Earth Day 2022 Faithfulness: Easter 2C
There is no doubt! No, really. When English Bibles since the
King James Version have Jesus saying to Thomas, “Do not doubt but believe,”
it’s not there in the Greek text. It does not say doubt.[i]
The Greek is pistos, an adjective meaning faithful or trustworthy. Richard
Swanson translates this as, “Do not become unfaithful, but faithful.”[ii]
Which is just what Thomas has been up to this moment throughout the Gospel of
John: faithful and trustworthy to a “t”!
It was Thomas, after all, who when word came to Jesus that Lazarus was ill, and Jesus says, “Let’s go to him,” all the disciples but one say, “No, there are people around Jerusalem and Bethany who want to kill you!” Only Thomas, faithful and trustworthy, says, “Let us also go, that we may die with him.”[iii] Thomas is faithful and trustworthy. Jesus knows this. There’s no doubt about it. We need to dispense with anything to do with “Doubting Thomas.” Let there be no doubt about that! For Thomas is alone among this room full of disciples to declare, “My Lord and my God,” “My Kurios and my Theos!” Kurios in the Bible is the God of Mercy, and Theos is the God of Justice.
Thomas recognize Jesus as the God of Justice and Mercy. Those first reading or hearing John’s story of Jesus would have recognized that the moment Jesus breathes on them he bestows upon them the gift of God’s ruach, God's Spirit. They would recognize it as the same Spirit-Breath that broods over the chaotic waters of Creation in Genesis1 verse 2. The same Spirit-Breath that God breathes into a handful of dust and water to form the first man in Genesis 2:7. The same Spirit-Breath of which God says to Ezekiel, “Prophesy to these bones, and say to them: O dry bones, hear the word of the Lord. Thus says the Lord God to these bones: I will cause breath to enter you, and you shall live.”[iv]
Thus, “Do not become unfaithful, but faithful,” is Jesus’s invitation to Thomas and all who are present to live into God’s dream of Shalom, and to share in the management of all God’s creation. It is this dream of God’s Shalom that resists all our tendencies to division, hostility, fear, drivenness and misery.”[vi] By saying, “Shalom,” and breathing upon them, Jesus reminds all who would be faithful to him and the God of Shalom of our calling, our responsibility, to the care and management of all of God’s creation: every person, every creature, every plant, every body of water, every molecule of breathable air. We might say with some degree of confidence, that this moment among followers of Jesus that evening the day of resurrection was in fact the very first Earth Day. It just took until April 22, 1970 for us to institute an annual reminder of this: our central task as humans interdependent on one another, all creatures and the environment itself. Our lives depend on the lives of the whole environment. This suggests the importance of Earth Day which will be observed later this week.
It would not be until 2008 for Harper One to publish The Green Bible in which all passages concerned with environmental stewardship are printed in Green – it’s a “Green Letter Bible”! The Foreword to The Green Bible was written by Archbishop Desmond Tutu who says, in part,
“I would not know how to be a human
being, how to think as a human being, how to walk as a human being, how to talk
or how to eat as a human being except by learning from other human beings…We’re
made for community, we’re made for togetherness, we’re made for friendship…to
live in a delicate network of interdependence, for we are made for complementarity.
I have gifts you don’t have. And you have gifts I don’t have. Thus, we are made
different so that we can know the need of one another. And this is a
fundamental law of our being.
“All kinds of things go horribly
wrong when we flout this law – when we don’t ensure that God’s children
everywhere have a supply of clean water, a safe environment, a decent home, a
full stomach. We could do that if we remembered that we are created members of
one family, the human family, God’s family.
“We must act now and wake up to our
moral obligations. The poor and vulnerable are members of God’s family and are
the most severely affected by droughts, high temperatures, the flooding of
coastal cities, and more severe and unpredictable weather events resulting from
climate change. We, who should have been responsible stewards preserving our
vulnerable, fragile planet home, have been wantonly wasteful through our
reckless consumerism, devouring irreplaceable natural resources. We need to be accountable
to God’s family. Once we start living in a way that is people-friendly to all of
God’s family, we will also be environment-friendly.
“As you read The Green Bible starting in Genesis, you will see that after God created birds, fish and animals he created humans to…act compassionately and gently toward all forms of life. The future of our fragile, beautiful planet home is in our hands…It is possible to have a new kind of world, a world where there will be more compassion, more gentleness, more caring, more laughter, more joy for all of God’s creation, because that is God’s dream. And God says, “Help me, help me, help me realize my dream”[vii]
When Jesus says, “Shalom. Peace be with you. As the Father
sent me, so I send you”; when Jesus breathes on them; when Jesus says to
Thomas, “Do not become unfaithful, but faithful,” he is speaking to us - all of us who would be disciples of his. Jesus says
to us, “Help me realize my dream - my Father's Dream of Shalom for all creation.” This Second Sunday of Easter ask us, whe will we embrace The
Dream of God's Shalom? When will we accept the gift of the Holy Spirit? When will we let
the Love of God be poured into our hearts? When will we, like Thomas, proclaim
in all that we say and all that we do, My Lord and my God? Let there be Justice and Mercy for all. There is no doubt
that all the children of God, all the creatures of the Earth, and the Earth itself,
await our faithful and trustworthy commitment to live in a way that is people-friendly
to all of God’s family, and thus environmentally friendly as well. Amen.
[i]
John 20:27
[ii] Swanson,
Richard, Provoking the Gospel of John (The Pilgrim Press, Cleveland: 2010)
p.444.
[iii] John
11: 15-16
[iv] Ezekiel
37: 4-5
[v]
Brueggemann, Walter, Living Toward A Vision (United Church Press, NY, NY: 1976)
p.15-16.
[vi]
Ibid, Brueggemann, p.16.
[vii] Tutu, Archbishop Desmond, The Green Bible (Harper One, NY, NY: 2008) p. I13-14.
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