Psalm 51:1-17; Luke
4:14-21
Myers Park Baptist Church
Charlotte, NC
January 24, 2016
It was an annual
ritual when I was growing up. It was practiced religiously and without fail. On
the first opportune day, spring cleaning began. There was no nook or cranny in
the house that was not dusted, vacuumed, swept, or otherwise harassed. Drapes
and curtains were taken down, rugs were taken up, and nothing—not furniture or
major appliances—went unmoved. Floors were scrubbed—not mopped, mind you; they
were routinely mopped. In spring cleaning floors were scrubbed, walls were washed, and the windows inside and out squealed
for mercy.
I always wondered
why my mother did it. I always wondered why she worked so hard at spring
cleaning. It’s not like the house stayed clean.
What I’ve come to understand these many years later that I didn’t understand
then is that the annual ritual of spring cleaning had less to do with the condition of
the house than it had to do with the condition of my mother’s heart and soul. What
I couldn’t hear when I was younger was that in and around all the orders to
move this, move that, “stay off that floor” (and always and still my favorite: “Don’t
use that bathroom; I just cleaned in there”), there were other sounds—the
sounds of my mother’s heart and soul being refreshed, renewed, revived.
It turns out that
our care for our living space can be a window on our care for our souls. Most
of the time, most of us get along pretty well, given how busy we are. We manage
to keep things mostly in order and more or less clean. One day years ago, when
there was more than the usual cleaning going on, our five-year-old announced that
he was wise to it all. He said, “I know why you’re doing all this cleaning.” “You
do?” I said. “Yes,” he answered. “Grandma’s coming, isn’t she?” And he was
right. While it is sometimes true that children have no clue what is going on
their parents’ lives, it also true that they see right through us far more
often than we realize. And it’s just as true that most of us don’t get around
to the spring cleaning of our hearts and minds and souls these days any more
than we get around to the spring cleaning of our living space.
And of our congregation.
Some years back, the congregation I was serving hired a consultant to visit
Sunday School and worship as a “secret shopper,” as it is known in the retail
industry. We asked him to provide us with the perspective of a fresh set of
eyes on our grounds and our facilities and our worship and our congregational
interactions. What he saw and reported to us was “eye-opening.” He pointed out
things that we were so accustomed to that we couldn’t see them for what they
were. On February 1, a new set of eyes will arrive in this place. That set of
eyes is attached to a mind and a heart and a soul to whom you are entrusting the
proclamation of the gospel and the leadership of this congregation. As they did
in the synagogue in Nazareth in Luke 4, you will hand the Scriptures to a new
preacher; and like his predecessor in the Galilee, Ben Boswell will “bring good
news to the poor. . . . proclaim release to the captives and recovery of sight
to the blind, to let the oppressed go free, to proclaim the year of the Lord’s
favor.” And on the first opportune day, impelled by his vision of the gospel and
a fresh set of eyes in this place, he will call on you to begin spring cleaning:
to roll up your sleeves, grab a bucket, and to get to work.
You may think that it’s
too soon to start thinking about spring cleaning when we are surrounded by ice
and snow. But there is a considerable body of literature in the field of psychology
that lines out the stages of thinking that precede any significant new action,
whatever that action might be. The first stage is Precontemplation. Precontemplation
is the stage at which you have not yet acknowledged to yourself that you need
to make a change. Clueless, I call it. The second stage is Contemplation. Contemplation
is the stage at which you recognize that you need to do something, but you’re
not ready or even sure you want to do it. Clued In, I call it. The third stage
is Preparation or Determination. Preparation or Determination is the stage at
which you decide and get ready to do what you have recognized needs to be done.
Dialing In, I call it. The fourth stage is Action or Willpower. Action or
Willpower is the stage at which you finally do what you have recognized, determined,
and prepared to do in your life—or your congregation. All In, I call it. Precontemplation,
Contemplation, Preparation, Action. Clueless, Clued In, Dialed In, All In. It
takes a while to get there, so it’s not too early to start thinking about spring
cleaning in your life individually and together.
Since the early
centuries of the Christian faith, Psalm 51 has served as a guide for what I’m calling
spring cleaning for the heart and soul and mind of individuals and congregations
alike. The first Action in spring cleaning is to open all the doors and
windows. Throw open the doors and windows of your life to God’s mercy. Psalm 51
begins this way: “Have mercy on me, O God, according to your steadfast love, according
to your abundant mercy” (v. 1). Eugene Peterson’s paraphrase in The Message starts this way: “Generous in love—God, give grace! Huge
in mercy—wipe out my bad record.” What Peterson’s paraphrase gets right is that
spring cleaning for the heart and soul and mind and church is a God-given
opportunity. If God is not “generous in love,” as Peterson paraphrases the
Hebrew word חֶסֶד, and
if God is not “huge in mercy,” as he renders the Hebrew phrase כְּרֺב
רֶחֶם, then every one of us and
all of us together are doomed to live our lives stuck in the mess we make of
them from time to time. But because God is “Generous in love” and “Huge in
mercy,” we have God-given opportunities to clean up our lives and our church and
to start all over again.
The second Action is
to take down all the drapes and curtains. Take down all the drapes and curtains
that cover and conceal your sin, your shortcomings, whatever is unsightly or
unseemly, inadequate or inappropriate in your life. The first two verses of Psalm
51 include a triple confession of sin: “my transgressions,” “my iniquity,” “my
sin.” Taking down the drapes and the curtains on our sin means acknowledging to
ourselves and to God that we have sinned. For some of us, that is the hardest
step of all. We live in an age of euphemisms, of evasive good-speak. We “fall
prey to indiscretion”; we “err in judgment”; we “get a little carried away”; we
“don’t know what came over us.” Some of us just can’t bring ourselves to call
our sin “sin.” Taking down the drapes and the curtains means confessing to God that
have missed the mark individually and congregationally in things we have done
and things we have left undone, in things we have said and in things we have
left unsaid, in things we have thought and in things we have failed to think. Taking
down the drapes and the curtains that are concealing our sin allows the purifying
and life-giving light of the presence of God to shine into the nooks and
crannies of our heart and soul and mind for the cleansing and healing that
comes only from God.
And that’s the best
part of spring cleaning for the heart and soul and mind. The third Action is
this: God does the scrubbing. God does the scrubbing. Listen again to verses
1-2: “Wipe away my transgressions.” “Scrub away my guilt.” “Cleanse me from my sin.” Verse 7 says it
too: “Cleanse me with hyssop, and I will be clean; wash me, and I will be
whiter than snow.” Peterson renders the idea of verse 7 this way: “Soak me in
your laundry, and I’ll come out clean; scrub me, and I’ll have a snow-white
life.” We cannot cleanse ourselves from sin. There are no do-it-yourself
antidotes, no self-help remedies, for sin. Only God can do that kind of scrubbing.
According to 1 John 1:9, “If we confess our sins, [God] who is faithful and
just will forgive our sins and cleanse us of all unrighteousness.” “Generous in
love” and “huge in mercy,” God does for us what we cannot do for ourselves when
we turn our hearts over, broken and contrite to God, who wipes away our transgressions,
scrubs away our guilt, and cleanses us from our sin.
Peterson captures
life on the other side of spring cleaning in his paraphrase of verses 8-12: “Tune
me in to foot-tapping songs, set these once-broken bones to dancing. . . . give
me a clean bill of health. God, make a
fresh start in me, . . . . breathe holiness in me. . . . put a fresh wind in my
sails.” Ever felt like you needed a fresh wind in your sails? That’s what spring
cleaning for your heart and soul and mind—and your congregation also—does for
you.
Along with a fresh
set of eyes, Ben Boswell will bring a fresh wind in your sails. I hope and pray
that you will make the most of the God-given opportunity that is just ahead of
you: Open the doors and windows, take down the drapes and curtains, roll up
your sleeves, and grab a bucket.
Copyrighted © 2016 by Jeffrey
S. Rogers. This material may be copied or disseminated for non-commercial use,
provided this notice is included. The author can be contacted at jrogers3@gardner-webb.edu.