Showing posts with label mercy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mercy. Show all posts

08 March 2020

“What do you want me to do for you?” (Mark 10:32-52)



By his own profession H.G. Wells, the great science fiction writer of a century ago, was not a Christian believer. However, in 1930 he wrote a short anecdote about an archbishop who found himself bothered by some niggling problem that had been eating away at him and that that he was unable to identify or explain. “Maybe the shadow of age was falling upon him, he thought, maybe he had been overworking… Or had he done something wrong or acted in a mistaken spirit?”

It troubled him to the point where he was unable to perform even the simplest, most routine functions. What was he to do about it, he pondered? At last the solution came to him. He would do what he was always telling everybody else to do who came to him with a dilemma: Pray!

Yes, he would pray.
Slowly he sank to his knees and put his hands together. He was touched by a sort of childish trustfulness in his own attitude. “Oh God,” he began, and paused.
He paused, and a sense of awful imminence, a monstrous awe, gripped him. And then he heard a voice.
It was not a harsh voice, but it was a clear strong voice. There was nothing about it still or small
“Yes,” said the voice. “What is it?”
They found His Grace in the morning… Plainly his death had been instantaneous…[1]

I don’t know about you. But speaking for myself I can say I’m grateful for the times when God hasn’t answered my prayers. That is not to say that there haven’t been occasions when God has graciously intervened in my life—when he has answered my prayers sometimes in ways far more wonderfully than I had even expected. But rather, I’m thinking of those times when my prayer has been selfish or short-sighted or half-hearted. Perhaps you don’t have those times, but I know I do—and more often than I care to admit.

Along the Way…


It seems to me that we have a classic example of that in our reading from the Gospel of Mark this morning. Mark tells us that it occurred as Jesus and his disciples were “on their way up to Jerusalem”. Now that word “way” in Greek is hodos, and it is a significant one—both for Mark, who uses it sixteen times, and for the entire New Testament, where you’ll find it more than a hundred times. In fact, long before they were ever called Christians, the earliest believers referred to themselves as those who belonged to “the Way” (Acts 9:2; 19:9,23).

For Mark that way begins with John the Baptist who has come to “prepare the way of the Lord” (1:2-3). Some chapters later, after teaching a crowd of four thousand people for a full three days, Jesus was concerned that as they journeyed on the long walk towards home they might collapse along the way (8:3). Two weeks ago, we read of how Jesus and his followers were heading towards Cæsarea Philippi. Mark tells us that it was as they were on the way that Jesus asked them, “Who do you say I am?” To which Peter replied, “You are the Messiah.” Again, in last Sunday’s reading, Mark tells us that it was as Jesus was “on his way” that a man ran up to him to ask, “What must I do to inherit eternal life?” (10:17).

Now in this morning’s passage we encounter it three times. Indeed, it is here in these verses that we begin to discover why the word “way” is so important for Mark. In the opening verses of our reading this morning Jesus himself makes it crystal clear: “We are going up to Jerusalem and the Son of Man will be delivered over to the chief priests and the teachers of the law. They will condemn him to death and will hand him over to the Gentiles, who will mock him and spit on him, flog him and kill him. Three days later he will rise.”

In fact, this is the third time Jesus has given this warning to his disciples. The way is the way to Jerusalem, the way to Jesus offering up himself in death for the sins of the world. Already the shadow of the cross looms ever darker over all that happens. And that is the context in which James and John approach Jesus with their brash request: “Teacher, we want you to do for us whatever we ask.”

A Bold Request


Now we all know that there are other places in the gospels where Jesus assures us that our prayers will be answered. In John’s gospel, for example, we hear Jesus make the promise, “You may ask me for anything in my name, and I will do it” (John 14:14). Or again, in Matthew, If you believe, you will receive whatever you ask for in prayer” (Matthew 21:22). But notice that in each case there is a condition. We are to ask in Jesus’ name. We are to ask believing—not just believing that God can do anything or formulaically tacking the words “in Jesus’ name” onto the end of our prayers, but conforming our minds to the mind of Christ, our hearts to the heart of Christ, our wills to the will of Christ.

But the disciples’ request comes without any qualifications: “Teacher, we want you to do for us whatever we ask.” And then comes the request itself: “Let one of us sit at your right and the other at your left in your glory.” If only the two brothers had known what they were asking! If they had, I imagine they would never have spoken as they did. They could be grateful that Jesus did not comply with their demand. For in the space of a few short days they would learn that Jesus’ glory would be revealed on a wooden cross and that the places they so desired on Jesus’ right and left would be occupied by two criminals.

The problem with James’ and John’s request (or prayer, if we may call it that) was that it revolved around them. Presbyterian theologian R.C. Sproul was one of many who have written about the false understanding of God as a celestial bellhop, a God whose very reason for existence is to do our bidding, one “who is on call every time we press the button, just waiting to serve us our every request”.[2] Of course that is a caricature.

This winter Karen and I have been attending a course on amateur astronomy. During the first couple of sessions our instructor dwelt on the way people largely understood the universe before the time of Copernicus in the early sixteenth century. Observers looked up at the movement of the stars and the planets and they assumed that everything revolved around the earth. In the face of considerable opposition Copernicus insisted that the sun was the centre of the solar system and it took more than a century for his observations to gain acceptance. Today we call that change in our understanding the Copernican revolution.

In the same way James and John needed a spiritual revolution—to move from a me-centred life to a God-centred life. We find it encapsulated in Jesus’ response to their request: “Whoever wants to become great among you must be your servant, and whoever wants to be first must be slave of all”—and they would find a model for that as they travelled a little farther along the way.

True Prayer


They had just passed through Jericho, about fifty kilometers from Jerusalem, when their journey was interrupted by what I can only imagine were the piercing shouts of a desperate man. “Jesus, Son of David, have mercy on me!” Some of the people in the crowd tried to get him to shut up. But that only prompted him to cry out all the louder, “Son of David, have mercy on me!”

I can’t imagine that Bartimaeus was schooled in theology. And maybe his crying out from the roadside was a rather crude way of getting attention. But those shouts of desperation showed a far more profound grasp of what prayer is all about than James and John had displayed earlier that day. “Jesus, Son of David, have mercy on me!”

His words echoed a prayer uttered centuries before by the prophet Daniel. With his people living in exile, their capital city of Jerusalem and its temple in ruins, Daniel dressed himself in sackcloth and covered himself in ashes as he made his plea on their behalf before God. At the heart of his petition we find these words: “We do not make requests of you because we are righteous, but because of your great mercy” (Daniel 9:18).

At the heart of both Bartimaeus’ and Daniel’s prayers was the conviction that the God to whom we bring our petitions is one who delights to show mercy and that this is the only basis on which we come before him. This was how God revealed himself to Moses atop Mount Sinai: “The Lord, the Lord, the compassionate and gracious God, slow to anger, abounding in love and faithfulness …” (Exodus 34:6). And those words to Moses become a chorus that we find repeated again and again through the Old Testament.

In the original Greek of Mark’s gospel Bartimaeus’ words are these: Huie Dauid Iésou, eleéson me. It did not take long for the early church to recognize the profound meaning in Bartimaeus’ prayer and to adopt it into its worship. We know it as the Kyrie eleison, the threefold cry, “Lord, have mercy. Christ, have mercy. Lord, have mercy.” We can trace it back at least to the middle of the fourth century, to some of the most ancient Christian liturgies.

“Lord, have mercy.” I believe that these words—and Bartimaeus’ cry—are an expression of what true, God-centred, prayer is all about. For we come to God and we bring our needs before him not because of any deserving in ourselves—not because we’ve served him with our lives or because we’ve prayed faithfully over the years or because we’ve managed to get our doctrine right, no, none of these things—but because he is merciful.

And the depth of that mercy would become clear as it compelled the Son of God to continue along the road—the way that would lead to his own sacrificial death and to offer up his life as a ransom for many.





[1] H.G. Wells, “An Answer to Prayer”


[2]     https://www.ligonier.org/blog/rc-sproul-warning-prayer/

20 August 2017

“The Way of Mercy” (Psalm 67)

Ever had the feeling you’d bitten off more than you could chew? Well, that’s exactly the sense that began to come upon me as I got more and more deeply into preparing my sermon this week. It was my intention to focus on Psalm 67, a psalm I committed to memory years ago in the old-fashioned idiom of the 1662 Book of Common Prayer:
God be merciful unto us, and bless us;
     and show us the light of his countenance…
That thy way may be known upon earth,
     thy saving health among all nations.
When I looked at it a couple of weeks ago in the New International Version (the translation in our pew Bibles), I found these words:
May God be gracious to us and bless us
     and make his face shine on us…
It’s not that different, except that the word “merciful” has become “gracious”. In fact, virtually every English translation since 1952 has dome the same thing, substituted that word “gracious” in place of “merciful”. This whetted my curiosity. And so a few clicks on biblegateway.com revealed that, while the words “mercy” and “merciful” occur 310 times in the King James Version of the Bible, they are to be found only 144 times in the New International Version. Why the change?
First of all, there are half a dozen words in each of the languages of the Old and New Testaments that can be translated “mercy” and each one has a different shade of meaning. There is one that carries the notion of “faithful devotion” and is often translated “loving kindness”. “I will sing of the Lord’s mercies forever; with my mouth I will make your faithfulness known through all generations(Psalm 89:1). The word that is used in our psalm this morning has been defined as “the gracious favour of the superior to the inferior, all undeserved”.[1] A third term in the Old Testament is related to the word for “womb” and so has the meaning of “motherly care” or “tender love”. It is the word the psalmist uses when he prays, Surround me with your tender mercies so I may live” (Psalm 119:77).
When we come to the New Testament there are again three words that are often translated “mercy”. The first simply means kindness: “Blessed are the merciful, for they shall obtain mercy” (Matthew 5:7). “If your gift is to show mercy, do it cheerfully” (Romans 12:8). “Mercy triumphs over judgement” (James 2:13). There is a second word that means “compassion”. Thus Paul exhorts the Christians at Rome, “I urge you …, in view of God’s mercy, to offer your bodies as a living sacrifice,” (Romans 12:1) and James declares, “The Lord is full of compassion and mercy” (James 5:11). But the most colourful term in the New Testament really means “bowels”—suggesting that we’re talking about a powerful emotion that comes from deep within. It’s the word that the desperate father uses when he comes to Jesus imploring him on behalf of his epileptic son: “If you can do anything, have mercy on us and help us” (Mark 9:22). And on more than one occasion, when Jesus saw the crowds that gathered around him and their neediness, the gospels use that same word. Today we might easily say, “Jesus’ heart went out to them” (Mark 6:34, 14:14).

The Nature of Mercy

My suspicion is that our contemporary Bible translators have moved away from that word mercy because in today’s world it has taken on negative implications. For many people “mercy” has become one of those outmoded words like “charity”. For them it carries with it a sense of condescension, of pity. While claiming to help, in reality it demeans its recipients, who end up being beholden to the one who bestows it. But that is certainly not the mercy that we find in the Bible or in the psalm we read this morning.
One of the characteristics of Hebrew poetry is that it often takes the form of a series of parallel statements, in which one phrase amplifies or enhances the one that precedes it. And this is what we see in Psalm 67:
May God be merciful to us and bless us
and make his face to shine upon us.
One of the things I’ve always loved to do on a hot summer day is to go body surfing. I stand out in the water up to my waist and a little wavelet passes by. Then there’s slightly larger one that wets me a little higher. And that is followed by a great rolling wave. I plunge in front of it and it carries me right into the shore. It seems to me the same is happening in this opening verse. It’s a kind of crescendo. May God be merciful to us; may God bless us; may God smile upon us. Each phrase builds on the previous one until it carries us like a wave into the shore.
You see, mercy is not about sparingly dispensing something when people beg for it. It’s not as though God grudgingly bestows his mercy only when we plead to him long enough and desperately enough. (Do you remember the story Jesus told about the persistent widow who pleaded her case before the unjust judge? The whole point of that parable is that God is not like that.) No, we have a God who desires nothing more than to show mercy. “Praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of mercy and the God of all comfort …,” writes the apostle Paul (2 Corinthians 1:3). The Lord is full of compassion and mercy,” echoes James (5:11). “His mercies never come to an end,” sings Jeremiah, “they are new every morning” (Lamentations 3:22-23).
And so mercy is about abundance. It is about generosity. It is about the lavishness of grace. It is about a shepherd who leaves his ninety-nine sheep in the fold to go in search of the one that is lost. It is about a father who kills the fatted calf for his errant son and runs down the road to embrace him. It is about a God who did not spare his own Son, but gave him up for us all.

The Need for Mercy

The tragedy is that that kind of mercy is a rare commodity in our world today. You can see the evidence of its disappearance in the social media on a daily basis. How quick people are to become judge, jury and executioner often on the slimmest of evidence! They hide behind the anonymity of the internet to lash out with torrents of insults and invective, with the result that whole lives have been ruined through unsubstantiated defamations. And then there is road rage, where a forgetful moment behind the wheel on the part of one driver can lead to unbridled fury on the part of another.
Lest we think that we in the church are immune, let me tell you a little story from Don Posterski, who used to be vice-president of World Vision Canada. His position often involved travel and therefore eating in restaurants. He tells of how he would occasionally ask the wait staff what were their best and worst times of the week. Almost invariably the answer would be Sunday lunch. Why? Because that was when they received the lowest tips. And who makes up a significant proportion of Sunday diners at restaurants? Churchgoers. Sadly we have gained a reputation among at least one segment of the population of being stingy and thankless. It wouldn’t take a lot of effort to turn that around when you consider that a five percent difference on a tip in most cases doesn’t amount to more than a dollar or two.
How transforming it would be if we who claim to be followers of Jesus could recapture the Bible’s vision of God’s mercy! And it seems to me the only way we can do that is to pursue it, to experience it, to cast ourselves upon it, on a daily basis ourselves. New Testament scholar Tom Wright has written, “The church is never more in danger than when it … forgets that every day it too must say, ‘Lord, have mercy upon me, a sinner,’ and allow that confession to work its way into genuine humility… ”[2]
Wright is echoing one of the earliest of Christian prayers: “Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God, have mercy on me, a sinner.” It is known by many as “the Jesus prayer” and is prayed repeatedly by believers in the Eastern Orthodox tradition. Of this prayer Franciscan writer Richard Rohr comments,
This is not a self-demeaning prayer, nor a self-defeating prayer, nor is it a disempowering prayer. Relying upon mercy, in fact, protects you from the arrogance and pride that wants to judge others, even in your mind. It situates you in freedom from any sense of your own sufficiency or superiority, and affirms a non-need to justify yourself, and thus keeps your heart open for others and for God. It is basically a prayer for detachment from the self, both mind and heart, and its endless games of self-validation. “Lord, have mercy” seeks validation only from God and not from any inner or outer attempts to be worthy, independently “good”, or not-in-need-of-mercy.[3]

The Fruit of Mercy

Before we close, there is another aspect of God’s mercy that we find in Psalm 67 and that we cannot overlook. I spoke of God’s mercy being like a wave that washes over us. One of the things about that wave is that it doesn’t stop with me. It continues to surge forward until it reaches the shore. So too, God’s mercy does not stop with us. Look at the psalm again:
May God be merciful to us and bless us
     and make his face to shine upon us—
that your ways may be known on earth,
     your saving power among all nations.
In fact apart from the first verse the focus of the entire of the psalm is not on “us” but on “them”: “Let the peoples praise you…” “Let the nations be glad…” “Let all the ends of the earth revere him.” God shows mercy to us so that we in turn may show that same mercy to others. And if we didn’t hear that message in the psalm, it certainly comes through loud and clear in Jesus’ parable of the unforgiving servant.
Do you remember the story he told about the king who thought it was time to settle accounts with his servants? As it turned out, one of them owed him an incalculable debt, far more than he could ever hope to pay in several lifetimes, so the king ordered that he and all his family be sold into slavery. When the servant got wind of this, he threw himself face down before the king and begged, Be patient with me, and I will pay you everything.” Jesus tells us the master had mercy on him and cancelled the debt. No sooner had he left the king’s presence, however, than he sought out one of his fellow servants who owed him what was by comparison a trifling amount. He grabbed him by the throat and shook him and demanded, “Pay back what you owe me!” In response his fellow servant pleaded with him, Be patient with me, and I will pay you everything.” But he refused and had the man thrown into debtors’ prison. When the king heard about this, he was enraged and said to the servant, “You wicked servant! I cancelled all that debt of yours because you begged me to. Shouldn’t you have had mercy on your fellow servant just as I had on you?” And with that he handed him over to the jailers.
The point of the parable is that that is the way it is with God’s mercy. He does not intend it to end with us, but to flow out from us, to bring freshness, renewal, joy and hope into the lives of others.
In his remarkable little book, The Name of God Is Mercy, Pope Francis relates the story of when he was Archbishop of Buenos Aires and a priest came seeking his counsel. The priest felt guilty because he feared he was too prone to offer forgiveness to the penitents who came to him in the confessional. The pope asked him what he did when he had these doubts. His reply: “I go to our chapel … and say to Jesus, ‘Lord, forgive me if I have forgiven too much. But you’re the one who gave me the bad example!’ ”[4]
Praise God that there are no limits to his mercy! And may it be our highest privilege and greatest delight to share God’s mercy in a world that desperately needs it.




[1]     “Mercy”, The New Bible Dictionary, 809
[2]     Evil and the Justice of God, 99
[3]     “Why We Need to Say, ‘Lord, have mercy!’ ”, Huffington Post, 16 Sep 2013, http://www.huffingtonpost.com/fr-richard-rohr/why-we-need-to-say-lord-h_b_3935884.html
[4]    Page 13