Have No Fear of Them (Matthew 10:16-33)
Proper 7, Year A — June 21, 2026. Have No Fear of Them: Today is the Fourth Sunday after Pentecost, and Jesus finishes the commissioning briefing he began last week. The mission that opened with such promise, the harvest, the authority, the blessing of peace on every worthy house, now receives its honest price tag: sheep among wolves, courts and floggings, families divided, hatred for the sake of the name. We are to be wise as serpents and innocent as doves, clear-eyed but guileless, and when we are dragged before power, the Spirit of the Father will speak through us. At the center of the passage, Jesus says do not be afraid three times in six verses, and each fear-not comes with a reason: the truth will be revealed, so proclaim it from the housetops; God alone holds eternity, so order our fears rightly; and the Father who attends the funeral of every sparrow has numbered the hairs of our head. Jeremiah knew this road six centuries earlier, beaten and mocked, trying to quit, but the word was a burning fire shut up in his bones. This Wednesday the Church keeps the feast of the Nativity of John the Baptist, the man who confessed before a king and paid with his head. Acknowledgment before men begins in small rooms and is sustained by one unshakeable fact: nothing about us falls to the ground apart from our Father. “Fear not, therefore; you are of more value than many sparrows.” (Matthew 10:31, ESV)