Brad
Sullivan
3rd
Sunday of Lent
March
4, 2018
Emmanuel,
Houston
John
2:13-22
Wreck It Rabbi
One of my kids’ and my favorite movies is an animated movie
called, “Wreck It Ralph.” Ralph is a
video game character, a bad guy whose catch phrase is, “I’m gonna wreck it,” and
in this movie, the video game characters are kind of alive and interact with
each other when they are off stage, when no one is playing the game. Ralph’s game is a game called Fix It Felix in
which Ralph is, again, the bad guy, except that he doesn’t want to be the bad
guy. He’s good hearted, but in the game,
his job is to destroy a high rise apartment building, and as he does, the
tenants shout “Fix It Felix”, and the hero, Fix It Felix comes along and fixes
everything that Ralph destroys. So,
everyone kinda hates Ralph, then as the movie goes on, they all realize that
without Ralph, no one would play their game, and through the rest of the plot,
we find that Wreck It Ralph is actually a hero, doing a lot of fixing of some
bad things going on through his propensity for wrecking. Spoiler alert, by the end of the movie,
they’re all friends.
So, in our Gospel story today, when Jesus overturns the
tables of the money changers in the Temple and drives out the animals that were
being sold there, he’s kind of like Wreck It Rabbi. He saw the animals and the money changers in
the Temple, and he wrecked it. The
people were pretty stunned saying, “What the heck just happened?”, eventually
calling out, “Fix It Pharisees.”
Well, most of our Bibles probably say, “Jesus cleanse[d] the
Temple.” If you’ve got a Bible that has
little subject titles inserted in the text, then that insertion, that editor’s
note, probably says, “Jesus cleanses the Temple.” It’s cute and catchy as titles go, but here’s
the problem, Jesus wasn’t cleansing anything.
See the animals and money changers, they were all supposed to be
there. The blood sacrifice of animals
was part of the temple worship, given as offerings to God for a variety of
reasons, including forgiveness of sins.
If you didn’t have the best or the right kind of animal of your own,
well then you could purchase one. This
was all prescribed in the law of Moses.
So the people in weren’t making the temple dirty. They were doing exactly what they were
supposed to be doing as prescribed in the law of Moses. The problem was that the system was
broken. People were stuck under the
weight of trying to manage their sin with God through animal sacrifice, and all
of that time and effort and resources which could have gone to improving the
lives of each other, went instead to trying to appease a seemingly angry God.
So, Jesus was not cleansing the Temple. He was reforming it. He was kinda taking a wrecking ball to his
religion, actually, but he was following a long tradition of prophets and
psalmists who kept saying over and over, “quit with this animal sacrifice
stuff. The temple should be a place of
prayer, and seriously, God doesn’t need any goats, or sheep, or cows, or
doves. He made them; they are his
already.” As the prophet Micah wrote:
Will the Lord be pleased with
thousands of rams, with tens of thousands of rivers of oil?
Shall
I give my firstborn for my transgression, the fruit of my body for the sin of
my soul?’
‘With what shall I come before the
Lord, and bow myself before God on high?
Shall I come before him with
burnt-offerings, with calves a year old?
He has told you, O mortal, what is
good; and what does the Lord require of you
but to do justice, and to love
kindness, and to walk humbly with your God?
Micah 6:7, 6, 8
Do justice. Love
kindness. Walk humbly with God. That’s what Wreck It Rabbi wanted for Temple
worship. That’s what Wreck It Rabbi wants
for our lives, and he is happy to wreck whatever gets in the way of that. Sometimes our worship getsbtoo performance
based, with people getting very upset if someone makes a mistake in the
movement or words of the worship. Wreck
It Rabbi comes in and says, “this is supposed to be a house of prayer, not a
theater company.” Sometimes folks get
angry with children making noise, and Wreck It Rabbi comes in and says, “Let
the little children come to me, for the kingdom of God belongs to them.” Sometimes we get so caught up in all that we
do to prepare for our worship, that we end up thinking that our primary
ministry is here, to prepare for our time here, and Wreck It Rabbi comes in and
says, “Go in peace to love and serve me, in those you encounter outside of
here, for that is your true worship.”
As Jesus comes along and wrecks things, disrupting our
worship time, we sometimes get calls of “Fix It Father” from those who have
been disrupted. Sometimes, it isn’t
Jesus disrupting things, and we really do need to fix it. Other times, Wreck It Rabbi may want us to be
disrupted, taking us out of our comfort and our routine in order to wake us up
to see him in our lives beyond the Temple, the church, the worship.
By reforming the Temple, in the story we heard today, Wreck
It Rabbi reminds us that our lives are not meant to lead us to worship. We don’t spend our time preparing ourselves
to be worthy enough to worship God in just the right way. We spend time in worship and prayer to heal
our hearts so that we can do justice, love kindness, and walk humbly with
God. That’s God’s desire for us. Our truest offerings during prayer and
worship are the offerings of our hearts.
Whatever is holding us back from doing justice and loving kindness, that
is what we offer to God.
In the Morning Prayer service, there is a prayer called, “A
Collect for Saturdays,” and I love this prayer except for one word,
“sanctuary.” “Almighty God, who after
the creation of the world rested from all your works and sanctified a day of
rest for all your creatures: Grant that
we, putting away all earthly anxieties may be duly prepared for the service of
your sanctuary…” (BCP p. 99) Wait a
minute. Is there anything we can do to
make us righteous enough before God to be worthy enough to come near to the
holy place where God dwells? No. We aren’t going to make ourselves more
righteous than Jesus already has.
Wreck It Rabbi has no interest in gospels of sin management
that keep us down under the heavy burden of fearing an angry God who feels that
we are never good enough for him. That’s
part of why he and the prophets took a wrecking ball to the animal sacrifice
system of Temple worship, and thankfully, Wreck It Rabbi continues to wreck our
worship and our ways of life whenever gospels of sin management keep us down,
fearing an angry God, rather than trusting in Jesus’ Gospel of light and grace
which tells us we are beloved children of a loving God, and that we are worthy
to do justice, to love kindness, and to walk humbly with God.
So, that prayer, then, that collect for Saturdays? I’ve changed that word “sanctuary” to
“kingdom.” No we pray, “Almighty God,
who after the creation of the world rested from all your works and sanctified a
day of rest for all your creatures:
Grant that we, putting away all earthly anxieties may be duly prepared
for the service of your kingdom…” That
is what our rest is for. That is what
our worship and prayer is for, so that we may be duly prepared for the service
of God’s kingdom, doing justice, loving kindness, and walking humbly with God.
What does that look like?
Well, that’s going to be a bit different for all of us. For me, one of my passions is children and
schools. I was at a meeting of faith
leaders on Thursday morning with the HISD superintendent, Richard Carranza, and
School Board president, Rhonda Skillern-Jones, among the topics discussed, they
invited us to come to a training on March 29 to learn about how best to partner
churches with schools to have folks be mentors for kids, to address the needs
that principals tell us are there, and to be a part of the village that raises
up kids in our community. You can bet
I’m going to be there at that meeting because that’s my passion. That’s the broken thing that Wreck It Rabbi
has given me a passion for where I would like to do justice, and love kindness,
and walk humbly with God.
What about you? What
broken thing has Wreck It Rabbi given you a passion for? What broken thing is Jesus calling you to
fix? That’s why we’re here. Wreck It Rabbi has brought us here this
morning to strengthen us, to heal our hearts, and to remind us that we are
beloved children of a loving God so that as we leave this place, we may have
eyes to see the broken places and systems of our world and say, “I’m going to
wreck it,” and through that wrecking, to fix it, doing justice, loving
kindness, and walking humbly with God.
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