Message for Sunday, October 6
Part of a Season of Pentecost series:
"On the Road with Jesus: Our Journey to Jerusalem"
Part of a Season of Pentecost series:
"On the Road with Jesus: Our Journey to Jerusalem"
Luke's Narrative of Jesus' Exodus into the Nation's Capital!
Luke 17:5-10
“Stupid is as stupid does.” Quick: What movie is that from? ...
Think
on that statement with me for a moment. It’s not “Stupid is as stupid thinks.” Stupid
as defined by my dictionary : “slow of mind,” “given to unintelligent decisions
or acts.” The statement’s not even, “Stupid is as
stupid feels.”
It’s, “Stupid is as stupid does.”
I
think Forrest Gump may have been well-schooled as a lad in Jesus.
Ah,
those words: “Increase! Growth economy! Let’s get more!” But
Jesus would have none of it! In this case, not the grandiosity, the pomposity,
the heroics of believing more. Jesus emphasizes instead – as his ensuing words
make clear – unceremoniously doing the next right thing: “We are your servants,
Jesus – we have done only what we ought to have done.” No pats on the back.
Just doing it. “Service is as service does.”
“Want
faith?” Jesus is saying. “Well, then: Be faithful.”
That’s what’s known as being faithful.
As for Mother Teresa’s faith? Here’s what she said to a
priest in 1979: “Jesus has a very special love
for you. As for me, the silence and the emptiness is so great that I look and
do not see, listen and do not hear.”
Certainly, she should be allowed that momentary doubt! And yet, the letters she wrote – compiled in a book and published after death – revealed more. Shortly after beginning work in Calcutta's slums, her spirits sank. "Where is my faith?" she wrote. "Even deep down… there is nothing but emptiness and darkness... If there be God — please forgive me."
Eight years later, she was still looking to reclaim her lost faith: "Such deep longing for God… Repulsed, empty, no faith, no love, no zeal," she wrote.
As her fame increased, her faith refused to return. Her smile, she said, was a mask. "What do I labor for?" she asked in one letter. "If there be no God, there can be no soul. If there be no soul then, Jesus, You also are not true."
Certainly, she should be allowed that momentary doubt! And yet, the letters she wrote – compiled in a book and published after death – revealed more. Shortly after beginning work in Calcutta's slums, her spirits sank. "Where is my faith?" she wrote. "Even deep down… there is nothing but emptiness and darkness... If there be God — please forgive me."
Eight years later, she was still looking to reclaim her lost faith: "Such deep longing for God… Repulsed, empty, no faith, no love, no zeal," she wrote.
As her fame increased, her faith refused to return. Her smile, she said, was a mask. "What do I labor for?" she asked in one letter. "If there be no God, there can be no soul. If there be no soul then, Jesus, You also are not true."
Mother
Teresa: Faithful as any to the end. As for her faith? … Welllll …
But
what about justification by grace through faith – the cornerstone of the
Protestant revolution? Well, that five century-old Protestant revolution is now
an institution, and not very Protest-ant. We have worshiped at the house of the
Apostle Paul with these words, and upon entering that house we have made of
these words a restricted-entry theological parlor game.
Judging
by the zeal of Paul’s commitment to the gospel, I think he would toss
this faith-versus-works game aside and vigorously affirm a few words from Sr. Helen Prejean as
closer to what he meant. Sr. Helen is the author of Dead Man Walking, and is a renowned advocate for the abolition of
the death penalty. I can sense the Apostle Paul’s spirit in these words Sr.
Helen once told NPR: “I watch what I do to see what I really believe.”
Sister
Helen’s faith is, like the Apostle Paul’s and Mother Teresa’s, a
journey-oriented faith. Faith not as a Sunday statement of right beliefs, but as
a journey with Jesus to the Jerusalem of our lives, seeking with him the next
right actions. Not right beliefs, first … but right and prayerful actions.
Want faith? Well, then: Be faithful!
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