Easter 3, 2013
Our Gospel reading today is perhaps
one of my favorite stories in the New Testament. It’s one which occupies an
importance place in our understanding of redemption. It shows us how even
though the redemptive work of the Cross was made complete; there were still
other matters yet to be attended to…
Throughout the Sundays following
Easter, we’ve been reading accounts of how Jesus appeared regularly to
different groups after the resurrection. Each time there is a little more
revelation about what his resurrection and all the rest means.
However, other than Jesus’
interaction with Thomas (that we read about last week) there doesn’t seem to
have been all that much inter-personal interaction with that original group of
friends who Jesus called at the very beginning. After all, we’re told that
Jesus would appear to gathered groups of believers, but it’s not clear how much
this close circle of Jesus’ friends actually got to interact with the risen
Lord.
So, from this we might assume then,
that Peter and the rest of these guys were doing ‘all right.’ All of them but
John and some of the female disciples had run away when Jesus was arrested. But
now that Jesus was back from the dead—things were alright.
Peter denied knowing Jesus three
different times the same night he promised never to forsake him. But now that
the Lord was appearing in his resurrected body to the faithful—things were
alright.
After the resurrection there were
people like Thomas who couldn’t believe it. Jesus came, and everything was
alright.
There were questions if the
resurrected one was just a ghost. Jesus showed up and ate fish with them—and
everything was alright.
But for all of these appearances,
Peter and the rest were never forced to come to terms with all that had happened.
I would imagine that beyond their introspection, they never resolved their own
guilt about events that led up to the crucifixion.
However, Jesus was alive—so
(again), everything was alright.
As things must have begun to settle
out after the resurrection of Jesus, we find Peter deciding that it was time to
go back to work…back to the grind. And this small group of disciples decide to
join him; and they spend the morning fishing.
Now whether they were preoccupied
with their cooler, or they just weren’t very good at fishing; they had not
caught many fish. But once again, Jesus shows up, everything is good.
When Peter realizes who Jesus is,
he hurriedly puts his clothes on, and swims to shore to find that Jesus had
been making breakfast. This, of course, is where everything begins to become a
little tough.
As I mentioned, we’re not told that
the closest of Jesus’ disciples ever really had any intimate time with him.
After the resurrection, it seems like they have to share him with all of these
‘other’ followers who Scripture and history seem fit to leave unnamed.
Things weren’t the way they had
been at the beginning when Jesus called them. After the events of the Passion,
we can easily assume that these men had been changed forever. But again,
there’s no sense that they really had to face Jesus—never had to face
themselves.
Yet, here he was, Jesus—the only
man who really had first right to hurl accusations at them for their betrayal
and their fickle hearts. And instead of judgment, he’s brought breakfast.
This is the point, I think, that
gives this story so much punch. Because like any of us, these men probably
expect to pay for their mistakes and failings with hard knocks. And maybe that
would be easier to deal with than this brutal grace…this breakfast.
Instead of finding the assumed
punishment for their faults, they find themselves fully embraced in
forgiveness. But the hardest part of this, is of course accepting one’s self as
being accepted fully by that grace in spite of our own guilt and grief.
This is a powerful lesson in and of
itself—but the reading doesn’t stop there.
Jesus goes on to talk to these
fully absolved, fully forgiven friends of his. Most specifically, he turns to
Peter, the “Rock”, and asks him: “Simon, son of John, do you love me?”
Peter of course answers that he
does—but Jesus asks him three times, just in case Peter had forgotten that he’d
betrayed Jesus three times. Each time Peter says “yes”, Jesus tells him to care
for his sheep—and finally he says, “follow me.”
There is a whole lot in this
passage that we could spend a ton of time on—and if I ever do, I’ll warn you
all to bring a snack. We could even probably spend the better part of the day
just talking about the significance of Christ’s ruthless grace that seems to
redeem us, and leave us with the weighty decision to accept it or continue to
punish ourselves…
And while that grace is part of
this, what I’d like to talk about is how we respond to such an overwhelming
gift as grace. What is the proper response to being given the unbearable gift
of complete forgiveness as the Church—a group of people living in this age
after Christ’s resurrection?
To begin with, I’d like to look
again briefly at this subject of grace. Often when I talk about grace, I try to
pair it with words like brutal and ruthless—something I learned from the
wonderful writer Brennan Manning, who passed away just a couple of days ago.
The reason for this is because we often get the idea that grace isn’t
costly—there’s this misunderstanding that grace means we get off scot-free, and
never have to deal with our wrongdoings. But this isn’t grace.
Because even though grace is a gift
that we can never hope to fully understand, it is all the same a gift that
leaves us powerless to help ourselves. Grace is always the best response to our
failings because it means we have to see ourselves as we really are. We have to
recognize within ourselves where our actions have harmed others, broken
relationships, or even damaged another’s faith…
That’s difficult; and that is why
real grace is anything but cheap. It’s also why we have such a hard time
receiving grace when it’s given to us. So, this is why I say that it is
ruthless and brutal, all the while understanding it’s such an amazing gift, as
well.
Now the way in which we respond to
this grace is really the difficult part. Some of us might realize what we’ve
been given in Christ’s forgiveness, and feel so utterly terrible about
ourselves that we never enjoy the gift—and certainly not the giver.
Others of us might receive the gift
of grace in the same way we might an inoculation, or a flu vaccination. We know
we need it, and once we’ve gotten it injected; we’re good to go for a while.
We’re glad we have it, but other than making sure it’s up-to-date, it otherwise
never really effects our lives.
But for those who really get
it—like really get it; grace can be such a powerful experience of freedom that
they cannot help but be changed completely. And for these people grace leaves
them wondering always what is next in this relationship with God. More
importantly, when this zeal is tempered, those who truly experience grace find
themselves asking what is being asked of them in this relationship with God.
If we were to take our Gospel reading
today as a schema for this continuum of experiencing grace and responding to
it; we could look to the conversation between Jesus and Peter as a guide.
Jesus asks Peter, “Do you love me?”
and each time, Peter responds “yes,” and “yes,” and “yes” again for each time
that Jesus asks him. But for every affirmation of his love for Jesus, Peter is
asked by Jesus to “feed his lambs”, “tend his sheep” and “feed his sheep.”
In other words, Jesus calls Peter,
who he knows loves him, to a much deeper service of caring for his little group
of faithful ones—this group who would one day become the Church.
We have to wonder, if Jesus is the
Good Shepherd, why he would ask Peter to tend the sheep. Perhaps it’s because
not even Jesus could do the work of the Church on his own.
What is perhaps a little
overwhelming, though is that this story is so very applicable to believers
today. When we talk about faith in Christ, we talk about relationship. When we
talk about our Baptismal Covenant, we talk about service to the world in the
name of God. And when we talk about the Church, we talk about people who make
up the living Body of Christ: the Hands and Feet of Jesus in the world.
Just in these three areas, we can
hear the echo of Jesus’ words to Peter: If you love me, feed my lambs; if you
love me, tend my sheep; if you love me feed my sheep. He says, “follow me.”
“Follow me.” A difficult command in
light of an even more difficult grace, but it’s by this grace that we’re
offered loving relationship in Christ and in the Church. And it’s because of
this grace that we should be compelled to be engaged in the life of the Church.
While Jesus comes to find us to offer us this
grace, he doesn’t “do” grace to us. In the same way, God doesn’t “do Church for
us”—again, because our response to grace is response to a relationship; and
relationships require responsibility: the responsibility is to show-up. Because
if we don’t show up, the sheep aren’t tended, and if the sheep aren’t tended,
then we are no longer vital or necessary…things that the Church must be, or
continue to face steady decline.
The point of all of this, I
suppose, is much more easily stated than it is perhaps implemented. But what
we’re called to as the Church is engagement beyond just having Church done to
us… What we’re called to in our Baptismal Covenant—what we promised—is that we
will actively find our place and take part in the life of the Church. We even
promise to help others to do the same thing.
We affirm in our worship that we
are here because we’ve been called to the resurrected life in Christ, and celebrate
our redemption. But then, (the most important part of the service): we go into
the world to love and serve the Lord.
The question that we’re faced with
then, if we’re as honest with ourselves as grace demands, is whether or not
we’re showing up. Are we tending the sheep by finding our place in the life and
ministry of the Church? And if we aren’t, what does it mean to love Christ and
follow him?
What does it mean to have ideas for
ministry and have no one to help with them? What do we communicate when we talk
about desire for fellowship events and no one shows up to them? How do we
expect formation and educational opportunities to happen or continue as long as
only a few people are participating? How are we tending the sheep, and if we’re
not, what is the necessity of the Church?
These are just a few questions that
require a lot of soul-searching for each of us, I think. Especially since it is
a question for each one of us to answer for ourselves.
Jesus says to those of us who love
him: tend my sheep. “Follow me.” Two simple, but devastating commands to the
Church…
They’re difficult things to wrestle
with, I know, but believe me when I say the message is being delivered by
someone who is still trying to deal with the meaning of this ruthless grace in his
own life…and definitely trying his best to tend the sheep and follow Jesus whom
we all love.
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