November 26, 2023
Ezekiel 34.11-16, 20-24; Matthew 25.31-46
+ Today is of course Christ the King
Sunday.
Now, as most of you know, I have issues
with authority.
I bristle at talk of rulers and kinds
(and Presidents).
But for some reason, I don’t have much
of an issue with the idea of Christ as King, despite my deep-seated issues with
authority.
I love this idea of God as Ruler.
And, as you know, I love preaching
about the Kingdom or Reign of God.
Jesus did it all the time.
The Reign of God is a good thing to
preach about.
But, it’s an important Sunday for
another reason.
It is the last Sunday in that very
long, green season of Pentecost.
Today, for the Church, it is New Year’s
Eve.
The old church year of Sundays—Church
Year A—ends today.
The new church year—Church Year
B—begins next Sunday, on the First Sunday of Advent.
So, what seems like an ending today is
renewed next week, with the coming of Advent, in that revived sense of longing
and expectation that we experience in Advent.
Today, we get a great reading from the
Prophet Ezekiel.
We hear God saying things through
Ezekiel like,
“I will seek out my sheep. I will rescue them from all the places
to which they have been scattered on a day of clouds and thick darkness.”
And (I love this one)
“I feed them with justice.”
We also get to hear Jesus tell us that
story of the sheep and the goats, echoing in many ways our reading from Ezekiel.
Now, I actually love this parable—not
because of its threat of punishment (which everyone gets hung up on), not
because of its judgment.
I love this story because there is
something beautiful and subtle going on just beneath the surface, if you take
the moment to notice.
And that subtle aspect of this story is
this:
If you notice, the reward is given not
to people who work for the reward.
The reward is not given to people who
help the least of their brethren because they know they will gain the reward.
The reward is granted to those who help
the least of their brethren simply because the least need help.
The reward is for those who have no
regard or idea that a reward even awaits them for doing such a thing.
Now I don’t think I need to tell anyone
here who the least of our brethren are.
The least of our brethren are the ones
who are hungry, who are thirsty, who are naked, who are sick and who are in
prison.
I think this ties in beautifully to our
own ideas of why we do what we do as followers of Jesus.
I preach this a lot!!
Why do we do what we do, we must ask
ourselves?
Do we do these things because we think
we’re going to get a reward for doing them?
Or do we do these things because by
doing them we know it goes for a greater reward than anything we ourselves
could get?
In our Gospel reading today, we find
that the Kingdom of God is prepared for those who have been good stewards, who
do good for the sake of doing good.
It is prepared for those who have been
mindful of what has been given to them and have been mindful of those around
them in need.
It is a great message during this
stewardship time
For us, we need to realize that the
Kingdom is prepared for us as well.
It is prepared for us who have sought
to be good stewards without any thought of eternal reward.
For us who strive to do good for the
sake doing good.
It is prepared for us who have simply
done what we are called to do as followers of Jesus.
To love God, and to love others.
That is why we do good.
For us, in our own society, we find
that these same terms found in Jesus’ parable have a wider definition.
Hungry for us doesn’t just mean hungry
for food.
It means hungry for love, for healing,
for wholeness.
Hungry to be included, and treated as
equals.
It means hungry, also, for God.
Thirsty doesn’t just mean for water.
Thirsty for us means thirsty for
fairness or justice or peace.
And thirsty for God.
Naked doesn’t just mean without
clothing.
It means, for us, to be stripped to our
core, to be laid bare spiritually and emotionally and materially, which many of
us have known in our lives.
We have known what it means to be
spiritually and emotionally naked.
To be sick, doesn’t necessarily mean to
be sick with a disease in our bodies.
It is means to be sick in our hearts
and in our relationships with others.
It means to be sick with despair or
depression or anxiety or spiritually barrenness.
And we all know that the prisons of our
lives sometimes don’t necessarily have walls or bars on the doors.
The prisons of our lives are sometimes
our fears, our prejudices, our anxieties, our addictions, our very selves.
To not go out and help those who need
help is to be arrogant, to be selfish, to be headstrong.
To not do so is to turn our backs on
following where Jesus leads us.
Because Jesus leads us into that place
wherein we must love and love fully and give and give freely—of ourselves and
of what we have been given.
It means to “feed with justice,” as God
tells us in Ezekiel.
I like that because that is definitely
what we have all been striving to do here at St. Stephen’s.
We practice our radical hospitality to
everyone who comes to us in any way.
And, I think, we accept everyone who
comes to us fully.
Here, we not only welcome people, but I
think we allow people to be the people God created them to be—without judgment,
without prejudice, just as the Kingdom no doubt will be.
And is.
Again, that brings us back to Jesus’
parable.
The meaning of this story is this: If
you do these things—if you feed the hungry, if you give drink to the thirsty,
if you welcome the stranger, if you clothe the naked, if you visit the sick and
imprisoned—if you simply respond to one another as loving human beings—if you
do these things without thought of reward, but do them simply because you, as a
Christian, are called to do them, the reward is yours.
The Reign of God is not only awaiting
us in the next world, on the other side of the veil.
The Reign of God, when we do these
things, is here.
Right now.
Right in our midst.
As Christians, we shouldn’t have to
think about doing any of those
things.
They should be like second nature to
us.
We should be doing them naturally,
instinctively.
For those of us who are hungry or
thirsty, who feel like strangers, who are naked, sick and imprisoned—and at
times, we have been in those situations—we find Christ in those rays of hope
that break through into our lives.
It is very similar to the hope we are
clinging to in this moment as we enter Advent—that time in which the Light is
seen breaking into the encroaching darkness of our existence.
And we—in those moments when we feed
the hungry, when we give drink to the thirsty, when we welcome the stranger,
when we clothe the naked, when we visit the sick and imprisoned—in those
moments, we become that light in the darkness, that hope in someone else’s
life.
We embody Christ and Christ’s Reign
when we become the conduits of hope.
So, as we celebrate the end of this
liturgical year and set our expectant eyes on the season of Advent, let us not
just be filled with hope.
Let us be a true reflection of Christ’s
hope to this world.
Let us be the living embodiment of that
hope to those who need hope.
And in doing so, we too will hear those
words of assurance to us:
“Come, you that are blessed by my Father, inherit the kingdom
prepared for….”
I am going to close today with the
prayer they pray at All Saints, Pasadena on this Christ the King Sunday.
It’s a beautiful prayer.
So, let us pray,
Most Gracious God, who in Jesus of Nazareth
showed us an alternative to the kings, queens and emperors of history, help us
to revere and emulate Jesus’ leadership: To love, and to seek justice for all
people. Help us to recognize the true grandeur and life-changing power based in
loving you and all of our neighbors. In Christ Jesus with you and the Holy
Spirit, may we co-create a world ruled not through domination, but in that
radical and all-powerful compassion and love. Amen.
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