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        St. James' Episcopal Church  
        Jackson, Mississippi 
         May 
        6, 2001 
        4th Sunday of Easter 
         
         
      The 
        "Christian Dilemma" 
        The Rev. William 
        A. Kolb 
        
         Gospel: John 
        10:22-30 
       
       "So 
        the Jews gathered around him and said to him, 'How long will you keep 
        us in suspense? If you are the Messiah, tell us plainly.' Jesus answered, 
        'I have told you, and you do not believe
because you do not belong 
        to my sheep.'" 
         
        When 
        I read the Gospel for today, and saw the all-too-familiar negative reference 
        to "the Jews," I was reminded once again of the discomfort within 
        me, one that may exist in many people who love this faith but who have 
        trouble with some of its apparent teachings. 
      In Will Campbell's 
        great book And Also with You, Gunnar Myrdahl is quoted 
        as calling race "The American Dilemma" - I would like to borrow 
        from him and 
        call Judaism the "Christian dilemma." 
      As a Christian 
        by faith who was born Jewish and raised Jewish, and as one 
        who considers himself to be Jewish to the bone (not only can we be both, 
        all Christians ARE both; the New Testament makes no sense without the 
        Truths of the Old Testament), I always have a problem with the apparent 
        anti-Semitism of the New Testament (mostly the Gospel of John). We yearn 
        so for the certainty offered by believing that Jesus is the "only 
        way to the Father," that we are willing to imply in many ways that 
        non-Christians are "less," if not doomed. The necessary faith 
        and ambiguity required to believe that God the Father embraces all people 
        is just too hard for many Christians. But William Loader of Murdock University 
        and member of the Uniting Church in Australia said this year about this 
        passage, "For God remains God. Jesus is not a second God. Ultimately 
        everything about Jesus points away from himself to God." I truly 
        believe that if Jesus were on this earth today and could speak to us in 
        a human voice, we would find that He was a Universalist and would consider 
        his co-religionist Jews very much a part of His Father's flock. 
         
        Let me go back aways. I was born into a Jewish family. I was raised a 
        Jew but did not go to Temple very often. In Christianity we call it "C 
        and E" (those who go to Church mainly at Christmas and Easter) and 
        in Judaism I guess it might be called "High Holy Days Jews;" 
        we went about twice a year. 
      
      When I was 
        a boy, Adolf Hitler was making it more uncomfortable than usual 
        to be a high-visibility Jew in America, so many Jews were very much into 
        assimilated and low-profile lives. I went to Temple classes but they were 
        on 
        Sunday mornings. My Uncles, even before the rise of the Third Reich, were 
        "confirmed" in their Chicago Temple, not Bar Mitzvahed. 
      As I grew 
        to adulthood I knew one central thing about God: God is Love; God 
        is goodness. God loves all of us. 
      When I was 
        in my mid-twenties, I was taken with a need for a deeper meaning 
        in life and got very much into the Bible and into its implications for 
        everyday 
        living. Because my little children were practicing their mother's Episcopal 
        faith, I found God there. When introduced to Paul's eternally true statement 
        about the human condition found in Romans chapter 7, I found the wisdom 
        of God that 
        I had sought and was baptized. The line of scripture that took me all 
        the way to this pulpit was (paraphrasing),"I do the very thing I 
        hate and I hate what I do; 
        who will save me from this body of death." I had known I had trouble 
        living up  
        to my own ideals, and that I never could quite seem to be the person I 
        believed I ought to be, but I didn't know until that time that I was not 
        only not alone, it was a universal human condition! That bad news was 
        very good news to me and I figured if that was the teaching of Christ 
        through Paul, that was where I was going. 
        One thing led to another and six years later I was in seminary and it 
        has 
        been an incredibly wonderful faith journey ever since. 
      So why am 
        I uncomfortable with this morning's Gospel reading? Why do I, a 
        Christian by religious conviction and a Jew by cultural heritage, wince 
        when 
        I hear certain excerpts from the Gospels, mainly from St. John? 
        I will tell you, I struggle with my faith. I struggle because I love the 
        Church and I yearn for the black-and-white certainty of knowing that Jesus 
        Christ is, as St. John says elsewhere in his Gospel, "the only way 
        to the 
        Father." 
         
        But if in fact Jesus is the only way to the Father, then all human beings 
        other than believing Christians are cut off from God. Many will say, "Oh, 
        we don't believe that." But it is the obvious inference to be drawn 
        from 
        what is called "one-way Christianity," which holds that the 
        one way to 
        relate to God is through Christ. It is the theology that caused the head 
        of 
        the largest Protestant denomination in America to declare not too many 
        years 
        ago, "God does not hear the prayers of a Jew." 
      I could go 
        into some detail about the role of the early Church in the 
        politics and the writing of this particular Gospel, and how the apparent 
        anti-Semitism in the New Testament has affected so many lives over the 
        millennia, including mine and those of many of my relatives and especially 
        of the Jews of Europe - not just during the Third Reich but for many 
        centuries before that -- but neither time nor the point of this sermon 
        allow 
        that. Instead, I invite you to read a brief, insightful and informative 
        article that appeared in the New York Times this past Sunday [April 29,2001]. 
        It was written by Gustav Niebuhr, a member of one of America's great families 
        of Protestant theologians. In the article Niebuhr says, "The occasional 
        eruption of statements blaming Jews for Jesus' crucifixion may reflect 
        some below-the-radar uneasiness as the idealized vision of a Christian 
        nation bumps up against the reality of religious pluralism - even though 
        recent surveys show a widespread sense of tolerance among Americans. 
       "Part 
        of the answer may lie in the difference between tolerating those with 
        different beliefs and truly accepting another religion as legitimate." 
         
      Niebuhr goes 
        on to discuss the advances that have occurred in the last 40 years in 
        biblical scholarship and Jewish Christian relations, yet states that "four 
        decades of such work and collaboration must still confront the deep roots 
        in Western culture of the idea that Jews in general bear responsibility 
        for the crucifixion." The problem, according to Rabbi Leon Klenicki, 
        director of interreligious affairs at the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai 
        B'rith, is that "those ideas are not incorporated yet in the teaching 
        of local churches and seminaries." Though Americans as a whole are tolerant 
        of other religions, Niebuhr says, their tolerance "is not grounded 
        in any deep appreciation of the 'other,' whomever that other may be." 
      So why, on 
        this beautiful day of God's making, as we gather for Eucharistic 
        worship as a parish family, do I talk about these things? Because I want 
        to 
        bring home to our minds and hearts what my mother taught me so many years 
        ago: God loves you and me, without reservation, God loves each and every 
        one 
        of us and makes no distinction between Jew and Christian, between Buddhist 
        and Muslim. Jesus preached the love of God for all humankind. All who 
        prize love over hatred, all who know that God created us and that we need 
        God if we are to be the fully-human beings God means us to be, all of 
        us 
        know His voice. All of us are His sheep. All of us. Thanks be to God. 
        God 
        is. God is Love. And we are living expressions of that love to each other. 
        To all. 
      Amen. 
      Copyright 
        2001 The Rev. William A. Kolb 
      
      Gospel: 
        John 10:22-30 
        At 
        that time the festival of the Dedication took place in Jerusalem. It was 
        winter, and Jesus was walking in the temple, in the portico of Solomon. 
        So the Jews gathered around him and said to him, "How long will you 
        keep us in suspense? If you are the Messiah, tell us plainly." Jesus 
        answered, "I have told you, and you do not believe. The works that 
        I do in my Father's name testify to me; but you do not believe, because 
        you do not belong to my sheep. My sheep hear my voice. I know them, and 
        they follow me. I give them eternal life, and they will never perish. 
        No one will snatch them out of my hand. What my Father has given me is 
        greater than all else, and no one can snatch it out of the Father's hand. 
        The Father and I are one." NRSV  
         
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