Matthew 6:1-4 · Giving to the Needy
Practicing Righteousness
Matthew 6:1-4
Sermon
by Richard A. Jensen
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Our minds remember the strangest things. Back when I was a freshman in college we all had to give speeches in English class. Henry gave a speech that I remember to this day. The thrust of his brief speech was to refute the old adage that, "Practice makes perfect." Henry’s point was that practice only makes perfect that which you practice. In other words you may practice something, say a piece of music on the piano, and have several of the notes wrong. You practice and practice until you play the piece perfectly. But you are playing it perfectly wrong. Several of the notes are incorrect. Practice in this case does not make perfect. It only makes perfect that which you are practicing.

In our text for today, Jesus also seems to be refuting the "Practice makes perfect" saying. "Beware of practicing your piety before men in order to be seen by them." That is the way the text begins. The word piety is used in the Revised Standard Version to translate the Greek word for righteousness. "Beware of practicing your righteousness before others." That is what Jesus says. Such a practice does not make perfect at all.

The opening words of our text find Jesus saying a NO word to the public practice of righteousness. That NO word is repeated several times in the text. But there is a YES word as well. Jesus says YES to the practice of righteousness that is done in secret.

Let’s look at the NO word first. Jesus says NO to practiced righteousness, to public righteousness, to righteousness that is paraded before people for its own sake. In saying this NO word, Jesus says NO to three very important elements of Jewish piety. Jesus says NO to almsgiving, NO to prayer, and NO to fasting. But let’s be clear about the intention of Jesus’ words. There is certainly nothing wrong with giving alms, praying, and fasting. But these acts of piety can be practiced wrongly. When almsgiving, prayer, and fasting are practiced for public show - that’s when there is a problem. Practice alone does not make perfect.

Jesus’ first NO is almost comical. He gives us a picture of a person giving alms. Picture this person coming into your church just at the time for the Sunday offering. You’re digging into your purse or wallet to find something to give and suddenly you hear this loud sound. Your ears split with the noise. Across the church, down the aisle, a man is walking towards the altar playing the trumpet with one hand and holding his offering high with the other.

Jesus says NO to that practice of almsgiving, that kind of offering, that kind of public righteousness. But let us not judge the trumpet playing man too quickly. Quite often we have our own ways, don’t we, of publicly practicing our offerings? I certainly always liked it when the list of figures was posted of the number of people (no names were given), who gave $1 weekly, $5 weekly, $10 weekly, and so on. I enjoyed finding out how high I ranked on that list even though very few people knew it. I knew it! And I was sure God knew it. "Beware of practicing your righteousness before others." Jesus says NO to me in these words. He says NO to any who would try to place a public dollar sign on their practice of righteousness.

And then Jesus says NO to the prayers of the hypocrites of Jesus’ day who experienced it. I think the most incredible story I ever heard about public prayer was a story about a woman who was about to die. Her family was gathered, her pastor was there. All held hands. As they did, the dying woman prayed a marvelous prayer that moved all present to tears. Soon afterward the pastor left the room. As soon as he left, the woman asked the family members, "Did I do all right?" There is simply something built deeply into the human heart that drives us to ask for credit for our public practice of righteousness.

And Jesus says NO to those who disfigure their faces when they fast. Jesus says NO to that kind of public righteousness. Fasting is a good thing. But fasting should be done before God, in secret.

Fasting, like almsgiving and prayer, should not call attention to itself. When it does, it has its own rewards. The public practice of righteousness, after all, is always rewarded. Jesus makes that clear. If I practice my righteousness publicly, I’ll be rewarded. There is no doubt about it. Those who see me will think I am a good and pious person. That’s my reward. But that’s my only reward. God, after all, doesn’t operate on the reward system.

Righteousness practiced in public. These verses make it very clear what that is. I think we have all seen it. I think we have all done it. We have received our rewards. But our reward is not from God. God, through Jesus, says NO to the public practice of righteousness.

But enough of the negative. Jesus also speaks positively in this text. Jesus also has a YES word. Jesus says YES to the practice of hidden righteousness. The riddle of this hidden righteousness is most clearly seen in verse 3, "when you give alms, do not let your left hand know what your right hand is doing." Don’t let your left hand know what your right hand is doing! That’s how one practices hidden righteousness. Hidden righteousness doesn’t even know it is acting righteously. It’s a secret. It’s a secret kept even from ourselves. But God knows the secret. God sees the secret. God rewards the secret.

How are we to practice this hidden righteousness? It would seem that if we understand it, if we know about it, then it’s gone, then it’s no longer a secret, then it’s no longer righteousness. This theme of hidden righteousness is present in other parts of Matthew’s gospel. It is present in the judgment parable in Matthew 25. Jesus tells us that God will separate the sheep from the goats. The sheep inherit the kingdom prepared for them from the foundation of the world. They receive it because they saw Jesus hungry, thirsty, a stranger, and so on, and they helped him. Do you remember how the righteous ones responded to Jesus in this parable? They asked him when they had done these fine deeds. They didn’t know. They couldn’t remember. Their left hand had obviously not known what their right hand was doing. The sheep who inherit the kingdom of God are those whose practice of righteousness is hidden from their own eyes.

In order to grasp and to be grasped by this hidden and secret righteousness of God, we must once again remind ourselves of the way righteousness is portrayed in Matthew’s gospel. The very first word Jesus speaks in this gospel, is his word to John the Baptizer. John felt unworthy to baptize Jesus. Jesus insisted that John baptize him. Jesus’ words were, "Let it be so now; for thus it is fitting for us to fulfill all righteousness" (Matthew 3:15). The text is clear. Jesus is the one in whom all righteousness dwells.

When we as Christians are baptized, we are baptized in the name of Jesus. The New Testament makes it clear in a number of places that our baptism in Jesus’ name joins us to the death and resurrection of Jesus, the Righteous One. "Do you not know that all of us who have been baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized into his death?" (Romans 6:3). That is the way Paul puts it. In baptism we are buried with Christ that we might be raised with Christ.

Let me just try to picture for you what is happening here. I would like to compare our lives when we are baptized to a seed that is sown or buried in the earth. The sown seed is hidden from sight. It lives in a secret underworld. No one can see what is happening to that seed and yet, beneath the earth, God’s miracle of growth is taking place. The seed is hidden from sight now, but one day it will burst forth as a tall beautiful plant. Only then do we see it. God has seen it happening all the time. God works with the seed on its way from burial to new life.

So it is with baptism. Our lives are buried with Christ and his righteousness in the waters of baptism. As the buried ones, our lives are hidden with Christ. We walk in a secret underworld where all is darkness. We don’t know what is happening to us there. No one else knows what is happening to us either! But the Righteous One knows what is happening there. The Righteous One is remaking us there in the dark. We are being recreated, remade, reborn, so that we can burst forth one day as tall righteous plants of God’s making.

And we do burst forth. We come out of the waters of baptism as God’s newly made righteous people. We live now in Christ’s righteousness. The Righteous One lives in us. His righteousness, note, his righteousness, shines forth from our lives. And because it is his righteousness that lives in us, we hardly ever recognize it. "Our left hand doesn’t know what our right hand is doing." Or, like the sheep in the judgment day parable, we can’t seem to remember when it was that we served Jesus by serving people in need.

We are called to practice this hidden righteousness, this righteousness of Christ living in our lives. We practice this hidden righteousness when we daily renew our baptism. We practice this hidden righteousness when we ask daily that our strong desire to practice our own public righteousness be drowned. We practice this hidden righteousness when we daily ask that our lives be buried with Christ so that Christ’s righteousness may live and grow in us.

Our text makes it clear that Jesus says NO to all the ways in which we try to publically practice our own righteousness. But Jesus says YES to the practice of hidden righteousness. Jesus says YES to the new life that is created in us in the dark and secret working of God within us. Jesus says YES to a new life that he sees even when we and those around us see nothing at all. Jesus says YES to us because he sees his righteousness, he sees his own life, alive and working within us.

CSS Publishing Co., Inc., Crucified Ruler, The, by Richard A. Jensen