Luke 4:14-30 · Jesus Rejected at Nazareth
The Limits Of Love
Luke 4:14-30
Sermon
by Charles H. Bayer
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Toward the end of the Old Testament history, a controversy arose about how far God's grace and care extended. The real question was not put in those metaphysical terms, but took shape as the Jewish people thought about how far their love extended. Some held that in order to maintain the purity of worship and faith it was necessary to eliminate all foreign influences. Cited in support of this argument was the historic debacle of Solomon, whose foreign wives, with their back-home religions, caused endless trouble for Israel.

When the rag-tag group of returnees from Babylon defined the rules they were to live by, the leaders were quite certain that God's care could not extend beyond the blood line of the Hebrew people. "No intermarriage!" said Ezra, the priest. The race had to be kept pure. Foreign wives were a plague. Since Semitic peoples of all sorts, including Jews, often made their points by telling stories -- like Jesus, the parable maker -- old cautionary tales such as those about Esther or Daniel were recited. In these stories the preservation of God's people in the face of the demonic influences of foreigners was the clear point. Such conservative, albeit heroic, stories were bound to foster xenophobia. The purity of religion, and the race, had to be preserved. Foreign influence was to be zealously guarded against.

At the same time there were those on the other side of the argument who had a somewhat expanded notion of God's providence. While holding just as much reverence for the law as did the conservatives, these religious and cultural liberals did not believe God's grace was limited to those of their own race. They too told stories.

There was the story of Jonah, who refused to believe that the foreigners in Ninevah could possibly be saved and only preached in that God-forsaken place when a great fish delivered him up on its shore. There was also the story of Ruth, a despised Moabite, who not only was accepted into the community by marriage, but became part of David's royal bloodline. "No intermarriage!" said the orthodox. "What about Ruth?" shot back the liberals. And so the debate went on for centuries, sometimes one side prevailing and sometimes the other. But then Israel was not the first people, nor the last, to cycle from internationalism to isolationism and back again.

Often the debate takes place as one section of a nation is more open to the influence of foreigners than another. There are areas within the United States known to be more conservative than others. Folks who live there are less likely to welcome outsiders, foreigners or those who don't look or sound like the run of the mill members of the population. We tend to think of what is called "The Bible Belt" or the old South, neither of which historically welcomed Jews or foreigners with open arms. It was not that these areas have been irreligious or lacking in Christian influence, but that the God of the prevailing religion had rather limited tastes and remarkably defined prejudices. There are places where you can talk about God's love only as long as you don't mean everybody!

Jesus took a clear position on this matter. In fact, he went farther than any of his countrymen, even the most liberal, had dared go. While Jesus came from the rural and more conservative hill country, he held that not only did God care about those who were not Jews, sometimes God had a preferential option for outsiders. Of all the gospels, the book of Luke most clearly makesthe point. There are, according to Jesus, no limits to God's love. The hero of one of his most famous stories was a Samaritan. Women play an important part. He heals the daughter of a Roman soldier. He had dinner with a traitor -- a tax collector. Every time you cometo the borders of love, Jesus penetrates them, and claims God does too. And that was tough to swallow for those who were certain that the divine blessing could not possibly extend beyond their own kind.

Jesus addressed the question early in his ministry. It was at his first public appearance in his hometown synagogue he first made the point. He had read the passage from Isaiah, which laid out the compassionate nature of divine love. He, as God's servant, was to take up Isaiah's messianic mission. He had come to preach to the poor, the captives, the blind and the oppressed. Up to then he had a good hearing. It is seldom dangerous to read Bible verses. The trouble came when he set out to define just who those poor captive people happened to be. It was not the scripture lesson but the sermon that got him in trouble -- specifically the illustrations.

He used Old Testament stories to make his point, but they were not the popular stories -- the good-old-boy tales -- people love to hear. We all want our preachers to tell us how much God loves us and our kind. Have you sung "God Bless America" recently? We are not quite as enamored of hearing about how much God loves our enemies. It was not that long ago anybody returning from a visit to the Soviet Union might be snarled at just for suggesting that faith in that communist cesspool might be alive and well, or that God was doing powerful things there. People don't want to hear how God is blessing their enemies. They didn't want to hear it in first century Nazareth; we don't want to hear it today.

The master's first illustration in this hometown sermon described how Elijah took care of the needs of a woman from the hated land of Sidon at a time when Hebrew women were starving. The word of the Lord came to Elijah telling him to go to Zarephath where he would meet a widow gathering sticks. The sticks were to build a fire so she could cook her last meal -- she had a little oil and a little meal left, and then it was starvation for her and her child. Elijah ends up not only seeing that she had food for the rest of her life, but also brings her child back from the edge of death. Jesus rams the point home. This was a foreign woman in an age when foreign women were the curse of Israel. Ahab had married foreign women, including Jezebel, and had hell to pay for it.

Young preacher Jesus could have found a thousand more appropriate Old Testament stories to use as illustrations for this sermon. But he wanted to make the point perfectly clear at the outset of his ministry: God's love did not have national or ethnic borders.

The second illustration was not much better. It was an account of how Elisha healed a man named Naaman, who happened to be an officer in the Syrian guard. Not only was the prophet helping foreigners, this particular foreigner was a member of an alien army! God's love for Sidonites and Syrians was not what these folks had come to hear, particularly since they could easily interpolate "Romans" or "Samaritans" for Syrians and Sidonites. Instead of playing to their prejudices, Jesus claimed that God's love was alive and well despite their prejudices. Fool with the bigotry of bigots and you have a fight on your hands. Can you imagine someone at the height of the cold war talking about how God had a preferential option for the Soviets, or some white preacher in the old south talking about how God had a particular affection for black activists -- while Bull Conner was releasing his dogs on them?

"They were filled with wrath," says the text, "and rose up to put him out of the city." That sounds like a lynch mob! It is dangerous to talk about love to those whose lives feed on fear. It is risky business to describe how God's affection extends toward those the audience despises. People want their prejudices massaged, and there is plenty of religion around ready to do exactly that -- just one more bit of evidence that God's grace can never be captured in our mud jars -- our earthen religious vessels.

But the gospel is clear. God's love is always more pervasive, complete and powerful than our hatred or even the ways we define grace. By the very nature of our humanity, we tend to put limits on love. God does not. And that is a miracle of grace.

But there is a greater miracle than even God's love for those we do not love. It is God's love for us. We who are sworn enemies of God, because of our sinfulness, are also loved. We are the Sidonites and Syrians, the Samaritans and Romans of the kingdom -- and "though we were yet sinners, Christ died for us."

How far is God's love willing to go? To the cross, my friends, to the cross. And who is included -- you and I, brother. You and I, sister. And that is the greatest miracle of all. Alleluia! Amen!"

CSS Publishing Lima, Ohio, When It Is Dark Enough, by Charles H. Bayer