Matthew 23:1-39 · Seven Woes
Would You Be a Saint?
Matthew 23:1-39
Sermon
by Leonard Sweet
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How many of you played “dress up” this weekend?

Wow…There’s a lot of you who “dressed up.” What did you “dress up” as? …[make this as karaoke as you can ... You may want to prime the pump by arranging for some to wear their “dress ups” to church]

On Halloween we “dress up” in costumes and put on masks to “hide out,” to conceal who we really are. Originally the “disguises” worn on “All Hallows Eve” were supposed to fool the demons and other dark forces roaming the planet on that fateful night. The idea was that good Christians would be left alone by evil spirits if they dressed to look like they themselves were part of Satan’s army.

How times have changed. I don’t think too many demons were put-off by Barbie Princesses, High School Musical cheerleaders, or Star Wars soldiers. Many parents found that this Halloween the problem was not that the most popular costumes were “too scary,” but that they were way too sexy! (So, YES, they were way too scary for Mom and Dad!)

But for a lot of us the “dressing up” in costume didn’t stop with Friday night. We also “dressed up” to come to church on Sunday morning. We exchanged our Friday night “sinner” for our Sunday “saint” costume. For some reason many of us have become convinced that there is a great divide between clothing and our spiritual condition.

The family, the Body of Christ, should always require a two-pronged greeting: “Good Morning Saints; Good Morning Sinners!” That is the organic complexity, the paradox of orthodoxy, that makes up this “Christ-Body” and makes it so vital.

Both Saints and Sinners are present and accounted for.

And all of us are both.

My grandma used to make her requests using a very particular vocabulary. She would ask, “Would you be a saint and bring me that sweater?” Or maybe, “Would you be a saint and pick up those dishes?” All of her requests gave us the opportunity to register ourselves as “saints.”

But is that all there is to being a “saint?” Would all of us be real “saints” if all we had to do was run helpful errands? Isn’t there some deeper commitment, some greater impulse required of a “saint?”

We all know there are true saints in our midst this morning. Can’t you feel their presence? We have but to recognize and celebrate them. And this is our problem.

The problem with real “saints” is that they are slippery. Jesus identified the revealing qualities of a true “saint” in today’s text. They don’t proudly peacock their achievements. They do not wear “broad phylacteries” or “long fringes.” They do not insist upon the best, recognition of their deeds, or need special placement in the community, or the best seats in the sanctuary.

True “saints” slip under the radar.

One reason the “Extreme House Makeover” program is such a feel-good, hands-down, no-holds-barred mega-hit, is that it takes the time to find the “real” saints.

Those who give without expectations.

Those who love without reservation.

Those who sacrifice without expectation.

People who give, love, and sacrifice, without ever wanting recognition or recompense, are those who qualify as “saints” within the Body of Christ.

Although yesterday was “All Saints Day,” today is “All Saints Sunday.” It is the one day we should especially make a concerted effort to recognize and celebrate “For all the saints/who from their labors rest. . .” These are the “saints” who have been gone for centuries, whose legacy of love continues on – saints like St. Paul, St. Augustine, St. Francis, St. Theresa, St. Jerome - all those saints appropriately identified and honored by the big “capital C” Church.

But there are also our local saints. The “sainting process” that the Roman Catholic Church runs all potential “saint candidates” through is both rigorous and sanitizing. Candidates who are potential “saints” must pass through a strict series of tests. They are also processed through a saintly sanitizer.

Why do we have the need for our “saints” to be utterly sinless? Why is there no room for unsanitized saints?

That is a far cry from the biblical standard.

St. Peter denied Christ three times

St. Paul persecuted Christians and cheered at Stephan’s stoning

St. Augustine was a spoiled, promiscuous, rebellious youth

St. Aquinas was gluttonous, rude, and abusive

Or read Hebrews 11, the great “communion of saints” chapter. Can you find one member of the “communion of saints” that isn’t portrayed in the Bible with warts? In some ways, this great “by faith” chapter of “saints” resembles more a “Rogues’ Gallery” than a Hall of Saints. Every Christian “saint” first comes to us as a “sinner.” In fact, in the Old Testament the faults and foibles of the patriarchs are paraded not hidden. In the Bible, we see saints in their underwear.

The way we play on Halloween is by putting on a mask, pretending to be something we are not. The way Christians reclaim their identity on All Saints Day is by stripping off all those masks. We expose who we really are, what we really care about, who we really love - once the masks come off.

If All Hallows’ Eve is all about Masking, All Saints Day is all about Unmasking - unmasking the saints.

Saints do not wear masks.

Saints do wear their hearts on their sleeves.

Saints do wear weariness in well doing.

Saints do wear crowns of suffering and long-suffering.

Saints do wear crowns of martyrdom sometimes.

Saints do mess up and bleed and fail.

Because saints always love.

Today is the day the Church should celebrate all those saints that stand in our midst. “Saints” are those people who keep the heart of the Body of Christ beating, who keep the Body of Christ warm, vital, and alive, for the whole world to see.

Is there anybody here who doesn’t know “Joe the Plumber?” The Presidential candidates have made a big deal of imaging the problems plaguing this country by using “Joe the Plumber” as their specific “real life” example. Whatever your political leaning, we all know “specifics matter.”

It’s time we Christians celebrate the particular and lift up the saints and angels in our midst. It’s time to unmask “Joe the Saint” and “Sarah the Angel.”

In fact, maybe we need to reframe that word saint, since “saint” is such a sterile, cold word.

The person who cleans the bathrooms before church on Sunday is a real human — a real saint.

The parent who takes three or four extra kids home from an event because they can is a real human, is a real “saint.”

The senior who volunteers time with snarly teenagers is a real human is a real “saint.”

The number cruncher who spends a lifetime balancing budgets and then spends their “down-time” helping un-scramble church finances . . . you’re a saint.

There are potential saints everywhere. Maybe we need to prophecy some saints into existence.

The grocery store checker who makes sure your eggs aren’t cracked and asks if everything is okay . . . “You’re a saint!”

The bank-teller who looks you in the eye and notes it is a beautiful day . . . “You’re a saint!”

The driver who lets you first at a four way stop . . . “You’re a saint!”

“Those who exalt themselves will be humbled, and all who humble themselves will be exalted” Jesus promises.

Saints are not those who exceed all the rest of us. Saints are those who most wholly manifest Jesus’ mandate of service.

The true saint is not a non-sinner. The true saint is one who humbles themselves, serves others, and does not concern themselves with the outcome.

“You’re a saint!”

Would YOU be a saint . . . ?

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by Leonard Sweet