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By Buzz Trexler
for The (Maryville, TN) Daily Times, Sept.
13, 2003
When Christians think
of Simon Peter, visions of a salty, rough-and-tumble fisherman with a
penchant for putting foot in mouth come to mind. That image may be the
result of Hollywood portrayals, such as the 1959 classic "The Big
Fisherman," and preachers who fail to dig beneath the surface.
Then along comes author, theologian and songwriter Michael Card with
"A Fragile Stone," and that vision shatters into a million
stained-glass pieces. When called by Jesus, "the rock" is actually
quite soft.
True, Card says, Simon bar-Jonah was a fisherman by trade, and he was not
formally educated. Nonetheless, true to Jewish tradition, he would have
studied the Scriptures as a boy. And Simon would have had a strong Galilean
accent which, Card writes, "would have sounded harsh to the rest of the
people in Judea."
While those facts may not surprise some biblical students, consider
these:
ä Simon is mentioned almost 200 times in the New Testament, while the
"beloved" disciple John is mentioned only 31 times.
ä Despite Jesus having given Simon the new name "Peter," the
Messiah only once calls him by that name — in Luke 22:34.
ä When the disciples are listed, his name is always the first, and he is
the first confess to Jesus his sinful state.
ä He is also rebuked more often by Jesus than any other disciple.
Card’s research eventually painted a diverse musical portrait in the CD
"A Fragile Stone" and accompanying book by the same title.
What led him to dig into the apostle who is revered by Catholics as the
first pope and cherished by Protestants as "the rock?"
"Well, I was asked to teach a class on the book of Acts and I really
felt like I met him for the first time," Card recalled in a recent
telephone interview from his home just south of Nashville. "I’m so
much a Gospels guy and I made all of the assumptions that I think most
people make about Peter from the Gospels."
Card said the first 12 chapters of Acts revealed a new disciple to him.
"I saw a person that was a lot more emotionally complex than he was
given credit for and just got interested." A further study of the
disciple’s letters confirmed that "This is not the guy who just puts
his foot in his mouth the way he is presented."
The complexity is revealed in Simon Peter’s devotion to Jesus and the
knowledge of his sinfulness and betrayal. Consider the resurrection story
found in Mark 16, where Mary Magdalene, Mary and Salome are at the tomb and
are told by an angel, "go, tell his disciples and Peter."
"I think the ‘and Peter’ business in Mark is interesting,"
Card said, noting that the Gospel of Mark "is basically Peter’s
Gospel.
"Mark recorded and interviewed Peter to write that Gospel. So it’s
interesting in that only Mark gives that detail," Card said. "And
I think it speaks, first of all, how devastating his betrayal was because I
think part of what that ‘and Peter’ indicates is that Peter might have
believed that he had forfeited his ability to be a follower of Jesus
anymore. I mean, certainly, I would have."
Card believes it also speaks of a special relationship between Jesus and
Peter.
"I’m fairly adamant about the fact that if Jesus had a best friend
it was Peter," he said.
Irritating omission
The first resurrection appearance to a disciple was to Peter,
which is alluded to in Luke 24:34 and mentioned by Paul in 1
Corinthians 15:5; however, it is not recorded in any of the
Gospels, nor is the appearance to James — which
"mystifies" Card.
"I’m sort of irritated that the Gospel writers didn’t
put that in there," Card said. "But I wonder if maybe
the content of that appearance to Peter was so emotional and
perhaps so painful that none of them could bring themselves to
record it."
If Peter was, indeed, the "best friend" of Jesus, why
does John refer to himself as "the disciple whom Jesus
loved?"
"I think John is still a very humble person; I don’t
think he’s claiming any exclusivity by that (phrase)," Card
said, pointing out that "John doesn’t even sign his own
Gospel."
"I think what that (phrase) means is that — as we should
— John derived his identity from the fact that he was loved by
this man. ... John would encourage all of us to understand
ourselves that we’re the disciples that Jesus loved."
Card notes that John is the youngest disciple and that maybe
Jesus "loved up on John because he was the youngest. I mean,
John’s probably 12 or 13 years old — which is pretty amazing,
isn’t it?"
The future ‘rock’
Is it not possible, Card was asked, that Jesus viewed Simon not
in light of who he was when called into discipleship, but who he
could be once he answered the call and allowed the Savior to work
in his life?
"I think that’s whole point!" Card said, and then
he excitedly drives home that premise.
"I think that’s where people have gotten Peter wrong,
especially preachers who sort of present him as this person who
had all of these promising characteristics. I don’t think that
was it at all.
"Jesus didn’t call him ‘Peter’ because he was
strong. The title of the book tries to stress the fact that he is
a very emotionally fragile person and he is a person who clings to
his Judaism. Even after Jesus has declared all foods clean — you
know, the Cornelious affair — Peter is still keeping kosher even
though Jesus clearly had showed that he didn’t want him to
anymore.
"He is a person who very stubbornly clings to his
definition of the Messiah. Even when Jesus tells him he’s gonna
be crucified, Peter rebukes him and says, ‘No, that’s never
gonna happen to you,’ because that doesn’t go along with his
view."
Card said that when Jesus first sees Simon in Mark, he says,
"‘You are Simon; you will be — future tense
— the rock.’ And that didn’t happen for years."
That’s the way it was with the disciple, Card said.
"Most of the time Peter is with Jesus, Peter does not get
it."
"John will go far as to say Peter will see the empty tomb,
and walk away wondering to himself what had happened. It’s
amazing how he doesn’t get it — even when John does. John sees
the empty tomb and believes; Peter still doesn’t understand.
"We can only guess what emotional state he was in,"
Card said. "He probably experienced what you and I would
refer to as a nervous breakdown. So, where he is emotionally when
he sees the empty tomb, he clearly doesn’t remember yet that
Jesus had said he would be raised from the dead when other people
clearly remember that he had said that."
Simon was indeed a "fragile stone," but he was
destined to be "the rock" — a rock chiseled, shaped
and formed by faith. |
Liner notes ...
On the musical diversity in "A
Fragile Stone": "The
lyric dictates the music," Card said. "I think ‘Unveiled
Hope’ was big because Revelation sort of demanded that it be a
more grandiose kind of orchestral thing. The nature of someone
like Simon Peter, who’s agrarian — I mean clearly, he’s an
agrarian fisherman — that, to me, called for bluegrass and black
gospel and a smaller sort of scope.
"A lot of the old hymns, they
lend themselves to an acoustic sort of bluegrass. I have a whole
section in the concert where I play banjo and I do, ‘Just As I
Am,’ and ‘What Wondrous Love Is This,’ and two or three
songs. The banjo’s a great instrument for hymns."
Future project centers on laments: "Numerically,
there are more psalms of lament than any other type of psalm, and
that’s what got me on to it. You know, there is this huge
worship movement, yet there’s no lament. ... I’ll tell you
what happened, I have a good friend, Calvin Seerveld, and after
9/11 Calvin wrote me a letter and said, ‘Look, Christians have
no song to sing in response to that event. And that really moved
me. ... I mean, at the point where (Jesus) is the most used by God
is the point where he laments. ... So, I just realized, we don’t
understand much. We think we do, but we really don’t."
On the burgeoning praise and
worship genre: "I don’t
think it’s a revival, I think it’s a popular commercial
phenomenum." |