Showing posts with label serpent in wilderness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label serpent in wilderness. Show all posts

Monday, March 5, 2018

Looking Honestly at What Harms Us - 11 March 2018 - Fourth Sunday in Lent

Parallels and paradox abound in these passages: the source of harm becomes the source of healing, those who see the darkness are brought to the light. What is exposed offers a route toward wholeness despite––and even because of––brokenness.

The preacher today may focus on the call in Lent to look squarely at the roots of self-deception and dishonesty. Looking at what harms us is the beginning of life abundant.

John 3:14-21

While nearly everyone is familiar with John 3:16 and the verses that immediately follow it, most readers are probably unaware of the verses that immediately precede it, included in today's reading. “And just as Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness. . .” refers to an oft-overlooked incident during the Israelites’ wandering in the wilderness (see below).

Just as Moses turned the serpent, something that was originally the cause of suffering, into a means of saving lives, the gospel writers made the cross, originally a symbol of shame and suffering, into a symbol of eternal life. . . .

While most readers are familiar with John 3:16, many may overlook the inherent tension between inclusivity and exclusivity in [the passage as a whole]. . . “God so loved the world” suggests the possibility of inclusion (whereas many places in the Bible speak of God's exclusive love for the chosen people), but “everyone who believes in him” limits the reward of eternal life to believers. The next verses increase this tension, since unbelievers are condemned on the assumption that they've had the opportunity to believe and have chosen not to. . .

While many readers have accepted this exclusivity. . . we must consider the audience to whom this gospel is speaking. Some have suggested that the Johannine community felt so beleaguered by “enemies,” not only the synagogues from which they'd been expelled, but the followers of John the Baptist as well as other early variants of Christianity, that they needed encouragement that they had made the right choice. From this perspective then, the exclusivity may be less important than the emphasis on belief in and loyalty to Jesus. –– Jonathan Lawrence

Numbers 21:4-9

This passage provides the background to the cryptic statement that precedes John 3:16. As they often do, the Israelites complain against God and Moses. . . [but] unlike the other times when they complained and God provided food or water, this time God sent poisonous serpents among them and many people died.

When the people realize their sin in criticizing God and Moses, they repent and God instructs Moses to place a bronze serpent on a pole so that anyone who was bitten by the serpents could look at it and live. . .  The concept is of God providing a way to rescue the people from the situation they found themselves in due to their sin, offering a logical parallel for the gospel of John. –– Jonathan Lawrence

Ephesians 2:1-10

Whereas John described Jesus as a signpost of hope to which people could look and be saved by belief, the writer of Ephesians sees the problem not so much as unbelief as the sins they have committed under the influence of the “ruler of the power of the air.” No longer under the sway of their fleshly passions, the Ephesians have been “raised” up and seated with Christ in the “heavenly places.” As in John, they are saved through faith, but there are also echoes of Psalm 107 in the references to God's help and healing. –– Jonathan Lawrence


Jonathan D. Lawrence, an American Baptist Church ordained minister, teaches Religious Studies and Theology at Canisius College, Buffalo, New York.


Homily Service 39, no. 4 (2006): 44-52.




Monday, March 9, 2015

Light of Truth – 15 March 2015 – Fourth Sunday in Lent

How hard it is to preach the gospel! Judith Simonson, in Homily Service in 2006 wrote about the proclamation of good news requiring that the preacher know how to distinguish between law and gospel. The preacher, then, does not leave people thinking that the gospel is something we achieve. It is well to think of this every Sunday.

Paul Scott Wilson (The Practice of Preaching) distinguishes in this way: law is what human life is, what we do, and what we are to do. Law is about human action. In contrast, gospel is what God is doing. This can be a handy check for preachers.

Almost nothing makes me a stronger believer in the doctrine of original sin than the difficulty we have in keeping the message of the Gospel clear. There is something, apparently, in the human makeup that prompts the clergy and laity alike to confuse law and Gospel and use them interchangeably. Perhaps the good news does not seem so good to those who really do want to earn the love of God.

. . . I heard it again the other day in one of our churches. I was listening to a well-delivered sermon, but beginning to wonder if it were not more of a lecture than a sermon. The preacher apparently also felt some need to inject a bit of the “Gospel,” proclaimed that intention, and proceeded to quote the lines from Matthew 22:37–39, “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind. . . You shall love your neighbor as yourself.” Ignoring the next verse, which speaks of “these two commandments,” we were urged to conduct ourselves as befits Christian people because that was the “Gospel” Jesus proclaimed.

I behaved myself and did not rise up to challenge the preacher (although I shall find a way to do it privately). . . because this is where our message gets so muddled and loses its power.

. . .  Jesus understood the law in a radical way. He was forever pointing out that the letter of the law was one thing, but that the children of God were called to express the intent of the law— the good of the other. When he challenged the rich young man with that radical expectation, his disciples questioned him and were told that, of course, it was impossible to satisfy the law from a human point of view; that it took God’s intervention.

It is that intervention, in the person of Jesus himself, the embodiment of God’s grace, that constitutes the Gospel.  

. . . Here we have come full circle from Ash Wednesday when we were urged not to display our piety in public. . .  to fast and pray privately. Now we hear words about light and darkness and are urged to come into the light. – Judith E. Simonson

The images of death and of healing in the Gospel of John and in Numbers turn us toward honesty about our struggles and the fact that looking at the causes can begin the healing.

John 3:14-21
Just as Moses turned the serpent, something that was originally the cause of suffering, into a means of saving lives, the gospel writers made the cross, originally a symbol of shame and suffering, into a symbol of eternal life. – Jonathan Lawrence

Numbers 21:4-9
[T]he concept [here] is of God providing a way to rescue the people from the situation they found themselves in due to their sin, offering a logical parallel for the gospel of John. – Jonathan Lawrence

Ephesians 2:1-10
Writing to the church in Ephesus, Paul clearly reiterates the difference between law and gospel:  “For by grace you have been saved through faith, and this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God—not the result of works, so that no one may boast.” (vs. 9)


Jonathan D. Lawrence, an American Baptist Church ordained minister, teaches Religious Studies and Theology at Canisius College, Buffalo, New York.

Judith Simonson is an ordained minister in the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America.


Homily Service 39, no. 4 (2006): 44-52.