Matthew 9:9-13 · The Calling of Matthew
An Unpopular Profession
Matthew 9:9-13
Sermon
by Donald B. Strobe
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Matthew was a tax collector.  He was probably stationed in Capernaum, an excellent spot for collecting excise from travelers and merchants, on the trade route between Ptolemais and Damascus.  Now, tax collectors are not on the list of anyone’s favorite people at best, but in ancient Israel it was even worse.  Tax collectors had little or no social standing.  Their word was not accepted in a Jewish court of law.  Their money was considered tainted and would not be accepted by the synagogue.  In fact, in Jesus’ day the title “tax collector” was a swear word. 

I.  WHY ALL THIS HATRED OF TAX COLLECTORS? 

In those days the only people who had to pay taxes were conquered people, living under the heel of foreign domination.  Taxes infuriated the Jews especially because it reminded them that they were under the domination of Caesar, and their money went not to Jerusalem, but to Rome.  In Jesus’ day, tax collectors were considered unpatriotic.  After all, they made a profit from the enemies of their people.  The Roman practice was to decree that a certain village, for instance, had to pay so much in taxes.  The local tax-collector was allowed to set his own tax rates, and then skim off the profits for himself.  In other words, Rome paid Jews to do their dirty work for them.  Any Jew who would do that would rob, and tax collectors were considered robbers.  The collectors’ huge rake-off created as much of a scandal as anything.  Being a tax collector was the dirtiest business in town.  Wherever he went, he would be hissed at.  No one would want to even be seen with him.  He and his family received no invitations to dinner.  In fact, he was well advised to avoid large crowds and dark alleys. 

Can you see why the crowds were scandalized with Jesus’ words and actions?  He not only ate and drank with “sinners and tax collectors,” but He even made a tax collector the hero of one of His most famous parables.  We find it in Luke 18, where Jesus talked about the two men who went up to the Temple to pray.  One was a Pharisee (one of the good guys), and the other was a tax collector (one of the bad guys).  And Jesus had the temerity to say that God heard the prayer of the tax collector and not the prayer of the Pharisee.  What an absolutely scandalous thing to say!  We often fail to notice that in Jesus’ parables the villains are heroes and the heroes are villains.  When Jesus spoke of a tax collector coming up to the Temple, His audience hissed between their teeth.  What’s he doing here?  He belongs out in the street!  But Jesus seems to have had a special place in His heart for those people who were the outcasts and dregs of society.  Jesus called them and changed them.  They became “new creatures in Christ Jesus.” (II Cor.  5:17) Like many of the apostles, Matthew had two names.  Luke calls him “Levi.” “Matthew” may well have been his new name in Jesus, for it means “God’s gift.” But Matthew only became God’s gift after he had received God’s greatest gift himself.  We read in Matthew 9:9, “And as Jesus passed on from there, he saw a man called Matthew sitting at the tax office; and he said to him, ‘Follow me.’ And he rose and followed him.”

II.  JESUS CALLED.  MATTHEW ANSWERED.  IT SOUNDS SIMPLE ENOUGH, BUT I DOUBT THAT IT WAS. 

It surely cost Matthew something to follow Jesus, for he was making a pretty good living as a tax collector.  He would have to give up a rather lucrative business.  In addition, he would have to live down his past, because the people who had known him in his former life would not trust him.  He was the one who had “ripped them off.” Still, he left his old life behind, and rose up and followed Jesus. 

Frederick Buechner says that the essence of all religious experience is luminous and mystical.  If we are religious at all it is because of “a lump in the throat,” as he says, “a bush going up in flames, the rain of flowers, the dove coming out of the sky.  We are likely to be religious because once somewhere, somehow, a doorway opened in the air and a word was spoken and we heard.” (New York Times Book Review, March 16, 1969, p.  1) Buechner knows whereof he speaks, for that is exactly what happened to him.  One day he entered Madison Avenue Presbyterian Church in New York City, and heard that great pulpit master George Arthur Buttrick preach a sermon on Christ being crowned with tears and great laughter.  At this point Buechner felt “as if the great wall of China had tumbled down.” He discussed the impact of the sermon with Buttrick, who immediately drove him to Union Theological Seminary where arrangements were made for his admission.  (Frederick Buechner, THE SACRED JOURNEY, (NY: Harper & Row, 1982), pp.109-111 So Buechner became a world-famous novelist and preacher.  Like Buechner, Matthew heard the word spoken and responded immediately.  Most of us hear the call many times, but manage to put off responding for one reason or another.  In fact, we are masters at the art of dodging Christ’s call. 

In August of 1961, 2000 young people gathered on the campus of the University of Michigan for the North American Ecumenical Youth Assembly.  As a part of that Assembly experience, a dramatic revue was commissioned and written by Helen Kromer and Frederick Silver.  It combined satire and serious drama to get across the Christian message.  One segment contains these lines:

“Use me, oh Lord!  Use me, oh Lord!  But not just now....As soon as I’m out of college And pay all the debts I’ve carried, As soon as I’ve done my army stint, As soon as I’ve gotten married.  I want you to use me, oh Lord, Use me, oh Lord, but not just now....As soon as I get my first real job, As soon as the house is built, As soon as my psychiatrist says That I am freed of guilt.  I want you to use me, oh Lord!  Use me, oh Lord!  But not just now... 

“As soon as I’ve paid the mortgage, As soon as the kids are grown, As soon as they are finished college, As soon as they are on their own.  I want you to use me, oh Lord!  Use me, oh Lord!  But not just now... 

“As soon as I’ve reached retirement, As soon as they are getting ahead, As soon as I draw my pension, Just as soon as I am dead!  I want you to use me, oh Lord!  Use me, oh Lord!  But not just now...”

We are told that when Matthew heard Jesus call, “Follow me,” he “rose and followed him.” He left his old life behind and entered into a new one.  But when Matthew entered upon his new life in Christ, we are fortunate that he did not leave everything behind.  For one thing:

III.  MATTHEW TOOK HIS PEN AND INK WITH HIM. 

In recent years Biblical scholars have debated back and forth as to the identity of the author of the Gospel which bears Matthew’s name.  Some insist that Matthew the Apostle could not have written it.  Others insist that he did.  This opinion is supported by the testimony of Bishop Papias in the second century: “Matthew set down in writing, in the Hebrew language, some words of the Savior.  Each one translated them as he was able.” One problem is that the Gospel is written in excellent Greek, and, supposedly, all of the apostles were “unlearned” men.  No less a New Testament scholar than the great Edgar J.  Goodspeed, in his book on the authorship of the Gospel of Matthew, came to the conclusion that Matthew the Apostle was, indeed, its author.  (Edgar J.  Goodspeed, MATTHEW—APOSTLE AND EVANGELIST (Phila.: John C.  Winston Co., 1959).  There are many reasons for this conclusion.  Since Matthew was a tax collector, he would have known a good deal about writing things down.  That was his stock in trade.  The Gospel according to Matthew was written by somebody who loved statistics, and reveled in ancestral records.  The writer looked up Jesus’ genealogy and played with the figures so as to arrange them in three groups of fourteen generations each.  And he has Jesus beginning the seventy-seventh!  Scattered throughout the Gospel’s opening chapters are many more references to money than one finds in Mark or Luke.  And guess which Gospel tells us about finding the Temple Tax in the fish’s mouth?  (Chapter 17:24-27) Only Matthew records the story of the laborers who worked different hours for the same wages.  Matthew alone records the story of high finance where the unforgiving debtor is forgiven a debt of ten million dollars and forecloses on his debtor for three hundred dollars.  Dr.  Goodspeed finds one hundred words in Matthew that are common to old Egyptian tax records.  The author of Matthew has a tax man’s vocabulary!  Where else would one expect the story of the man who asked, “Is it lawful to pay tax unto Caesar or not?” (Matthew 22:17)

There is no doubt that Matthew had Mark’s Gospel before him as he wrote, as did St.  Luke, for he included 15/16ths of Mark.  But he made lengthy additions of his own—probably from first-hand experience.  He was there.  He saw and heard.  And when Matthew heard the call to follow Christ, he rose up immediately and followed.  But he didn’t leave everything behind.  He took his pen and ink with him.  How lucky we are that he did, for the Church learned its Lord’s Prayer and the Sermon on the Mount from Matthew.  Matthew gives us the fullest form of the Beatitudes as well as many of the things that are most precious to the Christian’s heart.  He gives us so much material that Mark never knew about.  Only Matthew uses Wise Men to open the story of Jesus’ life, and the parable of the Last Judgment to bring it to a close.  The old tax collector put meat on Mark’s skeleton outline of Jesus’ life and gave us hundreds of little details which we take for granted, but which, when you compare the Gospels, are unique to Matthew.  And for that, we are everlastingly in his debt.  Mark’s Gospel, we believe, was written first, but his Gospel is “bare-bones,” the “Reader’s Digest Condensed Version.” Matthew puts flesh on those bones.  Perhaps that is why, when it came time for the Church to gather the Gospels together in one collection, Matthew’s placed first. 

IV.  IN ADDITION, MATTHEW’S IS THE ONLY INDIVIDUAL CALL TO DISCIPLESHIP WE FIND IN THE GOSPELS. 

All of the other calls were plural.  And Matthew was not asked to become a fisher of people.  What kind of a fisherman would a tax collector make?  Fishing for tax cheaters, perhaps, but not for disciples.  What could a tax collector do for the kingdom of God?  He could become a secretary.  Matthew was probably the only one of the twelve who could write Greek.  It may be no accident that Matthew quotes Isaiah on almost every other page.  What makes Isaiah so important?  Because the teachings of Isaiah the prophet were written down by secretaries who preserved his words for future generations, after he was slain by the wicked king Manasseh in 701 B.C.  Isaiah saw it coming and prepared for it by dictating his teachings to his secretary.  We believe that Mark was the secretary to St.  Peter.  Is it too much to imagine that Matthew was, in a sense, a secretary to Jesus? 

Note this: Of all the Gospels, Matthew alone relates Jesus’ parables about the treasure hid in a field and the pearl of great price, for which a man would sell all that he has to obtain it; perhaps because he saw how well those parables fit him.  He, too, had given up a profitable and lucrative career to follow Jesus.  And in Jesus he had found a new and wonderful life. 

The fastest growing churches in Christendom today are in Africa.  And they are growing because of the kind of spirit we find in the following story: A young African woman was attending a church service shortly after she had become a Christian.  The minister prayed just before the offering was taken.  As he did, he spoke of dedication and thankfulness, of giving back to the Lord in some measure and in great joy that which God had graciously bestowed on each member of that congregation.  Then the offering plate was passed.  The young woman had nothing to give—no money, no earthly belongings—yet she knew that she had been richly blessed with a new life in Jesus Christ.  And so as the plate came to her, she silently set it on the floor, got up—and stood in it.  Nothing more needed to be said.  Nor does it now.

Dynamic Preaching, Collected Words, by Donald B. Strobe