Grace to you and peace from God our Father and from our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. Amen.
Jesus said, “You are the salt of the earth… You are the
light of the world.”
I made mashed potatoes for dinner the other evening. I
salted the water when they were boiling. When they were tender, I dumped the
water off, let them steam a bit to dry, then added butter and milk and smashed
them. When I tasted them, I realized what I had forgotten: to salt the smashed
potatoes. It didn’t take a whole lot - for a couple pounds of potatoes I
probably used less than a teaspoon of salt. Had I dumped in a whole handful,
the potatoes would have been ruined, but the right amount was the difference
between “meh” and “delicious.”
When I was a boy, the darkness bothered me. Well, to be
honest, it scared me. I had a little night light that sat on the dresser, a Raggedy
Ann and Andy lamp. I looked on Ebay the other day; both my wallet and I wish I still
had that, albeit for different reasons. In a dark room on a dark night, the
soft glow of that small bulb provided comfort and assurance that all was right.
Had Mom left the room light on, it would have been too much; the small glow was
all I needed. I could go to sleep in peace, the light aiding mom and dad’s
comforting words “See you in the morning” into being believable.
Jesus isn’t giving cooking instructions. He’s not giving
home decoration tips. He’s speaking about what it is to be His disciples, His
followers, to the world. A little bit of light makes a big difference in the
darkness. A little bit of salt makes a big difference in food. When disciples practice
faithfully living in service to others in the name and in the joy of the Lord makes
all the difference in the world in which we, as God’s people, find ourselves in
a day-to-day place and time.
The word for that is “vocation.” The Latin root word is vocatio,
which means “calling.” Vocation is the place where God calls us to serve one
another in the name of Jesus. In the time of Luther, the only vocation that was
taught to be truly pleasing to God was church vocations – priests and nuns. If
you were a farmer or a mother or stable-boy, your work was outside of God’s
favor; it wasn’t a holy task; it was just work. Luther changed that,
teaching that all of a Christian’s work is declared holy by God’s grace through
faith. Let me say that again: the doctrine of vocation teaches that even your
work, whatever it is, is covered in the righteousness of the cross of Jesus so
God sees your work as holy and good. Further, Luther taught that in your
vocation, God was at work through your service. The Christian was the means,
the vehicle, through which God worked. Vocation was no longer an inverted me-to-God
vertical relationship under Law where you served God; vocation was a
vertical-to-horizontal God-to-me-to-neighbor relationship where the Gospel is
delivered.
Suddenly, every vocation was a holy one and every vocational
task, no matter how unpleasant or difficult or unpopular, was God pleasing
because in and through that vocation, God is serving those around you. A
Christian mother who changes her baby’s loaded diaper is doing a holy and good
work as she serves her child. A Christian septic tank pumper is doing a holy
and good work as he serves the client. A Christian surgeon who removed a
cancerous growth is doing a holy and good work for her patient. A Christian
engineer who designs bridges for safe travel is doing a holy and good work for
those who travel over it. A Christian student who struggles and fights to
correctly solve math equations, or grasp subject-verb agreement, or who
remember the seven rivers in Texas, he is doing a holy and good work for her
teacher, even if the grade book doesn’t show it.
For most of us, we have multiple and varying vocations. We have
vocations in which God has placed us to provide for ourselves and our families.
Nurses, pastoral ministry, teachers, office administrators, technicians,
ranchers, farmers, sales, grandparent – all are vocations where the Lord calls
us to serve our neighbors and, by extension, ourselves and our families. But
don’t just think “job” or “career.” That’s how the world thinks. Your minds are
set on something higher. Vocation is calling into service for others in the
name of Jesus, remember, and we hold many such vocations of service: spouses,
parents, children (yes, that means adults, too), sibling. Think outside of the
family, too: you are a neighbor to those in this community, a citizen within
the government of the county, state and country. Each of those are special
vocations, special callings of the Lord for the baptized child of God.
You notice, I added these are Christian in their vocations and
that a Christian’s works, life, and efforts are all made holy through faith in
Christ. The same cannot be said for a non-Christian, someone who lacks faith or
who denies Jesus. Their works and their vocation stand alone under the holy and
divine judgement of God.The funny thing is that even non-Christians serve in
these vocations, oftentimes very well. The funny part is, of course, that while
the Lord places non-Christians in those same vocations (well, except being a
pastor of course), they serve others neither recognizing the Lord’s hand nor
serving others in His name.
But there is one vocation that is unique, a vocation that
only someone who is part of the body of Christ can fulfill. That is the
vocation of discipleship. We are called by Christ into the vocation of
discipleship, following Him so that as we act and interact with others, God is
at work in and through us to those around us, in particular with those in whom
He places us in contact.
The earth needs to be salted with the Gospel; people need to
be brightened by the Word of the Lord that both calls to repentance and
proclaims forgiveness in the name of Jesus.
This is no secret: we live in a world that is evil, corrupt
and deficient. It was true when Jesus walked the earth 2000 years ago and it is
true still to this day. We see it every night on the news. We read it on the
internet. We hear the stories of things that happen like in Nashville, where the
wrong man is beat to death. Violence is excused under the pretense of
protesting the violation of civil rights. We see people joyfully speaking lies
and destroying the reputations of others, all in search of power. Civilians are
blown to pieces because a man wants to change national boundaries. The stories
the fallenness of man are enough to break anybody's heart. It'd be very easy to
stick our heads in the sand, wring our hands, and moan, “Oh goodness somebody
had better do something. The world is going to hell in a handbasket just as
fast as it can.”
But if we do that, or rather, if that’s all we do, we're
missing out on one of the gifts and the opportunities that the Lord has given
to us, his church, his disciples. He's called us to discipleship. He's called
us to act and to interact in a world that is dying and broken and in discord
and disharmony with the will and word of God. Jesus is calling us to be salt
and light to the world in both our acting out the Gospel and our speaking the
Gospel. Don't overthink the metaphors. This isn't about whether salt purifies
or cleanses or burns or helps or flavors. This isn't about whether light is an LED,
or solar, or has too much UV light, or is a soft glow. It's about how salt
changes things, and how light brightens in the darkness. In short salt and
light do exactly what they do because they are salt and light. If salt isn’t
salty, it’s worthless; if a light is hidden, it’s not able to shine. The same
is true of disciples. Disciples disciple by daily living out the faith into
which we have been baptized, so that in our good works (which have been made
righteous by faith in Christ, remember) others see Christ in us and through us.
By nature of being Jesus’ disciples, we are salt, we are light to the world
around us and the world we live in.
Your good works, done in faithfulness to Jesus, have one
overall, singular purpose: in serving your neighbor, you glorify God. It’s not
about you. Your good works aren’t for attaboys and attagirls, for attention,
for gold stars and blue ribbons. It’s so that others who see your good deeds give
glory to God through their own repentance and faith and then thank God for you
and your faithfulness.
In our vocations, there will be times for action and there
will be times for words. Every moment does not have to come with a three-part
witnessing statement, a handful of Gospel tracts, and an invitation for
baptism. But we are called to be prepared to speak, so that when asked, or when
the Lord provides opportunity for conversation, we are bold to speak of the
Father’s work in creating, the Son’s work of saving, the the Spirit’s work of
creating the very faith that saves. We share the same Word that was shared with
us and as the Holy Spirit worked in us, so also He works through us. It's who
we are, it's what we are, because we are called by Christ to be that very
thing.
So, be salt and light in your vocation. On the one hand, be
your ordinary self. You do not have to be Mom of the Year contender to be
faithful in your vocation of motherhood. You don’t have to be Employee of the
Month with your mug shot above the water cooler at work. You don’t have to
convert dozens of heathens to saving faith in Christ. Be who you are as a
baptized child of God. But, on the other hand, you are not ordinary. You are
extra-ordinary because you are in whom and through whom Christ does great and
wonderful things. So do not live as an ordinary person, that is, as someone who
is not a Baptized child of God. You are called to be extra ordinary:
extra-ordinary husbands and wives, extra-ordinary sons and daughters,
extra-ordinary citizens and church members, extra-ordinary neighbors and
employees, extra-ordinary in all that you are as children of God. You do so with the unique gifts and talents
that the Lord has given you.
There are over a dozen different salts at the grocery store, each with a slightly different taste or texture. Regardless, salt does only one thing: it salts. At the Big Orange Hardware Store, there are two full rows with lights and light fixtures. Regardless the light you get, light does one thing: it enlightens. That’s the point of comparison with discipleship. Just as salt salts and light lights, disciples disciple. Our identity is in Christ – we are His. With Christ in us and Christ working through us, we disciple. As St. Paul says, “In Him, we live, move and have our being.” As Jesus’ disciples, we “salt” those around us with the Good News of Jesus. Having received His blessings, enlighten those around us with the Word of He who is the Light of the World.
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