N.T. Wright

Twelve Months of Sundays


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days of the old world as with the first days of the new one. Politicians and economists can’t sort out third world debt, but the gospel, and its message of Jubilee, just might. If ‘teaching, fellowship, bread-breaking, prayers’, let alone ‘theology’ (remember Harold Wilson and ‘the theology of the Common Market’?) sounds boring to some, maybe it’s because we’ve forgotten that each of the four aspects of the early Church’s daily life stood the world’s values, not least its systemic injustices, on their head.

      Abundant life, then: that’s what Jesus has on offer, not the thin, hang-on-like-grim-death approach that you find in some churches. The ‘shepherd’ parable in John 10, which really continues to v. 30, explores the intimate relation between shepherd and sheep, with the emphasis on the shepherd’s desire that the sheep be led in the right direction, fed and watered, and kept secure for ever. And the point throughout is that Jesus is contrasted with other would-be Messiahs: thieves and brigands, he calls them. There were plenty of those in Jesus’ world, leaders of marauding gangs on the one hand and ‘holy brigands’ (fundamentalist terrorists, we would call them) on the other. Jesus’ way of leadership, of founding the new movement, was totally different, and totally relevant to his day and ours. A different style, an upside-down ambition, a self-giving love that, as Peter saw, would then be imitated by his followers – the world waits to see what can happen when wandering sheep, brought home by the Shepherd’s love, then start to live by the same pattern.

       The Fifth Sunday of Easter

       Acts 7.55–60

       1 Peter 2.2–10

       John 14.1–14

      I’m never quite sure what Jesus meant when he said ‘you will do greater works than these, because I am going to the Father’. But I’m quite sure he did not mean ‘you will do lesser works than these’. An old cliché; but those who used to say ‘expect great things from God; attempt great things for God’ had John on their side far more than those who, by implication at least, simply want a place on the sidelines where a few little Christian activities can take place without causing a fuss. As the world continues to reveal its powerlessness in the face of evil, is it not time to take Jesus at his word?

      The promise is flanked by others, equally remarkable. Many dwelling-places, furnished and ready. Knowing the Father – seeing the Father, even, something nobody expected to do and live – is found through looking at Jesus. And the simple and overwhelming promise about prayer: whatever you ask in my name, I will do it. Much standard Christianity, in all sections and parties of the Church, has adjusted the focus just enough so that, instead of seeing all this clearly, we get the general picture but it’s all rather blurred. We aren’t really sure about our final destiny. We don’t really expect to attain the vision of God by looking long and hard at Jesus (or why would we do anything else?). And we don’t pray for solid, substantial definite things that will bring the Father glory in the Son.

      The great statements earlier in the chapter are likewise at a discount in our half-hearted, lukewarm-blooded Christianities. Jesus, we are told, couldn’t have said that he was the way, the truth and the life. Many now make that denial the shibboleth of a new orthodoxy. (What this amounts to, of course, is the statement that the Enlightenment, or perhaps postmodernity, is ‘the way, the truth and the life’; is that any less ‘arrogant’, the charge normally advanced against John 14.6?) We don’t want our own worldview disturbed by someone telling us that Jesus has upstaged it all.

      Which was, of course, what Stephen did with the world-view of the chief priests and the hardline Pharisees. The Temple is under judgement, he said; Israel has always rejected its heaven-sent rulers, and has now done so again, once and for all. That would have been arrogant, fighting talk if it weren’t for the fact that it was Jesus he was talking about; as it was, it was suffering, forgiving talk. In the great Jewish tradition of martyrdom, the dying called down curses on their persecutors; the first Christian martyr followed his Lord in praying for their forgiveness. But forgiveness wasn’t what they wanted (despite the fact that this was what the Temple stood for!); they wanted their worldview left intact. That’s the stuff that stonings are made of. But God has laid in Zion the true corner stone, precious beyond imagining to those who believe.

       The Sixth Sunday of Easter

       Acts 17.22–31

       1 Peter 3.13–22

       John 14.15–21

      In a spectacular (and presumably heavily abbreviated) speech, Paul takes on culturally sophisticated Athens with the new upside-down wisdom. He begins on their own territory, with the altar to the Unknown God: even the Athenians had left a window open, a gap in their well-worked-out theology, where fresh air could blow in from an unexpected quarter. Some of the poets, too, had pointed towards a God who was both other than the world and yet intimately involved with it.

      Yet Paul is not simply finding points in the local culture he can affirm, as though Christian mission simply pats people on the back for being as they are. Affirmation is more than balanced by confrontation. Even today, if you stand on Mars Hill, where the highest court of the city used to meet, you have a wonderful view of the Acropolis, with the Parthenon and the other temples clearly in view, the pinnacle of a culture and its theology. Paul, against that backdrop, tells them it’s all a waste of time: the creator of all doesn’t live in houses like that. Nor does he need the whole paraphernalia of the sacrificial system. Nor – despite what not only traditional Athenians but also the pre-Christian Paul would have said – does he make any ultimate distinctions between one race of humans and another. Paul may have found an open window in the culture, but what’s blowing through it is a hurricane that will turn the room upside down.

      In particular, Paul takes on the Epicureans and Stoics with whom he’d been debating in the marketplace. Epicureans, like Deists, thought of the gods as remote and detached, happily unconcerned about our world. Stoics, like some other pantheists, thought of God as the inner divine essence within our world. Both can lead, and sometimes do, to atheism (the gods are either so distant that they might as well not exist, or they turn out to be simply a metaphorical projection of our feelings of wonder) or at least to relativism (the gods are so far away that all religions are just vague approximations; or they are so present that all religions are different expressions of ‘the divine’). Both are confronted head on by Paul’s message of one God, the creator, who is both different from the world and compassionately involved with it. Both, in particular, are confronted, as is all atheism and relativism, by the fact of Jesus’ resurrection, and the message which it brings: the God of Israel is the one true God, who is bringing to the world the justice for which it longs.

      Paul knew, as did Peter, how unwelcome this announcement would be. Yet the consequent suffering of Christians is itself to be part of the witness, because the justice proceeds from self-giving love. And the witness itself, as John would remind us, proceeds from the Spirit, God’s wind blowing fresh spring air through whatever windows, in whatever culture, may happen to be open.

       The Seventh Sunday of Easter

       (Sunday after Ascension Day)

       Acts 1.6–14

       1 Peter 4.12–14; 5.6–11

       John 17.1–11

      ‘When his glory is revealed.’ The ascension gives us a glimpse in advance of the great truth which will one day be unveiled – or rather, the glorious Person who will one day be revealed. It is as though the universe is throbbing with the secret knowledge that Jesus, the Messiah, is its true Lord, a knowledge that cannot yet be spoken, that would not be understood. To be a Christian is to be privy