This command that I give you today is not mysterious
and remote. You do not have to search the heavens or
cross the sea looking for it. No, it is very near to you.
It is in your mouth and in your heart. You only need
to carry it out.
Deuteronomy 30
Religion! Can’t live with it and can’t live without it! Religion! Wears you out and gives you life! Religion! So complicated and yet so simple!
Some of us who bother with
religion these days, often feel like the great prophet, Jeremiah. Jeremiah
tried his best to be faithful, tried to do what God had called him to do, but
he ended up so frustrated with all this “God-stuff” that he screams at God in
frustration, “You suckered me into this stupid mess and I fell it!” If he had
been a country music writer, he would have surely written the famous song that
goes, “Take this job and shove it. I ain’t workin’ here no more!” Like many
other saints, before and after him, he was close enough to God to get up in his
face and vent his frustration. St. Theresa of Avila, patron saint of liberated
women, is said to have let God have it in her convent chapel one time after a
disastrous trip, “Listen, God, if this is the way you treat your friends, no
wonder you don’t have many!” She was feisty, and her trials were many, so I
believe she probably did that pretty often!
Over the years, many
believers have worked through their frustrations with religion and remained
faithful, in spite of their deep disappointment. Many have gone on to become
great reformers in the church. Others have been God’s “fair weather friends,”
dropping out and moving on when the going got tough. Many among us don’t even give
God the time of day!
Jesus, himself, was known
for his frustration with the organized religion of his day. The ancient Jewish
religion, that he knew and loved, had become so tedious, so complicated, so twisted
and so burdensome that he actually went on a rampage outside the temple in
Jerusalem, whip in hand, kicking over the tables of the money-changers and screaming
in frustration.
In another place, looking at
how worn-down the average God-loving person of his day was, Jesus cried out,
“Come to me, all you who are weary and find life burdensome and I will refresh
you. For my yoke is easy and my burden light.” The “yoke and burden” he was
talking about was the “yoke and burden” of an overly complicated religion that
was crushing the people that it was supposed to lift up. “The ease and
lightness” that Jesus offered, in contrast, was the “ease and lightness” of a heart
given completely to God and the simple service offered to one’s neighbor. Just what had happened to the
religion that Jesus knew and loved? Where did it take such a wrong turn? Let’s see if I can explain it a little!
Let’s start with the fact
that the Ten Commandments were the heart of the Jewish faith and practice. Jesus’s spiritual
ancestors, the Jewish people of old, had struggled to live by them for
centuries. However, over time, living them in community had led to an immensely
complicated set of rule books, guidelines and ethical codes. When Jesus
was asked which of all those rules and regulations was the most important, he
cut through all those layers of complication and said, “love your God and your
neighbor as yourself with your whole heart! If you do that, you will fulfill
the whole law.” If you simply do that, you don’t need so many written laws.
Sadly, the Scribes and Pharisees
are back in our lifetime! Today’s self-styled “reformers” are not calling us to
heart-felt conversion and they are not calling us back to the basics with a convincing voice, they are
simply pulling old religious costumes and furniture out of the closet. dusting
off the old rule books and straining gnats while they swallow camels! They
don’t even seem to know what the real basics are!
Jesus was right! Pope
Francis is right! What the Church needs right now is not more gnat-straining legalism!
We need inspiration and that inspiration will only come from a church focused
on living the essentials of our faith. I cannot stress the need for
living the essentials enough. Personally, I am more interested in
inspiring people to live the ten commandments than in defending a marble
replica of two stone tablets on a courthouse lawn! The problem is not that we
have too few copies of the Ten Commandments around. The problem is that building
shrines to the Ten Commandments will never substitute for living them. If we as
a church were living them, they would be enshrined in us – “in our hearts” as
the first reading today puts it!
In our first reading today, God
tells Moses, the People of God and us, “My commands are written on your
hearts. All you have to do is carry them out.” We keep forgetting that - over and
over and over again!
There is an old story, a
favorite of mine, one I have told many times. It is similar to the Adam and Eve
story about losing the Garden of Eden. In my story, the first man and woman
lose the secret of happiness. As punishment, three angels meet to decide what
to do with the secret of happiness so that human beings would never find it
again. One angel suggested that they hide it among the stars. The idea was
rejected out of fear that someday humans would go to the stars and find it. A
second angel suggested that they hide it deep in the earth. That idea was
rejected, as well, out of fear that someday human would dig down and find it.
The third angel suggested that they hide the secret to happiness deep within
human beings themselves. The idea was agreed on because the angels knew that
human beings would never think to look there. And so, even to this day, the
secret to human happiness remains undiscovered within human beings
themselves.
Jesus did not come to
destroy organized religion, but to reform it, one heart at a time. The “church,”
no matter how defective it is sometimes, can never become an enemy for
Christians because it is the Body of Christ in the world. Christianity will
always be messy because it is a communal religion. Those who choose the “just
me and Jesus” brand of religion don’t actually know Jesus all that well. Jesus
told the assembled church when he left this world, “I will be with you always
and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it!” The church is one, holy,
catholic and apostolic, and yes, because it is made up of human beings, it is always
in need of reform. The reform of people is always about calling them back
to religious basics. The reform of church structures begins with the hearts of
people changing first - not the other way around! Changed people,
change things.
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