Tuesday, June 13, 2023

230611 Sermon on Matthew 9:9-13 (Pentecost 2 Proper 5A) June 11, 2023

 Audio recording

Sermon manuscript:

Jesus said, “Those who are well have no need of a physician, but those who are sick.”

Are you sick? It’s not easy to say “Yes, I am sick.”

Let me illustrate. Sometimes pastors get asked to visit non-members who are terminally ill. I’ve made more than a few visits like that. I usually ask someone who is dying, regardless of membership, whether he or she believes that he or she is a poor, miserable sinner. You’re familiar with that language because we say that in church: “I, a poor, miserable sinner confess unto you…” When someone has never heard those words, or been absent for a long time, those words seem to strike them as being overly harsh. More than one such person has responded to my question by saying, “Yes, okay, I’m a sinner, but I’m not so sure about that poor and miserable part.” I appreciate these folks’ honesty. They are only saying what we all would probably say if we weren’t trained to say something different.

People usually aren’t afraid to admit that they are sinners in general. I’ve never met anyone who says that he or she is perfect. Everybody makes mistakes. But everybody wants to believe the best about themselves too. “Ok, fine, I screwed up, but now I’m on the right track.”

Maybe sometimes we feel very strongly that we are poor, miserable sinners. That can happen when sin is hot and fresh and stinks to high heaven. But with the passage of time we can kind of forget about what we’ve done. Moss grows over the sin so that we can’t see it anymore.

Plus we can usually find some other poor schmucks who are worse off than we are. I haven’t murdered anyone. I haven’t smoked crack. I drag my butt out of bed so that I keep my job. Not everybody does that good. Plus, you might think, I go to church. That’s getting rarer and rarer these days. And not only have I gone to church, I go to the right church, thank you very much. My church is in the right synod. My church doesn’t do bad stuff like those other churches. So, come to think of it, I’m doing alright! I’m not perfect. Nobody’s perfect. But I can find a whole bunch of other people who are a lot poorer and more miserable than me!

This kind of reasoning doesn’t sound too bad. It doesn’t sound too bad, if, for no other reason, it is quite common. Nevertheless it reveals that we are much worse off than any mere murderer or drug addict. Justifying yourself by always being on the lookout for others whom you suppose to be worse than you is a very serious sin. It is a sin against the first commandment. You are your own justifier. You are your own God. Thus your sin is worse than the sins of those who might just be breaking the fifth, sixth, or seventh commandment. You believing in your own goodness and righteousness means you are spiritually sicker than those whom you might be judging.

You probably have a hard time believing that, and I can sympathize because I have my common sense and reasoning just like you. If I were to put one of you fine, upstanding citizens next to troubled soul and asked people to judge which is better, they would probably pick you every time.

So it was at Jesus’s time too though. One time Jesus told a group of fine, upstanding pharisees that tax collectors and prostitutes were going to enter the kingdom of God before they ever would. The pharisees were quite diligent, lawful people. If you put one of those fine upstanding church goers next to a thug or a lady of the night, which one would appear to be godlier? Common sense gives you the answer.

But Jesus means what he says when he says that tax collectors and prostitutes will enter the kingdom of heaven before the pharisees. The outside might look as good and respectable as can be, but inwardly there can be the most devilish things—spiritual sins that common sense and reason are not so good at understanding. And there is nothing more devilish than pride. There is nothing more devilish than pointing, sneering, accusing, judging.

Something that we can see from our Gospel reading today is that Jesus is very different than us. Jesus is good and kind. He doesn’t point and sneer at the sinners. He doesn’t say, “Look how sick he is! Ack! How disgusting!”

Imagine if there were a doctor doing that—going from one room to the next in a hospital, pointing at the poor sick people and laughing at them. “Oh, how sick you are! Look how sick you are compared to me! How can you sit there and be so sick when I’m so well?” We would rightly wonder if such a physician were more profoundly sick than the patients whom he is supposed to be treating.

But Jesus is a good physician. He helps people who are sick. He isn’t disgusted by them or avoid them. He goes to Matthew and says, “Follow me,” even though Matthew was a notorious sinner. Jesus stays with some tax collectors and sinners at his house. He eats with them.

When we consider Jesus’s kind actions towards these folks it is important to know why Jesus did what he did. Jesus did not associate with these notorious sinners because he loved how tax collectors abused, manipulated, and cheated people. Jesus also doesn’t love how the 5th, 6th, 7th, or any of the other commandments are broken. Jesus doesn’t like any destructive and sinful things. Jesus is the enemy of these things and wants to set them free from them. So he forgave their sin. They were sick to death with unrighteousness. They were poor and miserable. Jesus made them well, giving them his own perfect righteousness.

The pharisees were concerned that Jesus was being too nice to these people who weren’t doing right and living right. That’s understandable from a certain perspective. The pharisees were concerned about the example that Jesus seemed to be setting. It might appear to some that Jesus didn’t seem care about sins. It was like Jesus was saying that sins didn’t matter. So, the Pharisees thought, Jesus should shun them and not have anything to do with them. Otherwise everybody is going to think that sinning doesn’t matter.

As I said, the pharisees’ line of reasoning would be valid from a certain perspective. If there were no cure for what ailed these people, then Jesus should probably stay away. Imagine a doctor who can’t help. It’s impossible to help. And yet he goes and pokes and prods, slices and dices—nothing good can come from that. In like manner, if there was nothing that Jesus could do for these spiritually sick people, then all that Jesus probably would accomplish is to desensitize folks to the seriousness of sin.

But Jesus is able to help these people who are sick. Jesus can help people who are very, very sick. They can be downright poor and miserable. In fact, as Paul says in Ephesians chapter 2, your spiritual condition is so bad that you were “dead in your trespasses and sins…” Then he goes on, “But God, because he is rich in mercy, because of the great love with which he loved us, made us alive with Christ even when we were dead in trespasses.” Death is not an obstacle too great for our great physician.

If that is so, if Jesus is such a great physician that he gives life to sinners who are so bad that they are dead, then in the midst of sinners is exactly where this physician must be. The Christian Church is a spiritual hospital. Sick sinners belong here. If you don’t want to be a sinner, then you are in the wrong place, and have no business being with Jesus.

If there is one thing that I hope you take away from our Gospel reading today it is that your spiritual sickness is not an impediment to you being saved. In a way it’s true that sin doesn’t matter. Sin or the lack of sin isn’t why a single sinner will be saved. God is the justifier of the ungodly. You are not the justifier of yourself.

We can see this in our Gospel reading: Jesus called notorious Matthew, a veritable tax collector, to be his disciple. Jesus says very plainly, “I came not to call the righteous, but sinners.” Your salvation does not depend on you making yourself well. Your salvation depends on the skill and power of the physician. He simply says, “Follow me.” That is, “Listen to me. Believe my words.” The first task, and almost only task, that the Christian Church has is to speak Jesus’s words of forgiveness to poor, miserable sinners.

So let me conclude with the question with which I began: Are you sick? Usually we like to cheer people up. Politeness almost demands that we say, “You’re doing just fine. You’re getting better and stronger.” But we all know that being polite and being truthful are often not the same thing.

Although it might not be altogether polite, I hope that you feel worse about yourself than when you came in here today. I hope you see that your are poorer and more miserable. On the other hand, I hope that you see how good of a physician Jesus is. He is so skillful and mighty that he can even raise someone who is so sick that they are even dead. Maybe you weren’t thinking you were all the poor and miserable when you came here today, but maybe you also weren’t thinking how skillful and mighty Jesus is.

Following Jesus, clinging to him, is how we will receive eternal life. Jesus is how we will stand in the judgement and be welcomed into heaven instead of going to hell, which is what we all deserve. Jesus makes us well.

Now the God of peace himself sanctify you completely. May your whole spirit, soul, and body be kept blameless at the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ. The one who calls you is faithful, and he will surely do it.


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