April 20,
2019
+ We’ve all been here.
We’ve been here, in this belly
of hell.
We’ve been in this place in which
there is nothing.
Bleakness.
No hope.
Or so it seems.
It’s not just a bad place to be.
It’s the worst place to be.
We have been in that place in which
we seemed abandoned.
Deserted.
No one was coming for us, we
believed.
No one even knew we were here, in
these depths of hell.
Hell.
Holy Saturday is the time in which
we commemorate not only the fact that Jesus is lying in the tomb—in which we
perform a liturgy that feels acutely like the burial service.
We also commemorate a very long
belief that on this day, Jesus, although seemingly at rest in the tomb, was actually
at work, despite the fact that it seemed he was dead.
He was in the depth of hell.
This belief, of course, comes to us
from a very basic reading of 1 Peter, and from the early Church Fathers.
Jesus descended into hell and
preached to those there.
The popular term for this is the
Harrowing of Hell.
He went to hell and harrowed until
it was empty.
As a follower of Jesus, I find the
story of the Harrowing of Hell to be so compelling.
I find it compelling, because I’ve
been there.
I’ve been to hell.
More than once.
As we all have.
I have known despair.
I have known that feeling that I
thought I would actually die from bleakness.
Or wished I could die.
But didn’t.
Even death wasn’t, in that moment,
the worst thing that could happen.
That place of despair was.
It’s the worst place to be.
Which is why this morning’s liturgy
is so important to me.
In the depth of hell, even there,
when we think there is no one coming for us—just when we’ve finally given up
hope, Someone does.
Jesus comes to us, there.
He comes to us in the depths of our
despair, of our personal darkness, of that sense of being undead, and what does
he do?
He leads us out.
I know this is a very unpopular
belief for many Christians.
Many Christians simply cannot
believe it.
Hell is eternal, they believe
And it should be.
If you turn your back on God, then
you should be in hell forever and ever, they believe.
If you do wrong in life, you should
be punished for all eternity, they will argue.
I don’t think it’s any surprise to
any of you to hear me say that I definitely don’t agree.
And my faith speaks loudly to me on
this issue.
The God I serve, the God I love and
believe in, is not a God who would act in such a way.
Now, I am not saying there isn’t a
hell.
There is a hell.
As I said, I’ve been there.
But if there is some metaphysical hell
in the so-called “afterlife,” I believe that, at some point, it will be completely
empty.
And heaven will be absolutely full.
What I do know is that the hell I
believe in does exist.
And many of us—most of us—have been
there at least once.
Some of us have been there again and
again.
Any of us who have suffered from
depression, or have lost a loved one, or have doubted our faith, or have
thought God is not a God of love—we have all known this hell.
But none of them are eternal hells.
I do believe that even those hells
will one day come to an end.
I do believe that Jesus comes to us,
even there, in the depths of those personal hells.
I believe that one day, even those
hells will be harrowed and emptied, once and for all.
Until that day happens, none of us
should be too content.
None of us should rejoice too loudly.
None of should exult in our own
salvation, until salvation is granted to all.
If there is an eternal hell and
punishment, my salvation is not going to be what I thought it was.
And that is the real point of this
day.
I love the fact that, no matter
where I am, no matter where I put myself, no matter what depths and hells and
darknesses I sink myself into, even there Jesus will find me.
And I know that the Jesus I serve
and follow will not rest until the last of his lost loved ones is found and
brought back.
It’s not a popular belief in the
Christian Church.
And that baffles me.
Why isn’t it more popular?
Why do we not proclaim a Savior who
comes to us in our own hells and bring us out?
Why do we not proclaim a God of love
who will bring an end, once and for all, to hell?
We as Christians should be pondering
these issues.
And we should be struggling with
them.
And we should be seeking God’s
knowledge on them.
On this very sad, very bleak Holy
Saturday morning, I find a great joy in knowing that, as far as we seem to be
in this moment from Easter glory, Easter glory is still happening, unseen by
us, like a seed slowly blooming in the ground.
That Victory of God we celebrate
this evening and tomorrow morning and throughout the season of Easter is more
glorious than anything we can imagine.
And it is more powerful than
anything we can even begin to comprehend.
In my own personal hells the
greatest moment is when I can turn from my darkness toward the light and find
consolation in the God who has come to me, even there, in my personal agony.
Even there, God in Jesus comes to me
and frees me.
God has done it before.
And I have no doubt God will do it
again.
In the bleak waters of abandonment,
God has sent the buoy, the lifesaver of Jesus to hold us up and bring us out of
the waters.
That is what we are celebrating this
Holy Saturday morning.
That is how we find our joy.
Our joy is close at hand, even
though it seems gone from us.
Our joy is just within reach, even
in this moment when it seems buried in the ground and lost.
No comments:
Post a Comment