The Bungee Cord
Hello,
Here’s the majority of my sermon from yesterday….it seemed Bungee-able to me.
In today’s Gospel lesson (Matthew 9:9-13) we hear a rather detail-less story of Jesus’ selecting Matthew to be one of his twelve disciples. There is, however, one detail that we are told; Matthew was a tax collector.
Now, tax collectors in our day may not the most popular people in town, and letters from the IRS are not considered Valentines cards, but tax collectors in Jesus’ day were far, far more despised. The reason that they were so hated was that the taxes they gathered were sent off to Rome who had conquered their land. They collected poll taxes, land taxes, and tolls levied on goods that passed over roadways. The tax collectors, in order to get their jobs, paid a stipulated sum to the Romans, and then amassed their wealth by gathering more than they had paid the Romans. Generally, the tax collectors were Romans, the oppressors, but sometimes they were Jews, and those Jewish tax collectors we considered traitors. So, when people spoke of these tax collectors, they were paired with robbers, sinners, prostitutes, and Gentiles. They were considered the lowest of the low…few, in Jesus’ day, were lower.
And today we find out that when Jesus started to amass his disciples, the twelve that he would spend his life with, he chose a hated tax collector, Matthew.
As we would expect, his choice did not sit well with the people who observed this choice. With disgust the Pharisees asked some others of Jesus’ disciples, “Why does your teacher eat with tax collectors and sinners?” Why was he eating with … and eating with people was a public sign of alliance with those people … why was he eating with such scum? Why was he eating with those who everyone else had the sense from whom to keep their distance. Why was he eating with those who were the cockroaches of their town?
Jesus’ answer, “Because those people need me.”
I suppose the same thing might be said of those with whom Jesus eats today, those who gather at his table. Why does Jesus eat with us? Look around…look who is here. Although there may not be those the likes of tax collectors in Jesus’ day…look around. Here, just like in every church,
• there are people who have quirky personalities,
• people who wear the scars of things they have done in the past,
• people who the world has branded “losers”,
• people whose temper gets the best of them,
• people whose skulls are thick and hearts are calloused,
• people who when they are seen by others the others cross the road so they don’t have to talk to them,
• people whose children won’t talk to them, and children whose parents have turned their back on them,
• people who are called old and stupid by this technological world that is racing around at break neck speed.
We are not a bunch of angels, we are a band of sinners…every one of us…sinners in need of a savior…and that is why Jesus has called you and me here this morning, and that is why he eats with us….we need him.
It may have been that the other disciples were thinking that others would not want to join their group, a group with such a vile sinner, when they saw Jesus welcome Matthew…that scummy tax collector, and if that’s what they thought, their suspicions held true when the townsfolk scoffed at Jesus for eating with the likes of Matthew. They did not want to be part of such a crowd. But Jesus did not regard all those judgments and fears…the only judgments that Jesus regarded were that Matthew, a tax collector, was one who he had come to die for, and he, Matthew, needed Jesus.
And having seen Jesus make his judgment on Matthew, you and I can be assured that Jesus makes the same judgment on you and me. And that judgment is this: no matter what the world thinks of you and me…no matter what you and I think of ourselves…you and I are welcome here in this church…welcome to eat at Jesus’ table…because Jesus came to die for you and me, and you and I need him.
And as we go out in the world, that is the welcome that Jesus sends you and me out to proclaim….that no one is so low, so messed up, so sinful, so scummy…that they are not welcome here. Actually, the opposite is true. Such are the very ones that Jesus has chosen to be among his disciples… he chose Matthew…and why? Because Jesus came to die for them, and they need Jesus.
Have a great week.
God’s grace and peace, (ggap)
Pastor Jerry Nuernberger
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