The scriptures referred to are Romans 5:1-8 and Matthew 9:35-10:23.
You couldn't get a more succinct summary of Jesus' ministry than the first line of our reading from Matthew: “Jesus went about all the cities and villages, teaching in their synagogues, proclaiming the good news of the kingdom, and curing every disease and every sickness.” In other words, he was a teacher, a preacher and a healer.
You may ask “What is the difference between teaching and preaching?” Teaching is primarily about imparting information, showing someone how to find more information and helping them understand and use that information. Preaching is about advocating for specific beliefs, certain moral behaviors, and/or a way of living based on those beliefs and behaviors. Jesus preached on all three. What connected his preaching, teaching and healing was the kingdom of God.
The English word “kingdom” doesn't really encompass all the meanings of the Greek word basileia. It can mean the territory a sovereign governs. The United Kingdom includes England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland. But basileia can also mean a king's reign or rule. Charles the Third of Great Britain began his reign on September 8, 2022. He also is Head of the Commonwealth which comprises 56 nations. Though today that is largely symbolic, at one time the English monarch did rule an empire that encircled the globe. During their reign, and wherever they reigned, and over whomever they reigned, the monarch's will was carried out.
The kingdom of God that Jesus preached was not a physical piece of territory, though many who heard him thought of it that way. They thought that, as a descendant of David, he would reconquer Judea, Samaria and Galilee, kick the Romans out and rule as David did, a holy warrior-king. But Jesus did not teach that. He said, “The kingdom of God is within you.” (Luke 17:21) Or it could be better translated, “The kingdom of God is in the midst of you,” since the “you” in Greek is plural. The kingdom of God exists in the hearts, minds and lives of the community of those who trust and obey the God revealed in Jesus. It's what Paul called the body of Christ. That is where God reigns or rules and his will is done on earth as in heaven.
When Jesus teaches what the kingdom of God is like, he uses parables to illustrate how it affects people and how they respond to it. He says it is like the soil where a sower spreads his seeds. The kingdom can be snatched away or wither or get choked in the wrong soil. In the right soil it grows and multiplies. (Matthew 13:3-8, 18-23) As a community on earth, the fact is that the kingdom is like a field where weeds were sown by an enemy amid wheat, so both will grow together until the harvest when they will be separated. (Matthew 13:24-30, 36-43) Or a net which catches all kinds of fish, which are later sorted. (Matthew 13:47-50) The kingdom of God is like a small seed or a pinch of yeast, which then causes growth and abundance. (Matthew 13:31-33) It is a kingdom where God is gracious and generous to all who respond to him. (Matthew 20:1-16)
The kingdom of God is also evident in how those ruled by God act. It is a kingdom where mercy is shown to the merciful. (Matthew 18:23-34; cf. 5:7) It is a kingdom in which what you do is more important than what you say you'll do. (Matthew 21:28-32) It is a kingdom where everyone uses the gifts and talents God gave them, however large or small, to serve him. (Matthew 21:33-44) It is like a wedding banquet open to all who actually respond to God's invitation. (Matthew 22:2-14; cf. Luke 14:16-24) The kingdom is given to those who served Jesus by serving the hungry, the thirsty, the foreigner, the naked, the sick and the imprisoned. (Matthew 25:31-46)
So the kingdom of God is not located in a place but in a people. And it is not characterized by folks who lord their authority over others but by those who serve others, as Jesus came not to be served but to serve and even to give his life self-sacrificially. (Matthew 20:25-28) Because a king's reign reveals his character. Does he reign to benefit himself or his subjects?
And, sure enough, Jesus did not demonstrate his kingship by oppressing others but by freeing them from disease, death and the demons that bedeviled them. He didn't bring people into God's kingdom by threatening to harm them but by offering to heal them. He didn't persuade them by merely making them promises but by actually making them healthy and whole.
And he sent out his followers to do the same. They weren't to conquer people in his name but to cure people through the power of his name. He did not send them out as predators but as sheep into the midst of wolves. He wanted them to be thoughtful but not harmful. Because harm is what evil brings. Evil is deliberately destructive; good concentrates on being constructive. Evil intentionally makes things worse for some to benefit a few; good seeks to make things better for everyone. As his disciples, we are to be agents of healing and help. The world has quite enough people doing the opposite.
And his disciples were to do this relying only on God. They were supposed to travel light: no money, no luggage, no extra clothes or sandals, no staff that could be used as a weapon. They were to trust God for whatever they needed. They were to trust him to put trustworthy people in their path, who would put them up and feed them. If people rejected them, they were to simply move on and let God deal with them.
People who follow Jesus will meet opposition. Because proclaiming that God is the ultimate authority means the local or national rulers are not. Some of that opposition will even come from people who supposedly share the same religion as Jesus' followers because they do not actually recognize the God of love, justice and mercy revealed in Jesus. Even today we have people who identify as Christians who, upon hearing Christ's own words, consider them weak and woke. Others see him as too rigid and harsh about things that have become acceptable to modern society. All applaud him where he says something they like and ignore him where he says something they don't like. It's not called the good news because it's what we want to hear but because it's what we need to hear if we wish to become spiritually healthy.
Today we live in a world that is in many ways safer than it was in Jesus' day. Poverty rates around the world have gone down significantly over the last several decades. Death rates for major chronic and infectious diseases have plummeted, as well as deaths from disasters. Overdose deaths have also declined recently. And a lot of that progress is due to the fact that the values that Jesus preached have become accepted as the basic values of modern civilizations, as historian Tom Holland points out. We have charities and non-profits which, even if not Christian, help the hungry, the thirsty, the resident alien, the sick, the imprisoned and the oppressed. In many of the world's governments there are departments that help the poor and work to make society more just and fair.
And yet in every state of the U.S preventable deaths are rising, according to a study by the Brown University School of Public Health. We are talking about things like illnesses preventable by vaccines, treatable conditions like sepsis and appendicitis, and conditions that can be prevented by early detection and treatment like certain cancers, heart disease and tuberculosis. These are increasing and it's not because of lack of money spent. The U.S. spends more per capita on healthcare than any other high income nation. We are not getting the biggest bang for our buck because our healthcare system is largely for profit. What your doctor prescribes for you in terms of medication, surgery or treatments can be vetoed by your insurance company so that they can keep the money you pay them in premiums. That is, if you have insurance. Around 27 million Americans do not have health insurance. The vast majority of these are adults in working, low-income families.
All the other nations in the study use one of 5 different systems to cover their whole populations. Not all are provided by their governments, but in all of them, insurance companies are non-profit. And as we see in our gospel reading, when Jesus sent his disciples out to heal others, he did not want them to be in it for the money. (Matthew 10:8) Yet our healthcare system has gone as far as possible in the opposite direction. The majority of bankruptcies in this country—66.5%—are for medical debt. Does that make sense in a nation that considers itself Christian?
I think one of the problems is that people in this country have forgotten why these diseases and causes of death once went down: because once we shared the belief that we should help one another, including the poor, the sick and the stranger, something Jesus taught. Now we are much more concerned with trying to weed out everyone we feel does not deserve to be helped, in contradiction to what Jesus said. (Matthew 5:42) We have forgotten the fact that we are saved, not because we deserve it, but because of God's grace, his undeserved, unreserved goodness towards us. And we have forgotten that we are to extend that grace to others.
Jesus taught people the characteristics of God's kingdom, preached the good news that in him the kingdom had come near, and healed all who came to him as evidence of the reign of the God who is love. He commissioned his disciples, his students, to go and do the same. Are we spreading the reign of his kingdom in those ways or are we trying to seize the reins of power for ourselves? Are we motivated by selfish ambitions so that we do not care if others get harmed by what we do? Do we only care about ourselves and to hell with those we don't know or love? (Matthew 5:46-48) Or are we like Jesus, who, “when he saw the crowds, he had compassion for them, because they were harassed and helpless, like sheep without a shepherd”?
Jesus saw people suffering from disease and he did not stop to argue about if they were to blame or not. (John 9:1-7) Instead he was moved to heal them. Jesus saw a world of people suffering from sin and he did not condemn us to suffer the consequences of our destructive and self-destructive thoughts, words and actions. (John 3:17) Instead he gave his life to save us from spiritual sickness and eternal death. Looking at the world today, what would Jesus do? And if we are Christ's body on earth, and if he reigns in our hearts, minds and lives, what should we do?