The message I gave for our Weekly Lenten Service:
Gospel Message
Lenten Service 6
March 25, 2015
Please pray with me, may the words of my mouth and the
meditation of our hearts together be pleasing to you, oh God. Amen
These days we can hardly turn on the evening news or open the
morning paper without reading of some injustice somewhere in the world. Whether it is a young black man shot by
police, a school child being bullied, or our favorite basketball team losing in
the NCAA tournament on the opponent’s home court, the world is seemingly full
of injustice.
We live in a broken world, everyone seems to have the own
definition of justice. Usually it doesn’t
matter on which side of the fence they stand, they feel their cause, their
actions, and their ideals are just.
Broken more deeply by a society intent on using their cries of injustice
to whip their followers into a frenzy of dangerous, illegal and sometimes
deadly behavior.
I want to share with you two of the greatest love stories
ever told.
·
The
one, at Camelot; the other, at Calvary.
·
Two
of the noblest kings ever to live. The one, King Arthur; the other, King of the
Jews.
·
The
one is adorned with a jeweled crown; the other, with a crown of thorns.
The comparisons and contrasts between Camelot and Calvary are many, but one scene from Camelot illustrates a great theological dilemma that only the cross could resolve.
Prior to His appointment with destiny on the brow of that fateful hill, Jesus agonized in the Garden of Gethsemane: We hear in Luke 22:42 "Father, if you are willing, take this cup from me; yet not my will, but yours be done".
Understand, on an emotional level, that this is the pleading of a son to his father. If your child came to you in such agony, wouldn’t you do everything within your power to grant their request?
But this Father, this time, didn’t respond as expected. And that’s the theological rub. He denied the request of His Son, His only Son, His beloved Son. In Gethsemane, that Son was asking: "Is there no other way?"
The Son is betrayed, arrested, deserted, denied, beaten, tried, mocked, and finally crucified. Implicitly, the Father answers: "No, there is no other way."
But why? Why was there no other way?
We find the answer to that question in a scene from Camelot, where the adulterous relationship between Queen Guenevere and Arthur’s most trusted knight, Sir Lancelot, has divided the Round Table. When the scheming Mordred catches them in a clandestine encounter, Lancelot escapes. Guenevere is not so fortunate. She faces a trial. The jury finds her guilty and sentences her to the flame.
As the day of execution nears, people come from miles around with one question in their minds: Would the king let her die?
Mordred gleefully captures the complexity of Arthur’s predicament:
Arthur! What a magnificent dilemma!
Let her die, your life is over;
Let her live, your life’s a fraud.
Which will it be, Arthur?
Do you kill the queen or kill the law?
Tragically but resolutely, Arthur decides: "Treason has been committed! The jury has ruled! Let justice be done!"
Let her live, your life’s a fraud.
Which will it be, Arthur?
Do you kill the queen or kill the law?
Tragically but resolutely, Arthur decides: "Treason has been committed! The jury has ruled! Let justice be done!"
High from the castle window stands Arthur, as Guenevere enters the courtyard. She walks to her unlit stake, where the executioner stands with waiting torch. Arthur turns away, emotion brimming in his eyes.
A herald mounts the tower where Arthur has withdrawn: "The queen is at the stake, Your Majesty. Shall I signal the torch?"
But the king cannot answer.
Arthur’s love for Guenevere spills from his broken heart: "I can’t! I can’t! I can’t let her die!"
Seeing Arthur crumble, Mordred relishes the moment: "Well, you’re human after all, aren’t you, Arthur? Human and helpless."
Tragically, Arthur realizes the truth of Mordred’s remark. Being only human, he is indeed helpless.
Without even waiting for His Guenevere to look up in
repentance, the King stepped down from His throne, took off His crown, laid
aside His royal robes, and descended His castle’s polished steps into
humanity’s blemished streets.
But where this story ends, the greatest story ever told just
begins.
Another Execution Scene…Another time... Another place…Another king.
The setting: A world lies estranged from the God who loves it. Like Genevere, an unfaithful humanity stands guilty and in bondage, awaiting judgment’s torch.
Could God turn His head from the righteous demands of the law and simply excuse the world’s sin? If not, then could He turn His head from the world He loved? Would this king burn his Guenevere?
Like the wicked Mordred, Satan must have looked on in delight:
God! What a magnificent dilemma!
Let Christ die, your life is over;
Let Christ live, your life’s a fraud;
which will it be, God?
Do you kill your world or do you kill the law?
These words from Paul’s letter to the Philippians are thought by some scholars to be the lyrics of an ancient hymn, singing about the King of kings. Reading now from the second chapter, verses 5-8
Let the same mind be in you that was in Christ Jesus, who, being in very nature God, did not consider equality with God something to be grasped, but made himself nothing, taking the very nature of a servant, being made in human likeness. And being found in appearance as a man, he humbled himself and became obedient to death-even death on a cross!
Here Paul encourages us to think with our minds as Jesus thought with his. Note here Jesus was not only in the form of a human, though fully God, he was truly human. By doing so he took on human suffering, though without sin and humbled his human self on the cross. Jesus was the ultimate scapegoat.
That scene in Camelot was an epiphany of understanding. Suddenly, it all made sense. We know now why He had to die, only God was capable of the love necessary to give the full measure, to be completely broken, so we may become whole, there was no other way…
Arthur’s love got in the
way of justice, God’s love is the way to justice.
A justice we do not deserve but which comes to us freely from
our loving Father for when love and justice collide, only the cross offers a
happy ending.
Broken Justice Restored
Amen
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