
There is a well-known saying, that the first casualty of war is the truth. And so, it was perhaps inevitable that, during the ‘war’ we’re currently fighting against coronavirus, truth would also, if not exactly go out of the window, then at least take a back seat to expediency. And we’re seeing the proof of this in many ways.
We have people, both in our own country and others, looking to make political capital out of the situation, criticising the way governments have responded to the pandemic (although they’re usually very short on details of what they would, or could, have done differently). We have people looking to shift responsibility for the crisis onto others by playing the ‘blame game’, usually accusing China of responsibility for the pandemic, which has resulted in China threatening economic reprisals against those countries who are accusing them. In a number of instances, this has resulted in those countries changing tack and withdrawing their accusations against China as the practical business of economics demands that the pursuit of wealth takes precedence over the search for truth. But it’s not only countries who have gone down that road: there are numerous reports of people trying to make financial gains from the pandemic by offering ‘quack’ remedies and treatments for coronavirus, remedies which, at best, won’t be of any benefit to anyone who tries them and, at worst, could cause a great deal of harm to those who try them. And, inevitably in this day and age, we have no shortage of conspiracy theorists and armchair experts offering their opinions and advice via the internet and social media. And in all of this, truth seems to come secondary to the purposes of those involved.
But, if we think about it from the point of view of our Christian faith, the situation we find ourselves in during the current pandemic, is not too dissimilar to the one we find ourselves in every day of our lives. Every day of our lives we’re in danger from a pandemic disease that surrounds us wherever we go, and we call that disease, ‘sin’. Sin is a disease we’re all susceptible to and, unlike many other diseases, we can succumb to this disease many times because, no matter how many times we’re exposed to it or succumb to it, we have no immunity to it. But, if we’re always susceptible to the disease of sin, the good news is that we do have an antidote, ultimately, a cure, and there are some precautions we can take to minimise our risk of succumbing to sin.
The symptoms of sin are damaged relationships, an alienation from God and our neighbours, and very often a feeling of uneasiness within ourselves, because sin causes us to be at odds with ourselves due to the tension between what we know we should do, and what we actually do. As St Paul puts it in his letter to the Romans,
For I know that nothing good dwells in me, that is, in my flesh. For I have the desire to do what is right, but not the ability to carry it out. For I do not do the good I want, but the evil I do not want is what I keep on doing. Now if I do what I do not want, it is no longer I who do it, but sin that dwells within me. So I find it to be a law that when I want to do right, evil lies close at hand. For I delight in the law of God, in my inner being, but I see in my members another law waging war against the law of my mind and making me captive to the law of sin that dwells in my members. Wretched man that I am! Who will deliver me from this body of death?
Thanks be to God through Jesus Christ our Lord!
As St Paul says, it is our Lord Jesus Christ who is both the antidote and ultimate cure to the disease of sin. Through his Passion and Cross, Jesus has exposed himself to the disease of sin so that an antidote and cure could be found. Because of his Passion and Cross, Jesus himself has become the antidote to the disease of sin and no matter how many times we succumb to it, we know that we only have to turn to him and ask for forgiveness, and we can be put right with God, our neighbours and ourselves again, our damaged relationships can be healed and restored to their former health. Ultimately, Jesus is also the final cure for sin because, through his Resurrection, we can be raised to eternal life too and then, when our frail and weak bodies of flesh are transformed into spiritual bodies, we will no longer be susceptible to the disease of sin and we can live, free of it, for ever.
That full cure of sin though, must wait until our earthly journey is over. But, in the meantime, we not only have the antidote for sin, there are also some precautions we can take to lessen our chances of succumbing to sin. Just as with the precautions we’ve been asked to take to lessen our risk of succumbing to coronavirus, the precautions we need to take against succumbing to sin, are lifestyle changes. And the lifestyle changes we need to make to guard against sin, are set out for us in the Scriptures, especially in the teaching and example of Jesus.
One of the great problems we have as human beings though, is that we don’t really like being told what to do, do we? We’d much rather do what we want to do, wouldn’t we? We’ve seen this in the way some people have responded to the lockdown during the current pandemic. Some people have simply ignored the advice, and even direct instructions, to observe social distancing measures, to stay at home and work at home, and to go out only when essential. We’ve seen it in criticism of the decision to extend the lockdown, even of the need to have a lockdown at all, and the calls to end it or relax it, even if that means simply letting people take their chances with coronavirus. And that’s something we’ve also seen throughout the Church’s history too.
One way we’ve seen that in the Church’s history, is in the way people have distorted the Scriptures, or even written their own ‘scriptures’ in order to make them say what they want them to say, rather than what they actually do say. The Church has always taught that those who call themselves Christians should amend their lives in accordance with the teachings and example of Christ, as revealed in Scripture. But those who’ve changed and distorted the Scriptures, or written their own scripture have, in essence, attempted make the Scriptures, and thereby also make God and Jesus, condone their existing way of life so that they don’t have to change their ways, and so that they can carry on doing what they want to do rather than doing what Jesus taught us to do.
It’s about such things and such people that Jesus warns us in today’s Gospel. He warns us that these things will happen so that we won’t be led astray when they do and when we come across them. Jesus called the people who do things like this ‘thieves and brigands’ or ‘bandits’. The word we translate as ‘brigand’ or ‘bandit’ has a political connotation. It’s the same one Jesus used in Gethsemane when he was arrested. Then he asked if they had come to arrest him as a ‘bandit’. Given that Jesus was executed as the ‘King of the Jews’, it seems that the people Jesus is referring to in today’s Gospel are not simply thieves, but false Messiahs. They come to steal people away from his own flock, to kill by them by leading them away from the path of eternal life, and to destroy because they sow division and dissension rather than working to build up God’s people. And Jesus not only warns us about such things and such people, he says that those who truly are of his flock will not listen to them.
We profess a belief that Jesus is the way, the truth, and the life. If we truly do believe that, and we want to be his people, members of his flock, we won’t listen to those who change, distort or add to his words and example. And why would we? Jesus is the one who suffered and died to become for us the antidote to sin. He is the one who rose from the dead to become the cure for sin and offer us eternal life. He is the who gave us the way, the truth and the life to follow if we want to protect ourselves from sin. He is the one who came that we might have life in all its fulness and abundance, not only in this life, but in the eternal life to come. So, no matter how easy, or attractive, the ways of others may seem to be, let’s not be led astray from Jesus, but listen to him, and follow him, and no other.
Amen.
You will find the Propers for the Fourth Sunday of Easter here.