Vanity and Dignity
Fourth Sunday after Pentecost
Commemoration of Irenaeus of Lyons, Pastor
June 28, 2009
Mark 5.21-43
There it was, on the front page of the San Diego Union Tribune, two
stories side by side that put together say a lot about us. I doubt the
editors purposely put the two stories right next to each other as a
statement about ourselves, but I couldn’t help but think that they
were perfectly juxtaposed. One story was about a new trend in the
world of technology, which is quickly becoming the world of just about
everybody, even people who don’t know, or even don’t even care, much
about technology. But with hundreds of millions of people who are on
Facebook and Twitter and other social networking web sites like it,
all kinds of people are part of a technological revolution in which
they are socializing with people they know and don’t know all from the
comfort of their own home or in the comfort of Starbucks on their
laptop or their cell phone.
That’s what made this story so interesting, though. Because no matter
how much things change the more they stay the same. And it’s true in
the ever expanding world of technology. There’s a huge rush to have
your own web site address, which people usually want to be their own
name. They call these web site addresses “vanity addresses.” It’s all
about getting people to your web site so that they can find out more
about you. So even though the technological means for doing this
didn’t exist for most of history, let alone even ten years ago, vanity
is as old as anything.
Right next to it was an interesting story about the White House being
inundated by flies. It was so bad that during an interview of the
president, a fly was bugging him. President Obama was able smack it so
that it couldn’t bug him anymore. Now here was the part that struck
me: PETA, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, complained
about the president’s action. Since flies are living creatures, what
right do we have to take their life in such a way?
These two stories, present us with a picture of ourselves of the two
extremes in how we view ourselves as humans. On the one hand, there’s
vanity—good old-fashioned pride. On the other hand, there is false
humility, a debasement of the crown of God’s creation—people. Pride is
taking God’s creation of us and placing that very creation, ourselves,
above the Creator, God. False humility takes what is a command of
God—that we are to be good stewards of God’s good creation, the
environment and animals—and place it on a par with the crown of His
creation, people, as if plants and animals are equal to the people God
made to be in relationship with them.
Ironically, these two extremes, though they seem the opposite of each
other, are at essence the same thing. So we can put whatever name we
want on it, but it really all comes down to going against the First
Commandment: You shall have no other gods. In our pride, we want to
put ourselves first, above God. In our false humility, we actually do
the same thing, because we are taking the way God has made His
creation and saying that, no, it needs to be the way we make it; and
in so doing, we place ourselves once again above God.
When vanity rears its ugly head, humility takes a beating. We don’t
acknowledge that we are truly humble before the Almighty God and
Creator. When false humility steps in, dignity gets crushed. We don’t
acknowledge that, while all of God’s creation is wonderful, human
beings hold a special place in it and in the eyes of God the Father.
So how do we beat down our pride? How do we lift ourselves up from our
false humility to the dignified place God wants us to see ourselves
in? The Gospel reading gives us its own picture. It shows us what our
sinful flesh considers extreme—our utter deficiency of ourselves and
our total sufficiency in Christ.
You can’t get more helpless than watching your twelve year old
daughter getting sicker and sicker before your eyes. You can’t get
more in need than twelve years of different doctors, different
treatments, different medications, only to find your condition hasn’t
improved. And when your twelve year old girl ends up dying, we see
that ultimately there are things that are out of our control and
ability and we are simply left deficient.
But you can’t be in a better position than being utterly deficient of
yourself. Because when Jesus comes into your life you can see yourself
for who you really are: one whom the eternal Creator, Almighty God,
loves and cares for. You have no dignity of yourself, but you have
dignity in Christ. He created you and He loves you. He helps you in
your need. Pride gets you nowhere but left in your deficiency. False
humility leaves you with yourself, and with yourself is only ultimate
deficiency.
With Christ there is nothing you need to try to bolster yourself with.
There’s nothing you need to convince Him of of how unworthy you are.
He knows you. He knows your need. He knows where you stand before Him.
He knows you can manage your 401K, or hire someone to do it. He knows
you can drive yourself to the doctor and the store to get your
medication. He knows you can fill out an application and beat the
bushes to try to get a job in this tough economy. He knows you can
fight for the rights of those less fortunate than you. He knows you
make hundreds of little decisions each day in which you control what
you do and how you do it.
But He also knows that at the end of the day you know yourself, that
you have no control over your life, whether you will live or die
tonight or thirty years from now or live but end up in a coma. He
knows that you know that while you may not think about it a lot, you
cannot convince yourself that you are really fine without Him. That
you really are deficient of yourself, that you are completely
dependent upon Him in what will happen to you when you die.
Our pride wants to be in control. It wants to dictate. It wants to
hear what’s good about ourselves. If offended or made to feel bad
about ourselves we turn against those who tell us what we don’t want
to hear about ourselves. Or we simply turn them off. But the Word of
God is not interested in telling us what we want to hear, but what we
need to hear. Our pride will scoff at it. The Word of God will chop
off any notions we have of false humility. This is the irony that God
presents us with: we are nothing of our own selves and everything in
Him. We are the crown of His creation and yet deserve eternal
damnation because of our sin. We are by nature sinful and unclean and
yet loved by God so much that He comes to rescue us, giving His very
own life on our behalf.
God’s Word is like a hammer, breaking down our pride in order to bring
us to repentance. It brings to us the truest humility there is, the
ultimate humility—God Himself becoming a man. God Himself suffering as
if He were the sinner. God Himself taking upon Himself the eternal
punishment we deserve, all because of His eternal love for us because
He created us and wants nothing more than to restore us to the eternal
relationship He has with us.
We don’t need to puff ourselves up with pride or worry about our
dignity or have any pretenses of humility. Our sufficiency is in
Christ. Our life, our hope, our eternal care is in Him. Gladly boast
of your deficiency in and of yourself. Humbly confess your sins before
Him. Rejoice in His total sufficiency. Full and free forgiveness is
yours, now and forever. Amen.
SDG
--
Pastor Paul L. Willweber
Prince of Peace Lutheran Church [LCMS]
San Diego, California
princeofpeacesd.net
three-taverns.net
It is the spirit and genius of Lutheranism to be liberal in everything
except where the marks of the Church are concerned.
[Henry Hamann, On Being a Christian]
___________________________________________________________________________
'CAT 41 Sermons & Devotions' consists of works that are, unless otherwise
noted, the copyrighted property of the various authors; posting of such
gives members of this list implied consent for redistribution _with_
_attribution_ unless otherwise specified by the author, as well as
for quoting or use in a congregational setting
_with_or_without_attribution_.
Note: This list's default reply is to the *poster*, NOT the list.
Do *not* reply to the list with your comments, but to the poster.
Subscribe? Send ANY note to: [email protected]
Unsubscribe? Send ANY note to: [email protected]
Archive? <http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/>
For more information on this or other lists offered by Confess And Teach
For Unity, you can contact the CAT 41 list administrator at:
Rev. Fr. Eric J. Stefanski <MoM [at] lists (dot) cat41 <dot> org>