Luke 14:1-14 · Jesus at a Pharisee’s House
Who Holds the Keys to the Kingdom?
Luke 14:1-14
Sermon
by Steven Burt
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Not long ago I met with a student pastor whom I was supervising. He was serving a church in a nearby town. In our conversation we got to talking about who ought to be allowed to come up to the rail for Communion. It seems he had gotten into a disagreement with another pastor in that same town.

The other pastor said that no children should be allowed to receive Communion. The pastor I supervised thought it was OK.

I, being an astute supervisor, and knowing my supervisee was coming up for ordination interviews soon, didn’t give him the answer. Instead, I asked what such a decision might be based on.

His first answer was tradition -- that is, the Methodist churches which this pastor had attended had always served children. But that didn’t mean all Methodist churches did.

His next answer was that the rules and regulations of his church, the United Methodist Church, encouraged it -- at least, the pastor thought that was written somewhere in the Methodist Book of Discipline.

His next answer was a question. “Why shouldn’t they be allowed to, especially if the children are members, or at least if they are baptized Christians and members of the family of God and the household of faith?”

“A good argument,” I said. “But why didn’t the other pastor buy it?”

My supervisee wasn’t sure.

Finally I said, “Picture what it is you’re doing when you, as a pastor, particularly as a pastor in a long white robe, preside over the sacrament or ordinance we call Communion or the Lord’s Supper.”

“I’m serving,” he said.

“Yes, you are,” I said. “But whose part are you acting out?”

“Jesus’ part,” the pastor finally said.

“Fine,” I answered. “And if Jesus were calling people to supper at his table, whom would he invite?”

“He’d certainly invite children,” the pastor answered quickly, adding, “He’d invite any Christian practicing the faith.”

“Any Christian?” I pressed.

The young pastor gave me a puzzled look, so I continued, “How many Christians were at the Last Supper?”

“None,” the pastor answered. “They were all Jews.”

“That’s right,” I said. “But aside from that, if Jesus himself were offering the invitation to eat, whom would he call?”

The pastor scrunched up his face, and I said, “Let me rephrase the question. If Jesus himself were at the head of the table -- doing the inviting -- whom do you think he would exclude? Children? Jews? Blacks? Muslims? Unbaptized people? Whom would he turn away?”

That look of understanding, of sudden awareness, came over his face, and he said, “From what I know of Jesus, he wouldn’t turn anyone away. After all, we’re talking about a person who ate with tax collectors, prostitutes, and sinners.”

“That,” I said like a wise old supervisor, “is what you must base your decisions on -- the knowledge which comes out of your relationship with Jesus Christ -- not by the books or creeds or tradition. Speak out of that relationship, and you can speak with authority.”

It was what is called a teaching moment, one of those times when a critical learning or bit of wisdom strikes someone’s consciousness with great impact.

We, too, need to think about what this is we’re acting out. What is this ceremony, this sacrament, this ritual we call the Lord’s Supper, Communion, the Eucharist?

In Luke’s gospel Jesus may give us a piece of the answer. It’s not just a meal for insiders, as so many churches have tried to make it. It’s not a dinner meeting of the Christian Club. It’s the beginning of a picture, a vision, of the fullness of the Kingdom of God. It’s a foretaste of glory divine, as the hymn says.

In Luke 14:12-1 5 Jesus clearly shows us that the Kingdom of God and the banquet table of God are not for a select few. In the story we hear that Jesus said to the man who had invited him, “When you give a dinner or a banquet, do not invite your friends or your brothers and sisters or your kinfolk or rich neighbors for they will invite you in return and you will be repaid. When you give a dinner or a banquet, invite the poor, the lame, and the blind, and you will be blessed, because they cannot repay you. You will be repaid at the resurrection of the just.”

When one who sat at table with him heard this, he said, “Blessed is he who shall eat bread in the Kingdom of God.”

You see, the Kingdom of God -- the vision of the future we read about in Scripture, when the wolf shall lie down with the Iamb, when we shall beat our swords into plowshares, when justice shall roll down like floodwaters and righteousness like an ever flowing stream -- the Kingdom of God… is for all, not just for some.

The Lord’s Supper, the Communion table, isn’t yet the fullness of the Kingdom of God, but it’s a start. It’s a place where everyone can gather -- rich and poor, children and adults, black and red and yellow and white, male and female, blind and sighted, lame and walking. It’s a place where we can gather in peace, around the table of Jesus Christ which gives us a glimpse of the banquet table of the Kingdom of God.

Maybe some of you saw the movie Places in the Heart, with Sally Field. It’s set in the South, in Texas, in the 1930s. The movie is filled with varieties of prejudice. There is prejudice against women -- and the man who sells cotton seed to Sally Field tries to sell her inferior seed for full price, expecting that she won’t know the difference. There is prejudice against poor people -- and the banker and others only reluctantly allow Sally Field credit. There is prejudice against the disabled -- and a blind man is pushed around and taken advantage of when he tries to help his black friend. And there is prejudice against blacks -- and four local businessmen hide beneath their Ku Klux Klan hoods and almost beat Sally Field’s black hired man to death. In addition to prejudice, inequality, and injustice, there is marital infidelity. Sally Field’s brother-in-law is cheating on Sally Field’s sister, something which is eventually discovered. Also, Sally Field is left a widow right in the beginning of the movie because her husband is accidentally shot. The young black teenager (who shot him) receives no trial -- just vigilante justice, and he is dragged to death behind a car bumper.

If you recall, sin is separation -- distance between the two parties -- brokenness in a relationship. Sin can be seen in the broken relationship between us and God, or in the broken relationship between us and our neighbor.

Prejudice is sinful because it creates that distance; infidelity is sinful because it creates that distance. The distance can also be created and magnified by death. Places in the Heart is filled with sin, separation, brokenness, distance. The reason I mention it now, though, is for its powerful last scene. It is almost a dream sequence. In fact, it is a bit hazy, probably shot with a fuzzy filter on the camera so it would appear dreamy.

The scene is a church, and the minister walks to the pews to pass the Communion cup. Each person serves the next. And in the scene are all the people from the film -- Sally Field and her dead husband with the black teenager who shot him, Sally Field’s kids and the blind man who had boarded with them, the four men who had been Ku Klux Klansmen and the black hired man whom they beat up, the unfaithful brother-in-law and his wife, the banker and the unscrupulous cotton gin owner. All those people with brokenness, sin, and separation in their relationships -- yet they were there, together. But they weren't there for the Lord’s Supper as we know it. They were there sharing the Lord’s supper as it is in that time we envision, in that time we dream about, in that time we pray for -- that time we call the fullness of the Kingdom of God.

Sure, it’s a dream, a vision, the Kingdom of God. But we’re being asked to begin imagining it here and now, to begin stepping toward that vision like in Places in the Heart, to begin trying to flesh it out at our Communion rail or table.

I think my pastor friend grasped a bit of truth that day.

“When you give a dinner, don’t invite just friends, brothers and sisters, kinfolk, insiders. Invite the poor, the maimed, the blind. You will be repaid at the resurrection of the just. Blessed is the person who shall eat bread in the Kingdom of God.”

This is the Lord’s table, not mine, and he invites all who hunger in any way to join him and be fed.

C.S.S. Publishing Company, FINGERPRINTS ON THE CHALICE, by Steven Burt