Matthew 6:1-4 · Giving to the Needy
The Assumption Of Discipline
Matthew 6:1-4, Matthew 6:5-15, Matthew 6:16-18, Matthew 6:19-24
Sermon
by John N. Brittain
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You don't need to be told that we live in a superficial society. We (at least men) surf the channels on the television, catching a glimpse of multiple shows without really watching any one in depth. Increasing numbers of us are doing the same with the internet, confusing access to multiple sources of information for comprehension of it. We are obsessed with physical appearance, creating a massive cosmetic surgery industry while many Americans lack basic health care. It used to be a joke when Billy Crystal's Fernando character on Saturday Night Live would say, "It's more important to look good than it is to feel good." It ain't funny any more.

Increasingly, Americans seem to accept it as a given that public life is disconnected from personal morality, so the idea of ethical accountability for public figures or business leaders seems naive and quaint. In the justice system, the search for truth often seems to be obscured by the best game plan or the most corrupt investigators. And on and on it goes. We live in a fast paced world where we often seem to be skimming the surface of things. We assume that this is just the way things are.

The words from Matthew 6, traditionally read on Ash Wednesday to begin Lent, reveal some very different assumptions on the part of Jesus of Nazareth. He knew, of course, that life could be lived at a superficial level, concerned mostly with appearances and with what other people think of us, but he recommends something else. He recommends a pious life, one that not only looks beneath the surface but which lives at a deeper level. Jesus assumes that we will practice piety, and that that will include almsgiving, prayer, fasting, and prioritizing; he assumes that we will live according to some discipline, some method, that pushes us beneath the superficial.

There are those who point out -- and in fact this is one reason that many Christian churches do not observe Lent, or anything like it -- that the spiritual disciplines of which Jesus speaks in this passage -- alms-giving, prayer, and fasting -- simply reflect the Jewish religious practices of his day. They are no longer relevant for us, these Christians argue. All that is relevant for us is the spiritual change that Jesus works in my heart. In a C. S. Lewis discussion group we have seen how that great British Christian thinker approached this line of thought. "We value Shakespeare for the glory of his language and his knowledge of the human heart ..." Lewis wrote in an essay dealing with the doctrine of Christ's return to earth ("The World's Last Night") "not for his belief in witches or the divine right of kings, or his failure to take a daily bath." "When we propose to ignore in a great man's teaching those doctrines which it has in common with the thought of his age," Lewis went on, "we seem to be assuming that the thought of his age was erroneous." So, with regard to today's passage, people might say that these teachings of Jesus no longer apply to us because we are not first century Palestinian Jews.

But, Lewis pointed out, if we accept the doctrine of the Incarnation, that God was fully speaking God's word through Jesus in a unique way, we need to be very cautious in suggesting that the circumstances of his life were a hampering or distorting influence. Indeed, if the word of God became incarnate in what the Apostle Paul called "the fullness of time" (Galatians 4:4), it would suggest that he believed that the timing and cultural setting were just right for God's will to be fully communicated. No wonder Jesus insisted, "Do not think that I have come to abolish the law or the prophets; I have come not to abolish but to fulfill" (Matthew 5:17). The law and the prophets had perfectly set the stage for Jesus' ministry. And Jesus says "whenever you give alms," "whenever you pray," "whenever you fast," not "if" or "in the event you choose to," but "whenever."

Almsgiving, charity in the modern sense of the word, is always open to abuse. It can be done in a hypocritical and self-serving manner. It can be a fertile area for graft and fraud. It was a scandal in Jesus' day as it sometimes is in ours that those charged with administering the distribution of aid to the poor (the priests and Levites in the Jerusalem Temple, for instance) often kept too much for themselves. But in spite of potential abuses, almsgiving -- giving to sustain others in need -- is an important part of the life of faith for at least two reasons: it reminds us that we have a responsibility to see to the welfare of others because we are all children of God; that after all there is only one class and race of people, the human race. We may create all kinds of pecking orders and hierarchies and class systems, but in God's sight we are all the same, and in the end, Jesus reminds us, it is God who is doing the important looking. Almsgiving also reminds us of our own vulnerability as persons. I grew up in Cleveland, Ohio. The home of the Cleveland Orchestra is "Severance Hall," named for the industrialist couple who were benefactors of many causes in Cleveland in the 1920s, including classical music. My mother would often comment on how, when the Great Depression struck, the Severances lost everything, including their home, and a small apartment was provided for them in the upper levels of the concert hall they had built. They ended up -- at least the way Mom told the story -- in worse shape than her family.

A student I am currently supervising has been researching church-related aid to the poor in Evansville and has impressively documented what I hope we all know: that the vast majority of persons in this community who are receiving aid -- whether government or private -- are not the stereotypical welfare cheats of political rhetoric. Most are white and either elderly, disabled, or working poor. When you meet these folks and talk with them, at a place like the inner city ministry Patchwork Central or the Evansville Rescue Mission, you realize how much we have in common. They are us and we are them. We become keenly aware that most persons who are giving aid are one short step -- loss of a job, catastrophic injury or illness --away from needing it. Almsgiving, in other words, enables us to keep our perspective on the world, and to be in a right relationship with other persons.

Anybody who is serious about walking with God comes to see that prayer has to be the main business in life, because it is through prayer that we are in communication with God and become increasingly sensitive to God's will. Of course prayer can be abused: it can be a showy public display of piety or a means of self-deception as we try to convince ourselves that our selfish desires are really God's doing. But, as in the case of almsgiving, the abuses do not negate the practice. "In the morning, while it was still very dark," we read in Mark 1, "(Jesus) got up and went out to a deserted place, and there he prayed." When the apostles were tempted to invest their time and energies in other very necessary and important tasks in the exciting days of rapid expansion in the Jerusalem Christian community, they determined to give themselves continually to prayer and the ministry of the word (Acts 6:4). And Martin Luther, when asked how he managed all his affairs, declared, "I have so much business I cannot get on without spending three hours daily in prayer." John Wesley spent two hours per day.

Obviously this investment in prayer is not just to praise God although it is for that; nor is it simply to ask God for mercies, while that clearly is important as well. Perhaps the most important part of prayer is to listen in God's presence, to be molded and formed by God so that we come to be more the person God intended us to be. This can bring genuine liberation and peace of mind to us. It also lays great responsibilities on us as we become more attuned to God's will for us. So if almsgiving enables us to be in a right relationship with other persons, prayer keeps us in right relationship with God.

But then what about fasting? In our culture where the landscape is dotted not with shrines of Baal nor temples of Aphrodite but by Golden Arches, fasting certainly seems out of place. Jesus says that fasting is not to be a show, and we have to remember not to confuse it with the excessive and masochistic mortification of the Middle Ages. Nor is it dieting, which has a physical motivation, nor a hunger strike which has a political or public relations focus, nor even a planned famine to raise money for the hungry, all of which are good things, but not fasting. Fasting, which is found throughout the Bible, is to abstain periodically from food in order to focus one's time, energy, and being more fully on God. But because fasting involves a sacrifice, not of time, like prayer, nor of money, like almsgiving, but of food it does put us more in tune with our bodies, our inspirited selves. It reminds us of what we need, as opposed to what we want, and of what is good for us rather than what tastes good.

When we look at these disciplines, which Jesus assumes believers will practice, we cannot but be struck by something. Almsgiving brings us in right relationship with other people; prayer brings us in right relationship with God; fasting brings us in right relationship with ourselves, our own bodies. Does that remind you of any Bible passage from Sunday School days? How about Mark 12:29-31: "Jesus answered, 'The first (commandment) is, "Hear, O Israel: the Lord our God, the Lord is one; you shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind, and with all your strength." The second is this, "You shall love your neighbor as yourself." There is no other commandment greater than these.'"

The fact that virtually anyone who even toys with the idea of Christianity -- and many who do not -- recognize these words as the two Great Commandments but are uncomfortable with the traditional spiritual disciplines of almsgiving, prayer, and fasting shows the extent to which our Christian faith has become very superficial. We think that we can assent to the Christian ideal without living it; that we can affirm the need to be in a right relationship with God, our fellows, and ourselves and not do anything about it. Not so, says Jesus. "Whenever you give alms, whenever you pray, whenever you fast."

Life is a matter of priorities. We all know that. But priorities are lived, not just spoken. Do those things that fulfill the commandments, Jesus says. Do not store up treasures on earth, but in heaven. Set your priorities straight; do those things which put you in a right relationship with others, with God and with yourselves. We need them all the time, not just at Lent.

CSS Publishing Company, THE BACKSIDE OF GOD, by John N. Brittain