WHAT
RELIGION IS NOT
March 19, 2006
John M. Buchanan
Pastor,
Fourth Presbyterian Church
Psalm 19:1–10
John 2:13–22
“Making a whip of chords, he drove all of them
out of the temple. . . .
He also poured out the coins of the money changers and
overturned their tables.”
John 2:15 (NRSV)
Abraham Lincoln had it right. Our task
should not be to invoke religion and the name of God
by claiming God’s blessing and endorsement for all
our national policies and practices—
saying, in effect, that God is on our side. Rather, Lincoln
said, we should pray and
worry earnestly whether we are on God’s side. . .
. God’s politics is never partisan or ideological.
But it challenges everything about our politics. God’s
politics reminds us of
the people our politics always neglects—the poor,
the vulnerable, the left behind.
God’s politics challenges narrow, ethnic, economic,
or cultural self-interest,
reminding us of a much wider world and the creative diversity
of all those
made in the image of the creator.
Jim Wallis
God’s Politics:
Why the Right Gets It Wrong
And the Left Doesn’t Get It
Dear God, as Jesus came to the temple long ago, so come
into our lives.
As he overturned the tables of the money changers, so overturn
what needs to be different in our lives. Startle us with
his immediacy,
his urgency, and give us integrity to hear your word and
to answer
with our courage and faith. Amen.
I
was struck by something Canadian theologian Douglas John
Hall said recently. Hall
said that when he is introduced
or in any way identified publicly as a Christian theologian
these days, he immediately has to explain what he is not.
I know what he means. The Christianity that most makes
the news these days makes me cringe. It is not what I mean
either.
And so a sermon on what religion is not. Sister Joan Chittister,
a Benedictine nun, addresses the subject at the beginning
of her fine book Called to Question. She reflects on how
religion—hers or anybody’s—seems to restrict
and confine the human spirit. She writes, “I believe
so much in the breadth of the soul that every day I respect
less and less those things in religion . . . that bind it.
We tie the soul down. . . . We snuff it mid-flight. It is
God that religion must be about, not itself. When religion
makes itself God, it ceases to be religion. . . . God save
us from the smallness we practice in the name of religion.”
That’s quite a statement. For nearly five centuries,
Catholics and Protestants have been squaring off and defining
themselves by what they are not. It used to be a serious
infraction for a Catholic to walk through the doors of a
Protestant church or for a Protestant to enter a Catholic
church. At times we went to war with one another. At times
we seemed to say that the other side was not even legitimately
Christian. At times we seemed to believe that there will
be only Catholics—or Protestants—in heaven. Our
religion separated us.
I thought about all that and about how stunned my own family
members would be as I drove over to Old St. Pat’s three
weeks ago in the middle of a snowstorm to preach the sermon
at 5:00 Mass. That was a first for me. It was a very moving
experience. Father Jack Wall and Father Tom Hurley are good
friends. Their approach to ministry and mission are similar
to our own. The church was full; the service was lively.
I kept thinking about my Grandmother McCormick, a product
of that older age and mentality, who was convinced that the
Catholic church wanted to take over the world and start persecuting
Protestants, and I imagine her wringing her hands in heaven,
her Presbyterian grandson preaching in a mass, lamenting
that Rome had finally got me. It was a good experience, a
symbol, I thought, of the way Christianity ultimately judges
and overcomes its own religious expressions and institutions.
For an hour, we were not Catholics or Protestants, but Christians
trying to follow and be faithful to Jesus, our common Lord.
A few days later, I received a wonderful e-mail from a
young woman, Carla Nuzzo, who was in attendance at the
Mass with
her two sons, ages twelve and nine. She said nice things
about my sermon. She explained that Mass is still an exercise
in trying to sit still for her sons but that occasionally
a word or two seeps in.
She wrote,
In
the car after Mass my older son asked why a non-Catholic
would speak at Old St. Pat’s. I went
into some PC speak about how Lent unites all Christians,
about how religious
differences of any kind have always caused a heap of trouble,
about how Old St. Pat’s is about inclusion and so
on . . . when from the backseat the nine-year-old said, “Who
cares? So he’s not Catholic. Why are we even talking
about it?”
“I
was momentarily humbled by this,” she wrote. “He
seemed so blind to differences that even bringing them
up seemed offensive. I would have taken great pride and
credit
for raising such a naturally inclusive child if he
hadn’t
added, ‘It’s too bad he’s a Cubs
fan, though. That’s just dumb.’”
Father Hurley had mentioned my baseball commitments
in his introduction, and I had forgotten, frankly,
that
Old St.
Pat’s is on the South Side, barely. He said my religious
affiliation wasn’t a problem; it was my baseball preferences.
Sometimes someone has to stand up and say, or demonstrate,
what religion is not.
The text for the day, the third Sunday in Lent, is
the story of Jesus cleansing the temple. It is a strong
story.
It is
not a particularly easy story. It is a story about
what religion is not.
There is in the Bible a kind of running argument between
God and religion. God creates. God gives life. God
calls a people and delivers them from slavery. God
provides
for them. God gives them a home, and what God expects
for all
this undeserved goodness, this great love, is gratitude
and life lived on the basis of that same love. God’s people
are to love God with all their heart and mind and strength,
and they are to do that by loving their neighbor. It’s
that simple—or it ought to be. Religion enters the
picture as the way people organize themselves to thank God
and to live in faithful love. Rituals are designed to help
them express their gratitude. Rules and laws are devised
to make sure they’re getting it right.
And then a shift
happens. The rituals and rules designed to help them express
their gratitude and love slowly become the point of the exercise.
Gratitude and love fade as keeping the rituals and obeying
the rules ascends.
And so there is this wonderful running argument between
God and the people, particularly the religious people.
God keeps
saying, “No, you’re missing the point.” In
the Bible, God speaks through individuals called prophets
who stand up and say things like—
“I
desire steadfast love and not sacrifice, the knowledge
of God rather than burnt offerings.” That’s
Hosea.
Amos
puts is bluntly
“I
hate, I despise your feasts, and I take no delight in
your solemn assemblies. But let justice roll
down like water and
righteousness like an ever-flowing stream.
Micah:
“With
what shall I come before the Lord, and bow myself before
God on high? Shall I come with burnt offerings,
with calves
a year old?” . . . .
How
about thousands of rams? Ten thousand rivers of oil? I’ll
do whatever it takes. I’ll be utterly
and passionately and fanatically religious
if that’s what
you want.
Micah writes,
“He
has told you, O mortal, what is good; and what does the
Lord require of you but to do justice and to
love kindness
and to walk humbly with your God.”
And
so Jesus, one day, out of that prophetic
tradition in his own religious heritage,
visits the Jerusalem
temple, the heart of his religion,
the very institutional, physical
embodiment of his faith. What he saw
that day must have been
jarring. In the first courtyard, open
to all, called the Court of the Gentiles,
there were
booths where
every adult
male had to pay the annual temple tax.
But before he got that far he had to
change
his
Roman coins
for Hebrew
money
because the Roman coin bore the image
of the emperor. So there was a currency
exchange.
In the next court there were inspection
tables where the visitor presented
his sacrificial
lamb or doves
to ensure
that they were without blemish. Beside
those tables, there was a menagerie
of sorts: preinspected
lambs,
oxen, calves,
pigeons, for sale.
Fleming Rutledge describes it with
tongue in cheek:
It’s
Passover week, and it’s a mob scene. The
temple is a tourist attraction, religion
at its apex. Here are all the religious
instincts of humanity on display.
There’s
liturgical dance in the sanctuary,
performance art in the courtyard,
and a rock mass in the nave. You can buy
a tour
guide in the narthex, a cookbook
in the transept, and a bumper sticker
in the parish hall. Weight Watchers
meets in the
Sunday School wing, yoga in the gym,
AA in the audiovisual room. There’s
a prayer group in the basement, a
flower show in the courtyard, and
group therapy
in the reception room. And you can
get your money changed at five convenient
ATM locations. What a temple! What
a church! God must be
very pleased. (The Undoing
of Death, p. 53)
Sometimes
someone has to stand up and say what religion is not.
So
Jesus
does it.
Fashions a whip. Upsets
the currency exchange table, sends
the coins flying everywhere,
knocks
down the inspection booths, opens
the gates to the sacrificial animal
pens,
and physically
ejects
everybody.
Can you
imagine that? I’ll bet his
disciples told that story over and
over again and laughed. “Remember
the time he walked right into the
temple and overturned the tables?
Remember
the noise, the looks on their faces?”
Sometimes someone has to stand
up and say what religion is not.
In our day, Jim Wallis has done
it eloquently in a best seller,
God’s Politics: Why the Right Gets It Wrong and the
Left Doesn’t Get It. Wallis is an Evangelical pastor,
Editor of Sojourners magazine, who has the courage to identify
what he calls the “hijacking” of Christianity
by the religious and political right. It is a potent collaboration,
in the news every day. “Many people around the world,” he
writes, “now think that Christian faith stands for
political commitments that are almost the opposite of its
true meaning.” Wallis overturns a few tables. “God
is not partisan. God is not a Republican or a Democrat. When
either party tries to politicize God, or co-opt religious
communities for their political agendas, they make a terrible
mistake.”
Author Dan Wakefield picked up
Wallis’s phrase for
a new book of his own, The
Hijacking of Jesus, in which he
has researched the way the religious right has successfully
claimed for itself the mantle of Christian faith and happily
joined hands with the political right in support of a political
and social agenda it simply announces as the Christian agenda.
To express a different opinion on reproductive rights for
instance, to come to a different conclusion, on global warming
and the environment, for instance, or stem cell research,
or Social Security, is to be accused of opposing Christian
faith and values.
Rabbi Michael Lerner, Editor of
Tikkun magazine, in a new book,
The Left
Hand of God, says
that “the unholy alliance
of the Political Right and the Religious Right threatens
to destroy the America we love. It also threatens to generate
a popular revulsion against God and religion by identifying
with militarism, ecological irresponsibility, fundamentalist
antagonism toward science, and insensitivity to the needs
of the poor and powerless.”
Lerner quotes George Grant, Executive
Director of Coral Ridge Ministries,
one of the huge
right-wing operations:
Christians
have an objective, a holy responsibility to reclaim
the land
for Jesus Christ, to
have dominion in
civil structures
just as in every other aspect
of life and godliness. But it is dominion
we
are after,
not just a
voice. It is dominion
we are after, not just influence.
Not equal time, dominion. . .
. world conquest.
.
. . Christian
politics has
as its primary intent the conquest
of the land.
On
the other side of it, who will ever forget the pathetic
moment
during the
last presidential
campaign
when candidate
Howard Dean woke up to what
was
happening and tried to get
on the religion
bandwagon? He
told a reporter
that
he was
an Episcopalian but added that
he doesn’t go to church
much but helped his parish with
some real estate negotiations
regarding a bike path. The reporter
asked him what his favorite New
Testament book was and Dean announced
the book of Job,
Old Testament.
The challenge here is for the
church to remember what it
is about. It
is not about
a partisan
political agenda.
It is about issues that were
central to its Lord’s teaching.
It is not about dominion or conquest. It is about justice
and compassion and kindness. It is not about taking over
anything. It is about walking humbly and making sure the
poor are cared for, the excluded included, the children nurtured.
The challenge is for the church
to remember that it is not
about itself.
It is not
about religion.
It is
about
Jesus
Christ.
And there is personal challenge
here. This story makes me uncomfortable
precisely because Jesus
seems so unmanageable,
so unreasonable, so unpredictable.
The scene in the temple when
he upsets the tables and drives
out
the money
changers was made for
Rembrandt and Rembrandt
painted it. It’s an incredibly strong painting, full
of chaos and turbulence. It’s very crowded: a table
is hitting the floor, dogs are barking, people are thrown
down off their seats and are running away. In the upper right
corner, the religious leaders are observing in splendid isolation,
clearly deciding that this is too much; this man is too much.
He must go. And in the center, a striking, strong Christ
swinging the whip—not slender, frail, retiring, pious,
but bulky, muscular, compelling (see Fleming Rutledge, p.
55).
It makes me uncomfortable because
it is a reminder that Jesus
Christ is
not passive,
is not content
to be retiring,
waiting
patiently for you and me to
get around to
paying attention. It is a reminder
that sometimes he barges into
my life and yours and forces
a decision.
It
is
a reminder,
on the third
Sunday of Lent, that he was
crucified not for teaching
about love and
forgiveness but because
he challenged
people, challenged
religious and political leaders,
because one day he overturned
tables in the
temple to show
them
what religion
is not.
I have kept for years something
Dorothy Sayers wrote a generation
ago:
The
people who hanged Christ never accused him of being
a bore—on the contrary;
they thought him too dynamic
to be safe. It has been left
to succeeding generations
to muffle up that shattering
personality
and surround him with an
atmosphere of tedium. . .
. a fitting
household pet for
pale curates and pious old
ladies. He was tender to
the unfortunate, patient
with honest
inquirers, humble; but he
insulted clergymen
. . . ; referred to King
Herod as “that fox”;
went to parties in disreputable
company . . . ; assaulted
indignant tradesmen and
threw them and
their belongings out
of the temple. . . .
Officialdom felt that
the established
order of things would
be more secure
without him. So they
did away with God in
the name of peace and
quietness.
(The
Greatest Drama Ever Staged)
And
so he comes to startle
us, to challenge us, to awaken
us
to true
life. So he
comes and makes
detached
neutrality
impossible. He comes to
you and me and forces us to decide
whether
or
not to
be his follower,
his
man,
his woman.
So he comes to the sanctuary
of your heart and mine
and invites us to
make the most
important decision
you and
I can ever
make—to follow him, to live him, forever.
Amen.