I don’t know if anyone is reading this, but I’ll continue to write. It’s cathartic for me. Sometimes I don’t feel good about what I said or how it might have been received; writing helps.
Last Sunday, from Luke 16.14-31, I asked the question where do we go wrong. As individuals and as communities, we can easily travel down roads that are detrimental to ourselves and others. The Christian church doesn’t have a spotless record, to say the least. Why and how do we get it wrong as Christians?
First, we go wrong in our thinking whenever we assume too quickly that God is on our side. That’s what the Pharisees were doing. They believed that wealth is next to godliness. Such a view stifles compassion. To challenge their perspective, Jesus tells a story about a divine reversal: the rich man goes to Hades; the poor man, to heaven. Jesus is not describing hell or what it might take to end up there. Instead, Jesus is drawing a large startling picture because the Pharisees are nearly blind. Jesus is saying, your thinking is skewed, your values are inverted, don’t assume God is on your side.
As I suggested last Sunday, this happens all of the time. Our own values get twisted. It’s like what Augustine said as he was trying to describe the moral decay of the Roman Empire, “People care more about having a bad house than about having a bad life.” What would he say about us today? People care more about having the wrong clothes than about living the wrong way? People care more about having a bad image than about having a bad character? I believe he might say those things. And too often, we put some sort of spiritual or godly spin on this type of thinking: “God wants me to be happy; God wants to me to be blessed.”
But Jesus challenges this view: “what is prized by human beings is an abomination in the sight of God” (Luke 16.15). Ouch! What do we value? Glitz and glamour? Wealth? The bottomline? Million dollar contracts? All of that might be an abomination. What does God value? We don’t like the answer to that question. But answer it we must. He values justice, righteousness, the poor, equity, love, humility, to name a few.
So we go wrong whenever we assume too quickly that God is on our side. We must acknowledge that he is addressing us, and we must respond to his calling, to his challenge, to be a new type of people.
Secondly, we go wrong because we do not listen very well. We stifle God’s truth. Back to the text: The rich man wants Lazarus to go back to earth to warn his brothers. Evidently, he has five other brothers who are living just like he was—without compassion, without righteousness. Abraham refuses. Not because Abraham is uncaring, but because Abraham knows that if his brothers don’t listen to Moses and the Prophets, they won’t listen to Lazarus. Did you hear that? If these brothers aren’t the type of people who are listening to Moses and the Prophets, then a miracle won’t do an ounce of good.
Again, this is what frequently happens. We hear only what we want to hear; we see only what we want to see. We listen selectively, cafeteria style—I’ll take some of that, some of that, but none of that; dessert, carbs, but no vegetables. That’s what the Pharisees did. They read scripture, took some of the verses out of context, and concluded that God blesses the righteous—wealth is next to godliness. It worked well for them, since they were, for the most part, middle-class men. But they neglected the call to justice. We can fall prey to the same temptation. We can stifle God’s truth. We can create truth and God in our own image and end up missing the mark.
God have mercy on us. We need to be the type of people who listen with every fiber of our being. It always amazes me how people can sit in church, nod their heads, and yet still live in sin. I can preach on being reconciled to others and people will leave church still remaining stuck in their stubborn ways of life. Or I can preach on following Christ, and people will refuse or do so half-heartedly and wonder why they're so unhappy. They don't listen. They have hears but do not hear. I must stop now . . . Let me know if I’m way off base. Peace!
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