Sunday 18 April 2021

Jesus, Philip and our identity

 Luke 24 36b-48(49)

The two disciples who had met Jesus on the road to Emmaus tell the apostles in Jerusalem:

36 While they were still talking about this, Jesus himself stood in the midst of them and said to them, “Peace be with you.” 37 They were startled and frightened, thinking they saw a ghost. 38 He said to them, “Why are you troubled, and why do doubts rise in your hearts39 Look at my hands and my feet. It is I myself! Touch me and see; a ghost does not have flesh and bones, as you see I have.”

40 When he had said this, he showed them his hands and feet. 41 And while they still did not believe it because of joy and amazement, he asked them, “Do you have anything here to eat?” 42 They gave him a piece of broiled fish, 43 and he took it and ate it in their presence.

44 He said to them, “This is what I told you while I was still with you: Everything must be fulfilled that is written in the Law of Moses, the Prophets and the Psalms about me[i].” 45 Then he opened their mind to comprehend the Scriptures. 46 He told them, “This is what is written: The Messiah must suffer and rise from the dead on the third day, 47 and repentance for the forgiveness of sins will be preached in his name to all nations, beginning at Jerusalem. 48 You are witnesses of these things. 49 And, behold, I send forth the promise of my Father upon you – but stay in the city until you are clothed with power from on high.

Lord, bless what I say that is true, and correct my errors in the minds of these kind hearers. Amen

With even the most prominent people, there can be confusions about identity.

Prince Phillip told the story of when he and the Queen (when she was still Princess Elizabeth) visited the US in 1951. Churchill had just won the General Election, and a splendid but somewhat confused elderly lady greeted the Queen with “I’m so pleased your father’s been re-elected!”

Somebody standing next to her said “No, No dear, that was Winston Churchill”. At which point the lady turned to Phillip and said “O I’m so pleased to meet you!”

But here there is no confusion about Jesus’ identity.  In Luke’s account, the women (inducing Mary Madgalene, Joanna and Mary the mother of James) who come to the tomb are told by “two men in dazzling apparel” that Jesus is risen, but when they tell the apostles they are not believed.  Then Jesus appears to two disciples (one called Cleopas) on the road to Emmaus. The Catholic & Orthodox traditions suggest that this is the same as Clopas in John 19, whose wife was one of the women at the Cross. But they don’t recognise him until he breaks bread with them and vanishes. So the two disciples rush back to Jerusalem to tell the apostles, who say “The Lord has risen indeed” and has appeared to Simon.  And then, for the first time, the risen Jesus appears in the midst of them.

Before we get onto this passage, its worth noting two important points. First, we’re pretty sure that Luke names his sources. Luke is saying: I actually spoke to Cleopas, Joanna and the two Marys; this is how I know. Secondly: all four Gospels agree that it was the women who first knew about the resurrection, but only Luke tells us that they told the apostles but were not believed. This is certainly not a story you would make up if you were trying to convince people of the resurrection! Nor if you were trying to show the heroic Acts of the Apostles in a good light. Luke includes it because he’s convinced it’s true, and important. (Luke BTW is full of stories where the women come off better than the men. He tells of Mary, Martha’s sister, sitting alongside the other disciples at Jesus’ feet – this is obscured in English translations but in the Greek, para-kathetheisa, it’s perfectly clear). And in Acts he pays a lot of attention to Priscilla, who I think was the author of Hebrews).

And while they were still talking about this, Jesus himself stood in the midst of them and said Shalom – It’s the normal greeting: it literally means “peace” but it doesn’t just mean the absence of strife, it is God’s peace, that surpasses all understanding.  The Psalm set of the day (Psalm 4) concludes:

8 In peace I will both lie down and sleep well

For You, LORD, solely, make me safely dwell.

But they are startled and terrified. Why? Well partly because (as we know from John’s Gospel) they kept the door locked for fear of the Jewish authorities. But also because they think they must be seeing some kind of ghost or apparition. Matthew, Mark (and John) all tell the story of the disciples being frightened when Jesus came to them walking on water, for the same reason. So Jesus does what he needs to do to prove to them that he is not a ghost. They can touch him, and he eats with them. This does not, of course, mean Jesus believed in ghosts, just that he knew what the disciples believed about ghosts. And then he explains:

Everything must be fulfilled that is written in the Law of Moses, the Prophets and the Psalms about me.” Then he opened their mind to comprehend the Scriptures.

The whole of the Old Testament (the Law, the Prophets and the Psalms) points to Jesus, and only in the light of Christ opening our minds can we comprehend the scriptures.  The problem with the Pharisees and with the Jewish leaders was not that they didn’t know the scriptures – they knew it inside out!  But they didn’t comprehend them: the word (suniEmi) literally means “bring together” but in the NT it occurs 26x (and 8x in Luke/Acts) meaning comprehension or insightful understanding. All scripture must be read in the light of Christ. The Lord who has truly suffered, truly died, and has risen indeed!

There’s another interesting point in the Greek which doesn’t normally come across in translation. The NIV says “he opened their minds” but the Greek is singular: he opened their mind. Luke says in Acts they were “all continuing steadfastly with the same mind (homo-theumadon) in prayer” and Jesus in John prays that the disciples “may be perfectly one”.

Jesus says that his disciples are witnesses to these things, but he says something more. He is going to send forth the Holy Spirit (“the promise of my father”) on them and from then they will be clothed with power from on high and can go out from Jerusalem and change the whole world. As they did. The word for “send forth” is exapostellw the same root as apostle.

So what does this mean for us?  

It’s clear that something happened at the first Easter!  A tiny band of utterly demoralised followers of an executed Rabbi and wonder-worker, who never even wrote a book, became a movement that conquered the mighty Roman Empire and 2,000 years later has roughly 2Bn people worldwide. The disciples were very clear what had happened: the Lord had risen indeed!  And no-one has ever been able to offer a credible alternative explanation that fits the facts.

Georges Lemaitre was a brilliant cosmologist who showed in 1927 that what we now call the Big Bang provided a solution to Einstein’s equations. This idea was strongly resisted – it sounded far too much like Creation (and Lemaitre was also a Catholic Priest) but in 1965 scientists discovered the Cosmic Background Radiation which is essentially the echoes of the Big Bang throughout the Universe.

In a somewhat similar way, we too are witnesses to Jesus’s resurrection. We cannot see the event itself, any more than cosmologists can see the actual Big Bang: but can read the careful accounts of Luke and others, drawing on eyewitness testimony. And we can also see for ourselves, nearly 2,000 years later, the echoes of the resurrection throughout the world. “Clothed with power from on high” we, as a church, are called to proclaim the Gospel, so that (to use Peter’s words from Acts) “times of refreshing may come from the Lord”.

This is not simply an individual effort. We are all called to play our part in the Body of Christ, each with the gifts we are given. We are not all evangelists, but we must all support the spread of the Good News in the ways we are best able. It is a collective effort, best achieved when we are “all continuing steadfastly with the same mind in prayer.” And remember, we are not on our own. Jesus says (Mat 18.20) “for where two or three are gathered together in my name, there I am in the midst of them” -the same words as Luke uses in this passage.

Archbishop Justin said this of Prince Phillip: “He knew who he was, and his faith was central to who he was and how he lived his life. He worked out his call to serve and follow Christ in the context of his own unique calling.” None of us has anything like that public profile. But we are each equally beloved in God’s eyes. God cares for each and every person just as much as He cares for the most celebrated. We each have our own unique calling, to serve and follow Christ.

This is our story. This is our song. This is our identity. And let us pray, that as we serve, and as we help to bring the good news to people who need it so badly, they will be inspired to say, without any confusion, “O I’m so pleased to meet you!”