Epiphany 5/Year
A/February 5, 2017
North Beltrami
Lutheran Parish
Ordination and
Installation of Pr. Anne Meredith
Matthew 5:13-20
In
the name of Jesus. Amen.
“You
are the salt of the earth.”
Notice,
please, three things about this remarkable statement that comes to our ears
from the lips of our Lord.
First,
Jesus says: “You are…” You are…the salt of the earth.
Jesus
could have said: “Get serious—why don’t you?—and become the salt of the
earth….or: follow these ten easy steps
and make yourselves the salt of the earth.”
But
Jesus didn’t launch us into a self-improvement program here. Jesus didn’t establish
a 501(c)3 non-profit organization called the Salt-of-the-Earth Transformational Leadership Institute.
No. Jesus just uttered a promise. He simply announced: “You are the salt
of the earth.” This is the way things
already are…the way that things shall most certainly be.
Spoken
by the One who existed before the first day of creation, who in the fullness of
time went to the Cross and the Grave—the One who now has death behind him…these words define a fact
we can count on: “You are the salt of the earth”—end of story…
…because
this is God’s business. This is
who God has made you to be…what God calls you to embody. You
are salt—so be who you are.
Second,
Jesus says: “You are the salt of
the earth.”
You
are not the honey of the earth, sent
to sugar-coat all of life’s harsh realities.
Nor
are you the pablum of the
earth…bland, easy-to-digest cereal for babies and older folks with weak
stomachs.
You
are not the WD-40 of the earth, sent
to lubricate and smooth over all life’s hard edges.
You
are not the duct tape of the earth, desperately
trying to hold the world together.
No.
You are salt. Which, is to say: you are a force to be reckoned with.
Salt,
after all, is a biting, bracing, reactive substance. And we northern Minnesotans know all about
that! We have two seasons every
year: the season of road salt…closely followed
by the season of road repair. The
second season focuses on fixing up all the damage done in the first season by
the road-salt we can’t live without every winter. (I am
exaggerating only a little!)
Salt,
paradoxically is either life-giving or life-taking, depending on how much of it
we take in. Too little salt or too much
salt and we are dead. And yet the right
amount of salt helps keep us alive.
Salt
is deceptively powerful. Salt makes
chemical reactions happen. Salt preserves food.
Salt brings zip and zest to our eating. Salt makes food tangier,
tastier.
When
Jesus declares us to be the salt of the earth, he’s tipping us off that
we’re going to make a difference in the world—whether or not we even realize
it.
You
are the salt of the earth,
says Jesus. Our Lord wills us to be catalysts
for divine change, agents of God’s promised future. When we’re around, fully alive, stuff happens. We salty ones help preserve this world. God keeps the world going for the sake of the
Promise God sends us to share and live out.
How
about that?!? We’re here to make everything
more interesting, engaging, and fascinating. Our mission is to add zip and
zest, to make tasty and tangy a world that can seem so bland, tedious and
tasteless. We cause the world to sparkle with the spice of God’s Great News in Jesus Christ.
3. Third, Jesus says: “You are the salt of the earth.”
Salt
does its thing only as it gets dissolved in the broth, mixed in with the stew,
sprinkled on the pot roast. Salt has to
get shaken out, sprinkled, scattered.
Salt
loses itself in whatever dish it’s stirred into. When that happens, folks don’t say” “That
sure is tasty salt.” No. Instead they
say things like: “My, this is a scrumptious roast. Goodness, this is a savory
hotdish. Heavens to Betsy, this is a delectable stew. My
compliments to the Chef!”
Salt
is meant to get lost and live on only in connection with whatever it is salting….
…which
is to say: salt is of use only as it loses itself. Salt that stays hermetically sealed in a
salt-cellar isn’t good for much. It may stay high and dry and “pure”…but it’ll
never accomplish anything. It will be
useless—worthless.
And
here’s what’s perhaps most amazing: it
doesn’t take much salt to do the trick.
A teaspoon of salt does wonders in a whole pot of soup. A pinch of salt
transforms the flavor of a whole lump of bread-dough.
You,
God’s precious salty people in Christ, as you are “stirred into the world” have
an effect on that world that’s all out of proportion to your numbers in the
world. Salt is like that. Like those ancient Brylcream commercials, “a little dab’ll do ya!”
Does
the bigness of the universe and the hugeness of its problems overwhelm you? Do you lament the fact that you’re just one
person—“and what difference can one person make?”
Be
of good cheer! You are salt and salt is most effective in small quantities.
Just a pinch, just a bit of salt makes all the difference in the world. God
intends to use you to change, to preserve, to make more tasty the little corner
of creation where God has planted you.
Christian
people who are aloof, holed up in their “mighty fortress” church buildings,
pursuing their “purity projects,” and never actually venturing forth into God’s
world aren’t good for much of anything.
They may appear to be salt…but such “salt” really isn’t worth much. It’s like
salt that somehow has lost its saltiness and is good only for being discarded.
You
are the salt of the earth, Jesus declares to us.
Your
purpose is to spend yourself, following in the footsteps of our Lord Jesus
Christ who expended himself on the Cross—to destroy sin, to take the teeth out
of death, and to refashion the world to be fresh and new and “tasty” once
again.
Jesus
saved the world only as he lost himself, poured himself out into the world, for
the sake of the world. Jesus came to be
dissolved into his calling to seek and save the lost.
This
same salty Jesus now declares to us: “You are the salt of the earth.” You’re worth your weight in salt when you get
close to others…especially to bland, tedious, tasteless, unsavory folks. You
make them tasty by seasoning them with the Good News of Jesus Christ…for you
are the salt of the earth.
On
our better days, on our best days, we know that we who are Christ’s Body
“live, move and have our being” for the sake of the world around us. Or, as one of my former pastors liked to say:
“the church is the only organization that exists primarily for those who aren’t
its members.”
So
there you have it: You are….the salt….of the earth.
That
has been true for you, Anne since the day of your baptism. It’s been true for you for as long as you followed
Jesus.
But
this morning, as you are ordained to the ministry of Word and Sacrament and
installed to serve this parish, this promise comes at you with new vigor and
possibilities.
You
are going to be a “salty” pastor….just because God says so. As you look back over your life, please
remember that you didn’t get yourself into this business. God has been coming after you, hot and heavy,
wooing and wheedling you into this calling, teasing out the pastor in you.
So
hunker down behind God’s call, especially when things get tough. Take on Martin Luther’s heartfelt confession
that without God’s calling to you you’d make a hash of everything you try to do!
You
are a salty pastor, Anne, presented now with all sorts of new ways to be a
catalyst in God’s service, a reactive agent of God’s gentle but powerful rule
over all things.
Dear
people of Zion and Our Savior’s, please know that God has called Pastor Anne not
to let sleeping dogs lie but to be salt, a force to contend with, a reactive
agent of God’s barrier-breaking, sin-forgiving, future- opening work. God has called Anne to be the salty pastor
of a salty people!
Finally,
Anne, being the salt God declares you to be means you will be expended—not in some
crass, wasteful way--but in a Christ-like, cross-shaped redemptive way, always for
the sake of your neighbors in this parish and its mission field.
God
has plans for you. God means to do some
great things through you and through this faith community, as you get close to folks
and as you are dissolved in daring witness, loving care and costly service.
In
the name of Jesus. Amen.
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