Saturday, September 17, 2011

Celebrating the Interruption of Death [cross-post]

Celebrating the Interruption of Death
by 

Two nights ago death was interrupted.  Duane Buck was set for execution.  His execution would have been the second this week and the eleventh this year in Texas alone… and two more executions are scheduled for next week.  When Presidential candidate Rick Perry celebrated his 234 executions as Texas governor last week in the debate, the audience roared in applause.  As a Christian I found that deeply disturbing.


There is an incident in the Gospels where Jesus is asked about the death penalty.


Here’s the scene.  A woman has been humiliated and dragged before the town, ready to be killed.  Her execution was legal; her crime was a capital one.  But just because it’s legal, doesn’t make it right.

Jesus interrupts the scene – with grace.

He tells all the men who are ready to kill the woman, “Let the one who is without sin cast the first stone.”  And of course he reminds us all that if we have looked at someone with lust in our eyes we are adulterers.  If we have called our neighbor a fool we are a murder.  You can hear the stones start to drop, as the men walk away. The only one who is left with any right to throw a stone is Jesus — and he has absolutely no inclination to do so.  We can see that the closer we are to God the less we want to throw stones at other people.


It is this dual conviction that no one is above reproach and that no one is beyond redemption that lies at the heart of our faith.   Undoubtedly it’s why the early Christians were characterized by non-violence, even in the face of brutal evil, torture, and execution.  Of all people, we who follow the executed and risen Christ should be people who are pro-life, pro-grace, anti-death.


The last 2000 years of Christianity have been filled with those interruptions of death.  After all, many evangelicals believe that Jesus’ own death on the cross was an interruption (“the wages of sin are death, but the gift of God is eternal life in Christ” Romans 6:23) – according to conventional evangelical wisdom, our sin would warrant us all the death penalty were it not for Jesus.  How then can we who have been spared death so quickly become people who are ready to dish it out?


Besides, much of the Bible is written by murderers who have been given a second chance — like David (who committed adultery with a woman named Bathsheba and then had her husband killed).  How can we rejoice in death, even the death of a “terrorist” like Osama bin Laden when half of the new testament was written by a terrorist named Saul of Tarsus (who went door to door trying to kill the early Christians before his radical transformation), whose conversion was so radical it was as if “scales fell from his eyes” (Acts 9:18) and so fundamental that he changed his name.


The interruptions of death continue.  I recently heard a friend of mine who is living in prison tell me his story… a story very similar to that of Duane Buck in Texas.  My friend, admittedly and regrettably, committed a terrible crime.  But the victim’s family were Christians, and so in court they argued against the death penalty.  They insisted that we are all better than the worst things we do, and that no one is beyond redemption.  And they knew that there is something wrong with killing someone to show that killing is wrong.  Because of their persistent grace, my friend was spared the death penalty.  In prison, he pondered their words, and began reading the Gospels… and became a Christian.  To this day, his life is a resurrection story.


Our Gospel is a Gospel of grace, in spite of how scandalous grace may be, and in spite of all the ways we Christians have forgotten that grace.


When Duane Buck got the news last night that the execution had been stayed, these were his words: “Praise the Lord Jesus. God is worthy to be praised. God’s mercy triumphs over judgment, and I feel good.”


This is the good news – mercy triumphs over judgment (James 2:13).  Death has been interrupted by grace.  No one is beyond redemption – no one – not King David or Saul of Tarsus, not Duane Buck or you or me.


Their stories, and our own, remind us that we should never write any one off.  God’s grace is bigger than our mistakes.   Death Thou Art Dead.


May the interruptions of death continue.  And may our lives become a part of the interruption.

—-

Shane Claiborne is a prominent author, speaker, activist, and founding member of the Simple Way.  He is one of the compilers of Common Prayer, a new resource to unite people in prayer and action. Shane is also helping develop a network called Friends Without Borders which creates opportunities for folks to come together and work together for justice from around the world.

From the UCC Network: 09/17/2011 "Shout Out to Sunday School Teachers"


Shout Out to Sunday School Teachers

Excerpt from Psalm 105: 1-6, 37-45

"Then he brought Israel out with silver and gold, and there was no one among their tribes who stumbled."

Reflection by Anthony B. Robinson

It occurs to me this being Saturday, and early in September, there may be a fair number of folks preparing their first Sunday School lesson of the year today (or tonight). Thank you. Thank you for teaching, for telling the story, for loving the kids, and for helping all of us in the church to fulfill our baptismal promises to our children and their parents. It matters.

The long 105th Psalm basically tells the story of Israel and thus the story of God, or part of it. One of the main things we are up to in Sunday School is helping people learn and love the stories, the great stories of our faith.

Some opening lines from the novel Ceremony by Native American author, Leslie Marmon Silko, have stuck with me. "I will tell you something about stories . . . They aren't just entertainment. Don’t be fooled. They are all we have, you see, all we have to fight off illness and death. You don’t have anything if you don’t have the stories."

Imagine that: stories as health care! Stories to strengthen our immune system, set our broken bones and mend our torn hearts.

As people of faith, we have lots of amazing and wonderful stories. Together they make up one big story. It's the story of a God who created this good world and all of us in love and won't ever give up on us. It's the story of a God who has the first word and will have the last one, and that word is "Yes." It's the story of a God who finds a way when we don't, and who will be the way through life's many dangers, toils and snares.

So Sunday School teachers (preachers and parents), tell the stories. Furnish the imaginations of your children and adults with the stories. They aren't just entertainment. You don't have anything if you don't have the stories.

And Sunday School teachers: thank you.

Prayer

Dear Lord, bless all those who are your storytellers tomorrow. Grant them such grace that they may be so caught up in your story as to forget themselves and be truly found alive and anew in you. Amen.
Anthony Robinson 2011
About the Author
Anthony B. Robinson, a United Church of Christ minister, is a speaker, teacher and writer. His newest book is Stewardship for Vital Congregations, published by The Pilgrim Press. Read his weekly reflections on the current lectionary texts atwww.anthonybrobinson.com/ by clicking on Weekly Reading.