The Second Sunday after Pentecost 
Worth 
Grace, mercy and peace to you from God our Father and our Lord Jesus Christ! 
Amen. Jesus says to His twelve disciples in today’s Gospel, “Are not two 
sparrows sold for a penny? Not one of them will fall to the ground apart from 
your Father. … Fear not, therefore; you are of more value than many sparrows.” 
Dear Christian friends, 
“Beauty is in the eye of the beholder.” These words mean that, while you think 
something is beautiful beyond description, I might think, “Ho-hum.” You say you 
married the most beautiful girl in the world. You didn’t because I did. My 
friend’s favorite car is the 1966 Dodge Dart. I think he has been breathing 
exhaust fumes. He somehow missed the 1970 Monte Carlo. Beauty is in the eye of 
the beholder. 
Like beauty, value and worth are also in the eye of the beholder. I might think 
a baseball card is very valuable, and you might think it makes a good coaster 
for your drink. Nothing has any value, except for the value you assign to it. 
Nothing has any worth, except for what someone is willing to pay for it. Value 
and worth have to do with the way you look at the object, not with the object 
itself. Not even gold or silver have any value or worth unless you regard them 
as such. 
Here is a rectangular piece of paper with the portrait of a man named Franklin 
in its center and the number 100 at each corner. Everyone here can probably 
agree on a high value for this piece of paper. We consider this paper to be 
worth something because takes time and effort to get one of these pieces of 
paper. The billionaires on Shark Tank might hold a different opinion. For them, 
this piece of paper might represent lunch money. And how about the guy who has 
never heard of the United States of America? For him, this same piece of paper 
might be worth less than a paper towel. Its only value—its only worth—is found 
in the way someone looks at the paper. Value and worth are in the eye of the 
beholder. 
Value and worth play an important role in today’s Gospel. Jesus says to His 
twelve disciples, “Are not two sparrows sold for a penny? Not one of them will 
fall to the ground apart from your Father. … Fear not, therefore; you are of 
more value than many sparrows.” Although Jesus said these Words to His twelve 
closest disciples, you should think of these Words as being spoken also to you. 
Stated another way, Jesus wants you to know that “you are of more value than 
many sparrows.” 
There are two reasons why you can and should apply Jesus’ Words in today’s 
Gospel directly to yourself. 
•       The first reason has to do with the way Jesus called and gathered these 
twelve men to be His disciples. Jesus called these men by His own grace and 
mercy. Jesus sought these men and hand-selected them and claimed them as His 
very own. Simply stated, these men became the followers of Jesus, not because 
they had acted, but because Jesus acted. 
The Scriptures teach us to think much the same way about Baptism. In Baptism, 
Jesus called and gathered you to Himself, much like He called and gathered His 
twelve disciples, saying, “Follow Me” (e.g., Matthew 9:9). That is why God’s 
apostle Paul could address one of his letters to “those who are loved by God 
and called to be saints” (Romans 1:7). Like the twelve disciples, you have 
become a follower of Jesus, not because you acted, but because Jesus acted. 
That is why the Apostle Peter wrote that you were ransomed, “not with 
perishable thing such as silver or gold, but with the precious blood of Christ” 
(1 Peter 1:18). In Baptism, Jesus sought you out and selected you to be His 
very own. That is why St. John says calls you “children of God who were born, 
not of blood not of the will of the flesh or of the will of man, but of God” 
(John 1:12). 
•       There is a second reason why you can apply Jesus’ Words in today’s 
Gospel to yourself. It has to do with that great phrase Jesus used when He 
said, “Not one sparrow will fall to the ground apart from YOUR Father.” It is 
not customary for Jesus to say “your Father.” Jesus usually prefers to say, “My 
Father,” such as when He said, “All things have been committed to Me by My 
Father” (Matthew 11:27) and “Whoever does the will of My Father in heaven is My 
brother” (Matthew 12:50), and again, “Come, you who are blessed by My Father” 
(Matthew 25:34). 
Jesus does not use the Words “My Father” here in today’s Gospel. Today Jesus 
says, “Your Father.” With this phrase, Jesus is emphasizing the personal 
connection these twelve men have to their Father who is in heaven, a connection 
that has been made through the divine gift of faith. In the same way, when did 
Jesus’ Father become YOUR Father? Where did you get that same, personal 
connection to the Father who is in heaven? In Baptism. 
Because of your Baptism, you can take the Words of Jesus in today’s Gospel for 
yourself. Jesus is speaking to His twelve disciples, but your Baptism allows 
you to think of your Lord looking past them and directly at you while He 
speaks. These Words are your Words, and these Words are important Words: “Are 
not two sparrows sold for a penny? Not one of them will fall to the ground 
apart from your Father. … Fear not, therefore; YOU are of more value than many 
sparrows.” 
Certainly these must have been good and comforting Words to those first twelve 
disciples! These men were being sent out as prophets to the nation of 
Israel—and the prophets were rarely treated well. Remember how Stephen 
declared, just prior to being stoned to death, “Which of the prophets did not 
your fathers persecute? They killed those who announced beforehand the coming 
of the Righteous One” (Acts 7:52). Jesus had also warned these twelve, in just 
a few verses prior to today’s Gospel, “I am sending you out as sheep in the 
midst of wolves” (Matthew 10:16). Not a happy thought for anyone! But then 
Jesus fitted these men with the only defense they will need: “Not one sparrow 
will fall to the ground apart from your Father. … Fear not, therefore; you are 
of more value than many sparrows.” 
Perhaps you can also see the goodness and the comfort of hearing these Words of 
Jesus within the context of your Baptism. None of us are apostles, but this a 
strange world in which we live! In our public life, we always hear about how 
important people are—but that is only what we hear and rarely what we see. In 
reality, it is also very easy for people to get chewed up and spit out and left 
on the curb. It has probably happened to you, and you have undoubtedly seen it 
happen to others. This sin-filled life of ours makes it very easy for us to 
discount the worth of other people around us. The same sin-filled life makes it 
very easy to doubt and wonder about your own personal worth. 
Do not worry about personal worth! Listen instead to the Words of Jesus and 
rejoice to know that value and worth are in the eye of the beholder! Find your 
worth—find your neighbor’s wroth—not in what you see, but in what Jesus says: 
“Are not two sparrows sold for a penny? Not one of them will fall to the ground 
apart from your Father. … Fear not, therefore; YOU are of more value than many 
sparrows.” 
•       What is your neighbor worth? I am referring to the neighbor to whom you 
are not speaking; whom you brush past in silence, because he offended you in 
some way that he probably does not know about. Jesus baptized that person. 
Jesus says that person is worth more than many sparrows. Is there any way you 
could change your opinion of that person? Perhaps also your treatment of that 
person? After all, what is that person worth? That person is only worth what 
Someone is willing to pay for that person. The precious blood of Christ was 
poured out in payment for that person, which means that person is worth “more 
than many sparrows.” That same blood was shed for the forgiveness of that 
person’s sins, in the same way that the blood of Christ forgives and washes 
away all your sins. Maybe it is time for you to go ahead and forgive, too. 
Value and worth have to do with the way you look at the object, not with the 
object itself. You could dramatically
 increase your neighbor’s net worth simply by changing the way you look at your 
neighbor. 
•       By the way, what are you worth? I am talking about those of you who are 
falling apart; those of you who spend all your energy with nothing to show for 
it; those of you who have your share of scars. Those of you who now sit in the 
shadows alone—what are you worth? Those of you who operate like vending 
machines, constantly giving your family more than they can possibly know, and 
only getting kicked when you do not produce what is expected—what are you 
worth? You complainers, you mourners, you victims—what are you worth? Nothing 
has any value, except for the value you assign to it. Nothing has any worth, 
except for what someone is willing to pay for it. Your Lord Jesus paid for you. 
Value and worth are in the eye of the beholder. Your Lord Jesus is looking at 
you: “Are not two sparrows sold for a penny? Not one of them will fall to the 
ground apart from your Father. … Fear not, therefore; YOU are of more value 
than many sparrows.” That is
 how Jesus looks at you. Maybe it is time for you to look at yourself this way, 
too. 
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