October 27, 2013
For scripture readings click here.
For a video on this parable on "Who to judge, click here and then click on the video :Who to judge."
For scripture readings click here.
For a video on this parable on "Who to judge, click here and then click on the video :Who to judge."
In the gospel we have
just heard, Jesus tells a shocking story.
Perhaps you didn’t
experience the shock?
Part of the problem is
that many of us have heard the parables so often since we were children that we
know what’s coming:
It’s like watching a movie
for the tenth time.
Another part of the
problem is that we only vaguely get the shocking bits. Indeed, they often go
straight over our heads.
Yes, we know, or think
we know, that the Pharisee was probably like one of those people we may know,
who are so proud of their own rectitude and morality that they have no
compassion for anyone who doesn’t live up to their standards.
It’s easy to be completely
lacking in sympathy for this Righteous person. After all, we are tolerant,
accepting, open people.
We hope our parishes are
welcoming places, open to all who join us or want to join us.
We can feel secure in
disliking this person who lists the sins of others, is sure he’s God’s
particular friend and has God’s approval, a person of good values.
We can also approve of
the penitence of the Publican, who bewails his faults, dares not even to assume
the customary attitude of prayer, standing with arms extended, but who crouches
on the ground and begs God for mercy.
Our approval comes
easily because we don’t know what a “low life” the Publican is.
To understand just what
a crook the Publican is, we have to remember who the tax gatherers were in
Jesus’ day.
Tax collectors worked
for the hated Romans, who were not only unclean gentiles, but oppressors, those
who had conquered the Jewish state and ruled it with sometimes savage
enthusiasm.
Jewish tax collectors
were the equivalent of those who collaborated with the Nazis, or the Soviets in
occupied Europe during World War II, or Christians in Rwanda who stood by or
participated in the massacre of their fellow citizens.
A tax gatherer was given
an area and told to raise a certain sum of money. How he did this wasn’t an
issue; how much he pocketed for himself didn’t matter as long as the Romans got
the money they wanted.
Probably no one was
hated as much as a tax gatherer, not even a self-righteous Pharisee who looked
down on those who didn’t meet his standards.
So when Jesus approves
of the Publican, the tax-gatherer, one can imagine the shock that went through
his hearers.
It would be as if he’d
singled out someone who has ruined people with a Ponzi scheme, and now enters
our church and professes repentance in the company of those defrauded.
If we are to be polled,
we’ll vote to approve of a self-righteous but upright person over a swindler
and a crook.
To tell the truth, we,
too, can sound like the Righteous Man who thanks God that he is not like other people.
How often do we blame
the poor, saying that they are feckless, irresponsible and culpable in their
own poverty because they haven’t bettered themselves or taken advantage of the
American Dream?
We don’t want to be
taxed to pay for their health care, housing, feeding. Why should we share that
which we’ve worked hard for with those we regard to be lazy and unworthy?
To justify our lack of
“faith, hope and charity,” we trot out examples of people who really want to
live off others, and blame all poor people for the indolence of a few.
Worse still, we feel
that God owes us his attention to our needs, that we deserve his love and grace
because we are better than others and keep, or think we keep, God’s laws.
We trot out “forgive us
our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us” quite easily.
“Forgive us our debts,”
that which we owe God and owe others implies that there is something to
forgive, that we do fall short.
Of course we do.
This morning, here in
the presence of God, we feel secure because we believe that God is ever loving,
ever forgiving, always ready to restore us. We are right. Jesus offered himself
for us, placed himself between “our sins and their reward” in an act of self-sacrificial
love.
We come before God today
not secure in our own righteousness, but as the old prayer puts it, “in thy
manifold and great mercies.
We are not worthy so
much as to gather up the crumbs under thy table.
But thou art the same
Lord whose property is always to have mercy.”
God approves of the
wretched tax gatherer over the Righteous Man, because the tax gatherer admits
his faults.
We show our own
penitence not just by making our confession together, but by our willingness to
forgive and love those who are in need.
Without God’s love, our
love isn’t up to that task.
With God’s love, we can
love even those who repel us.
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