February 5, 2023
St. John’s United Church of Christ, Union, Illinois
Isaiah 58:1-12; Matthew 5:13-20[1]
I used to read
science fiction comedy by Douglas Adams, about this average guy from a town in England
who discovers his best friend is actually from another planet. In one of the
novels, they have to park their spaceship in a town on Earth near a sporting
event. In order to keep the spaceship from being seen, they have to use an
invisibility shield. They wrap the ship in an energy field called “Somebody
Else’s Problem.”[2]
You see, when it’s somebody else’s problem, you don’t really notice what’s
going on and you can ignore it.
Now, as
Americans, we enjoy certain inalienable rights; and individual freedom and
opportunity are protected in our laws. The value that our society places on the
individual enables us to achieve incredible things, allows us to do and be our
best, and promises that every person has value – no one is expendable.
Those who
serve our country and protect those rights, particularly those in uniform, know
what it means to “Be all you can be.” And they deserve our thanks for their
service. Several years ago, I read an article by General Stanley McChrystal,
U.S. Army, retired, former Commander of U.S. Forces in Afghanistan. The
article, “Step Up for Your Country,” was published in the January 31st,
2011 copy of Newsweek. McChrystal
raised an important point about our rights and freedoms. He says, “As important
as those inalienable rights are, there are also inalienable responsibilities
that we must accept and fulfill.”[3]
A soldier
knows a great deal about responsibility. If the unit doesn’t perform as a team,
or if any member of the unit fails to do their job, someone is going to die,
and it won’t be the enemy. There can be life or death consequences if anyone
thinks something is somebody else’s problem. And the tremendous responsibility
that comes with command in the armed forces has given McChrystal an important
perspective on what many of us might dismiss as somebody else’s problem. He
wrote, “We have let the concept of service become dangerously narrow, often
associated only with the military.”[4]
He continued, “This allows most Americans to avoid the sense of responsibility
essential for us to care for our nation – and for each other.”[5]
Are there any
Boy or Girl Scouts here today? You know something about responsibility as well.
“‘Do a Good Turn Daily’ is a core Scouting precept. Scouting encourages young
people to recognize the needs of others and take action accordingly. Scouting
works through neighborhoods, volunteer organizations, and faith-based
organizations to help young people appreciate and respond to the needs of
others.”[6]
Shared
responsibility for the well-being of our neighbors, our community, and our
world is not as clearly defined in
our laws. It is, however, quite
clearly defined in our scriptures.
Isaiah’s
people are trying to figure out what led to their exile in
Isaiah
suggests that observing the letter of the law misses the spirit of the law.
Worship is supposed to fill us with the power of the Holy Spirit, and charge us
to go forth to bring the “Day of the Lord” or the “
Both Isaiah
and Jesus make the point that worship of God is about more than faithful
observance of ritual. When Jesus says “unless your righteousness exceeds that
of the scribes and Pharisees, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven,”[11]
he means that there is something more important than obsessive observance of
the letter of the law. What God desires, offering food to the hungry,
satisfying the needs of the afflicted, is what gets missed when our focus is on
ourselves rather than on our responsibility to our neighbors.
In that Newsweek article,[12]
General McChrystal described a situation he saw in Afghanistan. In that harsh
environment, agriculture was sustained by a complex and extensive irrigation
system using underground tunnels. This system was essential, and required
labor-intensive maintenance. The members of the community understood their
responsibility to do the work necessary to keep the system flowing. It was a
shared task.
When the
In our own
country, it is often more efficient and cost-effective to hire professionals to
complete a project, but not if our objective is to shape our society with a
sense of shared responsibility.[13]
Snow removal
is a perfect example of this type of shared responsibility. Clearing the
sidewalks so children can safely walk to school is the responsibility of all of
us. And it’s more than just the sidewalk in front of my house – if the path
ends in a snow-bank where it meets my property line, that’s a dead-end, not a
safe and clear passage. Now, I have a deal with my neighbor, who has a bad back
and a snow-blower, that I can use the machine and clear the snow from both
properties. But ultimately our responsibility goes all the way to both corners.
When it snows, if my neighbors and I work together, there will be a clear path
by the next morning.
There are
other examples, things that members of this congregation are already involved
in. Serving at the MORE Food Pantry, or the Food Pantry in Huntley. Raking
leaves and shoveling show for our neighbor with a bad back is one way our
family takes responsibility for others. Loosing the bonds of injustice and
letting the oppressed go free are more difficult duties, but not beyond the
ability of people in this room, particularly if we work together.
Jesus said,
“You are the salt of the earth.”[14]
Worship of God means to bring salt to the world. Salt is that spice that brings
out the flavor of food. A life lived in worship of God can enhance our
experience of the world, and help us bring out the best in others. Salt also preserves
food. A worshipful life helps us hold onto our heritage and all that has made
us who we are. Salt makes us thirsty. Worship of God can give us a thirst for
justice and the desire to end oppression.
“You are the
light of the world.”[15]
To be told we are the light of the world encourages us to share our gifts and
talents with others. “However, there is another reason for light to shine.
There is darkness in life – external and internal.”[16]
“The light is not given for our own personal enjoyment.”[17]
We are given the light in order to go into the darkness, “to engage and walk
through it, so that, in time, the light can overcome it.”[18]
To be the
light of the world is to take on the responsibility to rebuild the ancient
ruins, to raise up the foundations of many generations. To be the light of the
world means that we repair the breach, we restore the streets to live in. To be
the light of the world means that we recognize our shared responsibility for
the well-being of our world in the commandment to love our neighbor as
ourselves. To be the light of the world means that we see through what seems to
be somebody else’s problem, and understand that we have a responsibility to serve
one another in the name of Jesus Christ.
When we bring
salt and light to the world, we raise up the foundations of something better.
We bring glory to God and raise up the foundations of the City of God![19] Amen.
[1] The
Scripture quotations contained herein are from the New Revised Standard
Version Bible, copyright © 1989, by the Division of Christian Education of
the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the U.S.A. Used by
permission. All rights reserved.
[2]
Douglas Adam, Life, the Universe and
Everything (Harmony Books, 1982).
[3]
[4] Ibid.
[5] Ibid.
[6]
Boy Scouts of America, from http://www.scouting.org/Visitor/WhyScouting/ServingOthers.aspx
(accessed 2/7/2011).
[7]
Brett Younger, “Homiletical Perspective” on Isaiah 58:1-9a (9b-12), in Feasting on the Word: Preaching the Revised
Common Lectionary, Year A, Volume 1 (
[8]
Isaiah 58:3b.
[9]
Isaiah 58:5a.
[10]
Isaiah 58:6-7.
[11]
Matthew 5:20.
[12]
McChrystal, 36, 38.
[13] Ibid., 38.
[14]
Matthew 5:13.
[15]
Matthew 5:14.
[16]
Charles James Cook, “Pastoral Perspective” on Matthew 5:13-20, in Feasting, 336.
[17] Ibid.
[18] Ibid.
[19]
The worship service concluded with the singing of the hymn “You Are Salt for
the Earth, O People,” paraphrase by Marty Haugen, 1986, alt.; in The New Century Hymnal (Cleveland: The
Pilgrim Press, 1995), 181.
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