Luke 6:27-36 · Love for Enemies
What Price Must We Pay?
Luke 6:20-31
Sermon
by John Wayne Clarke
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Today's Gospel Lesson mirrors the Sermon on the Mount that is found in Matthew 5-7. The sermon is directed at the disciples. It explores some of the things that will be expected of the twelve in the days and years ahead. It delineates the kind of outlook they should have as well as the kind of life Jesus expects them to live. Both Luke and Matthew start out with related materials. They both present us with what we have come to know as the Beatitudes and both end with the parable of the two foundations.

The verses presented here in Luke provide us with an astounding idea. That idea is simple; the value of your life will not be determined by how many years you live. It will be determined by how you used the years you were fortunate to live. I use the word, "astounding," in the sense that the normal life span for a male in the time of Jesus was under 35 years of age. So, it was easy to think that how long you lived was the single most important factor in life. And, although longevity has its place, longevity without value attached to it, means very little. On this day that we celebrate All Saints, it is astounding that there were those in the early church and in later times, who clearly understood the price, and were willing to give life itself to live the life Jesus directed them, and for us to live.

It is always tough to be asked the proverbial question that no one really wants to answer, and that question is, "If you died right now, what donation would you have made to life itself? Would you die knowing you really made a contribution to those around you? Have you been a grabber for yourself or a giver to others?" Many people have lived a long time without making any difference in the world. Sadly, every child of God has gifts to be shared, but not all come to understand how important it is to share those gifts with others.

Most of the time we live our lives inclined to believe that the demands of the gospel are that we remain good people and try to be fair in our dealings with the world. Our reading today throws a major curveball at all of our assumptions about living the life Jesus wants for us to live.

Let us retrace some of what has already happened to this point in Luke's Gospel. Jesus chooses twelve of his disciples for a special role. We can say, with some authority, that he chose twelve because that number represents the twelve tribes of Israel. By choosing these twelve Jesus was saying that they represented for him the new Israel. With something new, comes some new ways of living life. New values are outlined in this passage, new ideas that carry the power to transform the world. Powerful ideas that may at first seem radical, but with strong determination can bring about the kingdom that Jesus wants us all to share. The saints who have come before us had the determination to incorporate those ideas into their lives.

At its foundation, these ideas teach a new way of giving. They show us that giving is as much about attitude as it is about what is actually given. Jesus turns the world's ideas of what it means to be happy upside down. The very ones who the world has designated as poor and out, are the ones designated by Jesus as the rich! Wait, what does that mean? How can being poor, make a person rich? That just does not make any sense and it is an affront to our senses to be told otherwise. No money, no food, no friends, but blessed —  Please!

Before we get upset about being poor but blessed, we have to read the rest of the story, "But woe to you who are rich, for you have received your consolation. Woe to you who are full now, for you will be hungry. Woe to you who are laughing now, for you will mourn and weep. Woe to you when all speak well of you, for that is what their ancestors did to the false prophets."

These verses should never be read quickly, never read without prayer, and never read without looking in the mirror. Jesus is saying you're blessed or you're happy when you have very few finances, very little food, and few friends, and you're in trouble if you have a lot of finances, food, or friends. You ask, "Wait a minute, is Jesus anti-rich and pro-poor?" Fair question, but the answer is, "No." In fact, it has little to do with what he is teaching. Jesus is trying to get the point across to those listening, and to those of us listening today, that all the wealth in the world will be of little use if you do not use what you do have for God's good purposes. It all seems rather self-evident when you think about it. We all know deep down that how we live our lives always has an impact on those around us. That does not only mean family, it means all those around you. When looked at that way, you begin to realize that you contain within you the gifts to help change the world! You can be a "saint" of the church just like those who have come before. That is phenomenal, is it not?

If you hoard the things you have, and don't pass on to others the good gifts you have received, then you will get back exactly what you have given! Enjoy what you have today, because you are never going to have more than what you have right now. Go ahead and eat the food. Go ahead and enjoy the friends, because that's the limit to all that you are ever going to have, because you're not a giver in life. There is usually something deeper in what Jesus is teaching. In this case it is values. Jesus is teaching about values. He's talking about priorities. A plaque that hangs on the wall of the kitchen in a small church in Perry, Maine, has the following sentiment, "Only one life twill soon be past, only what's done for Christ will last." Do our lives indicate that we recognize the truth in these words?

There is the story of vandals who broke into a hardware store and, for several hours in the early predawn morning, did their work. The doors opened the next morning at 7:30 a.m. as usual and, surprisingly, everything seemed to be in good order. No one knew that the vandals had been there until they went to purchase goods. The intruders had switched all the price tags. Hammers were $.07 apiece, and bolts were $6.95. Screwdrivers were $1,995 and small televisions were $2.95. Everything looked the same on the outside, but the value placed on items had been changed.

It seems to me that these verses from Luke's Gospel ask us to redo the price tags of our lives. Jesus teaches us that all of our old ideas about what we value are now being challenged. The fundamental value that we have placed on things in our lives and in the world around us has been switched. Jesus wants us to understand that values are what shape us, mold us, drive us, and define us. Today we live in a society that tells us on bumper stickers that, "He who dies with the most toys wins," and that is a problem. The choice is, "Am I going to be a giver or a taker, am I going to be a consumer thinking of number one first and foremost, or others?" Jesus wants us to be sure that we know that it has nothing to do with the amount of assets or possessions we have. People will say, sure I'd be a giver if I had something to give. You have something to give, my friend. Quit using that excuse. God has given you talents, God has blessed you, God has made you unique and you have gifts to give. The issue is not do you have anything to give — the issue is, "Are you a giver or a taker?"

Our nation has been built on encouraging people to stand on their own feet. You know, the whole notion of rugged individualism that has been fostered by so many for so long. Needless to say, this societal value works against the sense of community that Jesus worked so hard to instill in the disciples and through them to us. Christians are not to be rugged individualists but community-minded sisters and brothers in Christ. As Christians we are to be steeped in biblical values, just like the ones outlined in Jesus' sermon from our text today. We are to be people who give ourselves to communal accountability and discipline when needed, and to seek the very best we can for the body of Christ, the church. We are to do this even at the expense of our own wealth, whatever that wealth may be.

A number of years ago, in Anchorage, Alaska, there was a big earthquake. A lot of damage was done. Calls poured into the governor's office. He went on television to reassure the people that the government was doing all it could to meet the thousands of request that were pouring in. As governor, he felt a tremendous load of responsibility. Loss of life, damaged buildings, ruined pristine forests, and more. He understood the insistence that something needed to be done. He ended his television spot with some encouragement he had received. He had received a postcard from a ten-year-old boy. It had two nickels stuck to the back of it with scotch tape. The words were written, "Use this wherever it's needed. If you need more let me know." Two nickels, a million dollars, it's all in the attitude. It has nothing to do with your finances.

What price must we pay to be true to our Bible lesson today? First of all, Jesus indicated that givers live on a higher level than most people. He tells us that there are two roads to travel. You can take the low road or the high road. The high road is traveled by people that give in life. Remember what Jesus said, "But I say to you that listen: ‘Love your enemies, do good to those who hate you, bless those who curse you, pray for those who abuse you. If anyone strikes you on the cheek, offer the other also; and from anyone who takes away your coat do not withhold even your shirt. Give to everyone who begs from you; and if anyone takes away your goods, do not ask for them again. Do to others as you would have them do to you' " (vv. 27-31).

Christianity and Christian conduct emphasizes what you do. Jesus describes the givers. They pray for those who abuse them, bless those who curse them, go the extra mile, and turn the other cheek. In other words, Christianity is not a bunch of don'ts. The Pharisees were all about doing things according to the law. There were all kinds of things they did not do. Jesus says its not only what you don't do that matters, it is what you do that matters more. You see, Jesus wants us to know that Christianity is leaving the past and doing something today. The Lord begins to tell us what the things are that we are to do. There is something else about this high road we are to travel and that is that the givers who travel it do more than expected. The Lord is talking about an unnatural way of living. He's talking about us living in a place where we do more than what's expected. This is what grabs the world. The world sees us as Christians being givers and going the second mile, and turning the other cheek, and blessing those who curse us. They see that and say wait a minute, I do not understand these people. They always take the high road. It's the high road that will change our society. Jesus says one more thing a little later in this chapter, he says, "... do good, and lend, expecting nothing in return" (v. 35b). You see, the world looks at us and sees that we do good and that we ask for nothing in return. Notice that Jesus did not say, "If you become this kind of giver, you will have nothing in return," he tells us to expect nothing in return.

Let us quote verse 31 one more time, "Do to others as you would have them do to you." All of the previous verses are summarized in this one verse. In fact, living this one verse will bring about the reality of the totality of Jesus' sermon to us this morning. Treat the world the way you wish to be treated. Pretty simple, really.

John D. Rockefeller, Sr., was a millionaire at age 23. At the age of fifty, he was a billionaire. He was the richest man in the world, but he was a miserable, rich man. At the age of 53, he was eaten up with physical diseases and ulcers. He was a grabber, not a giver. He was always trying to get more money and he was a greedy man. Greed had so consumed him, that at the age of 53, the doctors told him he had one year to live. Just one year.

Here's a billionaire, the richest man in the world, and all he could eat that year, all that his stomach could handle was milk and crackers. Milk and crackers. The man could go out and buy any restaurant in the world, buy it; he could have any food before him on the table, but it wouldn't do him much good. It was in that year, that Rockefeller began to look at his life. He said, "I have all these possessions and I've never been a giver."

That's when he decided to become a giver. He gave to churches, to hospitals, to foundations, and to medical research. Many of the discoveries we've had in medicine have come from money provided by the Rockefeller Foundation. That man who had only one year to live at age 53, began to live, and began to give, and do you know what happened to him? He started releasing all of the internal negative things that were killing him. He got rid of his stress, his tension, and his ulcers, and he lived to the age of ninety, a saint to many.

Have a good celebration of All Saints, and remember, "Do to others as you would have them do to you." It's the saintly thing to do!

Amen.

CSS Publishing Company, Inc., Sermons for Sundays after Pentecost (Last Third): Father, Forgive Them, by John Wayne Clarke