Time to Wake Up

Time to Wake Up

Romans 13:8-14; Matthew 18:15-20

At the end of August in 2018 in the small town of Actlán, Mexico, a “community alert” message began pinging from phone to phone on WhatsApp.  According to the message, a gang of criminals were kidnapping children and eviscerating them in order to sell their organs on the black market.  

No one knew exactly where this grisly story was coming from or even if it was true.

On the 29th of August, as this horrid rumor about child abduction was sweeping through the area, Ricardo Flores and his uncle, Alberto, came into town to buy supplies for the cinderblock water well they were building on Alberto’s ranch in the countryside.  Since Ricardo and Alberto did not live in town, the local rumor monger did not recognize them and began spreading the word that they were the feared child abductors.  Francisco Martinez began livestreaming into his phone saying, “People of Actlán de Osorio, Puebla, please come give your support, give your support. Believe me, the kidnappers are now here.”

Ricardo and Alberto quickly found themselves surrounded by a mob. The police arrested the two men for disturbing the peace, but since they had no real reason to hold the them, they let them go.  Sadly, the moment Alberto and Roberto walked out of the police station they were seized by an angry mob who beat them, doused them with gasoline and burned them to death.

It turned out, when it was all over, that the rumor about child abduction was fake news.[1]

“A lie can run around the world before the truth has got its boots on,” wrote Terry Pratchett, and in 2018 three researchers from MIT proved the truth of that observation by carefully tracking the spread of both rumors and facts on Twitter.  “We found that falsehood diffuses significantly farther, faster, deeper, and more broadly than the truth, in all categories of information, and in many cases by an order of magnitude,” said Sinan Aral, a professor at the MIT Sloan School of Management and co-author of the study.[2]

Rumors can be fiercely destructive.  Even deadly.  Rumors can even be weaponized.

Because rumors and misinformation can be so destructive, in 1942, as World War II was rapidly and utterly transforming life in the US, psychologists Gordon Allport and Robert Knapp set up the first Rumor Clinic at Harvard University.  Their goal was to stop pernicious rumors that could undermine the war effort or upset public morale.  They also wanted to understand why rumors are so attractive to us.

Knapp noted that rumors arise to express the public’s feelings in a time of crisis or instability.  Rumors supply the illusion of information when real information is unavailable or unsatisfying.  They can give a sense of having some measure of control when things seem out of control.  

Knapp identified three kinds of rumors and the psychological functions they serve.  

The wedge driver rumor expresses hostility in a time of frustration and allows us to find a scapegoat.  The rumor that the Corona virus originated in a Chinese lab is a good example of a wedge driver rumor.  

Pipe dream rumors express our hopes and wishes.  The debunked rumor that hydroxychloroquine is a cure for Covid was an obvious pipe dream rumor.  

Bogie rumors express our fears.  For instance the rumor that hospitals were not going to treat Covid patients over 60 which spread through social media in April of 2020 was a bogie rumor.

When we’re living in highly uncertain circumstances where even day-to-day decisions can have unforeseen outcomes, rumors will be rampant.  They provide an outlet for our precarious collective emotional life.  But they can have dire consequences.

One of the most common negative consequences of rumors is that they can damage relationships.  Let’s say Gomer tells Wanda that he heard that eating bleu cheese can keep you from getting the flu.  Two weeks later Wanda is in bed with the flu, feeling miserable, despite eating bleu cheese every day since she first heard about it from Gomer.  Now she’s going to be skeptical about anything Gomer tells her.

Or let’s say Wanda doesn’t buy the idea of the bleu cheese cure for a minute.  Now she’s going to take anything Gomer says with a grain of salt because she’s pretty sure his elevator doesn’t go all the way to the top floor.

The easy way to avoid the mistrust and skepticism that inevitably arises from this kind of thing is simple: don’t pass along anything unless you are absolutely certain that it’s true.

There’s a very wise rule that has been attributed to Socrates or sometimes to the Buddha: “Before you speak, let your words pass through three gates.  Is it true?  Is it kind?  Is it necessary?”  For those of us who are followers of Jesus, who are trying to live in and sustain the beloved community, I would add one more gate:  Is it loving?

We’re living in a very conflicted time.  Information and misinformation is flying around us at lightspeed—information and misinformation about science, about political figures, about political parties, about nations, about issues, about factions.  A lot of that information and misinformation is sent out with an agenda.  And some of those agendas are destructive.  

If ever there was a time when we needed to double and triple check the truth, the agenda, and the sources of the information that comes to us, this is it.

I think we all know that not everything we hear is true.  But we’re not always diligent about taking time to verify sources and facts before we pass things along.

As St. Paul says in today’s epistle reading from Romans, “You know what time it is, how it is now the moment for you to wake from sleep.”  There’s a lot at stake—in our country, in our communities, in our church, in our personal lives, in our relationships.  We need to be wide awake and thoughtful about what we hear and what we share.

But as St. Paul also says in that same passage, the one thing we owe each other above everything else is to love each other.  All the commandments “are summed up in this word, ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’ Love does no wrong to a neighbor; therefore, love is the fulfilling of the law.”

Loving each other with agape love means that we tell each other the truth.  No rumors.  No fake news.  No gossip.  It means we check our sources.  If necessary, it means we check our sources’ sources.  

As it says in Ephesians:

“We must no longer be children, tossed to and fro and blown about by every wind of doctrine, by people’s trickery, by their craftiness in deceitful scheming.  But speaking the truth in love, we must grow up in every way into him who is the head, into Christ,  from whom the whole body, joined and knit together by every ligament with which it is equipped, as each part is working properly, promotes the body’s growth in building itself up in love.”[3]

But what do you do if something does happen to damage your relationship with someone else in the community, if some rumor or misinformation or half-truth or something worse insinuates itself between you?

Fortunately, in Matthew 18 we have a formula in the words of Jesus, himself, for dealing with exactly that situation.

The first step is to go to the person who you feel has wronged you and talk to them one-on-one, alone.  Jesus said, “Where two or three are gathered in my name, I am there among them.”  So when you go to talk to that person, just the two of you, it’s not just the two of you.  Jesus is there, too.  So, what are you going to say if Jesus is right there listening to the conversation?  How are you going to say it?  How are you going to navigate this in the presence of Jesus?  How are you going to show faith and love?

Speak your truth in love.  If that person listens to you, all well and good.  Your relationship can begin healing.  I should note here that the Greek word translated as “listens,” (akouō) implies not just listening but understanding.  So the hope that you will come to an understanding is built into the text.

Unfortunately, too often our typical way of dealing with our grievances is to triangulate; we go looking for someone else to hear our tale of how we’ve been wronged.  As Brian Stoffregen describes it, 

“When we have been wronged, we often don’t confront the person. Instead, we create triangles. We go and tell two or three or more of our friends, ‘Do you know what so-and-so did to me?’ Jesus did not say: ‘Go tell everybody what that stupid jerk did to you.’ Jesus told us: ‘Go and talk to that stupid jerk about the hurtful actions s/he has done,’ although Jesus didn’t quite use those words. We are to go and talk to the person, not to go around telling everybody else. We are to be so concerned about the breach in the relationship, that we are willing to do whatever is possible to restore it.”[4]

So that’s the first step.  Go talk to the person.  If that doesn’t work, try step two.  Bring two or three others into the conversation.  Listen to what they have to say about it.  And here’s a caveat:  Be prepared to be told that you are in the wrong.  And if that happens, be prepared to be gracious about it.

Remember, this is the ideal way of dealing with disagreement or injury within the beloved community, and this part with two or three witnesses is also completely consistent with dispute resolution as it is described in Torah.[5]

If you’ve tried steps one and two, the additional witnesses think you’re in the right, and the other person still won’t listen or try to understand, then Jesus says to take it to the whole congregation.

This may seem a little radical to us, but it really is wise in two very important ways.  First, it brings everything out in the open and puts a dead stop to any scuttlebutt that might be circulating.  It stops the rumor mill dead in its tracks.  Most importantly, though, it acknowledges that relationships are important in the beloved community, that, in fact, the community is built on relationships.  One fractured relationship can collapse the community as surely as one fractured beam can bring down the roof. 

So you’ve tried to resolve your differences by talking one on one.  You’ve tried with one or two others sitting in.  You’ve tried with the whole church.  But you still can’t seem to reach that other person.  Now what?  

“If the offender refuses to listen even to the church,” says Jesus, “let such a one be to you as a Gentile and a tax collector.”  

That sounds so harsh.  But is it?  On the one hand, it seems clear that at this point the offender has made themselves an outsider, separated from the rest of the church.  On the other hand, it’s important to note that, especially in Matthew’s gospel, Jesus made a special point of reaching out to Gentiles and tax collectors.  

So yes, that person is now on the outs for a while.  But you —you have a new special focus for outreach.  You have a mission to find a way to bring that person back into the community.  You don’t get to wash your hands of them and say good riddance.

In a world and a time where so much is falling apart, now more than ever the beloved community needs to do everything we can to keep it together.

We need to remember that we owe each other love.  Love that is patient and kind.  Love that is not arrogant or boastful or rude.  Love that is not irritable or resentful or self-seeking.  Love that rejoices in truth.  And speaks truth.

We need to remember that, as much as we might like to have everything spelled out, as far as God is concerned, the entire law is spelled out in “love your neighbor as yourself.”  

We need to remember to speak the truth in love.  To pass our words through the three gates—is it true, is it kind, is it necessary—before we let them run out of our mouths our through our typing fingers.  

Besides this, you know what time it is, how it is now the moment for you to wake from sleep. For salvation is nearer to us now than when we became believers;  the night is far gone, the day is near.  In Jesus’ name.


[1] BBC News, 12 Nov 2018, Marco Martinez

[2] MIT News, March 8, 2018

[3] Ephesians 4:14-16

[4] Brian Stoffregen, Exegetical Notes, Matthew 18:15-20

[5] Deuteronomy 19:15

5 thoughts on “Time to Wake Up

  1. Steve, this post hits straight to the heart. Amen and amen! The “triangulation” treads around an unforgiving attitude. I let go of FB five years ago, due to the “spread” of misinformation in my feed. My truth? God’s word! If it’s not rooted in love, it’s best I don’t hear or apply or even share! Why is love so hard? Like you, I remember this (I love your words of wisdom!): we use this at school, too!:
    “Is it true? Is it kind? Is it necessary?” For those of us who are followers of Jesus, who are trying to live in and sustain the beloved community, I would add one more gate: Is it loving?” Amen, Steve! Keep spreading the love and truth!

    Liked by 1 person

      1. You’re welcome, Steve. I feel the prayers. This community is amazing. It came at a time in my life when I so needed it. I’m so happy you’re a part of it; even if I don’t get to see you often. Your writing is exquisite! Your wisdom is appreciated!

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