LIVING SIMPLY
Imperative Now
Notes for Sermon Development
Scripture: Matthew 6.25-33
In
his famous speech aboard the Arabella, Puritan leader John Winthrop
urged the colonists to guard against the seduction of material success,
and to ensure that "the good of the public oversways all private
interests." Pious hard work in a land of seemingly unlimited resources
earned many colonists handsome incomes. Soon silks and imported
furniture were the rage in New England cities, and powdered wigs
the fashion. The communitarian ethic of austerity and religious
piety gradually fell by the wayside, and America became the world's
greatest merchant state.
Even as we are proud of our great material progress, there is a
restless sense beginning to stir that something is amiss. A recent
study, commissioned by the Merck Family fund, found that most Americans
think we consume too much, produce too much waste, and have lost
sight of the spiritual values which once guided us as a society.
People are ready, the study concluded, to begin a serious dialogue
about our national habits as consumers, and in many cases see a
deep need to begin to take action on this issue.
A critical factor for our time is that the environment is becoming
ever less capable of sustaining the growing impact of our escalating
consumption patterns. Everywhere our forests are overlogged, our
agricultural lands are overcropped, our grasslands overgrazed, our
wetlands overdrained, our groundwaters overtapped, our seas overfished,
and nearly all our terrestrial and marine environment is overpolluted
with chemical and radioactive poisons. Worse still, our atmospheric
environment is becoming ever less capable of absorbing either the
ozone-depleting gases or the greenhouse gases generated by these
activities without creating new climatic conditions to which human
beings cannot indefinitely adapt.
Today we must reconsider our consumption patterns not only because
there is strong moral basis for doing so. We must reconsider our
consumption radically and fundamentally, because as a planet we
have no other choice. Simple life is a compelling necessity now.
Christian simplicity frees us from the modern mania to possess,
accumulate, and the attitude that "more is better." It brings sanity
to our compulsive extravagance, and peace to our frantic spirit.
Simplicity enables us to live lives of integrity in the face of
the stark realities of our world. It is not a faddish attempt to
respond to the ecological crisis that is threatening us now. Christian
simplicity is more than a reaction to the modern crisis. It gives
us the basis for developing a strategy for action to address many
of our social inequities. The answer to the problem of the survival
of the planet lies in spirituality as much as it does in politics,
science, or economics.
It is a call given to every Christian. The witness to simplicity
is profoundly rooted in the biblical tradition, and most perfectly
exemplified in the life of Jesus Christ.
The majority of Christians have never seriously wrestled with the
problem of simplicity, conveniently ignoring Jesus' many words on
the subject. The reason is simple: the discipline of simplicity
challenges our vested interests in an affluent lifestyle. But we
get help and a focal point from the words of Jesus in Matthew 6:25-33.
The central point of the discipline of simplicity is to seek the
kingdom of God and the righteousness of God's kingdom first, and
then everything necessary will come in its proper order. Simplicity
becomes idolatry when it takes precedence over seeking the kingdom.
Focus upon the kingdom produces an inward reality that results
in an outward lifestyle. Both the inward and outward aspects of
simplicity are essential. We deceive ourselves if we believe we
can possess the inward reality without its having a profound effect
on how we live. To attempt to arrange an outward lifestyle of simplicity
without the inward reality degenerates into legalistic trivia.
Jesus makes clear in the Matthew passage that freedom from anxiety
is one of the inward evidences of seeking the kingdom of God first.
The inward reality of simplicity involves a life of joyful unconcern
for possessions. Three inner attitudes characterize freedom from
anxiety: receiving what we have as a gift from God; knowing that
what we have is to be cared for by God; and to have our goods available
to others. When we are seeking first the kingdom of God these three
attitudes will characterize our lives. Taken together they define
what Jesus meant by "do not be anxious."
The sermon notes were prepared by Shantilal P. Bhagat, Staff
Consultant, Global Mission Partnerships, Church of the Brethren
General Board.
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