Matthew 25: 1-13
Amos 5: 18-24
November 12, 2023
Rev. Dr. Galen E. Russell III
“But let justice roll down like waters, and righteousness like an ever-flowing stream.”
Prayer: God of righteousness and mercy, may we receive both as gifts from you. In Christ we pray, Amen.
Let me share a couple of things I’ve observed, that kind of fits the title of my sermon.
Another government shutdown is looming. Which is basically a postponement of the one a month or so ago. And, I’m like “let’s get it right already.”
It took the House of Representatives 15 times of voting this past January to elect California Republican Kevin McCarthy to the Speaker of the House position in Washington DC, only to have him voted out in October. Which led to four failed candidates and many more failed votes, to which America was saying “Let’s just get it right.” Finally Mike Johnson was elected a couple of weeks ago. We’ll see if the House got it right.
For a little while since September, we tried one worship service on Sunday morning instead of two. And, we found out that maybe this wasn’t the right choice. “Let’s get it right,” is what some of our people said.
Sometimes things like that bug us, don’t they? And we get tired of them. Sometimes we get upset and angry that the same mistakes get made repeatedly. And we want to say, “Let’s just get it right!”
I think Amos fits into that category. Only much more seriously. His words can be divided into two parts. For the first part, Amos was sick and tired of the lack of faithfulness and integrity from the religious leaders of his day. He was sick and tired of the religious culture placing emphasis on the “day of the Lord” thinking that God would smite all their enemies. And Israel would be vindicated. And Israel could sit back, and smack their lips, and clap their hands, and say that God is on their side as they wait with cynical anticipation of how God destroys the other nations.
And Amos will have none of it! Because he said the same standard that God uses on those other nations will be held for Israel as well. If there is anything that God desires, it is to have the day come when justice and fairness rule. Where righteousness is as abundant as the waters of a river.
So, “let’s get it right,” Amos says. Don’t desire the day of the Lord! It’s not all rosy, like you think. It’s a day of darkness when God judges all the nations of the earth. It’s a day of danger when you, Israel, will be judged just like all the rest of them.
So here we go… applying this to today, Hamas and Israel are fighting it out. Russia and Ukraine are fighting it out. Iran is in there somewhere, too, aiding and abetting, and so is China, and probably North Korea, too.
And if there’s anything our past history should teach us it is this. We’ve had two major world wars. We had a conflict (a war really) in Korea. We’ve had wars in Viet Nam, the Persian Gulf, Libya, Afghanistan, Iraq, Yemen, Somalia, Syria, and now Israel and Hamas. We’ve also had war on terror. Hundreds of thousands, nay, millions, of people have died in the last 120 years, in our country alone. Tens of millions in other countries.
It’s time to get it right. We cannot keep killing each other. We need cease-fires. Diplomacy. Negotiations. We need the day of the Lord where justice and fairness roll down as powerfully as the waters that roll off Niagara Falls. Where righteousness is as abundant as the endless waters of the Susquehanna River. We need this day of the Lord in faraway lands, and just as importantly, we need it here in our own country. So, let’s get it right. Because we, and every nation in the world, ultimately are held to God’s standard.
That’s the first part of Amos. And then, in the second part, Amos uses God’s voice and gets specific about Israel, which we easily can extrapolate and apply to the church in America and the church around the world. Amos quotes God saying don’t be thinking that you can engage in meaningless worship, and spiritually thoughtless rituals believing that I, God will be pleased with your sanctimonious piety. Truth is, I despise your festivals. I take no delight in your solemn assemblies. I won’t accept your offerings, for they are not from your heart. I will not listen to your songs, for they lack credibility. Your actions, or lack thereof, don’t match your words or your religious practices. You say one thing and do another. Or you don’t do the thing you say.
This part always feels a bit convicting to me. As much as we strive to share in high-quality worship, I often have a little nudge in the back of my mind and in the pit of my gut hoping and praying that God is pleased with our efforts to give God worship and praise with integrity, to speak God’s word humbly and faithfully. But, when it comes right down to it, the proof is in the pudding, yes?
Because Amos thundered in response to trite and ‘going-through-the-motions’ type of worship: “Let’s get it right! Let justice roll down like waters, and righteousness like an ever-flowing stream!” Instead of singing about love, let’s get it right and go out and be the love you sing about. Instead of hearing about messages about justice in worship, let’s get it right and make the justice and love the strongest influences in your life. Instead of being ill-prepared for the arrival of a person or a situation sent by God, let’s get it right and see the arrival of God’s servants in everyone we meet, in every situation we find ourselves in.
Instead of cherry-picking Bible verses to support your way of thinking, instead of weaponizing the Bible, let’s get it right. The Bible’s overall message is of God’s eternal, abundant, and steadfast love for the human race, and God’s justice is the way God’s economy of fairness works for every person, every living creature, even the earth itself. Together those two, love and justice, point to the path of God’s peace. You can always find Bible passages to bash someone over the head with. But, let’s get it right and find the passages that reveal the overall message of the Bible, and put the love on the people with those passages.
So, instead of building walls to keep people out, let’s get it right and build bridges and have people meet in the center. Create programs that help everyone to see the goodness of others. Instead of holding hatred in the heart toward your neighbor, let’s get it right and reach out and get to know our neighbors. Instead of despising someone for the color of their skin, or the religion that they practice, let’s get it right and allow them the freedom to be who they are just as you expect them to give you the same freedom to be who you are.
But above all, let’s get it right by first coming unto God. Come unto God with the honesty that we are never really going to get it totally right. Come as the imperfect, mis-guided, ill-prepared people that we are to the God who loves us madly. God who cherishes all of us as God’s children. God who engages with us, day after day, week after week, as we seek God’s justice, live God’s love, ever moving toward God’s peace-filled world. Let’s get it right. Amen.
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