There once was a man
who was quite overwhelmed
by the state of the world.
His heart broke
to see so much poverty,
to see such need among his neighbors.
So, he began to pray,
“Lord, there are so many
needy people in the world.
If you will let me win the lottery,
I can so much good,
help so many,
make such a difference.”
Every night,
the man prayed earnestly,
ardently,
fervently,
righteously
that God would let him win the lottery,
so he could help the poor.
Eventually,
the man died,
broke and angry.
He reaches heaven,
furious and confused.
He searches out God,
marches straight up to God
in all God’s splendid majesty
and says,
“How could you?!
I prayed for so long;
and not for myself,
but for others.
Why, in your infinite wisdom,
didn’t you let me win the lottery?”
This benevolent God Who Is Love
glowed with a radiant brilliance
to outshine the sum of all the stars
and embraced the man in a hug
that felt like being swallowed up by eternity
and as intimate and sweet as a first kiss.
God said to the man,
as his anger melted into understanding,
“My sweet, sweet child.
You never bought a ticket.”
Our lessons for today
need a little set up,
or we might miss
or misinterpret
their central theme.
Several weeks ago,
our passage from Luke 10
began in verse 1,
stopped at verse 11,
and restarted at verse 16,
ending at verse 20.
Those verses between 11 and 16,
contained a little nugget
we should circle back to now.
In Luke 10,
just after Jesus addresses the 70
he is sending to share the message of the kingdom
Jesus says,
“But whenever you enter a town
and they do not welcome you,
go out into its streets and say,
‘Even the dust of your town that clings to our feet,
we wipe off in protest against you.
Yet know this: the kingdom of God has come near.’”
Jesus continues in verse 12,
“ I tell you,
on that day
it will be more tolerable for Sodom
than for that town.”
Jesus explains that the “sin of Sodom,”
then, is a lack of hospitality.
It has been convenient for centuries
to point to the story of Sodom and Gomorrah
to stigmatize, demonize, and ostracize
the LGBTQIA community
as though the sin of Sodom
was any deviation
from the presumptive normality
of heterosexuality.
But Jesus himself says otherwise.
Abraham’s persistence in our first reading
that God’s mercy take precedence
over God’s wrath,
comes after Abraham himself
has shown hospitality to God’s very presence,
and this story stands as a counterpoint
to the story of the same strangers
visiting the towns of Sodom and Gomorrah
and receiving no such welcome.
And Jesus says these folks
will have received a lighter sentence
than those who reject those he has sent
to proclaim the kingdom come near.
This theme of hospitality
has carried through the story of the Good Samaritan,
of Abraham beneath the oaks of Mamre,
of Mary and Martha’s hospitality,
and now into this parable of the persistent neighbor.
Jesus teaches his disciples to pray.
They are to approach God boldly,
“Father,”
but with reverence,
“hallowed be your name.”
Prayer should align their will with God’s,
“your kingdom come”
and to place their trust in God’s provision,
“give us each day our daily bread.”
They are to be honest and humble,
“forgive us our sins,”
and to give away the grace and mercy they hope to receive,
“for we ourselves forgive everyone indebted to us.”
And they are to ask God for guidance and rescue,
“Do not bring us to the time of trial.”
But Jesus doesn’t stop there.
Jesus gives them a parable.
Suppose a friend comes to you in the middle of the night,
while your kids are asleep,
and begs you for bread
because he has just received unexpected guests
and has nothing to give them.
Jesus says that even if you don’t want to help,
because of the racket your friend is making
you’re likely to help
just to shut him up.
Jesus teaches his disciples
that prayer consists of two things:
asking
and acting .
Before God,
Abraham is poor
and bold to ask for what is needed
even on behalf of others.
Before his neighbor,
the friend in need is bold to ask.
But the neighbor is slow to act,
and so the friend remains in need,
and so do his guests.
Jesus instructs his disciples
to ask and to act,
to know we are poor before God,
that even so we will have what we need,
and that we participate in meeting needs
when we forgive those indebted to us
and when we are generous to give away what we need,
trusting that we will be partakers of the sacrifice.
Prayer,
then,
is the process of becoming what our neighbor needs.
Prayer teaches us what to ask for—
a better world filled with enough for everyone to eat—
and how to act—
we love God and our neighbor
not in perfection, but in progress.
Love is our faith
and our calling.
To those who have bread, eggs, and fish,
give to those who ask of you,
just as God has given to you.
To those of you in need of bread, eggs, and fish,
be bold to ask
and it will be given to you.
Pope Francis has said,
“First you pray for the hungry,
then you feed them,
because that’s how prayer works.”
You can pray your whole life
to win the lottery,
but what do you what God to do
if you never buy the ticket?
You can pray your whole life
for God’s kingdom to come,
for God’s will to be done
on earth
as it is in heaven,
and yet,
what do you expect to happen
if this faith
doesn’t change the way you live,
doesn’t make you a better,
kinder,
more generous,
more peaceful,
more loving person?
How much better
will God’s kingdom be
if it doesn’t transform the people in it?
We commit the sin of Sodom
every time we close our ears
to the cries of our neighbors.
We commit the sin of Sodom
every time we shut out those who bring the kingdom near.
We commit the sin of Sodom
every time we pray God’s kingdom comes
and brings us our daily bread
without living like the kingdom has come near
and making sure our neighbors have enough to eat.
We are to ask and to act,
to hope and to trust,
to pray and to practice.
May we become disciples
who know how to pray—
who know what to ask
and how to act—
that we might all live together
in God’s neighborhood on earth
sharing our daily bread.
It’s not winning the lottery,
but it’s just the ticket.
Amen.