THE QUALITY OF MERCY A sermon delivered by the Rev. Scott Dalgarno on January 29, 2017 Based on Micah 6:1-8

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THE QUALITY OF MERCY A sermon delivered by the Rev. Scott Dalgarno on January 29, 2017 Based on Micah 6:1-8 Some things you just know in your heart, your mind, your soul, your very bones. You know when you see the real thing. When the Utah Symphony Orchestra plays the symphonies of Brahms that they are featuring this season. You know you have just experienced world-class music, the real thing. You know when you see our own Mt. Olympus, snow shrouded with just a tinge of pink. You re driving south late in the day, and you know what natural beauty can truly amount to and it stuns you even though you may have seen it a hundred times before. You listen to the words of Martin Luther King Jr. on the night before he was killed. Not the I have a dream speech, but his last speech, and you know the sound of true courage not its counterfeits. Remember his summing up, not only of that particular sermon, but of a whole lifetime. He mentioned the death threats he met when he came into Memphis that week. He spoke of the hate of some of our sick white brothers. And he said, Well, I don't know what will happen now. We've got some difficult days ahead. But it really doesn't matter with me now, because I've been to the mountaintop. And I don't mind. Like anybody, I would like to live a long life. Longevity has its place. But I'm not concerned about that now. I just want to do God's will. And He's allowed me to go up to the mountain. And I've looked over. And I've seen the Promised Land. I may not get there with you. But I want you to know tonight, that we, as a people, will get to the promised land! And so I'm happy, tonight. I'm not worried about anything. I'm not fearing any man. Mine eyes have seen the glory of the coming of the Lord. You hear that and if you ve never known it before, you come to know what courage really is. And you know it s not a man with a gun. You know that in your heart. And you know real religion when you see it. Mother Teresa of Calcutta for instance, who devoted her life to caring for the sick and dying in the streets of Calcutta, bringing love and compassion and dignity into lives utterly lost, all the while struggling with the darkness of her own doubt. You know when you see that kind of authenticity, that genuine humanness, that you are seeing real religion. Sadly, you don t always see it in religious institutions. Sadly, religious institutions sometimes seem more interested in arguing and fighting; keeping people out.

They seek to build exclusive barriers behind which to protect purity, I suppose, and in the process they show the world a religion that is mean spirited, tight fisted, with little resemblance to the heart of Jesus, its founder. Will Campbell, a grouchy Southern Baptist social activist who laments the capture of his denomination by the far right, introduces a book of his essays, Soul among Lions, by confessing that his writings express the chafing of an old man grown weary of what he sees as institutional nonsense. On the topic of the place of women in the church, which the Southern Baptists not so long ago relegated to the kitchen, Campbell challenges his church to simply read the Bible. There is neither male nor female, St. Paul said. That s a real shocker. Campbell quips, A lot of [Baptists] claim to believe everything in the Bible. But neither male nor female? Then how come most of our ministers are men? You know He has told you, O mortal, what is good; and what does the Lord require of you, but to do justice, to love kindness, and to walk humbly with your God? Some things you just know. And that helps you spot the counterfeit. It is a familiar text. It s very old, centuries before Jesus. The prophet Micah describes a courtroom scene. God s people are on trial, ordered to give an accounting, and they ask an important question; the Old Testament equivalent of What must I do to inherit eternal life? What does God want of us? With what shall I come before the Lord? Then comes a recitation of the conventional wisdom of the day... Shall I bring to God burnt offerings, calves a year old? Or will the Lord be pleased with me if I bring rams, thousands of them? Or perhaps ten thousand rivers of oil will get the job done. Or does God want me to give my precious firstborn child? Now, those were the answers to the basic religious question provided by tribal cultures around Israel in the ancient world. And they kept finding their way into Israel s religion, too. God wants our stuff, our most valuable stuff. The more valuable the gift, the more God will be pleased with us and bless us. Actually it s not unlike what many televangelists preach to their audiences today. But then comes one of the great moments in the history of religious ideas, a theological sea change, a moment that is defining for God s people, Israel, and for the followers of Jesus.

God doesn t want lambs and rams and oil and your firstborn. God has told you what is good: do justice, love kindness, walk humbly with your God. Now, consider what this says about who God is. Previously God has been considered the all-powerful, transcendent other, a God not unlike all the deities of ancient religions. Now comes a new idea: God, the God of Israel, has a heart. God cares about human welfare. God cares particularly about (and wants justice for) the small, the weak, the vulnerable, the widows and orphans, the children, and the prisoner and one more people group: the immigrant. That s what it says, and you don t have to look into the fine print to see that. This is a new and amazing idea. God is a God of compassion, yes, and we just celebrated that idea on December 24 th and 25th, with the birth of Jesus, the clearest window we know of on God s love and compassion. What God wants from us is that the weak and vulnerable ones will receive justice, which means simply not being exploited or marginalized or discriminated against, but instead, being treated fairly and compassionately. And consider what this means for religion and for the church. What God wants to see in the church is a little justice, some kindness, and some humility. Not size, power, unlimited growth. No, it s those three little things that are the criteria by which we are to measure ourselves. N. T. Wright, an Anglican bishop and distinguished New Testament scholar wrote a book, Simply Christian. Wright is quite conservative theologically, but in that book he says, Despite what many people think, within the Christian family and without it, the main point of Christianity is not to go to heaven when you die. No, it is bigger. The New Testament picks up from the Old the theme that God intends, in the end, to put the whole creation to rights (p. 217). That is why every human being longs for the day when other human beings are no longer wronged, a day when people live in peace with one another, because justice is a reality. God put that in the human heart, Wright argues. And that is why you don t have to teach a child about fairness. Most of us come with a sense of justice wired into us. You know, oh man, what is good, says Micah.

The verses in the New Testament that come the closest to echoing these words of the prophet are surely verses from the first chapter of Romans. I will quote them from the contemporary version of the Bible called, The Message: God s angry displeasure erupts as acts of human mistrust and wrongdoing and lying accumulate, as people try to put a shroud over truth. But the basic reality of God is plain enough to see. Open your eyes and there it is! By taking a long and thoughtful look at what God has created, people have always been able to see what their eyes as such can t see: eternal power, for instance, and the mystery of his divine being. So nobody has a good excuse. What happened was this: People knew God perfectly well, but when they didn t treat him like God, refusing to worship him, they trivialized themselves into silliness and confusion so that there was neither sense nor direction left in their lives. They pretended to know it all, but were illiterate regarding life. They traded the glory of God who holds the whole world in his hands for cheap figurines you can buy at any roadside stand. (Romans 1:18-23). Allow me to speak now about a man named Walter Rauschenbusch who came to prominence in this country a little over a hundred years ago. He was a simple pastor who wrote a book and out of that book came an idea and a movement called the Social Gospel. Rauschenbusch was a German Baptist pastor whose first call was to a small immigrant congregation in Hell s Kitchen in New York City. Through his congregation he was introduced to overcrowded tenements with high rent, horrendous working conditions rewarded by intolerably low wages, lack of heat in the winter, and lack of recreational facilities in the summer, all accompanied by constant hunger and substandard health facilities. As a pastor, Rauschenbusch realized that in order to serve the spiritual needs of his congregation, he had to first address their physical and emotional needs. So he wrote a book in which he said that Christianity is not a purely ascetic retreat from the world as most Christians and churches of the day believed but a project to transform the world in the here and now, a Social Gospel. Crowded, overpriced tenements are the church s business, he said. Economic exploitation of the poor is a national sin. The church is called to be in the world and to change it, to be part of a transformation that will extend God s justice and compassion to the poor and the most vulnerable. Now this call did not start with Walter Rauschenbusch. It started in earnest in the early days of the Protestant Reformation. As many of you know, we are in the 500 th year of that great awakening.

500 years ago, Martin Luther posted his 95 arguments with the Catholic Church on the door of the Wittenberg church, something academics like him had been doing for quite some time. But because the printing press had just come into maturity and because more and more people had learned to read because of printing, Luther quickly became the most famous man in Europe. As things changed swiftly, Luther came to believe it could only mean one thing Jesus was coming back soon. The end of the world was in the offing. And so he sat back and waited. But in France, another man who welcomed the Reformation, John Calvin, had a completely different idea from Luther s about what this sea change in history meant. Calvin believed that instead of the world coming to an end, the changes happening actually meant that after 1500 years it was finally possible for the teachings of Jesus to change the world. To turn it upside down. He had this vision that if people understood the scriptures, they might learn how to live in harmony, and he was given the opportunity to prove that could be done in tiny Geneva, Switzerland, where the city leaders gradually gave him authority to turn Geneva into a city set on a hill; a trial balloon for the kingdom of God. Ever since, there has been a divide between Luther s idea that only salvation was truly important, and Calvin s idea that the gospel is meant to remake the world. I m oversimplifying this, but that is a basic Christian divide. Well, after Rauschenbusch and the Social Gospel movement, a more well defined divide opened within the Protestant family. The mainline denominations Presbyterian, Methodist, Episcopalian, United Church of Christ began to focus their attention on social justice issues: poverty, race, gender, sexual orientation, economic justice, education, health care, and war. Then in reaction, Evangelicals pulled away and focused their energy on evangelism, personal conversion, and personal morality. Each side formed national umbrella organizations, and published their own magazines. For decades these two stopped talking to one another. The Evangelicals said that Social Gospel adherents forgot about John 3:16. And the Social Gospel people accused Evangelicals of ignoring all the rest of the teachings of Jesus. But events have taken a curious turn in the last half dozen years. Jim Wallis, editor of Sojourners magazine and an Evangelical with impeccable credentials and also a social conscience wrote a best seller, God Is Not a Republican or a Democrat: How the Right Got It Wrong and the Left Doesn t Get It.

Yes, and many evangelicals, particularly younger ones, have made it clear they have no argument against science they accept evolution and global warming as facts. They say that they care about the problem of systemic poverty as much as any old social gospel preacher. They hear the angry rants of older evangelical leaders and the anger doesn t resonate with them the way it did with their parents. They know, in their hearts what is central to the faith of Jesus -- They know what God requires: to... do justice love kindness walk humbly with your God. If Jesus and Micah were right, God intends to transform the world into a place where justice and kindness and humility are the hallmarks of the spirit of God. Where we see those three, there is God s hand and heart. Yes, and where our Christian brothers and sisters claim to speak for God and ignore justice, abhor kindness and jettison humility, I suggest to you, God is maybe missing and is trying hard to break back in. What I do know is this, God has commissioned us, you and me, to make the world more just, more kind, more humble. That s the project we have inherited for our lifetime. That project was going on before we arrived, and others will take it up when we are gone. But for now it is ours. And know this: God intends to transform you and me to clothe us in those three things in a way that it will bring us to life, fully human life. God wants that for you and me so desperately, that God sent Jesus, the epitome of justice, kindness and humility, to show us precisely what it looks like. Amen