Preliminary sermon manuscript for Green Lake Church of Seventh-day Adventists
For Sabbath, March 16, 2013
This is part of a series on the Beatitudes. I'll post a revised version tomorrow morning.
Jesus was on vacation. To get away from
the crowds, he left the Jewish region of Palestine and headed north
into what is today Lebanon. Up into the neighborhood of the
Mediterranean coast city of Sidon. It must have been a wonderful
release. Just Jesus and the twelve. Talking, processing, sitting
around, for a few days away from the incessant pressure of the
crowds. Time to eat. Time to sleep. Time to think.
One afternoon when they leave the place
where they were staying, a woman starts following them, calling out,
“Sir! Sir! Son of David! Master! Have mercy on me! My daughter is
haunted by demons. She's possessed and is horribly tormented. Please
have mercy.”
The disciples are peeved. How did she
figure out who they were? But Jesus is on vacation. It's like his
cell phone rings. He looks at caller ID. He doesn't recognize the
number. He lets it go to voice mail. His phone rings again. It's the
same number. He sends it to voice mail. The phone rings again.
Of course, they didn't have cell phones
in those days, so the woman uses direct voice. “Sir! Sir! Master!
Have mercy. Demons are tormenting my daughter. Please help!”
Jesus ignores her. The disciples are
gratefully surprised by that. But it doesn't work. She keeps calling.
She keeps following. They stop for tea at a restaurant. She waits
outside. When Jesus and the Twelve come out, she calls out again.
“Sir! Have mercy!” The men walk away, carefully ignoring her. She
stubbornly follows, calling, “Sir, have mercy!”
The disciples are annoyed. “Jesus,”
they insist, “send her away. She's driving us crazy. Jesus, do
something.”
So Jesus finally turns and for the
first time acknowledges the woman's existence. “Look lady. God gave
me a specific commission to serve his lost sheep—the Jewish
people.” The disciples are thrilled. Jesus validates their
self-understanding, and completely out of character for him, he is
getting rid of someone.
The woman understood what Jesus was
saying. The Jewish people were God's remnant people. They were the
true people of God, the flock of God as the prophets put it. The Jews
were the guardians of God's truth, the heirs of God's pioneers,
Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. They had the true prophet, Moses. Judaism
as a religion was well-known throughout the Middle East at that era.
Jewish missionaries went everywhere teaching people the special
truths that were their spiritual heritage. When Jesus said, “My
mission is the lost sheep of the house of Israel,” the woman knew
exactly what he meant: She was not his responsibility.
What did she do?
Since he had noticed her, she came
right up to him, fell at his feet and begged, “Sir, help me.”
Jesus was tough. This mother was
desperate. Her daughter's life had been ruined, devastated by some
kind of on-going, chronic demonic action. This mother had tried
every remedy available in her world. She had been to priests at
temples. She had visited old women in back alleys who were famous for
potions and charms. She had prayed and offered sacrifices. Nothing
had worked. Her husband had left her, unable to cope with the chaos
their daughter created.
She knew she had no claim on Jesus.
Jesus didn't owe her anything. But she wasn't asking for something
Jesus owed her. She was asking for what she needed. “Sir. Help me.
Have mercy.”
Jesus still gave every appearance of
tough-minded commitment to his God-given mission to the Jewish
people. “Woman,” Jesus said. “It would be inappropriate to take
the children's food and feed it to the dogs.”
Again the woman understood perfectly.
The attitudes of patriotic and fundamentalist Jews toward people like
her—outsiders, single moms, pagans, losers—were notorious.
Conservative Jewish people saw themselves as the royal children of
the divine king. People like this woman were dogs. Which, of course,
needs some explanation.
Dogs in that society did not star in
the Seattle Kennel Club show at Century Link Field Event Center. 7000
people would not have come to watch dogs strut their stuff. The
status of dogs in the first century world was only slightly higher
than the status of Norway rats in our world. Maybe we could compare
them to pigeons.
“Woman,” Jesus was saying, “I
can't take the kids' dinner and throw it out for the pigeons. That
would be crazy.”
At this point, any reasonable person
would have taken the hint. This woman had no claim on Jesus. He was
on vacation. Jesus had declared his divine assignment was
specifically to the Jewish people and this woman was a foreigner, a
pagan.
The woman was annoying. She was
obviously a bad person. A good person would not have allowed her
daughter to become possessed by demons. Jesus had stated that helping
her would be the equivalent of throwing the kids' dinner out for the
pigeons to eat.
What does she do?
She looks Jesus right in the eyes and
says. “You're right sir. You wouldn't throw the kids dinner out to
the pigeons. I get that. I accept that. But even a poor man, even
stingy man, would not begrudge the pigeons crumbs that would
otherwise go down the garbage disposal.”
Finally Jesus cracked. “Woman,” he
said, “you're amazing. Your faith is amazing. May it be to you as
you desire.”
Her daughter was healed.
This woman's story began with her plea,
“Sir, have mercy.” It climaxes with Jesus' words, “Let it be
for you as you have wished.” Her request: “Have mercy.” Jesus'
response, “Let it be as you wish.”
“Blessed are the merciful, they will
receive mercy.” What does it mean to receive mercy? It means to
receive what you need, to receive what you desperately desire.
For many religious people, one of our
most burning desires is to be sure we are accepted by God.
Many of us Adventists of a certain age
grew up in a world filled with withering spiritual uncertainty.
Preachers and Bible teachers painted vivid images of us standing
before God in the judgment. A video of our entire life played on a
giant screen on the wall of the court room. If that video showed a
single un-confessed sin we were doomed. We worried that we could
never be good enough to be saved.
Then in the eighties, many Adventists
discovered the good news of salvation by faith. All you had to do was
believe. But, it turns out this good news is only marginally better
than the old news that you had to be perfect.
At evangelical churches and colleges
young people learn that all you have to do to be saved is believe,
and once you believe, you are saved for ever. That should produce a
wonderful contentment. However, when you talk with these young
people, you find them as eaten with uncertainty and anxiety as the
Adventist young people in the days of our most intense legalism.
What's going on?
Here's the problem: as long as the
major question in your religion is “What must I do to be saved?”
you will find it very difficult to find a settled, lasting peace.
Because this kind of religion assumes damnation as the default
condition of humanity. God's habit is to condemn. No matter what
strategy we use to dodge the condemnation we are still up against the
question of whether our dodge is adequate. If you imagine that you
escape damnation by having faith, you'll wonder if your faith is
genuine. If you imagine that you appease God's frowning eye by
perfecting your behavior, you'll always suspect your behavior is not
quite good enough.
This traditional spiritual perspective
imagines that God operates primarily on the basis of justice. The
assumption is you deserve hell. God is watching and he is going to
make sure you get nothing more than you deserve. So, you're toast.
This beatitude points us in a
completely different direction: Blessed are the merciful, they will
receive mercy.
When we practice mercy, we work at
discerning the needs and desires of others and doing what we can to
meet those needs and fill those desires. We study people to figure
out what makes them tick so we can bless them. Sometimes people can
be quite articulate about their desire. Like the mother from Sidon.
There was no mistaking what she wanted. But other times people are as
inarticulate as that woman's daughter was. That girl had no way of
even expressing her need or desire. When encounter people like, Jesus
invites us to become their agents crying “Lord, have mercy!” on
their behalf.
I had a couple of conversations this
week that vividly illustrated the wisdom required of mercy. Both
conversations were with mothers of disabled men. In both cases, the
men are not verbal. So when they are going berserk with an earache,
they cannot say, “My ear is killing me.” Are they slapping their
head because their ear hurts or they have an abscessed tooth or
headache? Or are they exhibiting some kind of psychological problem?
These men's lack of speech does not make their pain any less. Their
inability to voice their need does not make the need go away.
So their mothers practice mercy. Guided
by the instincts of motherhood and the wisdom acquired through
decades of care-giving, they attempt to discern the need of their
sons and to find remedies. They do their best to make it better. And
when they have to go outside their homes for assistance, they become
the voices for their sons, begging for mercy from medical
professionals, courts, therapists. And ultimately they are the voices
of their sons to God. “Lord, have mercy!”
To be merciful means to provide what is
needed without regard to what is deserved. When we immerse ourselves
in the practice of mercy, the old question, “What must I do to be
saved?” loses its force. We know that we will never be more
merciful than God. As we move deeper and deeper into a habit of
studying people with the intention to understand and bless them
instead of analyzing them and apportioning blame, our view of God
will be transformed. We will come to confidence that God is, as the
Bible says, full of mercy and abounding in goodness and compassion.
As we move deeper and deeper into our
habits of mercy toward others, we will no longer understand even our
own disabilities as targets of God's condemnation. Instead we will
experience our failures, inadequacies, disabilities as perpetual
appeals for his mercy.
Mercy is what makes human communities
beautiful.
A healthy society must have structures
that support justice. When kids work hard, they should receive the
grades they earn. When adults work hard and skillfully, they should
receive appropriate remuneration. And there must be negative
consequences for failure to work, failure to put out. A workable
society needs a criminal justice system to respond to murder and
theft and assault. People are capable of doing evil, and society must
have a systematic way of restraining and containing evil. Still, a
society that becomes obsessed with justice becomes ugly.
Mercy is the supreme grace. Justice is
necessary, yes. Mercy is beautiful.
Part of the beauty of American society
are some of our institutionalized expressions of mercy. If you find a
pedestrian lying in the gutter, the apparent victim of a hit-and-run,
you would whip out your phone and call 911. An ambulance will come,
even if the victim appears to be a bum. At the emergency room, the
victim will receive life-saving treatment, before a payment plan is
worked out.
That's mercy. Responding to need
without regard to what a person deserves. Doing good because of the
goodness welling up from within us, not because of the rights or
claims of the other.
Several years ago my son spent a year
in a country where there are doctors and hospitals, but all hospital
care must be prepaid. He talked about the agony of seeing someone
frightfully injured but being unable to obtain hospital care for the
person because they didn't have enough money. No prepayment, no
admission. It is not rare for people to die outside the hospital
because the family could not come up with the money to cover the
projected costs of treatment. That's justice. If you can't pay, you
receive no service.
Death by poverty is not beautiful even
if you can make an argument that it is just.
Mercy: providing what is needed without
regard to what is deserved. That's beautiful.
Part of the foolishness of philosophies
based on the writings of Ayn Rand is their failure to see that the
pinnacle of human development is not an obsession with justice, not
even a commitment to justice. Human communities are most beautiful,
most noble, most godly when they are suffused with mercy.
One of the most startling challenges in
the preaching of Jesus comes at the end of Chapter Five in Matthew's
Gospel. Jesus tells us to love our enemies and pray for those who
persecute us. Because,
In that way, you
will be acting as true children of your Father in heaven. For he
gives his sunlight to both the evil and the good, and he sends rain
on the just and the unjust alike. If you love only those who love
you, what reward is there for that? Even corrupt tax collectors do
that much. If you are kind only to your friends, how are you
different from anyone else? Even pagans do that. But you are to be
perfect, even as your Father in heaven is perfect.
Or as Luke reports this saying:
"If you love
only those who love you, why should you get credit for that? Even
sinners love those who love them! And if you do good only to those
who do good to you, why should you get credit? Even sinners do that
much! And if you lend money only to those who can repay you, why
should you get credit? Even sinners will lend to other sinners for a
full return. "Love your enemies! Do good to them. Lend to them
without expecting to be repaid. Then your reward from heaven will be
very great, and you will truly be acting as children of the Most
High, for he is kind to those who are unthankful and wicked. You must
be merciful, just as your Father is merciful. Luke 6:32-36.
Be perfect as God is perfect is the
same thing as being merciful as God is merciful. The bargain we make
with the world is the bargain God makes with us. The wisdom of Jesus
is obvious: By practicing mercy we are setting ourselves up to
receive the ultimate, deepest joy. We will get what we most desire.
One of the curious patterns in the
gospels is the way Jesus responds to people who are possessed by
demons. Sometimes when blind people ask for healing, Jesus challenges
them: Do you really want this? (Luke 18:41) Do you really believe?
(Matthew 9:28). Several times Jesus told people: “You are healed in
accord with your faith” (Matthew 9:22, 29). But when it came to
people possessed by demons, Jesus never says a word about faith.
Jesus appears to completely ignore anything the people say. He goes
straight to their most profound need and releases from the demonic
torment.
I understand that as the supreme
challenge to us in our relationships at home, work, school and
church. Most of you know of someone who appears to you to be evil.
They are constantly doing things that annoy you, offend you, make
your life difficult. They are easy to hate.
I ask you to consider viewing them
through the lens of mercy. This does not mean volunteering for
further wounding. If you are being bullied, get help. If you are
being abused at home, tell someone. If you are a victim of domestic
violence, let someone know. Don't allow yourself or your children to
be hit another time.
Having said that, there is more to be
said. If we are going to see people as Jesus saw them, we will see
their outrageous behavior as evidence of an alien evil which has
invaded their lives. It is not the “real them.” Whether you see
that “alien evil” as demonic or psychological or neurological,
our fundamental response to that kind of human brokenness is to plead
Lord, have mercy. Not “Blast them, Lord.”
In our opening story, Jesus modeled
responding to people on the basis of justice, propriety and rights.
That annoying woman had no business interrupting his retreat with his
disciples. As a non-Jew she had no claim on the Messiah. As the
mother of a girl possessed by demons she had no moral standing.
As we watched Jesus respond to her on
the basis of propriety and rightful claims, we wince. We rightfully
expected better of Jesus. Then with his final response: “Woman, may
it be for you as you wish.” “Honey, I'll do whatever you want.”
Jesus flips the story on its head and asks us: This coming week, will
you stand on propriety and rights and protect yourself from all
inordinate demands on your forbearance, time and energy, or will you
have mercy? Will you stand with the disciples of Jesus passing
judgment or with the wise and stubborn mother?
Blessed are the merciful, they will
obtain mercy.
2 comments:
This is so beautiful, I do not think you could write it any better. Thank you for living and preaching mercy!
Thanks for preaching to those of us who grew up with "perfectionism" - tried out the "believing" - trusted God and knew the words of His grace - but still had anxiety about salvation. Today you presented mercy as the "default" God wants for us. Words are inadequate to express the impact of hope this can have after many decades of searching.
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