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Click to hear this sermon sermon081005
You know, when I first started going to church I had some real
problems with people there. Do you ever
have problems with church people? I certainly did.
"Please God, don't let me grow up
to be a Pharisee!" Cicero United
Methodist Church
October 5, 2008 Jack Keating Text: Luke 18:9-14
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You know, when I first started going to church I had some real
problems with people there. Do you ever
have problems with church people? I certainly did.
I was at that time ... and still am ... what some people would call a
Bible-believing Christian --I not only took my Bible to church with me every
Sunday, but I normally had one in my briefcase and another in the glove
compartment of my little orange Buick Sunfire.
At that time the faith was new to me and I was enthusiastic and eager.
Winning souls for God was important to me, prayer
was important; enthusiasm in worship was important; and while I was in a very
good congregation, a charismatic and evangelical congregation of the Episcopal
church in Buffalo,
I nevertheless found that I was in some kind of a minority within the church.
I looked around me at worship services ... and I saw that many people
there did not read their Bibles, they did not sing the hymns, they did not seem
to pray, nor did they fellowship with their brothers and sisters afterwards.
How many of you folk do that ... you know ...
check out what other people are doing during worship? Looking to see if they
are singing, or if they close their eyes during prayer time or lift up their
hands?
I think lots of us do it. During worship and at other times in our
life together.
And when I did it, when I checked things out, I noted that many in my
congregation seemed more concerned that the service end exactly one hour after
it began ... so they could get home and eat - than they were about the actual
worship they were involved in.
I noted too that only about 10% of
the congregation even bothered attending the weekly Bible studies and prayer
meetings; and ... that as far as I tell by how they talked - most of them had
never really grasped that the gospel message is one of grace - instead of works
that Jesus died not so folks who treated one another decently could be
rewarded - but so that sinners could approach the throne of God and find there
a welcome they did not deserve.
I had real problems with some of the people in the church in other
words. To my eyes the church was full of hypocrites, full of people who could
barely talk the talk, let alone walk the walk.
Have you ever- made judgements like that? Have
you ever thought of yourself as better than someone else?
One of the biggest issues I had at worship services in those days were
the prayers of confession that were often printed in the bulletin, as one is
printed in the bulletin this morning.
I don't know about you, but sometimes I still have a strong reaction
to the words I find in prayers of confession that have been written by other
people.
The fact that those prayers were prayers of confession didn't bother
me. I knew I was a sinner. What bothered me was the kind of sins that were
often listed in the prayers: things like - neglect of the poor - selfishness -
ingratitude - racism - and the like.
I found it hard to pray some of those prayers because I knew in my
heart that I had not done those particular things - that I was not especially
selfish or neglectful of the poor, nor was I in any way racist, or ungrateful
for all that God, and indeed other people, did for me.
I found it hard, in part, because I knew in those long ago days that,
all in all, I was pretty much on the right track.
While I was not well off, I gave a substantial amount to the work of
God each year, a tenth of my income in fact, and that little tenth was more
than most others in the church gave, though they had far more income than I.
Indeed, I tithed, I went to prayer meetings every Tuesday night, I
attended a Bible Study every Wednesday night, and I worshipped almost every
Sunday morning, - even if I had company coming for lunch or relatives were
expected to drop in for supper. I even volunteered as a camp counselor at camp
for a week every summer and went caroling at Christmas at the homes of
shut-ins, and helped out whenever I could with church suppers and special
events, and helped lead worship when the minister was away.
Not bad, huh? I know that many of you out there
have been there. You have been faithful. You have been generous. You have
worked hard and asked nothing in return.
Like me all those years ago, you too have realized God needs many
workers in his vineyard.
Like me, you knew too that your efforts have made a difference both to
others, and in the end, to you.
Now in all this you have to understand I was not particularly
prideful. Any more than the hard workers among you are particularly prideful.
I knew that there were sins that I committed - I knew that I needed
God's grace and forgiveness - I believed that it was only because of Jesus
Christ and his sacrifice upon the cross that I would enter heaven.
My favorite hymns in fact revolved around these ideas - and I, even
with the poor memory that I have, memorized some of the key verses of those
hymns: verses from songs like those we sing still today:
"Amazing Grace - how sweet the sound that saved a wretch like me.
I once was lost, but now am found, was blind, but now I see."
OR
"Just as I am, without one plea - but that O
Lord, you died for me."
In fact, one of my favorite sayings from that time of my life, in fact
it still is sometimes one of my favorite sayings, was a short and simple one
that is known to you all. .... "There, but for the grace of God, go
I."
Those hymns, those verses, and that saying, my friends, are good
stuff, they are the essence of the gospel - but I want to suggest to each of
you here today, that they can easily be misused by us; that they can be, for
us, songs and words that allow us to feel good about ourselves, and good about
what we are about, instead of being words that penetrate and pierce our hearts!
We may, in other words, comprehend in our heads what these words
concerning God's grace mean, but in our hearts, and with our feet and our hands
and our lips, display a total lack of true appreciation for their messages.
In still other words, we may fail, by our behaviors and by our
attitudes to really understand who we are before God - and who we are in
relationship to one another.
"Two men went up to the temple to pray, one a Pharisee and the
other a tax collector. The Pharisee, standing by himself, was praying thus,
'God, I thank you that I am not like other people: thieves, rogues, adulterers,
or even like this tax collector. I fast twice a week; I give a tenth of all my
income.'
But the tax collector, standing far off, would not even look up to
heaven, but was beating his breast and saying, 'God, be merciful to me, a
sinner!'
If you were one of the two folk described in that
reading, which would you be?
You know, it is one thing to thank God for what
he has done for us, for the blessings we have received, but it is quite another
thing to compare ourselves to one another and to thank God for the differences,
as if somehow we are better that that poor miserable tax collector over there,
better than that single mother who drinks too much, or that clumsy idiot who is
our fellow worker or the parishioner who sits next to us and seems to have no
real faith at all.
But we do it, don't we?
We do it - whether we see ourselves as the tax
collector begging God's forgiveness, or as the Pharisee - who has been diligent
in all things of the faith.
I don't know about you. But I suspect that most of you do it.
Even I, so many years after I began, find myself
doing it upon occasion, I still find others lacking something - which I, by the
logic of the observation, and my unique ability to so accurately judge others,
think I have.
Why oh why do we, do I, do such things?
Why oh why do we, do I, engage in behavior, or
hold an attitude that can do nothing but end up dividing us, one from another?
And you know what? That is the mystery of sin my friends. It has
power.
And while we have breath, we must continually
fight that power. We must fight it - and we must trust in the Lord to forgive
us when we fail.
You all know the Jesus Prayer, don't you? That famous prayer that is
recommended as a mantre, which we should repeat over and over again, when we
get down to serious praying?
"Lord Jesus Christ, have
mercy on me, a sinner." "Lord Jesus Christ, have mercy on me, a
sinner." "Lord Jesus Christ, have mercy on me, a sinner."
It comes from today's gospel reading - where the
tax collector - the lowest of the low according to all that was right and holy
in those days - and maybe even today - beats his breast and says: "God, be
merciful to me, a sinner."
Words to live by. Words to cultivate in our minds
and hearts that we might know the true joy of salvation.
There is a beautiful promise in today's gospel lesson, my friends, and
the promise is this:
"All who exalt themselves will be humbled, and all who humble
themselves will be exalted."
It is the promise of God, but it is also a
challenge - a challenge because it is very hard not to exalt oneself, - very
hard not to think that somehow or other, that I am better than that person over
there: the tax collector, that sinner, that arrogant person, that cheat, that
hypocrite, that lazy person, that liar, that domineering person.
We do not have to think we have the one right
answer; that because we do this or that thing better, or more often than
others, we are somehow better people, wiser people, or holier people than those
who do it poorly or less often than we.
We do not have to think that because we work
hard, pay our taxes, and refuse to hold out our hands, that we are better than
immigrants from the third world, or politicians, or those who own big business,
or people on welfare.
We do not have to think that because we are more
diligent at serving God inside the church and out, that because we tithe, or
attend worship more often than most other people, that we are somehow more
important, or more faithful, or more loved by God than they are.
"All who exalt themselves will be humbled, but all who humble
themselves will be exalted."
It's a promise. And it's a challenge ...
A challenge that we are all called to embrace ... a challenge that we
are all called to work on.
There is an old Hasidic saying that goes like this:
"The person who thinks he can live without others is mistaken; the
person who thinks that others can't live without him ... is even more
mistaken."
Our prayer each day - should not be "O Lord, I thank you that I am not
like other people like John or Jane, like my brother or my sister or my fellow
worker"; but rather it should be "I thank you God that you are so
good to me - me a miserable sinner, help me be good to others in the same
way."
Praise be to God, day by day. Amen.
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