Luke 7:36-50 · Jesus Anointed by a Sinful Woman
Like a Waving Flag
Luke 7:36-50
Sermon
by Leonard Sweet
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Those of us who live in the United States have no experience with royalty or with “kingdoms” ruled by kings or queens. We have no royal family, so we have to invent our royalty.

We had the “King of Rock’n’Roll,” Elvis Presley. We had the “King of Pop,” Michael Jackson. We had a “King of Soul,” James Brown. We have a Queen of Soul, Aretha Franklin. We have a “King of all Media,” Howard Stern. We have a Queen of Clean, Linda Cobb. We even have a King of Greasy Goodness” for the Queen of Clean to clean up: Burger King!

But in countries like the Motherland, Great Britain, there is a real royal family. And the public can always keep track of where their monarch is through an ancient tradition. When the ruling monarch is in residence, the Royal Standard, the flag of the ruling monarchy of the United Kingdom, flies above. When the Queen is at Windsor Castle or Buckingham Palace, the Royal standard flutters overhead. When she is NOT in residence, the Royal Standard is replaced by the Union Flag (the “Union Jack”).

At her other residences in Scotland the Royal Standard flies above Holyrood Palace or Balmoral Castle when she is present. When she is absent from the grounds, the ancient Royal Standard of Scotland is hoisted. Long before there was reliable news sources, just one glance overhead would let the citizens of the kingdom know if their monarch was present, or where “the king was in the kingdom.”

Maybe it is our lack of any historical connection to a “royal residence” that makes us so clueless about the concept of the kingdom of God when Jesus talks about it. We are not very educated in being a “kingdom” or even what “kingdom come” means.

Like Simon the Pharisee in today’s gospel text, we think in political terms that involve reciprocity based on what we can provide for others because of what they may provide for us. “Tit for tat.” I owe you, you owe me. We’re “even” as long as we’re evenly indebted to each other. As long as everything “balances out,” we feel things are fair and just.

But that is not how a “kingdom” works. In a “kingdom” there is one ruler, one power who is in charge, and all others are subject to that ruler. That’s why residents of a kingdom are called “subjects.” Not “objects,” notice, but “subjects.”

When the ruler is in residence that monarch is the final authority, the last and the deciding word. Yet the problem with human kings and kingdoms is that they function according to the standards of the world. They negotiate. They fudge. They offer fortunes for favors. They create pitfalls on purpose. In a human kingdom even when the “king” is in residence, he is flanked by an army of political advisors, professional negotiators, vested investors and interests.

The King or Queen of England may be in residence, but the kings and queens of England have ruled according to the ways the world “works.”

Jesus offered an outlandish story to Simon the Pharisee. He proposed a world where the one who “reigned,” the one who held all the power, willingly chose to abdicate that power. In Jesus’ story the “creditor” ....

the one who had every right to squeeze everything he could out of those indebted to him,
the one who had every right to take their lands and livelihoods,
the one who had every right to toss them in prison chose instead to cancel all their debts.

How would you react if you got a letter from your bank saying, “Hey, we know it has been tough lately. Here’s the deal. You know that balance you owe on your VISA card? Forget about it. We are going to cancel that debt balance out and set you back at zero.”

WOW!

And what if you got the same phone call from all your other credit card companies, and then from the bank that holds the mortgage on your house. The laws governing economics say that this is impossible. The creditors would go broke trying to pay off all that debt. In fact, such a policy would ensure that no one would ever pay on their debt balances again. Why bother? The company would just cancel it out if you didn’t pay!

Jesus’ debt-collection scheme was not based on the way the world does business. Jesus’ debt dissolution was based on the reality of the Kingdom of God, not the kingdoms of kings, but the kingdom of the King of Kings and Lord of Lords.

In the Kingdom of God, when the King is in residence, all the “rules” of the world go out the window. In Mark 10:42, Jesus outlined these differences - “you know that among the Gentiles those whom they recognize as their rulers lord it over them, and their great ones are tyrants over them. But it is not so among you.”

There are few more powerful biblical phrases than this one: “it is not so among you.” The way of the Kingdom of God is not the way of the kingdoms of the world. In fact, for those who have the King of Kings in residence in their lives, “IT is not so among you.” In the Kingdom of God, when the flag of the cross flies overhead:

whoever wishes to become great among you must be your servant, and whoever wishes to be first among you must be slave of all. For the Son of Man came not to be served but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many (Mark 10:43-45)

The Kingdom of God is wholly different than any human monarchy. When the ruler of the Kingdom of God is “in residence” in our lives, we fly a flag that announces that divine presence to the world. We must express in every action of our lives that divine presence to the world.

The world works one way with judgments about who is acceptable and who should be rejected as “outcast” or “sinner,” about who should be welcomed into community and who should be ostracized.

The Kingdom of God works another way. It does not function according to the rules of the world. There is the world’s way. Then there is our King’s mandate, “But it is not so among you.”

If we are not to follow the kingdom ways of the world but the Kingdom ways of the King of Kings, how do we figure out the parameters that encompass the Kingdom of God? Jesus demonstrated it in today’s gospel. First, ask. Second, think. Third, let the flag fly.

First, ask. When a new perspective, a new directive was needed, Jesus offered his words and wisdom to Simon, saying, “Simon I have something to say to you” (v.40). Every new generation of Kingdom residents has only to offer an open invitation, “Teacher…speak,” and Jesus will provide all the perspective, all the cues and clues that we need to be full participants in the Kingdom of God.

Second, think. “Teacher…speak” is an invitation to education. Sometimes, though, the communication is not spoon fed to us; sometimes we have to work hard to comprehend. Sometimes we need to use our brains and figure some things out not by ourselves but in community with others. Too many Christians specialize in the recycling of old ideas. Too many Christians are featherless parrots with bigger beaks than brains.

Some teachers offer “hard data.” For example, how to solve a quadratic equation. Or, these are the steps in a Krebs cycle. Or, this is how you calculate compound interest. Other teachers offer “soft data,” teaching ways to think, not what to think, encouraging interaction instead of reaction. Jesus’ data was “soft.” The personal shortcomings of every individual is molded to fit into God’s generous template of love and forgiveness.

Third, let the king’s flag fly. The kingdom is not something you bring about or build. As anyone knows who has actually lived in a real “kingdom,” wherever the king is, there is the kingdom. Wherever you see that flag flying of the king’s presence, there is the kingdom. When John announced “the kingdom is coming,” he didn’t mean a political, social or economic entity. He meant, “the King is coming.” The Messiah is coming. The King of Kings and Lord of Lords is coming. Kings and kingdoms will all pass away, but King Jesus and his presence are imperturbably solid and will reign forever.

Is the King reigning in your heart? The promise of the gospel is that your heart can be a place where God is always “in residence,” where God is always “in charge,” and where you can always experience God’s extended grace. And where God is, there is Joy, there is Forgiveness, there is Hope, there is Love.

When I was growing up there was a song we sang at summer camp, about this time of year. I haven’t heard it much recently. But here are the words. Maybe some of you have heard it? (If you can get someone to lead the congregation in singing it, so much the better)

Love is a flag flying high from the castle of my heart.

From the castle of my heart, from the castle of my heart.
Love is a flag flying high from the castle of my heart.
For the King is in residence there.

Faith is a flag flying high from the castle of my heart.
From the castle of my heart, from the castle of my heart.
Faith is a flag flying high from the castle of my heart.
For the King is in residence there.

Joy is a flag flying high from the castle of my heart.
From the castle of my heart, from the castle of my heart.
Joy is a flag flying high from the castle of my heart.
For the King is in residence there.

[If you’d like to hear the music behind these lyrics, here’s the link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tR4TgLYh4UU ]

Is the flag of the King of Kings, the flag of faith, the flag of joy, the flag of love, flying at maximum height in your life, for all to see, whatever you are doing, wherever you are?

One of the most popular songs in the world today, and a song that has become almost the second national anthem of Canada, is the song “Like a Waving Flag.” The song was written by a Toronto-based artist named K’naan. Born in the capital city of Somalia, Mogadishu, in a part of the city known as the “River of Blood,” K’naan’s mother knew she had to get the family out of the country when K’naan and his childhood friends picked up what they thought was a potato and started to play with it like a ball. K’naan tossed it away in time before it blew up a nearby school building. They escaped on the last commercial flight out of the country before the airport closed, civil war broke out, and the government collapsed. K’naan (his name means “traveler” in Somali) likes to record his music in Jamaica, but is really a global poet. In the first verse of “Like a Waving Flag,” K’naan recounts the experience when he was 11 of being attacked and shot at by some gunmen in Mogadishu. He was not hit. But three of his playmates were. All three died.

K’naan recounts the story in the first verse of the song, and the chorus offers the cry of children around the world who hope for peace and love and joy in a world dominated by violence and oppression and hate:

"When I get older/I will be stronger/They'll call me freedom/ Just like a waving flag"

But then in the midst of that dream, reality breaks in. The next three lines are “and then it goes back, and then it goes back, and then it goes back.”

In March of 2010, some Canadian artists like Justin Bieber and Drake, Avril Lavigne, Fefe Dobson, Kardinal Offishall, Nelly Furtado, and more, got together and recorded this song as a relief effort for Haiti. It is the Canadian version of the Michael Jackson “We are the World,” though it is becoming a global anthem that is inspiring our kids to raise the flag of causes in their lives.

Here is the song. Listen to the words carefully, as it moves from joy and hope to the despair and frustration of a world which takes one step forward and three steps back . . . “and then it goes back, and then it goes back, and then it goes back.”

For the words and music:

http://vodpod.com/watch/2919579‑just‑like‑a‑waving‑flag

For the video of Canadian artists singing it, and a short explanation by its composer (my favorite):

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nB7L1BIDELc

Will you raise the flag of Christ, the King of Kings and Lord of Lords, in a world that is struggling, searching for waving flags?

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Leonard Sweet Sermons, by Leonard Sweet