This morning,
I lengthened gospel reading
through verse 30 of Luke 4
to include the rest of the story,
which we would have heard next week.
This week and next we will be hearing this same passage,
in its entirety,
and we will be talking about preaching
and consequences.
What are the consequences of preaching?
For the Preacher?
For the listener?
Looking at today’s lessons gives us some clues.
In the reading from Nehemiah,
the Persian King has allowed Nehemiah
to come back to the ruined city of Jerusalem
and rebuild it.
But before they do,
he has Ezra the scribe
open the book of the Law of Moses
and begin to read it to the people
with interpretation,
so that the people might remember
and the city might be consecrated.
The people listen to Ezra,
standing in reverence
to hear the reading of the book of the law,
and the people are moved to tears.
They cried Amen, Amen—
or “Let it be so!! Let it be so!!”—
and they bowed their heads
and worshiped God,
afraid even to look up as they worshiped.
Ezra assured them of the Lord’s favor
and called them to wipe away their tears.
It is this “with interpretation”
that we call preaching.
Ezra not only read the text to them,
but expounded and explained it to them,
such that they were able to see themselves
as in a mirror,
and they were cut to the heart
by what they saw.
Ezra didn’t stop there,
but assured them of God’s grace,
the Lord’s favor.
This is what God does by the law,
holds up a mirror to our sin and shame,
forcing us to face and fix it.
And,
this is what God does by the gospel,
assures us of the unearned favor of God
who now calls us to repentance and reconciliation
instead of sin and shame.
Jesus’ preaching,
on the other hand,
seems to have mixed reviews.
Jesus, in the power of the Spirit,
returns to Galilee.
Where was he?
Jesus comes back to civilization
from the wilderness.
He has just been tested in the desert,
fasting and fighting with the devil
for 40 days.
When the Spirit brings him back,
he preaches in the synagogues
and is “praised by everyone.”
But then he goes home.
When Jesus comes to Nazareth,
he goes to the synagogue,
“as was his custom,”
he stood up,
read the assigned text,
everyone sat down,
and “the eyes of all in the synagogue were fixed on him.”
If Luke were a TV writer,
I am certain this is exactly
where the network would have inserted the commercial break.
“We’ll be right back
after these messages.”
And maybe that is what the compliers
of the Revised Common Lectionary were trying to do,
build a little suspense
to keep folks in the pews next week too.
But I hate it when they do that on TV
and I’m not gonna do it here!
Having crescendoed to this moment,
the Gospel of Luke gives us Jesus’ inaugural sermon.
“Today,
this scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing,”
Jesus said.
Luke says,
“All spoke well of him
and were amazed at the gracious words
that came from his mouth.
They said, ‘Is this not Joseph’s son?’”
So far, so good.
But Jesus had more to say.
He brings up the prophets;
Elijah and the widow of Zarephath,
Elisha and Naaman the Syrian.
He says a prophet is not without honor,
except in his hometown.
And these folks who were just speaking well of him,
are suddenly so violently angry
that they drive him out of town
to the edge of a cliff
hoping to throw him down to death.
Yes, beloved,
Preaching has consequences.
For Nehemiah and Ezra,
their preaching led to worship and restoration.
For Jesus,
they tried to throw him off a cliff.
Preachers are under an enormous strain
to be funny,
to be smart—but not too smart.
Preachers have to be poignant and timely,
without being too trendy or edgy.
Preachers have to be insightful and inspiring
but they also have to be practical.
Preachers also try desperately not to offend anyone,
though most often,
we only get to choose who to offend.
Because Preachers also have to preach
the Word of God.
Now hear me,
I do not mean
to sound like one of those Bible-thumpers
screeching diatribes and polemics,
insults and hate-speech
while hiding behind a literal reading of the Bible
and calling it the Word of God.
When I say that Preachers
have to preach the Word of God,
I mean three distinct things:
First,
Jesus is the Word of God
made flesh.
Second,
God’s promise to love and save the whole of Creation
through Jesus,
which is contained in the Bible.
Luther called the Bible “the manger
that holds the infant Christ.”
Third,
the proclamation of who Jesus is
and God’s promise love and save the whole of creation.
This is what preaching is.
And the main problem
with this kind of preaching,
is that it is impossible to not
offend everyone.
And that is just what Jesus did.
He talked about the poor,
which offends the poor by embarrassing them
and the rich by pointing out that they exist.
He talked about releasing the captives,
which means that he’s advocating amnesty,
which offends the lawyers and the judges,
and people think he’s making the streets less safe.
He’s talking about recovery of sight,
well that’s healthcare.
He’s talking about the oppressed,
and that’s just socialism.
And then he proclaims that it’s the year of the Lord’s favor.
“What’s that supposed to mean, Jesus?
We know your dad. We know your family.
Who do you think you are, anyway?”
If Jesus’ sermon can go this badly,
if Jesus’ preaching offended everyone,
well, then, maybe we cut every other preacher
a little slack.
This is what Preaching does.
It wounds our egos with the Law
before it comforts our souls with the Gospel.
Preaching holds up a mirror
so we can see the broccoli in our teeth.
Preaching will embarrass us a little,
will cause us to bow our heads
and worship with our faces to the ground,
before it calls us to raise our eyes and hearts
in praise and adoration.
Preaching has consequences.
Stephen,
the first Christian martyr
recorded in the book of Acts,
is stoned to death
after giving a sermon
in response to a question.
Through the centuries
and millennia,
preachers have been stoned,
arrested, imprisoned, and assassinated
as a consequence of their preaching.
Jesus was almost thrown off a cliff.
Preaching has consequences.
So, if you hear an offensive sermon,
lean in and not away.
The Law has wounded your ego,
but the Gospel is about to free you,
to restore your sight,
to proclaim the time of God’s favor.
There is some bad preaching out there,
and some bad preachers.
But we should be asking ourselves;
Did this sermon offend my conscience,
or did it offend my pride?
Was it way off base,
or was it a little too close to home?
Preaching has consequences.
For both the preacher
and the listener.