
RVC’s
Weekly Spiritual Essay
December
19, 2004: FOURTH SUNDAY OF ADVENT
Readings
Isaiah
7:10-14
Romans
1:1-7
Matthew
1:18-24
It always
disturbs me to participate in inter-faith dialogues when the Muslim
representative quotes the Koran about Jesus or Abraham. In their sacred writings, these two
pillars of our faith are depicted quite different from the way we see them in
the Christian and Hebrew Scriptures.
Against all rules of dialogue, I’m often tempted to blurt out, “Why don’t
you read about them in the original documents, not in your 7th
century rewriting of them?”
Of
course, I never actually say anything like this, not just because we’re
dialoging, but because we Christians are guilty of the same thing.
No
Christian author rewrites the Hebrew Scriptures better than Matthew. In just his first two chapters we find
more than a half dozen references to Jewish writings which he claims are
predictions of Jesus’ coming.
Scripture
scholars believe none of these quotes apply to Jesus, even the famous
“prediction” in today’s pericope: “The virgin shall be with child and give
birth to a son, and they shall call him Emmanuel.”
Even a
quick reading of Isaiah 7 will convince anyone that the Emmanuel can’t be Jesus
and the virgin can’t be Mary.
Isaiah is providing a sign for Ahaz, something to convince him not to
join with the Israelites and the Syrians in a revolt against the Assyrians who
dominated the Middle-East in the 8th century, BCE. The king doesn’t have 700 years to wait
to discover what path to take. He
needs an answer yesterday. That’s
why the “virgin” can only be Mrs. Ahaz, and the “Emmanuel” must be Hezekiah,
her son. (The word “almah” which
we Christians insist on translating “virgin,” can simply refer to a woman who
has not yet had a baby.)
Like the
authors of the Koran who wanted to demonstrate both the uniqueness of Mohammed
and his deep roots in ancient faith traditions, so Matthew reinterpreted the
text he quoted in order to give Jesus the same two attributes.
Though
Christians and Muslims both reinterpret other people’s Scriptures, there’s one
basic difference. We Christians
still read from those “other people’s Scriptures” almost every weekend. I know of no other religion which does
this. Today’s readings provide a
classic example. We hear both
Isaiah’s original oracle, and Matthew’s slant on it. We Christians employ a liturgical process which stops us
from believing that our faith is just a matter of learning the “predictions,”
then seeing how they’re fulfilled in Jesus. Our Jewish brothers and sisters could listen to the same
reading in the synagogue that we do in church, and never apply it to Jesus.
Those who
composed our Christian and Muslim Scriptures often use a prediction/fulfillment
structure. Real faith isn’t that
simple. Faith starts from the
present, not the past. We
experience something here and now which turns our head and opens our eyes to
God among us. Though our present
insight helps us to look at the past in a different way than we viewed it
before our faith-insight, the past was never as clear then as it is now. Never forget that the angel’s
annunciation to Joseph was composed at least 45 years after Christians first
realized Jesus had saved “his people from their sins.” It couldn’t have been narrated in this
form the day after it happened.
That’s
why the most important part of Paul’s introduction to his letter to the Romans
isn’t his reference to the prophets predicting Jesus “long ago,” but his
realization that he’s been called by the risen Jesus to be an apostle, to “spread
Jesus’ name and bring obedient faith to all the Gentiles.” Only after Paul had been called, did he
begin to look at the Jewish prophets from a Christian perspective.
Perhaps
some of us have fallen into the same post-biblical trap of concentrating so
much on a sacred past that we ignore our sacred present.