The
Rev. Brad Sullivan
Lord
of the Streets
July
21, 2024
Proper
11, B
Jeremiah
23:1-6
Psalm
23
Mark
6:30-34, 53-56
When
Jesus saw a great crowd, hungry for his teaching, he taught them because he had
compassion on them. When people heard that Jesus was near, they brought to him
those who were sick and in need so that he would heal them. Jesus spent a huge
amount of his time healing people, teaching people, sometimes in crowds like we
heard today, and sometimes with individuals, like we also heard today.
The
Jesus revolution, the world-healing movement of Jesus was lived through healing
and teaching people. He taught people to came to him and wanted to hear what he
had to say, and he healed people who came to him and wanted to be healed.
Jesus
didn’t topple King Herod’s corrupt government. Jesus didn’t raise armies to
destroy the oppressive nation of Rome. Jesus changed the world through the
lives of people. Jesus truly loved and cared for people, and his desire for us,
his teaching to us, was that we would do the same.
This
is in stark contrast to King Herod whom we heard about last week and the ancient
kings of Israel who had led them so poorly. The ancient kings amassed great
wealth for themselves, partly to show power and strength to other nations. The
ancient kings dealt unjustly with the people. They cared for those with wealth,
power, and influence to increase their own wealth, power, and influence, and at
the same time they ignored and worsened the plights of those with less, those
who seemed unimportant in their eyes.
Herod
did the same. As king of an occupied nation, semi-autonomous, kinda, he was
supposed to be leading his people according to the ways of God, but he was
trying to keep Rome happy and keep the people from rising up against Rome. He
of course, then had his courtiers and officials to placate, his influence to
maintain, so, John peacefully spoke out against the crown, he had him beheaded
on the whim of a young alluring girl and her mom. Amidst so many powerful
forces and the pressure of everything weighing on him, Herod led his people
further down the path of destruction, dealing in the same injustice and
oppression of the kings before him. Herod cared for those with wealth, power,
and influence and ignored and worsened the plights of those with less, those
who seemed unimportant in his eyes.
I’d
say there’s still plenty of that going on today in plenty of places, with
plenty of rulers and leaders. Now, I’d guess that folks all along the political
spectrum could hear my words and think I’m preaching against the particular
politicians or candidates they don’t like.
I’m
not.
I’m
not preaching for or against governmental powers. They all have their place in
seeking justice and wellbeing for all, but when I look for how to truly love
and care for people, I don’t look to our government because Jesus didn’t set up
our government to live out God’s mission in the world. For Jesus, shepherding
the people wasn’t about setting up his new dynasty on the throne. Jesus
shepherding the people was about caring for all people, poor and rich, exalted and
lowly. Jesus’ way was to love and care for others, not to increase his power to
impose his will in the world.
Jesus
saw Rome as an occupying nation over Israel. He knew Rome was going to overtake
and destroy Israel, and he let it happen. Jesus didn’t lead his people into an
armed revolt against Rome. He didn’t sacrifice others’ lives to make the nation
secure. Jesus cared for the lives of those who were there. Whether Israel was
its own nation, or whether they were oppressed by Rome, or even if they were destroyed
by Rome with the people of Israel scattered, Jesus cared for the people in the
same way.
Rather
than bring about some greater good for “the nation” by sacrificing the lives of
the people, Jesus let destruction happen to the nation, choosing instead to
love and care for people, not treat them as tools for his purposes.
Amidst
Rome rising up and threatening to destroy Israel, Jesus’ way of healing and
teaching folks may seem a bit small and unimportant. Shouldn’t he have made the
nation great? Well, trying to make the nation great was certainly the way of
the previous kings, but that wasn’t the way of God. Nation will rise against
nation, God taught, and in the midst of nations rising and falling, God’s way
for us is to love and care for one another. It may seem insignificant, but the
key is that all people, each person, are of infinite value to God. Nations, not
so much.
Great
tumultuous upheavals are going to happen. We’re not going to prevent such
things. God hasn’t taught us to. In the midst of great upheaval, God has taught
us to love one another.
Late
Archbishop of Canterbury Arthur Michael Ramsey wrote,
Amidst the vast scene of the world’s
problems and tragedies you may feel that your own ministry seems so small, so
insignificant, so concerned with the trivial. What a tiny difference it can
make to the world that you should run a youth club, or preach to a few people
in a church, or visit families with seemingly small result. But consider: the
glory of Christianity is its claim that small things really matter and that the
small company, the very few, the one man, the one woman, the one child are of
infinite worth to God. Consider our Lord himself. Amidst a vast world with its
vast empires and vast events and tragedies our Lord devoted himself to
individual men and women, often giving hours and time to the very few or to the
one man or woman.
Loving
one another is how we can bring about change in the world. If we set our minds
on bringing about some greater good, but sacrifice loving and caring for
individuals to bring those greater goods about, then we’re following the ways
of Herod and the kings of old. Preaching, teaching, forcing change without
genuine love for the people involved is to scatter God’s flock, to drive them
away. The way of Jesus is to love and care for others. No good that we’re
trying to achieve can come at the expense of people. Jesus showed us that in
the infinite value he placed on each person whom he taught, the infinite value
he placed on each person he healed, the infinite value he placed on each person
he just had a conversation or a meal with.
No
act of love or caring that we give to another is every too small to matter.
Even the smallest act of love that we give can be the greatest thing in the
world.