Leviticus 19:1-37 · Various Laws
The Call to be Holy in Love
Leviticus 19:1-37
Sermon
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Mr. Poppovich is a widower who lives in his own house with a neat, well-kept yard. Mr. Poppovich is very angry at the kids in his changing neighborhood because they kick the soccer ball in his yard and crush his marigolds. He has threatened to shoot the kids. One day he comes out of his house with a shotgun. He fires the gun, hits and kills a teenager. Mr. Poppovich is under siege in his own home by angry, hate-filled neighbors.

This story, on an episode of Hill Street Blues several years ago, found officers Hill and Renko called to the scene. They radio for help and Lt. Henry Goldblum arrives. Goldblum negotiates with Mr. Poppovich and goes into the house to talk to him. During their conversation, Mr. Poppovich says to Goldblum, "This used to be a nice neighborhood. I could send my daughter day or night to the grocery store for milk. There used to be a Polish bakery on the corner with still-warm bread for sale. Now you go to the supermarket and pay $1.80 for chemical garbage. Blacks and Hispanics* have moved into the neighborhood. There is garbage in the streets. I've seen them go to the bathroom in doorways. Garbage! Nobody gives a damn about life anymore!"

(* In the actual over-the-air TV dialogue, Mr. Poppovich said, "Niggers and Spicks.")

This harsh and profane slice of life shown on Hill Street Blues reveals a neighborhood that is not a community in which people live together with mutual concern and respect. There is no care for one another by treating each other justly and honestly. No one acts to restore another's property and freedom. No one loves one's neighbor as oneself. Mr. Poppovich's neighborhood is filled with suspicion, anger, and hatred. The result of such drastic brokenness of community is death.

For us, as for ancient Israel in today's Old Testament lesson, living together in community is to result in life rather than death. God's people are to be holy people and our holiness is to permeate the totality of our lives, so life in its full humanness, rather than death, will result. God calls us to be holy and our holiness is manifested in our love for our neighbor.

God, who has delivered Israel from slavery in Egypt and us from slavery to sin, death, the law, and the devil, in the death and resurrection of Jesus, is holy. The holy God calls, demands that we, God's people, be holy. Because of God's holy love for us, the totality of our lives is to be holy. There is to be no separation of our lives into sacred and secular, holy and profane. All of life is holy to God, and should be holy for us. The 19th chapter of Leviticus combines together a series of laws that deals with religious, cultic concerns and the everyday stuff of our life. In all of life we are called to be holy.

Specifically, in living together in community, we are called to be holy through living life as God structures and wills it. In our text for today, the commandments of our holy God call us to live day-to-day in the realities of life together in the human community. To be holy means to provide food for the hungry and poor so they may live. To be holy means to treat others justly and honestly in labor relations, in daily realities, and in the institutional structures of our community. To be holy means to restore property and freedom to those who have lost theirs. To be holy is to manifest a deep and conscious concern for the weak, the poor, the defenseless, the stranger. A holy people care for the oppressed, seek justice everywhere, and honor right dealings above all else. The summation of this series of commands to be holy in our life together in community is to love our neighbor as we love ourselves.

In Mr. Poppovich's neighborhood, engulfed in swift and radical change, there seemed to be no neighbor to love. The diversity of ethnic, economic, and national backgrounds meant that each group did not see the members of the other group as neighbors to be loved. Such a reality is always possible for people, whether they are God's people called to be holy or not.

For ancient Israel in the Holiness Code, one's neighbor was a member of the covenant community of Israel. A fellow Israelite was to be loved, fed, cared for. Later in the 19th chapter, the stranger who sojourns in the land of Israel is to be loved as the neighbor. It is clear that, for the church, our neighbors are definitely those people who are members of the covenant community of our Lord Jesus. But to define neighbor in that way only is to do so in too narrow a fashion.

In Luke's Gospel, after Jesus has summarized for the lawyer the will of God as loving God with the whole self and loving your neighbor as yourself, the lawyer asks the question, "Who is my neighbor?" Jesus then tells the parable of the Good Samaritan. The parable of the Good Samaritan proclaims that to ask "Who is my neighbor?" is to ask the inappropriate question. The appropriate question rather is "To whom am I a neighbor?" Our crucified and risen Lord gave freely of his life for us and for all people. In the cross of Christ we see the universal love of God revealed for all people. Anyone who needs us, our care, our love, is our neighbor.

In today's Gospel from Matthew, Jesus even further broadens our understanding of who is our neighbor. The Lord says we are to love our enemies and pray for those who persecute us. In loving our enemies we then imitate God's gracious love and fulfill the command of our Lord to be perfect as God is perfect. Perfection in this sense is the perfection of love for all, excluding no person. To be perfect is to be undivided, whole-hearted. To love all who need our love, even those who are enemies, is to be single-mindedly fixed upon our God and the love with which God loves us and all people.

To be holy is to be separate from, different from other people. God is the Holy One, separate from the creation which the Lord made and redeemed. The Lord Jesus was and is holy, separate from, radically different than other people. When reviled, Jesus did not revile in return. When hated, Jesus did not hate in return. Where others might have expected and shown vindictiveness and rejection, Jesus rather loved and accepted the outcasts, the despised, the down-and-out. Even when nailed fast to the tree of the cross, Jesus prayed that those who executed him might be forgiven. In Jesus we see manifested most clearly and pointedly the holiness of our God.

In our neighborhood, in our congregation, in our schools, in our work places, in our town, state, and nation we are called to be separate from, different from the world. We are called to be holy, the oddballs of God. We are to manifest the holiness to which God calls us, not in hating and destroying community, but in loving service to our neighbor, to whoever is in need of us, in whatever way and with whatever gifts we have. The light of the holy God shines in the darkness of our world, illumining us and calling us to be holy as we love our neighbor.

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