Fourteenth Sunday after Pentecost, C, September 14, 2025
How many of you
remember where you were
when John F. Kennedy
was assassinated?
If that was before your time,
what about Robert F. Kennedy?
Or the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.?
If that’s still before your time,
How about the Challenger explosion?
Or the Oklahoma City Bombing?
Where were you on September 11, 2001?
This week,
a popular provocateur
and political celebrity
was assassinated,
in broad daylight,
at a public event,
while speaking
in front of thousands of people
on a college campus in Utah.
His gruesome murder was filmed,
from multiple angles
and varying distances,
and immediately available to the world
across every social media platform.
Where once these graphic tragedies
were shielded from our view
by the censors of network news outlets
and the scruples of newspaper editors,
the internet has streamed the high-definition horrors
directly to our hip pockets
without edit
for mass consumption.
Children the world over
have seen this video.
My own son included.
Gen Z will likely remember where they were,
not when they heard the news,
but when they saw the video
of a high-velocity munition
take the life of a public figure.
And in our highly divided times,
this event has been met with a mix
of terror and celebration.
Each side has been quick
to blame the other.
Partisans,
ever the opportunists,
have sought to exploit the spectacle
to further their cause
and grab for power.
Blame is easy.
Blame is a form of self-absolution,
an adoption of victimhood
to justify vengeance
in the name of justice.
In all three of our readings for this week,
we see that there is a difference
between taking the blame,
and taking responsibility.
Moses didn’t make a golden calf
for the Hebrew people to worship,
but he defended his people,
staying God’s wrath,
and sparing their lives.
Moses didn’t take the blame,
but he did accept responsibility.
In 1 Timothy,
“Paul” speaks of his ignorance
as the cause of his blasphemy,
persecution, hatred, and violence.
And yet, as the recipient of mercy,
he accepts responsibility and changes his life
accordingly.
In the Gospel of Luke,
the Pharisees and scribes
were complaining that Jesus
had crossed the socio-political divide
and was sharing his table
with tax-collectors and sinners.
Jesus tells two parables in answer.
In the first, a sheep wanders off;
it’s what sheep do.
But the shepherd accepts responsibility
and goes to find the sheep,
bringing it back and celebrating.
Similarly,
a woman has lost a coin.
Coins don’t just wander off.
They can roll away
and they can be easily obscured
on the dirt floor of an ancient near-eastern home.
So, the woman accepts responsibility
and sweeps the whole house
until she finds the coin.
Then she celebrates its return.
Most of us in this room
aren’t to blame
for the rhetoric, rancor, and polarization
of this present age.
But all of us are responsible.
We didn’t create social media platforms
and engineer algorithms
to exacerbate our divisions,
radicalize our thinking,
monetize our engagement,
and silo us into us-es and thems.
But all of us are responsible.
We are not to blame
for the need of news media outlets
to be profitable in order to exist
and therefore, tailoring reporting and headlines
to the presuppositions of their consumers.
But all of us are responsible.
Political violence is always wrong.
Full. Stop.
And it doesn’t matter which side is to blame,
because we are all of us responsible
for what comes next.
Each of us is responsible for the media we consume,
both the quantity and the quality.
A good rule to follow
should be that each day,
you will spend no more time
reading, watching, or listening to the news
than you spend reading your Bible or praying.
Further,
understanding proper
journalistic standards and practices,
researching which reporters and outlets are using them,
and limiting ourselves to only those reliable resources
will protect us from being manipulated
by propaganda, advertising, misinformation,
and disinformation.
Then,
you need to build authentic, loving relationships
with people with whom you disagree.
You don’t have to fight them.
You don’t have to best friends.
But you don’t have to be enemies, either.
Instead,
see them as human,
as susceptible as you are
to bad information,
and share your thoughts, feelings, and research
with as much kindness and goodwill as possible.
And lastly,
if it is possible for you,
consider a social media fast,
if not an exodus.
I walked away for Facebook
and Instagram over a year ago
and I have been a lot happier
and clear-headed since.
I know that is not possible for everyone,
for various reasons—
and some of you are receiving this very sermon
on Facebook as I speak.
But to the degree that you’re able
to limit your consumption of social media,
treat it like alcohol.
Some of us will avoid it all together,
and others will be able to consume sparingly
and responsibly.
If you find that you are not able
to consume social media
or any facet of the internet with sobriety,
reach out to a mental health professional
for help.
We all have a share
of the responsibility for changing the world
around us.
As Billy Joel sang almost 40 years ago,
“We didn’t start the fire,
No, we didn’t light it,
but we tried to fight it.”
The good news
is that we do not do this work alone.
God’s mercy and patience go with us,
both as personal liberation
and as the empowerment for our duty.
We are not to blame,
but by the call of discipleship,
we are all responsible.
Today, in addition to the 14th Sunday after Pentecost,
is the Feast of the Holy Cross.
The Cross is a corrective lens
for our perspective on reality,
and the shape of discipleship.
God in Christ was not to blame
for sin, death, and the devil,
but Jesus took responsibility on the cross,
loving the world as it is,
remaking the world as it should be,
and calling and empowering us
to participate in both the loving and remaking.
I want to close by leading us through a time of prayer,
focused on this perspective,
calling us away from our allegiances
to this kingdom of death
and calling us to a new citizenship
in the Kingdom-come-on-earth-as-it-is-in-heaven….









