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Saturday, May 5, 2012

He was "Cut" and "Not Cut" Where it Mattered - But it Didn't Matter




We don’t know his name. We don’t know his name, but we know a few things about him.  He was an Ethiopian eunuch, a treasury official in the court of the Candace – the queen of Ethiopia, and he had gone to Jerusalem in order to worship. We don’t know his name but five times within this short little narrative[i] Luke refers to him as “the eunuch.” We don’t know his name but for now I’ll call him Ebed. [ii]

It seems strange that Ebed would have gone to Jerusalem to worship.  He probably wouldn’t have been allowed.  It’s not likely that he wouldn’t have been welcomed.  Nearly everything about him would have excluded him from that very exclusive and exclusionary worshipping community. 

He was, quite obviously, foreign. He was a gentile. He was one of the “uncircumcised.”[iii] And as such, he could enter only the very outermost courtyard of the temple (provided that he behaved himself in a respectful manner); but he would not have been allowed to proceed any further. A low wall marked with a placard warning that transgressors would be punished by death blocked the way. 

No foreigner is to go beyond the balustrade and the plaza of the temple zone! Whoever is caught doing so will himself to blame for his death which will follow!

Animals marked for sacrifice were sold in these outer courts, but gentile worshippers like Ebed would not have been allowed to lead these sacrificial animals to the altar. 

And not only was he an uncircumcised gentile, but he was a Eunuch (as Luke reminds again and again).  He’d been emasculated, probably just before puberty.  Eunuchs often served as officials within royal courts, especially trusted to serve within the women’s quarters because of their lack of libido. Because their physical condition (usually inflicted upon them without their consent) lowered their social status, they could be easily killed and replaced without consequence.  A trusted eunuch might attain a lofted position within the royal courts, but only so long as he remained useful and obedient. 

But eunuchs were specifically (and repeatedly) barred from temple worship. “If a man’s testicles are crushed or his penis is cut off, he may not be admitted to the assembly of the LORD.” [iv]
The first century Jewish historian, Flavius Josephus, had some pretty harsh words concerning the treatment of Eunuchs:
Let those that have made themselves eunuchs be had in detestation; and do you avoid any conversation with them who have deprived themselves of their manhood… let such be driven away, as if they had killed their children, since they beforehand have lost what should procure them; for evident it is, that while their soul is become effeminate, they have withal transfused that effeminacy to their body also.” [v]
Ebed had travelled some 1,200 miles (a journey that would have taken him about two months, even travelling in relative comfort and speed on a chariot, as he was) in order to worship the God of the Universe, but I have to wonder what his experience would have been once he arrived. Because he was both “uncut” (not circumcised) and “cut” (emasculated) he would have been cut off from the worshipping community.
Would he have been stared at? Would people have pointed at him? Would they have whispered about his dark skin, his strange accent?  Would they have bristled at his effeminate voice or pulled away in repugnance from his touch and his soft, un-calloused skin?
Or might Ebed have been welcomed (at least by some)? The torah of the Jews had pretty clear laws concerning the disbarment  of eunuchs from worship, yet within the tradition of the prophets came these words from God:

“Don’t let foreigners who commit themselves to the LORD say, ‘The LORD will never let me be part of his people.’ And don’t let the eunuchs say, ‘I’m a dried-up tree with no children and no future.’

For this is what the LORD says: I will bless those eunuchs who keep my Sabbath days holy and who choose to do what pleases me and commit their lives to me.

I will give them—within the walls of my house— a memorial and a name far greater than sons and daughters could give. For the name I give them is an everlasting one. It will never disappear!
[vi]
The Hebrew bible included much that would have led the Jews to welcome and to embrace gentiles and eunuchs in their worship, but it doesn’t seem likely that he would have been welcomed.[vii]
Ebed was now on his way home again, travelling by chariot back along the road that would take him through the desert regions between Israel and the African continent.  As he rode in the chariot along that deserted desert road, near the ruins of the city of Gaza (once a proud Philistine city, now a nearly empty desolation), Ebed was reading from the Hebrew bible – specifically from the prophet Isaiah.  I wonder if he was drawn to that particular prophet because of his conciliatory words for the gentile and the eunuch. 
He was reading from a Greek translation of the Hebrew bible:
“He was oppressed and treated harshly, yet he never said a word. He was led like a lamb to the slaughter. And as a sheep is silent before the shearers, he did not open his mouth.

Unjustly condemned, he was led away. No one cared that he died without descendants, that his life was cut short in midstream.
[viii]
These words come from passages about the “Suffering Servant” of Yahweh, but Ebed was having trouble understanding what he was reading.  Who was this oppressed servant?  Why had he been treated so harshly?  How could it be that no one cared that he died without the blessing and sign of God’s favor - descendants?  (Surely this was a point of concern for the eunuch Ebed….)
Ebed’s reverie was interrupted with a question: “Do you even understand what you’re reading there?”  The voice was breathless and panting.  Ebed looked up from the scroll and saw a man running alongside the chariot. This man was Philip the Evangelist[ix] who had been lead by an angelic spirit of the Lord to this wild and desolate place. 
Ebed answered his question with a question: “How can I understand it unless someone guides me?” And with that he invited Philip to join him in the chariot and the two of them poured over the words of the prophet.  Philip explained the words and interpreted them and “brought good Jesus news[x] to the Ethiopian eunuch.
And as they went along that desert road they came to some water. It was probably not a lush garden oasis, but a muddy and already evaporating water-hole.  Ebed ordered the chariot driver to halt the horses and then turned to Philip and said, “Look, water!  What is to prevent me from being baptized?”
Well – just about everything. By the commonly accepted standards of the religious worshipping community, Ebed - who was both “cut off” and not “cut” where it mattered - should have been cut off from the worship of God.  He should have been detested and avoided by the faithful.  Philip had contaminated himself by merely stepping into the chariot with this foreign eunuch. But none of this mattered to Philip on that dusty road. The two of them went down from the chariot to the water and Ebed was baptized by Philip.
For in Christ Jesus you are all sons of God, through faith.
For as many of you were baptized into Christ have put on Christ.
There is neither Jew nor [Ethiopian], there is neither [Eunuch nor virile father].
For you are all one in Christ Jesus.[xi]
The “good Jesus news” brought to the Ethiopian eunuch in that desert place was that the Kingdom of God welcomes those who have been oppressed, and those who have suffered.  The Kingdom of God embraces those who have been cut and cut off. The Kingdom of God is open to those who would have been shut out – precisely because the Christ, the Messiah himself was a suffering servant of Yahweh. He was led, like a silent lamb, to the slaughter.  He was unjustly condemned and has, by virtue of his perfect obedience as the suffering servant, taken all of our condemnation upon himself.
This is the “good Jesus news” that we all need to hear, and we all need to share.



[i] Acts 8: 26 – 40
[ii] Based on the Ethiopian eunuch who rescued the prophet Jeremiah (Jer. 38: 7 – 13)
[iii] It is possible that this Ethiopian Eunuch was Jewish but not certain.
[iv] Deuteronomy 23:1
[v] Flavius Josephus, The Works of Flavius Josephus, trans. William Whiston, 1905.
[vi] Isaiah 56:3-5
[vii] And this is not a slur against Jews in general.  The condemnation is equally applied to many Christian congregations as well.
[viii] Isaiah 53:7-8 (NLT) The NIV also translates verse 8 with reference to progeny.
[ix] Not to be confused with Philip the Apostle of the Gospels.  The Evangelist Philip was one of seven chosen to be the first deacons of the Church (Acts 6).
[xi] A slight paraphrase of Galatians 3: 26 – 28 for this occaision.

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