divine punishment

What's Deserved?

Luke 13:1-9

At that very time there were some present who told him about the Galileans whose blood Pilate had mingled with their sacrifices. He asked them, “Do you think that because these Galileans suffered in this way they were worse sinners than all other Galileans?

No, I tell you; but unless you repent, you will all perish as they did. Or those eighteen who were killed when the tower of Siloam fell on them—do you think that they were worse offenders than all the others living in Jerusalem? No, I tell you; but unless you repent, you will all perish just as they did.”

Then he told this parable: “A man had a fig tree planted in his vineyard; and he came looking for fruit on it and found none. So he said to the gardener,

‘See here! For three years I have come looking for fruit on this fig tree, and still I find none. Cut it down! Why should it be wasting the soil?’

He replied, ‘Sir, let it alone for one more year, until I dig around it and put manure on it. If it bears fruit next year, well and good; but if not, you can cut it down.’”


Did they deserve it? That’s the question Jesus poses to the people reporting a recent tragedy under Pilate's rule. Pilate was known for cruelty and contempt toward the Jewish people. In this case, some Galilean Jews were offering sacrifices when Pilate’s soldiers slaughtered them, mixing their blood with that of the animals, desecrating the sacred rite. It was as if Pilate declared: these Jews are no more human than the animals they slaughter.

The people came to Jesus to confirm what they already believed: “Did you hear about that horrible death? What did they do to deserve it?” They wanted an explanation. Surely, there had to be a reason. The common explanation was sin: divine punishment.

That was the belief of the day: suffering was punishment for sin, your own or your parents’. But Jesus pushes back. It’s not their sins that caused this, which feels like good news—until Jesus warns them not to think themselves better. To drive the point home, he tells them about a tower that collapsed and killed 18 Jerusalemites. Did they deserve it? Were they worse sinners than others? No, Jesus says, but unless you repent, you will perish just as they did. Is that a threat? A promise? A prophecy?

Jesus doesn’t explain, just like he doesn’t explain suffering. Isn’t that hard for us too? We long for explanations for suffering—ours and others'. We’re often gentler on ourselves, but when it comes to others’ pain, we’re tempted to look for fault.

When tragedy strikes—a plane crash, a tornado, a terrible car accident—we don’t think those people had it coming. We think: tragedy, bad luck, not divine punishment.

But what about poverty? What about homelessness? We see a tent compound, trash scattered around. We might not say they deserve it—but we think: if only they made better decisions, if they avoided addiction, if they took care of their health, maybe they wouldn’t be in this situation.

This year, we’ve been learning and talking a lot about homelessness, especially here in Indianapolis. Our high school students and I have spent this semester diving deep into the issue as part of their Sunday School curriculum. The advocacy workshop we hosted focused on two Indiana bills addressing homelessness. So I was eager to attend the Spring Faith and Action conference at Christian Theological Seminary, which focused on that very topic.

The keynote speaker was an author and activist I hadn’t heard of before: David Ambroz.

He started by sharing a bit of his own story. Born into homelessness, he, his mother, and two siblings roamed the streets of New York City, living mainly in Grand Central station. He recounted one particularly cold night, Christmas Eve, when David was just five years old.

It’s frigid and they are wandering the streets for hours, ice forming on their faces, as his mom flees the people she believes are chasing them. It’s only after David has peed himself and pleaded profusely that she relents and they go to a men’s shelter, where they are given a single cot for all four of them.

Laying on that cot, David remembers his mom, the caring mom now, asking him “do you want this”, gesturing to the lost souls in the shelter. “No!” he cried. “I don’t want this. I don’t want to sit here in my own urine, surrounded by nameless, homeless shadows.” But in the dark, Mom sparks something: hope. I’m five, but I know this—I want a roof, a bed, blankets. I want to protect my siblings. I want to protect Mom from mom. “Good,” Mom says softly. For a moment, she’s the mom I dream of. We pile together on the cot, and I fall asleep, held by hope.

The story was as powerful as the rest of his keynote. David talked about his time in foster care, he offered solutions, but he ended by asking, “Do you think I deserved to be homeless, to be grinded up in the foster care system? Do you think the people who live on your streets deserve such suffering? No! But until we change our thinking, until we don’t believe these people and children in utter poverty deserve this, nothing will change. We have the capability to end childhood homelessness and poverty—we just don’t have the willpower, because in our heart of hearts, we still believe they deserve this.”

That's exactly what Jesus is getting at. People living in poverty, living on the streets, are not suffering because of divine judgment. Jesus may not explain why suffering happens, but he makes clear it is not a punishment from God for one’s sins. That’s not to say sin doesn’t have consequences; surely it does. But I would ask: What sin is worse—the ones that contributed to being homeless, or having the means and resources to help but choosing not to? And I don’t just mean individually, but as a community, as a society.

In greater Indianapolis, we have spent over a billion dollars on sports stadiums and parks in the last 15 years, most of it coming from tax increases. Not even 4% of that has gone toward housing and homelessness. If anything, people are suffering more from our sin: from the slow, unjust systems we have created, from having the means as a society and as individuals to help, but choosing not to. From the self-righteous thought that they must be worse sinners than us, that they deserve this suffering.

Yet, thankfully, the trying task of deciding which sins are worse, which deserve punishment and which don’t, is an unnecessary and unfruitful task—one Jesus is uninterested in.

What I hear Jesus saying is: the people you assume are worse sinners than you are not. And unless we repent, unless we change our thinking, unless we turn to help, we will suffer too. As Bonhoeffer said, “We are bound together by a chain of suffering which unites us with one another and with God.” Because God doesn’t explain suffering; God shares it. To redeem all the suffering of the world, God did not command suffering to stop but rather became flesh in Jesus and suffered with us. It is by his suffering that we are redeemed and given the opportunity to lessen the suffering of others.

We are the fig tree, given another year, another day, another moment to bear fruit, to lessen the suffering of others. In Jesus’ eyes, we are not a waste of soil, of resources, opportunities, or time—and neither are those who live in tents, stay in cars, or sleep on sidewalks.

What does bearing fruit look like in our time and place? It’s simple, but not easy: It means doing what we can and acknowledging the humanity of those suffering around us. If you’re wondering how to begin, here are some ways you can bear fruit in this community.

Next Sunday after second service, I am taking our high school students to Horizon House, an organization dedicated to helping our neighbors experiencing homelessness get permanent, safe housing. We’ll get a tour and make some sandwiches for their guests. You are welcome to come; just please let me know if you’re interested.

And if that doesn’t work for you, consider reaching out to Lutheran Child and Family Services. They run the only long-term housing program for kids aging out of the foster system, many of whom are at the highest risk for homelessness. I learned just this week that their on-site pantry is running low and could use food donations. If you can help, reach out to me, and I’ll connect you with the right person.

Lastly, I leave you with the same charge David Ambroz gave at the conference: we may not be able to help every person we see on the streets, and he can’t either. But he does acknowledge them. He looks them in the eye and says, “I’m sorry I can’t help today, but good luck.” If nothing else, we can do that—acknowledge their humanity with kindness and respect. When that happened to David as a child, it let him know, if even for a moment that he mattered, that there was hope. Our neighbors certainly deserve that.

And what about us, do we deserve all that God gives us? The second chances, the boundless love, the endless grace with no strings attached?

No. But thank God we don’t get what we deserve. Amen.


G2A #7: "Adventures in New Worlds" – 1 Kings - Nehemiah

Most of our favorite stories are set in a new world. Not just a new world for the reader, but a new world for the characters of the story. The new and strange location drives the plot as the protagonist learns about the new world (and learn about him or herself) while trying to find their way back home.

Think of your favorite books, movies, or television shows. Chances are they follow this pattern.

Perhaps it is a story about a little girl who journeyed down a rabbit hole and found herself in Wonderland; or a story about survivors of a zombie-apocalypse world where the rules of survival and the ethics of human behavior have changed; or a story about children who walk into a wardrobe and end up in a land called Narnia; or a story about a young woman sealed in an arena and fighting for survival in a competition called “The Hunger Games.”

A new world is a great plot element because it introduces tension (what are the secrets and differences in this new place?), suspense (will the character make it home?), and adventure.

And yet, as wonderful as the stories often are, in real life we rarely embrace new worlds; precisely because they introduce those elements of tension, suspense (aka. stress), and adventure.

When we do find ourselves in a new world, we make every effort to transform it into something familiar. The most obvious example of this is the historical context of our Thanksgiving celebrations - the occupation, genocide, and transformation of this New World into settlements and territories strikingly similar to the cities in England from which the settlers departed.

Humans are people of routine who prefer to write the story of our lives ourselves, leaving very little to chance. Often our adventures in “new worlds” are limited to trying a new recipe or buying new clothes. Most people, not just Lutherans, have trouble dealing with change.

Our inability to deal with change is ironic because the overarching Biblical narrative–our focus over the last seven weeks–is essentially a story about explorations in new worlds:

  • new world created in the first two chapters of Genesis,
  • the new world that emerged after the flood,
  • the new world promised to Abraham,
  • the new world of slavery in Egypt,
  • the new world in the wilderness,
  • and the new world of living in a kingdom.

Which brings us to today’s scripture:

Generations after King David united the twelve tribes into one kingdom, the kingdom has split into two kingdoms, Israel in the north and Judah in the south. Following Israel’s defeat at the hands of the Assyrians, the people were scattered and lost into the mist of human history. They are referred to as the lost tribes of Israel. One century later, Judah was conquered by Babylon and after refusing to pay their taxes the people were exiled. This is what is referred to as “The Babylonian Captivity.”

In these periods, God gave messages to prophets including Amos, Isaiah, Micah, and Jeremiah. Over and over again, these prophets bring God’s message to those living in the new world of exile; a message that seems to have no obvious anchor in the lived human experience; a message that is hard to believe. Jeremiah’s message is “God is in control, God is present, God will bring us home.”

God is in control. One of the unsettling elements of the Old Testament is that God is portrayed as constantly pulling the strings of human history, even in acts of violence. Something good happens? It’s a blessing from God. Something bad happens? It’s a punishment from God. God’s excessive control of every situation can seem manipulative, judgmental, and harsh. Certainly it should give us pause to hear God’s words: “Thus says the Lord of hosts, the God of Israel, to all the exiles whom I have sent into exile from Jerusalem to Babylon.” God initiates and takes responsibility for the misfortune of the Hebrew people. And yet there is a sense of beauty, reassurance, and grace in the claim that God was the one who exiled the Hebrews. This means that even though the people have been defeated, God has not been defeated.

God is in control and God is present. God’s promised triumph throughout history means that God is present with the Hebrew people even in their new world. God, through the prophets, instructs the people to settle in their new location–to build gardens, raise families, pay taxes, and avoid those false prophets who claim there is an easy way or a quick fix to get back to the way things were. God is present, even in the city of the enemy.

God is in control, God is present, and God will bring us home. God’s plan includes both exile and restoration; punishment and salvation.

Surely I know the plans I have for you, says the Lord, plans for your welfare and not for harm, to give you a future with hope. I will let you find me, says the Lord, and I will restore your fortunes and gather you from all the nations and all the places where I have driven you, says the Lord, and I will bring you back to the place from which I sent you into exile.
— Jeremiah 29: 11, 13-14

God continues to make promises when no future seems possible, despite the peoples’ inability to trust and believe. Despite all evidence to the contrary, God will give them a future with hope and will bring them home again.

This text and context speaks to those of us today who feel as though we are living in a new world where...

  • neighbors don’t know one another,
  • relationships are facilitated through social media,
  • religion is viewed as an option,
  • planes crash into skyscrapers,
  • self-worth is based on the busyness of your schedules, and so on…

The text speaks to those of us who lament the way things used to be. The text speaks to our feelings of fear, oppression, isolation, and resentment. The text offers us hope, trust, and peace in the midst of a world which at times feels so foreign and misaligned.

Every time we gather as a Christian church we are called to proclaim a message that speaks directly to these feelings of fear, oppression, isolation, and resentment; we are called to proclaim a message originally given to the prophets– the message that God is sovereign and reigning in the midst of a world where it doesn’t look like God is sovereign or reigning.

If you feel as though you are a stranger in a new world, take solace in the truth that God is God even in places of exile. God is at work in the world; in places we would never expect and in ways we would never expect. This is grace. This is cause for hope, optimism, selfless giving, and extravagant praise.

Plus, it makes for an incredible story!

Much like the protagonists of our favorite stories, we are on a journey in what can seem like a strange and unfamiliar world. Yet no matter how much things change, this truth will always remain: God is in control, God is present, and God will bring us home.

As our summer journey through the Hebrew Scriptures winds up, I would like to fast-forward a bit and leave you with words from the coming King, Jesus Christ, who, as he was journeying toward the cross, spoke to his disciples - people who were about to find themselves in a new world:

Peace I leave with you; my peace I give to you. I do not give to you as the world gives. Do not let your hearts be troubled, and do not let them be afraid.
— John 14:27

Amen.