Matthew 6:1-4 · Giving to the Needy
Why We Do What We Do
Matthew 6:1-4
Sermon
by Mike Ripski
Loading...

A troubled 19-year old, estranged from family and having bounced around for years in foster homes and group homes, dumped by a girlfriend, and a day earlier having been fired from his job, goes into Omaha’s Westroads Mall with an assault rifle and guns down holiday shoppers and employees. Then kills himself.

In a suicide note he writes that he will no longer be a burden to anyone. And that he would be famous. (“Thoughts on Solitude,” by Wendy M. Wright, in Weavings, XXIII:6, p.9)

No longer be a burden to anyone. And be famous.

The young man had concluded that something was so wrong with him, so repugnant, so unacceptable, that he was nothing but a burden to all. He believed that his killing spree would finally gain the attention he so desperately craved.

I. The Human Condition: Original Sin

We are still on the hillside. Jesus has more to teach us. He turns his attention to why we do what we do. What motivates us? What need are we trying to satisfy?

The church has called the need Original Sin – the First Sin that every human inherits from humankind’s First Parents. And from which every human suffers.

A. Adam and Eve and the Serpent

Adam and Eve had it all. It was Paradise. They enjoyed harmony with their Creator and all creation. God made them partners in the tending of what God had made.

The crafty, devious serpent knew humankind’s weak spot. It is the awareness that we are the creature and not the Creator. We are not No. 1. We did not create all that is, including ourselves. We have limits. We are finite. Our lives are fragile. They are subject to death and decay. We are missing something that the Creator has.

The serpent plays on this awareness that we are creature rather than Creator. The serpent says, “The reason the Creator doesn’t want you to eat of the tree is that you’ll then know what he knows and be like him. The Creator wants to keep what he has to himself.” The serpent plants the seed of suspicion, of distrust. What is behind all that exists, can’t be trusted. We live in a hostile environment.

The serpent named our human reality. We are not as God. God has something we don’t have. We are less because of it.

The Original Sin was distrust of the Creator to have our welfare at heart – and to think that we can save ourselves by own efforts from this sense of being vulnerable and flawed.

Adam and Eve ate and their eyes were opened. What they saw didn’t cure their dis-ease. It only exacerbated it. They now not only were aware of the difference between them and the Creator. They were aware of the differences between themselves. And so they covered their vulnerability with fig leaves and began to point fingers of blame. Our estrangement from God leads to our estrangement from each other.

Such is the human condition. Such is humankind’s Original Sin. We have this profound anxiety that comes with knowing that we are not omnipotent, omniscient, omnipresent. We are not perfect. We are not eternal. We are not God.

B. Cain and Abel

This awareness can be intolerable at times. Recall the next story in Genesis as humankind’s story unfolds. Two sons of Adam and Eve, Cain and Abel, give offerings of thanksgiving to God. Abel’s offering pleased God. Cain’s doesn’t. Cain didn’t ask God why, so that next time he might change and make an offering that would please God. Instead, his failure to please God caused Cain to feel like a failure. It surfaced all those human feelings of not being good enough, of not being in control. He took out his anger at the human condition on his brother by murdering him.

C. The Tower of Babel

Then there’s the Genesis story about how this sense of profound anxiety, self-doubt, and distrust is a condition from which groups suffer from as well as individuals. One group says to itself, “Let us build a tower and exhibit our technological prowess. Let us make a name for ourselves. Let us prove we’re better than everyone else. That we’re No. 1.”

II. Ways We Use to Self-Justify

In his Sermon on the Mount Jesus addresses two of the ways we humans seek to justify our existence, to prove that we have a right to exist, that we are worth something, that we aren’t flawed after all. And maybe, if we can convince other people, we will convince ourselves as well.

A. Wealth

Both ways share a common assumption: people’s approval can overcome what ails us. Jesus mentions wealth, material success, earthly treasure. He says it won’t work, for earthly treasure is as fragile as we humans are. It is subject to rust, moth, thieves, and global financial crises. Here today gone tomorrow.

B. Religion

What Jesus pays the most attention to is a way of self-justifying that was especially prevalent in his day: religion. Jesus mentions three ways religion was being used to self-justify.

The first has to do with alms for the poor, with benevolences, with charitable giving. Jesus says if you’re out to impress people and you accomplish what you set out to do, you’ve succeeded. What Jesus is asserting that what you’ve succeeded in manipulating other people to give you really isn’t worth much. What you really need they can’t give you. What you really need you can’t achieve by your own efforts.

Jesus says, “When you give, don’t let your left hand know what you’re right hand is doing.” Give to those in need because of your love for them as the beloved children of God they are. Like you. You give because of their need, not yours.

Long ago I remember Oral Roberts declaring he was going to build a university to the glory of God. When it was finished, he named it after himself.

I know a church that has decided that, when it publishes memorials and honorariums in their newsletter, only the names of those being remembered and honored are listed.

Next Jesus takes up prayer. He tells us to pray to God and not to people. God is your audience. God already knows what you need before you ask.

Then Jesus takes up fasting, ascetical practices of self-denial. He says that fasting is our offering to God. God knows our hunger, our emptiness, the cost of our sacrifice. Don’t act like you’re suffering in order to gain the sympathy of others. They may be impressed with your martyr complex. God isn’t.

Why do we do what we do? Tuesday is Veterans Day. Many of you served your country because you were motivated by what your country needed and the world needed. You showed that it is possible to be motivated by something other than self-interest.

III. Means of God’s Grace

The church’s purpose is to convince all people that they are God’s beloved children. One of the means the church uses is sacraments – that mysterious chemistry of word and action. When we baptize, the church speaks on God’s behalf these words of claim and blessing: “You are God’s child, God’s beloved, and God is pleased with you. You don’t have to spend your life trying to earn God’s love or pleasure. God has already given it.”

When we come to the Table, we are shown how much we are loved as God gives his Son and the Son gives us his own life, broken and poured out for us the price of forgiveness.

Why are we so prone to believe ourselves a failure? We fail. We mess up. As I did last Monday night as I was heading home on Highway 100. I plowed into a car that had stopped, totaling her car and mine. We are imperfect. We are not God. God is able to see beyond our failure. God wants us to see beyond it too. God wants us free from all bondage, including guilt.

And so, after we confess our sins and hear words of forgiveness and assurance, we stand and declare the gospel truth to one another: “The peace of Christ be with you.” “And also with you.” Jesus said, “Peace I leave with you; my peace I give to you. I do not give to you as the world gives. Let not your hearts be troubled, and do not let them be afraid” (John 14:27).

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by Mike Ripski