Zephaniah 3:1-20 · The Future of Jerusalem
Let God Be God
Zephaniah 3:1-20
Sermon
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The concern of the prophet Zephaniah, from whom one of the lessons was read this morning, was with a society of people who had drifted into a condition of moral and religious chaos. On the one hand, they were pretending to worship both Baal and the Lord. On the other hand, they were in reality a rebellious, defiled, and oppressive people who listened to no voice and accepted no correction from any source.

What Zephaniah saw as essential for them to do was to get their act together by learning to "call on the name of the Lord and serve him with one accord."

Jesus’ parable in the lesson read from Luke’s record of the Gospel deals with the problem of self-righteousness. Jesus saw a fundamental difference in the way a Pharisee and a tax collector prayed.

The focus in both these lessons, as you can see, is on the God problem. Who or what is being worshiped?

They point up the sad consequences of displacing allegiance to the living Lord, the one true God, with idolatry and anomie: idolatry being either of inanimate objects or exalted self, and anomie: being undisciplined normlessness.

Now, have we any need to give special attention to these lessons? Are we having any difficulty deciding what to worship, or whether to worship anything? Is there any moral disorientation among us because we recognize no central source of authority and have no fixed point of reference by which to guide our behavior? Or have we, perchance, simply lost interest in the whole God concept? Should we be counted among those who seem to care not whether God is alive or dead?

This last question may be the most relevant of all. A lot of people today seem to look upon the God question as a dead issue. They may still give casual assent to the concept as an interesting mental artifact brought over from the past, but see little utility in it for their own living.

The stance of such persons is, at best, much like that of the little girl who wanted to know where God was. When told that God was everywhere she wanted to know if he was in the house, in her bedroom, behind the dresser, even under the bed on which she was being put to sleep. After having been assured that God was in all those places, she was later overheard saying an interesting and very candid prayer. "God," she was saying, "I know you are everywhere. I know you are in the house. I know you are in this room. I know you are behind that dresser and under this bed. But, God, if you move you’ll scare me to death."

If we are willing to deal seriously with the issues raised by these Scriptures, there are several important points to be considered.

First, the need of a God in our lives must be recognized.

Even the most ancient ancestors of whom we have any record felt this need in a compulsive way. They turned in almost every direction they could think of in the quest for a spiritual reality to help them make sense of their lives. That quest, continued through the ages, evolved great religious traditions out of which have come some of our oldest, strongest, and most stable institutions.

Why have we humans had this need? We are flesh like other flesh, but this is a need that seems unique in the animal kingdom. It is a gift of grace. So far as we can tell, no other beings possess it. But what is it? What makes humans unable to live satisfying lives, as other beings appear to do, without being disturbed by a sense of need to be related to something other than and beyond themselves?

A possible cue to this mystery is found in the Genesis record of the capabilities and responsibilities given the first humans. God made Adam and Eve capable of naming the other beings found in the Garden of Eden, of discerning good from evil, and of answering the question of "Why?" when he thundered at them concerning their misdeeds. And he immediately began holding them responsible for the use of these capabilities.

Assess these unique human capacities carefully and you will see that we are not limited to what is concrete and adherent, to what we can see, hear, smell, feel, and taste. We can go beyond the physical senses to visualize the unseen, to ask questions, to seek answers, and to pursue meanings.

When humans name things they are ascribing values, which means that they have been seeking meanings in what they see. They do the same thing, also, when they try to understand what happens to them in their life experiences. In pursuit of the logic, the why of life, they have been drawn inexorably toward an understanding of God, the unseen source that lies back of and makes sense of all perceived reality.

As Augustine observed, their souls are restless until they find rest in God.

Humans are, then, spiritualizing beings. They look for essences in what they experience and perceive, and invent symbols to represent these essences. It was inevitable, therefore, that they would come to an understanding of the great, all-embracing spirit in whom rested the coherence and logic that made all other reality make sense.

The grand summary of this climactic development is found in the first verse of the Gospel according to John. "In the beginning," he says, "was the Word (logos in the Greek, or logic in the English derivative), and the Word was with God, and the Word was God."

It must be noted, however, that humans have sometimes become impatient with the spiritualizing process because they have found it trying and difficult. The physical side of their nature has demanded concreteness. Building an idol has been more satisfying than trying to understand and commune with the great Spirit whose face is not visible. Consequently, many a golden calf has been molded in preference to wrestling on mountain tops with the awesomely mysterious Yahweh.

Even where the use of concrete idols has been avoided, carelessness in the valuing and symbolizing process has resulted in spiritualized forms of idolatry. In such things as pride, prejudice, pursuit of pleasure or fame, grasp for power, and misplaced love, value perversions and distortions have occurred which have diverted attention from the true and living God without whom life’s meanings fall apart.

Truly, there is only one real God, and without him we humans are lost. In the long course of human history he has made himself known in many ways. We know no better way of referring to him than to call him our loving heavenly Father.

This brings us to the second point of challenge in today’s Scripture lessons, which is that we personally take stock of our spiritual condition. Are we involved in any idolatries that are interfering with our relationship to the true God so beautifully revealed in Jesus?

Let us not kid ourselves. It has been said that one’s god is that to which he or she gives supreme allegiance. If that is so, the practice of idolatry is surely rampant in our midst. Our idols appear in many guises, and their shrines dot the landscapes of both private and public devotion. If we do not stay on guard alertly, we will be seduced into their worship without realizing what we are doing.

Are you and I willing to consider seriously the possibility that we are involved in some form of idolatry? Or that we are being tempted to become involved? What about the idolatrous self-centeredness that finds expression in greed, selfishness, arrogance, self-righteous pride, and possessive love? What about the worship of money, things, job, popularity, fame, power, or other benefits that can be gleaned from the life of community? Has business, racism, nationalism, class consciousness, sex, or other kinds of social or sensory experience become a religion with us?

These are only a few of the forms with which the Holy of Holies of our lives may be desecrated. Regardless of whether we make them exclusive occupants of that sacred place, or merely ask God to share it with them, we put our souls in jeopardy.

As many of the Old Testament writers were keenly aware, God is a jealous God. He does not take kindly to the idea of being asked to fit into a pantheon of deities. We cannot expect to find the blessings of peace, happiness, and fulfillment that God wants us to have so long as we deny him full sovereignty in our lives.

In his description of the Pharisee and the other sinner at prayer, Jesus indicated that the sovereignty issue had special reference to the contest between worship of self and worship of God. At another time, you will remember, when asked which was the greatest commandment, he had specified that love of self was legitimate, but only when subordinated to the love of God and equalized with love of neighbor. The selfrighteousness of the Pharisee was a gross violation of this spirit so strongly emphasized by the law and the prophets.

We who think of ourselves as the good church people of our community should take heed. It was annoyance with people who "trusted in themselves that they were righteous, and despised others" that prompted Jesus to tell the story of the parable.

Note the condition of these people. They were alienated from God. Though they paid lip service to him, they had no sense of need of his grace. They figured they were saving themselves by means of their piety and good works. In defense of this exalted view of themselves, moreover, they had become alienated from their fellow human beings. Despising others put props under the feeling of being elevated above them.

This is the kind of tragedy that always accompanies self-idolatry. It shuts persons off from the love and grace of God depriving them of both the blessing and the privilege of serving as channels of this love and grace. God is dethroned; the self is deceived with a false sense of adequacy; the communion that gives strength and stability to community life is destroyed.

Shall we do a little probing close to home? What about the class consciousness that undergirds our private schools; builds housing ghettos for the privileged with walls around them and guards at the gate; arranges our churches to conform to social class divisions? What about the alienation and exploitation that occur in our economic arenas where greed excuses its depradations with intimations of inherent superiority?

These are but a few of the social patterns that egoistic pride and self-righteousness have structured in our midst. One need not be a Sherlock Holmes to find a host of others.

Several studies have shown, for instance, that persons who identify themselves as Christians and church members are more harshly judgmental and punitive in their attitudes toward social offenders than are persons who make no claims to such identity. The parallel to Jesus’ description of the self-righteous Pharisee is so close as to be truly shocking. We should be grateful to Harvard’s Professor Gordon Allport, however, for having done a study that shows that the Christians and church members who have seriously internalized the faith are more inclined to be compassionate and non-punitive in their attitudes than are persons who do not claim to be Christians or church members.

Are we being too complacent about conditions our sociologists have been pointing out: the greedy competition that is producing increasingly great social and economic inequities; the burgeoning of class consciousness and hardening of social class lines; the humiliating and punitive treatment of the poor and unsuccessful by our welfare system?

If Zephaniah were among us, what do you think he would say? Would he find basis for a conviction that we, too, are in danger of becoming a community ravaged by roaring lions and ravenous wolves?

Let us not try to deny, then, that we have our problems with idolatry. Like all peoples in all times, we struggle with temptations to worship false gods.

Clearly, we are affected as a society, and must learn to deal with the problem at the level of our life together in community.

I am reminded of a question T. S. Eliot raises in one of his best known poems. "What is the meaning of this city?" he asks, seeking to discover whether the people merely dwell together to make money off of each other or are a true community.

This is a question with which every resident of every city, town, and hamlet should be challenged. The choice is before us. Either we will make our communities jungles of alienation and brutish competition, devoted to the worship of selfinterest and a pantheon of related idols, or places of communion with one another that reflects our communion with the living, loving God.

In the final analysis, however, it is at the personal level that each of us has to deal most directly with the lure of false gods. To myself as surely as to you I must address the question: Who, where, or what is your God? In what direction are you investing the energy and passion of your life? By what value standards, from what source, are you being governed? Are you giving your whole life to the highest and best, or are you suffering the crippling of compromise between unsettled commitments?

Is it not time for us to make sure we are willing to let God be God in our lives? Will we be among those who have no other gods before him?

Are we willing to take a personal inventory by the standards of Zephaniah’s concern? If so, we will be having to take an honest look at things that may be keeping us from calling on the Lord and serving him with gladness. Even if we are not bowing down to idols while pretending to serve the Lord, could it be that we are leaning toward the crowd of the rebellious and defiled who listen to no voice, accept no correction, and know no shame?

Shall we get serious about the possibility that Jesus’ parable about the Pharisee and the tax collector may be applicable to us? Can we consider the possibility that we are contaminated with self-righteousness?

Are we comfortably proud of our goodness this morning? Are we so absorbed in self-interest that we are neglecting communion with God? Are we becoming so callous toward other people that we feel superior to them and indifferent to their needs? Or are our hearts filled with compassion and true empathy rooted in obedience to the love of God?

There is only one cure for the idolatry that shows itself in self-righteousness. That cure is in the humility that confesses sin and weakness and recognizes that we all are sinners saved only by God’s grace. This is the only basis for dealing honestly with one’s self, with God, and with neighbors in community. It is the way of salvation, without which any life is sure to be lost.

How great is our determination to let God be God? Shall we look back with understanding to the ancient one who was troubled by the idolatries around him, and resonate with him in declaring, with all the passion of our hearts, "As for me and my house, we will serve the Lord"?

CSS Publishing, Lima, Ohio,