Thursday, June 30, 2022

PRIDE - 3rd July 2022 Pentecost 4C

PROPER 9 Pentecost 4C  Year C   July 3, 2022

Today we look at some really great Bible stories.  Naaman, who was not even an Israelite, received a divine healing, but he almost missed it due to his pride.  This is an amazing story about someone, blessed by God, even though he belonged to the people who were often enemies of Israel. 

Our first reading tells us: “Naaman, commander of the army of the king of Aram, was a great man and in high favour with his master, because by him the LORD had given victory to Aram. The man, though a mighty warrior, suffered from leprosy.”

Do you notice that it is was God who had given victory to Aram?  No doubt that some of those victories were against the Israelites and in one of those raids a young girl was taken as a slave.  This is a stark reminder that we are dealing with a story where the culture was so different to our own.  What was considered the norm, and considered honourable, was different.  Certainly, the young girl appeared to hold no bitterness.  Much like Joseph who, when he was sold into slavery by his brothers, saw God’s hand of provision for the future, perhaps this girl, aware of the story, held a similar view. 

In this story, we tend to look at the great warrior, Naaman.  And the great prophet, Elisha, but we should perhaps make definite note of this young, un-named girl, who became the instrument of God – the missionary – the evangelist.  She declared that the leprosy, suffered by Naaman, could be healed by the prophet.

 

Naaman was obviously someone of importance to the King of Aram, as the King sends Naaman to the King of Israel with a glowing letter and a great deal of money.  The King of Israel received the letter, and though his relationship with the prophet Elisha should have been a close one, it was not – and so he misinterprets the letter as the Arameans picking a fight.

 

Elisha sends word to the King and Naaman is sent on his way to the prophet.  After all this drama at the palace, and then finally arriving at the prophet’s house, a servant is sent and Naaman is told; "Go, wash in the Jordan seven times, and your flesh shall be restored and you shall be clean."

 

Naaman might have been a great man, doing the work of God… an honourable man, cared for by his slaves and servants, but to be sent away without an audience with the prophet, messed with his ego.  He left angry and was not going to do as the prophet said, simply because it wasn’t done in the way he expected.  And that expectation of course, included being treated as the important person he knew himself to be.

 

Have we ever been guilty of the same?   Have we missed the blessings of God because of our pride, and an expectation that things would only be done in a certain way?  Pride and this expectation of how things would be done was a stumbling point for the Pharisees of Jesus time also.

 

Naaman’s pride, however, was not so immovable that his servants couldn’t speak with him and convince him to heed the word of the prophet.  And so Naaman was healed.

 

Ego might not be a dirty word, but it has been said that pride comes before a fall.  In our Gospel, Jesus makes a comment about seeing Satan fall from Heaven.  Satan fell because of pride, and the Biblical connection to this statement is found in Isaiah 14:12, “How you have fallen from heaven, morning star, son of the dawn! You have been cast down to the earth, you who once laid low the nations!”

Jesus is saying that he saw Satan fall like lightening, in response to the excitement of the 70 who were sent out in his name.  Often, we hear about the Twelve apostles, but it is important to remember that we are also, all called, and these 70 were a large group who were sent with a specific mission; They were to heal in Jesus’ name and to declare that the Kingdom of God was near.  Jesus was sending these people to places where he intended to visit.  In many ways they had a mission a bit like John the Baptist, of preparing the way.

 

I can’t help but wonder how this would look in our community today.  Would there be 70 people who would be prepared to travel to the surrounding areas, not just praying for the sick, but healing, and declaring the kingdom of God?  It sure would create a buzz of excitement.  If it were us, would we return proud and a little full of our own importance?

 

These 70 were excited that people were miraculously healed and also that the demons submitted to them.  What power they must have experienced?  But then Jesus says this perplexing thing.  “I saw Satan fall from heaven like lightening”.

 

The implication of that one statement holds plenty for discussion.  Firstly, Jesus is saying that he saw that event.  He is standing there before them as the Messiah, but also as a completely human being and declaring his pre-existence and therefore his divinity.

 

In the same statement, Jesus is declaring a warning.  Satan was once a shining Angel of light, but he became so convinced of his own importance that he fell.

 

No matter who we are and what we are called to in this life, we can easily cross that line between confidence and self-importance.  Pride can hinder our own blessings and healings, and pride can even cause complete rejection of God.  Not that he ever rejects us, but that we, in our pride, reject him and the good that he has for us.

 

The letter to the Galatians also has somethings to say about pride and self-importance; “Bear one another's burdens, and in this way you will fulfill the law of Christ.  For if those who are nothing think they are something, they deceive themselves.  All must test their own work; then that work, rather than their neighbour’s work, will become a cause for pride. For all must carry their own loads.”

 

I want to break this down a little because it might seem a bit confusing with the talk of burdens and loads.  In the past I have witnessed judgements from people about people.  And before I go any further, we all know, that we all make judgements, …. All the time, in fact!  And THAT is simply a fact… But sometimes these judgements impact our actions.

 

I’m sure you have heard people complain about our taxes going to the unemployed.  It seems that some work while others “SEEM” to get hand-outs. 

We who have resources, might feel that we are “something.”  We might feel that our job and our wealth mean that we are someone important.  And in that sense of importance, we might judge these receivers of the handouts, who do not have jobs or finance, as people of less or no value.

 

The scriptures tell us very clearly about how love is the fulfillment of the law and the law of God is to care for others… to have mercy and act with compassion, and it is stated again in our Galatians reading that when we bear one another's burdens, we fulfill the law of Christ.  But then the reading tells us we must carry our own load.

 

Our loads are our own day to day responsibilities, and we all have them.  There are times when we or others fall on hard times and those hard times, grief, financial hardships, disasters, etc…  are burdens that we are not meant to carry alone. I suspect disappointments and disillusions are burdens that many people have sought to carry alone.  These then cause bitterness which comes between people and God.  We need to be carrying these burdens with each other… acknowledging the burden that they are and therefore sharing the weight of them, until there is enough relief.

 

Burdens and loads are all about healthy boundaries… you don’t take the burden – you share the weight of it, but we are all responsible for our own loads.

We can’t actually bear another person’s burden if we are full of pride and think we are better than them.  It is the difference between empathy and sympathy.  To actually bear a burden is to feel the weight of it yourself, just a little…. Not so much that we become overwhelmed.

 

To bear another’s burdens is to understand the heart of God and have that heart for others.  Jesus, who knows of eternal life, who healed the sick and raised the dead, still wept for Lazarus when he was in the tomb.  Jesus felt compassion for the widow whose only son had died and raised him to life.

 

We are now the hands, feet and heart of God on this earth and we are called to fulfill the law of Christ by bearing each other’s burdens, but there is more…. The revelation of how we can bear each other burdens, is in that commission that Jesus gives his followers.

 

Our Gospel reading tells us that Jesus had given authority to the 70 followers to heal and declare the kingdom of God.  Authority to tread on snakes and scorpions and over all the power of the enemy.  But it all came with a warning about pride and to instead rejoice that our names are written in heaven.

 

The cross is the great equalizer, because none of us has been perfect and therefore none of us had the power to save ourselves…. We need Jesus and his redemption.  Our safe-guard against pride is knowing who we are in Jesus.  In Jesus we are so, so loved and treasured, but we are nothing compared to him and all of us mere humans are in the same boat there.  When someone is hurting, we should all be hurting and interceding for them.  In doing this we not only fulfil the law of God, but we really do declare that his Kingdom has come.


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