Mark 9:38-50

Mark 9:38-50

 


Göttinger Predigten im Internet
hg.
von Ulrich Nembach und Johannes Neukirch


15. Sonntag nach Trinitatis / Erntedank, 1. Oktober
2000

Healthy Hypocrisy
A sermon on Mark 9:38-50 (proper
21)
Thomas H. Troeger


Healthy Hypocrisy
A sermon on Mark 9:38-50
(proper 21)

Which comes
first:
Belief
or
action?

Changing the heart
or
changing
behavior?

A lot of our prayers and rituals
put the heart
first:
„Create in me a clean heart
and put a new and right spirit within
me.“

It is a prayer we all need to pray.
For sometimes,
it is the
heart that needs to change first.

We believe in Jesus
and our belief
changes how we act.

I have seen this happen in people.
They have

to use their own words –
„found the Lord,“
and the Lord has
transformed
their lives.
Grace and compassion
have flowed from their
new hearts.

Sometimes
belief comes first.

Sometimes
a new
heart comes first.

But not always!

There are other times
when
the process works in reverse.
Action transforms the heart.
Behavior
reshapes our character.

The disciples report to Jesus:
„‚Teacher, we
saw someone casting out demons in your name,
and we tried to stop
him,
because he was not following us.'“
Evidently the man was using
Jesus‘ name
without making a commitment to Jesus.

The man’s action
may reflect
an ancient pagan custom:
magicians used a revered name
as
a talisman,
something possessing secret power.
They invoked the
name
purely for the effect it might produce
but without holding any sense
of worship or honor
for the name.
Their belief did not match their
action.

Jesus responds to his disciples‘ concern:
„‚Do not stop
him;
for no one who does a deed of power in my name
will be able soon
afterward to speak evil of me.'“

Doing an act of love
can create a
heart of love

Behavior can transform character.

I think of times

when I have gone to worship
and acted in the name of Jesus
though my
faith was wavering
and my heart was far from the gospel.
I mechanically
went through the rituals.
I bowed.
I knelt.
I made the sign of the
cross.
I received the sacrament.
I prayed in the name of Jesus.
And
then to my utter surprise,
I found faith in my heart
where there had been
none.
I found grace in my soul
where there had been none.
The action
had transformed me.

I have seen this process
not only in
worship.
I have seen it in people
who decided to work toward
reconciliation
when they did not feel like being reconciled.
I have seen
it in people
who showed compassion out of a sense of duty,
not a
spontaneous desire in their hearts.
And when they acted,
they were
transformed.
They became people with reconciling hearts.
They became
people with compassionate hearts.

In American culture
we often
hear
„Do what you feel. Be genuine. Don’t be a hypocrite.“
But sometimes
we need to do the exact opposite.
When we do not feel like worshiping
is
when we need to worship.
When faith is far from our hearts,
we need to
act as if we were filled with it.

We need a healthy hypocrisy:
doing
what is good and right and beautiful
even though it is not what we
feel.
Because if we do something good
in the name of Jesus,
in the
spirit of his compassion and justice,
then we will soon find
ourselves
unable to speak evil of Christ.
We will find our hearts
reshaped by our
action.

Do not wait until your faith
is perfect and full.
Act now
for Jesus,
and Jesus will do astounding things to who you
are.

Thomas H. Troeger
Peck Professor of Preaching &
Communications
Director of the Doctor of Ministry Program
Iliff School of
Theology
2201 South University Boulevard
Denver, Colorado
80210

303/765-3183
e-mail:
ttroeger@iliff.edu

FAX 303/777-0164


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