Luke 10:1-24 · Jesus Sends Out the Seventy-two
More Tolerable For Sodom And Gomorrah
Luke 10:1-24
Sermon
by Maxie Dunnam
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Cracow, the ancient capitol of Poland, remains a medieval city for it somehow escaped the devastation that leveled so many other European cities during the war. Cracow was once a flourishing member of the Hanseatic League, an association of independent merchant towns that exerted so much power and influence in the Middle Ages. The hugh sprawl of covered market still stands in the central square, dominated by a tower from which each night a trumpet tune sounds (the interesting thing is that in the midst of the sounding of the tune it is suddenly strangled and dies away.)

The story has it that a boy assigned to keep watch for the invading Tartars in the 13th century was felled by an enemy arrow in his throat even as he was trumpeting out a warning to the sleeping city. He had managed to sound the alarm, however, and the city was saved. So each night at the appointed hour, the broken (strangled) trumpet call is heard from the tower in the marketplace of Cracow, as a telling reminder and warning that powers of destruction and evil still await not only Cracow but the whole world. (Flora Lewis, Europe, quoted by Don Shelby, "When God Settles Accounts," July 2, 1989)

It is a dramatic picture of warning. Sounding the trumpet that judgment is coming. It is an apt introduction to our sermon today. Did that word of verse 12 register clearly in your mind? Listen to it again. "I tell you, it shall more tolerable on that day for Sodom than for that town."

It may not be as easy for us to get the awful impact of that as it was for Jesus' hearers. Sodom and Gomorrah had become the arch symbols of God's judgment. It remains so even to this day. Immediately after the Persian War, a magazine article was entitled "Sadom and Gomorrah," a play on the first name of Saddam Hussein and making the connection of the judgment of Sodom and Gomorrah on Saddam Hussein and Iraq.

Do you remember the story? Sodom was the city of Abraham's day that had become so wicked that God had decided to destroy it. The story is told in the eighteenth and nineteenth chapters of Genesis. God debated with himself as to whether he should let Abraham know that he was going to destroy Sodom. "Shall I hide from Abraham what I am about to do?" he asks himself. But then he answers "No, I cannot hide it from Abraham because Abraham has been chosen to do righteousness and justice and he must know."

Listen to the Lord speak to Abraham (v. 20 of chapter 18): "Because the outcry against Sodom and Gomorrah is great and their sin is very grave, I will go down to see whether they have done altogether according to the outcry which has come to me; and if not, I will know."

Everybody seemed to accept that as the way it should be except Abraham. He waited in the presence of God, and here comes one of the most beautiful stories, and one of the most telling encounters between a person and God.

Abraham interceded for Sodom. He asked God if fifty righteous people could be found -- would they be destroyed along with the whole city. That struggle of intercession and pleading went on as Abraham reduced his claim time and again--if thirty righteous folks are found--if twenty are found, if ten, if five.

There is a marvelous word in Abraham's argument with the Lord that says something about Abraham and his understanding of God. Listen to the twenty-fifth verse, "Far be it from thee to do such a thing, to slay the righteous with the wicked, so that the righteous fair as the wicked! Far be that from thee! Shall not the judge of all the earth do right?" "Abraham believed that what was highest in his own heart was the right clue to the nature of God." (The Interpreter's Bible, Volume 1, p. 624) And isn't that one of the marks that made Abraham great? And isn't that a clue for you and me as we think about the nature of God? Since we are made in God's image, can we not settle on this fact--that God certainly could never be less than what we are at our best.

Now I could spin that one out for an entire sermon, and it would be productive and helpful. But that is not our focus. So I will leave it to you to play it out. If you are attentive you will have the opportunity to do so, and probably rather soon. There are plenty of folks around, Christian folks, who are always ready to credit God with actions which none of us in our right minds and at our best selves would ever think of doing. So just tuck the truth back to call on for reflection in the future. Since we are created in the image of God, could God ever be less than what we are at our best?

When you catch yourself accrediting to God attitudes and actions which you would be afraid to claim or confess, examine your thinking. When you are tempted to believe folks who claim God's will has been done in events and circumstances that if you participated in them you would feel guilty, then please examine how you and others are thinking about the nature of God.

Since we are created in the image of God, could God ever be less than we would be at our best?

But on with the story. Abraham pled with God not to destroy Sodom reducing his negotiating point--fifty righteous men, forty-five, forty, thirty, twenty, ten, and on and on--but not even five righteous persons could be found in Sodom and so both Sodom and Gomorrah were destroyed with fire and brimstone because of their wickedness.

So, the wickedness of Sodom is set forth so emphatically that it's name has become proverbial--"a very Sodom."

So, Jesus' word is a terribly harsh one. "I tell you, it shall be more tolerable on that day for Sodom than for that town."

When I originally planned this sermon, in my general plan of preaching, while on study leave back in April, I was not aware that this particular sermon would fall on the Sunday following the Fourth of July. Back then, my working title for the sermon was "Shake the Dust Shuffle." That's a phrase some of us Methodist ministers coined back in the early sixties when we were going through the racial upheaval in Mississippi, and so many of us left the state. The image is a dramatic one, taken from our scripture lesson. Jesus instructed his disciples that if people did not hear the gospel, if they did not receive them as they sought to share the gospel, then they were to go out into the streets and shake their feet as though getting rid of the dust of the very ground. That is where we got our image -- Shake the Dust Shuffle. It was an act of judgment on the part of the disciples. They would do their work, as well as they could do it, sharing the gospel, healing the sick, ministering to everyone who would be responsive -- but those who refused would come under the judgment of God. And the disciples were to remind them of that fact.

Listen to verses 11 and 12 of our text again: "Even the dust of your town that clings to our feet, we wipe off in protest against you. Yet know this: the kingdom of God has come near. I tell you, on that day it will be more tolerable for Sodom than for that town.

That, too, could be an entire sermon -- that judgment is implicit in our hearing but refusing to accept the gospel. You can play that one out later, also. How often have we heard the gospel? How often has the Word of God come clearly to us and we refuse to respond. Every time we refuse, God's judgment is upon us and we can never know how that judgment is going to play itself out in our life.

But that is not the sermon either. This is the Fourth of July weekend. We need to turn our attention in that direction. That certainly is in harmony with our scripture lesson. With verse 13, Jesus shifts from talking about individuals and households and he addresses cities. Let's read that again, verses 13 and 14: "Woe to you, Chorazin! Woe to you, Bethsaida! For if the deeds of power done in you had been done in Tyre and Sidon, they would have repented long ago, sitting in sackcloth and ashes." But at the judgment it will be more tolerable for Tyre and Sidon than for you.

It is as clear as it could be. God's judgment is certain. Jesus instructs his disciples to say to those cities who refuse to be repentant and who remain unsaved that the judgment that is going to come upon them will be as awful as that rained upon Sodom and Gomorrah.

It is something to think about on this Fourth of July weekend as we focus our minds and hearts on our nation and where we are in God's history. Do we need to remind ourselves that the founders of our nation believed in such divine judgment? They believed that God was going to call us into account in terms of our moral and ethical performance. It was this belief in a divine judgment that became the context and the impetus for the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution and the Bill of Rights. Men like Thomas Jefferson, Samuel and John Adams, James Madison, George Washington, Patrick Henry and Alexander Hamilton were enormously influenced by the moral and ethical precepts of the Judeo-Christian faith, in a God who manifested his will and purpose in history. They all believed that it was virtue that made things work in a democracy. Samuel Adams summed it up in these words: "We may look to armies for our defense, but virtue is our best security. It is not possible that any state or government should long remain free where virtue is not supremely honored."

If that is true--and who would argue against it--then we have to confess our nation is in trouble. Where is virtue? What is the state of virtue in our land?

Consider this data as a part of our answer to that question about how moral we are -- and the place virtue has in the common life of our nation. "Americans are willing to lie at the drop of a hat." That is the conclusion of a recently published book entitled "The Day America Told the Truth." The book is based on a survey which supports the fact that an alarming number of the citizens of our country have chosen the way of falsity--rather than the virtue of truth. Of those polled, ninety-one percent said they routinely lie. Assured of anonymity, the cross-section of Americans responding to some eighteen hundred questions, made the following admissions:

86% said that they lie regularly to parents75% lie to friends73% lie to siblings69% lie to spouses

One of the authors says that "lying is a part of Americans' lives." Does anything strike at the heart of virtue and morality more than the erosion of truth?

To the folks who founded our country, it was inconceivable that the daring experiment of freedom would prosper without the blessing and the guidance of God, or that it would continue without the moral commitment of the people tempered by God's judgment. Because of those beliefs, they drafted laws, and set in place the structures of government which would encourage people to seek and uphold the truth, to choose what is right and to do it, and to live out what God required through the high moral demands of scripture and the ethical teachings of Jesus.

Thomas Jefferson, whose belief and commitment helped shape the foundations of America perhaps more than any other person, revealed how intensely he believed in this moral accountability before God when he said, "I tremble for my country when I remember that God is just!"

A few weeks ago I shared a word of Barbara Tuchman, the acclaimed historian and Pulitzer Prize winner. She died in 1988. Just before her death one of her essays appeared in the New York Times Sunday Magazine. Let me share a portion of that essay with you: "Decline of a nation or a society (she wrote) is a provocative historical problem. In Rome, it is associated with external pressure coupled with internal weakness. In the ancient Greek cities of Asia Minor (like Ephesus) it can be traced to the silting of harbors through environmental neglect, closing them to access by sea. In the Aztec Empire of Mexico, it was the invasion of ruthless Europeans.

"In the United States, who knows? Will it be moral collapse from within? One certainly experiences a deteriorating ethic at every level of society, and with it incompetence from the people who no longer function at their utmost, who grow lax and accept the mediocre. Violence is also symptomatic of a nation's decline, and today's deepening climate of bloody violence is not reassuring. More disturbing, however, is what is missing in American attitudes and public opinion: 'Where is the outrage?' Why aren't people angry about violence, injustice and immorality? Why aren't we angry over misconduct and incompetence in Government by public officials of the highest rank? Where is the outrage over racism, over fraud in business, over deceit and betrayal of trust, over the trivialization of morality where it is moral if it works or makes us feel good? Anger when anger is due is necessary for self-respect and for the respect of this nation by other nations.

"What has become of national self-respect, not to mention common decency? Why do we keep turning back to Sodom and Gomorrah?"("When God Settles Accounts" Sermon by the Rev. Donald J. Shelby)

Well, why do we? Will we learn before it is too late? Will we turn to God before something worse than Sodom happens to us?

In a column in the editorial section of "The Commercial Appeal", Katie Sherod reflected on a terrible accident, at the National Zoo in Washington last year.

"The ants who live in a big glass display case in the Invertebrate House beheaded their queen.

"They didn't mean to do this, you understand.

"As near as their keeper can figure, the worker ants were trying to transfer their egg-laying queen from one chamber to another. But the hole through which they were trying to pull her was small. And a queen ant is big.

"Pop. There went her head.

"Now, what do you suppose the ants did when they realized what they had done to their queen? Well, scientists don't know if an ant can feel really dumb, or whether an ant can worry about covering its posterior. But these ants reacted just like a lot of humans do when they realize they've made a terrible mistake: They pretended nothing had happened.

"When the keeper looked, the ants were still tending the queen."

"But no matter how carefully the ants tended their headless queen, their colony was finished. Without a queen, there can be no eggs. After all, that's all a queen ant does. Lays eggs. And if she doesn't lay eggs, there are no workers. So eventually the colony will die." (Katie Sherrod, "Still Paying Too Much Attention to Wrong Assumptions and Ideas", The Commercial Appeal, June 23, 1991, p. B5).

It's almost impossible to read this story as other than a wonderful parable for our times. Just think how often we humans are busy about the work of tending headless queens."

Our government does it and we allow it by our votes or failure to vote, by our staying quiet in the presence of evil, by our accepting without protest blatant immorality in our elected officials and persons in responsible public jobs.

It is time we did something like the "Shake the Dust Shuffle." Certainly it is time that we gave ourselves to the ardent kind of intercession Abraham was committed to. It is time that each one of us became the kind of godly citizen that if, all citizens were like us, God's reign would prevail.

Maxie Dunnam, by Maxie Dunnam