Jeremiah 15:15-21 • Psalm 26:1-8 • Romans 12:9-21 • Matthew 16:21-28
Have you ever gone from feeling sky high to rock bottom in a matter of seconds? That is what Peter’s experience is with Jesus as Jesus begins orienting his ministry towards Jerusalem. As we heard in last week’s gospel reading, Jesus asked the disciples, “Who do you say that I am?”, and he heralded Peter’s confession that Jesus is “the Messiah”. Jesus declared Peter's confession fully worthy of building the whole church on. No doubt, he was on cloud nine. Here is God’s own Son, giving a pop quiz, and Peter is the only disciple who dared answer--and he got it right! He’s standing 10 feet tall.
But as quickly as he ascends, he falls just as quickly. Jesus starts to talk about undergoing great suffering, about being killed and being raised on the third day. Peter thinks this does not sound like what a Messiah ought to be about. He thought the Messiah, of all people, would be making the proud, the greedy, the power-hungry to suffer and die...but choosing himself to undergo suffering and death? God would never let that happen to the Messiah! No sooner does Peter cry out in protest--“No! God forbid your dying! It must never happen”--than Jesus turns to Peter and cuts him down to size: “Get behind me Satan!” Jesus had just given Peter his name, which means Rock, when he gave his confession. Now, he is given another name by Jesus: “You are a stumbling block to me.” Scripture does not record Peter saying anything back to Jesus, but given how far he’d fallen in a matter of moments, I think Peter wouldn’t have anything to say...except...for stunned...cold...disbelieving...silence.
Silence, after all, is about the only thing we can usually muster when we’ve been put in our place. Peter’s own words had not saved him. He had said everything right. He’d thought he had Jesus figured out. Until his words confessed what he’d thought was his notion about how God operates--that not God, nor God’s Son could ever go through our agony of death. Peter’s words did not save him.
In our lives and in our life of faith, we believe that our words will save us. That if we can just put the right words on the resume, and say just what they want to hear in the interview...that job will be mine. That if we can just explain our side of the story of how we betrayed that friend or spouse or family member...they will finally understand what happened. If we can just say the right words to our children, we can finally get through to them. If I can just say the right words to this person...then just maybe...they’ll want to come church. Like Peter, we just want to get the words right to get ourselves out of the challenges we face.
But as Peter exposes in Jesus’ rebuke, even Peter, who spoke all the right words, cannot speak for Jesus. Jesus’ promises, Jesus’ identity as Messiah, Jesus’ way of self-giving sacrifice, cannot be spoken to us by anyone except Jesus himself.
As Peter is silenced, so are we. We are not just silenced at our inability to grasp the Son of God...we come to the end of words to describe the violence, the destruction and the death we see around us. We are silenced when we have no words to describe the catastrophies humanity is capable of carrying out. Still, almost 10 years later, the tragedy of 9/11 has the power to bring us...to silence.
Even as we try to break the silence of suffering, what can we say? In a world now filled with so much media, technology and commercialism, do we even have the space anymore to hear the words Jesus says to us? The average American subjected to 6,000 messages a day. Can we cultivate an openness to listening for a God who could still possibly be speaking to us?
The word Jesus speaks to Peter and to us is a word that chooses not to avoid being spoken in the midst of the unspeakable that brings us to silence. His word for us is a word that is more trustworthy than all the words that come at us to confuse and turn us in on ourselves. Jesus speaks his word from the path that leads through Jerusalem, through whatever suffering silences us...to his cross. His word meets us there at the intersection of where our deepest fears meet God’s great promise of hope. Jesus Word for us...is an embrace of the truth. The word spoken to us on the cross...is LIFE in his name. This is a Word spoken to us when we have no words left to say—when we become ambivalent to having faith in anyone or anything else. It turns out God chooses to bring speech out of silence through one who remained silent before his accusers....whose death was so irrelevant that it was not even recorded by the authorities. (Lischer)
It is in the places of silence where God’s Word of the suffering, saving Christ echo with the promise of presence. In his work about his time at the Auschwitz concentration camp in World War II, Elie Wiesel writes in his book Night about seeing the hanging of a child, and hearing someone ask, “Where is God? Where is he?” The boy was not heavy enough for the weight of his body to break his neck, so the boy died slowly and in agony. Wiesel filed past him, saw his tongue still pink and his eyes clear, and wept. “Behind me,” he writes, “I heard the same man asking: Where is God now? And I heard a voice within me answer him: ... Here He is—He is hanging here on this gallows.”
So it is on such a cross that the Word of Life is spoken to us, which we cannot speak for ourselves: Jesus will have the final word. His word will not shy away from all who hunger for compassion that fills us beyond measure. We respond as does the prophet Jeremiah who received a promise of return home from exile: “Your words were found, [God], and I ate them, and your words became to me a joy and the delight of my heart: for I am called by your name, O Lord, God of hosts.” (Jer. 15:16)
The Jesus of the cross speaks his word that paves the way for us to follow him. Thankfully we do not have to blaze that trail on our own. It has been paved for us already by Jesus, the Word, who offers forgiveness, who clears a way for us straight into God’s heart for the world.
We as the church gathered today hear this word, and it is that word that we then go and proclaim to all the ends of the earth, speaking the name that is above all other names, that runs deeper than any pain, into the silence: Jesus... Emmanuel... God is with us.
As United Lutheran continues its visioning process, what are those places of silence in this community and in our world that we feel God calling us to speak Jesus’ word of life to? Is it to assist with refugee resettlement? Is it to those without affordable housing? Is it to those who don’t feel welcome anywhere? This word, Jesus, is a word that matters, and that can change lives. I believe this church has the faith and courage to speak the word Jesus with boldness, even when the world would rather cover its ears.
So in the crazed world of our lives filled with so many words, let us now take a minute of silence to actually listen to God, who speaks a single Word of Life into our lives today, the self-giving...Jesus...who comes even in the silence of our frailty...to still our fears and fill us with his resounding YES to us spoken from the cross. ...And at the end that minute or so of silence I will say... Word of God, word of life, to which all will respond, Thanks be to God.
Amen.