Intro
At the Temple were two men, two prayers, and two faiths.

The first man was a Pharisee.  He’s the good guy.  He’s respected.  He’s 
forgotten more about the Scriptures than most of us can remember.  He’s an 
example of how to live an upstanding life.  Do as he says and does and 
everything will go well with you.

The second man was a tax collector.  He’s the bad guy.  He’s reviled.  He’s the 
thief, skimming as much money as he could get away with to make himself rich.  
But even worse, he’s a traitor.  For the tax collector took in money for the 
Roman Empire, the foreign power occupying Israel.

Main Body
So now we get to the prayer of the Pharisee.  “O God, I thank you that I’m not 
like other people.”  You’ve prayed that before.  You may not be perfect, but 
thank God that you’re not like the welfare queen you despise, or the bum who’s 
too lazy to work.  I’ve said aloud that I’m glad I’m not like the lazy person 
at the Walmart parking lot.  He’s too lazy to put his shopping cart away after 
he’s walked around with it all over the store.

You know the splinter in your eye is small next to the beam in his.  Your 
goodness came the hard way.  You worked hard to get that way.  You’ve got 
something to boast about before the Lord.

There’s just one problem: the proud saint is not of God but of Satan.  And the 
Pharisee in today’s Gospel reading is the perfect picture of the proud saint.  
For his words reveal the greatest sin of all: the damning unbelief in his 
heart.  He says, “O God, I thank you that I’m not like other people--greedy, 
unrighteous, adulterers, or even this tax collector.”

The Pharisee wasn’t simply content to hold others in contempt.  He had to 
spread his sickness around, giving it voice.  He had to go even further and 
attack the tax collector.  It would have been better if he had just left the 
tax collector alone.  But no, that wasn’t enough.  And so--in one sentence--he 
wounds the only person within earshot.

You are a proud saint when you point your fickle finger at someone else without 
first turning that finger back on yourself.  Pride is contempt of God.  Pride 
is crediting the goodness within you--not to God--but to yourself.  That’s a 
denial of God.  That’s a denial of your sin, as well.

When you pray in the liturgy, “Lord have mercy,” do you know what you are 
praying?  Did you know you are already praying for something that God already 
gives?  Yet, you pray for the Lord’s mercy to come to you anyway!  That’s what 
faith does.  That’s what faith recognizes.

Faith knows that, without God’s mercy, you’d stand condemned before the 
all-righteous, all-perfect, all-holy, and all-knowing God.  Without God’s 
mercy, you are eternally dead.  Your pride becomes a sinking boat on the river 
of life, pulling you deeper and deeper into a watery grave.

Did you ever notice that nowhere in the liturgy do you ever thank God that you 
are not like someone else?  That’s one reason the gift of the liturgy is such a 
blessing.  It’s God’s Word distilled, in content and form, to give you the 
right words to pray and believe, even if your heart feels otherwise.

On your own, you often get it wrong.  The Pharisee prayed from the heart.  But 
what was in his heart was not worth praying.  What was in his heart was sinful. 
 Sometimes, you need to pray what isn’t in your heart--because what is in your 
heart may be despicable to God!

Let the Church’s liturgy shape and form you with God’s Word, so you can believe 
and pray as you should.  For the thanks you pray in the liturgy is thankfulness 
to God for everything He did, does, and will do to save you.

The key to grasping today’s parable is to remember to whom Jesus is speaking.  
Jesus spoke this parable to people who trusted in their own righteousness, 
those who despised others for not making the grade.  Remember this warning from 
Jesus: “Unless your righteousness surpasses that of the scribes and the 
Pharisees, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven” (Matthew 5:20).

When you trust in your own righteousness over--not only the Lord, but also your 
neighbor--you despise both God and neighbor.  You walk in the footsteps of 
Cain, who murdered his brother because he wanted to worship God in his own way. 
 You walk in the footsteps of Saul, before he became Paul, and persecuted the 
Christian Church.

The man who returns to his house justified is the man least likely to win any 
popularity contest.  The tax collector is right there with common, everyday 
sinners at the bottom of the list.  Hearing Jesus say the tax collector is 
justified, instead of the Pharisee, is scandalous.  That’s what makes this 
parable so ironic.  That’s what makes this parable so sweet.

Take a closer look at their prayers.  You’ve heard the Pharisee’s scandalous 
prayer.  Listen again to the tax collector’s prayer.  He stood at a distance 
and would not even look up to heaven.  Instead, he pounded on his chest and 
said, “God, be merciful to me, a sinner.”

There’s more to the tax collector’s prayer than first meets the ear.  In the 
original Greek, the tax collector uses the direct article before the word 
“sinner.”  He doesn’t say “O God, be merciful to me, a sinner” but, instead, “O 
God, be merciful to me, the sinner.”

The tax collector’s sins so bother him that he uses the direct article: he is 
not simply A sinner, but THE sinner!  “O God, be merciful to me, the sinner.”  
It’s as if he’s the only one who has ever offended God.  He feels as if he’s 
the only one whom God could never stoop to forgive, the only son of damnation, 
and the only one who deserves hell.

Humility shaped the tax collector’s prayer.  The tax collector knew who he was. 
 He knew that he was by nature dead in sin.  He was bothered by the evil he had 
done and the good he had failed to do.  He knew he deserved nothing but 
punishment--both earthly and eternal.

Humility is also what the Church’s liturgy teaches you when you pray.  Does the 
tax collector’s prayer even sound a bit familiar?  You confessed the truths in 
his prayer just a little while ago in the Confession of Sin.  That was the 
first act you did before today’s service.  And that is a most-fitting way to 
begin in God’s house.

The Lord God wants to serve you with His forgiveness and His life.  But before 
you can receive God’s marvelous gifts, you should confess the truth.  You need 
a Savior.  You cannot do what only God can do.  Only the one true God of heaven 
and earth can save you from the refuse of your sin.

When you humbly confess your sins, it is sweet music to our heavenly Father’s 
ears.  After all, He taught us about true humility.  He lived true humility.  
He sent His one-and-only Son into this world.

Jesus Christ looked and acted just like us in every way--but one!  He was 
sinless.  Jesus didn’t go bragging about His signs and wonders, flaunting His 
divine nature in your face, and deriding fallen humanity.  Instead, He took up 
the burden of sin and bore it on the cross for you.

The Pharisees kept stumbling over Jesus’ words and deeds.  But instead of 
repenting, growing, and learning, the Pharisees despised Him all the more.  But 
when Jesus was despised, mocked, scorned, when He suffered and died, He did it 
for you.  Jesus suffered all that, so you don’t have to suffer it for eternity. 
 His death justifies you.  That’s why God declares you “not guilty” of all your 
sins.  You go home today, and every Lord’s Day redeemed, restored, and forgiven 
in the death and resurrection of Christ Jesus.

A humble sinner is a saint.  Consider Saint Paul.  He was a one-person cheering 
section when St. Stephen was being stoned to death.  Yet, God changed Paul.  He 
later wrote, “By God’s grace I am what I am.  The grace He has shown to me was 
not wasted” (1 Corinthians 15:9-10).

Conclusion
The beginning of godliness is not in you--it’s in the Word of God.  For God 
must first let His Word sound in your heart.  That’s how you know Him.  That’s 
how you believe in Him.  That’s how you arise to do righteous deeds in the eyes 
of God.

At the Temple were two men, two prayers, and two faiths.  One trusted in 
himself and his righteousness.  He went home dead in his sin.  The other humbly 
confessed his sin and believed in salvation outside himself.  He went home 
justified by God’s grace.  But it doesn’t end there.  Today, Jesus sends you 
home forgiven, just as if you never had sinned.  Amen.


 --
Rich Futrell, Pastor
Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church, Kimberling City, MO

Where we receive and confess the faith of the Church (in and with the Augsburg 
Confession): The faith once delivered to the saints, the faith of Christ Jesus, 
His Word of the Gospel, His full forgiveness of sins, His flesh and blood given 
and poured out for us, and His gracious gift of life for body, soul, and spirit.

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