Showing posts with label Andrew Lloyd Weber. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Andrew Lloyd Weber. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 22, 2022

At the House of Caiaphus

At the House of Caiaphus

 

Matthew 26:57-68, The Voice - The crowd that had arrested Jesus took Him to Caiaphas, the high priest. The scribes and elders had gathered at Caiaphas’s house and were waiting for Jesus to be delivered.  Peter followed Jesus (though at some distance so as not to be seen). He slipped into Caiaphas’s house and attached himself to a group of servants. And he sat watching, waiting to see how things would unfold.

The high priest and his council of advisors first produced false evidence against Jesus—false evidence meant to justify some charge and Jesus’ execution.  But even though many men were willing to lie, the council couldn’t come up with the evidence it wanted. Finally, two men stood up.

Two Men: Look, He said, “I can destroy God’s temple and rebuild it in three days.” What more evidence do you need?

Then Caiaphas the high priest stood up and addressed Jesus.

Caiaphas: Aren’t You going to respond to these charges? What exactly are these two men accusing You of?

Jesus remained silent.

Caiaphas (to Jesus): Under a sacred oath before the living God, tell us plainly: are You the Anointed One, the Son of God?

Jesus: So you seem to be saying. I will say this: beginning now, you will see the Son of Man sitting at the right hand of God’s power and glory and coming on heavenly clouds.

The high priest tore his robes and screeched.

Caiaphas: Blasphemy! We don’t need any more witnesses—we’ve all just witnessed this most grievous blasphemy, right here and now. So, gentlemen, what’s your verdict?

Gentlemen: He deserves to die.

Then they spat in His face and hit Him. Some of them smacked Him, slapped Him across the cheeks, and jeered.

Some of the Men: Well, Anointed One, prophesy for us, if You can—who hit You? And who is about to hit You next?

 

                My encouragement to us as we work our way through the passion narrative is that we force ourselves to be present – really be present.  Imagine that you are there as Peter was, hanging out in the shadows, watching the terrible events unfold.  I will confess that it has become harder and harder for me to do, so I do know that it is no small thing to ask. 

Hear the witnesses make up lies about Jesus, so outlandish and unbelievable that even though the religious leaders were seeking contrived charges, they deemed these lies unusable.  Finally, someone recalls something Jesus did actually say, but they twist it out of context.  Even in stating a technical fact, they are lying.  In our present era of alternative facts, this should be too hard to imagine.  But hear this shady tactic used against our Savior.

Hear the silence in the room as Jesus is asked to respond to the false charges.  Why won’t He at least tell them what He meant when He made that statement?  Everyone there wants Jesus to say something, but He doesn’t give them the satisfaction.  Feel the building tension as the silence becomes painful.   

Hear Caiaphus break the silence to continue the interrogation of Jesus. 

Are You the Anointed One, the Son of God?

                While Jesus doesn’t directly answer Caiaphus, He knowingly gives the gathered Council all they need to condemn Him.  But hear the words Jesus speaks.  From now on, when anyone thinks of God, they will simultaneously think of Jesus.  God’s glory is Jesus’s glory.  When God returns. Jesus will be right there.  Caiaphus may think he has all the power in the room, but Jesus’s power is synonymous with God’s power.  Experience the irony of Jesus’s statement even as Jesus submits to the inferior powers present in the room. 

                Be jolted by Caiaphus’s sudden verdict, “Blashphemy!”  What are your feelings as you hear all those in the room agree that Jesus should die because they cannot handle His Truth. 

                Here’s where it gets a bit harder.  Watch as these religious leaders, the supposed representatives of God’s goodness, spit in the very face of God-in-the-flesh.  Don’t turn your eyes away as these “paragons of God’s shalom/peace” punch God in the face with their bare knuckles.  Continue to strain your attention as they mock the God that they claim to be defending. 

                It’s important to not push this discomfort and shame of this story to the edges of our consciousness because the shame and violence God endured at the hands of the very people God chose to be the messengers of God’s truth is the heart of the truth Matthew would have us not just hear, but experience. To experience this truth is to begin to experience the surprising character of God that is revealed in these uncomfortable moments.  Matthew didn’t record this story so vividly just so we would know the details.  Matthew is hoping that we will experience this story in all it’s awful glory.  Matthew is hoping that we will meet God in the same way that he did – in this gut-wrenching story. 

 

Question:  How do you experience the details of Matthew’s account of the suffering of Jesus?

 

Prayer:  Lord, it’s hard for us to face the details of suffering you willingly endured at the hands of our fellow human beings.  But as we do, help us experience the length, height, and depth of Your grace and love.  Amen.

 

Prayer Focus:  Pray for people who are experiencing brutal violence today.

 

Song:  This Jesus Must Die (Jesus Christ Superstar) – Andew Lloyd Weber

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0paphVdW2qs   

Wednesday, December 8, 2021

Pie Jesu -December 8, 2021



Pie Jesu -December 8, 2021

 

Isaiah 53:4 - Surely he took up our pain and bore our suffering. . .”

 

This Sunday, we will light the candle of joy.  But before we do, I think it is appropriate to spend a few moments remembering those we love but see no more.  Just because we don’t see them anymore does not mean that our love for them has also died.  More than that, we also remember that their love for us has not died either. It is the love of God that makes this possible. 

 

We pause to honor those who have died for any reason during 2021. 

 

“Pie Jesu” is not written as Christmas season song, per se, but over the last several years, it has come to be one in many churches. The Gregorian Monks included it on their Christmas collection.  Perhaps, that is because underneath the intentioned joy of this season, there is a need to express the sentiment of this song.  Andrew Lloyd Weber composed the lyrics of “Pie Jesu” by combining the several liturgical readings from the Requiem, which is a Latin Mass to honor the dead.  He did so as a way to process his own grief from two separate tragedies - a journalist who had interviewed him just weeks before dying in Northern Ireland as a result of the IRA conflicts, and the story of a Cambodian boy who was forced to murder his mutilated sister or be executed himself.  He has combined these sacred writings in a quite powerful way that I believe will endure for many years to come.  Here is the English translation of those lyrics.

 

“Merciful Jesus, merciful Jesus, merciful Jesus, merciful Jesus

Father, who takes away the sins of the world

Grant them rest, grant them rest

Merciful Jesus, merciful Jesus, merciful Jesus, merciful Jesus

Father, who takes away the sins of the world

Grant them rest, grant them rest

Lamb of God, Lamb of God, Lamb of God, Lamb of God

Father, who takes away the sins of the world

Grant them rest, grant them rest

everlasting

everlasting

Rest”

 

Rather than me say much more, I would encourage you to listen to the song while meditating on the lyrics and those we have lost.  Though doing this may evoke emotion (don’t worry if it does or does not), I encourage you to do it anyway.  The emotion arises out of Love.  Remember, the song is a prayer – it connects us not only with those we love but with God who loves us and those we love.  It does all this simultaneously, which can be powerful. The intent is to honor the love we have for God and people AND the love God and people have for us.  Try it.

 

Question:  No question today – just an encouragement to spend some time connecting with your love for those you love but cannot see right now.

 

Prayer:  The song “Pie Jesu” is our prayer today.

 

Prayer Focus:  Pray for all you know who has lost someone this year.

 

Gregorian Monks - Pie Jesu

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PtxJUrJOLqI&feature=youtu.be