Luke 12:35-48 · Watchfulness
All Dressed Up
Luke 12:32-40
Sermon
by Lori Wagner
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Fashion is a trillion dollar industry. It makes up 2% of the entire world’s GDP.[1] Why does apparel, the clothing we wear, play such a large part in our lives? For this we can look to art and literature, and even to scripture and the church. Unlike other animals, for as long as humans have roamed the earth, we have been concerned with clothing ourselves.

From the moment of the “fall” in Genesis 1, we began a journey of finding ways to conceal our original “nakedness” and to express ourselves instead through material means. The very essence of communication in fact relies on using symbols for expression. Language employs verbal symbols. Music, dance, art, and clothing all convey symbols that are visual, tactile, or emotional. Every one of these wordless forms of expression still transmits connection, the hope of resonance, and carries with it the unique identity of the bearer.

Clothing perhaps more than anything is a form of “wearable art.” With our choice of clothing comes a plethora of symbolic statements that we unconsciously or consciously make to those around us, to ourselves, and to the world about who we are and what we want people to know about us.

Throughout history, artists and writers have employed clothing symbolism to help us understand something deeper and more vast about the characters portrayed.

An 18th century woman in a corset and mounds of decorative clothing unconsciously conveys by her clothing that she is pure, decorative, untouchable, and confined to certain norms and standards.A plain farmer’s daughter wearing gingham or burlap with ruby or glass slippers conveys a sense of hope for transformation or a radically different future.

What do your clothing choices say about you? If you are feeling down and discouraged, have you ever tried dressing up to the max? We can help ourselves to feel more attractive, more hopeful, and more alive by the choice of clothing we wear. An interviewee for example wants to look alert and sharp in a well-pressed suit and starched shirt, because that form of professional dress conveys to a prospective employer that he or she is taking the job seriously and is ready to also put on a professional demeanor. On the other hand, a construction worker needs to wear clothing that not only protect his or her body from harm but demonstrates the ruggedness and strength that the job may require.

Throughout the scriptures and Christian art, clothing has portrayed characteristics of holiness. The color blue, the color red, the color purple, the seamless shift, the simple sandal, the priestly garb, the sheath of white, the armor of battle, and many, many more, all speak to us of certain desirable (or undesirable) traits.

To dress for success means something specific to us. To get “all dressed up” for dinner means more than just a change of clothing. It also means a shift of mind and attitude.

We are what we wear.

So when Jesus tells us in our scripture for today to “be dressed for service,” he is not just advising us to put on our aprons! He means for us to change our attitudes, to change up our demeanor, to put on an aura of holiness. Paul uses this metaphor often in his letters: “Therefore, as God’s chosen people, holy and dearly loved, clothe yourselves with compassion, kindness, humility, gentleness, and patience (Colossians 3:12).”  “For all of you who were baptized into Christ have clothed yourselves with Christ” (Galatians 3:27). Isaiah too uses this metaphor often: “For he has clothed me with garments of salvation and arrayed me in a robe of his righteousness” (Isaiah 61:10). “Fine linen, bright and clean, was given her to wear” (Revelation 19:8).

We are to worship the Lord in the “beauty of holiness” (Romans 12:2).

For Jesus, to be “dressed and ready” for his appearance means to be “dressed for service.”

For a moment, think about what that means. Perhaps you can even picture in your mind the image of Jesus donning his big white apron, wrapping it around his waist, and kneeling down to wash his disciples’ feet. Perhaps for you, you can picture someone serving in a white chef’s apron in a homeless shelter or even the corner café. What kind of identity does this apparel convey?

A job as a server, waitress, or chef is not an easy job. It requires close attention to what’s going on around you. It requires quick response, an eager spirit, and dedication to the task at hand. It requires focus and commitment. It requires a desire to put before someone a plate of food that has been especially prepared for that person. It requires hospitality, communication, a heart for people, and obedience to the head chef. Knowing all of this makes tipping not just a requirement but a pleasure, especially when that person has done an amazing job, when he or she has been outstandingly helpful and kind, efficient and quick, attentive and focused, and delivers a nourishing and beautiful plate in a pleasant atmosphere.

Now think about what Jesus is asking us as disciples to do. I want you to close your eyes for a moment and imagine that you are putting on your “servant’s apron.” Or perhaps for you it’s a nurse’s uniform, a nun’s habit, a prayer shawl, or your “church” clothes. How do you feel? How has your demeanor changed by imagining this form of dress?

Jesus encourages us not just one hour a week, not just at certain high holy days, not just when we are engaged with scripture or at prayer meeting, to remember to clothe ourselves in an attitude of service, so that no matter where we are or whom we are with, we are attentive to our discipleship identity, to our identity as a follower of Christ, our identity as an apostle to the world and a servant to God’s people.

How will this change how you carry on your week? How will this change the way you live your life? For each person it may be different, for each one of us is unique in our personalities and our expressions. Just as some may be artists, some photographers, some sculptors, some architects, we as disciples too have varied gifts. But when we put on our servant’s garb, when we remember what we are wearing as a disciple of Christ, our identity as a servant of Christ can’t help but shine through. It’s as though the clothing we are wearing lights up our eyes with passion and our hearts shine through with love.

This week, I challenge you to be more aware of who you are in Christ. Be alert to the world around you and those who need your love and care. Pay attention to the Head Chef of the world, and pay attention to his direction and blueprint for mission. Be quick to respond to the hurting faces and yearning hearts of those who need to be nourished and fed with the body and blood that is Jesus.

Today, if you are celebrating Holy Communion, I invite you as you come forward or as you partake at your seats to imagine as you consume the body and blood of Christ that Jesus is lifting his white, holy robe of righteousness and salvation over your head and surrounding your body in light. Imagine that you are now clothed with his cleansing spirit of grace and his missional garment of servanthood. And as you leave this place today, wear your beautiful clothing of holiness in the world throughout your week and always.

For this is what holiness looks like. This is what it means to be “all dressed up” in God’s wardrobe of love.

ChristianGlobe Network, Inc., by Lori Wagner