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Click to hear the sermon sermon071021
I was once
at a preaching conference where the guest preacher was a fairly wellknown
pastor from Georgia, who could have done pretty well as a stand-up comedian.
The Right Thing: What Would Jesus Do? - II Samuel 11:1-5;
Matthew 4:1-11 October 21, 2007 - Cicero
United Methodist
Church - Everett J. Bassett
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I was once
at a preaching conference where the guest preacher was a fairly wellknown
pastor from Georgia, who could have done pretty well as a stand-up comedian.
One of his recurring lines was, "Everything I tell you is true; but this
next thing is really true." We preachers chuckled, because we know that
stories and quotes and sayings come down the preaching pipeline all the time.
And probably by the time you hear it, it has been repeated in hundreds of
sermons, and altered and improved every time. So, who knows how much is true,
and how much is really true?
I've been
told that this quote I'm about to give cannot be really true. It's about Mark
Twain visiting Las Vegas. Mark Twain, I'm informed, died in 1910; Las Vegas
took off in the 1940s. So, odds are, what I'm about to say is true, but not
really true. But I like it anyway. It seems that Mark Twain visited Las Vegas
(maybe not really), and then he wrote this: "They've got dancing girls and
wild parties and shows here. This is no place for a Presbyterian, so I no
longer am one."
The best
humorists have a way of couching the painful truth in funny disguise - and Mark
Twain was one of the best (that's really true). If he said anything resembling
that quote, he was presenting a painful truth that would go something like
this: when good encounters evil, good surrenders. And that's what I want to
address today as I continue to talk about doing the right thing, making the
right choices when the pressure is on.
Our
scripture story from the Old Testament today might be the flip side of last
week's story. Last week's hero was Joseph, who, when he was being seduced by
his master's wife, refused to give up his moral character. This week's figure
is David, who peeked at Bathsheba when she is bathing, and then commanded her
to be brought to him. As a result, she became pregnant with David's child. When
the king discovered it, he arranged to have her husband, Uriah, killed in
battle, so he could have Bathsheba all to himself. Clearly David disgraced
himself, and the, throne, and the nation. If we were going to adapt Mark
Twain's quote to David, we might say, "This was no place for a righteous
king; so, David no longer was one." When good met evil, good surrendered.
And isn't
that what we are conditioned to expect? That we will be helplessly attracted to
what is forbidden? When I was youth there was a line of commercials that I
wondered about. It would show someone getting out of the car and walking away,
leaving the keys in the ignition. And the announcer would say, "Don't help
a good kid go bad." Obviously, that is a wise idea. But the thought I kept
having was, "So if somebody steals my car -- (This is not really true; I
was probably only ten years old at the time) - but if I had a car, and somebody
stole it, it would be my fault? I made a good kid go bad?"
The idea
is, if the temptation is there, a kid will go bad. Good will always surrender.
Adam and Eve will always reach for the forbidden fruit. We know that it is so
often the case. But what we might forget -- because the headlines and the
experiences of life make us hopelessly cynical -- is that temptation can be
resisted! You don't have to cave in. Here's some headlines you will probably
not read this week: High School Kids Notice Keys in the Ignition of a Hot Car,
and Simply Walk By. Or, Two People Attracted to Each Other Decide to Honor
Their Marriage Commitments Instead of Committing Adultery. Or, Public Servant
Does Good Deed in an Election Year and Refuses to Take Credit. (Well, okay.
Let's not get carried away.) These are not the kind of headlines that will sell
many papers. But I believe they are really true; happening all the time. People
resisting temptation. It's possible; but we need have a level of character
within us that will prepare us to do the right thing when temptation arises.
That's why
the Bible tells us that before Jesus could begin his ministry, he had to deal
with the temptations he would encounter along the way. Out there in the
wilderness, when Satan came to tempt him, Jesus was physically and emotionally
weakened. But he was ready spiritually. He was armed with scripture; he was
armed with prayer; he was armed with an honest and humble grasp of who God was.
A few years back somebody started a "What Would Jesus Do?" campaign;
it was hugely successful. When you get into a situation where you have to make
a moral choice - where good and evil are duking it out - you can ask is,
"What Would Jesus Do?" If you prayerfully consider that, more often
than not, your heart will know the right path. And the first thing we might say
about Jesus is that Jesus didn't go into that wilderness spiritually unarmed.
Scripture, prayer, worship, humility - those are the shields he used against
Satan.
What are
the shields you carry into tough spots? What are the values you have nurtured
in your character? Last week I suggested that we might find a list of such
values in Philippians 4: 4-9, where the apostle Paul writes, "Whatever is
true, whatever is honorable, whatever is just, whatever is pure, whatever is
pleasing, whatever is commendable ... think on these things." This would
be a pretty good list of values to
carry into the wilderness.
Let's just
take a brief look at a couple of these. The first one is "whatever is
TRUE." This may not always be the case, but it would seem to me that a
pretty good indicator that something you are doing is not a good path is that
you have to lie about it, or hide it. Adam and Eve, with the serpent's help,
talked themselves into eating the forbidden fruit, convincing themselves that
there was nothing wrong with it. But when God came by, they hid themselves.
They knew what they had done. Someone has said that the first casualty of war
is the truth. That is because war calls forth so much from the darkest side of
humanity that it rarely stands the test of honest inquiry. One of the verses of
the Bible that proves true again and again is that the truth will set us free.
That's why the Twelve Steps begin with an honest admission about yourself; it's
why therapy so often has to go into hidden places from the past; it's why we as
citizens should grow more and more fearful the more secrecy our government
claims it needs to do its job. What would Jesus do? Perhaps the image we could
turn to is that of Palm Sunday, where Jesus rode boldly and openly into
Jerusalem. No hidden agenda; no secrets. Everything in the open. And if you are
in a situation where your first question is, "How do I cover this
up?" or "How do I get out of this?" then probably you are not
doing the right thing.
"Whatever
is JUST!" says Paul. Isn't that another
test question you can ask yourself if you are wondering what the right thing to
do in a given situation - - is this fair to everybody? Does it violate
somebody's justice? In the currently running movie Michael Clayton, a
high-powered corporate lawyer brings the multimillion-dollar case he's been
working on for years to court, and suddenly sits across from the victims whose
lives his clients have ruined, and realizes he can't go through with the case -
it's not fair and right. It doesn't pass the test question of justice. Think
about that question. Your boss wants you to overcharge a customer - is this
fair? A governmental policy favors one segment of the citizenry, but leaves
millions behind - is this justice? You have a great story to tell behind
somebody's back - is that fair to them? The examples abound, of situations we
might address more fairly if we just ask the test question of justice.
Is it
HONORABLE? That could be a good test question. Maybe what you are thinking of
doing is something you'll never have to lie about, or something that doesn't
directly violate someone's justice. But does it honor who you want to be when
you look in the mirror? And does it honor your relationship to God? Does it
honor creation? At our church camp at Casowasco there are signs over the sinks
asking you to turn off the tap water while you're brushing your teeth - it
saves a couple gallons of water. And I stand there and think, "Okay, there
are industrial processes that use millions of gallons of water. And I'm going
to affect anything by turning off this tap water for two minutes?" But
ever since I saw that sign, I do it. I turn off the water- because it honors
the gift we've been given. It honors the earth; in my mind it honors someone
somewhere who has to walk for miles to get a jarful of clean water.
Is it PURE?
Am I going to walk away from this feeling dirty or violated or less principled?
Is it PLEASING? Does what I am contemplating doing add to the beauty and the
richness of the world I and others live in? Is it COMMENDABLE? Would people I
look up to commend this action and think more of me for taking it? These are
test questions that can help to guide us at the critical moments of moral
decision-making, fleshing out that ultimate guiding question - what would Jesus
do? We can't always know what the right thing is to do. And even if we know it,
we can't always predict that we'll do it. Sometimes we have to be ready to just
pray from the heart, "God help me. I can't do this without you right
now." Thank God there is grace in the heart of God that guides and
strengthens and forgives and restores us. But if we feed our character with
truth and honor and purity and these other things Paul lifts up, we can go a long
way toward knowing how we'll respond.
Victor
Frankl was one of those who survived Nazi Germany, and then became a voice of
wisdom and moral strength for the human race. He wrote: "We who lived in
the concentration camps can remember the men who walked through the huts
comforting others, giving away their last pieces of bread. They may have been
few in numbers, but they offer sufficient proof that everything can be taken
away from a person but one thing: the last of the human freedoms - to choose
one's own attitude in any given set of circumstances, to choose one's own
way."
What way do
you choose? When the chips are down, when the right choice cries out to be
made, when the fiber of character is tested - who will you be? Where will you
find wisdom and strength? How have you prepared yourself to do the right thing?
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