Shifting Paradigms
One of the opportunities we have during our senior year of seminary is to preach in chapel. Today it was my turn. The scripture passage was Luke 6:27-38.
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Our campus is alive with
expectation. In 24 days, seniors called to the ministry of Word and Sacrament
will receive regional assignments. Graduation for all seniors is a mere 101
days away, not that anyone is counting. We cannot help but wonder where we will
land. Middlers, in just a few weeks you will be going through the marathon of
internship matching, affectionately called “speed dating” with all its
excitement and anxiety. And you juniors are looking forward to completing your
first year of seminary and embarking upon the world of CPE. How do you feel
about that?
Today’s scripture passage is taken
from Jesus’ Sermon on the Plain as Luke's gospel calls it. Just as our
regional, internship, and CPE assignments are not for everyone, these words of
Jesus are not for everyone. They are not for the multitude. Who are they for
then? They are for followers of Jesus. They are for us.
Once he has our attention, Jesus
simply tells us to love. We can do that. God is love. We understand that. That
seems basic. And Jesus must have really meant it because he mentions love six
different times in these few verses. We are a loving community here. We look
after and love our friends and neighbors. And of course, we love our families. But
Jesus is pushing us beyond our comfort zone. “Love your enemies.”
Who are our enemies? We may not feel like we have any. Are those who
oppose God’s work enemies? Are enemies those different from ourselves, with
whom we are uncomfortable? Are they people of different faiths, different
colors of skin, different languages? Beggars in Jesus’ day only had the
companionship of other beggars. They may have been seen as outsiders, certainly
not friends, maybe even enemies. Who are the enemies that God is calling us to
love?
This love we are being called to is
not just some passive, nice, warm feeling. This love lived out shows we are
Jesus’ disciples. Jesus fleshes out for us what kinds of actions express such
love. First, love will do good. Anyone
can do good to those who are loveable. It
is easy to do good for our friends. But Jesus’ call is to do good, not just to
outsiders with whom we may be uncomfortable, but to do good to those who hate
us.
N. T. Wright suggests:
Think of the
best thing you can do for the worst person, and go ahead and do it. Think of
what you’d really like someone to do for you, and do it for them. Think of the
people to whom you are tempted to be nasty, and lavish generosity on them
instead. (N. T. Wright, Luke for Everyone,
73).
Are you uncomfortable yet? Jesus
pushes us even farther now. Not only are we to love our enemies, do good to
those who hate us, but now it goes beyond hatred to such people cursing us. And
just how does Jesus expect his followers to react? We are to bless them.
Doesn’t Jesus understand that some people just have to be put in their place?
But this is the call for followers of Jesus, we are to bless them—to ask for
God’s special favor, to call down God’s gracious power. We are to pray for
those who want to hurt us. Really?
Jesus teaching is radical. It is not
the norm. As one scholar said:
Jesus’ mode of
presentation certifies that his message is not simply one of prescriptive
morality, as though he were telling people how they should or should not act.
Rather, [Jesus wants us to accept that he is going to turn the world upside
down]... and to act accordingly. (Joel B. Green, The New International Commentary on the New Testament: The Gospel of
Luke, 272)
This
is the in-breaking of the kingdom of God
Jesus summarizes his message, “…love your enemies, do good, and lend,
expecting nothing in return” (v. 35a). This is what Jesus is telling us our
attitude should be. Lord, you’ve got to be kidding! Do you want people to walk
all over us? No he does not. N. T. Wright suggests, “The
kingdom that Jesus preached and lived was all about a glorious, uproarious, absurd generosity” (Luke for Everyone, 73). Jesus directs us
back to the nature of God who is “kind to the ungrateful and wicked” (v. 35b).
We are to be merciful just as God is merciful.
God lavishes love, mercy, and grace
upon all. God’s love is indiscriminate. The message that runs throughout this
passage is plain: love, do good, lend. If we pass these words off as mere hyperbole, are
we doing justice to Jesus’ admonitions? This life of community in Christ with
our neighbors AND OUR ENEMIES is beyond us. But is it beyond God?
Wright sums up this portion of the
Sermon on the Plain in this way:
There are two
particularly astonishing things about these instructions. First, their
simplicity: they are obvious, clear, direct, and memorable. Second, their
scarcity. How many people do you know who really live like this? How many
communities do you know where these guidelines are rules of life? (Wright, 75)
Are they really the rule of life here on
the Ridge?
As we each approach our times, of
new beginnings let’s turn our ears to hear Jesus calling and let’s move our
paradigm to where our world is closer to making the guidelines of love, do
good, and lend the norm. Amen.
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Comments
The simple truth is you can't see it all yet; but not to worry. I didn't forecast my current call or children or home or anything 12 years ago.
God has a plan for you, so I won't tell you to stop counting, rather I'd encourage you to prepare and to pack light and hold firm to God's Word.
Pax
John