The Truth Will Set You Free
Psalm
46; Micah 3:5-12
November
5, 2017
Jesus
famously reminded his disciples that the truth would make them free. The
prophet Micah clearly understood that the opposite sentiment is also important
to grasp: lies will bring you to desolation.
These
two sides of the same coin operate on more than two levels. That is to say,
distinguishing truth from falsehood matters, at the very least, on personal,
corporate, and political levels. Moreover, on each of those levels, and
probably several others I haven’t yet considered, each of us is prone to
falsehoods from time to time.
You
remember the TV medical drama House
that ran for most of a decade in the early 2000s? Dr. House was a wonderfully
misanthropic character prone to grand proclamations about the state of the
human condition. One of his favorite maxims was simple: “everybody lies.”
He was
not wrong about that, but I always wanted another character to come back at him
with the equally accurate statement that “everybody tells the truth.” The
problem is that nobody does just the one all of the time.
That is
to say, each of us struggles with the truth at various points in our lives.
Most of us mostly have a hard time being honest with ourselves. I have made
great plans – for a recommitment to exercise or a more regular practice of
writing or a less regular practice of eating chocolate-chip cookies or some
other such self-improvement practice – only to find that “future me” looks back
at “eventually past me” and laughs at the naïve self-deception.
Most of
us have been there. The details may vary but the pattern seems all-too
familiar. As scripture puts it, with respect to missing the mark, when “we
claim we are without sin, we lie and deceive ourselves.”
That’s
the key: we deceive ourselves. And,
hey, we don’t even need God in this equation. Heck, those who know me best
listen to my grand plans and say, “sounds good.” But I’m quite confident that
they’re also thinking, “I’ll believe it when I see it.”
How do I
know this? Because it’s the exact same thing I say when friends and loved ones
share their grand plans for self-improvement with me. “Sounds good!” … and I’ll
believe it when I see it.
It seems
abundantly clear to me that there’s a word in this for each of us, as individuals,
but there is also a word in this for the church, and for the broader culture,
as well, and it is a particularly timely word.
When
those who hold the highest offices in our national political life consistently
lie to the public, then our common life is degraded. As Micah knew, when
leaders abuse the public trust but then claim “God is on our side, and all will
be well,” desolation is at hand. All I can say, on this Sunday before another
election, is that Micah must have been reading the Sunday paper for the news
from Washington is filled with the very kinds of deceit that came forth from
Zion and Jerusalem.
As
Walter Brueggemann insists, the prophetic task of the church is to tell the
truth in a society that lives in illusion. But what if the truth is that the
church also lives in illusion?
We sit
across the river from the insanity that is the current state of national
political life, and we pat ourselves on the backs because we’re not like those
folks in the White House or the Congress or so many parts of the media these
days. But I wonder just how different the church really is. Are our seers and
diviners, our prophets and oracles any less prone to self-deception than those
to whom Micah addressed his words?
The
Sunday of a congregational meeting is an excellent time for the church to take
stock of its commitments and of its willingness to live into them. For example,
about a year ago, after several consecutive years of growing the giving
patterns of this congregation, we challenged ourselves with a fairly
significant increase in pledge income.
Now I
wouldn’t say that we lied about it
when session approved the budget and the congregation received it last January,
but I would say that we deceived ourselves. The actuals from the current budget will show that we’re not going to
meet the 2017 pledge income numbers, and the preliminary budget we’ll look at
in a few minutes reflects a more thoroughly honest assessment of where we
pledge to be in 2018.
Looking
at the budget invites us to assess honestly some important aspects of community
life. As Mark Twain was fond of saying, there are lies, damned lies, and
statistics. While it’s true that the church membership statistic here at CPC
has grown by about 10 percent in the past year, the worship attendance
statistic has decreased by a similar figure. One of those statistics is lying.
If
90-percent of life is just showing up, then the attendance figure is probably
telling us the truth, whether or not we want to hear it. Moreover, I think the
nominating committee’s report is echoing that same truth. If we don’t have
enough time or energy on hand to fill all of the available slots on our
leadership board, then there is a truth that needs to be told.
I am not
much of a prophet or seer or oracle or diviner, so I am not going to stand up
here this morning and pretend to know precisely what this truth is. I am,
however, a disciple of the one who said that the truth will make us free.
So, my
invitation this morning is to seek the truth together. What is God calling us
to be and do as the church at Clarendon in the present time? Do we have a clear
calling, a mission that we believe in enough to commit our time, our talents,
and our treasure in measures sufficient to the day?
As Rick
Ufford-Chase, former moderator of our denomination’s General Assembly, told us
when we were filming at Stony Point last summer, “over the next ten or fifteen
years, we’re going to have to systematically deconstruct the corporate culture
and institutional structure of the church, and create space for something new
to emerge.”
We began
2017 talking about living into a reformation age. Nothing that I have seen or
heard or read in the past year has altered my conviction that we are, indeed,
living through an era of deep, thorough, and profound change in the culture,
the economy, the political order, and the world of faith around the globe.
Seasons
of profound change are always marked by deaths and rebirths. I believe some old
truths are in decline, and new ones are trying to be born in our midst. Are we
to be chained to old verities, or shall we discern the truth that liberates us
to participate in the new thing that God is doing in our midst?
I will
seek to follow the way of the One who promised that we would know the truth,
and that it will make us free. It is the best I can do, and an invitation to do
the same is the best word I have to offer. Come and see. Amen.
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