The Christian Year is a journey, which,
like a Labyrinth or a golf course begins and ends at the same place. No matter
what happens in a year of our lives, good times or bad times, joys or sorrows,
just as in a round of Golf or walking the Labyrinth, at the end is a new
beginning. The Christian year begins and ends and begins again, not with a baby
Jesus, that comes later, but with the Cosmic Christ, in mystery and hope.
“Almighty and everlasting God, whose
will it is to restore all things in your well-beloved Son, the King of Kings and
Lord of Lords; Mercifully grant that the peoples of the earth, divided and
enslaved by sin, may be freed and brought together under his most gracious
rule.” (Prayer for the last Sunday of the year, Book of Common Prayer, 236.)
And who are the peoples of the Earth
who are so divided and enslaved by sin? I answer that question by quoting two
songs. First from singer, song writer, and in my opinion, Theologian, Jimmy
Buffett in his 1994 song, “Fruitcakes,” and then Donovan in his 1965 hit, “The
Universal Soldier.”
First from Buffett: “Where’s the
church, who took the steeple, the God’s honest truth is it’s not that simple. It’s
the Buddhist in you, it’s the Pagan in me, it’s the Muslim in him, she’s
Catholic ain’t she? It’s the born again look, it’s the WASP and the Jew, tell
me what’s going on, I ain’t got a clue.”
And thirty years earlier from
Donovan: “He’s been a soldier for a thousand years. . .He’s a Catholic, a
Hindu, an Atheist, a Jain, a Buddhist and a Baptist and a Jew. And he knows he
shouldn’t kill and he knows he always will. Kill you for me my friend and me
for you. And he’s fighting for Canada, He’s fighting for France, He’s fighting
for the USA. And he’s fighting for the Russians and he’s fighting for Japan,
and he thinks we’ll put an end to war this way.”
Kingdoms against kingdoms, peoples
against peoples, “my side is better than your side.” Human greed and jealousy
and the need to be right and better than the other have throughout history lead
to division and enslavement to sin as our prayer tells us. In John’s Gospel
(18:33-37), Jesus and Pilate confront each other on the nature of kings and
kingdoms and truth. Pilate asks Jesus if he is a king and Jesus replies, “my
kingdom is not from this world.” Jesus’ implication is that his kingdom is more
important and higher than any earthly kingdom. But we must be careful with
Jesus’ statement here: though Jesus’ kingdom is not of this world, it is in
this world and this world is very important to Jesus, to God: “Thy kingdom
come, Thy will be done, on Earth as it is in Heaven.”
If the world is important to God,
then what we do on this Earth matters greatly, and we truly become co-workers
with Jesus, co-creators with God in bringing about God’s kingdom on Earth. We become
the hands and feet of Christ as we work to bring freedom to those enslaved by
sin, ourselves included, and to bring together a divided humanity.
We believe Jesus Christ is the
faithful witness to God the Creator, the first born of the dead and the ruler
of the kings of the Earth. We believe the Holy Spirit will lead us and guide us
into the truth Pilate was looking for, and that that truth will restore all
things on Earth as well as in Heaven, free us from our slavery to sin and bring
us together as one people of God.
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