Sermon for the Tenth Sunday After Pentecost

Nonconformity

Grace, mercy and peace to you from God our Father and our Lord Jesus Christ. 
Amen. In today's Epistle, God's apostle Paul wants us to know that none of us 
is the free thinker or independent person we would like to think we are. Forces 
outside of us are constantly pressing our minds and our thoughts. Paul warns 
you about these forces, and he also declares how God continually will save you 
from these forces, when he says to you in today's Epistle, “Do not be conformed 
to this world, but be transformed by the renewal of your mind.”

Dear Christian friends,

In February 2010, Time ran an interview with the world-famous rock musician 
Ozzy Osbourne. In that interview, Ozzy made a suggestion that might be the most 
beneficial thing ever to proceed from his mouth: “[Today] kids have tattoos 
everywhere. … If you want to be somebody special now, don't have a tattoo, 
because everyone's getting them, you know” (Time, February 8, 2010).

(No, this is not a sermon about tattoos. I do not care whether you have one or 
not.)

On a related note, Good Morning America recently reported that, in order to 
fight the rising costs of manufacturing, clothing retailers are now using less 
material in their products. In order to keep you buying their lower quality 
clothing, retailers are advertising that this move toward less material is all 
part of a new fashion trend.

(No, this is not a sermon about clothing. As long as you have all the necessary 
parts well covered, with no slogan or picture that causes people to wonder 
whether you are a Christian, I do not care what you wear.)

Deep Inside We’re All the Same

Both of these examples—Ozzy Osbourne and cheaply made clothing—both of these 
examples illustrate how your brain operates. Simply stated, we each do certain 
things because someone else is doing them. Like everyone else on the planet, 
you and I both possess an inner desire to be the same as, or at least similar 
to, other people around us. Conformity is the name for it. We all want to be 
accepted by others, especially our peers. Few of us want to stick out like a 
sore thumb. The fashion industry knows that, if it can get a handful of people 
to buy into the idea that cheaply made clothes are the new trend, many more 
people will soon follow. After all, Ozzy was right: “Everyone's getting 
[tattoos], you know.” All the individuals eventually look the same.

·       At first glance, children and teenagers seem particularly susceptible 
to this inborn desire to conform, but as we all know, they rarely wish to 
conform to their parents' or grandparents' desires. Children want to conform to 
the way other children look and act. Mind-boggling, I know, but we all have 
been there—or will be soon.

·       Don't feel too embarrassed, teenagers. For all our supposed wisdom, 
your parents and grandparents still feel the same pressure and desire to 
conform, in order to be accepted by their peers. That is partly why they find 
this sermon so agreeable so far. It is also why they feel the need to “Keep up 
with the Joneses,” as the saying goes. We all share the same disease. 
Conformity is just as dangerous for us as it is for you. 

·       Many of us want to think that we are each a free thinker. Part of the 
American ideal is that we each be independent and freethinking. We all think 
alike that way. 

Speaking about things that only God Himself could have revealed, Paul in 
today's Epistle opens up our brains and lays bare what is really happening when 
we each feel the desire to conform. Far from being free-thinking, far from 
being the decision-makers we want to think we are, Paul warns us that our 
brains are continually being pressed like cookie dough into a mold. Paul does 
not say, “Do not conform yourself to this world,” as though you or I play a 
completely independent role in our desires to conform. Paul says “Do not be 
conformed to this world.” The verb “be conformed” is passive, which means 
someone or something else is doing it to you. “Do not be conformed to this 
world.” Paul is saying, “Do not allow yourself to be pushed around or herded 
into a group by the unbelieving world. Do not let yourself be pressed into the 
mold or form that the world is always attempting to press you into. Do not 
submit to the pressure that the
 unbelieving world continually exerts upon you.”

If someone in the Walmart parking lot were to grab you and attempt to push you 
into his car, what would you do? In order to protect your body from harm, you 
would probably kick and scream, scratch and claw for all you are worth. Why 
wouldn't you want to put up the same fight when the world attempts to press you 
into conformity with its own ideals, thoughts, priorities, and desires? If we 
would resist with all our strength the bodily injury that could come to us in 
the Walmart parking lot, how much more should we resist the injury that comes 
to our minds when the world presses itself upon us, shaping and conforming us 
into its own image? 

More than a Matter of Tattoos or Clothes

Paul is not really speaking about tattoos and fashion trends toward cheap 
clothing, either. He is speaking about the way we think, and examples of how 
the unbelieving world continually presses us into conformity are as numerous as 
the stars in the sky. I have two examples for you here, but these are very 
general. You can examine your own life and probably come up with you own 
examples, as befits your situation and your sin. 

Conformity example #1 has to do with paying people back for the wrongs they 
have done to you. Not many verses after today's Epistle, God clearly says to 
you, “Beloved, never avenge yourselves [when wrong has been done to you], but 
leave it to the wrath of God, for it is written, ‘Vengeance is Mine, I will 
repay, says the Lord’” (Romans 12:19). 

Nevertheless, how often have you given in to the feeling of satisfaction that 
comes from getting even with those who wrong you? This is why older brothers 
pay younger brothers double for what they receive and it is why their parents 
file lawsuits. Yet when you give into your temptations for revenge, you are not 
operating independently. You are being conformed, pressed into a mold, forced 
into a car in the Walmart parking lot, so to speak. In order to guard and 
protect your brain from being hijacked in this way, God is saying to you today, 
“Do not be conformed to this world.”

Conformity example #2: Much of our educational system—and most of our political 
system—is built upon the world's assumption that each person is intrinsically 
good, and that all you need for a good life are the right opportunities, the 
right information, and the right decision-making abilities. Stated another way, 
the world refuses to believe that, apart from Christ, every person inwardly and 
naturally corrupt (Genesis 6:11-12, dead (Ephesians 2:1), hostile (Romans 8:7), 
and self-centered (James 3:14-16).

It is very easy for us Christians to become pressed into the mold and conformed 
to the way the world thinks. Part of each Christian even desires to believe the 
world's lie, that we are all intrinsically good. This lie allows us to think of 
ourselves more highly than we ought, as Paul also warns us in today’s Epistle. 
This lie, that we are all intrinsically good, also destroys the faith. Jesus 
did not come for the good. He came and died for the evil, the ungodly, the 
sinners. Jesus died for you and for me. In order to guard and protect your 
brain from being pressed and conformed back into the world's mold, God is 
saying to you today, “Do not be conformed to this world.”

But these are just my two general examples. You can probably think of better 
ones for yourselves. Think about your sexuality. Think about the way you speak 
to one another. Think about the things you post on the Internet. “Do not be 
conformed to this world.”

“Be Transformed” = Caterpillars to Butterflies

God has something much better for you than mere conformity and mold-fitting. 
God has a gift for you that will make you truly independent and the freest of 
all thinkers. Ozzy Osbourne’s solution to the problem of conformity was, “If 
you want to be somebody special now, don't have a tattoo.” God your heavenly 
Father’s solution will actually help you, save you, preserve and protect you. 
Not merely does God say to you today, “Do not be conformed to this world,” but 
He goes on to say, “be transformed by the renewal of your mind.”

The verb “be transformed” speaks about the great power that God’s Word 
continually exerts in your life. The verb “be transformed” does not speak about 
a simple change of mind, as in choosing not to get a tattoo or not buying the 
cheap new clothes they now sell. The verb “be transformed” speaks about how a 
caterpillar changes into a butterfly. The verb “be transformed” speaks about a 
total re-structure of your brain, which God’s powerful Word does for you on a 
daily basis.

The many personal benefits you receive from God’s Word continually doing its 
good work of transforming your brain. These benefits will help you every day:

·       First, God’s Word gives you, as Paul says here, “a renewal of your 
mind.” That is to say, God’s Word—first applied to you in Baptism (Titus 3:5) 
but continually effective every day—God’s Word continually renews, washes, 
cleanses and forgives the sins of your mind in the same way that the sins of 
your body are likewise forgiven.

·       God’s Word not only cleanses your mind, but it also daily gives you a 
fresh start, making you increasingly able to recognize the ways that the world 
continually tries to press you into its deadly conformity. No matter how old or 
young you are, the more you allow God’s Word into your brain, the more strength 
you will have against being conformed to the world. By the power of His Word, 
God gives you the ability and strength to be truly free in your thoughts and 
your decision-making. 

·       Finally, and perhaps most importantly, the renewing power of God’s Word 
will enable you to function in this world without fear. If you were afraid of 
getting hijacked in the Walmart parking lot, you would probably never go to 
Walmart. But what is life without Walmart? In a similar way, if you should 
become fearful that the world continually attempts press you into conformity 
with itself, you might become increasingly afraid to go out and function in the 
world. Do not do that. God’s Word transforms your mind. God’s Word renews your 
mind. God’s Word also protects your mind from harm. You’ve gotta go to Walmart, 
so to speak. That is to say, you must be able to function in this world without 
fear. Go without fear. God’s Word is protecting you. God’s Word has freed you 
and God’s Word will keep you free.

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