March 8, 2009 11:15 AM • Lent II
Take Up Your Cross
The Very Rev. Samuel T. Lloyd III
Crosses are everywhere these days. Not long ago I happened to find myself leaning over a jewelry counter in search of a gift, and everywhere I looked there were crosses. Some were large, silver, earthy looking, appropriate, say, for a casual outfit, a day in the country maybe. Some were delicate, ornate, glittering gold, often with bright-colored stones set in them. There seemed to be a cross for just about every taste and mood.
In the last several years I was surprised to see that crosses were a chief feature of punk style and the outfits of young celebrities. Amid the black jeans and T-shirts, the bright blue hair and piercings, you would nearly always find a cross or two. Crosses seem to be doing a booming business. As I heard one sales clerk put it, they are a standard fashion accessory.
Crosses didnt have any religious meaning in Jesus time. A cross was an instrument of torture and death the Roman government used to keep people in line. The road to Jerusalem was often lined with crosses, each one with a dead body hanging from itan effective tool for intimidation. Nothing worse could happen to you than being hung up on a cross, and you would do anything to avoid it.
Jesus ministry had been a soaring success in the rolling hills of Galileeteaching in the synagogues, gathering crowds, healing the sick, breaking bread with the unclean. The crowds thronged to hear him and touch him, but resistance to him had begun to intensify. There were rumors that he was a rabble-rouser. He was claiming an authority for himself that should belong only to God. As the tension rose, he saw that his mission demanded that he go to Jerusalem, away from the calm fishing villages and fields to the noise and turmoil of the capital city. That would mean trouble for sure.
And so, as Mark puts it, Jesus began to teach [the disciples] that the Son of Man must undergo great suffering, and be rejected by the elders, the chief priests, and the scribes, and be killed, and after three days rise again.
Not surprisingly, the disciples didnt like what they were hearing. Peter pulled Jesus aside and started rebuking him. God forbid it, Lord. Why are you saying this? Have you lost your mind? Weve got something good going here. Lets forget Jerusalem. Youre the Messiah, Gods anointed, youre not supposed to suffer and die. Thats absurd. You can almost hear him say, If we can focus on a good strong business plan with clear objectives, and keep building on our success, well be fine. Peter was frightened by what Jesus was saying. I think he loved Jesus and didnt want him to die. And besides, if Jesus was vulnerable, then they all were.
At this Jesus turned and looked at his disciples and then blasted Peter saying, Get behind me, Satan! The harshest rebuke Jesus ever gave anyone. And then he told his disciples what neither they nor we want to hear. If any want to become my followers, let them deny themselves and take up their cross and follow me. For those who save their life will lose it, and those who lose their life for my sake and the gospel will save it.
Jesus said it with an urgency and passion that suggests that weve hit a non-negotiablesomething we cant avoid if were going to take him seriously. Get this wrong and you flunk the course. You have to take up your cross. To save your life you have to lose it. And I have to say it puts your preacher in an awkward situation. We preachers like to make a good case for how religion helps your life go better. I can cite you statistics that demonstrate religious people live longer, have lower blood pressure, stronger families, better sex lives. In fact, I not only can cite such statistics to you, Ive done it before.
But what becomes clear today is that following Jesus isnt necessarily going to be the answer to all our problems, and may be the beginning of some problems youve never wanted. Jesus is after bigger game than helping us to feel happy and comfortable.
A few years ago, journalist Philip Yancey interviewed a wide range of people, and he divided them roughly into two types: the stars and the servants. When he interviewed the starsNFL football stars, famous authors, TV personalitieshe found himself having sympathy for them. These supposed idols, he says, are as miserable a group as I have ever met. They seemed to have more troubled marriages, troubled psyches, and constant self-doubts than most.
But the ones he called servantsrelief workers in Bangladesh, Ph.D.s scattered through the jungles of South America translating the Bible in obscure languages, organizers working in the inner citywere the favored ones. I was prepared to honor and admire these servants, to uphold them as inspiring examples. I was not, however, prepared to envy them. But as I now reflect on the two groups, stars and servants, the servants clearly emerged as the favored ones, the graced ones. They work for low pay, long hours, and no applause, supposedly wasting their talents among the poor and uneducated. But somehow, in the process of losing their lives, they found them.
When Jesus told his disciples to take up their crosses, he was saying that there are worse things than deaththings like failing ever really to live, living in fear, never facing the places where our lives are caught and pushing through them, never quite getting around to giving ourselves to any cause bigger than our own. You notice Jesus doesnt say, Take up my cross, as if we are expected to imitate him. He says, Take up your cross, the cross thats already in your life waiting for you to pick it up.
Your cross is lying right where your life and Christs call to follow and love your neighbor meet. But so often what we see at that intersection is scary. We would just as soon step around our cross rather than pick the ugly thing up.
Part of our cross is being willing to face into the burdens in our lives that we would rather avoid. In the novel by Gail Godwin called Father Melancholys Daughter, a wise old Episcopal priest grapples in a sermon with what this cross might mean:
…Each of us has a place of particular pain. And we know that, when were in it, all we can do is say…this is not what I wanted…why cant someone remove this cross from me?
…But then we have to take it a step farther and say, but its mine, this particular agony, its where circumstances met with myself and made this cross. Very well then, let me be crucified on this cross…this cross of my old expectations versus what is to be.
…Accepting our cross doesnt simply mean taking responsibility for what we are…thats arrogance, God made us what we are…it means taking responsibility for what we are doing with what we are….
A woman in her fifties has never really faced the abuse from her uncle when she was a teenager. And now, after a lifetime of not letting anyone get close to her, shes realizing that the damage has never stopped. A man has been hiding his drinking unsuccessfully for years. Do these people have the courage to take up their crosses through therapy and recovery to begin to live more freely?
But for Jesus, taking up your cross is about more than simply bearing your own burdens. It also means taking up a piece of the worlds cross because you begin to have a hunch Jesus wants you to.
Sometimes its just noticingseeing that a generation of kids is growing up only blocks from here without the schools or family support to make it in the world. Recognizing that if every one of us befriended just one childfor tutoring, or time together, or financial support for a schoolhundreds of lives would be vastly better.
Sometimes its the work we do. Not long ago I was making my way into one of the many dress-up fundraising evenings here in Washington and struck up a conversation with a man probably in his early thirties who looked as if he had just come from his K Street office. What do you do? I asked. I teach fifth grade in a D.C. public school, he said. How long have you been doing it? I asked, assuming he would say for a year or soon the way to something more satisfying. For five years, he said. Thats a long time and it must be hard. I cant imagine anything harder, I answered. He said, I feel like Im just getting the hang of it. But theres nothing Id rather be doing.
David Beckman, from Bread for the World, was our Sunday Forum guest last week and he pointed us to one cross we could take upthe reality of people dying of hunger, even more now in this terrible economy. Pick that cross up, he was saying, write letters, call your Representatives, send donations. Its urgent.
Day after day now were staring at a cross in Darfur, of a genocide that no one seems willing to stop. It should make us as people of faith ask, Is there nothing we can do to speak out for them?
What is your cross? Jesus doesnt say go out and find your cross. Just open your eyes. Look around you, see the pain and struggle and human need around you, and pick it up and follow him. Its the secret to living a real life. If you turn away, you deny God the chance to show you real liferight in the thick of your worst fear.
Of course, this is not something we do one day and then were finished. In Lukes Gospel, Jesus says, Take up your cross daily and follow me. Thats really what he means. It means being a disciple, staying in Jesus company, looking at the world with Jesus eyes. Looking at your own lifewhat youre afraid of, what you see as unjust, what youre angry about, what you yearn for, what has just fallen across your path that you never planned onyoull see your cross. Then for Gods sake dont walk around it.
As best I can tell my cross and yours arent nearly as scary as they look once we pick them up and start carrying them. Light has a way of shining through our crosses when all we thought we would get is darkness. We discover that God is in the pain and fear, that we can make a difference, that friends will walk with us along the way.
Come, Jesus says. Dont be afraid. Take up your cross and follow. If you cling to your life, youll lose it. If you lose your life, youll find it.
An old prayer says it all:
Thou the Cross didst bear:
What bear I?
Thou the thorn didst wear:
What wear I?
Thou to death didst dare:
What dare I?
Thou for me dost care:
What care I?
from Laurence Housman, Oxford Book of Prayer