Second Sunday after Pentecost
May 25, 2008
The Rev. Charles Henrickson

“Don’t Worry, Be Trusting” (Matthew 6:24-34)

Welcome to the Non-Worriers Hall of Fame.  In our
exhibits you will meet some of the most famous
non-worriers in history.  These are the champions of
carefree living, down through the centuries.  Stress
was a stranger to these advocates of the anxiety-free
life.

Here in our first display we meet Alfred E. Newman,
the goofy-looking cover boy of Mad Magazine.  Alfred’s
motto is as famous as his gap-toothed grin.  It’s the
simple question, “What, me worry?”

Next in our Hall of Non-Worriers we come to the
well-known singer Bobby McFerrin.  Bobby captured the
airwaves in the late 1980s with his smash hit with the
catchy refrain, “Don’t Worry, Be Happy.”

Then there are these two animal members of the
Non-Worriers Hall of Fame, namely, Timon and Puumba,
the meerkat and the warthog from the movie, “The Lion
King.”  These two loved to sing their theme song,
“Hakuna Matata.”  “It means no worries for the rest of
your days.”  “It’s our problem-free philosophy.”

Then there is the greatest non-worrier of them all,
Jesus of Nazareth.  This famous teacher taught people
not to worry with some very memorable sayings, for
example:  “Do not be anxious about your life, what you
will eat or what you will drink, nor about your body,
what you will put on.”  Jesus told people to be as
worry-free as the birds of the air and the lilies of
the field.  “Do not be anxious, saying, ‘What shall we
eat?’ or ‘What shall we drink?’ or ‘What shall we
wear?’”

So we hope you’ve enjoyed our little tour of our Hall
of Fame and meeting the great non-worriers:  Alfred E.
Newman, Bobby McFerrin, Timon and Puumba, and Jesus of
Nazareth.  Oh, and don’t worry if you can’t find the
way out, it’ll be all right.  Have a nice day!

Is that it?  Does you-know-who really belong with
those other guys?  I mean, was what Jesus of Nazareth
taught as simple as saying, “What, me worry?” or
“Don’t worry, be happy” or “Hakuna matata, no
worries”?  Was Jesus just the Bobby McFerrin of the
first century?  Well, I’m sure you can see that I set
you up by putting Jesus in the Non-Worriers Hall of
Fame.  For of course what Jesus taught had a lot more
depth to it than just the carefree caricature of those
others.

How so?  Today I’ll give you three reasons, based on
our text, why Jesus’ teaching is more than just a
light and carefree “Don’t worry, be happy.”  Instead,
the message that Jesus teaches his disciples is more
like, “Don’t Worry, Be Trusting.”

The first reason is not actually stated in the text
but is implied by how, in our lives today, we even go
beyond the text with our worries.  You see, in our
day, we worry about things we don’t even need.  In the
text, the things Jesus teaches his disciples not to
worry about are at least things they need:  food,
drink, clothing--the basic necessities of life.  Those
folks were worrying about having enough to get by.  We
worry about what to do with all the stuff we have.

We worry about things we don’t even need.  We ask the
same questions as those folks back then did--“What
shall we eat?”  “What shall we drink?”  “What shall we
wear?”--but the context is different.  “What shall we
eat?”  Shall we order the pasta primavera or the
linguine alfredo?  The primavera is lower fat . . .
but if we split a dessert I suppose I could still get
the alfredo.  “What shall we drink?”  Mountain Dew or
Sierra Mist?  What size should I get my café
mocha--grande, largo or venti?  “What shall we wear?” 
Do these white pants make my butt look big?  Which
black clerical shirt should I pull out of the closet
today?  Decisions, decisions. . . .

You get my point.  Even with rising gas prices, the
things most of us worry about go way beyond the level
of bare necessity.  If we had to make do, we could
probably rearrange our budgeting and our lifestyle a
little and we could at least get by.

But for some of us, even the basics of life might be a
struggle.  What then?  Are we allowed to worry?  No,
Jesus doesn’t put it like that.  What Jesus does is to
redirect our thinking and to lift our eyes.  He raises
our sights above worry and anxiety to faith and trust,
to faith in our heavenly Father.  Jesus takes us to
the source from which all of our help and our
blessings come.

This is the second reason, then, not to worry:  We
have a heavenly Father who knows what we need.  Jesus
came pointing his disciples to their kind and loving
Father in heaven.  Listen to what he says:  “Look at
the birds of the air: they neither sow nor reap nor
gather into barns, and yet your heavenly Father feeds
them.  Are you not of more value than they?” 
“Consider the lilies of the field, how they grow: 
they neither toil nor spin, yet I tell you, even
Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of
these.  But if God so clothes the grass of the field,
which today is alive and tomorrow is thrown into the
oven, will he not much more clothe you, O you of
little faith?”  Food, drink, clothing--your heavenly
Father knows that you need all these things.

Lord, we believe, help thou our unbelief!  Help us to
trust in our heavenly Father, in his goodness and
kindness and care!  So often we think we’re out here
on our own.  We live like functional atheists.  But we
forget that God is watching over us and taking care of
us, providing for us in our needs.

Now to be sure God does this through means, through
people.  He gives us the ability to work for our
living.  He would have us make wise decisions and not
be wasteful.  God provides for us through people:  our
fathers and mothers, our extended family and our
church family, friends and neighbors, employers and
farmers and so on.  These all are channels of blessing
by which God shows his care for us.  The chicken
doesn’t just fall out of the sky and land on our
table.  There are steps in between.  But nevertheless
we want to acknowledge God as the source of all our
blessings.  We thank him for our food and drink and
clothing, our daily bread, and we trust him that he
will continue to take care of us from day to day.

That then leads into the third reason Jesus gives us
here not to worry about our daily needs, and it is
this:  There are more important things we should be
seeking after.  Listen to what Jesus says:  “Therefore
do not be anxious, saying, ‘What shall we eat?’ or
‘What shall we drink?’ or ‘What shall we wear?’  For
the Gentiles seek after all these things, and your
heavenly Father knows that you need them all.  But
seek first the kingdom of God and his righteousness,
and all these things will be added to you.”

There are more important things to be seeking after
than just food for your belly or clothes on your back.
 You can do all that, you can have all that, and still
miss out on what is so much more important.  Think of
the rich fool, who stored up grain and had wealth for
years to come.  Then that night the voice came to him:
 “Thou fool!  Tonight thy soul is required of thee!” 
You see, there are much more important things to be
“worried about,” if you will, matters of life and
death and eternity.  You can have all the wealth this
world has to offer, you can have all the home theatre
systems and Maseratis and a McMansion on a hill, but
you can’t take any of it with you.

That’s the stuff that the people of this world seek
after and pursue.  If you want something really worth
seeking after, try this on for size:  the kingdom of
God and his righteousness.  The kingdom of God. 
That’s what Jesus came teaching.  That’s what Jesus
came bringing.  The gracious rule and reign of God
among men.  God’s end-time salvation.  For the
end-time judgment is coming, it’s right at hand.  How
will you stand in that great day?  Your sins will
accuse you.  How will you escape and come free? 
Therefore listen to Jesus, flee to him.  He comes
bringing the salvation you need.  That is your
greatest need, the kingdom of God and his
righteousness.  He alone provides you with the
righteousness that will stand up and pass muster in
that day.  So seek it now, now as Jesus stands here
bringing it to you.

You see, the big seeking is what Jesus came to do.  He
came to seek and to save the lost.  That’s us.  We
were lost, drifting around in this world, thinking
we’re on our own, worrying about our stuff, and not
giving a thought to God.  But Jesus came and sought us
out.  He is the supreme gift from the Father, who came
down from heaven for us men and for our salvation. 
Jesus gives us the righteousness we need.  We could
not keep God’s law as we ought.  Jesus did.  We could
not pay for our breaking of God’s law.  Jesus did.  He
did that on the cross, for you.  His death and
resurrection win for you forgiveness for your sins,
eternal life in God’s kingdom, and righteousness to
stand on the Last Day, the perfect righteousness of
Christ your Savior.

So seek after these things, the things Christ comes
and brings right to you as a free gift:  the kingdom
of God and his righteousness.  Hunger and thirst after
these things, after righteousness, and you will be
richly satisfied.  For out of the same goodness with
which your heavenly Father feeds and clothes you from
day to day--out of that same goodness your Father
feeds you with the bread of heaven, gives you to drink
from the cup of salvation, and clothes you with robes
of righteousness for eternal life in his kingdom.

- - - - -

St. Matthew Lutheran Church-Bonne Terre MO invites you
to listen to 30 minutes of the previous week's service
every Sunday morning, 8:15-8:45 a.m. (Central),
streaming online at http://www.krei.com .


Charles Henrickson
4749 Melissa Jo Ln
St. Louis, MO 63128
(314) 845-8811 (home)
(314) 779-8108 (cell)
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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