Location, Location, Location - Holy Wednesday

Location, Location, Location - Holy Wednesday

Author: Pastor Scott Schul
March 27, 2024

If you’ve ever bought or sold a house, you’ve heard a real estate agent say that the three most important factors are “location, location, location.”  Where your home is located has an enormous bearing on its value, because location dictates factors like the quality of your neighborhood, the school system you’re in, and traffic congestion.

Location, location, location.  It matters just as much in this sanctuary.  If you sit beneath the air conditioning units, you’re going to feel cold, even if I’m up here sweating under the spotlights.  Sound bounces around this one-of-a-kind sanctuary in very unique ways too.

Actors and dancers always have to be conscious of location, because where they stand greatly impacts the way the story unfolds.  I received an education in this 20 years ago when I was on-stage each December as part of a local Maine production of the Nutcracker Ballet.  When I did the opening announcements, I had to stand center stage.  At other times, it was important that I be off to the side, so I wouldn’t distract from what the other actors on stage were doing.

Even here at Grace, there’s a certain choreography to where the pastors stand.  I do the announcements from the first step, with my heels against the second step, so that I’m in the spots and not shrouded in shadows.  Some things, like preaching, happen here at the ambo, to emphasis the presence of God’s Living Word.  Other things take place at the altar, to emphasize how God comes to us through Holy Communion.  Our location – where we stand – is all part of the story. 

With all of this in mind, let’s turn to our Gospel lesson.  The plot of the story itself is a familiar one, especially during Holy Week.  It’s the famous Last Supper, and the moment of high tension when Jesus reveals that Judas will betray him.  He doesn’t try to talk Judas out of his plans or call upon the other disciples to restrain Judas.  Instead, Jesus encourages Judas to get on with it, because Jesus knows that the pathway to an empty tomb and his supreme glorification has to run through a betrayal, arrest, crucifixion, and death.  These are the high points of the last days of Jesus that we will dwell upon at length tomorrow during Maundy Thursday worship, and on Good Friday.

Now let’s consider this old familiar story from a fresh point of view.  Let’s view it from the perspective of location, location, location.  Aside from Jesus, there are three main characters in this story, all disciples, and their location speaks volumes about them.  The first character is the one whom Jesus loved – the one who was reclining next to Jesus.  This is John, which is why we often refer to him as “the beloved disciple.”  He’s right next to Jesus.  He’s leaning in, able to hear all of Jesus’s quietest conversations, able to feel his breath and listen to the beat of his heart.

Further across the room is Peter.  Evidently he was too far away from Jesus in distance or too distant in his relationship with Jesus to ask Jesus the question that’s preoccupying everyone there, namely, “Which one of us is going to betray you?”  And so he motioned to John to ask for the details on that juicy piece of gossip.

Finally, when it comes to location, location, location in our Gospel lesson, the one who’s farthest away from Jesus in every conceivable way is Judas, son of Simon Iscariot.  Immediately after getting his bread, the betrayer’s mark of identification, he would leave the gathering, exit the building, and slink away into the night, empty of Spirit and filled with Satan.

The location of these three disciples, relative to Jesus, is consistent with the outcomes they experienced.  As we know, Judas would be consumed by guilt and regret and meet a very sad and lonely end.  He had decided that he knew better than Jesus what true doctrine was, and he believed that only he – Judas – had the wisdom to protect the faith.  He consistently substituted his own judgment for that of Christ and always put his own selfish interests above all other considerations.

Peter, whose location was somewhere in the middle, would stumble as well.  After Jesus’s arrest, Peter would try to save his own skin by denying even knowing Jesus.  He too had gotten in the habit of thinking he knew better than Jesus, especially when it came to the question of how a Messiah should act.  Fortunately for Peter, he would eventually recover.  He would be healed and reconciled by Jesus’s forgiveness, and go on to lead the fledgling church until eventually he bravely and faithfully ascended his own cross and died the honorable death of a martyr.

And what of John the Beloved, the one who stayed so close to Jesus during Jesus’s life?  He is the one disciple who we know stayed just as close to Jesus in death.  He was there at the crucifixion, and even in Jesus’s last minutes of life, he remained beloved – so much so that Jesus entrusted his own mother to the loving care of John.  John is also the only disciple who would die not as a martyr but from old age.

And so what lesson can you draw from all of this?  Well, quite simply, it’s this: as you reach the final days of Lent – this season of reflection and repentance – now is the time to assess your own location, location, location when it comes to Christ.

Are you like Judas or Peter?  Have you distanced yourself from Jesus by regularly dismissing his wisdom and counsel and embracing only your own?  Do you find yourself ignoring Jesus because you’ve become convinced that he’s irrelevant, old fashioned, and out of touch?  Have you moved away from him because you no longer feel the desire to talk with him or spend time with him?  Could this distancing be the source of the restlessness, emptiness, and lack of peace you’re feeling?  How do you think your location, far from Jesus, will ultimately impact you?

There’s still time to follow the lead of John the Beloved.  There’s still time to draw close to Jesus.  After all, that’s where Jesus most wants you to be.  So get next to Jesus.  Just like John, lean in, so you can hear all of Jesus’s quietest conversations.  Lean in, so you can feel his breath.  Lean in, so you can listen to the beat of his heart.  But how? 

You already know how.  It’s not a mystery or a grand secret.  It doesn’t require an advanced degree in theology or elegant words.  In fact, it doesn’t require any words at all.  If you wish, be silent, just like John in our Gospel.  Just be present with Jesus, in prayer and in worship.  And then spend time serving and caring for the people Jesus loves.  They may not be the people you love, but that’s sort of the point.  You won’t always understand why Jesus does what he does, says what he says, or endures what he endures.  And you won’t always comprehend how and why Jesus can love people you consider to be among the most unlovable of all. 

But you don’t have to understand.  You don’t have to comprehend.  You just need to stay close to him.  Because that’s where you find true purpose.  That’s where you find true transformation.  That’s where you find true belonging.  That’s where you find true love.

What matters most?  Location, location, location.  Stay close to Jesus.  Amen.

GOSPEL LESSON: John 13:21-32
21 Jesus was troubled in spirit, and declared, "Very truly, I tell you, one of you will betray me." 22 The disciples looked at one another, uncertain of whom he was speaking. 23 One of his disciples-- the one whom Jesus loved-- was reclining next to him; 24 Simon Peter therefore motioned to him to ask Jesus of whom he was speaking. 25 So while reclining next to Jesus, he asked him, "Lord, who is it?" 26 Jesus answered, "It is the one to whom I give this piece of bread when I have dipped it in the dish." So when he had dipped the piece of bread, he gave it to Judas son of Simon Iscariot. 27 After he received the piece of bread, Satan entered into him. Jesus said to him, "Do quickly what you are going to do." 28 Now no one at the table knew why he said this to him. 29 Some thought that, because Judas had the common purse, Jesus was telling him, "Buy what we need for the festival"; or, that he should give something to the poor. 30 So, after receiving the piece of bread, he immediately went out. And it was night.

31 When he had gone out, Jesus said, "Now the Son of Man has been glorified, and God has been glorified in him. 32 If God has been glorified in him, God will also glorify him in himself and will glorify him at once.”

Copyright Rev. Scott E. Schul, 2024 All rights reserved. May not be reproduced in whole or in part without written permission.


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