A Worship Sermon on Isaiah 58:1-10
Charity Gives But Justice Changes

Responsive Readings · True Worship Is Sharing With those in Need

Call to Worship
Pastor: We worship God by giving ourselves in devotion to him.
People: We have many forms of worship; but it is too easy to sit through these forms without giving ourselves to God.
Pastor: That is why God asks for true worship to be expressed in the form of sharing this world’s goods with the needy.
People: May the worship we profess in the sanctuary find expression in genuine concern for the poor and hungry.

Collect
Almighty God, who requires worship to reach beyond ritual into the area of benevolent service: Inspire in us honest devotion which will motivate genuine love for those less fortunate, that we may enjoy the blessing of your guiding presence in our lives. We pray through Christ our Lord. Amen.

Prayer of Confession
We have expressed our worship in too small a place, Father, and the real sanctuary of our world is desecrated by our unwillingness to share with our brothers and sisters. Forgive us for the empty expressions we have offered as worship, while failing to express our love by reaching out to others in need. Lead us by your Spirit in true worship, that we may feel our brothers’ need, and minister to that need. In our Savior’s name we pray. Amen.

Hymns
“O Brother Man, Fold to Thy Heart”
“The Voice of God Is Calling”
“We Thank Thee, Lord”
“Where Cross the Crowded Ways of Life”


 

Children’s Sermon - The Big Meaning of a Small Gift

by Brett Blair

Exegetical Aim: The most expensive gift given is not a determinant of the one who has made the greatest sacrifice. The words in bold are meant to instruct the leader through this children’s sermon..

Prop: 35 one-dollar bills, two pennies, and an offering plate. Keep the offering plate behind you. You might ask one of the ushers to participate by bringing out the offering plate and taking up the offering. Be prepared yourself to give this thirty five dollars to the church because the kids will be placing it in the offering plate and you very well cannot take it out once you have put it in.

Lesson: Good morning! (response) I have some money to give you this morning. Hold out all the ones. Make a production of it. Don’t show the pennies. Count out each dollar as you hand them out. Indiscriminately give 20, 10, 5, and the two pennies to four individuals. First person: Ok, hold out your hand. You’re a person that has a good amount of money. You have one, two ten. You have ten dollars; you’re pretty rich. What are you going to do with your money? (response) Second: Hold out your hand. You have one, two five dollars. You are not as rich as he is but you have some money. What are going to do with your money? (response) Third: Hold out your hand. You have one, two twenty. Can you believe that? Twenty dollars. You are very rich! What are going to do with all your riches? (response) Fourth: Now, hold out your hand. You’re the last one. You have one two. Two pennies. That’s not a lot of money. Sorry but you’re very poor. What are going to do with your two cents? (response)

Now, you know what happens don’t you? Bring out the offering plate and hold it up high. What is this? (response) Humor: Every time you get some money the preachers reach for the offering plate don’t they? -but for good reason. We always give first to God. Pass the plate to each child. To the first: You decided to give four dollars to God. Count them out. (response) Thank you. Second: You decided you needed to give two dollars. (response) Thank you. Third: You were the very rich girl and want to give ten dollars don’t you? (no) Well, that’s what you decided to do anyway! (response) Thank you. Now you were the poor girl, weren’t you? All you have in the world is two little pennies. Guess what you decided? (response) You decided to give both your pennies. (response) Thanks.

Application: Now, I have a question for you. Which one of these gave the most? (the one who gave ten) Why is that? (response) Well let me surprise you. She is the one who gave the most. In giving her only two pennies she gave more than the other three. Why is that? (response) Jesus said it this way, “They gave out of their riches but she gave out of her poverty.” In other words: You guys gave some of your money but she gave everything she had. Her small gift was the biggest of all!

Let’s pray: Lord, teach us to give. Amen

Epilogue: Of course some of your money is still out. As soon as you end the prayer hold the plate up and look at the children. If they start to leave and do not notice your intent clear your throat. If they turn and refuse to put the money in then point to the plate. Don’t say anything. Allow them to struggle. When they comply say thank you and dismiss them.


Scripture - Isaiah 58:1-10

1Shout it aloud, do not hold back.
Raise your voice like a trumpet.
Declare to my people their rebellion
and to the house of Jacob their sins.
2For day after day they seek me out;
they seem eager to know my ways,
as if they were a nation that does what is right
and has not forsaken the commands of its God.
They ask me for just decisions
and seem eager for God to come near them.
3‘Why have we fasted,’ they say,
‘and you have not seen it?
Why have we humbled ourselves,
and you have not noticed?’

“Yet on the day of your fasting, you do as you please
and exploit all your workers.
4 Your fasting ends in quarreling and strife,
and in striking each other with wicked fists.
You cannot fast as you do today
and expect your voice to be heard on high.
5 Is this the kind of fast I have chosen,
only a day for a man to humble himself?
Is it only for bowing one’s head like a reed
and for lying on sackcloth and ashes?
Is that what you call a fast,
a day acceptable to the Lord ?

6 “Is not this the kind of fasting I have chosen:
to loose the chains of injustice
and untie the cords of the yoke,
to set the oppressed free
and break every yoke?
7 Is it not to share your food with the hungry
and to provide the poor wanderer with shelter-
when you see the naked, to clothe him,
and not to turn away from your own flesh and blood?
8 Then your light will break forth like the dawn,
and your healing will quickly appear;
then your righteousness [1] will go before you,
and the glory of the Lord will be your rear guard.
9 Then you will call, and the Lord will answer;
you will cry for help, and he will say: Here am I.

“If you do away with the yoke of oppression,
with the pointing finger and malicious talk,
10 and if you spend yourselves in behalf of the hungry
and satisfy the needs of the oppressed,
then your light will rise in the darkness,
and your night will become like the noonday.

-- Copyright: New International Version.


 

Commentary - Exegesis of Isaiah 58:1-10

By Elizabeth Sweet

With the opening words in Isaiah 58, the prophetic purpose is proclaimed. The prophetic mission was not to foresee future events or even to provide guidelines or a behavioral roadmap for the people to follow.

The primary role of prophets was to call God’s people to repentance, to demand their return to obedience and to remind the people what it means to live lives in keeping with the covenant. The opening command from God to Isaiah in 58:1 is, therefore, the most basic job description of a prophet: Shout out, do not hold back, raise your voice like a trumpet! Announce to my people their rebellion, to the house of Jacob their sins.

The “rebellion” and “sins” that Isaiah is to announce to the people of Judah — and to their Persian rulers — are surprising ones. Yahweh is not displeased here by some egregious BAD behavior. Rather it is what the Judeans obviously consider their very GOOD behavior that has gained them a spot on God’s bad list.

The re-established temple worship in Jerusalem had become a single-minded focus of the people. Public practices of piety, involving structured worship and extensive, repeated ritualized fasting, defined their religious life. The Hebrew people were caught worshiping worship. Not only are these worshipers convinced that acts of praise and worship evidence extreme faithfulness; they are more than a bit peeved that despite all these ritualized, public displays of devotion, God has not seen fit to answer their prayers.

As described by Haggai, the political and economic environment was anything but rosy. The legal courts were filled with corrupt officials. Taxes were staggeringly high and unfairly crippling those who were already struggling. Extensive indebtedness had forced many to lose their land and indenture themselves to work off their debts. Religious groups were also bitterly fragmented, with various factions fighting for supremacy in the religious courts and priority within the temple culture. Despite all the public prayers, all the elaborate fasts and all the religious rituals that made up popular religion, the people felt God had turned a deaf ear to their pleas and problems. The louder they shouted to the Lord, it seemed, the fainter God’s favor.

In Isaiah 58 Isaiah pins down and proclaims the nature of their problem: these very actions, the shape and form of their so-called “faith,” reveal how far from true righteousness they have wandered.

Look at all our humble fasting, the people grouse. Yet Yahweh still does “not notice” us.

But Isaiah points out, “Look how you serve your own interests on your fast day” (v.3). Your fastidious attention to fasting causes you to “oppress all your workers.”

Instead of being a humble practice that brings spiritual growth, fasting had become a very public, even showy drama played out before peers. A bowed head (“like a bulrush”), lying about in “sackcloth and ashes” were little more than props used in these public exhibitions. Such “competitive fasting” has led to nothing but “quarreling and fighting.” Isaiah’s rhetorical question asks if such self-serving, self-centered, strife-inducing behavior is really what they believe makes “a day acceptable to the Lord?” (v.5).

The prophet then challenges the people with a new definition of a “fast,” a new understanding of what kind of rituals and activities God requires of God’s people. At the heart of all Yahweh’s demands is nothing less than establishing genuine justice and merciful compassion for all. This directive is not just for the Judeans; it is for their Persian rulers as well. Justice and mercy do not know political boundaries for they are part of the divine fabric of the universe.

In verses 6-7 the activities listed sound much like those required on “Jubilee” years — the year in which debts were forgiven, slaves were freed, and confiscated land returned to its previous owners. It is a matter of heated debate whether or not such “Jubilees” were ever actually practiced. But what is clear is that the notion of a “Jubilee Year” was held up as a kind of divinely mandated “do-over” for all people.

Here is Isaiah 58 the prophet is taking the radical position that Jubilee behavior is what Yahweh demands as a permanent state of being in those who would seek God’s righteousness: “loose the bonds of injustice,” “let the oppressed go free,” “share your bread with the hungry,” “bring the homeless poor into your house.”

One especially telling requirement voiced by the prophet is that they are “not to hide yourself from your own kin.” In the aftermath of economic hardships, when extended family members may have lost everything—home, lands, livelihood, even freedom--cutting ties with those who were no longer able to care for themselves had become commonplace. In no uncertain terms, Isaiah condemns this “save yourself first” mentality that kept the thriving firmly behind doors closed to those who were barely surviving, flailing and failing without compassionate intercession or intervention.

In fact, these acts of compassionate justice are true “worship.” Sitting in the temple solemnly fasting is not worship when it is accomplished at the expense of, or with disregard for, the needs of others. The worship the Lord requires is the active incarnation of God’s justice in the world. DO first, then pray, is the prophet’s mandate. DOING is the worship God demands.

In performing the concrete acts articulated here--

feeding the hungry,
clothing the naked,
sheltering the homeless,
freeing the enslaved,
acknowledging kinships,

God’s righteousness is made manifest in the whole community, not just in gated parts. This is why the prophet can so confidently promise that “if” the people DO these acts, “then” the Lord will answer their prayers.

If you offer your food to the hungry and satisfy the needs of the afflicted, then your light shall rise in the darkness and your gloom be like noonday (v.10).

The unanswered prayers of the people had been for restoration, for peace, for prosperity, and for the rise of a newly empowered nation of God’s chosen people. But all those prayers are only answerable when justice and righteousness are already made present by a people’s own actions and attitudes. Faithfulness to God’s mandate of compassionate justice and God’s dream of a Jubilee world IS what brings about God’s righteousness and transforms this world.

Here (vv.8,10) and in many later passages Isaiah uses “light” as a symbol of final consummation, of the fulfillment of all God’s promises for the Earth. This “light” will grow brighter, and this “light” will illumine the “gloom” in which people have been living, as they continue to perform these true acts of “worship” and praise.


 

Sermon on Isaiah 58:1-10 - Charity Gives But Justice Changes

by Brett Blair with Leonard Sweet

Everyone is familiar with Mother Goose stories. We read our children these stories to help them sort out the world. The tortoise keeps on going to beat the hare in a race. Perseverance and determination beat pride and laziness! That third little pig uses the best quality building materials and has a safe home from the big, bad wolf. Quality construction materials win out over home invaders. Often in these stories, good wins out over evil through hard work, determination, and a little cleverness. These stories are cute, and they can help us teach our children a bit about good and evil. But how do we explain real poverty to our children? How could we possibly explain situations where there is no clean water, there is no safe place, there is no food, and disease or war might strike at any time? Hard work and a little cleverness are not enough to win the day. The Mother Goose ideals don’t seem to solve the problems of poverty. Mother Goose isn’t going to cut it. What you need is a Mother Teresa approach.

The story is told of a Franciscan monk in Australia who was assigned to be the guide and “gofer” to Mother Teresa when she visited New South Wales. Thrilled and excited at the prospect of being so close to this great woman, he dreamed of how much he would learn from her and what they would talk about. But during her visit, he became frustrated. Although he was constantly near her, the friar never had the opportunity to say one word to Mother Teresa. There were always other people for her to meet.

Finally, her tour was over, and she was due to fly to New Guinea. In desperation, the Franciscan friar spoke to mother Teresa: If I pay my own fare to New Guinea, can I sit next to you on the plane so I can talk to you and learn from you? Mother Teresa looked at him. “You have enough money to pay airfare to New Guinea?” she asked.

Yes, he replied eagerly. “Then give that money to the poor,” she said. “You’ll learn more from that than anything I can tell you.” Mother Teresa understood that Jesus’ ministry was to the poor and she made it hers as well. She, like Jesus, also understood the need to challenge the status quo and demand a systemic change to end poverty.

So how do we help the poor? How do we change the life of someone in need so they no longer need our help? Isaiah says it’s acts of justice, mercy, compassion, sacrifice. The Hebrew term used to define any charitable endeavor is “tzedakah,” which can be translated by the word “charity” but literally means “righteousness” or “justice.” Charity is probably a misleading interpretation of tzadakah. Charity is something very familiar to us all. We hear someone is in need and we give some money or gifts to help. Charity is the first step in giving. Tzadakah is the second step. I have always loved Jesus statement: “No greater love does a man have than he lay down his life for a friend.” There is love and then there is a greater love. There is charity and then there is Tzadakahi.

We as Christians are all called to a higher love. A love that changes. A love beyond merely giving. We are called to three purposes. First…

1. We Are Called to Compassion: The Spirit not the Letter

When I read the words of Isaiah 58 I get the sense that God is frustrated. He is frustrated that he has to explain what should be obvious. He has to explain the “no brainer.” He has to explain that which has been with them for hundreds of years. Something they have had plenty of time to absorb and understand. What is it? It’s the Ten Commandments. Nothing could be more obvious and yet more explained throughout the course of human history. I guess it shouldn’t surprise us.

700 years later after the death of Isaiah someone else had to explain the Ten Commandments: It was Jesus. If you take a close look at the “Sermon On The Mount” in Matthew 5 it’s primarily a teaching and explanation of the Ten Commandments. So I am sure from time to time God sits in heaven with his head in his hands, “Why must I always explain.”

I think God should have written an eleventh commandment. Right after Do not murder, Do not commit adultery, Do not steal, Do not bear false witness, Do not covet, He should have written “And you know what I’m talkin’ about. Don’t make me explain myself”

But the sad thing is it had to be explained. So Isaiah names eight things the Israelites must do to keep the spirit of the commandments alive. Here is how God tells them, through his prophet Isaiah, to clearly and truly keep the commandments:

1. Do not forsake the true meaning of the commandments (58:2):

2. On the day you fast you also exploit your workers. Stop it. (58:3).

3. Your fasts end in quarreling, strife, fights, malicious talk and finger pointing. Stop it. (58:4, 9).

4. A true fast loosens the chains of injustice setting the oppressed free. (58:5-6)

5. True humility shares food with the hungry. (58:7)

6. True commandment keeping provides the poor wanderer with shelter. (58:7)

7. The spirit of the Law clothes those who need garments. (58:7)

8. And finally live in a loving relationship with your own flesh and blood – your family (58:7)

The Israelites attempted to live their lives for God. They sought God (58:2); they asked God for just decisions (58:2); they fasted (58:3); they humbled themselves (58:3); they worshiped God (58:5); they observed the Sabbath (58:13). They kept the letter of the Law but there was one law they missed. That hidden eleventh commandment that whispers in your ear…you know what God is talking about. You know what he means when he says, “Do not murder.” He doesn’t simply mean don’t stick a knife in someone’s chest and cause them to die. He means don’t participate in all the evil leading up to such an event: The anger, the jealousy, the revenge, the getting even, the rage, the hatred. Remember how Jesus redefined the 6th commandment? He said, “You have heard it said, ‘Do not murder.’ But I tell you that anyone who is angry with his brother shall be subject to judgment.”

Isaiah had to explain the very simple commandment “Do not Steal.” Now, we all know what that means, but do we apply it throughout our lives. How many times do we wear a $200 coat to warm ourselves in the winter knowing it was made by a lady with six kids who is paid $2 day in a deplorable working environment in some third world country. And do we get upset enough about it to fight these kind of injustices in the world?

Does Isaiah really call this stealing? Listen to his words: “On the day of your fasting, you do as you please, and exploit all your workers.” Sounds like he is talking to the business owners and it sounds like he is saying, “You business owners are stealing from your employees.” Workers are to be treated with dignity and paid well for their work. If you don’t pay your workers a fair wage and create a reasonable working environment you are stealing.

You can follow an external interpretation of the Law and keep it perfectly or you can follow an internal interpretation of the Law and allow the commandments to influence your entire world. Which will it be? Do you want to legally keep the commandments or do you want to spiritually keep them? I’m sure you want to keep the spirit of the law. I know that about you. I trust in your Christian character. I have seen your compassion. And that’s the key. It’s a deep seated compassion in our hearts, that God places there, that enables us to see the true intent of the Law and not just what’s written down on paper. Compassion is allowing God to write the law upon on your heart and not just in your head. Keeping the commandments means building relationships: Your relationship to your family. Your relationships with one another. Your relationship with the poor. Your relationship with God.

2. We Are Called to Action: Works not Words

So God has called us to Compassion. That’s our first calling as Christians. Secondly, we are called to Action. Isaiah challenges those worshipers in the temple to get off their knees and onto their feet. God doesn’t need their empty praise. God is not honored when they lie about in “sackcloth and ashes.” What honors Yahweh is for them to be actively helping those whose most basic human needs are not being met.

Let me tell you that I am proud of the church. We give to the community and we give to the world. We help the poor on many occasions throughout the world and with our weekly offerings we are daily involved in missions. We are a charitable church. Let us never grow weary of giving. But let me add that charity is no substitute for Justice. Charity gives but Justice changes. Let me say that again: Charity gives but Justice changes. It changes the lives of the poor for the good and for good.

Justice sends a young girl to school who can’t afford it. Justice lends, expecting nothing in return, to the African entrepreneur to start a small family business which sustains his family for a life time. Justice demands that free markets stop preventing the poor from selling their products in the open market at competitive rates. Justice demands that the richest nations forgive the debts of the poorer nations. For all that charity does it is a band-aid when structures in our corporate and political world prevent real change.

This is why I say charity gives but justice changes; it demands the changes necessary for the lives of the poor to be elevated on a level playing field with us all.

Isaiah defines the new kind of “fast” that the Lord requires: “Is it not to share your bread with the hungry, and bring the homeless poor into your house; when you see the naked, to cover them, and not to hide yourself from your own kin?” (v.7) This is the kind of “righteousness” or “tzedakah” that defines the biblical understanding of justice.

Earlier, I made distinction between charitable giving on the one hand and acts of justice on the other. This is not a new distinction. Let me take you back 900 years to a Jewish scholar named Maimonides (1135-1204). He wrote out what he thought were the eight levels of tzedakah -- justice. I will start with the eighth which is the least desirable kind of justice and move up to the first. See if you can find your level of righteousness. Let’s see how righteous you are [jokingly]:

8. Giving to the poor unwillingly.

7. Giving to the poor happily but inadequately.

6. Giving to the poor after being asked.

5. Giving to the poor without or before being asked.

4. Giving to the poor without the recipient knowing who you are but allowing the recipient to know your identity.

3. Giving to the poor knowing who they are but without allowing the recipient to know your identity (this is called: anonymous giving).

2. Giving to the poor without knowledge of the recipient and without allowing the recipient to know your identity.

1. Strengthening the poor person in a manner that they can become self-sufficient.

Did you catch it? Did you hear the shift? The first seven acts of justice are really charity: giving….giving….giving…..giving. Seven times he uses that word and then he abandons it in the eighth and highest form. He uses the word: Strengthen!

What I have given you is the shortened form of what he wrote. Here are his actual words on the highest form of tzedakah: “There are eight levels of tzedakah, each greater than the next. The greatest level, above which there is no other, is to strengthen the name of another Jew by giving him a present or loan, or making a partnership with him, or finding him a job in order to strengthen his hand until he needs no longer [beg from] people. For it is said, “You shall strengthen the stranger and the dweller in your midst and live with him, “ {Leviticus XXV:35} that is to say, strengthen him until he needs no longer fall [upon the mercy of the community] or be in need.” [1]

The highest form of charity involves a just relationship. In fact it stops being charity and becomes partnership with those who are in need. Each successive level of giving demands more participation, more action, on the part of the one who gives and more relationship with the one who receives. The final, greatest type of giving is the establishment of true relationship, a partnership, a binding relationship for mutual aid, between the giver and receiver, the rich and the poor. At that point there really is no longer a “giver” or a “receiver,” a “rich” person and a “poor” person. There is only a newly created relationship within the community. It is that highest form of “charitable” relationship, righteousness that is no longer charity but community, that really transforms the world. Isaiah said: If you offer your food to the hungry and satisfy the needs of the afflicted, then your light shall rise in darkness and your gloom be like the noonday (v.10).

Pope Benedict’s has said that “the Church’s deepest nature is expressed in her three-fold responsibility: of proclaiming the word of God (kerygma-martyria), celebrating the sacraments (leitourgia),and exercising the ministry of charity (diakonia). These duties presuppose each other and are inseparable.”

Pope Benedict went on to say: “The Church cannot and must not take upon herself the political battle to bring about the most just society possible. She cannot and must not replace the states. Yet at the same time she cannot and must not remain on the sidelines in the fight for justice. She has to play her part through rational argument and she has to reawaken the spiritual energy without which justice, which always demands sacrifice, cannot prevail and prosper. A just society must be the achievement of politics, not of the Church. Yet the promotion of justice through efforts to bring about openness of mind and will to the demands of the common good is something which concerns the Church deeply.”

3. We Are Called to Community: Wii not i

And this brings us to our third point: First, we are called to Compassion. Second we are called to Action. And third we are called to Community. In our “outreach” we need less Mother Goose and more Mother Teresa. We need less Mother Goose glamour and more Mother Teresa grime. The forces of evil are rampant. Like Mother Teresa, you and I are in the good and evil business. You are going out there to battle evil . . . evil forces of ignorance, poverty, racism, substance abuse, hatred. It’s not about feeling good and happy highs. Like those worshipers in today’s text, we are attracted to the goosebumps, but what happens when the goosebumpiness diminishes and the bumpiness is all that’s left?

We need a major paradigm shift from how “charitable” ministries are conceived and conducted in most churches today. Many ministries major in principles and minor in relationships. As the head of a rescue mission said to me not too long ago, “Our biggest problem with Christians is that they all want to take stands for the poor, to come here and visit the poor and view the poor, and to “hand-out” food to the poor — especially at Thanksgiving and Christmas. But you can shake a stick at the number of Christians who come here wanting a relationship with the poor.”

An unlikely model for the kind of shift that is needed in the church is the new game console by Nintendo called the Wii. That’s spelled “w” “i” “i” but pronounced “we.” Until now gaming has been something done almost in isolation and by the young. But the Wii can be found in nursing homes and at the center of family entertainment centers. Why? Because Nintendo changed the joy stick and made it work like the real world works. My family and I all Wii. When we play the bowling game which can be done with multiple people we actually go through the same actions a bowler goes through. Same with tennis and golf and several other games. Suddenly everyone can understand a video game because everyone understands how to bowl, how to swing a racket. The video game is no longer a bunch of buttons but like real life.

And let me tell you that’s justice because this father can finally beat his son at a video game. The Wii has leveled the playing field between modern kids and out of date dads.

Here’s my point: Charity requires that I give. Justice requires that I change the game so I no longer have to give, so that the poor can play the game the same as me, so they can live, move, and have their being in the same community as all of us Let’s make governments and politicians play the game the same way we all have to play it. Let’s face the present reality that the future is greatly threatened around the globe by extreme poverty. We have the power to raise our voices against this situation and demand more action from our governments and our corporations. There are many children who have been left orphaned by HIV/AIDS and war. There are children who are sold into child labor. Vast numbers of children have no schools or opportunity to get an education. Basic medical care is missing for mothers and young children. We can demand support for programs that provide mosquito nets, anti-retroviral drugs, and clean water. This is an election year, so you can bet our elected officials will listen. It is time for us to raise our voices. It is our responsibility to protect the future of every citizen, especially the children.

You will remember the young man, who was rich and religious, who came to Jesus wanting to be saved. He told the young man, “Follow the Law.” “I have done that all my life” he said. “One thing you lack.” Said Jesus. “Sell what you have and give to the poor and you will have treasure in heaven, then come and follow me.” Jesus required that the man give but he also required that he change his life’s orientation. What must I DO? That was his question. What must I DO? Jesus said let me tell you what God is doing. Come follow me and WE shall DO it together. Then you will know what salvation is. You will have treasure in heaven.

A Jewish story goes: I went up to Heaven in a dream and stood at the Gates of Paradise in order to observe the procedure of the Heavenly Tribunal. I watched as a learned Rabbi approached and wished to enter. “Day and night,” he said, “I studied the Holy Torah.”

“Wait,” said the Angel. “We will investigate whether your study was for its own sake or whether it was a matter of profession and for the sake of honors.

A Righteous Person [a Zaddik] next approached. “I fasted much,” he said, “I underwent many ritual cleansings; I studied the Zohar the mystical commentary on the Torah day and night.”

“Wait,” said the Angel, “until we have completed our investigation to learn whether you motives were pure.”

Then a tavern-keeper drew near. “I kept an open door and fed without charge every poor man who came into my inn,” he said.

The Heavenly Portals were opened to him. [3]

Amen.

__________

1. For a full reading of each of the eight points go to:
http://www.panix.com/~jjbaker/rmbmzdkh.html or http://www.chabad.org/library/article_cdo/aid/45907/jewish/Eight-Levels-of-Charity.htm

2. Wendell Berry, “The Wild Birds” in The Wild Birds: Six Stories of the Port William Membership (San Francisco: North Point Press, 1986,), 136-37.]

3. No investigation was required. (Rabbi Aaron Leib of Primishlan, as quoted in Abraham Karp, The Jewish Way of Life and Thought, New York: KTAV Publishing Inc., 1981, p.177


 

Sermon Illustrations - Quotes and Stories

Albert Nolan begins his wonderful book with this paragraph:

“On the whole we don’t take Jesus seriously----whether we call ourselves Christians or not. There are some remarkable exceptions, but by and large we don’t love our enemies, we don’t turn the other cheek, we don’t forgive seventy times seven times, we don’t bless those who curse us, we don’t share what we have with the poor, and we don’t put all our hope and trust in God. We have our excuses. I am no saint. It is not meant for everybody, surely? It’s a great ideal, but it’s not very practical in this day and age.”

Albert Nolan, Jesus Today: A Spirituality of Radical Freedom (Maryknoll, New York: Orbis Books, 2006), xvii.

 

The Danger of Holding on to Wealth

The story of a butterfly named “Maculinea Arion” is most instructive. The creature lays its eggs on a plant, and after feeding on the plant for several weeks the young caterpillar makes its way to the ground. In order to complete its development, it must meet a certain kind of ant. When such an ant meets the caterpillar, the ant strokes it with its antennae, and the caterpillar exudes a sweet fluid from a special gland on its tenth segment.

Apparently the ant likes this substance, because it then carries the caterpillar home to its nest. There the ants drink the sweet fluid exuded by the caterpillar. And, what does the caterpillar eat? The baby ants. The ants show their appreciation to the caterpillar by letting him spend the winter in a special cavity of their nest. It continues to eat the young ants until spring. Eventually it emerges as an adult butterfly and flies away to establish more of its kind. And the cycle starts all over again

Some people are not much different from the ants: they cherish a luxury item to the injury of themselves.

Michael Green, Illustrations For Biblical Preaching, Grand Rapids: Baker, 1989, p. 238. Adapted.

 

Kings For A Little While

Sigmund Freud’s favorite story was about the sailor shipwrecked on one of the south sea islands. He was seized by the natives, hoisted to their shoulders, carried to the village, and set on a rude throne. Little by little, he learned that it was their custom once each year to make some man a king, king for a year. He liked it until he began to wonder what happened to all the former kings. Soon he discovered that every year when his kingship was ended, the king was banished to an island, where he starved to death. The sailor did not like that, but he was smart and he was king, king for a year. So he put his carpenters to work making boats, his farmers to work transplanting fruit trees to the island, farmers growing crops, masons building houses. So when his kingship was over, he was banished, not to a barren island, but to an island of abundance. It is a good parable of life:

We’re all kings here, kings for a little while, able to choose what we shall do with the stuff of life. (see Matthew 6:19-20 “Lay not up for yourselves treasures upon earth...”)

James S. Hewett, Illustrations Unlimited, Wheaton: Tyndale, 1988, p. 339.

 

Humor: Loosing Ourselves in our Possessions

There was a man who loved gold. Then he inherited a fortune. With joy he redecorated his bedroom. He put gold parchment wallpaper up, hung yellow curtains, had a golden colored rug and a yellow bedspread. He even bought some yellow pajamas. But then he got sick and came down with, of all things, yellow jaundice. His wife called the doctor who made a house call and went up to that bedroom for an examination. The doctor stayed up there a long while. When he came down, the wife asked, “How is he?”

“Don’t know,” said the doctor. “I couldn’t find him.”

Indeed many people today are absolutely absorbed in and lost in a world of greed and materialism.

Dr. Adrian Rogers

 

The Doomed Wasp

George Orwell, writing during the Second World War, tells of a rather cruel trick he once played on a wasp. The wasp was sucking jam on his plate and he cut him in half. The wasp paid no attention to what had happened to him, but just went on with his meal, while a tiny, stream of jam trickled out of his severed esophagus. Only when he tried to fly did he realize the terrible thing that happened to him.

What a picture of a solely consumer-oriented humanity, gorging itself, earthbound, and oblivious to its plight.

Adapted from Orwell, The Collected Essays, Journals and Letters Vol. II New York: Harcourt, Brace and World, 1968, p. 15.

 

Marketing Gone Mad

At the Coca-Cola Company, we have built and grown for more than 110 years.
Remaining disciplined to our mission has brought us to remarkable places.
Not long ago, we did some research and came up with an interesting set of facts.

A billion hours ago, human life appeared on Earth.

A billion minutes ago, Christianity emerged.

A billion seconds ago, the Beatles performed on The Ed Sullivan Show.

A billion Coca-Colas ago was yesterday morning.

And the question we are asking ourselves now is: What must we do to make a billion Coca-Colas ago be this morning?

Address by Roberto C. Goizueta, Chairman, CEO, Coca-Cola, delivered to the Executive Club of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, November 20, 1996. Taken from Vital Speeches of the Day, January 15, 1997, p. 201.

 

You Can Be My Husband

Communication. It’s difficult. Of course, the perennial complaint of women is that men don’t communicate their feelings. A little girl and a little boy were at day care one day. The girl approached the boy and said, “Hey Billy, want to play house?” He said, “Sure! What do you want me to do?” Sally replied, “I want you to communicate your feelings.” “Communicate my feelings?” said a bewildered Billy. “I have no idea what that means.” The little girl nods and says, “Perfect. You can be the husband.”

Staff

 

We Want It Our Way

The story of Faust by Goethe has become part of our heritage. Faust was a man who longed for romance, academic success, and wealth. Unable to find these on his own, he made a pact with the devil. If he could be granted his wishes, have his true worth made public and enjoy its fruits, then he would give his soul to the devil. Sure enough, he enjoyed marvelous romances, fabulous successes, and much wealth. Oddly enough, when the time came, he was unwilling to keep his part of the bargain. I wonder if there is a parallel here. We put Jesus off, promising, “Just one more of this and one more of that -- then I will be willing to go with you, Jesus.” Are we not like little Fausts, wanting to have it our way? After all, we say, we deserve it! And what do we say to Jesus when he comes to claim us?

Thomas Peterson, The Needle’s Eye, C.S.S. Publishing Company, 1990.

 

Four Questions for Church Membership

A seminary professor named Stanley Hauerwas has a novel idea about how churches should receive new members. A teacher of Christian ethics at Duke University, he has written about the church’s need for honesty and has called us to tell the truth as a “community of character.”

To this end, he has a modest proposal. Whenever people join the church, Hauerwas thinks they should stand and answer four questions: * Who is your Lord and Savior? The response: “Jesus Christ.” * Do you trust in him and seek to be his disciple? “I do.” * Will you be a faithful member of this congregation? The answer: “I will.” * Finally, one last question: What is your annual income?

You heard me correctly. When people join the church, Dr. Hauerwas thinks they ought to name their Lord and Savior and tell fellow church members how much money they make. It is obvious Hauerwas does not serve as a pastor of a congregation. His idea just wouldn’t work, especially in the American church. Most church members believe salary figures are more sacred than prayer, and would quickly tell an inquisitive minister to snoop around somewhere else. What’s more, parish experience tempers the questions a minister asks of church members. Most pastors quickly learn how to dance around the issue of money without ever naming it.

William G. Carter, No Box Seats In The Kingdom, CSS Publishing, Lima, Ohio, 1996.

 

Are We Rich?

The curse of any kind of valuable possession is its capacity to steal our hearts and souls. The heavier the purse, the tighter the strings. Is it fair to call most of us rich? According to our Methodist founder John Wesley, it is. He said that the word “rich” in the Bible means to have the necessities of life (food, shelter, and clothing) and then something left over. But here is part of the problem of us rich folks. We have increased the number of things we regard as necessities. We want three cars, two VCRs, four computers, a house at the lake, country club membership, and private school education. There are hundreds of things that we call necessities that our parents referred to as luxuries. The Bible says that shelter, food, and clothing are necessities. To have these and something left over, as almost all of us do, is to be rich.

Dr. Bill Bouknight, Collected Sermons, ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., 2002.

 

Remember, no one is worthless. Any person can always be held up as a bad example.

Anonymous

 

We Will Not Deny Ourselves

I think of a young couple I know. They’re in their early thirties, and both work hard at their respective careers. When they get around little children, their hands go out to pick them up and love them. Sometimes they talk about having children of their own. But the young woman is on a career track and isn’t sure she will ever be as successful as she wants if she stops to have children. Her husband is sympathetic. He has been well schooled in feminist thought. It isn’t right for his wife to give up anything in her career to have children, he says, even if in her heart she desires to be a mother. Her success is more important than having children. She has got to fulfill her manifest destiny!

And then there’s the man in later middle-age, a successful engineer who chairs a large department in his company, who is leaving his wife for a young surfer with tight “abs”, as abdominal muscles are now called. His friends have argued with him about the decision. His children tell him he is throwing over years of relationship with a wonderful woman for a mere biological attraction. But he counters by saying he has only one life to live and he cannot deny himself the pleasure of this young woman with the taut body.

You see? Just like the man in the biblical story. Thinking about the self and how to fulfill it, how to help it realize all its potential before decline and death. It has become a mania in our time.

Dr. John Killinger, Sermon: “The Real Way to Personal Fulfillment”

 

Let It Crawl, Reverend!

Flip Wilson had a weekly TV comedy show back in the 70s, and one of his favorite characters to portray was Brother Leroy. In one skit, Brother Leroy was leading services one Sunday morning. It wasn’t going very well. People weren’t very responsive. It came time to receive the offering and so Brother Leroy passed the collection plates. They came back empty. So he passed them again. Same thing. Empty. Brother Leroy then went before the people and said, “Now, I know that you all want this church to progress. This church must progress.” No response from the congregation. Brother Leroy shouted a bit louder: “Now, before this church can progress it has to crawl, this church has got to crawl.” And the congregation started getting excited and they yelled back, “Make it crawl, Reverend. Make it crawl!” Brother Leroy continued, “After this church has crawled, it’s got to pick itself up and start to walk, this church has got to walk!” And the people yelled back at him, “Make it walk, Reverend. Make it walk!” “And after this church has walked, this church has got to get up and run, this church has got to run.”

And the people were worked up into a terrible frenzy, and they hollered back: “Make it run, Reverend. Make it run!” And then Brother Leroy said, “Now, brothers and sisters, in order for this church to run, its gonna need money, its gonna take money for this church to run!” And the people yelled back, “Let it crawl, Reverend. Let it crawl!”

Flip Wilson

 

Pope Benedict’s alleged IQ of 150

Here are a couple of quotes from the first papal encyclical from Pope Benedict XVI, whose alleged IQ of 150 shows in everything he writes. It is called Deus Caritas Est:

“The Church’s deepest nature is expressed in her three-fold responsibility: of proclaiming the word of God (kerygma-martyria), celebrating the sacraments (leitourgia),and exercising the ministry of charity (diakonia). These duties presuppose each other and are inseparable.”

“The Church cannot and must not take upon herself the political battle to bring about the most just society possible. She cannot and must not replace the states. Yet at the same time she cannot and must not remain on the sidelines in the fight for justice. She has to play her part through rational argument and she has to reawaken the spiritual energy without which justice, which always demands sacrifice, cannot prevail and prosper. A just society must be the achievement of politics, not of the Church. Yet the promotion of justice through efforts to bring about openness of mind and will to the demands of the common good is something which concerns the Church deeply.”

“When we try to bring about change in our societies, we are treated first with indifference, then with ridicule, then with abuse and then with oppression. And finally, the greatest challenge is thrown at us: We are treated with respect. This is the most dangerous stage.”

A.T. Aryaratine

 

The Unfinished Dream

America is essentially a dream, a dream as yet unfulfilled. It is a dream of a land where (people) of all races, of all nationalities and of all creeds can live together as brothers [and sisters].”

Martin Luther King, Jr.