Listening to a new author as she reflected on this very passage from Matt., I was shocked that I had never thought about what Jesus really seems to be saying.  I’ve always seen this as a call to action, to helping the hungry, the naked, the stranger, the sick, and truly it is.  But the typical thought is that we will see Christ when we act like Christ.

But where do we see Christ in this image?  Isn’t Jesus found, the very Imago Dei, in those who are broken?  Isn’t Jesus found in the hungry, the naked, the stranger, and the sick?  Why do we spend our time trying so hard to “have it all together”?  to be successful, whatever that might mean in our particular context?  to NOT be hungry, naked, a stranger, or sick?  What if our call is not to be stronger, fuller, or “more” but is instead to acknowledge our brokenness, our weakness, our emptiness, our “less-ness”.  What if only by truly admitting our weakness and even embracing it can we truly know Jesus?  What if what we need is not Jesus’ healing so that we are stronger (for when we are strong we are far more prone to walk away from Jesus) but His merciful presence in the midst of our sickness?

Perhaps Paul knew what he was talking about when he claimed that in our weakness, Jesus is proved strong.

We’ve been thanking God that so far our family has avoided the flu bug that has hit with such virulence.  With flu shots, immediate quarantine of the slightest sniffle, and a strictly regimented hand washing routine, we’ve been able to get away with a quickly treated sinus infection and nothing more.  But the infectious nature of this year’s flu strains seems to be worse than previous years.

Watching the Israelites deal with the infectious nature of “uncleanness” is an interesting study.  Like the flu or any other virus, uncleanness passed from person to person, from unclean item to people, just by touch.  And when the primary goal of their life is cleanness, this is a serious problem.  An unclean person would at best be exiled from the community into the dangerous wilderness outside a city’s boundaries for a week, or at worst be cut off from their people forever.  Priests made unclean could not eat anything holy, which was their entire food supply.  No wonder the priest in the Good Samaritan story passed by out of the contagious zone!

Jesus came as the cure for this problematic, even lethal, contagion of uncleanness.  When Jesus proclaimed Himself the “living water”, he was talking about cleanness.  “Living”, or freeflowing, water was the one thing that could make unclean things clean again.  Jesus said that if we follow Him, streams of the stuff would flow from us, and that He Himself was the source of it.  In other words, we are walking, talking cures for uncleanness!

Today, we don’t talk much about uncleanness, but we do talk about sin.  And while we don’t forgive people their sins against God, we can introduce them to Jesus who will.  He is the source of grace, mercy, and forgiveness, and we are the containers that bring that possibility to the people around us.

What happens when the containers stop bringing cleanness to the people around them?  What happens in a community that doesn’t have a flu vaccine?  The flu, like uncleanness or sin, spreads and eventually takes over everything.  It is imperative that we share this living water with everyone around us and fight back the natural spread of sin in this world.

We’ve been thanking God that so far our family has avoided the flu bug that has hit with such virulence.  With flu shots, immediate quarantine of the slightest sniffle, and a strictly regimented hand washing routine, we’ve been able to get away with a quickly treated sinus infection and nothing more.  But the infectious nature of this year’s flu strains seems to be worse than previous years.

Watching the Israelites deal with the infectious nature of “uncleanness” is an interesting study.  Like the flu or any other virus, uncleanness passed from person to person, from unclean item to people, just by touch.  And when the primary goal of their life is cleanness, this is a serious problem.  An unclean person would at best be exiled from the community into the dangerous wilderness outside a city’s boundaries for a week, or at worst be cut off from their people forever.  Priests made unclean could not eat anything holy, which was their entire food supply.  No wonder the priest in the Good Samaritan story passed by out of the contagious zone!

Jesus came as the cure for this problematic, even lethal, contagion of uncleanness.  When Jesus proclaimed Himself the “living water”, he was talking about cleanness.  “Living”, or freeflowing, water was the one thing that could make unclean things clean again.  Jesus said that if we follow Him, streams of the stuff would flow from us, and that He Himself was the source of it.  In other words, we are walking, talking cures for uncleanness!

Today, we don’t talk much about uncleanness, but we do talk about sin.  And while we don’t forgive people their sins against God, we can introduce them to Jesus who will.  He is the source of grace, mercy, and forgiveness, and we are the containers that bring that possibility to the people around us.

What happens when the containers stop bringing cleanness to the people around them?  What happens in a community that doesn’t have a flu vaccine?  The flu, like uncleanness or sin, spreads and eventually takes over everything.  It is imperative that we share this living water with everyone around us and fight back the natural spread of sin in this world.

The word of the day is… “unintentional”.

That word never worked when I was a kid.  I claimed the broken window was “unintentional”.  I watched the third of two TV shows I was allowed, but it was “unintentional”.  And forgetting to take out the trash?  Again?  Yup, that was “unintentional” too.  To my credit, often these things weren’t planned out, or deviously prepared.  They just happened, and so were “unintentional”.  But that never meant I was free of punishment for them.  I still had to help pay for the window, lost my TV time for the following day, and had to mow the lawn for a month.  Such were the punishments for my “unintentional” sins against my family.

In Confirmation, we define sin as “all in thought, word, and deed that is contrary to the will of God.”  But implied in this definition is a level of intentionality.  And that doesn’t jive with what we’re reading today.  Like my childhood antics, our sins are not always intentional.  Sometimes we sin because we forget.  Sometimes we sin because we didn’t know the rules.  And sometimes we sin with no intention of sinning.  But nonetheless, we have sinned.  Even unintentional sin is sin.

So are we punished for unintentional sins as we are for our intentional ones?  YES!  We are punished the same for every sin we commit.  Which is to say, we aren’t.  Because Jesus took that punishment upon Himself on the cross.  You see, while sin is definitely a big deal, I wonder sometimes if sin is a bigger deal to us than to God.  We keep trying to define sin, categorize sin, point out sin, and even stop sinning.  But for God, these are always fruitless tasks.  We are sinners, people, and nothing we can do can stop that.  And that’s the Good News – while we were (are!) still sinners, Christ died for us.  So unintentional or not, God has forgiven our sinfulness, and with that information in hand, we can begin to truly live.

The word of the day is… “unintentional”.

That word never worked when I was a kid.  I claimed the broken window was “unintentional”.  I watched the third of two TV shows I was allowed, but it was “unintentional”.  And forgetting to take out the trash?  Again?  Yup, that was “unintentional” too.  To my credit, often these things weren’t planned out, or deviously prepared.  They just happened, and so were “unintentional”.  But that never meant I was free of punishment for them.  I still had to help pay for the window, lost my TV time for the following day, and had to mow the lawn for a month.  Such were the punishments for my “unintentional” sins against my family.

In Confirmation, we define sin as “all in thought, word, and deed that is contrary to the will of God.”  But implied in this definition is a level of intentionality.  And that doesn’t jive with what we’re reading today.  Like my childhood antics, our sins are not always intentional.  Sometimes we sin because we forget.  Sometimes we sin because we didn’t know the rules.  And sometimes we sin with no intention of sinning.  But nonetheless, we have sinned.  Even unintentional sin is sin.

So are we punished for unintentional sins as we are for our intentional ones?  YES!  We are punished the same for every sin we commit.  Which is to say, we aren’t.  Because Jesus took that punishment upon Himself on the cross.  You see, while sin is definitely a big deal, I wonder sometimes if sin is a bigger deal to us than to God.  We keep trying to define sin, categorize sin, point out sin, and even stop sinning.  But for God, these are always fruitless tasks.  We are sinners, people, and nothing we can do can stop that.  And that’s the Good News – while we were (are!) still sinners, Christ died for us.  So unintentional or not, God has forgiven our sinfulness, and with that information in hand, we can begin to truly live.