Tony Robinson: Urgency
"Then he said to them, 'Christ is lord of the sabbath.'" - Luke 6: 6
This verse comes from one of a number of New Testament stories where Jesus was at six's and seven's with the religious authorities over Sabbath laws and observance.
Jesus's disciples were hungry. They picked some grain, rubbed it between their hands to get the chaff off, and ate. Doesn't sound all that appetizing, but it's enough to get the predictable stick-in-the-muds, the Pharisees, to pull their yellow card and declare, "sabbath violation!"
It's pretty easy for Christians, and maybe especially liberal Protestants, to say, "Look at those uptight, narrow-minded Pharisees. Thank God, we're not like them! Thank God, we know that human needs like hunger, healing or help in crisis are more important than religious ritual or observance."
It is easy, in other words, to be smug about our open-mindedness, and to congratulate ourselves on our more flexible and magnanimous, and certainly not hidebound, faith.
But what if Jesus' point was not less, but actually more, demanding? This story concludes with his tense, not entirely clear statement, "Christ is lord of the sabbath."
It's the kind of statement that creates a moment of truth: what is God doing right now? What does God require of me, of us, right at this moment? We are in the presence of the living Christ, what now?
Often we too are stuck in familiar arguments, predictable conflicts and entrenched positions. Christ's presence shatters all that, renders it null and void. The old that has passed away; there is, in Christ, a new creation. In Christ God is doing a new thing.
We are "open," but are we open to that?
"Jesus puts us," a wise teacher once said to me, "where we all want to be and where we all don't want to be - in the presence of God."
Is that happening in our churches? Is there that sense of gospel urgency?
Prayer
Where we have grown comfortable and self-congratulatory, break in upon us O Lord with your new creation and fresh urgency. Amen.