Luke 14:1-14 · Jesus at a Pharisee’s House
Hold Your Peace
Luke 14:1-14
Sermon
by John G. Lynn
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Taylor Caldwell, in her book about Luke, Dear and Glorious Physician, tells how the gospel writer as a young boy sat near the window of his girlfriend, the daughter of a Roman tribune. Luke, in the story, a freed slave's son, really had no business in the courtyard of the tribune, no matter how he felt about his daughter.

As he stood there, leaning on a fountain in the courtyard, gazing toward the window of her room, he held in his hand a small, smooth stone. When the tribune noticed the boy he blurted out, "It is you, Lucanus!" The boy did not move. He did not move. He did not leap to his feet out of fear or respect. He simply sat there gazing, the stone in his hands. Finally he looked to the tribune and said, "I was praying for Rubria."

"You are praying for her? Well, she needs your prayers," said her father. "To what God did you pray?"

The boy replied softly, "To the unknown God."

When this fierce and ruddy Roman tribune surprised the small boy in his garden, the boy did not run away. Nor did he fold up like an armadillo and say nothing. He looked that giant of a man in the face and said clearly, "I am praying for your daughter." The young boy did not hold his peace.

In the gospels Jesus held his peace only once -- when he stood face to face with that lascivious, wishy-washy King Herod. Herod said, "Do me a miracle, Jesus of Nazareth. Here in my court, work me a miracle." And Jesus held his peace. It was not worth sharing with such a man.

The Pharisees and the scribes held their peace all the time. They never spoke out how they felt or what they thought. They held their peace -- and pretended everything was just fine.

Today's gospel lesson takes place in a Pharisee's home -- one of the chief Pharisees. Jesus went there on a sabbath to break bread with him. They were watching him. Pharisees were great watchers, especially of those whom they hated and feared.

And behold, there was a man before Jesus with dropsy, a disease that fills up the tissues and body cavities with fluids, a fatal disease.

Jesus looked around at all those people watching him and asked, "Is it lawful to heal on the sabbath day?" Luke tells us, "And they held their peace" (KJV). What gall these watchers had! Jesus asked a question and they would not say what they thought or what they felt. How difficult to deal with such people who don't say "Yes" or don't say "No." They just sit there holding their peace, like children sucking lollipops, exercising the backward power of inertia, irresistible forces and immovable objects all rolled into one.

We all have this power, and we use it to block the activity of God in our midst. God never holds his peace, especially in the face of inertia. That's when he heals and prompts and kicks his spurs in most of all.

A seminary professor once said the worst students were those who never asked any questions. He never knew where they stood on anything. After a while he began to realize they were afraid of what they thought and what they felt. They did not want their thoughts or feelings out in the marketplace with other people so they held their peace. Their fear eventually turned into hostility and hatred for their professor, especially when he asked them this question: "I know what other people think about this, but what do you think?"

Watched by those scribes and Pharisees who would not say what they thought or felt, Jesus made his move. He healed a man with dropsy and let him go. Then he asked those watchers a question: "If one of you has a child or an ox that has fallen into a well, will you not immediately pull it out on a sabbath day?" What did they say in response? They held their peace!

Their silence prompted Jesus' parable. When God invites men and women to the banquet of his kingdom he tells them, "Don't go directly to the center of the banquet where the guest of honor, Jesus, sits, risen and triumphant over death. If you go there right away you will do nothing but hold your peace. You will be so overawed that you will just sit there in fear, saying nothing to anyone, like the disciples when they met Jesus risen from the dead. No, first you need to taste the cross, the first course of my banquet. You need to start on the Good Fridays at the edge of the table, where light meets darkness, peace meets war, and little Jewish boys pray for little Greek girls. In anguish, turmoil and suffering, you will share your peace with one another. Through the cross, I will lead you to the center of my banquet, Jesus your Risen Lord."

The Pharisees watching Jesus that day traded the killing power of inertia corroding their relationships with God and with each other. Jesus traded the power of cross and resurrection inviting the poor, the maimed, the lame and the blind to God's banquet.

He invites us to the banquet as persons in need. Where we are poor he wants us to say so. Where we feel maimed he wants us to ask for help. Where we cannot walk in the paths God has set for us he wants us to pray, just as Luke prayed for his friend who was sick. We are all his beloved guests.

He wants us to come to his banquet, but not as one who holds his peace. Where we are poor he wants us to say so. Where we feel maimed inside he wants us to ask for help. Where we cannot walk in the paths he sets for us he wants us to speak out, just as little Luke did when he prayed for his friend who was ill.

Some preachers think this gospel lesson was written by Emily Post or Miss Manners and not by Luke. The point of the parable is not proper etiquette, but faith.

In his undying faithfulness to us, God goes out to the highways and byways where we live. He goes inside of our hearts, beyond the fences we put up when we hold our peace. There, at the core of our hearts, God says, "Come to my banquet. Yes, I have a cross for you, but I have resurrection, too. I know your eyes grow dim, your hearts falter and your legs give way in fear, but I am with you. I am at your side and I will be with you until the end of time. Come and be nourished at my banquet." "

CSS Publishing, Lima, Ohio, Trouble Journey, by John G. Lynn