If you haven’t remembered,
yes, this is exactly the same gospel reading
as last week.
The Revised Common Lectionary
had the reading split up
into two separate readings,
but I found it hard to discuss one half of the story
and not the other.
So, last week,
we talked about the consequences of preaching.
Jesus preaches
and while many speak well of him,
when he preaches in his hometown,
they cannot hear his critique
and nearly throw him off a cliff.
Preaching has consequences,
because a good preacher
will show you the law—
which will offend and condemn you—
before they show you the good news—
which will comfort you.
Preaching has consequences
for both the preacher
and the hearer.
This week,
we hear comforting passages
from Jeremiah
and from I Corinthians.
“Before I formed you in your mother’s womb,”
says the Lord to Jeremiah,
“I knew you.”
A comforting thought,
for sure,
echoing the sentiment of Psalm 139.
And then,
I Corinthians 13,
the Love Chapter,
read at many a wedding,
including my own.
We so often hear this passage
in the context of a wedding ceremony
that we forget that the passage
comes in a longer discourse
about spiritual gifts,
and assume that Paul is talking about
marital love, covenant love,
an all-you-need-is-love kind of love,
the love-will-keep-us-alive kind of love,
instead of the God-is-Love kind of love.
This passage from Jeremiah’s call story
and this passage from I Corinthians
play into a way of reading the Bible
that I think is exactly what got Jesus in trouble
that sabbath morning in Nazareth.
When we read these passages,
we glom onto the parts that make us feel good
and we gloss over the parts that make us confused
or feel bad,
and we assume that we are the main characters,
the ones being saved,
the prophet being called,
the lovers having their union blessed.
We hardly ever see ourselves
in the wayward backsliders
who need a prophet to call them to repentance.
We hardly ever see ourselves
in the softheaded and hardhearted congregation
who needs the apostle to write to them
so they remember that the whole of the law and prophets
is summed up in Love.
We hardly ever see ourselves
as the assembly turned lynch mob
who wouldn’t even have Jesus for a preacher.
None of these passages—
not a single one of them—
was written with a single living person in mind.
Each of them were written in different places,
at different times,
in different languages,
by different authors.
We can read the scriptures
and we can find parity with the people of Israel
in Jeremiah’s day;
we can feel a sense of kinship
with the faithful and foolish followers of Jesus
in the ancient city of Corinth;
we can find ourselves sitting in the pews
and listening to a sermon that confronts us
a little more than it comforts us;
and this is a very faithful way to read the scriptures.
But it is unfaithful
to gloss over, leave out, refuse to listen to
the bits that ask something of us,
the parts that call us to repentance,
the pieces that call us to the carpet
and show us how we should be living.
It is the job of the faithful preacher
to call you out,
to dress you down,
to rattle your nerves a bit.
It is the very work of preaching itself
to assail your ego as Public Enemy No. 1,
to expose you to yourself as you’ve been unable to perceive,
to hold up the mirror to the spinach in your teeth.
There is a part of preaching
that should feel like that dream
where you’re back in high school,
you’ve shown up for the exams,
in your underwear,
all your pencils are broken,
and the test is in a different language.
But the rest of preaching
should feel like being suddenly shaken out of that dream,
coming to consciousness,
realizing that high school has long passed,
all your exams are over,
and your safely in your nice warm bed.
God has sent us apostles,
prophets,
teachers,
and preachers
to show us who we are
and to show us the way to a better world.
And Jesus has come
to show us that still more excellent way.
Preaching certainly has consequences,
but by and large,
those consequences
depend on the hearer
and not the preacher.
We can choose
what the consequences of preaching
will be.
We can kill the messengers
or we can heed the message.
So,
let me show you this still more excellent way.
If I could preach like Jesus and Billy Graham
but didn’t have love,
I would be no better than any other late-night,
cable-access huckster that wants to sell you miracle water.
If I could see the future
and answer every question you could muster
with perfect clarity;
If I had the faith of all the saints
such that I could cure all your doubts
and diseases,
but didn’t have any love,
what good would I be to anyone.
If I were to give away everything I owned;
If I were to give away a kidney, part of my liver,
and my bone marrow,
but I didn’t do out of love,
what good could it really do?
Love is patient.
Love is kind.
Love is not envious or boastful,
or arrogant or rude.
Love does not insist on its own way;
it is not irritable or resentful;
it does not rejoice in wrongdoing,
but rejoices in the truth.
Love bears all things,
believes all things,
hopes all things,
endures all things.
Said another way,
Love doesn’t make itself
the main character.
Love can be the consequence of preaching
if we will choose it.
Love can be our response
to being called out.
Love can be our response
to feeling exposed by the law.
Love can be our response
when our neighbors have less than we do.
Love can be our response
to a world in need of good news.
Love can be our response
to our neighbors awash in cable news.
Love can be our response
when party loyalty demands our allegiance.
Love can be our response
when everyone else
wants to throw Jesus off a cliff.
Preaching has consequences,
but I think we get to choose them.
What will we choose?
Will we drive Jesus away?
Will we be offended by his message
and his ministry
if it feels like it’s more focused on our neighbors
than on us?
In our rage,
will we let Jesus pass through our midst?
Or will we choose love?
Will we let God be the main character?
Will we rejoice with the truth
even if it stands on our toes?
Will we let love be our response
to both the law
and the Gospel?
Will we choose
the still more excellent way?
Amen.