Skip to main content

Complicity and the System - Sermon for Easter 3B (Acts 3)

 


Acts 3:12-21


When Peter and John went to the Temple to pray, a man who had been crippled since birth called out to them, begging for alms. I’m guessing that Peter and John had seen him before this, but this time they responded. Here is their reply laid out in the form of a song I learned long ago

Silver and gold have I none,

But such as I have give I thee,

In the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth, 

rise up and walk.

He went walking and leaping and praising God,

Walking and leaping and praising God,

In the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth, 

rise up and walk.”

If you had been in the crowd and had seen this man “walking and leaping and praising God,” how would you have responded?

When Peter saw that a crowd filled with amazement was gathering in Solomon’s Portico, he knew it was time for a sermon. Peter opened his sermon by letting the crowd know that it wasn’t the power or piety of Peter and John that made the man whole. It was faith in the name of Jesus, the one whom they had crucified and whom the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob had raised from the dead, that made him whole.  

Now, Peter’s sermon poses a problem because it’s one of those passages in the New Testament that seems to blame the Jewish people for the death of Jesus. That in turn has been used to justify anti-Jewish and anti-Semitic actions, including the Holocaust. So, when we approach a passage like this, we have to reject any interpretation or application that would denigrate Jews and Judaism. If we remember that this is one Jew speaking to other Jews, then perhaps we can hear in Peter’s sermon a word for us as Christians today. 

What I hear in Peter’s sermon is a warning about the power of systems that can suck us in without us even realizing it. Consider what Peter says in verse 17 about acting in ignorance. What Peter was saying here is that the people who perpetrated this murder of Jesus had been caught up in a system called the Roman Empire.

When we think about the systems of this world that can take hold of us, it is worth pondering the word we hear in chapter 6 of Ephesians. What we read there is that we are involved in a battle that’s not with flesh and blood but with powers and principalities. In other words, our battle isn’t against human beings it’s with systemic and structural evil (Eph. 6:10-13). That requires a spiritual response.

One of those systems is white privilege. If we don’t acknowledge this privilege then it can lead to racism and racist acts. One of the ways the system takes hold of us is through the creation of stereotypes, which can then be used to label people, and then marginalize them. What Peter is saying to us is that it will take more than political activism to change the situation. True healing requires repentance so that we can view the world through a different set of lenses. That is, through the lens of love. 

We’ve been given a helpful lens in the inclusion statement we adopted when we became an “Open and Affirming Congregation.” This statement is a lens of love that begins with repentance and from there it leads to a willingness to learn from others and hear voices that have been historically silenced. From there healing of the soul, even the soul of a nation, can take place. Repentance, therefore, has implications for the systems we inhabit and that inhabit us.  

To give an example of how this might take place, I’ll point to the “Stop Asian Hate” rally I attended last Sunday afternoon. I went there not as a speaker or a leader, but simply to listen to the stories told by people who have been marginalized by our society. One of the messages I heard was a call for repentance on the part of those of us who are complicit in the system. That is a call for repentance on the part of those of us who have benefitted from the marginalization of others.  

While Peter issued a call for repentance, he also offered a promise to those who heard his message and chose to repent of their complicity in the execution of Jesus, whom God raised from the dead. Peter promised that if we repent then God will wipe away our sins. That means getting a fresh start in life by adopting a new outlook on life. Mark Andrew Jefferson puts it this way: “True repentance is an embodied disruption to the forces that distort God’s image alive within our neighbor and in creation” [Connections, p. 222].  

The good news is that if we recognize and acknowledge the systems that enslave us through repentance then we can experience liberation from these systems. As we experience this liberation, we will have the opportunity to participate in the times of refreshing that come to us through the name of Jesus, whom God raised from the dead. 

Peter closes his sermon with an intriguing promise. He tells us that Jesus will remain in heaven until the “time of the universal restoration that God announced long ago through his holy prophets.”   Of this day, Jürgen Moltmann writes that “what is meant is nothing other than the restoration of all things, the homecoming of the universe in the form of what Irenaeus called the recapitulatio mundi.” [Moltmann. The Coming of God, (Kindle Locations 3467-3470)]. But, until that day comes, we must navigate this world and its systems, drawing on the wisdom of the Holy Spirit who opens hearts and minds to the systems of this world so that we might move toward that day when all things will be restored. 

Preached by:

Dr. Robert D. Cornwall, Pastor

Central Woodward Christian Church (Disciples of Christ)

Troy, MI

April 18, 2021

Easter 3B     


Image attribution: Gerung, Matthias, approximately 1500-approximately 1570. St. Peter Healing the Crippled Beggar, from Art in the Christian Tradition, a project of the Vanderbilt Divinity Library, Nashville, TN. http://diglib.library.vanderbilt.edu/act-imagelink.pl?RC=58591 [retrieved April 17, 2021]. Original source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ottheinrich_Folio228v_Act3.jpg.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Salt and Light -- A Sermon for Pentecost 24B (Matthew 5)

Matthew 5:13-16 Our stewardship theme this year asks the question: What Shall We Bring? The sermon text for next Sunday is Micah 6:8, which asks this very question: “What does the Lord require?” As we think about these questions, I can share this word from the introductory material that guides our season:   “Stewardship is about more than money. It is a whole life response to the abundant generosity of God.”  Of course, money is part of the equation, but stewardship is about more than that, as we see in today’s scripture. The word of the Lord for us today comes from the Gospel of Matthew.  Jesus is sitting on a hillside, somewhere in Galilee. He’s delivering what we call the Sermon on the Mount. When we hear these words about Salt and Light, it’s good to know that Jesus has just finished revealing the Beatitudes. He tells the people what it means to be blessed. There are different blessings accorded to different kinds of people, ranging from the poor to the peacemakers. 

The Bread of Life -- A Sermon for World Communion Sunday

John 6:41-51 Each Sunday Tim Morehouse mixes up some bread, which he hands to me at the end of the service so I can hand it off to a visitor.  It’s always hot bread, so with a little butter or without butter if that’s your choice,  one can make a meal of it on the drive home!  It’s offered as a sign of welcome and hospitality.      While bread is a useful sign of hospitality, it’s also a sign of something much deeper.  Bread is often referred to as the staff of life.  Along with water, bread is the foundation of human existence, which is perhaps what Mahatma Gandhi meant when he said:   “There are people in the world so hungry that God cannot appear to them except in the form of bread.”  This physical hunger is so powerful that it must be tended to if we’re to be open to anything else in life. Remember how the people of Israel complained to Moses about the prospect of starving in the wilderness.  Slavery in Egypt was bad, but they wondered whether freedom was worth

Standing Firm

Isaiah 50:4-9a "Sticks and Stones may break my bones, but names will never hurt me." That’s what you’re supposed to say when bullies pick on you and call you names. It would be nice, if names didn’t hurt, but from experience I can say – it’s not true. Names do hurt. Indeed, we’ve discovered that verbal abuse can be just as damaging to a child as physical abuse. James understood this to be true long before the psychologists caught on. He called the tongue a "restless evil, full of deadly poison." Indeed, the same tongue that we use to sing praises to God, we also use to curse those "who are made in the likeness of God." (James 3:1-12). Today we celebrate Palm Sunday, and as we wave our palm branches and triumphantly process into church the excitement begins to build. Yes, this is a time to shout out words of praise and give thanks for God’s gift of deliverance. Oh, if things would just stay like that, but if you know the story, you know that t