Luke 6:37-42 · Judging Others
How Is It With Your Soul?
Luke 6:37-42
Sermon
by Maxie Dunnam
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Somewhere along the way I read a piece entitled "What is a Person" written by a little boy in West Virginia who was asked to write an essay on that subject. This is what he wrote.

"When you are a person...your head is kind of round and hard and your brains are in it and your hair is on it. Your face is in the front of your head where you eat and make faces. Your neck is what keeps your head out of your collar, and it's hard to keep clean. Your shoulders are sort of shelves where you hook on your suspenders and your stomach is something that if you don't eat often enough it hurts, and spinach don't help none. Your spine is a long bone in your back that is always behind you no matter how quick you turn around. Your arms you've got to have to pitch with and so you can reach the butter. Your fingers stick out of your hands so you can throw a curve and add up arithmetic. Your legs are what you run on and your toes are what always get stubbed. And that's all there is of you except what's on the inside, and I ain't never seen that yet!" (Norman Neaves, "How Is It With Your Soul?").

Well, there is a lot on the inside that we don't see. Not even the surgeon who does brain or abdominal or heart surgery sees it. It's something we are. It's the essence of our personhood.

It's what Jesus was talking about in verse 45 of our text when He said: "The good person out of the good treasure of the heart produces good, and the evil person out of evil treasure produces evil; for it is out of the abundance of the heart that the mouth speaks. So I'm asking a very important question today:

"How is it with your soul?" That question will gather and focus our thoughts as we look at our Scripture lesson today.

The first word that leaps out from the text is "hypocrite". He must have screamed it, "You hypocrite!" If not a scream, it was certainly a loud, firm challenging confrontation: "You hypocrite, first take the log out of your own eye and then you will see clearly to take the speck out of your neighbor's eye." (verse 42). How is it with your soul? There are a lot of avenues of thought we could pursue in answering this question. But I'll narrow our focus to hypocrisy. How is it with your soul? Maybe pondering the word hypocrite will help us answer.

I

One kind of hypocrisy is expecting other persons to have higher standards than those we set for ourselves. Let me focus this with a common example. Isn't it true that many people, maybe most people, expect clergy to have a higher standard of behavior than that by which they live?

It was illustrated dramatically two or three years ago by two events of National prominence. Jimmy Bakker, of PTL fame, the preacher who milked millions of dollars from non-thinking people and used that money in extravagant selfishness, was sentenced to 40 years in prison for his crime.

About the same time, a man named Boesky of Wall Street was convicted for criminal insider trading of stock in which he made millions and millions and millions of dollars. I think his sentence was only 5 years.

Now, I abhorred what Jimmy Bakker did. His hypocrisy was sickening and his selfish indulgence was vulgar to me. But the two crimes were punished unequally, I think the reason for that was that we expected more of Jimmy Bakker than we did out of Boesky because Bakker was a preacher.

Now, again, I'm not arguing anything about what the sentence should have been. I was as angered and sickened by Jimmy Bakker's sin as anyone else. But you get my point. It's a form of hypocrisy to expect others to have a higher standard of behaviour than that by which we live. So, I ask you, how is it with your soul?

II

A second kind of hypocrisy is to see a failing in someone else that you don't recognize in yourself. Modern psychologists call this projection. The "beam in your eye" analogy which Jesus used predated this modern understanding.

In modern psychological understanding, "projection" is the theory "that the things I condemn in others are probably the things that I don't like in myself", (we usually think that) having a beam in our eye keeps us from seeing the beam in another's eye. Not so. Having a beam in our own eye doesn't impair your vision. It improves your vision. "It enables you to see the speck in somebody else's eye. Most people you know can't see a speck in somebody else's eye. In fact, most people don't care if there is a speck in somebody else's eye. But if you have a beam in your eye, you are probably going to look for a speck in somebody else's eye." (Mark Trotter, "Before You Say It").

So be careful. Earlier in this sixth chapter of Luke, Jesus warned in verse 37: "Do not judge, and you will not be judged; do not condemn and you will not be condemned."

So we need to be careful. How is it with your soul? Are you seeing in others what you fail to see in yourself? That's a form of hypocrisy.

After telling His listeners not to judge lest they be judges, and not to condemn lest they be condemned, Jesus said, "Forgive that you may be forgiven."

Compassion, not condemnation, is the stance of the Christian.

How is it with your soul?

III

Now the third kind of hypocrisy--lack of integrity.

Integrity means wholeness. Here's a great illustration of it. There have been a lot of famous people that have come from Mississippi. Leontyne Price is one of them--one of the great singers of our day. She's a black woman from Laurel, Mississippi--about 30 miles from my hometown. She's been an inspiration to millions.

"For a people desperately needing hope, she became a symbol. Coming from the backwashes of a deprived culture, she has risen to that final judgment of excellence, the Metropolitan Opera. In the prime of her brilliant career, having been in the limelight for two decades, she has now virtually disappeared from the stage of the Met.

In an interview, she talked about the reasons for her withdrawal and her more selective scheduling of recitals. She sounded like a woman who knows who she is and what she wants.

"There are certain things in life that you have to have, because without them you are so uptight and tense that all the joy is gone from performing. Why, a few years ago I couldn't have sat here talking with a critic, let alone talked about myself. I even used to assume the conductors knew more than I did. Now, I feel I have recaptured the joy of singing, the feeling that courses through your body when you know the tone is right and your whole being vibrates with it".

What Miss Price experienced in relation to her art is what integrity is all about. "The feeling that courses through your body when you know the tone is right and your whole being vibrates with it." (Dunnam, Barefoot Days of the Soul, p.61).

Integrity. And a lack of integrity is a kind of hypocrisy. Not being true to yourself, not being true to the values you hold high, not being true to your profession as a Christian.

How is it with your soul?

IV

Now a concluding thought: Most of us are hypocrites…or to put it a bit more mildly, most of us are guilty of hypocrisy at times in our life, perhaps more often than we recognize or confess. And this is only one measure of our soul's health.

It takes a power beyond ourselves to live above hypocrisy and be healthy spiritually. That's the reason we have to depend on the power of the Holy Spirit and cultivate the indwelling Christ.

This is Pentecost Sunday, and we celebrate the coming of the Holy Spirit. But too many of us are seeking to live in our own power, without depending on the Spirit.

In her book, The Writing Life, Annie Dillard tells of an experience with a sphinx moth, something that looks like what we call a bumble bee...big body, tiny wings. Their design defies all aerodynamic principles. But they do fly.

The way they fly is unique. They blow themselves up with oxygen. They breathe deeply in, taking in as much air as possible. Almost panting worse than a worn out hunting coon dog. They take in as much air as possible, blow themselves up with oxygen and then they take off and soar.

Annie Dillard came upon one of these sphinx moths on the deck rail of a ship, frightened him before he was ready to fly, up and down, up and down, then unable to stay airborne plunged to the sea.

It's a parable of our life. Because we fail to breath the Spirit's power and cultivate the presence of the indwelling Christ, we are up and down, up and down…in and out of hypocrisy, and living far below our capacity. How is it with your soul? Are you by the Spirit's power?

Maxie Dunnam, by Maxie Dunnam