Luke 4:14-30 · Jesus Rejected at Nazareth
Defining The Mission
Luke 4:14-30
Sermon
by Charles H. Bayer
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One of the marvelous gifts I have been given is the capacity to tell at a glance what somebody is like. I have no trouble seeing a person for the first time and identifying all her faults. What is more, in a split second I can tell you what she ought to be doing. Like one of Gilbert and Sullivan's characters:

Of everybody's weaknesses I know a thing or two, I can tell a woman's age in half a minute; and I do!

But you know, sometimes I'm wrong! Two businessmen were traveling by train to an important business meeting. In the seat opposite them was an old man with a shaggy beard, dressed in a tattered sweater and jeans. Throughout the ride the two told each other crude jokes about bums and tramps, with particular reference to the chap in the next seat. When they arrived at the meeting they discovered this "tramp" was a world class scholar and the meeting's keynote speaker. Realizing he had heard everything they said on route, they apologized. "It is not my forgiveness you need," he responded, "but the forgiveness of all the common people you hold in such disdain." "Judge not that you be not judged," said Jesus. You might be dead wrong. Now, it is human nature to size up each other. No amount of piety is going to keep us from it. You will inevitably come to a conclusion about those with whom you work, share a pew or a neighborhood. We are probably best advised to wait a long time, however, before we jump to a conclusion about what anyone is like. She may be far better than we had first assumed -- or far worse. Chances are she will be far different. One hears much these days about who Jesus is. In popular religion, he turns out to be a warm, fuzzy, friendly chap, who has come to earth to help us feel better about ourselves. His mission is to make us happy. He loves those who look and sound like us, and live under our flag. He has little use for those not middle-class Americans. His aim is to make a world where we are even more blessed, safe and rich. The end product of his gospel is that we be happy, think positively and go safely to heaven. Spend a day listening to "Christian" radio or television, and that is the Jesus you will encounter. Those who first knew about him may have held similar opinions. Today's gospel story takes place at the beginning of his public ministry. He is still seeking to discover what God would have him do and be. Everybody else seems to know. "A report concerning him went through all the surrounding country," says the text. Everyone has an opinion. One day he appears at his home synagogue. Here was a local boy who was going to make a mark. Whatever else, they knew he was to do something for them. No doubt he would put the despicable Samaritans in their place. He would affirm the party line and champion the best causes. His friends would be the right people. Their enemies would be his enemies, and their values his values. He shows up at the synagogue, and because he is a rabbi is asked to read a scripture. The synagogue service had three readings. There was a psalm and a selection from one of the books of Moses. Both texts were assigned for the day so that in a three-year cycle the law and the psalms would be read through -- just as we do. But the text from the prophet was the choice of the reader. Jesus asked for the scroll of the prophet Isaiah. He unrolls it to the 61st chapter. It must have taken some time. When he finds the text, he reads:

The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because God has anointed me to preach good news to the poor, has sent me to proclaim release to the captives, and recovery of sight to the blind, to set at liberty those who are oppressed, to proclaim the acceptable year of the Lord.

He returns the scroll to the attendant and sits down. Don't assume he simply returned to where he had been sitting. In the synagogue everybody stood except the preacher when he was preaching. There was one chair. Jesus was about to deliver his first sermon to his hometown congregation. The text reports that everybody commented on how well he read. "My he has a nice voice." "What a pleasant young man." The problem came when he began to comment on the text. "Today this scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing," he said. He went on to describe how God had sent him to minister to those the worshipers that day despised. I have discovered in 40 years of preaching that people don't get offended at Bible readings -- in fact they barely hear them. The trouble comes when you begin to spell out what the text means. By the end of Jesus' sermon they were ready to lynch him. They ran him out of town, took him to a nearby cliff and would have thrown him headlong to his death had he not escaped. Why the anger? They had already defined him. He was their fair-haired boy. He was going to be one of them, take care of their needs, protect them, and put down all those who were not like them. His mission was to the right kind of people -- them. They had judged too quickly. He defined his mission in terms that were not only different than they had assumed, but downright scandalous! He had come not to pamper them, but to spend his life with the poor who would be the recipients of the good news. He had come to serve the prisoners -- the scum who were getting what they deserved in the slave pits. His mission was to the sick, the blind, the afflicted. He was to be a liberationist, who would set free the oppressed. His ministry was not to be directed to the proper, the well, the pious, but to the improper, the sick, the pariahs. If how he put it wasn't bad enough, the rest of the gospel of Luke describes how he did it. His friends were prostitutes, sinners, tax collectors and drunks. In his best stories the heroes were a no good son, a Samaritan, and a beggar whose sores the dogs licked. The shock comes when we realize that his mission then is our mission now. How do we define the essential work of the church? What is our relationship to this young man, who was tossed out of his home synagogue because the people assumed he was to have one sort of ministry when in reality his life and work were to be of another sort, with people they despised? "You are the body of Christ," says Paul in today's epistle. Did you hear it? We, the church, are the body of Christ! That means his ministry is our ministry. In defining who he was and what he was about he has defined who we are and what we are called to be about. And that's where it gets tough. To be the body of Christ means we may be much different than the world would like us to be, or even what we -- who are infected by the world -- see ourselves to be. How does the world perceive us? Probably as a nice, friendly, harmless, middle-class, patriotic, conservative, proper club. We maintain the status-quo. We are just like all the other fraternal or civic organizations. The world would never dream of applying the word "radical" to us. My guess is we suck our breath lest anybody think we could possibly believe that about ourselves. Most of us don't even like the word "liberal." We think of this room as a comfortable place for the right kind of folks. And isn't the purpose of the church to make us warm and happy and content? This club room should never be a place where anything untoward could possibly happen. Why, our phone rings off the hook when the temperature, summer or winter, varies five degrees from a comfortable 70. And here comes Jesus. One Sunday morning we let him read a text of his own choosing and preach. He reads from Isaiah -- the text that says God's servant comes to spend his life with the poor, at the jail, among the untreated ill, and with the left out. And that is obviously not us. It doesn't get really bad until he begins to talk about that mission in specific terms. He is going to serve those we would rather not even have around. What of this Jesus today? Where can he be found? Is he a memorable character from an old book? Or are we, "the body of Christ," Christ alive in today's world? Perhaps we are all of Christ the world around us will ever see. As sinful and pitiful and imperfect as we are, we are his voice, his hands and feet. And what are we to be about? Do we exist for the care and feeding of ourselves? Is this body in the world to make the comfortable even more comfortable? When you think of the church and your part in it, what images come to mind? Do you see Christ's body as existing for your amusement? Or do we exist to fulfill the mission Christ defined as his own? The church that chooses the former path may be popular, crowded and well thought of. But the church which assumes Christ's own mission may not be popular -- just as he was not popular. The world needs to see Christ clearly. That means the world needs to see the church clearly. We may be the only Christ it will ever see. For as the spirit of the Lord was upon Jesus, so it is upon us to "preach good news to the poor ... release to the captives ... sight to the blind ... and liberty to the oppressed."

CSS Publishing Company, WHEN IT IS DARK ENOUGH, by Charles H. Bayer