Gospel of Matthew

"Dust and Defiant Discipleship"

Matthew 6:1-6, 16-21

‘Beware of practicing your piety before others in order to be seen by them; for then you have no reward from your Father in heaven. So whenever you give alms, do not sound a trumpet before you, as the hypocrites do in the synagogues and in the streets, so that they may be praised by others. Truly I tell you, they have received their reward. But when you give alms, do not let your left hand know what your right hand is doing, so that your alms may be done in secret; and your Father who sees in secret will reward you.

‘And whenever you pray, do not be like the hypocrites; for they love to stand and pray in the synagogues and at the street corners, so that they may be seen by others. Truly I tell you, they have received their reward. But whenever you pray, go into your room and shut the door and pray to your Father who is in secret; and your Father who sees in secret will reward you.

‘And whenever you fast, do not look dismal, like the hypocrites, for they disfigure their faces so as to show others that they are fasting. Truly I tell you, they have received their reward. But when you fast, put oil on your head and wash your face, so that your fasting may be seen not by others but by your Father who is in secret; and your Father who sees in secret will reward you.

‘Do not store up for yourselves treasures on earth, where moth and rust consume and where thieves break in and steal; but store up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where neither moth nor rust consumes and where thieves do not break in and steal. For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.’


My wife, Christa, has complained about the dust in our house for years – as though it was any more prolific than anyone else’s dust. I never wanted to give her complaints much credence – mainly for two reasons. The first is that her main theory revolved around the dogs – who become MY dogs, of course – whenever there’s a problem like the copious amounts of hair they leave laying around, especially at this time of year; or the damn dog dander she deduced must certainly be the source of our abundance of dust. The second reason I never wanted to give her complaints much credence is because, as soon as I did that, I would have a dust cloth in my hand and a chore to do.

Well, a few months ago, we had the privilege of having a new furnace installed at 3872 Redbird Trail. I say it was a privilege because we were never without heat, nor did we have to worry about our pipes freezing, enduring a cold night’s sleep, or anything like that. Ours was a pre-emptive home improvement based on the prediction of the technician who did the regular, seasonal maintenance on our decades-old furnace and warned us that, sooner rather than later, we’d be replacing the unit whether we wanted to or not.

Anyway, when they dismantled the old furnace to install the new one, they found the sheet metal ductwork that sat on the ground in our crawl-space, had completely rusted and rotted to nothing but dust. Our old, dying furnace, which had a terrible filter system to begin with, was literally sitting on the ground, in its own dust, and had been blowing said dust up, into and throughout our house, for God knows how long.

Now this revelation was both good and bad. The good news was that our dust problem wasn’t the fault of MY dogs, after all. The bad news, of course, was that Christa had been right. The dust in our house was apparently more prolific than anyone else’s dust; and what’s more, I had been perfectly comfortable living in denial about that, pretending that it couldn’t possibly be true.

I got a call from the paper last week wanting to know about Lent, generally. The writer wanted to know about what we do and about why we do what we do, as a church who seems to make our way through the season of Lent more deliberately than some other flavors of Christians do. I feel like that’s true – that we do Lent a bit more deliberately around here than some others – but I didn’t know anyone else had noticed, so I was pleasantly surprised by the chance to talk about it.

So, of course I told her about our midweek Wednesday meals and worship. I told her about Holy Week prayer vigils and other worship services like Good Friday and Maundy Thursday, where we’re used to celebrating “First Communion” with our young people, stripping the altar, sometimes washing feet. And, of course, I told her about tonight – this Ash Wednesday stuff – where we begin all of it together with a smudge of dust and ashes on our foreheads. I even told her about how some of us get our ashes imposed in the columbarium – surrounded by the ashes of those who’ve gone before us – and she seemed particularly interested in that.

And I told her that, generally, for me, Lent – as a spiritual discipline – is about acknowledging that life in the world is hard. I think we do ourselves and the world around us a dis-service when we pretend having faith makes everything easier all of the time. Like, yeah, “God is good all the time and all the time God is good,” as some like to say. But God never promised there wouldn’t be suffering and struggle and hardship and adversity along the way.

I think too many people believe that too many of us believe that, because of our faith, we don’t or shouldn’t have to suffer or struggle or ENDURE, what so many out there in the world suffer through, struggle with or ENDURE, in this life. But looking around this room, I know that you and I know, that this couldn’t be further from the truth of our experience.

There is divorce and cancer; addictions and diseases of all kinds.

There are floods and wildfires; mass shootings and war; chemical spills and spy balloons.

There are racists, homophobes, and bullies.

There is sin and shame and sadness and regret that get the best of us, too much of the time.

But, rather than see these ashes on our foreheads and the beginning of another Lenten walk as an act of despair or self-flagellation; as a “woe-is-me” kind of fatalism, or some navel-gazing resignation to the sin that surrounds us, I’d like to invite you to let all of it – these ashes and these Lenten days – be an honest, brave, faithful, defiant, hope-filled engagement with the dust that covers us in this world.

This is an opportunity to acknowledge that the dust of our sin and struggle can feel – and be – heavier some days; and more-so for some of us than others. And it’s an invitation not to ignore that dust – as some of us are wont to do.

It’s an invitation to see it, to name it, to wear it, even – the dust and ashes of our sin and struggle – not pride-fully or with some sort of false humility, either. But so we might acknowledge and proclaim that none of us is alone in this.

And all of this is a chance to do as Jesus suggests and expects us to do:

We pray. We give our offering. We fast, perhaps. We put our faith, our time and our treasures, not in earthly, mortal, temporary things that rot and rust – but into the hands and heart of God. And these things we do – these exercises of faith – these acts of discipleship – are not meant to be chores. We don’t do them because we have to. We do them because we get to. We don’t do them because they will clean or clear away all the dust the continues to pile up among us. We do these things – we practice our faith – we live as disciples – precisely because we cannot clean or clear away any of it all on our own.

All of this is an exercise in trusting and proclaiming that the hard stuff won’t win; it won’t last forever; the dust and despair never get the last word, because God has… God does… and God will always have the last word.

Here and now we remember that we are dust … so much dust … and that we will be again, someday.

But here… now… and in the days to come… we are invited to hold out hope … so much hope … that God makes beautiful things out of the dust; that God can’t wait to redeem whatever is lost, to fix whatever is broken, to heal what is hurting, to find what is lost, to raise what is dead, even – through the love we know – and the life we share – in Jesus Christ, our Lord

Amen

The Asbury Revival and Transfiguration

Matthew 17:1-9

Six days later, Jesus took with him Peter and James and his brother John and led them up a high mountain, by themselves. And he was transfigured before them, and his face shone like the sun, and his clothes became dazzling white. Suddenly there appeared to them Moses and Elijah, talking with him.

Then Peter said to Jesus, “Lord, it is good for us to be here; if you wish, I will make three dwellings here, one for you, one for Moses, and one for Elijah.” While he was still speaking, suddenly a bright cloud overshadowed them, and from the cloud a voice said, “This is my Son, the Beloved; with him I am well pleased; listen to him!”

When the disciples heard this, they fell to the ground and were overcome by fear. But Jesus came and touched them, saying, “Get up and do not be afraid.”

And when they looked up, they saw no one except Jesus himself alone. As they were coming down the mountain, Jesus ordered them, “Tell no one about the vision until after the Son of Man has been raised from the dead.”


Have you heard about the spiritual “revival” at Asbury University?

Asbury University is a private Christian school in Wilmore, Kentucky. It identifies as “non-denominational,” but has ties to the Wesleyan-Holiness movement. Which means, I think, that it’s inclined toward the Methodist institution, in not so many words.

Anyway, apparently they’re experiencing a surprising, unintended, unplanned, Holy Spirit-induced, good old-fashioned “revival,” there – and have been since a week ago, Wednesday as far as I could tell.

See, Wednesday is when Asbury University has its regularly-scheduled, weekly chapel, as many small, private, religiously affiliated undergraduate colleges and universities do. And at Asbury – like so many other schools – students are required to attend some number of these 10 a.m., Wednesday morning, chapel services each semester.

And last Wednesday, something odd happened.

After the benediction, when worship was supposed to be over; when, I’m guessing, students usually pull out their phones, put on their coats, and shuffle off to their next class, to the cafeteria for lunch, or back to bed … they didn’t leave. Many, or most, maybe all of them – students, professors, staff and worship leaders – just stayed.

They stuck around… singing quietly, praying like they meant it, reading Scripture, publicly confessing their sins, even. Small groups of prayer circles formed. People raised their arms in praise. Some knelt at the altar. Some prostrated themselves on the floor. According to those who’ve witnessed it, the space was filled with peace and quiet and music and joy and light and love and all the good vibes.

Ultimately, people began to come and go, but the praying and worshiping, reading and confessing continued. The place has been packed – standing room only – according to a professor of theology from the seminary across the street, who walked over so he could see it to believe it.

AND students have been showing up from other schools – the University of Kentucky, Ohio Christian, Lee University, Georgetown College, Mt. Vernon Nazarene University – Purdue and Indiana Wesleyan University, even – just to name a few. I saw some Asbury alumni from right here in New Pal posting about it on Facebook, too.

And I find it fascinating. My skeptical instincts, some of what I’ve read about it, and my limited experience with such things tempt me to be critical of it, but I’m not going there. It’s not something that ever happened in chapel when I was an undergrad – not that I would have been there to notice. (They didn’t take attendance at Capital University.) And if it’s all it’s cracked up to be for those who are experiencing it, more power to them.

Anyway, all of this lasted for at least a week – it was still happening until THIS Wednesday, anyway, when I sat down to start thinking about this sermon and about today and about what we call “Transfiguration Sunday” around here – an event, for what it’s worth, I would have been equally skeptical about back in the day.

Because it seems like a spiritual revival of sorts took place on that mountain with Jesus, Peter, James and John. Jesus took them up the mountain “after six days,” we’re told, which is another way of saying, “on the seventh day,” which means we’re supposed to draw some meaningful connections to what happened when Moses took a hike up another mountain, “on the seventh day” as we heard about in our first reading from Exodus. Moses came down with the Ten Commandments, remember, after a transformative, transfiguring moment of his own up on there on Mount Sinai.

And in order to make that connection even more clearly, the disciples see Jesus in conversation with Moses – and Elijah, too – as a sign and declaration of his prophetic status and succession as the Messiah… the next … and last … and final Word … worth listening to … as God’s Chosen One … anointed … beloved prophet of all prophets.

So, however and whatever happened up on that mountain with Jesus – by way of his face that shined like the sun and his dazzling white clothes, in the appearance of those ghosts from the past, that talking cloud, and God’s profound declarations about his belovedness – the point was to reveal for those carefully chosen disciples (Peter, James and John) that Jesus was something special; that he was worth listening to, learning from, and following.

And we’d like to imagine the disciples were changed by all of this – Peter, James and John, I mean. They were knocked to their knees by what they saw and heard, after all. They were filled with fear and awe at what they witnessed. Maybe they prostrated themselves, raised their hands in worship, maybe they prayed, silently or aloud. And, like the students, faculty and staff at Asbury University, last week, Peter wants them to stay … to make it all last: “Lord, if you wish, I’ll build three dwellings here; one for you, one for Moses, and one for Elijah, too.”

But, as great and holy as it was… as mighty and transformative as it seemed to be… that doesn’t happen. It doesn’t last for long. Jesus seems to nip it in the bud pretty quickly. He comes to the disciples, touches them – seemingly snaps them out of their spiritual shock and awe – and they head back down the mountain. And as they go, he tells them to keep all of this on the down low. He tells them not to tell anyone about any of it until the Son of Man has been raised from the dead.

And this, for me, is where the lesson, the inspiration, the challenge and the hope about whatever happened on that mountaintop with Jesus and – whatever may be happening at Asbury University – matters. Because the lesson, inspiration, challenge and hope of whatever spiritual renewal or revival we’re looking for, longing for, or experiencing shows up in what happens as a result of it all.

Because what happens next for Jesus, as God’s beloved, anointed, chosen one, was even more surprising, unbelievable and awe-inspiring than what happened on that mountaintop.

He healed the sick and gave sight to the blind. He taught about loving the lost and forgiving without limit. He chastised and challenged the rich and the wealthy. He preached against the powerful. He talked politics and protested injustice. He overturned the tables in the temple.

And after all of that – because of all that, and more – Jesus gets crucified. He shares a meal with his friends; he is arrested; he is denied and betrayed by the closest of his followers – Peter, James and John, from this morning’s mountain, among them – and then he dies a horrible, humiliating, public and painful death – whipped, beaten, mocked, spit upon, crowned with thorns and nailed to a cross.

So, I kind of think Jesus is saying – on his way down the mountain this morning: “don’t go yapping about this mountaintop stuff – this little ‘transfiguration moment’ up here on the hill – unless or until it amounts to something; until you’re able to see and connect it with the rest of what’s to come.”

“Don’t talk about spiritual renewal or faithful transformation unless or until it leads to some measure of sacrifice, in your life, for the sake of others.”

“Don’t talk about spiritual revival or transfiguration unless or until it comes from – or leads to – a place of humility, justice, mercy and peace.”

“Don’t talk about spiritual renewal or faithful transformation unless or until it has something to do with a new way of living and moving and being in the world; unless or until something changes in you that does something to change the world around you.”

So, may whatever spiritual revival or renewal or transfiguration we seek as God’s people in this world inspire us not to stay put or to cling to the mountaintop moments of our lives for the sake of the mountaintop moments of our lives. But may renewal, revival and transfiguration fill us, inspire us and move us down from the mountain, beyond our sanctuary, off of our couches and out of our kitchens – to the lonely places, toward the least among us, in the face of the darkness and the powers that be, for the sake of a world that is ripe for the live-changing, life-giving hard, holy grace and good news that belong to us all in Jesus Christ our Lord.

Amen