April
                  1, 2004  
Lenten Noonday Preaching Series 
Calvary Episcopal Church 
Memphis, TN              
            
            (This
            sermon is also available in audio.) 
            My
                dear friends, this Lenten series has broadened our spiritual
                horizons in the countdown to Palm Sunday, Passover, and Easter. Our
                spiritual horizons tend to be small when we view God’s
                world only through Jewish eyes or through only one expression
                of Christianity. Obviously God is much bigger than any one, two,
                or three of our faiths, precious and true as they are to each
            of us. 
             I
                don’t know about you, but the more I learn about other
                faiths, the more I appreciate my own. I am a more faithful Jew because of
                my relationship with Christians, not in spite of them.
                 
            That’s the goal of interfaith dialogue. The goal is not
                  to dilute Judaism or Christianity, but to deepen both. We have
                  to tear down any misperceptions we have of each other until our
                  love is greater than fear.  
             Lent
                is a time to harness all the powers God has given us to change
                for the better. Those God-given powers include using our heads
                as well as our hearts. What I admire about this preaching series
                is that the extraordinary speakers we have been listening to
                have challenged us to think deeply, not simply.  
            It’s
                easy to be a demagogue about anything, including religion. I
                once heard a preacher so magnetic, so captivating, compelling
                and inspiring, I was on my feet cheering with the rest of the
                crowd. But something was gnawing at me during the drive home,
                and suddenly I realized what it was.  
            Nobody
                had thought about the logic of what he was saying because it
                made them, and me
                  too, feel good. Then I thought through what the speaker was
                saying, and it was very troubling. It’s easy to whoop up a crowd.
                  Hitler was the best at it.  
            Next
                to preaching evil, probably the easiest way to whoop up a crowd
                is to preach an exclusivist religious theology. Jews and Christians
                for instance, agree that human beings are God’s children.
                God is the parent, and we are all God’s children. And yet,
                some very charismatic preachers will go on to say that if you
                don’t believe the way they do, then you will burn in hell.
                 
            More
                than one person over the course of my life has told me, “It
                  is because I love you and don’t want you to burn in hell
                  that you need to be saved my way.” When I hear this, I
                  understand what the other person is saying. He wants to prevent
                  me from getting whipped, burned, and beaten.  
            But
                have you ever stopped to think about what that theology says
                about God? If
                    God is the father, and we are all God’s children, what
                    kind of parent would whip, burn, and beat you? Answer: a God
                    who is into child abuse. Or to put it another way, if the only
                    way to heaven is via a theology which teaches my way or hell,
                    then is Gandhi burning in hell? 
            I
                have begun to tell evangelical audiences I speak to what I was
                taught by my rabbi. I have begun to tell those audiences that
                while I know they may be surprised to see me and the Jewish people
                in heaven, I just hope they won’t be disappointed!  
            If
                they are surprised, that’s okay, since it’s God’s
                  call who enters the Kingdom of Heaven. But if they are disappointed
                  and don’t want me there, I tell them, then they’re
                  really not my friend.  
            Our
                spiritual horizons are small when we view God’s world only
                through Jewish or Christian theology. Obviously, God is much
                bigger.  
            When
                you think about the world from God’s perspective,
                  you begin to realize that we are all minorities. Two-thirds of
                  the world are not Christian, and there are more Hindus, Buddhists,
                  and Taoists than there are members of Jesus’ own faith,
                  Judaism. The challenge for our time is to affirm religious truth
                  without defining it for others. 
            How
                do you do that? Berthold Lessing was a friend of the great Jewish
                teacher of Germany, Moses Mendelssohn. Lessing wrote a book called Nathan
                The Wise. In it, he deals with the problems of the competition
                between religious theologies. The proponents of each religion
                claim to possess the truth.  
            How
                is one to know which is the true religion? Nathan
                tells a story in response to that question.  
            There
                was once a nobleman who had inherited a beautiful ring from his
                father.
                  It was handed down from generation to generation. Each father
                  gave it to his most deserving son, and it brought favor in
                the eyes of man and God. The ring went from father to son for
                generations
                  until it came to one man who had three sons.  
            The
                father tried to pick one who was worthy of wearing the ring,
                but he could
                    not make up his mind since they were all worthy. In desperation,
                    he called in a jeweler and asked him to make two more rings
                  that were so identical to the original that even he could not
                  identify
                    it.  
            The
                jeweler made the rings so skillfully that no one could tell them
                apart. Then the father gave each son a ring.
                  When
                    he died, the family gathered and the three sons displayed
                their rings. 
            They
                were puzzled and wanted to know who had the genuine one. They
                decided to go to a judge and each son declared that his father
                had presented the authentic ring to him.  
            The
                judge examined the rings and saw that they were absolutely identical.
                He declared
                  that no one can tell which is the genuine ring. There is only
                  one way of knowing. The son who lives the noblest and most
                decent life has the genuine ring.  
            Each
                religion claims it has the truth, but talk is cheap and no theology
                is foolproof. Each religion proves whether or not it is genuine
            by showing how its adherents live.  
            Our
                goal each year during Lent, or in Judaism, during the High Holidays,
                is to make our
                  faith shine through again--to show that we are wearing genuine
                  rings of faith by how we live, act, and reflect the Divine
            image.  
            The
                world and God will know whether the rings are real. The world
                    and God will know which ones are telling the truth and which
                    use religion for the wrong purposes. 
                   
              When I first spoke in this series three years ago, I recommended
                      a powerful book to you on Jewish-Christian relations by
                    James Carroll, entitled Constantine’s
      Sword. More than a few of you have shared with me how transformational
      that book was in understanding just how far we have come as Christians
      and Jews.  
            I
                commend another book to you, one that is even sharper, more to
                the
        point, and less than half the weight of Constantine’s Sword.
        The author is the prolific Christian scholar, Mary Boys who teaches at
        Union Theological Seminary in New York.  
            Her
                book Has God Only One Blessing?,
          is about Judaism as a source of Christian self-understanding. We cannot
          change the tragic history that arose from the Christian failure to
                recognize that
          God, Mother and Father of us all, has many children and more than one
          blessing, more than one ring.  
            We
                cannot erase that frightful past, but we can recognize,
            at least in Memphis, that Jews and Christians see themselves as accountable
            to the same God and committed to transforming the future together.
             
            Unlike
                the past 1900 years, we Jews and you Christians have become partners
              rather than
              rivals--partners and friends who recognize the Way of Torah
              and the
                    Way of Jesus as different refractions of the same God, the
                  God Who loves
              us all,
              the God who has more than one blessing for His children, the God
                  Whose love is
              greater than fear, the God Who is waiting for our love to be greater
              than our fear.  
               
              But how again is it possible to embrace and affirm your
              own religious truth without defining truth for others? A Methodist minister
                named Wesley Ariarajah
              offers this answer. He
                illustrates the distinction between my Jewish truth, your Christian
                truth and absolute truth in a way we can
                  all understand.
               
            He
                says, “When my son tells me I’m the best dad in the world, and
                  there can be no other father like me, he is speaking the truth, for this comes
                  out of his experience. He is honest about it. He knows no other person in the
                role of his father.  
            But,
                of course, it is not true in another sense. For one thing,” Wesley
                says, “I myself know friends who, I think, are better
                  fathers than I am. 
            Even
                more importantly, one should be aware that in the next house
                there is another boy who also thinks his
                  daddy is the best father in
                    the world. And he too is right.  
            In
                fact, at the level of the way the two children revere their two
                fathers, no one can
                    compare the truth content of the statements
                      of the two boys.  
            Our
                shared Judeo-Christian tradition deals with a different language
                - the language of faith and love.
                    To say, “If you don’t
                          accept my truth, then you have rejected absolute truth,” would
                          be like my son, Jake, telling his friend in the house next
                          door that there is no way
                          he can have the best father, because the absolute best one
                          is only in his house! As if my house is the only one in the
                          neighborhood. If my son were to make
                        such a claim, we’d have to call that claim what it is – 'child-talk!'” 
             Ever
                hear the one about the well-intentioned Arkansas Baptist minister
                who said, “I don’t understand why there have to be
                Presbyterians and Catholics, Jews and Methodists, Lutherans and
                Episcopalians…why can’t we all just live under one
                big Baptist roof?!” 
             What
                is needed more than ever before is the mutual respect of those
                who adore the One Creator and
                  Lord, and who seek to bring honor to God through the lives
                we lead, the faith we profess, and the deeds we do.  
            I
                applaud the
                    Episcopal Church in particular for believing as strongly
                as ever in the Christian faith, without discounting the reality,
                  the
                    religious reality, of other faiths, especially the faith
                of
                  Jesus, Judaism, which I am honored to represent. 
            Why
                can’t we all be the same religion? That’s like asking
                why people have to be different.  
            A
                  generic religion is impossible because there is no such thing
                  as a generic human being! God
                  created many different animals in His zoo, including us. God
                  must love diversity. Just look at us. 
             A Christian writer named
                    F. Forrester Church, put it this way:  
            
              Human
                    beings all stand in the cathedral of the world. In the cathedral
                    are a multitude of stained glass windows [like those
                    lining the walls of this beautiful sanctuary]. 
              We are
                      born in one part of the cathedral, and our parents and grandparents
                      teach us how to see the light that shines through the window,
                      the window that carries the story of our particular family
                      and people.  
              The
                    same light shines through all the windows of the cathedral,
                    but we interpret its story in many different
                        ways. The light is the presence of God. And the way we
                    see its colors are the ways of our particular faith.  
             
            There
                are, indeed, different responses to life in the cathedral of
                the world Rev. Church teaches.  
            Relativists
                say, “All the
                  windows are basically the same, so it doesn’t matter where
                  you stand."  
            Fundamentalists
                say, “The true light only
                    shines through my window.” 
            And
                fanatics break all the other windows except theirs.  
            The
                light that shines through
                        my Jewish
                        window is the light of Torah and mitzvoth--those sacred
                  obligations which link humanity to God. It is not the whole
                light.  
            But
                          like Christianity, it is a refraction of God’s light,
                          and that is why it is holy. That is also why the ministry
                          of Calvary is
                          holy, for this congregation too, is a refraction of the light
                          of God. 
            The
                only hope for realizing the Kingdom of God preached by Jesus
                is a willingness to accept one another, regardless of our differences.              We differ in color and creed, but we share common convictions
                during this Lenten season and our destinies intertwine.  
            More
                  on that tomorrow, but today, may each of us, no matter where
                  we worship, live, or pray, hear God’s call to Abraham.
                   
            God
                didn’t tell Abraham to share a blessing or offer a
                    blessing, God said, “V’hyeh b’racha,” Be
                    a blessing.  
            May
                this Lenten/Passover season re-energize our commitment to be
                blessings, to be a blessing to all whose
                      lives we touch
                      and who touch ours. Amen.             Copyright ©2004
                Rabbi Micah Greenstein 
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