"Salt, Light and Chili to Taste"

Matthew 5:13-20

[Jesus said,] “You are the salt of the earth. But if salt has lost its taste, how can its saltiness be restored? It is no longer good for anything and is thrown out and trampled under foot.”

“You are the light of the world. A city built on a hill cannot be hidden. No one lights a lamp and places it under a bushel basket, but on a lamp stand where it gives light to all in the house. Therefore, let your light shine before others so that they might see your good works and give glory to your father in heaven.

“Do not think that I have come to abolish the law or the prophets; I have come not to abolish but to fulfill. For truly I tell you, until heaven and earth pass away, not one letter, not one stroke of a letter, will pass from the law until all is accomplished. Therefore, whoever breaks one of the least of these commandments, and teaches others to do the same, will be called least in the kingdom of heaven; but whoever does them and teaches them will be called great in the kingdom of heaven. For I tell you, unless your righteousness exceeds that of the scribes and Pharisees, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven.”


I want to show you a quick little video of a prank I saw recently online. It happens kind of quickly at the beginning, so in case you miss it, you should know that, when this mother asks her husband and son to try her new chili recipe, they don’t see her cover a heaping spoonful of salt with a little bit of chili and a couple of beans before spoon-feeding it to them to get their opinion.

SALT PRANK VIDEO (A wife and mother tricks her husband and son to try her “new chili recipe,” and feeds them each a spoonful of salt, covered up with a small bit of chili. They pretend it tastes fine and refuse to tell her it’s terrible.)

The tag line on the video said something about how far men would go to avoid trouble … even, apparently, about something as small and insignificant as a terrible tasting batch of chili.

When Jesus tells the crowds on the hillside in this morning’s Gospel that they are the salt of the earth and the light of the world, he wasn’t talking about chili recipes or practical jokes. He was trying to get them to think differently about the kind of flavor their faith brings to the world around them. And, I happen to think, all of it has more than a little bit to do with their willingness or unwillingness – and ours – to engage a bit of trouble for the sake of the kingdom along the way.

“You are the salt of the earth,” he tells them. “But if salt has lost its taste – if you have lost your flavor – what good is it? What good are you? What are you doing here? What’s the point of it all?”

“You are the light of the world,” Jesus says. “Like a city on the hill… like a lamp on a stand… like a beacon in the night. Don’t cover yourselves up… don’t hide under a basket. Let your light shine so others can see what you’re up to; so people know what God is doing through you… and for you… and for the sake of the world.”

I think the reason mainline denominations of the Christian church in the world are struggling these days – failing to reach younger generations, I mean, or to connect with those cynical about who we are and what we’re up to – is because we’ve lost some of our taste, some of our saltiness, some of what adds flavor and zest and zip to the world around us.

What I mean is, so many talk about the generosity and abundance of God, but too many are looking to collect on that, to benefit from that themselves, rather than to give it away. Too many live, quite notoriously, with clenched fists and closed wallets.

The Church uses words like “mission” and “outreach” but consumes itself with itself too much of the time, worrying more about buildings and budgets and butts in seats than about leaving what’s comfortable… living in the world… seeking out, finding, and really loving our neighbor.

For generations, mainline denominations like Lutherans, Episcopalians, Presbyterians and the like, have been singing – like we did last Sunday – “Red and Yellow, Black and White, they are precious in his sight, Jesus loves the little children of the world,” but our churches aren’t getting any more colorful than we were when I first learned that song when I was in Sunday school.

And I don’t mean to rain on our parade here this morning. We have so much to be glad about and plenty to celebrate and even a little to be proud of when it comes to how we do Church here, in this place, and when I think of the very unique voice Cross of Grace is in our community.

But do you know that I’ve had three conversations, in as many weeks lately, with people in our neck of the woods, who were SURPRISED to know about Cross of Grace’s stance and wide welcome to the LGBTQ+ community? And that others have been equally surprised to learn about the very faithful, deliberate work we’ve tried to do here in recent years where racial justice and anti-racism are concerned?

It makes me wonder, under what kind of chili are we hiding our salt? And why? Why are what I – and so many of you – believe to be some of the most faithful and uniquely gracious things about our ministry, NOT things that more people out there – to whom it would matter most – even aware of?

So, I can’t help but be as inspired as I am unsettled by those words from Isaiah this morning – words that surely inspired and unsettled Jesus, too… all of that stuff about loosing the bonds of injustice; about letting the oppressed go free; about sharing my bread with the hungry; bringing the homeless poor into my house; covering the naked, and all the rest.

It’s all stuff that surely inspired and convicted Jesus to encourage people not to worship and practice their piety at the expense of their flavor … not to hide their light … not to keep their good works and good deeds to themselves – or make them too much about themselves – but to let it all shine for the sake of a world that needs to know it comes from the very heart of our God.

Because see, I think we can be too much like that mom with her salty chili or like that father and son who choke it down, pretending everything is just fine.

Because the truth is, the salt of God’s grace can be hard to serve up and share and even harder to swallow, sometimes, if we’re honest about it.

Because it means that when we see what’s happening in the world around us – as far away as Yemen and Ukraine, and as close to home as Memphis and Main Street – we’re supposed to call out its ugliness plainly and refuse to choke it down without saying or doing something to make it better.

It means we challenge each other to give more sacrificially, sometimes – more than feels safe or wise or fiscally responsible, even – because we have resources that most people in the world, statistically speaking, simply do not have.

It means we welcome, care for, and love, even, those the world refuses because so many of us have received welcome, care and love – by God’s grace – that we don’t deserve any more or any less than anybody else.

It means we do the hard work of being vulnerable to the mercy and forgiveness we proclaim, as much as we hope to change the world with that same mercy and forgiveness.

And we do all of this with hope – this salting the earth and lighting the world, I mean – we do it with hope for what Isaiah promises and what Jesus embodies: that our light – that the light of God – will break forth like the dawn; that our healing – that humanity’s healing – will spring up quickly; that our vindicator will go before us, that the glory of the Lord will have our back; that we will call and God will answer; that our needs will be satisfied in parched places; that, as God’s people, we will be known and seen and received, like a spring of water for the thirsty, like rebuilt ruins for those in need of refuge, like a firm foundation for those who can’t stand on their own; like a repairer of the breach for the broken among us, and like a restorer of streets to live in to a world searching for home.

Amen

"Experience, the Best Teacher"

Matthew 5:1-12

When Jesus saw the crowds, he went up the mountain, and after he sat down, his disciples came to him. And he began to speak and taught them, saying: “Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. “Blessed are those who mourn, for they will be comforted. “Blessed are the meek, for they will inherit the earth. “Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they will be filled. “Blessed are the merciful, for they will receive mercy. “Blessed are the pure in heart, for they will see God. “Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called children of God. “Blessed are those who are persecuted for the sake of righteousness, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. “Blessed are you when people revile you and persecute you and utter all kinds of evil against you falsely on my account. Rejoice and be glad, for your reward is great in heaven, for in the same way they persecuted the prophets who were before you.


We’ve all heard that experience is the best teacher. Some of us have stories confirming that to be true… but maybe others don’t agree with the age old adage. For example, experience is the best teacher doesn’t seem to hold up well with most if not all of the beatitudes. Blessed are the poor in spirit, the mourning, the meek, the merciful. These are not characteristics or situations our culture celebrates.

Afterall, there’s no scholarships for those who show mercy or are gentle and content! There are no greeting cards that say “hooray, you're mourning!” And if you’ve ever been or felt poor in spirit, felt like you were in despair and totally hopeless toward your inner life: your thoughts, feelings, confidence, and you beg God to help because you are completely unable to help yourself, if you’ve felt that way, did it feel like a blessing?

I think of the neighbors of the church I served in Glendale, AZ. By neighbors I don’t mean the families in the houses surrounding the church, but our neighbors who slept on our campus under the bushes out front or in the breezeways. Most, if not all, struggled with addiction, and with undiagnosed or unmanaged mental illness. Many had lived on the streets for years, some more than a decade.

As I got to know them, I listened and heard their feelings: despondent, helpless, begging God to help break their addiction, for the system to work, to feel loved. They were poor and spiritually poor, but I'm not sure I’d called or they would call themselves blessed.

Maybe Jesus is wrong on this one, maybe these things, these beatitudes just aren’t right and true. If that’s the case, Jesus can chalk this one up to inexperience: he just doesn’t know any better, he doesn’t know the way the world works yet. He hasn’t experienced how the merciful get screwed over, or the one’s who fight for justice don’t see the fruition of their efforts,

or the peacemakers pale in comparison to the violence of this world.

Afterall, he’s still young… What is he? 29? Maybe 30? Heck, this is his first sermon!

And coming from a 29 year old about to have a child, I feel very confident that there certainly is more I don’t know or haven’t experienced compared to what I do know and have experienced. If experience is the best teacher, then maybe Jesus needs a little more.

But that’s not the case. Jesus is speaking from experience, it’s just not included in the part of the text we read today. Just before Jesus climbed the mountain, he had been off in Galilee, and Jerusalem, and beyond, where he’d been “curing every disease and sickness among the people.” As he traveled, people brought the sick and the lame, people with all sorts of diseases and demons, pains and paralysis.

And we have to remember, that to be one of these people in the time of Jesus didn’t mean you were just sick: you were an outcast, viewed as a terrible sinner who deserved their plight.

You were poor, likely unable to work, and forced to the margins of society. These people were the poor in spirit, the meek, and the mourning.

These were the people who hungered and thirst for justice because they’ve been starved by injustice. After calling his first disciples, these are the people Jesus goes to; Not the rich in spirit, not the joyful, not the ambitious, but the opposite.

If experience is the best teacher, no wonder Jesus preaches with such potency. And if experience is the best teacher, no one knows or has lived these beatitudes more fully than Jesus himself. He’s the poor in spirit who cries out in abandonment asking “why, God?!”,

the one who mourns a world full of oppression and sin, the meek one who put all people before himself, the one who hungers and thirst for justice in every land, the giver of mercy to the least deserving, the pure in heart who sees God’s will and does it, the peacemaker who overcomes death not with violence but self-sacrifice, the persecuted and reviled One who willingly went to the cross. Like my neighbors in AZ, I, and most people, wouldn’t call that blessed.

Which is precisely the point. In the beatitudes, Jesus isn’t just describing reality, he makes reality. When Jesus speaks, the Word creates what it declares. In other words, The beatitudes are promises, promises to all who find themselves in these situations. You are and will be blessed. Not because of what you have done or didn’t do, but because of what Jesus has done, is doing, and will do through the cross.

In that way, those who are poor in spirit, persecuted and reviled, they are blessed because Jesus is there beside them and makes it so. My neighbors in AZ, they are blessed because Jesus promises to be there with them. And it’s not blessed as in lucky, wealthy or successful, but blessed as in favored by God because that’s where God is at work. Hopefully, there is some comfort in knowing that no matter how helpless or desperate or mournful you feel, Jesus has felt that too. And we see that most clearly in Christ crucified.

Now I want to be clear. These beatitudes are not imperatives. They don’t command you to become poor in spirit or meek or mournful as if that would save you. They aren’t goals you can check off. On the cross, Christ became all these things, each beatitude for you, giving you grace. So the beatitudes are not demands, but a warning and a promise. A warning to potential disciples back then and to followers today.

Picture yourself on that mountainside and it’s as if Jesus is saying:

“because you follow me, because you will speak and act and live in ways different from the culture around you, you will find yourself poor in spirit, meek and mournful, hungry and thirsty. You will be merciful and people will take advantage of you. You will attempt peace and you will be a lonely voice. It will be hard. You’ll feel pain, maybe even despair. But I promise, you’re blessed because I am there with you”.

As followers of Jesus, heed the warning and trust the promise.

Know it won’t take very long and we won’t have to look very hard, till we find ourselves in these situations, like: mourning the brutal killing of Tyre Nichols; hungering and thirsting for justice for our black and brown siblings; acting meek by refusing to take part in violent and unjust systems; making peace in our own families and communities.

May experience be the best teacher and may you be blessed.

Amen.