24 August 2025
St. Athanasius
Lutheran Church
Saint Bartholomew, Apostle Vienna, VA
“Nathanaeling
Bartholomews”
Text: Luke
22:24-30; 2 Corinthians 4:7-10; Proverbs 3:1-8
Grace, mercy, and peace to you from God our Father,
and from our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. Amen.
Jesus had just given His disciples His Supper, His
Body and Blood, for the very first time. A momentous occasion, to be sure. Then
He said that one of them would betray Him, which was unimaginable. They had all
been with Jesus for three years. They were a band of brothers. They had just
eaten this new and incredible Passover. Who would turn traitor? They began to
debate which of them could possibly do that. And that debate then morphed into
what we heard today, that a dispute also arose among them, as to which of
them was to be regarded as the greatest. Which I guess makes sense? If
you’re going to argue who’s the worst among you, then it’s not so far to
argue about who’s the greatest among you.
And Bartholomew? The apostle we’re commemorating
today . . . I think he would be planted firmly in the middle of the pack! I don’t
think Bartholomew is in any danger of getting the mantle of the greatest. I
mean, that’s got to belong to Peter, James, or John, right? One of the big
three, the inner circle. Or if not them, maybe Andrew or Philip - they seem to
be the second tier. But Bartholomew? Nah, he wouldn’t get any votes.
But I don’t think he’d be considered the worst
either. Bartholomew was also known as Nathanael, about whom Jesus had said: Behold,
an Israelite indeed, in whom there is no deceit (John 1:47)! Such praise from Jesus
gets you some status. But maybe that Matthew fella . . . He was a tax collector is his former life
after all. And if you’re going to betray your people like that, maybe
you’ll betray your master as well . . .
Now imagine Jesus . . . after He had just given
them His Supper . . . sitting there . . . listening to all this . . . who’s the
worst, who’s the greatest . . . had they not learned anything from Him?
So maybe before they get their pecking order all
figured out, Jesus cuts them off. Pecking order, status, highest, lowest,
greatest, least - this is how the world works. This is how the world thinks and
acts. I’m above you. I’m better than you. But not so with you,
Jesus says to His now, hopefully, a bit embarrassed disciples. The
road to greatness is not up, but down. A true leader doesn’t demand to be
served, but serves. Didn’t you see what I just did? You were all just reclining
at the table, and who served you? It was me, wasn’t it? Your master. Your
teacher. The one you, Peter, said was the Christ, the Son of the
living God (Matthew
16:16). The
one you, Nathanael, said was the Son of God, the King of Israel (John 1:49)! And you, Andrew,
said we have found the Messiah (John 1:41). Are you all so great that you deserve to be
served by me? Surely you don’t think so! Even the greatest among you, the
greatest of the twelve, doesn’t deserve such an honor. Yet so I honored all of
you. So stop this silliness, this worldliness. That’s not who you are.
And that’s not who you are either.
Though we do this, too. Compare ourselves with others. And how that usually
ends up is that we consider ourselves either far worse or far better than we
really are. We either focus on our sins and failures and shortcomings and think
we’ll never measure up, or we focus on the sins and failures and shortcomings
of others and think they’ll never measure up! Then we either
despair or become prideful. We look at others with either contempt or with
jealousy.
That’s how the world works. In the world, there is
higher and lower, there is achievement and merit. A law-based system: do this,
get that. And that’s not bad. Maybe even necessary, in the world. The problem
comes when we bring that thinking into the church, like the disciples did. That’s
when the problems begin. Then faith and salvation and our standing before God
becomes something we earn or deserve - law-based - and not by grace, a gift of
God. And that kind of thinking can lead us astray.
I heard it again, just this week, in fact. Our
president was talking about making peace between Ukraine and Russia, and said
that if anything was going to get him into heaven, that would be
it. Sorry, Mr. President. You’re wrong. If anything’s going to get you into
heaven, it’s not anything you will do, great as it may be. It’s what Jesus did for
you. It will be by grace. A gift.
Maybe this is where Bartholomew can help us. Or at
least, his names. For the name Bartholomew is Aramaic for “son of the
furrows,” probably a reference to his family being farmers. But we can
get into furrows, or ruts, in our life. Sinful ruts that become
comfortable and hard to get out of, even when we know they’re not good. But
Bartholomew’s other name, Nathanael, is Hebrew for “gift of God.”
And if we’re to get out of our ruts, out of our sin, out of our worldliness, it
will be only as a gift of God. As it was for Nathanael. The first time he met
Jesus, Philip had told him they found this fella Jesus of Nazareth - the one
that Moses and the prophets spoke of. And Nathanael’s response was: Nazareth!
Can anything good come out of Nazareth (John 1:46)? One of his ruts, evidently, was a rut of prejudice. And maybe
pride. But instead of condemning him, Jesus lifted him out of his rut, and he
became a disciple, and then an apostle.
It’s what Jesus does. Because of sin we are dust
(or dirt!), and to dirt we shall return (Genesis 3:19). We get cast into the dirty, sinful ruts of
others. We form dirty, sinful ruts ourselves with well-worn paths of sin. Our
ways do not lead us higher, but lower. Our ruts become deeper and deeper, until
we die in them and are buried in them, dust to dust. What are they for
you? Your ruts. The sin you keep returning to. The sin you’re comfortable with.
Maybe it’s pride, maybe despair. Maybe it’s rebellion, maybe it’s greed. Maybe
it’s lust, or apathy, or jealousy. Or failing to care about others. What are your
ruts?
But Jesus has come to Nathanael us Bartholomews. To, by His gift of grace, lift us
out of our ruts to a new life.
And Jesus did that by jumping in our ruts with us. Coming down from heaven
and jumping into the ruts of the prostitutes and sexual sinners, into the ruts
of the tax collectors and the greedy, into the ruts of the prideful and
uncaring, into the ruts of the rebellious and hurtful. And into your ruts. Whatever
they are, and however deep they are, Jesus is there to die for you in them, and
then lift you out in His resurrection. Because the thing to remember is that
when we’re talking about the greatest and the least, the highest and the
lowest, the best and the worst, is that Jesus was the greatest, highest, and
the best who became the last, the lowest, and the worst - He became that guy,
even the worst betrayer! - in order to raise you, buried under all your sins
and the sins of others, to a new life. A life no longer in the ruts, the way of
sin, but in His way, the way of life.
Jesus did that for you when He baptized you in
those waters of new life, new birth, forgiveness, resurrection. Waters
Nathanael’s own hands used to give what his name means: the gift of God.
How many of the 3,000 who were baptized on the Day of Pentecost were baptized
by him? And how many after that? How many before, as history records, he was
martyred by flaying - having his skin cut off his body. But Nathanael knew, or
came to know, that the gift of God is greater than the strength of men.
They could kill Bartholomew, throw him into what this name of his kind of means
- a furrow, or grave of dirt. But they couldn’t take his life. The new and
heavenly life that baptism gives.
That confidence is what St. Paul wrote about in the
Epistle we heard today. But we have this treasure - the good news
of Jesus - in jars of clay, - or dirt! - to show that the
surpassing power belongs to God and not to us. And notice how he now
contrasts the weakness of the flesh with the strength of the
Spirit . . . We are afflicted in every way (in the body),
but not crushed (in the Spirit); perplexed, but not driven to
despair; persecuted, but not forsaken; struck down, but not destroyed; always
carrying in the body the death of
Jesus, so
that
the life of Jesus may also be manifested in our bodies.
Death, so that, in order that,
life. Jesus’ death, for your life.
And that’s not only the gift of God that inspired
Nathanael’s name, that he gave in baptismal waters, and that he lived,
but he also preached. To people concerned about greatness, about
ranking. Been there, done that, he could say. There’s something better than
that, greater for you, in Jesus, the gift of God who gives the
gift of God.
Now the world scoffs at that. Scoffing that whoever
Jesus is and whatever He wants to give me doesn’t make my life better, but
worse. So no thank you. And, you know, maybe that’s true. Maybe
following God’s Word in this world makes things harder for you. Others lie,
cheat, and steal to get ahead, but not so with you. Others use, and misuse, and
abuse others for their own gain, but not so with you. Things that are legal in
the world are still sometimes things a Christian won’t do. So is my life as a
Christian better? When there is, as we heard from Paul, affliction,
persecution, hardship, disadvantage, and maybe even a bloody death?
Well, yes! Because as a Christian your life isn’t just how
high you can climb now, or how much you can get now,
or how easy you have it now - as a Christian, your life is eternal.
Your life won’t end as a Bartholomew, in the furrow of the grave, but go
on as a Nathanael, as a gift of God, risen from the dead, in His kingdom
that has no end. You may not get a throne and judge the
twelve tribes of Israel, as Jesus promised the apostles. But you will
eat and drink with Jesus at His table in His kingdom. In fact,
you already now have a place at His table here, and feast on His
Body and Blood - new food, living food, that gives the gift of God, a new life,
and makes you Nathanaels.
And whether you are the highest or the lowest, the
greatest or the least, a really bad sinner or a really bad sinner, you
get to live a new life, right where you are, as a Nathanael, a gift of God, to
those around you. And don’t underestimate the impact you have. You may not see
it or realize it, but leave that to Jesus. Or as He had King Solomon write in
Proverbs: Trust in the Lord with all your heart, and do not lean on your
own understanding. In all your ways acknowledge him, and he will make straight
your paths. He’ll see to it. For your benefit and theirs. Even if that
means the victory of a martyr’s death.
So as we commemorate St. Bartholomew today, we
really commemorate what Jesus did for him and through him. And
for us the same. For us who are maybe not the greatest, maybe not the least,
maybe planted firmly in the middle. But important to Jesus and precious to Him.
His baptized child with a seat at His table and the promise of life eternal
with Him. Which, all in all, is a pretty good gift of God. Bartholomew once
asked, Can anything good come from Nazareth? And maybe for us, the
question is: Can anything good come out of me? Or him? Or her? Or this
situation I’m in? Or this disease? Or this trouble? Come and see,
Bartholomew was told. Wait and see, might be the advice for us. And you
just might be surprised at what Jesus can and will do. And all
the Bartholomews he will turn into Nathanaels,
gifts of God. Like you.
In the Name of the Father, and of the (+) Son, and
of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
Now the peace of God which passes all understanding, keep your hearts and minds through faith in Christ Jesus, our Lord. Amen.