Who
Are We?
Rev.
Dr. Tom Sorenson, Pastor
June
11, 2017
Scripture:
Genesis 1:26-31; Psalm 8
Let
us pray: May the words of my mouth and the meditations of all of our
hearts be acceptable in your sight O God, our strength and our
redeemer. Amen.
When
I was in seminary one of the basic, introductory courses for all
students was a class taught by Father Mike Rashko, a brilliant
teacher and theologian who could also be very pastoral. The class was
called “Christian Anthropology.” When I saw that Christian
Anthropology was one of the first classes I would be taking I was
puzzled. Christian anthropology? Really? What’s that? What’s
Christian about anthropology? Isn’t anthropology the study ancient
humanoid ancestors of modern humans? What does that have to do with
Christianity? Well, it turns out that while we do use the word
anthropology for the study of human evolution the word actually has a
different, broader meaning. It means the study of what it is to be
human. Which still leaves the question: What does that have to do
with Christianity? Turns out it actually has a great deal to do with
Christianity, or any other faith tradition for that matter. Father
Mike’s class turned out to be about the basic questions of the
human condition and our relationship to God.
Human
thinkers have asserted many different understandings of the human
condition and the relationship of God to creation in general and
humanity in particular. One foundational question is whether we
humans are basically good or basically evil. It is easy enough to
conclude that we humans really don’t amount to much. We are so
often weak, fearful, and violent. We so easily get injured. It is so
easy to kill us whether the agent of death be an invisible microbe,
misbehaving cells, or a nuclear bomb. We so often live in fear, fear
of our neighbor, of disease, of suffering and death, of the one who
is different from us in some significant—or even some
insignificant—way. We fear a national enemy, so we build the most
powerful military force the world has ever known with the capacity to
wipe out all life on earth several times over. We fear personal
enemies, so we arm ourselves to the teeth and tolerate an immense
amount of gun violence because we convince ourselves that guns make
us safer, not less safe. Thinking that all of that and so much more
negative things about us is who we really are is easy enough to do
and is one way that thinkers have portrayed us humans over the
centuries.
Yet
there’s another way of understanding us humans too. We humans are
at the same time incredibly weak and incredibly strong. We live
through ordeals and losses that ought to destroy us but don’t. We
live through times of hell and come out scarred but not broken. We
are fearful, but we are also amazingly brave. We face losses and
hardships in our lives with a courageous will that refuses to let
those things have the last word. We sacrifice our lives to stop a
deranged man from harassing two young Muslim women on a commuter
train. Military people in combat risk and sacrifice their lives to
save their comrades. We’ve all heard those stories. Some of you may
have witnessed them, or even done them yourselves. We can be and
often are violent, but we are also people committed to peace and the
peaceful resolution of disputes. We create systems of oppression, but
we also stand and struggle for justice. It is perfectly possible to
view us humans as either irreparably flawed or as wondrously capable,
or both.
We
can see our relationship with God in different ways too. Some people
believe that God is simply irrelevant. We are autonomous creatures,
they say. We can do it on our own, they say. Other people believe the
exact opposite. They say we are utterly dependent on God for
everything. They say we can do absolutely nothing without God. So
faced with these conflicting opinions about who we humans are, about
how God created us, what are we to do? Well, whenever we Christians
are faced with a question like that we tend to turn to Bible to find
an answer; and while we don’t always find an answer there, or
sometimes we find more than one answer there, turning to the Bible is
usually a good thing to do. And it turns out that the two passages we
just heard from the lectionary readings for today say a lot about who
we are and who God created us to be.
We’ll
start with the passage from Genesis. It says that God created us,
both women and men, in God’s own image and likeness and essentially
made us God’s stewards over the earth and the living things upon
it. Trust me, there are libraries full of efforts that theologians
have made over the centuries to understand what the image and
likeness of God means and what this text means when it directs us to
rule over the earth and to “subdue” it. I won’t go into all
that this morning, not that I necessarily could if I wanted to
without doing a lot of research. Suffice it to say that we are
created in some way like gods. I take that to mean that God trusts
us. Our passage says that God’s actions in creating us was good.
That means, I think, that we are created more good than evil, not
that you can always tell that from the way we humans act.
Psalm
8 sheds some more light on how God created us. It asks what we humans
can possibly amount to compared to the majesty of God and the glory
of God’s creation. It’s a legitimate question. After all, none of
us could have done what God did in creating all that is. We couldn’t
do it as individuals. All of us couldn’t even begin to do it
together. Yet Psalm 8 then proclaims what the theologians call a very
high anthropology. There’s that word anthropology that I started
this sermon with again. It says that God created us “a little lower
than the heavenly beings” and crowned us with “glory and honor.”
It says God made us “ruler” over all of the works of God’s
hands and put everything “under [our] feet.” Wow! Psalm 8 picks
up the high anthropology of Genesis 1 and raises it even higher. It
says we are practically angels, or even gods, there being some real
confusion about what the Hebrew word translated here as “heavenly
beings” means. In both Genesis 1 and Psalm 8 we are created very
nearly as gods. It sure can be hard to see us humans that way, or at
least it can be for me. Yet these two powerful pieces of poetry from
the Bible say that that’s how it is, that that’s how we are. So
let’s take is as given that that’s how we’re created and see
what it might mean about how we are to relate to God and to our
lives.
With
regard to how we are to relate to God it means first of all that we
are free, autonomous beings. We are not the slaves of God the way
people were portrayed in the Babylonian creation story that Genesis 1
was written to refute. We are nearly divine, and we have control over
the earth. We have control over own lives, which surely is part of
what being made in the image and likeness of God means. We relate to
God not as slaves, not as indentured servants with no free will, but
as God’s supreme creation. We aren’t God, and we aren’t gods;
but we needn’t grovel before God. God created us as God’s
partners in the work of creation. We need to take our role as God’s
partners seriously.
God
gave us autonomy over our own lives. We have free will. We have the
right and the responsibility to make our own decisions in life. God’s
doesn’t control us. God doesn’t dictate to us, but neither does
God abandon us or leave us entirely to our own devices. Perhaps we
like to read Psalm 8’s “You made him a little lower than the
heavenly beings” as meaning that we no longer need God. Well, of
course we know that that isn’t true. Maybe we focus on the phrase
“heavenly beings,” but that verse also has the word “lower.”
We are autonomous. We have free will, but because we are neither God
nor truly gods we never lose our need for God.
The
great good news of the Christian faith (and of other faiths for that
matter) is that while we truly need God, God knows that we need God
and is always there with us in everything that comes our way in life.
God created us as good, not perfect. God created us to live our
autonomous lives with God not separate from God. I think all that
means that God calls us to make our own decisions. To discern our own
paths in life. But God never leaves us to do those things alone. God
knows our needs. God knows we need so often to turn to God for help,
for direction, for comfort, for strength and courage as we struggle
with life’s difficulties. Yes, God created us little lower than the
angels, but we’re still not even angels much less gods; and God
know it. God knows it and is always there to help us get through
whatever we must get through in life. God is there when things go
wrong. God is there when we struggle, when we are afraid, when we’re
hurt. God is even there when we die to hold us in unfailing arms of
love and see us through to the other side.
So
who are we? We are God’s beloved men and women. We are God’s
agents in the work of creation on earth. We are God’s stewards on
earth, charged with protecting and preserving God’s good creation.
We are strong, and we are weak. We are independent, and we are
utterly dependent on God’s grace. We are free to go our own way,
yet fullness of life lies with us going God’s way not our own. We
can do great things. We can solve our problems. We can recreate the
world, and can do that only with God’s help and inspiration. We can
get through, and we need God to help us get through. That’s who I
think we are. We have the gifts we need to take on challenges in our
personal lives, the life of our nation, the life of the world, the
life of our church. We have the gifts, and we need God’s help to
bring them alive in our lives and in the world. The great mercy we
have is that God is always there to do that for us and with us.
Thanks be to God. Amen.
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