Sermon 5th February 2017
Today, our Vicar, Cameron Barker, continues our study of the story of Jesus as told in the book of Matthew. The reading is from Matthew 9: verses 18-38.
Here are some offerings
that are at least partly in keeping with one of the dominant Sunday themes of
2017 here:
Doctor,
Doctor, can I have second opinion?
Of course you can: come back tomorrow.
Of course you can: come back tomorrow.
Doctor,
Doctor, will this ointment clear up my spots?
I never make rash promises.
I never make rash promises.
Doctor,
Doctor, I’m worried I’m a kleptomaniac.
Have you taken anything for it?
Have you taken anything for it?
Doctor,
Doctor, I’ve broken my arm in two places.
Well don’t go back to either of them again then.
Well don’t go back to either of them again then.
Doctor,
Doctor, I keep thinking I’m a spider.
It’s just a web of lies.
It’s just a web of lies.
Doctor,
Doctor, when I press with my finger here, it hurts; and here; and here.
Whatever do you think is wrong?
It’s obvious: you’ve got a broken finger.
It’s obvious: you’ve got a broken finger.
Obvious: now there’s a fine word which could be
applied to so much of what we’ve seen and heard in these 2 chapters of Matthew’s
gospel. And yes, at the same time, so much of it is anything but obvious: now
just as little as it was then. Of course we’ll get to both the obvious, and the
not-so-obvious, as we draw to the end of this short gospel series. We’ve gone
over this ground in fairly big strides for a specific reason. At the outset I
talked about – and that, as ever, is posted
on our website for those who missed it – how Matthew is built around 5 blocks.
The way that he tells the story of Jesus is by grouping thing together: first a
block of Jesus’ teaching; and then the action which proves just how real that
teaching was.
In this series we’ve covered the entire first action-block that followed
Jesus’ first teaching-block, in the Sermon on the Mount, as it’s known. That
had ended with people being – quite rightly – amazed by the authority with
which Jesus spoke. These action-stories have all proved what that authority
looked like – in o-so-many dramatic, radically life-affirming, life-changing,
life-giving ways. And telling the story like this wasn’t, of course, Matthew
re-writing the history of it. Rather it’s presenting it so that his readers (who
were mostly Jewish, originally) just couldn’t miss the point about who Jesus
was, and exactly what it was that he had done. It’s meant to be obvious; as I
hope has been very clear in this series; or else we preachers have failed!
At 1
level it would be very hard for us to have failed: these stories almost shout
for themselves, about just how amazingly different Jesus was. So as early as verse
2 of chapter 8 we have man with an incurable disease telling Jesus that he
could fix a problem (leprosy) which nobody else then would have dreamed was even
possible. And of course Jesus did it; as Matthew told in as few words as
possible in his hurry to get onto the next amazing thing that Jesus did. (By
the way, that was healing a man in agony he didn’t even have to go and see –
such was the faith of the Roman soldier (!) who’d asked Jesus to do it.) And
that’s only where this series began; let alone what else has been happening:
right through to Jesus’ first raising of a dead person in today’s passage!
There have been numerous notable themes running through these stories. Most
obvious among them has been the role of faith in people’s healing. As we’ve
seen again today, sometimes it’s their own faith; sometimes it’s the faith of
those who’ve brought them to Jesus. But sometimes there’s been no mention of
faith – which adds to the complexity (or the mystery) of how these things
‘work’. Another theme, which we may have missed because it’s not so obvious to
us, is about infection. I don’t mean the sort of infection that makes people
ill – though that is what lay behind many of the Jewish regulations that we’ve
heard about. This (and again we’ve had examples of it in today’s passage) is about
Jesus turning everything on its head. Instead of him being infected by their
illness, Jesus ‘infects’ them – the leper, the bleeding woman, the dead girl, and
so many more besides – with healing; with life itself!
As I say, so much of this is so obvious; and it’s continuously in our
faces too, given the way that Matthew just keeps the stories coming; and
coming. It’s almost easy to miss, then, what else is going on in these 2
chapters. Of course they primarily are about Jesus doing the sorts of things
that Jesus does which prove his total authority over everything and everyone;
from storms, to death itself. And we really mustn’t miss that; so we won’t
gloss over all the detail of today’s healings. In case you weren’t counting, those
number 5 in specific total; apart, of course from another of Matthew’s
catch-all summaries. Verse 35 reads: “Jesus … healed every disease and
sickness”. But there’s a key note on which this series must end, if we are to
take from it what we need to.
You see, Matthew didn’t set out ‘just’ to tell a story. It was that radically
life-affirming, life-changing, life-giving nature of it that drove him to
write, and to live, as he did. Last week Simon mentioned almost in passing – in
keeping with how Matthew himself did it – how he had entered this story
himself. I’m sure that the company that had gathered for dinner at Matthew’s
house were people he knew who most needed to join in as well. The 4 gospel
writers are often known as ‘evangelists’, because that’s what each of them
wanted: for other people to become part of the story that had so changed their
lives. And that’s the less-obvious thread which runs through these 2 chapters:
Matthew’s constant reminder of the invitation for everyone to join in.
Even
amid all this miraculous action, there are regular hints that people need to
respond to who Jesus is as much as to what he does. It’s there in the middle of
chapter 8, when a teacher of the Law said he wanted to follow (but couldn’t).
We’ve had it in the person of Matthew too; and this is now how this first
action-block ends as well. Jesus tells his followers to ask God for people who
will take his teaching, preaching, healing out to everyone who needs it; and
that means everyone! It also means that they should be the ones doing it, of
course! God often invites us to be the answer to our own prayers; so that’s
always an option for us to have in mind when we pray. To see what that looks
like this time, read on into chapter 10. Or just glance at the section headings
on the next page of the Bible – where Jesus sends the 12 out to do what he does.
It’s
worth pushing the pause button at this point; not least to review just what it
is that Jesus then sends them out to do. As I say, there are 5 miraculous
events in here, the last 3 of which are unique to Matthew. In usual style, he
races through each of them in next to no time – so Mark and Luke are where to
look for the detail of the double-healing that it begins with. All 3 of them
group these 2 events together, presumably because that’s what happened! Only
Matthew reports that the girl was dead before her father went to appeal to Jesus,
though. That fact then emphasises the sort of practical, trusting faith that
we’ve seen so often in this series. And it was met with the same sort of
radical life-affirming, life-changing, life-giving action that Jesus was able
to bring about as sign of the authority that God had given him – yes, even over
death itself, look.
And
the same thing also happened in response to the practical trusting faith of
that woman who suffered such humiliation and isolation for 12 years. No wonder
then, that news spread around that region – even before the 2 blind men told their
story about what Jesus had done for them. He’d told them not to tell anyone
because he didn’t want people to think of him only as a healer. But it’s not
hard to understand why people would want others to know what Jesus could do in
an age when there was so little medical help, or hope. But all the time Matthew
is trying to draw our eye away from the spectacular. As real and meaningful as
it clearly is for the people that it’s happening to, the point is so much
bigger, and wider than that.
As
ever, there is far more detail in here than we are able to tackle in any depth;
or at all, even. The story of the mute man healed here by Jesus casting out a
demon may be worth a sermon of its own. It certainly is when the combined
reactions of the crowd, and the watching Pharisees, are added into the mix as
well. But Matthew’s ever on the march; drawing the bigger picture, and leaving
us to ponder the detail of it when we’ve grasped the central message, about the
central person and the central task that Jesus came to accomplish. And again
Matthew provides his readers with this briefest but sharpest of summaries of
that; before moving on to his next block. Jesus’ teaching, preaching, and healing
were the signs of the Good News about this kingdom that he had come to bring in.
That’s
a great summary for us to carry with us as we move on ourselves. Being
half-term, we’ll pick up the children’s series on Psalms next week; and then our
focus will be on getting ready for Easter. That, of course, is re-telling the
story of how Jesus finished what he’d come to do: first by dying on the cross
for us; and then by being raised back to life so that we all can be too. This
is always where the story that Matthew is telling is heading towards, of
course. He’s also always inviting all his readers to join in with that story;
to become part of this kingdom that Jesus was teaching, preaching, and healing
about. That invitation is the less-obvious sub-plot that has been running throughout
this series; and now it needs a response from us.
There
are, of course many ways in which we can respond to all that we’ve seen and
heard here. And of course I hope that there will be many different responses,
at many different levels, over a long time. I couldn’t begin to list what those
may be, then; but I do encourage you to pursue whatever it is that God has been
speaking to you about through this series. As well as that, I need to mention
again what I flagged up at the start of this series: money. We don’t mention this
here very often, but it’s time to do so now, at start of a new year that will
see significant rises in our expenses. Part of a decision to follow Jesus is
taking responsibility to fund that work of the coming of his kingdom, so now is
a good time for each of us to review how we all do that.
[AT ST SAVIOUR’S: Our Treasurer,
Graeme, will be happy to talk you through any numbers you want to know about,
and the process of responding; all very confidentially. The headlines are that
we’re inviting everyone who already gives to review that, especially if you haven’t
done so in a while. If you’re more recently arrived and want to start giving to
this church, then that will be very welcome too. The target that Action Group has
necessarily set is an increase of at least £4 000 in regular giving this year,
if that helps to know; and we are deliberately setting that **]
[AT ST PAUL’S: I’ve written a letter to all St
Paul’s regular members with the detail of this need, and of how we can respond
to it. Do please take yours today, and pray about what God is saying to you
about this. The aim is that we will all be able to see this appeal **]
AT
BOTH ** in this context; of being Jesus’ disciples, who are carrying
on his work here. In this Matthew series we have not ‘just’ been reminded of
the amazing nature of God’s kingdom but also have been invited to be part of it
ourselves, and of making it real for others. Here is one way in which we can all
do that; and so now let’s pray that we will do so, in this, and in many other
ways besides ...
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