Luke 6:17-26 · Blessings and Woes
Woe to the Blessed
Luke 6:17-26
Sermon
by Gary L. Carver
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One of my all-time favorite television programs was M*A*S*H. In the early episodes, Frank Burns and Hot Lips Houlihan were an item. Often they were pitted against Trapper John and Hawkeye. In one such episode, Frank and Hot Lips had been trying to "do-in" Hawkeye but had failed. Hawkeye now had the upper hand, and Radar said, "Why don't you do to them what they were trying to do to you?" Hawkeye said, "Look at them! They're each just one-half of a person and when they come together, they barely make a whole person. They have enough troubles of their own."

When I was pastoring in another state, I became acquainted with a very prominent religious leader whom I had admired for a long time. As we worked together and as I got closer to him, I became disillusioned because he did not seem to be the person that I had envisioned him to be. In fact, he was petty, self-centered, and manipulative. He used people for his own selfish ends. If you ever crossed him, you were off his list forever. I was speaking to my dear friend at that time, Hudson Baggett, who was then editor of the Alabama Baptist, about this individual, and in poetic language, once a teacher of preachers, he said, "What a shame it is that so big a man is so little. How tragic it is that such a large man cast such a small shadow."

Half-people — casting small shadows. In our text for today, Jesus is talking about people who are half-persons becoming whole persons. Jesus is talking about people who don't get life. They just don't get it, but Jesus says that they can get life. It started as most everything starts in the Gospel of Luke, with Jesus in prayer. Verse 12 says that Jesus spent all night on the mountainside praying to the Father trying to ascertain the Father's values, the Father's views, and the Father's will. After spending the night in prayer, he chose his disciples. Luke is speaking with theological geography in that Jesus came down from the mountain on a level plain with the people. He was with the people. Emmanuel — God with us.

As he came down from the mountain, he was teaching, preaching, and healing. The crowds closed in around him when Jesus stopped and said, "Wait!" And he uttered these words, "Blessed are you who hunger, blessed are you who are poor, blessed are you who cry, blessed are you when people exclude you, and blessed are you who jump for joy when people reject you." And then he said, "Woe to those who are rich, woe to those who are well fed, woe to those who laugh, and woe to those whom everyone speaks well of." These words shocked them out of their theology of favoritism. They looked at each other and said, "What in the world is he talking about? He has just turned our entire world upside-down. What could he mean by all of this?"

And we ask ourselves, "What does he mean?" I don't know about you but this text makes me a little bit uncomfortable. When I read this text, I feel uneasy because what I hear just might change my life. What does he mean? Does he mean that God hates the rich or that God hates the so-called blessed of our society? Of course not! God loves everyone! What he may be saying is that if our lives are centered around our possessions and the pleasing of ourselves by our resources, we may already have our reward. The word "reward" here means "paid in full." Isn't it ironic that in a day in which we supposedly have the finest economy in years, there is a yearning in the heart and soul of the American people for spirituality? Now I'm not talking about a spirituality that is always found in churches, but a hunger for spirituality. It is as if the entire nation is saying, "There's got to be more!" Perhaps Jesus is saying that if our lives are centered around only that which pleases us then we have all that's coming.

Jesus said, "To whom much is given, much is required." So often we forget that everything we have been given, life itself, our possessions, our resources, and our finances are given to us by God as a gift to be given to others. We are just a channel through which our energies and resources are funneled to others. That is the purpose of the church. The church is to give us structure and discipline so that we may not only be ministered unto but we can minister and give our talents, resources, and gifts to others making their lives better. The church budget is a structure to teach us to tithe and to give of our resources so that other lives may be enriched. "To whom much is given, much shall be required," Jesus said.

Or, maybe Jesus is talking to those who are so blessed and reminding us that success is much harder to handle than failure. Ask Leon Spinks. Several years ago, he shocked the boxing world when he upset Mohammed Ali, the heavyweight champion of the world. The year after Leon Spinks became heavyweight champion of the world, the world for Leon Spinks was total chaos. The night he went in to face Ali for the rematch, over thirty people were in his entourage as he made his way into the ring, but after defeat he sat in his dressing room alone.

Ask Oskana Baiul who, just a few short years ago, stunned the Olympic world with her beautiful figure skating, but success was hard to handle. Now she fights to regain a fraction of her former abilities. Ask the Boston Red Sox player. I forget his name but they say he makes over two million dollars a year and he just filed for bankruptcy. Ask Mike Tyson. He made $147 million in 27 months and his accountant told him recently that he was broke. Success is hard to handle.

I love the Peanuts comic strip where Lucy is chiding Charlie Brown. In the first frame she says, "I have just examined my character and I find it to be without flaw." Next frame, "What I am going to do is hold a ceremony and give myself a medal." Next frame, "And then I'm going to give a wonderful speech." Next frame, "I am going to receive myself and congratulate myself in the receiving line." In the last frame she says, "You know, when you're a saint you have to do everything for yourself." I don't know if I would agree with her definition of a saint, but I can hear the loneliness. There has to be more.

Rabbi Kushner tells the story of being shown a caterpillar in South Wales. The caterpillar makes itself into a moth that has no mouth and no digestive system. That is all the caterpillar does. The moth then lays its eggs and dies. It has no other reason for living. There's got to be more to life than show up, further the species, and die!

Maybe Jesus is saying that he loves the poor. This is not Matthew. Jesus is not talking about poor in spirit; he is talking about people who are poverty stricken. He is talking about people who do not have enough to eat or wear and he is saying that God loves the poor. His own Son knew what it was to be poor. His own Son knew what it was to be hungry. His own Son knew what it was to walk as you and I walk, suffering all the trials and afflictions of this life. His own Son knew what it was like to be rejected. His own Son knew what it was to be overwhelmed by the enormity of life. His own Son knew everything that you know. His own Son knew what poverty was. God wants it better for those who are poor, for those who weep, and for those who are excluded. Could it be that one reason God loves the poor is because they come to him in their poverty and brokenness and say, "God, this is all I have"? Sometimes those who have a lot try to buy God off. Sometimes those that are well fed don't feel the need for God. Sometimes we who laugh say, "You know life is going pretty well," and sometimes we who are spoken well of think, "Well, I'm popular so everything must be all right. I must deserve all of this."

Sometimes when we have everything, we simply don't feel the need for God. Those who are poor come to him with empty hands saying, "Oh, God, we have no one but you and you can have all that we have, which is nothing." Maybe Jesus is talking about making God the center of our existence. We come to God not in what we have, but in what we have not. We come to God not in what we are, but what we are not. We place it before him and say, "Oh, God, here am I. I am yours completely! You are the center of my life. All of my life is centered around my relationship to you. You are at the center of my thoughts and actions. You are the purpose and direction of my resources. Here I am, God. Everything I have and everything that I don't have, everything that I am and everything that I am not, I bring to you."

And you say, "Preacher, that sounds great, but I can't enter a convent. I can't join a monastery. I have bills to pay, a family to support, and a life to live! Don't talk to me about that kind of stuff. I can't live up to it. Life is not meant to be a joyless parade," and you are exactly right. In fact, the Talmud, a commentary on Jewish Scriptures, says, "We will be brought in judgment to God for every good thing that he put upon this earth that we refuse to enjoy." You say, "Now, preacher, you've got me more confused than ever. Are we supposed to be joyful or are we supposed to be poor? I don't understand." I think he means that we are to put God at the very center of our lives. We are to put our personal relationship to the Lord Jesus Christ at the very center of our existence. It is the most precious gift that we have.

Every thought and every action we extend is centered around our personal relationship to the living Lord, Jesus Christ. I think it means this: In our best of days when everything seems to be going well, we ought to enjoy life with fullness, joyfulness, exuberance, and extravagance. We ought to enjoy the marvelous life that God has placed before us, always mindful that there is a great danger when we center our lives around what we have. That can become a distraction to our relationship with God.

I also think it means that in our worst of days when nothing seems to be going right we must remember that the final accounting has not occurred and we do not need to be weary in well doing because God rewards his faithful. I don't know about you, but sometimes I get tired of structure. I get tired of discipline. I get tired of poring over sermons late at night, but Jesus says, "It is all worth it!" That is not just some "pie in the sky" statement. Jesus is saying that it is not only worth it then, it is all worth it now! A life surrendered to Jesus is the very best of all lives, and that will work in the best of your days and in the worst of your days.

I love the story that is told of a factory that was having problems with employees stealing. The company hired a security firm to help with the problem. They had guards posted at all exits and they were to check each employee as they left for the day. They searched their clothing and lunch boxes to make sure they were not taking anything out. Every day one guy came by with a wheelbarrow full of junk. Every day they stopped him and plowed through all of the junk and garbage that was in the wheelbarrow. It took several minutes every day to search through the junk. Every day the same thing — nothing but junk in the wheelbarrow. Finally, the security person said, "Look, fellow, I know something is going on. Every day you come through here and all we find in the wheelbarrow is junk. If you promise to tell me exactly what is going on, I promise not to turn you in. Tell me what is going on." The fellow grinned and said, "I'm stealing wheelbarrows."

That story has two truths that I want to leave with you: 1) Things may not always be what they seem to be, at least on the outside, and 2) Don't go looking in junk and garbage for the most obvious answer to the meaning and essence of life. It's found in God's Word. It's found in your heart. As you give your heart and life to Jesus Christ, as you center your entire existence around him, oh, the blissful joy and happiness that is yours. Are you one of his? How can you answer that without a smile on your face?

CSS Publishing Company, Inc., Sermons for Sundays in Advent, Christmas, and Epiphany: Building a Victorious Life, by Gary L. Carver