Sunday, November 11, 2012

It's who we are


by The Rev. Shelby Ochs Owen

This sermon is based on Mark 12:38-44. An audio version of this sermon is available here. 

“Beware of the scribes, who like to walk around in long robes and to be greeted with respect in the marketplaces and to have the best seats in the synagogues...”  Uh, Paul,  I think you and I are busted!  This is one of those Sundays, I might want to be wearing my street clothes sitting on the back pew!  I have to admit it is kind of nice to always know that, as your priest, I will always be guaranteed a seat, and a very good seat, in church.

In today’s reading from Mark we have Jesus teaching in the temple, denouncing the scribes.  Now before we think he is condemning all of the scribes we can see just in a few verses before this one that this isn’t the case.  In that exchange with a scribe, Jesus actually tells him “You are not far from the kingdom of God” when the scribe indicates his understanding the ultimate importance of the commandments of loving God and loving one’s neighbor.  Here, though, Jesus denounces the scribes whose priorities are out of whack, the ones who allow power and prestige to rule their actions, the ones whose religious pretensions direct the oppression of the less fortunate, particularly poor widows.  Throughout the Scriptures God’s people are exhorted to take care of widows and orphans, the alien and the poor; Jesus knows this and so do the scribes. So Jesus calls them out on their hypocrisy.   Those who oppress widows while striving to appear virtuous, pretending to be religious while being driven by greed and egotism will be condemned, Jesus says.  

And then, Jesus sits down opposite the treasury to watch the crowd. Many rich people put in large sums of money and then a poor widow places two small copper coins, worth a penny, essentially 1/64th of a laborer’s wages for a day.  Something almost too small to notice, something that was close to nothing and yet it was everything. It was all she had.  Jesus then says, “Truly I tell you, this poor widow has put in more than all those contributing to the treasury.” “All she had to live on.”  But before we get overly sentimental and put her on the proverbial pedestal, let’s think about how we can walk along side the widow.  If we were to put her on a pedestal, we will find ourselves distancing ourselves from her as we realize we might not ever be able to give the way she gives or even to imagine ourselves doing so.  And then we find as we distinguish ourselves from her we are less able, less willing to change. 

Let’s look at the coins that the widow puts into the treasury as representing all that we are and all we can hope to become in God’s kingdom.  No doubt the widow knew of the oppression of the religious authorities and yet she gave all anyway.  In spite of an oppressive system she trusted in God, completely.  Might her actions be a foreshadowing of Jesus himself just a little later in the story giving himself completely for a world that had betrayed God’s trust?  For this widow, her act of giving was not simply about doing, it was about being-being one of faith, being one of trust.  Her giving was simply just who she was.

Early one morning this past week, I received an email from Patricia, a woman I know well, who lives in a European city.  She told me that she was shaken following an encounter right after work the night before.  Patricia and a colleague were walking down the street when they encountered a woman being mugged.  They helped stop the mugging.  The injured woman’s face had been badly beaten.   As I took in this shocking news, I remembered years ago another story of Patricia witnessing an attack in a subway station here in the States.  Crowds had gathered around the scene while a man attacked a woman.  No one was doing anything.  The crowd seemed paralyzed.  So Patricia jumped on the man’s back and starting hitting him so he would leave his victim alone and then she ran to find the police.  As I thought about the scene of this week’s recent mugging, I realized I wasn’t really surprised at Patricia’s actions.   Her coming to the aid of another in need or trouble was not a new thing at all.  It was just who she was, it was just who she was.

Who are we?  Who are we as people of God?  Who are we as members of the church, as members of the body of Christ?  For some of us, the church might at times feel like a club, where we connect and make friends with like-minded souls, not that there’s anything too wrong with that!; for some it might feel like a warm, welcoming home where we feel safe and cared for -not that there’s anything wrong with that either, and I certainly do hope church is warm and welcoming and a place to make great friends.  But church is more than a safe, warm place.  The church does not exist simply for its own well being; the church exists so that we can be instruments of God’s love and justice in the world, to relieve poverty, oppression and suffering, not to add to it the way the scribes were doing!

Just as Jesus was condemning the scribes who were part of an oppressive religious system that failed to care for the widows, God calls each of us to move out of our own areas of hypocrisy, areas of weakness where our profession of faith and our actions don’t quite jive; God calls us to integrate what we say we believe with how we treat others, particularly the poor.  You who have been baptized have made a promise to “persevere in resisting evil… to seek and serve Christ in all persons, loving your neighbor as yourself; to strive for justice and peace among all people and respect the dignity of every human being.” With God’s help, of course.

So go into the world trusting God, go to your corporate board rooms, go into your classrooms, go into the court room, go into your governing bodies, go to your individual families, and look around you.  Where might you be supporting oppression of individuals or groups of people, knowingly or unknowingly?  How are you investing your money?  Your time?  Any of you who know your history know that the church has had its infamous moments where she has supported systems of violence and oppression – psychologically, spiritually, economically and even at times, physically, in the name of Jesus Christ.  How can we tear down oppressive systems?  How can we change as we carry the truth of the Gospel to our individual corners of the world, carrying peace and truth and justice for all?  We have more power than we realize – even if it looks like just two cents to us.  If we give our whole selves over to God, the seemingly nothing can turn into something, something big in God’s eyes.

We are called to move from where we are into the dream God has for us.  To be bearers of God’s truth, in every situation, morning, noon and night.  At home, at work and in church, in whatever situation life finds us.

To be bearers of truth and instruments of justice, all rooted in God’s love. It’s who we are, it’s who we are.

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