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better, Bible, body, body of Christ, church, dignity, discipleship, discomfort, divorce, hard, interpretation, Jesus, love, mend, relationship, restore, self-centered, Sermon, together
As a teenager, in my rural southern United Methodist Church, our Sunday School class each week was an in-depth Bible Study of some book of the Bible. I have a distinct memory of one particular class where a condemning text arose about divorce. My Sunday School teacher herself was divorced and was happily and healthily remarried. I remember being aghast and indignant about the text, questioning my teacher about how divorce could be seen in such a condemning way, holding in my mind how beautiful my teacher’s current marriage was. Her response to me was a defeated admission of judgement for herself and her husband that would not be remedied.
Once upon a time, I might have told you that faulty biblical interpretation like this is what drove me from the Methodist church to the Episcopal Church. But the truth is, there have been many a times when Episcopalians do not fare much better. When confronted with gospel lessons like we have today from Matthew, most Episcopalians are more likely to either brush hard texts under the rug, or minimize and point you to something shiny, like “It’s all about love, so don’t worry about that pesky Biblical passage.”
Instead, today I invite us to acknowledge that Jesus’ words in Matthew’s gospel are hard. When Jesus tells us we cannot approach the altar without being reconciled in our broken relationships, or that our natural urges are so destructive we should gouge out our eyes, or that divorcing or lying are gravely dangerous offenses, we get nervous and even defensive. Where is that Jesus of love we like so much? Is not this a place where we claim all are welcome?
In order to understand scripture today – in a way that is neither defeatistly resigned nor superficially glossed over – the discomfort we may be feeling today is actually a good thing. The first thing you need to know about Jesus is that he was a skilled rhetorician. Much of what you hear today about ripping eyes out and cutting off hands are used not literally, but figuratively to point to something very important: the central importance of relationships in the community of the faithful.[i] Jesus wants to shock and provoke, to unsettle and destabilize, because he wants to invite a reorientation.[ii] I find theologian Stanley Hauerwas’ explanation the most helpful. He argues, “Jesus does not imply that we are to be free of either anger or lust; that is, he assumes that we are bodily beings. Rather he offers us membership in a community in which our bodies are formed in service to God and for one another so that our anger and our lust are transformed…Jesus is not recommending that we will our way free of lust and anger, but rather he is offering us membership in a people that is so compelling we are not invited to dwell on ourselves or our sinfulness…If we are a people committed to peace in a world of war, if we are a people committed to faithfulness in a world of distrust, then we will be consumed by a way to live that offers freedom from being dominated by anger or lust.”[iii]
Now I can tell you about how progressive Jesus words are about divorce since women were socially and economically marginalized by divorce at the time,[iv] or I could address anger, lying, or lust. But all of these four vignettes are meant to point our attention not to the salacious nature of Jesus’ words, but what Jesus is trying to do for us. Being a part of Hickory Neck or the wider body of Christ means our bodies are part of Christ’s body – that, as Dietrich Bonhoeffer suggests, we are so in communion with Jesus’ body that our infidelity is not just a sin against our own body, but against Jesus’ body.[v] We come here not just to reassure our own selves, and to find restoration for our souls, but also to be a part of something bigger. To become disciples, finding a purpose much bigger than our naturally self-centered ways, means becoming part of the larger body of Christ – a body that mends broken relationships, restores others to wholeness, and values the dignity of every human being.
The good news is that you do not join that body of discipleship alone. Everyone of us here is on the journey to being a different kind of human than the outside world would have us be. In fact, the reason we do this work together is we are better together than we ever could be on our own. We hold each other accountable, we keep working on reconciliation when we fail, we offer grace and love in our very humanness. The choice is ours. As Sirach aptly describes today, the choice is always before us – the choice of life or death, of fire or water. Our invitation today is to choose relationship – to choose the life of discipleship that joins us to the body of Christ, that roots us in the love of Christ, and enables our work of light in the world. We cannot do the work alone. Our invitation is to choose the love and light of Christ that we find his body, the Church, and in the relationships we find here. Amen.
[i] Ronald J. Allen, “Homiletical Perspective,” Feasting on the Word, Yr. A, Vol. 1 (Louisville: Westminster John Knox Press, 2010), 359.
[ii] Anna Case-Winters, Matthew. Belief: A Theological Commentary on the Bible (Louisville: Westminster John Knox Press, 2015), 84.
[iii] Stanley Hauerwas, Matthew: Brazos Theological Commentary on the Bible (Grand Rapids: Brazos Press, 2006), 69.
[iv] Case-Winters, 81.
[v] Dietrich Bonhoeffer, as referenced by Hauerwas, 70.
