Matthew 9:9-13 · The Calling of Matthew
A Call to Action
Matthew 9:9-13
Sermon
by Leonard Sweet
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Congress recently passed a law that seemed to fly under the radar screen. The law entitles any deceased U.S. veteran to have two uniformed military personal present to fold and present a flag, and to have “Taps” played on the bugle at the end of the service.

Who could argue with such a simple honor?

There is one little problem.

There are very few bugle players around these days.

This dearth of brass musicians has caused the Congressional mandate to be mitigated: veterans still have the right to “Taps,” but “Taps” can be played on a CD player during their funeral.

In order to keep the ceremony a little more stately, a whole new “instrument” has been invented. This “instrument” looks like a bugle. But instead of brass keys and open airways, this “bugle” is designed around a CD player. When the “musician” hits the “play” button on this phony bugle, a red and green light comes on. The “musician” then has five seconds to get the “bugle” into his or her mouth before the recording starts to play.

Not surprisingly, this “bugler” faces away from the mourners, so they cannot see the flashing lights displaying inside the bell of the fake instrument. (See The Post and Courier, Charleston, South Carolina, 26 May 2008)

In our culture, even when we try to do something sensitive and notable, we are all about appearance. We substitute style for substance over and over again. We prefer the canned perfection of these fake, false notes, to the real performance of a fallible, fragile human being, offering a genuine final tribute.

When Jesus called his disciples he did not call them to a course survey, or to a graduate seminar. Jesus called his disciples to active practice. Immediately after Matthew was called he got up from his everyday life and walked out. Later that day Matthew’s discipleship training had progressed to the “invite everyone you know and work with to dinner” phase.

Has YOUR discipleship gotten to that level yet?

As Jesus called his disciples, healed those in need, taught those who listened, he always asked for some active response. Matthew -- and before him Simon Peter and Andrew, James and John -- were asked to make a move in order to accept their new status as disciples. They got up. They left their established routines. They stepped out onto a new road.

The Pharisees who quibbled over Jesus’ dining companions were also asked to actively engage. Jesus gave them his directives, then challenged them to “Go and learn.” Even those to whom Jesus offered healing took some form of initiative. The hemorrhaging woman boldly reached out and touched Jesus, convinced by her faith that her action will bring her “health/salvation/wellness.” The little girl, already gone from this life, is touched by Jesus’ life-giving hand, but she then struggled to her own feet while gripping that hand.

How then did the church become a kind of “Sunday Spa” for the spiritually supine? Where did this “Jacuzzi Jesus” come from? Where and when did we decide that our faith, our discipleship journey, was a weekly “sit and soak” respite, an exercise in pew potato-hood?

“The General” and President of the French Fifth Republic Charles De Gaulle once contentedly sighed, “Church is the only place you could go and somebody talks, but you don’t have to say anything back.” The problem is that De Gaulle’s 1950s relief at non-engagement still rings true today. In too many churches “discipleship” is defined as “attendance,” not participation. Woody Allen is noted for saying 90 percent of life is “just showing up.” That is NOT the case for discipleship. We have not been called just to “show up.” We have been called to “participate” in Jesus’ life, and to continue his story. We have been, in the phrase of Julian of Norwich, “oned with God” when we are “oned with Christ.” Even Plato understood that the human species was designed by God for participation, not mere attendance: Plato declared that human reason was nothing less than our ability to “participate in the Divine mind.”

Let me put this another way: disciples of Jesus have been called to “dramatize” the gospel.

“Drama” comes from the Greek word which means “to do.” The Incarnation is all about God’s drama of salvation, and God’s invitation for us to join in God’s drama of salvation. God didn’t just say “I love you.” God loves. God lived in our midst, loved us to death, and loves us to day.

The church needs more drama, not less.

Disciples of Jesus lead lives of drama because they “do” their faith.

We may tell our kids not to be such a “drama queen,” but Jesus called his followers to be drama disciples.

To be a drama disciple is to be a verb, not merely a noun. To be a drama disciple is to be a participant, not just an observer. To live in expectancy, not just expectation.

One of my favorite moments in the best-seller The Shack is this great comparison between expectancy and expectation. In a chapter called, "Verbs and other freedoms,” William P. Young talks about institutions of marriage, of religion, politics and economics. His thesis is that our hope for the future in each one of these arenas is in changing our speech from stagnant nouns to dramatic verbs.

Expectancy is alive and active. Expectation is passive.

Jesus taught his disciples to live with expectancy, not expectation; to be dramatic agents of action from the moment they are called. If the church is to be the Body of Christ incarnate, we as disciples are called to that same drama energies, that same dramatic engagements and expectancy. The Body of Christ “incarnate” depends upon our drama, our activity, our participation, in order to remain vital and alive.

The key plank in any discipleship doctrine is the declaration that Jesus Christ is “the Way, the Truth, and the Light.” Notice how this confession puts participation FIRST. We cannot know Christ as “the Way” without actively stepping out onto that path of faith. We cannot experience Christ as “Truth” and “Life” until our feet have hit the road, until our faith has moved us off the “sidelines” or “mainlines” and onto the “front lines.”

Our kids may know the language of participation better than we do.

The “gotta have it” game in 2007 was the Nintendo “Wii” -- a game system christened with the most culturally appropriate venue. Our self-centered, self-engaging, self-absorbed culture dubs everything “i”— iPods, iPhones, iTunes, iToys. Everything is about the first person singular, “i.” We can’t even do a “We” without two “ii’s”— “Wii.”

Except, that in this culture the “i” is always connected to some “we,” to some interactive activity. Participation makes the individual part of a community. The “Wii” game system is a perfect combination of singular solidarity and communal commitment. Our “i” fixation has finally led to a “Mii” that is a “Wii.” It takes two “i’s” to make a “Wii.” But this interactive, participatory, get up and move game system involves individuals, teams, and on-line gaming teams in ways never before imagined. The hottest thing in nursing homes is now “Wii” tournaments. “Wii” is now the game of choice for post-operative therapy.

It’s time to support Tom Day, who believes that veterans deserve a real bugler, so has set up a website (www.buglesacrossamerica.org) to encourage people to step up to the plate and play taps on a real bugle.

It’s time to stop offering a “canned” version of the gospel.

It’s time to stop following red and green lights which we won’t or can’t let others see, and it’s time to tune our lives to Jesus the Christ, God’s Perfect Pitch, God’s tuning fork to the eternal. “Come thou fount of every blessing, tune our lives to sing Thy praise.” We’ve been singing the praises of those red and green lights for far too long.

It’s time to start singing the praises of the Light of the World, the First and Last Light.

It’s time to stop caring about appearance and start caring about substance, reality and truth.

It’s time to learn how to play our own song, even when the notes are fragile and faltering and sometimes fall flat.

It’s time to learn how to play our own instrument that God gave us, to blow our own bugle with its unique sound and spirit.

[A great way to end this sermon is for you to pull out a bugle and play taps . . . or to have someone from your church do it. You may also want to have your kids bring their Wii game consoles, set them up, and show other members how to play the Wii.]

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by Leonard Sweet