Luke 6:17-26 · Blessings and Woes
Topsy-turvy Christianity
Luke 6:17-26, Luke 6:27-36
Sermon
by J. Will Ormond
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Do you know anyone who is financially well off and secure, who has an abundance of things and often dines in the best restaurants, who enjoys life and has a good time, and who is well thought of in the community? You may be such a person yourself, but if not, wouldn't you like to be? In such a situation we could declare that life is good, that we are content, and that the future looks bright.

Do you know anyone who is poor, hungry, grieving, hated, excluded, reviled, and defamed? I sincerely hope you are not such a person. We consider anyone who has all these woes as an extremely unfortunate individual indeed.

And yet, did you hear the words of Jesus as recorded in the passage we read from the Gospel of Luke? "Woe to you who are rich ... Woe to you who are full now ... Woe to you who are laughing now ... Woe to you when all speak well of you...."

"Blessed are you who are poor ... Blessed are you who are hungry now ... Blessed are you who weep now ... Blessed are you when people hate you, exclude you, revile you, and defame you...."

What is going on here? Doesn't Jesus have it all upside down? This sounds like topsy-turvy Christianity to me. Suppose you had been among the crowd who first heard Jesus speak these words. What do you think your reaction would have been? That might depend on the part of the gathered company to which you belonged.

According to Luke's chronology Jesus, just before he began this Sermon on the Plain, chose from among his disciples twelve whom he called apostles (Luke 6:12-16). These words must have come as a shock to them. Did some of them wonder what they had gotten themselves into? Did they ask one another, "Does he mean if we are poor we are blessed, but if we are rich we have woe?"

Perhaps Peter, a poor fisherman, turned to Matthew, a wealthy tax collector, and said, "See, the Master says I am the blessed one, but you're the one who is in trouble. How do you figure that one out? Is being poor supposed to make me happy, and are you miserable because you are rich?"

In any large gathering of people there are bound to be those who are grieving for one reason or another. Were there those that day with tears running down their faces? Did they wonder, "When are we going to laugh? The hurt is too deep, the wound is too sore for me to think about being merry. Does this man mean that I am happy because I am weeping? These are not tears of joy. They are tears of grief."

Since Jesus appealed to the outsider and the oppressed, there were doubtless those in the crowd who were excluded from respectable society, who were hated by others, who were reviled. Did they ask themselves, "Is he saying that we are supposed to leap for joy because we are outcasts? What difference does it make if the prophets of old were treated in the same way as we are? Does that make us prophets?"

Do you suppose there were any rich people in the crowd that day? Perhaps not, but there might have been. People came from all over the country as far away as Jerusalem, Tyre and Sidon. Many people were drawn to Jesus because they had illnesses for which they sought healing. Rich people can get sick, too, you know. Others may have come not from a sense of need but out of curiosity.

What did the rich people think when they heard all those woes pronounced on them? To say the least, they must have felt uncomfortable. Some of them may have become angry and left the crowd in a huff, mumbling to themselves, "I'm not listening to any more of this stuff. The man is a revolutionary and heretic."

These words of Jesus may not arouse such reactions today. Their sharpness has been dulled by familiarity or by a kind of casual attitude toward scripture. "Oh, that's in the Bible, and was spoken a long time ago in a culture different from ours. It is far too impractical for our time."

The Lucan beatitudes and woes are certainly at variance with the accepted criteria of our time concerning what it takes to make one healthy, wealthy, and wise. They also do not fit a theology which presents the gospel as a sure road to success, peace of mind, and easy forgiveness. These sayings leave little room for "cheap grace" which emphasizes the grace and mercy of God, but gives little attention to the moral demands of the Word of God.

We need to remind ourselves that these beatitudes and woes were never meant to be rules for the ordering of political life. They have to do, rather, with the kingdom of God. There is no glorification of poverty, hunger, grief, nor persecution in Luke's version of the beatitudes. One is not exhorted to seek these negative positions in order to obtain a blessing.

There is no glossing over the reality of present distress. There is no call for stoic endurance. But hope is held out that wrongs ultimately will be righted and that God has a particular concern for the poor, the hungry, the grieving, and the victimized. Such concern is an important characteristic of Jesus' mission and of the kingdom of God. According to Luke's chronology Jesus' inaugural sermon in the synagogue in Nazareth was based on a passage from Isaiah which begins: "The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me to bring good news to the poor" (Luke 4:18).

The poor whom Jesus is addressing are lacking in material goods. Some of them have "left all and followed him." They are living under the reign of God. In spite of their outward circumstances, they have a security which no amount of riches can give them. Jesus also reminds them that those who serve God are often misunderstood, abused, and reviled. Such was the treatment of many of the prophets of old; therefore, the poor among Jesus' disciples are following a noble heritage.

But what of the rich, the satisfied, the lighthearted, the well thought of? For what reasons are woes pronounced upon them? They can so easily become self-satisfied and feel that they are deserving of their good fortune. They can get caught up in things as they are and see no need for change or growth.

People who seem to have everything going for them can easily glide into a sense of false security, which leads them to give scant attention to the future. Luke records some sayings of Jesus and a parable which speak to this attitude.

"One's life does not consist in the abundance of possessions" introduces the parable of the rich fool whose land produces a bumper crop. He boasts that he has ample goods laid up for many years. Therefore he can "relax, eat, drink, be merry." But that very night he dies. "So it is with those who store up treasure for themselves but are not rich toward God" (Luke 12:15-19).1

The Lucan woes do not condemn the "good things of life," such as wealth, abundance of goods, joy, and a good reputation. But they do warn of the danger of trusting in these things as a source of security in life. They are all transitory. Riches cannot compare with "treasure in heaven." Abundance of food may be taken away by illness or famine. Sorrow is bound to come into any life no matter how well protected. People praise false prophets because they tell them what they want to hear and do not challenge their false securities.

If the Blessings and Woes of the Sermon on the Plain turn our priorities topsy-turvy, what follows continues the process. Jesus gives a list of ethical precepts which go against every common sense natural impulse about how to get along in this world.

Here comes Jesus talking about loving our enemies and doing good to those who hate us; about blessing those who curse us and praying for those who abuse us. What is this about turning the other cheek? When someone hits me, am I not expected to hit back? If I am robbed of my topcoat, am I supposed to chase the thief down the street shouting, "Wait a minute! Here is my shirt. Take that too?" Am I supposed to give something to every beggar who shakes a tin cup under my nose? When someone robs my house, am I not allowed to call the police to see if the burglar can be caught and my stuff recovered?

Retaliation, getting even, standing up for our "rights," protecting what is ours -- these are the standards by which most of us live. Jesus' radical precepts make us extremely uncomfortable, but they set forth the principles by which life in the kingdom of God is ordered. Followers of Jesus may be victims, but they are not to regard themselves as such, being shaped and determined by the hostilities and abuse unleashed on them. Rather, they are to take the initiative, not by responding in kind, or by playing dead, or by whining. They are not to react but to act according to the kingdom principles of love, forgiveness, and generosity. Such behavior ... is a pursuit of that life one learns from God who does not reciprocate but who is kind even to the ungrateful and the selfish (v. 35).2

I can see why this passage is appropriate for All Saints' Day. Anyone who comes close to living up to the standards of life in the kingdom of God should surely be called a saint. But remember, we are all "called to be saints," a call issued by Paul to the church in Corinth (1 Corinthians 1:2). But that church had many people whose lives did not perfectly reflect the precepts of Jesus' Sermon on the Plain. Still Paul called them to be saints. If we listen closely, that call comes to us as well.

"It is a precarious, risk-filled existence, but one the text calls 'blessed.' ""

CSS Publishing, Lima, Ohio, Good News Among The Rubble, by J. Will Ormond