Tuesday, February 21, 2017

“Radical Cheek”

If anyone strikes you on the right cheek, turn the other also.                                                                                                                        Matthew 5:39b
“Are you happy now?”
That was basically the judge’s message to Megan Rice an 84 year-old nun and her two accomplices. All three, peace activists. Each slapped with a three-year jail sentence.
Their crime? In 2012, they broke into and vandalized a bunker at the Y-12 National Security Complex in Oak Ridge, Tennessee. Holding the nation’s primary supply of bomb-grade uranium, the facility is known as the “Fort Knox of Uranium.”
Why did they do it? They were worked up over the close-to six-hundred billion-dollar defense budget billions of which the activists believed could be diverted to improve the standard of living of the average American and our poorest citizens, in particular.
Now, we could wrangle over the “rightness” of the break-in, as well as its effectiveness. For example, I’m not convinced about the vandalism: splashing bottles of blood on a bunker holding bomb-grade uranium.
But dig deeper into the activists' motives and you get Michael Walli, convicted along with Megan Rice, telling the judge, I was acting upon my God-given obligations as a follower of Jesus Christ.”
That may be true, even exemplary. But did the activists think they would get away with it? No. They cut wires that set off alarms. They had time to vandalize the bunker, sit down, sing hymns, pray together … inside the facility. Two hours after the alarms first went off two hours security guards finally arrived and arrested the trio.
Heads rolled after that. And it wasn’t the heads of the activists.
Fact is: Megan Rice and her team started out that evening expecting to break into the Y-12 complex. They expected to be caught. They expected to be convicted. They expected to be punished. And at their trial, they dared the judge to slap them with harsh sentences.
As a matter of fact, Rice challenged the judge to sentence her to life in prison, even though sentencing guidelines called for far less: six years. “Please, have no leniency with me,” she argued.
So, Rice’s sentence? She expected six years’ confinement. Pleaded for a life sentence. Got three years.
But that plea for a life sentence: At 84, does that sound like a person who wants to be happy to the end of her days? On the one hand, incarceration for a cause … on the other, happiness.
Well, it sounds exactly like the type of person Jesus hopes each of his followers will be when he tells them:
“If anyone strikes you on the right cheek, turn the other also.
“If anyone wants to sue you and take your coat, give your cloak as well.
“If anyone forces you to go one mile, go also the second mile.”
And we are left to wonder, Is Jesus suggesting that our primary pursuit shouldn’t be the pursuit of happiness? … because, I don’t know about you, but I would rather not get sucker-punched in the face. Period. But, given Jesus limited options of one or two black eyes, Id be happier with just one.
I would rather not get sued and lose in court. But, losing my shirt … or losing my shirt along with (I think Jesus is saying here, more or less) my shorts? I’d be happier losing just my shirt.
And the one-mile/two-mile option? Factoid: A Roman soldier presumably on foot himself had the right to press you into carrying his heavy armor for up to one mile along the dusty roads of Palestine.
So, I’d rather not get coerced into carrying the armor at all. But, given only Jesus two choices, I’d be happier being forced to lug it one mile … rather than two.
And I’d really like to keep the cash burning a hole in my pocket to myself. But I’d be happier giving a buck to one panhandler … rather than shelling out one-buck-after-another to every panhandler in the hand-out gauntlet, otherwise known as Downtown Crossing.
And when Jesus talks about loving friends and enemies? My hunch is that outside of 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, these days few mentally-healthy people talk about being dogged by personal enemies. And yet, I’d be happier hanging out with my friends … while giving myself full license to avoid the Dementors who delight in sucking the very life out of me!
Bottomline: When Jesus finally talks about being “perfect” as perfect as God!?! I’d rather be happy than perfect … if “perfect” means sustaining a string of black eyes … submitting to a slew of indignities … and losing it all by giving it all away to people who may or may not be the “deserving poor.”
Read: Happiness might be possible … if happiness were the point. But it isn’t. At least, it isn’t in Jesus’ book. What is the point? What does Jesus think we should be in pursuit of?
Answer: Meaning. Purpose. Perfection not as in moral purity, but the experience of a life that is complete. Fully-developed in God’s eyes. Nothing missing. No essential parts like expansive awareness, widened charity, laser-like commitment nothing of God’s very essence left out.
It’s a life whose key mark is justice: pursuing what we are owed as persons created in the image of God … making sure our neighbors get from us from the system we support what they are owed.
And, at a very minimum, what are we all owed? Dignity.
For example, in Megan Rice’s case, securing dignity means seeing that all God’s children are raised in secure homes and communities free from the threat of war. No child no person a victim.
Complication: Asking for a life sentence, when six years will do, in Megan Rice’s case … or submitting to an extra black eye on top of the first, the way Jesus puts it: Looks like voluntary victimization. What does that have to do with human dignity?
Most days we'd say, absolutely nothing. And yet, Jesus’ audience might look at it differently.
That’s because they live in a “shame culture.” In a shame culture, you put a lot of effort into maintaining your “honor” saving face in your community.
Now, in Roman-occupied Palestine, who’s likely to slug you? A Roman soldier. Let’s say this soldier were to slug you on the right side of your face. (As will soon be obvious, Jesus specifies the right cheek as the target to make a teaching point.) If the soldier hauls off with his left fist which would be natural against a victim’s right cheek in that culture, he’s dealing the blow shamefully.
That is ‒ and as a leftie (on so many levels), I object ‒ as we’ve learned on many other occasions, to Jesus’ audience, the left hand is bad karma. Why? Well, before Charmin came along (and those cutesy bears doing in the woods what bears do), personal hygiene was different. And you want to save one hand the usually-dominant right hand for clean” activities (like preparing food, eating, and carrying out religious rites).
So, to punch you on your right cheek with his left hand? Literally, fighting dirty, the attacker brings shame on himself.
To get his licks in without being shamed, the attacker must use the back of his right hand to slap your right cheek. Who were the people most likely to be back-handed? Slaves, women, and other persons considered somehow “lesser” than this Roman soldier.
So  back-handing you  not only is your attacker hurting you physically, he’s robbing you of your dignity. You are lesser-than. You are subhuman.
But Jesus indicates the soldier can rob you of your dignity only if you let him. Read: To re-assert your dignity, Jesus says, “Recover. Stand up straight. Offer your left cheek for another glancing blow not as the attacker’s subordinate, but as the soldier’s full equal.”
Of course, you may get slugged a second time (this time with the soldier’s “shame-less” right fist), but you will have claimed what you are owed: not a punch, but the dignity God has given each of us to possess and exercise and nurture in our neighbors.
You will have pursued meaning, purpose, justice … not happiness.
Bottomline: Like Megan Rice and her companions, like the centuries-long train of resistors treading the path before them, like Jesus … in the face of right-able wrongs, we, too, have no right to remain silent. We, too, have no right to do nothing. We, too, have no right to be happy.
But we do have a right to pursue a life of meaning. As Jesus himself proves: It’s the perfect life, the only life worth living.
Amen.