Tradition
versus tradition
a sermon based on Matthew 15:1-20
by Rev. Thomas Hall
So what do you think about the quarrel recorded in the
gospel lesson? This is a strange story that has precious little to do with us. What has
washing our hands before we eat have to do with worship? Even the committee that selects
our lectionary texts choked on this passage and skirted right around it. Cant
apply this hand-washing thing to post-modern lives, they probably agreed. So
instead, our fearless lectionary team went right to that juicy story about the woman with
the demonized daughter with the happily ever after ending. So here we are this morning,
caught in the crossfire of a nasty argument between Jesus and the religious leaders over
what seems more suited for a health and hygiene class discussion than in the church.
Where did this strange custom of washing hands before meals come from? I bet you know
the answer! How many heard words like this growing up: Wash your hands before
supper? And who occasionally did a spot check to see if any precipitation at all
fell when we stuck our hands under the faucet? I know for a fact that if more moms were on
the lectionary committee, this passage would certainly have made it in our lessons! But
did you ever wonder where moms of the world ever picked up this strange tradition?
Heres my theory. About fifteen generations ago some mom living in Cincinnati
happened across Leviticus 22 which states that priests are required to wash their hands -
probably as a sign of their purity. Well, thats exactly where the Pharisees and
scribes got their tradition. Only they adapted it somewhat. Gods Law required that
only priests should have to wash their hands. But the Pharisees who interpreted the laws
for everyone else, came up with an addendum-everyone must wash their hands before eating.
So now, to be considered godly and pious were required to wash their hands. So while moms
of the world may have exulted in this hygienic practice, something has gone awry. When
pressed and pushed about it, Jesus pointed out a glaring danger about this fine little
upgrade on the Law: there is a difference between Tradition spelled with a T
and tradition spelled with a small t. Gods capital T tradition can
easily be nixed by our small t traditions, Jesus says.
Remember the story about the little country church that some student preacher served?
Each Sunday the student preacher observed a very odd behavior. At a certain point in the
service the entire congregation would stand up, turn 180 degrees, and recite the
Apostles Creed. This was a strange custom indeed. Curiosity got the best of him so
one Sunday after church, he gussied up to one of the members and asked her, Why does
everyone just stand up and start reciting the Apostles Creed?
Well, its because, ahhh, well, you see . . . you know, come to think about
it, I havent the foggiest. But I know who can help you. Our oldest member lives not
far from here; go ask her. So the preacher went to visit the oldest member and
popped the question. The 103 year old said, Oh, you see, before we built the church,
it used to be located in Drogers Field, and before that, it was down near the creek
by Sawyers Lane. Down there we had the Apostles Creed painted on the back wall
of the church, so we could remember it.
Now tradition is a good thing, generally. The Greek word, paradosis, means,
to pass something on to the next generation. So for untold generations the
Pharisees had passed on this strange tradition of washing the hands. Over the years it
became the unquestioned thing to do. This is what we do here and its never
been done any other way. So people kept washing their hands, yet somehow the purpose
of this custom escaped them.
So what did you do during summer vacation, Billy?
Oh I washed my hands a lot.
How interesting, Billy! Didnt Billy have a wonderful summer. class!
You know what Im getting at. Washing the hands had become a hard and unyielding
rule that was performed regardless of whether people understood why they were even doing
it.
Calvin Coolidge used to invite friends from his hometown to have breakfast with him in
the White House. On one occasion, just such a couple was invited to attend a private
breakfast with the President. They were nervous like we would be. No one wants to make a
goof up in front of the President. So they pretty much did what he did to reduce the
possibility of making a fool of themselves. It worked! The breakfast was a huge success.
So when President Coolidge performed this rather quaint way of drinking coffee they all
followed suit. He took his coffee saucer and poured milk into it, as everyone else soon
did. But they werent prepared for what he did next. He quietly placed it down on the
floor beside his chair and called, Here, kitty, kitty, kitty.
In Fiddler on the Roof, Tevi struggles with this very thing-tradition. Thats his
favorite song in the musical. Comes from the new way that his daughters
approach marriage. The first is promised to the local butcher-a man twenty years to her
senior. She rejects Tevis choice and selects one of her own choosing-someone she has
fallen in love with. Now Tevi faces a choice-what should he do? Should he hold with the
tradition of the elders, listen to the village rabbi and be unyielding to change, or
should he put aside his tradition in favor of his daughters love. He lays tradition
aside and allows his daughter to marry this scrawny man. Then comes daughter number two.
She too, breaks tradition and chooses a man who is a revolutionary, a man who fights
against the government. Tevi again, after an intense struggle, lays tradition aside and
allows his daughter to marry this revolutionary and so off they go up to Siberia where the
rebellion is quelled and her husband and the daughter is thrown in jail. Now comes the
deepest struggle in Tevis soul. His beloved youngest daughter wishes to marry a
non-Jew. So this father goes through his deepest struggle-should he put aside his own
faiths tradition and let his daughter marry outside the faith? But Tevi has reached
his limits; he can no longer be stretched. He forbids his daughter to marry. When she off
and marries anyway, he vows never to speak with his daughter again. And in a poignant
final scene we see a young woman who desperately craves her fathers love, and we
witness a father who desperately wants to love his daughter, but they dont. For
Tevi, there was a bottom line, a final bedrock of Tradition beyond which he dare not
transgress in the name of modernity.
We can understand Tevi, for we too, struggle face the same struggle. With each new
pressure to change we must reevaluate our own ways, our own traditions to discover whether
what we cling to so tightly is tradition with a capital T or just something
weve done the same way for a very long time. If we lose sight of our purpose, all we
may have left are a bunch of rules and locked doors; a building maybe, but not life.
Do we give God lip-service as Jesus claims the Pharisees and scribes do? Do
we say the right words on Sunday morning, but somehow never concern ourselves with their
intent and with carrying the action of those words out in our lives? Thats what God
asks us this morning. Frederick Buechner once said, There is no book to look up
the answer in. There is only your own heart and whatever by Gods grace it has picked
up in the way of insight, honesty, courage, humility, and maybe above everything else,
compassion.
The church where my wife attended as a high schooler was a nice, neat professional type
of club. Sang their hymns in an orderly way. Knew when to stand and sit. Laughed politely.
Then one Sunday all hell broke loose, some thought. Two or three shirtless, shoeless guys
walked into their quiet little church and got saved! To make matters worse,
they didnt just sit quietly in the back with the rest. No, they marched right up to
the very front pew and sat week after week with their mammoth-sized Thompson Chain Bibles.
They scribbled notes in their margins, sang too enthusiastically, and even said Amen at
certain points of agreement during the pastors sermon. So what happened? Well, they
brought their long-haired, loud-music-rock-and-roll friends with them and soon a youth
rockin youth choir was formed!
Began to sing every Sunday night. Then something began to happen-slowly at first.
Little by little the congregation in the back pews began to inch forward. Dont
misunderstand me; none of the older adults grew their hair long and wore love beads, but
still. Things gradually began to open up and the church began to grow. They grew out of
doing things in the same way that they were used to. Grew in number until the congregation
had to move to a larger building. But most important, I think was that the congregation
rediscovered that the important thing is to love God and to live out the gospel. So that
church survived the crisis of that summer, in large part, because they could discern for
themselves, between what was Tradition and what was tradition.
I close with a confession from a cyberspace Christian. I dont know his name, but
I understood what he was saying when he said these words, Ive been a disciple
for fifty years, brought up in a very strict tradition. I have taught all the old
arguments for many years. Yet, I have recently discovered Gods love and I can assure
you that I have begun to breathe the fresh air of freedom in Christ. Sounds like
hes discovered that theres more to faith than washing hands before eating.
Henry David Thoreau once said, Any fool can make a rule, to which we might
add, but only God can give life. Amen.