I didn't write a sermon for last Sunday, which felt a little strange to me. Instead I presented the story from Walter Wangerin, Jr.'s book, "The Manger Is Empty." I pulled up a chair and made myself comfortable and proceeded to relate the story of Christ's coming again as told by Mr. Wangerin. The service went 20 minutes over but, to my surprise, no one got up and left.
The reason I chose this story, this is a God thing, is that earlier a church member had left me a book, "My Time in Heaven" by Richard Sigmund. It's about his experience of dying and coming back. You know it's all about his remembrances of heaven, God, Jesus, the Holy Spirit, angels, and friends and acquaintances who've gone on ahead. And so, I shared this story about Christ coming again, and the anticipation of a close friend, Jesus, coming just for us.
Isn't that what Advent is all about? Isn't it a reminder for us of what we are waiting, hoping, and anticipating will happen...maybe in our lifetime.
So, if you can find it, this book is a good read for us in the season of Advent.
May God's grace, peace, and joy fill you with anticipation this Advent season.
Tuesday, November 27, 2012
Monday, November 19, 2012
Trust
Beginning at the very beginning in the Garden of
Eden, the Man and the Woman trusted in God to take care of their
needs…until they destroyed that trust.
Even when they had to make their own way
in the land where God sent them, they still trusted God to care and
provide for them. They lived on the land. They worked the ground, planted
seeds, raised animals for meat, and talked with God, trusting that he
would be there whenever they called.
The pattern had been set though that
Man would continue to forget the Covenant and would break it, always looking
for the greener pastures or the easy way, breaking the trust that was so
necessary.
Our ancestors, our sisters and
brothers descended from the original Man and Woman, broke the trust
established between God and them. It
would be mended or patched up. God told them He would forget, not remember
their past transgressions. He kept His promise; they didn’t.
As we read and hear the stories in the
Old Testament we see where God, our Father, would start all over with a new
leader, a new judge, a new king, or a new prophet. He would wipe the slate clean. He would erase
the memory of their sins against Him and begin anew. He would ask them to trust
Him…and they would…for a while.
That’s why God confused the language
of the people at Babel. That’s why there was the Flood. That’s why Joseph,
Jacob’s son, was sent to Egypt. That’s why the Israelites wandered so long in
the wilderness. That’s why Jerusalem was destroyed along with the temple. The
covenant was broken. They couldn’t believe that God would do everything He said
He’d do for them.
They looked at their neighbors, who
worshiped other gods, and saw that they had better things than they did…or at
least they thought so…so they would set up shrines and worship their gods. They didn’t trust God.
There was always that remnant that
didn’t lose their faith. Sometimes it was a very small remnant, like the family
of Noah or Hannah or Abraham or Joseph or Moses or Samuel or Elijah or Elisha
or Isaiah or Jeremiah or…Mary the mother of Jesus or Elizabeth the mother of
John.
Everywhere we look we can find the
element of trust somewhere in the story. God is love but we must
“trust” that He really loves us.
You see, we can’t believe that He
could love us the way we are because we know how many times we’ve broken the
covenant. We know our evil, lustful, not
so nice thoughts and actions. We hide them from others but we can’t hide them
from God.
And yet…he forgets our past and
current mistakes and transgressions. He calls us back to Him and all he asks is
that we trust Him…to forgive and forget and love us.
Hannah trusted God to hear her
prayers, especially after Eli told her he was sure God would answer her
prayers. Our reading from Hebrews
encourages us to trust the new priest, Jesus the Christ. Jesus tells us
in Mark’s lesson that we shouldn’t trust the signs around us or in our
own ingenuity but trust His word when he says he’s coming back… and
it’ll get worse before His arrival. This is nothing.
Trust is the key word to
remember and carry with us this week. We
aren’t to place our trust in our own talents but lean entirely upon Jesus, the
One who lived and died and rose again to show us we could trust in God’s
plan for the world.
Have faith my friends. God loves you
and will provide all you need as long as you believe.
Thanks be to God for his trustworthy
grace. Amen.
Monday, November 12, 2012
Risk All
Congregations
all over the world are struggling to make ends meet. People in India are living
in places we can’t even imagine. The people in Afghanistan and Iraq and Sudan
and Syria are living in fear for their lives because they never know whether
tomorrow might be their last. Christians living in nations where they are the
minority worship in secret because it’s against the law in their nation to be a
Christian.
Yet, every day these folks risk everything
they have to survive. And in some of these places there are folks who give the
little they have to help their neighbors.
So, I’ve been thinking. What do we
risk? Did any of us wake up this morning wondering if a car bomber was going to
be parked outside the church? Did any of us wake up this morning wondering if
there was enough flour in the cupboard to make something to eat? Did any of us
wake up this morning and count our pennies and decide that we could risk giving
them to the church…even though they were all we had? What chances do we take?
We may drive too fast. We probably eat
a few too many sweets or drink too many cups of coffee. We may choose not to
exercise. But that’s not what I’m getting at today.
Jesus took a seat in the temple and observed
the people putting their offerings into the temple treasury. Those who were wealthy were putting
substantial chunks of change. Then he
called his disciples over because he’d noticed a widow coming in with her
offering. She dropped two small coins in
the treasury.
And Jesus said that she had given more
than all the others put together. What
the others had put in they’d never miss but what she gave was all she had. She
risked it all trusting in God.
I don’t believe Jesus was saying that
folks should give all but he was pointing out the kind of trust this widow had
compared to those wealthy tithers who gave what they’d never miss.
The prophet Malachi spoke God’s words
to the people of his community. He spoke of how the priests were mistreating His
people and how the people weren’t remaining faithful to their spouses and each
other…and God.
In chapter 3 he speaks of sending a
messenger to prepare the way before Him. The people hadn’t been living as God
had instructed them. They had reverted back to sorcery and idols, swearing
falsely and cheating, and oppressing the laborers who worked for them by not
paying them a fair wage. They weren’t
caring for the aliens in their country…and they didn’t fear the Lord. God wasn’t happy.
But God hadn’t changed. He still loved
them. He desired them to return to Him. But how could they return when they’d
been robbing God? They questioned how they were robbing God and he replied, “In
your tithes and offerings! You are cursed with a curse, for robbing me—the whole
nation of you!”
Now you’d think that God would have
had enough. That he’d want children who loved him and cared to be with him and
wouldn’t cheat him. But no, He said, “Bring the full tithe into the storehouse,
so that there may be food in my house, and thus put me to the test…see if I
will not open the windows of heaven for you and pour down for you an
overflowing blessing.”
God was asking them to risk giving
their tithe and then trust Him to bless them. Even though they’d neglected
their offerings for so long God didn’t reject them he was willing to take them
all back if they’d come back to him.
So…when we hear God saying, “You have
spoken harsh words against me,” do we wonder when and how we could have done
that? God’s reply is the same today as it was in Malachi’s day. When we say it
is vain to serve God. What do we profit by keeping his commands…Now we count
the arrogant happy; evildoers not only prosper, but when they put God to the
test they escape. We risk nothing. It’s all about us.
There is a day coming says the Lord
when all the arrogant and all evildoers will be stubble; the day that comes
will burn them up. But…for you who
revere my name the sun of righteousness shall go out leaping like calves from
the stall.
Now, we might think that all of this
was just for those folks back in the day but I believe God is speaking to you
and me. He sees what we give. He knows what we’re thinking and saying…and his
heart is breaking.
There are hungry people in the world.
There are children starving in the world. But they don’t need to. They could be
fed. There is enough food in the world relieve the hunger and the
starvation. All it takes is for God’s
children to give. All it takes is for us
to give our tithe.
There’s not one of us here today who’d
starve or miss a payment by giving our tithe…not one. I say that because God isn’t asking us to
risk what the widow did. He just wants us to remember the commandments to love
him with all we are and to love our neighbors as much as we love
ourselves.
What would the impact be if we
committed to doing that? What kind of change would take place if we brought our
tithe into God’s storehouse? I wonder.
Friends, I believe God is reminding us
of our duty to Him and our neighbors.
And we know who our neighbors are, don’t we?
Thanks be to God for
his loving grace. Amen.
Monday, November 5, 2012
The Important Thing
The lawyer who came to Jesus with his
question about the most important commandment had been listening to Jesus as he
taught and was questioned by the other religious of Jerusalem. He could tell by the way he answered that
this Rabbi was a wise man who knew things. He had insights that no one else had
heard of or spoken of before. So, he posed his question about the most
important thing.
So, what’s the most important thing
for us? Is it still loving God and loving our neighbor? If that’s the answer
then how are we doing that most important thing?
I believe that love is the most
important thing for all of us. It’s important to love God with all everything
we are and it’s important to love our neighbors. Love is the key here.
Last night two people we love made a
commitment to love each other for ever. Their love is very evident for us to
see. You can tell by their actions how
much they care for each other, the little things they do for each other, how
they talk to each other.
But we all know that it’s not always
that easy to love all the time. And sometimes we fall out of love. And
the root cause of that may be that we fall out of love with ourselves. We have
strayed away from God and we don’t love ourselves very much. So, we don’t love
neighbors or God because we don’t love ourselves.
We might want to look within ourselves
to try to discover why it is we don’t love as we should. It could be that we
suffer from the same malady that Jesus’ disciples suffered from, the desire to
be the greatest or have the most or…be the most important.
If that’s the problem with us then it
should be easy to correct it. What did Jesus say? Whoever want to be first must be last, must
be a servant or a slave to all. Or as he told the rich young man who wanted to
know how to obtain eternal life, “Sell everything you have, give the proceeds
to the poor and then follow me.”
If a person were to do those things,
serve others, give everything away, and follow Jesus who would they have to
depend on? They could no longer depend
on themselves to provide shelter and food and clothes because they’ve given it
all away. Who would they turn to?
Who do you turn to when you’ve
exhausted all other possibilities, another person? Maybe, but most of us will turn
to God. Why?
I think it’s when we’ve run out of
options that we discover that the One who loves us the most, who really cares
for us, is the One who is able to provide just what we need.
We’ve been hearing the last couple of
Sundays what the disciples thought was important and then what they learned
from Jesus that was important. They weren’t anywhere close to the same.
Following this lesson in Mark’s gospel
is the story of the widow who gave out of her poverty. She gave two coins that were probably, at
most, only worth enough to buy food for one modest meal. But she gave them
hoping that they could be used to help someone else who had greater needs.
Yet others only gave what the law
required not from their needs. And what they gave wasn’t always used to help
those who were widowed and poor. The
leaders of the synagogue used the offerings to provide the luxuries they
desired. That’s what they thought was important.
What’s the most important thing? Jesus told us its love. In fact his life was
an example for all of us.
He loved his Father so much that even
when he was exhausted from a day being surrounded by the mass of people he
would go away to some deserted place to talk with Him, to commune with Him, to
be comforted by Him. And then he could go back to continue on the journey
towards Jerusalem.
God is asking us, every one of us, to
examine our lives and decide what’s the important thing. And once we learn what
it is then trust that the one who cares for the birds of the air, the flowers
of the field, and the grass in the meadows to provide just what we need so we
can love Him and our neighbors and ourselves.
Do you believe that? Do you trust God
to take care of you? Have you decided what the most important thing is?
Friends, trust in God and love Him.
Trust in God and love and care for your neighbors. Trust in Him and love
yourselves. Put all your trust in God and you will find the most important
thing.
Thanks be to God for his loving grace.
Amen.
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