A sermon about where we stand as we come into God's presence.

2 Timothy 4: 6-8, 16-18
Luke 18: 9-14
Rev. Dr. Galen E. Russell III
October 23, 2022
“The Pharisee, standing by himself, was praying… But the tax collector, standing far off, would not even look up to heaven...”
Prayer: Holy God, I thank you that your grace pours out on all of us, sinner and saint alike. Pour out on us, I pray. Amen.
I am so ready for the mid-term elections to be over! I know, I complain about this every two years in October. But, I mean it! Because the political ads on TV and radio and social media are relentless. Like I’m tired of hearing where the candidates stand on the issues anymore. You hear one ad that identifies where a candidate stands, and you hear another one right afterwards contradicting the first. And then you need fact checker ads to see which ad was telling the truth!
And honestly, I am at the point of disgust with hearing “I approve this message” ad nauseum. Do you feel me on this? I am also burned out with ads that are ‘ad hominem’—which means ads that bash the opposing candidate’s personal character while not addressing the issues. Ads that make one candidate seem lesser as a person by using black and white images with harsh music while the other candidate seems greater as a person with color images and sweet music. I get it. I know it’s all advertising strategy.
All this to get your vote. All this to get you to stand with the candidate. Thank God, November 2nd is coming soon. So, get out and vote! Then maybe we’ll have peace for a month, or so.
Seems to me that Jesus’ parable has one person, the Pharisee, thinking that he’s superior as a religious person over bad people, including the tax collector. The Pharisee in Jesus’ day, as you know, is considered to be the righteous one, the one who faithfully follows Moses’ law, the one who is among the religious elite, who is rich and tithes, believes in his exceptionalism, and stands inside the tent of God’s salvation.
The tax collector, on the other hand, is considered to be, first of all, a sinner! Because this is a Jewish person who seemingly betrayed his Jewish heritage and sided with the occupying, oppressing power—the Romans—by collecting money from the Jews for Rome ! And has become rich because of it! Talk about a betrayal of God and people! And so, by Jewish law, the tax collector is considered to be inferior, religiously unclean, and stands outside God’s tent of salvation.
But, leave it to Jesus to scramble up the ways people think and act! Notice that in the parable both went up to the temple to pray. It’s like both coming to our church. Both wanted to be in the presence of God. Both decided that God was important in their lives. I think both needed God at a certain level. So kudos go to both of them.
That’s important for us, too, I think. We can go along in life not really wanting God’s Presence, not really seeking it out, not really feeling like we need God in our lives. That’s easy to do. And chances are we won’t really feel God too deeply. We likely won’t come to cherish God’s mercy and grace, God’s Presence and love as spiritual staples throughout our lives unless we realize we need it.
But, I don’t think God holds that against us. God creates moments for us to notice God’s gifts. And if we don’t notice God or God’s Presence in one moment, then God creates another one for us in our circumstances. So, I think we can know God and God’s gifts best if we come to realize that we need them. So, just like the Pharisee and the tax collector, we have to decide to come into God’s Presence.
But, where do we stand? We can walk right in and stand in the sanctuary, like the Pharisee in the temple… which isn’t wrong at all. In fact, it’s good. Because standing in the sanctuary is a great place to experience the presence of the living God! It’s a beautiful place to pray, to listen, and to sing and offer praises to God! To re-align ourselves with what God values.
Or we can stand far off, like the tax collector did, way over there near our pavilion, which also isn’t wrong. It’s actually good. Because God is in our far-off places, too. God is out on the margins, in the in-between zone. Like the psalmist says, “Where can I flee from God’s presence?” You can’t. Its like the air we breathe. God hears all our prayers, our inner spirit’s voice from the far-off places we find ourselves, from the lonely painful areas of life. Perhaps wherever you find yourself now?
The difference between the Pharisee and the tax collector is a matter of comparison, I think. The Pharisee, standing in the zone of God’s Presence, thinks he is all that. He compares his actions to other’s actions and uses that as his guideline. So he, with his ego working, gets an attitude of exceptionalism when compared to all those “lesser” people, even the nearby tax collector. The Pharisee trusts in his self-righteousness and cultivates contempt for other people. Which are exactly what become barriers between him and God. Don’t do that!
The tax collector, standing out on the edges in God’s Presence, humbly compares his actions to God’s standards, not human standards. To which he clearly doesn’t measure up… and he knows it! He’s a sinner! And he beats his chest saying so. He can’t even lift his eyes upward because he is so aware of his human frailties. He empties out his heart before God out in the parking lot near the pavilion. Which is exactly what opens the doors between him and God. Do that!
Jesus says that God is justified in giving the tax collector God’s divine Presence, the mercy he asked for, love and strength, wisdom and all the other spiritual staples needed for the faith journey in life.
And then Jesus drives it all home with the punch line: “all who exalt themselves will be humbled, and all who humble themselves will be exalted.”
You see, God knows that exalting ourselves can give us something like a sugar high. We like a good bit of exalting ourselves. And it feels good for awhile. It feels powerful for awhile. We feel exceptional, greater than others for awhile. “Yeah, I’m better than that person. I’m better than my neighbor. I thank God I am better than others.”
But like all sugar highs, there comes the moment when it all comes crashing down, and we realize that the sugar high was a bunch of empty calories. And we’re longing for something more. We’re hungry for something real. Something that is life-sustaining. Jesus says that standing in God’s Presence with humility is what is real.
Because God’s Presence causes our spiritual transformation. Then the effects of that transformation show up as humble righteousness, doing spiritual things.
I encourage us not to mix up the cause and the effect, like the Pharisee did. He thought that fasting and tithing would bring about God’s Presence and God’s spiritual staples. But standing in God’s Presence is the cause. When you’re standing in it, the effects are—you do spiritual things like fasting, tithing, praying.
You know how I often say that worship is the fountainhead of everything else we do in our ministries? This is the reason why. Because when we stand in God’s Presence humbly in worship, both here and online, we can confess that we hang on to certain sins some times. That at times our closed mindedness is real, and so is our sense that we are exceptional. We even can confess that sometimes our sense of exceptionalism infects our seats of government. God hears our prayers, is gracious and good and promises that all who call on God’s name will be forgiven. In the presence of God, outside or in worship.
Then we do our ministries. Then we give our dollars and make our pledges to support our ministries. Then we help one another. We visit each other. We keep in touch with each other. We do auctions - we raise money for mission trips. We do our mission trips. We do Bible Study and SHARE our faith and connect it to current events. We teach our kids about faith in God. We sing and play our music to give praise to God. Doing all those things do not cause God’s Presence. Those are the effects of humbly standing in God’s Presence.
And no matter what happens, I believe God stands by us, and gives us strength in our worship and our daily lives. God has deep interest in you and me, and in our church. Because we are worthy and loved in God’s sight. Everyone is. No one is exempt from God’s Presence, from God’s blessings of spiritual staples. We make the barriers that limit our perception of God’s blessings. But, no one is left out. No one is lesser or greater. Because the tent of God’s salvation is universal: all who call upon the name of God are saved, and that includes Pharisees and tax collectors. Republicans, Democrats, independents. Those in the center. Those on the margins. Even the sparrow finds a home near the altars of God!
So come, let us humbly stand in God’s Presence knowing that God stands with us. Come as individuals. Come as a community of faith. Come saying, “I need you, holy God. I empty myself before you.” Come acknowledging with humility, that we need God’s mercy and grace. We’re standing in the need of prayer. We’re standing in the need of grace. Like the African American spiritual sings:
It’s-a me, it’s-a me, it’s-a me, O God,
standing in the need of prayer.
It’s-a me, it’s-a me, it’s-a me, O God
Standing in the need of prayer.
It’s-a me, it’s-a me, it’s-a me, O God,
standing in the need of grace.
It’s-a me, it’s-a me, it’s-a me, O God
Standing in the need of grace.
Amen.


