Sunday, 1 March 2020

Power and its abuse: Lent 1






Today’s Gospel story, for all its strangeness, is one we’ve probably heard many times before. The danger is that it can just go in one ear and out of the other. Jesus in the wilderness, fasting forty days, tempted by the devil, stones into bread and all that stuff. Its impact can be blunted even more by the fact that we know how it’s going to end. It’s a foregone conclusion, isn’t it? Satan will be out-argued and sent packing by Jesus – after all, Jesus is the Son of God, and the rest of the Gospel would be a bit pointless if he fell at the first hurdle.  

But just imagine that you didn’t know how it was going to turn out. Just imagine you were hearing it for the first time. What if Jesus made the wrong choices?

Matthew means us to take this story seriously, to allow ourselves to wonder like that, to let the suspense be real, because he knew that the temptations facing Jesus’ were temptations that face us all. The Christian communities he  was writing for struggled to know what to do in the face of persecution and the challenge of trying to form a united community from the wide variety of backgrounds they came from.  Life was tough, as it can be for any of us. It was tempting to look for an easy way through, an easy way out, even if that meant taking moral shortcuts, turning a blind eye to what was right.
Knowing that Jesus – even Jesus – had struggled as well mattered to them, and it matters to us too.

Jesus was about to begin his ministry.  He’d just been baptised by John the Baptist in the Jordan and, as he’d come up out of the water, he’d heard a voice from heaven saying, “This is my Son, the beloved” . What does that do to you, to hear something like that?
He’d been given power by his Father. He would also be given power by those he ministered too, as they opened themselves up to him, desperate for hope and healing, guidance and teaching.  He’s being called to use his power, but he knows that power is dangerous. Power can do damage as well as good.

The news these days is full of stories of the abuse of power. Despotic rulers abuse their power over nations. Bullies abuse their power in the workplace, in school, on social media. And of course, day by day we hear an ever-lengthening, doleful litany of stories of the deliberate abuse of children and vulnerable adults. This week Harvey Weinstein was finally convicted of rape, and the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse reported on abuse in Westminster and its cover up. Abuse scandals have emerged in every sphere of society, in sport, in education,  in entertainment  and, of course, in the Church too.

There have been a number of high profile cases. Peter Ball, a former bishop, John Smyth who ran Christian camps for boys from public schools, Jonathan Fletcher, once a leading light in the Evangelical wing of the Church of England. Last week well-founded allegations emerged about Jean Vanier, a Catholic layman who founded the inspirational L’Arche communities where able bodied and disabled people live together. He died last year, and in the wake of his death six women so far have come forward independently of each other to report that he coerced them into unwanted sexual activity over many years. He was widely regarded as a living saint, a spiritual superhero, so it must have been incredibly hard for them to blow the whistle on him, and very brave of them to do so.

As well as the cases that hit the headlines, of course, there are many more which don’t, cases which may never be reported at all. The majority of abuse happens within the family, which ought to be the safest place of all.  

What unites all these cases is power. Abuse can take many forms:  sexual, physical, emotional, spiritual. It may take place in the workplace, in the home, in the church, in schools, in voluntary organisations, but all abuse is rooted in the desire, the all-consuming need, of the abuser to have power over those they abuse. “Look what I can do to you” they say. ”Look what I can make you do. And there’s nothing you can do about it because it’s my word against yours and I am someone people look up to. There’s nothing you can do about it because I am your boss, your leader, your parent, your teacher, your spouse, your priest, someone whose love or support or approval you need, someone you’ve been told to trust, someone you wanted or needed to trust, someone you’ve thrown your lot in with, and you can’t imagine what will happen if you challenge me.” Abusers abuse because it makes them feel powerful, in control, even if it’s all based on lies.

We’d like to suppose, of course, if we are half-decent human beings, that those who can do these awful things are fundamentally different from us – monsters – but the raw truth is that wherever there is power, there is the possibility of its abuse, and power is something that all of us have, even if it is only the power of a cutting word, a snide comment, the threat of the withdrawal of friendship which keeps others down.  Abuse of power doesn’t have to be dramatic to be dangerous. It doesn’t have to reach the level of a criminal act to inflict real damage on others.  We all have power, and that means we can all use it abusively.  

That’s why this story of Jesus’ temptations matters so much, because it reminds us that even he could have abused the power he had. Even he had to take that possibility seriously and wrestle with it. And if he did, then so, surely, should we.
The temptations to abuse power which Jesus faced, are ones that face us all as we contemplate our own power and how we use it.

His first temptation was to turn stones into bread, to use his power to satisfy his own hunger, to meet his own needs, rather than the needs of others, which was what that power had been given for. In pastoral, caring situations we may be tempted to help others because it makes us feel good about ourselves; it feeds us the bread of affirmation, makes us feel worthwhile. But when we do that we treat the people we are helping as if they were just put there to satisfy our hunger, our need to be needed, rather than respecting them as autonomous individuals independent of us, who we should be encouraging to live their own lives.
We can treat the natural world as if it is just there to satisfy our hunger too, rather than respecting it for itself. Stones are, after all, meant to be stones, not bread. We may not be able to change them from one into the other, as Jesus perhaps could, but we can, and do, transform the worlds' natural resources of oil into polluting plastic and aviation fuel. We can, and do, transform Amazonian rainforest into pasture land or palm oil plantations just because we fancy a cheap burger or some cosmetics.  That’s a form of abuse too.

Jesus’ second temptation is to throw himself off the top of the Temple, to prove to himself that he really is who God says he is. God will surely catch you, says Satan “if you’re really his Son!  The normal rules won’t apply to you, not even the law of gravity.”  Those who abuse others often try to argue that they’re special, exceptional, deserving different treatment from the rest of humanity. They often seem to believe that they’re above the law. They’re astonished, as Harvey Weinstein was, when the law disagrees. It might not seem as serious, but if we howl in outrage when someone is mean or insulting to us, but don’t see or acknowledge when we do the same to others, we are doing the same.    

Jesus’ third temptation is to use his power to rule by might and fear. Satan offers him “all the kingdoms of the world and their splendour” if he will only worship him. For most of human history empires were won and kept by armies, by terror, by repressive force. Roman rule was certainly like that. Gladiatorial games and public crucifixion reminded people what would happen if they didn’t submit. If Jesus had accepted Satan’s offer, he would just have become another vicious despot like all the others. We may not have armies at our command, but most of us can muster a whole array of petty cruelties, cutting words and subtle threats if we feel we need to, leaving others scared to challenge us. We know what buttons to press to make people do what we want.

Abuse of power isn’t just found in those high profile cases. It’s something we can all be guilty of
That’s why we need to hear this story of Jesus in the wilderness again and again and again. And we need especially, of course, to hear how Jesus resists  the temptation to abuse his power, if we are going to do so as well.

Jesus knows, and acknowledges, his own hunger, but he also trusts that God will give him what he needs, so he doesn’t have to grab anxiously for food.

He doesn’t need to prove that he is special in his Father’s eyes by putting God to the test either. He knows he is, just as he reminds those he meets that they are too.  He knows he’s ultimately safe, that he can’t fall out of God’s hands, even if he falls right into the abyss of death, as he will when he is crucified.

And he doesn’t need to rule the world by might, because he knows that the only rule that really lasts will be the rule of love, which is stronger than any worldly kingdom could be.

In the desert Jesus takes his power seriously. He takes the possibility that he, even he, might abuse it seriously. He hears the devil out; taking seriously the temptations he lays before him. But in the end he resists those temptations, because he’s rooted and grounded in the love of God.

As we begin this season of Lent, with so many reminders of the abusive potential of power, we are called to do as he does; to recognise our power, to know both its gifts and its dangers, and, in response to that, to root and ground ourselves more deeply in the love and wisdom of God, so that we can use it wisely.
Amen

If you need help with any abuse you have suffered or witnessed, you can find help and support here. 

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