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Seeing With Eyes Of The Heart Lent 4A – March 26, 2017 The Hans Christian Andersen tale of the Emperor’s New Clothes is really a parable about how people see and how they respond to what they see. Remember the story: the emperor had been swindled into thinking he was wearing a set of very fine clothes, and that those folks who were unfit for their jobs would not be able to see such finery. Off the emperor went naked, in a parade in all his invisible finery; the crowd, fearing the loss of their jobs, cheered and told him how magnificent his clothes looked. But finally a little boy who saw with clear eyes and an unafraid heart spoke out loudly the truth: “the emperor has no clothes.” Today’s readings are also all about what people see, and how they respond to what they see. First there is the story from the Book of Samuel. The Lord said to Samuel, wait! Don’t choose Eliab, he may seem to you to the obvious choice – he is the eldest son and quite handsome. But, the Lord said, but: “The Lord does not see as mortals see; they look on the outward appearance, but the Lord looks on the heart.” The Lord looks on the heart – the Lord sees with the eyes of the heart. It is clear from the story about Samuel and the choosing of David to be King of Israel that the Lord sees with eyes that do not see just the surface, the expected or the accepted. 1 The Lord looks beyond the patterns of traditional thinking and the patterns of traditional power structures. Instead, the eyes of the Lord go deeper – to the heart of each person, to the very essence of a person or a situation. It is not always a comfortable way to see, but it is the essence of God’s way, I think. Jesus, we know, always sees with the eyes of the heart; he penetrates beyond the status quo, beyond the traditional rules of purity and power, to see the worth and importance of each soul. When he chose the man born blind from birth – he chose an outcast of society, one believed to sinful somehow just because he was blind. But Jesus saw possibilities for God’s grace and power in him that others could not or would not see. And, after Jesus restored his physical eyesight, the man born blind began to grow into spiritual sightedness too; ultimately he too began to see with the eyes of his heart: At first, perhaps still dazed by Jesus’ touch and the gift of sight, all he knew was that the man who had given him his sight was named Jesus; that is all he could tell his puzzled neighbors about the great physician. By the time the Pharisees called him for questioning the first time, he was seeing things more fully. He had grown in an understanding of Jesus and his power, so he identified Jesus as a prophet. 2 Later, when the Pharisees called him the second time, he was seeing even more clearly, more fully. He spoke fearlessly to the Pharisees, making it clear that he thought they were the ones who were blind or deliberately obtuse. When they challenged him, saying, that Jesus could not be from God, he answered: “Never since the world began has it been heard that anyone opened the eyes of a person born blind. If this man were not from God, he could do nothing.” And finally, when Jesus returned to him, after the Pharisees had driven him out, the man born blind saw fully who it was that had cured his blindness – He saw not just a man, but saw the Lord, saw him with the eyes of his heart and he worshiped him. Jesus then made clear the mission that God had given him: he had come so that those who do not see, may see. May see with the eyes of the heart, may truly see what the Lord loves and desires. Like the blind man, at our baptism we are graced us with eyes that have the capacity to really see. Paul describes this gift when he says that we are light. “Once you were darkness, but now in the Lord you are light.” That is who we are, who we can be. But…Paul goes on to say: “Live as children of light – for the fruit of the light is found in all that is good and right and true. Try to find out what is pleasing to the Lord. And, he cautions, take no part in the unfruitful works of darkness, but instead expose them. 3 In other words look at the world with the eyes of your heart; see what God sees, see what God intends for us. And if you see things that are not fruitful, that don’t reflect God’s intention, then speak out – expose them so they can be changed. And you and I have been taught how to live as light – it is summarized in our baptismal covenant – We are to proclaim the good news; to seek and serve all people, loving our neighbor as ourselves, and to strive for justice and peace among all people, respecting the dignity of every human being. I have to acknowledge that it is easier to recite our baptismal promises than to live them out fully every day. And anyone who has read a newspaper or listened to the nightly news recently, knows that we are far from a place of light; knows that many of us are not looking at the world with the eyes of our hearts. For many of us I think the constant barrage of news and social media over the last two years has left us with fear in our hearts. We have been told repeatedly and loudly that we are in danger from Muslim terrorists and immigrants of all kinds; and we have been told repeatedly that our country is in an economic downward spiral because of the unfair trade balances with other countries across the globe. And while we earnestly try to sort through what is real and needs serious attention, what is just political hyperbole, and what is a lie with a hidden agenda - 4 in the end, many now look at our world through eyes that are fearful, that are worried. And instead of looking at God’s world and its needs through the eyes of our hearts, some of us have permitted that fear to narrow our focus - to narrow our concerns to just our own personal or our country’s self-interest. Thus there is the push to build walls, to keep out refugees, to forget the needs those desperate folks who are at the margin here and abroad, to forget the needs of the environment all in the name of protecting us and making things economically better just for us. But this insular, fearful response to our world really closes off the eyes of our hearts and we end up seeing the world and its needs with spiritually blind eyes. Greg Pope, the pastor at First Baptist here in Jasper, wrote an open letter to Christians in the Pickens Progress two weeks ago and addressed some of these concerns when he said: Whatever fear of danger, real or imagined, we may face, our commitment to Christ is the dedication of our lives to a love that casts our fear. Christians do not live their lives driven by fear. This call to love neighbor and enemy, stranger and immigrant, springs from the biblical exhortation to see every person as created in the image of God. Race, ethnicity, or nationality does not shape our love or actions because it does not shape God’s love or actions. 5 Of course our personal concerns are important –the safety and wellbeing of our own families and of our country must be a priority. But, as followers of the Lord, these concerns must not be allowed to crowd out concern for others. And the concern for our families and our country is not an excuse to demonize the stranger or immigrant, or an excuse to focus solely on economic growth at the expense of care for God’s creation and his people. Living with eyes of the heart open is not always easy or comfortable, especially now. But as those who are marked as Christ’s own forever in baptism, we must try live as light, as Paul tells us; we must not be stopped by fear as we try to seek and serve God’s people, and we must try shine with God’s light of integrity and fierce honesty, as we help to expose and to mend the dark, broken places in our world. And if the emperor is wearing no clothes, then those who see with the eyes of the heart need to say so. AMEN 6