Luke 13: 1-9
Isaiah 55: 1-9
“Why do you spend your money for that which is not bread, and your labor for that which does not satisfy? Listen carefully to me, and eat what is good, and delight yourselves in rich food.”
Prayer: O God, as we sojourn in our wildernesses, pleased feed us. Amen.
You ever hear of Club Med? Sandals? Beaches? Secrets? These are all resorts that offer all-inclusive vacations in sun-drenched places. All-inclusive means that you pay one lump sum up front for your vacation, and everything is supposed to be included in that lump sum. Every expense, except souvenirs and stuff on the side. Every meal. Every drink. Even the tips. You never have to open your wallet, hunt for a credit card, sign a bill over to your room charge account… Club Med even used to have the slogan “Life as it should be.”
On the first reading of Isaiah, you might think God is offering kind of like the Club Med experience of the spiritual world. This is life as it should be. You spiritually thirsty? Come, drink from God’s well Is your soul hungry? Come, buy and eat without money. Without price. Our basic spiritual needs of love and God’s presence are symbolized by free water and bread. Even the luxury spiritual items of grace, forgiveness, mercy, wisdom are symbolized by wine and milk. It’s all available with no effort on our part. All available from God’s abundant storehouse. All ready for you. Just ask, and you shall receive. Seek and you shall find. It all sounds like wonderful good news, doesn’t it? And it is...in beautiful and wonderful ways.
But, is that it?
I hear on the second, deeper reading, a bit of a rebuke… and a sense of being convicted. Why? God asks. Why do you spend money on something that isn’t spiritual bread? I take that to mean ‘Why, especially in the middle of Lent, do you seek spiritual sustenance from things that don’t feed your soul?’ Like determining your self worth based on what others think about you, or by what society says you should be? Why are you doing that? Why? God asks. Why do you work for something that doesn’t satisfy? I take that to mean, ‘Why, as you sojourn in the wilderness, do you give your time and effort to things that aren’t life-giving? Like doing something begrudgingly for someone else? Out of guilt? Or to shame someone? Is that what you call an act of service?
Why do we take up attitudes and ideas that are decidedly against what Jesus taught? Is it right for us to wish ill-will on someone? Like President Putin? I mean I want the guy to be incapacitated to stop the terrible things he is doing. Is it a faithful Christian attitude? But is it a faithful Christian attitude to wish for someone’s comeuppance? Like when the speeder flies by and we wish that a cop would snag that driver… and then we lick our chops and smack our lips with delight when we see that car pulled over a few minutes later.
Is it right to think that when tragedy happens and people die that it is a result of their sins? There are folks who think that. Someone told Jesus about the Galileans that died at Pilate’s hand. Jesus asks if they thought those people died because they were terrible sinners. The answer is no. But, you better repent because you could die as they did. Get your spiritual life in order because who knows how you’ll die.
Jesus also remarks about a tragic accident when the tower fell down and killed eighteen people. He asks if they died because they were more terrible as people than anyone else. He quickly implies that the human thinking applies some sort of keeping score method. But God’s ways are not our ways. The people who died were no worse as sinners than those who were spared, and those who were spared were no better than those who died. But, life happens. Any one could be taken out in the same way. But, it’s important to get your spiritual life together.
So, it’s vital that we repent. That we turn to God for what’s really important and find the food that endures. That we listen carefully to God’s words. That we seek the Lord while God may be found. Find the food on the journey. Find the food while we sojourn in our wildernesses.
Because when we’re on our wildernesses journeys, we tend to turn to things that don’t feed us. Netflix is not going to feed you. The stock market going up is not going to do it. Neither will buying a new car, or computer, a house, or any material thing. Continuing attitudes that someone is beneath you for whatever reason you will not feed you. Even proving you’re right and someone’s wrong in an argument is not spiritual food. None of these satisfy spiritually. None feed our souls.
I think what IS food for our journeys while we sojourn in our wildernesses is receiving God’s free gifts and have action that goes with it. Get God’s gifts, food for the journey, but have responsibility and accountability attached.
I have a wall hanging in my basement workshop at home that speaks of this—given to me by my mom when I was 16 years old—”What you are is God’s gift to you, What you make of yourself is your gift to God.”
Yes, God’s love and presence, God’s grace, forgiveness, mercy and wisdom are all available as free gifts to each of us. God’s gifts to us. But if we receive them without letting them move us, we’re only kidding ourselves. If God’s gifts don’t lead us to dig around our inner soul, and get our spiritual live in order, and get our spiritual lives in order then they’re pointless. If we’re not willing to change our lives, add fertilizer to our soil, strive to bear good fruit, and make something of ourselves giving it back to God, then God’s gifts are meaningless.
It’s like the mom who found out that her 7th grade son was sluffing off in class and was repeatedly failing his tests. When she confronted her son, his instant words were, “I’m sorry.” But the woman responded, with wisdom and grace said “It’s not enough to simply say you’re sorry. Show me you’re sorry.” How many of us as parents haven’t said something like that as we’re raising our kids? I love you and will always love you, but show me by your actions that you are making changes. Spiritually speaking. I think Jesus may be saying, “Show me you’re repentant and are turning around.”
I think God’s gifts must lead us toward responsible actions. Gifts of forgiveness must lead us to forgive others. The grace of God in our lives has to take us to be graceful to others. Mercy leads us to efforts of hospitality.
And this is not just for Sundays, either! We aren’t supposed to make confessions here about relying on our own spiritual sources for sustenance, being forgiven for that, and then go out there without changing our ways. That’s like the old commercial where the actor who played Dr. Marcus Welby on the TV Show “Marcus Welby MD” says, “I’m not a doctor, but I play one on TV.” Some of you may remember that old commercial. Are we followers of Christ out there, feeding on God’s gifts and letting them move us to changes and to action? Or do we just play a follower of Christ on Sunday mornings?
The beauty is that God’s gifts do show us the way life is supposed to be. God’s gifts with responsibility and accountability attached ARE the rich food for us as we sojourn in the wilderness. Gifts with responsibility is the fig tree that bears fruit. Gifts with accountability is the treasure hidden in the field that a person would gladly sell everything in order to attain. It is the pearl of great price. It is the cross of Jesus that is our home within the wilderness. The cross is the rest upon our way. The food for the strengthening of our spirit on our journeys. Let is find this rich food in the cross and share in its substance and be moved to action with it.
Let us be quiet.
Let us sing. Amen.
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