First Presbyterian Church, East Moline, IL
March 1, 2026, Lent 2A
Facing the Snake
I don't think most people have much fun waking up in the morning and finding out that their country has gone to war with another country. I suppose some do, but those are probably people you don't want to be around if you can possibly avoid it.
In reckoning with where we are and how we got here, whether we are speaking of a nation or a church or anything in between, there is some pretty unpleasant business that must be carried out before any kind of repair can begin. And that is demonstrated quite clearly in this odd-looking (and possibly offensive for some readers) account from the book of Numbers, the fourth of five books of the Pentateuch, the books that sit at the head of the Hebrew scriptures as found in our Christian Bibles.
Of course, a little background is in order. We find the Hebrew people on their journey through Sinai, having been unable to gain passage through the land of Edom and seeing a way around that region. As happened more than a few times during these wanderings, the people lost their patience and began to complain, both against Moses and against God. You know that on some level they are complaining just to complain, since one of their chief complaints seems to be that there was no food and the food was terrible. When you can’t even be logically consistent, you’re frankly just trying to be a jerk. But it should be noted that in the four previous examples of such complainings in Numbers, the grumbling had been directed specifically at Moses; this is the first time the Israelites complained against God as well. As we'll see, God was having none of it.
At this provocation, poisonous snakes got loose among the Israelites, and many of them (the Israelites, not the snakes) died while others were suffering great pain. Somehow this provoked an outcry of confession among the people, and they pleaded with their terrible awful no-good leader Moses to plead for their lives before terrible awful no-good God. Their terrible awful no-good leader Moses did exactly that, and God gave Moses a curious instruction: make a replica of one of the serpents and put it up on a pole, and the people who were bitten by the real serpents would be able to look at the fake serpent and avoid dying from their wounds.
This sounds like borderline idolatry, and in fact there is some evidence that the bronze snake did in fact become something of an idol for the Israelites; in 1 Kings 8 the king named Hezekiah ordered that the snake (that apparently had been preserved ever since that exodus) had become an object of adoration or maybe even worship; in other words, an idol.
But in fact, in the immediate moment in Numbers, it works as the opposite of an idol. In order for their lives to be spared, the people would have to look directly at the snake, the physical manifestation of the consequences of their sin, without flinching or looking away. You either confronted the wrong you had done and its consequences, as represented by that bronze snake, or you died, rather painfully at that. You could not help but be reminded of the sin you had committed and the painful consequences of that sin – not only for yourself, but for others.
This same basic pattern is continued on a far grander scale in the reading from John 3. Yes, verses 14-15 are directly referring to this account from Numbers, invoking the bronze serpent that Moses lifted up in the wilderness as a forerunner of "the Son of Man" being lifted up; it would be hard for John's readers not to draw the parallel to the "lifting up" of Jesus at his crucifixion. It is here in this gospel, however, that this "lifting up" is directly tied, not to any retribution or punishment, but to nothing less than the love of God. While it is verse 16 of this chapter that gets all the attention, perhaps even more necessary is the following verse: "Indeed, God did not send the Son into the world to condemn the world, but in order that the world might be saved through him."
Even so, Jesus being "lifted up" on the cross still resonates with the Numbers account. Jesus being lifted up on the cross is an act of redemption, yes, but it also confronts the world with the horrid and horrible consequences of human sin. It's probably not an accident that the Son of God in human flesh was put to death in one of the most grisly and horrifying ways humanity has invented to kill humans. (Not surprisingly it took the Roman Empire to introduce that horror to the world at large.) To confront that horror and to know it is we human beings who sinned so continually and unrepentantly that Jesus experienced this, inevitably, is a breaking point. In the face of such horror one either is driven to repentance - not just confession, but repentance, the turning away from the sin that had held us in its grip - or one flees from that confession and repentance, turning and running farther and farther away from the redeeming God.
Whether it be nation or church, we inevitably have to face the snake, so to speak - to look unflinchingly at not just our sin, but the consequences of it. On the broader national level, it involves the horrors of such things as the driving of Native Americans off their lands, the internment of Japanese-Americans at the outset of World War II, and of course the enslavement of captured Africans up to the Civil War and the unending violence visited upon them in the decades since.
This past Friday night I had the unexpected opportunity to hear a second time a musical work commissioned to mark the 100th anniversary of the Tulsa Race Massacre in 1921. (Curious: how many of you have heard of that event?) By that year the business district of the African-American population of Tulsa was so wildly successful it had acquired the nickname "Black Wall Street." A violent attack on that neighborhood and community on May 31 and June 1 left at minimum 39 dead, with potentially hundreds of others killed and thousands wounded, with 10,000 homes destroyed. As late as last fall a new search found 80 unmarked graves likely containing victims of the massacre. And for all that, for way too many Americans, their first exposure to that attach was when it was used as a plot point in the HBO series Watchmen.
Awful as they are, we must see these horrors and know them as the consequence of our sinfulness as a nation, and even as a church as well, which too often saw such racist violence and chose to "let it slide." We must see it and know it. We must face the snake, because if we do not face the snake, the snake will continue to bite, and we will continue to die.
Thanks be to God. Amen.
Hymns (from Glory to God: The Presbyterian Hymnal unless otherwise noted): #645, Sing Praise to God, Who Reigns Above; #---, When Israel's people fell away; #526, Let Us Talents and Tongues Employ; #12, Immortal, Invisible, God Only Wise





