Showing Love or Complicit in Betrayal
Tony E Hansen
Sermon John 12: 1-8, Psalm 126, Philippians 3:4-14
Opening prayer
Judas is not portrayed well by the Gospel. Judas is rebellious, thieving, deceitful and treasonous. (It is for that last one that Dante puts him in the center of Hell. )
It is one of the reasons some criticize portrayals like those from Jesus Christ Superstar that suggest more sides of Judas.
I am open to questioning spaces between the lines for there is much we don’t observe in the writing. What is missing? There could be ego of those involved (or the writing) that cloud perspectives because we know victors often write the history.
Is Judas given an unjust bad rap where others have masked their own jealousy and sins upon Judas? (Sins like jealousy have a remarkable abilities to stain truths and perspectives.) Or, is Judas really sinister with selfishness, greed and betrayal as written in the Gospel.
Betrayal is hiding intent, posing to be a friend, or pretending to understand words when instead we walk away in quiet disgust. What didn’t we like and why not speak up instead of plotting downfall?
Betrayal destroys not just one but whole communities.
Judas receives (wanted or not) silver in order to hand Jesus over to whom? They who plot not only Jesus’s demise but that of Lazarus too. (Hmm is it curious to note religious folks plotting murder? How uncanny.)
Judas watches the feet washing, observes expensive product used and questions why. Gospel suggests there may be greed behind the question.
(Side question: why didn’t any of the group raise concerns about Judas with the purse if it was known Judas would help himself to its contents?)
I often hear folks talk about how poor people should give up their cellphones - like communication with the world holds no value - like poor can give up what they, those claiming, would not give up. Folks, that is simply a shroud over bigotry. That bigotry is a form of betrayal.
Here, Mary is showing love to Jesus by washing his feet with expensive perfume.
Remember during the Last Supper, Jesus washes the feet of those who follow him but also the betrayer, the liar, and all who cower in fear. Jesus did this despite knowing that was going to happen.
Jesus shows that love to the disciples, regardless of what they do to Jesus.
Even though Jesus knows what Judas, Peter and the rest of them will do, Jesus washes all of their feet in the same way that Mary has done.
Having that kind of knowledge, you and I might be looking for doorways.
That isn’t to say, we should accept relentless and prejudiced lies and deception, but in our last time on earth, what good is wishing ill-will? In fact, what good is that in “normal times”?
Instead, between these two scenes, Jesus shows loves to the disciples in the way that Jesus has been shown love by Mary.
Why? Above all else, despite all of our concerns, things we want to do and even all the things that irritate us, this, this is what Jesus wants us to do: to show love and forgiveness that has been shown to us.
Similar to last week’s parable, the parable ends with forgiveness and love while urging us to do the same.
Why? A righteous life, a diligent life, a purposeful life, without Christ, without compassion and forgiveness, that effort loses purpose and meaning
When we don’t practice forgiveness and love with those around us (including those who hurt us or who don’t look like us.)
What is to be written about us who perhaps say we are blameless or even imagine ourselves wearing “the whole armor of God” when there is emptiness inside.
If we are silent during injustice, if we do not carry true compassion inside our hearts nor God’s understanding that is hypocrisy, elitism, and betrays the words of Jesus.
Inaction is just the same as the betrayal of Judas because it is all an act, pretending, and just the motions.
Our silence, when injustice shows its ugly face, makes us complicit.
What damage can that do?
Friendships, marriages, families, churches and whole communities have been destroyed because of betrayal, hypocrisies, elitism and silence.
The role of complicit persecutor or the actual betrayer is dangerous. When we are complicit, we watch Rome burn and do nothing.
Maybe since someone tells our history a little nicer, we might think to ignore truth. Malarky.
Being complicit with injustice does not absolve the sin but reveals us as participants, and God knows.
“Not my monkeys, not my worry.” Maybe, it should be.
Instead, the psalmist reminds us we are to be “bearing the seed for sowing…” and witness the Lord with all of us.
Similarly, even though Paul persecuted Christians, he realizes the error of his way and he converts into a believer of Christ. Paul as a non-believer goes blind on that road to Damascus and is born into Paul that witnesses Jesus.
Paul has an Easter moment because Jesus forgives in life and beyond.
Paul witnesses, is forgiven, converts, and becomes more than a guy on the road.
Paul, to Philippi, says everything (that he was) became nothing compared to witnessing Jesus in his life. That is because having all the knowledge in the world, or doing the right thing simply fail without knowing the gifts that come from Christ.
We all have suffering, and sometimes, like Judas, we are angry, resentful or questioning our Creator, but we are here no less.
Thankfully, God has big shoulders for us all, especially in those moments.
We do fall short even when we think we are doing the right things. Sometimes, we lose reason. For we are among the dead walking the streets with many excuses and many broken thoughts.
However, if we truly listen to Jesus speaking to us through the Spirit, there is reason to care. There is possible. There is love and forgiveness.
With faith in Christ, we can truly live when we leave the skepticism aside and live our baptism - to be born into Christ.
That is part of Easter (not just a date on a calendar).
Easter is coming and can happen for you now. Are you ready?
With our Creator in our hearts, our words and our being, we are true love to others that has been (and continues to be) poured out for us.
We are lights in the darkness.
When we do that, it spreads from one to the next and the next.
That is love and life beyond excuses, beyond reason, and beyond measure. That is true love embodied into and beyond this community. Then, the Spirit works us, opens eyes, and teaches us.
Jesus is forgiveness in life and beyond. When we truly embrace that, we become more than we ever were, and distractions that we thought were important fall away.
Walk with the love that cleans us all. Let Mary touch and wash Jesus and let Jesus touch you and wash you.
Then, in turn, we wash others with forgiveness and love, even those who are different than us.
Then, Beloved, we truly can say that we follow Jesus instead of a betrayer’s fate.
Find the love and forgiveness that is beyond measure, beyond price, and beyond death and let that be the Spirit speaking to us today.
Thanks Be to God