Address given at Templederry, St Mary's Nenagh and Killodiernan on Sunday 10th September 2017, the 13th after Trinity.
70 years ago in 1947 British India was
partitioned to form the new countries of India & Pakistan.
Murderous rioting left
some 2 million people dead and prompted the greatest population transfer in
human history, as the religiously mixed provinces of Punjab and Bengal were
divided. Some 14 million Muslims fled to Pakistan, and 14 million Hindus and
Sikhs fled to India, breaking up communities that had lived and worked peacefully
beside each other for centuries.
You may have seen
images, as I have, of the horrific violence that followed partition, and heard
the stories of survivors, their children and grandchildren, shown recently on British
TV. Of course, this is not the only example of ethnic cleansing within the living
memory of many of us. They are examples of how men and women just like you and
me can be infected with the virus of hatred for those who are different to us,
which pushes them to do evil things – surely a manifestation of original sin.
These thoughts are prompted by today’s 1st
reading from Exodus 12:1-14.
To understand it we
need to put the reading in context, since as so often the good compilers of the
lectionary have set only a small part of a much bigger story.
The Israelites had
lived in Egypt for 430 years since the time of Joseph, and their numbers had
grown to 600,000, we are told - though that may be exaggerated. Once welcomed
in the time of Joseph, the Egyptians had come to resent them for being
different. To reduce their numbers, Pharaoh – the Egyptian King - had decreed
that their male babies should be killed – as nearly happened to Moses. Now a
new Pharaoh is using them as slaves, forced labour on his great building
projects.
Immediately before
today’s reading, we hear how the Israelites prayed for God to relieve their
suffering, and God ordained Moses and Aaron to lead them out of their slavery
to a promised land ‘filled with milk and honey’.
Pharaoh would not listen to Moses’ pleas to let the Israelites go. So God sent
9 successive plagues on Egypt, but still in the hardness of his heart Pharaoh
would not let them go. Now God is preparing a 10th and final plague
– the death of the first-born – after which Pharaoh will let them go.
In today’s reading we
heard how God instructs Moses and Aaron to prepare the people to leave. Each
family is to kill a lamb. They are to paint their doors with its blood, then
roast and eat it hurriedly with unleavened bread and bitter herbs, all dressed
and ready to go. During the night God will destroy the first-born of every
human being and animal, except where the doors have been marked with blood.
This is to be named the Passover, because God passed over the Israelites, and
they are to celebrate the Passover as a festival for ever after.
After today’s reading
we hear that God was as good as his word. He killed every first-born, but
spared the Israelites. Pharaoh finally permitted the Israelites to leave, and
they went carrying gold and silver and clothes given them by their Egyptian
neighbours. Pharaoh changed his mind and sent an army after them, but his army
was drowned in the Red Sea. The Israelites escaped into the wilderness of Sinai,
where they wandered for 40 years, before finally entering the promised land of
Canaan.
The story of the Passover and Exodus from Egypt
is the great foundation myth of the Israelite people.
It was probably written
down some 700 years after the Passover, based on memories passed down orally from
generation to generation from the 15th-13th Century BC,
as part of religious ceremonies.
As a result the
Israelites came to see themselves as a people specially chosen and loved by the
one all-powerful God, a God of justice who would protect them, so long as they
kept to their side of the covenant he made with them through Moses.
But perhaps there was
a darker side to the Passover too. Was it accompanied by intercommunal
violence, like the partition of India? Could the reason for marking the
doorways with blood be so that Israelite gangs bent on murder would not attack
Israelite homes? Did the departing Israelites pillage their neighbours houses
to steal the gold and silver and clothes they took away with them? It is impossible
to know – there is just too little evidence – but it does not seem unlikely to
me.
Whatever the truth of
this, the Passover and Exodus played a critical role in forging the national
identity of the Israelites as a distinct people, as they faced the hardships of
the wilderness, and fought to establish themselves as farmers in the fertile
lands of Canaan. There they were to suffer repeated defeats, occupation and
deportation. But they always returned, thanks to their strong sense of identity
forged at the time of the Exodus, and their faith in their covenant with God.
In my own lifetime, Jews have returned again to build the strong state of
Israel – though at the expense of Palestinians turned out from their ancestral
homes.
Jesus was able to
build on this Jewish sense of identity to proclaim his good news. He used the
symbolism of the Passover lamb – quite deliberately, I think – when he went up
to Jerusalem for the Passover. There his passion and death shows Christians how
to confront evil with self-sacrifice, becoming our Paschal Lamb, who died to
save us from the slavery of sin. And the early church was able to broaden the
terms of the covenant to include gentiles as well as Jews - largely through the
insights of St Paul and St Peter - so that we gentile Christians now claim that
covenant with God for ourselves.
Today we face a different sort of slavery to
the ancient Israelites – a slavery of excess.
Men and women are
driven by economic forces to ever greater consumption. We are enslaved by a
false God of endless economic growth to maximise return on investment, without
thought for others or the future. As a society, we do not care for the poor in
our own country as we should. We do too little to ease the plight of refugees
from conflict and natural disasters. We continue to pollute the atmosphere with
greenhouse gases which threaten environmental catastrophe. We ignore issues of
global justice and ethnic tensions springing from competition for scarce
resources. How do we as Christians respond to these moral challenges?
We know we must change
our ways, as we travel into the future on a pilgrimage of faith and hope. We
cannot see our promised land, nor can we be certain how to get there, so we are
filled with fear about giving up our comfortable lifestyles to sojourn in the
wilderness. In our imagination we suffer hunger and thirst, with wild animals
lurking in the bushes and unfriendly neighbours ready to attack. And we protest
that the costs of the journey are to be borne by us, while the benefits will
not be felt in our time.
Yet we can learn from
the history of the children of Israel - how they changed after the Passover and
the Exodus from a bickering group of refugees into a nation and flourished in
their promised land. As we can too, in ours.
We need to sense the
urgency of God’s call to us to get ready for a new life. We hear it in Jesus’s
proclamation, ‘Repent, for the kingdom of God has come
near’. We must trust in our covenant with the one almighty God,
who chooses us and loves us. We will get our focus right if we follow Jesus’s
commandments to love God and to love our neighbours.
But we have to move
quickly – ‘the
night is far gone, the day is near’, as Paul tells the Romans in
today’s Epistle reading (Romans 13:8-14).
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