Sunday, 7 March 2021

Lent 3: Out of the house of slavery


Audio version here

Exodus 20.1-17, John 2.13-22

 

One of the words I’ve been very aware of over this last year is the word “household”. Covid regulations have decreed that there have been things we can only do in household groups. That’s been hard on some who live alone, though it has been possible to form “support bubbles” – extended households if you like. It’s been hard on some who live with others too, if there are tensions or abuse within the household. Whatever size and shape our household is, though, we’ve been stuck with it, and maybe that’s made us notice its blessings and drawbacks afresh, the effect we have on each other, the connections – and disconnections – which shape our lives.

 

We’ve been interconnected in a wider way too. Neighbours have helped one another, communities have looked out for each other. But we’ve also had to deal with the dilemmas about how far to curtail individual freedoms for the sake of the common good. We’ve been reminded that none of us can live for ourselves alone. No man is an Island, entire of it self; every man is a piece of the Continent, a part of the main.” as John Donne put it in the 17th century.

 

In the world of the Bible people often had to face the same dilemmas we do. How could they live together as a community? It was a question that was especially pressing for the ex-slaves Moses had led out of Egypt on their long trek to their new home in the Promised Land. Slavery had shaped their whole lives, the way they saw themselves, their dreams and expectations, or rather the lack of them. What was the point of dreaming if you were someone else’s possession, theirs to do what they liked with? But freedom sometimes felt tougher than they expected, as they trekked around the desert.  Again and again, they looked back to Egypt. “At least there we had food to eat - leeks and garlic and cucumbers and melons, Now there is only manna! If this is freedom, you can keep it !” they said. At least slavery was familiar. Whose household did they belong to now? And what should that household look like?

 

In our Old Testament Reading, we heard the answer to those questions in the shape of the list of rules which we now call the Ten Commandments. “I am the Lord your God” they start. These people belong to God – he is the head of this household. Why? BecauseI brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of slavery.” That’s the household they had been part of – the house of slavery -  but now God declared that they will be his household, his family. That’s why the Ten Commandments start with God. We’re not free-floating individuals, they remind us. We can’t be. We depend on one another, on God’s good earth and its fruitfulness, and ultimately, therefore, on the God who gave it to us. That’s something we are becoming painfully aware of as we see the effects of climate change and ecological devastation.

 

The commandments go on to remind us that God can’t be reduced to the size of a convenient idol that we can kid ourselves we own or control. We can’t treat him, or his name, as a lucky charm or magic formula as if we had the power to make him do our bidding. Keeping the Sabbath day, too, reminds us that we are in God’s hands, not he in ours. We can rest because God is in charge, not us.

 

When we know this, the rest of the commandments – those instructions not to murder or steal or commit adultery or bear false witness or covet what is not ours – fall into place. If we are God’s children, members of his household, then so is everyone else; they deserve to be treated with respect and care.

 

One of the distinctive things about these Jewish commandments was that they applied to everyone equally; rich or poor, powerful or powerless. In the legal systems of many of the nations around Israel, the punishments for murder or stealing or adultery were different for different social classes. A rich man who killed a poor man might have to pay a fine to his family. A poor man who killed a rich man would be executed. In Israel it wasn’t so. There was one law for everyone. Of course, it often didn’t always work out that way – it often still doesn’t – but it was an important principle, and one which our own legal system still preserves.

 

So, the Ten Commandments aren’t just a list of dos and don’ts. They are about identity and belonging. They tell us who we are, because they tell us whose we are, and we forget that at our peril.  

 

By the time of Jesus, the household of God had built for itself a literal house, the Temple in Jerusalem. It was the symbolic centre of their faith and of their nation, the place where they came together into God’s presence. It should have been the embodiment of that way of life which treated everyone equally. But we are all flawed and fallible, and it’s clear from today’s Gospel reading that all was not well in this particular family home.

 

Scholars argue about what, specifically, so enraged Jesus as he stormed into the Temple with his whip of cords. It may have been the fact that the stalls he overturned had almost certainly been set up in the Court of the Gentiles, the only place in the Temple which was open to everyone, including those who weren’t Jewish. Their place to pray had been stolen from them. They had been excluded. The selling of animals and the changing of money may also have placed a disproportionate burden on those who had very little, especially if the prices had been hiked and the exchange rate manipulated. The Temple was, as Jesus put it “my Father’s house”, a place where God’s people – all people – should have been able to feel at home, part of the household, equal members in it, but that wasn’t so, and Jesus was furious.

 

Whose house was it? Whose household was it for? Did it belong to the Temple authorities? Did it belong to the traders? Or did it belong to God, the God who had brought his people out of the “houses of slavery”, places where people were exploited, and where some lives counted while others didn’t? This isn’t a story about whether it’s right to sell things in church. It’s a story about what it means to say we are God’s people, what kind of household that means we should be building and how we should live in it together.

 

Households, as I said at the start, may come in all sorts of shapes and sizes. They may be wonderful, loving places, or places of struggle and pain – or both at the same time. But these readings remind us that our truest household is the household of God, a household which embraces all humanity, all creation, in which everyone is precious. St Paul said that God is the one, “from whom every family in heaven and in earth takes its name” (Eph 3.15). God calls us to learn to live as part of his household, and to find in it the perfect freedom he wants for us all, which is seen not in rugged independence – go it alone, grab-what-you can and the devil take the hindmost – but in lives that are shaped by the knowledge that we belong to him and because of that we belong to one another too.

Amen

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