Sunday 19 February 2023

Second before Lent: Stories of creation

 

Genesis 1.1-2.4, Matthew 6.25-end

 

I’d like to take you on a little imaginative journey today, back in time to the sixth century before Christ, and across the world to the city of Babylon. It is one of the greatest cities on earth, a cradle of civilisation and science, inhabited by people from across the known world, from every background and nation, each with their own cultures and stories. Some have chosen to live there but others have been taken there by force, exiled and sometimes enslaved people from the nations the Babylonians have conquered.

 

Imagine we are members of one of those groups forced to make a new home here. We are from Jerusalem, which now lies in ruins, destroyed by our captors. Years have passed, and those among us who remember Jerusalem are getting old and dying, leaving a new generation which doesn’t know the faith, the customs, the stories that had shaped our lives back there.   

 

Something needs to be done. The stories must be gathered together and written down, so that they can’t be lost. So that’s what we do. Scribes began to set to work, shaping the stories so they will be memorable, telling them, so they won’t be forgotten.

 

Let’s imagine ourselves, sitting around a fire in some rough shelter in Babylon, after another day’s hard graft, listening to our storytellers. Like all good storytellers, they start with something familiar, or something that sounds as if it will be, and the most familiar story in Babylon is the Enuma Elish, the Babylonian Creation story, known and told across the whole of the ancient Near East. It is named for its opening words “When on high” – that’s what Enuma Elish means. As the Jewish storytellers begin their story, they start with almost identical words,  “When God created” –  we think we know what’s coming because the phrase is almost identical in the original languages. But as we listen we’re in for a surprise.

 

The Enuma Elish, the creation story we take for granted, that we hear around us all the time, goes on to describe how Apsu the god of freshwater, and Tiamat, the sea goddess – who are symbols of primeval chaos - create a whole race of gods who fight with one another, kill each other and dismember each other’s bodies in an orgy of violence, creating the world as pretty much as a by-product. Eventually they make humanity to be their slaves, to do the work they don’t want to do themselves.

 

That’s the kind of story we’re expecting to hear. And at first, it sounds as if the story might turn out to be the same. There are chaotic waters, like Apsu and Tiamat, after all. But then it takes a very different turn. Instead of a host of divine beings at war with one another, there is one God who brings calm and peace and beauty and fruitfulness. And instead of humanity being created as an afterthought, as slaves at the bidding of these cruel gods, they are the crown of creation, the delight of the God who made them, entrusted with the care of the rest of the creation. Again and again, this God looks at what he has made and declares “it is good, it is good, it is very good…”

 

The story we are hearing, as we sit in exile, takes us off guard. It is wonderful, but, can it be true…? What would it mean if it was true…? Not true in the sense of being a literal historical account, but true in its message, that God loves what God has made, that it didn’t come about as the by-product of divine warfare, but was dreamed up in love, in all its rich diversity. What would it mean if life was not seen as a burden, one day’s hard graft after another, but a delight to the one who made it, designed to be enjoyed, even having a day a week set aside simply to do that? What would it mean if the world and everything in it, including us, was good and beloved in the eyes of God?

 

Now, I can just imagine someone among us sitting in that ancient Babylonian audience piping up at this point, “but it doesn’t feel good, this world that we’re living in. It feels brutal, and oppressive, and insecure, and we are treated as less than nothing. It feels much more like we were created by malicious gods who didn’t care about us.” And that’s often how it has felt, of course.  Whether its enslavement in Babylon or earthquakes in Turkey or war in Ukraine, or something more personal and closer to home, the world can feel far from blessed.

But maybe the storytellers might answer, keep listening, and let the tale unfold, and see what happens next. You’re right. The world often feels like a terrible mess, but see what that God does about it. So we keep listening and we hear that we’re not the first people to feel far from home, expelled from Eden, out in the wilderness, but we also hear about the God who goes out into that wilderness with his people, who speaks to them from burning bushes, and rescues them from an earlier enslavement Egypt, and travels with them through the desert. He promises them that he won’t forsake them, and he doesn’t. Suffering is real and baffling, and the Bible never soft pedals that, but God’s love is real too, and unstoppable.  

 

If we had been there in that Babylonian captivity, hearing that story, daring to trust its truth as it spoke of our belovedness and the belovedness of the world, what would it have done to us?  Instead of swallowing the lie that we were worthless, made only to work for cruel and capricious warring forces – human or divine – that ruled our world, it would have given us the strength to endure and to live and love again, eventually returning to our country and rebuild it. And that’s exactly what it did, and what it has continued to do for Jewish people ever since. As Christians we believe  it was and still is, wonderfully confirmed by the life and death and resurrection of Jesus, the one who shows us that “God with us” in flesh and blood. As Jesus reminds us in the Gospel story today,  and as this week’s earthquake has reminded us, controlling the world around us is often completely beyond our power,  but knowing we aren’t alone, that life isn’t pointless, that every person matters to God is a vital antidote to the anxious, and usually pointless, striving Jesus talks about.

 

And it all starts with that foundational Creation story. It's hard for us to understand how revolutionary this version was, how subversive, how life-changing, because we’ve lived with it for so long. We are more likely to fuss about whether it is literally true, and how it relates to scientific understandings – a great amount of energy is wasted on that sort of debate - but it’s not a story about faith versus science; it’s a story which asks us to consider what kind of God we believe in, and what our belief says to us and about us, and about all the rest of his creation, discerning his hand in all his works, and his likeness in all his children, as today’s special prayer put it. Do we look around us and hear God say “it is good”, and therefore treasure God’s world? Do we look at one another and hear God say “it is good” and treasure one another? Do we look in the mirror and hear God say “it is good” and treasure ourselves? What difference might it make to the world if we did?

 

Amen

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