Attitude!
'Jesus makes it very plain whose example
we are to look up to. '
Mark 12:37-44
Cleaning out the pulpit, a caretaker found the typescript of
last Sunday's sermon. He happened to notice that the vicar had
pencilled notes to himself in the margin: 'Pause here for effect,'
then further down, 'Wipe brow, sigh,' and halfway down the next
page, 'Lift hands up to heaven,'
After this there was a long, very involved piece of the sermon
which the caretaker couldn't understand at all. Against this,
the vicar had written: 'Argument woolly and confused. Theology
weak. Shout loudly and thump pulpit.'
Unsurprisingly perhaps, Jesus had something to say to this particular
clergyman.
Mark was a great collector of Jesus' words and stories, and the
importance of this gospel is not least in the fact that Mark almost
certainly used the preaching of the apostle Peter as his main
source. Peter, who had died just 30 years or so after Jesus' crucifixion.
Commentators have called Mark's gospel 'a transcript from life'
and 'written from the viewpoint of loving, vivid recollections,'
and that it's great characteristic was realism.
Maybe that's why Mark's gospel is so easy for new Christians,
or searchers after faith to relate to. It has an immediacy about
it. We can see in our mind's eye Jesus walking those dusty streets,
meeting all these different people, making comments on the behaviour
that he finds - the hypocrisy, the uncaring attitude, the little
actions of a widow that most people milling around him would have
missed. Jesus was a great commentator on life as he found it,
and Peter a great collector of all those little episodes in Jesus'
life. What we have in Mark's gospel then is probably the nearest
we'll ever get to a TV documentary on the life of our Lord.
When we look at Jesus' words what do we find?
We find that over 2000 years very little has changed. The characters
that Jesus met as he walked those streets may be long dead and
buried, but the attitudes are still there around us, both in the
church and out in the world at large.
The passage that we're looking at seems on the surface to be
two disconnected stories, one about the priests and scribes, the
other about a widow and her offering, but they flow so well when
put together. Close your eyes and imagine Jesus and his disciples
sitting in the temple courts, talking and arguing between themselves
and with the teachers of the law who passed by. This was a busy
place, voices raised in debate - maybe the temple equivalent of
Parliamentary question time. Sweeping past them come the scribes
in their flowing robes, and as they do so folk turn and greet
them with a bow of the head and a mumbled word or respect. The
scribes acknowledge the bowing and scraping of the ordinary folk,
perhaps with a small hand gesture or a slight glance in their
direction. They are looked up to as someone special - perhaps
the equivalent today would be the deference shown to royalty or
a film star. Look how they milk it, says Jesus. Heads in the air,
robes flowing, graciously acknowledging the greetings of the masses
as they pass. The very title Rabbi means 'My great one'.
They took the front seats in the synagogue, in full view of the
congregation and in front of the ark where the sacred volumes
were kept.
At feasts and banquets they took the seats of honour. You could
always tell the honour in which a man was held by the place at
table that he was sat. The first place was on the right of the
host, the second on the left of the host, and so on round the
table.
Not only that, says Jesus, as they pass by, but these so-called
men of honour - these religious leaders who are held in such high
regard - they 'devour widows' houses. What did he mean by this
strange phrase?
The nearest I can come to an explanation is to think back a few
years to the controversy that surrounded a certain American TV
evangelist and his wife. They played upon the emotions of their
listeners to the point that they were receiving ridiculous amounts
of money which was supposed to be supporting their charitable
enterprises and ministry, but in fact was supporting a very lavish
lifestyle - and not a terrible Christian one at that. Innocent
people were duped by the false piety of someone who seems to have
been no more than a TV entertainer.
Then Jesus mentions those long prayers. Are long prayers so bad,
then? Well, it's been said that the prayers of the Pharisees were
not so much offered to God as offered to man. They were offered
in such a place and in such a way that no one could fail to see
how pious were those who said them.
That's an awful lot of criticism. But what was Jesus really trying
to say?
Well, first of all Jesus' words throw down a challenge to all
who hold office in the Church. To those who stand up and preach,
to those who play instruments, to those who are elders, members
of Church Councils, treasurers and secretaries or office holders.
Why are we doing it? Is it because we enjoy the status that it
gives us? That it looks good on our heavenly CV? Do we look upon
these jobs as privilege rather than responsibility? Are we looking
at them as a source of kudos or a means of service?
There's an old story about a monk who went to take up the position
of abbot in a monastery. He looked so unassuming and humble an
individual that when he knocked at the door the monks thought
he'd come to work in the kitchens, and so they set him to work
in the scullery. He said nothing and went to work, washing the
dishes and doing all the menial tasks that were demanded of him.
It was only when the bishop arrived some time later that the mistake
was recognised and matters put right. The humble monk was installed
in his rightful place as abbot.
Everyone likes to be treated with respect. Yet the way of Christ
is to forget 'self' rather than hoist it on a flagpole. Taking
a job because of the respect and honour that it confers onto the
office holder is taking the job on for all the wrong reasons.
The way of Christ is the way of the servant.
More than anything Jesus warns us to examine our motives for
being 'here' at this very moment in time. Are we here for what
we can get out of this experience, or for what we can put into
it?
Jesus then sits down with the disciples, probably between the
Court of the Gentiles and the Court of the Women, by the Gate
Beautiful. In the court of the Women were thirteen collecting
boxes called 'the trumpets', because that’s what they looked
like. Each was for a special purpose, and were for contributions
towards the daily expenses and sacrifices that took place in the
temple. It was a very visible way of giving, rather like those
collecting bins that you see at the Severn bridge. You could be
in no doubt who were the generous givers and who were not, simple
by the tinkle or clatter of the coins as they hit the boxes.
Look at them, says Jesus, just like the scribes and Pharisees
who flaunt their authority and power for all to see and acknowledge,
look at the way that the rich pause to make sure everyone is watching
as they throw all those heavy coins into the boxes. You can even
hear how generous they are. Then look at that widow over there
- sorry, did you miss that? She just threw in two small coins,
but you probably didn't hear because they're only light, only
worth - well, in today's money perhaps 1/4 of a pence. Yet, says
Jesus I tell you something, that women has given far more than
any of those others whose contributions clattered so loudly, as
they threw coin after coin into the boxes. Because they gave what
they could easily spare and still had plenty left. She gave everything
she had, small though it was.
It's down to attitude again, isn't it? With the Scribes and Pharisees
in their flowing robes, flowery prayers and false show of piety
it was their attitude to their position that was all wrong. Here,
it's all about a lesson in giving, and Jesus uses the example
of a poor woman and her contributions to the church restoration
appeal - sorry, temple funds to make two very important points.
Firstly that our giving, of money, gifts, resources, skills,
time - whatever we are called to give must be sacrificial to have
any meaning. Size does not matter in the Kingdom of Heaven. It's
not the amount but the sacrifice that goes with it. Real generosity
gives and goes on giving until it hurts. It's a very difficult
one for many of us to answer, but does our giving actually amount
to any sacrifice at all. Let's for a moment put all our giving
into one basket, so to speak. Let's look at the financial aspect
of our giving; the amount of time that we give to God through
our week in worship; our commitment reading the bible; the time
we spend in prayer or meditation; our willingness to use the gifts
that God has given us when they're called upon, and our reluctance
to muck in when skills are needed. How closely do we have to look
at our own lives before we start cringing?
Secondly there has to be a certain recklessness about our giving.
The widow threw two coins into the box. She could have thrown
one and kept the other, but she didn't. Two she had, and two she
gave. And here there's a direct parallel with our own lives. How
much of our lives are we prepared to give to God?
Is it all? Or would we rather keep some back? Throw in the one
coin but hold onto the other. One for God, one for me. This part
of my life is dedicated to God, but this part I hang onto.
Can I remind you of a hymn that we sing now and then.
All for Jesus - all for Jesus
This our song shall ever be;
For we have no hope, no Saviour,
If we have not hope in thee.
All or Jesus - thou will give us
Strength to serve thee, hour by hour;
None can move us from thy presence,
While we trust thy love and power.
All for Jesus - thou hast loved us;
All for Jesus - thou hast died;
All for Jesus - thou art with us;
All for Jesus crucified.
All for Jesus - all for Jesus -
This the church's song must be;
Till, at last, we all are gathered
One in love and one in thee
Isn't it just typical of Jesus that he should present to us as
the prime example of generosity, someone who had so little and
yet was prepared to give all.
We might feel that we have very little to offer to God. We might
consider that we have no special gifts or skills, that daily life
doesn't provide us with very much spare time, that there are parts
of our life that we really don't think God would want to use.
But if we follow the insistent plea of that hymn, if we're prepared
to put all that we are and all that we have at God's disposal,
then he can do things with it and with us that are beyond our
imagination.
I'm sure that these two stories are placed together by Mark for
a reason. Because they both touch at the very heart of our faith.
The Son of God came, we are told, not to be served but to serve.
It is a servant Church to which we belong. If we accept positions
within that Church, then they are not positions of rank and privilege
but positions of responsibility. If we treat them as such then
there is less likelihood that we shall risk being held up by Jesus
as examples of the same behaviour as the scribes and Pharisees.
The Church that we belong to is one that has its root in the
cross, and our own individual faith must also start at that same
place. Together with this, and very much connected is the idea
of sacrifice, and sacrificial giving. You can't have the one without
the other. A sacrifice of self, and an offering of lives. The
scribes and the Pharisees had it all wrong. They sought power
an influence and milked it for what they could get out of it;
the widow sought for nothing but what she could offer - and gave
all that she had.
Jesus makes it very plain whose example we are to look up to.
It's a difficult lesson to learn, as I've said earlier, but if
we are going to be used by God in this world then we've got to
make sure that our faith is on solid ground. There's no place
in the Kingdom of God for the outward show of religiosity that
was characterised by the scribes that passed by Jesus and his
disciples, one that has it's centre on self. But there's plenty
of room for those who are prepared to look not to self but to
service, those who are prepared to risk all - throw in the extra
coin rather than hang on to it.
Those who are prepared to put all that they are and own at God's
disposal.