Proverbs 31-12
Psalm 119: 33-40
2 Timothy 3:1-17
Matthew 9:9-13
T
he readings this morning are not the usual Sunday lectionary readings, but the readings for the Feast Day of St. Matthew. Matthew is both an Apostle and an Evangelist. He is identified with Matthew the tax collector or publican, mentioned in todayâs Gospel reading (Matt. 9:9). Matthew is also traditionally identified as the author of the Gospel identified by his name, the first book in the New Testament. Many modern scholars question Matthewâs authorship, but for the convenience of this sermon, I am going to assume that both the converted tax collector and the writer of the Gospel are the same person. Iâll be focusing on the first Gospel because it is the book that has really given Matthew his influence in the church.
Matthewâs Gospel was the most popular of the four Gospels in the early church, and it has continued to be influential, both in the history of the church, and even in modern secular culture. After hearing the Gospel reading from Matthew on the Commissioning of the Twelve Apostles at a Sunday mass in February 1208, Francis of Assisi decided to devote himself to a life of poverty, and composed a simple âRuleâ for his mendicant order â to follow the teachings of Jesus and to walk in his footsteps. Thomas Aquinas claimed that the entirety of Christian ethics could be summarized in Jesusâ Sermon on the Mount in Matthewâs Gospel. At the time of the Reformation, Mennonites found their inspiration for pacifism in Jesusâ commands in the Sermon on the Mount to not resist evil and to turn the other cheek. Anglican and founder of Methodism John Wesley found his doctrine of Christian perfection or âentire sanctificationâ in Jesusâ command in the Sermon on the Mount: âYou therefore must be perfect, as your heavenly Father is perfectâ (Matt. 5: 48). Mahatma Gandhi found the inspiration for his philosophy of non-violence in the Sermon on the Mount.
Even modern secularists have found themselves coming back again and again to Matthewâs Gospel. In 1964, Italian film director Pier Paolo Pasolini made a film titled in its English translation, The Gospel According to St. Matthew. In 1971, John-Michael Tebelak wrote a script that became the off-Broadway musical and later Hollywood film Godspell, based on Matthewâs Gospel. Jesus of Montreal is a 1989 Canadian film about a group of actors who stage a modern version of the Passion Play. As they continue to enact the play, the actors lives are transformed as they begin to resemble Jesus and his followers. The Jesus of Jesus of Montreal is clearly the Jesus of Matthewâs Gospel.
For most Christians, Matthewâs Gospel is likely the one with which weâre most familiar. When we think of the Christmas story of the Magi, we think of Matthewâs Gospel. When we think of the Beatitudes, the Sermon on the Mount, and the Lordâs Prayer, we usually think of Matthewâs version, not the parallel versions found in Luke. So in addition to the writings of Paul, Matthewâs Gospel is perhaps the most influential book of the New Testament. It is through Matthewâs Gospel that most people have come to know the story of Jesus.
Despite the average Christianâs love for Matthewâs Gospel, it has sometimes been problematic for theologians, and we see the reasons why in todayâs lectionary readings. The Psalm reading is from an entire chapter extolling the glories of Old Testament law: âTeach me, O Lord, the way of your statutes; and I will keep it to the end. Give me understanding, that I may keep your law and observe it with my whole heart. Lead me in the path of your commandments, for I delight in itâ (Ps. 119:33-35). In the language of at least some Protestant theology, this is law, and, as the proverb goes: âLaw kills.â (What the apostle Paul actually wrote was âThe letter kills, and the Spirit gives lifeâ (2 Cor. 3:6), but Paul had not read modern New Testament scholars).
It is all too easy to read Matthewâs Gospel as an endorsement of a kind of earnest moralism that only compounds the problem of Old Testament Law, and even goes beyond it. Jesus says in the Sermon on the Mount, âDo not think that I have come to abolish the Law or the Prophets. I have come to fulfill themâ (Matt. 5:17). And, âunless your righteousness exceeds that of the scribes and Pharisees, you will never enter the kingdom of heavenâ (5:20). And, finally, âYou therefore must be perfect, as your heavenly Father is perfectâ (5:48).
Protestants have sometimes found this focus on good works in Matthewâs Gospel to be problematic, in tension with Paulâs doctrine of justification by faith alone, with Paulâs clear teaching: âFor by works of the law no human being will be justified in his sight, since through the law comes knowledge of sinâ (Rom. 3:20).
There is a kind of hermeneutic that resolves any tension between Paul and Matthew by reading Matthew in the light of Paul. For theologians like Reinhold Niebuhr, the point of Jesusâ teaching about the law and righteousness in the Sermon on the Mount is not to prescribe moral behavior which no one could possibly hope to carry out, but rather to do just the opposite â to make clear that no one could possibly be expected to do the kinds of things that Jesus demands in the Sermon on the Mount. In this reading, the whole point of the Sermon on the Mount is to proclaim what Niebuhr calls an âimpossible ethic,â to make demands so extreme that sinners can only recognize their utter inability to fulfill them, and thus finally be forced to throw themselves on the mercy of the gospel.
This would seem to leave us with an insuperable problem, however, a hermeneutic that puts this morningâs lectionary readings in conflict with one another other. Is the Christian gospel addressed to sinners, good news for those who know that they have failed to fulfill Godâs righteous demands, and are simply unable to do so? Or is the gospel good news for the righteous, for those like the Psalmist who ask to know Godâs commandments because they delight in them, who promise to keep Godâs law and observe it with their entire heart?
I would suggest that this dilemma is really a false dichotomy and a fairly serious misreading not only of Matthew, but of Paul. There is no hint in Matthewâs text that the Jesus of the Sermon on the Mount thought that he was making demands that he did not expect his disciples to emulate. Indeed, to the contrary, Jesus seems to be making demands that he expects his disciples to follow. But Niebuhrâs reading also fails to explain why the Jesus of Matthewâs Gospel has been so appealing to readers throughout the ages, from church fathers and medievals like St. Francis to the modern screen writers of Godspell or Jesus of Montreal, who admire Matthewâs Jesus as someone to be loved and celebrated, not someone to throw us into despair of our own righteousness.
In the rest of this sermon, Iâm going to engage in a kind of summary of something like âLaw and Gospelâ in Matthewâs Gospel. I can only give an outline, but I want to make clear that Matthewâs Gospel is not mistitled. Matthewâs Gospel really is good news, not only for sinners, but also for saints, if there are any among us.
New Testament scholars sometimes suggest that Matthew portrays Jesus as a ânew Moses,â and the Sermon on the Mount as a kind of âNew Law.â This is not incorrect, but I think it is the wrong place to start. It tempts us to read Matthew as a kind of moralist. I think that the proper place to begin is rather with Matthewâs understanding of God. Nothing Jesus says or does in Matthewâs Gospel makes sense apart from what Jesus tells us about the God who is his Father.
It is well known that the God in Matthewâs Gospel is the Jewish God of the Old Testament. Matthewâs Gospel is full of statements like âThis was done to fulfill what was written inâ followed by an Old Testament citation. But just as important as the Old Testament fulfillment is that God is described throughout Matthewâs Gospel as the Creator who loves his creation, and exercises providence over it. In the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus tells us not to be anxious about our lives, what we will eat or drink because God our heavenly Father will feed us and cloth us just as he feeds the birds of the air and clothes the lilies of the field. Against our worries, Jesus says: âSeek first the kingdom of God and his righteousness, and all of these things will be added to youâ (Matt. 6: 33).
I would suggest that this understanding of divine providence is even a clue to Matthewâs reading of the fulfillment of Old Testament prophecies. The Creator God who watches over and cares for his creation is the same God who was at work in his covenant with Israel, and is now at work in Jesus.
This God who is the Father and Creator not only watches over and cares for those who follow Jesus, but even those who do not. Followers of Jesus are called to love their enemies, and to pray for their persecutors that we may be sons of our Father in heaven, who âmakes his sun rise on the evil and on the good and sends rain on the just and the unjustâ (Matt. 5:45). The context makes clear that this is what Jesus means when he says that we should be âperfect as your heavenly Father is perfectâ (Matt. 5:48) This is not a call to moralist perfectionism, but a call to love others as God our Father loves us, to love even our enemies. So this is the first theme. The God of Matthewâs Gospel is the loving Father who cares for and watches over all of creation, and all people, not only those who are good, but also the evil.
Next, this Creator God is the Father of Jesus, and this God has come among us in the person of his Son. It is not just that Jesus is a ânew Moses,â a law-giver, but that Jesus is Godâs personal presence, and God is like Jesus. At the very beginning of Matthewâs Gospel, an angel appears to Joseph, engaged to his betrothed, Mary, and tells Joseph in a dream that Maryâs son will be named Jesus because âhe will save his people from their sins.â Then comes the traditional formula. This was done to full what the Lord had spoken by the prophet: âThe virgin shall conceive and bear a son, and they shall call his name, Immanuel,â which Matthew reminds us means âGod with usâ (Matt. 1:20-23).
Throughout Matthewâs Gospel, Jesus plays this role of âGod with us.â The providence that Jesusâ loving Father exercises over creation, Jesus now exercises in relation to his followers. Jesus appeals to his own intimate knowledge of his Father: âAll things have been handed over to me by my Father, and no one knows the Son except the Father, and no one knows the Father except the Son and anyone to whom the Son chooses to reveal him.â Immediately following this verse is Jesusâ invitation, found only in Matthewâs Gospel: âCome to me, all who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you, and learn from me, for I am gentle and lowly in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy, and my burden is lightâ (Matt. 11:27-29).
Jesus speaks of his relationship to his church applying this same imagery of divine providence to himself: âAgain I say to you, if two of you agree on earth about anything they ask, it will be done for them by my Father in heaven. For where two or three are gathered in my name, there am I among themâ (Matt. 1:19-20). And the resurrected Jesus promises his followers that he will always be with them: âAnd behold, I am with you always, to the end of the ageâ (Matt. 28:20).
This is the second key point. The loving God who cares for and exercises providence over creation has now come personally among us in his Son Jesus. This means that Jesus is not only a teacher of a new law, and a moral example to his followers, but is himself the very presence of Godâs law, a law which is about Godâs good care for and love of his creatures, not only birds of the air and lilies of the field, but especially human beings, both the good and the evil.
And so, the third point. This is actually good news for sinners. Matthewâs Gospel really is a gospel, a euaggellon. We see this especially in todayâs Gospel reading that speaks of Jesusâ calling of Matthew the tax collector. If this story is autobiographical, if the apostle Matthew is also the author of the Gospel, it is even more significant because Matthew is telling the story of how, through Jesus, God was gracious to him.
In the story of Jesusâ calling of Matthew, we see a contrast between two different kinds of people, a group of good people and a group of bad people. Matthew actually describes the latter as âsinners.â After calling Matthew to follow him, Jesus is eating dinner with some of Matthewâs friends, and this offends the Pharisees, who object not directly to Jesus, but to his disciples: âWhy does your teacher eat with tax collectors and sinners?â Jesus does not use the occasion to perhaps enter into a post-modern discussion about moral relativity: âWho are we to say whether one group is morally superior to another?â Jesus rather acknowledges the legitimacy of the complaint, but then responds: âThose who are well have no need of a physician, but those who are sick. Go and learn what this means, âI desire mercy, and not sacrifice.â For I came to call not the righteous, but sinnersâ (Matt. 9:12-13).
So Matthewâs Gospel is good news for sinners, but thatâs not the whole story. The story of the calling of Matthew is not the story of Jesus going to hang out with a bunch of tax collectors. The Gospel reading begins with âAs Jesus passed from there, he saw a man called Matthew sitting at the tax booth, and he said to him, âFollow me.â And he rose and followed Himâ (Matt. 9:9).
Which bring us to our concluding point: In Matthewâs Gospel, salvation is not only about forgiveness of sins, but also about following Jesus. The gospel is good news for sinners, not only because Jesus forgives sins, but because Jesus does not leave us in our sins. I would say in this respect that Matthewâs understanding of discipleship is a kind of parallel to Paulâs understanding of justification by faith. For Paul, faith is not simply belief, but faithfulness, âfaith working through loveâ (Gal. 5:6). What Paul calls âfaith,â Matthew calls âfollowing Jesus,â and following Jesus means patterning our lives on Jesusâ own character, to live as Jesus lived.
Matthewâs Sermon on the Mount is a kind of commentary on how to live as Jesus lived, and how to imitate the character of the Creator God of providence who is Jesusâ Father. In this context, it is a misreading of the Sermon on the Mount to read it as a series of didactic commands, a list of rules to be followed. Rather, the Sermon is a description of the character of disciples who come to resemble Jesus as they follow in Jesusâ footsteps.
The Sermon begins with the Beatitudes â a series of topsy-turvy descriptions of the moral character of followers of Jesus, people who live in ways contrary to the values that most human beings rather naturally tend to embrace: âBlessed are the pure in heart,â âBlessed are the peacemakers,â âBlessed are the mercifulâ (Matt. 5:2-11).
Throughout the Sermon, Jesus speaks of a way of life that focuses not only on external moral behavior, but strikes to the very heart of the motivations behind our actions. We are not merely forbidden to kill, but to hate and to be angry without reason. We are not only expected to avoid the kinds of moral behavior that makes for scandalous headlines, but even to lust. We not only are forbidden to get even with those who do us wrong, but Jesus actually commands us to love our enemies, to forgive them, to wish them well (Matt. 5:21-48).
And of course, throughout Matthewâs Gospel, this is exactly what Jesus did, loving his enemies all the way to the cross. In a very real sense, the Sermon on the Mount is Christocentric. Just as Jesus emulates his Fatherâs providence by having mercy on sinners, so followers of Jesus are called to emulate Jesus by having mercy in our own treatment of others.
Another passage in Matthewâs Gospel â the parable of the Sheep and the Goats â makes clear how Jesus is central for our moral dealings with others. Jesus is not only Godâs presence among us, but Jesus is present also in all of those with whom we deal. How we treat the poor, the hungry, the thirsty, the imprisoned, the homeless, is indirectly a matter of dealing with Jesus. As Jesus says in the parable, âTruly I tell you, just as you did it to one of the least of these brothers and sisters of mine, you did it to meâ (Matt. 25:40).
In the end, there cannot really be any conflict between law and gospel if we follow Jesus. Law in Matthewâs Gospel is a reflection of Godâs love for and care for all of his creation, not only the good, but also sinners. As Immanuel, âGod with us,â Jesus reflects the character of his Father. He offers mercy to sinners like the tax collector Matthew, but he also calls to Matthew, âFollow meâ (Matt. 9:9).
This does of course result in a kind of paradox. On the one hand, Jesus in Matthewâs Gospel is absolutely uncompromising in his demands: âYou therefore must be perfect, as your heavenly Father is perfectâ (Matt. 5:48). On the other hand, the call to be perfect is precisely a call to sinners, a call to be merciful as the Father of Jesus is merciful, to be merciful to others as Jesus himself has been merciful to us. What could be heard as moralistic perfectionism is actually a call to consistency, to reflect the behavior of Jesus in our own lives as Jesus reflects the character of his Father, and as he shares that character with us.
How in the world are we expected to live this out? It would perhaps be easier if we could embrace only one of these truths: The gospel is about forgiveness of sins, so it is good news for sinners. Or rather, the gospel is about being perfect as God is perfect, so it is good news for good people.
What certainly seems to be a paradox is resolved in the character of Jesus himself. Jesus is the perfect image of his Father. Jesus is Immanuel, God with us. Jesusâ character is morally perfect because Jesusâ character is perfect love, the character of the Son who is the perfect reflection of the Father who sends sun and rain to both the just and the unjust. And because Jesus is perfect love, Jesus demonstrates that love to sinners â sinners like us â sinners to whom Jesus calls âFollow me.â
Paradoxical as it might seem. how these two qualities of perfect goodness and perfect mercy hold together in the life of Jesus, perhaps explains why Matthewâs Gospel continues to be so irresistible, why people as diverse as Francis of Assisi and people who make movies like Godpsell and Jesus of Montreal, keep coming back to Mathew. Despite the uncompromising character of Jesusâ call to discipleship, they find that call irresistible.
And if we read Matthewâs Gospel for ourselves, it is just possible that we may end up hearing Jesus call to us as well: âFollow me!â