Matthew 6:1-4 · Giving to the Needy
For the Glow of It
Matthew 6:1-4, Matthew 6:16-18
Sermon
by David & Marian Plant
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Our Ash Wednesday service is full of rich symbols. With the Imposition of Ashes and the Sacrament of Holy Communion, we are reminded that our faith, our church, and our worship life, has much outward symbolism.

The scripture for our time together this Ash Wednesday is one of those passages that seems to go against the very fabric of our tradition as we understand it. We might be tempted at first reading to wonder if everything that we traditionally do as part of a worship service is called into question, from the way we shape our prayers together, our passing of the plates so that our collection of tithes and offerings is seen by all, to having joint confessions, raising of the cup, and breaking of the bread in ways that all can see.

While historical study can aid us in understanding that many of the practices Jesus is referring to were common in, literally, public places outside of the worship space, where followers of the faith made a very public witness to their faith, I cannot in good conscience dismiss the idea that just because we do these things within the walls of the worship space, that the caution is mitigated. For as the beginning of Lent, Ash Wednesday represents the start of a chastening season, a season of what is to be deep introspection and correspondingly deep movement toward a different way of living.

We are aware that verse 5 where that beautifully condemning word “hypocrite” pops up in most translations is a reminder that no matter where we are, in any circumstance, others are watching, and that we must be careful that our faith example isn’t “playing to the crowd.” With the references to doing things in private or out of eyesight of others, we wonder how that relates to the teaching in chapter 5 verses 14-16, that we are not to hide our light but put it out there so everyone can know that God is real and is worthy of honor.

Perhaps Ash Wednesday is too much of a ritual time to devote effort to the kinds of paradoxes that Jesus always seems to throw in our laps. Be a light to the world, but don’t be a stage hog. Give, but not as a means of boasting; pray, but not as a means of calling attention to yourself (see how well this works at McDonald’s).

I was studying the rise of the mega “seeker sensitive” church 25 years ago and attended Willow Creek in South Barrington, Illinois, with 3,000 people each at five services. They featured a band as good as any professional band and quality acting performances as good as any major playhouse might put on in order to showcase the gospel message. Even their parking lot ministry volunteer attendants each weekend outnumbered those on the rolls at the church I was serving at the time. When they announced that their December Mission offering was over 1.5 million dollars with a few weeks to go, I couldn’t quite reconcile the joy I felt that people would give so much while at the same time wondered if the very figure itself and its announcement wasn’t just a little bit of chest thumping. Of course, as a pastor, I started trying to figure out how 1.5 million dollars among 5,000 members, and another 10,000 visitors each weekend (from a relatively wealthy community) compared to the $1,500 Christmas Mission collection of my fifty worshiping members. Suddenly I realized I was likely in violation of many more scripture admonitions. But in that experience, I understand the dilemma we all face, the dilemma of how we demonstrate our faith without making it about us but about God. How do we demonstrate the light while at the same time helping everyone understand that it is not about me: It is about God?

For Ash Wednesday, if not for the cross we put on our heads will the person waiting upon us at the grocery store know that we do wish to follow Christ and are open to their questions? If I don’t preach that there is great value in following the discipline of giving by sharing my own story of giving, not to puff up myself, but to point to God, how will the gathered community know what to do with their own desire to give? If we do not demonstrate that we practice the gifts of fasting or the value of a 24-hour period of silence, how can we expect them to know just how valuable a gift it is?

The way I like to think about the paradox and dilemma of scripture such as this is simple: Beware the trap of ego. In all candor there is a fine line between something being a healthy ritual or activity and something being an unhealthy ritual or activity. The path toward becoming a hypocrite is not easily identified until we are often well over the line. Crossing the line goes both ways: from failing to demonstrate our love of God sufficiently so that all see God, to being so over the top that the focus points to me rather than to God. So what do we take away from this scripture and put on our “to do,” or perhaps more accurately, “to be,” list?

First, be authentic. Don’t do things for show. If we are ready to pray, then pray. Don’t hold it in, even if we are standing in the middle of the grocery store with a child who is melting down. The key is that we aren’t doing the prayer to show others how pious we are; we are praying because we lean upon God in all times. But let’s also be honest. Jesus wants deep, abiding prayer out of us — not just emergency prayers: a time when we put away all our requests, and listen; a time of not trying to affect God with our prayer but letting God affect us through our time of praying. That can come only when we hole up, shutting out all the business of our lives with all its noise; hearing the voice of God that is usually drowned out by all the chatter around us. It comes about when we finally can think of nothing more to “talk” with God about. We let the Creator of all things get a word in.

Second, we are called to use our bodies more effectively as a means of getting closer to God. The tradition of fasting has a special historical symbolism as a sign of remorse or a signal to God that we are in need of divine wisdom. The literal application of fasting is not, again, so that we can talk about what we are giving up, but that we literally experience the giving up of ourselves to God, so that God may fill us with all Godly things. It becomes a very tangible sign that we really are willing to give ourselves up for God. We find how much of our lives are lived around food more than the fellowship that goes with it. We find a sensitivity to those who have food scarcity in their lives and are hungry every day and therefore we can better appreciate the “breaking of the bread” and celebrate the supreme humble appreciation for that morsel given to us. Now, we finally begin to have a glimmer of the appreciation and humility for the gift of what Christ’s sacrifice not only meant for us but also can mean for others.

Third, what we do with our money matters. Not because we do it for the show, but because we do it out of an attitude of gratefulness in response to all that has been given to us. After all, if a small piece of bread after a three-day fast can taste so delicious, how delicious will it feel to offer back to God the 10% that we are called to give? How delicious will the next 10% in gratitude for all the special wonderments that have been handed to us: the glorious sunset, the bounty of a world created to feed us, listening ears to hear our pleas and grant us an audience be? Oh yes, not for the show but as a fellow pastor once said quite regularly — for the glow.

This Ash Wednesday, let us use this jumping off point for the Lenten season as a means of earnest and deep reflection. Let us use this time to begin practices and habits that bring life more than they bring familiarity. Let us use this time to do the hard work of growing closer to God without all the celebrity baggage that so quickly creeps in. Let us submit ourselves to authenticity, to fasting, to giving, and to coming ever closer to the one who called us into being and asks us for lives that are lived with the humility and integrity of being called servants of the most high.

Amen.

CSS Pubishing Co., Inc., Surprise! Surprise! Surprise!: Cycle A gospel sermons for Lent and Easter, by David & Marian Plant