Matthew 13:44-46 · The Parable of the Hidden Treasure and the Pearl
There Is a Price for Everything
Matthew 13:44-46
Sermon
by Maxie Dunnam
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Have you ever had something backfire on you, making you feel as though you had spit into the wind? Leo Buscaglia tells about a man who was driving his car on a narrow, winding country road. He came to a hairpin curve and accidentally crossed the center dividing line a bit. A woman driving in the opposite way had to swerve to avoid hitting him. As they passed, she yelled out her window, “Pig!”

Why that - that so-and-so the man thought. Instantaneously, he shouted back, “Sow! Then he rounded the curve and hit a big pig in the middle of the road. There’s a price for everything. And that’s what I want to talk about today not only today, but next Sunday as well.

I

First, let’s get the perspective of scripture. In the passage from Matthew’s gospel, Jesus gives us

A series of parables — mini-parables they are — or similes the Kingdom. He uses ordinary experiences from everyday life to tell us what the Kingdom is like.

There are many lessons in these brief parables, but two big ones. The first lesson is that entrance price to the Kingdom is too great. To enter the Kingdom is worth any price that we might have to make. The man found the treasure hidden in the field, sold all that he had in order to raise the money to purchase that field. The man who found the pearl of great price sold all his other pearls plus everything else that he had in order to buy the prized pearl Jesus said, “Entering the Kingdom is like that.” No entrance price is too great.

The second big lesson is that there is a time of judgment. The parable of the fishing net cast into the sea tells us there will be a time of separation - a time of judgment. In the famous words of Men most colorful preacher, Dr. R. G. Lee, there will be “Payday Someday”. The evil will be separated from the righteous, and the scripture says in verse 50, that the evil will be thrown into the furnace of fire; there men will weep and gnash their teeth.

That’s a pretty dramatic picture, isn’t it? - the judgment. It’s a sobering picture, and I have a hunch we don’t think about it enough. When is the last time you thought about a final judgment? Is the way you live affected at all by the fact that one day you are going to stand before the judgment bar of God and give an account for your deeds?

Now these are the two big lessons from the three mini-parables in Matthew’s gospel. Add to it our second lesson from Mark - the tough word of Jesus with which we are all familiar. Hear it again: “If any want to become my followers, let them deny themselves and take up their crosses and follow me. For those who want to save their life will lose it, and those who lose their life for my sake, and for the sake of the Gospel, will save it.”

That’s pretty clear, isn’t it? But the word that ties the two lessons together is found in the next verse of Mark 8, verses 36 and 37: “For what will it profit them to gain the whole world and forfeit their life? Indeed, what can they give in return or their life?”

Now that’s the scriptural focus of the sermon today - the theme, “There is a price for everything.”

In the sermon today, I want to elaborate two truths suggested by these words of Jesus.

II

The first is this: Life itself has a price.

Oscar Wilde once wrote that in modern society, “People know the price of everything, but the value of nothing.” Ours is an age of the “sell out”. It seems that everything is for sale at any price, and it seems every person has his or her price. We know the price of everything, but the value of nothing. That’s the reason we need to underscore the truth: Life itself has a price.

In his book by the title, The Web of Life John Storer paints a vivid picture.

“Consider the case of the great Spruce Forest which, through a catastrophic wind storm, lost the protection of the woodpeckers. With this protection gone, the forest is killed by beetles (which the woodpeckers normally eat in large quantities). The tender, dry, dead forest then becomes a prey to fire, which destroys it, and along with it the watershed. Resulting floods and droughts damage soil, ruin farms and inundate cities a thousand miles away…”

All because the woodpeckers died.

You see there is an intricate web in all of life - a cause and effect — and we certainly need to see that in our own life. Life itself has a price.

Jesus asks us the penetrating question: What does it profit a man if he gains the whole world and lose his own soul — or, what can a man give in return for his life? We know the tragic truth that question is addressing. We have experienced some of its cutting edge ourselves, and we have seen the terrible sorrow of it in others. It is possible to sacrifice principle for popularity; character for cash. I have seen, as you have, people sacrifice lasting things for that which is cheap and tawdry. What else is a man or woman doing when they violate their fidelity in marriage for a cheap affair that brings little more than sexual satisfaction for a season?

What else is a politician doing when he violates his moral and ethical convictions for some special interest vote? Many a politician who could have been a statesman never becomes so because he sells his soul on the altar of popularity and compromise. Life itself has a price. Let me share a more focus to make the point. Consider what we might call the “shadow-side” of ourselves, Victor Hugo tells the story of a ship caught in a violent storm. Winds whip the seas higher and higher and the ship wallows between the waves, buffeted from side to side. At the height of the storm, the harried crew hears a horrible crashing sound coming from below decks. With terror they realize what it is, a cannon are carrying has broken lose from its moorings and is rolling across the lower deck with every pitch and heave of the waves, smashing into the inside walls of the ship. Two men, at risk of their lives, go below and struggle to lash the cannon secure again, for they know that the heavy battering of the cannon on the inside of their ship is a greater danger than the buffeting of the storm winds and wild waves outside

We still use the phrase, “a loose cannon” to denote those who thrash around without realizing the damage they are doing. But Victor Hugo has given us the psychological metaphor as well: the “loose cannon within” - the unresolved conflicts, the unnamed anxieties, the “stuffed” emotions and unexamined motivations we carry around inside us. (Bob Olmstead, “Heel-Grabbers and Hip-Huggers”, 17 August 1, 1993).

Robert Bly, who is most famous for his book Iron John wrote another book that is not so well-known entitled A Little Book on the Human Shadow Bly said the human shadow is that long bag we drag behind into which we have stuffed the things we didn’t deal with, things like sexuality, or hostility, or grief, or independence from our parents. We drag the bag along beside us everywhere we go. The bag contains:

Unwelcome emotions

Unacceptable impulses –

Longings and desires we refuse to acknowledge –

Ambitions we have denied

Relationships that need healing

Gifts and talents we have ignored.

Into the bag they go to be dragged around for the rest of our lives – an unacknowledged burden.

It is just one area of concern — but it makes the point. Our failure to deal with the “shadow- side” causes us to miss the Kingdom of God’s peace here and now. Life itself costs. Jesus’ word is a piercing word: “What does it profit a person to gain the whole world and forfeit his life?” Or, “what can a person give in return for her life.” Life itself costs.

II

Not a second truth: It costs to be a caring person.

Recently, here in our city we celebrated the life and memory of Anne Frank. You recall the story: Many of you have read her diary. This family risked their lives and were finally condemned to death for expressing their concern for others. I remember visiting the place in Amsterdam where it all took place. It was a moving experience to go into that little attic where Anne lived, to see the cramped quarters in which they spent over two years, hiding themselves, but also hiding Jews who were seeking to escape the onslaught of Nazi terror. It costs to be a caring person.

Bring it home where we live. You can’t be a caring husband or wife, caring parent or child, without it costing. You can’t be a genuine friend to another person without some price being exacted. The cost includes time given in attention to others, energy spent for the other’s well being, sacrifice of our wants and desires for the health and wholeness of the other. Emotional involvement that often tears us to pieces. There is a price for relationship.

Tagor, the poet of India, tells a memorable story from his own life which illustrates this. His servant did not come to work on time one morning. Like so professional men of his mind-set, Tagor was utterly helpless when it came to the routine details of the day, getting his clothes together, his breakfast, tiding up his place. An hour went by and Tagor was getting angrier by the minute. He thought of all kinds of punishment. Three hours later he no longer thought of punishment. He would discharge the man without any further consideration, get rid of him, turn him out. Finally the man showed up. It was mid-day. Without a word, the servant proceeded with his duties as though nothing had happened. He picked up Tagor’s clothes and set to making breakfast. Then he started cleaning. Tagor watched all of this with mounting rage. Finally he said, “Drop everything! Get out! I can’t stand the sight of you. You are dismissed…fired!”

The man, however, continued sweeping, and after another, few minutes, with quiet dignity he said, “My little girl died last night.”

It doesn’t matter who we are, rich or poor, servants or masters, belonging to a family and being in relationship as a caring person has a price, and that price is often high.

III

Now a third point: There is a price in living out our Christian discipleship.

For people like us, it’s not easy to Locus where and how we must express our discipleship. Note I said focus One of the planks in our Mission statement is this: “As the Body of Christ, Christ United Methodist Church will instruct persons for discipleship and ministry. That statement assumes that all of us as Christians are disciples. And that we are! For some of us that may be vague and general. Yet, we still have a gnawing conviction that there must be a more specific involvement: a more concrete expression of our faith. That is the reason we are putting such a strong emphasis on the ministry of the laity — on every person in this congregation choosing at least one volunteer involvement.

A couple of weeks ago I received a letter from a man who had visited this congregation. He was overwhelmed in so many different ways, but he wrote with such deep feeling about sitting in the pew and picking up the booklet that lists the 269 opportunities for us to be involved in volunteer ministry here at our church. He said he had never seen anything like it and he wanted to become a part of a church that thought in that fashion.

That’s also the reason we ask every person to express their Christian faith in the way we use our money. We’ve been asked to bring our estimates of giving to worship today. In a few minutes we are going to receive those.

Three weeks ago I talked about financial stewardship. You who were here may remember we considered second thoughts about giving: one, not giving ‘til it hurts, but giving ‘til it helps; two, not equal giving, but equal sacrifice; three, not underwriting the budget, but responding to God’s call.

Money isn’t everything, but there are some things we can do with our money as Christians that we can’t do in any other way.

Through our link with the Apportionment Program of the United Methodist Church, we support a world mission that touches the spiritual, physical, educational, and social needs of people in every corner of the world. And there is much more — the particularized mission expression of this congregation is almost breathtaking.

The support of theological schools where persons are trained to be the ordained ministers of the church in the future, but also the support of the E. Stanley Jones School of Evangelism and World Mission at Asbury Seminary where we train people for world mission and world evangelization.

The support of Reelfoot Center which ministers to the poor in the western Kentucky part of our conference.

The response to emergency needs such as the flood victims in Missouri a few weeks ago.

The just launched ministry of Mediation and Reconciliation which is a move on our part to attack the problem of crime and violence at its roots - seeking to reach young offenders and offer them a way out of the vicious cycle of crime which is connected with the culture of poverty and racial injustice.

A new congregation of Methodist Christians in Cordova, another is Pskov, Russia, and another in Stankoft, the Czech Republic.

We could go on and on. It is a thrilling story. The Shepherd’s School, new Bible Study program at Methodist Neighborhood centers, which is designed to reach the young people who live in the inner city, a housing ministry that will go beyond the two houses we have been building each year, to a partnership with other churches that hopefully is going to make a dramatic response to the housing needs of this community.

And we could go on and on - and we are not neglecting our own here in this congregation — we are not: neglecting the Christian training, the spiritual nurture of our own membership. Our care for children - our Christian education program —our youth ministry — our counseling center and Stephen Ministries which reaches out to lonely and hurting folks - our worship which is attracting over 2000 people every week.

And don’t forget that in your giving you are supporting a staff — one of the finest in our denomination — who serve, lead and equip us for ministry. You are also supporting buildings which provide our worship center, our training school, and our staging ground for living our life in the world. It’s almost breathtaking. And it reminds us vividly that it costs to be a Christian disciple — but oh the rewards; oh the meaning; oh the value of shared life; oh the redemption and transformation that take place when we respond.

IV

So I need to close on this note. There is a price for everything. Life itself costs. It costs to be a caring person and there is a price in living out our Christian discipleship. But let’s go back and underscore one of the primary lessons expressed in our Scripture lesson: No entrance price to the

Kingdom is too great. Put another way, the price of entering the Kingdom, whatever the price is, is not too great. The bottom line is simply this: The Kingdom demands our all.

A friend of mine told me a story recently which is a marvelous illustration of commitment. A Methodist preacher in Kentucky had a son who was an outstanding track star. Last year he made it to a District Meeting, and it was one of the high points of his life. Naturally, his father was proud, and having been involved with his son, looked forward to this time and this event. He and his son were very close, and his father tried to make as many track meets as he could; this was the big one.

On the evening of the Meet, the father had to have a meeting at the church prior to the track event but as is so often true, the meeting went far longer than he thought it would, and by the time he got to the Meet, his son’s event was over. In fact, he saw his son moving rather dejectedly across the field, and he knew something was wrong. The father began to feel guilty that he had not been there to cheer his son on and to affirm him and to share with him in that important experience. As soon as his son arrived, he began to apologize to him about not having been there. The son told him he came in second. The father said, “Oh, I’m sorry. If I had been here, maybe I could have inspired you. Maybe I could have shared with you, and it would have been different.”

The young man said, “No, your not being here was not what caused me to lose; I lost when I went over the Finish Line in second place, I still had something left in me.”

What a picture. If you are going to win a race, you have to give everything. You can’t keep back a reserve. You can’t have anything left inside when you cross the Finish Line.

So we don’t miss the point. There is a price for everything - and no price to enter the Kingdom –whatever that price is, no price is too great.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by Maxie Dunnam