EAM CROSS

EAM CROSS
Honoring the Nestorian Christians

Thursday, March 28, 2013

MAUNDY THURSDAY: ACHING LOVE OF CHRIST



MAUNDY THURSDAY: THE ACHING LOVE OF GOD
(Fred Vergara.Chapel of Christ the Lord, New York. 03/28.2013)

Maundy comes from the Latin word “mandatum,” meaning mandate or commandment. On this Maundy Thursday, Jesus issued two mandates to his disciples by washing their feet and instituting the Last Supper. These mandates clearly demonstrate how Christians should lead and what kind of message they should proclaim in light of the heavenly Kingdom that He has inaugurated on earth.

The washing of the feet. By performing this most lowly act of service, ordinarily done only by the slaves, Jesus demonstrated the mark of servant leadership. The context of the story was the dispute among the disciples who among them should be the greatest. The brothers James and John, sons of Zebedee, knowing that Jesus had a soft spot for women, especially for mothers, asked their own mother to intercede for them, to let them sit beside Jesus one on his right and one on his left, should he become the king of Israel. Obviously, they thought that Jesus would become the new King David, who would restore the glory and the splendor of Zion. The other disciples upon hearing about this, certainly got upset because they too had the same ambitions---to be close to the Power that be.

I remember my first visit to China. I was with a group of VIP’s from the Episcopal Church as visitors of the China Christian Council. One day, we were treated by the Chinese government to an "imperial banquet" and I noticed the protocol officer was very careful in the seating arrangement. Knowing from my colleague, Canon Peter Ng, that I am the missioner for Asiamerica Ministries, the officer seated me beside the bishops and Bishop Ting, the acknowledged leader of Chinese Christians in China. Oh, how I felt being close to power! Digital cameras clicked and video cameras rolled, not for me but for the bishops and dignitaries, but simply because I was beside the VIP, I was included.

So I could resonate with Peter, James and John and the other apostles. It is exciting and heartwarming to be with the King!

But Jesus shattered the myth: Before the Passover meal, he girded his loins with a towel, knelt down and washed the disciples feet and said, “Just as I washed your feet, you should also wash one another’s feet!”

How amazing it would be if instead of fighting one another or shooting each other in the foot, we, the current disciples of Jesus would also wash one another’s feet!

The Breaking of the Bread and the Sharing of the Wine. At the Passover Meal, Jesus took the bread and asked the Father to bless it. He then broke the bread into pieces and said, “This is my body given for you. Do this in remembrance of me.” After supper, he took the cup of wine and shared it with his disciples and said, “This is my blood of the new covenant shed for you and for all, for the forgiveness of sins. Whenever you drink it, do this in remembrance of me.”  

This mandatum, also called “the last supper,” illustrates the extent to which Jesus would obey His Father. He humbled himself, being found in human form, taking the form of a slave and became obedient unto death on the cross---for the salvation and reconciliation of the world.

Asian Folk Tale
There is an Asian folk tale that I used over and over again to illustrate God’s unfailing love to humankind. There was a mother who had a son with, proverbially speaking, "a face only a mother can love." One day, the son fell in love with a beautiful young woman on other side of the mountain. Seeing that the man was ugly, the woman asked him to do what she thought would be impossible thing to do and that would discourage him from the pursuit of courtship. She said, “if you really love me, give me the heart of your mother.” 

The young man was in turmoil and for a moment pondered upon this request. He loved his mother but he was also madly in love with this beautiful woman. So in a moment of madness, he killed his mother and took her heart out and ran to offer it to the object of his infatuation. While running through the rice paddies, he stumbled and fell, and the heart dropped in the muddy field. As he was wiping the mud from the heart of his mother, the heart spoke, “Son, are you hurt?”

The love of God in Christ is unconditional, extravagant and sacrificial. The Bible says, “when we were yet sinners, Christ died for us.” God's unconditional love and forgiveness found their way on the cross.  Jesus said to the foolish children beneath the cross, “Father, forgive them for they do not know what they do.” 

Reconciliation in Christ
I recently visited Japan and preached at the ordination of Fr. William Bulson from Minnesota who was appointed the new rector of St. Alban’s Parish of the Nippon Sei Kokai. I also had a chance to preach at St. Andrew’s Cathedral of Tokyo. The readings on that week was the commemoration of the martyrs of Japan who suffered greatly from tortures and excruciating deaths during the imperial era when Christianity was banned in Japan. I was certainly impressed by the solemnity and dignity of Japanese liturgy. I spoke about the "theology of the pain of God."

After the service, Bishop Andrew Ohata, William Bulson and myself had a photo session. One of those taking photographs was a Filipino, Arturo Dela Cruz, who accompanied us with his wife. Arturo, who is now in his eighties, experienced the atrocities of the Japanese Imperial Army when they occupied the Philippines during the Second World War. As a 7-year old boy, a Japanese sergeant made him to sing a military marching song, and he said he learned it quickly because the officer was showing him his samurai. Funny how you learn quickly under pressure. The song never left his mind but he never sang it until that night that he drank saki in the home of Japanese priest, Fr. John Sanzaki. As a matter of fact, Arturo’s wife and children never heard about his story and never heard him sing that song, until our translator, Chikako Kobayashi, who videotaped Arturo singing, posted it later in You-Tube.

But back to the photograph he took of of Bishop Ohata, William Bulson and me: a Japanese bishop, an American priest and a Filipino missionary. Our ancestors have figured in the War in the Pacific. My father was a veteran of World War II who until his death, looked at any Japanese as an enemy. Arturo, looking at the photograph, remarked, “World War II has really ended.”  Yes, it did. But it ended after so much sacrifice and deaths. The "death march" in Bataan, the atrocities inflected by Japan to its neighbors in the Pacific, the atomic bombs dropped by the United States in Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

Today, religious and Christian freedom flourishes in Japan. The Philippines, Japan, Korea, China, the United States enjoy the blessings of mutual peace. Reconciliation is achieved but after such a great price.

The Rev. Dr. Jim Kodera, Japanese American priest and former president of Episcopal Asiamerica Ministry Council, married Nancy Sabug a Filipina who served as the first director of Kapatiran (Brotherhood/Sisterhood) Ministry in Japan. They met during one of our EAM Consultations. Jim has a story about former Presiding Bishop Frank Griswold of the Episcopal Church. He said,

“When Bishop Griswold visited Japan, he was asked to preach at the Anglican Church in Hiroshima, where the United States dropped the first atomic bombs. He had just visited the Peace Park and the adjacent museum. He was introduced by the vicar, Kobayashi Sensei, and stood at the pulpit for a long time. Griswold did not speak for quite a long time. Kobayashi Sensei looked in to find what was wrong, only to discover that Bishop Griswold was sobbing in the pulpit and could not speak. In the words of someone who was in the congregation, ‘that was the most eloquent sermon I ever heard!’”

On this Maundy Thursday, let us hear the mother’s heartbeat and the sobbing bishop for they speak of the aching love of God. Amen.

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