Gospel of Luke

Alongside, Not Rather Than

Luke 18:9-14

He also told this parable to some who trusted in themselves that they were righteous and regarded others with contempt: “Two men went up to the temple to pray, one a Pharisee and the other a tax collector. The Pharisee, standing by himself, was praying thus, ‘God, I thank you that I am not like other people: thieves, rogues, adulterers, or even like this tax collector. I fast twice a week; I give a tenth of all my income.’ But the tax collector, standing far off, would not even look up to heaven, but was beating his breast and saying, ‘God, be merciful to me, a sinner!’ I tell you, this man went down to his home justified rather than the other; for all who exalt themselves will be humbled, but all who humble themselves will be exalted.”


I learned this week that Luke, the Gospel writer, has a thing for tax collectors that I never noticed before. Smarter people than me say that Luke – the writer of this morning’s Gospel and the book of Acts – was a physician by trade, so I wonder what his deal was with tax collectors. Maybe he was friends with one. Maybe his brother or his favorite uncle was a tax collector. Maybe a tax collector helped salvage his 401K during a recession, or something. I don’t know. But Luke has a thing for tax collectors.

In Luke’s Gospel, more than the others, Jesus eats with tax collectors and gets the goat of the self-righteous religious leaders of his day because of it. Luke makes a point of Jesus having called Levi, a tax collector, to be one of his disciples and then going to a banquet at Levi’s house with a bunch of other tax collecting so-and-so’s.

And, according to Luke, it’s in response to accusations about all of this – his “eating with tax collectors and sinners,” I mean – that Jesus tells some of his most famous stories about the wideness of God’s mercy: the parables of the lost sheep, the lost coin, and the Prodigal Son. And it’s also Luke who tells the story of Zacchaeus, the wee little man and Chief Tax Collector, who falls in love with Jesus, and gives half his possessions to the poor and makes reparations to everyone he’s ever ripped off, because of it.

So, you see, Luke goes out of his way, more than any of the other Gospel writers, to use infamously, stereotypically sinful tax collectors as foils against the proverbially, religiously righteous and faithful Pharisees. Luke loves to paint tax collectors as the unlikely recipients of God’s mercy and blessing; as the archetype of the surprisingly loveable, redeemable reprobate; as the forgivable, forgiven sinners upon which every story of grace could turn; tax collectors, for Luke, are the unexpected examples of obedience and righteousness, goodness and gratitude.

And today’s parable shows us all of those things.

Remember, the prelude to this morning’s parable, as the Bible tells us, is that Jesus was speaking to “some who trusted in themselves that they were righteous and regarded others with contempt.” It means he was speaking to people, like the Pharisee in the parable, who were pretty confident that they were on the straight and narrow and who took it upon themselves to judge others who they believed were not. So he tells them that story about the Pharisee and the Tax Collector.

And it matters that Pharisees and Tax Collectors existed on opposite sides of the social spectrum in Jesus’ day. Pharisees were religious, righteous and “right” about most things when it came to issues of faith and theology – at least as far as most people were concerned. They followed all the rules. They made all the right sacrifices. They read scripture, gave their offering, showed up for worship – and everyone knew it.

Tax collectors, on the other hand were not the most well-liked people in town. And Jewish tax collectors – to other Jews, like the ones listening to Jesus – were seen as puppets of the occupying Roman authority who often took advantage of their power to swindle fellow Jews out of money – some of which they paid to the Romans, and some of which they kept to line their own pockets.

So it would have captured anyone’s imagination to see these two strolling toward the temple, at the same time, to pray. The Pharisee, right and righteous as he was, toots his own horn and thanks God for just how good it is to be a Pharisee. “Thank God I’m not like other people:” he says, “thieves, rogues, adulterers, or even like this tax collector.” And the Tax Collector, standing somewhere off in the distance, prays just the opposite. Unable even to raise his eyes toward heaven, beating his breast with shame, guilt and remorse, he begs simply for forgiveness, “God, be merciful to me, a sinner.”

And I don’t think how or what these two prayed would have been much of a surprise to Jesus’ listeners. Like I said, everyone knew Pharisees did what they were supposed to do, that they followed the rules and towed the line. And everyone knew, too, that tax collectors were sinners and they were probably thrilled to hear of one who felt the weight and shame and guilt of his sins, for a change. But what would have surprised any of Jesus’ listeners – and what I hope surprises us still – is what Jesus has to say about it.

Jesus promises that the tax collector went home justified, forgiven, redeemed, in spite of his sins, and that “all who exalt themselves will be humbled, but all who humble themselves will be exalted.”

What the grace of God does in this parable, as always, is it levels the playing field on which the Pharisee and the Tax Collector stand. Not only does it bring down the high and mighty, but it raises up the down and out. It exposes the sinfulness of both men and lets the love of God do the rest. And, since you and I don’t come across Pharisees and Tax Collectors in the same way that we might have back in Jesus’ day, we’re invited to fill their shoes with names and faces that might be a little more familiar and meaningful for how and where we live, now.

Like, maybe we need to see a Republican and a Democrat praying on the steps of the temple.

Or a Christian and a Muslim praying alongside one another.

Or a Lutheran and a Catholic, gathered around the communion table.

Or the Right to Lifer and the Pro-Choice advocate; the Black Lives Matter marcher and the Oath Keeper; the divorcing couple; the warring siblings; the bickering neighbors; the disagreeable co-workers.

If tax collectors, for Luke, represent the proverbially prolific sinners of all sinners, and if the Pharisee is the proverbially sanctimonious, self-righteous saint of all saints, we can fill their shoes with any number of stereotypes from our own day and age; from our own life’s experience; from the cast of characters with whom we live and move and breathe, every day; and we might be able to see ourselves as either one of them, on any given day, when we look in the mirror, too; so that we can be challenged and changed by what Jesus tells us today.

Because I learned a new thing this week that gives all of this an entirely different twist. Bear with me, but someone else smarter than me – a guy named Evan Garner, an Episcopal priest who learned it from a professor and theologian named William Brosend – says that the Greek words that get translated most often in this parable as “rather than” are more likely to mean, “alongside.” And this changes EVERYTHING, people.

Because if that’s the case, Jesus actually says, after all of this drama on the steps of the temple between these two unlikely prayers … these proverbial opposites … that one man “went down to his home justified – not rather than, but alongside – the other.” “…this man went down to his home alongside the other!” “the tax collector went down to his home justified alongside the Pharisee.”

Whether figuratively or literally – (I’m not sure they left holding hands and skipping down the street) – but that Pharisee and that tax collector left the temple together as far as God’s grace and mercy were concerned: each humbled, each exalted, each forgiven, each loved, each redeemed, each transformed by the mercy given them both, by the grace they each counted on, prayed for and trusted would come.

And so can we. And so can “they.” And so will we all be, justified by God’s grace, thanks to the power of Jesus’ promise, in the end, that “all those who humble themselves will be exalted. And all those who exalt themselves will be humbled.”

Amen

Anti-Patient Anti-Racism Soap Box

Luke 18:1-8

Then Jesus told them a parable about their need to pray always and not to lose heart. He said, “In a certain city there was a judge who neither feared God nor had respect for people. In that city there was a widow who kept coming to him and saying, ‘Grant me justice against my opponent.’ For a while he refused; but later he said to himself, ‘Though I have no fear of God and no respect for anyone, yet because this widow keeps bothering me, I will grant her justice, so that she may not wear me out by continually coming.’”

And the Lord said, “Listen to what the unjust judge says. And will not God grant justice to his chosen ones who cry to him day and night? Will he delay long in helping them? I tell you, he will quickly grant justice to them. And yet, when the Son of Man comes, will he find faith on earth?”


(I seriously considered finding an actual soap box to stand on for this morning’s sermon, which might make sense to some of you in a minute.)

Last week, I preached something about John Lennon and the song “Imagine” – arguably Lennon’s most well-known and most beautiful creation. It’s full of what seem like pie-in-the-sky hopes and dreams about what the world would, could, should be like if humanity could get its act together. “No countries… No possessions… Nothing to kill or die for,” remember. “No need for greed or hunger… A brotherhood of man… All the people sharing all the world, living as one, living in peace…” Yada, yada, yada.

Sadly, it feels like we’ve “yada, yada, yada-d” right over all of that goodness, grace, beauty and hope since then, for lots of reasons.

Since then, I learned about Kanye West going viral for promising – by way of Twitter – to go “death con 3 on Jewish people.”

On Sunday, recordings leaked of the Los Angeles City Council President, Nury Martinez, griping and gossiping on a hot mic about another city council member – a white guy named Mike Bonin who has a Black son. Martinez said something about Bonin treating his Black son like an “accessory” and that the child looked or acted like a monkey.

Then on Tuesday, every family in our school district, right here in New Palestine, got an e-mail letting us know that allegations were made by students and coaches up at Pike High School that one of the girls on our volleyball team had “behaved inappropriately” during a match on the other side of town. If it’s true, this child, took what the LA City Council President did to the next level … she teased, taunted and tried to humiliate her Black peers … to their faces… in public… on their home court, by mimicking a monkey.

Imagine.

“Then Jesus told them a parable about their need to pray always and not to lose heart.”

And then he tells this story about a nagging, persistent, “importunate” widow (that’s what they called her in my grandma’s old Bible, anyway). This widow was nagging and persistent about the justice she craved in ways that weren’t well-received, or welcomed, or respected, or acknowledged, as far as we can tell. Had she been any of those things – well-received, welcomed or respected, I mean – she wouldn’t have had to keep coming back, right? She wouldn’t have had to be such a nag, or so “importunate,” would she?

And she was nagging a judge, looking for justice, even though this particular judge couldn’t have cared any less about her concerns – he neither feared God or had respect for people, we’re told. But he gives her the justice she seeks, just to get her off of his back; just to remove her from his docket; just to get her out of his hair and out of his business.

And Jesus seems to be saying that if a corrupt, uncaring, unjust, faithless judge like that can be made to do the right thing every once in a while, then we should trust and expect the God of all creation to respond with goodness and grace, just the same, and without delay, to the prayers of justice we continue to offer, day after day.

Well, I expect it. I trust it will come. I have faith that God is good for it, in the end. But it’s the delay, that gets me – and Jesus’ suggestion that justice is coming quickly. Which is why I’m here – on my proverbial soap box, which can be pretty awkward and uncomfortable, to be honest – to play the role of the nagging, persistent, importunate widow … yet again … this morning.

See, I get accused of beating this anti-racism stuff into the ground… People wonder if I really need to keep talking about this… People ask me if it really is as much of a problem as I – and others – make it out to be. And this week – from near and far – I was reminded that it is. But if you still don’t believe me…

I would say ask your Jewish friends, neighbors and co-workers what a Tweet like Kanye West’s does to them – especially if they or their children or their neighbor’s children love and listen to his music, which they very likely do. (And then watch that PBS documentary I also mentioned last week called “The US and The Holocaust,” too.)

And I would say listen to the pain in Mike Bonin’s voice – that LA City Councilman with the Black son – when he describes what’s happened to his child and to his family. He said those racist, hateful words about his kid “cut” and they “stung.” And, because he’s a white man, he said, “I know that I can never really know or comprehend or feel the weight of the daily relentless racism, anti-Black racism, that my son is going to face. But man, I know the fire that you feel when someone tries to destroy Black boy joy.” He feels it like a rage, he said.

And I would say listen to those girls up at Pike High School – and their parents – and imagine what it must be like to welcome that ugliness into your own backyard; to become another one of these stories on the evening news, in the local paper, in the ever-present, inescapable world of social media, in which our young people live these days; and to know so many people are going to minimize, dismiss, deflect and doubt the Truth of their experience.

And I would say, imagine what it must feel like to be one of the very few Black kids in our town who has to show up for class tomorrow, after fall break, in light of it all.

And I would suggest that in just these three examples, taken from the local and national news, over the course of just the last week, we see how this sin of racism permeates so many levels and layers of our lives:

Entertainment - and entertainment for and by a younger generation than mine, which we all pretend is supposed to be evolving beyond our racist ways;

Politics - and by a woman … a woman of color, herself … and a Democrat, in arguably the most liberal state of our union, to boot;

Athletics - something as important in the lives of young people and families in our culture as anything, these days;

Education - one place – besides Church – where we would, could and should be teaching our kids more and better and differently about all of this, in my opinion. (And I’m glad to know our schools have been and continue to be working on this, I have to say.)

But it’s everywhere, people. And it’s not going anywhere all on its own. That is clear.

You can’t drive into New Palestine from the east on US 40, or from the west on US 52, without seeing a Confederate flag, many days. There are people who have hung nooses from trees as Halloween decorations in my neighborhood. And there are people who tell me this is not something I need to keep harping on.

So, thinking about today’s Gospel – and Jesus’ parable about our need to pray always and not to lose heart – it seems like all we have left, sometimes, are our prayers and our persistence and whatever hope we can muster when it comes to fighting the racism around us. We keep talking about it. We keep coming forward to acknowledge and educate about it. We keep preaching and teaching and speaking out against it. We stop it when we see it. We don’t allow it to live and move and breathe in our presence for one more moment.

And I’m praying that, if you don’t have the courage or the conviction or the energy; if you don’t have the passion or the patience or the hope enough to be persistent about this injustice from where you sit, that at least you’ll listen to and allow those who do to do their thing. And pray for them, in the meantime…

…so that someone might hear.

… so that those with the power to respond might do something different for a change – whether they want to or understand why or mean it, or not.

… so that justice might be granted, finally.

… so that change will come, finally.

… so that when the Son of Man shows up, he might – finally, finally, finally – find faith on earth.

Amen