When you are a pastor, people feel compelled to tell you why they don’t go to church. I am not sure why. Maybe they feel guilty or defensive and feel compelled to make some explanation or justification. As I said, I am not sure why, I am only sure that it happens, and it happens a lot.
It happens so often I can even state the top five reasons that people don’t go to church (as told to me at least.) Number one is that they are spiritual but not religious. Number two is that Christians are hypocrites. Number three is that the church subordinates women and discriminates against gay people. Number four is that they prefer Eastern Spirituality. And number five is that they believe that there is nothing that anyone can do - not you, not me, not anyone - that’s ever going to make any difference in this world.
I have a degree of understanding and sympathy for these reasons, at least for the top four. The spiritual but not religious are basically fellow travelers. My experience of them is that they appreciate nature as God’s handiwork, and that they are all behind justice issues. They have just had a bad experience, or no experience, in the church, and they prefer to go it alone. And Jesus, after all, said “…whoever is not against us is for us.”
And, who could begin to argue with the charge that Christians can indeed be hypocrites? Jesus instructed us to remove the plank from our own eye so that we can see to remove the speck from our neighbor’s. He instructed us thus because he knew that there were hypocrites among us. And hypocrites don’t make good witnesses to the faith.
And, it is, without question, to the church’s shame that it has created lower tiers within it for women and gay people. The church would probably still have African Americans in a lower tier as well but history wouldn’t let it get away with it. We can credit Abraham Lincoln with that, who, of course, was himself not a church goer.
And, Eastern Spirituality is filled with profundity and wisdom unique unto itself that has never infiltrated western spirituality. The world religions became world religions because of their brilliant insight into the human condition. They all, in their ways, offer solutions to the human problem. Their practices can’t be valueless. And they have the benefit of novelty as well.
Yes, there’s no sense to take aim at the reasons people do not go to church, except maybe for the fifth reason – that there’s nothing anything anyone can do to make a difference in this world. Maybe I am being harsh, but that reason strikes me as a cynical cop-out, as a poor excuse to do nothing. Moreover, it’s not true, at least not according to the Bible. The Bible, in fact, takes the polar opposite stance. It believes that everything we do makes a difference in this world. It even goes so far as to insist that little things we do make big differences – after the fashion of a mustard seed which grows into a hardy shrub, or a seed that takes root produces grain thirty, sixty, and a hundred fold.
Or take our Old Testament lesson as an example. We all know Ruth’s story. No one would envy Ruth her ethnicity. Ruth was a Moabite. The Moabites were stigmatized, particularly by the Israelites. Stigmas, then and now, are based upon stereotypes, and Moabites were stereotyped as being pervasive low lives – low morals, low intelligence, low standards. Imagine if before you walked into a room, you knew everyone in the room was going to judge you, and judge you harshly and unfairly. This was Ruth’s lot in life due to her ethnicity.
Ruth had married into an Israelite family, which could have offered her some protection. People normally ascend to the social level of their spouse. But Ruth’s spouse died. Ruth was then left alone with her mother-in-law Naomi, who herself was a widow. The two of them lived together in Moab. It would have been better for Ruth to remain where she was, with her own kind. Why go where you’re not wanted? But Naomi sought to return to Israel, and Ruth knew Naomi needed her. So Ruth braved it.
What could Ruth possibly do to make a difference in this world? The people who voice this reason to me are normally prosperous and resourceful. They actually could make a difference in this world. They have the resources. Ruth arrived in Israel with but the clothes on her back, a stranger in a strange land, that nobody was keen to welcome. What could she possibly do to make a difference in this world?
Here’s what she did. She gleaned. She simply gleaned. She went into the field of a “prominent rich man,” as the Bible puts it, she followed behind the harvesters, and she gathered what they left behind. In this way she sustained herself, and she sustained Naomi.
The Bible recognizes that simply by participating in gleaning, whether you are on the giving or the receiving end, you make a difference in this world. Gleaning was indeed demanded by the Law of Moses. Hear the book of Deuteronomy: “When you gather the grapes of your vineyard, do not glean what is left over. It should be for the alien, the orphan, and the widow.” By simply participating in gleaning, you participate in the act of provision and you prevent waste. And a difference in this world is made.
I can state that with perfect confidence that Jesus would have agreed with what I just said, because Jesus himself was a gleaner. In our gospel lesson, Jesus had just performed a miracle. He had fed 5,000 people with five loaves and two fish. After the crowd had eaten its fill, he gleaned twelve baskets of leftovers. Think about that. Jesus could miraculously produce food, and lots of it – enough to feed 5,000 people. And if there were 10,000 people there, he could have miraculously produced enough for them too. And yet he gleaned. He gleaned because he, along with the rest of the Bible, believed it would make a difference in this world - just as he believed that healing a blind beggar, forgiving an adulterous woman, welcoming children, acknowledging a widow’s mite, and eating with tax collectors would make a difference in this world.
I guess the bottom line is that in fact there is no such thing as the proverbial drop in the bucket. Every drop effects the bucket – it can change its makeup, it can cause ripples, it can add to its volume, it can be the tipping point. This is simply the ecology of existence, as God has ordained it to be, that we all can make a difference in this world. So glean. So compromise. So support. So aid. So ease. So try. So care. So let’s go out there and make a difference in this world, and let’s do it for Jesus Christ. Amen.