A.Hanson, 2009 |
Gospel Text: Matthew 25:31-46
Grace,
peace, and mercy are yours from the Triune God.
Amen.
Today is the last
Sunday in the liturgical year. On this particular day we talk about the person
of Jesus Christ and God’s ongoing work in the world. We talk about what it
means to have a King who defies earthly standards for what is royal and we
learn about who we are in relationship to this King. The kingdom of God is now,
not some far away time or place, and Christ shall reign forever and ever.
Which is all well
and good until we get a text like today’s Gospel from Matthew 25, which doesn’t
sound like something to celebrate. Jesus
has gathered on the Mount of Olives with his disciples and they have asked him
to describe what the end of the age will look like. Today’s Gospel text comes from Jesus’ final
time of conversation with his disciples prior to the beginning of his trial and
passion. In typical Jesus style, he
decides to tell a story.
The story features
a king who has gathered “all the nations” before his throne. This king is said to separate the people from
one another as a shepherd will separate sheep from goats. The king says to
those on his right hand, the sheep, that they have been blessed and will inherit
the kingdom. They provided food, water,
hospitality, clothing, and companionship to others during their time of need. This group asks, “Lord, when was it that we
saw you hungry and gave you food? We were just serving others.” The king says to the people, “Truly I tell
you, just as you did to the least of these who are members of my family, you
did for me.” Then the king turns to
those on his left, the goats, and says, “You are accursed, depart from me and
into the eternal fire prepared for the devil and his angels. For I was hungry and you gave me no food…”
and so on. Those on the king’s left say, “Lord, we never saw you. Therefore, we were never able to serve
you.” The king responds, “Just as you
did not serve those who were in need, you did not serve me.”
This text is a
favorite among Christians everywhere, particularly those who have a bent
towards social justice, because it is such a clear exhortation to be of service
to one’s neighbor. Because just as Jesus says, “Truly I tell you, just as you
did it to one of the least of these who are my family, you did it to me.” But
the underlying motivation for many, if not most, Christians is not to be of
service to one’s neighbor because of the Christ in them, but rather, an
overwhelming desire NOT to be a goat. It is easy to read this parable and
make it simply a humanitarian call for good works, which unfortunately
correlates with a reading that our salvation is achieved by what we do.
We are entering
into the season of good works. In just a few days we will be celebrating
Thanksgiving, followed by Christmas in a few short weeks. If you have not
already received the annual mailers from the Denver Rescue Mission, your time
is coming. There is a pull this time of year to donate money, canned goods,
toys, or warm winter clothing to one’s neighbors because “It’s what good people
do” and perhaps, doing good works lets us be a bit more self-absorbed when it
comes to holiday consumerism and consumption. If we toss a few dollars the way
of “the least of these” it lets us buy our new electronics and clothing with a
bit less guilt and feel warm and snug in our salvation by material means. I am
not sure that any of us actually believe that doing holiday good works helps us
rack up more points on a heavenly scorecard, but donating money for tax
deductions at the end of the year or donating our cast-off household items to
those who should be thankful for them is no less selfish than thinking we can
coordinate our own salvation by what we do.
I am not convinced
that the distinction between sheep and goats in today’s Gospel text is as
clear-cut as Jesus would have us believe.
I know that I am both a sheep and a goat. I recycle, I give to non-profit organizations,
I listen to NPR, and I do my best to be a good person. Yet while I am driving home from my chaplain
job, I refuse to make eye contact with the people standing on the corner of
Broadway and Sixth Ave with their signs because I am feeling fatigued from
being of service to people all day long.
If we were measuring salvation by
what we do, I would most certainly not measure up. None of us would.
But in making this
parable about the sheep and goats and avoiding everlasting turmoil or securing
everlasting salvation, we miss a very important thing. Where is God in this
parable? God is not in the sheep. God is in the people who are in need.
Both the sheep and the goats seem to be surprised by this. And I think it surprises us too. We want to
think that we are somehow the ones bringing God to those people who desperately
need God in their suffering. We have a
hard time imagining that God is already in the midst of the hungry, the
imprisoned, the sick, and the lonely. There is an entire mission-trip industry
built upon the desire of well-intentioned Christians to bring the “love of
Christ” to people in need, but God is already there. Jesus is more likely to be
found in a prison than a parsonage, or in a mental hospital instead of a
mega-church.
So what’s the good
news? Why read this text in a church?
And particularly, why read this text on a Sunday where we celebrate the
Reign of Christ in the world?
What would happen if we view the coming
Kingdom, the Reign of Christ in a new world not as something that is far off,
but as something that is breaking in now? God is already here among us,
making things new, stirring things up, working in, through, around and beside
us. God is in us in our work as sheep,
and in us when we are the broken and needy ones who are being cared for by the
sheep. This is the Kingdom! The reign of Christ looks like: I was hungry
and you gave me food, I was thirsty and you gave me a cup of cool water, I was
in the hospital and you came to see me, I was in prison and you visited me, I
was an immigrant and you showed me hospitality in a strange land, I was
standing on the corner of 6th and Broadway and you met my eyes and
smiled at me.
People of God, the
kingdom of heaven is not far away, it is breaking in among us even now. Where might we see glimpses of the reign of Christ? During his public address on Thursday night,
President Obama cited this very scripture text in his call for justice and
reform on immigration issues, and to welcome and make a way for our brothers
and sisters from other countries, because we see the face of Christ in them. I call this a glimpse of the kingdom! My
friend Margaret is the pastor of a food truck church in St Paul, MN. She hands
out calzones and the Peace of Christ on the streets. I call this the kingdom! Yesterday during my
shift in the emergency room I held an elderly woman’s hand as she was
experiencing a heart attack and was terrified. I call that a glimpse of the
kingdom! We see Christ in the face of our neighbors and in those people who
meet us in our own time of need. The
kingdom of God is now, not some far away time or place, and Christ shall reign
forever and ever. Amen!