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St. Matthew's United Methodist Church 14900 Annapolis Road, Bowie, MD 20715 (301) 262-1408 |
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"When Being Correct Prevents Mission" Sermon Preached By Rev. Richard E. Stetler - August, 31, 2003 James 1:17-27; Mark 7:1-8, 14-19
Our laws are a very powerful tool that society uses to maintain order
and establish boundaries for our citizens. When laws are obeyed,
everyone gets along as we experience the fruits that our common
freedoms give us. Laws
also prevent the ambitions or self-interests of certain individuals
from engaging in activities that would put others at risk or take away
our freedoms.
In addition, many individuals in our society have joined the
ranks of our respective police departments to see that the laws of our
municipalities are obeyed. There
have been occasions when we have listened to the oath of public office
being administered by a judge where dignitaries are being sworn in to
uphold the Constitution of these United States.
In today's lesson, Jesus became the target of ridicule because
the Teachers of the Law found him and his disciples out of compliance
with laws by which the Jews had lived for centuries.
Mark records, "They noticed that some of his disciples
were eating their food with hands that were ritually unclean."
The Jews were brilliant. Whatever else we may think about this
illiterate, agricultural-based society, their customs of personal
hygiene were bar coded on its citizenry. These rituals were put
in place thousands of years before there was any knowledge of
bacteria. The Jews instinctively understood that when their hands and
food were washed before eating, people tended to stay healthy. These
habits of cleanliness carried over to washing their eating utensils
and cookware. They
intuitively knew what we know today.
After being confronted by the authorities, Jesus rose to the
occasion by addressing these Teachers of the Law with a quote from the
Prophet Isaiah. The words
I am going to give you are actually from Isaiah, not from Jesus: The
Lord said, 'These people claim to worship me, but their words are
meaningless, and their hearts are somewhere else.
Their religion is nothing more than human rules and traditions
which they have simply memorized.'
(Isaiah 29:13) Jesus
then gave the passage deeper meaning by including in God's statement
some of his own words, ". . . they teach human rules as though
they were my laws!" Laws can liberate us and they can also prevent us from revealing who we have been called to be -- representatives of God's Kingdom here on earth. Do we truly understand the significance of what our identity is to look like every day?
Some years ago, I was working for the Agency for International
Development as a Summer Intern. A
group of us was given the enormous responsibility of compiling the
results of an intra-agency survey.
Material was coming in from field offices all over the world.
While the purpose of the inquiry was never clearly stated, most
of us believed that AID was engaging in damage control from the public's
outcry, an outcry stimulated by the release in paperback of Burdick and
Lederer's 1958 best seller, The Ugly American.
There were two other interns working near our cubicles who were
very gifted Ivy League college students.
We approached them to help us with the compilation of the survey
results. I will never
forget the scene. Both of
them were sitting at their desks; one was drinking coffee with his nose
buried in Business Week. The
other was reading the Wall Street Journal.
I asked the two if they would help us compile this data.
The one lowered his newspaper, looked over his glasses and said,
"No can do, Dick! Your
request is not part of our job description."
We hear such words too often in the workplace.
While such a statement is correct, it also may reveal the spirit
of the one speaking.
Both of them were destined to become attorneys, and I am sure
that wherever they are, they are good ones.
They were well within their rights to say what they did.
They were correct! But
they missed an opportunity to make a difference in the lives of seven of
their "friends" who were on the same GS-7 grade level.
Another example of strict obedience to the law was given voice by
a colleague. He received a request from a couple in his church to
perform a baptism for their four month old grandson. The circumstances
were these: The couple with
the baby had moved to Austin, Texas.
The in-laws of the couple with the newborn lived in the
Washington area. They were
going to coordinate their gathering around a time when the couple could
fly in for Thanksgiving or sometime between Christmas and New Year's
Day, whichever would be more convenient for the pastor.
The grandparents were shocked to hear the minister's response.
He refused to perform the baptism. His explanation was perfectly
correct and well within his authority.
He said that his beliefs are quite strong that children must
be baptized in the church where the congregation will surround them with
love and support. The
grandparents of the child reminded him of the obvious.
They said, "It wouldn't make any sense to fly 37 people to
Austin to experience an eight minute baptism."
The minister became agitated when they questioned his integrity
and authority as the pastor. These
grandparents, seeking a favor from their pastor, had been in the church
for over 35 years. All
their children had grown up in the church.
Still, their minister was not willing to compromise. Literally
heart sick, the family left the church and vowed to stay away until a
new minister was appointed. They
found someone else who would perform the baptism in their home. Who
are we called to be, servants of the people or custodians of "the
laws" which govern our beliefs?
As we return to our lesson, Jesus called together all those who
were witnessing his verbal exchange with the Teachers of the Law and
said, "Let me add something to your understanding. There is nothing
that goes into you from the outside which can make you ritually
unclean. Rather, it is what
comes out of you that makes you unclean." (v. 15)
This teaching obviously shocked even Jesus' own disciples.
We learn this from what happens next. Jesus and his disciples
left the gathering and entered someone's home.
When they got inside the disciples began to question Jesus about
this teaching.
We get a rare look at the way Jesus' processed their lack of
insight when we read the following verse.
He said to his disciples, You
are more intelligent than the others.
Why do you find this so difficult to understand?
Nothing that goes into you from the outside can really make you
unclean because it does not go into your heart, but into your
stomach and then it goes on out of the body." (v. 18-19) Again, it
is what comes out of you that makes you unclean.
Let us consider this understanding in light of what happened this
past week. We have witnessed another episode that dealt with a Court's
interpretation of the separation of Church and State. The Chief Justice
of the Alabama Supreme Court failed to follow through on a mandate from
a Federal Court. We watched
as the huge chunk of granite containing the relief of the Ten
Commandments was removed from its prominent place in the foyer of the
State Supreme Court and placed in a room away from public view.
We have read the editorials in our newspapers and over the
Internet regarding the truth behind the separation of Church and
State, and how our Founding Fathers never intended such a rigid
interpretation when they framed the Constitution.
We have heard the disgust from zealous defenders of the faith
about what is happening to our country with prayer officially being
removed from public schools and with minority faiths appearing to
dictate to the majority that religious symbols must be removed from
Federal or State property because they are offensive to their religious
beliefs.
We American Christians really know how to ventilate our,
"I've had it!" attitudes.
It should strike us as being odd that God becomes an all
important "war cry" during a time when our beliefs appear
threatened. There are times we feel perfectly justified and we allow
our righteous indignation to bring our emotions to a boiling point. Was
it not this motivation that caused the Apostle Peter to brandish a sword
in the garden on the night Jesus was taken prisoner? Who
are we when our words are defiant and bitter?
Who are we when our cause is "just" and we dispense
verbal swords from our mouths?
How quickly our selective memory no longer recalls the voice in
our lesson this morning which said, "It is what comes out of you
that makes you unclean." We forget the teaching of Paul when he wrote, "But the
Spirit produces love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness,
faithfulness, humility, and self control.
There is no law against such things as these. (Gal. 5:22f)
Are we angry because a granite slab containing the Ten
Commandments was removed from the courthouse foyer, or are we angry
because other people used the laws of our land to have it removed? A
further question, if the Appeal's Court ruling had prevailed and the Ten
Commandments had been permitted to stay where they were, would the
people of Alabama or all believers in America
have become more attentive and obedient in honoring that ancient
law code with how they live?
God had something unique to say about the law.
Jeremiah has God say these words, "The new covenant that I
will make with my people will be this:
I will put my law within them and write it on their hearts.
I will be their God, and they will be my people." (Jer.
31:33) As Jesus said,
"It is what comes out of you that makes you unclean." When a cup is shaken and it spills, what comes out of it is
its contents.
We forget that we walk in a land of constant change.
Chaos swirls around us. We
are inconvenienced. Our electricity fails for days. Our tire may flatten
during rush hour on a road with no shoulders.
We may be required to sit six hours in the waiting area of the
hospital's emergency room. We
may become agitated when the chef takes a long time to prepare our meal
when our restaurant of choice has four stars connected to its name.
A still small voice whispers, "It is what comes out of you
that makes you unclean." Are
we committed enough to the Kingdom life to remember these words?
Or, are we more inclined to mirror the responses of those around
us? Suppose Jesus made an observation of those gathered on the
Alabama courthouse steps, "You are more intelligent than the
others, and yet you still not
understand this teaching? You claim to be my followers, my disciples,
yet, do you still fall victim to the games people play and the tests of
your faith that life brings to you."
Jesus was not attacking or belittling the value of laws,
particularly laws that were long standing in his culture.
He was merely teaching his listeners that observing the law is
not what puts anyone in harmony with God. There are many people who
make a point of being correct in all that they do, and there are others
whose quality of life radiates a message that far exceeds what the law
requires. We have to decide which one we have been called to be.
We will always have controversies.
We will always experience others who hold different points of
view. There will be times when no one supports our position.
There will be moments when justice is absent.
Jesus faced all of these circumstances during his final week on
earth. THE CONGREGATIONAL PRAYER We cannot live
through a single day, O God, without being surrounded by blessings that
touch every aspect of our lives. Yet
we realize how easily we allow discouragement to prevent our recognizing
them. We forget that there
are no failures; there are only results from how we think.
Jesus taught us that we can change, yet how often we cling to old
ways of perceiving. We have
our own unique qualities to share yet often we envy how others are using
theirs. We were invited to
live with kind and caring attitudes, yet we allow the wisdom of
our unchallenged fears to govern what comes out of us. Free us, O God, from all that clouds the spirit we wish to
display. Lead us to become
adventurers, discoverers and more wholesome creators as we seek to make
your kingdom more visible to others.
Amen. THE PASTORAL PRAYER Merciful God, we
invited you into our minds and hearts during these all too brief moments
together. Sometimes it
takes an experience like this one to focus our attention on what is
timeless, still and capable of nourishing to our spirits.
There are moments when we lose our center. We make hasty judgments we later regret.
We allow minor inconveniences to flavor the chemistry of the rest
of our entire day. We have
a difficult time hiding the fact that we have favorite people at work
and others who would bring joy to us if we never saw them again.
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