Today’s Reading: Luke 6:36-42
Daily Lectionary: Joshua 2:1-24; Acts 8:26-40
“Be merciful, even as your Father is merciful.” (Luke 6:36)
In the Name + of Jesus. Amen. If you read it on its own like it’s usually quoted, “Judge not lest ye be judged,” is the only command that gets easier the less you care. The less you care about your neighbor, the less you care what they do. The less you care about God’s Word, the less you care to talk about uncomfortable things like sin. It’s the religion of today, but it’s a lonely and bitter one. It can’t cope with tragedy. It can’t find the source of pain. It can’t fix it. It can only lift itself up above someone else who broke its chief commandment. Thou shalt not judge.
There is a second like it: Thou shalt not be a hypocrite. It’s catching, even among us. We bring God’s Word to bear whenever we notice something our neighbor can’t do, so we won’t get accused of judging them. We bring it to bear whenever there’s something we can’t do either, so we don’t get accused of being hypocrites. The only thing we’re showing is that we care more about what our neighbor thinks of us than what they’re going through. This leaves nothing to offer anyone in pain. It speaks only to sinners, but never to victims. It lacks mercy. And that’s the whole point of this.
It begins with a promise. Your Father in heaven is merciful. You are of mercy now. Be merciful. It ends with a speck in your neighbor’s eye. This is not a call not to ignore your neighbor in pain, but to help them, even if you have to confront your own sin and receive forgiveness for it first. Actually, that’s a good plan either way. There is a log in my eye even as there is a speck in yours. The question is, should we leave it there and go on ignoring each other in pain, or should we talk about mercy? Don’t worry about judging. Focus on mercy.
Mercy comes from only one place. Jesus gives real mercy. Not just empty words. He backs His by deed and truth. He gives it only to hypocrites who hope in something greater than themselves. It’s bad to be a hypocrite, but Jesus saves sinners. He bears the damage sin does and names you forgiven. He calls your neighbor forgiven, too. The more you deal with your neighbor as someone for whom Jesus died, the more peace you find in seeing his sins forgiven. Start with Jesus. End there, too. In the Name + of Jesus. Amen.
O Lord, grant that the course of this world may be so peaceably ordered by Your governance that Your Church may joyfully serve You in all godly quietness; through Jesus Christ, our Lord, who lives and reigns with You and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever. Amen. (Collect for the Fourth Sunday after Trinity)
Audio Reflections Speaker: Pastor Duane Bamsch