October 31, 2021
Deuteronomy 6:1-9; Mark 12:28-34
+ In the
name of God, Creator, Redeemer and Sustainer. Amen.
I know
that I have preached many times here about my frustration with scriptures with
which we must engage on a Sunday morning.
You have
seen me approach this pulpit with a weary shuffle sometimes.
Or,
worse…when there is a scripture I just don’t want to preach about…well, I
don’t.
And
that’s all right.
I can do
that, as a preacher.
After
all, sometimes that’s exactly what the Holy Spirit seems to be telling me.
But…today…
Oh,
glorious day!
Today!
Today!
What do
we get?
We get
IT.
Capital
I.
Capital
T.
THIS is
what it’s all about.
These
scriptures are the penultimate scriptures.
And these
scriptures are where the rubber meets the road in our journey as followers of
Jesus.
You don’t
believe me?
If you
don’t, you have not been listening to me
over these last 13 years.
Because,
the message we find in our reading from both the Hebrew scriptures and the
reading we hear in our Gospel reading…well, this is the summation of it all.
This is
the point I keep coming back to, again and again.
And if
you take nothing else away from all those sermons I’ve shared from this pulpit,
please, PLEASE! take this away.
What we
find in our Gospel reading for today is everything I believe as a Christian, as
a priest, as loved Child of God and as a passionate follower of Jesus.
That
question I am asked, again and again, is what must I do to be “saved.”
And right
here, right there in our readings today, is the answer.
Let’s
examine the story.
A scribe
comes before Jesus after listening to the Sadducees arguing amongst themselves.
Now, a
scribe, as we know by now, was important in Jesus’ day.
They are
the ones who transcribed the scriptures by hand.
There
were no printing presses.
There was
no publisher of scriptures.
And
scribes took their job very seriously.
Every
word they inscribed, every jot and dash, was sacred, and they treated it as
such.
In the
process of their transcribing, they also became somewhat of experts on
scripture.
How could
you not?
Day after
day of transcribing these words and commandments and sacred stories.
So, this
scribe comes to Jesus and asks which of the commandments is foremost.
And
Jesus, seemingly without hesitation, says,
“The first is, ‘Hear, O Israel: the
Lord our God, the Lord is one; you shall love the Lord your God with all your
heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind, and with all your
strength.’ The second is this, ‘You shall love your neighbor as yourself.’
There is no other commandment greater than these.”
Now, Jesus
is not just a cherry-picked scripture, mind you.
Jesus and
every good, loyal Jewish male there on that day—including the scribe and those
Sadducees— was required to pray a prayer every day.
Jesus no
doubt prayed that prayer that morning, as did every devout Jewish male (and no
doubt many Jewish females) listening to him that day.
The
prayer is a recitation of the scripture from Deuteronomy.
It’s
called the Shema
“Hear, O
Israel, the Lord our God is one Lord; and you shall love the Lord your God with
all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your might.”
The Shema
is, of course, the summary of the Law.
It is a
summary of all belief for a Jew.
But Jesus
doesn’t just leave it there in regards to what is the foremost commandment.
Because
let’s face it.
If it was
just that—just loving God with all our hearts—well, we could do that right now,
right at home. All the time.
But no.
Jesus
doesn’t let it stand there.
He then
adds the second commandment.
‘To love one’s neighbor as
oneself,’
The
scribe is impressed with this answer, and tells him that this is more important
than burnt offerings and sacrifices.
That’s a
big statement from a scribe.
It is
then that Jesus makes a huge statement hidden right inside a seemingly simple
statement.
“You are
not far from the kingdom of God.”
In fact,
they were all so amazed by this, they didn’t even bother to question him
anymore.
So, what
must we do to be saved, according to Jesus?
Nowhere
in our scriptures, nowhere in this discourse or in any other, do we find that
all too familiar answer from the televangelists and others to our big question:
“One must
accept Jesus Christ as our personal Lord and Savior.”
It’s not
in the Bible. Anywhere.
But what
must we do to be saved, to draw near to the Kingdom of God, according to Jesus?
We must
love God with everything that is in us.
And we
must love others.
That’s
it.
Anything
else we add to that is just filler.
It really
is just that simple.
Love God.
Love
others.
Do those
two things, and you will draw near to the Kingdom of God.
If you do
these two things—if you strive to do these two things—in your life, you are a
follower of Jesus.
You are
doing what Jesus himself did.
You are
living out your faith.
This is
what it means to be a Christian.
It means
to love fully.
It means
loving God fully.
It means
loving others fully.
It means
loving ourselves fully.
It means
living that love out in our lives.
I know.
It sounds
so simple.
It sounds
so basic.
We wonder
why we ever thought it was hard or why others thought it was hard.
Well, it
actually is.
It is a
lot harder than it sounds.
Loving
God sometimes is not easy.
Loving
someone we don’t see with our eyes, or hear with our ears is not easy.
Loving
others is definitely not easy.
People
can be jerks. People sometimes ARE jerks.
Or worse.
They can
be monsters.
It is
hard to be a Christian in every aspect of our lives.
It’s hard
to love God in all things.
It is
hard to love our neighbors in all things.
It is
hard, very often to love even ourselves.
Because,
sometimes we are the jerks.
Sometimes
we are the monsters.
And
sometimes our ego prevents us from seeing that fact.
But that
is what it means to be a follower of Jesus.
When we
do those things—when we love fully and completely—we draw near to the Kingdom
of God.
And not just
after we die.
Not only when
we have left our bodies behind.
Right
here.
Right
now.
When we
do these things, we become conduits of that all-loving, all-accepting God.
We become
bearers of that radical, all-powerful love of God.
Now, do
you understand now why everything I preach and believe and do as a priest, as a
Christian, is based on this scripture, on this belief?
As you
know, I, like you, struggle with doubt and skepticism sometimes.
I get
frustrated by the world, by the larger Church, by those in authority, by the
unfairness and injustice of this world.
But one
thing I do not doubt is the inherent truth that is contained in the summation
of the Law.
Love God.
Love
others.
Love
yourself.
Do these
things, and you will gain the Kingdom of God, both here and in the next life.
Knowing
this, believing this with every ounce of my body, fills me with a strange, but
very real joy.
I am so
passionate in my belief in this that if I could do nothing else but preach
this, over and over again, I would be content.
You, on
the other, no doubt weary of your priest going on and on about this.
Well,
that’s just the way it is sometimes.
You knew
what you were getting when you hired me.
This
priest doesn’t hide his flame under a bushel.
But, even
so, let us truly take to heart what Jesus is telling us clearly today in our
Gospel reading.
Let us
truly love God.
Let us
live out our lives in the love we have received from God.
Let us
live fully in this holy and all-consuming love, sharing what we are nourished
on here with everyone.
And let
us love others.
Even
those terrible people who turn on us and make our lives miserable.
And let
us love ourselves.
We are,
after all, truly loved children of God.
Let us
love ourselves as God loves us.
And with
God’s love within us in this way, let us be that radical Presence of love and
acceptance to all those we encounter.
And when
we are, it is then that we are bringing the Kingdom of God near.
Let us
pray.
You, O
God of Israel, are One. May we truly love you with all hearts, all our souls,
and all our might; and may we truly love one another as you love us. And when
we do this, help us to truly see your Kingdom drawing near to us. Amen.