I was not the only person who did this sort of
thing. There were always kids and their parents walking around this church with
their fundraisers and their missions, hitting church members up for a few
bucks. Some days it did feel like being at the temple in the midst of the
merchants and money changers. Which, we know, Jesus does not like. And that is
a little bit puzzling because it’s not totally clear that what they were doing
was wrong.
We need to examine what was going on outside the
temple that day. It was business, but in service to religion. There were
merchants there, selling cattle, sheep, and doves because there were people coming
to the temple to make their offerings. An offering required a sacrifice, and so
they needed cattle, sheep, and doves to hand over to the priest.
And there were money changers there because these
pilgrims who were arriving had come from all the surrounding lands, and they
needed to exchange their various coins for a currency that would be acceptable
at the temple.
Certainly, there were some very frustrated and
bewildered Jews watching Jesus throw a fit and toss the tables and their wares
all about the place. They wondered what they were supposed to do now. Where
would they get their cow, or sheep, or dove to make their offering? Where would
they exchange their currency, so they could make their temple payments?
These merchants and money changers were doing a good
thing, performing a needed service, according to the religious system of the
day. So it is not clear if Jesus took issue with the merchants and money
changers, or if it was the whole temple system, itself, that bothered him.
Or, perhaps, both. In any case, I think it is safe
to say that it had something to do with the people losing their purpose,
because their institution was losing its grounding.
Institutions are important, because they keep people
together, working toward the same things, grounded in a set of shared values.
The institution of the temple in Jerusalem was very important for the people of
Israel at that time; it was the center of their faith and the way in which they
practiced their faith. No matter where they lived, the people had to make these
pilgrimages to the temple because this was the way they practiced their
religion. Very much like the way we attend church services.
We know now that the temple truly was in decline at
that time. In the year 66, the Jews revolted against the Roman empire, which
lasted about four years. It ended when the empire came in and destroyed Jerusalem,
including the temple. The temple was never rebuilt.
When Jesus entered the temple on that Passover week,
the temple was near its end. Within a few decades it would be gone. The
institution of the temple would crumble.
Now let’s fast forward to the year 2024. We have
come through the COVID-19 pandemic, which threatened all our institutions.
Every way in which we were accustomed to coming together for work, for worship,
for service, for play, all came to a crashing halt.
But, if we look back to a few years before we even
heard of COVID-19, we know that many of our institutions were showing signs of
distress, crumbling. Fewer people joined clubs and civic societies. Union
memberships dwindled. Schools struggled to meet their missions. And church
numbers were falling off dramatically. As our culture has changed, our
institutions have been damaged. Many people have said that COVID-19 did not
instigate these changes but simply hastened them along. And if things continue
in this direction, it is conceivable that these institutions will meet their
end just as the temple met its end.
But –
When the temple was destroyed, Judaism did not end.
It was re-invented. The Jews found a new way. And the religion shifted from its
central focus on the temple to a focus on the home and the community synagogue,
away from the priestly leadership toward the rabbinical leadership. Which was something
that probably seemed unimaginable before it happened. But it was a change that
needed to happen.
The temple system that existed back in Jesus’ day
had been compromised. Some of the leaders worked in league with the Roman
empire for their own benefit. The system of offerings and sacrifices had become
compromised, enabling some merchants and money changers to profit handsomely
from it, exploiting people who had no choice but to do business with them.
A change needed to happen.
Jesus said the temple would be destroyed and in
three days he would raise it up. And as John very helpfully tells us, he was referring
to the temple of his body. On Good Friday, his body was destroyed, and three
days later raised up again. This is good news. Jesus lives; in every work of
compassion done in his name, Jesus lives. Through our hands and our feet and
our hearts Jesus lives.
I believe what we need to hear today is that
buildings can be destroyed, but we will continue. Bricks and mortar will
crumble, but the church will continue. Even systems that we cherish, systems
that hold us together and help to give us a sense of meaning and purpose, these
can fall, but the church of Jesus Christ will continue. And the church will thrive
if we care enough to defend it.
If we care enough to defend it. And sometimes
defending it requires tearing down and throwing out what has been compromised,
what does not serve us or glorify God.
Perhaps there are things that need to be torn down
or thrown out.
The church systems, we can clearly see if we are
looking, have been compromised. By church leaders who abuse, embezzle, and exploit.
They have been compromised by churches that sell out their mission in all kinds
of ways, from coercing members to vote for certain candidates to renting their
electronic sign to firearms businesses. They have been compromised by churches
that cut their mission budgets because they are afraid to ask people to support
them. The church has been compromised by congregations that worship their
buildings more than their God. The church has been compromised by people who
care more about having the right language – whether we are talking about
political correctness or legalistic dogma – than having a right heart. Let us
count the ways the church has been compromised.
And maybe it is time for some things to be torn
down. The important question we must ask is what will be raised up in their place?
We don’t really know what the church will look like
in the future. But no one will ever know, if you and I don’t care enough to
wonder about it and dream about it and try to live into it. If we don’t care
enough to keep one foot firmly planted in the realm of God while we tend to the
life of the church in this world. For all I know, this beautiful building may
not last through the century. But the church, you and I, will find a way to
carry on Christ’s ministry to the world if we care enough to do it.
We are the ones, you and I. Tell me: what will we,
with God’s help, raise up together?
Photo by youssef naddam on Unsplash
No comments:
Post a Comment