Luke 14:1-14 · Jesus at a Pharisee’s House
Character Approved: Stand Up or Stand Out?
Luke 14:1-14
Sermon
by Leonard Sweet
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August is county fair time. Hooray!

Who doesn’t like a county fair?

Yes, we are sophisticated, urbane, high-tech people. But there is something about a good old-fashioned county fair that is like catnip. County fairs still draw us to our local fairgrounds like cotton candy draws us to paper cones.

Who can resist taking just one ride on the Ferris wheel? Who can resist eating deep-fried something (this summer’s new something hamburger with a deep fried doughnut for its bun!). Who can resist walking through smelly barns full of prize winning farm animals? Who can resist drooling over champion pies?

County fair prize winners among the livestock are decided along the lines of type and breed. There is the best Hereford, and there is also the best Charolais — even though they are both cows. But there is no competition for “Best Animal” or “Best of Show” that pits different species against each other.

Dog shows are different. Okay, strictly-speaking a dog show is about one species. But human beings have spent so many centuries messing around with the canine gene pool that the difference between some breeds is astronomical. How do you compare a Chihuahua with a Newfoundland. Or a Pekinese with a Pit Bull? Yet in dog shows, after a champion has been crowned in each breed, the next competition is to find the best dog in each “Group” — herding, working, sporting, toy, and the group that we’d all like to be in, the “non working.” After a winner has been picked from each of these groups, they compete in the coveted “Best of Show.”

It is in the “Best of Show” show-down that the judges really seem to be judging apples against oranges. And yet they are not. In each stage of a dog-show competition, each pooch a judge examines is held up to the standards established for its own breed. So even though in the “Best of Show” assembly a Scottie might be competing against a Samoyed, the Scottie is being judged only according to Scottish Terrier standards. The “Best in Show” winner is the dog that best embodies the ideal of its own breed, the dog that is truest to type, the dog that best embodies the essence of itself.

This is so different from the winner of a horse race, or a dog race. The standards of “best” are completely different. The best horse in a horse race is easy to tell: it’s the first horse across the finish line. The best greyhound in a greyhound race is easy to tell: it’s the first dog to cross the finish line. It’s not so easy to figure out what dog will be the “Best in Show.”

Unfortunately most of our culture is based on the horse race model of “best” and not the “best of show” model of “best.” The “best” has become the richest, the most exclusive, the biggest, the fastest, the most famous (for whatever reason). The “success” of bad-behaving reality-stars proves one thing: In a celebrity culture, it doesn’t matter what you stand for as long as you stand out.

Being “the best” in the first century meant playing a skillful game of patronage and power. Virtually every relationship was played out with the same self-promoting intentionality and intensity as a twenty-first century political fund-raising dinner. Everyone who buys a place at a $500/plate fund-raiser for a political candidate knows they were not invited to attend because of their table manners or table skills. The candidate knows that those who buy a ticket eventually expect to get more for their money than rubber chicken.

Likewise the banquet Jesus attends in today’s gospel text is far more than an ordinary Sabbath supper. There is the expectation of forth-coming favors, and there is a large dollop of indebtedness on everyone’s plate. That select group of Pharisees, lawyers, rich relations, and well-heeled neighbors, came with strings attached. But they also came with the potential for increased power and prestige.

Jesus broke all the rules of etiquette and social advancement. Jesus took a Greco-Roman vice — humility — and turned it on its head, transforming it into a virtue — “those who humble themselves will be exalted” (v.11).

Not only that. Jesus then instructed his host on what the guest list should look like for his next dinner party. And it wasn’t pretty. It wasn’t the fastest, or brightest, or biggest, or hairiest. It was the “poor, the crippled, the lame, and the blind” — all those whose social credit balance was zero. It was all those who could never hope to repay their host, either with a return invitation or with a leg up the social ladder.

In worldly terms, Jesus is directing his host to invite the “worst” society had to offer.

Jesus isn’t adhering to the rules of the world.
Jesus is advancing the cause of the kingdom.

Jesus isn’t advising his host to make all the right moves.
Jesus is admonishing him to imitate God’s righteousness.

Jesus isn’t agonizing over etiquette.
Jesus is actualizing equality.

Jesus isn’t encouraging his followers to stand out.
Jesus is encouraging his followers to stand for and to stand up.

It’s hard for us in the twenty-first century to hear how strange, how bizarre and how foreign Jesus’ advice was to his first century Pharisee hosts. It’s not that our culture is any more open to outcasts. But we do have advantages: we have the example of the New Testament; we have the example of Jesus; we have the example of his life, death, resurrection; we have the example of his embodiments of God’s presence, God’s intentions, and God’s mercy.

We might not be any better at embracing humility, expressing compassion, welcoming the stranger, or accepting the outcast. But we do have twenty centuries of tradition telling us it is our character to do these things.

The cultural ideal of what is “the best” will always be changing.

It was best to be a Roman citizen in the first century. 
It was best to be a Christian when Constantine ruled. 
It was best to be a Catholic during the Inquisition. 
It was best to be a Protestant when Cromwell took power. 
It was best to be a Puritan in seventeenth century New England. 
It was best to be a revolutionary patriot in eighteenth century America. 
It was best to be an abolitionist during the Civil War. 
It was best to be . . . .

It is dangerous for Christians to define “best” as a race track defines “best.” Christians should define “best” as dog shows determine “best.” Our “best” isn’t measured against the standards of the world. Our “best” isn’t judged according to wealth, success, being famous or infamous.

The standard we measure ourselves against is the standard of Jesus the Christ. To be the “best” Christian you can be is to embody Christ the most fully in everything you do, in everything you say, in every action you take.

But hear this: "Be all you can be" is too low an ambition for a Christian. Be all Christ wants you to be. Be all Christ can make you to be. Anything less is out of character.

The USA television network has as one of its advertising hooks a series of interviews with people they have dubbed “character approved.” Artists, activists, athletes get a “character approved” stamp from the TV network for doing what they do. Both the actors on USA network shows and the people the network has chosen to highlight on these “character” spots share a common identity. They all claim, “I’m a character.”

Being a character is different than HAVING character. Being identified as a “character” means you stand out. Having “character” means you stand up.

Martin Luther King implored the crowd listening to his “I Have A Dream” speech to look forward to the day when everyone could be judged “not by the color of our skin, but by the content of our character.” Martin Luther King, Jr. was not a “character.” Martin Luther King, Jr. had character. And King called himself and others to put on the character of Christ. To be the “best” that we can be is to be the Christ that wants to character in us.

A Christ character is not a culturally-approved character. A Christ character will turn celebrity culture on its head. If you’re a Christ character, be prepared to turn the world upside down: the first will be last, the last will be first, the humble will be exalted, and those who lose themselves will find themselves. The outcasts will be “in” and the “in” crowd will be outed and ousted.

The best table in the house will not be found in any Hummer house or Martha Stewart McMansion. The best table in the house will found on the dusty floor of a hovel, on the trays of a hut, in the flooded commons of a village, in all places where God’s grace and truth are not out of character.

Samuel DeWitt Proctor tells a story from his life as a pastor that makes the point. “Let me tell you about a lesson that came to me as a pastor. . . A little fellow at our church had Down syndrome. We didn’t know how old he was or what his health condition was. All we knew was that three very well-dressed women brought him to church every Sunday, and he always wanted me to pluck him or do something to let him know that I recognized him. And I used to pluck him every time I went down the aisle going into the deacon’s room to pray with the deacons. And Lord knows the deacons needed to be prayed with. And as I went, I would just pluck him on the head.

I never was able to have a conversation with him. He never talked very much, but he smiled all the time. Whenever he saw me coming, he gave me a big smile. Well, he died and I still didn’t find out exactly how old he was. He died and I was out of town somewhere when he died. And one of the ladies form the church called me up got my number from my wife and said, ‘Dr. Proctor, he passed away. We’d been looking for it; we didn’t know when it would happen, but he passed away right sudden.’ She said, ‘But don’ you bother to come back for his funeral because it’s a small family; it’ll be a small funeral and won’t be many people there. So you don’t have to bother to fly back for his funeral.’

The inference was: ‘If I die, fly back to my funeral; but don’t fly back to his funeral.’ The culture had instructed her that if the pastor knew what he was doing, he would have sense enough to know that you don’t go to a funeral for a young fellow with Down syndrome, where there are only like two cars in the procession and just three or four mourners. And if he knew what the culture required, he would know that that’s not the way you behave if you’re the pastor of a big church in New York City. Now if he jumps on an airplane and comes back here to this little fellow’s funeral, he’s telling all of us that he doesn’t know how to behave in this culture.

But that’s exactly what I did! I got on an airplane and went back there fully knowing what the culture required, but knowing also that Jesus went a little farther. Jesus went farther, and I’m controlled and guided by what the Master would do for a little fellow with Down syndrome, who loved me so much as to smile every time he saw me and to giggle every time I plucked him on the head. If I didn’t have but one of my frequent flyer tickets left, I would use it to go to his funeral! Every now and then you have a wonderful opportunity to see where the culture and Christ are in plain conflict one with another. And you ought to know where to stand when that conflict occurs.” (from Samuel DeWitt Proctor, “Jesus Went Farther! Cultural Conformity and the Mind of Christ,” The African American Pulpit, Winter 2008-2009, 75-76.)

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