Ain’t that Good News?
Homily delivered for the Third Sunday after Epiphany (Year C)
The
Rev. Fr. Tony Hutchinson, SCP, Ph.D.
26 January 2025
9:00
a.m. Sung Mass
St. Luke’s Episcopal Church
Grants Pass, Oregon
Nehemiah 8:1-3, 5-6, 8-10; Ps 19; 1 Corinthians 12:12-31a; Luke 4:14-21
God, take away our hearts of stone and give us hearts of flesh. Amen.
Today’s scriptures all in one way or another talk about how we think about God, whether in fear or joy.
In the Hebrew scripture reading, the scribe Ezra reads the book of the Law before the people who react by bursting into weeping, totally dismayed at its severity. Ezra’s liturgy police react: no weeping or mourning allowed, only feasting shared with the poor, because “LAW IS GOOD” no matter what! Put on a happy face, even if this stuff is killing you!
The Psalm says that we can learn much about God in looking at the wondrous stars and planets in the skies above us, as well as by reading the Law, a “perfect” and “sure” teacher that “revives” and “makes wise” the heart by stirring it up to “fear” and prayers that our words and thoughts be acceptable to the God thus revealed.
The Gospel reading is Luke’s portrayal of Jesus’ first public sermon. He reads from Isaiah 61, beginning
“The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because
he has anointed me
to bring good news to the poor.
He has sent me
to proclaim release to the captives
and recovery of sight to the blind,”
But then, instead of the next line, “to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favor and the day of vengeance of our God,” Jesus ends the reading by throwing in a line from another part of Isaiah (58:6) and saying:
“to send out into freedom those once downtrodden,
to proclaim the year of the Lord's favor.”
He deliberately deletes Second Isaiah’s reference to “the Day of Vengeance of our God” and replaces it with a line from Second Isaiah’s great song about what true worship is:
“Is not this the fast that I choose:
to loose the bonds of injustice,
to undo the thongs of the yoke,
to send out into freedom those once downtrodden,
and to break every yoke?
Is it not to share your bread with the hungry,
and bring the homeless poor into your house;
when you see the naked, to cover them,
and not to hide yourself from your own kin?”(Isaiah 56:5-7)
Jesus applies this all to himself, and thus announces his mission. Like Gabriel Fauré in his Requiem as originally written, Jesus deliberately leaves out the Dies Irae. By deleting the reference to the Day of Vengeance, Jesus focuses his message on Good News, hope and forgiveness, rather than fear. Jesus is to break the bonds, and then send out those who were once downtrodden into freedom, as sent ones, or apostles, with his message of liberation to others.
We will read of the congregation’s bitter reaction to Jesus’ sermon next week. And as you shall see later in this homily, a sermon that announces good news can trigger a bitter response. But the story we read today is clear: Jesus’ mission is to bring joy not fear, hope not despair. Forgiveness, not punishment: a Happy Announcement, or Good News.
Mahatma Gandhi said “I love your Christ. It is you Christians that frighten me.” The Church’s occasional obsessive and fear-inducing focus on pure and legal has driven many, especially the young, from what they call “organized religion.” For many, it is not “Good News,” that Christian Churches proclaim, but rather, “bad news”: you don’t measure up, you need to shape up or ship out, and even if Jesus wants to love you, you are simply not worthy, not up to snuff. God with a capital G really is annoyed with you, and especially with the fact that you don’t feel properly convicted of your evil ways. The things that give you pleasure and joy are all forbidden, you yourself are deficient and hopeless, and only by throwing yourself at the mercy of the Church, with its abusive hierarchs, hypocritical congregations, pointing fingers, demands for mindless submission and faith, and constant demands for money and time, you might be able, just possibly, to gain a bit of favor from the overarching, homophobic, woman-hating, sex-hating, drink-loathing, KILLJOY IN THE SKY.
But we need to understand that Jesus’ message is a message of GOOD NEWS, no matter where you are.
I used to sing my children to sleep by singing lullabies and African-American Spirituals. One of their favorites was this:
I got shoes in that kingdom, ain’t that good news? (repeat)
I’m gonna lay down my troubles, and shoulder up my cross,
Good God, I’m gonna bear it home
to my Jesus,
Now ain’t that good news?
The other verses followed suit: “I got a robe in that kingdom,” “I got a house in that kingdom.” “I got a crown in that kingdom.”
The point is that in Jesus, we have a promise for what we need, even things like shoes, shelter, and food. We have a blessing in him to receive the true desire of our hearts. It doesn’t mean that all we think we may want is right, or that he has promised bad things for us because we in our brokenness want the wrong things. But it does mean Jesus is good news, not bad.
This is not good news for the afterlife only. It is about our lives here and now, about who we are, not just about how we should be. It is about liberation from what binds us, what keeps us back, what holds us down, both individually and communally. Liberation from addictions, obsessions, fears, and vicious habits. Healing from illness. Jesus went out from that sermon and healed people, and called them to help each other. This is the heart of Christian mission: Jesus sends out free those who were once held captive, once down-trodden, and asks them to free others.
Importantly, Jesus here says his mission is to make the Happy Announcement to the poor, the downtrodden, to those who have the most to fear from the broken way the world is. The very people that we have pledged to defend and support in our baptismal covenant.
This brings us to a matter that has been on the hearts of many of us this week. You made have hear about the Episcopal Bishop of Washington DC, the Right Rev. Maryann Budde’s short homily at the National Prayer Service held at National Cathedral the day after the Inauguration. Addressing President Trump sitting there front and center in the first row of pews, she said this:
Let me make one final plea, Mr. President. Millions have put their trust in you and, as you told the nation yesterday, you have felt the providential hand of a loving God. In the name of our God, I ask you to have mercy upon the people in our country who are scared now. There are gay, lesbian and transgender children in Democratic, Republican, and Independent families, some who fear for their lives.” [She then gives a lengthy description of people who are at risk of deportation, stressing the fact that most are good contributing members of our communities and concludes:] “Our God teaches us that we are to be merciful to the stranger, for we were all once strangers in this land. May God grant us the strength and courage to honor the dignity of every human being, to speak the truth to one another in love and walk humbly with each other and our God for the good of all people. Good of all people in this nation and the world.”
For this, Bishop Budde was accused of “ambushing” the President, “acting inappropriately,” or, in his own words, being a “nasty” “left-wing radical.” One member of congress called for her to be deported, though she is a native-born U.S. citizen. But then birth-right citizenship, guaranteed in our Constitution, has come under direct attack.
One dear priest friend of mine, an old-style conservative republican wrote this about the matter: The image that has come to mind is the rich young ruler and Jesus. Christ sees him and loves him. He then tells him that to truly follow him would mean leaving behind what defined him, expressing a hard truth with love. The Bishop asked the President to set aside what defines him — a reflexive cruelty that is his brand now, and for some of his followers, one of his chief attractions. No wonder it triggered such bile and anger. It was perhaps not good political discourse meant to gently bring someone over to another way of thinking--but I suspect the Bishop held little hope that the President would actually relent based on her call for mercy: just look at the response! But when all is said and done, she was doing exactly what a priest or a bishop is called by Jesus to do, proclaiming by word and deed the “Good News” of Jesus.
The Christian doctrine of Salvation is a far broader concept than “transferred Karmic payback for my sins.” It is being rescued from anything and everything that is the matter. And different things are “the matter” for different people. So “Good News” can mean different things to different people. And yet Jesus is proclaimer of Good News to all, of healing to all, of liberation to all, of deliverance to all. And that includes both sides of our deeply divided and broken national community.
That is the gist of today’s epistle reading. Paul likens us to a body with all sorts of different body parts. The very diversity of the body’s different parts is a good thing, and makes the body strong. One size does not fit all. And if it pretends to, it fits no one. Paul calls on us to get along, and to value and respect—even honor—diversity.
One of the great glories of the Anglican tradition is that we value diversity. Historically, we are a broad tent, and include both very evangelically-minded protestants as well as sacramentally-minded catholics. We include liberals as well as conservatives, and have a wide range of worship styles.
As St. Paul notes, the key here in healthy community life in the Church is grounding ourselves in Christ. It demands not just toleration—holding our noses and putting up with others’ habits and ideas that are not so attractive to us—but rather truly honoring and welcoming difference.
Let us focus on being heralds of Good News—of liberation, healing, reconciliation, and love. Let us work to set the captives free and break every chain that ties us down and holds us back. Let us honor and respect all our fellow human beings, and embrace the glorious diversity that God created us for.
In the Name of God, Amen.