"Taboo." It's a strange, mysterious, ancient-sounding word that we don't use much any more in our modern, scientifically enlightened world. A taboo is something that is forbidden. A taboo is a prohibition. It is usually associated with something sacred and mysterious. Something that is taboo is set aside, never to be touched and desecrated by human hands. We are usually afraid of the taboo. We are in awe of its power. Taboos control us. In the ancient world certain places or things may have been considered taboo. You stayed away. Hands off! In our modern world we are less likely to speak of the taboo. Nothing seems to be sacred. Nothing is forbidden. Everything is up for grabs.
But the taboos still remain. Just try to place a Christmas creche on public property. Just try to carry a confederate flag into a NAACP convention. Just try to burn a flag at the local VFW hall. Such actions desecrate the sacred. They are unthinkable, forbidden, unspeakable -- taboo.
One of the biggest taboos in our society today is talking about money, and, specifically, revealing how much money one makes. People are more willing today to talk about their sex lives (which used to be taboo) than they are about how much money they make. That is the most personal and intimate of secrets. I know of families today where the children have no idea what their parents make. A friend of mine once told me that all through his college years, his father would never apply for financial aid. Why? Because in applying for financial aid he had to reveal his personal income. He ran a business. How much money he made was nobody's business but his. He wasn't about to reveal such an intimate and personal thing to a financial aid officer, someone he didn't even know. Such a thing was unthinkable, forbidden -- taboo!
The church does not remain unaffected by such taboos. The subject of money is also a big taboo in the church. I have often heard people brag about their church to a friend by saying, "At our church we don't talk about money." Many times I have heard people complain when the subject of money is brought up in the church. Money seems too secular, too worldly, not spiritual enough. Some churches are so concerned about this taboo that they make a special effort in their worship services to remind any of their visitors that they are not expected to make a financial contribution when the offering plate is passed. Asking for money is too personal. It is impolite, rude, inhospitable. It is taboo.
Why is the subject of money so often taboo in the church? Some complain that such a worldly matter as money has no place in the spiritual business of the church. That could hardly be further from the truth. The truth of the matter is that there is probably nothing in our society that is as spiritual and religious a matter as the subject of money. If you want to find out what people truly value in life, look at their checkbook. If you want to see what someone is truly loyal to, what one truly trusts, then examine how they spend their money.
As Martin Luther reminds us in his explanation to the first commandment in his Large Catechism, whatever one most trusts, values, is loyal to, that is his god. There is no such thing as an atheist because everyone has someone or something that gives his life meaning. That is his god. Therefore, if our use of money reflects our ultimate values and commitments, what we trust, what is our god, then there is nothing that is more religiously and spiritually revealing than the subject of money.
The problem is that we don't want to be put under the microscope. We don't want to have anyone asking such "personal" questions about our "real" religion. Such talking about money in church is taboo.
The truth is that all of us much of the time are busy trusting other gods than the god of Jesus. Just look at how we spend our money. Just look at what we are really committed to. It isn't very pretty. It isn't very faithful.
The subject of money may be taboo in the church, but it certainly wasn't taboo for Jesus. Continually in his preaching and teaching Jesus breaks the taboo. When Jesus talks about the kingdom of God he uses images and illustrations from the world of money and economics more than any other. Jesus is continually talking about money. The little story of "the widow's mite" (as it has often been called in the church) in today's gospel is one such example. At the heart of this illustration is money. From Jesus' perspective there is no better way to talk about one's relationship to God.
Jesus sat near the temple treasury and watched the crowds go by making their contributions. The money was placed in a trumpet-shaped opening which led to the container below. The more coins you put in, the more noise you would make -- and the more attention you would draw to yourself. Many would call this "sounding the trumpet." This is the same kind of image that is behind the modern way we refer to someone who is calling attention to themselves: "They are tooting their own horn."
You can be sure that the rich often liked to make a lot of noise when they made their contributions. It made them look good. And you can be sure that the fund-raisers in the temple would have also made much of all the noise and would have invited others to join in. But Jesus surprises everyone by calling their attention not to the large and noisy and attention-getting gifts of the rich but to the small and silent gift of the poor widow. Even though the sound she created in the trumpet would have been barely audible, even though her contribution was only one cent, it was far greater than all the noise of the big bucks. Why? Because she gave everything she had.
This story has long been a favorite of "stewardship programs" in the church. This story has been used to try to motivate people to give more money to the church. The poor widow has been cited as an example of the value of percentage giving. Even though the rich may actually give more money, what is more important is the percentage of your income that you give to the church. From that perspective the widow actually gave a higher percentage of her money. And that is the example Jesus wants us to follow.
Unfortunately, such an interpretation skips an important detail. The widow didn't just give a percentage of her income to the temple. She gave everything she had -- 100 percent.
On second thought, maybe she isn't such a good example when it comes to raising money for the church. If there is someone who would scare off potential donors, it is this widow. She is a strange lady. She is dangerous. She gives everything she has to the temple treasury. Does her example mean that we should be willing to give all our money to the church? Or does her example mean something else? Maybe her example isn't about increasing our percentage giving to the church budget at all?
Maybe the point is this: This woman had a better understanding of her relationship to God than all those rich people who loved to sound the trumpet with their big offerings or those scribes and other religious leaders who were criticized in this passage by Jesus. Those scribes were the experts in determining just how much one ought to give to the temple. They were the experts in computing the tithe, and deciding just how much to give to God and how much to keep for oneself. But they had it all wrong. The widow had it all right. She recognized that her use of her money was never a case of giving some of it back to God and keeping the rest for herself. All of it already belongs to God.
It is arrogant, presumptuous, and sinful to think that we can give some of our money back to God in our church offering and keep the rest for ourselves. It is all God's. And this poor widow is recognizing that fact through her simple gift.
What makes her example so troubling is that she is willing to recognize what the rest of us resist doing. She completely trusts God with her life, her whole life, not just a percentage of it. Such trust continually escapes us.
We live in a much different world. We live in a world in the grips of the great taboo. We live in a world that is forbidden to question or challenge the great taboo. To challenge this taboo is to question the most basic assumption and belief of our world. And that is forbidden -- taboo.
And what is that great taboo? What is the unspeakable power that holds us hostage? That we live in a world of scarcity; that we live in a world of limitations; that there is only so much wealth to go around. Therefore, you have either got to hold on to and preserve the wealth you have or work hard at creating more wealth. Either way, we live under the threat of scarcity. Either way, we live in fear of not having enough. We live life trusting the power of the almighty dollar. We live life believing that finally even God is going to judge us on the basis of our ability to be good stewards of our money. We believe that the size of our bank account ultimately determines who we are. We are held hostage.
That is why the behavior of the widow is so troubling. She breaks the taboo. She has no fear of not having enough. She is totally oblivious to the threat of scarcity. She trusts a future in which she obviously believes there will always be abundance. She does not determine her value by the size of her bank account because she is willing to give it all away.
Jesus called everyone's attention to the example of this poor widow because she exemplified what he was all about. Jesus also lived his life breaking the taboo. Jesus came to shatter the taboo that everyone assumed was true about life and money and God. Jesus dared to call the creator of heaven and earth "Abba," Father, Daddy. Jesus dared to believe that his father loved him abundantly, without limit, even though he had nothing. Jesus refused to be afraid of scarcity. He didn't need to prove himself by the size of his bank account. Instead he trusted the abundant promises of God. Instead of trying to accumulate for himself, he gave himself away without regard for his own financial well-being. Like this poor widow, in spite of appearances to the contrary, in spite of the world's definition of wealth and status, Jesus believed he was rich. Therefore, he was able to give himself away for the sake of others. Like that widow, he gave everything that he had. He gave his whole life away, all the way to death on the cross.
And most of all Jesus dared to announce to the world that this desire to love the world, to give himself away, to sacrifice everything that he had, was the very nature of God. Yes, breaking the taboo that had so enslaved this world in fear, Jesus announces that God can be trusted because God loves, because God is merciful, because God forgives, abundantly, without limit, eternally. There is no need to fear scarcity. God's love will never run out. There will always be plenty.
People, this is good news to a world that is held hostage to the great taboo. The church announces that in Jesus Christ God has broken the great taboo. The church's ministry is always seeking to reflect this incredible abundance that knows no end.
The sacrament of Baptism is only administered once in a person's life. There is no need ever to do it again. Why? Because the gift of Baptism knows no limit. There is never a scarcity of God's love. This is a promise that lasts forever.
As we gather to eat and drink around this table, we eat a foretaste of the feast to come. We can look forward to eating one day at a table covered with unlimited abundance. There is no end to the love offered at this table. God will never take it away.
And believe it or not, money is no longer the big taboo. We are not afraid to talk about it. We are not afraid to recognize it for what it is, i.e., a reflection of our values and beliefs, of our religion. And because we believe that we live in the kingdom of God, in this new world of unlimited abundance, because we are no longer held hostage to the power of money, we can dare to give that money away in an offering for the sake of others. There is no need to be stingy. There is no need to worry about getting something in return.
Breaking the taboo of money also means that we don't let the tremendous emphasis our society puts on money control us. There is more to life than money. Likewise, there is more to stewardship than money. Living in this new kingdom economy of abundance means that this new sense of generosity and sacrifice will affect not only the use of our money but also everything that we do with our lives. Given this new world of abundance and plenty, we now get to live our lives no longer imprisoned by the old taboo, always having to worry about what's in it for me. Rather, the focus of our lives can be on others and their needs. We can give everything that we have, our whole lives, like that widow outside the temple and like Jesus in his journey to the cross to God.
And where can we do that? Where do we love God? Not just in giving time and money to the church but also in giving ourselves in love to our neighbor, wherever we come in contact with people in our daily lives.
Occasionally I am just gratified to see this sense of generosity and service show up in the lives of the people of this congregation. It shows me that at times we can break the taboo. At times we actually can live our lives trusting the abundance of God and daring to give ourselves away for the sake of others.
I have always found it gratifying to hear the young people of our congregation, as they plan what to do with their lives when they graduate from high school, speak not just of having a career that will make them lots of money, but also of doing something with their lives that will make this world a better place. Because of the power of the gospel, they are daring to believe the abundant promises of God. They are daring to trust the love of God. They are daring to live as if there is more to life than the accumulation of money. They are daring to trust God's gift of abundance and reject the world's lie of scarcity. They are beginning to break the taboo.
So can you, as you discover the same privilege that widow did that day at the temple treasury. You live in a world of unlimited abundance. And you can give it away in the service of God and the love of your neighbor."