Matthew 27:38-45
27:38 Then two bandits were crucified with him, one on his right and one on his left.
27:39 Those who passed by derided him, shaking their heads
27:40 and saying, "You who would destroy the temple and build it in three days, save yourself! If you are the Son of God, come down from the cross."
27:41 In the same way the chief priests also, along with the scribes and elders, were mocking him, saying,
27:42 "He saved others; he cannot save himself. He is the King of Israel; let him come down from the cross now, and we will believe in him.
27:43 He trusts in God; let God deliver him now, if he wants to; for he said, 'I am God's Son.'"
27:44 The bandits who were crucified with him also taunted him in the same way.
27:45 From noon on, darkness came over the whole land until three in the afternoon.
It was that last verse that caught my attention this week, as I prepared this message for “Palm/Passion Sunday.” By the way, did any of you pastors out there have parishioners who panicked when they heard that you decided to preach on the “Passion,” rather than on the “cloak and jagger” story of the Palms? They usually remember how this often leads us to read the entire Passion narrative, which takes about 15 minutes to read aloud, but rarely then did we shorten our own remarks, accordingly, meaning the sermon-con-scripture is a marathon. One of my irreverent parishioners once said, “It took Jesus less time to die on the cross than it did to read the story of it in church, today.” He was probably right.
While we only have the Gospel narratives as the historical record of exactly what happened, both on “Palm Sunday” and the crucifixion, and of course they don’t agree at all, it IS the history we have, so we’ll treat it accordingly. However, if we allow each of the Gospel writers to have their reasons for what they include or redact of those events, we can “guess” why they might have made the choices they do. A good example is the story of Jesus being crucified between two “bandits” or thieves. Matthew includes this, but just as one of the entities who were mocking Jesus, along with “those who passed by” and the chief priests and religious leaders. Isn’t it interesting that these bandits, religious leaders, and the riff-raff are of the same mind in doing this? For those of us who ARE religious leaders, it sure sounds like the wrong crowd to be seen with.
In the longer rendering (I’ve chosen only a few key verses for this week’s Palm Sunday message) of Matthew’s version, he tells us of Barabbas. Given a choice between a man who taught and lived a higher morality and both from a “love thy neighbor” plane, and Barabbas, a murderer and insurrectionist, they chose the latter. Doesn’t say much for the voting public, does it? If you are looking for the agar that nourishes the gross bacteria of society, look no farther. As the comic strip “Pogo” said many years ago, “We have met the enemy, and he is US.”
This shoddy human behavior leads us to my main point today, which was spurred by the last verse of this pericope: “From noon on, darkness came over the whole land until three in the afternoon.” Why the darkness? (Let us please ignore the science of HOW it got dark from Noon until 3:00PM. It could have been a storm front, or a solar eclipse, I suppose, or it could have been a “miracle” wherein God suspended the natural laws and just made it dark.) The question I’d like to investigate is not “how,” but “why.” Did it get dark because God was grieving the death of Jesus? Some have suggested this. Was it as a sign for those who voted for Barabbas, or for the ones who had Jesus crucified? It might have been a bit disconcerting for the “mob” who shouted, “Giv e us BARABBAS!” to see God darken the SUN, don’t you think? It might also have caused the chief priests and religious leaders to check their egotistical theology that condemned Jesus. I guess we may not ever know the answer to this question on this side of glory, but let me suggest an idea.
God made it dark to mirror the “ease” with which the human soul can “go dark.” Mobs form quite easily, don’t they? We can fall for temptation almost at the drop of a hat. Here’s an exercise for you: think of a neighbor you “like,” and list why you like them; now think of a neighbor you have issues with, and list the reasons you DON’T “like” them. My guess is, the latter case is easier to prosecute for most of us. We “go dark” easily. Having worked with both parties trying to save a marriage, and others who have suffered a divorce, I can testify that it often takes some serious prompting to get the would-be marriage savers to list the “good” things or the things they appreciate about their partner, while most of the ones who are going through a divorce have little trouble coming up with both the reasons (in some cases “rationalizations”) for why they are divorcing, AND the proverbial “50 ways to leave a lover.” Going negative (dark) is like diving a submarine—going down is much easier than coming back up, but we should ask ourselves, which is more important?
Did God’s Noon to Three “lights out” serve as God’s disappointment with what humanity has done with the freedom of choice God gave us? Even when “visited” by the Son of God, we “went dark” and found ample reasons to destroy him, and at that, violently. One of the movies I have used in my “Theology and Film” classes is Clint Eastwood’s “The Unforgiven.” In that film, Eastwood plays a “retired” contract killer in the “Wild West,” who has redeemed his life by turning to farming, marrying, and having a family. While he is working through grief over the death of his spouse, a young man visits him, who knows his past. The young man is an aspiring “murder for hire” candidate himself, and he asks the Eastwood character, Will Munny, to “show him the ropes.” In the throes of grief, and in the weakness of the moment, he agrees, and goes with the young man on his first killing assignment. I won’t go into the rest of the story, but what got me was just how QUCKLY Eastwood’s Will Munny “backslides” into being a ruthless gunslinger again, something that even spooks the young protégé. It’s scary—just like sinking a submarine, only faster. We DO “go dark” rapidly. I really don’t think God is happy at all about this development in the human psyche.
Please understand that this preacher is not pontificating here. You may have your own stories of “backsliding” to think about, but I have several of my own. The one that bothers me most is how quickly I can become impudent and sarcastic in an “argument”—especially over politics—on social media. I am a “well read” person, and not a day goes by that I don’t take my fill of the broadest possible “survey” of news and current events. So, as one who considers himself informed, I often start out these social media “debates” thinking I am taking the high ground. But, as I already said, I can “go dark” very quickly, especially when I “judge” my opponent as “inferior” or UN-informed. Why is this, I ask myself after the debate goes off the rails? And it usually does, because with my impudent attitude, I “push the buttons” of the other. And isn’t it interesting that this is the first “sin” I thought of when I read verse 45, while working on this sermon? Is this what we call “conviction”? Or is it just guilt, that I, a well-educated, well-read individual, can so quickly devolve into a social media “gunslinger”? I wish I could say that I never brought this “dark” fighting spirit into the pulpit, but from time to time, I’m sure I did. I guess there’s a reason Teddy Roosevelt called it a “bully” pulpit? Thankfully, this was an infrequent occurrence, thanks to Pittsburgh Theological Seminary, where my beloved professors taught me to “preach the text,” and to do my best to stick to God’s agenda, even when my own was quite tempting.
Humanity, like Will Munny, has so easily left God’s agenda behind. Our wars prove this. Our racism and sexism prove this. Our poor vs. rich proves this. And right now, our politics is proving it. How are you getting along with that neighbor who stuck a Trump sign in his front yard? When you argue with your spouse, are you listening to what he/she is saying, or are you readying your next salvo? How do you feel about refugees and immigrants, even before you know their “legal” status? When you hear of a terrorist attack of some sort, how broadly does your anger rage against Muslims? There are countless other examples.
When WE crucified Jesus Christ, was this the “final straw” in God’s disappointment regarding how humanity has used God’s wonderful gift of “free will”? Did God hide the Sun because we killed the Son? If God got as snippy as I can in a word fight, God might have said out loud, “Oh, you LIKE the darkness? Well, here you go!” But again, I believe God was grieving, not angered. Grieving both at the horrific death of Jesus, but even more at the created beings that the Psalm says God had “made a little lower than the angels.”
Might possibly the Noon to Three darkness on the day Christ was crucified be as important to the future of humanity as what God is doing in the atonement? That God would give humanity an “Olly, olly in free” invitation by forgiving the sins of our rebelliousness and selfishness through the Christ Event is HUGE, but the “darkness” warning may be God’s way to spur us to clean up our act, which might save US, the planet, the rest of creation, AND help bring about God’s Kingdom on earth! As United Methodists, we believe that GOD does the forgiving, but HUMANS may make the choice to use the “free will” God gave us to “go on to perfection,” an old world way of saying we CAN not only GET better, but we can DO better, and we can join our other religious siblings in fixing the world (tikkun olam, in Hebrew).
Each week in our worship services at St. Paul’s United Methodist Church in Allison Park, PA, one of our pastors lights a “peace” candle and says a specific prayer for a current need for social justice, and for persons being victimized by injustice in our world. The response we use is from the prologue to the Gospel of John:
Pastor: The light shines in the darkness,
People: And the darkness has not overcome it.
As we wave our palm branches this week, and as we remember the Passion of our Lord Jesus Christ, may we also relish the “dark” reminder of the worst of the human spirit, and that the Holy Spirit of God may rescue us from living our lives IN the darkness. May it not “win,” and may WE begin our journey on to “perfection,” to the glory of God! Amen.




