Matthew 6:1-4 · Giving to the Needy
The Truth, The Whole Truth, And Nothing But The Truth
Matthew 6:1-6, 16-21
Sermon
by David E. Leininger
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Several years ago there was a huge literary uproar over A Million Little Pieces (New York: Anchor Books, 2004), the so-called "memoir" by writer James Frey concerning his supposed criminal career and bizarre misadventures. With a push from Oprah Winfrey (who has become an incredibly powerful force in American book publishing with her Oprah's Book Club), the book sold more than three and a half million copies, and was second only to the latest "Harry Potter" book among that year's best-sellers.

The trouble started when The Smoking Gun, an investigative website, reported about a million little lies in A Million Little Pieces. It turns out that whole sections of the book were either wildly exaggerated or outright fiction. The author was confronted about the allegations on Larry King Live, but he insisted that everything was essentially true. Then Oprah called in to the show and said the "inaccuracies" did not matter because the book was helping people who were dealing with their own demons. Then, a few days later, Oprah had a change of heart and, to her credit, she apologized to her millions of fans for presenting the book as factual, whereupon she lambasted the author on her show. Don't mess with Oprah!

Of course, A Million Little Pieces is far from the first autobiography to fudge the facts. No surprise. But the incident also illustrates the sad state of "truth" these days. An awful lot of "truth" is nothing but spin, and one gets the impression that if something is declared loud enough and long enough, people begin to accept it as "true." That, of course, was the"big lie" theory of the Nazis, and it does work. Politicians have been proving it ever since.

Are you familiar with satirist Stephen Colbert? He is the host of Comedy Central's The Colbert Report, a late-night take off of talk-show blowhards, and he has added a new wrinkle to the conversation. When his program debuted several years ago, Colbert made it clear that his mantra would be "truthiness," a devotion to information that he wishes were true even if it's not. Did you catch that? A devotion to information that he wishes were true even if it's not — okee-dokee. "I'm not a fan of facts," he says. "You see, facts can change, but my opinion will never change, no matter what the facts are." Uh-huh. Colbert is a comedian, but in hearing him one wonders whether he has not opened a window into our souls.

Are we more devoted to truth ... or truthiness? William Bastone, the editor of The Smoking Gun website that researched and documented the fabrications in James Frey's "memoir," was stunned when 40% of those who responded to the exposé were furious, not at Frey and his lies, but at The Smoking Gun reporters for exposing him. Go figure. Whistle blowers, whether in business, research, the military, politics, or some other institution, often experience similar responses to their attempts to expose the lies and corruption in their agencies.

Dr. Harry Frankfurt, a retired Princeton philosophy professor, wrote a brief treatise with the intriguing title, On Bull (Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press, 2005), that became another best-seller. He speculated that perhaps we have become so accustomed to lying in all areas of society that we are no longer surprised, let alone outraged, when it is exposed. "The country has lost its taste for the truth," he says.

My good friend, Carlos Wilton, thinks it all started with Ronald Reagan. As a nation, by the time the great communicator came into office, we were profoundly tired of scandal in high places, we were tired of hearing about a national "malaise," so we were ready when he told us everything we wanted to hear. He invented the myth of "welfare queens" driving Cadillacs purchased with welfare benefits, and he schmoozed his way through the Iran-contra scandal, in which White House staffers demonstrated a contempt of the law every bit as egregious as anything that the Nixon White House ever perpetrated — but they got away with it. When this smooth-talking former actor died, there were some who wanted to carve his face into Mount Rushmore — that is how much we loved the big lie.[1] Interesting.

Have we indeed brought the problem on ourselves? How would we react these days if the president stood up before Congress at the beginning of the year and declared, "The State of our Union stinks"? Do we want to be lied to? Perhaps. That is the way we can live with ourselves when we think of Vietnam, Iran-contra, or Iraq.

The truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth. "It would be easy to say that lying is always bad and truth telling is always good but that would not be the truth either." So says Caroline Keating who is a professor of psychology at Colgate University. "We protect ourselves and we protect our social relationships by disguising the truth."

Although we hardly even realize it, we lie to ourselves and each other daily, she says. "We ask our friend how she is and she says ‘fine,' even when she isn't. That relieves us of our responsibility of solving her problem."[2] Hmm.

Then suddenly we come upon Ash Wednesday and the beginning of Lent, this unique season of introspection, and the unvarnished truth about our innermost selves is revealed, or at least as unvarnished as we can handle. We read the gospel lesson, hear Jesus' instructions for ethical living, and realize that we come up short ... again ... still.

How do we handle that? To be honest, it is easier for us to lie to ourselves about ourselves than to face the hard truth of our shortcomings. We, down deep, prefer "truthiness" to truth, but Lent will not let us.

"The truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth." But the good news as we begin our Lenten journey is that the phrase as we know it is incomplete that way. We know it as, "The truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, so help me God." Those last four words, "so help me God," make all the difference.


1. Carlos Wilton, The Immediate Word, http://www.sermonsuite.com/the-immediate-word.html.

2. Andrea Simakis, "Is the big lie no big deal?" Cleveland Plain-Dealer, January 15, 2006.

CSS Publishing Company, Inc., Lectionary Tales for the Pulpit, by David E. Leininger