Difference between revisions of "Sermon for March 27th, 2022"

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This joke works for two reasons:  First, most of us grew up with some kind of awareness of the twin concepts of Heaven and Hell.  The criteria for where you end up tend to change based on what religious tradition you hail from, but the basic description is the same:  eternal bliss, or eternal torment.  Whether or not you subscribe to that belief is pretty much irrelevant to the joke itself, as long as you understand the basic concept.
 
This joke works for two reasons:  First, most of us grew up with some kind of awareness of the twin concepts of Heaven and Hell.  The criteria for where you end up tend to change based on what religious tradition you hail from, but the basic description is the same:  eternal bliss, or eternal torment.  Whether or not you subscribe to that belief is pretty much irrelevant to the joke itself, as long as you understand the basic concept.
  
The second reason this joke works (and the one I intend to focus on today) is because I told you that the main character, the butt of the joke, was a corrupt politician.  Half of you probably had one in mind, and the other half of you had a different one in mind, from the opposite political party.  Regardless, we can all conceive of someone like that who we perceive to be thoroughly and incorrigibly corrupt, but immensely crafty and powerful, and therefore also frustratingly immune from all of our notions of justice and accountability.
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The second reason this joke works (and the one I intend to focus on today) is because I told you that the main character, the butt of the joke, was a corrupt politician.  Half of you probably had one in mind, and the other half of you had a different one in mind, from the opposite political party.  Regardless, we can all conceive of someone like that who we perceive to be thoroughly and incorrigibly corrupt, but immensely crafty and powerful, and therefore also frustratingly immune from all of our cherished notions of justice and accountability.
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If fairness and justice are important virtues (and I believe they are), then how can reasonable, thinking people in a civilized society wrap their hearts and minds around the idea that some people will live an entire lifetime full of corruption, exploitation, and harm to others, and then finally die without punishment or judgement, completely beyond the reach of the law?
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Well, you could choose to believe that life simply isn't fair, that evil prevails over good, and that innocent people are always destined to suffer at the hands of the wicked.  But that's not a very hopeful, or helpful worldview, and I think it leads to despair, resignation, and sometimes even to choosing evil over good.
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Another choice--the one advocated by most world religions--is to put what is beyond our control in the hands of God, or some benevolent order in the universe that leads toward ultimate justice.  In Buddhism, for example, those who lead wretched lives are doomed to reincarnation in an even more wretched existence, over and over again, until they get it right.  But it's still the same principle--we put our faith and our hope for justice in whatever force governs life after death.

Revision as of 16:04, 25 March 2022

Job 20:1-29 (OT p.468)

1 Then Zophar the Naamathite answered:

2 “Pay attention! My thoughts urge me to answer,
    because of the agitation within me.
3 I hear censure that insults me,
    and a spirit beyond my understanding answers me.
4 Do you not know this from of old,
    ever since mortals were placed on earth,
5 that the exulting of the wicked is short,
    and the joy of the godless is but for a moment?
6 Even though they mount up high as the heavens,
    and their head reaches to the clouds,
7 they will perish forever like their own dung;
    those who have seen them will say, ‘Where are they?’
8 They will fly away like a dream, and not be found;
    they will be chased away like a vision of the night.
9 The eye that saw them will see them no more,
    nor will their place behold them any longer.
10 Their children will seek the favor of the poor,
    and their hands will give back their wealth.
11 Their bodies, once full of youth,
    will lie down in the dust with them.

12 “Though wickedness is sweet in their mouth,
    though they hide it under their tongues,
13 though they are loath to let it go,
    and hold it in their mouths,
14 yet their food is turned in their stomachs;
    it is the venom of asps within them.
15 They swallow down riches and vomit them up again;
    God casts them out of their bellies.
16 They will suck the poison of asps;
    the tongue of a viper will kill them.
17 They will not look on the rivers,
    the streams flowing with honey and curds.
18 They will give back the fruit of their toil,
    and will not swallow it down;
from the profit of their trading
    they will get no enjoyment.
19 For they have crushed and abandoned the poor,
    they have seized a house that they did not build.

20 “They knew no quiet in their bellies;
    in their greed they let nothing escape.
21 There was nothing left after they had eaten;
    therefore their prosperity will not endure.
22 In full sufficiency they will be in distress;
    all the force of misery will come upon them.
23 To fill their belly to the full
    God will send his fierce anger into them,
    and rain it upon them as their food.
24 They will flee from an iron weapon;
    a bronze arrow will strike them through.
25 It is drawn forth and comes out of their body,
    and the glittering point comes out of their gall;
    terrors come upon them.
26 Utter darkness is laid up for their treasures;
    a fire fanned by no one will devour them;
    what is left in their tent will be consumed.
27 The heavens will reveal their iniquity,
    and the earth will rise up against them.
28 The possessions of their house will be carried away,
    dragged off in the day of God’s wrath.
29 This is the portion of the wicked from God,
    the heritage decreed for them by God.”

Other Voices in the Book of Job: Zophar

One day at the gates of hell, the devil welcomes a corrupt politician to his eternal reward. "Your actions and choices in life have earned you an eternity of torment. But since you were always a sucker for a self-serving deal, I'll make you this one: You get to choose between three options." He leads the politician to door number one, the classic fiery furnace where inhabitants are being perpetually roasted in agony. The man nervously asks to see what's behind door number two. The devil opens the second door, which reveals a vast and desolate wasteland. In the distance, the man can see scattered inhabitants, exhausted, and constantly pursued by frightening demons. He says, "Well, that's a slight improvement, but let's see what's behind door number three." As soon as door number three is opened, out comes an almost unbearable stench, and the politician sees the inhabitants of the room standing waist high in what looks like a combination of cow manure, rotten sewage, and (again for classic effect) burning sulfur. But there's one more faint aroma coming out of the room: Coffee. He sees that each of the inhabitants is drinking from a small cup of coffee. "This one definitely seems like the lesser of three evils," says the politician, somewhat relieved. "I'll choose this room." "Popular choice," says the devil with a snicker, as he shoves the man inside the room. And just before the devil closes the door, he yells out in a loud voice to all in the room: "Coffee break's over--back on your heads!"

This joke works for two reasons: First, most of us grew up with some kind of awareness of the twin concepts of Heaven and Hell. The criteria for where you end up tend to change based on what religious tradition you hail from, but the basic description is the same: eternal bliss, or eternal torment. Whether or not you subscribe to that belief is pretty much irrelevant to the joke itself, as long as you understand the basic concept.

The second reason this joke works (and the one I intend to focus on today) is because I told you that the main character, the butt of the joke, was a corrupt politician. Half of you probably had one in mind, and the other half of you had a different one in mind, from the opposite political party. Regardless, we can all conceive of someone like that who we perceive to be thoroughly and incorrigibly corrupt, but immensely crafty and powerful, and therefore also frustratingly immune from all of our cherished notions of justice and accountability.

If fairness and justice are important virtues (and I believe they are), then how can reasonable, thinking people in a civilized society wrap their hearts and minds around the idea that some people will live an entire lifetime full of corruption, exploitation, and harm to others, and then finally die without punishment or judgement, completely beyond the reach of the law?

Well, you could choose to believe that life simply isn't fair, that evil prevails over good, and that innocent people are always destined to suffer at the hands of the wicked. But that's not a very hopeful, or helpful worldview, and I think it leads to despair, resignation, and sometimes even to choosing evil over good.

Another choice--the one advocated by most world religions--is to put what is beyond our control in the hands of God, or some benevolent order in the universe that leads toward ultimate justice. In Buddhism, for example, those who lead wretched lives are doomed to reincarnation in an even more wretched existence, over and over again, until they get it right. But it's still the same principle--we put our faith and our hope for justice in whatever force governs life after death.