
No more Cheap and Easy Easters! | 'A Christian celebration? REALLY?'
ARTICLE SOURCE: Scoop Independent News
Saturday, 7 April 2012, 1:34 pm
Press Release: Network of Spiritual Progressives
[Soon] the churches across the United States of America will fill up with people who identify themselves as Christians to celebrate the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ.
Let me see if I have this right: This was a man who counseled us to "Turn the other cheek," and "Love your enemies."
And this is in a country with the highest prison population in the world and a record number of inmates awaiting execution on death row;
A country that assassinates people at will, from drones flying high altitude, by push-button technology, without any legal process at all;
A country that launched an illegal war called "Operation Iraqi Freedom" that killed tens of thousands and has turned a million people into refugees;
A country that thinks owning a gun is a sign of freedom and independence and gun control infringes on “our rights.”
This weekend, the priests and preachers will proclaim the “Paschal mystery of salvation” in front of packed congregations. We Christians will join with Jesus as he celebrates his last supper with his disciples, washes their feet in a humble gesture of servanthood, then agonizes alone all night as he faces a rigged trial and unjust execution. We will kiss the Cross, the instrument of his torture and execution, and dedicate ourselves to "taking up our cross daily" and then give each other hugs over his resurrection on Easter Sunday.
You might disagree with me, but in my opinion, if we Christians left our churches on Sunday and followed Christ in action on Monday, the killing would stop that very day. In other words, it is a mockery of life, death and resurrection of Jesus to call this a Christian country.
The fact is that we Christians are only fooling ourselves. Jesus knew this would happen. He predicted that many Christians would be hypocrites, even the most fervent who preach and claim to heal and do what they think are "mighty works" in his name. To them, he would say: “I never knew you; depart from me, you evildoers." (Matthew 7:21)
In my opinion, we are avoiding the experience of Holy Saturday.
This is the time that begins at 3 o'clock on the afternoon of Good Friday. The agony of the crucifixion is ending, sunlight fails, darkness descends, an earthquake splits rocks and “the veil of the temple is torn in two.” Jesus cries out in a loud voice: "Father, into thy hands I commit my spirit!" And he breathes his last breath. His head falls forward. He is dead.
There is silence. Perhaps a gust of wind. A moment when time stands still. Those near the cross look once more. Yes, he is really dead. All that they expected collapses. There will be no overthrow of the Romans, no restoration of the kingdom of Israel, no magical solution to unendurable in life.
Instead, we must face the tomb, the winter of all hopes and dreams, the disintegration of all understanding. Comprehensibility itself becomes incomprehensible. The rational structures in the mind, the categories by which we interpret the ocean of sensations deluging us disappear. We are thrust into utter desolation and darkness, of despair and the triumph of the human creature at his and her worst. Civilizations crash into heaps of rubble. Rome is burned. Baghdad is sacked by the Mongols. Constantinople is burned by Crusaders. Ukrainian peasants burn Jewish villages. The screams and cries of the Holocaust in Germany and Poland echo to this very moment. The invisible American drone leaves no sound for those who are incinerated beyond recognition.
Perhaps you think I exaggerate when I say that we live suspended over this abyss of horror every day of our lives, an abyss that can crack open at any second during the most mundane moments of our lives.
Immediately, our minds sought rational explanations. We were avoiding feeling Holy Saturday. We were searching for an explanation that would push ourselves out of the abyss of this world -- ha’olam hazeh -- and reweave the veil of normalcy that had been torn in two. We needed to restore the placid, predictable, rational and understandable surface of life. Holy Saturday is too terrifying to contemplate; it’s a moment when rationality itself shatters like glass at a sub-arcic temperature.
Yet the veil cannot be rewoven and the glass must remain shattered. ..There have been many [murders] in California. There have been many throughout the world. There have been massacres, large and small, and then, catastrophic massacres of entire civilizations.
The question is not, “How do we make sense of this?” No, this is beyond all sense. The question is: “What is our relationship to this aspect of reality?” What is my personal relationship with the fact that I can step outside to pause midsentence and be shot, kidnapped, attacked by a random, crazed person, or in the more modern version, assassinated for a revenge killing for something some of my race or nationality or religion did.
Knowing all this was coming, Jesus did not flinch or turn away. He did not produce platitudes about how it would all work in out in the end or spin out empty philosophical or theological slogans.
No, in Gethsemane, Jesus stared into the approaching horror of Holy Saturday and most courageously of all, he felt it. He didn’t lie to himself; in his innermost parts, he did not want to die, even if it would "save the world form its sins.” And he begged God to let him off the hook, to “take this cup from me." He sweated blood. He was entirely alone, facing the horror, just as Katleen Ping and Grace Kim were, and the millions of innocents like them who have died.
Unless we are willing to face the horror of the incomprehensible in the human experience, we have no access to the subsequent miracle and joy of new life. If our minds seal over and we re-weave the veil, if we push back from the abyss and impose on reality our order, our own understanding, we become safe from the horror of Holy Saturday. But we’ve also insulated ourselves from the real joy at Easter. Our minds have safely pushed back from the brink of horror, and we’ve also pushed back from the brink of believing the possibility of a true resurrection.
This is why I don't want Easter to come too soon. I don't want cheap grace, and I don’t want easy joy. My prayer for this Easter weekend is that the reality of the resurrection will save us from our conceptions that we Christians have imposed with our own minds on this ultimate mystery, the ultimate appearance of the ultimate structure of reality that goes far beyond anything we can conceive of our own minds, both in the depth of its horror and the ecstasy of its joy.
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