Showing posts with label mercy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mercy. Show all posts

Saturday, August 30, 2025

Isaiah 53:5, Matthew 9:10-12, Micah 6:8, 1 Corinthians 12:8-10: HMCS Merciful: Stone Catcher Cruise.

 Presented to TSA Alberni Valley, 30 August 2025 by Major Michel Ramsay

 

 My parents took Susan, our kids and I on an Alaska cruise to celebrate their 60th anniversary. It was great. We were able to see wonderful scenery in Glacier National Park and elsewhere. We were able to see whales – so many whales – and other wildlife. It was good celebrating with family. It was fun to do the activities on ship and explore Juneau, Skagway, and Ketchikan. The girls and I really enjoyed the trivia – especially music trivia - nights. We even won two of the contests and received plastic tulips as a prize! Heather and I were able to be part of a show in Skagway where they invited us up on stage. We also met some very interesting people – One lunch I sat with a lady from Japan who studied at Regent College in Vancouver and is currently working on her PHD on Malachi – she spent 10 years translating Bibles in Uzbekistan. It was certainly providential to have her sitting next to me at lunch one day. She told me how one of the Bible translators working with her, an Uzbek, was not a Christian. They weren’t allowed to proselytize; however, during their time immersing themselves in the Bible; he gave his life to the Lord.

 

Many things from this trip could be possible sermons. The beauty of nature and creation is always a good theme. And launching from the testimony of the Bible translator, one could easily speak about Doctrine One of The Salvation Army (We believe that the Scriptures of the Old and New Testaments were given by inspiration of God, and that they only constitute the Divine rule of Christian faith and practice) or Romans 1:16: “For I am not ashamed of the gospel, for it is the power of God for the salvation of everyone who believes..."

 

One thing that is a natural analogy is the nature of cruises in general. There are so many people on the trip from all over the world. I met people from Germany, Japan, Columbia, Philippines, South Africa, the UK, the US and elsewhere. People were from different walks of life and different ages. This reminded me of the Kingdom of Heaven and how, Galatians 3:28 “There is neither Jew nor Gentile, neither slave nor free, nor is there male and female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus.”

 

I was also reminded that as is pointed out in Ecclesiastes 9:2-3: 

 “All share a common destiny—the righteous and the wicked, the good and the bad, the clean and the unclean, those who offer sacrifices and those who do not.

As it is with the good,

so with the sinful;

as it is with those who take oaths,

so with those who are afraid to take them.

This is the evil in everything that happens under the sun:

The same destiny overtakes all.”

 

It doesn’t matter what people do on the cruise – there were more activities than one could possibly do even if they wanted to do them all. Some people could have spent the whole time in their rooms; some people could have gone on every shore excursion - dog sleds, helicopters, hikes – or visited every museum or saw every show. Some people could have eaten and drank so much that they couldn’t move whereas others could have spent their time doing abs workouts and Tai Chi. I could easily make the point that this is what life is like. We all board the cruise ship of our life and we are all going to get off – the revivalist would then ask us this question, when your temporal cruise ends, what will your eternal destination be? This is important. I myself am drawn to holiness / social justice themes these days; concentrating on what you do while you are on the cruise of life rather than where you will exit the ship because I truly believe that Salvation is a relationship (with God) rather than merely a final destination.

 

About that: I have shared with you this summer many books I have been reading: about Truth and Reconciliation, and prison reform and other social justice issues. If I have gone overboard (pun acknowledged) I do apologize. I do believe that we are called to live holy lives serving God, showing love, mercy to our neighbour. One book I have been reading is ‘Just Mercy’ by Bryan Stevenson, a death row lawyer who helps people who can’t afford lawyers in the USA. He shared a number of stories about his clients: some guilty, some innocent; Some who were spared execution; some who weren’t. I read stories of children who lived 40 years in prison to finally have their sentence overturned and be released. There is one amazing story of Walter, who was wrongfully committed and was almost executed but they were able to save him. There were also hair-raising stories of people who could prove they were innocent but were still executed. There was one story of a man who never matured beyond the equivalent of a young child who was convicted of murder and spent most of his years in prison in solitary confinement and who truly believed that when/if he was released, he would go to live with his lawyer. One execution, that of Mr. Dill, hit the author, his lawyer, quite hard… (288-289)

On the phone with Mr. Dill, I thought about all of his struggles and all the terrible things he’d gone through and how his disabilities had broken him. There was no excuse for him to have shot someone, but it didn’t make sense to kill him. I began to get angry about it. Why do we want to kill all the broken people? What is wrong with us, that we think a thing like that can be right? I tried not to let Mr. Dill hear me crying. I tried not to show him that he was breaking my heart. He finally got his words out. “Mr. Bryan, I just want to thank you for fighting for me. I thank you for caring about me. I love y’all for trying to save me.”

 

This next part really resonates with me in my role as a Salvation Army Officer. I truly feel sometimes as the Mr. Stevenson writes:

When I hung up the phone that night I had a wet face and a broken heart. The lack of compassion I witnessed every day had finally exhausted me. I looked around my crowded office, at the stacks of records and papers, each pile filled with tragic stories, and I suddenly didn’t want to be surrounded by all this anguish and misery. As I sat there, I thought myself a fool for having tried to fix situations that were so fatally broken. It’s time to stop. I can’t do this anymore.

For the first time I realized that my life was just full of brokenness. I worked in a broken system of justice. My clients were broken by mental illness, poverty, and racism. They were torn apart by disease, drugs and alcohol, pride, fear, and anger. I thought of Joe Sullivan and of Trina, Antonio, Ian, and dozens of other broken children we worked with, struggling to survive in prison. I thought of people broken by war, like Herbert Richardson; people broken by poverty, like Marsha Colbey; people broken by disability, like Avery Jenkins. In their broken state, they were judged and condemned by people whose commitment to fairness had been broken by cynicism, hopelessness, and prejudice.

I looked at my computer and at the calendar on the wall. I looked again around my office at the stacks of files. I saw the list of our staff.... And before I knew it, I was talking to myself aloud: “I can just leave. Why am I doing this?”

It took me a while to sort it out, but I realized something sitting there while Jimmy Dill was being killed at Holman prison. After working for more than twenty-five years, I understood that I don’t do what I do because it’s required or necessary or important. I don’t do it because I have no choice. I do what I do because I’m broken, too.

My years of struggling against inequality, abusive power, poverty, oppression, and injustice had finally revealed something to me about myself. Being close to suffering, death, executions, and cruel punishments didn’t just illuminate the brokenness of others; in a moment of anguish and heartbreak, it also exposed my own brokenness. You can’t effectively fight abusive power, poverty, inequality, illness, oppression, or injustice and not be broken by it.

We are all broken by something. We have all hurt someone and have been hurt. We all share the condition of brokenness even if our brokenness is not equivalent. I desperately wanted mercy for Jimmy Dill and would have done anything to create justice for him, but I couldn’t pretend that his struggle was disconnected from my own. The ways in which I have been hurt—and have hurt others—are different from the ways Jimmy Dill suffered and caused suffering. But our shared brokenness connected us.

… We have a choice. We can embrace our humanness, which means embracing our broken natures and the compassion that remains our best hope for healing. Or we can deny our brokenness, forswear compassion, and, as a result, deny our own humanity.

I thought of the guards strapping Jimmy Dill to the gurney that very hour. I thought of the people who would cheer his death and see it as some kind of victory. I realized they were broken people, too, even if they would never admit it. So many of us have become afraid and angry. We’ve become so fearful and vengeful that we’ve thrown away children, discarded the disabled, and sanctioned the imprisonment of the sick and the weak—not because they are a threat to public safety or beyond rehabilitation but because we think it makes us seem tough, less broken. I thought of the victims of violent crime and the survivors of murdered loved ones, and how we’ve pressured them to recycle their pain and anguish and give it back to the offenders we prosecute. I thought of the many ways we’ve legalized vengeful and cruel punishments, how we’ve allowed our victimization to justify the victimization of others. We’ve submitted to the harsh instinct to crush those among us whose brokenness is most visible.

But simply punishing the broken—walking away from them or hiding them from sight—only ensures that they remain broken and we do, too. There is no wholeness outside of our reciprocal humanity.

 

Like me, Mr. Stevenson says:

I frequently had difficult conversations with clients who were struggling and despairing over their situations—over the things they’d done, or had been done to them, that had led them to painful moments. Whenever things got really bad, and they were questioning the value of their lives, I would remind them that each of us is more than the worst thing we’ve ever done. I told them that if someone tells a lie, that person is not just a liar. If you take something that doesn’t belong to you, you are not just a thief. Even if you kill someone, you’re not just a killer. I told myself that evening what I had been telling my clients for years. I am more than broken. In fact, there is a strength, a power even, in understanding brokenness, because embracing our brokenness creates a need and desire for mercy, and perhaps a corresponding need to show mercy. When you experience mercy, you learn things that are hard to learn otherwise. You see things you can’t otherwise see; you hear things you can’t otherwise hear. You begin to recognize the humanity that resides in each of us.

All of sudden, I felt stronger. I began thinking about what would happen if we all just acknowledged our brokenness, if we owned up to our weaknesses, our deficits, our biases, our fears. Maybe if we did, we wouldn’t want to kill the broken among us who have killed others. Maybe we would look harder for solutions to caring for the disabled, the abused, the neglected, and the traumatized. I had a notion that if we acknowledged our brokenness, we could no longer take pride in mass incarceration, in executing people, in our deliberate indifference to the most vulnerable.

 

My friends, I almost wept as I read all of this; because this is what my life as a Salvation Army Officer often feels like. I see so many people broken, needing mercy, and it makes me cry when we as a society, or I, as a person, don’t offer it.

 

I read one part in this book where Mr. Stevenson’s client was being released after many years of wrongful imprisonment and he said he should have felt happy – but he felt angry that Walter, his client, had to suffer for many years and even though he was released, his years can never be returned to him. My heart was in my throat. I have felt that anger on behalf of our friends here and at the Bread of Life as they receive justice delayed, knowing many will not even experience that. I have like Mr. Stevenson felt I wanted to quit some days.

 

He tells another story. This one is about a lady he encountered in a courtroom. The first time she was ever in court was after her young grandson, whom she loved more than anything else, was murdered. Mrs. Macmillan prayed to the Lord repeatedly. She sat through the whole trial of the three young men convicted of killing her son. When they were sentenced to die in prison, she cried. A lady came to comfort her asking which one of the convicted boys she was related to – none, the victim. They sat together for two hours in silence. Mrs. Macmillan then began coming regularly to court. She said,

          “It has been wonderful, Bryan. When I first came, I’d look for people who had lost someone to murder or some violent crime. Then it got to the point where some of the ones grieving the most were the ones whose children or parents were on trial, so I just started letting anybody lean on me who needed it. All these young children being sent to prison forever, all this grief and violence. Those judges throwing people away like they’re not even human, people shooting each other, hurting each other like they don’t care. I don’t know, it’s a lot of pain. I decided that I was supposed to be here to catch some of the stones people cast at each other.”

 

She is referencing the woman caught in adultery and how the Lord required that they let the woman go. Mr. Stevenson said to a congregation once, “But today, our self-righteousness, our fear, and our anger have caused even the Christians to hurl stones at the people who fall down, even when we know we should forgive or show compassion…we can’t simply watch that happen…. we have to be stone-catchers.” Mrs. Macmillan doesn’t have the power of the Lord or the judges to release people but she can catch the stones we throw at each other. We can all do that. We are all called to do that.

 

Mr. Stevenson recalls again the night his friend was killed:

 

On the drive home, I turned on the car radio, seeking news about Mr. Dill’s execution. I found a station airing a news report. It was a local religious station, but in their news broadcast there was no mention of the execution. I left the station on, and before long a preacher began a sermon. She started with scripture (1 Corinthians 12:8-10).

 

Three different times I begged the Lord to take it away. Each time he said, “My grace is sufficient. My power is made perfect in your weakness.” So now I am glad to boast about my weaknesses, so that the power of Christ may work through me. Since I know it is all for Christ’s good, I am quite content with my weaknesses and with insults, hardships, persecutions and calamities. For when I am weak, then I am strong.

 

I turned off the radio station, and as I slowly made my way home, I understood that even as we are caught in a web of hurt and brokenness, we’re also in a web of healing and mercy. I thought of the little boy who hugged me outside of church, creating reconciliation and love. I didn’t deserve reconciliation or love in that moment, but that’s how mercy works. The power of just mercy is that it belongs to the undeserving. It’s when mercy is least expected that it’s most potent—strong enough to break the cycle of victimization and victimhood, retribution and suffering. It has the power to heal the psychic harm and injuries that lead to aggression and violence, abuse of power, mass incarceration.

 

Today, I confess to you that this is a burden on my heart. I feel for all our employees who are struggling with addiction, mental illness, and trauma; my friends who steal from our Thrift Store to feed their addiction. Our folk at the Bread of Life and The Salvation Army shelter who have left us to go to prison, the hospital or the funeral home. My heart breaks for the many people struggling whom I know personally and who we live and work alongside everyday. I just hope that I will always remember to extend the mercy that I know that I don’t even deserve to everyone I meet. After all, we are called to be stone-catchers. It is my prayer that we will all do just that and show just mercy.

 

Let us pray.



Friday, July 11, 2025

Luke 6: Have Mercy

Presented to TSA Alberni Valley Ministries, 13 July 2025 by Major Michael Ramsay

 

Last week we spoke about forgiveness.[1] I shared many stories from the Truth and Reconciliation Commission in South Africa. There are many more stories to tell. Forgiveness and Mercy I believe are central to all of Christianity and without it there is no future. To experience the joys of the Kingdom of God we need to live in a world of forgiveness. Jesus says, Luke 6:27-30: “But to you who are listening I say: Love your enemies, do good to those who hate you, bless those who curse you, pray for those who mistreat you. If someone slaps you on one cheek, turn to them the other also. If someone takes your coat, do not withhold your shirt from them. Give to everyone who asks you, and if anyone takes what belongs to you, do not demand it back;” Luke 6:35-37: “But love your enemies, do good to them, and lend to them without expecting to get anything back. Then your reward will be great, and you will be children of the Most High, because he is kind to the ungrateful and wicked. Be merciful, just as your Father is merciful. Do no judge and you will not be judged; do not condemn and you will not be condemned. Forgive and you will be forgiven.”

 

You know that Susan and Heather have been away for a few Sundayss. As well as visiting family in Victoria, we have been staying in various campgrounds: the previous two weeks we were an hour or so west of Campbell River and before that Raftrevor. I have been splitting my time between being with them and coming into work here: it was much easier when they were in Raftrevor than an hour west of Campbell River – also there were outlets and internet in Raftrevor! Next week I will wind up spending more time here, while they are there. There is much to do (this week: volunteer appreciation, Summer Rain, Colour Fest, …) and it is challenging to be in two places at the same time – but it is good to spend family time camping outside and in the weather.

 

The other week when we were in one campsite a family moved into the adjoining site for the evening. They were a husband and wife, a seven-year-old and a four-year-old from California. He is a carpenter, and she is a university professor; the mother is fluent in Cantonese, Mandarin and English and Dad is bilingual Spanish and English. I laughed in joy as I said “your kids have got it made! Carpenter, College professor, multi-lingual.” Maybe. The conversation then shifted to what is happening in the USA right now and California specifically. ICE agents are active on the college campuses. Her students are afraid. Especially Spanish speaking people and people of colour: they are carrying passports around with them. She said even university professor colleagues are afraid if they aren’t from the USA. (My cousin is a Math professor in Oregon. I know he is really concerned.)

 

They told me what things were like for them in California, speaking other languages, and mom and children being Asian in appearance. One story they told me was horrific and at first, I missed the punch line. They said that a year ago when they were going home to the USA, they were stopped at the border. Mom was driving. The border guards saw her and her children and moved them to a particular line of vehicle traffic. They noticed that everyone in that line was a person of colour. The customs official then saw dad, who is ‘white’ in appearance and moved them to the other line. This struck me as horrible. I immediately thought of the stars that the Nazis placed on people in the 1930s and the radio shows in Rwanda in the 1990s, Apartheid in South Africa; post 9-11, McCarthyism, or so many other examples from the USA. The kicker for me in what they were telling me about crossing the boarder was this: that horrendous event, that racial segregation at the border, that was from before Donald Trump was re-elected. The USA has been walking down this road for a while now.

 

Also highlighted in the news lately is the conflict that has been continuing in Gaza and Palestine for decades. I have one horrific story from an Israeli attack on a hospital in 2009 that I will share with you another time – the theme of that story is how Israel’s bombing of a hospital on live TV and the killing of a Palestinian doctor’s daughters saved the lives of many; just as Rome and Israel’s killing of our Heavenly Father’s Son made it possible for us all to be saved.

 

My story today is as told by Archbishop Desmond Tutu. I have been reading a lot of his writings lately – I have been camping with no internet! - he tells us Bassam Aramin’s story[2]:

 

At the age of twelve, Bassam Aramin watched as another boy his age was shot and killed by an Israeli soldier. In that moment, he felt a “deep need for revenge” and joined a group of freedom fighters in Hebron. Some called him a terrorist, but he felt he was fighting for his safety, his home, and his right to be free. At seventeen, he was caught planning an attack on Israeli troops and sentenced to seven years in prison. In prison, he only learned to hate more as he was stripped naked and beaten by his prison guards. “They were beating us without hatred, because for them this was just a training exercise and they saw us as objects.”

 

While in prison, Bassam engaged in a dialogue with his Israeli guard. Each thought the other was the “terrorist” and each equally denied being the “settler” in the land they shared. Through their conversations, they realized how much they had in common with the other. For Bassam, it was the first time he recalls feeling empathy in his life.

 

Seeing the transformation that took place between him and his captor, as they recognized their shared humanity, Bassam realized that violence could never bring peace. This realization changed his life.

 

In 2005, Bassam Aramin cofounded a group called Combatants for Peace. He [had] not picked up a weapon since, and for Bassam this [was] not a sign of weakness but of true strength. [Then…] In 2007, Bassam’s ten-year-old daughter, Abir, was shot by an Israeli soldier as she stood outside her school. Bassam says, “Abir’s murder could have led me down the easy path of hatred and vengeance, but for me there was no return from dialogue and nonviolence. After all, it was one Israeli soldier who shot my daughter, but one hundred former Israeli soldiers who built a garden in her name at the school where she was murdered.”6

 

Forgiveness is not weakness. Bassam Aramin could have given into the same temptations that, after decades of children and friends being murdered by Israeli soldiers and politicians, Hamas did. But how could that help? “Retaliation gives, at best, only momentary respite from our pain. The only way to experience healing and peace is to forgive. Until we can forgive, we remain locked in our pain and locked out of the possibility of experiencing healing and freedom, locked out of the possibility of being at peace.”[3]

 

Hamas drank the poison of vengeance and are suffering because of it. Israel is actively it as an opportunity to intensify its holocaust, its genocide. Since the day of vengeance, Israel has slaughtered more than 57 645 Palestinians – not including the Syrians, people from Yemen and Lebanon, Iranians and the others they have murdered – all with the blessing and/or material assistance from Canada, by the way.

 

Jesus says, “… Love your enemies, do good to those who hate you, bless those who curse you, pray for those who mistreat you. If someone slaps you on one cheek, turn to them the other also. If someone takes your coat, do not withhold your shirt from them…love your enemies, do good to them… Then your reward will be great, and you will be children of the Most High, because he is kind to the ungrateful and wicked. Be merciful, just as your Father is merciful; do no judge and you will not be judged; do not condemn and you will not be condemned. Forgive and you will be forgiven.” (Luke 6:27-30).

 

Bassam Aramin, who cofounded Combatants for Peace, has used his own powerful story of recognizing the humanity of his enemies to create an organization devoted to dialogue, reconciliation, and nonviolence. This organization is run by former Israeli soldiers and Palestinian fighters who say, “After brandishing weapons for so many years, and having seen one another only through weapon sights, we have decided to put down our guns and to fight for peace.”[4]

 

If one person can put down his weapon, so can 100; and if 100 people can, so can a thousand; and if a thousand can, why not 10 thousand? And if 10 thousand can, why not the whole world? Mercy and forgiveness can transform the world. Forgiveness and mercy can transform our whole selves, our whole lives. Pertaining to our own lives here, Quoting again from Archbishop Tutu[5]:


If you are standing before me, beaten and bleeding, I cannot tell you to forgive. I cannot tell you to do anything, since you are the one who was beaten. If you have lost a loved one, I cannot tell you to forgive. You are the person who has lost a loved one. If your spouse betrayed you, if you were abused as a child, if you have endured any of the myriad injuries humans can inflict upon one another, I cannot tell you what to do. But I can tell you that it all matters. Whether we love or we hate, whether we help or we harm, it all matters. I can tell you that I hope, if I am the one who is beaten and bloodied, I will be able to forgive and pray for my abuser. I hope that I would be able to recognize him as my brother and as a precious child of God. I hope I never give up on the reality that every person has the capacity to change.

 

[Maybe] We can’t create a world without pain or loss or conflict or hurt feelings, but we can create a world of forgiveness. We can create a world of forgiveness that allows us to heal from those losses and pain and repair our relationships

 

That is what Jesus invites us to: He invites us to His Kingdom of Forgiveness where we forgive others as our Heavenly Father forgives us. He invites us to His Kingdom where we live out a life of forgiveness, offering hope to those who seemingly have no hope; love to those some consider unloveable, and the peace of Christ, to all we meet.

 

So to us today I say this: if you are hurting from the pain of unforgiveness – it is a terrible pain; it is a terrible pain and Christ can heal you and He will heal us as we ask Him, He promises. If you would like to be freed from the burden of hate, unforgiveness, and sin; if you would like to be free to from the power of your oppressor and if you would like to be free to love your neighbour as yourself, please pray with me:

 

Dear Lord, please help me to forgive all those who have done big, small, horrible and other things to myself, those I love, and others. Please help me to be free of the chains of hate and unforgiveness. Please help me to love my brother and sister and fellow human being dearly as You love me, so that indeed I may finally be free.

 

In Jesus’ Name.

Amen


www.sheepspeak.com



[1] Ramsay, Major Michael. Luke 23: 32-46: Forgiveness. Presented to TSA AV Ministries, 06 July 2025 https://sheepspeaks.blogspot.com/2025/07/luke-23-32-46-forgiveness.html

[2] Tutu, Desmond and Mpho Tutu, The Book of Forgiving (HarperCollins, 2014), 34-35

[3] Tutu, Desmond and Mpho Tutu, The Book of Forgiving (HarperCollins, 2014), 32

[4] Tutu, Desmond and Mpho Tutu, The Book of Forgiving (HarperCollins, 2014), 35

[5] Tutu, Desmond and Mpho Tutu, The Book of Forgiving (HarperCollins, 2014),224

Sunday, April 30, 2023

Matthew 9:13: "I Desire Mercy, Not Sacrifice"

Presented to Swift Current Corps of The Salvation Army, 13 June 2010; Corps 614 Regent Park and The Warehouse Mission, 16 Sept 2016; and Alberni Valley Ministries, 30 April 2023

 

This is the 2023 Alberni Valley Version (See below for links to versions from other places and other times)

 

Summer feels like it is here, I saw someone driving their fancy classic car the other day. Don, you belong to the car club. When do all the summer events begin? Seeing this made me reminisce about my first car, it isn’t quite as fancy as those classic cars but here is a picture of it…

 


Okay that’s not my car –but that isn’t entirely dissimilar from my car. My car only cost $100 and see how Fred’s car is propelled… It only moves because he runs with his feet sticking out the bottom. That was sort of like my Pontiac. Like Fred’s car, didn’t have any floorboards at all on the passenger’s side – so my passengers had to be careful not to drop anything on the floor because it would be gone. It was allegedly a two-door but the driver’s door never worked. This sometimes made it a little difficult especially considering one of my friends for part of this time was confined to a wheelchair so whenever I gave them a ride I would either have to climb over them to get into the car or more likely get in Dukes of Hazard style. (You remember the Duke’s of Hazard where they would climb in through the windows instead of using the door?) – Actually, before I was done with my car, we always had to get in Dukes of Hazard style because the other door broke too. Nonetheless I loved my first car. It was all mine. It did have one good thing about it. It had four really nice moon discs. They were shiny, they were good solid hubcaps and they were really cool.

 

‘I desire mercy’ is a quote from our text today. When I was a teenager I used to let friends drive my car. One friend – Bill– has his learner’s license. We load the car up with many of our friends and we go cruising around the town. At one point we decide to go through the drive through and get some water to drink (we couldn’t afford to buy anything else) so – Bill is driving – he takes us through the drive through and he cuts the corner too close and - ‘crunch’ – there goes my front moon disk and then instead of stopping, (because he is an inexperienced driver) he keeps going and ‘crunch’; there goes a second one. Bill is so upset as he is chased from my car by our friends. He starts walking home feeling quite sad. I take over driving. We order enough waters from the A&W for everyone and Bill too  – remember the quote from the scriptures, ‘I desire mercy’ – we pull up beside him. He comes up to the car and then we – well – we hit him with our waters. Okay maybe that is not a good example of mercy. We got it a little backwards.

 

Jesus said, “I desire mercy, not sacrifice’. This is significant. Look at what is happening in our text today. Jesus is having one of his all too familiar conflicts with the religious teachers. Jesus is walking along after performing a sensational faith healing in front of a large audience, he sees a tax collector and Jesus invites himself over to this house for dinner and the tax collector (Matthew) accepts.

 

Now we should put things in perspective a little bit here. Jesus is famous. He is as popular as any athlete or music star. Just like contemporary celebrities, crowds are following Jesus everywhere. He even has to hop on a boat after the miracle of the fish and the loaves to get away from them. Jesus is a pretty popular celebrity and all the people are following him and Jesus sees this tax collector and he invites himself over for dinner.

 

Anybody have a favourite celebrity here? Call out a name or two… what if _____ invited himself over to your place for dinner, would you accept? Of course. This is what Matthew does.

 

Now Matthew is a tax collector. Strictly speaking he is more like a customs officer, but it was the same idea: he collects taxes for Rome. Tax collectors are not the most popular people in the world these days.

 

It was even worse in Jesus' day. Do you remember who controlled Palestine in Jesus’ day? The Romans. Palestine was an occupied territory. I am the Legion Chaplain here.. As a Judean, for Matthew, sitting in his toll booth collecting taxes from his own people to pay Caesar may even seem be like collaborating with the enemy.

 

So here is Jesus, a celebrity preacher, who some people even know is the Messiah but misguidedly think he will destroy Rome and free the occupied territories and Jesus goes and invites himself over to one of the collaborators' places for dinner.

 

So Jesus’ adversaries think they see a weakness. They think that they can create a scandal that will discredit him. If there were newspapers, internet and the like back then the headline on the 6-O’Clock News would read like verse 11: “Jesus eats with sinners and tax collectors.”

 

Jesus doesn’t deny what he is doing. He is associating with unliked people. The Pharisees have caught Jesus red-handed with these ‘sinners’ they call them, and so, Verse 11: “When the Pharisees saw this, they asked his disciples, ‘Why does your teacher eat with tax collectors and 'sinners'?’” Jesus overhears them and instead of denying his actions, Verses 12 and 13, “On hearing this, Jesus said, ‘It is not the healthy who need a doctor, but the sick. But go and learn what this means: ‘I desire mercy, not sacrifice.’ For I have not come to call the righteous, but sinners.’”

 

So this is interesting. Jesus is quoting Hosea 6. The Pharisees would have been very familiar with Hosea 6. Do you remember who are the Pharisees? The best of the Pharisees are like the good Bible-believing Christians of today, even encouraging us to holiness; Nicodemus and the Apostle Paul were Pharisees (Acts 23:6, 26:5). The worst of the Pharisees, I imagine, if they were around today would be intimidating people on social media who aren’t following societal rules of their day. These Pharisees, who themselves, are very careful not to break any religious laws accuse Jesus every time they catch him doing something that they do not think appropriate.

 

When accused here Jesus says to the Pharisees, Matthew 9:13: “But go and learn what this means: ‘I desire mercy, not sacrifice.’

 

The Pharisees were really good at sacrifice. They did rightly believe in holiness. Amongst their number were probably some of the best of the religious people of their day (cf. Acts 22:1-5; Galatians 1:13,14). Maybe even better than us at following the scriptures. They tithed regularly. They read their scriptures. They come to the synagogue (church) regularly. They did not work on the Sabbath or do anything that would cause someone else to work (Dt 5; Ex20). They are very careful worshiping God by providing the appropriate sacrifices. If they were around today, they most likely would always have a wholesome radio station tuned into their car and/or their computer; they would always be dressed appropriately and they would be very careful to tithe and be self-sacrificing. This is good.

 

Where they go wrong is in pointing out that Jesus by eating with ‘sinners’ is like the sinners and not like them. Jesus agrees that he is not like them and he tells them why: He says the difference is that the Pharisees are not extending mercy. God loves people. The word ‘mercy’ here, ḥesed, means steadfast love or literally ‘covenant love.’ They are accusing Jesus of not being faithful to the covenant with God because he eats with ‘sinners’ but Jesus says that he is faithful to God’s covenant precisely because he does eat with ‘sinners’. Jesus says, quoting Hosea 6:6: “But go and learn what this means: ‘I desire mercy, not sacrifice.’ For I have not come to call the righteous, but ‘sinners.’

 

The Pharisees sacrificed lots to do many good things right but Jesus says that is not what is most important. God desires mercy and not sacrifice.

 

I remember once when I was visiting a good church many, many years ago; a street person came in and lay down on the pews for a nap. A good, self-sacrificing pastor at this church asked him to leave. Jesus says, 'I desire mercy, not sacrifice.'

 

I have also seen congregations where nice, good, self-sacrificing church people have sat pouting, arms crossed all through the service because some stranger had dared to come an unwittingly sit in their seat. Jesus says, 'I desire mercy, not sacrifice.'

 

I have heard divorced people, single mothers and others tell me that they felt shunned in their churches by the good self-sacrificing Christians after their life circumstances change.  Jesus says, 'I desire mercy, not sacrifice.'

 

I have in my time heard good self-sacrificing Salvationists help the poor but complain whenever someone shows up for help who doesn`t look poor enough or needy enough or who does not seem marginalized. Jesus says, 'I desire mercy, not sacrifice.'

 

I have in my time seen good self-sacrificing Salvationists actually punish people for behaving in ways that are totally consistent with their diagnosis. Jesus says, 'I desire mercy, not sacrifice.'

 

Well, what about us here today? How do we greet the people God brings across our path? Do we extend to them the hesed covenant love of Christ who spends time with them (and us) no matter who they (and we) are.

 

Today, like always, I invite us to examine ourselves. Are we like it says in Matthew 23:24, ‘straining a gnat and swallowing a camel’? Are we ‘majoring in the minors’? Or do we openly embrace our brothers and sisters? Do we eagerly look for opportunities to show our love for God by loving our neighbours –poor or rich, nice or mean, scary or not scary? In short, if Christ showed up today in disguise would we welcome him warmly? If there are any ways that we here today have not been open to serving God by showing this hesed, mercy, covenant love to our neighbours, I would ask the Lord to reveal that to us, so that we can turn that and our whole lives over to Jesus Christ and I pray that people will indeed know we are Christians by our love.

 

May we all today go from here with a renewed impetus to show hesed, mercy, covenant love to our neighbour and may they will know we are Christians by our love.

 

 

To view the 2016 version,  click here: https://sheepspeaks.blogspot.com/2016/09/hosea-66-matthew-913-i-desire-mercy-not.html

 

To view the 2010 original version, click here: https://sheepspeaks.blogspot.com/2010/06/matthew-913-i-desire-mercy-not-sacrifice.html

 

 

 

 

  

Friday, September 16, 2016

Hosea 6:6, Matthew 9:13: ‘I desire mercy, not sacrifice.’

Presented to Swift Current Corps of The Salvation Army, 13 June 2010 and Corps 614 Regent Park and The Warehouse Mission, 16 Sept 2016, and Alberni Valley Ministries, 30 April 2023

To view the 2010 version, complete with footnotes, please click herehttp://sheepspeaks.blogspot.ca/2010/06/matthew-913-i-desire-mercy-not.html 



Our scripture that we are looking at today comes from Hosea 6:6 and Matthew 9:13: “But go and learn what this means: 'I desire mercy, not sacrifice.'  I desire mercy…

Summer has just passed. On the prairies some people have really fancy cars that live indoors most of the year and only came on nice sunny days. Some of these are CLASSIC cars. Many farmers are also mechanics and so spend a lot of time working on their vehicles. It sort of reminds me of my younger days. I remember when I was a teenager. I was blessed to be able to afford a car that I could fix up a little bit too. Not quite as fancy as those sports cars in Saskatchewan but here’s a picture of it…



Okay that’s not my car – that is Fred Flintstone’s mobile but that isn’t entirely dissimilar from my car. My car only cost $100 and see how Fred’s car is propelled… It only moves because he runs with his feet sticking out the bottom. That was sort of like my Pontiac. It, like Fred’s car, didn’t have any floorboards at all on the passenger’s side – so my passengers had to be careful not to drop anything on the floor because it would be gone. It was allegedly a two-door but the driver’s door never worked. This sometimes made it a little difficult especially considering one of my friends for part of this time was confined to a wheelchair so whenever I gave them a ride I would either have to climb over them to get into the car or more likely get in Dukes of Hazard style. (You remember the Duke’s of Hazard where they would climb in through the windows instead of using the door?) – Actually, before I was done with my car, we always had to get in Dukes of Hazard style because the other door broke too. Nonetheless I loved my first car. It was all mine. It did have one good thing about it. It had four really nice moon discs. They were shiny, they were good solid hubcaps and they were really cool.

‘I desire mercy’ is a quote from our text today. I remember I used to let friends of mine drive my car for a number of different reasons. One friend of mine – Billy, he’s a great guy – we’re teenagers and he has his learner’s licence. We load the car up with many of our friends and we go cruising around the town. At one point we decide to go through the drive through and get some water to drink (we couldn’t afford to buy anything else) so – Billy is still driving – he takes us through the drive through and he cuts the corner too close and - ‘crunch’ – there goes my front moon disk and then instead of stopping, (because he is an inexperienced driver) he keeps going and ‘crunch’; there goes a second one. Billy is so upset as he is chased from my car by our friends. He starts walking home feeling quite sad. I take over driving. We order enough waters from the A&W for everyone in the car and one for Billy too – remember the quote from the scriptures, ‘I desire mercy’ – we pull up beside him. He comes up to the car and then we – well – we pelt him with our waters. Okay maybe that is not a good example of mercy. We sacrificed our water instead of offering mercy. Whoops. We got it a little backwards.

Jesus said, “I desire mercy, not sacrifice’. This is significant. Look at what is happening in our text today. Jesus is having one of his all too familiar conflicts with the religious teachers. Verse 9 records that Jesus is walking along after performing a sensational faith healing in front of a large audience, Verse 8. Verse 9, he sees a tax collector and Jesus invites this tax collector over for dinner – no, he doesn’t actually. He really invites himself over to the tax collector’s house for dinner and the tax collector (Matthew) accepts.

Now we should put things in perspective a little bit here. Jesus is famous. He is like a televangelist before TV with all of his faith healings and exorcisms and he even controls the weather. More than that even: with his high popularity ratings he is kind of like an earlier version of popular reality TV shows: ‘Judean Idol’ or ‘Survivor Palestine’ or something like that. Jesus is as popular as Jose Batista was after his bat flip as the Jays had an incredible post-season last year. He is as popular as any music star or athlete. Just like contemporary celebrities, crowds are following Jesus everywhere he is going. He even has to hop on a boat after the miracle of the fish and the loaves to get away from them and then in front of his disciples and whoever else was on the Sea of Galilee at that time he even calms the storm (Mt 8:18-27; Mk 4:36-41; Lk 8:22-25). Jesus is a pretty popular celebrity preacher and all the people are following him and this celebrity Jesus sees this tax collector and he invites himself over for dinner.

Anybody have a favourite celebrity here? Call out a name or two… what if _____ invited himself over to your place for dinner, would you accept? Of course. This is what Matthew does.

Now there is more. Who is Matthew, this fellow whom Jesus has invited himself over to his house? Matthew is a tax collector. Strictly speaking he is more like a customs official, but it was the same idea and expressed with the same Greek word: either way he collects taxes for Rome. Tax collectors are not the most popular people in the world these days.

It was even worse in Jesus' day. Do you remember who controlled Palestine in Jesus’ day? The Romans – the Superpower of the day. Palestine was an occupied territory. I used to lead D-Day and Nov 11 Remembrances with the veterans each year. Paying taxes to the Romans would be the same as the Dutch or the French paying taxes to the Nazis. It would be like Afghanistan paying taxes to NATO or Iraq paying taxes to the USA. The Americans – in their own revolution – cited as one of their causes for starting that war the fact that they didn’t want to pay taxes even to support their own military. People generally aren’t so fond of paying taxes. As a Judean, for Matthew, collecting taxes from his own people to pay Caesar would be like collaborating with the enemy (cf. Mt 22:15-22, Mk 12:13-17, Lk 20:20-26). This is what Matthew would have been doing in essence, as he was sitting in his tariff/tax booth (Mt 9:9).

So here is Jesus, a celebrity preacher, who some people know is even the Messiah and some of those think as a part of this he will destroy the Superpower and free the occupied territories in Palestine and now Jesus goes and invites himself over to one of the collaborators' places for dinner.

So here Jesus’ adversaries think they see a weakness in Jesus. They think that they can create a scandal that will discredit him and by extension increase their own power and popularity. The general people in Palestine at this time don’t support the occupying forces – they want to be free and some of them want Jesus to free them. So the Pharisees attack. If there were newspapers, internet and the like back then the headline on the 6-O’Clock News would read like verse 11: “Jesus eats with sinners and tax collectors”

It would be like today if someone has a picture of a politician or a famous preacher coming out of a seedy bar or if they have pictures of a person from the Conservative party having secret meeting with the Liberals or something like that. This is potentially a scandal.

Now Jesus –unlike many contemporary politicians- doesn’t deny what he is doing. He is associating with the unfavourable parties in society and he is partying with people who are perceived by some as traitors to his own country. The Pharisees obviously follow him here and have caught Jesus red-handed with these unfavourable people, ‘sinners’ as they call them, and so they attack Jesus’ followers, verse 11: “When the Pharisees saw this, they asked his disciples, ‘Why does your teacher eat with tax collectors and 'sinners'?’” Jesus overhears them and instead of running for cover, instead of denying his actions, Verses 12 and 13, “On hearing this, Jesus said, ‘It is not the healthy who need a doctor, but the sick. But go and learn what this means: ‘I desire mercy, not sacrifice.’ For I have not come to call the righteous, but sinners.’”

So this is interesting. Jesus is quoting Hosea 6. The Pharisees would have been very familiar with Hosea 6. Do you remember who the Pharisees are? They know their scriptures. At their best, they are like the holiness teachers of their day. Today we have the more orthodox churches theologically who –like us - do uphold the inerrancy of scripture but some of the apparently theologically orthodox preachers have a tendency to err towards your super-ultra-right-wing Bible belt, holier than thou, prosperity gospel, venom spewing types that want to tell you that you deserve everything that happens to you and they are more than happy to point out to you every sin you commit and how terrible you are for committing it.

The best of the Pharisees are like the good Bible-believing Christians of today, even encouraging us to holiness; the Apostle Paul was a Pharisee (Acts 23:6, 26:5). The worst of the Pharisees however, I imagine, if they were around in today’s day and age you would hear their voices screaming hatred over the radio or intimidating people with signs and mobs as they catch people like Jesus here heading into the seedy places of today to be with ‘sinners’. 
These Pharisees are very careful not to break any religious law and they accuse Jesus (and others one would assume) every time they catch him doing something that they would not think appropriate. I know you know the type. I run into people all the time who say that they don’t come to church any more because some of us can be like this. People tell me all the time that they don’t come to church because they think we Christians are all judgemental hypocrites or they just don`t feel welcome.

This is important. When accused, Jesus says to the Pharisees, Matthew 9:13: “But go and learn what this means: ‘I desire mercy, not sacrifice.

Now the Pharisees, Jesus’ rivals who we have been pointing out their flaws a little bit here, they were really good at sacrifice. They did rightly believe in holiness. Amongst their number were probably some of the best of the religious people of their day (cf. Acts 22:1-5; Galatians 1:13,14). Maybe even better than us at following the scriptures, they tithed regularly. They read their scriptures. They come to the synagogue (church) regularly. They do not work on the Sabbath and they would certainly never go out for brunch or anything else on the Sabbath because that would cause some poor servant to work (Dt 5; Ex20). They are very careful about taking all that they do seriously and worshiping God by providing the appropriate sacrifices. If they were around today they most likely would always have the Christian radio station tuned into their car and-or their computer; they would always be dressed appropriately and they would be very careful to tithe and offer the appropriate sacrifices.

These are good guys in this regard but they are Jesus’ adversaries and here they are pointing out that Jesus by eating with ‘sinners’ is not like the Pharisees. Jesus agrees that he is not like them and he tells them why: He says the difference is that the Pharisees are not extending mercy. God loves people. The word ‘mercy’ here, ḥesed, means steadfast love or literally ‘covenant love.’ They are accusing Jesus of not being faithful to the covenant with God because he eats with ‘sinners’ but Jesus is saying that he is faithful to God’s covenant precisely because he eats with ‘sinners’ and thus by extension the Pharisees are unfaithful to this covenant love because even though they seem to do everything right, they are not showing mercy. Jesus says, quoting Hosea 6:6: “But go and learn what this means: ‘I desire mercy, not sacrifice.’ For I have not come to call the righteous, but ‘sinners.’

The Pharisees: they did many things right in the eyes of their community. If around today, they certainly wouldn’t have been smokers, or heavy drinkers; they would be embarrassed if they were ever caught speeding, or if they accidentally bounced their cheque to the church but, knowing that all of this stuff is good that they do, Jesus says that is not what is most important. God desires mercy and not sacrifice.

I remember once when I was visiting a good church many, many years ago; a street person came in and lay down on the pews for a nap. A good, self-sacrificing pastor at this time at this church asked him to leave. Jesus says, 'I desire mercy, not sacrifice.'

I have also seen congregations where nice, good, self-sacrificing church people have sat pouting, arms crossed all through the service because some stranger had dared to come an unwittingly sit in their seat. Jesus says, 'I desire mercy, not sacrifice.'

I have in my time heard good self-sacrificing church people complain because a teenager showed up in jeans or in other ways not dressed the right way. Jesus says, 'I desire mercy, not sacrifice.' 

I have in my time heard good self-sacrificing Salvationists help the poor but complain whenever someone needy shows up who doesn`t look poor or who does not seem marginalized. Jesus says, 'I desire mercy, not sacrifice.' 

I have in my time seen good self-sacrificing Salvationists actually punish people for behaving in ways that are totally consistant with their diagnosis. Jesus says, 'I desire mercy, not sacrifice.' 

I have heard divorced people tell me that they felt shunned in their churches by the good self-sacrificing Christians after their marriage collapses.  Jesus says, 'I desire mercy, not sacrifice.' 

I have heard single mothers tell me that they don’t feel welcome in many churches by good, self-sacrificing Christians at all but Jesus says 'I desire mercy, not sacrifice.’

Well, what about us here today? Do we follow the letter of the law at the expense of the spirit of the law? Do we make nice to some while under the guise of good intentions plot the downfall of others? Do we greet some people but neglect to be hospitable to others? How do we greet the people God brings across our path? Do we extend to them the hesed covenant love of Christ who spent time with them even if they were rich tax collectors removed from everyone else because of their jobs.

Today, like always, I invite us to examine ourselves. Are we like it says in Matthew 23:24, ‘straining a gnat and swallowing a camel’? Are we ‘majoring in the minors’? Or do we openly embrace our brothers and sisters? Do we eagerly look for opportunities to show our love for God by loving our neighbours – rich or poor, nice or mean, scary or not scary? In short, if Christ (or an angel) showed up today in disguise would we welcome him warmly? Would he recognize us as his followers? If there are any ways that we here today have not been open to serving God by showing this hesed, mercy, covenant love to our neighbours, I would ask the Lord to reveal that to us, so that we can turn that and our whole lives over to Jesus Christ and I pray that they will indeed know we are Christians by our love.

I would be remiss if I did not point out that up at the front here we do have the Mercy seat – and any who feel led our more that welcome to come up here for prayer or to commune with God.


May we all today go from here with a renewed impetus to show hesed, mercy, covenant faithfulness to our neighbour and it is my prayer that indeed they will know we are Christians by our love.