June 28, 2026, Saint Barnabas Lutheran Church, Howard Beach, Queens, N.Y.
“There is a reciprocal nature to how you treat other people,” writes New Testament scholar Cleophus J. LaRue. “What you do for others you will see it again in your own life.”
We call it Karma.
A high school football quarterback swaggers with the confidence that he is a superstar on campus. In just a few years, he's getting a bit of as gut, his lowly job bores him to tears, his marriage is falling apart, and former classmates have forgotten him.
Karma.
A high school prom queen exults in her beauty and tends to be a mean girl to her friends. Years later her beauty has faded, her belly has sagged, and the plain girls she used to torment hide their smiles when they see her at class reunions.
Karma.
“This admonition also applies to those who are involved in the work of the Lord, LaRue continues. “One finds this observance in both the Old and New Testaments. In the Old Testament it is ‘Do not touch my anointed ones; do my prophets no harm’ (Psalm 105:15). In the New Testament it is found in Galatians 6:7: ‘Do not be deceived; God is not mocked, for you reap whatever you sow.’”
In the three brief verses in Matthew 10:40-42, Jesus endows the disciples with remarkable and often frightening authority: the power to forgive sins, execute miracles, and speak on behalf of the Creator of the Universe.
“Whoever welcomes you welcomes me, and whoever welcomes me welcomes the one who sent me.” (Matthew 40:40)
“The language here is ambassadorial,” notes Professor LaRue. “To receive the ambassador or apostle is to receive the potentate that sent him; to reject the ambassador is to reject the one that sent him. The word ‘welcome’ refers practically to the willingness to offer support and shelter to those who represent Jesus.”
It’s an awesome thing to be Christ’s ambassador, especially in parts of the world where religion is waning or used to gird political power. Not everyone wants to hear Jesus’s commandments to love one another, to proclaim comfort and release to captives, to free the oppressed, to forgive debts, to do justice, to love kindness, to walk humbly with God (Luke 4, Micah 6). Many will not recognize these ambassadors as Jesus’ envoys and will accuse them of being “snowflakes,” weak, left leaning, and politically ambitious.
It takes a very special person to be an ambassador for Christ.
“These verses in Matthew capture the heart of discipleship,” writes Professor Danny Zacharias of Acadia Divinity College in Wolfville, Nova Scotia: “responding to the needs of the people, relying on God’s provision, and carrying forth the work of healing and restoration. To do this, Jesus’s disciples need to imitate their Lord. This passage challenges us to see discipleship not as passive belief but as active participation in the work of restoration.”
If we accept the challenge, our first duty is to imitate Jesus, to minister among the “harassed and helpless” with loving compassion.
As we prepare ourselves for this ambassadorial role, it might be good to meditate on the lives of many who took up this mantle of discipleship.
We might think of Mother Teresa who ministered among the poor and dying of Kolkata, India.
We might think of Albert Schweitzer, musician, organist, physician, and Lutheran minister, who founded a hospital in Gabon, Africa.
We might think of Father Damien, also known as Damien the Leper, who devoted his life to serving lepers on a remote compound on Molokai island.
We might think of Martin Luther King, Jr., and Medgar Evers, and Dietrich Bonhoeffer, who gave their lives to speak God’s truth to self-aggrandizing power.
I’d like to offer another paradigm of discipleship who has inspired me since college.
John Woolman was an itinerate Quaker mystic who spread his peaceful witness throughout Colonial New Jersey in the mid 18th century. He was born 306 years ago this October.
Woolman became one of my heroes when I was a student at Eastern Baptist College (now Eastern University), in the late sixties. I began classes as a recently discharged veteran of the Air Force but soon began to feel the Vietnam War was a hideous mistake by America’s best and brightest politicians, and an immoral travesty by the presidents who refused to stop it.
I became active in the peace movement and spent hours exploring pacifist ideas with Professor John L. Ruth, a Mennonite minister. One afternoon, John handed me his 18th century copy of John Woolman’s Journal. It was a loan, he said. “I know you’ll treat it gently.”
It was not easy reading because the pages were yellowed, the letter s was stylized f, and I had to train my brain not to read, “purfuit of happineff.” The ancient binding made crinkling sounds when I opened the book. I turned each page with gentleness and read the journal in one night.
No book I read in college had a greater impact on me. Woolman, committed to Christ’s command to love God and neighbor, swore he would never do harm to any living creature. He begged carriage drivers to treat both their African coachmen and their horses with kindness. He walked in friendship with indigenous peoples in New Jersey. And he was an early abolitionist.
Woolman was eccentric in the extreme. He discovered that the harsh chemicals used to blacken men’s coats were blinding the slaves forced to do the dyeing. He couldn’t convince his fellow Quakers to stop dyeing their clothes black but he refused to do it himself. He wore a white muslin jacket that became increasingly soiled as traveled around Colonial New Jersey, snow time or mud time.
That is the image of Woolman I have carried in my head since I returned his journal safely to John Ruth’s keeping. He must have cut a comical figure when he arrived in meeting houses and pubs, wrinkled, yellowed, and stained with mud and sweat.
Woolman was a notary public. He steadfastly refused to notarize wills if they included slaves as property. An excerpt from his journal:
A person at some distance lying sick, his brother came to me to write his will. I knew he had slaves, and, asking his brother, was told he intended to leave them as slaves to his children. As writing is a profitable employ, and as offending sober people was disagreeable to my inclination, I was straitened in my mind; but as I looked to the Lord, he inclined my heart to His testimony. I told the man that I believed the practice of continuing slavery to this people was not right, and that I had a scruple in my mind against doing writings of that kind; that though many in our Society kept them as slaves, still I was not easy to be concerned in it, and desired to be excused from going to write the will. I spake to him in the fear of the Lord, and he made no reply to what I said, but went away; he also had some concerns in the practice, and I thought he was displeased with me. In this case I had fresh confirmation that acting contrary to present outward interest, from a motive of divine love and in regard to truth and righteousness, and thereby incurring the resentments of people, opens the way to a treasure better than silver, and to a friendship exceeding the friendship of men.
I don’t know what it was about Woolman that people found so persuasive. I was used to the contentious debates of the sixties when we tended to shout at persons who disagreed with us, never expecting to convince them. But Woolman spoke with gentle persuasion and people generally saw he was right.
Woolman could walk into raucous New Jersey pubs, preach about the evils of rum, and convince both the pub crowd and the pub owner that he was right. “When men take pleasure in feeling their minds elevated with strong drink,” he wrote in his journal, “and so indulge their appetite as to disorder their understandings, neglect their duty as members of a family or civil society, and cast off all regard to religion, their case is much to be pitied.” It’s a mystery – and perhaps a miracle – that Woolman was not simply thrown out of the pub on his head.
But most people quickly figured out that John Woolman was a prophet in their midst. He’s one of the unsung heroes of U.S. history and I wish more people would sing about him.
There are, of course, limitations to Woolman’s style of servant discipleship. Today it would be nearly impossible to avoid products or practices that hurt others. One might boycott a particular company that is harming the environment only to discover there are companies in the same conglomerate that distribute food to hungry children.
Woolman’s style or gentle persuasion might also be a non-starter today. When Gandhi suggested passive resistance was the morally acceptable way of confronting the Third Reich, Churchill said, “Hitler would smash him like a bug.”
When Woolman advocated abolition of slavery or abstinence from liquor he convinced many of his contemporaries he was right. This kind of “woke” activism would have its critics today.
“Depending on our church traditions and the nations we reside in,” Professor Zacharias writes, “gospel work that focuses on healing and justice can be suspect, seen as ‘social justice’ disconnected from the proclamation of the good news.
“Similarly, some ministries focus their work entirely on the teaching and proclamation of the gospel with very little thought toward justice and healing. Jesus shows us that the work of the compassionate shepherd is holistic and integral; the preaching of the gospel is never separated from the embodied work of the gospel to bring healing and wholeness.”
John Woolman’s approach to discipleship may seem dated now.
But three centuries after he passed from the American scene, may God raise up heirs to his loving, peaceful spirit, eccentric, yellowing jacket and all, to speak wisdom and God’s love to our bitterly divided land.








