Jesus' Attitude to Sinners
Sermon preached by
The Reverend Peter Littleford
16 September 2001
Gospel Reading Luke Chapter 15:1-10
Now the tax collectors and "sinners" were all gathering
round to hear him. But the Pharisees and the teachers of the law muttered,
"This man welcomes sinners, and eats with them." Then Jesus told them this
parable: "Suppose one of you has a hundred sheep and loses one of them. Does
he not leave the ninety-nine in the open country and go after the lost sheep
until he finds it? And when he finds it, he joyfully puts it on his
shoulders and goes home. Then he calls his friends and neighbours together
and says, 'Rejoice with me; I have found my lost sheep.' I tell you
that in the same way there will be more rejoicing in heaven over one sinner
who repents than over ninety-nine righteous persons who do not need to
repent. "Or suppose a woman has ten silver coins and loses one. Does she not
light a lamp, sweep the house and search carefully until she finds it? And
when she finds it, she calls her friends and neighbours together and says,
'Rejoice with me; I have found my lost coin.' In the same way, I tell
you, there is rejoicing in the presence of the angels of God over one sinner
who repents."
I don't know about you, but what stands out to me, in today's Gospel
reading, is the great difference between Jesus and the religious leaders of
his day and their attitude towards sinners.
The scribes and the Pharisees felt that those who had broken the
religious and moral laws of Judaism were beyond the pale: they were to be
excluded, ostracised and rejected. Their attitude was not only judgemental,
not only condemnatory, but was also self-righteous. It was as though they
had established a stockade with the righteous safely on the inside and
sinners outside. The righteous would be safe from becoming contaminated by
the unrighteous.
How different this was from the attitude of Jesus! Luke tells us that,
without condoning sin, Jesus welcomed sinners and offered them forgiveness
and love, and gave them understanding and care. Like a magnet, he drew the
most despised members of society towards himself and valued their
friendship. But, of course, he did more than that! Jesus not only welcomed
sinners when they came to him, but he took the trouble to seek them out and
meet them. No wonder that when the scribes and Pharisees saw Jesus in the
company of such people they got very indignant and cross.
In response to their criticism, Jesus told people the parables of the
lost sheep, and the lost coin. Elsewhere he also told them the parable of
the lost son. All these familiar stories illustrate Jesus' relationship with
the 'lost', and point us towards the central tenets of his gospel. But more:
they also set markers for our relationship with God and with each other,
today and every day.
Jesus welcomed sinners because he believed that God is love and that his
ministry was to give human, visible expression to that love. For Jesus,
God's love was more concerned with forgiveness and reconciliation and new
life, a fresh start, than with condemnation, punishment and retribution.
God's love doesn't deal with categories of people, whether they are
righteous or unrighteous, but it is offered to every individual, to each one
of us, here and everywhere else. There is worth in everybody. God's love
takes the initiative in seeking out the loveless, the hard to love, and
recognises their potential to become what they are: the children of God.
This is the gospel for which Jesus lived and died. This is the gospel which
so angered the scribes and the Pharisees who failed to see that, in Jesus,
the old covenant of the law with its impossible demands had been replaced,
superseded by the new covenant of God's grace. This is the gospel, which, in
Christ's day and ever since, has transformed human lives into the living
image of Jesus himself. The lost are found and the angels rejoice.
For us, as Christians, these parables are central to us understanding of
the task which lies ahead. They clearly demonstrate the nature of God's
relationship with us, one which we need to express in our life and work
today. The key is that God has no favourites. No one is more loved than
another; no one is dismissed as 'worthless', the lesser half of no use at
all. All are of equal value to God.
In our society, where we quickly categorise people, this is hard to
accept. God's love is not influenced by the things that influence ours -
race, gender, religion, politics, social standing, profession, or income to
name but a few. God's love is not even affected by a person's moral
standing, a truth which sometimes, like the Pharisees, we find hard to
accept. Don't the good-living, upright, churchgoing citizens deserve more at
God's hands than those (by our standards) who ignore or break God's
commandments?
Sometimes it seems, on reading the scriptures, that God's love for the
sinful, the despised, the marginalised and the outcasts of society is
greater than for people 'of our sort'. I don't know, but could that be
because those who are denied love by their fellows are more ready to receive
God's love when it is freely offered? Or could it be that God, who sees into
all our hearts, sees the hidden sinfulness of 'respectable' people - the
greed, the pride, the envy, the self-righteousness - and judges it to be on
a par with the sinfulness of those who openly flout the moral code?
In God's eyes all are 'lost', but all are loved; for to describe anything
as lost means that we have invested it with value. It is this inclusive love
which must be the heartbeat of the church as it worships and witnesses to
Christ. No one, whether within or outside the fellowship, should experience
cold rejection at our hands and none must be cold-shouldered or refused
practical care. Different though we may be from one another in a variety of
ways, we are all, by the fact of our common humanity, created, loved and
accepted by God as we are.
Equally important is the truth that God never calls off his search for
us. Wherever we are, whatever our need, God seeks us out to bless us with an
experience of his love. We may ignore the evidence of his presence, reject
him or, as Peter did of Christ on the Sea of Galilee (Luke 5:8) feel
unworthy of him, but still he comes. He takes the initiative and comes to us
in scripture, in people, in day-to-day events and in a multitude of other
ways; he leaves no avenue unexplored, no door untried.
Well, what about us today? I think that this divine searching should
reflect in our actions. We need to commit ourselves actively to the
community around us and so proclaim the gospel in word and deed. And let us
not be afraid in our church, for the sake of Christ, to offer people his
love in baptising their children, marrying them, burying their loved ones.
Welcoming them, rather rejecting them when are brave enough to come across
our threshold.
From the loving and the seeking it follows that when God finds us we
become at home with him and with one another. When, in Jesus' stories, the
lost sheep, the lost coin, and the lost son were found, they were restored
to where each belonged - to the flock, to the women's treasures, and to the
family. When God's love meets a loving response from us, then we, too, have
restored the right relationship with him and all who believe in him. The
gospel is, therefore, both individual and social; it proclaims that we are
of supreme worth in God's sight, and also, that our worth is realised in a
loving community, the family of God. No Christian stands alone:
reconciliation, belonging and rejoicing are still our Christian experience.
When his opponents called Jesus 'the friend of sinners' they intended it
to be an insult, but he took it as a compliment. His mission was prospering!
The lost were being sought and found, the sinners saved. Today, though we
may express it differently, the church's mission is the same: to give value
to every individual. Without exception, everybody is loved by God, sought by
him, and offered a place in his family. In that is life for us all.
Amen
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