Scripture Reading: Matthew 6:1-18 (NRSVUE)
Alms, prayers and fasting were three spiritual disciplines common to religious practitioners in first century Judea. Note that Jesus begins with a warning about our righteousness and then goes on to speak of giving alms (money to those in need). We see righteousness defined again as how we care for those who may need help with some of the basic needs in life.
Giving charity in private not only takes away the puffing up of those doing the giving, but it also has the added benefit of providing dignity to the ones receiving it.
One in that day might argue that the trumpet is sounded so that all may come and receive. But it also alerts everyone to your good deeds! Instead of the ice cream man driving around in a tinkling truck, you've got the alms-giving man who is only out to help (as long as you see me do it)!The prohibition on public prayer is not looking at corporate prayer in worship but rather more private devotional prayers. The Lord's Prayer given as a format for Jesus' disciples begins with adoration before moving on to supplication.
Notice that the emphasis on daily bread harkens back to when God's people were wandering in the desert and fed by manna. They were not to gather more than their needs for the day, trusting that God would supply them manna again tomorrow. We'll see this emphasis on trust again later in the sermon.
We also see the emphasis on forgiveness being something we receive to the measure we give it. Forgiveness becomes much more than vertical (me and you, God!) as it expands to the horizontal (me and you, neighbor!).
The discipline of fasting is not to bloat a spiritual resumé for the community.
As we go through the Lenten season, this reading explores our motivation for pursuing spiritual disciplines. It may be helpful for us to examine how much of our behavior is determined by a high moral or ethical standard and how much is influenced by how we will be perceived by our peers. Of course, this is impossible to measure but maybe rich to consider.
It is good to recognize at least that most people want to be liked and well-thought-of! But at the end of the day, according to Jesus, the driver for our action should be oriented more toward God than what we might get out of it.
Prayer for the day:
for you are sufficient for me.
I may not ask for anything less
than what befits my full worship of you.
If I were to ask anything less, I should always be in want,
for in you alone do I have all.
Amen.
Prayer by Julian of Norwich, 14th century
Photo by Wes Peck via Flickr.com. Used under the Creative Commons license.






