Reading:
Acts 9:1-6 (Paul -- at the time a strong man enforcing extermination rules against the troublesome nobodies who are following and proclaiming a crucified criminal as God's messiah, is out-of-the-blue knocked off his certitude, to have to re-examine and re-learn everything he thinks he knows about God and through what part of society and what class of people God works to heal the world.)
Already Thursday, and "all" I have still is this troubling comment about Paul's spiritual journey, that came to my laptop more than 2 weeks ago as a daily devotional from Fr. Richard Rohr. I find it so striking, I'll just post it all here for your consideration. It will help shape whatever sermon is offered Sunday. (I already have a few simple stories in mind.)
As you read Rohr's thoughts, where do they lead you?
Vulnerability—Even in God! (Thursday, March 17, 2016)
Paul’s encounter with the Eternal Christ on the Damascus Road must
have sparked his new and revolutionary consciousness. He recognized that
he had been chosen by God even “while breathing murderous threats”
(Acts 9:1), and that the God who chose him was a crucified God and not
an “Omnipotent” or an “Almighty” God. In fact, Paul only uses the word
“Almighty” for God once (2 Corinthians 6:18), and then he is quoting the
Hebrew Scriptures. This is quite significant considering his tradition
and training. Paul’s image of God was instead someone crucified outside
the city walls in the way a slave might be killed, and not of a God
appearing on heavenly clouds. Christ was not the strong, powerful,
military Messiah that the Jews had been waiting for throughout their
history. He was in fact quite the opposite. This was Jesus’ great
revelation, surprise, and a scandal that we have still not comprehended.
God is not what we thought God could or should be!
Paul, like few others, read his own tradition honestly and recognized
that Yahweh consistently chose the weak to confound the strong (1
Corinthians 1:17-31). He saw this in Israel itself, the barren wives of
the patriarchs, the boy David forgotten in the fields, the rejected
prophets, and finally Jesus on the cross. This becomes Paul’s
revolutionary understanding of wisdom that is still offensive and even
disgusting to much of the world and even the church. Only vulnerability allows all change, growth, and transformation to happen—even in God. Who would have imagined this?
Paul’s view of himself, of God, and of reality itself was completely
turned on its head. He had to re-image how divine power worked and how
humans changed. All he knew for sure at the beginning was that it was
not what anyone expected. Paul went off to “Arabia” for some time to
test his ideas against what he thought he was taught, to slowly allow
the full metamorphosis of his soul. (Is this not the necessary path for
all of us?) Only later does Paul have the courage to confront Peter and
James in Jerusalem (Galatians 1:16-21), and then a full fourteen years
later he tells Peter “to his face” that Peter is wrong (2:11) for
imposing non-essentials on people that only give them an incorrect
understanding of their correctness or righteousness. (Apparently Peter,
the first Pope, was himself fallible, and he too had to learn how to be
wrong to grow up!)
It takes all of us a long time to move from power to weakness, from
glib certitude to vulnerability, from meritocracy to the ocean of grace.
Strangely enough, this is especially true for people raised in
religion. In Paul’s letters, he consistently idealizes not power but
powerlessness, not strength but weakness, not success but the cross.
It’s as if he’s saying, “I glory when I fail and suffer because now I
get to be like Jesus—the naked loser—who turned any notion of God on its
head.” Now the losers can win, which is just about everybody.
The revelation of the death and resurrection of Jesus forever
redefines what success and winning mean, and it is not what any of us
wanted or expected. On the cross, God is revealed as vulnerability
itself (the Latin word vulnus means wound). The path to
holiness is so different than any of us would have wished or imagined;
and yet after the fact, we will all recognize that it was our littleness
and wrongness that kept the door to union and love permanently wedged
open every day of our life. In fact, there is no way to close it.
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