Sunday, October 14, 2012

October 14, 2012 - Proper 23B


In the name of God- Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Amen.
            Well, there are pledge cards in the pews in front of you, and Jesus encounters a man asking for advice on discipleship and he tells him “sell what you own and give the money to the poor.” So this, unsurprisingly, is a financial stewardship sermon. Now before you tune me out for the next 15 minutes, before you start feeling anticipatory guilt, before you cover your wallet let’s give Jesus a chance to speak. This isn’t my message, its Jesus’. I know that this is a tough passage. It challenges me every time I read it. And let us remember, this story is found in the Gospel according to Mark- so at its heart, this story testifies to the Good News.
            In preparing for this sermon I ran across a commentary that noted that people misread this passage in one of two ways. Either they say that this passage is just an allegory and it isn’t really about money, or they say that this passage is only speaking about money. Both of these misunderstandings limit the impact of Jesus’ teaching. So I’ll use that as the structure for this sermon- addressing those that say this isn’t about money first, and then those that say it’s only about money.
            So we start by addressing those that say this passage isn’t about money. No sense in sugar coating it, they’re wrong. This passage is about money. The historical context for the story is important. Whether it’s the 99% ganging up on the 1%, the cry for higher taxes on the wealthy, or the distrust of Wall Street, there are strong feelings against those who are rich. People who earn a healthy living are often distrusted because it is assumed that they cheated or exploited others to get that money. This isn’t at all though what Jesus would have thought about the rich man whom he encounters.
            To be rich in Jesus’ time was to be blessed. If you had wealth, it was because God was happy with you and gave you these good things. Being rich was a sign of honor. We though live in a different context, and we understand that being rich doesn’t mean that God loves you any more than anyone else. But the context of this passage reminds us that God doesn’t love the rich any less either. We do God, and the rich, an injustice when we condemn them for being rich.
            What Jesus does speak against though is consumerism. This man comes to Jesus with a first-world sort of problem. We know that he’s well off because he comes not asking for healing, because he can afford medical care; not for food, because he isn’t hungry; but instead he comes asking how to inherit, a financial term, eternal life. He’s enjoying this life so much; he wants to make sure that it continues forever.
            He has become used to earning things through his wealth or prestige. Money has a way of making us feel entitled to things. I was listening to a story last weekend on the radio about poverty in America. They were speaking with a family of 6 that lives on $500 a month. I don’t think of myself as the rich man in this story, but in hearing their story I realized that I might as well be. And with that, I’ve bought into consumerism. There are things that I feel entitled to because I have a steady paycheck. If I want to go out for a nice dinner every once in a while, I do it. I tell myself that I work hard and that I deserve it. And in a similar way, this man came to Jesus thinking “I’m blessed because God is happy with me, I deserve the chance to get eternal life.”
            Consumerism places our emphasis on the economy of the world instead of the economy of God. In the world’s economy, there are fiscal cliffs, uncontrollable debt, and scarcity. But in God’s economy there is always enough for everyone. One scholar defines consumerism as “the glorification of individual choice.” But the message that Jesus continually goes back to is “it’s about the Kingdom of God.” Consumerism puts our interests on profits and our own comfort rather than making sure that every person can live with dignity. The Kingdom of God isn’t for sale, nor is eternal life. The man learns this lesson when Jesus tells him to sell all of his things and give the money to the poor. The man came to Jesus, perhaps hoping that Jesus would tell him to give his money to the poor, not to become poor.
            He couldn’t imagine doing this. And neither can I. Sell everything? I trust God, but I’m not sure that I could do this. Even many monks struggle with this. They take a vow of poverty, yet they all own things, often even owning property. But yet, Jesus calls us to give it all away. CS Lewis said that “nothing you have not given away will ever really be yours.” If we hang onto it so tightly that we can’t give it away, then it owns us. I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again. If you can’t give your money away, it controls you instead of you controlling it.
            But giving money away still isn’t easy. What does that mean to do with less? Anne Frank said “no one has ever become poor by giving.” And she’s right, but she also had a bit more courage than most of us. There is a William Faulkner play in which one of the poor characters is talking to a rich many about money and he says “I ain’t rich, I don’t need no money. We fool ourselves into thinking that if we just had a little bit more money the financial stress would go away. But we all know that somehow, expenses always rise to meet income. If getting money, even if it’s for retirement or savings, is our goal, we’ll never have enough. If everything seems to come simply by signing checks, we might soon forget that we are, at every moment, dependent on God.
            And though we may never have enough, there are too many people that aren’t even close to having enough. Too many people die of starvation and preventable disease. Too many animals are abused and too few children are given education. As I said in my last sermon, “God only wins when we lose.” When we lose money by helping those in need, God’s justice and love wins. So maybe giving money away means not getting a big vacation every year, but if that means those in need are less needy, then I think we’re all okay with that.
            Jesus didn’t mince his words on this; there’s no getting around it. He said sell all that you have and give it away. As we’re in our financial stewardship season, this is a tough message. We’d be ecstatic if everyone gave 10%, but Jesus seems to be calling us to give 100%.  But how do we do this responsibly? If I sold my house, clothes, and car, how would I eat? Even Jesus knew that money was necessary because one of the disciples was the treasurer. Now, yes, this was Judas; but still, he carried the money because sometimes you need to buy things.
            If this reading is about money, how do we respond? Do we sell it all and start living in a commune? This is where we need to move into the second half the sermon, addressing those that say this passage is only about money, because, they too, are wrong. This passage is about a lot more than money.
            About a year ago I was talking with Bishop Curry about preaching during stewardship season. And he commented that the readings that we often get during October aren’t as much about money as they are about the Kingdom of God. Jesus isn’t a financial planner; he is the Messiah. He didn’t come to preach about finances, he came to preach about the Kingdom. And he tells us that the “Kingdom of God is among you.” And if the Kingdom is a present reality, we need to live in that Kingdom, working to build it instead of work against it. And how we use our money will determine whether we are working for or against the Kingdom. So this passage is indeed about something much larger than money.
            The way that Jesus responds to this man is easy to miss. Before he tells him to sell his possessions, he looks at him and loves him. Jesus didn’t chastise him for being rich, he didn’t condemn him for being selfish, he didn’t challenge him for attempting to buy eternal life. Instead, he simply loved him. Jesus genuinely wants this man to have eternal life. Jesus sees that he is ripe for true conversion. He yearns to do the will of God, and he’s been trying by keeping the commandments. He just quite hasn’t gotten over the hump of living in the Kingdom of God instead of the kingdoms of this world. This wonderful addition reminds us that in our life of discipleship, we are loved and supported. It reminds us of those great words from our reading from Hebrews today: “For we do not have a high priest who is unable to sympathize with our weaknesses, but we have one who in every respect has been tested as we are, yet without sin. Let us therefore approach the throne of grace with boldness, so that we may receive mercy and find grace to help in time of need.”
            We can have boldness to act as disciples. Jesus has walked this plight of suffering for the sake of the cross. Our Lord knows what it means to live without, and he knows what it means to rise from the deaths that plague us. We can be bold enough to live in total commitment to Jesus and the Kingdom of God.
            The man in this passage is often called the “rich man.” He has been defined by his wealth, and Jesus confronts him to give up his wealth, because that is what prevents him from entering the Kingdom of God. What defines you? What prevents you from going “all in” for the Kingdom of God? Maybe it’s an addiction, pride, an old grudge, a sense of entitlement? If you encountered Jesus, what name would you get? Would you be the man with a short temper? The woman with control issues? Are we overly devoted to our jobs, or even to our families? Do we exercise more than we serve others? What could Jesus tell you to give up that would shock you and send you away grieving? The message this morning is clear: whatever defines you, Jesus calls us to give it up for the sake of following him in living for the present Kingdom of God.
            There has been a lot of talk recently about politics and whether or not “you built that” or whether the government helped you to build it. That’s a fine debate to have in a presidential debate, but it’s not even a question for the Christian. Whether you built it or not, give it to God. Your family, your business, your wealth, your reputation, your life- they aren’t yours to clutch onto. Instead, they’re God’s blessings bestowed upon you. Whether or not you built it really doesn’t matter, so long as what we’re seeking first is to build is the Kingdom of God. This passage would actually be a lot easier to deal with if it was just about money, but it isn’t that simple.
            But let us not lose sight of the fact that this is Good News. It is Good News that the last will be first. It is Good News that God is with us when we choose to be the last. It is Good News that for God, all things are possible. It might be impossible for us to put a camel through the eye of a needle, and in a similar way, it might be impossible to come up with the courage to live fully for God, to give up what is most dear to us for God’s Kingdom. But it is Good News that through God these things are indeed possible.
            It might be Good News, but perhaps it isn’t welcome news. Our passage from Job today shows us of the great power of lament and complaining to God. At the end of Job, the text literally says that God restored all the fortunes to Job because he talked to God. If this is a hard message, talk to God about it. Tell God that you don’t like giving until it hurts. Tell God that you’ve worked hard to get where you are and you don’t think it’s fair to give it up. Tell God that you want to trust God enough to do this, but you need help taking that first step. Take the prayer of St. Augustine before God- “give me the grace to do as you command, and the command to do what you will.”
            This isn’t supposed to be easy. A lot of people assume that this rich man went away and didn’t sell his possessions. But maybe he did. Perhaps as soon as Jesus told him to do so, he realized that he must. So he walked home, thinking of all that he’d have to sell, and he mourned the loss. Jesus didn’t say “sell all that you have and be happy about it.” This is tough stuff. Faith isn’t always easy. But God is with us. God’s Kingdom is present. We can do this together.
            It’s a tough passage to get in the midst of a financial stewardship campaign. We are reminded that this passage is about money, challenging us to consider how we use it. And this is a passage about much more than money. We are invited to consider how we define ourselves and then give up those attachment that bind us to the kingdoms of this world instead of the Kingdom of God. Though it is difficult news, this is Good News. It is Good News when Jesus says “Truly I tell you, there is no one who has left house or family or fields, for my sake and for the sake of the Good News, who will not receive a hundredfold now in this age…and in the age to come eternal life.” So we pray and struggle to give it away, knowing that we will be blessed to be a blessing in sharing God’s blessings.
I know, the children, the mortgage, aging parents, bills, the uncertain economy, the future. I know. I struggle with this too. There are days when threading a needle with a camel seems easier than following Jesus. So what hope do we have? And who is brave enough to do all this? The question hasn’t changed much over years, and neither has the answer. For us, it is impossible, but for not for God. For God, all things are possible. Thanks be to God.