The Kingdom of Heaven is meant to be shared
Did you see the
commercial for the newest breakfast cereal, Salt
Cubes?
It starts off with Salty the cartoon deer in flannel and
thick rimmed glasses pouring salt cubes into a bowl while two human children and
their parents get ready for school and work. The dad takes the milk out of the
fridge and is about to pour it on the cereal, when Salty puts his hoof over top
of it and says, “Salt Cubes don’t need
anything added to them. Just take a handful, chuck them in your mouth, and
enjoy.”
Which the family
proceeds to do—they look like their trying to imitate The Cookie Monster from Sesame
Street—you know the one (demonstrate)—by the end there are crumbs of salt all
over the place.
Then the Salt Cubes
logo flies into place and an announcer says, “Salt Cubes: The Salty Breakfast Cereal!”
Or there’s the new
product “Eye-HighBeam-Glasses” a competitor of Google Glass. As you may know
Google-glass essentially puts all the features of a smart phone into a pair of
glasses.
“Eye-HighBeam-Glasses”
does something a little different. It takes two lights, as powerful as the high
beams in your car, and constantly shines them in your eyes.
I hope both of these
fictional products make my point today fairly plain,
if we are the salt of the earth,
and we are, we’re here
for the sake of the earth,
and if we’re the light of the world,
and we are, we’re here
for the sake of the world.
Salt is meant to preserve
things and bring out their flavor—not to be eaten on its own.
Light scatters the darkness
so that we might see clearly—otherwise it’s simply blinding.
And so I want you to
know, The Kingdom of Heaven is meant to
be shared.
Prayer
The Kingdom of Heaven
is meant to be shared.
What is the Kingdom
of Heaven?
We read today that
we’ll be the least in the Kingdom of Heaven if we break a commandment, and if
we’re not more righteous than the scribes and Pharisees we’ll never enter it.
Now, I know some of
you naturally assume this is talking about heaven/heaven…
as in, where we’d like to go when we die.
And that would be a
frightening prospect. It would mean there is a hierarchy after we die. This
might conjure up images of people on clouds playing harps,
some on really nice fluffy clouds,
playing beautiful gold harps,
while others cling to storm clouds and play out-of-tune banjoes.
But that’s not
what’s going on. Heaven, for Matthew— like other Jewish writers around this
time, is a way to say God without
saying God—most likely because he
doesn’t want to overuse or misuse the divine name.
The Kingdom of
Heaven—the Kingdom of God—is the hoped for rule of God, the time when all will
be made right,
when the meek shall inherit
the earth,
those who mourn will be
comforted,
the merciful will receive
mercy,
those who hunger for justice
will be filled with it…
Sound familiar? It
is the very thing Jesus proclaimed last week—the beatitudes, the blessing of
the disinherited.
It is the very
Ministry and Gospel of Jesus—it is what he accomplishes in his life, death, and
resurrection,
and it is the calling we
have on our lives as his Body in the World, the Church.
And so, the point of
the Law (the Torah), which we read Jesus did not come to abolish, but to
fulfill, is to make the Beatitudes a
reality—and clearly he doesn’t think the way the Pharisees are living out
the Law is doing that; neither would breaking the Law of God bring about the
Beatitudes.
The Kingdom of Heaven is meant to be shared.
This good news of
blessing—the Beatitudes proclaimed and made manifest,
that God has come near in
Jesus Christ reconciling all people to Himself,
isn’t something to hold onto
for ourselves, because then we end up
gagging down salt cubes and blinding ourselves with unhelpful glasses.
Neither is it
something to water down, because then it becomes diluted, and something other
than gospel.
Neither is it
something to hide, because then it is of no use to those most in need of it.
I’m sure we can all
imagine how these things can happen—
How the Gospel can become a me and Jesus type of devotion/
Instead of a we and
Jesus faith that challenges and shapes our lives lived together
How the Gospel can
be diluted and become a self-help system, or a culturally acceptable form of
entertainment/
Instead of life out of
death, encouraging the entire world to
be life giving.
How the Gospel can
be hidden behind all kinds of other stuff,
walled off from those in need—a mighty fortress keeping those out who
desperately need to come in/
Instead of being a bulk
worth against trouble and a lighthouse for those in darkness.
And yet, Jesus
doesn’t ought us into salt/ or should
on us, until we become light.
No, Jesus says we
ARE Salt and we ARE light.
Salt can’t be
anything but salt, and if a light is put under a basket that basket will soon
be on fire.
Both Salt and Light
are naturally occurring things, both gifts from the gracious God who created
all that is.
It is not us who
make ourselves Salt and Light, but the Holy Spirit calling us through scripture
making us spicy and bright.
We are salt and light.
We share the Kingdom of Heaven in our life together. There are few
places in our society outside the family where people of all ages meet
together—but here we are, together. We share our sorrows and our joys with one
another, lifting them both to God in prayer.
We flavor this world, by living in such a way that the jobs,
identities, and relationships we have in it reflect God’s love for His
Creation. We give space for our children to grow into their faith here among
brothers and sisters of the faith, mothers and fathers of the faith.
We preserve our neighbors in need by collecting food and clothing
for them and working for their wellbeing in a myriad of ways locally, and also nationally
and globally, including the ELCA’s stellar work in creating affordable housing,
stepping up when disaster strikes and staffing refugee camps throughout the
world.
We brighten the world with our ongoing proclamation of the Gospel
and many opportunities to reflect upon God’s Word. Most recently in the
planting of a Lutheran church in Jordon, in a Middle East experiencing an
ongoing depopulation of Christians, we are sticking around.
We shine a light on dark and confusing places when we wrestle with
tough social issues,
and we highlight peacemaking when our Synod yearly sends teams
to Bosnia to run Reconciliation Camps for children in
order to help diffuse the longstanding tensions in that country, so the ethnic
cleansing that happened in the 90’s will not happen again in the next
generation.
And those are just the things I can come up with off the top of my
head.
Brothers and
sisters, the Holy Spirit has empowered us to be Salt and Light, and Christ has
proclaimed it of us.
I challenge you this
coming week to listen carefully to the Spirit, and when you catch yourself
being Salt or Light, to ponder it and to thank God for it.
You are Salt and you
are Light. The Kingdom of Heaven is meant to be shared.
A+A.
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