Doubt and
belief. If we made a list of things we doubted and a list of things that we
believe, most of our lists of doubts would be longer than our list of beliefs.
What do we believe in? God? Sure. But what do we believe about God? Who is God?
What is God’s job? Is God a cosmic judge, making lists of things we did wrong
and a list of things we did right, who will accept us if the list of things we
did right is longer than the list of wrongs? Most of us know the right answer
is no. At the same time, most of us still persist in believing that if we are
more good than we are bad, that we’ll be okay. Time and again, when a loved one
dies, the number one thing I hear the bereaved’s children and friends saying
is, “S/he was a good person.” Perhaps they tell me this because it seems there
are so few genuinely good people in the world, but my best guess is that they
tell me this because they think that it has some sort of cosmic significance.
But what does it mean to be good?
What are the characteristics of a good person? Is it someone who respects their
elders? Is it someone who works hard and doesn’t depend on others for handouts?
Is it someone who does what they are expected to do? Now, tell me: who in the
Bible fits these characteristics? Nope, not Abraham: he trusted God, but he
didn’t trust God enough to believe that Pharaoh wouldn’t steal Sarah from him.
Not Sarah, who knew the promise of a child but offered Hagar to Abraham and
then sent Hagar away because she feared her son wasn’t special enough. Not
Esau, who sold his birthright for a bowl of soup; not Jacob, who pretended he
was his brother to get his father’s blessing; not Joseph’s brothers, who got so
annoyed with him they threw him in a pit and left him, telling their father
(Jacob) that he was dead. Not Moses, who doubted his ability to speak to the
Hebrew people, who struck the rock in the desert instead of speaking to it
because he didn’t want to look like a fool; he didn’t get to see the promised
land as a result. Not Deborah, who was a powerful judge in Israel, who defied
the people’s expectations and inconveniently reminds us that women could – and
did – lead, even in war. Not David, who got Bathsheba pregnant, then tried to
cover it up with sending Uriah to Bathsheba and then had him killed when that
didn’t work. Not the kings of Israel, whose unfaithfulness led to exile. Not
the people in exile, who forgot the law, not recognizing it when Ezra read it
after they returned from exile. Not Peter, who denied Jesus three times. Not
Thomas, who doubted Jesus. Not Jesus, who said, “Woman, of what concern is it
to me that they have no wine? My hour has not yet come,” who defied Messianic
expectations. The Messiah was not supposed to be crucified. He was supposed to
be powerful. He was supposed to remove the Romans from power and set up a new
kingdom.
But we want someone powerful. We
want someone to save us who looks like a knight in shining armor, the hero of
the fairy tale, the one who makes the bad guys scatter. When we read Bible
stories, we are quick to situate ourselves on the “right side,” to give the
“right” answer, so much so that we often refuse to sit in the spaces of people
who were trying to figure out who, exactly, Jesus was. “If you are the Messiah,
tell us plainly.” And Jesus tells us, again and again, that power is made
perfect in weakness, that grace is sufficient. Again and again, we refuse to
believe that this is enough. Again and again, we try to “help” by telling
ourselves that we are good people, that we’re better people than so-and-so and
by the way did you hear what they did? We can look at the society around us and
feel like a city on a hill, like the ones who get it right, but it’s so much
easier to live giving the right answers than it is to wrestle with the
questions. Yes, Jesus, you have told us again and again who you are, but we
still try to force you into a shape that makes sense to us. We try to keep you
away from the sinners and the tax collectors, away from the ones who don’t
quite fit: away from the people we disagree with, away from the people that
make us uncomfortable, away from the people who don’t look like or think like
us, away from anything that makes us remember the inconvenience of having a
Savior who loves sinners, the inconvenience of having a savior that saves people
who only just barely believe, who come at the eleventh hour with some sort of
makeshift confession of how they’ve changed.
Somehow, even though we know the
stories of Abraham, of Moses, of Deborah, of David, and on and on, we don’t
believe them. Somehow, even though Jesus tells us who he is, the one who saves
sinners, we don’t believe him. It would be more convenient if Jesus saved the
good, the beautiful, the powerful, the ones who seemed to already have grasped
a piece of paradise in the here and now. But what about the rest of us? What
about us who aren’t always good or kind or generous or loving? What about those
of us who are still asking if this guy - who hangs out with tax collectors and
sinners, who forgives the unforgiveable and loves the unlovable – is the
Messiah? What about those of us who are still doubting Jesus’ ability to save
us because we cannot forgive others for the wrongs they have done to us and for
the wrongs we have done to each other?
It is difficult to recognize Jesus
when he’s frustrating our expectations, when he shows up in the places we would
least expect him. It’s difficult to recognize Jesus when we are busy wandering
our own ways and hoping we sheep can pull the wool over his eyes and eventually
present ourselves as faithful. But we are an unfaithful lot, chasing after
whatever gods we think will save us: after money, after security, after freedom
from fear, after a belief that has rid itself of all of its doubts. The sheep
hear Jesus, and Jesus knows them. And the times we follow aren’t usually the
times we have been especially good or worthy. The times we follow are the times
that we know that we cannot get ourselves out of the messes we have created,
the times we can’t wriggle free from the sin that shackles us. It isn’t we who
know Jesus, but Jesus who knows us. It isn’t we who earn eternal life, but
Jesus who gives it to us. It isn’t we who keep ourselves in Jesus’ hand, but
Jesus who keeps us. It is pure gift, and it is out of this gift that we live.
We live out of the gift of Abraham’s trust, Sarah’s laughter, Jacob’s renaming,
Joseph’s forgiveness, Moses’ faithfulness, Deborah’s powerfulness, the promises
given to David, the prophet’s hope, out of Peter’s confession, Thomas’ belief,
and out of Jesus’ power made perfect in weakness.
You, dear brothers and sisters, are
the wanderers of his own fold, the doubters of his own flock, the sinners of
his own redeeming. And yet he who welcomes you into the arms of mercy, into the
rest of everlasting peace, and into the company of the souls of light. And you
will never be taken from his hand.
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