The
theme for this Second Sunday in Lent is “OF SATANS AND SAVIORS”
. The text is from the Gospel of Mark: “So Jesus, turning
around and seeing his students, reproached Peter, saying,
‘Get yourself behind me, you Satan, because you are not thinking
of God’s concerns, you are thinking of human concerns!’” Let
us pray . . .
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The
early followers of Jesus had three names for the influences
in their lives that opposed or blocked what they understood
to be the will of God–Diabolos (which means to “throw across”),
Baalzebub (which means “Lord of the Flies”) and the name Jesus
uses in our text today, Satan (which means “adversary” or
“accuser”). In the Hebrew Bible, as in mainstream Judaism
to this day, Satan never appears as most of us have come to
know him–the heated supernatural leader of an evil empire,
the corrupt commander of hostile spirits who make continual
war on God and humankind alike! For as Elaine Pagel writes
in her powerful book The Origin of Satan, “In biblical
sources the Hebrew term “the Satan” describes someone who
plays an adversarial role. It is NOT the name of a particular
character!” The “Satan” can be anyone who takes on the specific
purpose of “blocking or obstructing” another person’s path.
And thus whoever is fulfilling the role of “the Satan” is
serving as an adversary against the will and way of God in
the life of another human being. Interestingly enough, the
Greek term for a Satan is “Diabolos”, later translated as
Devil, which literally means “someone who throws something
across the path of another.”
So
maybe now we can begin to explore why the author of the Gospel
of Mark uses the word Satan in reference to Peter. The Lectionary
is a bit messed up this week because it leaves out Peter’s
dramatic confession of who he thinks Jesus truly is! Alas,
what the author of Mark joined together, the Lectionary now
brutally rends asunder! For just prior to our text today
Jesus and his students are traveling through the villages
of Caesarea Philippi. And while they are in this Gentile
territory Jesus asks his students a question: “Who do folk
say that I am?”
His
students begin to answer him–“Some say that you are John the
Baptist! Others say that you are Elijah! Still others say
that you are one of the prophets returned in glory!”
“But
who do YOU say that I am?” Jesus quickly responds!
And
so it is that Peter–good, dedicated, rock-solid Peter-- speaks
up: “You are the Messiah!” Peter blurts out–believing that
he is fully cognizant of who Jesus is and the role he is
to follow and the path he is to take. And don’t miss this
crucial detail–for the title of Messiah was not one to mess
around with–for the Messiah–the Anointed of God-- was to be
the one who would restore the Kingdom of David with a swift
and mighty sword The Messiah was to be a warrior King filling
the highways and the by-ways with the blood of Roman troops
while ascending the Davidic throne with amazing glory and
abundant honor! This is, more than likely, the image that
is rumbling around in Peter’s head as he makes his passionate
statement of recognition. This is the lense through which
Peter now sees Jesus–believing him to be the Mighty, Kick-Ass
Savior for whom everyone was waiting!
But
wait–for now we must listen to what Jesus says in our text
before us today! Instructing his students, Jesus says to
them that the son of humanity will have no easy ride–for he
will have to undergo many hard and difficult things. The
elders and the high-priests and the cannon-lawyers will not
rejoice over him but rather they will reject him! Jesus will
not be welcomed into a royal court but rather he will be rushed
off and hung up on a criminal’s cross. There will be no
mighty sword to unsheathe–for instead, in its place, Jesus
will be forced to take up the burden of misery and the broken-ness
of suffering. There will be no honor bestowed upon him–only
harsh and hate-filled beatings. There will no be glory given
unto him–only the gory hammering of nails into flesh and
his slow asphyxiation unto death.
So
do you see? All that doesn’t sound very Messiah-like! How
could Jesus claim to be the Son of Humanity–the peoples’ Messiah–without
laying claim to the Davidic throne? How could Jesus fulfill
the role of Savior of the people if he was to suffer, and
be humiliated, and left for dead? How could he refuse to
take up the sword when he could plainly see the suffering,
and the pain, and the abject poverty of people living and
dying under Roman rule? An eye for an eye–right? A tooth
for a tooth! Vengeance is mine–vengeance is OURS–says
the Lord!
Is
it any wonder, then, that Peter, as Eugene Peterson puts it
in The Message, “grabs Jesus in protest”–grabs
him so as to shake some sense into the one whom he thought
was a Savior, the one whom he thought was the peoples’ Messiah?
But
Jesus’ response to Peter and his protest is swift and direct!
“Get yourself behind me, you Satan–you who would block my
path, you who would be my adversary as I follow on my journey,
you who would have me take on a role that is radically different
from the role I am called to live out and fulfill!”
And
seeing his students wavering ,the author of Mark tells us,
wondering what to believe, Jesus turns to them and says, “Peter,
you have no idea how God works! Anyone who wants to come
with me must now be willing to wash their hands and take up
their own cross. All of you must refuse to run from suffering–for
instead you must be willing to embrace it. So follow me now
and I will show you how! Self-help is not help at all–for
self-sacrifice is the way, my way, to saving yourself, your
true self! For what good would it do to get everything you
want and lose you, the real you, the God-given you? For what
could you ever trade for your soul–although many of you have
tried!”
“So
here it is–up front and simple! If any of you are embarrassed
over me and the way I am leading you when you get around fickle
and unfocused friends, if you feel self-conscious when I speak
about my role as a different kind of Messiah, then know this
well! You will be an even greater embarrassment to the Son
of Humanity when he arrives in all the splendor of God!”
“Get
yourself behind me, you Satan! For you are not thinking of
God’s concerns, rather you are thinking of concerns that are
human!”
So
there is our text today in context. There is our text
today in contemporary terms. And I hope that by debunking
both our understanding of Satan and our understanding of
what Peter perceived to be the Savior’s role, we too might
find some access to this text, some association with its meaning
and its message. For how many of us here today are Satans–people
who serve as adversaries against the will and way of God in
the lives of other human beings. And let me be blunt about
this! We are Satans when we buy products that are produced
by folk who are paid minimally and who are preyed upon continually
by corrupt corporate interests. We are Satans when we , as
a nation, impose our will and way upon other countries–throwing
stumbling blocks across their ability to self-govern while
tenaciously blocking opportunities for them to self-determine
their own futures. We are Satans when we allow some to live
in luxury while others are forced to live in abject poverty–a
reality as close to us as the over-pass to East
Palo Alto! We are Satans
when we intentionally throw stumbling blocks across the future
of our faith community–locked in to what we believe is the
right way, the liberal way, the only way, for our community
to function and formulate its future yet to be.
“Get
yourself behind me, you Satan!”–Jesus says to all of us this
day! “For you are not thinking of God’s concerns–rather you
are thinking of concerns that are human!”
But
we must also acknowledge this day those things, those situations,
those people, who are serving as Satans in the midst of our
own life and living–those who are serving as our adversaries
or as those who are blocking or obstructing our own life paths
and journeys. Our Satans may be an employer, or a life-partner,
or a situation toward which we cannot give voice. Our Satans
may be an abusive parent, or an abusive spouse, or an abusive
sibling–situations where we desperately need healing, and
health, and wholeness. Our Satan may be someone who deals
only in hate-filled gossip, or in in-house lies, or the manipulation
of the truth for their own benefit–but still Jesus cries out
to them, in support of us, “Get behind me, you Satans–for
you are not thinking of God’s concerns–rather you are thinking
of things that are human!”
It
is Bishop Spong who writes, “No barriers could block the
path that Jesus was taking! No obstacles could destroy the
love of God that was seen in the life of Jesus. It was a
love that swept over every human pain and pretension. It
was a love that transcended the religious definitions of what
was thought to be clean and unclean, holy and unholy. Such
a love called for profound changes in the human psyche. Such
love called for openness, for the death of prejudice, and
for the end of any human isolation. Such love pushed every
personal and political Satan aside—allowing people to journey
freely on God’s path of grace, and tolerance, and trust!
It
is that path—the path of grace, and tolerance and trust—that
we are called to journey on this Lenten season. But to undertake
such a journey we must be willing to acknowledge those Satans
that are blocking our own path. So too, we must acknowledge
if we ourselves are standing as Satans for others—throwing
obstacles across their journey to wholeness and joy-filled
living.
Today,
at the Prayers of the People, you will be given the opportunity
to come forward and to give name to those Satans that are
blocking your path or those ways in which you are standing
as a Satan for others. You then will given the gift of having
your hands washed so that you can begin your Lenten journey
anew—refreshed and released from all that binds and blocks
your way! Thanks be to God! AMEN.