In this week’s reading, which follows directly after last week’s Gospel, Jesus reassures the disciples that, even though he is leaving them, his teaching and his Spirit will remain with them. That Spirit — working in them — will fulfill what they lack. The Advocate, the one who will speak on their behalf in moments of judgment and inspire their speech in times of testing, will lead them more deeply into the truth of God’s love and God’s will for the world.
We will hear much more about the work of that Spirit in a few weeks. But for this moment, I want to emphasize what Jesus is telling his disciples as he bids them farewell just before his suffering: If you do what I do, Jesus says, you are doing God’s will. If you do God’s will, you will have the power you have seen in me — and that power can change the world. Not by doing self-serving miracles, but by changing the nature of human relationships.
Remember what Jesus taught them one last time at that meal as a sort of summary of all that he had done with them during his earthly ministry. He washes their feet. It is what we reenact on Maundy Thursday, and it is the act that continues to make us uncomfortable — and part of the reason I think attendance at that service has been declining over the years. To love God is to love Jesus. To love Jesus is to do what Jesus does. Jesus humbles himself, even taking on the role of a servant, a slave, to wash the dirt off our feet. To love Jesus is to do the same for the people around us.
If you are unhappy with the way things are in your life — if you are frustrated by the way things happen in our community — if you despair when you watch the national news — then you should know that there is something you can do that will begin to change things and make them better. You can love your neighbor just as Jesus did. You can serve them and put their best interest ahead of your own. And in doing that you will change them, and you will change your relationship with them, and you will change the world.
The disciples, after the Passion and the Resurrection and the Ascension, did exactly that. Empires fell. How we think about ourselves and each other has never been the same.
And what is remarkable is how this pattern keeps repeating itself throughout history. In moments of despair and confusion — moments not entirely unlike our own — someone rises up and shows the rest of us what it looks like to love God by loving the way Jesus loved.
(It’s been a few weeks since I’ve been able to find the time to record and post my Sunday sermons. I’ve been preaching – many times a week over the past month or so – but between meetings and travel, I’ve just not been able to squeeze in the time to record, edit and post. I’m hoping I’ll get back on track again, but in the meantime, please accept my apologies.)
You can view the sermon recording here.
Twenty years ago I was on a late-night radio program in Phoenix with a rabbi and a Christian host who insisted the Bible was simple — just open it and read. The rabbi stiffened. So did I. What followed was one of the most clarifying conversations I’ve had about faith and reason.
Today marks the beginning of a new communications initiative for the Episcopal Diocese of Rhode Island: “Dear Rhode Island Church”
Jesus’ resurrection and our atonement with God leads us to recognize that we are reconciled not just to God but to each other as well. And more than that — it isn’t simply a remaking of our personal relationships. The Easter event is the foundation for a new way of living in community. It begins a process, still ongoing, of moving us from a world ordered around the way of the Ruler of this World to one in which the Reign of God is made increasingly manifest.
When we have completely given up, God has not. God acts and out of the darkness, new light bursts forth. Easter is the proof that death and despair do not win in the end.