In Luther’s Small Catechism he gives a brief, easily memorizable or even, in
this day and age, tweetable (for the social media crowd), explanation of the
basics of Christian faith, the 10 Commandments, the Creed, the Lord’s Prayer,
Baptism, Holy Communion, and Confession.
In his brief explanation of the 10 commandments, he hammers home that these
commandments are about keeping us from idolatry—from making those things we
fear, love, and trust, into false gods. In doing so, he reminds us of the one
true God who is our Gracious Lord.
Additionally, he expands the don’ts of the 10 commandments—just as Jesus does
in Matthew’s Gospel “You’ve heard it said thou shall not kill, I say don’t even
get angry.”
Finally, in Luther’s Small Catechism he adds a positive command to each
negative one—in other words, “Don’t just refrain from the evil, but also do the
good.”
Luther
also wrote a Large Catechism. In addition to exploring more deeply what it
means to fear, love, and trust—in addition to widening the negative and
pointing to the positive—he also highlights Jewish practices at the time of
Moses—using the best learning of Luther’s age,
And
pointing, sometimes very sharply, to how these command are to be lived
out in the society of Luther’s day.
So, today, I would like to present a hybrid between Luther’s Small and Large
Catechism—not too large nor too small—sort of a goldilocks and the three
bears kind of thing—a “Just right” Catechism—a Medium Catechism.
Today
I would like to present, “Christopher’s Medium Catechism.”
Let
us pray
You
shall have no other gods before me.
It all stands and falls here. The other 9 commandments are moot, if we’ve not
grappled with this first one. The measure of our actions is simply this, “How
are they a response to God’s freely given gift of life to us?”
You see, we easily declare idolatry to be an ancient thing—or something
practiced in far off temples—a relic of an idea with no practical application
these days… but that is not so.
Ask yourself this:
What
do you fear—what goes bump in your night?
What
do you respect, above all other things?
When
stuff hits fan, and you are hard pressed between a rock and a hard place, Where
do you turn?
Those
answers, dear sisters and brothers, are your idol.
Because, there is One who has told us “be not afraid.” One who earned our
respect through His humility and His grace. One to whom we can always turn. The
one true God found in Christ Jesus our Lord.
And so, be on guard against idolatry yes, but even that prohibition is grounded
in the positive, that God has freed you to live life unafraid, trusting in him,
who loves you deeply.
You
shall not take the name of the Lord your God in vain.
We humans are creatures of clay, and have unclean lips—thus it is dangerous
when we speak about God—God, who alone is not an idol, God who alone is Holy
—we
might speak in such a way that we create a false god out of the one true God.
We might cloak a lie in God’s name.
We
might hide those things, which are sinful under a cloud of piety.
Our
greed, our lusts, our envy, our violence and our strife, done in God’s name—and
thus done in the name of a false god.
Think,
of course, of those fanatics who murder and maim in the name of God—it is
wickedness and idolatry.
Think
too of those preachers of false gospels—gospels of escape and gospels of
prosperity, which dishonor Christ, who did not escape, but entered into
human hurt
—Christ
of whom it is said, “to gain Christ is to lose the whole world.”
To honor God’s name, we ought to call upon God in all times of need, and pray
to God, and praise God with our lips and in our lives.
Remember
the Sabbath day, and keep it holy.
I’ve preached to you all about the Sabbath before. Sabbath is about rest,
liberation, and holiness.
Sabbath is a time that ought to be “good… for nothing.” Good in and of
itself—not clogged up with cares and the frantic pace of the rest of the week.
Truly a time to rest.
Sabbath is also about liberation, acts of kindness and justice are part of
living in the holiness of God’s time—such acts honor God’s love of everything
God has created.
Sabbath, finally, is holy in and of itself, dragging us into the reality of God
though our worship together, where we receive the cherished promises of God.
What does this have to do with fearing, loving, and trusting, you might
ask—well, what keeps you up at night?
What
keeps you from rest, from service of neighbor, and from worshipping and
receiving the promises of God?
Sabbath
exposes all of those—points out our idolatries.
Honor
your father and your mother.
As you may know, I insist parents attend confirmation class with their
children… and for some reason, when we get to this command, the parents are
overjoyed.
It’s a very practical commandment, and one that follows Luther’s attack on all
the idols that we put our fear, love, and trust in.
It is from our parents, and all those who raise us, that we learn what is
dangerous and what is safe. It is from them that we establish, or don’t
establish, a sense of love and trust.
We’re like little sponges and what we sop up will enter into our lifeblood for
the rest of our lives—our basis for fear, love, and trust, are established in
childhood.
For good and ill, all authority figures shape our views of God—thus we ought to
not only honor them, but also pray that they, while filled with foibles and
folly, might reflect, on occasion at least, the one true authority, the one
true parent of us all—that they might reflect at least a little of God’s
authority, which is found in humility and weakness.
You
shall not kill
Christ takes this command, and raise it to great heights, saying, “All who are
angry at a sibling, or curse them, are guilty.”
We should instead spend our days giving life to our neighbor—Luther says
following this one commandment would be a full time job. Being life
giving is a lifelong task.
You
shall not commit adultery
There are many relationships we will have in life; our relationship with our
spouse will likely be the deepest.
Yes, there will be ups and downs—perhaps you will cycle from lust, love,
loathing, and back to lust. Perhaps it won’t live up to a romance novel or all
those romantic comedies—but, I would remind you, holding real people up to
such standards is idolatry too.
Marriage is a place where trust is formed, or broken. If we cannot trust our
spouse—can we trust anyone?
—such
a break can deform so many of our relationships, even our relationship with
God, after all, marriage can be a metaphor for that relationship, the
relationship between God and God’s people.
This is why we ought to honor those who struggle to love one another and trust
one another with their whole lives
—why
we ought to support trust and trustworthiness in relationships
—why
we ought to build up our neighbor’s marriages.
You
shall not steal.
Luther is a little scary on this point… he states that if every thief were hung
there would be no one left on the earth.
Theft, is not just pocketing soap and not paying, or even knocking over a bank.
It’s gaining other people’s things by a multitude of means.
Tipping
the scale when weighing things,
selling
an inferior product, or price gouging.
Not
giving 100% at work, not paying people enough to live on.
Buying
things that cause the suffering of others.
Pretty soon we’re all on the gallows, and forced to swallow a hard truth—none
of these things—not one of them—can we take with us… As that country song says,
“I’ve never seen a hearse with a trailer hitch.” Theft is ultimately trusting,
fearing, or loving things, instead of loving people and loving God.
We ought to protect the integrity of all our neighbor has, and work to better
their livelihood.
You
shall not bear false witness against your neighbor.
Any time we wield our tongue against another human being as if it was a weapon,
we’ve broken this commandment.
This is doubly so when we do it from the shadows of anonymity. When we gossip
about others from the darkness, we defame and dishonor them. Any claim we make
about someone else, we should be willing to defend in the court of law, with
the danger of libel and perjury pointed against us.
And it is so much more complex now—what of social media? Is “re-tweeting”
something that proves false, a crime? Is “Liking” a lie on facebook, an
offense?
Our tongue wagging and our typing, both tempt us toward sin. I pray we train
them to only talk well of our neighbor, and defend them from all defamation, that
we might interpret all they do in the best possible light.
You
shall not covet your neighbor’s house, or household.
These last two commandments knock any self-righteousness out from under us. We
might look to the first eight, and pretend that we’ve never broken a single
one, but this pushes the breaking of the commandments into our hearts and
imaginations.
Have
you coveted any of those things you did not steal,
or
wished someone dead who you did not kill,
or
lusted after someone’s wife but never acted on that impulse,
or
thought of dishonoring your parent, but kept quiet about it?
Did
any of those breaches of the Law cross your mind or fill your heart with hope?
Additionally, I would venture to guess, if you own a TV, you are unable to not
covet. The average American watches 8 hours of commercials a week—and what are
commercials, but a continuous call to covet?
In
conclusion.
Ask
yourself these questions:
What
idols does an honest reflection upon these commandments reveal?
How
can you live your life as a joyful response to God’s grace?
Who
is your neighbor and how can you serve them?
And
know this:
God
has freed you to live life unafraid, trusting in him who loves you deeply,
Jesus Christ our Lord.
Amen.
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