Holy Saturday
All
around me there is activity, people who spring into action, who don't
just sit there but do something. Into the stillness of my body and
mind irrupts the image of him who waited for the Kingdom of God and
never found it; who said positive things about Jesus without
following Him; who got courage when it was too late for courage; who
spoke up to the mighty when the risk was low; who came through with a
big donation to cover up his unwillingness to offer and present his
self. Joseph, Joseph .... how often have I met you in others, even in
myself! On this eerily quiet day I can suddenly see so clearly what's
wrong with the human race. We yearn for God's presence and reject or
ignore it when it is in our midst. We think ourselves religious
because we have some notion of a Higher Being “up there”, some
basic morality, and a concept of judgment (all of which we mean to
circumscribe Christianity), but we can't bring ourselves to
discipline, to discipleship, to sit and learn from Him, to be
changed. We wax bold when others have paid already, with their
reputation, careers, even their lives, for their timely witness and
fearless proclamation of the gospel. We mightily and forcefully
lament and bewail the manifold sins and wickedness of ages past and
distant rulers while the beam in our own eyes makes us legally blind.
We throw money at whatever problem we perceive, we are generous with
what we have as long as we can withhold our selves, our souls and
bodies. We are doing much but change neither ourselves nor others. We
practice charity because it makes us feel good and gives us a raison
d'être.
We “adopt” children in far away countries but neither care nor
know what impact our actions have on their indigenous culture; we
feed the hungry but refuse to acknowledge the role we ourselves play
in creating that hunger; we are generous without ever wondering why
it is that we can be generous. We tell the world that we are needed
because we want to save it whilst, at the same time, we ignore the
Master's injunction about those who would gain the whole world and
lose their souls. Why is it that we are able to attract people to
projects with appeal, “ministries” which “serve” someone in
need, while the ministry offered to us in study, prayer, worship, and
learning is such a hard sell? Joseph, o Joseph: so much, so late, so
useless!
I want this Saturday to be holy. I want to be, to sit, to look at the
sepulchre. But noise disturbs me, the noise of hectic, frantic
consultations, of planning sessions and committee meetings, of
negotiations, deals, and gives and takes. If Joseph was trying to
work out his past, Pilate and his cohorts are managing the future.
Damage control. Spin doctors. How to handle the fall-out from all of
this. If Joseph wanted his dead Jesus out of pious sentiment, Pilate
wants Him because of political security. He is a career man, someone
who looks to the future. His story is history, over and out. Let
there be no sequel. Nothing worse than a man who is relevant, who
connects, whose life and death mean something. A living Jesus: the
ultimate nightmare! Our creed rushes us from the birth from the
virgin Mary to the crucifixion under Pontius Pilate, not a chance to
pause and ask: who was He? What did He say? Why did our hearts burn?
Pilate, Pilate …. as I sit still and contemplate the sepulchre I
begin to understand. Humans want the dead Jesus, a failed but
appealing hero, someone they can put up on pedestals, whom they can
lift higher and higher until He is out of sight, until He becomes an
object of worship and not the One who called us friends. We want His
tomb to be sealed, guarded by a cohort, we want Him tucked away in
tabernacles and sanctuaries or locked into the doctrinal system of
the Holy Trinity. How much energy went into keeping Jesus in the
tomb, embalming, preserving, worshiping a relic? The chief priests,
the Pharisees, the soldiers, Pontius Pilate, even the suspected
disciples: they are not the enemies but the friends and promoters of
religion. They bequeath a cult to us, a kind of ancestral faith. The
only good Jesus, they seem to say, is the dead one: He died for our
sins, He paid the price, His cross is what matters, forget His life,
don't go there, it may, well: it just may change you! The cross is
what humans do to that which gives life. As long as we are allowed to
reminisce, to engage in hallowed ceremonies remembering Him who once
was we will be successful in keeping Him at arms' length. As long as
you worship Him (by all means) you won't have to follow Him. Thank
Him for His death, rejoice in His departure for the heavens, and
forget about His real life among us.
I have decided to be, to sit, opposite the tomb, for one day, from
sunset to sunset. For twenty-four hours I wish to be caught up in
this dark, black hole which is my Self. Before and after. I want to
learn how to mourn (how blessed that is!) the death of Him who was,
an