Christ the King

23-24
Nov 2019, Christ Mountain Top
Praying
the Scripture, Psalm 23
Children,
Luke 23.33-43 (crucifixion)
Message,
Colossians 1.9-20, with Luke
Mission
Moment, Student Day/offering
This
section of Colossians is a prayer. The writer prays for the readers – that’s us
– to be filled with spiritual insight, gifted with patience and joy, fruitful
and powerful, wise and worthy. Then there is a transition. It is still prayer,
but rather than prayer for us it is thanks to God for all that God has done for
us and for all the glory of Jesus. It becomes poetic, more like a hymn, and it
raises all kinds of theological questions that it doesn’t bother to answer.
Because theology has to do with mystery. Because poetry is not about
explanation.
       The Princess Bride: Let me
explain.
No, let me sum up. (Inigo)
       So, there is not much explaining to do,
not much that I can do. I just have to join in the song, repeat the rhythm of
the poetry, listen to the soaring language as it gives glory and thanks to God.
The
Father “has qualified you for a share of the inheritance of the saints in
light, … has rescued us from the domain of darkness and transferred us* to the kingdom of the Son
he loves[1].”
And this Jesus sums up all things:
·       Jesus
sums up God – image of the invisible God
·       Jesus
sums up all creation – the firstborn of all creation
·       Jesus
sums up all things – things in heaven and things on earth, things visible and
things invisible, things that rule and things that obey
·       Jesus
sums up the church – which is his body
·       Jesus
sums up resurrection – the firstborn from the dead
·       Jesus
sums up all things through his blood, by the cross

I
need better language, the writing of Irenaeus, bishop of Lyons from
177-200:

Jesus
sums up God: “The immeasurable Father is measured in the Son; for the Son is
the measure of the Father, since he contains the Father.”
Jesus
sums up all things: “Thus there is one God the Father … and one Christ Jesus
our Lord who came in fulfilment of God’s comprehensive design and consummates
all things in himself. Man is in all respects the handiwork of God; thus he
consummates man in himself: he was invisible and became visible;
incomprehensible and made comprehensible; impassible and made passible; the
Word, and made man; consummating all things in himself. That, as in things
above the heavens and in the spiritual and invisible world the Word of God is
supreme, so in the visible and physical realm he may have pre-eminence, taking
to himself the primacy and appointing himself the head of the Church, that he
may ‘draw all things to himself’ in due time.” Irenaeus, Henry Bettenson, The
Early Christian Fathers,
76 & 81
The
story of Jesus is the story of all things – created, redeemed, held together, set
in order:
·       Jesus
creates all things in partnership with the Father
·       Jesus
redeems all things, through his blood by the cross
·       Jesus
holds together all things by his Word
·       Jesus
rules all things, on behalf of the Father
I
need more language, the poetry of Karol Wojtyla, who later became Pope John
Paul II:
I
call you and I seek you, in whom
man’s
history finds its body.
I go towards you and do not say “come”
but
simply “be.”
Be
where there is no record, yet where man was,
was
with his soul, his heart, desire, suffering and will,
consumed
by feeling, burnt by most holy shame.
Be
an eternal seismograph of the invisible but real.
Oh,
Man, in whom our lowest depths meet our heights,
for
whom what is within is not a dark burden but the heart.
Man
in whom each man can find his deep design,
and
the roots of his deeds: the mirror of life and death
staring
at the human flux.
Through
the shallows of history I always reach you
walking
towards each heart, walking towards each thought
(history
– the overcrowding of thoughts, death of hearts).
I
seek your body for all history,
I
seek your depth.
       Karol Wojtyla, Easter Vigil &
Other Poems,
77
Jesus
holds together all things?
·       The
pent-up energy of every atom
·       This
“swiftly tilting planet” (C.S. Lewis novel title) running in ellipses around
the sun
·       The
melting glaciers and expanding deserts
·       The
timbered rain forest and the new parking lot
·       The
Republicans and the Democrats
·       The
Syrians and the Kurds
·       The
white supremacists and the hated minorities
·       Our
“lowest depths” and “our heights”
·       “Life
and death”
Nobody
said that these things want to be held together. Nobody said that this work of
sustaining the world, of keeping it from flying apart in chaos, was easy or
simple or nice. Jesus holds together
·       Being
the image of God and being embodied in the church
·       Being
the firstborn of creation and the firstborn from the dead
Nobody
said that this can be explained. It can, however, be a source of amazement. It
can, however, be a cause for criticizing the power arrangements of empire and the
fake news that resistance is futile. (See
Brueggemann, Walter. Prophetic
Imagination: Revised Edition
(p. 82).)
Because
there is one thing does not survive the primacy of Jesus, one thing that
is not held together by our Lord: whatever else that wants to be first.
       Caleb and Jesse in the pool, swim
team
The
only way to survive the primacy of Jesus is to surrender. “He is before all things”
(Colossians 1.17). “He himself [is] first in everything” (1.18).
And
yet … and yet our delusions of grandeur do not bow the knee so simply. We tend
to resist to our last breath. We don’t want to say to our brother in the pool,
“After you.” We don’t want to say that to anyone else either. So, I appreciate
that this Christ the King Sunday also records for us the story of our
resistance to the kingdom of our God and of his Christ. We killed him. We
nailed him to a cross. We mocked his failed kingdom and his impotence. We even
went so far as to post the inscription: “This is the King.”
       It is the human story through the ages.
When Moses proclaimed the liberation of slaves to the empire of Pharaoh, he got
a firm “no.” And death was required for freedom. The prophet Jeremiah turned
grief into poetry and prayer because the empire was unable to recognize that
its end was near, violently resisting dramatic social change. When Jesus is
born, King Herod holds on desperately to a kingdom that is not his own,
slaughtering innocent children because they pose a threat. (See Brueggemann, 81-83.)
And when Jesus dies, every human being who ever lived or ever will live stands
in collusion with the powers of his time refusing to bow the knee, refusing not
to be first.
       In this way, and only because of the evil
at the core of the human heart, Jesus the firstborn of creation becomes Jesus the
firstborn from the dead.
I
need more language, more poetry, more hymn. The new song “So Will I” (aka “100
Billion X” Joel Houston, Benjamin Hastings, Michael Fatkin, 2017):
God
of creation there at the start
Before
the beginning of time
With
no point of ref’rence you spoke to the dark
And
fleshed out the wonder of light
God
of salvation you chased down my heart
Through
all of my failure and pride
On
a hill you created the light of the world
Abandoned
in darkness to die
We
do have another choice. Instead of resisting the kingdom, we can welcome it and
pray that Jesus remember us. That is, not only do we ask Jesus not to forget us
when kingdom comes. We ask him to put back together a person who has been
dismembered by empire and power – alienated, rejected, taken advantage of,
despised, betrayed. We ask him to re-member us, to make us whole. “Jesus,
remember me when you come into your kingdom.” In fact, it is because Jesus
remembers each of us that he can sum up all things.


[1]
Harris, W. H., III, Ritzema, E., Brannan, R., Mangum, D., Dunham, J., Reimer,
J. A., & Wierenga, M. (Eds.). (2012). The Lexham English
Bible
(Col 1:12–13). Bellingham, WA: Lexham Press.