Sunday, 5 November 2017

Bible Sunday: Let the Word of Christ dwell in you richly

Audio version here 


Over the last week or so you may have seen events and articles commemorating the 500th anniversary of the Reformation. In a way, it’s a bit of an arbitrary date. What this anniversary has actually marked is the moment when, on Oct 31st 1517, Martin Luther, a German Augustinian monk, nailed 95 theses – 95 statements – to the door of a church in Wittenberg. They were statements expressing his disagreement with the Catholic belief in indulgences. An indulgence was a formal declaration granting “time off” for people in purgatory, an intermediate state between heaven and hell where the soul was thought to be cleansed. Prayers, pilgrimages and good works could all reduce the time you’d have to spend there after death, according to Catholic doctrine. It was always a bit of a dodgy proposition – there’s no Biblical basis for it – but it was when indulgences started to be sold on an industrial scale for cold, hard cash that opposition to the whole system started to build. Luther wasn’t the first to challenge the sale of indulgences – that’s why I said that this is a rather arbitrary date to fix the start of what we call the Reformation. Over a century earlier, the English priest, JohnWycliffe, had criticised them, and his followers, radical Christians who were scathingly called Lollards – babblers – had kept up the criticism since then, and been persecuted savagely for doing so. Luther’s 95 theses, nailed to the Wittenberg church door, were just another step in a long, slow process of reform, which would eventually lead to the foundation of Protestant Churches across Europe.

The thing that fuelled this reforming urge, both for Luther and the earlier Reformers, was the Bible. It was Paul’s letter the Romans which did it for Luther. As a conscientious monk – perhaps too conscientious – he’d tried so hard to live the perfect spiritual life that it had nearly broken him. “How can I be saved?” was his anxious question. As he read Romans, he was reminded powerfully that salvation was a gift from God. We’re saved by grace, by God’s loving decision and God’s loving action, not because of what we've done or ever could do. That wasn't a new idea, but things like the sale of indulgences had obscured it, because they gave the impression that God’s love could be bought or earned.  

Reading the letter to the Romans opened Luther’s eyes afresh to this central message of the Gospel.  And if it had opened his eyes, he knew that it could open the eyes of others too. But how would ordinary people ever discover this liberating message for themselves? Luther could read Latin, Greek and Hebrew. But most ordinary people never heard the Bible in a language they could understand. If you’d come here to Seal church at any time before the Reformation, the service would have been in Latin, including all the Bible readings. I don’t know how good your Latin is, but my guess is that most people here would have found it pretty hard to follow. It might seem crazy to us now to make it so hard for ordinary people to understand the Bible, but in a sense, that was the whole point.

You see, the Bible is a dangerous book. It’s full of dangerous ideas. It tells us that we are all equal in the sight of God, that God “casts down the mighty from their seats and exalts the humble and meek.” That’s good news for the humble and meek, but you can see why the mighty might not be so keen on it. As well as that, people were genuinely afraid that if untrained people read the Bible they might get it wrong, and imperil their immortal souls as a result. Better to leave the Bible in the hands of those who knew what they were doing with it, or thought they did!

No wonder the powers that be were worried when people like Wycliffe and Luther translated the Bible to make it accessible to all. Luther reputedly went down into the marketplaces of the town where he was staying and spent time listening to the way people actually spoke to each other, catching their idioms and rhythms of speech so that his translation would communicate with them, and it soon caught on. Back here in England Wycliffe had made a translation into English a century earlier. It had been banned – the penalty for owning one was death – but it had circulated widely and now William Tyndale began to make a new translation which, like Luther’s, captured the speech patterns of ordinary people. Tyndale paid for his presumption with his life, since Henry VIII was still staunchly Catholic at this stage. But ironically, less than two years later, after Henry’s break with Rome, he ordered that every church in the land should have its own English Bible, in a translation which was mostly Tyndale’s. Tyndale is said to have prayed as he died, “Open the King of England’s eyes”, and it seemed as if God had done just that.  

Those who’d feared that giving people access to the Bible in their own language would spark revolution were right to be afraid, because it did. It changed the world.  

I’m glad that today we have a Bible we can all read, but for all that, though, I’m not sure that Protestants have really been any better at truly “hearing the word of the Lord” than their Medieval Catholic brothers and sisters were. Anyone who knows me will know that I am pretty passionate about the Bible, and pretty passionate about finding ways of helping people read it. There’s the “Story of the Week” each week on the pew leaflet, the Good Book Club each month which discusses those stories. There are Home Groups, Lent and Advent material for reflection, and all sorts of other things. I care about this book immensely, but I’m also clear that the squiggles on these pages are not, in and of themselves, the word of God. God may speak to us through them, through the stories of those who have struggled with faith before us and left us this record, but he can’t be confined by this book, any more than he could be boxed up in the rituals of the Catholic Church, and when we forget that we soon get into trouble.

At the Reformation, Protestants knocked the statues of the saints off their pedestals, but often they then put the Bible on those pedestals instead. They insisted that every stroke of it had come straight from the mouth of God and should be obeyed as unquestioningly as Catholics had been expected to obey the Pope. Read it correctly – that is, the way those in charge told you to read it – and all would be well. They accused Catholics of idolatry, but then set about making an idol of the Bible instead. That’s a very dangerous thing to do. You can construct a justification for almost anything from the Bible if you pick the right verses; slavery, the oppression of women and LGBT people, imperialism and racism, even child abuse. The Bible gives very clear instruction that rebellious sons should be put to death (Deuteronomy 21.18-21), but I think you’d rightly get into quite a lot of trouble now if you obeyed that particular injunction. That’s why I think it is really important that we grasp that that this book, this physical object, these squiggles on these pages are not in themselves the Word of God. We can be enlivened, enlightened, challenged, comforted, blessed and transformed through them. We can feel God’s breath coming from the pages, but we mustn't mistake the creation for the Creator. The Bible is a precious treasury of wisdom, story, worship, warning and inspiration, but if we truly want to hear the word of God through it, we’ll need to work a bit harder than just lifting proof texts from here and there and assuming we've found simple answers to life’s complicated problems.

“Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly”, said Paul to the Colossians in the reading we heard today. I love that verse, because it’s a reminder that God wants his word to dwell in us, to make its home in us, to intermingle with all that makes us who we are and enrich us in the process. The “word of Christ” that Paul refers to here wasn't a book. It can’t have been, because this book didn't exist when he wrote to the Colossians. The Gospels hadn't been written yet. Paul’s letters were just scraps of paper circulating around the churches he’d founded. It would be centuries before the list of books we now find in our Bibles were finally agreed on, let alone bound in one volume like they are today.  

So, when Paul talks about the word of Christ, he isn't talking about words on a page, but something far more diverse than that. The people he was writing to expected God to speak to them in all sorts of ways; through the Hebrew Scriptures, but also through each other as they gathered together and shared in the fellowship of their churches, through prayer and prophetic utterance as well as through the stories they were told of the life of Jesus. It may all sound frustratingly vague. They, like we, would probably have like to have a neat list of rules, all bound up in one slim volume, to which they could effortlessly refer – that’s how the Bible ended up on that pedestal at the Reformation. But the truth is that if we try to treat the Bible that way we have to ignore its complexities, read only those verses that suit us, and when we do that, we lose its richness too. The only measuring stick the early church had to determine whether they were hearing God’s word, God’s guidance for their lives, was the measuring stick of love. Did what they were hearing build love and draw them together, or did it bring hatred and stir up division?  

I’m glad that here at Seal there are so many ways in which we can encounter this precious book, brought to us at so great a cost by those Reformation translators. But I hope that we’ll always have the courage to bring our own brains and hearts to it as we read it and hear it. It’s only when we do that the Word incarnate can speak through the words on these pages. It’s only when we do that that God can come to dwell richly in us and in our community bringing us his life, his love and his peace.

Amen. 

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