flesh and blood
01 January 2022
Banu and I are fans of vampire movies. There are many I like, but my favorite is still probably one we saw in the theater when we were in seminary, Bram Stoker’s Dracula. I also very much like the Swedish movie, Let the Right One In. Banu got me started watching the Twilight movies, which I grudgingly will say aren’t too bad! However, I do have one big complaint with their contribution to the vampire mythos: sunlight doesn’t hurt them. Rather, it makes them sparkle!
Why do I begin with vampires? It’s directly related to one of our sacraments. In the first century, as word gradually spread that the early church was eating the flesh and drinking the blood of Christ, many non-Christians, Jews and Gentiles alike, were horrified. Prohibitions against blood in the Hebrew scriptures go back as far as Genesis: “you shall not eat flesh with its life, that is, its blood” (9:4). The blood is the life.
Some called the Christians cannibals. And though the legend of the vampire goes back to ancient times, we can’t really pin that one on the early Christians.
Still, hearing this, one might be forgiven if there were some doubts: “Those who eat my flesh and drink my blood have eternal life, and I will raise them up on the last day; for my flesh is true food and my blood is true drink. Those who eat my flesh and drink my blood abide in me, and I in them.” Those are the words of Jesus in John 6:54-56. To the uninitiated, it probably would sound like cannibalistic or vampiric actions are in order!
This isn’t the only place where the gospel of John speaks quite insistently about the flesh and blood of Jesus. Later, I’ll mention its role in the encounter with Pontius Pilate. But right now, flesh and blood have a prominent role in today’s reading: the introduction to the gospel of John.
The introduction, like the book that follows it, is very different from the other gospels. The other three don’t have the level of philosophical and theological reflection we find in John. Many would say this gospel is the most beautiful at a poetic level. (I would be in that category.)
These eighteen verses are packed with meaning. I’ll only try to unpack a little of it!
“In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God” (v. 1). Does that verse remind you of anything? If it reminds you of the first verse of Genesis, then that is deliberate. John wants to identify Jesus the Christ with the eternal living Word, the Word that transcends creation.
“All things came into being through him, and without him not one thing came into being.” That includes life, “and the life was the light of all people” (vv. 3-4). Here’s some of that poetic beauty I spoke of. “The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness did not overcome it” (v. 5). What does that mean?
The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness did not overcome it. The Greek word for “overcome,” καταλαμβανω (katalambanō), has several nuances. It can mean “to grasp.” In the physical sense, it would suggest “seizing” somebody or something. In the mental sense, it refers to “understanding.”
It can also have the sense of “detecting.” In chapter 8, when some scribes and Pharisees bring to Jesus a woman “caught in adultery,” the same word is used. In this case, she is both detected and seized! (On a side note, we hear nothing about the man being detected and/or seized—nor about how word came to the scribes and Pharisees who detected her!)
The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness did not overcome it. The darkness did not grasp it, or seize it, or understand it, or detect it. More than that, the darkness is incapable of grasping or understanding the light!
We are told John the Baptist testified to the light. “He himself was not the light, but he came to testify to the light.” John testified that the Word, “the true light, which enlightens everyone, was coming into the world” (vv. 8-9).
With verse 14, we have something of a summary of today’s reading. “The Word became flesh and lived among us, and we have seen his glory, the glory as of a father’s only son, full of grace and truth.” The Word became flesh and lived among us. That’s how John portrays Christmas. There’s no messing around with a baby in a manger. Like I said earlier, there’s more of a philosophical and theological focus.
As I was doing research for this sermon, I came across an article with an eye-catching title by Jennifer Glancy, who teaches Bible at LeMoyne College in Syracuse. The title was “Torture: Flesh, Truth, and the Fourth Gospel.”[1] This is where Pontius Pilate enters the picture.
In the article, she wonders, echoing Pilate in his interview of Jesus, “What is truth?” Expanding on that, she asks, “Does truth dwell in flesh?”[2] If verse 14 is correct and the eternal living Word has come to dwell in flesh, then it seems we have to say yes, truth does in fact dwell in flesh.
That is the assumption of the Roman Empire and its project of torture and crucifixion—that truth can be extracted from flesh and blood. Indeed, that’s the assumption of all who torture, truth can be wrenched from the body.
Glancy speaks of three intentions of torture.[3] There is “judicial” torture, in which the intent is to discover the truth. (You know what I mean: “We have ways of making you talk!”) Secondly, there is “penal” torture, torture used for punishment.
Finally, there is “terroristic” torture, which is part of a campaign to send a message to the rest of the population. You make an example out of somebody. Add to this the element of humiliation. People crucified by the Romans were stripped naked and mocked.
For those who would say this talk of terror and torture has no place in the Christmas story, I would remind us of Herod’s attempt to kill the Christ child. His paranoia results in the massacre of numerous little boys. Sadly, that kind of brutality has a very real-world feel to it.
In order to protect their young one from Herod, Joseph and Mary are forced to flee to Egypt. They have to seek asylum; they’re fleeing political persecution. In Jesus Christ, we worship one who has been a refugee. We worship one who has been a victim of torture. Still, even though darkness does its worst, it still can’t overcome the light.
Almost five centuries ago, Martin Luther expressed it well in verse: “And though this world, with devils filled, should threaten to undo us / We will not fear, for God hath willed His truth to triumph through us / The prince of darkness grim, we tremble not for him / His rage we can endure, for lo, his doom is sure / One little word shall fell him.” The Word became flesh and lived among us.
What does that mean for us? Can we think of ways in which we see or experience the Word in flesh? Are there ways in which we know there is truth in flesh, in this physical stuff?
The darkness could not grasp or seize the light; it couldn’t overcome it. But the darkness did indeed grasp and seize the flesh of Jesus.
We all struggle with the darkness. On struggling with darkness, Richard Rohr notes that it “can be experienced as pain and handicap.” It can be “experienced by struggling with the riddles, dilemmas, and absurdities of life.” Commenting on verse 5, he says, “Like physical light itself, true light must both include and overcome the darkness.”[4]
I pray—I hope!—we don’t literally engage in torture, but torture can have different meanings. We torture each other in a multitude of ways. I’m sure we can think of plenty of cases in which we find that to be true. We torture ourselves, and we are tortured. I think it’s safe to say Covid hasn’t always brought out the best in us. We have shamed each other. And there are consequences to all of this. We are harmed as the body politic, and we are harmed as flesh and blood bodies.
Yet even though we surely know darkness can’t overcome the light, at some level—and in some ways we can’t quite put our fingers on—we turn away from the light. Too often we hide in the dark. We need to let the light, the light that enlightens everyone, penetrate our darkness.
That doesn’t happen by accident. Responding to Christ’s call to eat his flesh and drink his blood is a matter of will. As the early church father Ignatius of Antioch put it, “the Blood of Jesus Christ is love.”[5] That’s what it takes to become aware of the body of Christ, be it in the Sacrament of the Lord’s Supper, the Eucharist—or in the sacrament of everyday life.
The apostle Paul warns the Galatians when he says, “the whole law is summed up in a single commandment, ‘You shall love your neighbor as yourself.’ If, however, you bite and devour one another, take care that you are not consumed by one another” (5:14-15). Remember what I said earlier about vampires and cannibals?
We are at the beginning of a new year. No one knows what 2022 will bring. Certainly, it will have its own joys and sorrows, its own life and death. We as the church, the body of Christ, have our own unique calling. Our world is divided; our bodies are torn apart.
We can remain whole. We can be made whole. We are told that from the fullness of Christ “we have all received, grace upon grace” (v. 16). That is our witness. That is our testimony. Instead of tearing flesh and spilling blood, we build each other up. We nourish each other, knowing that the Word has come and dwells with us.
[1] Jennifer A. Glancy, “Torture: Flesh, Truth, and the Fourth Gospel,” Biblical Interpretation 13:2 (2005).
[2] Glancy, 107.
[3] Glancy, 115.
[4] Richard Rohr, On the Threshold of Transformation (Chicago: Loyola Press, 2010), 35.
[5] footnote in Archibald Robertson & Archibald Plummer, The First Epistle of St. Paul to the Corinthians (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1914), 252.
Comments
You can follow this conversation by subscribing to the comment feed for this post.