Downward to Triumph!--November 8, 2018
“But each of us was given grace according to the measure of Christ's gift. Therefore
it is said, ‘When he ascended on high he made captivity itself a captive; he
gave gifts to his people.’ (When it says, ‘He ascended,’ what does it mean but
that he had also descended into the lower parts of the earth? He who descended
is the same one ascended far above all the heavens, so that he might fill all
things.)” (Ephesians 4:7-10)
Hmmm… seems like a lot of up and down, with all
this “ascending” and “descending” business.
Maybe even more than in the stand-up/sit-down rhythm of a Sunday at a
Lutheran church.
So, here’s what I wonder: clearly Paul thinks he is hitting on a really
important point here. He’s quoting a
line from the Old Testament, and he’s trying to explain it to us at the same
time, and he is building up to making a bigger point. So if I can’t quite wrap my brain around what
he’s so excited about at first, can I at least make the effort to see what has got Paul all fired up?
This is a little like one of those times when a
friend recommends a movie or a book to you, or raves about a song or a musician
to you, and even if you don’t understand at first why they think you would like
it, you are willing to give it a try to see why it means so much to them. If you’ve ever been there—if you’ve been the
one holding the book, or the DVD or CD they gave you (but you didn’t ask
for)—and you have made the effort to see why it’s so appealing to someone you
respect, then use the same skills here with Paul. Why is he so excited about
this saying he quotes with all the ascending and descending in it? What's on Paul's Psalm Playlist that makes him so worked up?
Okay, first off—Paul is quoting, or rather
loosely paraphrasing, a verse from the psalms.
Psalm 68:18 reads, “You ascended the high mount, leading captives in
your train and receiving gifts from people…”
In its original setting, the verse in Psalm 68 is about God’s power and
might as God’s presence goes up to the Temple mount in Jerusalem. It’s part of a whole psalm about God’s
victory and God’s vindication—how God was strong and powerful in the past, and
how God has defeated all the threats posed to the people of God, whether enemy
armies, wild animals, or natural disasters.
Now what’s at first surprising is how fast and
loose Paul seems to be playing with that verse from the Psalms. He’s done a fair amount of rewording, and he
has even reversed the image of God “receiving gifts from people” to “giving
gifts to his people.” And for that
matter, Paul makes the reference to this Psalm while he’s talking about Christ,
and specifically seems to be thinking about Christ’s death (the “descent into
the lower parts of the earth”). That
seems a little strange at first, since Jesus’ death doesn’t seem very… victorious.
Except… maybe that is exactly the point. Paul sees
Jesus’ death as the victory. He connects Jesus’ “descent”—as in, his
burial in a tomb—and the great victory of God, because it’s there at the cross
and there in the tomb where God defeats the power of death once and for all. It’s the cross that makes it possible for God
to reconcile and restore a world full of outsiders to himself—ending their
estrangement by leaving it nailed to the cross.
Jesus’ death is what God’s
victory looks like, in the end. God
chooses to work through what seems weak, what seems foolish, what seems tragic,
in order to accomplish his purposes.
Paul makes the connection here so that we will see the way God triumphs:
not in a show of strength, but in a moment of surrender.
That’s just it:
this is what’s worth giving Paul a second, or third or fourth, chance to
listen and consider what he is trying to say. In the end, this is Paul’s way of
saying that God’s great victory is what looks like utter loss at the
cross. It’s what Frederick Buechner
calls “the magnificent defeat.” This is
how Jesus wins—he swallows up death by dying, and he captures captivity itself
by dying as a prisoner captive to the whim of the Roman Empire. At first blush, those seem
contradictory, but as Paul sees it, the
Scriptures have been hinting at this amazing upside-down kind of victory all
along. It’s just a question of whether
we will sit with the Scriptures long enough to let their truth speak.
And once we do, we will come to see everything differently. We will no longer be satisfied to crown as "winner" whoever is loudest or brashest or most forceful or most intimidating. We will have learned to see God's victory in the least expected places... in hospital waiting rooms, in refugee camps and homeless shelters, and on death row. We will see God's victory in the cross, and once that happens, everything else gets turned upside down.
Gracious
God, work through our weaknesses like they are precious gifts, as you worked
through Jesus’ weakness unto death to bring us all to everlasting life.
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