Tuesday, 20 December 2016

Unmasked

MATTHEW 23
Frauds under fire

Now Jesus goes for the jugular. He has put up with endless attacks on his authority to preach, to heal, to show compassion and to point people back to God. He is still in the temple precincts. Matthew tells us that the Pharisees and Sadducees and High Priests have ended their inquisition.

We are sometimes told by scholars that Jesus reserved his most blistering attack on the Pharisees because he had such an admiration for their dedication to the Torah, yet he was so deeply disappointed in them. It is it for those we love most that we reserve our most profound anger?

Over the next 39 verses Jesus speaks to the crowd with the passion of a modern-day poetry-slam competition entrant or a ranting rapper. It is as unrelenting and powerful as anything he is recorded as saying in the whole of the gospels. It carries huge importance. For it defines what it is NOT to be a follower of Jesus. It is often in defining what we are not that we discover who we truly are.

What are Jesus’ main accusations, and how might they hit home to us? Is there not a lot of truth in Jesus’ assault on those whose lips and lives are not in sync? We who claim to be followers of Jesus have much to attend to here. I have always found Matthew 23 a little close to the knuckle. So here goes:
Jesus accuses the Pharisees of:
·       Being very good at teaching the Torah but not living the Torah: ‘It’s all spit and polish veneer’
·       Loading obligations on people but not lifting a finger to help
·       Enjoying public flattery and being placed on a pedestal
·       Being frauds, talking the talk but not walking the walk – and what’s more, blocking the way to the kingdom
·       Putting huge effort into winning a convert, then making them into replicas, twice as fit for damnation
·       Failing to treat the promises of God and the law of God seriously – preferring to nit-pick over tiny details rather than seeing God’s big picture story of salvation
·       Being greedy and gluttonous
·       Presenting a purity and cleanliness, but in fact being a bundle of bones
·       Attacking the wise in each generation

Jesus ends his diatribe by revealing a motherly heart. This country preacher and healer cries out for Jerusalem; the city which is the locus of power in Israel as well as the seat of God the Holy One. Human leaders of that city had for centuries murdered the messengers of God, the Prophets and the broadcasters of God’s good news.

‘How often I’ve ached to embrace your children,’ says Jesus to the crowd with the smarting Pharisees and other leaders of the faith, ‘the way a hen gathers her chicks under her wings, and you wouldn’t let me. And now you are so desolate, nothing but a ghost town. What is there left to say? Only this: I’m out of here soon. The next time you see me you’ll say. “Oh, God has blessed him! He is come, to bring God’s rule!”’

He places himself as the defender and protector of the people of Jerusalem – but not as a Lion of Judah or a Messiah with winged angelic army, but as a mother hen, who will shield her chicks from harm with her wings.

The attack that normally hits home greatest to any Christian is the accusation that we are hypocrites. As you will probably remember, this word relates to the world of Greek tragedies. It is the word used to describe an actor who wears different kinds of masks to represent different kinds of lives or behaviours. It is acting, pure and simple. A Christian who is accused of being good at acting is assumed that they do not actually mean what they say or believe. They are people living a double life.

In our culture, the Press will often set themselves up as the guardians of morality, using the public interest justification for their inquiries as a shield with which to attack a politician or celebrity for double-standards, or hypocrisy. I used to be a member of the Fourth Estate (the Press). As a local reporter, there were a few occasions when I found myself in the uncomfortable position of writing such a story. On one occasion, it was a politician (an MP who got, it was alleged, preferential treatment in a local hospital) and another it was a public figure (a vicar accused of having an affair with a member of his congregation). On both occasions, I found my role in the story distasteful and messy. I questioned what right I had to ruin their reputations and yet found that the ‘public interest’ argument had some traction with my superiors.

On both occasions the energy which drove the story was the attempt by the parties concerned to cover up what was going on. There is nothing that energizes a reporter so much as the desire to uncover what authorities or people in power are trying to hide. In fact, as we know from many media scandals, it is the cover-up that is nearly always more criticised than the original sin of omission or commission. It is why, in these days of the uncovering of the extent of the sexual abuse scandal of our day, that institutions and organisations (the church prime among them) are doing all they can to prove that they have no longer got a culture of cover-up. Of course, there is also a real concern for the myriad victims of the predatory people who have ruined so many lives. But cover-up is the big sin of organisations and institutions.

Could it be that repentance is a public matter not just a private one? Could it be that the word that heralds the announcement of the kingdom – Repent, for the Kingdom of God is near – finds its absolute and unerring focus in Jesus’ attack on the Pharisees?

As the cradle and the cross approach, Jesus renews our call to a new birth and to stop our cover-ups. The journey to maturity is littered by the throwing away of many masks.


3 comments:

  1. So we get to the blistering attack on the religious authorities known as ‘the seven woes’, ‘Woe to you teachers of the law and Pharisees’. Jesus is not critical of what they believe, for the most part, but what they do, for their lives being at odds with what they preach. They live for status and recognition and to make themselves important.

    Back to the phylacteries I mentioned yesterday. Jesus was very critical of the Pharisees for having large phylacteries. These were little boxes that orthodox Jews wore at prayer and contained texts taken from the Torah, usually Exodus and Deuteronomy. No problem with that, except that the Pharisees made them very large and ostentatious to show everyone their piety. Yesterday I suggested that we should perhaps empty our mental phylacteries and fill them with the sound-bites of Jesus. For the true phylacteries are mental and spiritual where we store and treasure the Christian message of Christ. These are not on physical show, but they should become physical and be evident to people around us in our lifestyle, choices and conduct – phylacteries of the heart expressed in our lives!

    Jesus attacks the teachers of the law and Pharisees for their hypocrisy, not for their beliefs. They take the first step of faith with a great fanfare, but they don’t take the second step of living out what they believe. I have a certain sympathy with them, because I have always found it easier to read and be convinced by the message of Jesus than to put it into practice! It is a bit like the pithy school reports of last century, ‘Tries hard. Could do better’. I don’t think today’s teachers would get away with such a simple damning summary. Jesus implied that the Pharisees were not trying hard enough, and that was their unpardonable fault. They could certainly do better in the application of their faith, and, what’s worse, they made it impossibly hard for other people to live by faith. ‘You make it impossible for others to enter the kingdom of heaven, but don’t go in yourselves.’ ‘You teach converts to be the same as you.’ ‘You appear outwardly clean but are greedy within.’ ...

    Beware, however! Don’t read this chapter and feel smug – ‘I’m glad I’m not like the Pharisees’. There’s a strong warning in that story of the Pharisee and the tax-collector praying side by side (it’s only in Luke, 18,11, not in Matthew). In this context we can probably say ‘There, but for the grace of God ...’. It is so easy to make the Christian faith unapproachable for others, and for them to ask us, in return, if we really do live out what we profess to believe. We need to be on our guard against following in the New Covenant the path that Jesus so hated in the Old Covenant.

    So, ‘Tries hard. Could do better’ is not a good enough report for the Christian in the light of this chapter; certainly not if we try to go it alone. But by accepting God’s grace each of us will be enabled to live more closely to the way of Jesus revealed in all those sound-bites and parables, to be stored in the phylacteries of the heart. It’s a long, and probably impossible, struggle without accepting the grace of God, so freely offered, so hardly won by Jesus.

    For all its detailed criticisms, covered in the main blog, the underlying message of chapter 23 is the need to accept the grace of God to live out our faith, as individual followers and in fellowship. And the last three verses show Christianity at its most inclusive, with Jesus wanting to gather the people of Jerusalem under his wing, welcoming, protecting and nurturing.

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    Replies
    1. What a chapter! My reading partner found it really funny, laughing out loud at Jesus' criticism of the Pharisees, especially with the choice of words in the Message version, and he said "I totally agree with Jesus. How does making a promise on a piece of leather make any difference to the promise?" The chapter evoked amusement.

      On my first reading I was immediately reminded of the 1970s musical Godspell in which we hear Jesus shouting out some of these words of woe before singing the song "Alas for you". As a teenager I was very attracted to the character of Jesus portrayed in Godspell which I felt compelled to see many times - his outspokenness, his sense of fun, his love of people, his challenging teaching. Jesus was someone I wanted to know and be around, and the play played a signifiant part in my coming to make my own personal commitment of faith.. This chapter reminds me of my call to discipleship.

      It is a hard chapter to read because which one of us can honestly say we cannot ourselves be hypocritical and be like the Pharisees? But equally when we read it there may come feelings of self righteousness - I'm not as bad as them, or am I? How do we maintain a spirit of humility in our faith? The chapter calls us to repent of self importance, inflated egos, the need to impress, pride.

      And yet the chapter ends with the most beautiful description of Jesus' longing to love us like a mother hen gathering her children. You can hear his frustration with the religious leaders but you can also hear his deepest love for them. I have never read these last few verses in this context before. They are an outpouring of love for those who want to serve God but are going about it the wrong way and are missing the point, and even want Jesus dead. Jesus' cry sounds like his heart his breaking. He so wants them to see and understand what they're missing that he cries out in love. This chapter ends with what could be described as a love song from Jesus.

      But the words which stood out the most for me are the very sad ones: "and you were not willing" (v.37). Why weren't they, why aren't we, willing to be more fully drawn into God's love? What stops us, what barriers do we put up to prevent God's love getting too close? Is it stubbornness, or pride, or the need to be in control, or power, or even fear? Our unwillingness to be loved and transformed, however, does not change how much Jesus loves us. He is persistent and consistent in his love for us. The chapter ends with God wooing us again: "Let me love you".

      Chapter 23 is an amazing chapter!

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  2. As we read this chapter yesterday, my daughter asked me why Jesus asked us not to call anyone teacher or father. What Jesus is objecting to is the sense of superiority, not just the title. As one of the books I read pointed out, the Bible does tell us to honour our father and mother. Romans 13:7 clarifies it too:
    " Give everyone what you owe him: If you owe taxes , pay taxes, if revenue, then revenue; if respect, then respect; if honour, then honour.

    As for what Paul says about repentence needing to be public, it reminds me of the "Truth and Reconcilliation Commission" in South Africa, when apartheid was abolished. The public confession of those who oppressed and the testimonies of the oppressed were televised to bring about healing in a deeply wounded country. In our own lives, we need to acknowledge the hurt we have caused. So too, we need to express our woundedness. Our hurts need to be heard and acknowledged for forgiveness and healing to take place.

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