38 ‘You have heard that it was said, “An eye for an
eye and a tooth for a tooth.” 39But I say
to you, Do not resist an evildoer. But if anyone strikes you on the right
cheek, turn the other also; 40and if
anyone wants to sue you and take your coat, give your cloak as well; 41and if
anyone forces you to go one mile, go also the second mile. 42Give to
everyone who begs from you, and do not refuse anyone who wants to borrow from
you.
43 ‘You have heard that it was said, “You shall love
your neighbor and hate your enemy.” 44But I say
to you, Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you, 45so that you
may be children of your Father in heaven; for he makes his sun rise on the evil
and on the good, and sends rain on the righteous and on the unrighteous. 46For if you
love those who love you, what reward do you have? Do not even the
tax-collectors do the same? 47And if you
greet only your brothers and sisters,*
what more are you doing than others? Do not even the Gentiles do the same? 48Be perfect,
therefore, as your heavenly Father is perfect.
Matthew 5:38-48
“But I Say to You”
In our Sunday night Bible
studies this semester, our UKirk group is focusing on different questions about
faith—and if you know this group and how smart and curious they are, it should
come as no surprise that their first question about faith is one of the big
ones—predestination. We spent this past Sunday night reading from Paul’s letter
to the Romans, chapters 8-11. Paul’s words in these letters are fascinating,
challenging us to understand that God is the one who chooses us from the
beginning before we can ever know it, sending a Son to be with us and instill
faith in us and bring us to salvation—and that our faith means nothing if we
just say fancy words about Christ without doing whatever we can to show
Christ’s love to the neighbors and strangers in our midst. Paul’s words in
Romans are deep and challenging, inspiring, but sometimes seemingly
contradictory to each other. We discussed what we do when we read things in the
Bible that contradict each other, talked about how we go about interpreting the
Bible for ourselves and our communities. One of our students said, that when
the Bible seems to contradict itself, she turns to the words of Christ in the
gospels to discern the answer, to the sermons he preaches, the commands he
gives to his followers, discovers how he lives his words out as he heals and
listens and calls—all of the ways he shows God’s great love to each of us.
I’ve been thinking about that
so much this week as I’ve studied today’s lectionary texts, thinking about
Jesus’ words to all of us, thinking about how we turn to what Jesus said and
what he did as we search for answers in the midst of today’s world. For the
past several weeks, we have been reading from Matthew’s Gospel in our
lectionary, specifically Jesus’ sermon on the mount. This sermon is so
beautiful, so challenging, so revolutionary—both in its time and in ours. As
the fifth chapter of Matthew begins, Jesus reaches out to his followers and all
who are gathered there, reaching out to all of us, to share about God’s great
love with us, to nurture us, to challenge us. He sits down and begins teaching,
saying that God’s blessing of love comes to us when we are poor in spirit, when
we are mourning, when we are meek and humble. He says that God’s great love for
us comes as we are searching for ways to heal through righteousness, to love
with mercy, when we seek to be pure in heart as peacemakers in the world, and
especially when we suffer because of it. Jesus tells us about God’s love in
this part of his sermon, calling us to rejoice and be glad.
Jesus teaches us about how
greatly God loves us and then calls us to go out into the world and show God’s
love to others. “You are the salt of the earth,” he tells those gathered there,
says to us. “You are the light of the world, so let your light shine before
others and before your God in heaven.” Jesus teaches and reminds us that we are
called to be salt to the earth, to give the world preservation, to give it the
flavor of life; he teaches and reminds us that we are light, called to be light
to each other, called to give light to the world.
Through Jesus’ words on the
mountain, we are reminded that God loves us no matter what is happening, no
matter what we are going through. Because we have been given God’s amazing
love, Jesus calls us to shine our light before others. And in this last part of
Matthew’s 5th chapter, we are called and shown how to go out into
the world, what to do—we are shown how to treat others, how to live in
community together. We are told how to interpret some of the toughest questions,
told how to act in love when the world, especially when the world feels like it
is full of questions and contradictions.
Jesus pretty much lays it out
for us, not leaving much doubt:
“You have heard that it was
said, ‘An eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth.’ But I say to you, ‘Do not
resist and evildoer…if anyone strikes you on the cheek, turn the other also.’”
“…if anyone wants to sue you
and take your coat, give your cloak as well.”
“…if anyone forces you to go
one mile, go for the second mile.”
“Give to everyone who begs
from you, and do not refuse anyone who wants to borrow from you.”
Love your enemy. Pray for
those who persecute you. Love those who love you—and those who don’t. Greet
your brothers and sisters, but don’t just stop there. Love the stranger, the
alien, the refugee in your midst.
“You have heard that it was
said, but I say to you.” Jesus preaches an amazing sermon here, calling us to
act, calling us to reach out to friends and strangers—and enemies—alike,
calling us to turn the other cheek and give what we have. Jesus shows us a
portrait of God and God’s great love for us, teaching us what it is like to
live in God’s kingdom, God’s community. When we live as people who have been created
and called and saved, we love without reservation and we think of others first
before we ever consider ourselves.
“You have heard that it was
said, but I say to you.” In God’s kingdom, we act out love and welcome
everyone, friend, stranger, or enemy, as a sister or brother in Christ. In
God’s kingdom, we have a great capacity for love, empowered by God’s love for
us, love that in unselfish and kind and giving. In God’s community, we can
forgive those who have hurt us or persecuted us or broken us.
“You have heard that it was
said, but I say to you.” In God’s kingdom, we are called to give what we have
to those who have little or nothing. In Jesus’ sermon to us, he shows us his
ultimate hope for us—that we will live in God’s community together, and that
because of God’s love, we will love each other without even giving it a second
thought—that it will become our way of life.
When I took a week of study
leave last month, I took two books with me I have been intending to read for a
while. One was Just Mercy, Auburn
University’s common book about racial injustice and the death penalty. It is
both fascinating and very hard to read, and I hope you will all pick up a copy
and read it. The second book is called The
Great Spiritual Migration: How the World’s Largest Religion is Seeking a Better
Way to be a Christian. It is written by a minister and author named Brian McLaren.
In the book, he talks about how people, particularly younger folks, are leaving
the Christian faith in great numbers because, simply put, they do not feel that
Christians are modeling their Christ and living out his love in the world. In
the book, McLaren talks about Jesus’ sermon on the mount, reminding us that
Jesus’ emphasis has always been the ethic of love, reminding us that, no matter
what, in every situation, Jesus calls us to love. He writes:
Of
the many radical things said and done by Jesus, his unflinching emphasis on
love was most radical of all. Love was the greatest commandment, he said. It
was his new commandment, his prime directive—love for God, love for self, for
neighbor, for stranger, for alien, for outsider, for outcast, and even for
enemy, as he himself modeled. The new commandment of love meant that neither
beliefs nor words, neither taboos, systems, structures nor the labels that
enshrined them mattered most. Love decentered everything else; love relativized
everything else; love took priority over everything else—everything. In the
Sermon on the Mount…Jesus makes this audacious statement: God generously
showers both the good and the evil with rain and sun. In other words, God love
is completely nondiscriminatory: God loves us not because we are so deserving
and lovable, but because God is so loving, without limitation or discrimination.
This nondiscriminatory love, Jesus says, is the true perfection, the true maturity
toward which we should aspire: to be perfect as God is perfect is to love
without discrimination because that is how God loves.
McLaren speaks beautifully about
Christ’s ethic of love. “You have heard that it was said, but I say to you”: Love
is the prime directive, the most important concept in the world. Christ’s
commandment for us to love takes precedent over any ethic we practice, any
questions we ask, any contradictions we might see. God’s love is complete and
nondiscriminatory, so our love must be as well. This is the news we need to
hear in this sanctuary today, in our homes today, in our country today. We are
called to love without discrimination because that is how God loves. We are
called to aspire to this perfection of love because God’s love is perfect. And
the best news of all is that God is with us, with us in the flesh in Jesus
Christ—God is loving us all along the way. So, what are we going to about it? How
are we going to shine Christ’s light, the light given to us, in the world? Thanks
be to God. Amen.
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