Sermon Archive

Repent or Perish??!

© by Elder Cheryl Pyrch
A sermon preached at Rutgers Presbyterian Church
on March 18, 2001; Third Sunday in Lent, Year C;
Scripture Lesson: Luke 13:1-9

I’d like to begin this morning by talking about the punctuation in the sermon title. Here at Rutgers we like to have our sermon titles up on the signboards by Monday afternoon. That way no one’s confused about who’s preaching, and folks have a full week to chew on the topic. The trouble is – speaking for myself – I usually don’t know what my topic is on Monday morning. Now, by last Monday, I had read the gospel and realized I’d have to say something about repentance and perishing. I figured if I put both words in the title – Repent or Perish – I’d be covered. I also knew that Jesus’ words disturbed me, that I would want to qualify them, to put them in their historical context, to ask what Jesus really meant: so I put a question mark at the end. But after all the signboards went up, I was afraid it still looked like I was planning to yell at people to “Repent or Perish!” (I polled the Christian Education Committee when we met on Monday night, and they allowed that the single question mark was a little subtle.) So on Tuesday morning – with the help of the office staff – I decided two question marks with an exclamation point would do the trick. That it would convey – I hoped – the doubt, that faint sense of alarm, that “he didn’t really mean that, did he?” approach that I expected to take with the text.

When our scene opens, Jesus is talking to the crowds on his way to Jerusalem. He’s just told them a series of parables about being ready to meet God in judgment. Be dressed for action and have your lamps lit, he says, like slaves waiting for their master to return from the wedding banquet. I’ve come to bring fire and division to earth, not peace; make up with your accuser before you go to court and it’s too late. All this talk about conflict and judgment prompts some in the crowd to tell him about some Galileans who were killed by Pontius Pilate when they went to make sacrifices at the temple. Jesus detects their unspoken question: Did that terrible fate happen to them because they had done something wrong? Did they deserve it? NO, Jesus says: those Galileans were no worse sinners than any other Galileans. He brings up an example of his own to hammer home the point: those eighteen people killed when that tower fell in Siloam weren’t especially sinful either. But after each “No” Jesus adds these puzzling words: “Unless you repent, you will perish just as they did.”

I suspect that when many of us hear these words, we flash back to those childhood images of heaven and hell. We’ve just died, we’ve been swept up to the pearly gates, and St. Peter – looking like Burl Ives in a white sheet with a very large clipboard – decides whether we sufficiently repented while on earth to enter heaven. Now, we know there is no “heaven-land” of people playing harps on top of the clouds. We know there’s no fiery pit in the middle of the earth populated by red devils with pitchforks. We may also have trouble believing that St. Peter – or anyone else up there – is keeping score. After all, who are the repentant or the unrepentant (the righteous or the wicked)? The earliest Christians, those first readers of Luke, seemed to have a pretty clear answer: to repent was to turn towards God, confess Jesus and live as he had commanded. Jesus was coming again, at an unexpected hour but soon, and he would bring God’s justice with him. They saw the signs: the temple destroyed, Jerusalem in ruins, families ripped apart. Of course, repent or perish. There was no time to waste.

Two thousand years later, ecumenical Christian doctrine still holds, for the most part, that there will be a second Advent, that Christ will come again and establish God’s reign in its fullness. The oppressed will be liberated, the righteous vindicated, the evil punished. We in the pews may believe it – theoretically – but most of us have trouble wrapping our head around it. It’s so fantastic, so remote. Those of us of the liberal Protestant persuasion may even balk at the idea of evildoers, whoever they are, perishing in God’s reign. Is there anyone, ultimately, outside the pale of God’s forgiveness? At the very least, the old categories don’t work – such as Christians saved, non-Christians in trouble. ???Repent or Perish???

But physical death, now or in the eschaton, is not the only way to perish.... Most of us go through our days quite certain that we are alive. We eat, we drink, we talk with friends, watch TV, go to work, hug our children, attend Session meetings. We may be happy, anxious, depressed --- we’re alive. But I challenge you – and myself – sometime, not necessarily now, to ask if there is an area of your life that is so painful, or dangerous, or overwhelming, that you don’t even live there. A place in yourself or an area of your life that is dead to you, disowned, mostly forgotten, lost forever as far as you’re concerned and good riddance.

I think that for many of us, one of those dead areas is the place where we relate to people who are suffering, people suffering terribly whom we don’t necessarily know. We see the homeless on the subway, we watch footage of the earthquakes in India or El Salvador, we read about AIDS in Africa, sweatshops in Thailand, and maybe we send a small check. We know, deep down, that what we do or don’t do means life or death for others. We may even suspect that some of that suffering means more stuff, more affluence, for us. And we feel so guilty, or confused – these issues are always so complicated – tired or overwhelmed that we don’t deal. We take care of our business and tell God to go away when our conscience starts bugging us. We are dead to ways we might be in solidarity with others, ways we could work for justice, dead to the claims of our brothers and sisters upon us.

Or maybe the area where we are perishing is the place of intimacy with others. Friends or lovers or families have betrayed us so badly that we don’t even think of being close to someone – really close – as a possibility anymore. We’re friendly, we’re cordial, but we’ve turned our backs on more.

“I know that you are perishing,” Christ says to us, “Repent, and you shall live.” The promise of the gospel is that we don’t have to stay in our safe, restricted zones. We don’t have to be dead to that which scares or hurts us or seems impossible. God promises us abundant life. Life where we can face our demons, overcome our fears, live with joy, do what may seem impossible. God only asks that we turn towards God, beginning with prayer. To repent does not mean to live perfectly, or sinlessly. It does not mean a life free from pain or struggle. It simply means, at bottom, to turn towards God, beginning with prayer, in whom we can live fully.

Jesus does not end with the words, “Unless you repent, you will perish.” He ends with a parable of a fig tree. The owner of a vineyard wants to cut down this tree that has not born fruit for three years. But the gardener asks him to wait one more year to see if some fertilizer, and some loving care, will make the tree fruitful.... In our Bible study on Wednesday afternoon, John Gingrich told us about the fig trees he had seen in the Holy Land. It’s not like being in a temperate climate, he said, where trees are lush with leaves and fruit falls on the ground. In that hot and dry climate, those fig trees are struggling, gnarled and solitary along the side of the road, barely surviving. You can see, he said, how much effort is involved in just being a fig tree, even an unproductive, unrepentant fig tree. God knows, and God’s mercy we have been provided a gardener – many gardeners, really. We have the love of Christ, the words of scripture, the prayers and liturgy of the church, each other. God has also given us time. Not unlimited time – we’re not immortal – but time to turn towards God, time for all our branches to become green with life, and to start bearing fruit. Thanks be to God.

Please join me in prayer:

Grant unto us, O God, the fullness of your promises.
Where we have been weak, grant us your strength;
Where we have been confused; grant us your guidance;
Where we have been dead, grant us your life;
Apart from you we can do nothing;
In and with you we can do all things. Amen.

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