Sunday, May 25, 2008

Worries and Blessings

This sermon was heard at the First Presbyterian Church in Berryville, Arkansas on May 25, 2008, the 8th Sunday of Ordinary Time.

Isaiah 49:8-16a
Psalm 131
1Corinthians 4:1-5
Matthew 6:24-34

May the words of my mouth and the meditations of our hearts be acceptable to you, O Lord, our rock and our redeemer. Amen

Merwan Sheriar Irani[1] was an Indian man of Persian heritage who lived from 1894 to 1969. At the age of 19, during his sophomore year of college, Merwan had a brief contact with a Muslim holy woman Hazrat Babajan marking what he said was the beginning of his spiritual awakening. With a single kiss on his forehead, Babajan was said to have suddenly triggered a seven-year process of transformation. It was after this extensive period of study and contemplation that Merwan began his public work.

In 1921, Merwan’s followers gave him the name that most of the world knows him by today, Meher Baba, Hindi for “Compassionate Father.” In 1931, Baba made his first trip to the west. From this time, his teachings began to gain a foot hold world wide. When Baba sent correspondence, he would usually close with “Don’t worry, be happy.” This comment soon became his trademark.

In the summer of 1988, Jazz vocalist Bobby McFerrin released the hit song “Don’t Worry, Be Happy” listing Baba as coauthor. The a cappella classic won the 1988 Grammy Awards for Song of the Year, Record of the Year, and Best Male Pop Vocal Performance. The first verse contains these lyrics:

In every life we have some trouble
But when you worry you make it double
Don't worry, be happy.[2]

God help me, I hate this song, and I’m not alone. Running a quick computer search[3] I found song lyrics that specifically reference McFerrin’s by Wycliff Jean,[4] Public Enemy,[5] and Ras Kass.[6] In each of these songs, the lyric tends to say that the phrase, in fact the entire song, “Don’t Worry, Be Happy” is the sort of fluff that means nothing at all in today’s time and place. Sure, you can say it all you want, but it doesn’t mean anything in a world that is strife with racism, greed, pain, and toil.

Cyclone Nargis hit the Ayeyarwady Delta of Myanmar on May 2, 2008. After the damage was done, the military government didn’t allow relief workers into the country. The generals wouldn’t allow much of the relief supplies which did enter the country to reach the people, and the supplies that did were splashed with pictures of the ruling generals. Chatting with Mark Mallett a couple of weeks ago he said that the generals were withholding relief so they could be little tin gods. I couldn’t have said it better myself and told him so.

The news is now reporting the ruling junta is going to allow foreign aid workers into the country.[7] About the prospect of interference with aid and aid workers, Secretary-General Surin Pitsuwan of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations said “We expect no obstacles.” But others are more reserved. Lionel Rosenblatt, president emeritus of U.S.-based Refugees International said, “I want to be optimistic, but I'm skeptical.”

There are earthquakes in China, hurricanes in the gulf, floods throughout mid-America, and tornadoes all over the place—including Arkansas. Yesterday’s twisters through northern Oklahoma are just another addition to this long list of natural disasters. You ought to see the emails I get from Presbyterian Disaster Assistance and the good folks at the PDA Disaster Assistance Center at Ferncliff in Little Rock.

Charitable agencies have declared an emergency.[8] There have been so many disasters that people have become overwhelmed and donations are dropping just when they are needed most. There is actually a tendency during a spate of emergencies for donations to drop off. It’s not news to relief agencies. It even has a name, “disaster fatigue.”

When I read this passage, I just want to look to the heavens, shake my fist, and ask God what exactly is meant by “do not worry about your life?” Oh, and seeing as how the New Living Translation renders this statement as “not to worry about everyday life” does that give us license to worry about the big nasty stuff as long as we don’t sweat the small stuff? Then are we supposed to accept adding insult to injury when somebody says “it’s all small stuff?” Sorry, I’ve got worries…and I know that you do too. We pray over our joys and concerns every week and it never fails, there are always joys and concerns.

I know that worry won’t add an hour to the span of my life, but ignoring worry won’t make the conditions I worry about go away either. Oh, and I’ve been on call at the hospital this week. I dare anybody to come with me this afternoon and tell somebody lying in a bed who’s waiting on diagnosis or chemo or surgery “Buck up Skippy, Jesus says ‘Don’t worry, be happy.’”

Thank God none of us have such poor pastoral care skills.

This is why; after all of this raving about the first nine verses or our reading I want us to focus on the first half of the tenth, “Strive first for the kingdom of God and his righteousness.” We are called to a radical new priority, strive first for the kingdom of God first, and then we deal with what follows.

The prophet Isaiah tells the covenant people to raise up, restore, and establish the land saying to the prisoners, “Come out;” and telling those in the darkness “Show yourselves.” The Lord promises that the one who has compassion for the prisoners and the lost will lead them and by springs of water will guide them; for the Lord has comforted his people, and the Lord will have compassion on those who suffer. The prophet Micah is often quoted with directions on how to minister to the prisoners and the lost. He prophesied, “What does the LORD require of you but to do justice, and to love kindness, and to walk humbly with your God?” This is what we are called to do.

Through Isaiah, the Lord promises that those who have cause to be anxious will be comforted. This promise was reflected again by Paul in 1Corinthians. Paul begins his call to those who will be sent in the name of the Lord by telling them that they are, that we are, servants of Christ and stewards of God’s mysteries.

As servants of Christ, we are called to do the business of the household of God. The glory of this term, servant, is that it is no lofty theological term. It isn’t something that has a long theological history; defined and redefined by the greats of the church. Servant is a household term. It is a common term. Servants helped around the house. Servants cooked and cleaned. The servants took care of the business of the household as assigned. This isn’t a position of privilege or status; it is a position of duty, a call to action.

As servants we are the helpers of the master, the one who is the head of the household. We take the master’s instruction, not our own. A wonderful illustration of this is found in the movie “The Princess Bride” where the stable boy Westley is a servant of the family of the maiden Buttercup. Whenever Buttercup would ask Westley to do any chore he would respond, “As you wish.” No matter how menial or degrading or cruel, he would respond, “As you wish.” We are to follow, not to lead. As we pray, thy will be done, not my will.

As stewards, we are called to be the managers of the mysteries of God. The managers of the household receive orders from the head of the household leading others in the work of the manor. In a way, these people would be like a chef would lead the kitchen staff in preparing daily meals and arranging special events.

To be a manager of the mysteries is a difficult proposition. By definition, the word mystery means “the private counsel of God” or “the reality that transcends our understanding.”[9] So to be stewards of the mystery, we must be attentive to the will of the master, the will we find in scripture of God, in the life of Jesus, and in the calling of the Holy Spirit.

Again from “The Princess Bride,” the story continues, “[Buttercup] was amazed to discover that when he was saying ‘As you wish’, what he meant was, ‘I love you.’” I return to this because I want to redraw the analogy in the light of our Gospel reading instead of Paul’s letter. As the epistle says, we are called to answer the Lord saying “As You Wish,” but more often than not, we ask God what we will eat or what we will drink. We are called to say, “As you wish,” but even the Lord knows our tendency is to say “we wish” instead.

There is joy in their relationship though. As Buttercup matures, as she learns more about her Westley, “She was amazed to discover that when he was saying ‘As you wish’, what he meant was, ‘I love you.’” The movie continues, “And even more amazing was the day she realized she truly loved him back.”

It is the Lord who constantly tells us “I love you,” when all our sinful nature wants to hear is “as you wish.” It is a shame that all too often our calls and our prayers deal with the superficial worries of life when we are called to strive for the kingdom of God and his righteousness. When we concern ourselves with the work and the mysteries of God, acting as servants and stewards, we act as if we truly love God back. When this happens, we are promised that all these things, the everyday things, will be given as well.

And I don’t think these things will come as some sort of magic reward. The things that will be given to us won’t fall like manna from heaven. They will come from the person sitting right next to you; from neighbors; and in the smiling face of a stranger. The things which will satisfy our worries will come in the grace and peace of our Lord Jesus Christ reflected in the eyes, the hearts, the souls of our friends and neighbors.

We receive great things from people we have never met through the work we do to provide school supplies to the needy children of Carroll County and thanks from those we may never meet who receive assistance through the Loaves and Fishes Foodbank. We receive thanks in the smile of a stranger we show kindness on the streets. We are blessed when we do justice, love kindness, and walk humbly with God.

We receive the blessings of others, as others receive the blessings we give them. Through the power of the Holy Spirit, the grace of God multiplies these blessings beyond what we could ever do ourselves. As we deal with the worries of the kingdom of God, our earthly worries have the tendency to be taken care of along the way.

As I said earlier, we are called to a radical new priority, we are called to work for the things of the kingdom of God first, and then we deal with what comes. When we strive for this inbreaking of the kingdom of heaven on earth, this touch of God’s righteousness in our lives and the lives of others, when we touch the world like this, the world returns the touch. In the way of glory and light; what goes around, comes around; for the glory of the Lord and the good of all creation.

So let us act in ways that are pleasing to God, let live as the LORD requires, doing justice, loving kindness, and walking humbly with our God. By doing God’s work on earth, we participate in the kingdom of heaven which is constantly coming on earth. And by doing God’s work through Jesus Christ our Lord, we prepare for the eternal coming of the kingdom on earth.

[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meher_Baba, retrieved on May 22, 2008.
[2] McFerrin, Bobby, Meher Baba, “Don’t Worry, Be Happy.” ProbNoBlem Music, BMI, 1988.
[3] Search ran on lyricsdir.com, using the search parameter “don’t worry be happy” on May 22, 2008.
[4] Next Generation
[5] Fight the Power
[6] The Music of Business
[7] “Myanmar concedes to access ahead of donor meeting,” http://kevxml.windstream.net/_1_2LBVTO10YSZRW6__wind.main/apnws/story.htm?kcfg=apart&sin=D90S6G5O0&qcat=intl&ran=24784&feed=ap&top=1, retrieved May 25, 2008.
[8] “‘Disaster fatigue’ leads to drop in giving” http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5gswBRTjuCUzisdb0yHO306EmoDuAD90OSC000, retrieved on May 22, 2008.
[9] “Musthrion” Entry, A Greek—English Lexicon of the New Testament and Other Early Christian Literature, Revised and Edited by Frederick William Danker, Third Edition. Based on Walter Bauer's Griechisch-deutsches Wörterbuch zu den Schriften des Neuen Testaments und der frühchristlichen Literatur, sixth edition, ed. Kurt Aland and Barbara Aland, with Viktor Reichmann and on previous English editions by W.F.Arndt, F.W.Gingrich, and F.W.Danker., Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Sunday, May 18, 2008

The Fullness of God

This sermon was heard at the First Presbyterian Church in Berryville, Arkansas on Sunday May 18, 2008, Trinity Sunday.

Genesis 1:1-2:4a
Psalm 8
2Corinthians 13:11-13
Matthew 28:16-20

May the words of my mouth and the meditations of our hearts be acceptable to you, O Lord, our rock and our redeemer. Amen

Theodore Roosevelt was the 26th President of the United States. Since he died before any of us was born, all that we know about him comes from what we learned in American History or heard from our parents and grandparents. He was truly the late 19th–early 20th Century version of the American Renaissance man. In his public life, he was a statesman, politician, president and public figure. In his life in the American West, he was a sportsman, hunter, explorer and soldier. His letters to his children show him as a winsome, lovable, gentle father, husband and family man. If we didn’t know, we might think that these are three different people, but we know him as one particular person.

You see where I’m going with this on Trinity Sunday, don’t you. Roosevelt in his way was three in one. Each one of these portraits was true to who Roosevelt was. We know enough from each one of them to know something. But even when we put them all together, we still don't know everything there is to know about who he was.[1]

I’m having trouble getting a handle on Trinity Sunday, especially since our gospel reading, the Great Commission, is perhaps the most evangelistic reading in the Gospel. So on this Trinity Sunday, what do we say about the Trinity?

Let’s begin here; the word “Trinity” is not found in scripture. It’s a theological term. It’s a way people describe God based on the witness of scripture. One of my theological dictionaries calls the Trinity “The coexistence of Father, Son, and Holy Spirit in the unity of the Godhead. While not a biblical term, ‘trinity’ represents the crystallization of New Testament teaching.”[2] That’s as good as any place to start.

The trinitarian formula used most frequently in our worship, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, is found in scripture. It was in today’s readings from 2Corinthians and Matthew. In 2Corinthians it is a blessing, a benediction to the benefit of the recipient. As we prepare to leave the sanctuary, I use this same benediction. In Matthew, it is used to describe the one God in three Persons we worship as we welcome new members into the community in the waters of baptism.

Of course, this formula is not without its critics. As humanity has explored the diverse possibilities for trinitarian images, there is a temptation to try to bring the mystery of God under our control.[3]

Some say it is gender specific; too male, not enough female. Even though we confess that the First Person of the Trinity is a most pure spirit without body, parts, or passions;[4] people get touchy about the maleness or femaleness of God. The quantity of masculine words to identify God in scripture only adds to the controversy.

Others note that people whose fathers weren’t present or were abusive have difficulty seeing God as the figure of a good Father, father with a capital “F.” I can’t disagree with this, after all, earthly fathers are a sin-soaked people; just like everyone else. But unfortunately, our earthly perceptions of fathers infect our perception of God the Father who we confess is infinite in being and perfection.[5]

Another issue with the history and theology of the Trinity is that some considered Jesus the Christ and the Holy Spirit to be secondary deities, subordinate to the First Person of the Trinity. But the church affirms that Jesus and the Spirit are not some lackey or servant gods to a supposedly supreme God when in truth all three persons of God are equal to one another.

Additionally, some have renamed the persons of the Trinity based on what we think are their usual roles. The most common of these is “Creator, Redeemer, and Sustainer.” This isn’t good because it tries to cubby-hole the works of God into a specific person of God. This is not the nature of the Triune God. For example, our Genesis passage this morning speaks directly to the Spirit’s role in creation as the wind that swept across the face of the waters. Our Psalm sings of God the Great I AM as the one who protects and sustains us.

All three persons of God create, redeem, sustain, and so much more. We need to remember that naming the Triune God by roles hides the truth of the scriptural witness and the nature of the fullness of God.

Our human efforts to tame the names of God have helped humanity homogenize God into compartments based on our perceptions of what God does. It has helped us put God into a hierarchy that would make a business tycoon proud. It has helped us infect the glory of God by our individual perceptions. By speaking of the Three Persons of God in these ways, in a very human way, we limit God. But the Triune God is not contained by human frailty.

Two years ago, the General Assembly voted to accept a report on this issue,[6] a Presbyterian look at the Trinity. It included this great truth: “Jesus Christ and the Holy Spirit are, together with God the Father, fully and eternally God. As the Nicene Creed affirms, Jesus Christ is ‘God from God, Light from Light, true God from true God,’ and the Holy Spirit is to be worshiped and glorified as ‘the Lord, the giver of life.’”[7]

All three persons of the Triune God are eternal and equal. As the Triune God, the three persons cannot be separated from one another yet they are distinct from one another.

Now, if you think this is beginning to sound more like three Gods than one God in three persons, I can’t blame you. Perhaps one of the most important things we can say about the Trinity is that the concept of “Trinity” is a model, a way of explaining the mystery of God.

The PC(USA) Trinity Report puts it this way, “The mystery of the Trinity is an open and radiant mystery. It is the mystery of the truth that God is holy, abundant, overflowing love both in relationship with us and in all eternity. We meet God’s threefold love in astonishing faithfulness of the Holy One of Israel, in the costly grace given to us in Jesus Christ our Savior, and in the new life in communion with God and others that has come to us in the gift of the Holy Spirit.”[8]

The best way I have found of describing how to imagine the Trinity comes from the Swiss theologian Karl Barth who said “in it we are speaking not of three divine I’s, but thrice of the one divine I.”[9] There is one divine presence who has been shown to us in three distinct persons, shown to us in scripture, and still being shown to us today by grace. God in three persons is diverse, and in one, the Triune God is united.

The question becomes “What do we do with this knowledge?

One of the places we can find the answer to this question is in our Prayer for Illumination:

God, whose fingers sculpt sun and moon
and curl the baby’s ear;
spirit, brooding over the chaos
before the naming of the day;
Savior, sending us to the earth’s ends
with water and words:
startle us with the grace, love, and communion
of your unity and diversity,
that we may live to the praise of your majestic name.[10]

Excepting the prayer’s creeping modalism, it gives us an important clue. There are two distinct motions to this prayer, remembering what we know about the one who creates us and showing how we are to respond to God in praise and to creation in love and service.

The love of the Triune God overflows from the relationship of the three persons. We were created to share in that love, that wonder, that joy. We can’t repay God for the love we are shown; so what we must do, all we can do, is love in return. Love God and love one another in word and in deed.

When we claim the overflowing love of the Triune God we are called to respond. “[The doctrine of the Trinity] must be put into practice in our everyday life. It has its roots in the proclamation of the gospel and in the church’s life in prayer.”[11]

And as our reading from Matthew teaches, we follow the command to make disciples; sharing this love by going into the world, baptizing in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching obedience to everything the Lord has commanded.

This is a daunting command, but with this command we are given the assurance that Jesus, the Son of God and the Son of Man, will be with us to the end of the age. Rely on this and rely on the overflowing love in the fullness of the Triune God Almighty, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.

[1] Homiletics Online, attributed to Harry Emerson Fosdick with an editorial contribution, http://www.homileticsonline.com/subscriber/illustration_search.asp?item_topic_id=902, retrieved May 16, 2008.
[2] “Trinity,” Interpreter’s Dictionary of the Bible
[3] Office of Theology and Worship, PC(USA), “The Trinity: God’s Love Overflowing.” PC(USA): Louisville, KY, 2004,, lines 354-355
[4] Westminster Confession of Faith, Chapter II, Paragraph 1. In the PC(USA) Book of Confessions this is found at 6.011.
[5] Ibid.
[6] Note that I wrote “accepted” and not “approved.” Because of the controversial nature of this report the General Assembly of the PC(USA) did not approve this report but instead voted to accept it.
[7] Ibid, Office of Theology and Worship, lines 217-220.
[8] Ibid. lines 245-249.
[9] Barth, Karl, “Church Dogmatics.” Volume I.1.Edinburgh: T & & Clark, 1975, page 351.
[10] Reprinted from Revised Common Lectionary Prayers, Year A, Trinity Sunday, Prayer of Illumination, copyright 2002.
[11] Ibid, Office of Theology and Worship, lines, 483-484.

Sunday, May 11, 2008

The Church Emerges

This sermon was heard at the First Presbyterian Church in Berryville, Arkansas on May 11, 2008, Pentecost Sunday.

Acts 2:1-21
Psalm 104:24-34, 35b
1Corinthians 12:3b-13
John 7:37-39

May the words of my mouth and the meditations of our hearts be acceptable to you, O Lord, our rock and our redeemer. Amen

Since Easter, we have been on a journey exploring the ancient church during the time of the crucifixion, resurrection, and ascension. Today, that journey brings us to the starting point of what we know as the church; the presence, the coming of the Holy Spirit, the Pentecost.

Our reading from John begins as Jesus cries out, “Let anyone who is thirsty come to me, and let the one who believes in me drink.”

Our reading from Acts has a prophecy from the book of Joel, “God declares, that I will pour out my Spirit upon all flesh.”

The Lord promises to pour out the Spirit on all flesh and Jesus cries out for those who believe to come to him. John’s gospel promises the coming of the Holy Spirit, Acts describes the Spirit’s coming.

The Spirit has come, the church is born. From these beginnings, the church emerges. And as it emerges, it does with authority granted by the Lord and empowered by the Holy Spirit. And for the past seven weeks, we have gotten a scriptural image of what the church is, what it should be, and what it can be.

Our readings have pointed us toward a community rooted in the resurrected Christ; the messiah who bore the wounds of pain and death for us; the Shepherd who knows and protects his sheep. The sheep, knowing the Shepherd’s voice, called to come together as a community sharing fellowship, a common meal, and prayer as the family of God.

We are the people who are given a new message of new life, a life that begins with the gift of free grace offered long before the beginning. We are the people called to respond to this glorious gift in faith shown in repentance and baptism.

We are called to worship the Jesus who died and rose and lives today who is the Lord of life, not of death. The Lord who created us, loving us freely, wants us to respond in love, not out of obligation. Since there is no way we can repay the Lord, one of the ways we love God is by loving one another.

Most importantly perhaps, we, as the people of the resurrected Lord have been told to go, see, and tell. We are to share the person and in the work of Jesus Christ our Lord.

In Acts, Luke writes of the coming of the Spirit as a heavenly sound, like the rush of a violent wind. The concept of a heavenly wind isn’t unusual to the Jewish reader; this phrase is found in other places in scripture noting the arrival of the Spirit of God. So when the Spirit comes, it comes with the same power it came with in Genesis when the wind blew across the waters when the Earth was a formless void.

If as one of the three persons of God, the Spirit blows beginning the process of creation, giving the gift of tongues must be a snap.

In Acts the people ask the question, “How is it that we hear, each of us, in our own native language?” People today still ask this question, “How does the gift of tongues work?” In our reading from Acts, this question is never answered.

When the question, “What does this mean?” is asked, this question is answered. Peter speaks telling the assembly “Let this be known to you, listen to what I say.” Peter tells the assembly that how the Lord speaks to them through the power of the Holy Spirit is not nearly as important as the message itself.

The message is simply this, “Everyone who calls on the name of the Lord shall be saved.” This is the message of the Pentecost. This is the message we are given the power and authority to take into the world, “Everyone who calls on the name of the Lord shall be saved.”

So on this, the birthday of the church, what does this message mean to us? What does it mean to us as individuals? What does it mean to us as the body of Christ?

Above all, it means that we have been given the power to do as the disciples did two thousand years ago, we are to share the good news that “Everyone who calls on the name of the Lord shall be saved.” And we have been given the power to do this so that all may understand.

What you don’t know, but I’m about to tell you, is that when I got to this point in the sermon, I had no idea where to go from here. I was looking for some grand words, a wonderful gesture, a stunning illustration; and it just wasn’t there, and I spent days looking.

Oh, don’t get me wrong, I had plenty of words. But of those that made sense, many of them were accusatory without being convicting. I was doing some good blaming, but there was nothing constructive. I was deeply theological, but not terribly practical. Good stuff, but frankly, other than a few professors and maybe a journal editor, who cares about my deep theological epiphanies? But for the love of God and all that’s holy the words I had written just sounded preachy… to me! I couldn’t imagine any of those words were pointing to Christ and moving us toward to the kingdom of heaven.

So, I punted. There were some things I needed to do in the office this morning, so I went to McDonalds and got some coffee and came in to do some worship chores. I changed the paraments to the proper liturgical color, changed the outdoor sign, stuff like that.

As I was putting up the “Happy Mother’s Day” sign, one of the women who worked in the county dispatch office across the street came to work. She looked over at me and said, “So you’re the one who changes the sign!” I replied “Yes I am.” (This wasn’t the time for the Bill Engvall “Here’s Your Sign” snappy comeback.)

She reminded me of a couple of months ago when the sign said, “Ashley, We’re Praying for You.” Of course, we were praying for Ashley here in church. But she told me that they appreciated it because there were two women in the dispatch office named Ashley and they appreciated that someone was praying for them.

This wasn’t the first time that happened because of that sign. While the sign was up, a woman asked me the last name of the Ashley we were praying for. I told her that she was a member of this congregation and that I would keep her last name in confidence. So she asked me if we were praying for Ashley So-and-so and I said no. But then I said that in a way, we were praying for her if she believed we were. The Lord does things with words and prayers that I cannot control.

One little sign, in one little sign four women were blessed and bathed in prayer that I know of! Through that one little sign, one tiny prayer, the Good News of life eternal was being shared in ways I never imagined. My intent was for only one of them, but the Holy Spirit would not be constrained to my little corner of the world or by my intent. The Spirit blows as the Spirit will and we must be ready for where that Spirit takes us.

In my study there is a small picture of the Isenheim Altarpiece in Colmar, Alsace titled “John the Baptist.” by Matthias Grünewald. Karl Barth used this image to inspire him and to serve as one of the goals of his preaching.[1] The central image of this altar piece is Christ on the cross. To his left is John the Baptist in camel hair holding holy writ and pointing to Christ. Barth believed that all good preaching was holding holy writ and pointing to Christ crucified.

This is the message we take into the world. We take Christ crucified into the world. We are to use the power of the Holy Spirit, given to the church on Pentecost so long ago, and use it to point to Jesus who lived and died and conquered death so that we may live. And the Spirit gives us the power to do just that. And by the variety of gifts given for the common good—the good of the church; whether by wisdom or knowledge, by faith or healing or miracles, by prophecy or discernment, by tongues or interpretation of tongues; we are able to take the word into the world saying, “Everyone who calls on the name of the Lord shall be saved.” By this, the church emerges.

[1] Willimon, William, Conversations with Barth on Preaching. Nashville, TN: Abingdon Press, 2006, page 6.

Sunday, May 04, 2008

Call to Life Eternal

This sermon was heard at the First Presbyterian Chruch in Berryville, Arkansas on the Seventh Sunday in Easter, May 4, 2008.

Acts 1:6-14
Psalm 68:1-10, 32-35
1 Peter 4:12-14, 5:6-11
John 17:1-11
May the words of my mouth and the meditations of our hearts be acceptable to you, O Lord, our rock and our redeemer. Amen.

When I was in college, some friends of mine liked to play what we called “The Busy Game.” The game was played whenever we tried to get together to do something. In a day before Palm Pilots, cell phones, and email, my friends would actually take time to discuss who was busiest. “I can’t get together on Thursday because…” and then “Well we can’t do lunch this week because…” and the notorious, “Nope, sorry, got a meeting…” One of my college friends even developed an ulcer, at the age of 20, because she was so busy. I never really liked the game, mainly because I could never win. I was never quite as busy as my friends; most of the time I would rather read, study, or throw darts than be so busy.

The American longshoreman philosopher Eric Hoffer shrewdly observed that “the feeling of being hurried is not usually the result of living a full life and having no time. It is, on the contrary, born of a vague fear that we are wasting our life. When we do not do the one thing we ought to do, we have no time for anything else—we are the busiest people in the world.”[1]

In the end, we all suffered the tyranny of the busy. We did everything we could to fill every free moment of time with an activity to fill our resumes so we could get better jobs, make better contacts to broaden our networks, or whatever we thought would fill our lives with something worthwhile. We did this so well that we had no time for anything of real and lasting importance.

A common thread in our New Testament readings is time. In Acts, we are told that it is not for us to know the time the Father has set. Peter instructs the church to humble themselves before the mighty hand of God so that he may exalt it in due time. In the Gospel Jesus says the hour has come. Time is a part of each of these readings.

In Acts, the disciples ask if this is the time when Jesus will restore the kingdom to Israel. They ask if this is the day, the hour, the moment in time when Jesus will restore the kingdom to Israel. They knew he would restore the kingdom, and he has risen. He has risen indeed. They wanted to know when.

Jesus answers, “It is not for you to know the times or periods that the father has set.” Instead of “times or periods,” the New International Version translates this as “times or dates.” The New American Standard says “times or epochs.” All translation has an element of interpretation, and this is a glaring example of just that. In the Greek, the words used here for “time” and “period" can both be translated as “time,” but they are different kinds of time.

Using the Greek words from the text, Patricia Fortini Brown, distinguishes between these two kinds of time. Kairos is opportunity or an opportune moment and chronos is eternal or ongoing time.[2]

So kairos can mean ages, or eons, or epochs; or an opportune moment. It can also mean “appointed time,” particularly “God’s ordained time.” Chronos is time we find on clocks. Again in Brown’s words, “While [kairos] ... offers hope, [chronos] extends a warning.”[3]

Eternity also has its place in our readings. John’s gospel tells us that Jesus has been given the authority to give eternal life to all whom the Father has given him. Often when people think of eternal life, they think of the life that follows after the end of this one. When our time ends on earth, our eternal time begins with God in heaven. But John’s gospel teaches us that this is not true, not at all.

Jesus says, “And this is eternal life, that they may know you, the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom you have sent.” Eternal life exists without regard to the tyranny of chronological time. Eternal life has nothing to do with our death, on the contrary, it has everything to do with life and how we live it.

It has been said that for Catholics there are “only two things that survive to eternity: our relationship with God and our relationships with each other. Therefore, the things we do with our relationship with God and our relationships with each other are of mutual significance.”[4]
I believe the wisdom of this saying. I believe that eternal life begins here on earth with how we relate to the triune God while we live. I also believe that the quality of our relationships with one another is a reflection of our relationship with the triune God.

The disciples showed this in their response to Jesus’ ascension. It says in Acts that after the ascension “they returned to Jerusalem from the mount called Olivet, which is near Jerusalem, a sabbath day’s journey away. When they had entered the city, they went to the room upstairs where they were staying…All [of them] were constantly devoting themselves to prayer.”

The disciples stayed together, they returned to the upper room. They dedicated themselves to worship and prayer awaiting the power of the Holy Spirit. And after receiving the Spirit, they would become witnesses in Jerusalem, in all Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the earth.

When some say that they seek eternal life, what they mean is that they can’t wait to live with Jesus in the next life. I say that with the glory of this promise there is eternal life long before death. The glory of life eternal begins with the relationship between the Holy Father and his Son Jesus Christ our Lord. It extends to Christ’s relationship with us and our relationship with him. It then is reflected by our relationship with one another and all of creation.

I say “reflected by our relationship with one another and all of creation” because of what Jesus says in our gospel reading. He says, “I am asking on their behalf; I am not asking on behalf of the world, but on behalf of those whom you gave me, because they are yours.” Jesus prays first for the disciples, those who follow him. He prays for them that they may be one as he and his Father are one.

Jesus prays for the church so that during the time of trial that is to come they may be one. In John He prays that the disciples will respond to his death, resurrection, and ascension just as they did in Acts. He prays that they will live the life eternal on earth as it is in heaven because this is what he calls them to do.

The Greek word “ecclesia” is often translated as church or congregation. The roots of the word mean “the ones who are called out.” Friends, the church, the entire body of Christ and especially this part of the body of Christ are called out from the world to be Christ in the world. We are called to be one with one another in Jesus just as he is one with his father.

We are called to live this life together in the warmth of prayer and worship just like the disciples. We are called to go out and meet Jesus in the world just as he called his disciples. We are called to share the Good News of eternal life so that the world may know the only true God and Jesus Christ who himself was sent.

Since Easter Sunday, I have focused on the church and what it means to be the church. We have seen John’s Pentecost and the scars Jesus received in order to save us. We have heard The Message and how we are its witnesses; how we are called to take it into the world. We have heard Peter’s call to the people to repent and be baptized. We have seen Jesus as the Good Shepherd who knows us and calls us all by name.

We learned that we are called to pray for one another because we all need prayer. We have seen and heard the word of Jesus who is the one who is the elect, the one predestined for salvation on our behalf. Above all, we know that we have been called to be the church as the church was called into being two thousand years ago.

Today, we begin to take all of these things with the understanding that we are called to life eternal, lived in the joy and the wonder that we may know the only true God and Jesus Christ who himself was sent. We are the ecclesia, the ones called out from the world to live the eternal life. We are also the ones called out of the church and into the world to share the Good News of Jesus Christ. But that’s for next week.

[1] Bob Buford, Halftime. Grand Rapids, Mich.: Zondervan Publishing House, 1994, 80
[2] Stewart Brand, The Clock of the Long Now. New York: Basic Books, 1999, 9.
[3] Ibid.
[4] Father Luke Dysinger of Saint Andrew's Abbey in an interview with Bruce Langford, Pathways, 6, March-April 1997, 10.