Something To Die For
Read Mark 7:14-23
Do you know what it's like to feel so strongly about not
doing something that you'd die before being forced into it? Is anything
in this world so bad that it' s worth dying to avoid. We think of
the virtue of being prepared to die for someone you love - greater
love has no man, we are told in the bible. But can it also be true
of the opposite?
Well, if we travel back in time to when the book of Leviticus was
written, we find in the 11th chapter a list of animals
that are unclean and unfit for eating. Fine in itself, you might
think, possibly part of a sensible diet laid down for the Jews by
a caring God. Let's face it, lots of people avoid certain types
of foods today, for a variety of reasons, mostly to do with losing
weight or keeping the Cholesterol down, sometimes to do with conscience
and a desire that no animal should suffer in order that we should
enjoy their flesh.
But would you die rather than have butter on your bread, or ham
with your salad?
Well, how seriously the rules laid down in Leviticus were followed
by the Jews can be gauged by stories contained in the books of Maccabees
- some of the apocryphal books which some bibles include and others
don't. At that time the Syrian king was determined to destroy the
Jewish faith once and for all, and he chose a very straightforward
way of doing this. He ordered them to eat pork.
We read
And again in fourth Maccabees there is a story of a widow and her
seven sons. It was demanded that they should eat pig's flesh. They
refused. The first had his tongue cut out, the ends of his limbs
cut off; and then he was roasted alive in a pan. You don't want
to know what happened to the rest.
These perfectly sane and respectable people- fervent in their faith,
and God fearing - would rather suffer torture and death rather than
break a dietary rule.
I labor the point slightly because of the importance of the statement
that Jesus made in the passage from Mark's gospel that we heard.
It may not seem so now, but when it was made this was probably the
most revolutionary passage in the New Testament.
What did he say?
'Listen to me, everyone, and understand this. Nothing outside
a man can make him 'unclean' by going into him. Rather, it is
what comes out of a man that makes him unclean.'
What Jesus is saying is that 'things' cannot be either clean or
unclean in any real religious sense of the word. Only people can
become unclean, through their own actions which are the product
of their heart. The Jews had a whole system of things which were
either 'clean' or 'unclean'. With this one sweeping pronouncement
Jesus declared the whole thing irrelevant.
Can you see how this must have upset the religious leaders? And
what about your average Jew, what was he or she going to make of
such a statement?
Jesus then goes on to justify his pronouncement, by listing all
the terrible things that come out of a person and make him or her
'unclean', and it's a very familiar list which is as relevant now
as it was then.
Evil thoughts. Sexual immorality. Theft. Murder. Adultery. Greed.
Malice. Deceit. Lewdness. Envy. Slander. Arrogance and folly.
Jesus is saying to the people 'Look at yourselves. You spend all
your time worrying about what you can and can't do, following rules
and laws to the letter, and yet look at the state that society has
got itself into. Despite all this religiosity and outward show of
faith, what others see when they look at you is anything but good.
We of course are not troubled by such strict rules about what we
should or shouldn't eat, and I doubt very much whether any of us
would be prepared to die for most of our principles. But we are
assailed by things that cause us occasional pain and distress -
even TV soaps contain much of that list that Jesus mentioned, and
much of the output on all television channels contain scenes of
a sexual nature, or gratuitous violence. We worry as well about
what our children watch on the TV or read in so-called teenage magazines.
But these things in themselves, if we carry Jesus' message to the
modern day, are not 'unclean' in a religious sense of the word.
It's what happens to them once they enter the body, and more especially
the heart. By this Jesus means more than just dwelling on things
in our mind, it's when we start turning thoughts into action.
How many times have we heard of a teenager's antisocial actions
being explained away as a result of watching too many violent movies,
or a rapist complaining that his life has been blighted because
of exposure to pornography. Whatever the psychologists might say,
it seems logical to take the view that these activities can become
obsessive to the point where they affect a person's actions.
What did Jesus say?
It's not so much what goes in, as what comes out of a person that
makes them 'unclean' And what comes out are the actions that have
their root in our heart, not just in the mind.
We have it within us to say no, in two ways. We can say 'no' to
the source of the problem, vet every program, book or magazine that
our families are exposed to - try and minimize the chances of coming
into contact with 'the world' if you like. But we'd have to live
in an igloo at the North Pole to be sure. And what an oppressive
world we'd live in as well - the fear of something evil slipping
through.
Or we can live our lives responsibly, accepting that we're going
to be exposed to various things that we'd rather not be, but putting
them to one side and concentrating instead on the more important
things in life.
My computer has something called a recycle bin on the screen. It's
where the bits and pieces of files that I don't want, the rubbish
that collects on my hard disc, can be placed and then neatly disposed
of.
I think we all need something similar in our lives. We need to
understand that we do run the risk of being 'contaminated' if you
like, by the world. But we have it within us to sort the good from
the bad, the wheat from the chaff. And if we struggle with all that
we're exposed to, if we find our lives and our actions falling short
of the high standard that our faith demands then we have one who
is always willing to help - to look into our hearts and expose that
which is causing us to stumble.
We have a savior who came to release mankind from bondage - from
bondage to the law, bondage to sin, and bondage to fear. All he
asks is that we take him at his word.
The Jews that Jesus was talking to were in bondage to the law.
They were sincere, to the point where they would gladly give their
lives rather than break a law, but it was bondage all the same.
Jesus came to release them, to give them freedom and life in abundance.
He does the same today.
The Jews of his time, and to a great extent today, chose to reject
that freedom
Let's not make the same mistake.
Read Mark 7:24-30
I think that it's more than mere coincidence that has these two
passages linked together, because there's a common theme running
through them.
Jesus is on the move again, this time to the regions of Tyre and
Sidon, cities of Phoenicia which in turn was a part of Syria. The
Phoenician cities were all rivals. They had their own kings, their
own gods and their own coinage. More importantly from the point
of view of this story, Jesus was in Gentile territory.
Maybe Jesus had come here in order to try and escape for a while,
gather his thoughts. There's no doubt that back home he was under
constant attack by the scribes and Pharisees, who had branded him
a sinner because he broke all their rules and regulations. In fact,
if these two passages actually happened in the sequence in which
Mark placed them then we can perhaps understand the storm that Jesus
was creating all around him.
So what's the significance, if any, of Jesus visiting Tyre and
Sidon?
Probably because this was Gentile territory.
In the previous passage we have Jesus clearly wiping away any difference
between what were considered by Jews to be clean or unclean food.
Now perhaps, we have him doing exactly the same for people. Because
just as a Jew wouldn't contaminate himself by touching food thought
to be unclean, so he wouldn't allow himself to come into contact
with an unclean Gentile.
Here again Jesus gives an answer that to some might be thought
to be rather controversial, if not even unloving. After all, the
poor woman only came to him for help because of the condition of
her daughter; a need which Jesus ordinarily would have acceded to
quite readily. And yet what does he say here?
What a strange answer. To the Greek, the word dog meant
a shameless woman, rather like we use the term bitch. To
the Jew it was also a term of contempt, and sometimes used to describe
the Gentiles. On the surface it was simply an insult, so how do
we explain Jesus' use of the word?
Firstly, Jesus didn't use the usual word here; he used a diminutive
word which describes not the wild dogs that roamed the streets and
caused a nuisance, but the little lap-dogs of the house which are
held to be objects of affection.
Secondly the woman seems to have seen Jesus engaging in a little
light-hearted banter here, not tossing insults. There's something
in the tone of a voice that can turn a word from an insult to a
term of affection. Jesus didn't say no. He said that the children
must be fed first, but then there is meat left over. Israel had
the first offer of the gospel, but there was plenty left for the
rest of God's household. The woman saw which way his mind was working
and gave as good as she got. And this to Jesus was evidence of a
faith that just wouldn't take no for an answer, and of course she
got her prayers answered.
In those days people didn't eat with knives, forks or napkins on
the table. They ate with their hands, wiped them clean on pieces
of bread and flung these to the corner of the room for the house
dogs to eat.
Symbolically then, this woman stands for the Gentile world which
so eagerly seized on the bread of heaven which the Jews rejected
and threw away.
So here we have, in two small chunks of the gospel of Mark a radical
new agenda being proposed, where no longer would people be bound
to the law, and where the distinctions between different races of
people would be eliminated.
This was revolutionary language as far as the authorities were
concerned, and threatened everything that they held dear.
This was the language of the Kingdom of God.
This is language which still threatens today. It threatens where
man still considers himself better than his neighbor - for whatever
reason.
It threatens whenever we think that the way we do things in our
church is the only way to go. When we refuse change in favor of
rigid tradition. The Jews had clung to their laws for thousands
of years, and where had it got them? Further and further from their
God.
Jesus came and brought change, and with that change came freedom,
freedom from the burden of the law, of tradition, of fear, of stagnation.
He also changed conceptions about race, in declaring all to be equal
in the sight of God.
Jesus still comes to us with the language of the Kingdom. He challenges
us today in the way that we live our lives, in the way that we look
at this world and the way that we look at each other and our neighbors.
Jesus brings change. He brings change to our lives and to our worship.
There is no doubt about this. If there is no change in our lives
and in our worship then it's time to start worrying. For Jesus came
to bring life in abundance and a freedom and joy that will not be
bound by earthly rules.
He challenges us to live that life here and now.
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