Redeemed to Be Priests? A Sermon for the Fifth Sunday of Easter 2020
1 Peter 2.2-10
Psalm 31.1-5, 15-16
Acts 7.55-60
John 14.1-14
Fifth Sunday of Easter: Redeemed to Be Priests?
Prayer of Invocation
Father, by Your Spirit enable us know your Son Jesus Christ to be the way, the truth, and the life, so that we may steadfastly follow his steps in the way that leads to eternal life; through Jesus Christ your Son our Lord, who lives and reigns with you, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.
Sermon
I’ve never been to the Louvre in Paris, and I’ve never seen the
Mona Lisa in person. But I’ve talked to people that have, and they’ve told me
that it is kind of disappointing; there’s a lot of build up, long lines and
all, but in the end it’s just a small portrait of a lady who
frankly is kind of unattractive and looks pretty sad. Friends who have come
from out of state to see first hand the lore of the Alamo have said they were surprised
by how small it was, and confused by the significance of the monument. We can
all relate to anticipating something that we expect to be wonderful, exciting,
perhaps even life-changing only to be disappointed, confused, or underwhelmed
when we actually encounter it.
Frankly, I think 1 Peter can have that effect on many people.
There is a lot of build up, anticipation of something gloriously wonderful. If
I may be allowed to paraphrase the message of 1 Peter up to the point of our
text this morning, it goes something like this: Wow! Praise the Father of
our Lord Jesus Christ! You’ve been born again, redeemed from your ignorant
passions, liberated from the futile ways of life you have inherited; you have
an incorruptible inheritance that is kept for you in heaven; once you were not
a people, but now you are God’s people; once you had not received mercy, but
now you have received mercy; the salvation that prophets searched and inquired
about, the salvation that that even angels have longed to understand has
dawned, it’s been brought to us in this time, now. It’s here and we get to
enjoy it. And here’s the great news, here’s what we have been saved for,
here’s what you’ve been liberated to do, here is what it means to be God’s
people… are you ready? You are a holy priesthood saved to make spiritual
sacrifices to God through Jesus (1 Pet 2.5, 9)!
Huh? That’s it? We are a holy, royal priesthood? Yep, that’s it!
That’s what we have been saved for! That is our calling summed up in a phrase:
holy, royal priesthood!
Of all the images that New Testament authors draw upon to explain
what we have been saved for, all the images that the Scriptures use to shape
and inform the identity, responsibility, and calling of those who follow Jesus,
none may be more inaccessible or unintelligible to the modern reader than that
of “priesthood”. Disciple, newborn infant, sheep, body (or body part), slave,
soldier, obedient child, family member (brothers and sisters)—for the most part
these are understandable, relatable. But priest? What does that even mean?
One way to clarify what it means to be a
holy priesthood is to look at the role and function of priests in the Old
Testament.
- There
we see that the primary function of the priesthood was to represent
God to the world and to represent the world (people included) back to God.
Priests were intermediaries; they were called to intercede on
behalf of the people to God—to receive God’s gifts as gifts and to steward
those gifts; to offer requests, to give thanks, to offer sacrifices of
atonement, etc.
- Priests were also called to
know God’s word (what He has revealed about Himself, His will, what He
loves, what He hates, etc.), to understand how the world works, and in
light of this,
- to discern good from
evil, clean from unclean, right from wrong.
- Additionally, priests were also
called to order communal life—“housekeeping” you might call it,
making sure everything was in its proper place, and in particular making
sure that time was properly ordered around the worship of God.
- Finally, priests were called to
bless, offering pronouncements of God’s favor and giving thanks for
the many gifts that God bestows upon us.
Ok. That’s helpful. That is clarifying, perhaps
even exciting. But there is more.
The Eastern Orthodox tradition offers a way to
better understand what it means to be a priesthood. In this Christian
tradition, which is often unfamiliar to Christians in the West, the image of
priesthood is central to understanding what it means to be a follower of Jesus.
In fact, two Eastern Orthodox theologians, Alexander Schmemann (For the Life
of the World) and John Zizioulas (“Proprietors or Priests of Creation?”)
trace all of the problems of our world to our failure to understand and
exercise our calling as a holy priesthood . It’s worth a few minutes of our
time to hear from them to gain greater clarity on what it means to be a royal
priesthood, a people who represent the King and His ways.
In his preface to For the Life of the World,
Schmemann explains that he wrote his “little book” to help ministry students
understand how the eucharist (or communion or the Lord’s supper) ought to shape
their understanding of the Christian mission in and for the world. The
overarching question that he seeks to address is, What is life for?
He raises this question because he sees two fundamental
distortions in the way that Christians approach the world and life therein
(distortions which are also common within non-Christian approaches to the
world). He labels these two distortions "spirituality" and
"secularism".
According to Schmemann, the “spirituality” approach to
Christian mission implies that this world is something from which we need to
escape. In this approach, the church's mission is to convert people to live in
another world, to a life that essentially sees this world as irrelevant, to a
life that amounts to piety and patience as we wait for something beyond the
here and now.
The “secularist” approach implicitly
affirms that life consists of making this world better. The world has
been lost, and we need to take it back through social, economic, and political
action. And yet, Schmemann, notes, with this approach the question still
remains--what is this life that we must regain?
For Schmemann, both these approaches fail to appreciate the world
for what it really is, they fail to understand and embrace the telos (or
goal) of creation: “All that exists,” Schmemann writes, “is God's gift to
[humankind], and it all exists to make God known to [humanity], to make
humankind’s life communion with God" (pg.21).
A “Spirituality” approach to the Christian life rejects this world
as God's gift to humankind, as a sacrament through which we share communion
with God. And “secularism”, in all its efforts to make the world better, fails
to recognize the telos (or goal) of this life as communion with
God. The secularist approach treats social justice (as important as that is) as
an end in and of itself. “When we see the world as an end in itself,
everything...loses all value, because only in God is found the meaning and value
of everything...The world of nature, cut off from the source of life, is a
dying world” (pg.24).
“Whether we 'spiritualize' our life or 'secularize' our religion,
whether we invite people to a spiritual banquet or simply join them in a
secular one, the real life of the world, for which we are told God gave his
only-begotten Son, remains hopelessly beyond our religious grasp" (pg.
20).
So how do we avoid adopting these two distorted approaches to the
world? What is the faithful way forward?
According to Schmemann, our distorted views of
what life is for, of what the world is for, derive from an improper
understanding of what a human being is for:
The first, the basic definition of man
[humankind] is that he is the priest. He stands in the center of the
world and unifies it in his act of blessing God, of both receiving the world
from God and offering it to God--and by filling the world with this eucharist
[thanksgiving], he transforms his life, the one that he receives from the
world, into life in God, into communion with him. The world was created as the
'matter', the material of one all-embracing eucharist, and man was created as
the priest of this cosmic sacrament." (pg.22)
Schmemann looks to the Garden as the
archetype for how humans abandoned their first and basic calling as priests:
"The fruit of that one tree...was unlike
every other fruit in the Garden: it was not offered as a gift to man. Not
given, not blessed by God, it was food whose eating was condemned to be
communion with itself alone, and not with God. It is the image of a world loved
for itself, and eating it is the image of life understood as an end in
itself...Man has loved the world, but as an end in itself and not as
transparent to God" (pg. 23)
Orthodox theologian John Zizioulas further
illuminates Schmemman's insight. In his short essay "Proprietors or
Priests of Creation?", he argues that our ecological crisis is
fundamentally a crisis of misunderstanding what this world is for, how the
world is designed to work, and what our place is in the larger economy of the
world. He writes,
“In our Western culture we did everything to
de-sacralise life, to fill our society with legislators, moralists and
thinkers, and undermined the fact that the human being is also, or rather
primarily, a liturgical being, faced from the moment of birth with a world
that he or she must treat either as a sacred gift or as raw material for
exploitation and use. We are all born priests, and unless we remain so
throughout our lives we are bound to suffer the ecological consequences we are
now experiencing.” (pg.1)
He further explains that
"This role of the human being, as the
priest of creation, is absolutely necessary for creation itself, because
without this reference of creation to God the whole created universe will die.
It will die because it is a finite universe, as most scientists accept
today...Therefore, the only way to protect the world from its finitude which is
inherent in its nature, is to bring it into relation with God. This is because
God is the only infinite, immortal being, and it is only by relating to him
that the world can overcome its natural finitude. In other words, when God
created the world finite, and therefore subject by nature to death and
mortality, he wanted the world to live forever and to be united with him--that
is, to be in communion with him. It is precisely for this reason that God
created the human being. This underlines the significance of man as the priest
of creation, who would unite the world and relate it to God so that it may live
forever. Now, the human being did not perform this function, and here lies for
theology the root of ecological problem. The human being was tempted to make
himself the ultimate point of reference, i.e. God...the human being rejected
his role as the priest of creation making himself God in creation." (pg.
4)
Now we get to the wonderfulness of what Christ
has accomplished for us, the exciting calling of priesthood! Christ has
restored our calling to be a holy priesthood and invites his followers to
participate in his perpetual priesthood for the life of the world:
Now it is this role, which Christ performed
personally through his cross and resurrection, that he assigned to his Church,
which is his Body. The Church is there precisely in order to act as the priest
of creation who unites the world and refers it back to God, bringing it into
communion with him. This takes place in the Church particularly through the
sacraments. The meaning of the sacraments, for example that of baptism, is that
through it the attitude of the fallen Adam is reversed. Man dies as to his
claim to be God in creation, and instead recognises God as its Lord…through the
Eucharist, the Church proclaims and realises precisely this priestly function
of humanity. The Eucharist consists in taking elements from the natural world, the
bread and the wine which represent the created material world, and bringing
them into the hands of the human being, the hands of Christ who is the man par
excellence and the priest of creation, in order to refer them to God. At
this point, it is important to remember - especially those of us who belong to
the Orthodox Church and are familiar with the Orthodox Liturgy - that the
central point in our Liturgy is when the priest exclaims: 'Thine of thine own
we offer unto Thee'. This means precisely that the world, the creation, is
recognised as belonging to God, and is referred back to him. It is precisely
the reversal of Adam's attitude, who took the world as his own and referred it
to himself. In the Eucharist, the Church does precisely the opposite: the world
belongs to God and we refer it back to its Creator through the priestly action
of Christ as the real and true man, who is the head of the Body of the
Church." (pg.4)
Through the liberating power of the Passover
Lamb (1 Pet 1.18-19), Jesus, and by the sanctifying work of the Spirit (1 Pet
1.2) we have been restored to our unique capacity to collect and gather
this fragmented world and make it unified and harmonious. Those who are in
Christ now have the capacity to unite the world—but only as priests who refer
all things from and to God:
“The priest is the one who freely and, as
himself an organic part of it, takes the world in his hands to refer it to God,
and who, in return, brings God's blessing to what he refers to God. Through
this act, creation is brought into communion with God himself. This is the
essence of priesthood, and it is only the human being who can do it, namely,
unite the world in his hands in order to refer it to God, so that it can be
united with God and thus saved and fulfilled…only the human being is united
with creation while being able to transcend it through freedom.” (pg. 3)
When Peter declares that
“you are royal priesthood” (1 Peter 2.9), he is calling us to be a people that
sees the world for what it really is—a gift that is meant to be received with
gratitude and intended to draw us into communion with God. As a communal
priesthood, we are called to refer all of life to God and to extend the life of
God to our world. In this priestly calling, we are reminded that we are not the
ultimate point of reference, but that all of life derives its meaning, purpose
and life from God. For this reason we “humble ourselves under the mighty (and
sustaining) hand of God (1 Pet 5.6).
By the power of the
Spirit, taking our humble, rightful place within the world, we offer
sacrifices (gratitude, blessing, intercession, obedience) to God through
our high priest Jesus Christ (1 Pet 2.5). To be a royal, holy priesthood, then,
is to participate in God’s life of love, God’s life of delight and fellowship.
For this reason, we delight to proclaim the excellencies of him who called us
out of darkness and into his marvelous light (1 Pet 2.9).
This is what life is
for. This is what salvation is for. This is what we have been liberated for.
This is what we will be doing for the rest of lives, learning how to live as a
holy, royal priesthood--for the life of the world, made so that we can share in
the life of God.
Benediction
Now, may the God of peace who brought again from
the dead our Lord Jesus, the great shepherd of the sheep, by the blood of the
eternal covenant, equip you with everything good that you may do His will,
working in us that which is pleasing in His sight, through Jesus Christ, to
whom be glory forever and ever. Amen.
Hebrews 13.20-21
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