Easter 5A


Exegetical Notes

John 14:1-14

Initial Thoughts

  • One of my first sermons in seminary was on this text and built it around “The Way, the Truth, and the Light.” Whoops. (Robb)

  • How to live now that Jesus is gone

    • Funerals

    • Part of Jesus’ farewell discourse

    • Typical of ancient literature- Socrates, Moses, etc

Bible Study

  • Beginning of the Farewell Discourse (14:1-16:33) 

    • Critical analysis presents many ways of editing this passage. There are many theories about the redaction of this section.

      • Farewell Discourse is a genre

      • “The voice of Jesus that speaks in the Farewell Discourse is, therefore, that of a risen and victorious Jesus.”  (Gail O’Day, New Interpreter's Bible, v. IX, p. 738)

      • Message to the writer’s present community is given added weight by being ‘assigned’ to Jesus.

      • Themes of this particular passage: Consolation and Assurance (O’Day, p. 738)

  • Jesus first provides the answer to the question the disciples have yet to ask (but John’s community had surely wondered about); When and Where?

    • Jesus provides an answer to worry and anxiety

    • Do not fear- “if you know me” I will take you to me

    • Jesus prepares to die, the Disciples must prepare to let go of their preconceived notions of who the Messiah is and accept a Messiah that will be crucified

    • “When their hopeful visions for a just and peaceful messianic kingdom melt in the crucible of crucifixion, the hearts of the disciples will be diseased—and their anxiety will be blinding.” (Shannon Michael Pater)

    • Believe in God and believe also in me

    • Luther asks what it means to have a God and answers that God is what you hang your heart upon. The heart that is troubled is a heart not hung upon God but hung rather on all the things the world peddles to soothe a troubled heart.” (Cynthia Jarvis)

    • Can we follow God without knowing where?

      • Preparing a place

      • What do we know?

        • God will be there

        • Jesus will be there

        • Follow Jesus’ Way

      • Nothing can separate us from Jesus or God - words of comfort

  • “My Father’s House”

    • “It is critical to the interpretation of Jesus’ words here that the reference to ‘my Father’s house’ not be taken as a synonym for heaven.” (O’Day, p. 740)

    • The key to this passage is “abiding” which is a common theme in John that describes a relationship, not architecture.

    • The “many rooms” is not about having enough room for people to get into heaven. It is extending the abiding relationship between Jesus and the Father into a relationship that we may now enter into also.

      • Jesus abiding with God did not start when he died. It was a description of how he lived.

      • This is true with us, too. It is not about where we live in the ‘afterlife,’ but where we live in the present.

    • Jesus’ promise is about permanent abiding with God

  • v. 14:6a - I am the Way the Truth and the Life

    • WAY

      • People of the Way (Acts 9:2; 19:9, 23; 22:4; 24:14, 22)

      • Journey of faith:

        • Abraham to Canaan

        • Israel to Promised Land

        • Back from Babylon

        • Disciples following Jesus

        • Journey from Galilee to Jerusalem

          • From the Baptism to the Cross to the Empty Tomb and beyond

    • TRUTH

      • Main theme of John’s Gospel

      • Prologue: Grace and truth (1:14, 17)

      • Spirit of Truth will come after Jesus to guide the faithful (14:17, 15: 26-27)

    • LIFE

      • Theme of eternal life

      • Not what is coming next but what happens when you follow the Way of God

      • participation in God = eternal life (cf. Jn. 10:28; 17:2-3)

  • 14:6b - Exclusivism

    • Can exclusive claim be made- YES

    • Is this only exclusive? - NO

    • Message of comfort (see 14:1)

    • Who is Jesus talking to here? The believers and disciples

    • Is Jesus message consistently exclusive or inclusive?

    • Do not fear and do not worry

    • “Jesus claim that ‘no one comes to the Father except through me’ is the joyous affirmation of a religious community that does, indeed, believe that God is available to them decisively in the incarnation.” 

      • It is important to understand that these words are directed at a particular community which is trying to shape its own identity.

    • “What is often labeled as excessively exclusionary would be described more accurately as particularism. That is, the claims made in John 14:6 express the particularities of the Fourth Evangelist’s knowledge and experience of God, and membership in the faith community for which he writes and which he envisions does indeed hinge on this claim.” (O’Day, p. 744, emphasis by author)

    • “To use these verses in a battle over the relative merits of the world’s religions is to distort their theological heart. It is dangerous and destructive anachronism to cite John 14:6-7 as the final arbiter in discussions of the merits of different religions’ experiences and understanding of God” (O’Day, p. 744)

  • vv. 14:8-14

    • See God - we see God in Jesus

      • According to John - Jesus reveals God

      • Greater works

        • Carrying the message to the Gentiles?

        • Carrying on the message without the physical presence of Christ?

        • Trusting in the power of love and grace over the power of pragmatism and domination?

Thoughts and Questions

  • Where do you hang your troubled heart? On God and Jesus or on the details and our own strength?

    • God’s house has many rooms - God always has room for us, do we have room for others in our life?

    • How do we reclaim 14:6 as a text of comfort and grace not a litmus test for faith or a gate to salvation


Acts 7:55-60

Bible Study

  • Skips most of his speech, which recounts Israel’s history:

    • 2-8 = Abraham

    • 9-16 = Joseph

    • 17-43 = Moses and Exodus

      • Stephen emphasizes the struggle Moses had with the people, and their constant misunderstanding.

      • Ends the story with utter disobedience and the people worshiping the calf, and ties that to the exile (which is a dubious understanding of exile and skips an awful lot of history).

  • Why was Stephen stoned?

    • Build up to his final condemnation:

      • His retelling shifts from “our people” to “you people”

      • “You are ‘uncircumcised in your heart’ (interesting argument considering future controversies with Paul and Jerusalem council)

      • You killed prophets

      • You opposed the Holy Spirit

      • You received the law but did not keep it.

    • When accused of speaking against Torah and threatening the Temple, he turns the accusations instead to them.

    • The first Martyr - Gk - witness

    • Tells the story of God’s saving actions, with people’s unwillingness to follow.

    • Connecting Jesus to Moses - just as the people rejected Moses, so they rejected Jesus.

    • Stephen preaching reform - of the Way of Jesus as being rightly Jewish over the Temple and the Law

      • “What would you do to protect your people and your faith from a threat to their existence? The church has often failed to see in this moment not an analogy but the reality out of which it comes to be church. We will be born in the tight space between faith and fear and forever lies in that space. Only the Holy Spirit keeps that space from collapsing us in” Willie Jennings, Acts

      • “For the contemporary Christian audience, it is crucial to observe that in his speech, Stephen is not pitting Christianity over against Judaism as though they were two distinct religions. The debate depicted by Luke in Acts 6-7 is an intra-Jewish struggle over identity and the continuing role of Temple and Law; to label it otherwise is anachronistic.” Mikeal Parsons, (Working Preacher)

    • When Luke/Acts was written, the Temple had been destroyed, and the church was under persecution.

  • verse 56 Jesus is “standing at the right hand of God.”

    • John Calvin claimed this was a minor detail and nothing should be made of it.

    • Ambrose observed: “Jesus stood as a helpmate; he stood as if anxious to help Stephen, his athlete, in the struggle. He stood as though ready to crown his martyr. Let him then stand for you that you may not fear him sitting, for he sits when he judges”  Mikeal Parsons, (Working Preacher)

    • “He sits as Judge of the quick and the dead; he stands as his people’s Advocate”

  • Stephen’s and Jesus’s death parallels in Luke/Acts

    • False accusation

      • Jesus

      • Stephen

    • Trust in God

      • Jesus: “Into your hands, Father, I commend my spirit.” (Luke 23:46)

      • Stephen: “Lord Jesus, receive my spirit.” (Acts 7:59)

    • Right hand of God

      • Jesus during trial: “The Son of Man will be seated at the right hand of the Father.” (Lk 22:69).

      • Stephen culminates his testimony; "I see the heavens opened and the Son of Man standing at the right hand of God!" (Acts 7:56)

    • Forgiveness

      • Jesus on the cross: “Father forgive them, for they do not know what they are doing.” (Luke 23:34)

      • Stephen being stoned: “Lord, do not hold this sin against them.” (Acts 7:60)

    • Centurion watching Jesus, “Surely this man was innocent.” (Lk 23:48)

      • Saul watching Stephen (Acts 7:58)

      • Saul approving of the death (Acts 8:1)

  • Aftermath

    • This leads to the scattering of the disciples to Samaria and beyond - just as Jesus commanded them (Acts 1:8)

    • Yet it isn’t until Stephen’s death that the disciples finally carry the message beyond Jerusalem

      • To Samaria (Acts 8:4-25)

      • To Ethiopia (Acts 8:26-40)

      • To Saul (Acts 9)

      • To the Romans (Acts 10)

  • What does the ugly violence of this act mean to us today?

    • “Death is not dead yet, neither is evil or pain.  They may be doomed, but they are still very pervasive realities, with which men and women must deal daily.” (Beverly Gaventa, Texts for Preaching, Year A, p. 293).

    • Not all good works are met with joy and grace.

    • Death of Stephen, is not one of evil triumphant - Stephen’s witness to Jesus occurs not in his trial, but in his death

      • Forgiveness

      • Trust in God  

      • Grace and forgiveness of Stephen has been a source of inspiration for two thousand years

    • What effect does this have?

      • Unknown - simply Saul approved of the killing

Thoughts and Questions

  • Willie James Jennings, Acts: “The church was born in the tight space between faith and fear and forever lives in that space. Only the Holy Spirit keeps that space from collapsing in on us.” Do we feel that tension? Do we fear only the loss of institutional power, or do we fear something more existential, more rooted in God’s justice and shalom? If our only fear is to keep the budgets filled and doors open, then perhaps our fear is misplaced, and we are no longer “The Church,” but a club grasping for relevance in a world that no longer needs us.

  • Awkward responses to the Spirit:

    • Response to Peter’s sermon is explosive growth and building of community.

    • Response to Stephen’s rise is jealousy, culminating in an ugly, violent act.

  • Response to the gospel is not always positive.  

  • Is the church prepared for an ugly and violent response to the Good News?

    • Just because the response is negative, doesn’t mean you are doing it wrong

  • Was Stephen stoned for blasphemy? Or for being prophetic and judgemental instead of pastoral and loving?

  • Jesus is placed in the same arc as Moses and the prophets, as the culmination - not as the replacement.


1 Peter 2:2-10

Initial Thoughts

  • Strangely we are going backwards in 1 Peter...thanks RCL

  • Be careful of v. 9, “chosen race”, when taken with v. 18 “slaves submit to your masters” has been and continues to be used to perpetuate slavery, racism, and white supremacy.

Bible Study

  • The scriptural foundation for 1 Peter - 6/9 verses are allusion or quotes:

    • Psalm 34:8 - “O taste and see the Lord is good”

    • Isaiah 28:16 - “Look! I’m laying in Zion a stone, a tested stone, a valuable cornerstone, a sure foundation: the one who trusts won’t tremble.”

    • Psalm 118 - “The stone rejected by the builders is now the main foundation stone!”

    • Isaiah 8:14 - "A stone that makes them stumble, and a rock that makes them fall." (thanks Ruth Fitch!)

    • Exodus 19:5-6, “So now, if you faithfully obey me and stay true to my covenant, you will be my most precious possession out of all the peoples, since the whole earth belongs to me. You will be a kingdom of priests for me and a holy nation.”

    • Many of the Psalm talk about recalling the mighty acts of God - cf. Psalm 77, 78, 105 - especially as it related to the Exodus

    • Hosea 2:23 - “I will sow him for myself in the land; and I will have compassion on No Compassion, and I will say to Not My People, “You are my people”; and he will say, “You are my God.””

  • New born

    • Just as a newborn cannot survive on its own, neither can the new born Christian

    • The church, this new born community, is nourished and sustained by the story of faith. 

      • Those who have come before, our traditions, our story is the milk which we need to sustain us

    • The story of the church does not begin with Jesus but is a continuation of what God has done and continues to do in the world

  • Where will this new life lead?

    • Rejection, not triumphalism - like Christ we will be the rejected and dismissed stone, not the golden altar piece

    • We are called to be a royal priesthood - the priests were the intercessors between the people and God - so we are called to point out where God is active in creation

    • We are called to be a holy nation - set apart - in, but not off. Holiness does not mean withdrawing from the world, but rather engaging the world through the way of God’s grace, as revealed in Jesus Christ.

      • We proclaim the mighty acts of God, but those acts are unfolding before we even show up

Thoughts and Questions

  • None of our churches emerge out of nothing, but come out of a deep tradition. That tradition may cause us to repent (for the ways the Church has supported, enacted, or remained silent in the face of slavery, oppression and anti-semitism) and may cause us to rejoice (movements of liberation, feeding the hungry, clothing the naked and welcoming the stranger). We cannot ignore our tradition. How do we see ourselves, our churches and our ministry in light of what has come before?

  • Scripture is the story of the people of God. Like the history of the church it is complicated, but it remains our story. How are you and your community rooted in its story?

  • Once again in 1 Peter we remember that these are words of encouragement for a persecuted community. This passage is a comfort remembering other times when the people of God have suffered and their cries were heard.


THANK YOU FOR LISTENING AND GET IN TOUCH:

Thanks to our Psalms correspondent, Richard Bruxvoort Colligan  (psalmimmersion.com, @pomopsalmist, patreon.com/RichardBC). Thank you to Scott Fletcher for our voice bumpers, Dick Dale and the Del Tones for our Theme music (“Miserlou”), Nicolai Heidlas  for our transition music (“Sunday Morning”, "Real Ride" and “Summertime”) and Bryan Odeen for our closing music.