Luke 6:17-26 · Blessings and Woes
Skating To Where The Puck Is Going To Be
Luke 6:17-26
Sermon
by Frank Lyman
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In his book, South Carolina Off The Beaten Path, William Fox tells an apocryphal story of two wealthy Charleston matrons who escaped Charleston's oppressive heat by summering in Paris. When they fell upon hard times and could no longer afford Paris they shuttered themselves inside their home, venturing out only at night to catch the ocean breeze. One night a boy recognized them and was ready to greet them, when his mother stopped him by saying, "No, son. We can't talk to them, they're spending the summer in Paris." (1)

When it comes to hearing the blessings and woes of Jesus, there's a temptation to be like those Charleston matrons, pretending that we're hearing something different from what Jesus is saying.

Jesus begins with words we like: "Blessed are . . ." So far so good. Who doesn't like blessings? Blessings are divine pronouncements of God's good will. We want to hear more. Blessed are . . . who?

Jesus' answer is not to our liking. "Blessed are . . . the poor, the hungry, those who weep, those who are hated, excluded, reviled and defamed." If we're hearing Jesus right it means that the poorer we are, the hungrier we are, the sadder and more despised we are, the more blessed we are! Thanks a lot! If the poor, hungry and despised are blest, then who are the ones of whom Jesus says, "Woe to you?"

The news is not good. "Woe to you who are rich, who laugh and have everyone speaking well of you." If we are hearing Jesus right, it means that if our oceanfront condo is paid for, if we have a good sense of humor and are popular around the office, then we're really in trouble!

Those whom the world calls wretched Jesus calls blessed, and those whom the world loves, Jesus says, had better watch out! To understand what Jesus is saying we need to examine the context of the story. LET'S BEGIN WITH THE BLESSINGS OF BEING POOR.

Jesus is speaking to a crowd of people. They "had come to hear him and to be healed of their diseases."(Luke 6:48) Jesus then comes down and stands in the midst of them, at their level. This is essentially a re-telling of the Christmas story. At Christmas we celebrate how God came down from heaven to live among us, and here that story is repeated. Jesus stands with those who need his healing touch.

Picture them brushing against our Lord. Picture their broken, twisted bodies. Sense the presence of the addicted, the poor, people whose bodies are ravaged by cancer, those whose minds are troubled, and picture Jesus, not as a four-color picture from a Bible page, but as God incarnate, allowing people to touch him.

Some came to hear Jesus. There's an ironic note here. Luke reports "a great cloud of his disciples" listening to Jesus. Note that we are reading this in February. When Good Friday rolls around later this Spring, that "great cloud of disciples" will be reduced to one disciple, John! Only he was loving enough to be with Jesus when he breathed his last. In light of his disciples' fickleness, is it any wonder that Jesus addressed them by saying, "Woe to you when all speak well of you?"(Luke 6:26) Jesus knew that when all speak well of us, we must not be saying very much!

Jesus gives his blessing to the poor, the hungry and the hated. He never says it's good to be poor, hungry or hated. It is not good. Jesus is saying that since the poor, the hungry and the hated are despised, they have a special place in the heart of God. As liberation theologian Gustavo Gutierrez has written, "God has a preferential love for the poor not because they are necessarily better than others . . . but simply because they are poor and living in an inhuman situation that is contrary to God's will." (2)

As Christians, we are the body of Christ in today's world. We have a special responsibility to touch those whom Jesus touched, for we believe that each person carries within him the Imago Dei, the image of God. Jesus never said that it's good to be poor, hungry or despised. He did say that they are blessed because they have something to look forward to. Jesus said the poor shall have the kingdom of God, the hungry will be filled and the despised shall be rewarded in heaven.

AS WE HEED THE BLESSINGS TO THE POOR FOUND IN LUKE 6, WE ALSO MUST PAY ATTENTION TO THE WOES CHRIST ACCORDS TO THE RICH. "What's so woeful about being rich?" we may legitimately ask. We can't say exactly what Jesus meant here, but we do know that there is a great danger for those who are obsessed with gaining material possessions, for obsession with obtaining great wealth has a tendency to do two things.

FIRST OF ALL, IT HAS A TENDENCY TO GET OUR VALUES

OUT OF WHACK. We start valuing the acquisition of things over spending time with our family and friends. We start valuing goods more than our responsibility to God. A pastor with limited means tells of attending the North American Auto Show. As he entered that massive display, he lost all perspective. Initially he looked at the more modest cars. But soon his eyes began to wander and soon he was drawn to the glamorous and expensive. The highlight was sitting behind the wheel of the ultimate sport utility vehicle, none other than a genuine Hummer! What a feeling of power! He asked the salesman how much the Hummer cost and was told somewhere around $80,000. He nodded his head as if he'd just been told that the corner grocer was selling Snicker Bars, two for a dollar! He began to fantasize . . . "We're now a family of three drivers," he thought to himself, "don't we need a third car? Doesn't every red-blooded American family need a van, a sedan and a Hummer!" He discovered very quickly that being rich, or imagining himself as rich, warped his sense of what really matters!

Wealth can do that do us. However it can also do something else--something more subtle, yet more deadly. IT CAN DEADEN US TO THE SPIRITUAL REWARDS THAT AWAIT THOSE WHO SERVE GOD.

The key to the woes that Jesus speaks of is found when Jesus says, "Woe to you who are rich, for you have received your consolation." (Luke 6:24) Is he not implying that those who seek their own security through wealth have nothing to look forward to? We are not designed to live merely for the pleasure of today, we live with an eye to the future. F.R. Maltby captured this when he wrote, "Jesus promised his disciples that they would be completely fearless, absurdly happy and constantly in trouble."

Christians anticipate the future. We look forward instead of backwards. It's like a conscientious choral director working with a choir. In the rehearsals she teaches them to sit forward on the edge of their chairs rather than sitting back. She teaches them to lean into their notes, rather than react to them, and it works! The choir sings better. Anticipating the future is better than reacting to the present!

It's not an easy concept to master. There is a famous quote from the hockey star, Wayne Gretzky with which many of you are familiar. In explaining his enormous success, the always modest Great One replied, "I just skate to where the puck is going to be." Gretsky claimed the ability to anticipate the direction that the puck was going and the ability to get there first. That is not as easy as it sounds. Even most professional hockey players race to catch up with the puck.

So it is with the Christian faith! IT TAKES PRACTICE TO GET IT RIGHT: TO LOVE THE POOR, THE HUNGRY, AND THE HATED, TO HAVE WITHIN US THE MIND OF CHRIST JESUS. WE CAN DO IT ONLY IF OUR EYES ARE ON THE FUTURE, NOT ON THE PAST.

We can learn from the example of people like Lech Walesa, Poland's longtime freedom fighter who became his country's first democratically elected president. You may remember that Walesa was working in a shipyard when he rose from obscurity in 1980 to lead the Solidarity movement that eventually toppled Poland's old Soviet-backed government.

After leading his nation to freedom, and then serving as its leader, Walesa has chosen to return to that same shipyard. Today he works for a salary of about two hundred dollars a month. (3)

Two hundred dollars a month! He could be making millions on the celebrity lecture circuit. After all, he has a Nobel Peace Prize and an honorary degree from Harvard University, but Lech Walesa's commitment is to the people of his country. Do you believe that he could make that kind of sacrifice if he did not believe in the future? His example is a challenge to all of us. It takes practice to live the Christ life. It takes commitment, sacrifice! I came across a powerful poem that's an illustration of how we want God on our terms. It goes like this:

I would like to buy $5.00 worth of God, please;
not enough to explode my soul or distract my sleep,
but just enough to equal a warm cup of milk,
or a snooze in the sunshine.
I don't want enough of (God) to make me love the outcast
or pick beets with a migrant,
I want ecstasy, not transformation;
I want the warmth of the womb, not a new birth,
I want a part of the eternal in a paper sack.
I would like to buy $5.00 worth of God, please.

Jesus demands more than $5.00 worth of God. We are more to him than that. Jesus taught that when a seed falls into the earth, what emerges from the ground is something quite different from the original seed. So, when we die and fall into the earth, what emerges is not our old self, but a new creation, eternally bound to God. If our destiny is eternal life with God, then it's now time to skate to where God is, to learn to love, even as Jesus loves.

We believe in the future and that belief allows Christ to work a change in our lives. We believe in our future as new creatures in Christ.

Max Lucado writes humorously of a transformation in his life. He writes,

"Most of my life I have been a closet slob. I was slow to see the logic of neatness. Why make up a bed if you are going to sleep in it again tonight? . . . Life was too short to match your socks; just buy longer pants! And then I got married.

"Denalyn was so patient. She said she didn't mind my habits . . . if I didn't mind sleeping outside. I enrolled in a twelve-step program for slobs. My nose was reintroduced to the fragrance of Pine Sol. I was a new man. I could go three days without throwing a sock behind the couch.

"But then came the moment of truth. Denalyn went out of town for a week. I figured I'd be a slob for six days and clean on the seventh. But something strange happened. I couldn't relax with dirty dishes in the sink. When I saw an empty potato chip sack on the floor I . . . bent over and picked it up! What had happened to me? Simple. I'd been exposed to a higher standard."(4)

Jesus is our higher standard, and the closer we are to him, the more ready we are to embrace the un-embraced. We are skating to the place Jesus wants us to be, a place where we are completely fearless, absurdly happy and constantly in trouble, for the glory of God!


l. Adapted from Eugene Winkler's sermon, "Learning To Count."

2.Gutierrez, Gustavo, Voices From The Margin, pg. 131.

3. Finish Strong: Living the Values That Take You The Distance by Richard G. Capen, Jr., Harper Collins, New York, 1996, p. 84.

4. From Brian Bauknight's sermon, "A Samaritan Woman: The Ultimate Thirst Quencher.

Dynamic Preaching, Collected Sermons, by Frank Lyman