The Narrow Gate

Welcome to the continuation of my blog, post-seminary. Ministry and evangelism have brought me back home to Chattanooga. I welcome your company on my journey.

The original blog, Down In Mississippi, shared stories from 2008 and 2009 of the hope and determination of people in the face of disaster wrought by the hurricanes Rita and Katrina in 2005, of work done primarily by volunteers from churches across America and with financial support of many aid agencies and private donations and the Church. My Mississippi posts really ended with the post of August 16, 2009. Much work, especially for the neediest, remained undone after the denominational church pulled out. Such is the nature of institutions. The world still needs your hands for a hand up. I commend to you my seven stories, Down in Mississippi I -VII, at the bottom of this page and the blog posts. They describe an experience of grace.



Saturday, November 2, 2013

Day 321 - Thank Goodness I’m not Like Them

A sermon delivered at First Presbyterian Church Soddy Daisy, TN Oct. 27, 2013
OT reading:  Joel 2: 23-32 

NT Reading: Luke 18: 9-14

As you know, a parable is an oral exercise intended to be heard. Jesus did not pass out paper texts of the parable, like I do on Wednesday evenings. The parable is a challenging mental exercise that tests our spontaneous perception of good an evil. It expect a reaction such as, “What did he just say?” or “He’s got a lot of nerve!” or “Is he talking about me?” It is not meant to be overanalyzed but to cause us to “overthink” and linger in our mind.

I wonder how many of us remember this parable about the praying Pharisee and tax collector by the image of the Pharisee standing on the corner with outstretched arms praying thanks that he is not like the contemptible tax collector?

It is unusual to have Jesus explain a parable to his audience after it is told, not to mention before it is told. But here Luke tells us both the purpose and audience for this parable. It is for “some who trusted in themselves that they were righteous and regarded others with contempt.” He leaves it to the listener to decide who is righteous and who is not.

I find it very cunning that Luke does not tell us who Jesus aims this parable. We can infer from the previous verses (18:1-8) of the persistent widow who kept after the unjust judge until she got justice as an example of persistent prayer, that he is amplifying the teaching on prayer. But is prayer the point?

Jesus presents a Pharisee and a tax collector. The Pharisee is by all rights, an exemplary Jew highly regarded as righteous for his meticulous adherence to the Law. As Paul would say, he is a Jew’s Jew. Pharisees were a mishmash of lay religious police, a political movement and a social movement who searched out and punished violations of the Law. They enjoyed good favor with common people of the public because they opposed the priestly leaders who mostly were the elite Jews who returned from Babylonian captivity.  The tax collector is a Jew, as typical, but his job demanded that he abandon almost all Judaic principles. He worked for Rome, a traitorous and sacrilegious act on three accounts. First, the Romans occupied the Promised Land. Second, the Romans were gentile heathens whose emperor claimed the status of god, even having his own gospel, or good news. Third, the tax collector enjoyed wide latitude in collecting taxes. Usually he charged far more than the emperor demanded, keeping the excess for himself, or giving some to the emperor’s cult. Tax collectors had the lowest and most loathed status among the Jews.

And so our parable begins with the honorable and the dishonorable, but which is which? The Pharisee is standing by himself in a public prayer. We might think that is egotistical, but it is a particularly advisable thing to do in the presence of a ritually unclean tax collector. He prays to God with his thanksgiving that he is able to be a justified Jew under the Law. He honors God. He does not steal from others, nor is an adulterer. He is not rouge; apparently he respects the well-being of others and does not take advantage of them. The Law says one should fast once per week on the Sabbath, but he fasts twice. The Law says you should title one tenth of your food and the products of your husbandry, he gives a tenth of all he has. In short, this Pharisee has gone far beyond what the letter of the Law requires, he is truly a righteous man. The other impoverished Jews who have come from all over the countryside to the Temple for worship would think what a great religious man this Pharisee is, and all would agree he is clearly better and more justified under the Law than the loathed tax collector.

The tax collector on the other hand, is not just standing apart from the rest, he is at a remote distance. The way the Temple court fills with religious people, he may have been as far away as the entry gates to the outer courtyard. (walked in last?)

The parable does not say why he has recognized his poor state, but it paints a picture of a very pathetic, broken man totally overwrought with grief and repentance.

He bows his head because he is afraid to raise his eyes to the heavens. He beats his chest with his fists in grief, probably in tears. Pounding of the chest with your fists is a very striking and humiliating display of grief for a man of the time. It is the normal public display of grief-stricken women of the time. This broken and lonely, fearful, grief-stricken, cowering man, far removed from the righteous Pharisee, can only plead, “God be merciful to me!”

The other Jews in the Temple courtyard are probably thinking, “Yes you ought to ask for forgiveness, but you deserve no mercy for being the scum-bag that you are.”

At this point our idea this parable is about prayer still holds.  Given that the preceding verses (1-8) about ceaseless prayer and never giving up hope for justice and the return of the Son of Man; we could conclude, “Ah! Jesus is fine tuning the matter of prayer.”

The two men certainly pray differently. Recall that Jesus instructs us to model our prayer according to the Lord’s Prayer (LP, Matt 6:7-15; Luke 11:1-4).  We should focus on the large issue of God’s plan for the Kingdom of God on earth, not our mundane day-to-day matters. We pray that our faith will preserve us in times of trial with sustenance so we may work for the kingdom of God to be realized on Earth when we will live with all the saints and be blessed with grace, validating our faith by forgiving others as God has forgiven, and enjoying that grace forever.

When we pray this way we have our eyes on this great unfolding redemptive, Kingdom of God and the return of the Son of Man as described in the Gospel narrative itself (a few verses earlier, 17:22-36). Such prayer focused on the fulfillment of God’s Kingdom on Earth sharpens our desire for its completion and our conscious, every-day discipleship. Such prayer is really all about God, not us.
In light of this model of prayer, what should we conclude by the behavior of the Pharisee and tax collector? We could say they both are praying properly. The tax collector is seeking atonement for his sin because he understands the depravity of his life and how antithetical it is to the Kingdom of God.

At first glance we concluded the Pharisee really is the Jew’s Jew by the content of his prayer. He maintains his purity at all costs. He thanks God for his blessings and strength to live by the Law feeling he is justified under it. He has fulfilled every work of the Law except the one that Jesus constantly repeats - love your neighbor as yourself. We can sense the prideful contempt in his words when he says, “I am not like other people, especially not like that tax collector.” As we rethink his prayer, we see his focus is on himself, he is praying to himself, not God: Thank you God I’m not like them…” He is almost more Roman than Jew. Prideful contempt is honored by Rome as the virtue of honorable citizens.

We do not find pride in the tax collector only the same contempt for him self the Pharisee has. He prays, “Have mercy on me” as he humiliates himself beating his chest. The tax collector comes in absolute humility, the virtue of the slave. He validates the assessment of the Jews and Romans, he is a scorned person and is the opposite of Roman honor.

As he has done throughout Luke, Jesus is about to turn the tables on every listener with a reversal that insults both Roman and Jewish minds.  Up to now, everyone listening to this parable nods their heads at how justified is the Pharisee and sorry is the tax collector; until Jesus gets to the last sentence about grace.  

Jesus says the tax collector is the one to praise because he has humbled himself in an embarrassed way with womanly, subservient and penitent behavior before God confessing his sins. He knows he has no control over his life beyond loyalty to God. He begs for mercy and his loyalty revealed in prayer justifies him.

By praising the tax collector, Jesus simultaneously indicts the Pharisee for his prideful, contemptuous Roman behavior that exalts his own righteousness.

Jesus has pulled the rug out from under us all. He calls out the pride of righteous and praises the self-humiliated who plead for God’s forgiveness.  This is the kind of subversive talk gets people crucified, as we know already, because we remember we are almost at the gates of Jerusalem and the foot of the cross on this journey from Galilee.

And so, yes, this parable deal with the nature of true, wholehearted prayer and atonement. There is an old Jewish story about the nature of true prayer that really fits this idea. I borrow it from Brian Stoffregen1
Once there was a rabbi who was ill and at the point of death, so the Jewish community proclaimed a day of fasting in the town in order to induce the Heavenly Judge to commute the sentence of death.
On that very day, when the entire congregation was gathered in the synagogue for penance and prayer, the town drunkard went to the village tavern for some schnapps. When another Jew saw him do this he rebuked him, saying, "Don't you know this is a fast-day and you're not allowed to drink? Why, everybody's at the synagogue praying for the rabbi!"
So the drunkard went to the synagogue and prayed, "Dear God! Please restore our rabbi to good health so that I can have my schnapps!"
The rabbi recovered, and it was considered a miracle. He explained it in the following way: "May God preserve our village drunkard until he is a hundred and twenty years! Know that his prayer was heard by God when yours were not. He put his whole heart and soul into his prayer!"

If we put this little story into a Christian perspective, Jesus says the person who puts one’s whole heart and soul into humble prayer for their sinful state, who admits who he is and asks for God’s mercy is justified before God.

But these words, “being justified by God” should give us pause. Have you ever thought, even if only a little, “Wow ! I’m glad I’m not like that Pharisee?”  How many times in our life do we react exactly as the Pharisee when we see something, or some one that we think is evil or sinful, or at least quite the opposite of or less than what we think is good? “Oh, I am so glad I am not like them.” (for example, Republicans, Democrats, Libertarians, Tea partiers)

That is where Jesus has completely upset our apple cart. He intends for us to identify with the Pharisee, not the tax collector. We can’t get to the justice of the tax collector until we know we are the Pharisee. We may think, “I have a job and worked hard to find and earn it, why does the person who can’t find or keep a job do the same?” The Pharisee forsook humility for pride, “Thank God I am not like that tax collector.” He failed the one critical test of the Law, to love his neighbor as he loves himself, or to put it in another way, to love your neighbor as God loves you.

The true heart of this parable is the self-made man. It is easy to fall into the trap of the Pharisee’s “salvation of works.” As a self-made man I work hard, follow the Law and it pays off. If you do the same it will pay off for you too. God is good.

But we know we cannot work hard enough to earn our way right into heaven. Jesus told us for his entire time on Earth that is dead-end thinking. The question is not am I better than another, or “why isn’t that person as good as me?” It is why has God graced a sinner like me who does not deserve it?
This parable involves humble prayer, but at its deepest level it is about the absolute power of God in our life and the heresy of the self-made person. The parable is timeless.

When it was told, the crowd saw only the hypocrisy of the tax collector asking for forgiveness after his abominable behavior of stealing from other Jews to pad his pocketbook and support the Roman God-Man emperor. Today, we are more likely to see the hypocrisy of the Rabbi/Pharisee praying about himself and his self-righteousness. In both cases, the parable points at the listener.

It leads us down a rosy path today like it did then.  Everyone of us are prone, even unconsciously; to thank God we are not like the Pharisee when we see someone pretentious about his or her faith, or are hypocritical with it, when we do something better than another person. We fall victim to that “works” and “judgment” thinking, the Pharisee is a hypocrite but I am religious, I earn my salvation. 
Jesus expects us to wonder do we rely on God or ourselves? Are we the person “who trusts in themselves that they are righteous and regards the other with contempt?”

It is also an important question for today because today is Reformation Day, the day we acknowledge our Protestant roots. If Martin Luther did one thing he showed through the Word that there is nothing of value on God’s green earth that we can do to earn our way into God’s good favor. Jesus Christ alone is responsible for that grace. Pride in self-sufficiency mortally wounds our relationship with God by keeping us from His grace. We can only find that freely given grace when we have adopted the humility of the tax collector and become open to those two great commandments, Love the Lord with all your body, soul and mind; and love your neighbor as you love yourself. That is where you will find that freely given grace. When you leave these doors, don’t think, “I’m glad I’m not like that Pharisee,” rather pray  “Thy Kingdom come on earth as it is in heaven and may I only tend your footstool.”
1. (http://www.crossmarks.com/brian/luke18x9.htm) A Treasury of Jewish Folklore: Stories, Traditions, Legends, Humor, Wisdom and Folk Songs of the Jewish People, Edited by Nathan Ausubel, Copyright, 1948, Crown Publishers, Inc., New York.

note: All links to scripture are from oremun bible Browser (http://bible.oremus.org)

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