You are called and anointed to share God’s heart and guts – the deep compassion and love of God – for all God’s children, and to be Christ in your world, for those children.
Pr. Joseph G. Crippen
The Third Sunday after Pentecost, Lect. 11 A
Texts: Matthew 9:35 – 10:23; Romans 5:1-8
Beloved in Christ, grace to you, and peace in the name of the Father, and of the + Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen
Jesus was torn up inside by love.
Gut-wrenching, gut-twisting love, that’s compassion in Greek. That’s what Jesus felt as he saw these huge crowds who showed up everywhere. So many broken people, so many people crushed by the world, and all wanted what Jesus was giving. And he loved them so much. So he healed people everywhere he went. He proclaimed the Good News of God’s reign, God’s love for them. But there were so many. Every day, more and more heard, more and more came.
It was almost more than Jesus could handle. Correct that. It was more than Jesus could handle. Changing the metaphor from sheep to harvest, he told the women and men following him he needed more workers like him to go into these fields, to these flocks. To embody the same gut-wrenching love he had, become Christ as he is, so all could be reached.
Embodied compassion is still the job Christ needs done. Now in your body and mine.
It’s a job that needs human contact, human touch. It’s why the Triune God first came as a human among us. It couldn’t be taught as a lesson. God came to us in person to show this gut-wrenching love in person. To be God’s peace, in person. To be God’s healing, in person. To embrace, to kiss, to love, to touch. It’s the only way anyone knows love is real.
And there are so many sheep without a shepherd, harassed and helpless ones, Christ called you in your baptism to be God’s embodied compassion. So all can be embraced in God’s love.
Look at the job Jesus sends the disciples to do today.
“As you go,” Jesus says, “proclaim the good news, ‘The reign of heaven has come near.’ Cure the sick, raise the dead, cleanse the lepers, cast out demons. As you enter people’s homes, greet them with God’s peace.” Jesus doesn’t send them to make sure everyone’s following the rules, everyone’s doctrine is correct. Jesus doesn’t send them out to bash other people’s experiences. He sends them to do something that only can be done in person, in real bodies.
Christ sends them out, sends you out, to be the personal embodiment of God’s love in the world. To proclaim the Good News in your body, your words, your life, that God’s love is for all. To bring healing in a world of sickness. Life in a world of death. To stand against evil and the demonic and drive it out where you can. To speak God’s peace in all you do. There are just too many who need God’s love for one – even God-with-us – to reach personally. Your body, your person, is desperately needed. All ours are.
And this heart you are called to be loves all without judgment.
Jesus looks at the crowds, harassed and helpless, like sheep without a shepherd, and is torn up inside with love for them. For all of them. He doesn’t think, “well, that sheep kind of deserves the mess he’s in. And that one is never kind to others. That one always screws things up. And that one’s just different from the others.”
No. Christ loves the whole crowd to the depths of his guts. It’s the miracle Paul declares today that forever proves God’s love: no matter how sinful, rebellious, stupid, mistake-prone you are, I am, God sees only love. And came as Christ so you could know that.
So as your heart beats with God’s heart, as your guts twist in love alongside God’s guts, this is the love you’re bearing: a love that will not stop, will not rest, until all God’s children are found, healed, brought home. Until all are safe and fed and cared for. No exceptions. No exclusions.
This call is risky, and Jesus warns you of that, too.
Maybe you and I will never stand trial for our faith, but Jesus knew some of these women and men would. It’s likely that anyone who bears God into the world will face setbacks and rejection.
Not everyone will be receptive to your God-beating heart and what it leads you to do. If driving out demons leads you to political actions, you most certainly will face pushback. If reaching out to the sheep God shows you leads you to changing things about your life that make other people uncomfortable, you’ll hear about it. And so many who need God’s love are vulnerable ones who are being targeted today for hate and even death. Standing in love with them will put a target on you. Even the ones you greet in God’s peace might reject that peace.
So be prepared for that. But if someone throws your peace onto the ground, Christ says, it will return to you. You still get to have God’s peace, that can’t be taken away. And shaking the dust off your feet isn’t answering rejection with rejection. It’s just a reminder that you don’t need to carry your rejections with you as you go forward as Christ. Shake them off and move on.
Christ sends out these twelve, and later 70, and after Pentecost more than 120, and now millions, knowing his gut-wrenching love got him killed. So if you bear the kind of love God has in your own body, all kinds of sacrifices are going to be asked of you, too.
But you’re embodying God, which means God is in you.
Which means you are not alone. Jesus says, “don’t worry what you’ll say – the Spirit will give you all the words you need.” When you wonder, “what will this mean for me today and tomorrow? What am I supposed to do?”, the Spirit will give you all the help and guidance you need to figure that out.
Paul proclaims today that God’s love has been poured into your hearts by the Holy Spirit! Poured into your heart to join your heart, your guts, your hands, your voice, your life, your love, to God’s. To change you. So that healing can transform sickness in this world, life can change death, demons can be driven out.
There’s one more thing: you don’t have to do everything.
These first twelve were only sent to their Jewish siblings for now. Christ’s mission was to the whole world. But this first time, Jesus said, “don’t go to the Gentiles or Samaritans yet.” They weren’t ready to do that.
So, you get baby steps, too. Until you get better and better at bearing God. Until your heart and guts more instinctively react to the world as the Triune God’s do, and you more and more sense the Spirit.
Maybe you’ll never feel you’re good at this. But God’s Spirit is going to do this, and you’ve been called to be this. You were anointed for this. And you are loved with the same gut-wrenching love of God that God is hoping you’ll have for the other sheep, the ripe fields.
So that all will know that love of God now and always.
In the name of the Father, and of the + Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen