Sunday, November 25, 2018

Today's Sermon 11/25/18 - Is Someone Standing on Your Wings?


Is Someone Standing on Your Wings?
(based on Rev. 1:4-8)

          This is the sermon that I’ve wanted to write for a long time.  When today’s lectionary passage from Revelation fell on Christ the King Sunday, I thought it might be the perfect time to write it.  Today we celebrate the full cycle at its conclusion of Christ’s life – next Sunday with the beginning of Advent, we start that cycle anew.
          From Revelation we get the culmination of Christ’s life – what was his purpose and what tried to thwart that purpose?  From Revelation we learn that Jesus sits on the throne.  He is the faithful witness, the firstborn from all those who have died, and the ultimate ruler, even over all the kings of the earth.  We also learn that Jesus loves us, that he paid the ultimate sacrifice to free us from our chains of bondage to sin and has granted us the privilege of being part of the Kingdom of God. 
These gifts from Christ for the entire human race did not come easily.  There were those that wanted to stop him.  There were those that opposed his teachings, who tried to silence his voice, to keep him from becoming all that he was meant to be.  They hung him on a cross in the style of crucifixion, nailing his hands and feet to that cross, and at last, piercing his side.  Yet, even death could not silence him, nor could it stop him from achieving his life’s purpose.  In fact, those very actions that were made to suppress him, were the very ones that brought his life’s purpose to fulfillment.
Just over thirty-three years ago I was fresh out of college and beginning seminary here in Pittsburgh.  I wanted a place to worship regularly on Sunday mornings.  Rev. Bob Lamont had been an interim pastor at my home church in West Chester, Pennsylvania.  During our time with us, I had learned that at one time he had also been the pastor at First Presbyterian Church of Pittsburgh, downtown.  So, one Sunday morning shortly after beginning seminary I got on the bus and went downtown to hear Dr. Bruce Thielemann preach, their current pastor at that time in the mid 80’s.
Every Sunday, I would sit in the pew and listen to his sermons.  And every Sunday, I wondered if he’d been spying on me or following me because his sermons were always relevant to the very things I’d been dealing with that week.  One particular Sunday, I was struggling with my call to ministry.  Not exactly whether or not I felt called, but rather what purpose I would serve God in being called.  What goal did God have in mind for me?  At the time I was 21 years old, I was full of raw energy and wanted to be used by God to set the world on fire, but felt unfulfilled, useless, weighed down by a heap load of studying without knowing or feeling like it was going to matter or make any difference.
During his sermon, Dr. Theilemann gave an illustration about being overweight.  I’m not sure if any of you had known him or had heard of him, but Dr. Theilemann was a big man.  And I mean a really big man.  He stood at 6’4” or 5” and was just about as big around as he was tall.  He was huge.  That morning, one of his illustrations was about his own life.  About being the fat kid in school and being teased a lot for how big he was.  One day as an adult, he said that he was standing in front of the mirror, looking at his big old self, and crumpled into tears.  It wasn’t the struggle of being overweight that depressed him and had brought him to such a low point; but rather it was the weight of all the bad things people had said about him that kept him from being more social, kept him from pursuing certain things that he’d always wanted to do.  It was the weight of other people’s judgment about him that had caused him to question everything he did and question everything that he wanted to do.  It was that weight, not the physical weight of his body, that had held him down.
His sermon, that day, changed my life.  The title of his sermon that Sunday morning was, “Is someone standing on your wings?”  Thirty-three years later, that message still impacts me.  It was on that day that I realized that it was other people’s expectations of me and therefore, as a result, the expectations I had for myself that was causing me to not see God’s plan for my life.
One of my favorite musicals is called Camp.  It’s about a group of misfit kids that go to music camp for the summer.  All of them have spent their young lives trying to please others, trying to be and act the way others expect them to act, or to simply fulfill and play out the roles that others have assigned them.  This includes the old, washed-up, alcoholic musical director of the camp.  He had a one-hit wonder years ago and then couldn’t seem to produce anything to cement his new-found fame after that.  The critics and people in general started giving him bad reviews, saying that he was just a has-been or a hack.  They began to overlook him for any current or future projects until he started believing all those negative lies himself.  The climax of the musical is when one of the students finds a piece of music this had-been musician had composed and gathers his fellow students together to try it out.  The song is called the Century Plant. 
“Outside my house is a cactus plant, they call the century tree.  Only once in a hundred years it flowers gracefully, but you never know when it will bloom.”
The song goes on to talk about people who have bloomed at various stages of their lives.  It ends with the story of man who lost his only love because he was afraid to tell her.
“Didn't know how to tell her for over thirty years
Kept locked up inside himself
No one saw the tears
Then she went away
And he woke up that day
So he went back to college at the age of sixty-three
Graduated with honors with an agriculture degree
And he joined up the Peace Corps at the age of sixty-nine
And he rode the grand rapids at the age of eighty-five
Now he brings roses to his sweetheart
She lives most anywhere
He sees someone suffering
He knows that despair
He offers them a rose
And some quiet prose
About dancing in a shimmering ballroom
'Cause you never know when they will bloom.”

What or who is keeping you from fulfilling your dreams, your purpose in life?  What or who is keeping you from blooming?  What or who is standing on your wings and keeping you from taking off?
If it’s something from the past – let it go.  Those voices will knock you down every time if you let them.  They’ve already kept you down this long, don’t let those voices rob your future, too.  Let other people’s negativity be the power, the energy to revitalize you. 
If it’s the expectations of others or what you’ve grown to expect from yourself because of what others have wanted from you, listen to your heart, listen for the Spirit of God that speaks to our spirits and fulfill your own destiny and purpose. 
Is someone or something standing on your wings?  Brush them aside, unfurl those wings, and fly.
Just like the Century Plant – it’s never too late.

Sunday, November 11, 2018

Today's Sermon - Live by the Spirit


Live by the Spirit
(based on Galatians 5:13-26)

When we read passages from the epistles or from the letters to the early churches, it is extremely important to understand the context that these letters were written.  Each letter was written to a specific church regarding specific actions or reactions to the message of the gospel.  This passage in Galatians is similar, but we can get a general understanding of what the author was trying to tell his readers from the passage itself.
          You were called to freedom.  What exactly does that mean?  It means that you don’t really need a long list of do’s and don’ts, a list of rules and laws like the entire books of Leviticus and Deuteronomy and even parts of Exodus in the Old Testament that write down the long list of rules and regulations in order to live well and to live in right relationship to God and others.  If you have spent any time reading the New Testament, spent time in church listening to the sermons, if you know Jesus Christ as your Lord and Savior, you’d know by now what’s important to God. 
          It’s a pretty short list.  Last week, we capsulized it in one of the gospel accounts.  The long list of rules and regulations boils down to two things; Love the Lord your God with all your heart, mind, soul, and strength and love your neighbor as yourself.  That’s it. 
          And that’s what the author in Galatians is trying to get across.  Be free to live in this way.  That does not mean that you are free to do anything you want.  It does not mean that there aren’t any rules or any limitations.  There are.  But the difference is this: if we lived only by a set of rules, without a clear understanding of the foundation of those rules, we become a slave or we become burdened and shackled by the rules themselves. 
          For example, the law says that you should drive no faster than 15 miles an hour in a school zone, when the lights are flashing or between certain hours.  Why is it 15 miles an hour?  Where does the school zone end, where does it begin?  What are those specific hours?  As a society that needs to have laws that everyone abides by, we’ve had to become very specific and it’s extremely difficult and burdensome to know every law and the rationality behind each one.
However, what is behind the purpose of this particular law?  The purpose is to keep children safe, so that they are not injured by a reckless driver, so that they can cross the street without fear of getting hit.  So that the drivers are even more vigilant in watching out for children who might suddenly race into the street to retrieve a ball or a hat that blew away without thinking about traffic.
Now, if we know and understand the underlying principle of the laws for traffic violations in school zones and if every single person actually took that principle to heart we could probably do away with the laws themselves because then everyone would be looking out very carefully to keep children safe – we’d want to drive very slowly when children are around, we’d be extra careful during times when we know school was about to begin, throughout the day and when school was ending.  Each and every one of us would take special precautions to obey all those laws, without there actually being a law.  That’s the freedom the author is talking about here.  When the understanding of the law, when the principle of the law is written on our hearts it gives us a lot more freedom, because it’s already part of who we are.  It’s part of our mind, our abilities, our spirit and soul.  We don’t have to think about specific laws and whether or not we’re breaking them.  We just live freely, obeying the law of our hearts because it is written there.
Wouldn’t it be great if that was the way our society worked?
Wouldn’t it be wonderful if that was the way life worked?
Yes, I know….That’s a dream world, a utopia we’ve never seen or been a part of.  Perhaps especially not now.  But, that’s the world that the author of Galatians wants us to dream about, to be a part of, to make happen, to begin to experience by living - that - way.
The author wants us to live by the Spirit.  How do we live by the Spirit?  Here, the author uses the concept of fruit to help explain.  A tree that has been infested with some kind of disease is not going to produce very good fruit.
Many years ago – close to 30 years now, there was a peach tree outside my back door.  When I first moved into the house, there were many peaches on the tree, the second year I noticed that the peaches didn’t quite taste as good as I had remembered them from the previous year and there weren’t nearly as many.  The third year, it produced hardly any fruit at all.  That fourth spring I was determined to figure out what was going on with it as I’d never had a peach tree before and perhaps I needed to trim it, to move it, put some fertilizer down.  I was studying the tree that late spring and trying to figure out what to do, when I leaned down to look around the base of the tree.  As I did, I used the tree to support myself, pushing slightly against it, when suddenly the whole tree just fell over.
It had a boor which had eaten away the inside of it and had weakened its roots.  A good tree would have continued to produce wonderfully tasty fruit for many years.
The author uses this concept to explain the way of the Spirit.  The good fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control.  “Against such things there is no law”, the author of Galatians says.  Why, because there doesn’t need to be.  You are free to live in this way.  It is written on your heart to behalf, act, think, and obey all that flows from that kind of life.
The fruit or the results that flow from that kind of living break us entirely free from law.
Love – this is the desire to be other-centered rather than self-centered.  The desire to help, bless, do for, care for others.  It is not based on what you will get out of it, but simply how it will help another person.
Joy – this is a happiness that is not dependent on circumstances.  A happiness that flows from knowing you can trust God to help you with any struggle, any situation.  So, it doesn’t matter what gets thrown at you.  God’s got it and you can rely on that knowledge.
Peace – this is a sense of well-being that is also independent on current circumstances.  A sense of well-being that overwhelms you in the midst of hardships.  Joy comes at the beginning and ending of those hardships, while peace gets you through it.
Patience – taking time to think through situations before responding, to put up with inconveniences, quick to forgive violations against you, giving people second and third chances without utterly giving up on them too quickly, giving others time as well as opportunity to improve their own behavior and actions, slow to dismiss others for their inadequacies.
Kindness – being gracious, considerate, thoughtful about the needs or desires of others.
Goodness – similar to love, but doing something beneficial for others, to give to them something that will elevate them, uplift them.  Goodness is more proactive and purposeful than love.  It is based on what it right and true.  Goodness lifts us all up.
Faithfulness – being reliable and loyal to God, to others, to yourself.  So that your yes means yes and your no means no.  That your promises and vows are kept.
Gentleness – a mildness towards others, one that cooperates with the will of God.  This should be confused with weakness.  Gentleness is being assertive, but not aggressive. 
Self-control – to not be easily overcome by temptation, wrong desires and the ability to know what is right and the ability to control ourselves without an outside person, entity or law having to do it.  The ability to control our own language, anger, temper, habits, impulses, behaviors, eating, drinking, and spending.
These are the fruits of the Spirit and the results of living by the Spirit.  If these good qualities are in your life and are increasing, you are living by the Spirit.  If they are not, or if you struggle with them, it simply might mean that you need a bit more fertilizer, (to spend time with God – some time reading and studying God’s word), perhaps you might need a good healthy trimming – cutting off those bad influences in your life, finding more positive friendships, relationships, ending a bad habit.
What a world we’d live in with we could show the rest of the world how.
Thanks be to God.


Sunday, November 4, 2018

Today's Sermon - The Greatest Commandment - 11/4/18


The Greatest Commandment
(based on Mark 12:28-34, and Matthew 22:34-46)

          Last year the lectionary gave us this very same passage, but it was the one from Matthew 22:34-46.  Today we read it from Mark.  First, let’s take a look at how these passages from the two gospels differ.  And then we’ll get into a bit more depth on what Mark has to tell us.
          (Read both passages again.  Matthew and then Mark.)
          It’s important to note that Matthew was writing to a Hebrew and Jewish readership in order to qualify Christ as the Messiah, the one they’d been hoping would come.  And it is believed by most biblical scholars that Mark was written first and in that sense, has an urgency in how it is written. Because of this, most stories that are in the synoptic gospels (Matthew, Mark, and Luke) Mark will have an abbreviated story.  Matthew and Luke are more expressive and give more details.  Mark was writing to an audience who believed that Jesus was returning to earth within their lifetimes, during their own generation.  Therefore, he gets right to the point and doesn’t waste too much energy on detail.  Because of the difference between these gospels, two things stand out.
The first one in Matthew is the set up.  The Sadducees and the Pharisees, two separate sects of the Jewish faith at the time, were trying to bait Jesus into a trap to disqualify him as the Messiah.  Jesus navigates their questions well, in fact shuts down their arguments and in turn asks them some of his own regarding the Messiah. 
The second one in Mark is Christ’s answer to the questioner.  When Jesus saw that he answered wisely, he said to him, “You are not far from the kingdom of God.”
Understanding the background to both the readership and the authorship can give us a more in-depth understanding about the passages themselves.  Since we are neither a Jewish readership and needing validation that Christ is the Messiah, nor do we have the notion that Christ is coming back any time soon, since it hasn’t happened yet in 2000 years, what are we to take away from the differences in these gospel accounts?
The meat of the passage is in Christ’s response to the question regarding which one of all the commandments in the law is the greatest commandment.  But he wasn’t able to pin the Greatest Commandment down to just one.  Instead, he chose two of them, as if they were one; as if they were nearly equal.  These two commands are part of one another.
          First, he said to “love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind.” Then he said, “And a second is like it: love your neighbor as yourself.”
          The connecting bond between these two commands is love.  And yet, that concept is more than we can possibly fathom.  It’s important to note that God created the world out of love.  The light that shines in the day and the moon that shines as night, the stars that amaze our children and make us breathless when we try to grasp the infinity of it all.  The water that flows down a mountain stream as fish like salmon brave the journey home to spawn, water that surges in the ocean depths with behemoths like humpback whales who frolic and live there.  Water that rains down to nourish the earth that brings forth the trees and plants, each bloom and blossom.  Each bird that flies above the landscape, that soars in the air; every tiny insect that crawls or burrows beneath the surface to every elephant that stomps on the earth was created by God.  Even the oddest and strangest among them; birds that swim, fish that walk, mammals that lay eggs, and males that give birth.  All created by God in amazing and pure love.
          But it was all made for us, for our living and growing, for our enjoyment and enlightenment.  A Creator who loved us more than anything else in all of creation.  God created you out of pure love.  God created each human being out of love.
          You were not created as an experiment by God to see what mess he could make.  No, you were created in the image of God, perfect and holy.  You were created out of love, to be loved.  And here’s the challenge that we’ve twisted and changed, marked as unattainable in this maddening world of ours: we are to love in return.  Not just God, who created you, but the other command that goes along with it – to love one another, as well.
          I think it is in this part of the command that we fall short.  For us, as Christians who stand on our faith and our beliefs, it’s easy for us to say that we love God, that we love the Lord, that we would do anything for God.
Last year I challenged you to the second part of the greatest command.  I know how well you are doing with the first part of the command.  It’s obvious with your attendance and commitments here at church that you love God, but how well are you doing with that second part?  “Loving your neighbor as yourself”?  And here’s where it gets a bit more personal in asking that question.  I’m not talking about doing for others.  I’m not talking about volunteering for the Food Bank, or to visit a shut-in or to collect socks for the homeless.  I’m talking about the heart.  I’m talking about the inner voice that sometimes says something completely differently than what the outer works show.
What is the condition of your heart for others?  Are you always generous, kind, humble, in your thoughts, words, actions towards others?
To be perfectly honest, we, as Christians, aren’t very good at being charitable people when it comes to matters of the heart.  Think about the 3 main religions that have a common background in monotheism and believe in the same one true God, Yahweh, or Allah.  Over thousands of years, Moslems have broken off into two main branches: the Sikhs and the Sunnis.  Jews have broken off into three main branches: Conservative, Orthodox, and Progressives or Reconstructionists.  But Christians have broken off into many main branches: Catholic, Lutheran, Methodist, Baptist, Presbyterian, Episcopalian, Eastern Orthodox, Seventh Day Adventist, Church of God, Church of the Brethren, United Church of Christ, Nazarene, Mormons, and I’m sure I’ve forgotten a few.  And each of those branches have broken off into perhaps even hundreds of others.  All over, in my opinion, matters of the heart, more than anything else.  If we were truly generous, kind and humble, most of our arguments would have gone away a long time ago rather than breaking us up into smaller and smaller pieces.
The central command, the first and most important, that Jesus referred to in this passage, was given to all three religions of this monotheistic faith: Love the Lord your God with your entire being, and your neighbor as yourself.  Jews, Christians and Moslems – all three were given this same great command.
And yet, members of three of the main religions in the world, complain about everything from the minute to the ridiculous.  I hear us chastise those who believe differently.  I hear us criticize those who are morally ambiguous.  I hear us slander and hurt, lie and steal and berate another who has done the same, but the only difference is that the other got caught. 
We aren’t perfect people and we should stop pretending that we are.  We struggle with the same sins that everyone else struggles with.  We struggle with the same inner battles, the same heartaches, the same demons.  Maybe, just maybe we’ve learned over many, many years of struggle how to cope with them better, how to ignore the voices that lead us down an instant gratification and easier road.  But we are no better than those who are still struggling and still perhaps losing in those struggles.
This challenge is not meant to be an indictment against you, but rather as a serious consideration for us to take a closer look at what Scripture tells us, what God wants from us, and how we are actually living.
There is too much hatred in the world.  Look around, it’s everywhere.  We know it and have experience it.  It’s on the news daily, it’s in our city streets, at shootings and massacres around the globe and now even here at home.  There is only one way that this will end.  And that way is for the cycle to be broken.  For love to win out over hate.
We cannot expect someone who has known misery and heartache and pain, who has not found or known the love of God through the actions of God’s people, to suddenly wake up one morning and think, “Oh, maybe I’ll be nice today.”  It’s not going to happen.  It has to start with us.  It has to start with the people of God who refrain from judging others, who refrain from speaking badly about others, who refrain from idle gossip and slanderous speech.  It has to start with us, truly taking this commandment that Jesus spoke about, to love one neighbor as we love ourselves, to heart as a challenge for better behavior on our part.  To show the world a different way of living.  That is why Jesus came to earth.  Not just to be a substitution on the cross for paying the penalty of our sins, but more than that – to show us the way, the truth, and the life.
There is too much hatred in the world and the only way that it will end is if we take Christ’s commandment to heart as a challenge to do better.
The connection that Jesus made when asked the question about which commandment is greatest, reaches back to the purpose of the cosmos, when God out of pure love created the stars, and it settles in the heart of who you are, of whose you are.  God created you out of love and joy.  And Jesus asks us to give love and joy back to God and to one another.
AMEN.

         
         


Sunday, October 28, 2018

Today's Sermon - 10-28-18 Response to the Shooting at Tree of Life Synagogue



Tragedy at Tree of Life Synagogue
(there is no specific biblical reference)

Full disclosure: I’m a mess this morning.  I had written a sermon based on today’s reading from Mark and the idea that the blind man in the story of Mark was known by name and that each of us are also known by God, by name.  But I was up most of the night rewriting today’s sermon.
Yesterday morning, I was making the last minute preparations for a wedding that I would be celebrating for Caird McHolme, former member of Bethesda United Presbyterian Church and his bride, Katie Dolan, when I heard the news that a shooting had occurred in Pittsburgh.  Unfortunately, we are so accustomed to that kind of news anymore that my attention was only slightly swayed from what I’d been doing.  The really scary and horrifying fact is that the news of a shooting in one place or another is no longer the shock and surprise that it used to be.  Afterall, this week alone, as many as 14 pipe bombs were mailed to prominent political figures in the US.  
But then I heard that the shooting was in Squirrel Hill at the Tree of Life Synagogue during the celebration of Shabbat also known as the day of Sabbath for the Jewish people.  And that a bris was being performed and celebrated on the same day.  A bris is when an 8 day old infant boy is to be circumcised and given his Hebrew name as part of the sign of the covenant between Abraham and God.  
Having heard that it was in a synagogue, it got my full attention.  When a shooting occurs in Charleston, SC or in Sutherland Springs, Texas we are saddened and feel empathy for those who were present during such a horrific event.  But it is far away and doesn’t normally affect us.  But yesterday’s event was right here at home in Pittsburgh.  In the past 6 years, since May of 2012, there have been 15 mass shootings in places of worship here in the United States.  And over 700 separate incidences in US.
When I began my doctoral program, I was intent on studying the affects of traumatic events on communities.  For three years I was immersed in tragedy, motivations of such events, people’s reactions, community efforts to rebound after such events and, faith communities’ response to tragedy.  After all that studying, you’d think I’d know what to say.  I don’t.  In fact, I had to stop doing my dissertation and I took a year off.  There were some other factors, but one of them was that it was too difficult for me to face that kind of evil on a regular basis - just reading about it and studying it every day became too much for me.  And I don’t know that I will get back to it.
How do you address such hatred that turns into killing another human being?
How do you face the grief of those whose lives are forever affected by the actions of these kinds of crimes against our fellow human beings? 
“Today we all stand in solidarity with our brothers and sisters from the Tree of Life Jewish Synagogue in Squirrel Hill, as we did with those from First Baptist Church in Sutherland Springs, Texas, as we did with our brothers and sisters from Emanuel A.M.E. Church in Charleston, South Carolina, as we also did with members of the Sikh Temple of Wisconsin …”
For today’s message, I turn to the pastors and other faith leaders whom I have studied, who have been through this in their own communities, who know tragedy and have seen tragedy firsthand and I offer some of their words.
After the church shooting in Charleston, Rev. John Foster, Senior Pastor, Big Bethel AME Church in Atlanta said that, we live in a world where tragedies happen.  These events demonstrate that we have not met the mark of where God wants us to be.  Martin Luther King stated, “We have got to learn how to disagree with each other without being violently disagreeable.” The real sin of what occurred in Charleston at Emanuel AME Church (and I’ll add at nearly all of the 700 mass shootings) is that we still live in a society where violence is chosen as the preferred choice of action. I believe God’s word is still true: “Then Jesus said to him, ‘Put your sword back into its place; for all who take the sword will perish by the sword” (Matthew 26:52). God is challenging us to transform our minds by throwing away our legacy addictions to violence.
In response to the shooting at the AME Church in Charleston, Satpal Singh, Founding Trustee of the Sikh Council for Interfaith Relations said this, “When the shooting at Sikh Gurdwara in Oak Creek, Wisconsin, occurred, the entire nation and the entire world stood by the Sikhs. Within hours, Sikh organizations received messages of support and solidarity from hundreds of religious, political and social organizations from all around the world. Today we all stand in solidarity with our brothers and sisters from the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church, which has become the target of the same hatred and venom that keeps engulfing us again and again in the name of religion, race and a myriad of other divisions.  We pray for the peace of those who have left us, and for their families.  We pray for the peace of mind of the perpetrator of such a hateful act, and for the peace of mind for all those who suffer from hate and prejudice.”
          Rev. Natalie Mitchem said, “We will not operate in fear, but with power and love…It is time for all of us to reinvigorate our efforts to banish hatred from our society and to bring harmony among all the sections of our society, irrespective of the divisions that have been created among us. Let this act of hatred strengthen our resolve to spread the message of love and harmony that all our faiths profess. We must all remind ourselves, and our congregations, that blood has no religion. It has no race, no caste, no nationality and no political ideology. And it has no skin color.
Today we are reminded that God in Heaven, our Heavenly Father, provides the peace through Jesus Christ and the Holy Spirit that surpasses our understanding. God is love, and the Bible urges us to overcome evil with love.”
Rev. Jonathan Malone, says that he, “…calls on us all to do the hard work of self-examination.  Ask yourself what stories, what narratives have you accepted as true that may have racist undertones. (and I’ll add – any kind of hatred against another undertones to it)  When you see someone who does not look like you, does not dress like you, does not talk like you, (does not believe like you, does not have the same lifestyle that you have) what assumptions do you bring up about that person?  We all are shaped and informed by our context, and we need to again and again challenge the narrative that we have assumed to be true.  I ask you to speak out against those small, subtle overtures of racism (hatred) that you may encounter on a daily basis. The joke that is said in the hall, the comment made only for your ears, the statement about “those people” all are sprouts from the seeds of racism (hatred against another) and need to be cut down where and when they happen.
Edmund Burke wrote that “Evil triumphs because of the silence of good men” — and I’ll add men and women.  Martin Luther King Jr. indicated that there comes a time when our silence cooperates with our enemies.
Now is the time for a prayerful, thoughtful response, not thoughtless reaction.  All of these acts of violence against one another rise out of our sin of hatred.  Examine your heart.  Each person is made in the image of God.  Each person is given the life sustaining breath of our Father in Heaven.  Each person is guarded by the influence of the Holy Spirit.  And each person is loved with the powerful love of a redeeming Savior.
Allow us to stop looking at other people as if they are not part of that equation.  It is not reserved for us alone.  It’s time to turn away from any thoughts of hatred that harbors evil in hearts turning those thoughts into ideologies about others, which turns our ideologies into behavior and our behaviors into action.  Allow us to find common ground.  Let’s raise our communities and country as models of service and sacrifice, virtue and victory; ever deepening our responsibility to our neighbor.  And finally, never let us forget that it starts with us; we must intercede with our words and our deeds of grace and mercy.
AMEN.

Sunday, October 21, 2018

Today's Sermon - Oct 21, 2018 Backwards Day


Backwards Day
(based on Mark 10:35-45)

          You might be wondering why I look so ridiculous with my robe and stole on backwards.  Do you remember going to school on Backwards Day?  It was an unofficial holiday when you got to go to school wearing your clothes backwards.  We would even start the day with last period and work our way backwards throughout the day, ending it with homeroom and the day’s announcements.  For this morning, I even toyed with the idea of doing the entire service backwards as well.
          You’ll be thankful that I chose to just put my robe and stole on backwards because, two weeks ago we read from the gospel according to Mark in chapter 9 when he was having a discussion with his disciples about what they had been arguing about while they traveled to Capernaum.  They didn’t want to admit it, but they had been arguing about which one of them was the greatest among them.  And Jesus told them that the first shall be last and the last shall be first. 
One chapter later, in our reading this morning, James and John take the argument to another level.  They come forward to Jesus to ask him to do them a favor.  “What do you want?” Jesus asks them.  And they say, “Grant us to sit, one at your right hand and one at your left.”
Jesus and the other disciples are pretty angry with them, at this point.  But for different reasons.  When the other disciples found out what James and John had asked of Jesus, they were angry because they wanted those positions for themselves.  Jesus is angry because he realizes that his disciples still don’t get it.
He had already told them that the first shall be last and the last shall be first.  But now he tells them the same thing in a different way.  He says to them all, “You know that among the Gentiles those whom they recognize as their rulers lord it over them, and their great ones are tyrants over them.  But it is not so among you; but whoever wishes to become great among you must be your servant, and whoever wishes to be first among you must be slave of all.  For the Son of Man came not to be served but to serve, and to give his life a ransom for many.”
So, in the kingdom of God everything we have experienced in this world and everything we understand about how things work and everything we believe to be important now will be different; it will be backwards.  The first shall be last and the last shall be first.  Those who are first will be those who serve, and those who serve will be raised to the highest status.
Obviously, this is not an easy concept for us to fully grasp.  Why else did Jesus repeat this teaching twice in such a short span of time? 
I liked backwards day at school.  Why?  Because it forced me to think, to feel, to experience something routine from a different perspective.  All day long, the clothes that you normally wear, that fit just right the way that you wear them, suddenly feel wrong.  Have you ever put on a t-shirt backwards?  You can do it in the dark and know, just from the feel of it, that it is wrong.  The back part of the neck rides higher than the front, so it actually feels like you’re choking, just a bit.  It’s uncomfortable.  You know immediately that something’s amiss.
Then to experience the day from last period to first period, ending in homeroom feels wrong, even though it should have been a routine day, everything suddenly feels fresh and new.  Your math class is strangely less intimidating.  There’s suddenly new vibrancy during gym.  You actually pay attention to the announcements during homeroom, because the whole day was experienced in a different way.  The old routine is wonderfully fresh and somehow exciting because of it.
Speaking of routines: Why did you come to worship today?
What motivated you to get yourself organized, move away from a comfortable place, travel by car to be in this church building at this moment?  It takes an effort to participate in worship on Sunday mornings.  It never happens by accident.
Why are you an active member or visitor to this congregation?   We live in a time when many people flee from any kind of commitment, avoid community, and refuse to volunteer for anything.  The big trend today is cocooning, wrapping yourself up in your home.  You certainly do not enhance your social status by participating in a church anymore.  And yet people like you regularly share in the gathered Christian community, you support the work of this congregation with your gifts, and many of you work in quiet ways to further Christ’s mission and ministry here.  Why?
Scholars, theologians, church educators and even sociologists and psychiatrists have studied the phenomena of church membership and participation.  There’s a long list of why they think people go to church.  Some have said that it is to gain favor with God.  Perhaps to satisfy a spouse or to appease a parent.  Maybe to deepen a friendship.  Some say that people go to church for the same reason they go to the mall or to a store; to pick up something that you need, sort of like a spiritual full-service mini-mart, a place to pick up the spiritual resources you need in a quick, efficient manner. 
Others come to church for mood alteration – to get a sense of forgiveness when they feel particularly inadequate.  Or to seek a comfort in the midst of difficulty, grief, disappointment.  Many go to church to find encouragement when they feel depressed, lonely, or just down.  Some come to gain confidence when they feel afraid, or inspiration when life grows a tad stale through the week. 
And as almost all scholars concluded, and this is difficult for us to admit, nearly everyone comes to church simply out of obligation, out of routine because their parents made them come – even if those parents have been gone to the heavenly realms for years now.
Jesus wants to shake up that routine and have you think about life from a different perspective, because the reason behind the routine isn’t what you think it should be.  It’s something quite different.
The great value of the gospel is the manner in which it reveals what Jesus means when he speaks of a different viewpoint.  In this lesson, it’s about greatness, and its definition is different from the way the world uses that word.  For Jesus greatness is defined by total, unconditional trust in God.  Jesus tells James and John and the rest of the disciples that greatness is measured in service, in spending our lives for the sake of others.
We tend to define greatness in terms of power, privilege, and prestige.  We measure the importance of a person by external markers – the house they own, the car they drive, the appearance of their lifestyle.  We are impressed by the visible achievement of people: their honors and academic degrees, the importance of their profession, and sometimes even the accomplishments of their children.
But when Jesus speaks of greatness he inevitably links it with service.  As he said to his disciples, that which makes us great is not our ability to rule over others, but, rather, our ability to invest ourselves for the welfare of others.  In a world where most people want to put as little as is necessary into life and to get out as much as possible, Christ tells us of a better way.
Jesus calls us to that “better way” today.  Only when we are willing to put more into life than we take out, to put service to others in a place of honor only then are we worthy to be called his followers.
After nearly thirty years of service as a pastor and a church leader, I am convinced that the Church of Jesus Christ finds its validation not in its public rituals, nor in solemn pronouncements on social issues, nor in the pristine quality of our theology and teaching.  The Church of Jesus Christ establishes its credibility through its acts of mercy and kindness – the cup of water to the thirsty, the bag of groceries to the distraught, the life-giving accompaniment when we walk with someone who can go no farther without a champion.
Once upon a time in a far-off country, a king had twin sons. One was strong and handsome. The other was intelligent and wise. As the ruler grew old, everyone speculated about which son the king would choose as his successor – the strong son or the wise son.
In this land the sign of kingship was a royal ring. Just before the king died, he had a copy of the royal ring made and presented both rings to his twin sons. The chief advisors to the king asked him, “How shall we know which son wears the authentic royal ring?”
You shall know, answered the king, because the chosen one will reveal his right to rule by his self-giving service to our people.
This is not the way our world works, this is not the way the “gentiles do things”, as Jesus said.  But it is the way in which Jesus wants us to do things now; the way he wants us to envision the kingdom of God.  And the kingdom of God isn’t something that will happen in the future, in heaven, in the vision of the new regime when New Jerusalem will be established.  Jesus wants us to work toward the Kingdom of God, now.
In hindsight, I wish I had arranged for today’s worship to be done backwards.  Perhaps that would have given you a fresh sense of what Jesus was trying to explain to his disciples.
But now that I’ve experienced the uncomfortableness of being in this robe backwards for the past hour, I want you to go home and do something backwards, wear something backwards, shake up your routine and think about what Jesus is really asking us to do here and now, in this lifetime….and then start doing it.
Thanks be to God.  AMEN.



Sunday, October 7, 2018

Today’s Sermon - The Blessing if Children 10-7-18

The Blessing of Children
(based on Mark 10:13-16)

Children comprise one of the largest groups of the unchurched population in the community today. There are more children at home on any given Sunday morning than at Sunday School and church.
One pastor tells this story:
A church he was serving planned a whole day of activities for the children of the neighborhood to help them prepare for Christmas. They provided craft materials for the children to make Christmas gifts and, of course, they served refreshments and played games. It was the pastor’s role to tell the children the Christmas story from the Bible:
When the time came, he sat on the floor with the children and got to know their names.  Theysang a couple of songssaid a prayer, and then he asked, “Does anyone already know the Christmas story?” A little girl raised her hand and started reciting,
Twas the night before Christmas, and all through the house not a creature was stirring, not even a mouse.”
For her, that was the Christmas story. It was all she knew. Her Christmas, and the Christmas of most of the other children sitting there, had nothing to do with the birth of Jesus, but instead with Santa and his reindeer.
Children comprise one of the largest groups of the unchurched population in the community; theyare largely unaware of God’s presence in their lives. And children’s lack of faith is not their fault; it’s a choice their parents are making. The children are only following the example set by their parents.
In most cases today, this isn’t intentional.Some parents are simply lax in their attitude toward the church (after all, at this point, most of them didn’t attend church regularly, either) and they’re not yet aware of the long-range effects it’s certain to have on their children. They’re not hostile toward the church, they’re just simplyapathetic. They’re comfortably busy with their lifestyles and don’t want to be bothered.
They have weekend plans, they work, they have other activities to keep them and their children busy on Sunday morning.  They’d rather sleep in, participate in local sports for them or their kids or just watch T. V. 
Psychologists tell us that the bulk of a child’s personality is formed by the time he/she is five years old. Think about that – before the child starts school, essential character traits are already established and patterns of behavior are pretty well set.
Isn’t it obvious that religious formation follows suit? Children’s patterns of faith, for better or worse, are shaped at a very early age, long before they can articulate what they believe and why.
Knowing what we know about child development, it’s all the more important for parents to decide early on, even before their children are born, to rear their children in the church and to give them the benefit of religious training, to undergird their lives with the knowledge of a power greater than themselves until they are mature enough to confirm their faith for themselves. Children depend on their parents to make good choices for them in all matters of life, and so, it’s up to us, the church, to do everything we can to encourage parents to choose wisely on behalf of their children and their relationship to God. 
So, what are we doing to help them?
In the Bible, God shows particular favor to the least, and children are among the least of those in our society.  A couple of weeks ago, there was a passage – again from Mark – when Jesus made another example of children as a slap in the face of reality for his disciples to truly understand what he was saying.  Do you remember it? 
Jesus and the disciples were walking on their way to Capernaum when the disciples got into an argument about who was going to be greater in the Kingdom of Heaven.  What roles each of them would play and who would get to sit at Jesus’ right hand.  Jesus got frustrated with them and took a child from in their midst and said, “Whoever welcomes one of these, welcomes me, and not just me but also the one who sent me.  Whoever is first shall be last and last shall be first.”  He said it because children were always considered last, they were just property, in those days. 
And perhaps we’ve gotten our priorities mixed up again, if our time, commitment and energy aren’t spent in relating the message of the gospel to the children of our community.
In the language of the New Testament, there are two words commonly used for children. One is “tekna” which refers both to offspring and to the children of God.
The other is “mikrone” which is often translated “little ones,”
Mikrone speaks of the whole range of those who occupy the lower rungs of the social ladder – the poor, the lame, the outcast, the stranger and the children. And the Bible makes it clear, God takes a special interest in seeing that these little ones are given ample protection and care, so that for us to show hospitality to the stranger, compassion for the cripple, generosity to the beggar, concern for the children is to be on the side of God and to gain God’s richest blessings. 
The best example of this overall usage is found in Matthew 25:40:
“The King will answer them, ‘Most certainly I tell you, inasmuch as you did it to one of the least of these (the mikrone), you did it to me.”
When we reach out to the children around us and make a special place for them in the church, we reap the benefits of God’s blessing on ourselves and on our congregation.
Here’s the problem: Jesus said, “Allow the little children to come to me,” but that’s not going to happen if we sit back passively and wait for them to show up on our doorstep. We have totake the initiative, to be proactive. And so, I’d like to give you a challenge.
Since we can’t expect them to just show up on their own, we need to step in and participate in their lives.  So, I’d like to challenge each of you to think of a child or two that you can invite to come to (for Olivet - our afterschool program on Wednesdays) or to church with you on Sunday, or to something completely new and different that we discover, along the way, as well.  Think of a young parent or two with whom you can have some influence – to begin a conversation about faith.Some of you, that’ll be easy. Perhaps you need to have a deeper conversation, not a confrontation, but a conversation with your grown children and your grandchildren.  For others, you’ll need to be more imaginative. You may have to look more closely at the dynamics of your neighborhood.
You’ll need to begin an influential relationship, a dialogue, before you can ask them about bringing their children to church. But don’t be surprised if they say yes! You’ll also need to think ahead. Young adults and children who haven’t been in church much are going to need some help knowing what’s going on and what’s expected of them, when to stand up and sit down, how to behave. And in that dialogue and dynamic of new faith conversations, we may find that we have tostart thinking outside the box in regard to how or when we do worship and what is included in worship.  
It may end up that we not only do what we do on Sunday mornings, but we learn that we need to do something else, as well.
When you consider the big picture, what greater contribution could you possibly make in your lifetime than to bring a child into a lasting relationship with the Christ? Here’s the gist of it all: There are a lot of unchurched children here inour own community and it’s not their fault. They’re victims of circumstances beyond their control. Yet, God is on their side, and God calls us to do what we can to bring them into his presence. To do so is to be faithful to our calling and to open the door to a lasting relationship with Jesus Christ. 
When he was chaplain of Duke University, Will Willimon said it best when he wrote,
“Sometimes it seems as if the older I become the less I understand about the mystery of God’s loving presence in our midst. Do not ask me, adult though I may be, why God loves wayward children like us, how even so diverse a group of people as we are formed into one body, why ‘when two or three are gathered together,’ there he is also…but this I know: These deep, sacred experiences came first to me when I was a little child, fruits of life begun in a loving, embracing family at home and at church. My encounters with God began first by being included in the church’s worship, by being invited to the church’s table, by being claimed at the church’s font. Admittedly, over the years, the meaning of these early experiences has deepened for me. But, as an adult, I must never forget how they began, and I must seek ways to make them available for little ones who come after me.” (“Keep Them in Their Place?” Worship Alive, Discipleship Resources.)
If the church is to take seriously Jesus’ invitation, “Allow the little children to come to me,” we simply must take a more aggressive role in reaching the children who are not here on Sunday morning who can perhaps learn how to worship God and participate in the life of the church in new and different ways.