+
Here’s a big question: where does power and authority lie?
When
you look at the world, our country, our local community, our families, the
Church: where does power and authority lie?
The
question is a really ‘live’ one when we see the struggle for presidential power
and authority over the White House and, recently, in No.10 Downing Street. It
plays out at Croydon Council or in the tensions of life with others in families
and churches.
The
theologian Walter Wink speaks of ‘unmasking the powers’. In other words, in
situations where things just don’t feel right, where is power, where is
authority? If we can identify that then we can begin to understand a situation
better.
That’s
where the scriptures come in to help us identify where the power and authority
lies.
Over
the last few days the pattern of readings at Morning Prayer has taken us
through the book of Daniel and the Revelation to John. In dramatic, sometimes
outrageous, incomprehensible and alien imagery the question of where power and authority
lies is tackled.
These
strange and fantastical books are known as ‘apocalyptic’. That’s not to be
confused with Hollywood action films or doom and disaster, but ‘apocalyptic’
means ‘unveiling’ or ‘unmasking’.
What
they seek to reveal is that earthly powers and authorities are not where
sovereignty, ultimate power, ultimate authority lies. Power and authority, they
declare, begin and end with God.
Today
we celebrate the Kingship of Christ; to celebrate that is to declare that the
sovereignty of God is made visible in the face of Jesus Christ.
Yet
his ‘kingship is not of this world’. His crown is one of thorns, his throne is
a manger and a cross. His kingdom is revealed in service of the hungry, the
thirsty, the naked, the sick, the prisoner.
In
Revelation the power and authority is revealed to be in the Lamb on the throne.
The lamb is weak, frail and vulnerable in the eyes of the world, and this is a
sacrificial lamb, one whose life will only make sense in death.
John
the Baptist said of Christ, ‘Behold, the Lamb of God’. Here is enduring power,
ultimate authority, revealed in love.
Love,
the King, does not manipulate, oppress, distort, jostle, but feeds the hungry,
gives water to the thirsty, clothes the naked, comforts the sick, visits the
prisoner: this is the love of the Lamb of God who gives away all earthly power
and authority so that he can assume heavenly, cosmic power and authority.
In
Christ the world is not interpreted through earthly powers and authority – that
belongs to him – rather it is measured by the power and authority of love.
Love
reframes the question: in how we relate globally, nationally, locally, in
families and in church. Life in Christ is shaped by love, not vying power and
authority.
So
with Christ as Sovereign King we look at the world through a different lens:
the question now is not ‘where does power and authority lie in the world, the
nation, the home, the church’, but in all those places where we find ourselves
we ask ‘where do find and unveil the love’?
No comments:
Post a Comment