Matthew 5:21-37
No
one can escape this laundry list of sin but those who are angry with brothers
and sisters can do so silently, whispering “You fool” under their breath. Those
who fail to keep vows to the Lord keep it to themselves and the Lord isn't talking
either. Those who look upon another with lust can do so without anyone being the
wiser even the one being objectified. But those who carry the certificate
of divorce, even when re-married, hear these words of Jesus differently. If
Jesus knew the whole story, knew how painful and lonely and hurt I felt, and
that I resisted divorce as long as I could because it was the wrong thing I never
wanted to do but in the end was the only right thing I could do, what then
Jesus, would you still condemn me? The church throughout the centuries has used
these words of Jesus to condemn women, but some men as well, to a life of cut
off hands and plucked out eyes demanding they deny themselves rather than divorce
the one who beats them every night, or day after day makes them feel stupid or
dirty or inadequate or simply unnecessary. We can sanitize these words of Jesus
and say he’s speaking in hyperbole. We can say he means what he says and we
better get serious about sin or suffer the consequence. Or maybe the anger that destroys
relationships, the lust that makes us less than human on both sides of the
equation, the dishonesty of vows made and not kept and yes, the promise of the
wedding day, so full of hope, so full of joy that ends under the cold hard
light of the court is as much hell as anyone needs to know. So isn't there a
day of judgment? Of course there is. And we’re all guilty for the way we have
failed to live these words or tried to avoid them or worse, the ways in which
we who claim the name of Christ have twisted them. Heaven help us. And of
course heaven did, though for Jesus it was hell.
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