Following the admonition to love our enemies, Jesus’ focus in the Sermon on the Mount turned to what motivates our actions, and particularly our piety—another way of reminding us that life and faith are team sports.
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As I stand here this morning with my folder and my manuscript to guide me through the next several minutes as I preach, I am aware that Jesus preached a rather lengthy sermon to the people gathered on the hillside without any notes. I am also aware, as we have been working through the sermon over the past few weeks, that he had an outline he was following. He may have been speaking extemporaneously, but he wasn’t just making stuff up as he went along. There is a trajectory, a thread to follow.
The verses we read last week, along with today’s passage, give us a good example. At the end of Chapter Five, Jesus implored his listeners to love their enemies and to live into their identity as those who are created in the image of God and worthy of both loving and being loved. In our verses for this morning, he moved to talk about justice on a more personal level, challenging his listeners to examine their hearts and their motivations. God is not only calling us to love one another, God is also calling us to love one another in a way that doesn’t seek to get credit for the gift.
The Message translation phrases it in a helpful way:
“Be especially careful when you are trying to be good so that you don’t make a performance out of it. It might be good theater, but the God who made you won’t be applauding. . . . When you help someone out, don’t think about how it looks. Just do it—quietly and unobtrusively. That is the way your God, who conceived you in love, working behind the scenes, helps you out. . . . And when you come before God, don’t turn that into a theatrical production either. . . . Do you think God sits in a box seat?”
All of the theatrical imagery comes from the word translated as “play actor” in our passage, but often rendered as hypocrite. The Greek word actually means a play actor: someone who is putting on a show or acting a part.
Matthew’s account puts most of this section in the format of a comparison—don’t be like them!—but the heart of what Jesus was saying wasn’t about who not to be as much as it was about the choices we make and what motivates us to be people of mercy and justice. He was echoing, once again, the words of the prophet Micah that we have spoken often:
“What does God require of us but to do justice, love kindness, and walk humbly with God.”
This passage is about not just walking humbly, but sharing and praying humbly, reminding us again that the first rule of theology is, “There is a God and its not me.”
We have a couple of other things to keep in mind. One is that the giving here is not talking about how much they are putting in the offering plate. Jesus was talking about how they shared what they had with those who needed help. To help those around us requires, first, that we are looking for those who need help. We can only be compassionate when we see beyond ourselves, when we see how our griefs connect us with others, when we understand shared burdens become lighter.
The other thing to remember here is that Jesus wasn’t talking to rich people. Most of the people sitting on that hillside would have been poor or working class at best. I don’t imagine any of them was contemplating what portion of their investments they could do without if it meant the new educational wing of the Temple would be named after them. Jesus was talking to people who did not have limitless resources. Jesus was talking to poor and working-class people about how to share with poor people.
Regardless of our economic status, sharing what we have helps us learn a survival strategy that is motivated in kindness when the help we offer one another is not taken out of a surplus but out of everyday limited resources. Then it is an act of trust, of faith, and it is also an act of community solidarity.
God is with us and we are with each other.
In our Lenten Bible study yesterday, we looked at part of the life of the prophet Elijah. At one point, he had nearly starved to death and God led him to the house of a widow. She and her son were literally down to their last portion of flour and oil. They had enough for one more meal. Elijah showed up and told her God wanted her to feed him, too—in fact, to make a small loaf for him first and then feed herself and her son. If she did so, God would provide.
She trusted what Elijah told her and she fed him. The next morning, there was still enough flour and oil for one more day. That continued day after day. Like the old hymn says, “Morning by morning, new mercies I see.”
Jesus then moved to talking about how we talk to God, and the instructions we similar. Just as we are to walk humbly with our God, we might say we are also to talk humbly with our God. Jesus’ admonitions remind me of a skit I saw Lily Tomlin do years ago when she used to play the character of a precocious and rather mischievous little girl named Edith Ann. She said, “My mama told me that God is watching me all the time, so sometimes I stop and do little commercials for myself.”
Jesus said prayer was about more than making sure we look good to God or to anyone else. He wasn’t saying that no one should pray in public. Praying together is an important thing to do. He was talking about how we choose our words and the attitudes behind them. God doesn’t need platitudes. God doesn’t need compliments in order to be convinced to listen to us. God is with us. God is listening. So, Jesus said, pray with integrity and honesty.
What follows are familiar words that we know as the Lord’s Prayer, so they may be hard to hear in fresh ways since we know them so well and we say them every week. Yet, when we boil them down to their essence, they are words about essentials:
May God’s name be spoken with reverence;
May God’s purpose be accomplished on earth;
Give us enough for today;
Forgive us and teach us to forgive;
Lead us and protect us.
The short prayer asks a lot of God: accomplish your purpose, give us enough, forgive us, lead and protect us. Jesus’ sermon reminds us that it asks a lot of us as well. God is with us. God is in us. God moves in us and through us. We are God’s hands and voices. Like the widow who fed Elijah, we have to be willing to make the bread and share what we have.
Remember, Jesus how started this sermon:
Happy are those who are exhausted and crushed because they will find hope because God’s realm belongs to them.
Happy are those who are living with heart-breaking grief because they will find sustaining comfort.
Happy are those who are gentle in the face of brazen power because they will be the ones who inherit the earth.
Happy are those who are starving for justice because they will feast like never before.
Happy are those who show mercy—who don’t use their power to lord over others—for they will be shown mercy.
Happy are those who live with integrity and honesty because they will see God.
Happy are those who make peace around them because they will be recognized as God’s children.
Happy are those who are hounded and insulted because they choose the path of justice and belonging because they will get the last laugh when love wins.
Remember also the verb in these blessings is plural—happy ARE—and so is the prayer—give US, forgive US, lead and protect US.
If we live as though God will provide enough for us to continue, we are going to be more generous. If we live trusting that we are forgiven and don’t have to earn love, we are going to be more forgiving. If we trust that God is with us no matter what we face, we are going to be more courageous. That is how God’s purpose is accomplished on earth as it is in heaven, even on mornings like this when so much of life around us feels uncertain.
To do justice, love kindness, and walk humbly with God is not a recipe for success or fame, it is a call to trust, to faithfulness. May we, like the widow who fed Elijah, be those who choose to trust God no matter the circumstance, those who will share what we have. Amen.
Peace,
Milton