Hidden With Christ in God
Texts: Colossians 3.1-11; Luke 12.13-21
This morning I’d like us to focus our attention on a short text from
Colossians:
Set your minds on things that
are above, not on things that are on earth, for you have died and your
life is hidden with Christ in God . . . Put to death, therefore,
whatever in you is earthly: fornication, impurity, passion, evil
desire, and greed (which is idolatry).
In the last thirty years or so, this text has become quite a large
problem for many Christians. For it appears to support what
Manning Clark used to call the “wowserism” of the “life-deniers”.
Wowserism, in Clark’s lexicon, refers to a deep suspicion of anything
to do with human desire or passion. The son of a clergyman, Clark
rejected the church in later life because he came to believe that
Christianity was a religion which rejected the body and all that was
earthly or material. Christianity, he said, was too much about
words, heaven and spirit, and too little about art, the body and human
longing.
Is Clark right? Is this what Christianity is like? Is that
what Paul intended to say?
Well, before I press on, let it be known that I agree with Clark, and
indeed with more recent critics like David Marr and David Tacey, in
their assessment that there is a great deal of wowserism amongst
Christians. I grew up amongst the wowsers, and I have no desire
to live that way. I would argue, nevertheless, that there is a
darker dimension to the human experience of earth and body and passion
that Clark and his followers have, I think, failed to acknowledge or
appreciate. With St. Paul, I contend that there is a
fundamental problem with human desire, and it’s this: that human
beings would rather possess a whole heap of things, than allow God to
possess them. That human beings would rather possess a whole heap
of things, than allow God to possess them. The name given in
Scripture for this tendency is “idolatry”. Not a popular term
these days, I grant you. Nevertheless, I happen to believe that
idolatry is amongst the biggest problems that we have, and it is
exactly the problem that Paul seeks to address in the passage we are
reading today.
When Paul told the Colossians to set their minds on heavenly things
rather than on earthly things, he wasn’t talking about heaven and earth
in the literal way we still, despite all our sophistication, tend to
think of them. He was simply saying this: “That space in
your home and heart where God would like to be is not simply
vacant. You fill it up with other stuff. Stuff which has
nothing to do with God or the practise of love, joy and peace; but is
rather about your greed, your status in the world, and your desperate
desire to avoid God’s call on your life. That’s idolatry, the
desire that keeps you from God”. Get it? The “earthly” is
everything that pushes God out of the frame. The “heavenly” is
where God has been evicted to.
Now, Jesus spoke a little more specifically. He told his
disciples this: ‘Be on guard against all kinds of greed; for
one’s life does not consist in the abundance of one’s
possessions.’ Now I reckon that sums up the problem pretty
well. Because what gets between us and God is simply the desire
for every bloody thing under the sun but God. More money.
More street cred. More security. A bigger house. A
surgically styled body. A bigger orgasm. A bigger credit
account. Or whatever. Do you see where Jesus was heading
with this? For Christ and for Christianity, there’s actually
nothing wrong with desire as such. What Christ objected too,
however, was idolatry—the desire of shadows and chimeras rather that
the real thing. For our every craving for every advertisable
whatever is just that: a shadowy displacement of (or, in the language
of psychoanalysis, fetishization) of that which we have lost or put
aside as irrelevant. God. And if we keep on chasing shadows, says
Jesus, one day we’re going to wake up dead. “Dead” meaning that
the joy has gone out of life. We’ll have gained the world, maybe,
but lost our souls in the process. ‘So it is with anyone who
stores up wealth for themselves, but is not rich toward God’. So
says Christ.
Now one fellow who understood all this particulary well, I think, was
Meister Eckhart, a german theologian and priest who taught and wrote in
the 14th century. Eckhart was certainly not a wowser. He
spent a considerable percentage of his time speaking about the wonder
of creation and of the human body. He celebrated human desire in
fresh and disarming prose. For all this, however, Eckhart was not
an innocent. He was far from naïve. He understood that
the body, and human emotion, and the beauty of the earth could only be
celebrated with a true and holy passion if, if we had first disciplined
ourselves to receive them as gifts from God rather than objects for our
consumption, accumulation or possession.
At the heart of celebration, he said, is discipline. In order to
experience God’s love, joy and peace in life, you first need to detach
yourself from every desire to consume, accumulate or possess. Yes
‘detach’. That is Eckhart’s equivalent for the Pauline phrase ‘to
die with Christ.’ ‘Detachment from created things’, he said in a
famous sermon, is the ‘one thing necessary . . . detachment leads me to
where I am receptive to nothing but God’. Eckhart, like
Jesus and Paul, could see that our human hearts and minds are full to
the brim with things. Things which are shadows, illusions,
idols. Things to which we are willing to sell even our
souls. Things which have nothing of God in them. At least,
not in the way that we see or relate to them. And the only way to
be rid of their poison, says the Master, is to detach. Let
go. Cease to desire for them after the way of consumption,
accumulation or possession. Gelassenheit was the word he used,
‘let be’. Because if we could just . . . cease . . .
be still . . . let things be . . . then suddenly we would
see that God gives himself to us not as something to be possessed or
owned, but rather as a gift which owns or possesses us. Only by
allowing God to own and possess us will life become a passionate and
joyous celebration, says Eckhart.
You see, the only wealth we need is God. I’m serious about
that. The only ‘thing’ we need is not a thing at all. It is
God. When we detach from things, God comes to fill or possess us
by God’s Spirit. And suddenly the world is full of life once
more. Not the life which we put there ourselves, through complex
psychological processes of greed and wish-fulfillment, but the life
which God himself is as the gift within our hearts and our world.
So when Paul says ‘You have died with Christ and now your life is
hidden with Christ in God’ he wants us to know that we don’t have to be
capitalists anymore. We don’t have to face our neighbour with
envy or greed. We can allow them to be what they are: a
gift of God to be celebrated and loved, not a symbol of desire all we
don’t have.
And so we come full circle. We are back to where we began.
I do believe, you see, in an earthy, imminent, sensual
spirituality. And I believe it is what God has in store for
us. But none of this is magically ours. We are called to
place ourselves in the way of God’s grace by confessing, and dealing
with, our attachment to things. Eckhart said that if we want God
to write God’s word and will in our hearts, then we have to become like
empty tablets, ready for that writing to begin. God calls us to
detach, to empty ourselves of the desire for things, to die with
Christ, so that we may truly welcome the whole world, in all its
spendour and pain, as God’s gift of love, joy and peace in Christ. .
. Now all of that is both very easy, and very difficult! We
shall be exploring these things more in the weeks and months and years
to come. But, for now, it is appropriate that Meister Eckhart
should have the last word, a word of paradox which lies, I believe, at
the crux of our faith:
Detachment is the best of all,
for it purifies the soul and cleanses the conscience and enkindles the
heart and awakens the spirit and stimulates our longings and shows us
where God is and separates us from created things and unites us with
God.
In the name of God – Father, Son and Holy Spirit - as in the beginning,
so now and for ever, world without end. Amen.
Garry
Deverell
9th Sunday after Pentecost
2004
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