Matthew 11:16-30
July 5
David A. Davis
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“We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by the Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among them are Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness.” Some texts are iconic.
“Four score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth, upon this continent, a new nation, conceived in liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal.” Some texts you never forget.
“O beautiful for spacious skies, for amber waves of grain, for purple mountains majesties above the fruited plain!” Some texts, you don’t need the words.
“Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free”. Some texts are etched in stone.
“Come to me all you that are weary and carrying heavy burdens, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn from me; for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy, and my burden light.” Some texts rest forever deep within the soul.
Whenever you and I read, hear, remember, experience these particular words from Jesus, they are rarely, if ever, connected to the 11th chapter of Matthew’s gospel. That could be because our hearing is context-specific: funerals, memorial services, assurances of forgiveness. Invitations to the Lord’s Supper. But it is also because Matthew 11 is a difficult chapter. It begins with John the Baptist in prison sending his disciples to ask Jesus if he is the one to come or if they are waiting for another. “Go and tell what you hear and see,” Jesus tells them. Jesus then tells the crowds about John, “Among those born of women no one has arisen greater than John the Baptist.” Then in the beginning of the text for this morning, Jesus launches into this scathing judgement of the present generation. Blasting them because they called John a demon who didn’t eat and drink. They labeled Jesus a drunkard and glutton, a friend of tax collectors and sinners. Then Jesus rips the cities where he did most of his deeds of power because there was little repentance. To the city of Capernaum, the disciples’ hometown, Jesus says, “Will you be exalted to heaven? No, you will be brought down to Hades.” After thanking God for the gift of handing the knowledge of the plan of salvation to him and the grace of the gospel to infants rather than the wise and intelligent, Jesus says, “Come to me, all you who are weary and are carrying heavy burdens.”
Interestingly, this text from the Gospel of Matthew is the selected gospel reading from the Revised Common Lectionary for today, the 6th Sunday after Pentecost. I don’t always use the lectionary. After all, I have been through the 3-year cycle 13 times. I went with it for this morning because I didn’t want to select a passage for this Lord’s Day morning after the 250th celebration of the country yesterday. On paper, the lectionary actually breaks up the passage and leaves some of the hard stuff out. We read straight through from v.16 to the end of the chapter so as not to miss the notion that the words of Jesus that rest so deep in our soul come after some of his hardest teaching to understand. One of the greatest promises of Jesus comes right after some of his strongest words of judgment. Just after Jesus says “Hey Capernaum! Do better!”, he invites them to “Come unto me.” He offers rest to those who are weary. Those whose burdens are heavy. He offers rest for their soul. He invites them to take his yoke, to be yoked with him. “The heavier it is for you,” Jesus says, “come closer to me.”
As we observe, acknowledge, and celebrate the nation’s 250th anniversary, we remember that King George frequently referred to the Revolution as “that Presbyterian revolt.” We sit here this morning on the ground where John Witherspoon preached what some historians call the most important sermonic call for revolution. It is widely believed that Nassau Presbyterian Church, then First Presbyterian Church, is the only congregation that had two signers of the Declaration of Independence: Witherspoon and Richard Stockton. Lots of history in this congregation and in the town of Princeton to ponder this weekend. And yet, as we observe, acknowledge, and celebrate that history and the 250th, for some, the experience can be… complicated. There is a lot going on in the world and in the country that seems heavy. A season of chaos that can burden the heart. A sea of hatred, division, violence, and war that can weary the soul. The rise of white Christian nationalism that manipulates the gospel to preserve power and seed bigotry. And multiple efforts to block any attempt to learn, to honor, to tell the fullness of the history that includes the reality of enslaved persons held by those calling for freedom 250 years ago.
I was helped immensely by Harvard Professor of American History Annette Gordon-Reed, who spoke at two different public events here in the sanctuary in recent weeks. Seminary president Jonathan Lee Walton and our own Dr. Heath Carter introduced her at the Princeton Seminary event as the foremost scholar on Thomas Jefferson. Dr. Gordon-Reed was asked what she thought about the internal conflict that is both a contemporary reality and a historical one as well. I am broadly paraphrasing, but she strongly affirmed a both/and approach. The professor suggests that it is not contradictory to celebrate our nation and its history while also truthfully lamenting its past and present. She suggested it is the hard work of both the thorough historian and the honest citizen. Hard work, I would suggest, comes in times such as these with a certain heaviness. “The heavier it is for you”, Jesus says, “come closer to me.”
Dietrich Bonhoeffer writes about the heaviness of a Christian’s journey in his book The Cost of Discipleship: “To be called to a life of extraordinary quality,” Bonhoeffer writes, “to live up to it, and yet to be unconscious of it is indeed a narrow way. To confess and testify to the truth as it is in Jesus, and at the same time to love the enemies of that truth, his enemies and ours, and to love them with the infinite love of Jesus Christ, is indeed a narrow way. To believe the promise of Jesus that his followers shall possess the earth, and at the same time to face our enemies unarmed and defenceless, preferring to incur injustice rather than to do wrong ourselves, is indeed a narrow way. To see the weakness and wrong in others, and at the same time refrain from judging them; to deliver the gospel message without casting pearls before swine, is indeed a narrow way. The way is unutterably hard, and at every moment we are in danger of straying from it. If we regard this way as one we follow in obedience to an external command, if we are afraid of ourselves all the time, it is indeed an impossible way. But if we behold Jesus Christ going on before step by step, we shall not go astray.” To see Jesus “going on before step by step”. That is Dietrich Bonhoeffer on being yoked with Jesus. “For my yoke is easy, and my burden light”, Jesus said.
Beholding Christ going on before. Believing that the life of discipleship is not some kind of external command. But a life that is lived out with Christ who is within, Christ who is beside, Christ who goes on before. Beholding Jesus Christ going on before step by step. Or to use Jesus’ own image: being yoked. Yoking. The life of discipleship and being yoked to Christ himself.
I couldn’t have been a pastor more than a year or two when the congregation had a July summer picnic. The planners decided to play some old-school summer picnic games: think egg toss, water balloon catch, and there was the three-legged sack race. Two young people frantically hop-scotched and promptly fell in a fit of laughter. Another couple tried to run fast, but the sack quickly fell away like a beach towel that drops from someone running toward the ocean. But then, there were the two older folks. The two women were up in their 70s. Friends since before WW II. Their technique was slow and steady, with one arm they clung to each other hanging on for dear life, with the other hand they each held up the sack. And they didn’t run; they walked, with long, determined strides. Laughter, joy, love, it just dripped off them as they went. Step by step by step. With that embrace, they were kind of… yoked. They won going away. It wouldn’t be until years later in my ministry in that congregation that I understood that their lifelong relationship, and others in that congregation, had some of the same characteristics. Supporting one another when their husbands were in the war, raising their children, burying their parents, struggling when money was tight, losing a child, growing old, becoming widows, praying for one another, worshipping together. 50, 60, 70 years. Long determined strides, hanging on for dear life, helping one another when the stumbles came, step by step, beholding Christ Jesus, going on before. Yoked to each other, yes. Even more, yoked to Christ.
“The heavier it is for you”, Jesus says, “come closer to me.” The promise comes after Jesus calls out the complexities, the burdens, the weariness, the heaviness of life. Our discipleship, our walk with Jesus, comes amid the complexities in the world that surely warrant the judgment of Jesus. Judgement not just of cities but of nations. The weariness comes from being tossed into the world’s mixer of greed, selfishness, and what’s in it for me when you know full well Jesus’ path is one of putting others first and watching out for the most vulnerable and loving even and especially those no one loves. The burden comes from believing deep in your heart that Jesus’s concern for the poor, his teaching that there are no longer strangers, his own bold embrace of those so, so different from him, those that the powerful and religious believed he should not name much less touch, and yet living in a season where injustice, and hatred, and condescension, and bigotry comes from the highest offices, halls, and courts in the land. The weariness comes when you understand yourself called by Jesus to life of forgiveness, and giving from what you have, and helping to make the community around you and indeed the world a better place, that his kingdom might come on earth as it is in heaven, and yet finding yourself smothered by a culture defined by meanness, and winning at all cost, and respect tossed out the window.
The burden, the weight, the weariness that comes…from striving to live for Christ and work for Christ. It’s the cost of discipleship. Indeed, we observe, acknowledge, and celebrate the nation’s 250th Anniversary and how that Presbyterian rebellion started here all around us. Looking back and looking around, claiming Christ’s promise, not just this weekend but for every day and every night, “The heavier it is for you”, Jesus says, “come closer to me.”
Jesus invites you to the Table this morning, and he says, “Come to me all you that are weary and carrying heavy burdens, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn from me; for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy, and my burden light.”