Saturday, May 19, 2012

The Betrayal of Judas - a sermon for May 20, 2012


A Sermon for the Sunday after Ascension Day (RCL B) 5-20-2012
Offered by Nathan Ferrell for Trinity Episcopal Shared Ministry

Texts:              Acts 1:15-17,21-26; Psalm 1; 1 John 5:9-13; John 17:6-19
Themes:         the wicked and the righteous, Judas, Matthias, the high priestly prayer of Jesus
Title:              The Betrayal of Judas

It was March 25, the Feast of the Annunciation, the day each year – 9 months before Christmas Day – when the Church remembers the surprise visit by the angel Gabriel to Mary in order to announce her pregnancy by the Holy Spirit.

In this village in Ireland, it was the custom on this day for all the young girls to wear a blue scarf on their head as a sign of their devotion to the Virgin Mary. One girl, who was herself named Mary, was in her room getting dressed for the morning Mass, when her younger brother burst into the room and grabbed her blue scarf and began to play with it, using it as a jump rope and other things.

“That’s a holy scarf!” Mary yelled at her brother, named Michael. “Give it back right now!”

But Michael was being a boy, and he went out playing and skipping and laughing.

“You are committing a sin,” Mary said, trying to use some kind of leverage to get the scarf back. “And you must fast all day on Friday as a penance for this sin!”

Eventually, their Mother heard the commotion and came in and ordered Michael to give back the scarf, which he did. And they all went off to worship. On the way, Mary was keen to remind Michael that he must fast on Friday to make up for his wrongdoing.

“From dawn till dusk, no food or drink must pass your lips,” she said, wagging her finger at him.

This was Tuesday, and two days later, on Thursday, Michael developed a high fever and went to bed early. It was Mary’s job to nurse him. And in her heart she made the decision that, despite his fever, she was going to make sure that Michael kept that fast on Friday, as a way to learn his lesson.

Mary told her mother not to prepare any food for Michael on Friday, that she would take care of whatever he needed. Her mother, of course, had no idea of Mary’s intention. 

All day long, Mary brought no food or water to her brother. And without any water, his fever grew worse. Sweat poured from his body until he was so dry that he could not sweat any more. But Mary remained convinced that Michael had to complete this fast, as a just punishment for his wicked act.

She said to herself: “If I relent now, he will think that he can get off lightly in the future, and so he will keep acting badly.”

As the sun began to set in the west, Michael’s breathing grew slower and heavier. Then, as the sun disappeared, his breathing stopped.

When Mary realized what had happened, she rushed and told her mother, and then ran to fetch the priest. From that day on, Mary wore a blue scarf, not just on the Feast of the Annunciation, but every day of her life, in order to remind herself of how, in her pride and arrogance, she had betrayed her brother and betrayed the Virgin Mary. (Adapted from Celtic Parables by Robert Van De Weyer, p. 79-81.)

Family. Love. Betrayal.

These are some of the most common experiences of life, and I bet that most of you know a bit of what betrayal is all about.  

Family. Love. Betrayal.
A few weeks ago, in April, we will remember that we had our Doubting Thomas Sunday.
Well, today then, my friends, in my estimation, is our Judas Iscariot Sunday.

Judas is central to nearly all of our lessons today.
In his high-priestly prayer from the Gospel of John, the Lord recognizes that he has called beloved together his community and he has protected them. He says that “not one of them was lost except the one destined to be lost” – that is, of course, a reference to Judas.  

The Psalm appointed for today can certainly be understood as a reference to Judas, as the prime Gospel example of one who walked in the counsel of the wicked.

And, of course, our reading from Acts is all about how the community recovered from the scandal of Judas. In this text, the apostles speak of Judas as one “who became a guide for those who arrested Jesus.” And when they pray, they recognize that “Judas turned aside to go to his own place.”

In the saga of Holy Week and the Lord’s Passion, Judas is the prototypical bad guy – the trusted friend who betrayed the Master and handed him over to his eventual torture and death.   

But that’s too simple, too easy. We tend to brush off Judas too quickly and put him aside as someone who is unworthy of our thought and meditation.

Let me suggest to you that there is much that we can learn from the story of Judas, and let me begin by making one thing perfectly clear: Judas loved Christ! Judas loved the Lord.

Let’s be clear about this. Judas was one of the first in that core group who left the security of their old lives behind in order to follow Jesus. And he walked with the Lord and journeyed with him and stayed with him all throughout his years of ministry. He was a faithful companion of Jesus for years. No one does something like that except out of love. I am convinced that he faithfully loved Jesus in his heart.

And yet, Judas did betray the Master. Why then did he do it?
It wasn’t for the money. You may remember that later he tried to give the money back, and he threw it down in the temple. It wasn’t about the money.

So why then did he do it? What was the betrayal of Judas?

Let me suggest to you there is a very fine line between love and betrayal, a fine line which gets crossed all too commonly in our families, among our friends.

The betrayal of Judas was this: in his love for the Master, he became convinced that he knew what was best for the Lord, and he decided to take control by himself of the situation.

Just like Mary in the old Irish story with which we started: Mary loved her brother Michael. There is no reason to assume that she did not love him. In fact, it is clear that she wanted what was best for him; she wanted him to mature, to grow up. The problem is that she felt sure that she knew how to make that happen, she knew the best way to force him to mature, and she took control of the situation.

You can call it pride perhaps, but this betrayal is really much more subtle than this.
Can you think of a situation with a friend, with a son or daughter, with a parent perhaps, where you are convinced that you know what is best for their life, and you are frustrated that they will not see their situation in the same way that you do?

When that happens, we are tempted to take charge, to take control, to make sure it happens exactly according to the blueprint that we have formulated in our minds.

Judas was certain that Jesus was the promised Messiah, the Son of God who was sent to make the world right again! To break the bonds of oppression. To right the wrongs of injustice. To heal the broken. To alleviate the suffering of the poor.
Judas loved Christ; he believed in Jesus and knew that he was the One!
The problem was that Jesus was not acting in accordance with the plan that Judas had in mind.
He needed to confront the Romans and the corrupt leaders of the Temple. If he just grasped the reigns of power, then Judas was sure that he could set the world right, the way that God had always intended it to be!

And so Judas decided to take charge, to take control of the situation, to make sure it happened according to the blueprint that he formulated in his mind.

And that is the betrayal of Judas, the betrayal to which we all are tempted at one time or another.

The truth is that there is a fine line between love and betrayal.

 We must not be surprised by Judas. All of us know exactly how he could do so such a thing.
We know because we are tempted to do likewise all of the time.

The sad thing is that Jesus had taught Judas and all who would listen about a better way to be, a better way to live free from the need to control and manipulate others.

Dallas Willard summarizes the very practical teaching of Jesus in this way:
“We are always to respect other people as spiritual beings who are responsible before God alone for the course they choose to take of their own free will. God has paid an awful price to arrange for human self-determination [and] obviously places great value on it” (The Divine Conspiracy by Dallas Willard, p.230 - http://www.dwillard.org/books/DivConsp.asp).

Every week during these Great Fifty Days, as we have been renewing the covenant made at our baptism, we have been promising to “respect the dignity of every human being.”

We fail to do this when, like Mary in our story today, and like Judas, we force upon others the change which we want to see in their lives, which we are sure is for their best!

God never does that with us. God respects the process of our free will.
And we follow Jesus in his life-giving way when we choose never to manipulate others, but to respect them as beings of infinite worth in God’s sight, who must make their own choices and choose their own path.

This is how we love others without falling into the trap of betrayal. Amen.

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