Scriptures: Ezekiel 37:1-14 & John 11:1-45
04/07/2019
This Sunday seems to come about the same time in Lent each year—the time in which maybe we have all grown a little tired of the waiting, of the watching, of the dying and we just need to have some kind of reminder of where our final destination actually is. The time in which the darkness has wholly subsumed all that can pass for light and we need to begin see some spark of illumination to pass over world that, at least, seems to be stuck in perpetual twilight. And it is a time in which we are tempted, as is human nature, to cast our eyes past the impending Maundy Thursday, past the devastation of Good Friday, past even the waiting and the wailing and the lamentation of Black Saturday, and just go straight to Easter morning that we might glimpse just a moment of hope arising from the despair that often accompanies our Lenten practices. Because, the truth is, it is hard to dwell in this space that we find ourselves for too long. It is hard to sit in between Jesus turning his face towards Jerusalem for the last time while also residing on the precipice of what comes next. It is hard because we know that the hardest part, the part for which we have been preparing this whole season is drawing so close. And for those of us who have taken this Lenten journey over and over again as the years have passed before our eyes, for those who have spent our lives living through this cycle of life, death, new life, resurrection, we possess the collective memory to envision the whole of the events play our in our minds. We can close our eyes and see our savior in the garden while those closest to him could not stay awake with him. We can the fear that arises each time we encounter the mob with torches and swords coming to arrest him. We can close our eyes and he is standing before, the Sanhedrin, before Pilate, before all of Jerusalem watching the crowd turn on him and scream out for the radical Zealot Barabbas to be released in his place, to know that his disciples have already fled for their lives. We are immersed in the bleakness that comes with a silhouette of the cross—the lifeless body of the one whom we worship and adore hanging there. We can see all that. But more than that, we can cast our eyes out across the expanse of the world and we can see sights more troubling, more immediate than those from our Christian story. We can see the brokenness that brought about Jesus’s death—visions of God’s children hungry, of God’s beloved struggling for dignity, of our brothers and sisters in Christ crying out for good news and a year of God’s favor. And being aware of all of this, we soon find ourselves utterly lost in the pain and the suffering of those next door and those halfway around the world. And so maybe this Sunday, this set of readings for this morning comes at just the perfect time. And in pondering that which we are supposed to take with us from these two stories let us consider in our own town and world, “What do we see?” When we look on the world, when we look on our town, what do we see? When we cast our vision across our own valley of dried out and decaying bone, what do we see? In a country often more divided than unified, in a world always more divided than unified. In a church and a faith more divided than unified, what do we see? In a world with enough military might and know-how to end the life of virtually every species on this planet, what do we see? In a world where countless numbers of God’s children are denied the basic necessities for life, countless numbers of God’s children denied an equal place at the table of God, what do we see?
In both of the passages for this morning, people are asked to pass their vision across scenes of death and to offer a frank analysis of that which is before them. They are asked to survey areas in which specter of the reality of mortality is present and overwhelming and in the midst of these scenes of tomb and bone they are asked instead to see life. In our first passage, God comes to the prophet Ezekiel and offers him a vision—a valley filled with dried out, decaying bone. Perhaps, there is not a starker setting we can think of for God to offer this prophet of Israel. And this image, this valley of dried out and decaying bones, was the perfect symbol for the feelings of the Israelite people at that time. It was the perfect symbol for people stuck in a cycle of oppression and violence, stuck in a cycle of exile and invasion, in which a rebel army from an empire far away has come in and inhabited their space, has come and taken their government and their throne, their culture, their religion. They have forced many in the country to flee to neighboring regions, have sent many of them back to Persian Babylon to start a new life of service and servitude to an unfriendly empire and a people bent on holding them captive as far into the future as anyone can project. So it is that this valley before Ezekial is filled with dry bones of a people who have lost hope, this valley filled with the death and decay of a proud chosen people living out a hellish existence in an unfamiliar land, with unfamiliar people, speaking an unfamiliar language and worshiping an unfamiliar God. This valley of dried out and decaying bones represents all the anguish and anxiety, all the angst and worry of a people stuck in the darkest days of an invasion from which they cannot get free. “Mortal,” God intones, “what do you see?”
In the second passage for this morning, we are told of the death of one of Jesus closest friends. In it, We see that word has reached Jesus that his close friend Lazarus is on the precipice of dying, and that Jesus must come quickly. “Rabbi, the one whom you love is ill.” The specificity of love is one that is not often given in the gospel of John. Certainly, Jesus speaks often of love in the abstract, in the sense that we are to have love for all persons, but in the end, very few of the characters in the Johanine gospel are said to be personally loved by Jesus and so we know that this Lazarus is one who shared a special connection with the savior. Rabbi, the one whom you love is ill. But we are told that rather than rushing to be by the side of his close friend who is sick, Jesus stays an extra two days in the place where he was. And there seems little way to explain this curious detail. Because it doesn't seem the actions of one who loves another and learns that they are dying. Perhaps there is a concern about his safety, the following paragraph seems to indicate that. Perhaps he is bringing believers into the fold where he is at and doesn't want to leave them behind in his efforts to get to his close friend. We don't know, but by the time that he does arrive in Bethany, we know and he knows, Lazarus is dead and Jesus wept.
In our broken and at times very dark world, it is easy to become overwhelmed by the immensity of everything we encounter on a daily basis. It is easy to become overwhelmed with the pain that exists in our world. It is easy to become overwhelmed with the hatred and violence, with war and with injustice. It is easy to see only a valley of dried out and decaying bones. It is easy to see a close friend slowly giving up the light to the darkness. It is easy and, incidentally, alright, to become overwhelmed in a world of cancer or Alzheimer’s, a world of lost jobs and homelessness, a world of paycheck to paycheck living where many do not have the basic needs of life. It is easy in that world, to see only bones, to see only death. But we know that they story does not end there. We know that neither story ends there.
If we return back to the valley with Ezekiel, we see that in the midst of all the remnants of lives lived and passed, God queries Ezekiel, “Mortal, Can these dry bones live?” And just like that, Ezekiel is given an opening in the midst of all this death and decay. “Mortal, Can these dry bones live?” A peek into the light of God when for the longest time, all there was was darkness. “Mortal, Can these dry bones live?” Ezekiel is given just the tiniest sliver of hope. “Mortal, Can these dry bones live?” “O Lord, you know!” “Prophesy to them.” And as he did, a strange thing began to happen. Slowly at first, but then with increasing speed. Bone came to bone, sinew and then skin, and then finally, the breath of God. That which had been dead, was brought back; that which seemed completely irredeemable, was breathing again, was together again. Then God said, “Go and do likewise for my people Israel.” Somewhere, deep in Ezekiel’s vision, in the midst of a valley of death and decay, we find a glimpse into the future of Israel. A future of hope and not death; a future of life and not invasion. Of home and not exile. “Go and do likewise for my people Israel.”
And in a similar fashion, Jesus comes to the town of Bethany and all around him all people can see is death. All around him people are overcome by their grief for their dearly departed friend. All around him people want to know where he has been, why he had not come sooner, why he had not healed their friend, his close friend from his illness. Where had Jesus been? And who can blame them really? When you are surrounded by death, you have no reason to look for life. When you are surrounded by darkness you have no reason to look for light. When you are surrounded by brokenness and sin, there is no reason to look for redemption and hope. And yet, here is Jesus asking that the stone be removed, asking for access to the dead body. And the people are confused. Lazarus has been dead for four days, the stench is going to be unbearable. But from darkness comes light, from brokenness can come holiness, from death comes resurrection. “Lazarus, come out!” And just like that, that which was dead was brought back to life and the people could see and in seeing know and in knowing believe.
In the midst of the Lenten journey, we are made aware of the struggle that comes with being faithful to the call of Christ in our lives. As we walk Jesus, we see that more than feeding hungry people, more than healing the sick, more than offering sight to the blind of release to the captives, more than all that, the chief responsibility of Christians, of the church, is to be with folks who have lost the ability to see and perceive the love of God and the light of the Holy Spirit dwelling with them. Thus, it becomes our task to forever remain in the cleavage that exists between darkness and light, between death and life, between despair and hope. To put it in the terms of the passages from today, we are to remain with Ezekiel in the valley of dried bones but always hoping for life to return to those who have become overwhelmed by death. We are to stand with those who grieve for Lazarus all the while longing for and believing Jesus will come and offer healing and life. In short, we are called to remain in the hurt and pain of the world while always having the courage to hope. And so it is for us who live in that in between place, we cannot simply remain stuck in the valley of dried bones. We cannot remain in death. We cannot bring ourselves to believe that all of life is just a cycle of violence and hatred; a cycle of brokenness and sin. If we do, if that is all humanity can ever hope for. Then, all that is left in this life is dried and decaying bones and the stench of a body four days past, and we cannot remain there. We cannot fool ourselves into believing the existentialist got it right, or the nihilist. Because, at least at moments in our lives, our eyes have seen the glory of the coming of the realm of God, and so we know that God’s love and grace are sufficient for the living of this day and the next.
In our passages from today, we are told Ezekiel saw a valley of dried out and decaying bones but God saw a valley teaming with life that had not yet been tapped. Let’s have the vision of God. Mary, Martha, and all those in the village of Bethany saw a friend who had died. Jesus saw an opportunity for resurrection. Let us be bearers of resurrection in a world shrouded in death. Nicodemus, coming to Jesus in the dark of night could not see the world as Jesus saw it. Jesus saw the world as worthy of being saved, every part of it. Let us work for the salvation of all creation. The disciples encountered a blind man and immediately began to seek to assign blame for the situation in which the man found himself. Jesus saw an opportunity to give sight to one who had searched for it his entire life. Let us bring sight to those who cannot see the movement of the spirit. The Apostle Paul only saw a small band of rabble rousers rebelling against the Jewish faith. God saw beloved children seeking to follow the one we call God’s child. Let’s make a commitment to one another on this day that we will depart from here ready take our place in the long line of the faithful who stretch from the beginning of time to the end. And once we do that. Once we have been given eyes to see and ears to hear it is not enough to stop at awareness. It is not enough to know that there is suffering in the world, that there are people who seek the God’s righteousness and a crust of bread. We have to be thrust out into those places. All our preparation during this Lenten season must move us to be resurrected on Sunday morning and to never see the world in the same manner. The time for pensiveness, for timidity, has drawn to a close and the time for a revolution of love to sweep the world has come and there are no half-measures when it comes to resurrection. The call to follow Jesus demands our all, every part of us and we leave this place inspired and alive and ready to proclaim not a valley of dry bones but one teeming with life. God is at work at this moment, the spirit of God flowing through this place and the whole of the world, the resurrected body of Christ walking rocky roads with those who struggle to see light and he tells them, I am the light of the world and my light is the life of all people,, the Holy Spirit is still blowing across the face of the deep and inspiring all those who can hear her song to dance the dance that first birthed creation, while the creator of the universe sits high atop the throne with cherubim and seraphim singing that hymn of old, Holy, Holy, Holy, Lord God Almighty all the while calling all children home. Sisters and brothers we are blessed to be a part of that work, to be reconcilers of the world, to be witnesses to the resurrection that we might tell others about it. We are blessed to be a blessing. Let’s get ready, for resurrection is about to pass this way again and the world will never be the same. Amen.
*-Image: Vision of the Valley of Dry Bones, Gustav Dore, 1866