5 February 2017 St. Athanasius Lutheran Church
Epiphany 5
Vienna, VA
“No Rotten Hamburgers in
Heaven”
Text:
Matthew 5:13-20 (Isaiah 58:3-9a; 1 Cor 2:1-12)
Grace, mercy, and peace to you from God
our Father, and from our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. Amen.
Last summer we were
cooking out on my deck. This day it was one of our usual cookout fare -
hamburgers. But unbeknownst to me, on this day, one of the hamburgers never
made it onto the grill, but instead fell onto the deck.
So after we were done
cooking and eating and the grill had cooled off, I put the cover back on the
grill . . . still not seeing the hamburger that remained on the deck, and now
hidden by the cover.
Well, it so happens that
we didn’t grill again for a week or two. But even before then, I knew something
was wrong . . . for everytime I went on the back
deck, I could smell it. I didn’t know what “it” was, but something wasn’t
right. It was foul and getting fouler.
And so when we finally
went out to grill again and I took the cover off and the smell became ten times
worse, assaulting my nostrils, I saw the guilty party. And it was not a pretty
sight. And there was no redeeming that hamburger - there was only one thing to
do with it, of course. Throw it away.
That’s what happens to
meat without refrigeration. And in the ancient world, a world without
refrigeration, that’s what happened to meat without
the preservative of salt. And that’s what happened to our world because of sin.
We stink. We’re beyond rotten. We’re foul and getting fouler.
God sent the prophet
Isaiah to point out that fact to the people of his day. That they were fasting
and being religious outwardly, but inwardly they were rotten.
Yes, they were fasting but then seeking their own pleasure, and they were
quarreling and fighting and oppressing.
And if Isaiah were here
today, perhaps he would say it to us like this: You come to church in
the morning, but then you go home and act as if you were never here. You speak
the creed one moment and then gossip and lie the next.
You confess your sins even while planning your next one. You listen with your
ears but not with your heart. You eat and drink the Body and Blood of Jesus and
then feast on the pleasures of the world. And the good you should be doing,
where is that? Are you not rotten?
And of that, Jesus said, it
is
no longer good for anything except to be thrown out and trampled under people’s
feet. Because you can’t make that
hamburger good again. And unless your righteousness goes from rottenness
to exceeding that of the scribes and Pharisees, you will never enter the
kingdom of heaven. There are no rotten hamburgers in heaven.
And there is no darkness
in heaven either. The book of Revelation says that there is no sun and moon in
heaven because God is the only light needed. In fact, if there were sun and
moon you wouldn’t know it, because the light of His glory would eclipse and far
outshine them. They would be as nothing.
But there is
darkness here. We just hide it. We hide the darkness with our artificial
lights. And not just the physical darkness, but even
more the spiritual darkness that surrounds us.
And so technology, we
say, will light the way to a better future. Science will scatter the darkness
and give us a better life. Tolerance will help us see. But the darkness keeps
getting deeper. The preaching of tolerance is making us more intolerant.
Science kills in the name of life. And the technology that connects us is also
separating us - real friends replaced with virtual friends, and social media
making us more unsocial than ever before.
I remember a few years
ago going down into an old mine, deep below the ground, and for a moment they
turned off all the lights and left us in the complete darkness. And the guide
said that a human being could only be in darkness that deep for a brief time
before starting to go mad.
I think that’s why God
wasted no time coming to Adam and Eve when they plunged themselves and the
world into the darkness of sin. They were not only hiding from Him and from
each other, they were going mad. They needed light. A light
of hope. A light to save them.
And our world gone mad, and getting madder - in both senses of that word: mad crazy
and mad angry - needs the light, too.
And God gave it to us in
the Garden that day. The light of a promise -
the promise of a Redeemer. Who would come and do
away with the darkness. Who would come and redeem the rotten. And that one was
the one now speaking to the disciples. The Light, the Redeemer, come to do what
God had so long ago promised.
Only His words were
perhaps not exactly as you might expect. He says YOU ARE the salt of the earth.
YOU ARE the light of the world. He doesn’t say I AM these things, but YOU ARE.
And notice that’s not a command Jesus is giving to them, but a statement; a
reality. This is who YOU now ARE, He says to His disciples.
Which I’m sure raised the
eyebrows of the disciples more than a bit. As it should
yours. If we know ourselves. If
we know the rottenness in us. But it is teaching us something.
That we are not salt and light because we are so good, or better than others.
It is not because of our righteousness. A quick look in your heart will reveal
that. Something will happen. Something will change. In them.
Because they are with the one who IS their righteousness and saltiness and
light. He who came not just for the world, but for them.
He would make them what they were not. We would be what He said.
And that would happen -
they would become what He is - because He became what they were. Jesus became
rotten for the rotten to redeem the rotten. He entered this world of darkness
to enlighten us. What we could never do, He did.
For
His was the righteousness that exceeded that of the scribes and Pharisees.
He didn’t say of the Law: Oh, that? No, don’t worry about that! Because the Law is God’s Word. It is good. It is important.
Instead, He did the Law. All of it. He fulfilled it.
Not so that we could now ignore it. But so that we could now
do it, too.
So Jesus did two things.
First, He fulfilled every iota and dot of the Law, doing it all. And
then He also took every iota and dot of its condemnation in our place - every
bit of rottenness we are Jesus took, was consumed by it, and was thrown out and
trampled underfoot for it. So that in then rising from the grave and the stench
of death, He would bring us with Him, to life again. No
longer rotten. No longer in darkness. But raised and alive in Him, and now citizens of the kingdom of
heaven.
And that’s why St. Paul said
that in His preaching, he decided to know nothing .
. . except Jesus Christ
and him crucified.
For that’s what made the difference in him and his hearers. Not our work, but
Jesus’. Not our own righteousness, not our own saltiness, not our own light, but
His.
And then what is His
given to us. He puts us into Himself, that we go with
Him through death to life again. And He puts Himself into us, that He now live in us.
And
in Baptism, Absolution, and Supper, doing just that. His
Strong Word Forgiving us, enlightening us, salting us. Putting
us into Jesus and Jesus into us. That we be what He makes us and says we
are: salt and light. It’s not really us. It’s Him in us.
And so you really ARE
salt and light in a dark and rotten world. To preserve a
rotting world. To enlighten a dark world.
Wherever Jesus puts you and sends you. Doing good works -
which is not just doing good things. Good works are Jesus works, salt
works. For He is the good one, who makes you good and does good
in you. And through you for others. And so what He
did, you do. And what you do, He does. He uses for His good.
It may not seem like
much, what you do. It may even seem as impossible task, just as I could not
redeem that rotten hamburger. But don’t worry about that. Let Jesus worry about
that. You do what is given you to do. You be who Jesus has made you to be.
For as St. Paul also said
today:
“What no eye has
seen, nor ear heard,
nor the heart of
man imagined,
what God has
prepared for those who love him”—
So you just might be
surprised at what a little salt and light can do. What a little salt and light
in the hands of Jesus can do.
So no rotten hamburgers in heaven doesn’t mean you will not be there! It
means that what you could not do - make yourself unrotten - Jesus did for you.
So you’ll be there, too. In fact, you already are, in Him. For
there is no rottenness in Him. And so your righteousness is off the
charts in Him.
So you can now be who you
are. For others. Sharing, feeding,
clothing, giving, lighting, gooding, praying,
serving. For, again as St. Paul said, you have received not
the spirit of the world, but the Spirit who is from God, that we might
understand the things freely given us by God. His righteousness and forgiveness freely given to us,
to live in them. Now, and forever.
In the Name of the Father, and of the (+)
Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
Now the peace of God which passes all understanding, keep your hearts and minds through faith in Christ Jesus, our Lord. Amen.