“Uh-Oh” – A Sermon On Matthew 15:10-28

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“Listen and understand,” Jesus says in today’s gospel (Matthew 15:10-28). Imagine what our world and lives might be like if listening and understanding were our daily practices. There is a lot of practical wisdom in what Jesus says and we’ve all experienced the truth of his words.

Haven’t there been times when deep thorough listening gave you greater insight into and understanding of another person or a situation? Maybe even your own life? Understanding follows listening. 

You’ve probably also experienced the opposite. There probably have been times when you weren’t understood because the other person didn’t listen to you Or maybe you misunderstood someone because you weren’t listening. Misunderstanding is preceded by not listening.

It’s as if Jesus is telling us, “Listen deeply. Pay attention. Move beyond the external circumstances of what you hear and see.”

I love what Jesus says in the first half of today’s gospel (Matthew 15:10-15). It’s beautiful, expansive, and generous. It’s Jesus at his best calling us to our best. But I don’t really love what Jesus does in the second half of today’s gospel (Matthew 15:21-28). His initial treatment of the Canaanite woman is not at all beautiful. It’s narrow and exclusionary. It’s not Jesus at his best. 

There’s a disconnect between what Jesus says in the first half of today’s gospel and how he behaves in the second half. Jesus tells us, “Listen and understand,” but then he refuses to listen to the Canaanite woman and understand her life, her pain, her needs. There is a disconnect between the Jesus I’ve been told about and the one I see in today’s gospel.

I grew up with the idea that Jesus is perfect. He always knows what to do and he never doubts. He always says and does the right things and he never has a bad day. He goes to sleep at night without guilt, regrets, or seconding guessing himself. He’s everything I’m not and nothing at all like me. He’s the perfect one. Maybe you too were taught or told those things growing up. Maybe that’s what you believe today. I struggle with the perfect Jesus and wonder if he really can know what my life is like. 

On the one hand I so want Jesus to be perfect. It lets me off the hook. I can use my humanity as an excuse. Have you ever said or heard something like this? “I’m only human. What do you expect? I’m not perfect.” It’s one of the ways we defend and justify ourselves. It’s really, however, just a refusal to take responsibility for ourselves and our lives. 

On the other hand if Jesus is perfect and I’ve committed to follow and live like him then I too should be perfect. WWJD and all that kind of stuff. I’ve lived a good part of my life trying to close the gap between my humanity and Jesus’ perfection. I have to say though, I’ve never possessed perfection but I have often been and sometimes still am consumed by perfectionism. Maybe you know what that’s like.

The longer I live and the more I experience, the less helpful and meaningful a perfect Jesus is in my life. The disconnect I experience in today’s gospel has me asking, “What if Jesus isn’t perfect? What if he’s more like us than we know or maybe want him to be? What if he has disconnects in his life just like we do?”

There is an important theological term for the disconnects in our lives. It’s a word I’m certain you know though you may never have thought about it as a theological description of your life or Jesus’ life. You ready? Here’s the word: Uh-oh. 

Uh-oh. You know what that’s like, right? We’ve all said it. 

The uh-oh moments of our lives are the recognition that a disconnect has taken place. We’ve disconnected from our truest self. Uh-oh. We’ve disconnected from the values we claim to hold and the ways we want to be. Uh-oh. We’ve disconnected from another person. Uh-oh. We’ve disconnected from the pain and needs of people in our town, across the country, throughout the world. Uh-oh. We’ve disconnected from the beauty and authenticity of our humanity. Uh-oh.

I wonder if that’s what is happening to Jesus in today’s gospel. A Canaanite woman comes to Jesus and says, “Have mercy on me, Lord, Son of David; my daughter is tormented by a demon.” And Jesus “did not answer her at all.” Uh-oh. He ignored her. He showed her no interest, no compassion. He did not listen to her. Uh-oh.

“I was sent only to the lost sheep of the house of Israel,” he tells her. He could just as well have said, “You are a foreigner. You and your daughter’s torment are not my concern.” Uh-oh. He shows her no understanding. Uh-oh. How could he? He didn’t listen to her. Uh-oh.

She knelt before him, saying, “Lord, help me.” She’s on the ground begging for her child’s life and Jesus says, “It is not fair to take the children’s food and throw it to the dogs.” Uh-oh. He called her a dog. Uh-oh. 

The reason I can recognize the disconnects in Jesus’ life is because I have them in mine. My life is full of uh-ohs. I suppose your life might be too. 

Haven’t there been times when you said or did something and almost immediately you said to yourself, “Uh-oh”? Or maybe you wake up in the middle of the night thinking to yourself Uh-oh. Or maybe a week or month later something about a situation strikes you anew and you feel an uh-oh in the pit of your stomach.

What are the uh-ohs in your life today? What’s the disconnect? From whom or what are you disconnected? And what are you doing about it?

Maybe we don’t need a Jesus who is perfect but a Jesus who knows and understands what it’s like to be us. Have you ever thought of Jesus as learning from his mistakes, deepening his self-understanding, continuing to grow, reconnecting when he’s become disconnected? What if he doesn’t have it all figured out but is figuring it out as he goes? That sounds more like what my life is really like. How about yours?

Every disconnect is an uh-oh inviting and asking for reconnection. That’s what the woman offers Jesus. “Yes, Lord, yet even the dogs eat the crumbs that fall from their masters’ table.” Uh-oh. She just called him out. She called him back to his better self, to a larger self, to a new self.

“Then Jesus answered her, ‘Woman, great is your faith! Let it be done for you as you wish.’” He reconnected to himself and to her. 

What would reconnection look like for you today? With whom or what do you need to reconnect? In what ways are you disconnected from yourself? 

Maybe reconnection isn’t about trying to get it just right, perfect. Maybe it’s enough to just listen and understand. 

Listen and understand. 

___________________
Image Credit: Le Christ et la Cananéenne – Francisco Antolinez y SarabiaMusée des Beaux-Arts d’Agen photograph by Didier Descouens – Own work, Public Domain, Wikimedia Commons.

© Michael K. Marsh and Interrupting the Silence, 2009-2026, all rights reserved.

6 responses to ““Uh-Oh” – A Sermon On Matthew 15:10-28”

  1. erikamorck Avatar

    I preached on this doozy this Sunday as well. I like your take on this encounter between Jesus and the Canaanite woman. Yes, as a woman and a human, I applaud the boldness of the Canaanite woman despite all that would deny her agency in her time and place, and I draw comfort from the idea that Jesus is just like me in my humanness – and therefore understands just how hard it is to be me.
    But the idea that this woman teaches Jesus – that she helped him see his bias against the likes of her does not sit well. And if this woman had to “teach” Jesus to see the likes of her, what if Jesus has yet to “see” the likes of me or? What does that mean for me or you? What do we have to DO for God to have mercy on us too? 
    It’s like we are trying to conform Jesus into the perfect Jesus we think he should be. A Jesus who identifies with our polarized identities and politicized dividing lines. A Jesus that “gets” the patterns of this age. Inasmuch we are saying that Jesus “needs” to be taught how to see us rather than believing that he already does.
    My thoughts were such that Jesus used “the Law” in its worst way to show just how great his mercy is.
    This woman who should not have had any faith in or understanding of Jesus, stated exactly what Jesus had been trying to teach the disciples all along: The law, her identity, her achievements, her place at the table or lack thereof – is not her righteousness. Her trust in His mercy is.  She didn’t want Jesus to be fair – fairness belongs to the law. She wanted Jesus to be Jesus – merciful! And she knew that even a crumb of that mercy would be enough for her.  “Yes, Lord, yet even the dogs eat the crumbs that fall from their masters’ table.”

    That being said – I do like your idea of the woman’s role – rather than those who think she taught Jesus or knocked him down a peg… That: “She called him back to his better self, to a larger self, to a new self.” That is a wonderful take and new way for me to see this story.

    Sorry for sermonizing on your blog – but it is fascinating how differently each of us reads this story. And I always appreciate, indeed am deeply moved by your perspective.
    Thank you!!!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Michael K. Marsh Avatar

      Erika, it’s good to hear from you. I really appreciate your insight about misusing the law. One of the things this story highlight for me is the humanity of Jesus. I think we often minimize Jesus’ humanity. I think we’re good with giving him the grace of being divine but not so good at offering him – or ourselves – the grace of being human.

      I also love the way these stories are so layered and can have multiple even contradictory meanings and still be true.

      God’s peace be with you,
      Mike

      Liked by 1 person

      1. erikamorck Avatar

        Yes, the humanity of Jesus makes his death for us even more potent/ powerful/ all encompassing. I pray that you have a wonder-filled last week of August! How is that possible?? Here’s to walking side by side with the very best kind of friend.

        Liked by 1 person

        1. Michael K. Marsh Avatar

          Thank you, Erika. I’m grateful for your companionship on this journey.

          Peace be with you,
          Mike

          Like

  2. mobersby@netspace.net.au Avatar
    mobersby@netspace.net.au

    Hi Mike, Thanks again for your wise words.  I think my favourite hymn is one written by a religious in Australia, which begins: ‘Come as you are, that’s how I want you.’It goes on to develop that theme, that Jesus wants us as the flawed and imperfect people we all are. One line reads: ‘don’t run away sad and disheartened, why should you think I’d love you the less.’ I sometimes use it as a Communion hymn and it is very powerful. Recently I preached on this Gospel for a mid week Eucharist, and among other things I read, as I prepared, was a suggestion that maybe Jesus was toying with the woman, speaking to her in a bantering tone. But I feel your interpretation is much more on the mark. Surely, if Jesus came to be fully human, he would, as you suggest, have been ‘learning on the job’ so to speak, with dawning insights as to his mission and himself. We used last Sunday to celebrate the Feast of the Blessed Virgin Mary, so I didn’t preach on this passage again. I can certainly relate to your experiences of disconnection and reconnection, within my family life and my parish ministry.

    I hope there are no disconnects in your life this week, only connections and reconnections! Blessings, Marilyn Obersby

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Michael K. Marsh Avatar

      Marilyn, thank you so much for your good words and insights. I really like your characterization of Jesus “learning on the job.” That sure rings true in my life. I so often wished or thought I could figure out life and then go live it but my experience is that the figuring out happens in and through the living.

      Blessings of connections and reconnections to you too.

      Peace be with you,
      Mike

      Like

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