Psalm 106:1-6,19-23
Christians at the time might have had some
misgivings, some discomfort, about the cross of Christ being co-opted as a
symbol of war. But, on the other hand, how grateful they must have felt to be,
finally, on the side of power instead of persecution. To be able to breathe
easy in this world at last.
This is something that all humans crave: safety…security.
We want it. Christians in the Roman Empire wanted it, people in all times and
places want it.
We desire things that are certain, things of which
we can be sure. It is in this space of desire that our idols are born.
The Israelites, as we read last week, had decided
they could be certain about Moses. They told him, “You speak to us, and we will listen.” And so a
routine was set in motion: Moses would go have private conversations with God
on the mountaintop, and then he would come down and speak to the people.
But on this occasion, the people grew anxious, and
their certainty foundered. Moses was gone too long, they felt. And anyone who
has waited for a loved one to get home, long after they were expected, it is a
familiar feeling. We get anxious and we worry. And we want to do something to
relieve our anxiety.
The people turned to Aaron and demanded: If we
cannot have Moses, we need another god, so make one for us – a god that we can
see, a god that will go before us. And
Aaron set about the task of doing just that – fashioning for them an idol.
They had lots of good material to work with, because
they had managed to get plenty of gold on their way out of Egypt. I suppose the
Egyptians at that time were also quite anxious. After the plagues that had
befallen them, they were anxious to have the source of their sorrows be gone,
so they were happy to give the Israelites what they wanted if it would get them
out of the country.
Aaron took all this gold stuff and fashioned an
idol. Something they could worship.
Now, this feels very odd to us, doesn’t it? We know
better than to think there is any real power in a gold statue. But let’s take a
moment and think: What is attractive to you? What is valuable to you? What is
it you feel gives you any kind of power? A healthy bank balance?
A career? Thinness? These are the things that may become idols. You can even wrap
a veneer of holiness around it, as Constantine did when he carried the Christ
symbol into battle. But an idol is an idol.
It is important for us to know and accept that we
too are prone to fashioning idols, that is, forming allegiances to things – little
gods – that we think will go
before us. It is important for us to know that when we have lost our certainty
and want it back; when we have decided it is all up to us, to fashion that god,
to serve it and sustain it, then we are, like Israel in the wilderness,
choosing to worship an idol.
Now, while down at ground level Aaron was feverishly
making a golden calf and leading the people in worship, the Lord says to Moses,
“You know, your people are doing some idol-worshiping down there.” And Moses
was apparently speechless, because he said nothing. Then, the story has it, God
goes on to say, “Moses, I’m done with them. I’m going to go down and incinerate
them. Then you and I can start over.”
Certainly, God could do that. We have the story of
Noah, in which God decided – not to incinerate the whole lot, but to wash it
all away. Drown it. The fact that we look at this story of Noah as less than
factual – we call it pre-history, more myth than fact – that doesn’t matter.
The fact that we tell these stories means that we believe them, in some way;
that God can destroy all life on earth if that is what God chooses.
But it is here in this moment that Moses finds his
voice, and he implores God to turn his wrath away from Israel, to give them
another chance. Just as Abraham did so many years earlier, Moses asks God to
reconsider, and God relents.
The psalm today is a song of praise for God and all
the wondrous things God has done, and it retells this story, of how God turned
away God’s wrath from Israel. But the psalm gives credit to Moses, too. It says,
Moses stood in the breach –
The breach that had been created by the people’s
weakness and sinful behavior, their desire for certainty.
A breach that was formed when they turned away from
trusting Moses and trusting God and deciding that they needed to put their
trust only in things that they could see.
A breach that formed between God and God’s people
because they chose a lesser god. Moses put himself in the breach.
There is no point, really, in assigning blame or
finding fault or tsk-tsking the Israelites because the things the people did,
the things Aaron did, are things we all do. We seek out certainty, we crave security,
we believe that we have to make a way for ourselves in this wilderness world.
We want a god of our own making who will go before
us, guiding us, strengthening us, leading us through our wilderness days.
As the Israelites did.
As the Christians of the Roman Empire did.
We let things come between us and God, making a
breach.
When they are feeling uncertain, insecure. When God
seems to have been away too long and we just can’t figure out what God is doing
– then we turn to our own devices.
And so my thoughts turn again to Israel and
Palestine.
I know I cannot speak for Jews. Neither can I speak
for Palestinians. But I speak as an American Christian when I say that the
breach we see in Israel and Palestine grieves me deeply. I speak as a Christian
when I say that the people of Israel have suffered unspeakable harm by the
actions of Hamas and there is nothing to say about that other than to condemn
the cruelty.
But I also speak as a Christian when I say that the
Palestinians who live in Gaza are suffering as well. And they will continue to
suffer as the war rages on.
For me, as a Christian, there is no us versus them
in this matter. Love is not a zero-sum game. Suffering, sorrow, and need do not
belong to one side or the other. This is the human condition.
As long as humans continue to hate, to punish one
another, this suffering will continue. And there will be the temptation to
incinerate the other, as the story says God was tempted to do.
I question, though, if this was really God’s desire
or the desire of humans who would like to speak for God.
Nonetheless, as the story goes, Moses stood up for
reconciliation. As the psalm says, he stood in the breach. He stood for mercy,
for life and all the hope we have that life will go on.
I wonder if you and I might do the same – stand in the breach.
To appreciate the righteous anger of a people harmed
way too much for way too long.
To understand the tender love that they have for
their children, for their parents and grandparents.
To remember the shared humanity we have with them.
and them. and them.
After all, we all came from the same place.
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