It has been very difficult to watch TV,
to peruse social media,
to listen to the radio
to have a conversation with a friend,
or the person behind us in the check-out line,
that doesn’t turn to the news.
What a week it has been.
A community divided,
swirling rumors,
some locked in their homes from fear,
others giddy with delight.
In case you haven’t heard,…
43 monkeys
escaped the Alpha Genesis research facility
in Yemassee, South Carolina,
and are still on the loose.[1]
The facility says all the monkeys are healthy females,
bred for use in research facilities across the country.
An employee left a door unlocked
during feeding time,
and eventually the whole family group
escaped into the surrounding canopy.
The facility assures the public
that they are not a danger,
but highly skittish,
and will flee if approached,
making them harder to catch.
The Associated Press quotes a long-time researcher
from the University of Colorado Boulder
who begs to differ.
She says these monkeys,
rhesus macaques,
are dangerous in groups
and will turn violent
to defend their family group.
The facility has been fined by the USDA
several times,
partly for previous escapes of 26 monkeys in 2014
and 19 more in 2019.
For that matter,
the facility is home to some 6700 rhesus macaques
while the town of Yamassee is home
to only 1100 people.
The AP characterized a conversation
with University of Chicago behavioral scientist
Dario Maestriperi,
author of Macachiavellian Intelligence: How Rhesus Macaques and Humans Have Conquered the World,
as follows:
“The animals are very family oriented, siding with relatives when fights break out. And they’re adept at building political alliances in the face of threats from other monkeys. But they can be painful to watch. Monkeys with lower status in the hierarchy live in a constant state of fear and intimidation.”
“In some ways,”
Maestripieri said,
“they kind of represent some of the worst aspects
of human nature.”
This is likely because we share
93% of our DNA with the rhesus macaque.
It is only the other 7%
that separates the human from the beast.
And it’s in that 7% where things get messy.
When we hear reports
of desperate men, women, and children
fleeing their own country
to seek asylum in the United States,
on the one hand,
we are moved with pity
that these people are fleeing such terrible circumstances,
and on the other
we are scared of what this will mean for us,
for our country.
We tend to be inundated
with these types of heart-wrenching stories
and moral conundrums
to a point of emotional fatigue.
This is where that 7% kicks in.
Compassion fatigue affects
healthcare workers,
and social workers,
and counselors,
and the clergy;
all of the “helping professions.”
Meeting wave after wave of terrible stories
and inconceivable circumstances
can cause a person to sort of go numb
to their own emotion
and it becomes much harder to empathize,
to see the people
and not just their situation.
Then the other 93% kicks in,
and we become inseparable from the beast.
Perhaps, you have found yourselves there.
It is terribly easy to shut off one’s emotions,
to become invulnerable,
or, at least to convince ourselves that we are invulnerable.
We seal the boarders.
We buy more guns.
We convince ourselves that the poor
are not our fault
and not our problem.
But then,
lest we be thought heartless beasts,
we send our thoughts and prayers,
we bow our heads for a moment of silence,
and then we go about our business
of making sure we are safe and secure.
We spiritualize the teachings of Jesus
and convince ourselves that,
somehow, we can leave our secular selves
at the sanctuary door
and put on our church selves for an hour
like Mister Rogers’ cardigan and sneakers,
and somehow fool Jesus—
if not ourselves—
into thinking we love our neighbors
with a simple costume change.
So, when we hear passages like this one today,
we glide right over Jesus’ warning to the scribes,
thinking that, clearly, Jesus is talking to someone else.
I know in my own head
I think of the Creflo Dollars
and the Kenneth Copelands
and the Jesse Duplantises
who prey on the economically depressed
and promise that if they will help pay for a new jet
then God will reward them.
These folks have covered themselves
not with robes,
but with self-assumed titles,
as though calling oneself Reverend
makes one deserving of reverence.
But we tend not to examine our own lives,
and the ways in which we have spiritualized the words of Jesus
in order to avoid self-sacrifice.
In today’s gospel, Jesus warns his hearers
of those scribes who would use boisterous displays
of public piety to cover up their greed
and self-aggrandizement.
These scribes would use their religious authority
as a pretext for the exploitation
of the most vulnerable members of their society.
As this passage continues,
we see Jesus sit down
“Opposite the treasury”
drawing a contrast between
the contributions made by the wealthy
and the contribution made by a poor widow.
Jesus says the widow
gave “all she had to live on,”
whereas the wealthy
had only given out of their abundance.
At a first read,
This passage probably feels all too familiar.
Jesus says,
“Your religion is neither a status symbol
nor a free pass to do as you please.”
Jesus says,
“These rich folks gave their leftovers,
but this widow gave everything she had.”
It’s really easy to think,
“this doesn’t apply to me.”
It’s really easy to intellectualize this
into a theological maxim,
or over-spiritualize the passage
until it has no bearing
on how I live my everyday life.
Jesus sits down in the middle of this passage
And invites us to sit with him.
Jesus sat down
“opposite the treasury”
This is probably better translated
“in opposition to the treasury.”
Jesus opposes
and exposes
the system that allows the scribes
to “devour widow’s houses”
while widows are left with nothing to eat.
Jesus points out that these “religious folks”
are little more that macaques
in Mr. Rogers’ cardigans.
Jesus is opposed to the temple treasury,
having spent the entire day prior
preventing anyone from buying or selling in the temple
and follows this teaching in the temple
with a teaching about the temple,
telling his disciples it will be destroyed,
stone by stone.
Jesus is opposed to the system
that made the scribes wealthy and well-respected
without caring for the widows.
Our first reading tells us
how God cared for the widow of Zarephath,
her son,
and Elijah,
by calling all three to trust that God will provide.
The appointed Psalm for this morning,
Psalm 146,
tells us directly,
“Do not put your trust in princes,…
the LORD… gives justice to those who are oppressed,
And food to those who are hungry. …
the LORD sustains the orphan and the widow.”
Beloved,
This is the good news for us this day, too.
Just as Jesus did not extol the system
that asked the woman to give all she had,
Jesus lifts up the faith of this woman
whose desperate dependence on God
for her “daily bread”
freed this woman to give all she had.
Jesus is calling us
by his own self-sacrifice,
by his body and blood on the table
to pour out our lives
for the most vulnerable among us.
This means we must examine
the way we participate in our political and economic systems,
asking,
‘Does this politician
or this party
support caring for the most vulnerable among us?’
‘Does this politician claim to be a Christian
as a pretext for taking the food out of the mouths
of the most vulnerable in our society?’
It means examining our investments.
‘Is my money tied to systems
that profit from foreclosing homes?
‘Use of prison labor?
‘Abuse of the environment?
‘Propagate mistrust and anxiety?
‘Rob my neighbors of dignity
and bodily autonomy?’
It means asking ourselves
‘Am I practicing a desperate dependence on God,
Or am I giving God my leftovers?’
By our baptism,
God has swept us up
in God’s plan to care for our neighbors.
We are practicing an intellectual dishonesty
if we presume we can love God
without loving our neighbors,
or that we can love our neighbors
and bear no responsibility for their well-being.
Further, we,
like those scribes,
are risking the greater condemnation,
by participating in systems
that marginalize or commodify people for profit.
We are like macaques in Mr. Rogers’ cardigan,
hoping we can make up that 7% difference
by at least appearing to be human.
Beloved,
we are called by our baptism
to share in the humanity of Christ
and our neighbors
by devoting everything we have
in service to the solidarity of God
to give justice to those who are oppressed,
food to those who hunger,
freedom to captives,
and care for the most vulnerable among us.
This is what separates us from the beasts;
a common humanity,
shared with Christ and neighbor,
and which transcends any familial or political bonds.
It is animals,
common apes,
who will follow a misguided leader
toward what feels like freedom
without knowing the danger ahead.
But we have the good fortune of that other 7%,
the good fortune of a humanity shared with Christ,
if we will only use it.
Amen.
[1] https://apnews.com/article/monkeys-escape-alpha-genesis-south-carolina-640eb78119c66b88a418ccd1e361318e