Wednesday, March 26, 2025

Lent Midweek 3

 Lent Midweek 3 – March 26, 2025
Psalm 19; Exodus 20:12-24a
St. Matthew 15:1-20

In the Name of the Father, and of the + Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.

The text before us this evening presents one cohesive unit concerning what truly makes a man unclean – sin. This discourse comes in two parts: first, how the oral traditions of the elders compare with the commandments of God; and second, that sin proceeds from the heart.

We don’t know as much about the oral traditions of the elders as we would like. What we do know is that these traditions began to spring up during the time in between the testaments. We also know that the Pharisees often tried to take the Mosaic laws that applied to priests and apply them to all believers, turning specific laws into general ones. Some of these traditions took laws of Moses and amplified them. For instance, the law against work on the Sabbath was amplified to mean that you could not sit on chairs or stools on the Sabbath because you might slide one of the legs against the ground, creating a small furrow in the earth as though you were tilling the ground and that would be work.

We also know that not all of the oral traditions were the same in every place and at every time. So when these Pharisees asked Jesus about the transgression of His disciples, it could be that they were seeking to debate about conflicting traditions, wanting to prove why their tradition was better than His. But our Lord has no interest in allowing the Pharisees to set the terms of debate. In a turn that might surprise us, Christ answers their question with another question, and He phrases it in an offensive way. The Pharisees asked, “Why do Your disciples transgress the tradition of the elders?” and Christ responds, “Why do you also transgress the commandment of God because of your tradition?”

It is very important to understand precisely what Christ is condemning in this passage. He does not condemn traditions. He does not even condemn oral traditions that are used within the Church. What He is condemning is the elevation of such traditions to the same status as the Word of God. He even provides an example that has nothing to do with washing hands so that the underlying principle might be understood.

The Pharisees had another oral tradition that a man could, maybe even should, give his wealth to the Temple to receive great blessing, even if that meant his parents spent their latter years in poverty. This created a loophole wherein a man would be exempt from caring for his aged mother and father, something directly commanded by God in the Fourth Commandment. The Pharisees had elevated this oral tradition to supersede the commandments of God, allowing a loophole by which a man needed tradition but not the Word of God.

This general principle is then to be applied to the tradition of handwashing, although this one is more subtle. It doesn’t seem that the Pharisees’ handwashing tradition created a loophole to get around the commandments of God. Washing one’s hands didn’t suddenly make unclean foods clean. What it did was bind the consciences of those who did not wash their hands according to this tradition. The Pharisees had laid another layer of sanctification on top of the dietary commandments of God and treated it as equal to that of God. To transgress the tradition was the same as to transgress God.

In so doing, the Pharisees have now set themselves up as the sole authority that determines what is sin and what isn’t. They have claimed the authority of Christ for themselves. ‘Do as we say, or else God will punish you.’ What’s worse, and will be discussed in a minute, is that the Pharisees have declared that one’s relationship with God, one’s salvation, is almost entirely (if not exclusively) bound up in the outward keeping of the oral tradition. Under threat of excommunication, man must keep the outward traditions of the Pharisees.

Our Lord harshly rebukes the Pharisees, applying the words of Isaiah to them, “These people draw near to Me with their mouth, and honor Me with their lips, but their heart is far from Me, and in vain they worship Me, teaching as doctrines the commandments of Men.”[1] The worship of the Pharisees is false because they worship God with their works, trust in their works, and obey traditions of men rather than the commandments of God. They claim to worship the true God with their lips but worship themselves by setting their own traditions above God’s Word.

Having rebuked the Pharisees, Jesus calls the multitude to Himself and continues His teaching, “Not what goes into the mouth defiles a man; but what comes out of the mouth, this defiles a man.” Again, our Lord is not commenting on dietary laws. He is teaching concerning sin and its true origins, as He makes clear when speaking to Peter, “Our of the heart proceed evil thoughts, murders, adulteries, fornications, thefts, false witness, and blasphemies.”[2]

Sin is a matter of the heart long before it is an action in the hands. This is not to say that sin is simply the result of intention. One can have the best of intentions and still commit a sin. Rather, sin is the result of our sinful condition, of the sin that clings to our hearts and minds, not just our flesh. We are not sinners because we sin. We sin because we are sinners.

A word that is very helpful in understanding this concept is “orientation.” To be oriented toward something is to be turned in its direction, even if it is not the sole focus of your attention. For example, I am currently oriented toward all of you, even if I am not looking directly at you, individually, in this moment. When considering sin, the hearts and minds of Christians are oriented toward the things of God. Yet the Christian still sins because of the sin which clings to his body. He is oriented toward God even if he fails to meet God’s standards in every way. The unbeliever is always oriented away from God even if he outwardly does something that conforms to God’s will.

In the case of the Pharisees, they have oriented themselves away from God and toward their oral tradition. Many of their traditions sought to outwardly uphold the Law of God but their hearts were turned away from Him. Thus they honor Him with their lips but their hearts are far away.

This is what it means when I say that God is more interested in the orientation of your heart than the nature of your sin. That doesn’t mean God doesn’t care what sins you commit. Quite the opposite! The sins you commit reflect the condition of your heart. But what is really important is how your heart is oriented. For the sinner whose heart is oriented toward God, sin is abhorrent. It is unclean. It is a thing to be despised. And when one whose heart is oriented toward God finds sin within himself, he desires to be relieved of that sin. He wants to flee to the One who can remove that sin. He wants to hear the words, “In the stead and by the command of My Lord Jesus Christ I forgive you all your sins in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit.”

And such a one as this, because his heart has been made anew and turned toward God by the action of the Holy Spirit, knows and believes this forgiveness to be true. He is confident that whatever is loosed on earth is loosed in heaven.[3] Such a one finds delight in the Law of the Lord because it is pure, enlightening the eyes. The fear of the Lord is clean, enduring forever.[4]

Thus it is not keeping the tradition of the elders that makes one clean. Nor does breaking the tradition of the elders make one unclean. That which proceeds from a sinful heart dirties the man and the Word of God alone makes him pure.

In + Jesus’ name. Amen.


[1] Isaiah 29:13; St. Matthew 15:8-9.

[2] St. Matthew 15:19.

[3] St. Matthew 16:19.

[4] Psalm 19:8-9.

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