Sermon on Luke 6:17-26
Pastor Jennifer Garcia
This is one of those teachings of Jesus where what’s Good News to one person might not seem like Good News to someone else.
Jesus came down the mountain with his disciples to a level place among the people.He took his time and healed everyone.
Then, he began to speak. And what he said was surprising.
The Beatitudes—or these “blessed are yous”—have become familiar, even cliché.We’re most familiar with the Beatitudes in the Gospel of Matthew, which are similar to the ones we read today, but Luke adds “woes” to the “blesseds.”
Even with this slightly less familiar version, it’s hard to imagine what it was like to hear those words for the first time.
When Jesus opened his mouth and said, “Blessed are you,” his audience probably expected to hear something like what we read in Jeremiah today: “Blessed are those who trust in the Lord.”
But what he said was, “Blessed are you who are poor.”
In what universe, Jesus?
How is it blessed to not be able to feed your family? To be constantly worried about money?
Surely those who have enough and more are the ones who are blessed? Surely God has shown favor to them.
And blessed are you who are hungry, who weep, and who are hated?
How is that blessed?
Nobody aspires to any of these things.
And then, Jesus went on to the “woes”: woe to you who are rich, full, laughing, and spoken well of.
Surely those are the things to aspire to. Surely those are the indications that God has blessed you.
If Jesus hadn’t just healed a bunch of people, I suspect he would have lost most of his audience at this point.
But instead, this has become one of Jesus’ most famous teachings.Why?
Because this is Good News to a lot of folks who haven’t had much of that.
This teaching says that God is attentive and caring to those who are suffering and who have been pushed to the margins of society.
God hasn’t forgotten the poor, the hungry, those who weep, or those who are hated for following Jesus—and remember that Jesus was hated enough by those in power that they had him executed, so Jesus followers could expect the same treatment.
That’s not to say that anyone should aspire to be poor, hungry, weeping, or hated.
God’s still with rich and reputable people too, but they probably don’t need the reminder as much as those who are excluded by society.
This isn’t about excluding those with power and privilege; it’s about including those without.
The Beloved Community that Jesus came to bring about seems upside down—after all, the first shall be last and the last shall be first—but it’s about inclusion, not exclusion.It’s about centering those who have been excluded.
And those who are used to being centered?
They’re not being excluded, but their attachment to the status quo and their own power causes them to exclude themselves from Beloved Community.
When we’re centered by society, we tend to trust ourselves, our resources, and our power to save us and keep us safe instead of leaning on God. We can forget who we are and Whose we are.
But when we’re barely scraping by or are in dangerwe often have nowhere to turn but to God and our community. We’re under no illusion that we can make it by ourselves.
That’s not to glorify or romanticize poverty. Again, the “blesseds” aren’t things to aspire to—they’re reminders that God is in the margins. And the “woes” are reminders of ways we can turn inward and ignore the invitation to Beloved Community.
This famous teaching can sound like Good News or bad news, depending on where you’re located in society.
It’s a little scary to identify with the “woes.” What do we do with that?
Middle class people in the US are wildly rich compared with much of the world.
I’ve never had to worry where my next meal was coming from, and perhaps it’s the same for you.
I laugh more than I cry. God became human and experienced the full spectrum of human emotion. There are no good or bad emotions—God created us with the capacity for all of it and is present with us no matter what we’re feeling.But as the movie Inside Out illustrated, sadness can help us connect with other people. If we don’t weep with people who are suffering and oppressed, maybe it’s a sign that we’re so insulated fromour neighbors that we’re excluding ourselves from the Beloved Community.
And it feels nice to have a good reputation. It seems like that would be a good thing for bringing a positive image to Christianity in a time when many are understandably suspicious and even hostile toward religion in general and Christianity in particular.
But, seeking a good reputation at the expense of our values, mission, and calling from Godmight suggest that we’re veering into “woe” territory.
Avoiding that requires being grounded in who we are and Whose we are. Studying the Bible can help us figure out what God values. Jesus announced his mission in our reading from a few weeks ago:
1. To bring good news to the poor, (like the Beatitudes)
2. Proclaim release to the captivesand recovery of sight to the blind,
3. Set free those who are oppressed,
4. And proclaim the year of the Lord’s favor
And plenty of other passages and stories help us see what God is up to in the world.
Praying and other spiritual practices can help us discern what God is calling us to and how to participate in the Beloved Community in our daily lives.
It’s also important not to do this entirely alone. There’s certainly a place for silence and solitude in spiritual practice and study, but God also made us for community. That’s why we meet to worship and do life together as a congregation.
Our church council did some great work together at our council retreat last weekend. We spent time discerning our values as a congregation. We narrowed it down to the top three we felt God calling us to: service, compassion, and inclusion.
And we updated our mission statement to reflect these values: “Called to be the heart of Christ caring for our neighbors through service, compassion, and inclusion.”
Don’t worry: we’ll still use our tagline of “the church that feeds people body and soul.” But our mission statement goes deeper into the specifics of how we do that.
Service, compassion, and inclusion all point us to community—not just giving charity to those people over there, but recognizing the image of God in every person, serving our neighbors as we would serve Jesus himself, entering deeply into life with our neighbors, and committing to creating a community where everyone belongs just as they are and not expecting them to conform to a certain mold.
That’s difficult and noble work. It’s work worthy of the Beloved Community, which Jesus is inviting everyone into in his teaching today.
Beloved Community is Good News for the impoverished, hungry, hurting, and excluded parts of ourselves. And it’s challenging news for the rich, full, comfortable, and reputable parts of ourselves.
There’s a saying that originally referred to newspapers but is often used about preaching: that it’s to comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable. Jesus exemplifies that in this teaching.
He reminds those who are hurting and excluded in this world of the Good News that God is with them, and he warns those who are comfortable and privileged in this life of the bad news that they might be missing out on the Beloved Community. And for most of us, we might fall somewhere in between.
So receive the Good News that God is with you, Beloved, and God will always be with us as we figure out how to embody the Beloved Community through service, compassion, and inclusion—together.