The biblical tradition hopes to reveal that whenever the
prophetic function is lacking in any group or religion, such a group will very
soon be self-serving, self-maintaining, self-perpetuating, and self- promoting.
When the prophets are kicked out of any group, it's a very short time until
that group is circling the wagons around itself, and all sense of mission and
message is lost. I am afraid this is the natural movement of any institution.
Establishments of any kind usually move toward their own self-perpetuation,
rather than "What are we doing for others?" In fact, the question is
not even asked because self-perpetuation is presumed to be a high level
necessity. Thus the prophetic and Pauline words for institutions were
"thrones or dominions or principalities or powers" (Colossians 1:16).
They consider themselves "too big to fail," usually because they are
protecting their own privilege--which is too important to question.
......Prophets step in to disrupt the usual social
consensus--"How wonderful our group is!"--and say, "It's just
not entirely true!" So you see why the prophets are all killed (Matthew
23:29-39). Prophets expose and topple each group's idols and blind spots, very
often showing that we make things into absolutes that are not absolutes in
God's eyes, and we relativize what in fact is central and important. As Jesus
so cleverly puts it, "You strain out gnats and you swallow camels"
(Matthew 23:24).
This tendency in religion to "absolutize"
things comes from a deep psychological need for some solid ground to stand on,
and I understand that. But what the prophets keep saying is, "God is the only absolute!"
Don't make the fingers pointing to the moon into the moon itself, as it were.
Jeremiah said, "The Temple, the Temple, the Temple of Yahweh! Don't you
recognize it has become a robber's den?" (7:1-11) and this is the very
line that Jesus quotes (Mark 11:17). But of course he was talking about
Jerusalem, and surely not our parish church, Salt Lake City, [Lee's Summit,]
Washington, DC, or much less, St. Peter's in Rome.
With that, perhaps we are ready to begin Lent.
It's a beautiful day in God's world, be sure to see the
good.
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