Rev. Dr. Galen E. Russell III | June 2, 2024
2 Corinthians 4:5-12; Mark 2:23-3:6
Then [Jesus] said to them, “Is it lawful to do good or to do harm on the sabbath, to save life or to kill?”
Prayer: May we feel your Spirit moving us so that we may be servants of Jesus Christ, for your light to shine from us and your good to be done by us. In Christ we pray, Amen.
So, a couple of weeks ago, as I read our gospel text from Mark, I was trying to get the meaning of these two Sabbath stories. And, I kept getting the feeling that Jesus was kind of like the Bad Boy of the Bible right here. And that song kept popping into my head. “Bad boy, bad boy, whatcha gonna do, whatcha gonna do when they come for you?” So, I thought, “What a cool title for my sermon! ‘Bad Boy, Bad Boy, Whatcha Gonna Do?’” But, somehow it felt mildly inappropriate to call Jesus a ‘Bad Boy,’ so I changed the title to “Holy Defiance.”
And then come to find out there is a new Bad Boys movie with Wil Smith and Martin Lawrence coming out this week called “Bad Boys: Ride or Die!” And I was like, “Dang! Should’ve kept my original title!” Oh well.
But, it’s true, isn’t it? Jesus sort of has a defiant bad boy attitude when he goes up against the religious leaders. In these two Sabbath stories, Jesus got into what the late representative John Lewis called “good trouble.” Because in the first Sabbath story, with the holy wisdom of God flowing from him, Jesus openly defied the Pharisee’s love of the power that comes with exacting the law. And after citing an example from 1 Samuel 21 of how even the soon-to-be-king David didn’t follow the law precisely, Jesus taught that the Sabbath was made for people, not the other way around.
In the second Sabbath story, plain and simply, Jesus got mad because of the hardness of their hearts. He knows the religious folk are trying to find reasons to accuse him. To hook him into trouble. He knows that they are obsessed with having control over people. He knows that they have weaponized Sabbath-keeping and use it to clobber people. He knows that their obsession has withered their faith.
But most of all, he knows that exacting of the law prevents them from this basic understanding—that doing good on the Sabbath actually is keeping Sabbath. Because just as practicing keeping the Sabbath is supposed to restore one’s faith and renew a relationship with God, healing the man’s withered hand would restore and renew him and his life.
So, it seems to me that with a holy defiance of all that the religious folk thought was important, with a disrespect of all of the ways that the Sabbath was misused, with a rebelliousness of the way scripture was used to beat people up, with a bad boy attitude, Jesus healed the man’s hand.
And the man, who before had a chronic deformity, was reformed. The man who at one time had fingers all gnarled up, now was able to stretch out his hand. So, do you see the metaphor here? I think this means that Jesus is absolutely defiant against anything in life—ailments, deformities, bogus religious practices, habits, ideas, obsessions—anything that withers faith. Jesus has holy defiance against it.
Ideally, the religious leaders would see that their withered faith could be restored, that their gnarled up understanding of scripture and Sabbath-keeping could be stretched out so that these could fulfill their real purpose. Faith, scripture, and Sabbath are there for people to have a meaningful relationship with God and spiritual needs fulfilled their whole life long. Ideally, that would be great.
But, we don’t live in an “ideally” kind of world. There are plenty of people who continue to misuse scripture. There are plenty of people who can’t let go of judging others because of what specially picked out Bible readings say. Plenty of people who love the power that is used to lord over others, to control others.
And I struggle with that. Because part of me feels defiant against such scriptural rigidity and misuse of the Bible. And to be honest, another part of me knows that God is at work in the lives of people who feel that way. So, I don’t know.
But, here’s what I do know at this point: that no matter how much importance people give to the Bible as a rule book, the Spirit of God seems to pay little mind to that. It seems to me that the Spirit doesn’t confine itself to our societal norms, or biblical rules, or our political ideologies, or our words and wishes.
The Spirit will burst forth where it wants.
It will heal when it’s not supposed to. It will restore our withered spirits with a holy defiance against what our accusers might say. Social media is a terrible place for accusations. It will help us bear the unbearable just when we think the lessons in patience are too much.
And more, the Spirit of God redeems those thought to be unredeemable by the self-righteous. It loves those considered un-loveable by others. It accepts those called unacceptable. It welcomes those determined to be un-welcome-able. It pushes for justice and fairness for those who don’t have these in life. This is the work of the Spirit. Because God is about redemption, love, welcome, and justice.
And our job, it seems to me, as a church filled with redeemed people, is to pay as much attention to the work of the Spirit as we can.
And, to practice being servants of our Bad Boy, Jesus Christ in holy defiance of and resistance to any allegiances in this world. Because we who were at one time spiritually withered and gnarled up and in the dark are now made new in Christ. And even though imperfect, it’s clear God still uses us. As servants made new, the Spirit empowers us to be at work for Christ.
And yes, being at work for Bad Boy Christ will at times mean having holy defiance against some ongoing religious practices and beliefs, some ideologies that hold people under the thumb. And we may likely find that we will have offended somebody along the way.
But take heart. Have courage. Because like Paul writes, while we may get afflicted, we are not crushed. Perplexed, but not in despair. Struck down, but not destroyed. We may have to get into good trouble, but we are alive, and Bad Boy Christ alive in us. Thanks be to God. Amen.
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