Blessed are those who hunger and thirst
after righteousness, for they will be filled.
Sermon manuscript for Green Lake Church of Seventh-day
Adventists
Sabbath, March 2, 2013
Comments welcome, especially if they come in before 8 a.m. on March 2.
Fourth in a series
Blessed
are the poor in spirit, For theirs is the kingdom of heaven.
Blessed
are those who mourn, For they shall be comforted.
Blessed are the meek, For they shall inherit the earth.
Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for
righteousness, For they shall be filled.
Blessed are the merciful, For they shall obtain mercy.
Blessed are the pure in heart, For they shall see God.
Blessed are the peacemakers, For they shall be called
sons of God
Blessed are those who are persecuted for righteousness sake, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.
These blessings, The Beatitudes," are recorded in the Gospel of Matthew as
the beginning of the “Sermon on the Mount,” the most famous
collection of the sayings of Jesus. This “sermon” has been a
primary source for Christian visionaries, humanists and radicals
for at least 1800 years.
Sometimes hunger is funny.
This fall I got back home from a two
day hike. I had miscalculated the food needed for the trip, so when I
got home I was seriously starved. The first thing I did, before
taking a shower, before unloading the car was to make a sandwich. As
I was carrying it to the table I was overcome with dizziness. I
managed to sit down and put my head on the table. After a minute, I
lifted my head enough to get a bite of food in, then put my head back
on the table to chew. I repeated this process until I finished my
sandwich.
I was glad Karin wasn't home. She would
have given a me scolding. Why didn't I take more food? I thought it
was funny. I live in a society where food is readily available. I was
sitting in a kitchen full of food, and I was fainting from hunger.
There are others here who have had similar experiences: you have run
out of gas while running a marathon, you have failed to carry enough
food for a long hike. Hunger ambushes you. You get dizzy. You faint.
Someone gives you a granola bar or some goo and you revive.
These kinds of hunger stories are
entertaining. In fact, among skinny trail runners, this kind of story
is part of the swagger. This kind of hunger is funny.
Then there is another kind of hunger.
Soul-bending, ugly hunger.
I recently starting reading Les
Miserable, the novel by Victor Hugo. The central figure in the is a hardened convict. A man who has spent nineteen years under the lash
in the prison galleys of the French navy.
How did he get there? Hunger.
Bone-gnawing, heart-crushing hunger. There is nothing funny about
this kind of hunger.
Jean Valjean had lived with his widowed sister
and her gaggle of kids who are perpetually hungry. Starving kids, for
whom a bit of bread is a superlative luxury. His sister was eaten not
only by the miserable emptiness in her own belly but by her inability
to feed her children. And Jean Valjean? He worked day and night, at
any job he could find. Was paid a pittance, Walmart wages in a BMW society. It was never enough. He
lived with perpetual economic impotence. Until one day, driven by
rage against the hunger—his hunger, the kids' hunger, his sister's
hunger—he steals a loaf of bread. And for stealing a loaf of bread he is
sentenced to five years in the galleys which stretches out into nineteen.
In Hugo's story hunger is never
comical. It is never the transitory difficulty experienced by skinny
hikers and runners. It is an ugly, excruciating emptiness. A desperate lack
of sustenance that puts life itself in question.
This is the kind of hunger Jesus had in
mind when he said, Blessed are those who hunger and thirst after
righteousness, for they will be filled.
In Jesus' world if a laborer didn't find
work today, he didn't eat today. His wife didn't eat today. His
children didn't eat today. The 99 percent in Jesus' day were not
obese. They weren't even near their “ideal weight.” They were
stringy, scrawny people, like the pictures you see of Chinese
laborers a hundred years ago. Like rickshaw pullers whose arms and
legs were as skinny as the spokes of the rickshaw wheels.
Jesus' audience knew hunger. Real
hunger. Soul-bending hunger. They knew what it meant to put kids to
bed at night who were whimpering with hunger. Hunger in their world
was not funny. It was this ugly, biting hunger Jesus had in mind when
he said, Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteous for
they will be filled.
When you are hungry for righteousness,
you are keenly aware of your lack of your righteousness, your need
for more righteousness. Your awareness of your unrighteousness eats
at you, gnaws on you. It's pretty easy to translate that sense of
deficiency into a sense of condemnation. The distance between the
ideal and your performance is a measure of God's disapproval. Your awareness of your deficiency feeds a sense of shame.
Jesus spoke to this natural sense of condemnation and shame when he said, Blessed are those who hunger and
thirst—who feel their lack of—righteousness. Blessed. God is not
screaming at you for your failure to achieve. He is not smirking.
He's not shaking his head and saying scornfully, “Again?”
According to Jesus, God notices our hunger, our ache for doing
better, and God's word in response is, “Blessed.” God says, “I'm
rooting for you. You can do it. We can do it. It's going to happen.
Give it another go.”
Alcohol has dominated Bob's life for
decades. He has gone through detox repeatedly. Through rehab. He has
joined AA. He has prayed. Then proceeded to betray friends, ruin
romances, destroy his employment with drinking. More than once he has
stood up in church to ask us pray for him. “I just got out of detox
yesterday, pray that I will remain clean and sober.” Or, “I'm
going into detox on Monday, please pray.”
Bob was desperately hungry for wholeness. This hunger started early in his life. And the impossibility of filling that hunger was also set early in his life, in the pervasive alcoholism of his parents and aunts and uncles and cousins and neighbors. It was probably written into his genes.
Bob was a gentle soul. Loved his dog and cat. Cared about people. He dreamed of serving people, of doing them good. It was an illusive dream. It was a hunger always blocked by his fatal weakness and the tyranny of alcohol.
When I would sit with Bob and his friends in their dilapidated house, I find myself wondering, does God notice? Is God watching?Bob was desperately hungry for wholeness. This hunger started early in his life. And the impossibility of filling that hunger was also set early in his life, in the pervasive alcoholism of his parents and aunts and uncles and cousins and neighbors. It was probably written into his genes.
Bob was a gentle soul. Loved his dog and cat. Cared about people. He dreamed of serving people, of doing them good. It was an illusive dream. It was a hunger always blocked by his fatal weakness and the tyranny of alcohol.
Jesus insists, yes, God is watching. And his word to people like Bob, to people who are desperately hungry for an elusive righteousness, an unavailable well-being, is Blessing. Blessed are those who hunger and thirst after righteousness, they will be filled.
Blessed. Not
screamed at by God. Affirmed by God. Not scorned, not condemned, not
rejected. Blessed.
Further, God's promise is, “You will
be filled.” Bob's hunger would not forever eat his soul. Bob was
not consigned to eternal failure. In this world, for Bob, alcohol
will always be a deadly threat. Bob would like to enjoy the freedom
to casually, freely, comfortably say no to the urge to drink. Given
his personal and genetic history, that's not going to happen. Not in this world. Only in a different world, with a brain transformation not
imaginable here, can Bob enjoy that freedom. Jesus promised it would
happen. A world where Bob will be different, where he will no longer
be tormented by hunger that cannot be satisfied, hunger for an
unreachable wholeness, an unattainable righteousness.
Jesus words are a special gift to
people who struggle against the tyranny of addiction.
In contrast to Bob, who was fairly open
about his struggles, William's hunger was deeply hidden. He first
experienced drugs in his teen years—that was in the late sixties.
In college he experienced a dramatic conversion. Along with others he
led in a revival that swept Adventist college campuses. People were transformed, the course of their lives changed. People became ministers and teachers as a result of the power of God evident in William's ministry. He went to
seminary where he demonstrated brilliant theological acumen,
graduating magna cum laude. He was a dearly loved pastor before
deciding to leave the clergy and take medicine. He became an admired,
beloved physician.
Publicly through all those years of
seminary, pastoring, medical school and medical practice, drug use
merely part of his pre-conversion story. In
reality, they had never let go of him. For decades, they secretly pleasured him, tormented him, and eventually ruined him.
To people like William Jesus said,
Blessed are those who desperately long for holiness, honesty,
self-control. They will be filled. Blessed, not cursed.
Some of us here this morning live with
aching hunger for a righteousness that eludes us. Maybe we're
battling an addiction. Maybe we coping with a profound sense of never
being good enough. We learned in Bible class or from some preacher
that the only acceptable standard for “these last days” is
perfection. And we are not yet perfect. Our hunger for righteousness
torments us. We experience our hunger as a measure of our
condemnation or as a measure of our shame.
We imagine God watching our performance
and scowling. Our flaws are blocking God's work in the world. We are
responsible for the delay of the Second Coming. Our sense of
inadequacy and failure is overwhelming. It crushes our spirits. We
long to be better, to do better.
Jesus says to you: Blessed are those
who hunger and thirst after righteousness, they will be filled.
God is not scolding you. God is not
screaming at you in frustration. God is not shaming you. God notices
your hunger and pronounces blessing. He offers hope. You will be
filled.
Bob and William have found partial
satisfaction of their hunger even in this life. The last time I
talked with Bob he had been clean and sober for two, going on three,
years. William has been clean and sober for three or four years. Both
men live on the edge of relapse. The ultimate fulfillment
satisfaction of their hunger is beyond this world, in a place where
there is no more sin, no more weakness, no more dealers. Still, they
are experiencing some measure of satisfaction. That is sweet.
It's easy to pronounce a blessing on
those who have attained righteousness. If we had heard Bob or William
tell of their victory over alcohol or drugs twenty or thirty years
ago, we would have cheered. What a wonderful demonstration of the
power of God to change lives!
Would we have been as boisterous and
thrilled if we had know that the victory was temporary? Jesus calls
us to celebrate the hunger for righteousness even if we do not see it
satisfied. The challenge for us as disciples of Jesus is to set aside
our natural instinct to condemn those who fail to realize their
ideals and join Jesus in pronouncing blessing.
We should bless those who dream of
triumphing over addictions. We should bless those who hunger for more
control over their tongue. My guess is that there is more than one
person here who is secretly ashamed of there inability to make their
speech unfailingly courteous. How many times have you regretted your
sharp words? You blow it. You speak sharply to your kids or your
spouse or your employees. Then your conscience pricks you. You find
yourself hungry for a sweeter tongue.
Jesus does not scold you for your
failure. He blesses your for waking up and realizing that God's call
is higher.
Let's be crystal clear, righteousness
is worthy of our hunger. It is foolish and tragic to deal with the
distance between our performance and our ideals by lowering our
ideals.
When I was sitting at the kitchen
table, faint from hunger, unable to hold my head up. The remedy was
to shove food in my face whichever way I could. It would also be
silly not to learn something from that fainting spell. Next time I
will take more food. Our goal is not to deny our hunger but to satisfy it
with good things.
Jesus blessed those who were tormented
by hunger for righteousness. He assured them they were under the
smile of God. He encouraged them in their pursuit of righteousness.
And he urged them to keep that hunger alive.
So we come to church to encourage one
another in our own pursuits of righteousness. Especially to those of
you who think of yourselves as young, I challenge you to be satisfied
with nothing less than righteousness.
Earn your degrees. Master your athletic
skills. Become an expert in your field. Cultivate social skills.
Build your networks. Those are all worthy goals. Above them all is
the goal of righteousness. Integrity. Compassion. Self-control.
Honesty. Generosity. A commitment to human well-being that goes
beyond your family's standard of living.
If you are not now hungry for
righteousness, if you find yourself quite satisfied, then maybe it's
time for you to trying running a longer race, climbing a higher
mountain. Dream of making a bigger difference in the world.
When we are aware of a distance between
our performance and the ideal toward which we strive, Jesus' blessing
sets us free from shame and condemnation. Jesus' blessing frees us to
devote all of our energy to seeking to satisfy our hunger with the
very best—righteousness, a life shaped by the teachings and example
of Jesus.
Blessed are those who hunger and thirst
for righteousness. They will be filled. God will be pleased.
HERMEUTICAL NOTE:
In the Gospel of Matthew, righteousness
means doing right, goodness, nobility, integrity, wholeness,
spiritual and social well-being. The Pauline/Augustinian/Reformed
notion of righteousness as “divine approval” is derived from the
earlier and more fundamental definition of righteousness as doing
right. In this view, God grants people his approval—i.e. counts
them as righteous—on the basis of their spiritual connection with
Jesus who was the supreme right-doer, the ultimate exemplar of
goodness, nobility, integrity, wholeness, spiritual and social
well-being.
Matthew presents many pictures of God's
grace, the most dramatic of which is the first beatitude. He also
vividly pictures the righteous life—that is a life lived according
to the will of God—as the ideal for those who wished to participate
in his kingdom. Jesus aims to move people toward a new, holy way of
life. This is illustrated in the story of the call of Matthew the Tax
Collector.
As Jesus was
walking along, he saw a man named Matthew sitting at his tax
collector's booth. "Follow me and be my disciple," Jesus
said to him. So Matthew got up and followed him. Later, Matthew
invited Jesus and his disciples to his home as dinner guests, along
with many tax collectors and other disreputable sinners. But when the
Pharisees saw this, they asked his disciples, "Why does your
teacher eat with such scum?” When Jesus heard this, he said,
"Healthy people don't need a doctor—sick people do." Then
he added, "Now go and learn the meaning of this Scripture: 'I
want you to show mercy, not offer sacrifices.' For I have come to
call not the righteous, but sinners." Matthew 9:9-13
Jesus looked at human brokenness and
said that's what I'm here for. I'm a physician. My job is healing.
And Jesus fully intends to succeed as a healer. He intends to move
people from wherever they are in the realm of sin and darkness into
the pattern of life he has mapped out for the children of light.
Jesus is a teacher who expects his students to learn.
5 comments:
Thank you.
It seems to me that there is also a sense of "hunger for righteousness" in desiring a family - church - community where concern for others and concern for relationship with God is the norm rather than the exception. ...Maybe also the sense that one is in harmony with God. I know there are times when people are "righteous" but God seems far away - like Jesus on the cross.
It has also been my experience that, when my heart longs for such, people around me consider that an undesirable emotional thing that shows me being weak and illogical. I am glad that David wrote his heart desired God as a hart (deer) pants for water.
Thanks. Yes, Karin SHOULD have given you a talking to... ;-) She is a saint! Happy Sabbath to you all.
I am sitting here thinking.... Your friend Bob was not too much different than my ex. To love someone chained to addictive thinking and actions is ... well, it is hell. Is it "hungering for righteousness" to plead with God that He break that bondage, whatever it is - maybe abuse, neglect, abandonment as a child? - I know that my ex's past was very broken. I also know that he had previously had a pretty serious closed head injury.... and the drugs and alcohol may have already done some brain damage?
Is it hungering for righteousness to have prayed and looked for a church that would have gotten beyond "traditional" theology and practice and had taken time to "see" the problems and understand how best to intervene - rather than be co-dependent with him? Is it maybe another kind of "hungering for righteousness" for me to have continually pleaded with God for someone to help me and my small children to know how to deal with such brokenness and craziness?
Is it "hungering for righteousness" to want Jesus to come back and make everything OK again? No matter how "good" I could ever have been - it would not have made a difference for my ex. He needed something more than MY "goodness".
When I was first in college, western psychology had the concept that a person could work on HIS issues independent of the world around him. Theology had the idea that a person could be "saved" & "righteous" independent of the world around him. But, when I was at Andrews U, on professor (George Knight?) said the Hebrews considered that people were saved in groups. Maybe there is a need for us collectively reject complacency and Pollyanna religion and seek to understand how to minister to people like my ex - and Bob - and all the others who wrestle with demons, darkness and bondage.
...Just some thoughts. Looking forward to reading your final draft. ;-)
Hey John,
I just wanted to express my deep appreciation for the following quote in your sermon:
God is not screaming at you for your failure to achieve. He is not smirking. He's not shaking his head and saying scornfully, “Again?” According to Jesus, God notices our hunger, our ache for doing better, and God's word in response is, “Blessed.” God says, “I'm rooting for you. You can do it. We can do it. It's going to happen. Give it another go.”
What an awesome way of putting it. I was blessed!
Thank you John. i read your sermons and reflect on them especially since there are many Sabbaths that my health takes precedence over going to church. This sermon I like, it comforts me. I can feel God laying His hand on me and comforting me that even though I hunger for Him that the hunger of my physical body for rest is okay. He knows that I haven't walked away from Him. I am enjoying this series. You are pointing things about the beatitudes that I had never thought of. Such soul comforting perspectives. I don't think I will look at them the in the same black and white view that I used to hold and was taught. Thank You for sharing this.
First and foremost, I want to express the joy and inspiration of having the words I've heard since preschool take on an expanded meaning that challenges my thinking and is translating into making a difference in how I talk to those in my sphere who are open to Biblical discussion. I wonder now that if these "blessings" were seen as "virtues" to be attained - it could be fodder for legalists to have another list to strive toward. I also appreciate the hermeneutical underpinnings. I am not a theologian but a serious lay student of the Bible - and I have already been relieved of certain long-held, unreachable, and distorted ideas without sacrificing any of my core belief system. My oldest son earlier this evening, in less than a minute had me into the "comment" area. As I soak up and begin to implement what I'm hearing, I can feel "guilt" loosening and "hope" reviving. That's no small feat for a life-long Adventist.
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