In one of the myriad jobs I had
before I went to seminary,
I worked as a prep cook
and a line worker
at a small quick-service restaurant.
The owners were fairly hands off,
and the shift I usually worked
was not overseen by the general manager,
but by a cadre of shift managers,
with varying degrees of…
professionalism, shall we say.
As you might imagine,
with the cat was so often away,
the mice had a tendency to play
with impunity.
As this was not my first restaurant job,
or even my second,
I was well aware what was expected of me,
and as an oldest child,
I was grateful for a bit of self-governance.
This did not seem to be the case
for many of my co-workers.
I watched one employee roll a joint
in the same place we normally prepared food.
I watched one of the shift managers
take a call,
pull a sum of cash from the register,
walk out to the parking lot,
get into a car that had arrived
at about the same time the phone had rung,
and return a few minutes later
as if nothing had happened.
I also witnessed a co-worker
try to play rock-paper-scissors
with one of the less shifty shift managers
when he had asked her to mop the dining room floor.
She had said no,
he had insisted,
she had said no again,
and when he insisted still,
she offered to play the game to decide
whether she would in fact have to mop the dining room floor.
I was a bit surprised when he seemed to acquiesce.
They squared up,
fist to palm,
she counted,
“one, two, three!”
I don’t remember which hand signal she gave,
but on the count of three,
this shift manager had given her a hand signal
not suited for general audiences,
the ol’ ‘one finger salute,’
and demanded that she mop the floor immediately.
That was the end of that discussion.
I believe she did in fact mop that dining room,
even if a little begrudgingly.
But obedience is like that,
isn’t it?
We hear a law
and we want a lawyer,
we want to haggle,
we want to negotiate the terms and conditions.
What are the loopholes,
the work-arounds,
the indemnity clauses?
We think,
“What is the least I can give
and the most I can get?
“Rules are made to be broken,
right?!
“Luther said ‘Sin boldly,’
didn’t he?
“Speaking of Luther,
What’s with all this Law stuff anyway?
“Where is my grace and mercy,
my forgiveness and reconciliation?
“What about my Christian freedom?
“All this obedience talk
sounds an awful lot like works righteousness to me.”
And still others
tend to go entirely in the opposite direction.
They become rigid and cold,
exacting and cruel.
They train like spiritual Olympians,
working tirelessly
to shave off a thousandth of a second
in hopes of gaining the advantage.
They become merciless:
with themselves,
and with everyone else.
But I’m not entirely sure
that this is the way we should be thinking of the Law,
God’s Law,
given to Moses
and to God’s people
after God rescued them from slavery in Egypt.
Turning to our text in Deuteronomy,
Moses says that the Law is given
“so that [they] may live.”
Moses says to observe and preform them
to “show your wisdom and discernment to the peoples,”
to demonstrate that no other people has a god
so near to them as the Lord,
nor a Law so just as this law.
The Law is given so that they will know
and not forget,
and so that their children will know,
and their children’s children.
God has given the Law to Moses
and to God’s people
to show them,
as Pastor Jennifer would say,
who God is and how God acts.
The Law is not some impossible standard
we must meet
to show God how good we are—
much less,
to appease a God who couldn’t love us otherwise.
And neither is the Law to be litigated
and adjudicated,
amended and redacted,
overruled and struck down
by jurisprudence or prudent jurists.
The Law is not some divine middle finger
proclaiming God’s distain for our rebellion
and demanding our obedience.
The Law is given to us not as a path
but as a promise and revelation of the destination.
If the Law shows us who God is
and how God acts,
it is Jesus who shows us who we are
and how we ought to act.
Jesus gives us the Gospel,
the bad news of sin and death
and the good news of grace and mercy.
The Law reveals the character of God
and the Gospel includes and transcends
the character of humankind.
Luther defined the freedom of a Christian
in a treatise of the same name:
The Christian is the perfectly free lord of all,
subject to none.
AND AT THE SAME TIME,
the Christian is the perfectly dutiful servant of all,
subject to all.
Luther said it another way:
God doesn’t need your good works,
but your neighbor does.
Our neighbor needs our grace and mercy.
Our neighbors need us to be just and wise.
Our neighbors need us to be doers of the word
and not hearers only.
Our neighbors need us to be quick to listen
and slow to speak.
Our neighbors need us to rid ourselves of sordidness
and rank growth of wickedness.
Our neighbors need us to abandon our notions
of purity and respectability
in favor of practicing a religion of care
for the most vulnerable among us.
Our neighbors need us to stop looking around
for whom to blame for all the evil things in this world
and to start looking in the depths of our own hearts.
The Gospel may free us
but it does not let us off the hook.
The Gospel compels us
to be ever searching the depths of our hearts,
to be subject to the Holy Spirit
and the transformation of our truest selves
into the very love of God.
This is what we have called salvation:
that we are becoming the Love God is
until the Love God is swallows up the whole cosmos.
The Law is not the path to salvation.
But in revealing the character of God,
in showing us who God is and how God acts
and therefore who we are and how we ought to act,
the Law and the Gospel show us our ultimate destiny
and continue to transform us into the Love God is.
For what other people has a God so near to them
as to come to them
from within?
Amen.