Sermon on Luke 18:9-14
Pastor Jennifer Garcia
Today’s parable challenges our human categories.
The term “Pharisee” has come to be a derogatory term, largely due to the portrayal of Pharisees in the Gospels, but that’s not fair.
Our society has understandably become rather suspicious of authority figures, but when Jesus’ audience heard “Pharisee,” they would have thought of a well-respected religious leader, because that’s who Pharisees were. Think of maybe a mayor or a school principal or a well-regarded professor—someone trusted and up-standing.
And as for the tax collector, while no one today is excited to see an IRS agent, tax collectors in the first century were outright hated. They were known for skimming off the top for themselves, plus they were working for the Roman Empire—they were collaborators with the occupying enemy.
So, when Jesus started telling a story about a Pharisee and a tax collector, his audience would have understood the characters in this way: a Pharisee (yay!) and a tax collector (boo!).
But as ever, Jesus turned our human categories inside out.The Pharisee’s prayer conveys his inner self-righteousness and contempt for the tax collector, and the tax collector’s prayer conveys his remorse and desire for God’s mercy. Not everything is as it seems on the outside.
We humans tend towant to know the rules for getting ahead or doing the “right” thing. We also tend to judge other people for not doing those things.
Today is Reformation Sunday. It’s a celebratory day: we might wear red, we might belt out “A Might Fortress is our God,” this congregation hosts a really fun Oktoberfest event.
And it’s also a bittersweet day. Martin Luther didn’t want to start a new denomination. He wanted to reform problematic practices in the Church, not split it. There was a lot of violence in the wake of the Reformation.
So, today’s a day when we can celebrate what’s helpful in Luther’s work and that of those who have come afterwards. And we can grieve the animosity between followers of Jesus from different traditions that still persists today.
We can rejoice that we’re saved by God’s grace, not by anything we do. And also, we need to be careful not to pat ourselves on the back for having the “right” theology and find ourselves judging other denominations and even other faiths for believing the “wrong” things.
Not that we shouldn’t call out beliefs that harm people—we should. That’s part of loving our neighbor, especially neighbors who are marginalized and often hurt by people of faith.
But we also have to remember that no one has a complete and 100% correct understanding of God and the universe. God is way too big for that—thank goodness!
And we don’t have to have a perfect understanding—again, thank goodness!—because we’re saved by God’s grace.
We humans tend to judge others in areas that we’re self-conscious about. If we put our trust in God’s grace and love, we can let our judgment go.
But, the parable today sets a trap for Jesus’ audience and for us: the moment we start judging the Pharisee for judging the tax collector, we’re becoming judgmental just like the Pharisee! Funny how judgment becomes a vicious circle!
Our reading opens by naming that Jesus was telling this parable to people who “trusted in themselves that they were righteous and regarded others with contempt.”
John and Julie Gottman, incredible relationship researchers and psychologists, talk about Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse for relationships. These are behaviors that can predict the end of a relationship. They are: criticism, contempt, defensiveness, and stone-walling.
I’m not going to go into each of them—you can find a lot of great information about them online—but I want to share what their website says about contempt:
“When we communicate in this state, we are truly mean—we treat others with disrespect, mock them with sarcasm, ridicule, call them names, and mimic or use body language such as eye-rolling or scoffing. The target of contempt is made to feel despised and worthless.
Contempt goes far beyond criticism. While criticism attacks your partner’s character, contempt assumes a position of moral superiority over them.”[1]
Their description is in the context of a romantic relationship, but it shows how deadly contempt can be for any relationship between people.
This parable to reminds us how easy it is to fall into self-satisfaction and self-righteousness and then judgment and contempt for others. Jesus teaches us how to love our neighbor and how dangerous contempt is for our relationships with fellow beloved children of God.
So, we must be careful not to fall into contempt, even for the Pharisee in the parable. None of us have earned our way into God’s family. None of us are A+ students living a perfect moral life—because it’s not about that. It’s about God’s grace and love, which God gives freely and abundantly.
The Pharisee and the tax collector are caricatures that remind us that we don’t know what’s going on inside a person. Humans are complex. Rarely are our motives and behaviors entirely pure or selfish.
Luther described that with the paradox that we are simultaneously saints and sinners.Humans have the potential to do unspeakably mean and cruel things to each other and at the same time have the potential to act with selflessness, kindness, and compassion.
Even Luther, who wrote beautifully about God’s grace, translated the Bible into German so ordinary people could read it for themselves, and had a deep love for his family, also wrote really terrible things about Jewish people and incited violence against the poor during the Peasants’ Revolt.
We’re all a mixed bag. We’re all simultaneously saints and sinners.
Again, that doesn’t mean we shouldn’t hold people accountable for harmful behaviors, but we also have to be willing to recognize our own flaws and failings and rest in God’s mercy.
On this Reformation Sunday, we can rejoice in what’s life-giving about Luther’s legacy and Lutherans’ contributions to the Christian faith and the world.
And, we can grieve broken relationships between Christians and with other people of faith.
Remembering that we are all simultaneously saints and sinners, we can recognize that none of us has all the answers or a corner on right practice.
When we let go of judgment and contempt, God’s grace and mercy allow us to learn and respect how other people experience God, whether we agree or not.
We can lean on God’s grace to protect and save us.
One might even say: a mighty fortress is our God.
[1]https://www.gottman.com/blog/the-four-horsemen-recognizing-criticism-contempt-defensiveness-and-stonewalling/