October 23, 2022
Luke 18.9-14
+ Since I’ve been your priest here at St., Stephen’s of quite some
time now, you have gotten to known some of my pet peeves.
Let’s open it up.
What are some of my pet peeves?
Well, certainly only one of the big ones as a priest is none other
than: triangulation.
If you want to set me off like a rocket, try to nudge me into that
fun catch-22.
Here’s essentially what triangulation is:
Sometimes people come to me as a priest and, because they have
some issue with another parishioner, they want me to go to that other person
and deal with the situation this other person is having on their behalf.
The excuse here is that, since it is a church issue, the “church
guy” should take care of this issue for them.
After all, I must be on their side of this issue, right?
Now, to be clear, THEY don’t want to confront the person.
But they seem to think it’s somehow the priest’s job to confront
that person for them and for this particular issue that they themselves see as
something that needs to be confronted.
Now, before we go on from here I just want to be clear:
It is NOT the priest’s job to do this.
Nowhere in my contract does it say I am to do this kind of a job.
What this triangulation does is it puts the priest not in their
rightful position as priest, but only puts them in an awkward situation in
which they can’t win.
Stuck right in the middle.
To be clear, it is not the priest’s job to be THAT PERSON.
Triangulation, as you can guess, is one of the quickest “clergy
killers” out there.
You want your priest out, all of you have to do is try to draw
them into an ugly triangle like this.
Actually, I luckily, have not really had to deal with
triangulation much here at St. Stephen’s very often.
And those times when it has come up, I have reacted pretty
strongly against it.
One of the great aspects of St. Stephen’s has been the
self-reliance of the parishioners.
But, in other congregations I’ve served, let me tell you, they do
attempt to resort to triangulation quite often.
And…I hear many fellow clergy share stories in which they have
found themselves trapped in the middle of those situations.
In the past, when I have found myself being nudged into such a
situation, I finally have had to ask a question.
I, of course, tell the person: you need to talk to this person if
you have an issue with them.
You’re talking to them will probably be much more successful than
my talking to them on your behalf.
But, if that doesn’t work—and it usually doesn’t work—I ask those
people: “have you tried praying for them?”
And I’m not saying, praying for them to change, for them to be more like what you expect them to
be.
Have you just prayed for them, as they are?
Because when we do that, we find that maybe nothing in that other
person changes—ultimately we can’t control how other people act or do
things—but rather we are the ones who
change.
We are the ones who find ourselves changing our attitude about
that person, or seeing that person from another perspective.
However it works, prayer like this can be disconcerting and
frightening.
Let me tell you.
I have done it.
I’ll be honest: I have had issues with people who do not meet my
own personal expectations.
But I do find that as I pray for them, as I struggle before God
about them, sometimes nothing in that other person changes.
(God also does not allow God’s self to be triangulated)
But I often find myself changing my attitude about them, even when
I don’t want to.
Prayer, often, is the key.
But not controlling prayer.
Rather, prayer that allows us to surrender to God’s will.
That’s essentially what’s happening in today’s Gospel reading.
In our storyw e find the Pharisee.
A Pharisee was a very righteous person.
They belonged to an ultra-orthodox sect of Judaism that placed
utmost importance on a strict observance of the Law of Moses—the Torah.
The Pharisee is not praying for any change in himself.
He arrogantly brags to God about how wonderful and great he is in
comparison to others.
The tax collector—someone
who was ritually unclean according the Law of Moses— however, prays that
wonderful, pure prayer
“God, be merciful to me, a sinner!”
It’s not eloquent.
It’s not fancy.
But it’s honest.
And it cuts right to heart of it all.
To me, in my humble opinion, that is the most perfect prayer any
of us can pray.
“God, be merciful to me, a sinner!”
It’s a prayer I have held very, very dear for so long.
And it is a prayer that had never let me down once.
Prayers for mercy are probably one of the purest and most honest
prayers we can make.
And what I love even more about this parable is the fact that the
prayer of the Pharisee isn’t even necessarily a bad prayer in and of itself.
I mean, there’s an honesty in it as well.
The Pharisee is the religious one, after all.
He is the one who is doing right according to organized religion.
He is doing what Pharisees do; he is doing the “right” thing; he
is filling his prayer with thanksgiving to God.
In fact, every morning, the Pharisee, like all orthodox Jewish men
even to this day, pray a series of “morning blessings.”
These morning blessings include petitions like
“Blessed are you, Lord God, King of the Universe, who made me a
son of Israel.”
“Blessed are you, Lord God, King of the Universe, who did not make
me a slave.”
And this petition:
“Blessed are you, Lord God, King of the Universe, who did not make
me a woman.”
So, this prayer we hear the Pharisee pray in our story this
morning is very much in line with the prayers he would’ve prayed each morning.
Again, we should be clear: we should all thank God for all the
good things God grants us.
The problem arises in the fact that the prayer is so horribly
self-righteous and self-indulgent that it manages to cancel out the rightness
of the prayer.
The arrogance of the prayer essentially renders it null and void.
The tax collector’s prayer however is so pure.
It is simple and straight-to-the-point.
This is the kind of prayer Jesus again and again holds up as an
ideal form of prayer.
But what gives it its punch is that is a prayer of absolute
humility.
And humility is the key here.
It gives the prayer just that extra touch.
There is no doubt in our minds as we hear this parable that God
hears—and grants—this prayer, even though it is being prayed by someone
considered to be the exact opposite of the Pharisee.
Whereas the Pharisee is the religious one, the righteous one, the
tax collector, handling all that pagan unclean money of the conquerors, is
unclean.
He is an outcast.
Humility really is the key.
And it is one of the things, speaking only for myself here, that I
am sometimes lacking in my own spiritual life.
But, humility is important.
It is essential to us as followers of Jesus.
St. Teresa of Avila, the great Carmelite saint, once said,
“Humility, humility. In this way we let our Lord conquer, so that [God] hears
our prayer.”
I think we’re all a bit guilty of lacking humility in our own lives, certainly
in our spiritual lives and in being self-righteous when it comes to sin.
We all occasionally find ourselves wishing we could control and
correct the shortcomings and failures of others.
Oh, let me tell you!
When a person fails miserably, or is caught in a scandal, I find
myself saying: “Thank God it’s them and not me.”
Which is terrible of me!
And maybe that’s also an honest prayer to make.
Because what we also say in that prayer is that we, too, are
capable of being just that guilty.
We all have a shadow side.
And maybe that’s what we’re seeing in those people we want to
correct.
There’s no way around the fact that we do have shadow sides.
But the fact is, the only sins we’re responsible for ultimately—the
only people who can ultimately control—are our own sins—not the sins of others.
We can’t pay the price of other’s sins nor should we delight in
the failings or shortcomings of others.
All we can do as Christians, sometimes, is humble ourselves.
Again and again.
Sometimes all we can do is let God deal with a situation, or a
person who drives us crazy.
God, have mercy on me, a sinner
We must learn to overlook what others are doing sometimes.
Doing so, exhausts me.
And so I don’t know why I would want to deal with other’s issues
if my own issues exhaust me.
There are too many self-righteous Christians in the world.
We know them.
They frustrate us.
And they irritate us.
We don’t need anymore.
What we need are more humble, contrite Christians.
We need to be Christians who don’t see anyone as inferior to us—as
charity cases to whom we can share our wealth and privileges and whom we wish
to control and make just like us.
That is true humility.
In our own eyes, if we carry true humility within us, if we are
our own stiffest and most objective judges, then we know that we are the most
wretched of them all and that we are in no place to condemn others.
In dealing with others, we have no other options than just simply
to love those people—fully and completely, even when they drive us crazy.
Sin or no sin, we must
simply love them and hate our own sins.
That is what it means to be a true follower of Jesus.
It is essential if we are going to truly love those we are called
by Jesus to love and it is essential to our sense of honesty before God.
So, let us steer clear of such self-righteousness.
But, in being humble, let us also not beat ourselves up and be
self-deprecating.
Rather, let us work to overcome our own shortcomings and rise
above them.
Let us look at others with pure eyes—with eyes of love.
Let us not see the shortcomings and failures of others, but let us
see the light and love of God permeating through them, no matter who they are.
And with this perception, let us realize that all of us who have
been humbled will be lifted up by God.
All of us will be exalted in ways so wonderful we cannot even
begin to fathom them in this moment.
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