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High School yearbooks, I don’t know if it’s still the case but for mine, they really did it up for the Seniors. They dressed you in a robe. The pictures for Seniors were bigger than for the other classes. Under your name they listed everything you participated in during high school and any awards received. And finally, the kicker; they let you come up with a quote that would forever haunt you. Some of those quotes were really quite good. Some were just famous quotes by famous people that were, of course, not properly cited. Some, well, somebody should have pulled us and said, “Is the hill of foolishness really the one you want to die on?” You know, “Stupidity lingers like stench when printed in a yearbook.” The last thing you want is to go to your 50th Year High School Reunion and your classmates are looking at the yearbooks matching young faces to the wrinkle club standing before them. They read your quote and whisper under their breath, “What a moron!”
Mine was sort of a mixture of the last two categories. It was partly a quote from someone famous and partly just stupid. It was, “I pity the fool who says ‘I can’t.’” I mean, like, gag a maggot, for real, du-uh! I should explain it, I guess. At the time there was a TV show called the A-Team in which one of the characters was the very famous and memorable Mr. T. At some point during every show Mr. T would remark about the villain they were chasing saying, “I pity the fool.” The other part of my quote was biographical, reflecting something I was proud of accomplishing but you wouldn’t know that from the quote. At my mother’s insistence, I doubled up my Junior and Senior years and graduated a year early. It was a difficult academic accomplishment, but it really wasn’t a smart thing to do for so many reasons. I could have used my Senior year to develop some more relational maturity and confidence. But instead, I wound up out in the real world and not ready for it and made some foolish mistakes particularly academically. To quote John Prine, “That’s the way the world goes round”.
The High School yearbook: a spruced-up picture, a list of achievements, and a pretence of wisdom but, you know, it says nothing about the hurts, the angers, the failures, the rejections, the rivalries, betrayals, petty jealousies, malicious rumours, the picked-overs, the not-good-enough’s, the bullying, the broken homes, and…that kind of stuff. All those things that made the high school years something so many would rather not revisit and certainly not repeat. The foolishness of high school. It’s a rare critter who made it through high school without being touched or touching someone with cruelty. High school is a microcosm of humanity. If you came through it without being hurt or hurting someone else in a way that will profoundly affect the way you live the rest of your life, well then, “And there’s a hand, my trusty friend, and gie’s a hand o’ thine, and we’ll tak’ a right gude-willie waught for auld lang syne.” Nostalgia like bacon makes everything better. The high school yearbook seems to be the way the world goes round: We want to look good, boast about our accomplishments, and have some wisdom to pass on all the while denying the world of hurt that was behind it all. Some might call that foolishness.
It's interesting here in our reading that Paul says the word of the cross is foolishness. In fact, the word group for foolish comes up quite a bit in this passage. The Greek word group used sounds like moria, mora, moros, moraino. We get our words moron and moronic from it. It’s one thing to call someone a fool and another to call them moronic. If we had such a word as moronity or moronicness that would bring what he is saying over into English with the appropriate effect. It’s a bit more of an insult than just saying something or someone is foolish. Paul also quantifies for whom the word if the cross is moronity; the perishing. A more accurate translation of that would be “those who are destroying themselves.” They aren’t simply wasting away, they're destroying themselves. The word of the cross is moronity to those who are destroying themselves all the while thinking themselves strong and wise, significant somebodies born noble.
The word of the cross – In love God the Son became a human being as the Jew, Jesus of Nazareth, born to be their Messiah who would deliver them from Roman rule and the corruption of their own leadership and institutionalized religion and establish the Kingdom of God. Instead of organizing a revolt, Jesus healed people, cast out demons, ate with sinners and tax collectors, and called Galilean tradespeople (of all people) to be his disciples. To the Jewish political and religious leadership, he was scandalous. The Gentiles just laughed at how moronic the whole story sounds. Gods don’t love and befriend humans. Gods only appear to be human when they foolishly fall in love with a human woman. Gods don’t heal humans. They play with us like dolls. Then the most foolish thing of all, to put an end to the shame of this Jesus matter, the Jewish authorities had the Romans crucify him. He died for simply doing things that only God or a god could do. But gods don’t die. They glory up like a well-blinged Mr. T and go Apollyon, the angel of death, on all their enemies.
What they failed to see was that as this Jesus, God was healing humanity of this mortal disease we have come to call Sin. God came as one of us so that we can see God as God really is. Our failure to recognize God and instead killing God in the cruellest way imaginable was God’s way of exposing our sin. God raised Jesus from the dead in an act of new creation creating a new humanity which we share in by the gift of new life by the Holy Spirit. We become newer as we strive to live according to the way of the cross – humbly laying aside our pride and self-importance which only lead to perishing and in the struggle of denying our selfish self’s we strive to serve one another in unconditional love until Jesus returns with the ultimate healing of resurrection to make all of Creation fully new.
This story may sound like foolishness or moronity. It may not make sense to us and our vainglorious reason. But it is the power of God to save, to heal us. Following Jesus, taking up the cross is where we find healing, peace, love. This is the foolish wisdom of the cross. In this world where people, many Christians included, think that being strong like Mr. T and muscling in morality is the way to a better more prosperous world particularly for those who already have wealth, the foolishness of the cross, the way of dying to oneself, the way of humility, the way of generosity and hospitality, the way of welcoming the stranger, the way of striving for what is best for us rather than simply what is best for me, the way of unconditional love; the foolish way of the cross is the way God is saving his world. And so I leave you with an invitation: Would you put the High School yearbook back on the shelf and join me in being a moron for Jesus? Amen.