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The beginning...

One
Man's Web > Dialogue with Mark > The
beginning...
Mark 1:1-6
January 29 2006
We are using the New
Revised Standard Version.
Mark is generally accepted as being the first of the gospels. It is not the
first Christian writing we have; that comes from Paul.
Mark begins with these words:
The beginning of the good news of Jesus Christ, the Son of God. Jesus is
clearly identified as "good news", something we ought to remember when we feel
the church weighing us down, and being anything but good news.
I think he is talking about "good news" in a wholistic, even cosmic, sense. We
are talking about more than winning back the Ashes here! At a very deep level he
is claiming this Jesus Christ is good for us. I am reminded of a young pregnant
woman I saw on the train recently. One hand rested over the child who is to be
born, and the other supported her belly. The words "utter complacency" came to
mind. A complacency rooted in peacefulness and promise. That's what "good news"
should be.
Mark calls Jesus Christ. That is the Greek word. It translates the word
Messiah, one chosen and anointed by God. Jesus is not only Christ,
chosen and anointed, as was David the Great King in the stories of the past, but
God's Son. This has echoes of the Psalms where the king was recognized as "God's
son".
(See Psalm 2 for example) It is a
claim of inheritance, of authority, and of power. God's son speaks for God. It
is no wonder that the gospels spend so much time repudiating the image of Jesus
as the conquering warrior Messiah- Son of God would have reeked of the
idea!
In the second verse Mark plants himself, and Jesus, firmly in the traditions of
Israel:
As it is written in the prophet Isaiah
"See, I am sending my messenger ahead of you, who will prepare your way;"
This is not a new religion. This is fulfilment.
The next- words should speak to we Australians. We are a desert seeking people.
As city dwellers [the great majority of us) we have a passion for the "outback."
Even our stupid passion for 4WDs bears witness to this. Uluru is the Australian
pilgrimage. In their great generosity, the Pitjantjatjara elders and guardians
let as climb the Rock. On the Rock, Australians are different. For every yob who
yells, there is a silent, moved, spiritually touched person. ...the voice of
one crying out in the wilderness, "Prepare the way of the Lord,"
The desert is where we hear the voice of God. It is or the long drives across
the Hay Plain, or into Alice Springs, and around the camp fires, that even men
talk about faith and belief.
We might now jump to verse 6 where
it says Now John was clothed with camel's hair, with a leather belt around
his waist, and he ate locusts and wild honey....
This also puts John the Baptiser in context. He is in the mould of the Old
Testament Prophet- and this later allows him to be interpreted as Elijah, who
must come before the Messiah. But it is also a word to us. The desert is the
place of simplicity- we will hear no God if we take our generator, and TV, and
DVDs along with us. John's power comes out of solitude and contemplation. That
hot silence that pushes down and in upon us when we are in the wilderness....
where we are cowed by the vastness... that is the source of the voice of God.
...make his paths straight,' 4 John the baptiser appeared in the wilderness,
proclaiming a baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins. 5 And people
from the whole Judean countryside and all the people of Jerusalem were going out
to him, and were baptized by him in the river Jordan, confessing their sins.
These next verses begin our education about the content of "good news": Jesus
bona fides have been laid out, so now we are down to business.
Jerusalem is the seat of power. It is the site of the temple, it is the centre
of the promised land. Authority and authenticity are from here. So too, in
Australia, we have a seat of power, based around Canberra, the media, and
business. They seek to present to us what is right and meaningful. The churches
have largely lost their place at this table and are mostly respected, if at all,
for being more efficient channels for government welfare benefits than the
government's own agencies.
The gospel calls us to repudiate this if we want the "good news." To begin with,
John is not in Jerusalem, he is in the wilderness, seeking a new voice of God.
This itself, is good news for those of us who feel we are in the wilderness.
Perhaps we are in the right place to find God. A new vision of God does not come
from the seat of power.
Then Mark clearly relates the good news to two historical memories.
...make his paths straight, is a direct reference to the Exile in
Babylon. In second Isaiah there is the promise of return to the Promised Land.
Speak tenderly to Jerusalem,
and cry to her that she has served her term,
that her penalty is paid,
that she has received from the LORD's hand double for all her sins.
A voice cries out:
In the wilderness prepare the way of the LORD,
make straight in the desert a highway for our God....
Isaiah 40
There is the implication of return from an Exile. Jerusalem is exile. We
are not in the Promised Land. The second historical reference is that the River
Jordan was the place of entry into the Promised Land. It was the place Israel
came when it returned home after centuries of slavery in Egypt. The good news is
subversive of the status quo. To receive the good news we have to go out from
Jerusalem and return to our roots. This is the beginning of repentance.
4 John the baptizer appeared in
the wilderness, proclaiming a baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins.
5 And people from the whole Judean countryside and all the people of Jerusalem
were going out to him, and were baptized by him in the river Jordan, confessing
their sins.
Baptism is a loaded word is the church.
There are millennia of history attached to it. Thee some is true of
repentance."
In Mark, I see John's baptism as a sign, as a way
of saying "I repent. '" I am coming back to the source of my identity as one of
Gods people and I am beginning again. The act of repentance is more important
than the exact way it was signified. It could have been done with sackcloth and
ashes. The water and the act no intrinsic have power. They are not magic which
will move God. They signify to John's audience, a decision to act and move and
change.
John's offering of baptism is itself subversive.
They happen outside Jerusalem. They are for forgiveness of sins outside of the
boundaries of the ruling cult. He had no authority for this. He was saying
Jerusalem was wrong.
The big word in all of this is "repentance. We
have a tendency to so repentance as meaning to be sorry.. It is not. The root
Greek word is metanoia, which has the sense of complete change. We use it of the
immature form turning into the butterfly: metamorphosis. So it is not enough to
be sorry. A complete change is being called for. In fact, many of the liturgies
say, "We repent, and are sorry for our sins:. It would be difficult to repent of
something and not be sorry. But we could say "I'm sorry, but I'm going to do it
again," and here is a world of difference. The abusive spouse who is sorry after
the event, but makes no real attempt to change, has never repented.
John's baptism was for the forgiveness of sins.
The people going out to him were confessing their sins. Repentance involves an
admission of shortcomings, and of guilt. we cannot repent of something, or be
forgiven if we are not honest enough to own up to it.
What does forgiveness of sins mean ? There are times we simply don't measure up
to what is the good. We can think of the good as what God wants.
Less religiously, we could call it our failure to be complete. There is a line
in Ephesians (5:48) which says Be ye perfect, as your father in heaven is
perfect. The word perfect is troublesome, but has an appropriate
weight for the demand. We should understand it as complete (the Greek
root is teleos) and I think it is complete according to our circumstances;
what I understood as good and complete- and God's will- when I was twenty is
now, I see, actually not good enough. There is more I can be and do. I suppose,
technically, there is an absolute standard of human completeness. The church,
especially in its more conservative forms, is terrified of relativism. But
practically, we cannot know that standard, but only live towards it.
Discipleship is growing into greater wholeness and completeness as a person.
Where completeness is closely defined, beyond generalities, and where it is
enforced, then it becomes another sin: judgementalism. Strict moral codes with
no give and slack are someone's idea, not God's idea. So perhaps we just
haven't measured up to what we know, and believe, is right. Sometimes we may
have acted in ignorance. But there are also many times where we know what is
good, and choose to do what is not good.
One of the areas where sin is poorly understood is
the notion that the good is defined by Jerusalem's elite: if Mr. Howard does it
according to the law of the land then it is not sin. But John and Jesus, the
whole Gospel in fact, begins with a discussion of Sin outside Jerusalem. The
gospel says of its very beginning that Jerusalem is wrong about sin. My
"civic'' upbringing, what I was taught at school about being a good boy, a good
citizen, and being respectful of the law was not the gospel. We see this problem
over and over when bible study participants read and talk about justice and
compassion, and agree, but then pull back when they realise this will have them
criticising Mr. Howard. (On the other hand total cynicism towards Jerusalem and
the civil authorities is not the answer: seek the welfare of the
city where I have sent you into exile, and
pray to the Lord on its behalf.... Jeremiah)
Sin is also not just personal piety. Sin is about
corporate behaviour. Sin can be committed against the earth. Sin is global. The
fact that I did not steal or cheat on my taxes does not make owning a
gas-guzzling V8 4WD in the suburbs any less a sin. My ownership of this
has implications for the earth, and for the people who I am not able to help
because I need to buy all that petrol.
Finally, what is forgiveness? Forgiveness is
freedom to start again, freedom to keep going, freedom to still speak and act
even though I was wrong before. Even freedom to repair and make
reparation, and heal and be healed. It is freedom to go on.
Direct Biblical quotations in this
page are taken from
The New Revised Standard Version Bible, copyright
1989, Division of Christian Education of the National
Council of the Churches of Christ in the United
States of America. Used by permission. All rights
reserved.
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