Luke 13:1-9 · Repent or Perish
The Tower of Siloam
Luke 13:1-9
Sermon
by Frank Ramirez
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It was over forty years ago, in the middle of December 1963, when my aging father retired from the Navy. He was only 37 years old at the time, but to a nine-year-old that sounded pretty old!

He and mom packed us into the car and we moved from Nor­folk, Virginia, back to our native California, taking the old High­way 66, a two-lane highway that could really cause motion sick­ness at times!

Dad made sure we stopped at important places from the sights of Washington DC to the austere majesty of mountainous Silver City, New Mexico, which is where our family settled after we crossed the Mexican border in 1910.

The stop I remember best lasted only a few minutes. My father stopped the car in the middle of Dallas and pointed to a window on the sixth floor of the Texas Book Depository. Less than a month before, a man had leaned out that window and killed a president. Nearly a half century later, we still argue about what that event means.

Probably most of us remember the school assignment known as "current events." We were asked to cut out an article from the newspaper and write about it. Nowadays one suspects that students can go to a newspaper website and do their cutting and pasting electronically, but it's the same thing.

In some ways it is futile. We know what happened but it's way too soon to know what it all means. It takes time to know if a "current event" is as significant as we think, and it takes perspec­tive to understand what they mean. Today's passage involves Jesus and a question about a current event. Instead of giving a snap judg­ment we shall see that Jesus brought some real perspective to the matter.

When people asked Jesus his opinion of one current event, he responded by giving perspective to a political event — the rebel­lion of some Galileans, a common enough event in that time. He did this by pointing to another current event, the fall of a tower and the death of those who randomly stood near it when it fell. Al­though both were big news at the time, neither was significant enough for historians to record, and we know nothing beyond the bare references in scripture. But in the parable that followed, Jesus made it clear that regardless of the peaks and valleys in the age we share, the time is so urgent that our shared life of faith in Christ remains most important. Jesus gives some perspective.

Perspective is not so easy to get, especially when you live in flatland. I've been a city boy much of my life, so what I see in the country still amazes and amuses me. I think back to the time when I lived for twelve years in rural Indiana. One autumn I was particu­larly amused by a raccoon who lived down the road from me. He was a bit of a genius and had learned to climb up telephone poles in order to get a better look. There was no food up telephone poles as far as I could tell, but this raccoon regularly climbed up and I want to believe it was for better perspective.

The years have gone by, but there is still a tremendous amount of national trauma, and rightfully so, surrounding the events of September 11, 2001. To some extent that raccoon had more perspective than most of us in the United States, sadly enough, and that goes for the churches of Jesus Christ, the Prince of Peace. People in the church failed to listen to the words of Jesus, to take the long view, or at least to take a long breath. We had no perspective.

In this way we are no different than the ancients who believed that the earth was at the center of the universe. It's hard to imagine how we can continue to believe in this conceit. When the Voyager space probe looked back and took a snapshot of the solar system, the Earth appears as a small blue dot. From a larger perspective we know we are on a small planet circling an average-sized star orbiting near the edge of an ordinary spiral galaxy that is part of an undistinguished Vegan Super Galaxy.

Even so, we are tempted as adults to consider ourselves the center of the universe. It's normal for children to feel that way. Indeed, one of the major stages of development is the recognition that there are others, these others have feelings, and are individu­als with as much right to happiness and success as ourselves. One of the first ways children acknowledge that others matter, one of their first gifts, is potty training. Later they will give gifts without thought of what they will receive in return. At some point we hope that we come to value God and others more than ourselves.

However, some individuals — and churches and nations — never reach that point. Consider the United States. There is a ten­dency to consider what happens in that country as more important than anywhere else. The events of September 11, 2001, were horri­fying and criminal — but the loss of around 3,000 souls pales to the evil involved when a few years before nearly a million Rwandans were killed one by one, largely with machetes, while the world at large did nothing. Westerners buy diamonds at artifi­cially inflated prices without a care as to whether they are "con­flict" stones, stolen by thugs who routinely hacked off the limbs of their victims. To even suggest that there is a larger evil than what has happened to our nation, however, can incite American churches to the flaming point.

I call it the "idolatry of current events." What happens to us now is more significant (in our minds) than anything else. One problem is that we get caught up in current events. If the news is followed religiously, there's a danger of it becoming a separate and idolatrous religion. That idolatry is demonstrated in Luke 13:1-9. Jesus and his listeners begin talking about current events. Some people bring up the topic of rebellious Galileans (whether they were freedom fighters or terrorists depended on your perspective) who were murdered by Pilate. Jesus responds that their fate was no different than those who died when the Tower of Siloam fell. Ac­cording to Jesus the crucial fact was whether the individuals in question had repented in a timely fashion. His parable of the fig tree was a reminder for all of us that first and last things have pri­ority over even the most compelling events of the present.

It all comes down to this. If a thing was right before Septem­ber 11, it is still right, and if a thing was wrong, it is still wrong.

We are Christians first. Christianity is not a convenient means of explaining or justifying our wars. Peace is the natural lifestyle of a committed follower of Jesus Christ, one who recognizes that the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus are real and saving events that change lives now.

The apostle Paul speaks of righteousness, which is properly defined not as a standard of outward morality, but the state of seek­ing to live in God's peace, a shalom that was intended to include all nations, all individuals, all of creation in a perfect reflection of God's will for our lives. This peace is not strident or self-justifying. It is not achieved by isolation from the world. It does not put itself on a pedestal to condemn others. It does not bend to the whims of current events.

As a matter of fact, it is not arrogant or rude. It is not jealous or boastful. It does not rejoice in the wrong but rejoices in the right. It bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, and endures all things. It's a lot like love in this regard.

In addition to our longing for our human needs, there is a long­ing for justice with regard to the crimes, which have been commit­ted that mirrors the biblical call for that same justice. Anyone who reads scripture from beginning to end recognizes that justice, the balancing of all scales to achieve God's righteousness on the earth in the form of shalom, is a constant thread that runs through the biblical tapestry. From God's law, through the claiming of the land, the struggles with judges, prophets, and kings, through the writ­ings of the psalmist, there is the recognition that God's justice is an objective standard, and that we are all called to live that justice. In the New Testament, Jesus proclaims scriptures of justice, and the vision of Revelation is a strong reminder that ultimately, God's will shall be done.

Rather than seek revenge, would it not be better to take the biblical view and seek justice? Justice scalds the pages of the Old and New Testaments. When the Old Testament scriptures speak of an eye for an eye, it is with the aim of limiting vengeance. Jesus goes a step further and invites us to put transforming love at the heart of our lives.

Look again at the scripture text. Jesus said, "Unless you re­pent, you will all perish ..." (v. 3). Notice the "all"? It's not just the ones who don't repent who perish. We're all in the same boat. If we don't all repent of the heresy of wealth and power, we will all perish. Everyone around the world. If we don't all repent of our indifference to global warming, we will all perish, both those who practice green lifestyles and those who listen to self-appointed ex­perts who fly in the face of established facts. If we don't all repent of the hardness in our hearts, we will all perish — everybody. It's not you and me, us or them. It's all or nothing.

Finally Jesus speaks to another major misconception with re­gard to the current events in Galilee and at Siloam. There's no escaping it. Some people think that only good things happen to good people and that bad things only happen to bad people. When disaster strikes they begin to try to figure out what people did wrong, rather than accept the fact that this is a broken world, bad things happen, and somehow we survive. Especially if we stick together.

Woulda, coulda, shoulda; Jesus doesn't play this game. In today's scripture text some folks call to mind the recent murder of some Galileans, possibly guerillas, who were murdered by Pontius Pilate, and Jesus insists they were no worse than anyone else. He goes his questioners one better — how about those killed when the Tower of Siloam fell? Were they worse than those who stepped out of the way just in time? No, the real question remains — are we ready to meet God?

The people you are serving did not deserve what has happened to them. Especially the children.

Every disaster, every act of terrorism, every genocide, every war, whether justified in our minds or not, is an invitation to see the world through God's eyes. God is not willing that even one should perish. And it is God's hope for humanity that all are ready, never knowing when we might be called, or when we might fall into a pit created by evil people. The apostle Paul says that whether we live or whether we die, we are the Lord's (Romans 14:8). That makes it imperative that before we are confronted with the unpredictability of life or death — we choose the Lord. Amen.

CSS Publishing Company, Sermons for Sundays in Lent and Easter: You Are Here!, by Frank Ramirez