Waldo Beach - "On Christian Consumption" (May 17, 1959)
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- | Today is the anniversary | 0:10 |
of the triumpho entry | 0:13 | |
of our Lord Jesus Christ | 0:15 | |
into the city of Jerusalem | 0:18 | |
on Palm Sunday. | 0:21 | |
Because of the fact that people broke branches | 0:25 | |
from Palm trees and spread them before Jesus, | 0:28 | |
as he rode into Jerusalem. | 0:32 | |
And in other ways gave evidence | 0:35 | |
of their desire to claim him king. | 0:37 | |
This has been called Palm Sunday. | 0:41 | |
The reference there is not mainly to the palms, | 0:45 | |
but particularly to the symbolism, | 0:48 | |
which they are the desire of people | 0:52 | |
to claim Jesus Christ as king. | 0:55 | |
The accounts of this are carried in all four of the gospels. | 1:00 | |
This happens to be one of the incidents | 1:06 | |
in the life of our savior, | 1:08 | |
which was considered worthy of reporting | 1:10 | |
by each of the four evangelists. | 1:13 | |
Indeed, each one gives some bit of information, | 1:17 | |
which is omitted by all the other three. | 1:20 | |
For example, | 1:25 | |
Matthew is the only one who tells us | 1:25 | |
that there were two beasts involved. | 1:29 | |
Mark is the only one who mentions that the disciples, | 1:34 | |
when they went to get the beast, | 1:38 | |
made a promise that they would | 1:40 | |
return the animal after it had been used. | 1:42 | |
Luke is the only one who, who mentions that Jesus, | 1:46 | |
when he came to the brow of the hill | 1:49 | |
overlooking Jerusalem, | 1:51 | |
wept. | 1:55 | |
We are indebted to John for the report that while the | 1:57 | |
procession was going on, the Pharisees who were in it | 2:02 | |
said to themselves that they must recognize | 2:08 | |
that their plans to thwart Jesus | 2:12 | |
had been temporarily frustrated because as they put it, | 2:14 | |
the whole world is going after this man. | 2:17 | |
So you see this must have been an important incident | 2:21 | |
in the life of the savior, | 2:24 | |
because all of the reporters report it. | 2:27 | |
And each one seems to have had some unique bit of | 2:31 | |
information about it. | 2:34 | |
It would be interesting for us to form | 2:37 | |
from these strains of information, | 2:40 | |
one composite picture of what happened that day. | 2:43 | |
We might arrive at this composite picture | 2:49 | |
by asking some questions about the event. | 2:52 | |
The first one would be what happened? | 2:55 | |
The answer is that Jesus had on this occasion, | 2:58 | |
the greatest public success of his ministry. | 3:03 | |
When, as it were, the whole world, | 3:07 | |
went out after him to claim him as Lord. | 3:10 | |
He rode from the Mount of Olives, | 3:14 | |
into the city of Jerusalem, | 3:16 | |
surrounded by a great throng of admirers and worshipers. | 3:19 | |
The next question is why was Jerusalem the city | 3:26 | |
into which he rode? | 3:30 | |
And the answer is that it was the capital of the land | 3:32 | |
in two ways, politically, it was the capital | 3:35 | |
and religiously it was the capital. | 3:38 | |
But beyond this, | 3:42 | |
the common people expected that the Messiah, when he came, | 3:44 | |
would ride into Jerusalem from the Mount of Olives. | 3:49 | |
In other words, | 3:53 | |
here was the fulfillment of their expectations. | 3:54 | |
Now on what did he ride? | 4:00 | |
When he came into the Capitol city? | 4:03 | |
He rode on a coat of a donkey. | 4:07 | |
Now this is significant because the military conquerors of | 4:13 | |
that day, when they went into a city to be in charge of it, | 4:18 | |
rode on a horse. | 4:22 | |
Which was the symbol of conquering might. | 4:24 | |
Jesus Christ, When he rode into Jerusalem, | 4:28 | |
rode on the coat of a donkey, | 4:32 | |
which was the symbol of lowly service. | 4:34 | |
This is particularly significant because of the fact that | 4:40 | |
Jesus elected this means of transportation himself | 4:43 | |
and made plans for it. | 4:46 | |
He deliberately wished to set the tone of his conquering | 4:48 | |
kingship by the means of his transportation. | 4:52 | |
Let's look for a moment at what we would expect Jesus to do | 4:56 | |
if this were the original Palm Sunday | 5:00 | |
and he were riding into Washington | 5:02 | |
instead of into Jerusalem. | 5:04 | |
Let us suppose that we have a tremendous motorcade going | 5:06 | |
into the capital with police escort | 5:09 | |
and with the Cadillacs in the front. | 5:14 | |
Now Jesus very likely would not be up front | 5:17 | |
with the Cadillacs because he does not | 5:20 | |
subscribe to that superficial American philosophy, | 5:22 | |
which says it's what's up front that counts. | 5:26 | |
Jesus would very likely be back about the middle of the | 5:30 | |
motorcade hitchhiking a ride with some friend | 5:34 | |
who had a Nash Rambler or an Austin Healey. | 5:37 | |
Jesus would leave the impression that he did not want to be | 5:42 | |
a king in the worldly sense of that term, | 5:46 | |
that he was a king of the heart, | 5:49 | |
that he was a king of service that he believed that those | 5:52 | |
who would be first in his kingdom should be last. | 5:56 | |
They should be the servants of all. | 6:00 | |
And he set the tone of this himself. | 6:03 | |
All right. Then we ask another question. | 6:05 | |
Who are the people who greeted him? | 6:07 | |
Well, it seems the answer to that is | 6:12 | |
that about everyone greeted him, | 6:14 | |
almost everyone shouted the songs and shouts of praise. | 6:16 | |
That is with the exception of a few, | 6:23 | |
the political leaders of Jerusalem were not among | 6:26 | |
those who came out to greet him. | 6:29 | |
The religious leaders were not among those | 6:31 | |
who came out to greet him. | 6:33 | |
It was mainly the common people, | 6:36 | |
though many of the elite and the aristocratic we can believe | 6:38 | |
were in the number two. | 6:42 | |
What did they say? When they came out to greet Jesus, | 6:46 | |
They said a Hebrew word, | 6:50 | |
which is a shout of prayer addressed to God. | 6:52 | |
It is an invocation of blessing. | 6:59 | |
The word was hosanna. | 7:03 | |
Which means save now. | 7:06 | |
This is not a pious kind of prayer that says, Lord, | 7:10 | |
sometime in the future, will you let something | 7:15 | |
important happen for us please? | 7:17 | |
But it is a thrilling expectant cry | 7:20 | |
in which the worshiper almost demands | 7:25 | |
of God that salvation be now and here, | 7:29 | |
and that blessing be upon those present. | 7:32 | |
So that by means of this, they were saying, | 7:37 | |
we believe that God's salvation is coming now | 7:39 | |
in this person, Jesus. | 7:43 | |
And upon us who are in this parade. | 7:45 | |
What did Jesus say? | 7:51 | |
The answer to that question is that he said almost nothing | 7:54 | |
so far as the record goes. | 7:57 | |
This very likely is what happened. | 8:01 | |
Because if he had said very much, | 8:03 | |
one of the four gospel writers would have picked it up. | 8:05 | |
The only thing which is recorded is that when he came to the | 8:10 | |
brow of the hill, overlooking Jerusalem, wept over the city, | 8:13 | |
he explained his tears by saying that Jerusalem should have | 8:18 | |
known what were the things that made for peace. | 8:22 | |
But that she did not know that the things which made | 8:27 | |
for peace were hidden from her eyes. | 8:31 | |
And then he went on into the city | 8:36 | |
and began the events of Holy Week. | 8:39 | |
All right, there we have Palm Sunday | 8:42 | |
in brief outline laid before us. | 8:45 | |
Why is it that we are considering this matter today? | 8:48 | |
Well, one good answer would be | 8:55 | |
that this happens to be the anniversary of the event. | 8:57 | |
And there seems to be some didactic value in celebrating | 9:01 | |
anniversaries on the day of the anniversary, | 9:05 | |
the day of the event. | 9:09 | |
It is worthwhile remembering, | 9:12 | |
however that we do not always do this. | 9:14 | |
For example, we never celebrate the birthday | 9:17 | |
of Jesus on the day he was born. | 9:19 | |
It is also worthwhile remembering that some of the | 9:23 | |
formalities and formalisms which religious groups put on, | 9:27 | |
on special days in holy seasons, | 9:33 | |
deserve a healthy skepticism. | 9:36 | |
Because actually, they have about as little relevance | 9:40 | |
to the true purpose of Jesus Christ | 9:45 | |
as the Campus Greek Week has to the true purpose of Plato, | 9:49 | |
which is practically nil. | 9:55 | |
This is not true of all formalities or formalisms, | 9:58 | |
but it is true of some. | 10:02 | |
Having said this, | 10:04 | |
it remains true that whether we consider | 10:07 | |
this matter of Palm Sunday in the context of Holy Week | 10:11 | |
now, or in August, we absolutely must come to grips | 10:17 | |
with what is involved in a | 10:23 | |
puzzling situation that is presented. | 10:26 | |
We cannot avoid this as Christians. | 10:30 | |
We have to come to grips with it. | 10:32 | |
The puzzle arises out of the updraft and down draft | 10:35 | |
spiritually speaking that is presented by the fact that Palm | 10:40 | |
Sunday comes only five days before Good Friday. | 10:44 | |
The day on which our Lord received | 10:51 | |
the greatest public acclaim of his career, | 10:54 | |
was only five days before the day of his | 10:59 | |
total rejection by the public. | 11:03 | |
This is a puzzling situation, but it is a historical fact. | 11:09 | |
The crowd that was able to shout Hosanna | 11:15 | |
on Sunday was able to shout crucify him on Friday. | 11:19 | |
Now, as we look at this situation a little bit, | 11:28 | |
we are aware that there was a small minority | 11:31 | |
of very few people who were | 11:34 | |
on hand when the event of Mount Olives took place, | 11:37 | |
who were not in sympathy with that. | 11:43 | |
And that there was a very small group of people who were not | 11:45 | |
in sympathy with what took place on Calvary. | 11:49 | |
But it is also significant to know that neither minority was | 11:52 | |
able to prevent what happened. | 11:56 | |
The Pharisees who were grumbling on Palm Sunday knew that | 11:59 | |
they were so badly outnumbered that they | 12:03 | |
could not stop this procession. | 12:06 | |
And the handful of people who sympathized with Jesus | 12:10 | |
on Good Friday made no attempt to stop the crucifixion. | 12:15 | |
Now this drives us to the conclusion, doesn't it? | 12:22 | |
That actually the people who determined what happened on | 12:25 | |
Palm Sunday and what happened on Good Friday | 12:31 | |
were the largest number of people, the mob, the crowd, | 12:35 | |
the general public folk, like you and me. | 12:40 | |
People like us were able to say on Palm Sunday, | 12:45 | |
Hosanna, and were able to say within that same week, | 12:52 | |
give us Barabbas . | 12:58 | |
On the outskirts of Jerusalem they praised Christ | 13:02 | |
and the same week on the outskirts of Jerusalem, | 13:06 | |
they crucified him. | 13:09 | |
How striking this is, | 13:12 | |
can be seen as we reflect on the fact that in order to lift | 13:13 | |
up the dominant moods of only one historic week, | 13:17 | |
we need to sing in one university service of worship, | 13:23 | |
the strangely paradoxical hymns, all glory, | 13:27 | |
Lord and honor to the Redeemer king And O sacred head. | 13:32 | |
Now wounded, claiming Christ king, | 13:38 | |
as it were one minute crucifying him as it were in the next, | 13:42 | |
This is a situation that confronts us and we may as well | 13:49 | |
deal with it on Palm Sunday during holy week, | 13:55 | |
as to postpone it until August. | 13:58 | |
Is this then A paradox or a contradiction? | 14:02 | |
This human behavior that we see on Palm Sunday and this | 14:09 | |
human behavior that we see on Good Friday, | 14:13 | |
the one claiming as Christ, | 14:16 | |
the other crucifying the same Christ. | 14:18 | |
Is this a paradox that is only a seeming contradiction | 14:21 | |
or is it a real contradiction? | 14:27 | |
Do these two types of human behavior stand in only | 14:32 | |
apparent fundamental conflict? | 14:36 | |
Or are they in real fundamental conflict? | 14:39 | |
Well, those who say that we are dealing here | 14:44 | |
only with the paradox, can point to some things | 14:48 | |
in the life and teachings the death and | 14:51 | |
resurrection of Christ, which undoubtedly are paradoxical. | 14:53 | |
Indeed, the whole earthly ministry of Jesus are, | 14:57 | |
is studded with the sparkling paradoxes. | 15:00 | |
Let us consider just a few of them. | 15:05 | |
Jesus said on one occasion that religion might be defined | 15:09 | |
as simply giving a cup of cold water | 15:15 | |
in his name to someone who was thirsty. | 15:17 | |
And yet this same Jesus criticized the activist, | 15:20 | |
Martha for making preparation to do this very thing. | 15:25 | |
And he complimented the passive Mary | 15:30 | |
who we can believe hadn't even given her Lord a cup | 15:34 | |
of cold water, but simply sat down to hear him speak. | 15:37 | |
And then this same Jesus told us that we should be so pure | 15:42 | |
that a man would not look at a woman with lust in his eyes. | 15:48 | |
But who on the other hand, was a friend | 15:54 | |
of Magdalene and of other prostitutes. | 15:55 | |
This Jesus was so paradoxical that he could say | 16:02 | |
he that will save his life will lose it. | 16:07 | |
And he who will lose his life, or my sake will save it. | 16:10 | |
Find it, lose it, lose it, find it. | 16:14 | |
Many, many other paradoxes might be cited. | 16:19 | |
Which when we examine them closely are seen not to be | 16:24 | |
contradictions, but only apparent contradictions. | 16:28 | |
So that these two things which stand in contrast to each | 16:32 | |
other are seen to be in high harmonious agreement with the | 16:35 | |
basic purposes of Jesus Christ. | 16:39 | |
Now where we do not wish to make a mistake, | 16:41 | |
is to conclude from these paradoxical situations | 16:47 | |
in the life and teaching of Jesus. | 16:51 | |
That human nature, as it relates itself | 16:54 | |
to Jesus on Palm Sunday and on Good Friday | 16:57 | |
present only a seeming contradiction. | 17:02 | |
We are dealing. It seems to me, not with a paradox, | 17:09 | |
but with a contradiction. | 17:13 | |
And we see how human beings related themselves to the savior | 17:17 | |
on Sunday, claiming him king and Lord and Christ. | 17:22 | |
We do not see the same thing that happened, | 17:28 | |
when on Good Friday, they said, | 17:32 | |
give us Barabbas, give us the criminals, | 17:37 | |
give us the crooks, give us anybody but Jesus, | 17:39 | |
and let's crucify him. | 17:41 | |
The mood of the two situations is totally different | 17:45 | |
and it is impossible to reconcile them. | 17:50 | |
We are here dealing with something that is so fundamental | 17:54 | |
that the salvation of our souls is at stake. | 17:57 | |
What we are dealing with here is as crucial to the matter of | 18:01 | |
basic Christianity as the current Berlin crisis | 18:04 | |
is crucial to world peace. | 18:08 | |
There is no way to make it anything else, | 18:10 | |
except a contradiction with which we must deal. | 18:13 | |
Now, as we look at the crucifixion syndrome, | 18:20 | |
we see that every element in it is low and base | 18:26 | |
and selfish and earthbound. | 18:31 | |
But as we look at the mood, | 18:36 | |
which makes for claiming a lowly teacher | 18:37 | |
and prophet who rides on a donkey, king. | 18:42 | |
We find everything that is high, | 18:47 | |
and unselfish and holy and mature. | 18:51 | |
The one is sick. The other is healthy. | 18:55 | |
The one is God centered and others centered. | 18:59 | |
The other is self-centered. | 19:03 | |
Now that leads us inescapably then doesn't it | 19:07 | |
to the necessity of making a choice between the two. | 19:11 | |
We have to make up our minds, | 19:17 | |
whether we will be in one mood in our life | 19:19 | |
or in the other mood. | 19:23 | |
It is impossible for that crowd or for any individual in it | 19:26 | |
or for any individual in this congregation this morning to | 19:31 | |
go on through life week after week, | 19:35 | |
year after year waving palm branches on Sunday morning | 19:38 | |
and crucifying on Friday or on Saturday night. | 19:43 | |
To attempt to continue doing this indefinitely | 19:48 | |
is to build up a schizoid religion. | 19:51 | |
If not to develop actual schizophrenia, | 19:53 | |
Jesus did not say very few men can serve two masters. | 19:58 | |
He said, no man can serve two masters. | 20:01 | |
And therefore you and I must realize that somewhere, | 20:07 | |
and the sooner, the better we must make a choice. | 20:12 | |
Either to follow Christ, to make him our king | 20:18 | |
or to yield to the lower and baser passions of life. | 20:24 | |
That ultimately lead to crucifying everything | 20:31 | |
for which Christ stands. | 20:34 | |
Now, if we make the choice | 20:37 | |
to be that of Christ being for him, with him, | 20:41 | |
then we are on the road to a life of abundant service | 20:46 | |
with him here and of sharing with him | 20:50 | |
in the life to come the fruits of the resurrection. | 20:54 | |
It is a glorious choice that we have made. | 20:58 | |
There are however, two expectations | 21:03 | |
against which we should guard when we make this choice. | 21:05 | |
The first expectation is that merely by making the choice, | 21:09 | |
we are assured instantly and permanently that all of the | 21:14 | |
baser elements, which are within us | 21:18 | |
will be immediately eradicated and that | 21:21 | |
we will then usher in an era of personal perfection. | 21:24 | |
The other expectation against which we should guard with | 21:29 | |
equal vitality is the expectation that since we find these | 21:32 | |
crucifixion motives within us, that all during our lives, | 21:37 | |
we can expect a continual tug of war | 21:42 | |
between the high and the low within us making no progress, | 21:47 | |
even with the help of the grace of God in becoming like | 21:52 | |
Christ in putting down the base and the low and in lifting | 21:57 | |
up and giving dominance to that which is holy | 22:01 | |
and unselfish and ethical. | 22:05 | |
To expect this second thing is to deny the whole meaning | 22:08 | |
of the biblical doctrine of grace. | 22:12 | |
By which we are assured divine help in choosing Christ | 22:15 | |
and in living Christ like lives. | 22:20 | |
Some years ago, when I was pastor in the city of Charlotte, | 22:25 | |
I was very much interested in the use | 22:28 | |
which was made of the Charlotte city auditorium, | 22:30 | |
the armory auditorium. | 22:34 | |
It was used by all groups within the city to put on | 22:36 | |
whatever program they had in mind. | 22:41 | |
The backstage dressing rooms of the platform were the part | 22:45 | |
of the building, the use of which interested me the most. | 22:49 | |
Those backstage dressing rooms were used at different times | 22:54 | |
as a dressing room for visiting opera stars, | 22:59 | |
as a headquarters for organizations which met there, | 23:04 | |
as a dressing room for prize fighters and wrestlers, | 23:09 | |
as a place to house chickens during a poultry show. | 23:14 | |
And on one particular day in the year, 1946, | 23:18 | |
the same dressing room was used as a headquarters for the | 23:22 | |
teacher's association convention and as a stable | 23:25 | |
for Emperor Hirohito's white horse. | 23:29 | |
Now, as the officials of Charlotte came to see | 23:34 | |
even a building can't be used in such contradictory ways. | 23:36 | |
And so they made some rules, which excluded certain | 23:42 | |
things from the dressing rooms of the armory auditorium. | 23:45 | |
It is absolutely necessary for you and me to use that much | 23:50 | |
judgment and good sense in ordering our hearts and lives. | 23:55 | |
We cannot hold on to a Palm branch with one hand | 24:01 | |
and with the other drive the nails in the hands of Christ. | 24:05 | |
We have to choose, no man can serve two masters. | 24:10 | |
And while historically it is true that perhaps the same | 24:16 | |
crowd on Palm Sunday claimed him king, | 24:20 | |
which on Good Friday, crucified him, | 24:23 | |
even that crowd saw when they were pricked in heart later, | 24:26 | |
that you could not go on doing both. | 24:31 | |
You have to decide and you have to make your life | 24:34 | |
go in one direction or the other. | 24:37 | |
You have to choose. | 24:40 | |
Heavenly father, in this moment of dedication. | 24:49 | |
We are sorry for our involvement in the crucifixion | 24:54 | |
of what Christ has stood for in our day. | 25:00 | |
And being sorry, we wish to be delivered | 25:05 | |
from the guilt of our past sins. | 25:07 | |
And we pray that by thy help, we may not repeat these. | 25:12 | |
Give us hearts that will truly claim Christ | 25:17 | |
as our king today and evermore. | 25:20 | |
And now may the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, | 25:25 | |
the love of God, the communion | 25:29 | |
and fellowship of the holy spirit, | 25:31 | |
rest upon you and abide with you now and evermore. | 25:34 | |
- | Let us pray. | 25:47 |
Let the words of my mouth and the meditations | 25:50 | |
of our hearts be acceptable in thy sight. | 25:55 | |
Oh Lord, our strength and our redeemer. | 26:01 | |
Amen. | 26:05 | |
Have you ever noticed in your desultory reading, | 26:18 | |
how by no conscious design at all, | 26:26 | |
a single thought or idea, | 26:30 | |
or fact will keep repeating itself, | 26:33 | |
will keep bobbing up. | 26:39 | |
Unbidden perhaps even undesired. | 26:42 | |
Recently, the word bridge | 26:48 | |
and the ideas that lies subsumed in the word bridge | 26:52 | |
have come into my kin. | 26:56 | |
There was a book by John Prebble, Disaster at Dundee. | 27:00 | |
Which told of the wreck of the great railroad bridge, | 27:07 | |
which spanned the first of Tay one wintry night. | 27:10 | |
About Christmas time at the end of the last century. | 27:17 | |
That bridge was considered by the British | 27:23 | |
as the eighth wonder of the world. | 27:26 | |
And it went down in a storm | 27:31 | |
and took a train load of people with it. | 27:34 | |
And then there was a class assignment reread | 27:38 | |
with renewed and deepened wonder. | 27:42 | |
Thornton Wilders The Bridge of San Louis Ray, | 27:45 | |
the finest bridge in all Peru. | 27:51 | |
Which broke on July 20th, 1714, | 27:56 | |
and precipitated five travelers into the Gorge below | 28:01 | |
by accident or by intention. | 28:08 | |
And then there was a short story in a volume called | 28:16 | |
The Changeling by Donn Byrne. | 28:19 | |
And I do hope, you know, the short stories of Donn Byrne. | 28:21 | |
This one is called The Keeper of the Bridge. | 28:27 | |
In this case, the bridge did not fall. | 28:30 | |
It stood firm, fixed. | 28:33 | |
Thanks to the voluntary self-sacrifice | 28:38 | |
of the loveliest person in the story. | 28:42 | |
Now it was in that last story of Donn Byrnes, | 28:46 | |
that historical fact was brought to my attention | 28:50 | |
and promptly proceeded to fascinate me. | 28:54 | |
There was during the 12th and 13th centuries, | 29:01 | |
a religious community | 29:06 | |
of a semiofficial nature. | 29:09 | |
Founded for the purpose of caring for pilgrims. | 29:13 | |
They constructed hospices to house the pilgrims. | 29:20 | |
They operated ferry boats to assist them across rivers. | 29:26 | |
And finally they built bridges. | 29:31 | |
Some of them of great fame. | 29:34 | |
The (inaudible) over the river Roan | 29:38 | |
is claimed as one of theirs, great bridge made of stone. | 29:41 | |
Now this is back in the 12th century, | 29:47 | |
a thousand meters long with 24 great arches. | 29:50 | |
They became known as the Fratres Pontifices. | 29:58 | |
(Inaudible) | 30:04 | |
The (inaudible) brothers. | 30:08 | |
The brotherhood of bridge builders. | 30:11 | |
And is that brotherhood even more than the bridges, | 30:15 | |
which they built that intrigues me. | 30:18 | |
I've always been partial to the practical men of God. | 30:24 | |
God's plumbers. | 30:28 | |
The sons and daughters of Martha. | 30:31 | |
Brother Laurens in the kitchen, | 30:35 | |
probably because I can't boil an egg | 30:39 | |
without burning the water. | 30:42 | |
And so I want to play with this idea this morning | 30:46 | |
of the Pontest brothers honestly | 30:49 | |
and unashamedly using it as an analogy. | 30:54 | |
Where is there today, a demand for bridge building? | 31:01 | |
Everywhere? | 31:09 | |
Anywhere? | 31:12 | |
Where rivers of anxiety and suspicions | 31:15 | |
separate man from man. | 31:19 | |
Where canyons divide great need from possible succor. | 31:23 | |
Where bridges have always been required | 31:32 | |
sometimes attempted in vain. | 31:36 | |
Occasionally built, but now outmoded. | 31:41 | |
You know the areas. | 31:46 | |
The most obvious of all is to bridge the gap between | 31:48 | |
persons so that I may come to know you as you really are. | 31:53 | |
And you may come to know me, Scott's accent, | 32:02 | |
reckless tongue and all. | 32:07 | |
And then together, we may come to know them. | 32:12 | |
Them who live on both the other sides of the tracks. | 32:17 | |
That is what school and college | 32:26 | |
are supposed to help us to do. | 32:28 | |
But we are so busy with curricular and extracurricular | 32:32 | |
and sub curricular and anti curricular activities. | 32:39 | |
That we do not always succeed in personifying persons. | 32:48 | |
That man is the instructor who teaches me German at 10:30, | 33:01 | |
but I don't know his name. | 33:06 | |
Now that's happened, three weeks in the class, | 33:08 | |
and they start said, you know my name? | 33:12 | |
He said, no, sir. | 33:13 | |
I said, how do you identify me? | 33:15 | |
A man who teaches German at 10:30? | 33:17 | |
Well, the instructor sent him home | 33:21 | |
and there was nothing else to do. | 33:22 | |
I mean, this is just, just abyss you fall into. | 33:24 | |
Oh that nice girl? | 33:29 | |
She's well, she's president of the judicial board, | 33:30 | |
but I dunno anything about her. | 33:33 | |
Perhaps we're supposed to come to know one another in | 33:36 | |
committee meetings. Hmm. | 33:39 | |
The mayor's committee on human relations. | 33:41 | |
The executive committee of that annual orgy known as the | 33:47 | |
Sentra society replete with bagpipes. | 33:50 | |
The regional sorority council of iota, iota, iota. | 33:56 | |
Do we really come to know one another | 34:04 | |
on such occasions, I wonder. | 34:06 | |
My own idea of hell is a succession of committee meetings. | 34:09 | |
(laughter) | 34:15 | |
Presided over by junior devils from Satan's hierarchy. | 34:20 | |
I have not yet decided, | 34:27 | |
I'm still working on this doctrine of hell. | 34:28 | |
Whether Satan lets you carry out what you decide | 34:32 | |
or whether he vetoes it. | 34:35 | |
I don't know what would be more hellish yet. (laughter) | 34:36 | |
I'll let you know in a later sermon | 34:39 | |
just what revelation I receive. | 34:41 | |
And yet the strange thing is that here and there, | 34:46 | |
now and again, when we least expect it, we make contact. | 34:50 | |
And something true and beautiful and good | 34:58 | |
comes to life and stays alive for us. | 35:03 | |
Let me give you one very personal illustration. | 35:09 | |
We've had the same negro maid | 35:15 | |
since we came to Durham in 1945. | 35:17 | |
Now I regularly failed in human contacts. | 35:23 | |
But she once said something to me, which I shall remember | 35:29 | |
when all earthly official honors, earned and unearned | 35:35 | |
are forgotten or casually accepted. | 35:42 | |
I asked her one day, how shall I refer to you | 35:46 | |
and to people of your race, as colored or as negro? | 35:52 | |
I want to know. | 35:59 | |
And she looked me straight in the eyes and answered | 36:02 | |
immediately, simply and graciously. | 36:06 | |
It doesn't matter which term you use. | 36:13 | |
Now that was as satisfactory | 36:21 | |
as an honorary degree and much more humbling. | 36:24 | |
We built a bridge and we'd met on it | 36:29 | |
and we still meet on it. | 36:33 | |
And talk about all kinds of things about her daughter at | 36:34 | |
whose wedding I assisted about her boys in college, | 36:38 | |
about how much starch to put in my clerical colors, | 36:43 | |
about her church, about anything which folk | 36:49 | |
who trust and love each other discuss. | 36:53 | |
Then of course outside the personal realm, | 36:59 | |
there is the realm of contact between nations. | 37:01 | |
Most of us can do so little to influence national policy, | 37:05 | |
but other that let's remember that, | 37:10 | |
let's not bluff ourselves about it. | 37:12 | |
We can do practically nothing to influence national policy. | 37:15 | |
Oh, an occasional vote in an occasional election. | 37:21 | |
We may regret the fact that all foreigners don't speak | 37:25 | |
English with a Southern or a Scottish or a Boston accent, | 37:28 | |
but we can explain ourselves to individual aliens | 37:35 | |
and allow them to make themselves known to us | 37:39 | |
so that they cease to be aliens, horrible word | 37:43 | |
with psychiatric undertones. | 37:47 | |
One thinks of what Dwight Morrow did for the United States | 37:52 | |
in Mexico, and of what Chester Bose | 37:55 | |
of Connecticut did for the United States in India. | 37:58 | |
One begins to understand why the great YMCA building | 38:03 | |
in Jerusalem stood undamaged | 38:06 | |
through all the Jewish Arab British hostility. | 38:10 | |
I can think of my own confused distress and happiness. | 38:16 | |
When someone in Glasgow said of my wife, | 38:22 | |
she's a nice person; | 38:26 | |
one would never guess she's an American. | 38:28 | |
(laughter) | 38:33 | |
Well, that fantastic story, | 38:35 | |
which I threatened to tell just before I resigned from Duke, | 38:37 | |
but which I'll tell now when disappear on. | 38:40 | |
(laughter) | 38:43 | |
Of the Aberdeen farmer who, | 38:45 | |
had a Negro battalion stationed on his farm | 38:49 | |
for three years during the war. | 38:53 | |
And when they left, | 38:58 | |
someone asked him how he liked the Americans. | 38:59 | |
He said, oh, I liked the Americans, | 39:04 | |
but I didn't like these white men they brought with them. | 39:06 | |
(laughter) | 39:10 | |
Do you see what I mean about | 39:14 | |
this relationship between nations? | 39:15 | |
What's gotta be understood? | 39:18 | |
I call professor Bowman of Princeton and Glasgow. | 39:23 | |
After he came back to Glasgow, | 39:26 | |
Princeton University sent him a blank check and said, | 39:28 | |
write your own salary in it. We want you back. | 39:31 | |
Anything you want. | 39:34 | |
He was captured in the First World War. | 39:36 | |
German officer who received him cursed and swore at him | 39:40 | |
in German, and Bowman replied | 39:44 | |
very politely in the same language. | 39:48 | |
The officer says, why do you know German? | 39:51 | |
Said I'm a Heidelberg graduate. | 39:53 | |
When were you there? | 39:54 | |
Discovered they'd been there together. | 39:56 | |
And in the middle of the battle, | 39:58 | |
they began chatting, with shells going around them, | 39:59 | |
and people being captured and bayoneted, | 40:02 | |
and finally the German officer said, oh, excuse me. | 40:05 | |
He said, you are my prisoner. | 40:07 | |
There's a war on, go away. | 40:09 | |
(laughter) You see, just contact you make with, | 40:10 | |
with aliens foreigners are different, so what? | 40:14 | |
They're queer sure, just as queer as we are. | 40:18 | |
They've got as much right to be queer as we have. | 40:23 | |
But they are a first class opportunity | 40:26 | |
for us to learn the spiritual difference between | 40:30 | |
unison and harmony. | 40:34 | |
Which is richer, fuller? | 40:40 | |
The more to be desired, | 40:45 | |
unison or harmony? | 40:48 | |
Need I go on? | 40:53 | |
Have I set our minds and hearts worrying together about the | 40:56 | |
person down the hall? | 40:59 | |
The divinity student from Scandinavia or the Philippines, | 41:01 | |
the medical intern from Latin America, | 41:05 | |
the Commonwealth fellow who speaks English, | 41:08 | |
but doesn't understand American. | 41:10 | |
Do we grant the need for bridge building in all kinds of | 41:14 | |
personal and racial and national areas? | 41:18 | |
Well, if so, let's move on. | 41:22 | |
Granted the need. | 41:26 | |
What's the motivation, | 41:29 | |
which will set us to crossing the chasms, | 41:30 | |
to constructing the bridges, | 41:34 | |
to joining the pragmatic brotherhood of bridge builders? | 41:36 | |
There are at least three motivations. | 41:41 | |
The first I'll just mention and move away from fast. | 41:44 | |
And that is self interest. | 41:47 | |
Self survival. | 41:50 | |
Don't despise it. | 41:52 | |
We're supposed to love our neighbor | 41:54 | |
as much as we love ourselves. | 41:56 | |
Jesus accepted the fact of self survival. | 41:58 | |
It's a given and an important given. | 42:05 | |
Self love in the form of self survival drives us to know, | 42:10 | |
to understand, to appreciate others, | 42:14 | |
unexpected others. | 42:19 | |
If one is sick and to surgery in the Duke hospital. | 42:21 | |
Your surgeon may be an Anglosaxon with a Louisiana drawl, | 42:28 | |
but your anesthetist is likely to be a Venezuelan, | 42:33 | |
and your private nurse will be a negro lassie | 42:36 | |
who comes from anywhere. | 42:39 | |
Someday we'll have Russian doctors, | 42:41 | |
and Chinese radiologists, and Indian economists, | 42:43 | |
and African professors of English; | 42:47 | |
just as we have Roman Catholic pediatricians, | 42:50 | |
and Jewish biochemists, and all kinds of agnostics | 42:53 | |
here, there, and everywhere. | 42:57 | |
Because when self survival is uppermost, | 43:00 | |
then racism and nationalism and religious divergence | 43:03 | |
take a backseat. | 43:08 | |
If they're not driven completely out the room. | 43:09 | |
But there's a second motivation. | 43:14 | |
That is intelligence. | 43:18 | |
One has watched the necessary | 43:22 | |
building of bridges between subjects. | 43:25 | |
I was so happy when I came to union seminar in the twenties | 43:28 | |
to major with a man who spent his entire life, | 43:31 | |
trying to pull together ethics and economics. | 43:34 | |
It was an artificial separation. After all Adam Smith, | 43:40 | |
who wrote The Wealth of Nations | 43:43 | |
was a professor of model philosophy. | 43:44 | |
And this man again, | 43:48 | |
was trying to see, what is the interrelation? | 43:49 | |
I can remember advising a student at Amherst in the thirties | 43:52 | |
who was excited about American studies and discovered to his | 43:56 | |
sheer joy that in his senior year, his five subjects, | 43:59 | |
because he only took five subjects a year, | 44:03 | |
they lasted all year. | 44:05 | |
His five subjects were American literature, | 44:07 | |
American history, American philosophy, American economics, | 44:11 | |
and then one others just for fun. | 44:16 | |
Now this compared to the cafeteria, what we do here, | 44:19 | |
two of this and three of that, and one of that, | 44:23 | |
and down the line we go. (laughter) | 44:25 | |
This is intelligence at work. | 44:29 | |
You see they've done it in medicine so long, | 44:32 | |
not biology in physics, biophysics, biochemistry, | 44:34 | |
psychosomatic myths. | 44:39 | |
But there's a third encouragement to our joining | 44:47 | |
Le Frères Pontifes. | 44:51 | |
And that is religious in its drive. | 44:53 | |
Interestingly enough, | 44:57 | |
the word bridge is never mentioned in the Bible. | 44:58 | |
So I can't give you a text. (chuckles) | 45:02 | |
That'll cheer those of you up | 45:08 | |
who have to take home the text, | 45:09 | |
as I used to have to take it home to tell there was no text, | 45:10 | |
the word wasn't in the Bible. | 45:13 | |
But the idea of bridge building | 45:16 | |
and the logically used is prominent. | 45:20 | |
In fact, holy scripture is centered | 45:23 | |
on the fact of bridge building. | 45:27 | |
Let me try to explain the bridge builder is God. | 45:30 | |
That's the central thought in Judaism and in Christianity, | 45:36 | |
God of his own free will seeks constantly to cross the gulf | 45:41 | |
between himself and man, and to make it possible for man | 45:48 | |
to come back across that gulf. | 45:53 | |
That's the idea behind the giving of the law. | 45:56 | |
You know, we make a great mistake when we | 45:59 | |
teach people the 10 commandments. | 46:01 | |
Just as the 10 commandments part altogether from putting bad | 46:05 | |
ideas into their heads. As somebody said. | 46:09 | |
The important, the thing of the two verses | 46:12 | |
before the 10 commandments, what are they? | 46:15 | |
I am the God who brought you out of the land of Egypt, | 46:19 | |
out of the house of bondage. | 46:24 | |
That is why you'll have no other gods before me. | 46:26 | |
That's why you'll make no grave, an image and so on. | 46:30 | |
I am the God who came across to you delivered you, | 46:33 | |
brought you out successfully. | 46:37 | |
And that is what the Jew never forgot. | 46:39 | |
And that is why any good Jew will tell you that the law | 46:42 | |
is a sign of grace. | 46:46 | |
The law is given in grace by a God | 46:50 | |
who acted in grace and deliver. | 46:54 | |
And that thought reappears in Christianity, | 46:57 | |
the doctrine of the incarnation, | 47:00 | |
think of it in terms of the Virgin birth or the Lagos | 47:02 | |
doctor, anything you like, it's God coming cross, | 47:04 | |
man doesn't go to him. | 47:07 | |
God comes to man, | 47:09 | |
man is passed over to, | 47:13 | |
and God opens a way to him that spans | 47:17 | |
the gulf of sin and guilt. | 47:21 | |
And I think worse than that, homelessness, | 47:24 | |
the sheer feeling that we don't belong. | 47:29 | |
This is what God does in the incarnation. | 47:35 | |
God made, and God keeps the bridge open. | 47:39 | |
Jesus so appreciated that, | 47:44 | |
that he decided he'd go ahead and build bridges too. | 47:46 | |
Between himself and the, the publicans. | 47:50 | |
The income tax collectors. | 47:57 | |
Then which there was nothing worse worth remembering | 48:00 | |
at this time of the year, April 15th, | 48:05 | |
that Jesus was friends with income tax collectors | 48:08 | |
you can be friends with anybody, | 48:10 | |
we're friends with an income tax collector | 48:13 | |
and other sinners. | 48:15 | |
But here's a Samaritan woman now the Jew | 48:19 | |
loathed this American, partly because she belonged | 48:21 | |
to the family and there's no hatred like the hatred | 48:26 | |
of a mother-in-law or a daughter-in-law. | 48:29 | |
Now the Samaritans were like the Jews, | 48:32 | |
but they loathed each other and Jesus surrounds | 48:35 | |
that person with his understanding | 48:37 | |
and even with his affection. | 48:41 | |
So the very disciples of surprise and the highest words of | 48:43 | |
praise he ever gave anybody | 48:47 | |
was given to an officer in the Roman army of occupation. | 48:50 | |
Now imagine a Jew saying that about an officer crossing | 48:55 | |
bridges and on the cross, as he died, he studied a thief | 48:59 | |
and then even asked God to forgive those people | 49:05 | |
who were breaking down all bridges, | 49:09 | |
except those which Judaism sanction. | 49:12 | |
Is it any wonder that his holiness, | 49:16 | |
the Pope claims as one of his highest titles, | 49:19 | |
Pontifects, Maximus bridge builder supreme. | 49:25 | |
Now, granted we see the need. | 49:35 | |
Granted, we understand the motivation. | 49:37 | |
What's the task that awaits us? | 49:40 | |
Two full tasks. | 49:43 | |
The first is the cultivation of personal sensitivity. | 49:46 | |
How can you do it? | 49:52 | |
Well, | 49:56 | |
Read and meditate reread and re meditate | 49:59 | |
about people who have built bridges. | 50:04 | |
Read the story of Ralph Punch. | 50:08 | |
His final arrival in the United Nations read about the small | 50:12 | |
woman who made her way from England across Siberia to China, | 50:18 | |
just because she heard there was a need to help. | 50:24 | |
And who has now been given the | 50:29 | |
dubious immortality of a Hollywood production? | 50:30 | |
The in of the sixth happiness. | 50:35 | |
Read about Howard Thurman's travels | 50:38 | |
from Dean at Howard University. | 50:42 | |
Out to the church of all nations in San Francisco. | 50:45 | |
And back to that special department in Iowa | 50:50 | |
and now Dean of the chapel at Boston university | 50:54 | |
Read about anyone who built bridges, | 51:00 | |
Florence Nightingale, Albert Schweitzer, | 51:02 | |
Mahatma Gandhi, Father Hiddleston. | 51:04 | |
Read about the flesh becoming words until the | 51:07 | |
words in tongue become pulsating resolute flesh in us. | 51:11 | |
Then we'll begin to understand the truth of the statement in | 51:19 | |
first John four and seven. | 51:22 | |
Which threatens to become my favorite verse | 51:26 | |
in holy scripture. | 51:30 | |
Beloved, | 51:32 | |
let us love one another for love is of God. | 51:36 | |
And he, that loves is born of God. | 51:44 | |
That's treatment, whether he knows he's father or not. | 51:48 | |
If he loves, | 51:53 | |
he's born of God, | 51:56 | |
and know it, God. | 51:59 | |
And yet, let me be honest. | 52:01 | |
There's one more thing we must do love is not enough. | 52:02 | |
At least it's not usually enough. | 52:06 | |
There must be added to personal sensitivity, | 52:09 | |
vocational training, the kind of thing that a college | 52:12 | |
or certainly a good university can do. | 52:15 | |
Do we want to teach and remember the Docere, | 52:23 | |
the Latin verb to teach governs two accusatives: | 52:28 | |
the subject taught and the person taught. | 52:34 | |
Now we forgot that in Scotland, | 52:39 | |
we thought it just govern the subject taught. | 52:41 | |
And we forgotten in America, we think it just governs | 52:45 | |
the person taught. | 52:47 | |
The verb to teach is to teach a subject to a person which | 52:50 | |
demands goodwill and technical skill. | 52:55 | |
They want to find our place in medicine, the USA, | 53:00 | |
great scientific ability and God be praised for the research | 53:03 | |
buildings attached to our great medical schools. | 53:07 | |
And yet I have a hunch, | 53:10 | |
But what patients are looking | 53:13 | |
for are intelligent family doctors, | 53:14 | |
wise, general practitioners, | 53:21 | |
and skilled bedside nurses. | 53:25 | |
Sometimes think we have too many chiefs and not enough | 53:30 | |
Indians in the medical profession. | 53:32 | |
Do you wanna find your place in science? | 53:39 | |
I wish there were more people like Professor Sears of Mass | 53:41 | |
State College in Amherst room. | 53:44 | |
None of you ever heard about, | 53:46 | |
but he made Labrador livable. | 53:51 | |
He went up there and taught them | 53:55 | |
how to grow green vegetables. | 53:56 | |
Every summer, he went up for 20 years | 53:59 | |
till he had abolished scurvy. | 54:02 | |
Do we wanna find our place in religion? | 54:06 | |
Oh, there's such a need for people to who understand the | 54:09 | |
thoughts in religion to transmit them. | 54:13 | |
The great genius Harry Fosdick had of taking the ideas | 54:17 | |
of the experts and making them understandable. | 54:22 | |
It's what somebody has got to do down here with Tillich. | 54:25 | |
Somebody's said that the thought of, | 54:32 | |
Tillich it reminded him of the peace of God, | 54:34 | |
because it passed all understanding. | 54:37 | |
(laughter) | 54:39 | |
And yet here is important thinking | 54:43 | |
which needs rethinking and sharing. | 54:47 | |
This is the twofold endowment of bridge builder, | 54:51 | |
personal sensitivity and vocational training, | 54:55 | |
where we meet the needs of others. | 55:00 | |
There's an old, old proverb, which says, | 55:03 | |
praise the bridge that carried you over, | 55:07 | |
praise the bridge that carried you over. | 55:13 | |
And you know, when the Highlanders of Scotland | 55:16 | |
in the old days came to a bridge, | 55:18 | |
they said that proverb as a prayer of thanksgiving, | 55:22 | |
while they removed their bonnets in reverence. | 55:27 | |
Ain't that wonderful? | 55:33 | |
Praise the bridge that carried you over with the head bear. | 55:35 | |
It could be said in gratitude of us, | 55:42 | |
if we became members of the company | 55:45 | |
known as Le Frères Pontifes, | 55:47 | |
the brotherhood and the sisterhood of bridge builders. | 55:53 | |
Let us pray. | 56:02 | |
Oh God, who of thine own free will span the chasm | 56:08 | |
between earth and heaven. | 56:12 | |
Grant us to be coworkers with the. | 56:15 | |
The gulfs of our day may be bridged by us, | 56:20 | |
in the spirit of thy son, Jesus Christ, our Lord, | 56:25 | |
and may the blessing of the Lord come upon you abundantly. | 56:29 | |
May it keep you strong and tranquil in the truth | 56:35 | |
of his promises through Jesus Christ our Lord. | 56:38 |