Because
I don’t draw a line between my religion and politics…
Christ
the King Sunday
“Not from Here”
John 18:33-37
No
one is born hating another person because of the color of his skin, or his
background, or his religion. People learn to hate, and if they can learn to
hate, they can be taught to love. For love comes more naturally to the human heart
than its opposite.
Nelson
Mandela
With our current political climate, you may ask why the
title of this sermon isn’t, “Testify to the Truth” Instead of “Not from Here.”
I recently read someone’s concern that our country is being desensitized by the
lies our President tells on a daily basis. A fear that we are worn down or worn
out by the barrage of falsehoods and fantastical fiction that emanate from a
man who fears the truth which is chasing after him each and every second. Truth
that will catch him in the end.
“The truth shall set you free,” Jesus said. The truth
will set us free. Truth will set our country free.
In our Gospel today, Jesus is on trial. He has done
nothing wrong except bring truth and hope and redemption to a very broken
world. The Jewish leaders are threatened. They are afraid of the one who says
their laws and their ways of conducting life and law are done. There is a new
King in town. The Messiah they won’t accept.
I don’t have a problem with the language of “king.”
Some people don’t like the male language. Obviously, all the kings we have ever
known are males. There have been good human kings and disastrous human kings. It
would be foolish to compare Jesus Christ to an earthly king. He is the perfect
King from the halls of heaven. We can’t begin to comprehend what this means. We
only have imperfect words and images.
He is the Shepherd King. The forgiving King. The King
of the heavens and earth. The Servant King. The King of Glory. The King of
ultimate love. The King of salvation.
The King who knows a sheep from a goat.
Jesus is not the Messiah anticipated by the forever
watching and waiting Israelites. He is not riding in on his trusty steed to turn
the Roman Empire upside down. He is turning the entire way of life upside down.
“Blessed are you if you are poor, mourning, hungering for righteousness, meek,
persecuted…”
Jesus the King of Kings and Lord of Lords is healing
the ones who bleed, who are sightless, who are voiceless, who are hopeless.
Jesus Christ the King of Kings and Lord of Lords
speaks the truth to power. Tells those who are cheating the poor out of their
pittance that they have to go! Those in the synagogue who wield power over the
powerless will soon find themselves out of a job.
Because Jesus Christ is the King of the World, there
is no singular group of people he came to save. He came for everyone. He is the
King of every nation and every tribe. Every race, color, and religion.
Right now, there is a caravan of people seeking hope
in our land that has plenty of room and plenty of promise. At least we used to.
Jesus Christ, the King of Kings and the Lord of Lords
is walking in the midst of the caravan from Central America. He is walking with
the young men who grow weary. He is walking with the mothers who can’t carry
their babies another step. He is walking with the old, the infirm, the sick,
the fearful, the desperate.
There are those in this country who did not need a
feast three days ago. They have more food than necessary but won’t share a bite
with the starving. There are those who believe their bank accounts will protect
them from everything, even death. Yet, they won’t share a dime with the poor.
There are those who spew hatred, lies, threats, violence, and other vileness.
They won’t lift a finger to help someone in need.
They certainly cannot claim to know Jesus Christ. They
have no clue who he is or what he stands for. Everything they do and say is
anti-Christ.
In our Gospel Jesus is on trial. He has done nothing
but change the world for good. Pilate is unaware of who he is talking to. He
only knows what the Pharisees and leaders have told him. Pilate has to decide
whether he should let this innocent man go or keep the Jews from unrest by killing
Jesus.
“So, you are a king?” Pilate asks.
“You say that I am a king…but as it is, my kingdom is
not from here.”
No, his kingdom is not from here. The kingdom of Jesus
Christ is the place where there are no more wars or rumor of wars. Where there
is no more suffering. Where there is no hunger or thirst. Where there is no
hatred, racism, or bigotry because we are all one race, the human race. The
kingdom of Jesus Christ is where love is learned and lived because it “comes
more naturally to the human heart.”
How surprised some people might be when they get to
heaven and find themselves serving those they have ridiculed, attacked, or
derided on this earth.
Because the Kingdom of God is not from here. Not from
this place where a man, the leader of our country, is so full of insecurity, small intellect,
and zero empathy. A man with a bloated body and an ugly little soul. A man who
would have a mother and child killed on the border or a young man beaten, or a baby
caged like an animal. A man who doesn’t care if men of color are shot down in
the streets of our cities. A man who wants to take away human rights – keeping people
from being who they really are. A man intent on destroying climate and creation.
Stealing from the poor and sowing hatred. No, these things are not Kingdom
Living. These things are the lashings of hell.
When there is a president who is so anti-Jesus Christ,
there is only one hope until he is taken away.
We are. We are the hope in the name of Jesus Christ. We
are the ones who will teach love to those who have been taught to hate. We are
the ones who share the food, the money, the time, the conversation, the love of
the King of Kings and the Lord of Lords. We are the ones who follow in his footsteps,
we carry his glory and grace to the world, we tell the stories of the Kingdom
of the Good Man. Where there is no more pain, or tears, or despair, or
prejudice, or bigotry, or cruelty. Our lives must be lived in doing all the
good we can until that day when we are welcomed into the Kingdom-not-from-here.
But the Kingdom-not-from-here is actually HERE now. The Kingdom into which we have been saved. He saved us even though he was falsely
accused, horribly beaten, and crucified on a cross. A King who rose from the
dead.
A King who can tell the difference between a sheep and
a goat.
He is the King of Glory. His Kingdom is here. His
Kingdom is now. It is where we dwell. Right here. There is much work to do.
There are people to feed. People to welcome. People to find homes for. People to
protect. There is healing to share and love to teach. There is so much to bring
in the name of the King.
Amen.
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