St. John's Episcopal Church
Montgomery Alabama

June 30, 2002

Sixth Sunday After Pentecost

Where Is Your Heart: With God or with Your Family?
The Rev. Robert C. Wisnewski, Jr.
Rector

Gospel: Matthew 10:34-42

Our gospel lesson for today is the final part of Jesus’ commissioning and instruction of the twelve apostles. He has chosen them, each of them for a purpose, and he has spent some time telling them what they are to do and what they may expect in
following him. In what comes before this passage, the lessons we have read here the past few weeks, Jesus has given the apostles authority over unclean spirits; he has given them gifts of healing; he has told them not to take too much with them but to live each day trusting that God will provide what is needed; he has told them to do their very best but not to worry too much about results; and he has told them not to try to defeat the wolves in the world but to be sheep in the midst of the wolves and trust God to protect them. Today he warns them about following in order to get a certain reward. Don’t follow me thinking that you then deserve some easier kind of life. Give up your definitions of ease and comfort and simply obey. Take each day as it comes and avoid judging the day too soon. The Lord will care for you but the way will be hard. It will not always be peaceful.


If the first line of this gospel lesson is confusing to you, certainly you will not be alone. Probably it was confusing to the apostles as well. “I have not come to bring peace, but a sword.” I would be among the first to say that, in fact, the more
faithful and obedient one becomes, the more peace he will find in his life. Jesus is referred to as the Prince of Peace and the only true peace we can find on this earth is through the Son of God. Nevertheless, Jesus says that the apostles must not follow simply to find peace. If finding peace and contentment is the primary motivation, then such takes the place of God in our lives. he apostles, and we, are to follow Jesus with worshiping God as our primary focus in life. And the irony is that then we will find peace. But if we follow with just the selfish desire for peace, peace will elude us.

He who finds his life will lose it, and he who loses his life for my sake will find it.” That is Jesus’ elaboration on this subject. If you let go of life and peace and focus on following the Lord, then you will find life and peace. Jesus desires from us
faithful following rather than using him to get what we think we want. Much of our problem in life comes out of our selfish pursuit of what we think will make us happy. Let go of that, Jesus says, and worship: be faithful; follow; obey; allow God to
give you what you need and receive it as a gift. When our wants are our focus and God is simply the means to accomplish that focus, there can be no sense of gift or gratitude, because what we have really done is acquired our wants. How dare you
worship me in order to get what you want! Worship me and let go of your wants. I will give you more than you can imagine.

Of all the places Jesus could apply this teaching, he chooses first to apply it to families. That central unit of human community, that in which God so obviously intended for his people to live and grow, that is where Jesus says following him may
well be the hardest. That’s where you are going to struggle, that’s where it may be the worst, that’s where spiritual growth may be tested the most.

If you ever think you’ve got life licked, go to a family reunion! Along with all the joys you may experience, you will also find yourself angry, embarrassed, frustrated, judgmental, self-conscious, critical, criticized, baffled, utterly amazed that you and
all these people share the same genes. If they were strangers on the street, things would be different but they are family and somehow that makes it more complicated. Families are the kilns in which our spiritual growth issues are fired. It’s natural and good that we are there for that is our place. But the heat of refinement is high.

There are two primary truths of humanity: we are born from God; and we are born into families. And much of life has to do with reconciling those two truths. God blesses our families and calls for loyalty to the family; yet God calls for our ultimate
loyalty to be to him. Families are where we often experience holiness first, where we seem always to expect things to be on a higher plane; yet they are where we find the basest of activity. We are invited by God to grow spiritually, ever closer to him. And we are to live in families. It’s hard to do both of those things but that’s the way God has set up the world, and surely there is purpose in his will.

If you would like an exercise in frustration, try this: go home and try to arrange a peaceful family event. There simply are too many factors beyond your control. Each person has been affected by more events and emotions than you can keep up
with. Interruptions occur, air conditioners die, storms knock out televisions and water heaters, cars break down, traffic backs up, flowers wilt, wines sour, hurricanes build off the coast and inside teenagers. You can’t orchestrate peace but one of the greatest problems in families is that we think we should be able to orchestrate peace. It is the elusive god of most every family, what we silently name as the one thing we would most like to have. We elevate it, pursue it, yearn for it, and are so devastated when we don’t get it. Families are one of the main places where God is most abused. Peace in the family is usually our real
desire; our prayers to God are more like tokens in the slot hoping peace will fall into our hands. No wonder Jesus starts with families as an example of the great challenge he issues to his followers. You must worship me even above your family and all that you want in your family. Your family may well be the idol you must daily put aside.

Taken out of context, this statement would be ridiculous but our families are too important to us and we are too close to each other inside our families. We let our families interfere with our relationship with God which must be primary. For God to be the center of a family means much more than all members following the rules God gives us. Here again, keeping the rules can easily turn into putting tokens into a slot with the expectation of a payoff rolling down the chute. For God to be the center of my family, he must be the center of my life. I must worship him above my selfish desires for the members of my family. I can have my wants and I can express them to God; indeed I should, but I must then release all attachment to outcome. I may want something for my family above any material possession, but until I place that want into God’s hands, I am not putting God as
the center of my life.

I am convinced we are put into families in order to learn how to want yet let go. It is in our families that we want the most and so easily our wants for our families push God out. I must struggle daily with all my wants in my family and God invites me to give those wants to him, not as a token in a slot but as my gift on his altar. I must become willing to live without my wants being accomplished. I must become grateful for God’s presence without equating that with my wants being met.

That’s a hard message but I think it’s the gospel of Christ. If it helps, I’ll remind you that what you want for yourself does not compare with what God will give you. Jesus on the cross, I imagine, wanted not to suffer; he was given the resurrection. His wants had to be set aside in trust for the gift of his father to be received. What do you want most this day? Name it and put it on the altar. Be willing for that never to be met. And open your arms to receive God’s greater blessing.

Gospel: Matthew 10:34-42
"Do not think that I have come to bring peace to the earth; I have not come to bring peace, but a sword.

For I have come to set a man
against his father, and a daughter against her mother, and a daughter-in-law against her mother-in-law; and one's foes will be members of one's own household.

Whoever loves father or mother more than me is not worthy of me; amd whoever loves son or daughter more than me is not worthy of me; and whoever does not take up the cross and follow me is not worthy of me. Those who find their life will lose it, and those who lose their life for my sake will find it. (NRSV)

"Whoever welcomes you welcomes me, and whoever welcomes me welcomes
the one who sent me. Whoever welcomes a prophet in the name of a prophet will receive a prophet's reward; and whoever welcomes a righteous person in the name of a righteous person will receive the reward of the righteous; and whoever gives even a cup of cold water to one of these little ones in the name of a disciple--truly I tell you, none of these will lose their reward."

Copyright 2002 The Rev. Robert C. Wisnewski, Jr.

[back to top]

 

 
     
 
 
Search

 

 

Copyright ©1999-2006 explorefaith.org