Great Expectations—Jeremiah 14: 7-10, 19-22; Luke 18: 9-14
The Bishop Marvin Winans went viral for all the wrong reasons recently. It was not for a homeless shelter, a food ministry, a clothing ministry, for an untold number of baptisms, but for scolding a member publicly because she gave too little offering. Let’s watch it together. Video of Rev. Winans scolding member for only bringing $1,200 in offering instead of $2,000 as instructed.]. Yet he is not the only one. There are many televangelists and so-called ministers who have demanded large offerings, unduly influenced members and viewers for sewing ministry seeds for money, or simply outright asking for a private jet. This seems to be their expectation.
Having expectations is nothing new. When I was growing up, my parents had expectations for how I would do in school. Our employers have or had expectations of our job performance. Our medical practitioners have expectations of how we take care of ourselves physically and psychologically. Life, in general, comes with expectations. Our scriptures today talk about two types of expectations. The Jeremiah lesson tells us about basic expectations and failure to meet those. The Gospel lesson talks about inflated expectations and the need to avoid those.
When it comes to faith there are a few basic or minimum expectations of us. We hear in Jeremiah where a people had gone astray, and God’s patience had worn out. The prophet Jeremiah, known as the weeping prophet, tells of the destruction of Judah and Jerusalem shortly before the nation was conquered and led off into exile in Babylon. The crux of Judah’s problems stems from their unfaithfulness to God. They have gone their own way in religious worship and observance. They call it the worship of God, but they have made idols within their worship and made human reforms that led them to glorify themselves over God. In Jeremiah 6, God says to them, “Ask for the old, godly way, and walk in it. Travel its path and you will find rest for your souls.” But, God says, they do not want that way.
Jeremiah 7:3 has the clearest indictment of all, “This is what the Lord of Heaven’s Armies, the God of Israel, says: ‘Even now, if you quit your evil ways, I will let you stay in your own land. But don’t be fooled by those who promise you safety simply because the Lord’s Temple is here…But I will be merciful only if you stop your evil thoughts and deeds and start treating each other with justice; only if you stop exploiting foreigners, orphans, and widows; only if you stop your murdering; and only if you stop harming yourselves by worshiping idols. Then I will let you stay in this land that I gave to your ancestors to keep forever.”
The people of Judah failed in every way to meet God’s minimum expectations for their life and behavior. They chose sin and dressed it up as piety. They chose evil and King Josiah passed laws to call it proper. You cannot follow God or turn to God if you convince yourself your sinfulness is perfectly okay. It’s like when I say one small piece of chocolate won’t hurt me at 9PM at night. 10 minutes later, I wonder where the whole bag has gone. It’s like Bishop Winans, who is preaching God, but exploiting his church members. No matter how beautiful and popular we make our wrongdoing, it will never magically become good, or Godly. God calls us to minimum expectations of faithful behavior exhibiting the truth of our faith, and we cannot get around this.
But sometimes we also have an inflated sense of expectations. The Gospel lesson tells us about this. When the Pharisee went to the temple to pray, he didn’t call on the name of God, praise God, or offer prayers for others. He exalted himself before God. He told God how good he was doing. If he even went one step further, and thanked God for helping him accomplish all these good things, it would have been different. But he made it clear that this was on his own merit, and not because God had helped him.
The real problem, however, was his pride, his inflated expectations of himself, led him to be condescending to others. He said to God, “I’m glad I’m not like that tax collector,” a cheat, a sinner, probably an adulterer just for good measure. And there is the tax collector, mindful of his despised and miserable position in society, praying to God, “Be merciful to me, for I am a sinner.” It’s easy to judge someone when you’ve never listened to the earnest prayers of their heart. The Pharisee used his position and prominence, the inflated expectations others had of him, to engage in cruelty and bullying, and to some degree cowardice. He didn’t rebuke the tax collector to his face for something the man had done wrong. He let his snide hatefulness flow out from a prayer.
This scripture has much in common with Judah in Jeremiah’s day. As the Gospel lesson says, “For those who exalt themselves will be humbled, and those who humble themselves shall be exalted.” Too many in our society live their lives like the Pharisee. They have inflated expectations of themselves, they pray with malice, and they fail to give God the credit for the good things they actually do. We would be better served with more of the tax collector. He’s not a religious leader, a deep thinker, or even really loved in his society. He merely comes up and offers himself before God, “O God, be merciful to me, for I am a sinner.” How much could we accomplish in our world if we simply prayed for God’s mercy and grace on a daily basis?
The problem with inflated expectations is that they lead to pride. The Pharisee actually worked hard to live in righteousness—following the religious laws, praying, doing the right things as the rules demanded. But he was still empty in his soul. In a place where God’s love and grace should live, he was filled with pride and self. Good actions are no substitute for a hateful soul. And as Proverbs tells us, pride goes before a downfall. Jesus told this story to make a point. It is in our faith in Jesus and following him, that we find ourselves faithful. It is not found in our own confidence in our right way of doing things. We cannot follow Jesus and be filled with scorn. We cannot follow Jesus and bully others. We cannot follow Jesus and be filled with pride. We cannot follow Jesus and condone cruelty in our prayers. Instead, we must say, “O Lord, be merciful to me, a sinner.”
Sometimes it is easy to think that we are covered faith-wise if we work really hard to be perfect. Or perhaps we believe that all is well if we follow the rules like Judah did. Or maybe we think our grace is found in giving $2,000 instead of $1,200. I promise I won’t turn away a $2,000 tithe. The problem is we look down on the one who comes only to pray that God would be merciful and has little else to offer.
As I read the Jeremiah scripture, I understand God’s anger a bit more. All God asks is that they turn to God and love God, treating others as God has commanded. When they get in trouble for doing wrong, their response is, “Help us for the sake of our own reputation, [Lord].” The arrogance in that prayer verses “Show mercy to me, a sinner,” is astounding. It’s a clear reminder that we must have our priorities in order when it comes to faith.
God doesn’t love us and offer grace because of our perfection, or our performance. Faith is not some grand sales pitch that wins the quarterly market for the company. Simply, and completely, God wants you, your heart, your love, your trust, and your willingness. All God asks for is your faith and trust, and your willingness to follow in this world. God doesn’t even ask for a $2,000 donation to the building fund. All God wants is you. It took a tax collector to show what that really looks like. In a world filled with people whose pride keeps them doing religious things with a broken soul, remember that God simply wants you because God loves you so very much.
Worship Service Video https://www.facebook.com/fccmacon/videos/1365582948561975/
