Sunday Sermon: Now What? Stand Fast!

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Scripture Passage – Acts 7:54-60

Description – The Final Sermon in the post-Easter series “Now what, Jesus?”

 

I begin with this morning’s text from Acts 7:54-60:

 

When the members of the Sanhedrin heard this, they were furious and gnashed their teeth at him. But Stephen, full of the Holy Spirit, looked up to heaven and saw the glory of God, and Jesus standing at the right hand of God. “Look,” he said, “I see heaven open and the Son of Man standing at the right hand of God.”

 

At this they covered their ears and, yelling at the top of their voices, they all rushed at him, dragged him out of the city and began to stone him. Meanwhile, the witnesses laid their coats at the feet of a young man named Saul.

 

While they were stoning him, Stephen prayed, “Lord Jesus, receive my spirit.” Then he fell on his knees and cried out, “Lord, do not hold this sin against them.” When he had said this, he fell asleep.

 

As we conclude our post-Easter series “Now what Jesus?” we come to a passage of scripture that I think is often hard to read and study because it makes us uncomfortable. And it is uncomfortable because we like to think that we could avoid being murdered for our faith.

 

But I think what God would say to us through this passage today, in light of our theme of living in the days after Easter, is “Stand Fast!” “Stand fast in the faith and truth of what you have heard and been taught and believe and stand fast in Me!”

 

Now, as with several passages we have recently read, this passage requires some explanation of what has already been said before our main text. With this text what has just been said is important to understand because it sets up the action mentioned in what we have just read. But in this case we have to go back to Acts 6:8 to get the full story.

 

And this story starts with these words: “Now Stephen, a man full of God’s grace and power, performed great wonders and signs among the people. Opposition arose, however, from members of the Synagogue of the Freedmen (as it was called)—Jews of Cyrene and Alexandria as well as the provinces of Cilicia and Asia—who began to argue with Stephen. But they could not stand up against the wisdom the Spirit gave him as he spoke.”

 

Notice that Stephen, who is as we read further back in Acts 6, one of those chosen to take care of the food distribution, is being challenged by followers of Judaism from other parts of the world – Egypt and what is now known as Turkey, including where a man named Saul came from. But Stephen is a spiritually deep man and great wonders and signs that came from him caused an uproar with the established leaders. No one could stand up to the wisdom and insight that Stephen had because of the power of the Holy Spirit operating through him.

 

The result is that he is dragged before the Sanhedrin, the Jewish court and has the opportunity to refute the charges. As I read through the rest of chapter 6 I was reminded of Jesus’ who also stood before the Sanhedrin.

 

The beginning of chapter 7 has Stephen answering the charges, stated toward the end of chapter 6, “…we have heard him say that this Jesus of Nazareth will destroy this place and change the customs Moses handed down to us.”  Stephen’s response is, in many ways, a succinct summary of the Old Testament and it is a familiar story to his audience, one that they could identify with because they knew it well and for some they knew it from childhood.

 

I have a sense that as Stephen shared the Sanhedrin perhaps wondered what the fuss was about. I think they could have been saying to themselves, “There is nothing new here. This is familiar and we believe this is true.”

But then he makes a statement which angers them “You stiff-necked people! Your hearts and ears are still uncircumcised. You are just like your ancestors: You always resist the Holy Spirit! Was there ever a prophet your ancestors did not persecute? They even killed those who predicted the coming of the Righteous One. And now you have betrayed and murdered him— you who have received the law that was given through angels but have not obeyed it.”

 

The result is a rage induced frenzy in which Stephen is killed.

 

He calls them out, like Jesus did, on their stubborn hearts and a lack of faith in Jesus Christ. And he pays with his life.

 

But notice what happens as Stephen is being stoned to death:

 

While they were stoning him, Stephen prayed, “Lord Jesus, receive my spirit.” Then he fell on his knees and cried out, “Lord, do not hold this sin against them.” When he had said this, he fell asleep.

 

If this were to happen to me, I am not sure I would have the presence of mind to say “Lord, do not hold this sin against them.” I probably would roll up into a ball to protect myself.

 

What would you do?

 

Stephen does not run. He stands his ground.

He tells the story – God’s story – honestly but ultimately with love. Otherwise, why would he have asked God not hold them accountable for his murder?

 

Good and evil are truly at war here. And the war is in the desires and priorities of the Sanhedrin. They feel threatened by Stephen’s words because it challenges their power and authority. The issue of faith to them is about power and politics not human transformation and redemption. Their mission was to hang on to what they had at any cost and let no one else, including Jesus, get in their way.

Jesus told the disciples, and surely Stephen heard them say this to him and others, “If the world hates you, keep in mind that it hated me first.  If you belonged to the world, it would love you as its own. As it is, you do not belong to the world, but I have chosen you out of the world. That is why the world hates you… If they persecuted me, they will persecute you also.”

(This is out of John 15)

 

We are so concerned these days about the church’s lack of influence in society and that we also lament we no longer seem to be a “Christian” nation. Have we stopped to consider that perhaps in pursuing some other agendas we have forgotten the true agenda of our faith? I think that Stephen serves as a painful reminder that in standing fast for the faith, we are going to make enemies because the agenda of the Christian faith is nothing short than a deep and profound forgiveness resulting in transformation of the human heart and character.

 

And these men, and their character, were called out, if you will, by Stephen because the true nature of our faith and our agenda is to call out people from their selfishness and self-centeredness in short, their sinful attitudes and actions, and invite them to repent from them and turn to God. And there are some people who do not want to hear that – ever.

 

I think that we have forgotten this in the age of social media where we want to be ‘liked’ and followed and friend-ed and re-tweeted. We have forgotten that we are sinners in need of a power greater than ourselves because we are insane – spiritually insane and so we keep trying the latest techniques, programs, and follow the latest thinkers – but to no avail.

 

What we need is an old fashion repentin’! And this repentin’ can begin when we are sick and tired of the way we are living that is not working even when we say that it is ‘Christian.’ When our own stiff-necked-ness is causing us to live spiritually schizophrenic lives!

 

What say you this morning church?

 

Would you be free from the burden of sin? There’s power in the blood, power in the blood! Would you ov’r evil a victory win? There’s wonderful power in the blood!

 

Not in slick campaigns nor trendy seminars and ideas. Neither in 100 sure fire ways to grow your church nor in, dare I say it, building fund campaigns.

 

But only in the life changing power of Jesus Christ and the forgiveness He has made possible for us to accept and be changed by.

 

Are you sick and tired of being sick and tired? Are you weary of the weariness in your hearts?

 

Come home. Get up out of the mud and crud and come home.

 

God is waiting for us. Jesus is waiting for us and the Holy Spirit is the one who is telling us to get up out of the mud and come home!

 

What say you this morning church?

 

Who will we listen to now, at this moment?

 

Amen.

 

Hump Day Prayer 4.24.13

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I am tired today Father

saline

saline (Photo credit: Cult Gigolo)

worn out and exhausted.

I am stretched out emotionally from end to end.

My energy level is low

Going to work makes me sigh

I am focused today on family

surgery

healing

The ‘what if’s’ of it all

I need Your strength

Your strength

to help me get through this day.

 

I am grateful for the words and actions of love

shown to me

but I know that I live in these moments alone.

And yet I know that I am not alone

You are with me

and that gives me hope.

 

So in the middle of this week

at the beginning (for me at least) of the day

I come to You

and I ask for strength that I do not have

to do what I need (and want) to do.

 

So then

Good and Gracious Father

You will be honored and praised

and others will be reminded that

You are a God

who does not leave us alone

in the midst of

this week

and this season of life.

 

Amen

 

Sunday Sermon: Now What Jesus? “Tell the Story!”

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Scripture Passage – Acts 2:22-36

Description – Communion Meditation and initial sermon for April 2013 series, “Now What Jesus?”

We are approaching the time of year when we are again reminded that life has chapters that end and chapters that begin as millions of people

Graduation

Graduation (Photo credit: uonottingham)

from 17 and 18 year olds and up graduate from high school, college, or trade school. It is a time when these individuals field questions from us that begin long before the actual event of graduation take place:

So what are your plans after graduation?

Are you going to college? Where?

Have you found a job?

We know that this end of chapter experience is a transition in which it is expected that something else will occur – a job or a new educational experience will take place.

It is basically what I call a “Now what?” or even “What now?” experience.

From last Monday to today and beyond this day to tomorrow – we have a ‘what now?’ to answer. Easter Sunday is a very important day in the life of the Christian and the Christian faith. It is a key, if not the key, day of the faith for without the resurrection, we really do not have a faith.

But we have Easter Sunday and then we have this Sunday – the Sunday after Easter. “Now what?”

I cannot help but think that the remaining disciples and those who gathered with them after Jesus ascended back to heaven asked “now what?” before the Day of Pentecost when the Holy Spirit came in a great and visible way.

While Easter Sunday is a key Sunday in the life and celebration of our faith, there is a Sunday after Easter, and a Sunday after that and a Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, and Saturday after that as well! “Now what? What now?”

During the four Sundays this month, we are going to walk through the following passages of the book of Acts to answer the questions, “Now what?” and “What now?”:

Today – Acts 2:22-36 What now? “Tell the story!”

Next Sunday – Acts 10:44-48 What now? “Allow the Spirit!”

April 21st – Acts 9:1-20 What now? “Change!”

April 28th – Acts 7:54-60 What now? “Stand fast!”

So there is an answer (actually several answers) to “What now?” and we are going to spend time with those answers because they point to the issue of empowerment and being empowered by the Holy Spirit to engage in a mission, God’s mission, the church’s mission of making disciples.

Let us hear Acts 2:22-36 this morning: (Go to:
http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Acts%202:22-36&version=NIV

When Jesus spoke to them back in Acts 1 just before He ascended back to heaven, He told those gathered “You will receive power … go be my

St. Peter Preaching at Pentecost by Benjamin West

St. Peter Preaching at Pentecost by Benjamin West (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

witnesses.” And as we have just read, following the coming of the Holy Spirit, that is what they began to do. Here we have in our main text Peter, sometimes timid, often impulsive Peter, stepping out and boldly saying, in the strength and power of the Holy Spirit, “this is the story behind the strange signs and languages you have just heard.”

The opportunity to tell the story –God’s story- becomes ‘what’s next!’ for the disciples.

The Easter story – the story of the resurrection; the Advent story – the story of Jesus’ birth – the story of Moses, Joseph, Peter, David, Ruth, Esther, and others – is the story about a God who cares about us, wants to be involved in our lives, and offers us forgiveness of all that we have said and done that is wrong. But, the story has to be told, again and again and again.

It has to be told when it is easy to tell and when it is hard to tell.

As I have said before, we do not have to spend time coming up with a mission statement. We already have one – it is in the command of Jesus to “go make disciples” and “to love God and neighbor as one self.”

So what does this mean for this week?

Let me suggest that we need to tell and keep telling not just with our words but with our actions the story of God’s forgiveness and love. Our mission is to help people come to faith in Christ and experience this saving love and grace just as we have by telling the story – God’s story – a story of redemption.

And we are reminded this morning of this story as we take communion together. We practice open communion here, you do not have to be a member, and so if you wish to join us, you are welcome to do so. But let us do so with repentant hearts and openness to God’s working in our lives as we do so today.

I end with this question, “What story and whose story are you telling through your life these days?”

Let us prepare our hearts for communion.

Amen.

Post Easter Hump Day Prayer

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Where do we go now Lord Jesus?

path path path

path path path (Photo credit: hockadilly)

You are risen from the dead.

We know this because we have experienced Your grace, salvation, and mercy time and time again.

What do we do now?

Make disciples?

Be witnesses?

But Jesus…

I am not a preacher or a missionary! That’s their job!

What? My job, too?

But Lord…

what…

how…

I can’t…

The Holy Spirit?

Yeah, I believe in Him.

Yeah, I know He empowered Peter to speak..

Yes, Jesus but…

I am not like Peter, Jesus

Peter was Peter…

Yeah, I remember my Sunday School teacher

uh huh, my pastor too…

Ordinary people?

Not to me they weren’t!!!

I never thought that way before…

I never looked at it that way before…

They were ordinary people I guess

but they loved You and obeyed You and…

I see it now Jesus…

Help me then… I can’t do it by myself.

Where do I begin?

Okay Jesus, okay…

Sunday Sermon: Unplugging the drain.

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Scripture Passage – 1 Thessalonians 5:19

Description – Communion Meditation and final in series on the Holy Spirit

Has anyone had to unplug a drain recently?

It’s disgusting to do, isn’t it?

But drains are vital to our lives and to have them operating properly is important to our sanity and our sanitary conditions.

Lots of things cause drains to back up. (And I will not go into detail about what they are). Some are normal things to send through a drain but others, are not. There have been stories about diamond rings getting accidentally stuck in a drain and a large expense is made for getting it out.

I want to suggest for a few moments this morning before we take Communion together that we have to have clear drains in our souls through which the Lord removes the impurities and barriers to faith we collect day in and day out for if we have blocked drains, the Holy Spirit is impeded in His work.

There are three things which if we allow them to, will plug the drains of our souls. And they are three things which as our main text for this morning indicates, will quench or stifle the Spirit.

One thing that can cause our souls to back up is resentment.

And to determine if resentment is keeping the Holy Spirit from really working in your life you need to ask yourself two questions:

The first question is “Who or what am I jealous of right now?”

Jealousy, I have painfully found, is a pathway to resentment. Let’s say I am jealous of Joe who has the ability to lead a group of people in a manner which seems so easy and gets quick results.

If I do not acknowledge to myself and to God, and if I really want to get my soul drain cleaned out, to another person as well, that I am jealous of Joe, then resentment of Joe slowly but surely begins to build within me. And the result is an inner (and perhaps an outer) battle that causes me to sulk, get angry, withdraw and the like from Joe, who perhaps is a good friend, and others. And then I notice that my prayer life suffers and so does my Bible reading and I become a pain to deal with.

The second question to determine if resentment is an issue or not is “Is/are my expectations not being fulfilled right now?”

I have noticed, more than I often care to admit, that resentments flair up within me when I have had expectations that I often have not clearly seen or acknowledged, rise up as resentment when I have not received something from someone. When I have expected more attention or less attention or certain actions and have not received them, resentment has flared up.

I think that there were expectations within Judas that Jesus was going to be a political liberator. And when He was not, resentment came flooding out of him so he betrayed Jesus.

There was a sharp disagreement between Paul and Barnabas in Acts 15 over young John Mark. Barnabas wanted to take him along on the next journey with Paul but Paul said no “because he had deserted them in Pamphylia and had not continued with them in the work.” So, as we read in Acts 15:38-39, “They had such a sharp disagreement that they parted company. Barnabas took Mark and sailed for Cyprus, but Paul chose Silas and left, commended by the believers to the grace of the Lord.”

Paul had certain expectations that were unfulfilled and so did Barnabas. And there was a clash and I would gather some resentments. (Later though as is noted in 2 Timothy 4:11, Paul asks for him by name to come to him)

How then do we let go of our resentments? Well we first want to let go of them, really want to let go of them. We have to become willing, for until we do, we won’t. And even here the Spirit does His work, working on us to let go of them. Here to we can resist the Spirit and quench His work and power in us.

But once we really want to let go of them and ask the Lord to help us here, the Spirit begins to work to make that happen! But we need to replace our resentment with something else. Much like you have to add good bacteria to your septic system (if you have one) to combat the bad bacteria, right?

(I know what you are thinking right now, “Jim, this sermon is quickly going down the drain!”)

What needs to be added is humility. Not humiliation but humility. Humility comes from being content with who you are becoming in Christ. A truly humble person has a contentment with who they are and what they have.

A second thing that can cause a back up in our souls is fear.

Now there is an appropriate place for fear. For example, if you would be in the woods and a bear would appear in front of you, you would have an appropriate fear that would cause you to run the other direction.

That’s not what I am talking about. The fear of which I speak, causes us to become paralyzed. We freeze up. Our faith withers.

We begin to stop believing in God, even in ourselves.

Fear is mentioned quite a great deal in the Bible. The source I consulted had over 250 references to fear.

Fear is common. Some of us have a fear of certain animals (often called a phobia and woe to the person who lets their phobia of something be made public). Others of us have a fear of public speaking or even being up here in front of people. (When I think about my two being up on the school stage like they have, I have thought, “never in a million years would I have dared to be up on that stage at their age.)

A question to ask ourselves if an unhealthy fear is present is perhaps an unusual question: “What am I angry about?”

Some times what makes us so angry is a great fear. That is why kids often have a hysterical (as in angry hysterical) parent in their face after finding out something happened. The parent knows the danger in the situation and is scared.to.death.

But this also holds true when unhealthy anger is expressed. This anger is often expressed in some irrational fears – like being left out of something, or not getting what you think is your fair share, or being heard.

I can hear the fear, and maybe some anger in Eve’s voice (and Adam’s too) when they are confronted by God in the Garden. I can hear it in Saul’s voice when he was trying to deny a disobedient act to Samuel. I hear it in Judas’ voice, even perhaps when he kissed Jesus. These people were on the wrong side of God’s goodness. They were afraid of missing out on something and so their fear drove them to grab for something they wanted.

What needs to take fear’s place in our souls when we confront and surrender it to God?

I thought about it for a few moments. Peace came to mind. And a peaceful mind is one that has fear under control. Love came to mind. Perfect love we read in the Bible casts out fear.

But I am going to suggest is honesty as what need to take fears place. Honest about what we really feel and really think and take responsibility for it.

Jesus found such honesty refreshing and it was often closely related to faith in God. There is the Greek woman in Mark 7 whose persistent honesty, about her social status of that day, was remarked by Jesus and her daughter was delivered from an impure spirit.

There was the Roman Centurion of Matthew 8 who simply believed that Jesus could just speak the word, like he could speak a word, and something would be done. And Jesus remarked about such faith and the soldier’s servant (a Roman soldier’s servant!) was healed.

The final spiritual drain plugger comes to us from James 1:13-15, “When tempted, no one should say, “God is tempting me.” For God cannot be tempted by evil, nor does he tempt anyone; but each person is tempted when they are dragged away by their own evil desire and enticed. Then, after desire has conceived, it gives birth to sin; and sin, when it is full-grown, gives birth to death.”

They are our desires. Misplaced and misdirected desires.

Paul reminded the Christian community in the ancient city of Corinth that “I have the right to do anything,” you say—but not everything is beneficial. “I have the right to do anything”—but not everything is constructive.”

There is a place for our sexual desires within the bonds of marriage that God intended in Genesis 2:24. But when they are allowed to run free, pain, brokenness, and tragedy are always present.

The desire for justice to be done is another strong and good desire. But to give into revenge leads us on a path of destruction and pain.

The desire to make a good living for our family is great! But when greed takes over, look out.

We all have desires. We were born with them. God gave them to us. But they get warped and distorted in the spiritual battles especially when fears, expectations and resentments are added in.

The question that needs to be asked when misdirected desires stifle the Holy Spirit in our lives, “What do I want more than God right now?”

For some of us it is affection and affirmation – we want to be loved. For others of us it is power – we want to be in control for lots of conflicted reasons. For some of us it is loss – there is a gap of something in our lives – family, money,

But, they need to be submitted to God and channeled in the right direction. This perhaps is the hardest thing to do because sometimes we are so tangled and mixed up with our feelings and desires we do not know which end is up.

Surrender to the Holy Spirit is what we do with our desires. We need His help in untangling them. And we also must learn to trust Him to fulfill them in His good way as well.

So this morning I ask each of us as we prepare for communion, “What resentments, fears, and desires are keeping the Holy Spirit from doing His good work in us and allow us to be truly free?

We are going to spend time in silent prayer and I encourage you to earnestly seek God in these areas. He wants us to live free! Allow Him to do His work in you this morning….

Let’s pray…

 

Sunday Sermon: Mission Possible

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Scripture Passage – Acts 1:8

Icon of the Pentecost

Icon of the Pentecost (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Description – The third of a four part series on the Holy Spirit

A common statement to new pastors is, “everyone has a wonderful plan for your life!”

But whether or not we are a pastor, everyone has a wonderful plan for our lives. And that includes a mission. And there are many missions.

The mission to become wealthy

The mission to become powerful

The mission to become successful

The mission to make the child finish.his/her.homework

The mission to get him to put his dirty laundry IN the laundry basket

There has been a lot of discussion over the past 15 to 20 years at least, regarding the mission of the church. And I would wager that on just about any given weekend, there is an in person seminar or online gathering whose purpose is to help determine a church’s mission.

 we-already-have-it

But you will receive power when the Holy Spirit comes upon you. And you will be my witnesses, telling people about me everywhere—in Jerusalem, throughout Judea, in Samaria, and to the ends of the earth.”

We have spent the last two weeks focusing on the purpose of the Holy Spirit that we have determined, based on John 16, is to, “convict the world of its sin, and of God’s righteousness, and of the coming judgment;” and then His plan to come along side us, individually and corporately to, as we read in John 14 to teach us “everything and will remind you of everything I have told you.”

This morning the focus is on the power of the Holy Spirit for a specific purpose – to give witness to the love, grace and mercy of God in our lives. Our text is Acts 1:8 “But you will receive power when the Holy Spirit comes upon you. And you will be my witnesses, telling people about me everywhere—in Jerusalem, throughout Judea, in Samaria, and to the ends of the earth.”

Just as Jesus is getting ready to return to the Father, He is asked a question, “Lord, has the time come for you to free Israel and restore our kingdom?”

And Jesus replies with a response and then a directive. The response is this “The Father alone has the authority to set those dates and times, and they are not for you to know.” The second is a directive which is our main text this morning.

What Jesus is doing is giving a clear focus to the remaining disciples who are to become the leaders of the coming to life Christian faith and church. He wants their focus to be on the mission they have been given. To tell what they have seen, heard, and experienced having been with Jesus.

And think for a moment with me what they have seen, heard, and experienced as they walked with Christ for three years.

This is what they had seen:

People healed of incurable diseases.

People delivered out of demon possession.

People who had no hope, given hope.

Lazarus raised from the dead.

A risen from the dead Jesus.

This is what they heard:

Words of a partnership – Follow Me.

Words of forgiveness – Neither do I condemn you, go and sin no more.

        Words of challenge – Take up your cross and follow me and sell your possession and follow me

        This is what they experienced:

A passion and power that left them scratching their heads.

A sudden change in the weather from calm, to storm and back again with just a word spoken by Jesus.

A new way of life.

A personal, in the flesh, God who loved them.

The call to a journey and a commitment that would eventually lead some of them far away from the familiar places of Israel.

But they were lacking one thing this time, the one thing that was to be needed because of Jesus’ absence. They lacked power but not just any kind of power. They lacked the power of the Holy Spirit that would come in a mighty way as Jesus said it would. Without this power, they could not be the witnesses they would need to be because this power was vital to their ability to share their faith and belief in Christ as they would eventually journey out from Jerusalem as a channel of that power, and the love, grace, and mercy.

Our mission, (should we decide to accept it!) as followers of Christ and members of the Church (with a capital “C”) is simply this: To be witnesses of what we have experienced in our walk with God.

     We need the power of the Holy Spirit because:

The reality to which we are witness is a spiritual one and there is a powerful opposition that is a part of this reality. We cannot ignore the presence of Satan and the presence and power of the evil that he makes and uses.

Paul’s words to us in Ephesians 6:12 is a reminder that there is a spiritual battle that is fought in our hearts and minds every day, “For weare not fighting against flesh-and-blood enemies, but against evil rulers and authorities of the unseen world, against mighty powers in this dark world, and against evil spirits in the heavenly places.”

We also need the power of the Holy Spirit because, as we read in the book of Acts, credibility is necessary to being a good witness. I think that this is noted in Acts 4 when soon after the coming of the Holy Spirit on the day of Pentecost Peter and John were taken before some of the same people who had present of Jesus’ arrest and so called “trial” before His crucifixion.

In verse 8 we read “Then Peter, filled with the Holy Spirit, said to them…” And he spoke with power and authority and it was noticed as we read further down in verse 13 the council of leaders “were amazed with the boldness of Peter and John, for they could see that they were ordinary men who had been with Jesus.”

That’s a statement of credibility!

We are not always dragged into a religious or civil court to testify about our faith. But we are always in the court of public opinion as to the credibility of our witness.

If you have either testified in court or been on a jury, you understand this issue of credibility because credible witnesses help to build a case. Lack of credible witnesses hurt a case.

But credibility does not assume perfection. None of us are absolutely perfect. None of us.

When we read Jesus’ words in Matthew 5:48, “But you are to be perfect, even as your Father in heaven is perfect,” we think we know what He means when He says perfect. Flawless. No imperfections. Our performance is absolutely perfect because there are no errors.

Who here this morning is perfect in this manner? Raise your hand if you are absolutely perfect.

The word used for perfect in this verse means “full grown, mature, complete.” And Jesus calls us to such maturity and growth. But we do not get there overnight, if ever. It is an on-going goal. We are to become maturing and responsible followers of Christ. I am still maturing as a follower of Christ. I am not there yet.

But we need to be credible.

This again is where the Holy Spirit helps us. Credibility is built both with the power of the Spirit and with consistency.

When James opens his New Testament book with “you must believe and not doubt, because the one who doubts is like a wave of the sea, blown and tossed by the wind. That person should not expect to receive anything from the Lord. Such a person is double-minded and unstable in all they do,” he is writing about the need for consistency. Each of us can relate to this anxiety and uncertainty which we wrestle with on a daily basis.

But the Holy Spirit comes to help us with such in-consistency. He wants us to help us live a consistent life of faith as we grow in our knowledge and experience of and with the Lord.

So what does all of this mean for us today and week?

One thing stands out to me – success in living for and with the Lord on a daily basis – comes as we daily (and at times hourly and even moment by moment) allow the Holy Spirit to have His way. In doing so, we do not give up our personality and become like a robot. We still are very much human.

But our character begins to change in a better direction. The fruit of the Holy Spirit begins to be seen in us. We become more loving, joyful, peaceful, patient, kind, good, gentle, faithful, and controlled. Our credibility as Christ’s followers grows and we are more consistent in our faith which supports our credibility.

Where do you need to begin to have success in effectively living for the Lord? It starts with surrendering ourselves to the Holy Spirit. And a helpful starting point is to pray at the beginning of each day for the Spirit assist you during that day.

And maybe you have to pray that several times a day sometimes. Our faith requires constant attention not in an obsessive way but in very thoughtful way. Just as we have to pay attention as we drive, we have to pay attention to our faith.

The Holy Spirit helps us here to have the power to live for the Lord. When we ask Him to help us, He will.

Respond to God as you need to do today.

Amen.

Sunday Sermon: Keeping Our Path Lit

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Scripture Passage – Psalm 119:105

Description – Final messages in the series “40 Days in the Word”

 

(Slide one) As I begin with our main text for this morning, I do so with a reminder of the value and place of the Bible in our personal faith development. (Slide two) It is Psalm 119:105:

Your word is a lamp to guide my feet and a light for my path.

We are going to consider this text in light of the overall theme for this series which I think is best expressed by looking at Bible study as one key way God communicates His love, intentions, and purposes to us and lets us know what He wants to do for us AND… what He wants us to do for Him.

We will be addressing another key way – that of prayer, along with fasting and evangelism in our next series that will start in two weeks. Next Sunday, the sermon and our worship service will focus on love a vital link and motivation for all of this.

(Slide three) For the last time, here are the Bible Study methods introduced to us in this series:

Pronounce It!

Picture It!

Probe It!

Paraphrase It!

Personalize It!

Pray It!

I know from chatting with some of you that you found some methods easier to use and that passages from the Bible began to mean more to you than before. That is good to hear!

These are the ‘how’ of Bible Study. These are methods. They are important but I want us to understand the ‘why’ of Bible study. Why it is important to study the Bible? Why do we need to study the Bible?

(Slide four) Let’s start with Hebrews 4:12

For the word of God is alive and active. Sharper than any double-edged sword, it penetrates even to dividing soul and spirit, joints and marrow; it judges the thoughts and attitudes of the heart.

 

 

(Slide five) And let’s break down this verse in the following manner:

For the word of God is alive and active. Sharper than any double-edged sword, it penetrates even to dividing soul and spirit, joints and marrow; it judges the thoughts and attitudes of the heart.

Alive and active is God’s word to us, including these words we call the Bible, but it is more than this written word. Here’s why.

When we say someone is a man or woman of their word, what are we saying? That there is integrity and honesty in them that when they say they are going to do something, they are going to do it! It’s a character issue.

But God’s word also includes the Holy Spirit who reveals to us the truth of the printed word. And God’s word reflects who God is – living and present – and His character.

So to study God’s word, we face a spiritual force that is alive and active. It is not dead. It does not lie around. It moves, within our minds and hearts, actively seeking to change us into the likeness of Christ as we seek to love God and neighbor and help others become disciples or followers of Jesus Christ.

And this activeness, this aliveness is seen in the rest of this passage and without wanting to bring up gruesome images, let me suggest that for a sword to properly do its job, it has to be moving toward something. It does not do its job sitting in the sheath that it is housed in.

These are metaphors being employed here to help get the point across (no pun intended) about the activeness of God’s word within us. A two-edge sword does damage both ways, going in and going out. It is a sharp and damaging object.

But God’s word is even sharper. It cuts us very quickly and it cuts very deeply. This cutting to me is another name for conviction. Can you recall a time when hearing a verse of scripture really convicted you of something that was wrong?

You knew it fairly quickly, right? The Holy Spirit spoke and His words went right through you into your heart!

And this is where God’s word goes – to our heart. To our souls and spirit because it’s purpose is to judge the thoughts and attitudes of our hearts. This is Holy Spirit work because the Holy Spirit takes the words of our Bibles and brings them to life and uses them like a sword to poke us inside where it really needs to work – our thoughts and attitudes. He reflects back to us what is truly going on within us and sometimes it is not a pretty thing to look at.

We read in James 1:14-15 of the inner reality that causes us to have thoughts and attitudes which run contrary to God’s will and which lead us from thinking about doing something contrary to God’s will to developing an attitude to do it which then leads to actually doing the thing that affects our relationship with the Lord.

(Slide six) “…each person is tempted when they are dragged away by their own evil desire and enticed.  Then, after desire has conceived, it gives birth to sin; and sin, when it is full-grown, gives birth to death.”

       If we truly want to follow the Lord; if we truly want to enjoy a forgiven heart; if we truly want to be at peace with ourselves, others, and God; then we must surrender ourselves to God. If we don’t how can we follow Christ? How can we say that we are Christian? How can we discern God’s purposes and mission for us?

We can’t!

(Slide seven)And this brings me back to our main verse, Psalm 119:105. Your word is a lamp to guide my feet and a light for my path.

(“How so Pastor? What’s the connection?”)

God uses the Bible to illuminate our inner life as He cuts through the darkness within each us and brings to light that which has been hidden within us – our attitudes and our thoughts – which serve as motivators for us to make choices that go against what God would have us do.

(seven a) So, we have scripture say to us ‘this is the way to go.’ This makes the Bible a lamp to guide our feet and a light to illuminate our path.

Some of us here have walked through the darkness either at a camp or other outdoor event and we have used lanterns or flashlights to light our path. They help us but the light we have only illuminates a small portion of our path. But it is large enough to help us see our way only a few steps at a time.

So scripture also provides us with an outward light by which we follow the guidance and direction of the Lord. It plays a dual role, then.

It has an inward role, like a sword, or I think a better image, that of a scalpel which cuts on us so that God does His work in us in removing sin. And then there is the outer role, as of a lamp/lantern which lights our direction in life.

But in either case, we have to read, study, and apply the Bible, with the Holy Spirit’s help, so that the truth of which it speaks, demonstrates, and offers, a truth that can transform us into better people now and an eternal hope with God forever in the hereafter.

So what does this mean for us today?

Do you remember the challenge, I gave you at the beginning of this series?

(Slide eight) Here it is: To add 15 minutes of daily Bible reading and study to my day for the rest of this year.

 

We have been given six ways that can help us achieve this goal. Are you willing to try this?

If so, let me ask you a few questions:

When? What time of day will you do this? When will you get started?

How? Which two of these six ways will you utilize to start? Which version of the Bible will you use?

The Lord wants us to understand and apply the Bible. It is hard work at times. There are passages of scripture that we will struggle with and there are others that will become sources of strength and hope for us. It requires us to think and pray and pray and think. But the reward of studying the Bible and growing in our faith and as persons of faith is wonderful.

As I said a few weeks ago, I view you as missionaries and not as members. And a key tool that missionaries need to have is a working knowledge of the Bible and the ability to study the Bible.

This series has been a first step in this regard.

But more important I want to ask you this morning, how has the truth of scripture affected you and your life?

The purpose of studying the Bible is not only gaining more information. That is important. We need to read the Bible, regularly and entirely on a regular basis.

But it is not the only reason we are to study scripture. We study the Bible to allow God to change us.

Someone has said, “Sometimes the only Bible someone will ever read is you!”

I conclude this morning with one of my favorite passages because it gives me a long-term view of life and faith and troubles and joys. It is a reminder that this life is not all there is, that there’s more to life and that there is a life that is to come. I pray that each one of us will be prepared for that great day not just because we read the Bible but because we have allowed the God who inspired the Bible, and who speaks to us through the Bible, into our hearts and souls and because we have, we are not the same.

(Slide nine) Then I saw a new heaven and a new earth, for the old heaven and the old earth had disappeared. And the sea was also gone.  And I saw the holy city, the new Jerusalem, coming down from God out of heaven like a bride beautifully dressed for her husband.

I heard a loud shout from the throne, saying, “Look, God’s home is now among his people! He will live with them, and they will be his people. God himself will be with them.He will wipe every tear from their eyes, and there will be no more death or sorrow or crying or pain. All these things are gone forever.”

And the one sitting on the throne said, “Look, I am making everything new!” And then he said to me, “Write this down, for what I tell you is trustworthy and true.” And he also said, “It is finished! I am the Alpha and the Omega—the Beginning and the End. To all who are thirsty I will give freely from the springs of the water of life. All who are victorious will inherit all these blessings, and I will be their God, and they will be my children.

No longer will there be a curse upon anything. For the throne of God and of the Lamb will be there, and his servants will worship him. And they will see his face, and his name will be written on their foreheads. And there will be no night there—no need for lamps or sun—for the Lord God will shine on them. And they will reign forever and ever.

 

Amen.

Sunday Sermon: They Said That?

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Scripture Passage – Psalm 119:11

Description – The fourth sermon in the series “40 Days in the Word”

(Slide one) William Jennings Bryan once said, “Do not compute the totality of your poultry population until all the manifestations of incubation have been entirely completed.”

(1a) Translation?

(1b) “Don’t count your chickens before they hatch!”

One of my favorite comedy shows is “Tool Time.” Now it is my favorite not because I have been compared to the main character, Tim “The Tool Man” Taylor, because of his mishaps with power tools, but because of the way he gets those wonderfully insightful quotes from his very insightful next door neighbor, Wilson, all mixed up when he tries to use them in solving another family snafu.

And speaking of translation, I would think that one of the most stressful jobs a person can have is that of translator who works for his/her government. Translation is a dynamic process because in our native language we use expressions, called colloquialisms which sometimes are difficult to translate. So can you imagine what it is like when heads of state get together and navigate language and cultural barriers?

(Slide 2) As we continue our initial 2012 series, 40 Days in the Word, let me quickly review the three methods of Bible Study I have introduced so far before I present number four.

(Slide 3) The first method is called the Pronounce It! Method. And to experience this method we used Colossians 3:16a which says “Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly…” This method is a verbal method in which we read a verse of scripture several times through highlighting a different word, or phrase, each time we read it and take time to reflect on that word or phrase and what it means for us now.

(Slide 4) The second method is called the Picture It! Method. And to experience this method we studied Mark 2:1-12 which is the story of the four men who brought a paralyzed man to Jesus and saw him healed. This method requires us to enter the story and take a point of view within the story as we do some deep and important reflection on what takes place within the story.

(Slide 5) The third method we experienced last week is called the Probe It! method and featured an unforgettable acronym called what?

SPACEPETS !

Each of the letters in this acronym asks a question of the text designed to help us apply that text in a suitable means. We visited Mark 8:31-38 and using the SPACEPETS acrostic, studied this important passage of scripture.

This morning we turn to the next method called the Paraphrase It! method of study.

(Slide 6) And this method of study combines, I believe, the word by word aspect of the Pronounce It! method with the “putting myself in the story” view of the Picture It! method as it requires us of us to rephrase a verse or short passage of scripture in a way that stays true to the message of said verse or passage but helps us understand it in a personal way.

How do we do this?

Let’s start with our main text today Psalm 119:11 which says, I have hidden your word in my heart that I might not sin against you.

In your bulletin is another half-page insert with this verse on it. Please take it out.

First let’s read this verse together aloud:

I have hidden your word in my heart that I might not sin against you.

Now, having heard and read what the verse says take a moment and write down this verse in your own words. (Just try it don’t worry about how it sounds. Make it meaningful and understandable to you.)

Now, what does it mean to you right now? Take a moment and write a couple of things down there in the third space on your half-sheet.

This is a very important verse and it makes an important point. I want to spend a few moments illustrating with another verse of scripture both this method of study and the importance of what this verse says.

(slide seven) One of my favorite passages of scripture is Hebrews 4:15-16 and here it is in the New Living Translation:

This High Priest of ours understands our weaknesses, for he faced all of the same testings we do, yet he did not sin. So let us come boldly to the throne of our gracious God. There we will receive his mercy, and we will find grace to help us when we need it most.

Here is my paraphrase of these two verses:

(Slide eight) I have a God who is more than a religious professional. I have a God who understands what living as human being is really like. I have a God who never sinned and yet understands the temptations I face because He faced them, too. I have a God I can run to and say ‘help, me!’ and He will!

This has been favorite passage for many, many years. It became one during a time when my perfectionism to live for God absolutely perfectly would collide with the painful realization that my imperfection, my sin, said otherwise.

And as I struggled with all of this, this verse reminded me that Jesus understood exactly, and dare I say it, perfectly what I was wrestling with. And because He did, I finally realized that when I would struggle, and even fail, I could go to Him for help and He would help me.

This is what the Paraphrase It! method does. It helps us to put scripture in our own words that resonate not just from our brain but from our heart.

Now there are some who might feel that we are taking a risk with scripture with this method because we may paraphrase a verse in a way that makes it mean something entirely different and even at odds with the faith. And some may suggest that we remember the warning in Revelation 22:18 which says “And I solemnly declare to everyone who hears the words of prophecy written in this book: If anyone adds anything to what is written here, God will add to that person the plagues described in this book.” So the anxiety and fear of paraphrasing a verse of scripture way out of the context of what it says is understandable.

The Bible, I remind us this morning, is a very sturdy book. It was divinely inspired and no one person and no movement political, economic, or otherwise have been able to destroy it. The truth of which it speaks is spiritual in nature and cannot be contained and cannot be stopped.

And then we have the Holy Spirit to help us. And the Holy Spirit is a very important part of Bible Study. For it is the Holy Spirit who helps us understand what is being read as we read the Bible. It is the Holy Spirit who brings comfort, peace, conviction, and the like to us as we read the Bible. It is the Holy Spirit who helps us think correctly as we think about the scripture we are reading.

Though His role is not explicitly stated at times in the Bible when Jesus says in John 14 verses 16 and part of 17, “And I will ask the Father, and he will give you another Advocate,who will never leave you. He is the Holy Spirit, who leads into all truth,” He makes clear that the Holy Spirit has the key role in helping us understand what the Bible says and then helps us to understand what it means and how then to apply it. And so while we need to be careful by carefully studying a verse within its context, we also can have the confidence that the Holy Spirit is at work helping us to understand a verse and provide us with the information and inspiration we need at that moment in life. So let’s consider that this method of paraphrasing a verse of scripture can be used by the Lord to help us better understand and apply His word to our lives.

(Slide nine) Now, turn your half-sheet over and let’s try this method on another verse of scripture, James 4:10 “Humble yourselves before the Lord, and he will lift you up.”

 Read through it a couple of times and then spend a moment writing out your paraphrase.

Okay, now what does it mean to you today?

(9a) Here’s my paraphrase:

Chill out! Sit down and relax! Calm down! You’re not the one in charge. God is. Be quiet for a few minutes and then pray to the Lord. In His time, He will tell you what you need to know.

I am my own worst enemy sometimes. I get so anxious and so frustrated when things are not going as I think they should and my thoughts and attitudes begin to harden and I forget that God is in charge.

When I learned many years ago that I cannot fix people, that I cannot change them, it was a major turning point in my life and personal faith. I began to realize that I am not God and that I am not in charge of a person’s life.

And while it does not mean that I now have a “hands off policy” that I operate from (I don’t because I have a responsibility to my family and this church to be a wise and careful husband, father, and pastor) it does mean that when I have to eat a piece of ‘humble pie’ it serves as a reminder that God is in charge and I am not. It means to hear the Lord more clearly that I sometimes have to ‘let go and let God.’

So what does all of this mean for us this morning?

I want to suggest a couple of things:

There is a larger picture for this series that I want to bring to focus as I conclude this morning and it is this: When I stand and look at you this time of week I am looking at you more and more as missionaries and not as members of this church.

When I have served as an ordination mentor to those who were completing their ordination process I used to ask them, “When you stand up front on Sunday morning, how many audiences do you see?”

After they responded, I would tell them what I saw on Sunday morning. That a congregation was a diverse set of audiences based generational experiences, length of time as a believer or unbeliever, the old introvert/extrovert idea, etc.

But, I am seeing you and other congregations now more as missionaries whose mission field is the classroom, as a student or a teacher, in the workplace, and in the neighborhood. To, shall we say, paraphrase, you are God’s person where you live and work. And subsequently, I am responsible with providing you a knowledge base and a set of skills to help you serve as God’s person where you are and go.

And this leads me to my second suggestion or direction this morning:

I am committing myself from the beginning of this year through Easter Sunday with provide some vital skills and knowledge to help you as you serve God where you are.

(Slide ten) Now let me give clarity to the word ‘missionary.’ A missionary is a person who has mission that is specific in nature and definitive in location. What do I mean?

Simply this: Our mission is to help make disciples. In other words, we are to help other people come to faith in Christ and then help them learn to live out that faith. And as they do, we are placed along the path of life and faith to help them do so.

Some of us will be there before that choice to come to faith in Christ takes place. We are like first responders, if you will, to a person who is seeking hope and meaning and needs God in their life. We are there early on and it is often our kind and caring example that opens the door to a person’s heart into which the Holy Spirit goes and moves in them.

Others of us will tell about Jesus with both words and actions. We are like kindergarten teachers who help others begin to learn the basics of the faith like a kindergarten teacher who helps a first year student begin learning the basics.

And there comes a time when a person who is like the delivering physician who helps deliver babies, helps a person be born again. And today is the day 46 years ago when I was born again. The life of faith begins.

Then some of us are like a personal fitness trainer who helps us stay in shape as we mature in our faith. They help us unlearn bad habits and develop new ones.

Paul writes in 1 Corinthians that ‘some planted and some watered’

But ‘God gave the increase’

If you and I have a personal relationship with Jesus Christ that comes through the confession and forgiveness of our sins, then we are missionaries. And we have a responsibility and a role to play in fulfilling the Great Commandment to love God and neighbor and the Great Commission to go and help people become followers of Jesus Christ.

Essential to this mission (and this is my point) is that we have a good working knowledge of the Bible to help people with a humble attitude of love and service and care which opens the door to discussion about Christ. That is why we are doing this sermon series right now and the one to follow about prayer, fasting (don’t panic), and evangelism (don’t panic again.)

Each of us has a mission field. And I pray this morning that we will have a greater clarity about our mission field and use these methods to help us better study the Bible.

Amen.

Sunday Sermon: The Wonderful Group of People Called the Church

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People

Image by ThisParticularGreg via Flickr

Scripture Passage – 1 Peter 2:9, Ephesians 4:11-13

Description – The final sermon in the series “Beliefs that give us faith, hope, and love.”

 

(Slide one) Today I am concluding our current series “Beliefs that give us faith, hope, and love” with a message that will feature not one, but two, voices. And I am glad to do so because one of the valuable aspects of the church is that it is a community of faith that includes many people.

There are many different passages of scripture to choose from in regards to addressing the place and importance of the church. However, keeping in mind our theme and what the other voice, the other person, who will be sharing in a few moments, has to say, there are two passages that come readily to mind this morning.

The first is one is 1 Peter 2:9: “You are royal priests,a holy nation, God’s very own possession. As a result, you can show others the goodness of God, for he called you out of the darkness into his wonderful light.”

Peter is writing to, as we read in 1 Peter 1:1 “God’s chosen people who are living as foreigners in the provinces of Pontus, Galatia, Cappadocia, Asia, and Bithynia…” These were Roman provinces, or districts, in what is now the modern nation of Turkey. And He is writing to the church, God’s chosen people.”

And not only is he writing to some specific geographical locations and to the church in those specific geographical locations, he is telling them something very important that we need to hear this morning. He is telling them they are royal priests, a holy nation, and God’s very own possession.

And not only that he is telling them all of this, he is also telling them that they have a very important role of showing others “the goodness of God”  because “he [that is God] called you out of the darkness into his wonderful light!”

 I think that it is very important, very important to understand and accept that we are also royal priests; we are God’s very own possession; we have been tasked with showing others the goodness of God because we have been called out of the darkness and into his wonderful light.

(Slide two) I thought of that this week when I snapped this picture last Tuesday at Bixler Lake. What a contrast between the light and the dark! It’s blinding! (It blinded me when I took it!)

The Church, with a capital ‘C’ is God’s way of helping to fulfill the Great Commandment to love God and neighbor and the Great Commission to go and make disciples which I define as maturing and responsible followers of Jesus Christ.

The testimony of the Church, and by this I mean the people of God who through their confession of sin and their profession of faith in Christ alone, involves partnering with God to break through the darkness in people’s lives and to bring the light of God, the redeeming and grace filled light of God, into the lives of others.

And so often we lose sight of this important mission and purpose. We “major in the minors and minor in the majors.” Pastors get hung up on what the congregation does and does not do; and congregations get hung up on what the pastor does or does not do.

That is not the point!

For if we have a message of faith, hope, and love; if we believe in a God of love; if we hope in a God of forgiveness; then we must be a people in which faith, hope, and love is expressed and lived our day in and day out.

The church is a wonderful group of people committed to a person and a mission that God plainly gave us in the Bible: “Go and make disciples.”

How does that happen?

Well this is where my second passage comes in and I get to set up (in the right kind of way) our second voice this morning. It is Ephesians 4:11-13:

Now these are the gifts Christ gave to the church: the apostles, the prophets, the evangelists, and the pastors and teachers. Their responsibility is to equip God’s people to do his work and build up the church, the body of Christ.  This will continue until we all come to such unity in our faith and knowledge of God’s Son that we will be mature in the Lord, measuring up to the full and complete standard of Christ.

When we confess our sins and accept the forgiveness of our sins through Jesus Christ, the Holy Spirit enters our hearts and begins to influence and empower us to do God’s work. A key part of that work is the gifts that Paul writes of in this passage and elsewhere in the New Testament. Some have labeled this passage “the five-fold ministry of the church” and it has been the subject of much discussion and even disagreement over the years.

But what I want us to briefly notice is the initial statement, “Now these are the gifts Christ gave to the church…” and simply say this, “Everyone one of us who are walking with God today in this place has one of these five gifts. Every.one.of.us”

Most of us, I think, have at least two of these five in some combination. And when we read ‘Pastor’ it does NOT mean (necessarily) we are called to become a full-time pastor. To be a pastor is to be a spiritual care giver to others and some of us here do that very well.

There is more to say here but for now my point is that each of us has a vital and important role in the ministry of the church and that our mission and purpose, already set forth by Christ in the Great Commandment and Great Commission, is one that we need to embrace and do.

And while not all of us are called to give our full-time efforts to this vital work, some of us are called to do so. This is where our the other voice, our other speaker this morning comes in because he is responding to God’s call and he now gets to share more about that call with us this morning.

 

Regan shares

 

This is a conversation that Regan and I have been for a while. It has been an exciting conversation to have. I have already introduced him to several pastors here in Northern Indiana and will continue to do so.

Ok, what and how to we respond to Regan, and Teri?

We first of all start praying for them both. We need to support them in prayer that God will lead them in the direction they should go in ministry.

We seek the Lord to affirm His call of Regan. The call of God is both personally experienced and corporately affirmed.

Well I remember a time when I left the ministry vowing to never return only to have a pastor say to me “you have the call of God written all over you.” That was the last thing I needed to hear!

Regan will need to affirm and discern God’s call. I say affirm and discern because He needs to have a no doubt policy in knowing that God has called him into the ministry; and that he will be called by the Lord to a specific ministry path that can change as the Lord leads (the discernment) and prepare accordingly.

So I call upon you church to seek the Lord on Regan and Teri’s behalf as they begin together this journey. Let us truly pray, “Your will, not our will be done.”

And let us be the church!

Amen

Sunday Sermon: What is the Main Thing?

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Cover of "City Slickers"

Cover of City Slickers

Scripture Passage – John 15:9-15

Description – Communion Meditation for November 6, 2011

 

One of the most uncomfortable aspects of life comes when someone asks us a question.

Questions like “Where is your homework?”

Or “What did you do with your pajamas?”

Or “Did you go to the store and get what I asked you to get?”

Or “Did you pickup your underwear and place it IN the hamper?”

Or, one of the biggies, “Did you just hear what I told you?”

 

They can also be embarrassing ones as well:

 

Questions like, “Mommy, why is that person so fat?”

 

“Mommy, where did I come from?”

 

“Mommy, why does Grandpa make those funny noises in his sleep?”

 

“Daddy, why were you and mommy giggling in the bedroom last night? Were you watching cartoons?”

A good question also opens up realms of possibilities concerning faith, hope, and love and sometimes those questions are ones that stop us in our tracks. Jesus asked those questions and they caused as much embarrassment (and pause for reflection) as some of the ones I have just mentioned.

In the story about a despised Samaritan who risked life and limb to help a beat up Jew, Jesus asked the question, “Now which of these three would you say was a neighbor to the man who was attacked by bandits?” It was a question asked in response to a question asked of Jesus, “Who is my neighbor?”

There was the moment in which Jesus sought to determine what his twelve closest followers truly believed Him to be or not to be, “Who do you say that I am?” And Peter said, “You are the Christ, the Son of the Living God.”

And in the final chapter of John’s gospel Jesus asks a question of Peter who had gone back to fishing after his denial of Christ that calls out Peter I think, to make up his mind about Jesus and his relationship with Him.

“Peter, do you love me?”

Questions can, and do, embarrass us because they reveal a gap between what we know and what we don’t know; what we publically sometimes disavow and yet what we privately admit to (or experience)…

Questions are powerful things…

One of the things that are drilled into basic recruits is no questioning of orders because to do so is to challenge not just unit cohesion but its survival on the battlefield. And ‘Because I said so’ almost it seems to become part of a parent’s vocabulary at the birth of their child.

 

All of these thoughts, and questions, about questioning, lead me to our main text for this morning as we prepare for communion: John 15:9-15 which says:

 “I have loved you even as the Father has loved me. Remain in my love. When you obey my commandments, you remain in my love, just as I obey my Father’s commandments and remain in his love. I have told you these things so that you will be filled with my joy. Yes, your joy will overflow!This is my commandment: Love each other in the same way I have loved you. There is no greater love than to lay down one’s life for one’s friends. You are my friends if you do what I command. I no longer call you slaves, because a master doesn’t confide in his slaves. Now you are my friends, since I have told you everything the Father told me. You didn’t choose me. I chose you. I appointed you to go and produce lasting fruit, so that the Father will give you whatever you ask for, using my name.  This is my command: Love each other.”

One of, if not the most important question that Jesus was asked while He walked this earth was the question, “What is the greatest commandment?”  And in these moments before His arrest and death which is the setting of our main text, I think that His answer echoes in what He is telling those who remain with Him to be concerned about in the days, weeks, month, and years ahead.

And I also think that in doing so, Jesus addresses the question which forms the title of this morning’s message, “What is the Main Thing?”

In one of the classic movie scenes of the past 20 years the late Jack Palance, who plays the rough looking cowboy Curly Washburn in the movie City Slickers, holds up 1 finger and says “Do you know what the secret of life is?” One thing. Just one thing.” He is quizzed by other cast as to what he means and he replies “That’s what *you* have to find out.”

For some the one thing is money. “Just give me enough money,” they say, “and I will have it made.” For others power is the one thing. “Once I am able to have the power to be in charge, then I will have it made!”

But, to quote Rick Warren in the opening chapter from the Purpose Driven Life, “It’s not about you!” The main thing in life is about the Lord and His mission and purpose.

And Jesus is making very clear, I believe, what the main thing is for us in this passage of scripture that is very, very important for us to understand and apply. It has been traditionally called the Upper Room passage because it is a written record by one who was there, the Apostle John, of what Jesus said to the remaining disciples prior to His arrest, trial, crucifixion, and (Praise God!) His resurrection.

It is notable for a couple of things. 1. Jesus’ clear affirmation that He is the ONLY way to God. 2. The promised coming of the Holy Spirit to do the important work of the Father as the disciples would share. 3. The hostile reality they would face in the world as they shared the Christian faith. And, among other things, 4. A prayer on behalf of the twelve that reveals Christ’s love for them and his pastoral heart.

Jesus answers Curly’s question with a very strong and pointed statement in chapter 15 that uses the familiar imagery of the vineyard as a way to get across the importance of love and obedience because it is through these two vital things that we remain, like the branch to the vine, connected to God.

It is very important to notice that Jesus says in a key verse, verse 10, “When you obey my commandments, you remain in my love, just as I obey my Father’s commandments and remain in his love.”  He starts with obedience and then brings in love because He links obedience to love.

To love God is to obey Him. And when we obey God we are expressing our love to Him.

This is vastly different from what we think today about love. But let’s think about it for a view moments as we prepare for communion:

Do we love God? We say we do but do we obey Him? With our money? With our power? With our priorities? With our words?

I think that one thing that God might want us to understand today is “to love and obey me is very important to me.”

How well are we loving and obeying God these days?

Let us love God well these days by obeying Him in our daily choices – to listen well instead of disregarding often, to serve rather than just being served, to pursue purity instead of going with the flow and doing whatever, to confess one’s sins instead of denying them.

To love and obey God brings clarity and peace to our hearts. To love and obey helps us see and experience God’s grace and mercy more fully because obedience is a like a cleaner that cleans our glasses lens.

This is the main thing for us to hear, accept, and then do – Love God by obeying Him.

What is the Holy Spirit saying to you today? Respond as you need to and let us prepare our hearts for Communion.

Amen.