Reconciliation is frequently heard buzz word these days. You can
listen to or read the news any week and you will hear the word used,
usually with reference to indigenous Australians and specifically to the
search for a just and harmonious relationship between them and the rest
of Australia’s population. But you won’t only find this word in current
affairs. In the New Testament we are told that through our Lord Jesus
Christ we have now received reconciliation. That God was in Christ,
reconciling the world to himself. And that God is giving us the ministry
of reconciliation and is entrusting the message of reconciliation to us.
So does the use of the word in the newspaper mean the same thing as the
use of the word in the New Testament? Is the reconciliation that the
aboriginal people are calling for the same thing that God says is our
ministry?
Jesus Christ is the image of the invisible God. He has in himself
the full nature of God. Through Jesus Christ, God was pleased to
reconcile to himself all things. This idea of reconciliation, of the
whole world being reconciled to God, appears repeatedly in the New
Testament, most notably in Paul’s letters to the Romans, to the
Corinthians, and in the reading we’ve just heard to the Colossians. God
was in Christ, and through Christ the reconciliation of all things to
God is accomplished.
Now the idea of reconciliation presupposes some things, doesn’t it?
I mean, if I said I needed to be reconciled to my wife, what’s the first
thing you would assume???
That’s right you’d assume that there was some sort of breakdown in
our relationship. And before anybody starts worrying about the fact that
she’s not here this morning, no it’s not because of any breakdown in our
relationship. If I said there was a need for reconciliation between me
and the Church Council, what would you assume???
Yes, that there was a breakdown in my relationship with the Church
Council. So when the scriptures say that there is a need for
reconciliation between God and the world, what do you assume???
That’s right, there is a breakdown in the relationship between God
and the world. Now how could that be? God created all things and
declared them to be good. God was pleased with all that was created and
God’s intent ever since has been to bless all of creation, to take
pleasure in all of creation, to delight in the fertility, growth,
prospering and joy of all creation. So how could there be a breakdown in
a relationship like that? What happened???
Yep, as Paul put it in our reading, we became estranged and hostile
in mind. We abandoned God, and consequently God’s ability to keep
blessing us was limited. We distanced ourselves from God causing
enormous pain to God and enormous deprivation to ourselves.
Now when you think about it, if God is the one sinned against, what
would God have done if God behaved like us? If God behaved like most of
us God would have said, "Well if that’s the way your going to treat
me you can all go and get lost. I’ll have nothing further to do with you
until you come in your knees and say sorry." God would have said
that since we caused the problem, it was up to us to make the first move
in repairing it.
But is that what God did??? No. God reached out to us in Jesus
Christ to reconcile us to himself through his suffering and death on the
cross. Not only did God not say we had to make the first move, but in
making the first move himself, he put his body on the line. He risked
and copped the ultimate rejection. Reaching out the hand of
reconciliation, the hand of undeserved friendship, he had it slapped
back in his face and was killed for his trouble. But even that couldn’t
stop him. God raised Christ back to life and the reconciliation project
was continued and ever since then there have been men and women here and
there who have taken the hand offered in friendship and found themselves
reconciled to God: the relationship restored, the blessing resumed.
Now there is an important point to note here: although God was
willing to take the initiative in this reconciliation project before we
expressed any sort of apology, that doesn’t mean an apology was
unnecessary. You all know from your own reconciliation with God that
although God reached out to you first, one of the first steps of
response you had to make was to say sorry. To confess your rejection of
God and repent, change your ways. And why? Because there can be no
genuine reconciliation that is not based on truth and honesty. A
reconciliation that doesn’t take seriously the nature of the initial
breakdown in the relationship will be superficial and short lived.
That’s why in South Africa today there is a Truth and Reconciliation
Council. They know that there will not be real reconciliation between
the racial groups in South Africa unless the truth of the breakdown is
first told and acknowledged.
And that question brings us to our original question: Is the
reconciliation spoken about by Paul in the New Testament the same thing
as the reconciliation being called for by the indigenous people of
Australia? Well not exactly, but yes almost. Not exactly because Paul is
usually speaking primarily about the reconciliation of people to God.
But "yes almost" because he also says that God has handed the
ministry and the message of reconciliation to us, and the reconciliation
of people one to another is implicit in the reconciliation of people to
God.
Let me illustrate. Tim and Dayo, come out here. Now just for the
purposes of illustration, I’m God for a moment. And I’m standing here
with an arm around each of Tim and Dayo because, as God, I’ve reconciled
them both to myself. Now what’s going to happen if I’m standing here
demonstrating my love to each of them and they’re trying to kill each
other??? That’s right, I’m going to get caught in the middle, aren’t I?
And what’s more, how long are people going to believe me if I just keep
saying "I love you" to both of them while they’re trying to
kill each other? Not long, hey? I can’t stay neutral for long and still
expect to be close to both of them.
Now let’s push this a bit further. Tim sit down and Vipiano, you
come up here instead of Tim. Now I’m still God and I’ve reconciled both
Dayo and Vipiano to myself, but Dayo is trying to exterminate Vipiano.
Now here in the Red corner we have Dayo. How tall are you Dayo? And how
heavy? And here in the Blue corner we have Vipiano. How tall are you
Vipiano? And how heavy? OK, so we’ve got Dayo, at 28 years of age and a
rippling muscled mountain of a man. And he’s trying to kill Vipiano
here, a girl who turned nine years old last Friday and who’s half his
height and about a quarter of his weight. OK now Dayo, you start
strangling Vipiano here. Now what do the rest of you expect of me as
God? Can I stay neutral and just keep telling them both that I love
them? Can I say, "well it’s got nothing to do with me, it only
matters that they’re spiritually reconciled to me"? Can I say that
politics and religion have got nothing to do with each other?
No, I can’t can I? You can put her down now Dayo. There is a lot of
rubbish spoken about politics and religion having nothing to do with
each other, and there’s a lot of rubbish spoken about reconciliation.
All things cannot be fully reconciled to God without also being
reconciled to each other. God is not just reconciling things one at a
time without any concern for how they relate to one another.
And in the debates about the struggle to bring about reconciliation
between indigenous and settler peoples in Australia it is very easy to
speak rubbish in words that sound good and Christian and true. It is
very easy for a Pauline Hanson to get up and say that all people should
be treated equally. Sounds good. A quarter of Queensland say that’s
right and vote for her. Equal rights, we all agree with that. But when
Dayo’s trying to kill Vipiano do we treat them equally? Do we just make
sure that they both agree on the rules of the fight and leave them to
it? Level playing field? I don’t think so. Equal treatment is not
necessarily fair. I don’t refuse to give Jane a large print song book
because everybody else can read the screen and I want to treat her
equally. Fair treatment means that everyone is worthy of equal moral
consideration, and equal moral consideration always takes into account
the differences that we start with, not ignoring them in the interests
of some superficial level playing field.
Pauline Hanson says we shouldn’t fund special health programs for
Aboriginal people because we don’t have them for white people. Well
given that on nearly every health measure you can come up with
Aboriginal people are at the lower end of the scale in this country, her
argument is a bit like saying we shouldn’t fund special health programs
for sick people because we don’t need them for healthy people!
God’s anger at the unjust treatment of the poor and the downtrodden
is thundered by the prophets from earliest times and is still part of
the message of reconciliation. The truth must be acknowledged. Apologies
must be made. God has shown us what reconciliation is all about by
reconciling us through Christ. Now the message of reconciliation is in
our hands. God has given us the example. God has shown us the model by
which reconciliation takes place.
In Jesus Christ, God as the one sinned against reached out the hand
and offered to make peace with those who had mistreated him. There is
absolutely no doubt that in Australia today it is the Aboriginal
peoples, the ones sinned against, who are reaching out the hand in peace
and dreaming of reconciliation. It’s not them who are using works like
guilt and compensation claims. They’re talking reconciliation, peace.
In response to his offer of reconciliation, Jesus Christ looks for
an honest acknowledgement of the wrongs of the past, a confession, an
apology. In response to their offer of reconciliation, our indigenous
brothers and sisters look for an honest acknowledgement of the wrongs of
the past. A truth telling. An apology. Our culture sought to dismantle
their culture. The institutions of our culture decimated their families
by taking their children away.
And there’s no use saying that we can’t apologize because it wasn’t
our generation that did it. Suppose Dayo didn’t beat up Vipiano. Dayo’s
grandfather beat up Vipiano’s grandfather, and now Dayo’s living in the
house that Vipiano would have inherited and Vipiano’s sleeping outside
the gate. Does that mean that Dayo’s got nothing to apologize. I don’t
believe for a moment that if the current Japanese government made an
apology for what Japan did to Australian POW’s during the war, that
Bruce Ruxton and the RSL would say, "Oh there’s no need for that,
it wasn’t your generation."
And when we respond to the offer of reconciliation in Christ, Christ
calls us to follow up our apology with repentance, with a change of
ways. The Aboriginal peoples are asking no more than that. Replace
oppression with justice. Stop showing contempt and show respect. They
are not asking us to get out of their land, although it would not be an
unjustifiable demand. They are asking merely to be honoured as the
traditional owners of the land.
In an act of extraordinary grace, after 200 years of being trampled
over, disregarded, dispossessed and subjected to genocidal policies,
like Christ with nails in his wrists and thorns in his brow, the
original inhabitants of this land are reaching out the hand of peace and
offering us reconciliation. Yes, I reckon this word does mean the same
thing in both these contexts. Christ has reconciled us to God and shown
us the model for reconciliation. Now the Spirit of God is moving in this
land and calling our generation to follow that model again and respond
again to the hand of reconciliation held out to us. And I suspect that
if we slap back this hand of peace from our black brothers and sisters,
we will be slapping back the hand of God. But I don’t think that will
happen. I don’t think our generation will long tolerate the hard hearted
refusal of our politicians to accept that hand of peace. I believe that
the Spirit of God is stronger and the day of reconciliation is upon us.
"Who will be my people of peace, Who can I send?" says the
Lord. Let’s sing of our response, "Here I am, Lord."
Nathan Nettleton
Pastor, South Yarra Community Baptist Church
Melbourne, Australia
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