Matthew 23:27-39
Luke 14:1-6
I want to begin this morning by having you look for a minute
at the beginning of chapter 23 in Matthew.
As you can see the entire chapter of 23 is about the hypocrisy of the
Pharisees. But the chapter opens by recognizing the authority of the
scribes and Pharisees, acknowledging that they sit on "Moses' seat" (v. 2). They are
teachers and interpreters of the law in the line of Moses, the original
lawgiver and the most important figures in Judaism; they are due deference and
respect in religious matters. After all, Jesus came not to "abolish but to
fulfill" the law (Matt. 5:17). As a whole, Matthew labors to show Jesus'
reverence for and continuity with Judaism. The problem is not Jewish religious
traditions or teachings; it’s not the pharisees religious traditions or
teachings. Jesus commends them to
everyone: "Do whatever they teach you and follow it" (v. 3).
The problem here is that the Pharisees misuse their authority,
misuse scripture and misuse the law. They behave in ways that are counter to
the truth teach. They speak of glorifying God, but they seem most interested in
self-aggrandizement. They speak of orienting their entire lives toward God, but
they draw everyone's eyes toward themselves. They speak of their responsibility
for the people of God, yet "are unwilling to lift a finger" to
lighten the people's burdens (v. 4). They
proclaim that they are people of God, yet they fail to do the basics of caring
for one another. But what is primary, they
are MORE concerned about the laws than they are about the people. And as Jesus points out, “Sabbath was made
for the people, not people for the Sabbath.”
In other words, the laws were made to serve us, to make us better, to
make us whole, to help us to be closer to God.
We were not made simply to follow the laws. That means, in all things, that situations
must be brought into account. In today’s
passage from Luke we see this with much more clarity. Yes, it was against the law to heal on the
Sabbath or do anything on the Sabbath that required work. But Jesus broke this law for the sake of
healing. He did this repeatedly. His disciples broke the law by picking grain
on the sabbath: again, they did work so that they might eat. I cannot stress this strongly enough because
this is very central to Jesus’ teachings: we are to help and love one
another. The laws enforce that. But as with every construct, every rule,
every rigidity, the things that are made to serve us can also be misused to
hurt people, to harm them, to injure them.
When that is the case, Jesus was clear, the needs of the people, of
God’s people, of all people, MUST and do come first.
Where the hypocrisy part falls into this is that people are
generally willing to bend the laws when it serves them, and then they strengthen
and insist on the laws in ways that harm other people. As Jesus said, “If one of you has a child or
an ox that falls into a well on the Sabbath day, will you not immediately pull
it out?” Of course they would. They would break the Sabbath law to save one
of their own. But when it comes to
healing or caring for others, they want Jesus to wait for the appropriate day,
not recognizing that each day lost is a lifetime for a person in pain, in
isolation and in struggle.
In these actions, the scribes and Pharisees were not unusual
or unique. The Biblical commentary, Feasting
on the Word said it this way: “It is
so easy to confuse our interests with God's purposes, our power with God's
sovereignty, our standing with God's glory. Whether we are referring to our
individual or collective lives, human beings have a strong tendency to create
false and sinful hierarchies that displace God's authority; we have a
proclivity to ignore or rebel against God's kingdom in order to protect our
minor fiefdoms. This is a particularly distasteful, yet common, inclination
among religious people and their leaders. Constant reference to God and God's
purposes can easily lend our own aims, desires, and identities a semblance of
holiness that is sanctimonious and hypocritical. Pious words and orthodox convictions alone do
not make a person faithful…. The true measure of faithfulness is found not in
the words one speaks or the doctrines one accepts but in the orientation of
one's heart. Is one's whole heart and
life oriented toward God, or is it aimed at something less than God (Matt. 6:19-34)?”
– Feasting on the Word.
I love that. This is
not about our ability to follow rules.
This is about where our hearts are oriented. Do we walk with love? Do we see with love? Do we interact with others with love? If so, our hearts are oriented towards God. When we fail to do so, we fail to be oriented
towards God. It’s that simple. When we are drawing our circles tighter, when
we are pulling in and taking care only of our own, when we are reacting out of
fear, our hearts are not with God and we will be seen as the hypocrites that we
all, at times, can be.
As I said, we are not immune from this. We all have heard about Westboro Baptist
Church. It gets itself in the news a
great deal lately. This specific church
looks “pious”. They look
“religious”. They are using the bible
and quoting rules, and saying things like “God Says”…. But what is coming out
of their mouths? Hatred. They’ve missed the central message of the
Bible and of faith. And because of that,
everyone else sees them as the hypocrites that they are: preaching a God of
Love with mouths full of hate. This is
the number one reason people don’t come to church. Too much hypocrisy. And we can see it in some of these
congregations and we know the public is right to condemn it.
But the challenge I
want to offer today is a recognition that ALL of us have our hypocrisies. All of us do.
Can you think of something you do that is hypocritical?
Some minor examples: I have a friend who is constantly
complaining about other people’s driving: always, she is yelling about how
terrible the drivers around her are.
Yet, I once had the opportunity to sit as a passenger while she drove,
and I have no idea how she has made it alive for as long as she has! Her driving is absolutely atrocious! She looked at me while she was talking to me,
more than she did the road, and then honked and got upset when cars
“mysteriously” appeared in front of her!
When she wasn’t talking to me, she was talking on her cell-phone; one,
by the way, that did not have an ear piece.
At one point she was holding the phone with one hand, eating with the
other, looking at me with her eyes, following inches away from the car in front
of us, though we were driving 75 miles an hour (so much for the 3 second rule),
swerving all over the place, and cursing and swearing at all the other drivers
on the road!
In my family, we have a number of people who are pack
rats. What is interesting is that each
of us sees it in each other, and none of us sees it in ourselves.
Another friend of mine loves to correct others for failing to
be polite. She is quick to point out, in
front of others, I might add, when I or others have been “rude” by failing to
use polite-nesses such as “please.” She
seems oblivious to the fact that she is being just as rude by pointing this out
to all of us in this public, humiliating way.
And of course, I have my own hypocrisies. Some of which I see, but no doubt there are
others I don’t see. I spout love, preach
love, stand on love as the law of the land.
I preach about the importance of really seeing people and trying to give
them the benefit of the doubt. But there
are times, of course, when I fail to do that and am crabby with others, snippy
with others. Especially when my kids are
involved, it is harder for me to really listen to anyone I think has been
unfair or has mistreated them (like their teachers on occasion). This isn’t fair to these teachers. They have tons of students they are trying to
get to know, and stuff happens. I could
have expressed the same things in less cranky ways, but I don’t always.
I found myself remembering a time, years ago now, when I felt
very betrayed by a friend. I don’t want
or need to go into the specifics of that because they aren’t important. What is important is that I became very
self-righteous about it. I knew I had
been wronged and so standing on religious language, I went on the attack. I let go of all of my years of training that
tell me to use “I” statements and instead I “corrected” the other, using learnings
that remain meaningful to me, but which, when used as a weapon, frankly do and
did more harm than good. This hypocrisy
in myself caused me to become critical of others while failing to look at my
own part in the issues. We do this. Leaders, especially religious ones, are in a
dangerous position because, in standing on scripture, we can become very
self-righteous about what we believe to be “truth”, the “truth of God” even. But taking that stand when it is aimed as a
weapon against others can cause damage and harm to others. There is a reason why the people Jesus
attacks most strongly throughout the gospels are the religious leaders: the
scribes and pharisees. From that
position of power, it is extremely easy to misuse God’s words in ways that harm
others. It just is. And when religious leaders fail to be
self-reflective, it is an extremely dangerous thing. We’ve seen this again and again: religious
leaders caught in the same activities they are criticizing others for,
religious leaders proclaiming that it is okay to destroy or damage other
people, religious leaders picking and choosing scriptures and ignoring whole
other areas (such as the gospels!!) in order to prove their points.
All of us have
paradoxes within us. All of us have
contradictions, and ways in which we criticize others without seeing the flaws
in ourselves. We all do. It’s part of being human. It becomes hypocrisy when the basic beliefs
we have, the foundational tenets of our lives do not match our behavior. When we declare that we believe in the God of
Jesus, a God of love and grace, a God who calls us to feed the hungry, cloth
the naked, visit the sick and imprisoned; but then we act only on our own best
interests and fail to even try to love our neighbors as ourselves. And while it is easy to point our fingers at
others who do this, especially public figures (and the amount of hypocrisy currently
is so much, it’s frankly hard not to point those fingers), looking at our own
hypocrisies is much harder.
One of the greatest ways we can avoid being hypocrites, or at
least minimize our hypocrisy, is by taking the time to look at ourselves,
honestly, openly. When we cannot do
that, fortunately, we have each other to help us out. For we are in a community that is supposed to
care about our spiritual growth. And as
I’ve said before, caring about one another’s spiritual growth means being part
of helping one another grow better, grow more honest about our flaws and our
gifts, grow in our relationship with God.
The other way we can avoid hypocrisy is to really take private and
personal time with God, being honest and open.
We can use that time to listen to God.
We can use that time to work on our “hidden” judgements and flaws. We can use that time to just BE real -
because God knows the real us anyway - better than we know ourselves.
The thing is that before God we are
all equal. This is hard for us to get
because we see inequalities around us every day. Some are smarter, some are more successful,
some are braver, some are happier, some are more popular. But again, before God we are all equals. We are all God’s children, all loved, all
wanted. Our gifts, therefore, the things
that in this world make us unequal are things we are called on to use to help
God’s people, to help the community, to give to the community. Our gifts aren’t for our own glory. They are for God’s glory and to help others. When we start feeling that they somehow make
us better, we only get into trouble with them.
The thing that heals hypocrisy is grace. We are called to remember that everything we
have has been given to us not because we deserve it, not because we’ve earned
it, but because God loves each of us so much that we are created surrounded by
abundance. As we see throughout the
gospels, this extends to loving us even when we mess up as Jesus loved and
forgave the disciples again and again for their blindness, their stupidity,
their inability to see and understand and follow in the way they were asked to
do. Our worth, our value, comes from a
God who knows us completely and loves us completely. We don’t need to impress others, we don’t
need to be dishonest about who we are, what we believe and how we act.
My challenge, then, for all of us, is to do the work of
self-reflection and look at the hypocrisies in our lives. It is hard work to truly be the Christians we
strive to be, especially when it comes to loving people we don’t like. That is the call, but it also takes a great
deal of work to face ourselves. It takes
a great deal of honesty to be willing to look at our own stuff, name it,
confront it and work to change it. But
when we do, when we are able to look, we grow, not just in our own beings, but
in our closeness to God. When we can
really take the time to own our shit, we open the door to change and to letting
God in at ever deeper levels. Thanks be
to God. Amen.
No comments:
Post a Comment