Matthew 6:1-4 · Giving to the Needy
Return to the Lord, Your God
Matthew 6:1-6, 16-21
Sermon
by Lee Griess
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Every once in a while a whimsical story makes the news. A couple of years ago, the Associated Press carried a story about a woman in Olney, England, named Dawn Gallyot who defied snow and a biting wind to beat seven other women to the finish line in the annual Shrove Tuesday pancake race. In her first race, the 38-year-old schoolteacher made the 415-yard dash from a pub in the market square to the Church of St. Peter and St. Paul with a pancake and a frying pan in her hand in 73 seconds. That was 9.5 seconds slower than the previous year's pace. Each woman must flip a pancake in the frying pan at the start and at the finish of the race. The record is 58 seconds. Mrs. Gallyot reportedly wore a traditional headscarf and apron, but opted for modern running shoes.

Shrove Tuesday, known in England as Pancake Day, is traditionally the last day for merrymaking before the start of Lent. Pancakes are thought to be a good way to get in the eggs and fat that faithful church people were supposed to give up for Lent. Legend has it that the Olney race started in 1445 when a housewife, dashing to get to church on time, arrived at the service clutching in her hand a frying pan with a pancake still in it.

The pancake race is but one of many traditions that have grown up around the season of Lent. New Orleans' Mardi Gras is another — one last blowout before a season of denial. Throughout the years, Lent has become associated with fasting and denial. Even today many people talk about giving up something during Lent. Some stop eating meat. Some give up coffee. For others it's chocolate or desserts. And that's all well and good, but the real intent of Lent is that should we look within. We should change our hearts and not our diets.

That's what Jesus means when he talks about fasting in the passage from Matthew. Remember what he said? "When you fast, don't look somber as the hypocrites do for they disfigure their faces to show others they are fasting. For I tell you, they have already received their reward." God doesn't want an outward display from us. God doesn't want us to change our eating habits. God wants us to change our hearts. God wants a change within. The Old Testament prophet Joel puts it well when he says, " ‘Even now,' says the Lord, ‘return to me with all your heart, with fasting and weeping and mourning.' Rend your heart and not your garments."

The first task of Lent is not fasting or alms giving. It's not giving up sweets or going off fatty foods. It is repentance — repentance that brings us before the Lord with penitent, contrite hearts. That's what Jesus is saying in the passage from Matthew. "Don't put on a show with your acts of righteousness ... Don't even let your left hand know what your right hand is doing ... And when you fast, do it in secret. For your Father who knows what is done in secret will reward you." Lent tells us to repent of our sinfulness; to look within and purify our hearts. As the prophet Joel says, "Return to the Lord, your God...." Repent of your sinfulness. Turn back, change directions, make a new start from an old life and do so without making a show of it.

As we begin this season of Lent, we are invited to bring our sins and lay them before the throne of God. We are invited to unburden our souls in repentance. We are directed to come before the Lord our God with open hearts and make a new start within.

Sometime ago, I read an article in the newspaper about a man who walked into the Sacramento Police Headquarters and confessed to a crime he had committed fifteen years before. According to the article, the police were dumbfounded. They had no record of the crime and certainly no active investigation of it. In fact, the crime was so insignificant that they refused to even prosecute the man. And yet, the man insisted that he be charged with the crime so that he could "do the time." The reason for his confession? He said, "I just haven't been able to get it off my mind." Now here was a man willing to subject himself to punishment in order to restore his peace of mind.

And that's what God has in mind for us when he says, "Return to the Lord, your God...." Return. Turn back. Repent and begin a new life. Lent is a time of repentance, a time for confession and the beginning of a new life. Because, as the prophet Joel tells us, "God is gracious and merciful, slow to anger and abounding in steadfast love."

Now, repentance does little good if its only purpose is to show off. Repentance has no reward if it is done as a public display of our righteousness. That's what Jesus warns us of when he says: "Let your acts of righteousness be done in secret ... Let your fasting be done in private ... For your Father who sees what is done in secret will reward you."

Lent is a time, not only of repentance, but also of forgiveness (the word we use in church is "absolution"). Lent tells us that God so loved the world that he gave up his only Son on a cross for us that through that one man's death, God might grant us forgiveness. Jesus reminds us that our God, who is unseen, will reward our penitent hearts. God will see within.

An old Scottish clergyman once said that the devil really has only two lies to tell us. The first lie the devil tells us comes before we commit a sin when the devil says that it doesn't matter what we do for no one will know. The second lie the devil tells us comes after we've sinned when the devil tells us that no one can forgive us what we have done.

Lent is not only a time of repentance. It is also a time of forgiveness. Yes, Lent tells us that no sin is too little to go without notice, for we have a God who sees what is done in secret. But Lent also tells us that no sin is too great to be forgiven — for we have a God who can see within the heart. Lent is a time for repentance and forgiveness.

And there is one more point. Lent is also a time of renewal. Contrary to most people's opinion, Lent is a time of hope, a time of renewal, a time of refreshment. It is a time to turn over our burdens to the Lord, knowing that God will receive them in forgiveness and love.

In the Musee de Chagall in the Mediterranean city of Nice hangs Marc Chagall's painting of The Sacrifice of Isaac, a favorite theme of the Jewish painter. The painting depicts Abraham as he is about to plunge the knife into the heart of his only son, Isaac. But an angel has seized his hand and off to the side of the stone altar that Isaac lies upon a ram has been caught by its horns in the bushes. God provided the sacrifice to take the boy's place. Up in the corner of the painting, however, is another figure. It is Jesus carrying his cross to Golgotha. It's an amazing picture, especially for a Jewish artist, and it is a theme for us in Lent.

Lent reminds us that there is one who bears our sins before the throne of God. There is one who hears the cries of our hearts and receives them. There is one who waits to welcome us home. That is why the prophet's words are so important for us. "Return to the Lord, your God." If we repent of our sins, there is a gift of forgiveness awaiting us. If we turn from our sinful ways, there is a heavenly Father waiting to welcome us home. On this Ash Wednesday when we bear on our brows the ashen mark of our sins, let us heed the prophet's words. Let us turn to the Lord our God that the ashes of our sins be so compressed by the grace of God that we might sparkle like diamonds in the crown of the Lord, our God. In Jesus' name. Amen.

CSS Publishing Company, Inc., Return to The Lord, Your God, by Lee Griess