RVC’s
Weekly Spiritual Essay
March
13, 2005: FIFTH SUNDAY OF LENT
Readings
Ezekiel
37:12-14
Romans
8:8-11
John
11:1-45
Though
the theme of today’s three readings is God-given life, each looks at this life
from a different perspective.
Ezekiel,
who knows nothing of an after-life as we know it, delivers Yahweh’s promise to
his fellow-Jews during the Babylonian Exile. They eventually will return to the
Promised Land, even if Yahweh has “. . . to open your graves and have you rise
from them, and bring you back to the land of Israel.” These words often confuse us. The prophet’s not announcing a definitive resurrection from
the dead, but a temporary resuscitation.
Yahweh will carry through on Yahweh’s promise, even if it goes against
the “laws of nature.”
Paul
isn’t speaking about resuscitation when he reminds the Christian community in
Rome, “. . . The Spirit . . . will give life to your mortal bodies . . .” He’s simply stating the common early
Christian belief that those who imitate Jesus’ dying by giving themselves to
others, are already experiencing a form of Jesus’ life right here and now, even
before they physically die. “If
Christ is in you,” he writes, “although the body is dead because of sin, the
spirit is alive because of righteousness.” We’re experiencing this life as we hear these words, the
life our ancestors in the faith would have given their lives to receive. Though the Spirit will give us a
different, eternal life later, Paul believes we should rejoice in the life we
also have now.
John
offers a third dimension of life.
One of
the reasons John’s Jesus raises Lazarus from the dead is to demonstrate that he
can also raise us from the dead.
But the evangelist adds something to the mix, something quite radical in
John’s day and age.
The
earliest Christian belief about rising from the dead presumed Jesus’ followers
would have to cool their bodies in the grave until he returned to claim them in
the Parousia. Only then would he
collect them from their graves and take them with him to heaven. Paul writes about this in Chapter 4 of
the first piece of Christian literature: I Thessalonians.
A change
in this belief triggers the Martha/Jesus dialogue in today’s gospel. “Lord, if you had been here, my brother
would not have died . . . ,” she says.
“Your
brother will rise,” Jesus replies.
Falling
back on her old-time Christian belief, Martha responds, “I know he will rise,
in the resurrection on the last day.”
Then
Jesus gives the new-fangled resurrection theology John’s community had
evolved. “I am the resurrection
and the life; those who believe in me, even if they die will live, and everyone
who lives and believes in me will never die. Do you believe this?”
A few
years before John wrote, Luke had altered Paul’s idea about our staying in the
grave until Jesus’ Second Coming by composing a story in Acts in which Stephen,
the first Christian martyr, sees Jesus coming for him at the moment of
death. Luke believed each disciple
of Jesus can expect to have his or her personal Parousia when they die.
John
carries Luke’s theology one step further.
No longer do we have to wait until death to be with Jesus. The life we’re expecting in the future
has begun long before our physical death.
What we perceive as death is just a doorway into another way of
experiencing the life we already have.
Our
readings tell us that the more we become one with Yahweh/Jesus, the more we
notice things about life which we never perceived before. Just as we mature in our physical
lives, our sacred authors presume we more deeply appreciate and understand the
life into which our faith brings us.
From Ezekiel to Paul, to Luke, to John, there are no limits on this
understanding.
One wonders where our biblical theology would be taking us today if someone hadn’t stopped adding books to the Bible in the second century.