When the Truth Ain’t the Truth
Acts 16.16-34; Psalm 97;
Revelation 22.12-14, 16-17, 20-21; John
17.20-26
It’s
funny what can happen to you on your way to worship. Luke tells us
that Paul and Silas were on their way to worship in
Now,
this is all very perplexing.
Why did Paul cast this spirit out?
It was telling the truth, wasn’t it?
Paul and Silas were 'slaves of the Most High God', and they were
proclaiming a 'way of salvation', were they not? So
what's the problem? Wasn’t everyone on the
same side here? Paul appears not only to miss
a golden
opportunity to footnote his own authority with an pagan authority
already
recognised amongst his hearers, but also to prevent that
authority from
speaking its truth altogether. One could
quite reasonably conclude that Paul has not been a very bright boy at
this
point! Especially when one notes that the
immediate result is that he and Silas end up in prison!
This
story reminds me of several others, notably in the gospel of
Mark. There’s the one where a demoniac
named ‘Legion’ calls Jesus by his true name and identity—‘What have you
to do
with me, Jesus, son of the Most High God? I adjure you by God not to
torment
me.’ (5.7). In this story, as in the one
we read from Acts, it appears that the demons not only know who
the good
guys are, they were also quite keen to let everyone else know who they
are, in
what could easily be seen as a truly evangelistic manner!
Yet, as for Luke in Acts, Mark is
adamant that the good guys were none too impressed by such fervent
preaching.
Whenever the demons started to cry out like that, Jesus would tell them
to be
silent, to bite their tongues, for he did not want them broadcasting
his
messianic identity abroad (1.34). Again
we must ask where the problem lies. What
is wrong with footnoting a pagan authority if he or she is telling the
truth? Isn't the truth the truth, no
matter who tells it?
I
suspect we shall find some hints toward an answer by turning to
another of today’s lectionary readings, the one from John chapter 17. This fascinating passage is part of a prayer
Jesus is said to have prayed at the Last Supper. It
is a prayer for his disciples, and for
those who will come to believe in him because of their testimony. Amongst the many remarkable features of the
prayer is the close association it makes between right belief, or
'truth', and
right behaviour, or 'sanctity'. Truth
is understood solely as the word spoken by the Father (Christ, that
is), and sanctity
as the conformity of one's life to this truth by an immersion in the
uniquely loving
relationship Christ has with his Father in the Spirit.
What counts as truth for the Christian,
according to John, is conformity with the love of God as it is revealed
in the
relationship between Christ and his Father.
The truthful life is not, therefore, a matter of merely
intellectual
understanding or cognition. It is a
capacity for relationship, for loving, which has its origins not in our
own,
merely human, understanding or experience, but rather in the loving
relationship between the Father and the Son. John teaches that
truth is not
an objective ‘something’ we invent or discover out of our own
resources, but a
quality of relating that is given by God, given insofar as we allow
ourselves
to be absorbed and included within the covenantal dance that is the
triune God.
Now,
what that means for the problem at hand is this. That
the truth ain’t always the truth. Even
if it appears, at first glance, to undergird or support our deepest
beliefs or
convictions. Christian truth, as we have
seen, consists in the bringing together or reconciliation of all
reality within
the integrating love of the Father and the Son in the Spirit. If we look at truth from that point of view,
then falsity is anything that pulls things apart, that divides us into
warring
factions, any ‘truth’ which actually carves a fissure through the
middle of all
those things that God intended for each other: things like belief and
holiness,
theology and politics, prayer and economics.
Christian truth is about welcoming everyone to the table, and
recognising that which is God in them.
False truth sees the other as the enemy.
Christian truth is on about reconciliation and relationship,
precisely
because we are created different but equal.
False truth is uttered by lips unwilling, or unable, to
transcend the
barriers that divide us. Christian truth
presents a God who would love the world in and through all that is
human and
material and ordinary, a God who therefore desires to transform the
world's
lust for 'more' into a holy desire to lay down what we possess for the
sake of
the other. False truth, by contrast, is
always trying to acquire what the other has for itself.
It is a hoarder who is secretive and
calculating, forever exacting a price from all who would sit at its
feet to
learn.
This, I
contend, is the reason why Paul, like Jesus before him, refused
the evangelism of the demon, even when it apparently spoke the truth. The spirit who animated the slave-girl
apparently proclaimed a belief in the Most High God.
Yet it also exploited and enslaved the girl
for the sake of capitalism, for the sake of making a great deal of
money for
her owners. This, as Paul and Silas were
wise enough to see, made a nonsense of its claim to the truth. For the God of Jesus is love.
The God of Jesus is not one to use or
manipulate another for the sake of personal gain. There
was a fatal gap, therefore, between the
truth as it was told and the truth as it was lived.
The demonic is precisely that which sounds
true, and yet denies that truth any real effect or reality
in our
lives. I put it to you that Paul and
Silas were thrown into prison ultimately because they privileged the
God of
love and liberation over the economic realities of dog-eat-dog
capitalism,
because they refused the right of that ‘reality’ to colonise the truth
of love
with its divide-and-conquer business plan.
In that
light, one is perhaps invited to ask a few questions about what
passes for the truth in contemporary church culture.
Take Mr. Guy Sebastian, for example. According
to the Baptist Witness, he
is a shining example of the capacity of
Christianity to appeal to a younger, hipper, demographic. “God loves you,” says Guy, which sounds fine
to most of us. Yet one must ask who
‘God’ is for Guy. As the winner
of a television show called 'Australian Idol', one is tempted to say
that God,
for Guy, is . . . well Guy. Or
perhaps it is the trappings of celebrity which allow him to lend his
considerable time and talents to the mission of
. . . Pepsi !
But perhaps I am being picky. Perhaps
he is not a pagan demon at all! The
Hillsongs church is Baukham Hills,
I close
with a final observation about the way in which even the reading
of the Revised Common Lectionary, which I support and encourage as a
generally
very important Christian practise, can sometimes fall victim to the
kind of
naivety with regard to truth that we’ve been discussing this evening. The lectionary’s presentation of Revelation
22.12-21, which we read this evening, actually edits out quite a lot of
the
text. It skips verses 15, 18 &
19. So what, I hear you say?
Well, the effect of hearing the whole text is
substantially different from hearing the lectionary text only, for the
bits the
latter leaves out are precisely those verses that name the kinds of
people who won't
be counted amongst the redeemed – sorcerers, murderers, idolaters,
and
everyone who practices falsehood, to be exact.
Ironically, one of the missing verses also warns that anyone who
takes
away part of the whole message of the book will also have their share
in the
life to come taken away! The theologian
in me really does wonder at this, at whether or not the lectionary
itself is
sometimes guilty of exactly the kind of spin that Paul wanted to be rid
of. You know, ignoring the difficult and
demanding bits in favour of the bits that make us feel good and
important. What do you think?
What
I’ve done with you tonight is, as usual, nothing particularly
spectacular. Just a bit of
gardening. You know, pulling at the
weeds, pruning off the dead wood; questioning the truths we’ve
inherited,
asking if they are really true. That
kind of thing. For that is what any
preacher is called to do, I reckon. To
create enough cracks in those certainties we have about God, the world,
and
faith that, perhaps, just perhaps, the really new and entirely strange
word of God might be able to seep into our lives. Any
gardener knows that you have to prune off
the old stuff to let the new stuff grow.
Which is exactly what Paul did when he cast out that demon. Or baptised people. Or
preached the gospel. Some pruning.
Some freeing. Some liberating
from the exploitative certainties of capitalism, and the gods invoked
to
support it, in order to create the possibility of faith in a God who
loves, and
nurtures, and welcomes, and that is all.
Glory be
to God—Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. As in
the beginning, so now, and forever,
world without end. Amen.