Grace Presbyterian Church
January 29, 2017, Epiphany 4A
Micah 6:1-8; Matthew 5:1-12
Blessed Are…
I remember my
first teaching job. I don’t mean the kind of teaching one does as a graduate
assistant; I mean my first real, away-from-grad-school teaching position with
an actual title – Visiting Assistant Professor of Musicology. At Texas Tech
University. In Lubbock, Texas.
At this point in
my life I had never driven past the Mississippi River, save for a few academic
trips to LSU. But here I was, making the drive from Tallahassee to Lubbock for
a one-semester teaching job. Julia was remaining in Tallahassee so the sense of
displacement was heightened just a bit.
I drove through an
ice storm in the Panhandle, spent a night in Shreveport, Louisiana, and then
entered Texas, which, as the ads used to say, is like a whole other country.
Once I got past Fort Worth all the green stuff stopped; it was as if I was
driving off the edge of the world. A Mars rover was at that time sending
pictures of that planet back to Earth, and having seen a few of those pictures
in the news I thought I recognized what I was driving through. And between
Midland and Lubbock my car actually got hit by a tumbleweed.
But I got there
and it was time to get to work. First day of class, in this strange new place,
with two different courses to teach, and it was time to begin. I don’t think
I’ve ever had a more self-conscious day in my life. Is my hair going to stay out of my eyes? Do I have my lecture notes? Is
the media equipment working? What am I forgetting? Man, oh man, my throat is
dry…(that’s still a problem, sometimes…).
Eventually I got
through it and ended up having a pretty enjoyable time that term.
“Firsts” can be
rather nerve-wracking. Being conscious about doing your job but also about
“making an impression,” or just trying not to embarrass yourself, can be
exhausting. I invite you to remember such “firsts” in your own life as we begin
to explore this, Jesus’s first public sermon as recorded by Matthew.
You might remember
last week’s scripture, the last half of chapter four, followed Jesus setting up
shop in Galilee, calling his first disciples, and healing a great many people –
his first action, so to speak, which revealed Jesus as an upsetter of the order
in which the people had been burdened and oppressed. This sense of revealing of
Jesus and about Jesus continues a theme we can trace all the way back to the
Epiphany story, when the child Jesus was visited by those eastern sages, being
revealed to the world, so to speak. Continuing with Jesus’s very public baptism
by John and the work of healing from last week, Jesus continues to present
himself, or to reveal what his ministry is about, to an unsuspecting world.
The numbers of
people who came for healing, from all around Galilee and beyond, meant that
quite a crowd had accumulated around Jesus, and the presence of those crowds
seems to have prompted Jesus to decide it was time to begin the long process of
educating his disciples, and the people as well. He goes up the mountain
(understood as a place of holy instruction at least since Mount Sinai), sits
down (a position of teaching authority in that culture), and begins to teach
and preach.
And the first
words out of his mouth are “Blessed are…”
Just a few verses
ago, back in chapter four, Jesus had been taking up John the Baptizer’s
message, the one that started with the word “Repent…”
But now, “blessed are…”
Of the Beatitudes
(as they have come to be know) much has already been said in Christian
literature, sometimes not to best effect. I recall from my younger days a book,
written by a preacher well-known from the televised program from his rather
ornate church out in California, purporting to offer a practical application of
the Beatitudes, with possibly the worst title possible for summing up their
actual import: The Be-Happy Attitudes.
Um, no.
Before going
anywhere with these eight statements, we need to get one thing straight:
“blessed” and “happy” are not synonyms. Not remotely.
Let’s remind
ourselves who is being blessed here: “the
poor in spirit,” “those who mourn,”
“the meek,” “those who hunger and thirst for righteousness,” “the merciful,” “the pure in heart,” “the
peacemakers,” “those who are
persecuted for righteousness’ sake,” and finally “you, when people revile you and persecute you and utter all kinds of
evil against you falsely on my account.”
These are the ones
who are called out as “blessed” here. But in the midst of any of those
situations, “happy” isn’t very likely the dominant feeling going on. I don’t
think any of you are typically “happy” in the midst of mourning, for instance.
Being in the position of being a peacemaker typically means some kind of
conflict is going on, and people who are happy about that are frankly awful
people. And those who are somehow “happy” in the midst of being persecuted are
frankly crazy people. And the blessings promised in each case, amazing and
wonderful blessings all, you will notice are mostly paired with future-tense
verbs – “will be comforted,” “will inherit the earth,” “will be filled,” and so forth.
These blessings
are, to use a fancy seminary word, eschatological. In the future, maybe even in
the end times. These Beatitudes are not about turning us into perpetually
smiley-faced, shiny happy people all the time. If anything, quite the opposite
is true: Jesus knows his disciples are going to face hard times just for being
his disciples, and these blessings are part of getting through the hard times
to come. Forewarned is forearmed, so to speak.
You see, each one
of is most of these things at one
point or another. I am going to guess that most of us have known mourning, all
too frequently. I frankly hope you have longed, even hungered for
righteousness, or have been in the position to need to show mercy. Frankly I
hope you have not been persecuted for righteousness’s sake, but these days
don’t rule it out.
At some point or
other we find ourselves in many of these places. Jesus knew that those
disciples were going to face these hard things, and his very first teaching to
them is about preparing them for these hard things, and equipping them to
remember that even in the midst of these hard things, they are blessed.
This probably
isn’t what Andrew and Simon and James and John were expecting back when they
jumped off their fishing boats as fast as they possibly could and followed
Jesus. It’s hard to know what they were thinking, maybe thoughts of fame and
glory, or of some kind of perpetual blissed-out existence, or maybe just
anything but the backbreaking work of fishing, but probably not anything along
the lines of “know that you are blessed when the hard things come.”
And yet that is
precisely what these Beatitudes say to these disciples: know that you are blessed when the hard things come.
This leads to
another point that we should take from the verses: the hard things will come, if
you are truly following Christ.
If indeed you are
submitted to the will of God, being led by the Holy Spirit, and striving to
live in the way Christ taught and lived, hard times will come. You will be reviled and persecuted and have
people utter all kinds of false things against you. And the most distressing
part will be that, if your life follows anything like the path that Jesus
walked, that reviling and persecuting and slander will come, and it will come
from other people who call themselves Christians. And coming from your supposed
brothers and sisters in Christ, it will be far more venomous and bitter than
any Muslim or Jew or Hindu or Buddhist would ever be towards you.
But our call, our
mission, is to follow, to be so submitted to Christ and so overtaken by the
Spirit that we live up to these Beatitudes not because of our own effort, but
because we as so following Christ that we don’t know any other way to live. The
reviling and persecuting and slandering will come, it will come because when we
live in Christ and are possessed in heart by Christ, when these words and
others like the amazing words from the prophet Micah are written on our hearts,
we won’t be able to keep quiet about rampaging injustice being practiced in the
name of patriotism. We won’t be able to stop ourselves from receiving the
stranger, no matter what country that stranger comes from. We won’t be able to sit
still when prejudice is passed off as prudence and enshrined in law. And when
we can’t shut up or sit still or stop ourselves, we will catch Hell, in the
most theological sense of that word, and we’re pretty likely to catch it from
others who call themselves by the same name we call ourselves. Hard to believe
that meekness and mercy and hungering and thirsting for righteousness could be
so divisive, but they surely can.
So there it is.
This is how Jesus introduces himself to the world, by promising that those who
follow him will be so contrary to the way of the world and the way of empire
that they will live regularly in the crosshairs of the world. And he calls them
blessed for it.
And then he tells
them to rejoice, because the prophets before them were treated the same way.
Like Micah, with those amazing words about doing justice and loving kindness
and walking humbly with God, you’ll catch heat for it.
And you will be
blessed, and yours will be the kingdom of Heaven, and great will be your
reward.
For these utterly
backwards blessings, Thanks be to God.
Amen.
Hymns (from Glory to
God: The Presbyterian Hymnal):
#749 Come!
Live in the Light
#419 Lord, Who May Dwell Within Your House
#172 Blest
Are They
#700 I’m Gonna Live So God Can Use Me
#700 I’m Gonna Live So God Can Use Me
Credit: agnusday.org -- and that's a REALLY GOOD QUESTION, isn't it?