Matthew 22:41-46 · Whose Son Is the Christ?
Rule of Love
Matthew 22:34-46
Sermon
by Albert G. Butzer III
Loading...

Teacher, which commandment in the law is the greatest? — Matthew 22:36

In one of her books, the eloquent Episcopal priest, Barbara Brown Taylor, wrote these words about the Bible: “My relationship with the Bible is a marriage, not a romance, and one I am willing to work on in all the usual ways.”1 What she meant, of course, was that her relationship with the Bible was like any other serious relationship; it included good days as well as challenging days, days of clarity and days of confusion, days of joy and even days of dread. Everybody has favorite parts of the Bible, verses that make our spirits soar. But what do you do with those troubling parts of scripture, which, unfortunately, certain people like to wield like a club?

For example, last December, just as we Christians were preparing to celebrate the birth of the Christ child, a Baptist minister from Tempe, Arizona gained a lot of notoriety by preaching a sermon against homosexuals. Not only did he declare that “no queers or homos would be allowed in his church,” he also proposed a way to rid the world of AIDS. Quoting from Leviticus 20:13 which says, “If a man lies with a male as with a woman, both of them have committed an abomination; they shall be put to death,” the minister said that the way to get rid of AIDS was to kill all gay people.2 It’s right there in the Bible, part of the Law of Moses.

It goes without saying that reasonable Christian people will disagree about the place of gays and lesbians in society and, yes, even in the church. If we were to ask twelve people in this congregation what they think about gays and lesbians, we would get at least thirteen or fourteen opinions. It is, after all, one of the hot button social issues of our day. But how many of us would agree with that Baptist minister from Arizona who believes that all gay people should be put to death? Hopefully not many of us, but on what basis do we disagree, since he quotes from the Bible to support his opinion?

That’s what I want to talk about today, not so much about homosexuality but about the Bible and how we make sense of it in the midst of this modern world in which God has put us.

As is true of most Christian churches, the Presbyterian Church has had a long colorful history trying to make sense of the Bible and then interpret and apply it to life. Admittedly, this has been a source of tension within the denomination. In 1976, some thoughtful Presbyterians formed a task force to seek answers to a vexing question: “Why do Presbyterians fight with each other so much?” Perhaps, you’ve heard the old joke, which says that wherever a member of the Scottish Macleod family went, a Presbyterian church was sure to follow. And wherever a second member of the Macleod family went, a second Presbyterian Church was sure to follow! Unfortunately, disputes, disagreements, and even schisms seem to be deeply embedded in our Presbyterian DNA.

A task force was appointed in 1976 to find out why. They decided to interview all living past Moderators of the Presbyterian Church, as well as members of the General Assembly staff and other church leaders. When they had finished their research, they came to this conclusion: “The most prevalent cause of conflict among Presbyterians is related to widely differing views of the ways the Old and New Testament  are accepted, interpreted, and applied.” Then the task force added, “It is our opinion that until our church examines this problem, our denomination will continue to be impeded in its mission and ministry, or we will spiral into a destructive schism.”3

Ironically, what happened next was not schism, but reunion! In the early 1980s the two largest branches of the Presbyterian Church in this country, the so-called Northern and Southern churches, reunited 130 years after a major schism that had been caused by the Civil War and different ways of reading the Bible with regard to slavery. In preparing for reunion, each branch of the church created a document that spelled out what they believed about the authority of the Bible and how to interpret and apply it.

Just as people who are dating want to know something about each other before getting too serious, so these two churches before reuniting wanted to know what the other thought about the Bible and how to apply it to day-to-day living.

These statements are wonderfully written, articulate, and carefully capture what Presbyterians think and believe about the Bible. Each statement is twenty pages or more, far too lengthy to discuss in detail in any one sermon, so for today, if you’ll allow me to do so, I want to highlight several points. Maybe it will surprise you to hear this Yankee preacher  say what I am about to say — that I actually prefer the document created by the Southern Church more than the one created by the Northern Church in which I grew up!

The document produced by the Southern Church is called Presbyterian Understanding and Use of Holy Scripture and it lays out a number of important guidelines. One of those guidelines affirms The Centrality of Jesus Christ. Another way to state this guideline is to ask: “Do we worship the Bible, or do we worship the Lord Jesus Christ, to whom the scriptures point and in whom they find their finest and fullest expression?” The guideline states:

No understanding of what scripture teaches us to believe and do can be correct that ignores the central and primary revelation of God’s will through Jesus Christ.4

Another guideline affirms The Interpretation of Scripture by Scripture. In other words, you can’t cherry pick one verse here and another there and claim that those verses, isolated from the message of the Bible as a whole, constitute God’s will and God’s truth.

Yet another guideline is called The Rule of Love, and as you can see, I have borrowed this phrase for the title of this sermon. This is at the heart of what I would say to that Baptist minister from Arizona:

The fundamental expression of God’s will is the twofold commandment to love God and neighbor, and all interpretations of the Bible are to be judged by the question whether they offer and support the love given and commanded by God… Any interpretation of scripture is wrong that separates or sets in opposition love for God and love for fellow human being, including both love expressed in individual relations and in human community. No interpretation of scripture is correct that leads to or supports contempt for any individual or group of people, either within or outside of the church.5

Speaking of the twofold commandment to love God and neighbor, we heard that described for us in this morning’s scripture. According to Matthew, the Pharisees sent a lawyer to put Jesus to the test. Actually, he was more of a Bible scholar than a modern-day lawyer. He was an expert in the law of Moses. “Teacher,” he said to Jesus, “which commandment in the law is the greatest?”

By the way, this Bible scholar was not just thinking of the Ten Commandments. Jewish scholars who counted the laws of Moses came up with 613 commandments scattered throughout the Hebrew Bible. That’s the test he put before Jesus! “Which of all of these 613 is the greatest?”

To answer, Jesus drew one commandment from the book of Deuteronomy: “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul and with all your mind” (Deuteronomy 6:5). Jesus said, “This is the greatest and the first commandment.” Then he drew another from the book of Leviticus, “You shall love your neighbor as yourself” (Leviticus 19:18). In summary he said, “On these two commandments, hang all the law and the prophets.”

According to Professor Tom Long, Jesus’ answer not only established his religious orthodoxy — who can argue with love God and love your neighbor as yourself? — it also challenged the Bible scholar and all like him who think that religion is primarily about keeping the rules. It’s as if the Bible scholar says, “We have 613 rules here; now which rule is the most important?” According to Professor Long, “What Jesus claims is that the whole law is about love, not rules, about really loving God and one’s neighbor, not about figuring out how to avoid stepping on cracks in the legal sidewalk.”6

Because Jesus understood the law to be love-based rather than rules-based, he did all sorts of things throughout his ministry that seemingly broke the rules:

  • He reached out and touched a leper, even though the rules said, “Keep away from people like that.”
  • He healed on the Sabbath day, even though the rules prevented it. “The Sabbath was made for us,” he said, “not us for the Sabbath.”
  • He ate and drank with tax collectors and sinners, even though the rules discouraged it.
  • He befriended foreigners like Samaritans, even though they played by a different set of rules than did the Jews.
  • If Jesus was here today, I am pretty sure he would sit down to eat with his Muslim neighbor and find some reason to praise his neighbor’s faith as he once praised the faith of a Roman centurion.
  • And I would be willing to bet that if Jesus was here today, he would willingly bake a cake or shoot photographs for a gay couple on their wedding day, because love rather than rule-keeping is at the heart of his faith.

“Love God and love your neighbor as yourself,” he said. “Keep only these, and you will find that you are obeying all the others” (The Living Bible).

Amen.


1. Barbara Brown The Preaching Life (Boston: Cowley Publications, 1993), p. 56.
2. “Pastor Calls for Killing Gays to End AIDS” in USA Today December 6, 2014.
3. Jack Rogers, Reading the Bible and the Confessions: The Presbyterian Way (Louisville: Geneva Press, 1999), p. 14.
4. Presbyterian Understanding and Use of Holy Scripture (1983) (Louisville: Published by The Office of the General 1992), p.17.
5. Ibid, pp. 19-20.
6. Thomas G. Long, Matthew, in the Westminster Bible Companion Series (Louisville: Westminster John Knox Press, 1997), pp. 254-255.

CSS Publishing Company, Inc, Choosing to be grateful: gospel sermons for Pentecost (last third) Cycle A, by Albert G. Butzer III