The Measuring Stick
The Measuring Stick
Sermon: October 12, 1997
My nephew Kevin married his childhood sweetheart the previous day and the family was in town, filling the first three pews for this sermon. I took the opportunity to speak to my love and respect for my father, Glen, my mother-in-law, Ettie, my brother Bob, and my son Julian.
Happy New Year!!
With the sunset last evening came the end of Yom Kippur, and the end of the High Holy Days following the Jewish New Year -- Rosh Hashanah. Gentiles may not notice the turning of the page of the Jewish calendar, as it is a good deal quieter than the wild rumpus that marks the turning of the page in the Gregorian calendar.
Why is Rosh Hashanah so much quieter, so much more contemplative, than the Gregorian New Year? During the ten days of repentance between Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur, Jews undergo a time of contemplation and study. It is a time for people to think back on the year, identify those whom we have wronged, and seek out their forgiveness. It is also a time to forgive others their wrongs against you.
Jesus Christ -- that completely devout Jew -- describes precisely this part of the atonement process of Rosh Hashanah in the book of Mark (11:25):
“And whenever you stand praying, forgive, if you have anything against any one; so that your Father also who is in heaven may forgive you your trespasses.”
The introspection of Rosh Hashanah goes beyond this, however. It is a time to ask a broader question -- am I all that I can be?
I will ask that you take a moment here, now, to ask that question. Please close your eyes. Take three deep, slow breaths to settle your mind and heart.
Now, ask this:
“Am I all that I can be? Am I all that God intends me to be?”
Please open your eyes.
Am I all that I can be?
The task we are about is much like that contemplated by Peter Senge, a renowned management guru. In his book, The Fifth Discipline, he builds this image. Imagine two hands, one above the other, connected to each other by a rubber band. The upper hand represents our vision of what is possible. The lower hand represents an assessment of my current reality. Notice that the force of the rubber band tends to pull these together. The farther apart our hands, the more tension we experience, and the more we feel that we must resolve the stress of the separation of these hands.
Sometimes we are not even aware of this stress. We go through our days, vaguely aware of ourselves as a living possibility, and vaguely aware of our limitations. Only at some unconscious level do we notice the gulf between our possibility and our reality. The stress of that gulf is simply another of the unidentified stresses and disappointments that so characterize our time. We know the gap, but do not acknowledge it, so it steals into our hearts like a thief and robs us of our capacity for joy. We feel a vague, dull ache, so we take an aspirin, or pour a drink, or watch a mindless situation comedy -- anything but recognize this longing and pain in our hearts.
The introspection of Rosh Hashanah brings this whole process -- both hands and the rubber band -- out of the fog and into the clear, bright view of the noon-time sun. Let’s see what a little fresh air and sunlight can do for this vague heartache.
Even in the light of day, we can foul up this evaluation.
First, we can move this lower hand -- our current reality -- up with a lie. We simply lie to ourselves about what is. We can construct this lie in dozens of different ways. One popular way is to take refuge in the rules:
“I work hard. I recycle. I pay my taxes. I am faithful to my spouse. I go to church regularly. I obey the law.” And so on. Then, with our list of rules with which we have complied, we build an image of ourselves. The longer the list, the better, at least for sustaining the lie.
A second way we artificially move this hand upward is by minimizing our impact in the world. I simply tell myself that the world is so grand and I am so insignificant, that I cannot have any real impact, any real meaning. I am powerless. It is not worth the time and effort needed to examine my current reality. My reality is not worth a close look.
Just as we can close the gap by moving the lower hand up with a lie, so, too, can we move this upper hand downward with lies. I can say that people -- all people, including myself -- are no darn good. We can do no better than this. We are so flawed, that there is no upper hand, no vision of what is possible that is distinct from what is. People don’t change. I am all that I can be, darn it, and don’t try to suggest otherwise.
Or how about this lie: God gave all the gifts to other people. “When they passed out the brains, or the caring, or the talent, I was out to lunch.”
Here’s one: “I was born 2 centuries too late, or too early. My gifts are for different circumstances, different times, than these.”
On and on these lies go, denying the vision, denying the possibility that I am a Child of God, graced with gifts and opportunities to make a difference, to have an impact, to glorify the Creator, to fulfill my promise.
The problem is, our hearts know better, just as our hearts know our current state regardless of the honesty of our assessment.
So, let’s say we take a deep breath and decide to honestly tackle the questions of Rosh Hashanah: Am I all that I can be? Am I all that God has intended for me?
All of us must answer this question, “no.” If Christ himself, as he does in the 18th chapter of Luke, must decline to be called “good”, then who among us can say that we are all that we can be? Who among us can say there is no higher possibility for us?
But it is not enough to answer this question “no.” That is too easy, and it offers us nothing by way of closing the gap. We must go on to ask, “in what ways do I fall short of my promise?”
Both Senge and Christ suggest the same strategy -- focus your attention on the upper hand, the standard. Keep it firmly fixed in your mind. If you do that, and keep an accurate view of your current reality, the natural tension created by the gap will provide the impetus needed to close that same gap. We need do little more than that.
What, then, is that standard? What does this upper hand look like?
We find the answer in today’s scripture reading. Christ gives two clues about this standard: “love the Lord our God” and “love your neighbor.”
But the message of Christ about what this upper hand looks like is not simply the admonition to love God and your neighbor. It is in the life of Christ himself. In Christ, we have an opportunity to see what it is to, as a human being, take all of God’s gifts and express them, moment by moment, in one loving act after another.
The danger of setting Christ up as our measuring stick, though, is that he can seem a bit distant. If you live in the late 20th Century, his time is distant. If you have no gift of public speaking, his ministry is distant. If you are a woman, his gender is distant.
What we need, then, is a way to translate the life-lesson of Christ into our own lives, somehow using the commandments to love God and love my neighbor as a guide?
I’d like to suggest a three-step process. First, listen closely to these words of Christ, and take them into your heart: “You are the light of the world. A city set on a hill cannot be hid. Nor do men light a lamp and put it under a bushel, but on a stand, and it gives light to all in the house. Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works and give glory to your Father who is in heaven.”
So, step one is, know that you are the Light of the World.
Step two: take an inventory of God’s gifts to you. Obviously, look at what you can do, and look at what you love to do. These are, however, only some of your gifts. In each moment, the entire context of your life is a gift. By this I mean, “where am I, who is here with me, what is going on around me?” God gifted Christ not only with a crystal-clear knowledge of his own divine nature and a gift for teaching and healing, but also with a moment in time, a people immersed in a devotion to One God, and a particular historical context against which he could make his points about forgiveness, love, and compassion. Even more specifically, God gifted Christ with a Roman centurion in one moment, a leper in the next, an adulteress and an angry crowd in the next. Each of these moments was a gift, an opportunity to show us all what it is like to be the Light of the World.
Finally, step three: Ask, in each moment, what does it mean to be the Light of the World, to love God and your neighbor with all your might, if you happen to have this set of talents and loves in this context? What does it mean to have Christ’s heart, but at this moment, with these gifts of talent and history?
Let me show you how this works. Say, for example, instead of an itinerant Jewish preacher and healer, I am a Jew in
Or say that I am a man with lifelong dedication to family. I have a son facing the agony and shame of divorce, a son who fears his family will see him as flawed as he sees himself, and in a particular moment that son calls and tells me, with a shaking voice, that he and his wife are splitting. In that moment, what does it mean to have Christ’s heart, but in Glen’s body in 1983?
It means you say, I love you, son, no matter what.
Say, for example, I am a young mother in the early 1960s, making ends meet by working a switchboard in a Ramada Inn. I am blessed with an ear for music, a passion for opera and theater, and an 8-year-old daughter who likes music. In that moment, what does it mean to have God’s heart, but in Ettie’s body in 1963?
It means that, despite my financial worries, I figure out a way to take my 8-year old daughter into
Say I am a nuclear physicist and an ability to make accessible the incomprehensible world of quarks and mesons. My dear 6-year-old nephew asks me what salt is. What does it mean to be a Beacon of Love in that moment, to have Christ’s heart in Bob’s body?
It means that I take the time and effort to let that little boy see a glimpse of the magic of God’s universe that has enchanted me since I was his age.
Anybody can -- and should -- do this. Each of us can ask, does it mean to have Christ’s loving heart, with these talents, a this time in history, with these parents, and this family, in this moment?
With that question, we can get a clearer view of that upper hand, that vision of our possibility.
With this new, clearer vision of the promise that we are, and an understanding of what we have been when we do not fulfill that promise, this tension is right out in the open. It is only when we do this that we can make this tension work for us instead of against us.
Look what must happen over time if I keep my attention firmly on this possibility and keep this tension between “what is” and “what could be” out in the open. “What is” must begin to close the gap. Little by little -- moment by moment -- we will find ourselves relieving that tension, not through self-deception, cynicism, or self-medication, but by choosing -- moment by moment -- to love.
In each moment, to love.
That is the call of Rosh Hashanah.
That is the invitation of Christ.
That is the wish of our Divine Creator.
