Pentecost 15
September 25th, 2011
“Mind Changing”
Today's Gospel reading from Matthew takes place during Holy Week. It was after the Triumphal Entry on Palm Sunday, when Jesus rode on a donkey and signaled with powerful symbolic action his arrival as the Messiah. It was also after his cleansing of the temple, driving out the money-changers. And while there he also healed some who were blind and lame. By word and deed Jesus was exerting his authority, his rightful authority, as the Son of Man and the Son of God come to His holy city.
Oh, and those of human authority didn't
like it too much. The scribes and pharisees tried to trick him, trip
him up in his words. Instead they showed themselves to be the fools.
Outfoxed by the creator of foxes and pharisees. Jesus has authority
to do these things and much more. He even has authority to lay down
his life and take it up again, as he soon would. He has authority to
forgive sins, and delegates that to his church and her pastors. But
he doesn't answer to human blowhards and pompous men who think
themselves something when they are nothing. He will not be fooled.
But Jesus still doesn't write them off
entirely. He tells them a parable, which, had they ears to hear,
would have set them in the right direction: The owner of a vineyard
has two sons, and tells them both to go work in the vineyard. The
first son says he won't, but changes his mind and goes. The second
son says he will go, but never does. Now which of the two did the
will of his Father?
The question behind the question isn't
about the 2 sons, it's about what it means to be a son in the
vineyard. It's about what it means for you to do the will of God,
and to be a child of God. It's a comparison between people who think
they have their act together, like the pharisees and scribes, and
those those who change their minds and actually do God's will.
The pharisees were all talk. If you'd
ask them how well they keep God's law, they'd likely tell you about
all their good works. They'd tell you how they carefully keep the
law and live a holy life. They give what the law requires, do what
the law demands, learn it, know it, and follow it. Their
self-assured piety and arrogant self-righteousness would hardly know
any bounds. And they certainly would have given themselves good
marks compared with the tax collectors and prostitutes.
But for all the appearance of goodness
and holiness, that's not what was in their hearts. And that's not
how God saw them. And that's not what they looked like compared with
the perfect standard of his law.
You can see where we're going, cant
you? What good church going member of Grace Lutheran wouldn't also
tell you all about their credentials? I go to church, I volunteer, I
give what I can. I try to be nice to people. I'm not perfect, but
I'm better than those perverts and criminals. I don't beat my wife.
I pay my bills. I'm a good citizen. And while all those things are
nice and fine, they amount to little more than talk, talk. For that
perfect standard of God's law leaves us nowhere to hide our sins.
The darkness of our hearts isn't dark enough to disguise the evil
that lurks within, and often peaks out into out lives. We may do a
pretty good job of keeping up appearances, but what sinner doesn't
say one thing and do another – when it comes to our own
righteousness.
Jesus compares the two sons, and what
do we see? the one who says the right thing – who appears to be
together – who tells his Father what he wants to hear – but then
does his own thing. But then there's that other who says he won't
but later changes his mind and does his father's will. Changes his
mind. In other words, repents.
That's what repent means – to turn
around, do an about face, to change one's mind, indeed, one's whole
orientation. It's not about doing penance, or making up for your
wrongs. It's a change of attitude or spirit – a turning away from
sin and toward Christ in faith. A turning from death to life. A
turning from falsehood to truth, from self-righteousness to God-given
righteousness.
This is why the tax collectors and
prostitutes are better off. Not because of their sin, but because of
their repentance. The pharisees had no repentance. John the Baptist
made it plain to them – Repent! Still, they didn't think they had
sins to repent for. But many big-time sinners who came to faith in
Jesus did. They came crawling and crying in humble faith, to the
only one who could and would forgive their grievous sins.
So which son did the Father's will?
The first. That they got right. But which kind of son will you be?
The one that is talk, talk? The one
that claims a righteousness of your own? The one that says, “I
keep the commandments” and lives such a lie?
Or will you be honest that you haven't, that you don't, that you can't do God's will? Will you admit your sins, your wicked thoughts and words and deeds, and bring them to where they belong? To the cross of Jesus Christ? Repent. Change your mind. Let go, turn away from those sins, and turn in faith toward Christ who is our only righteousness.
And he will, and he does forgive you!
This is his will. This is God's will. That sinners repent and
believe in Christ. You want to do the will of God? It's not about
the illusion that you can keep his commands. It's about the
repentance and faith that comes as a gift from God himself – that
he changes us, changes our minds and hearts and spirits – from
utterly lost sinners to dearly beloved children. From dead men
walking to eternally living.
Oh, and one other thing. Jesus still
shares a table with repentant sinners. Come receive his gifts today,
child of God, here at his altar. Amen.