Gospel of Mark

"Half Truths: God Helps Those Who Help Themselves"

Mark 2:1-12

When he returned to Capernaum after some days, it was reported that he was at home. So many gathered around that there was no longer room for them, not even in front of the door; and he was speaking the word to them. 

Then some people came, bringing to him a paralyzed man, carried by four of them. And when they could not bring him to Jesus because of the crowd, they removed the roof above him; and after having dug through it, they let down the mat on which the paralytic lay. When Jesus saw their faith, he said to the paralytic, “Son, your sins are forgiven.” 

Now some of the scribes were sitting there, questioning in their hearts, “Why does this fellow speak in this way? It is blasphemy! Who can forgive sins but God alone?” At once Jesus perceived in his spirit that they were discussing these questions among themselves; and he said to them, “Why do you raise such questions in your hearts? Which is easier, to say to the paralytic, ‘Your sins are forgiven,’ or to say, ‘Stand up and take your mat and walk’? But so that you may know that the Son of Man has authority on earth to forgive sins”—he said to the paralytic—“I say to you, stand up, take your mat and go to your home.” And he stood up, and immediately took the mat and went out before all of them; so that they were all amazed and glorified God, saying, “We have never seen anything like this!”


Of the many half-truths commonly associated with the Christian scriptures, few get me a riled up as the phrase, “God helps those who help themselves.” It’s not that the sentiment is false (I’d actually call it a “3/4 truth” instead of a “half truth”); the problem is that this phrase is usually employed as a way to justify our judgment and condemnation of people whom we deem as unworthy of our help.

“God helps those who help themselves” is a philosophy that too-often sidesteps the importance of grace and gives us a false illusion of our role in the world.

This phrase is conditional; as in, if you do something and then earn something equal in response. For example, “If you eat your vegetables, then you can have dessert.” Christians ought to be careful in employing “if…then” conditional philosophies, because our God is not an “if…then” God. 

Instead, God is an “I am” God. 

God has always been and will always be the prime mover and the creator. God’s blessings are eternal and not dependent on our moral righteousness. There is nothing you or I can do to earn God’s love, forgiveness, blessing, or help. Likewise, there is nothing you or I can do to make God’s promises of love, forgiveness, blessing, and help invalid. We are sinners whom God loves dearly and freely forgives despite our not deserving forgiveness. This is grace – a bedrock of our faith and religious life.

We sidestep grace when we think that our decisions or actions are the basis for God’s corresponding response. This understanding prioritizes human initiative over God’s. As though we are in the driver’s seat. As though God withholds blessings until we earn them through making good, just, and correct decisions. It is as heretical to believe that we earn the blessings we receive as it is to believe that others deserve a lack of blessing. The beautiful truth is that grace is the first and last word, and we are privileged to live in its midst.

My primary theological issue with the phrase “God helps those who help themselves” is that it leaves little room for the foundational and radical truth of grace. My primary practical issue with this phrase is that it shifts responsibility away from ourselves and solely onto the shoulders of the person who needs help–shoulders that simply cannot bear that burden. 

It is true that we ultimately cannot make decisions on behalf of someone who needs help. For example, we cannot overcome someone else’s addiction for them. But everything up to that point is our shared communal responsibility. We, in community, bear responsibility to be present, to love, to persist, to forgive, and to be in relationship with those who need help, regardless of whether we thing they’re doing enough to deserve help.

I am reminded of an experience I had while serving as a hospital chaplain during seminary. One day a fellow student found himself in an argument with our supervisor over the role of a hospital chaplain (or any Christ-follower, for that matter). My colleague spoke about his frustration with a patient who didn’t seem to want to be healed. Our supervisor angrily told him he had no business judging the patient’s desire for healing or lack thereof. 

Our supervisor proceeded to describe the chaplain’s role using an analogy of a pit. If someone is in a pit of despair or hopelessness, the chaplain’s role is not to stand safely at the precipice and lower a rope and command the person to get out (nor to judge the person if they didn’t grab onto the rope); but rather, the chaplain is to get down in the pit and be present with the person who is suffering. 

We can never truly judge what motivates someone who is suffering. Our response is to be an unconditional, honest, supportive, non-anxious presence for people who are suffering. We strive to be empathetic and present, but we are not that suffering person’s savior and it is not for us to determine how or when someone makes it out of the pit.

Too often, we stand at the precipice of pits where people are suffering and yell down judgments like, “Do you even want to get better” or “You brought this on yourself” or “God helps those who help themselves.” These sentiments may come from honest and well-intentioned hearts, but they won’t make a bit of difference unless they are spoken from a place of vulnerability and empathy with the one who is suffering. Unless we first listen, we cannot understand what people believe about themselves and their worthiness or ability to be helped.

Joining people in their suffering is hard holy work; which is why it is never to be undertaken alone. This work requires a community of support and a network of relationship. Today’s gospel tells the story of four people who bring a paralyzed man to Jesus by lowering him through the roof into the home where Jesus is staying. The gospel story makes no mention of the paralyzed man’s desire for healing or why he was paralyzed in the first place. All we know is that there was a group of people who desired so deeply for the man to be healed by Jesus that they went to extraordinary measures to make that possible. We do not go to such great lengths unless we truly empathize with, and love, the person who is suffering.

Contrast that story with this one: Earlier this week Federal Judge Sarah Evans Barker spoke to a gathering of Indianapolis-area Lutheran clergy. She informed us that the overwhelming majority of people who appear before her in federal court for sentencing have no one show up in the gallery to support them. One could draw the conclusion, then, that the majority of people convicted of committing crimes are not connected to a community that empathizes with, and loves, them. The fact that every corner of our society is pushing further and further toward isolation and individualization will have disastrous consequences. The world needs empathetic, loving community now more than ever.

Imagine a community that doesn’t judge who is worthy of help and who is not; but rather is motivated by a the mission to stand in solidarity with all who suffer in the pits of despair.

Imagine a community that doesn’t shout instructions safely from the sidelines, but enters into the depths of despair in order to whisper words of peace and provide a comforting embrace.

Imagine a community not concerned with superficial appearances or conversation; but a community held together with authentic, compassionate, God-centered relationship. 

I am here today because I found such a community. You see, I lost my faith in God while in college. It was a terrifying time for me. I do not recall which came first, but I experienced a debilitating depression at the same time. I barely managed to complete the last semester of my Junior year, but when I did I had no options for the summer. My plan was to return home and spend my days and nights sleeping, which often seemed like all I could do. But then I received a phone call from the director of the Lutheran summer camp where I had worked the previous two summers. She told me they were in desperate need of staff for the summer. As much as I pushed back, she was relentless. With nothing better to do, I showed up with the intention of serving as the lifeguard that summer. 

A few nights into our staff training program, we were around the campfire sharing our faith stories. As each person spoke I became more and more nervous because for the first time I felt safe enough to open up about my lost faith, my struggles, my depression. I hadn’t shared any of that with anyone except my parents (and even with them I only told them part of the story). I hadn’t shared my experiences because the thing I feared most was rejection. I knew that my community of friends and family were the only positive force in my life at the time and I couldn’t risk losing their support. But there, around the fire, hearing other college-age students share their faith, questions, and doubts, I felt the courage to be honest. 

And so I told the truth. I publicly announced my inability to believe in God, which up to that point had been my secret shame. Their response was neither pity nor condemnation. Instead, they thanked me, hugged me, and made it clear that they appreciated my presence and friendship. Many asked if I would be willing to talk more about my struggles so they could better understand.

At a time in my life when I felt completely helpless, a community of Christ followers joined me in my suffering, responded with unconditional grace, and helped me on the path back to faith and trust in a God who had been with me all along.

It is true that God helps those who help themselves; but it is also true, and infinitely more important, that God helps those who cannot help themselves. And the best part is that God helps us with that hard, holy work. 

Amen.

"Living in the Rubble" – Mark 13:1-8

Mark 13:1-8

As he came out of the temple, one of his disciples said to him, "Look, Teacher, what large stones and what large buildings!" Then Jesus asked him, "Do you see these great buildings? Not one stone will be left here upon another; all will be thrown down." When he was sitting on the Mount of Olives opposite the temple, Peter, James, John, and Andrew asked him privately, "Tell us, when will this be, and what will be the sign that all these things are about to be accomplished?" Then Jesus began to say to them, "Beware that no one leads you astray. Many will come in my name and say, "I am he!' and they will lead many astray. When you hear of wars and rumors of wars, do not be alarmed; this must take place, but the end is still to come. For nation will rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom; there will be earthquakes in various places; there will be famines. This is but the beginning of the birth pangs.


If you could know the exact date and time when you will die, would you want to know?”

It’s a morbid question, I know. But think about it for a second. Would you want to know?

If you knew, how would that change your life? Your decisions? Your relationships?

I read a study that focused on this question. The overwhelming majority of those asked responded by saying that they would not want to know the exact date and time of their death.

I certainly don’t want to know. Not knowing allows me to live under the illusion that I am in control of my own life. And chances are, whatever the date of my death is…I would think it would come too early.

I once had a strange and memorable conversation with a doctor after a yoga class. We talked about healthcare, nutrition and exercise and he told me he believed that there are people alive today who will live to be over 150 years old. And he swore to me that he was going to be one of them!

All this sounded incredibly wonderful to me, after all, that doctor was twice my age! So if he’s got a hundred years left, I’ll surely get close to 200!

I would guess this doctor is one of the majority who says they don’t actually want to know when they will die; because, chances are his time will come before he reaches that ripe old age of 150, and I don’t imagine that he would be too happy with that news.

My guess is that the majority of us would not like to know the exact date and time of our death. I think most of us are terrified of the power that knowledge would exert over us. Ignorance is bliss, as they say.

Scripture paints the picture of a Jesus who knew when he would die. At a minimum, Jesus certainly understood that he would die…which is more than most of us are willing to admit most of the time.

Think about that next time you read from the Gospels. Pay attention to the way in which Jesus interacts with those around him. Pay attention to his priorities. Jesus is constantly healing people, constantly hanging out with the rejects, nerds and social outcasts of his time, and constantly challenging the behaviors and beliefs of the powerful – all behaviors which people wouldn’t choose if self-preservation was their primary objective. Jesus has absolutely nothing to lose and as a result his life is absolutely radical and amazing!

Jesus was never concerned with stretching out his life to the absolute maximum number of years. Instead, he knew he had only a short time and he wasn’t going to waste it as everyone else was by oppressing the outcasts, kissing up to the powerful, and keeping quiet in the midst of injustice.

Case in point – today’s gospel text, which comes from the last chapter of Mark before the passion narrative begins. Jesus knows his death is just around the corner and he has some impassioned words for his friends before he bids them farewell.

He points to the great temple – the marvel of engineering and artistic beauty that was the heart of the city of Jerusalem. Jesus points to the great temple and makes a profound prophecy – it’s all gonna come crashing down.

The disciples certainly found his statement absurd. Not only was the temple one of the pinnacles of human achievement, but it was also the center of religious life for the Jewish people. No doubt each faithful Jew swore they would die before allowing the Temple to be destroyed. Without it, they would be lost, frightened, and scattered and without direction.

However, Jesus’ prophetic words would come true. In the year 70, the Roman general Titus along with 80,000 Roman troops set siege on Jerusalem, killed one million residents of the city, and destroyed the temple, leaving only one partially-intact wall remaining (you may have heard of this – it is the Western Wall or Wailing Wall in Jerusalem and millions of people still visit this site each year).

Jesus continues his prophecy, foretelling a future full of war, earthquakes, famine and disease. And in the verses immediately following, Jesus foretold for his disciples an future of betrayal, arrest, judgment, and condemnation by the worldly authorities.

And so, not only were Jesus’ prophecies fulfilled in the first century, but they have continued to be fulfilled throughout history. There have always been wars and rumors of war. There have always been “earthquakes and famines in various places.” And even today, buildings erected as monuments either to God or to human achievement can be reduced to rubble, whether it is the bombed-out churches from WWII, the World Trade Center on 9-11, or a market in Afghanistan leveled by a suicide bomber.

But notice what Jesus doesn’t say. He doesn’t say “Be Afraid!” Nor does he permit his disciples to cling to a false sense of security; as if they do in fact have control over their lives. Instead he promises them that he will be with them, guiding them along the way. And he makes the audacious promise that they will not perish, but instead will find their souls.

As Jesus said, “Beware that no one leads you astray.” The future has always been uncertain for every generation of humanity. Anyone promising certainty is a false prophet. Anyone telling you to be afraid is a terrorist. Anyone insisting on vengeance and retribution is preaching death.

In today’s Gospel, Jesus challenges us to live free from the chains of fear and the desire for control. Jesus calls us to radical reliance on his eternal presence, which he promises will accompany us as we endure tough times and celebrate good times.

And a life lived free of fear, in today’s culture, is one of the most radical claims God could possibly make on us.

Our challenge is to identify the roots of fear in our lives and ask God to rip them out before they poison our lives and relationships.

When you meet someone who is different, pray that God would give you the power to love them, as God has commanded you to do.

When you drive through a rough part of town and find yourself reaching for the door locks, pray for God to forgive you for our prejudice and assumptions…

When you watching a 24-hr news channel and hear someone telling you to be afraid, change the channel and pray that you would be filled up with the joy of God’s eternal presence.

And when you hear gossip or backstabbing, pray that God would give you the words to be brave and defend their honor.

Norman Vincent Peale once told of encountering a hurricane while on a cruise in the Atlantic. After the captain managed to sail around the danger, he and Dr. Peale were visiting with one another.

The captain said he had always lived by a simple philosophy namely that if the sea is smooth, it will get rough; and if it is rough, it will get smooth. He added something worth remembering: “But with a good ship,” the Captain said, “you can always ride it out.”

Our ship is Jesus Christ. With a good ship, we can always ride it out.

None of us knows how long we have on this earth. But what we do know is that God has promised to be alongside us, every step of the way. Through the high highs and the low lows, God is and always will be the same God who created you, loves you, and promises life.

In the face of tragedy, uncertainty, and fear, may you be bold in your faith that life always triumphs over death, peace is more powerful than fear, and the world will be redeemed.

Amen.