Sermon preached on November 11, 2012 at the Church of St. Luke & St. Simon Cyrene: Psalm 146, Mark 12:38--13:2 (Proper 27B)
Happy are they who have the God of Jacob for their
help;
whose hope is in the Lord
their God.
By any stretch of the imagination, the scribes were not
Jesus’ favorite people. He sees in them
the antithesis of what he was trying to teach about the ways of God. So who were the scribes?
A scribe in Jesus’ day was a person of many talents. They were called “scribes” because many of
them were copyists of the biblical texts.
In many ways, we owe the fact that we have the Hebrew scriptures at all
to the Jewish scribes who maintained and passed down the text.
But scribes were much more than just copyists. They were also the biblical scholars of their
day. They were interpreters of the
Bible, in particular they were interpreters of biblical law. That made them the lawyers and government
bureaucrats of their day. They were
among the most highly educated and respected people of their day.
Jesus speaks of them largely when he is in Jerusalem in and
around the Temple. Because of the
Temple, Jerusalem would have been thick with scribes. Jesus saw them as part of the problem that
Temple religion had become.
He says of them in this morning’s reading that they love
· To walk around in fine, long robes
· To be greeted respectfully in the marketplace
· To be seated up front in the synagogues
· And have the best couch at dinner parties.
One
can understand that the man who taught that to be the greatest you must be the
least and the servant of all, would neither be impressed nor supportive of
people (especially religious leaders) who acted in these ways. This is not what it means to be a disciple.
But
it got worse. Most scribes were wealthy
individuals, and Jesus alludes to one way they accumulated wealth. “They devour widow’s houses.” Jesus is referring to the common practice of
scribes administering the estates of widows.
Widows could not manage their dead husband’s affairs. If there was no obvious heir, a scribe would
manage the estate and receive a percentage of the assets. The system was notoriously corrupt with “a
percentage of the assets” becoming an exploitative amount. Widows were largely destitute and powerless
in Jesus’ day.
And
this at the hands of a religion one of whose vocations was to “protect orphans
and widows!” God himself is given the
title in Psalm 68: “Father of orphans,
defender of widows.”
Jesus
then begins to leave the Temple for the last time, but he pauses outside the
Treasury, the part of the Temple where people paid their tithes and left their
offerings. He watches what is going
on. The Greek verb here is actually more
like “scrutinizes.” He is looking for a
last lesson for the disciples. Many
people of wealth are putting in large sums of money. Then he sees what he may very well have been
looking for.
A
poor widow, the kind of person he was just speaking about, brings her offering
of two small coins, “lepta,” the smallest coins in circulation in Jesus
day. He calls the disciples close and
says to them, “Amen” (“truly I tell you”).
Jesus tends to begin sentences like that when he wants it to be very
clear that he is teaching the disciples something important. Do not forget this!
“See
this poor woman? She has put in more than anyone else. These wealthy people
gave out of their abundance. She gave
her life.”
They
leave the Temple. His disciples marvel at its splendor. By all descriptions, Herod’s Temple was
magnificent, one of the wonders of the ancient world. Jesus is not impressed. “These stones will be thrown down.” And indeed, some forty years later the Romans
would do just that. Jesus seems to be
saying that it will have deserved what it got, for the Temple was not a symbol
of faith in the living God, but of religion that thrived on the backs of the
poor.
“The
widow’s mite,” as this story is often called after the King James’ Version use
of the word “mite” for the coins the widow offered, is often used as a
stewardship story, and I would be foolish not to use it for that today, since
pledge cards are out and the Vestry is asking us to return them next
Sunday. But it ends up this is not a
great stewardship story.
The
story is not so much about the sacrificial giving of the widow, but of the
system of exploitation that has robbed her of life. Exploitation in the name of religion is the
worst exploitation of all as far as Jesus is concerned. Which means that through history he has
frequently been unhappy with religious expressions that bear his name and
religious leaders who act more like the scribes than the disciples he calls
them to be.
We
have to constantly be concerned that long robes and impressive buildings are
not what this is about. Our worship, our
buildings, our leadership must never be ends in themselves. The end is justice and peace and the dignity
of every human being, things that begin with how we live together in this faith
community around this table fed not with splendor but with meagerness and
simplicity and humility. Those are the
things Jesus calls his Body.
We
ask one another to give to this community, and, yes, sacrificially, but not
exploitively, and there is a difference.
And a great deal of what we give goes to maintaining a building and
supporting a leadership that could dangerously become ends in themselves. But
we also hold one another accountable for the true ends of what makes this
community Christian.
2 comments:
This is the second Sunday in December and we are going into our Stewardship campain.
We should give willing from the fountain of God's love to us. Ony then can we say we respect the dignity of all. Freely is was given to us and freely we should give.
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