Luke 14:25-33; Romans 6:1-4
Presented May 23, 2010, by Joel Kline
Pentecost Sunday
In his book Let Your Life Speak Quaker author Parker Palmer suggests that when we are grappling with our calling in life—our vocation, our purpose, our identity—it is important that we pay attention to our deepest longings. Writes Palmer, “I must listen for…the standards by which I cannot help but live if I am living my own life.” For those of us who embrace the Christian faith, there is a recognition that the values and standards upon which we cannot help but live—these values and norms are integrally intertwined with our identity. Many would portray the Christian faith as something which is imposed upon us from the outside, with God compelling us to do what we would never choose to do, were God to leave us alone. The gospel—the good news—Jesus proclaimed does indeed confront us with high standards, but God is not an angry tyrant forcing us to embrace life in God’s realm; rather, God invites us to take hold of that which will enable us to more fully become the persons God created us to be.
At one level today’s Gospel lesson seems quite severe, and we could very well assume Jesus to be a hard taskmaster as he urges the pathway of radical obedience. This text, frequently associated in Church of the Brethren tradition with the rigors of baptism, reminds us that there is a counting of the cost of discipleship to be done. Strong language, with Luke telling us that Jesus even asserts that whoever would follow him must “hate father and mother, spouse and children, brothers and sisters, yes, and even life itself” (Luke 14:26). Matthew, in his telling of the gospel, finds that language far too severe, suggesting that Jesus said instead, “Whoever loves father or mother more than me is not worthy of me; and whoever loves son or daughter more than me is not worthy of me” (Matthew 10:27). Whatever the original language, Jesus—the one who ever challenges us to extend hospitality to the stranger, to love our enemies, to take the risk of binding the wounds of the broken, to go the extra mile in relationship—this Jesus is not asking us literally to hate anyone. Rather, Jesus is urging us to take a serious look at our priorities, at where our primary loyalty in life lies. Jesus reminds us that he is setting before us another way of living—a life centered in justice and peace, mercy and compassion, self-giving love and grace beyond measure. And as we pay attention to our deepest yearnings for this new way of living, we find ourselves drawn to life with a generous God at the very center of our living. We do indeed find ourselves choosing a new set of values, a complete re-ordering of our priorities.