Texts: Genesis 12:1-9 & Matthew 9:9-13, 18-26
We are greeted by a couple of interesting lessons for this Sunday.
At our Wednesday night service, I reminded the people assembled that they are church, not the building that is the meeting place. In fact, our church buildings seem to serve us as the
How easy is it for us to look at the stuff of our worship? How easy is it to look at stained-glass, altars, vestments, and holy hardware as what makes St. David’s a church. But what makes it a church is the people gathered together, in at least twos and threes. In fact, the land that is considered 1519 Elmwood is a place marker: it is not holy land in and of itself, but a place where the holy meets humanity.
On the way out, I mentioned that I loved the passage from Genesis where Abram is wandering on his desert journey and makes an altar to God, as a place marker and as a show of faith for God. How coincidental that this should be our first reading! And how appropriate! For this same confusion is explored in the gospel (conceptually, not literally).
In the gospel, Matthew describes Jesus as “walking along” and finding a man named Matthew. Jesus says to the man “Follow me.” And the man does.
The way Jesus communicated was using two methods: words and actions. For Jesus, these are always in tension, but necessarily so. In this first example, Jesus speaks and the man acts. Next, he acts and then he speaks. He sits with the undesirables; when this is brought to his attention, he says “Those who are well have no need of a physician, but those who are sick.” For Jesus, you do what is needed for those that need it. But even more, we don’t expect a doctor to perform a tonsillectomy on a person whose tonsils are fine, so why do we expect Jesus to spend his time with the righteous? (us?)
The last half of the reading is a wonderful demonstration of Jesus’s earlier words. I am not compelled to wonder about the miracle of healing that Jesus performs here as much as I am the obvious illustration of his earlier point. People are coming to him for healing who need it and he declares that “Take heart, daughter; your faith has made you well.” Healing is the appropriate response to a person who needs it.
We say that those who say one thing and do another are hypocrites. We say that a person who says one thing and does nothing about it is lazy or insensitive. But isn’t this the norm? Isn’t this how we behave normally? Isn’t this what you notice about your teachers, parents, public officials?
The word that describes what we long for is authenticity. We want Jesus to be the authentic savior. We want God to be authentic in the way we are treated. We want the Holy Spirit to be authentically present with us. It is precisely because we worry about that authenticity in our human souls.
What are some of the ways that you and I can be more authentic? How can we apply those things that we say we believe? What changes can we make to the injustices we witness? How can we treat others with the respect to which God invites us?

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