Mark 2:23-3:6 · Lord of the Sabbath
Everyone's a Fundamentalist About Something
Mark 2:23-3:6
Sermon
by Leonard Sweet
Loading...

We are all fundamentalists about something. Jesus was a "Love Fundamentalist."

Most of us are fundamentalists about fundamentalism. We think we are either fundamentally against it or fundamentally for it. But contrary to what some of us may think, "fundamentalism" isn't the private domain of one group of people. "Fundamentalists" can be found in all walks of life.

The jogger going out at 5:30 a.m. on a dark, blustery, blizzardy morning is a fundamentalist about her exercise regime.

The carpenter whose workshop looks like a display ad is a fundamentalist about the location of each and every one of his tools.

The 6-year-old who makes his parents pick off every single one of those tiny dehydrated onion squares from his Happy Meal burger is a fundamentalist about his food.

The office manager whose weekly staff meetings always take exactly the same form, no matter what crisis is surging through the office, or who insists that everything that takes place be "according to plan" or "according to Robert's Rules of Order" (I call this the Order of St. Robert) is a procedural fundamentalist.

The strict party-liners who world never consider voting for a candidate not run by their party are political fundamentalists.

The parents who insist that their children be instructed in "the three R's" and nothing else may be called educational fundamentalists.

And there are countless other kinds of "fundamentalists" as well. Monday Night Football fundamentalists, the toilet-paper-rolls-under vs. the toilet-paper-rolls-over-fundamentalists, No-nuts-in-fudge fundamentalists, Christmas presents opened on Christmas Eve fundamentalists, no white shoes after Labor Day fundamentalists.

Even within the defined domain of "religious fundamentalism" there are many varieties. If you think your church is flexible and receptive to new ideas, just try suddenly changing the prescribed Sunday morning order of worship. It will suddenly become apparent that even within the most "liberal" congregations we tend to develop liturgical fundamentalism.

Or try reading from The Woman's Bible or one of the newest, most colloquialized paraphrases of Luke's gospel at the Christmas Eve service in order to gauge the textual fundamentalism of your spirit. Of course, if you really want to fan the flames of fundamentalism, start messing around with the church music.

The point is that all of us are fundamentalists about something. We all choose to erect certain foundational pillars that we use to support the weight of other attitudes and actions called for in our lives. Being a "fundamentalist" about some things can strengthen our centeredness and build up our sense of security for the marginality that is required of disciples of Jesus. Fundamentalism only becomes a problem when those rocks of certainty we have placed in our lives spread their stoniness to the depth of our souls, or harden to immovability the compassion of our hearts.

Mark's gospel pinpoints this problem in the second pericope of today's text. Even as he is moved to compassion by the sight of the man with the withered hand, Jesus is moved to anger as he detects the "hardness of heart" shared by those watching him. Jesus and the bystanders in the synagogue that day were butting head-on into each other's fundamentalisms. For the Pharisees, abiding by the strict letter of the law concerning correct Sabbath observation was the fundamentalism shaping their attitude. Like the Pharisees from the first pericope of today's text (2:23-28), these synagogue observers believed that safeguarding Sabbath observation was more important than the individual situations that they found themselves confronting.

In both these cases, however, Jesus also acts as a fundamentalist. But here, as everywhere else in the gospel stories, Jesus' actions and attitudes are defined by his fundamentalism of love. Jesus is a love fundamentalist. In everything he did, in everything he said, Jesus acted out this love fundamentalism.

It was love fundamentalism that urged Jesus to heal the man's withered hand on a Sabbath.
It was love fundamentalism that kept Jesus from Satan's temptations in the wilderness.
It was love fundamentalism that spurred Jesus to sweep the children up into his arms.
It was love fundamentalism that drove Jesus to choose humiliation over political power.
It was love fundamentalism that revealed Jesus' glorification through self-sacrifice.

Douglas John Hall of Canada's McGillUniversity says that the law requires us to tolerate one another. But the law of Christ makes tolerance not enough. "It may be good enough, legally and politically, for the pluralistic society; but it is not good enough for the one who did not say, 'Tolerate your neighbor,' but 'Love your neighbor'" (Douglas John Hall, The Future of the Church: Where Are We Headed? [Toronto: United Church Publishing House, 1989], 57).

The great thing about being a love fundamentalist is that the more strictly you abide by your fundamentalism, the greater your freedom. Instead of narrowing your vision, limiting your options or scaling down your scope, love fundamentalism opens whole new worlds of possibilities and promise. The fundamentalism of love always offers one more chance, always goes one more mile, always trusts one more time, always believes one more possibility, always commits one more hour, always cries one more tear, always rejoices over one more soul.

But like all fundamentalisms, love fundamentalism depends on rigorous commitment, perpetual practice and overarching obedience in order for it to truly define the depth and direction of our lives. If something is not woven within the very warp and woof of our lives it is not a fundamental part of our being.

Jesus chose to weave the thread of love throughout every aspect of his existence. The very fiber of his soul was knit together with this love. Will we choose to do the same?

In his recent book for seekers, R. Scott Colglazier tells the story of Victoria Ingram Curley. She "was like most brides-to-be. She was picking out her beautiful white wedding dress. Getting the invitations out to friends. Making plans for the reception and honeymoon. A few months before her wedding, however, she learned that her fiancé was ill. Very ill. He would die unless he had a kidney transplant. Donors were sought, but none was suitable. Finally, Victoria Ingram said: "What about me? Could I give him one of my kidneys?" Tests were made, and, remarkably, she was the perfect donor. The wedding was postponed, and a surgery was scheduled instead. When asked by the press why she would go through all of this, her answer was perfect: "This is what love is. This is what relationships are all about" (R. Scott Colglazier, Finding a Faith That Makes Sense [St. Louis: Chalice Press, 1996], 151).

She and her husband are love fundamentalists.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Works, by Leonard Sweet