Monday, August 31, 2015

A Kosher Parable: Reading Mark 7



Sometimes – probably, more often than we realize – we have to remind ourselves that Jesus was a Jew to understand what he is going on about and why it matters to us.  Today’s Gospel reading is a case in point.  Jesus is arguing with the Pharisees about how to observe the Torah – Jewish teaching – not about whether to observe it, but how to do it.  To understand what is at stake in this debate, those of us who are Gentiles need a little background information.[1]

The argument appears to be about whether or not one needs to wash one’s hands before meals.  This isn’t a health precaution, but a matter of maintaining purity from the perspective of Jewish law.  There are two classes of Jewish law under consideration in Jesus’ argument with the Pharisees.  The first are the kashrut or kosher laws defining which foods are muttar – permitted or forbidden.  These laws govern the familiar practice of pious Jews, who abstain from eating non-ruminants such as pigs and rabbits, birds of prey, and sea creatures without fins or scales.  Kosher meat must be prepared in a such a way that the animal’s death is painless, and milk and meat are kept separate.  Although food that is not kosher is sometimes confusingly referred to as “impure,” kosher law actually has nothing to do with the purity or impurity of the body or other items per se.

The system of law that governs what is tahor – clean or unclean, pure or impure – is distinct from kashrut or kosher law in the Torah.  It has to do with the issue of pollution: touching various objects, such as a dead body, or experiencing certain conditions, such as skin diseases or bodily fluxes, which render one impure.  It also governs how one can be restored to purity through certain ritual actions.  Note that “impurity” is not equivalent to “immorality” and does not involve moral condemnation.   A person may very well become impure quite accidentally through no fault of his or her own.  In fact, most Israelites in Jesus’ time were impure most of the time (and today all Jews are all of the time), because purification required a trip to the Temple in Jerusalem (which was destroyed by the Romans in 70 AD and never rebuilt). 

According to the Torah, these two sets of rules governing kosher foods and purity regulations are kept strictly separate.  While kosher food could become impure under certain circumstances, eating such food did not make the body impure.  According to the Torah, carrion is the only food that renders a body impure. It seems the Pharisees imposed a stricter definition beyond that of the Torah, derived from oral tradition (the tradition of the Elders), stipulating that eating defiled kosher food would make you impure.  Hence their strict observance of a ritual washing of the hands before touching food to make sure that the food does not become impure. 

By arguing that only what comes out of the person renders one impure, rather than what one ingests, Jesus is protesting against the extension of the purity laws beyond their specific biblical foundation.  He is actually making a conservative argument for Torah observance in opposition to the innovations of the Pharisees.  Jesus kept kosher.  He simply refused to accept the idea that eating defiled kosher food could make one impure.  This is the meaning of his declaration that all foods are clean.  All food is clean, but not all food is kosher.

Now, this may very well be interesting, but what does it have to do with us Gentile Christians?  Jesus takes the argument to a deeper level, indicating that the laws of purity are a kind of parable.   Those who are concerned with being contaminated by what is outside of us, miss the spiritual import of the Torah’s teaching that it is only what comes from within us – from the heart, from actions flowing from interior intention – that renders us impure.

This is underscored by the other example that Jesus’ uses to criticize the Pharisees: the practice of Corban, of making an offering to God.  Evidently, oral tradition had made provision for people to avoid taking responsibility for supporting aging parents by taking a vow to dedicate their resources as a sacrifice to God only.  Jesus rejects this kind of legal legerdemain as an abrogation of the demands of the Torah: a human creation devoid of the legitimacy of scriptural teaching.  He is sensitive to the many ways we can use the veneer of religion to justify practices that in reality are antithetical to the deeper moral and spiritual meaning of religious practices. 

Far from rejecting Jewish teaching, Jesus attempts to retrieve and protect its core concern to sanctify all of human life through the practices of justice and mercy that form, and flow from, a compassionate heart.  The observance of kashrut and halakhic teaching is in the service of this core.  The literal practice serves to form our intentions and actions in conformity with the love of God.  Becoming obsessive about the literal practice can blind us to the mercy of God that is at the heart of the life of faith.

We do not need to worry about the contagion of impurity.  Nothing and no one outside of us can defile us.  What matters is what we are putting out into the world.  This is what reveals our spiritual condition.

This past week I was visiting with my aunt, a conservative Baptist and something of a biblical literalist, who loves me dearly.  She was telling me about her daughter’s sister-in-law, who was recently married to another woman – in Indiana.  My aunt was lamenting that this newlywed’s parents and other family members refused to attend her wedding and completely ostracized her and her wife.  For them, to be touched by a gay or lesbian person is to risk defilement.  Their purity trumps their compassion. 

My aunt, bless her heart, understands that this was not the teaching of Jesus.  It is not the sexual orientation of their child – whatever they may think about it – that defiled them, but rather their cruel rejection of her.  My hope is that their daughter has the faith to resist internalizing the sense of worthlessness that her family is attempting to impose upon her. 

It seems to me that this is the purpose of our spiritual practices: to inoculate us from the attempts of others to define us as impure, worthless, expendable.  They serve to remind us that we are God’s beloved, holy children.  Our observance of spiritual practices and moral teachings are meaningful only if they help us to see ourselves and others in this way.  Let our compassion be contagious.

Unless our literal observance serves this deeper meaning, it can quickly become a weapon to degrade other people while masking the rot in our own hearts.  This is the tragic outcome of so many purity campaigns:  they reveal more about the hard heartedness of the moralizers than they do about the morality of the “impure.”  The attempts of certain presidential candidates to condemn the impurity of “illegals,” branding them as rapists and murderers, is but the latest in a long history of using the fear of contagion to manipulate and control people. 

True religious observance relieves us of the fear of the other, the fear of contagion, so that we can be free to love and serve our neighbor.  Authentically conservative spiritual teachers – like Jesus – are dogged and dogmatic in their resistance to attempts to dilute the core meaning of faith.   They are adamant about protecting the essence of religious practice:  recognizing the dignity of humanity created in God’s image and preserving the gift of a world full of wonder, beauty, and joy for generations to come.  

Jesus offers us a kosher parable: it is possible to keep the whole law and lose your soul.  How we keep the law, not whether we keep it, makes all the difference.  It is not our purity or perfection that saves us, but only and always the mercy of God.  Amen




[1] The following reading of Mark 7 draws on the work of Daniel Boyarin, The Jewish Gospels: The Story of the Jewish Christ, especially the chapter entitled “Jesus Kept Kosher.”

Sunday, July 26, 2015

Clay Jar Hearts





Some of you may be familiar with the The Ark community founded in France in 1964 by Jean Vanier and Father Thomas Philippe.  The well-known spiritual writer, Henri Nouwen, spent the last 10 years of his life at The Ark community in Toronto.  Today, there are 140 independent Ark Communities in 36 countries.  Their mission is to create communities of people with and without mental disabilities sharing their life together, recognizing the mutual need and dignity of every human being created in God’s image.[1]  

One of the founding members of The Ark in Syracuse is a man named Eugene.   Eugene had been institutionalized long enough to loose touch with his family and long enough to feel the sting of dehumanization before coming to The Ark. When he was welcomed there, his paperwork indicated he had an IQ of around 20. He was almost non-verbal and sometimes exhibited extreme mood swings.

It didn’t take long, however, to discover his love for cooking. He liked to bake cookies and was good at watching over the grill when the community cooked out in the yard. He also discovered his affinity for animals and his love of prayer. Eugene was never really comfortable with the large numbers of people at prayer services, but he loved God.

One night at the weekly Tuesday prayer service the theme was “The Ark is impossible.”  The discussion was around the impossibility of living in community, given the challenges that come with relating to one another in all our differences. Near the end of the prayer time the question was asked: “What can we do?” Eugene, who had not said a word during the evening, looked up and said simply, “We need the Holy Spirit.”[2]

The Ark is what the church looks like:  a collection of clay jars, to use St. Paul’s metaphor:  fragile, cracked, not always especially pretty or decorative, but containing inside them a priceless treasure.[3]  This is what St. James has been for 125 years.  A place where people are invited to embrace their mutual vulnerability in Christian community, so that together they can discover and share the power to serve and heal and bless.  It isn’t easy to do this.  In fact, it is impossible.  We’re just clay jars – cracked clay pots – some of us I daresay are even crackpots!  We need the Holy Spirit to slip through the cracks in our clay jar hearts.

Leonard Cohen says it beautifully in his powerful “Anthem”:

The birds they sang
at the break of day
Start again
I heard them say
Don't dwell on what has passed away
or what is yet to be


Ah the wars they will
be fought again
The holy dove
She will be caught again
bought and sold
and bought again
the dove is never free

Ring the bells that still can ring
Forget your perfect offering
There is a crack in everything
That's how the light gets in. 


We asked for signs
the signs were sent:
the birth betrayed
the marriage spent
Yeah the widowhood
of every government --
signs for all to see. 


I can't run no more
with that lawless crowd
while the killers in high places
say their prayers out loud.

But they've summoned, they've summoned up
a thundercloud
and they're going to hear from me.


Ring the bells that still can ring
Forget your perfect offering
There is a crack in everything
That's how the light gets in.


You can add up the parts
but you won't have the sum
You can strike up the march,
there is no drum
Every heart, every heart
to love will come
but like a refugee. 


Ring the bells that still can ring
Forget your perfect offering
There is a crack, a crack in everything
That's how the light gets in.
That's how the light gets in.
That's how the light gets in.[4]


We live in a world consumed with perfection – the perfect body, the perfect lover, the perfect career, the perfect children, the perfect artisanal cocktail – consumed with all that is invulnerable, and superior, and that sets us apart from everybody else.  We settle for being admired or envied if we measure up or pitied if we don’t, when what we really desire is just to love and to be loved as we are, cracks and all.  Accepting the cracks in our clay jar hearts is the doorway that leads us back into the human family.

When we accept our mutual vulnerability, when we realize how desperately we need the Holy Spirit, we can then let go of the project of securing our perfect lives and make our imperfect offering instead.  It is then that we become usable for God, with the courage to read the signs of the times and confront the killers in high places, creating an alternative to a world whose deadly pursuit of perfection makes no room for what is weak, or poor, or simply human.  

We have a practice at St. James of honoring life changes during the Sunday morning liturgy.  When I first came here, I dreaded it!  The idea of people standing up and just sharing whatever was going on in their lives seemed crazy.  "What would they say?  What if it isn’t appropriate or it is embarrassing?"  Then I realized, “Now I know how people must feel when I stand up to preach.” I had to forget my perfect offering.

So, during “life changes” folks share births and anniversaries and new jobs, not to brag but to recognize with gratitude the gifts they have received.  And they share their divorces, and chemotherapy appointments, and their struggles against everyday injustice.  Some days, it can break your clay jar heart right open, but what a treasure you will find inside:  the joy we discover when we place the weakest among us at the center of our community (and on any given day that could be anyone of us); the joy of experiencing how much God delights in our imperfect offering. 

We honor our patron, St. James, today, because he fostered a Christian community that placed its most vulnerable members at the center of its common life.  When Herod Agrippa had James beheaded, it was at the very time that Jesus’ disciples were planning the first international Christian relief effort aimed at providing aid for the victims of a terrible famine in Judea.[5]  James had the courage to respond to the need of others, even if it placed him in conflict with the killers in high places. 

James was willing to make his imperfect offering, because he remembered the words of Jesus, “You know that the rulers of the Gentiles lord it over them, and their great ones are tyrants over them.  It will not be so among you; but whoever wishes to be great among you must be your servant, and whoever wishes to be first among you must be your slave; just as the Son of Man came not to be served but to serve, and to give his life a ransom for many.”[6]

As we learn together to serve one another in our weakness, Christ becomes really present among us.  God became human for our sake in Christ Jesus so that through Christ being formed in us, we could become truly human.  In the words of Dietrich Bonhoeffer, “the church is not a religious community of those who revere Christ, but Christ who has taken form among human beings . . . The church’s concern is not religion, but the form of Christ and its taking form among a band of people.”[7] 

The form of Christ is shaped like a servant: a servant-community that gives itself away for others in love, and receives our imperfect offerings with grace. The power of God flows through the cracks in our clay jar hearts.  It is that power that has brought us thus far, and will carry us through the next 125 years and beyond.  We need the Holy Spirit.  So come, come Holy Spirit, fill the hearts of your faithful people, and enkindle in us the fire of your love.  Amen. 



[1] http://www.larcheusa.org/who-we-are/larche-international-2/
[2] http://www.larcheusa.org/who-we-are/stories/bob-sackel/
[3] II Corinthians 4:7.
[4] http://www.lyricsfreak.com/l/leonard+cohen/anthem_20082876.html
[5] Acts 11:12-12:3.
[6] Matthew 20:25-28.
[7] Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Ethics (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 205), pp. 96-97.