I’ll never forget the first time I read Hansel and Gretel to Adam. The questions began no sooner than I started. “Why is that mommy so mean?” he asked. “She’s just a mean person.” I answered. “Even to her own children?” he asked. “Some people are just that mean.” I explained. Would you ever become mean like that?” he asked, worry creeping into his voice. “No, of course not. I have never been mean to you in the past, and I will never be mean to you in the future. That I promise you from the bottom of my heart,” I responded.
He seemed relieved, until the story continued. As the children were being led into the forest, he climbed onto my lap. “You mean the mommy is going to leave her children in the forest to die?” he asked, worry giving way to downright fear. “Well, yes she is,” I said, not knowing what else to say given the fact that the mommy was going to leave her children in the forest to die. By the time the witch had imprisoned Hansel with the intention of eating him and enslaved and starved Gretel, he begged, “Close the book!” “But the story is not over yet,” I protested, realizing the only thing worse than finishing the book was closing it and letting him think there was no happy ending.
Life can be that way sometimes. We may feel we want to close the book on it, and for essentially the same kind of reasons. It’s too bad. It’s too scary. In fact, for many people life is like that right now. In all my years, I don’t remember living through more troubling times.
There’s Covid 19, the decimation of the disease and all the ramifications of the disease – worry, anxiety, and fear over the future, over our livelihoods, over the economy, over vulnerable loved ones, over aimlessness, loneliness, and isolation.
But to me at least, Covid 19 is not the worst of it. Not by a long stretch. The blind malevolence of disease doesn’t compare to the sighted malevolence that presently assails us -- The gun violence that has overtaken our cities – the horrific figures of shootings that bombard us day after day after day. The nightly anarchy featuring looting, destruction of property, and attacks upon law enforcement.
And then there is this general feeling of malaise occasioned by the feeling that our moral compass has become completely inverted. Evil has become good, and good evil. Our entire culture has come under attack. Worse, there are calls for its destruction.
All of this has hardly brought out the best in us. Just the opposite, it’s brought out the worst in us. We are all at each other’s throats. Mutual respect, common curtesy, good manners…These are things of the past.
So yes, many of us may feel we want to close the book on life. We’ve had about enough of this story.
The prophet Jeremiah would surely understand. He wanted to close the book on life as well, and his era made ours look like Shangri-La. God called him to prophesy at the time of the fall of the nation of Judah, to prophesy precisely that the nation of Judah would fall. And why would it fall? Because the hearts of the people, God made known to Jeremiah, had turned bad.
The people of course did not believe Jeremiah. Just as they laughed at Noah before the deluge, they laughed at him. God would not allow the nation of Judah to fall. That was ridiculous. They had been elected by God for nationhood. “Go from your country and your kindred and your father’s house to the land that I will show you, and I will make of you a great nation,” God had promised Abraham.
But Jeremiah continued to prophesy that the nation would fall because the hearts of the people had turned bad, and in time their laughter crossed over to derision and scorn, and then to anger and persecution. He was branded a traitor. He was publicly beaten and held in stocks, he was harried by mobs, attempts were made on his life.
Jeremiah finally determined that he would keep his mouth shut, but God would not allow it. There was in his own words, “a fire shut up in his bones” that impelled him to speak until the end of his life. And through his whole long career as a prophet, some 50 years, and even after the nation fell, he was never vindicated by the people. It was only after he was gone that the people realized that God had indeed spoken through him. They realized their hearts had turned bad. They realized they had lost their nation because their nationalism distracted them from acknowledging it. And not only that, they realized that Jeremiah had served to preserve their faith after they had lost their nation. After they had lost their nation they never, as they could well have done, blamed God for it. They realized the blame was on them.
But in the midst of it all, life got so bad and so scary for Jeremiah that he confessed that he wished that he’d never been born -- “Cursed be the day on which I was born! The day when my mother bore me, let it not be blessed! Cursed be the man who brought the news to my father saying, ‘A child is born to you, a son,’ Let that man be like the cities that the Lord overthrew without pity…because he did not kill me in the womb so that my mother would have been my grave…Why did I come forth from the womb to see toil and sorrow, and spend my days in shame?” He wanted to close the book on life.
Now maybe Jeremiah had a right to feel that way. It would have required tremendous faith after all, to have witnessed all he witnessed, to have endured all that he endured, and still hold out hope for a happy ending in life. Jeremiah had a right to feel that way, but we do not. This is because we live on the other side of the resurrection of Jesus Christ. The resurrection of Jesus Christ proclaims that there is a happy ending in life, and his story, like ours and Jeremiah’s, is one in which we’d definitely want to close the book before it was over.
After a brief and increasingly ominous ministry, he was arrested by an angry mob and brought to trial, if you could call it a trial. The proceedings were those of a kangaroo court with Jesus being passed from jurisdiction to jurisdiction in a prejudicial attempt to convict him. Once he was convicted, he was mocked, tortured, and hung on a cross. He died broken and shattered.
Yes, we’d definitely want to close the book on his story anywhere along the way. But of course on the third day he was resurrected! The resurrection is the happy ending of his life and of ours. It proclaims God’s triumph over the whole human catastrophe. We know now that God wins in the end. And that makes all the difference -- the hope born of God’s triumph in Jesus Christ.
Will we face hard time ahead? Yes, we will. Will we be forced to contend with uncertainty and change? Yes, we will. Will things never be the same? Yes. Will there be loss? Yes. But we know how the story ends. Life has a happy ending. And we can do more than hope in God’s triumph in Jesus Christ. We can enact God’s triumph in Jesus Christ. We can enact God’s way of sacrifice, service, and mission. We can enact God’s way of love. Through us life’s happy ending can begin right now. Amen.