June 28, 2026 - Matthew 10:34-42 - Proper 8
It feels like there are many people today who donât take the time to think things through to their conclusion. Itâs probably always been true, but it seems like itâs gotten worse lately. Maybe itâs just because Iâm older and now I have an obligation to berate younger generations for trying to do things without the hard-won wisdom Iâve acquired. It might also be a bit of unhealthy pride on my part.
Itâs easy to go through life without digging too deeply into things. You donât really need to know everything, you just need enough to get you by. As long as your ideas about the world more or less work, then why waste time trying to get more complex than that? Back in his day, Isaac Newton figured out the basic principles of gravity and why the heavenly bodies move the way they do in their orbits and why apples fall to the ground. His principles work and they make sense. Albert Einstein came along many years later and showed that Newtonâs ideas were rather simplistic. Gravity is actually a lot more complicated than that. But, most people donât really know what Einstein said about gravity, wouldnât be able to understand it even if they did know, and probably donât need to know. If you work at NASA or some high end physics lab smashing particles together, Einsteinâs work might be very important. For the rest of us? Itâs just more than we need.
Most people probably treat God the same way. They donât have a very sophisticated understanding of God or what heâs all about. There are just the bland and generally accepted notions about God that are floating around that many buy into. It could be God, the universe, mother nature, or anything else someone reveres. For many people, the world works with a karma system. If you do good things, good things will happen to you. If you do bad things, bad things will happen to you.
This works pretty well, most of the time. It helps you remember that if you want to do well in life and have good things happen to you, then you need to be doing good things yourself. Donât be a crook and expect life to go well. Occasionally youâll run into trouble with this system. Youâll encounter people in your life who are good, give you the shirt off their back, kind of people who just canât seem to catch a break. You run into other people who are just rotten to the core but who cruise through life without a care in the world. How do you account for this? Well, this karma system gives you a possible answer. Just wait. For the good people, good times are coming. The longer you have to wait, the better the reward will be. Just trust the universe to balance the scales and you wonât be disappointed. For the bad folks, well, just wait. As my Paul would say, âTheyâll get their comeuppance.â The universe will balance the scales there too.
There are plenty of things I might encounter in my life that will challenge this worldview. I can find endless examples of good people suffering and bad people prospering, but I donât really have to deal with all of that unless I want to. I can just keep putting it off and saying that theyâll all get what they deserve at some point, good or bad. That changes when it isnât out there, itâs right here. Iâm no longer looking at other people and seeing where they fall on the karma spectrum. Iâm looking at my own life and seeing how unbalanced the scales are.
If I were to pick any part of Jesusâ life as the one people are most likely to know, Christian or non-Christian, it probably isnât going to Easter or Good Friday. Itâs probably Christmas. As commercialized as it has become, the religious foundation for Christmas still peeks through, even outside of the church. Most of the music you hear around Christmas time is Jingle Bells, Winter Wonderland, and that sort of thing, but every so often youâll still hear Away in a Manger, Silent Night and other familiar hymns like it tell the story of Christmas, of the savior being born into the world. You may not understand what heâs all about, what heâs saving us from, why he had to be born, and all of that, but youâll probably at least get the idea that heâs here to help good people. âGlory to God in the highest, and on earth peace among those with whom he is pleased!â the angels say. How wonderful! What could be better than that? Hereâs someone who is coming to help balance the scales, to ensure good people get the reward they are due.
There are a lot of people who donât see any major difference between Christianity and other religions of the world because, in their minds, all religions kind of do the same thing. They all follow this same karma type system. Do good, get rewarded. Do evil, get punished. Everything else just makes things more complicated than it needs to be. As I said though, even many who call themselves Christian operate this way too. You can cling to that mindset until you run into a situation that just refuses to follow the rules. For all of the good youâve done, you canât seem to catch a break. It ends up being one disaster after another and thereâs no indication that will ever change. When the problem is out there, happening to some other person, you can let it slide. You just shrug your shoulders and acknowledge thereâs probably more to the situation than you understand. It isnât your life, so it isnât really your problem. When itâs your life and your problems are right there in your face every day and they refuse to go away and refuse to follow your simplistic rules, youâre left with two options. Either acknowledge that your system doesnât work, or start shoving things into your system to make them work.
Jesus, the one Isaiah prophesied as the Prince of Peace, the one angels hailed as the bringer of peace now says some disturbing things. At the beginning of Matthew 10 the Twelve are getting just a taste of what life will be like at Pentecost. Jesus sends them out. They are apostles now, just for a short while. They are able to do some of the same amazing things Jesus does but only because he has given them the authority to do so. They will heal the sick, cleanse lepers, cast out demons, even raise the dead, along with the most important part of the assignment, to proclaim the coming of the kingdom of God. Our Gospel reading for this morning comes as Jesus describes what they should expect as they go out among the towns proclaiming the message. Theyâll do wondrous works. Theyâll do miracles that could only come from God. Theyâll help people in ways no average person ever could. Despite this, people will be hostile. People will attack them and drive them out. These deputized apostles will be doing good things, some of the best things anyone could do for another person and theyâll be hated for it. Theyâll suffer for it. Jesus is supposed to bring peace. Heâs supposed to forge unity and heal divisions.
Now Jesus is saying all of that is garbage. Thereâs no loophole here. Thereâs no translation error. Jesus doesnât come to bring peace. He comes to bring a sword. He brings division. He says all of that, but in the very next breath it sounds like weâre back to the whole âkarmaâ thing with people getting the reward they deserve. What gives? What is this Jesus guy all about? He canât reward good people while also bringing violence and divisions. Those things donât go together. Yet, this is the guidance he gives his followers as he sends them out. This is their first taste of what life will be like for them after his ascension, after Pentecost, after they begin doing his work in earnest. Whatâs worse, Jesus doesnât describe this as a temporary situation. This is who he is and this is what he does.
Jesus is addressing one of the oldest questions sinful humans have ever asked. âWhy do bad things happen to good people?â If Jesus is supposed to be good, then he canât be bringing bad things. That doesnât work. It doesnât make sense. For many people, some of whom Iâve dealt with myself, thereâs no reason to dig any further. Get rid of it. Throw it out. Donât bother having anything more to do with this Jesus guy. Everything he says is garbage. Why fight this Christianity nonsense? Why waste any more time with God?
We all have the same problem. Itâs so much easier to blame someone or something else instead of admitting that we might have been wrong about something. Christians especially seem to suffer, which goes against all of the karma type ideas we have about how everything ought to work. It all seems wrong and I donât want anything to do with it.
No, it doesnât make sense, not unless youâre willing to dig a little deeper, not unless youâre willing to look at the world for what it is, and not just the world, but you yourself. Christianity is both a religion of justice, of rewarding the good and righteous, and punishing evildoers. At the same time it is also a religion of profound injustice, bringing suffering to the good and righteous.
The fatal flaw in the karma view of the world is the assumption that we are good and therefore deserving of good things. We downplay sin, both in the world and in ourselves. Jesus doesnât come to cause division. It is a natural consequence of him being in the world. The world is fundamentally unjust and the good suffer all the time. The world is disordered and chaotic. It is cruel and vengeful. Karma likes Christmas. It likes the peaceful scene of Jesus, Mary, and Joseph gathered together. It likes shepherds and angels. It likes all of that. Karma canât make sense of Good Friday. The best among us ends up suffering the worst. It doesnât fit. It doesnât work. It shouldnât happen and yet it did. Jesus shows the injustice of the world. He shows the injustice we permit and even support. He shows us what we deserve and where we really rate on the scale.
Where we like to close our eyes to the world and pretend it all works the way we think it should, Jesus shows us the honest and painful reality. The world is broken. We are broken. We are sinful, corrupt, unjust, and cruel. We deserve every punishment that comes our way.
Still, Jesus is the Prince of Peace and the angels that celebrated his birth werenât confused. Jesus does bring peace, and a sword. As with so many other things Jesus does, things that seem like the should be opposites are somehow brought together. It isnât logical, but it still is.
Divisions between Godâs people and the rest of the world can be seen everywhere, even in a single family. Strife and suffering afflict the godly around the world. The cross of Christ stands before us as the stark message of injustice in the world and the suffering that awaits all of Godâs people in this world. It shouldnât happen, but it does. Sin shouldnât be here, but it is and we are complicit in the damage it does. Good Friday shows us that all of our notions of rewards and punishments donât fit the world. It shows us what we really deserve.
Then comes Easter, and there we see a different message entirely. God is a just God. He punishes the evildoer and rewards the righteous. Jesus was righteous and received a righteous personâs reward. He receives eternal life. Yet, here God also has mercy. Mercy and justice are two things that oppose one another as well, but God is both and does both. Where many look at Good Friday and Easter and are confused because it doesnât fit their system. They reject it because it doesnât work. We see how Good Friday and Easter take place because God carries out injustice not against us, but for us. Jesus willingly takes the just punishment we deserve. With Jesus, everything is turned upside down. Thereâs no reason for him to do it. It doesnât make sense, but that doesnât stop him. He does what doesnât make sense and he does it out of love, because in earning a righteous personâs reward, he can then give that reward to all who look to him.
He offers peace. Jesus offers a peace that exists right now. It is a peace that comes from knowing that, despite what I may suffer here, my eternity is assured through Jesus. It is a peace that comes from knowing that I am loved and cared for, that God is in control and that I have truly nothing to worry about. This peace is also an eternal peace. The same peace I have now will continue on into eternity. Itâs not just that thereâs nothing I need to worry about now, itâs that thereâs nothing I need to worry about ever again.
The Twelve will see divisions as they go out sharing the Gospel, and so will we. We are tempted to keep silent and not cause a fuss. We donât want to bring strife. Jesus says something here we all should take to heart. The divisions are already there. They just donât become apparent until those who reject God are confronted by his message of grace. Those divisions will be there whether we speak or not. We canât change that there are divisions, but we can offer the peace of God to those who will receive it. The righteousness isnât ours. That righteousness is given to us, and with it, the reward for righteousness. Peace with God. Peace with your neighbor. Peace with the world, now and forever.
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