The Rev. Charles Barebo
August 30, 2015 - Pentecost 14
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Put God in Your Heart
Today’s
gospel switches from John and metaphors about bread to Mark. Mark’s story of
Jesus is powerful and to the point. His gospel is believed to be the first
gospel written down. This fall we’ll be hearing about the ongoing conflict
between Jesus and the Pharisees from Mark. And how the disciples do not
comprehend Christ’s methods or mission. To get the most out of Mark it is
important to understand what makes the Pharisees tick, the group that Paul
calls the strictest of the strict.
The ancient
Israelites believed that God lived in the temple in Jerusalem. In Isaiah it
tells us that when God was in the temple so much smoke filled the building that
humans could not enter. The temple was where earth and heaven interlocked and one
would go to be in God’s presence. Ancient Judaism was about the temple. At
least until the second Exile when the Babylonians took Jerusalem and destroyed
the temple. Seventy years later the Persians took Babylon and allowed the Israelites
to return home and rebuild the temple. Then in the second century the Syrians
took Jerusalem and desecrated the temple. The desecrated temple and living
under the pagan rule began to change the way that the Israelites looked at
their faith.
By Christ’s
time Jewish theology began to change. If you kept the Torah, the first five
books of the Old Testament, it was as if you were in the Temple itself – that
is the place where heaven and earth met. Regardless of whether pagans or
corrupt Jews ruled and what when on in the temple, practicing the laws set
forth in the Torah became where first century Israelites found God. The
Pharisees were sticklers for the Torah. Never numbering more than 6,000 in
Palestine’s population of 2,500,000 they were nevertheless a force to be
reckoned with. Knowing what makes the Pharisees tick is important in
understanding Mark’s Gospel and the traps they set for Jesus.
Jesus’
message would have been seen as very subversive or revolutionary by the Pharisees. When challenged about the Levitical cleanliness laws Jesus tells the Pharisees
that these laws were never important, that the Pharisees gave God lip service
but never accepted God in their hearts. They had “abandoned the commandment of
God and hold to human tradition.” Jesus,
never one for political correctness, points out their sin for ignoring God
while focusing on human traditions.
The
disciples are not understanding Christ’s message. After the exchange with the Pharisees they
ask Jesus what the parable meant. Jesus is clear, the real evil was not what we
eat or how we wash or the things that come from the outside but rather things
that come out of the heart like theft, murder, immorality, greed, wickedness,
envy, slander and pride, these are the things that make us unclean. Then Jesus
goes on to strike down the kosher food laws. Jesus is challenging the very
rubrics of Jewish life. Jesus is always brutally honest. And this honesty will
cost him his human life.
The
Pharisees are still with us today. It seems so much easier to accept our
politically correct rules of man-made tradition as opposed to accepting Jesus
in our hearts. It’s not easy to be a disciple; in fact it seems almost
impossible at times. We can see the
Pharisees in action everyday if we have our eyes open. In our leadership at
local, state and national levels; where politicians tell us about change that
is needed and then play party politics, ignoring the call to work together and
compromise to fix our many ills. And both parties do it, all the time. When our
mayors, congress men and women, state officials and candidates prattle on about
state building or helping what we call the poor, while being investigated or
charged with crimes we see the Pharisees at work. This is happening in
Allentown, in Harrisburg and in DC at this very moment.
In our schools where we are more concerned with avoiding lawsuits than teaching wisdom, justice and mercy; Where we are more interested in correctness and a common core as opposed to teaching each and every child to the best of their abilities-the Pharisees are at work. Even in the church, we sometimes become so caught up that we forget that we are charged to love God and our neighbor. The farther we stray from the Great Command, Christ’s mission for His disciples, the closer we edge into the Pharisees camp. In fact, this can become our litmus test for our actions in the church. Does this further Christ’s mission? Does it love God, does it love our neighbor, and does it build the Kingdom? If it does we’ve let God into our heart.
In our schools where we are more concerned with avoiding lawsuits than teaching wisdom, justice and mercy; Where we are more interested in correctness and a common core as opposed to teaching each and every child to the best of their abilities-the Pharisees are at work. Even in the church, we sometimes become so caught up that we forget that we are charged to love God and our neighbor. The farther we stray from the Great Command, Christ’s mission for His disciples, the closer we edge into the Pharisees camp. In fact, this can become our litmus test for our actions in the church. Does this further Christ’s mission? Does it love God, does it love our neighbor, and does it build the Kingdom? If it does we’ve let God into our heart.
In Mark’s
Gospel today, Jesus calls us into the true relationship with the Father and the
Son. It is simple, pure and just. It opens the door to true peace, love and
happiness. In our hearts lie the seeds of the Pharisees way – missing Christ’s
invitation and focusing on man-made tradition, planted there by evil to lead us
from the Way. Let Christ then be our guide to allow God into our hearts. And
may all our actions meet Christ’s litmus test – Does this love God, our
neighbors and build the Kingdom? For first century Jews, the temple was where
heaven and earth meet and God’s presence was felt. For Christians when God is
in our hearts, heaven and earth interlock and we are in His presence.
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