Community
Church Sermons
Thirteenth
Sunday after Pentecost, Year B - September 10, 2000
"Indiscriminate
Mercy"
James 2:1-13
Practical Christianity.
I must confess to you that's what I'm interested in.
Practical Christianity. A down-to-earth faith that walks more than it talks. A
faith that not only believes great things, but lives out those beliefs every
day. A faith that works.
And if that's the kind of faith that interests you,
I want to urge you to embrace the Bible, and most particularly, the New
Testament. Contrary to what many people think, the Bible is not a book about
who begat who, not a convenient listing of life's do's and don'ts, not a book
of complicated genealogies, not a book of theological doctrines that set us
against the advances of science, or the marvels of medicine, or the progress of
technology.
No, the Bible is the story of the people of God.
People like you and me. People who struggle every day with the very real and
sometimes painful challenges of birth and life and death. And the Bible is the
unfolding story of the God who loves us, coming alongside our lives, teaching,
guiding, loving, forgiving, healing - making it possible for us to experience
the fullest heights of life both in the here-and-now and in the life to come.
The Bible is a library of books that tells the
living story of God walking with people, and people walking with God. Sometimes
it doesn't go very well because of the flawed humanity of God's people. And God
gets ticked off at the people, and the people get ticked off at God! Sometimes
it goes better than expected because of God's immeasurable power, mercy
and grace. And God's people discover that God can be trusted - even when they
find it hard to believe or understand.
And when you read the Bible as the true-life drama
of people walking with God, and God walking with people, you begin to see yourself!
Your family. Your circumstances. Your
internal struggles. The every day issues you face in life.
And faith becomes very practical - not
something you feel; or think or understand, but something you do in
every circumstance and every relationship.
Now in my opinion, the New Testament letter of James
is a terrific example of this practical faith. Last week, in chapter one, we
discovered that Christians are called to be generous givers. We are to
be generous giving away our love, and our resources. We are to be generous
giving away mercy and forgiveness. We are to creatively give ourselves away to
others in Jesus' name. And, we learned that Christians must become good
listeners, for there are people all around us who need to be listened to
and understood before we can know how to love them. And, James teaches,
Christians are to be people who devote themselves to caring for
widows, orphans, and others who are vulnerable. Now, these are not
theological concepts to be mulled over, but rather practical things to do every
day of your life. Practices that will make you a better person, and this a
better world. Practices that will bring glory to God.
And in today's passage from the letter of James,
chapter two, we encounter another very practical practice of the Christian
faith. Here's how I'd paraphrase it:
Don't be partial to high-powered people!
Peter Kreeft tells us that in the Latin rite for the
burial of an Austrian emperor, the people carry the corpse to the door of the
great monastic church. They strike the door and say: "Open." The
abbot inside says: "Who is there?" The people shout, "Emperor
Karl, THE KING OF AUSTRIA!" The response from inside: "We know of
no such person here." So the people strike the door again. "Who is
there?" asks the abbot. "EMPEROR Karl," the people shout. And
from inside the reply, "We know of no such person here." So they
strike the door a third time. "Who is there?" asks the abbot from
inside the church. "Karl," -
say the people. And the door swings open.
The Bible teaches that God is no respecter of
persons. Now that doesn't mean that God disrespects us, but rather that God is
immune to being impressed by our credentials. God doesn't give a hoot about
social status. God sees right through our pedigrees, awards, wealth, power,
standing, and reputation.
These things mean nothing to God.
But they mean a lot to us.
One of my dear friends and colleagues used to
vacation in Kennebunk, Maine. Each summer, the little Congregational Church
nearby opened up for the vacation season only, supplying it's pulpit with a different
visiting minister each week. My friend was one of those ministers. And he loved
doing it. It didn't take much work because he could just pull a sermon out of
the old sermon barrel and adjust it to the needs of the handful of vacationers
who attended the services. And the people enjoyed it because they got to attend
church on Sunday and hear a good message preached by a fresh voice.
One summer, a number of years ago, my friend was all
set to leave for Maine. His vacation schedule was overflowing with exciting
things to do. The sermon to be preached at the little church that Sunday was
all selected and tucked away in his briefcase. The car was packed and ready to
go. And just then, the telephone rang. It was the secretary of the little
church up in Maine. She had just received a phone call. It was from the White
House. She thought my friend would appreciate knowing that President Bush was
going to attend church that Sunday!
When my friend told me about this, he was in state
of sheer panic. He certainly couldn't preach the re-warmed sermon he had
planned to use, with its rather simple points aimed at people who were on
vacation and not looking for something long and deep. And there was so little
time left to prepare a new sermon for Sunday - a sermon that would be fit for
the President of the United States, the leader of the free world. Oh, he was in
quite a tizzy. I laughed and told him I'd pray for him. After all, what are
friends for?
Well, my dear colleague made a bold decision. He
yanked that old simple sermon out of his briefcase and left it at home. Then he
drove to Maine and pulled an all-nighter on Friday night, and spent all day
Saturday and most of the evening preparing a new sermon that would be
appropriate for the President and all his advisors. Despite being terribly
tired, he hardly slept a wink that Saturday night. Sometime around dawn he gave
up trying, rolled out of bed, and drove down to the little church. There, all
alone, he walked down the aisle and climbed into the pulpit, and began to
rehearse. "…and so you see, Mr. President, Jesus calls the leaders of
nations to…"
And just about the time he came to the end of the
newly constructed sermon, custom-made for the President of the United States,
the church secretary came running through the door, and dashed down the aisle.
Out of breath, the woman gasped, "I thought I'd better tell you that
the White House just called. The President has been called back to Washington,
and won't be here after all!"
A little more than an hour later, my friend was
again in the pulpit of that little church, looking out over a small
congregation of vacationers wearing shorts and tee-shirts, trying to make the
best out of a sermon written for the wrong audience. He sure wished he had
thought to at least bring along that other sermon. The one intended for real
people. My friend had succumbed to what James describes as partiality.
And you know what? I probably would have done the
same. How about you?
There is something about power - success - wealth -
standing - reputation - that magnetically draws us, tempting us to get close to
it. I once served a church where people had what they felt were their own
seats. They had sat in them for so many years, the pews were almost
form-fitting! And once in awhile, a visitor would come, and not knowing the
divine truth about who sat where would inadvertently plop down in one of these
"reserved" seats. And it wasn't pretty what happened after that!
Needless to say, that church had a problem getting visitors to return.
But then came the Christmas Eve service when Sam
"Bam" Cunningham - the All-Pro fullback of the New England Patriots
came to church. And there were these same pious pew-owners saying, "Oh,
come take MY seat!"
What is it that causes us to make distinctions like
this?
Well, James says it's sin at work in our
lives.
What appears to us to be beautiful and attractive
about people sometimes masks and camouflages tremendous evil hidden
within. Here in James, the people are
all agog over some wealthy folks who've come to church. They’ve given them the
seats of honor. They’ve bathed them with special attention. And to accommodate
these folks of high standing, they’ve sort of relegated all the people of low
standing to a back seat.
And James points out what they cannot see for
themselves. They are so blinded by the limelight of these folks from the upper
crust that they don't even realize the seriousness of their sin. James declares
three problems with it. One, they obviously don't really believe in Jesus who
has chosen the poor - not the wealthy - to inherit the kingdom. James says the
partiality they are showing to the powerful is a subtle kind of blasphemy
against the excellence of Jesus’ name, as well as a dishonoring of the poor.
Two, they obviously don't understand that the drive for wealth, power and
standing is at the very heart of what's wrong with the world and that destroys
people, most especially the poor. And third, what they are doing is sin, and
this sin of making distinctions between people is on an equal level with the
sin of adultery, or the sin of murder.
It's that serious!
After all, what is the genesis of something like racism if not the destructive attitudes and the resulting behaviors created by elevating some, and lowering others? What was the impetus behind the holocaust, in which six million Jews were exterminated as part of a Final Solution intended to create a pure, Master Race? What was behind the Crusades in which the faithful went off to destroy the infidels? What is the root cause of injustice if not a raising of some and a lowering of others?
These are all fruits of a tree whose roots run deep
in our lives. They are the result of ordinary people like you and me who have
been taught from childhood that it’s both okay and good to make distinctions
between people.
But now that Jesus of Nazareth has made a claim on
our lives, we have to change.
If you're going to follow Christ, you need to learn
a new skill that is able to bridge all the artificial distinctions we make
between people. James, in the last verse of our text today, calls it mercy.
That's a theological word. But what it means is
this: mercy is the act of loving people not for what they've done or not
done, but because they are - children of the living God. And the very
practical outliving of mercy is the art of
friendship.
If you're going to follow Christ, you have to stop
making distinctions, and start making friends!
And I want to close this morning by offering four
practical ideas.
First, if you're going to be a Christian, you can't
have just Christian friends. In a world that is painfully divided by religion,
it is essential for us to go out and make friends with people who think and
believe differently. Jews, Muslims, Buddhists, atheists, agnostics are loved by
God, too. So bring God's love to them.
Second, if you're going to be a Christian and you
live in Tellico Village or Rarity Bay, you're going to have to drive over the
bridge and make friends with the people of Loudon County. The artificial
distinctions between us need to be blurred. Why, the natives of East Tennessee
are some of the most beautiful, loving, interesting people you can ever meet!
They are people just like us. They are God's children!
Third, if you're going to be a Christian, you're
going to have to resist being rude to people. Servers in restaurants.
Carpenters building our homes. Clerks in stores. Rudeness is nothing more than
the practice of making distinctions between people. It is valuing yourself more
highly than another. And it makes the world a sadder place. It ruins the day of
the recipient. And it is an insult to the God we represent. Oh, it's okay to
speak the truth in love, but it's not okay to treat people like dogs at
our beck and call.
And fourth, if you're going to be a Christian,
you're going to have to tenaciously hang on to Jesus' promises. He says that
when the kingdom comes, the last will be first and the first will be last, the
poor will inherit the kingdom and the rich will lose their wealth, the lowly
will be lifted and the powerful will be put down, the weak will be empowered
and the strong will not prevail. Do you believe Jesus is right? If you do, come
and build your life on it.
So here's today's very practical application of
faith. Be careful about making distinctions. Learn to live with mercy.
Go, and make friends in Jesus' name!