Saturday, March 31, 2012

Triumph to Tragedy

Focus: Holy Week Worship
Function: To help people consider the events of passion week, worship and be connected to God.
Form: Storytelling

Intro:
I love to imagine the events of Palm Sunday, nearly 2,000 years ago.
I picture an early Spring, a warm day, clear skies and an huge crowd of well-wishers who have genuine and real hope.
I envy those people who were the only people in history to be living with, walking with, eating with and rejoicing with Jesus, their Savior.
We know that these were a people who were hard-pressed by the Roman powers that have occupied their lands and have imposed taxes so heavy on them that for most of them, they have little to eat, little to wear, and very few comforts. All the rest of their income is being sent away to a government whose claims to be giving them “peace.” But the “peace” they experience is for them to submit to this bondage, or face death. And it isn't just a clean, relatively painless death, but it is death on a Roman Cross, one of the worse tortures that mankind has ever invented. The empire said “follow our `peace,' or die ugly.”
And yet, we see Jesus coming to them. They know that Jesus is something completely different than their own religious leaders.
Jesus loves them. Jesus heals them. Jesus cares for them. The rumors about His power have now come true because for this crowd, just a few days before, in a city just a few miles away, Jesus has given back life to a man who had been dead four days. In so doing, Jesus signs his own death warrant.
They may not have had email, telephones, Facebook, or twitter to spread the news, but let me tell you, the gossip traveled fast. The Religious leaders who felt threatened by Jesus were all but in a panic about Jesus. They didn't have an answer for the fact that He was performing some pretty spectacular miracles.
Moses was born to lead Israel. But he was only human and he messed up. At 40 years of age, he took matters into his own hands, killed an Egyptian and had to flee for his life. The Jews knew who he was, but when he was 40, they rejected him as leader. So now he was gone, out of sight for 40 years. And God sends him back to deliver God's people from their slavery. God told Moses “I have seen the suffering of my people and it is time for me to do something about it.”
God sees our suffering.
This time the people were not likely to reject their leader so quickly. They saw Jesus as a new Moses. Even Moses prophesied that another great prophet would come. A prophet who was equal with Moses in power and authority. He would be a prophet who would establish a new covenant with God and the Jews.
The people were excited. Jesus came at just the time that the prophet Daniel said He would come. Their hope was renewed.
And on that, as I imagine it, clear, spring-time Sunday morning, a week before their most important festival and crowds were beginning to fill the city from all over the world, on that morning the Savior rides into town and the people come out in droves. Finally, they allow themselves a chance to experience hope.
Hope is a powerful thing. It can take people through the worst circumstances. And these people were in a bad place.
To them, maybe, the years of suffering were over. Just as Moses demonstrated God's power against a nation that had enslaved the Jewish people for 400 years, Jesus was going to do the same thing. That was their hope.
I wonder if they hoped that Jesus would appear before Pilate and tell him to let his people go?
Did they imagine that God would send the 10 plagues on the cities of the Roman occupation and leave the Jews exempt? Would God bring down the entire Roman empire?
I can imagine the excitement and speculation in the buzz among the people that day.
How sad that the people did not know of the sinister plot against Jesus!
It was a sinister plot brought directly on Jesus, and therefore indirectly on them, by the people who were entrusted with their care.
As always, we see that a mob can be easily swayed and manipulated. History has shown that time and time again.
The crowd that day was shouting out “Hosanna!”
The direct translation is: “Lord, Save us”
They knew that those cries were direct rebellion against the Roman oppressors. And they had enough hope to risk it.
How sad. They were betrayed by their own leaders who were more concerned for their own power and wealth than the welfare of the people they were entrusted to protect.
Of course, we know that it was all in God's plan.
The triumph of that moment was real, but the Salvation that was to come was spiritual, not political.
And on the human side of it all, it became a tragedy.
Jesus was betrayed, then He was abandoned, and then He was crucified.
The mob, the fickle mob, cried out “Lord, Save us” on Sunday and then cried out “Crucify Him” on Friday.
And that is what happened on passion week, the week we -celebrate is too strong a word, the week we remember in worship this week.
Last week we mentioned the significance of the Lenten fast. It is not a command and it is only something you should do if you feel compelled to do. It doesn't make us better Christians.
But the idea is that Jesus suffered. And Jesus calls us to take up our crosses as well.
Holy Week provides several opportunities to do that.
First. I hope you have been doing some sort of devotional every day. (HOLD UP) Here is the Lenten devotional guide. If you have laxed on using it during Lent, try to make sure you use it this week.
I believe that it is important that we experience a connection to Jesus and what He has done or us. And that takes some sort of discipline. It takes intentional action.
There were two smaller miracles that week. They were miracles of providence and miracles of preparation. On Palm Sunday, Jesus told two of the disciples to head into town and take a baby donkey that would be tied up there. If anyone questions them, just tell them “The master needs it.” Apparently God had prepared someone's heart to lend Jesus the donkey.
And on the night of the last supper, the night Jesus was betrayed a similar incident happened. Jesus told two disciples to show up at a certain house and do the final preparations for the passover feast in the upper room. And the miracle was that God had laid it on the heart of that person beforehand to prepare the place.
God calls our heart to Jesus this week. And our intentional action prepares the way for it.
This happened the night Jesus was sold for 30 pieces of silver.
And a re-creation of that event will happen here this Thursday.
I want to beg you to come, but that would be manipulative.
So, let me strongly encourage you to come here for Thursday night's worship. Let me call you to intentional action to connect to this worship service that is designed to placed us right there in the room with Jesus. It is designed to connect us with Him.
It is open to everyone. It is a beautiful and solemn ceremony. It is a chance for us to act out what must have been in the minds of the disciples that night.
We will begin with a chance to wash each other's feet. Men on one side, women on the other.
When that is over, we will enjoy a simple meal of meat, bread, and broth. It is a symbolic meal. It is a form of the ancient passover meal that the Jews celebrated.
And then, we partake of the bread and the wine, or in our case, juice and bread, we call this “Full Communion.” It is full, or complete, because when Jesus speaks these words in John 13, it doesn't come out well in the translation, but the promise is this, “Happy are you, when you do ALL of these things.” In our obedience to scripture, we too, practice communion in this fashion.
Some people will say, “washing someone else's feet seems sort of grotesque.” It does. But, it is also a privilege.

Love and Lent

How my faith was formed in the midst of betrayal
Mar 17, 2012 by Carol Howard Merritt
"I saw him in the parking lot with her. I think he wanted to get caught," my mom's hushed voice bleeds with betrayal. Unlike most gossip, this conversation doesn't have the quality of a listener, hungry for salacious trivialities. The whole house feels on edge, as I sit on the couch in an adjoining room, straining to hear.
I'm fifteen years old. I missed church that Sunday morning, but I'm catching up with what happened in the service through my mom's one-sided phone conversations. The instant mom hangs up the phone it rings again. She's in a t-shirt and shorts, walking back and forth with bare feet on the cork kitchen tile, reciting assorted facts and collecting others.
The bits and pieces come together. Our pastor had an affair and confessed it in his sermon. He stood up in front of the church and let the gathered members know that he had succumbed to temptation, but he was ready to just "move on."
The shocked congregation is not so ready to just move on. They want details. They demand to know exactly what had happened, how long, and with whom. The elders and the pastor schedule a meeting for that evening. As the sun goes down, my father leaves for the gathering of leaders.
My mother paces the kitchen a few more times. Instead of grabbing the phone again, she picks up a big basin and places our plushest guest towels inside of it. Then she yells out to the quiet house, "Carol! Let's go!"
The warm Florida night swells with the sound of crickets singing and waves crashing as we drive for about a half an hour, over a bridge, from the beach to the mainland, to our pastor's home. When we pull up to driveway, the house is dark. My determined mom still gathers the basin and towels and rings the doorbell.
I don't remember being let in. I just recall entering and seeing Margaret, our pastor's wife, sitting on a chair in her living room. She remains motionless in the dark room, in her beautiful home, staring at her lavish, white carpet, breathing deeply.
My mother takes the basin, walks into her friend's kitchen, and fills it with warm water. She carries it to Margaret's feet, taking off Margaret's shoes, she cradles her soles as if they are the most precious things in the world. Without a word, mom puts them in the water and washes them.
Margaret begins to cry and it doesn't take long before the tears smear all of our faces. Mom takes Margaret's feet out and dries them on the soft towels. Throughout the entire ritual, we don't talk, but we know what's being said. I even understand the depth of it, at my young age. Margaret is about to face some of the worst public betrayal, as people began to pick apart the indiscretions of her husband.
Privately, people make extremely difficult decisions to work through a spouse's unfaithfulness everyday. When it happens publicly, the betrayal magnifies. The most intimate facts of this affair would be drawn out for everyone. Margaret's character will even be questioned. And people will whisper about how they would never put up with such a thing. Some will even wonder if Margaret is the reason. Perhaps she was too frigid, and he had to find love elsewhere.
In the midst of the painful exposure, Margaret would sort out what she was going to do about her marriage. While hearing more details than she ever wanted to, she would have to evaluate everything in her life--her friends, the lies, her reputation, her pride, her children, and her financial situation.
Mom wanted Margaret to know one thing in the midst of it. Margaret would be cherished, even to the end of her toes.
My faith was formed that evening, not by the bitter betrayals, but in the love of the women. I think about that night each Lent, as we walk toward that treacherous path with Jesus. I recall how Mary took Jesus' feet, baptized them with her tears and perfume. She prepared Jesus for his death, not just with the costly ointments, but with the ritual that let him know that no matter what sort of trials he would face, he would do it realizing the love that soaked his skin.
Jesus said that whenever we spoke of the good news, we would do it in memory of her. So as I walk along this season, trudging the journey with the man of sorrows, I remember the reality of betrayal, but I tell the story with her memory. I think of all the times that the love had the ability to bathe toxic days and allow us to face injustice and cruelty.
It may be gross to some. To others, the harder part is not washing someone else's feet, but allowing our own feet to be washed. It takes genuine humility to allow another person to serve you. But Jesus gave us an example. We all know how important the bread and cup is and I want to remind us all that Jesus places similar importance on these other two rituals, the agape meal and foot-washing during the communion service.
Let me invite you to this service. I believe it is very important. I believe it is as important as Christmas and Easter worship services. The reason it is important is because it gives the worshiper the opportunity to be there. We sang that song “Were you there?” this morning. There is something special about re-creating those events that makes the Passion of Jesus come alive to us.
I know that for some, it is physically impossible to bend down. And for some there are other reasons why they feel that they cannot do the foot washing part of the service. Do not let that stop you from coming and participated in both the Triumph and the Tragedy of Christ. If you can't you will not be judged. All you have to do is simply back away from the table and we will respect your wishes.
But please come and join with us in this beautiful and solemn worship service.


Sunday, March 25, 2012

What is Fasting?


Text: Isaiah 58
Focus: Fasting
Function: To help people understand the importance of this discipline.
Form: Topical Study

Intro: I hope you have enjoyed, learned from and have been challenged by our 3 months of looking at the basics of Christianity and Christian practices. Today is our final lesson and we are studying the Christian discipline of fasting.
I know that many of you are currently on a 40 day Lenten fast. This year, my sacrifice is Chocolate, and it is funny just how much a person can crave something that they do not need!
Lent sacrifice. I was never raised with the tradition of observing Lent, practicing Advent disciplines and etc. It is important to understand that Lent sacrifices, Lenten fasts, any kind of fast, does not make one a better Christian than others.
In Luke 5:33, we read how the Pharisees tried to make themselves superior to Jesus disciples because they practiced a regular and visible fast.
Fasting isn't commanded, but the concept of fasting is throughout the Bible. And most often, it is not so much a commandment as an assumption. If you are a believer, this is something assumed of you.
So, it is good for us to look into a practice that the Bible assumes we will do.
What is a fast?
  • An attitude of the heart
    • Isaiah 58 about justice
      • But it uses the discipline of fasting to teach the importance
      • It is about “being religious” versus having an heart that wants to love God and His passions.
    • Not an outside practice -it moves the heart.
    • A symbol of our desire to align ourselves with God's ways instead of ours
      • We have looked at the way Jesus symbolically lived His life
      • Fasting is a symbol of a change and desire here (point to chest) in our hearts.
  • Giving something up for a period of time:
    • Ranges from everything to something small
      • Jesus and Moses fasted 40 days.
      • Apparently, Daniel fasted for 21 years.
        • It began in the first year of Darius (Daniel 11:1) and it ended in the 3rd Year of Cyrus. (Daniel 10:1)
        • He only ate simple food. No meat, no wine and no seasonings (Daniel 10:3).
          • Although he was the second most powerful man in the kingdom
          • He was rich, wealthy and had access to the finest things that money could buy, including food.
          • He choose to eat simply as a form of fast.
          • He too was fasting for his homeland.
          • I understand that in some monasteries, the monks fasted speech.
            • Not to make light, but silent monk joke (they could speak every 7 years and just two words. After 7 years, a monk said: “Food cold” so they moved him closer to the kitchen at dinnertime. 7 years later he said: “Bed hard” so they gave him a new feather bed. 7 years later he said: “I quit” and the abbot said, “It doesn't surprise me, you have done nothing but complain since you got here.”)
    • Lenten fast is also that symbol
Why Fast?
  • It is a practice assumed by Scripture
    • Not specifically commanded at any one point in time, but it is assumed that we will do it.
  • Fasting reminds us of God's sovereignty
    • Jesus said “man lives by God's word”
    • It reminds us that man lives by God, not by what He can accomplish
      • It reminds us to live by faith in God.
      • Fasting then, becomes a symbol of our faith.
    • This is an important discipline.
      • Jesus tells the Devil the importance of His fast. He refers to the story:
        • They were hungry when God sent the Manna
        • God wanted them to rely on Him.
  • MOST PEOPLE FAST BECAUSE THEY HAVE A SPECIFIC PRAYER REQUEST
    • Daniel was a prophet, exiled in a foreign land and he wanted assurance about the future.
    • So, he fasted in order to understand the purpose of God.
  • Fasting places us in a position of humility
    • We are symbolically telling God that we depend on Him.
    • We acknowledge that God is the one who provides our life and health.
  • Fasting reminds us of our connection with God.
    • For me, every time I feel that hunger pain, I remember that at this specific time, I am setting myself apart to know God, or understand His purpose.
    • The Lenten fast is unique in the fact that we attempt to bring ourselves into fellowship with Jesus who knew that He was going to go to Jerusalem and face such terrible pain.
      • Jesus willingly suffered for us.
      • So, we join in fellowship with His suffering by fasting.
      • Some work hard to forgo any pleasure
      • Others choose an item to symbolize it.
What does fasting accomplish?
  • Dependence
    • That is what Jesus did
    • It proves to ourselves that we are not led by desire, but by God.
  • Surrender
    • The longer it gets, the more we begin to understand what we are fasting for.
    • We want it to mean something, therefore we do not want it to be a waste of time or meaningless.
    • The more we realize that we can do without and still be happy and have a sense of peace, the better able we are to surrender to God's will.
    • The more willing we are to accept that God knows what is best for us.
  • A sense of purpose
    • Daniel, although the ruler of Babylon, used his fast to remind himself that he was first and foremost God's prophet and knowing God was more important than anything else to him.
    • And again, the hunger pain, the craving reminds us that at this particular moment, we are on mission, we are on point.
Is Fasting magic? Is God obligated by our fast?
  • No
  • God is never obligated to bend to our will
    • My experience is that fasting bends us to God's will
    • Isaiah 58 is an important chapter about the connection between being spiritual and caring for the poor. That is the point of the chapter.
    • However, the underlying spiritual principle about fasting is that fasting may start out as a request for a specific blessing from God and in the process, God refines our requests to our concern for others and the way it affects everyone.
  • But I have seen miracles happen
    • The biggest miracle is the miracle of all of a sudden, hunger pains being replaced by a time of prayer and connection to God.
      • It is a spiritual discipline with spiritual results. We somehow know, or understand, what Jesus meant when He said that man lives by the Word of God.
      • I don't know how to better describe it, but it does sharpen our spiritual focus.
      • That is probably why most major religions of the world practice fasting.
    • We also see specific answers to prayer.
      • Daniel wanted to know the future.
      • In the chapter we read that his answer was delaying for these 21 weeks of years.
      • There is a real story in the chapter about spiritual warfare and the powers of both good and evil that influence cultures. Read it, it is fascinating.
How does it change us?
  • An attitude of the heart
  • It helps us sort out what is important.
  • It reminds us that we live by faith

Sunday, March 18, 2012

Courageous Disciples


Focus: Doing Justice
Function: Justice is part of discipleship
Form: Topical study

Intro: Tim Harvey, the Moderator for this year's Annual Conference gave an interesting description on Friday of what it means to be Brethren. He referred to us as: “courageous disciples.” Courageous disciples. Six years ago I did a two-year study with five other pastors on what it takes to lead churches into what is necessary to become disciple forming churches.
During that study and in all the literature we read, the words “Courage” and “Disciple” were never mentioned together. We did speak of other problems facing the Church today. We spoke of the competition we have in getting people to work at the programming of the church when they have busy schedules focused around school or sporting activities, vacation homes, and etc.
We are torn between so many commitments and sometimes the church comes up on the losing end of commitment.
Again, I am not going to lay a burden of guilt or shame upon you. I was greatly taken back by moderator Harvey's perspective when he spoke about creating courageous disciples.
And again, when we studied about making disciples, we neglected the concept of “courageous disciples.”
What is a disciple? A disciple is one who follows the lifestyle and teaching of a particular teacher. In our case that teacher is Jesus.
I preached last week that Jesus was homeless because he chose a symbolic lifestyle. Jesus is not calling us to be homeless, but He is calling us to place him above our homes. So, more than anything, however, Jesus is calling us to be courageous disciples.
How would you describe the term: courageous disciple?
Good. There aren't many ideas. Let us keep them in mind.
Do we think of courage when we think of disciple?
Generally not.
When I think of the term disciple, I think of obedience. But let us look again at this mornings Scripture.
Let me read it to you from The Message:
1-3God's orders: "Go to the royal palace and deliver this Message. Say, 'Listen to what God says, O King of Judah, you who sit on David's throne—you and your officials and all the people who go in and out of these palace gates. This is God's Message: Attend to matters of justice. Set things right between people. Rescue victims from their exploiters. Don't take advantage of the homeless, the orphans, the widows. Stop the murdering!
13-17"Doom to him who builds palaces but bullies people,
   who makes a fine house but destroys lives,
Who cheats his workers
   and won't pay them for their work,
Who says, 'I'll build me an elaborate mansion
   with spacious rooms and fancy windows.
I'll bring in rare and expensive woods
   and the latest in interior decor.'
So, that makes you a king—
   living in a fancy palace?
Your father got along just fine, didn't he?
   He did what was right and treated people fairly,
And things went well with him.
   He stuck up for the down-and-out,
And things went well for Judah.
   Isn't this what it means to know me?"
         God's Decree!
"But you're blind and brainless.
   All you think about is yourself,
Taking advantage of the weak,
   bulldozing your way, bullying victims."
This prophet is certainly an example of a courageous disciple. These words that he spoke placed his life in jeopardy. The scene is classic, he appears before the king of Judah, and without any compromise, he points his finger at him and tells him that his materialism is bringing him under the judgment of God.
And the prophet is smart, he knows the history of this king in the king before him, the king's father.
I love this passage of Scripture, because since when I was four years old, and I trusted Jesus to be my Savior, I have always used the expression, that now that I am a believer: “I know the Lord.”
Knowing Jesus. Do you know the Lord? I preach the family of God all the time. When I give an invitation to become a Christian, almost always I make the invitation to join God's family. When I speak of Holy Week and the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ, I always word it that “Jesus has made the way for us to come back into God's family.” I empathise that because it speaks to the privilege of “Knowing God.” Knowing Jesus is a real joy.
I love the phrase: “Jesus knows me and I know him.” It reflects the joy of our Christian faith. When we see a beautiful sunset, or sing the words from the great hymn: How Great Thou Art, We think to ourselves: “what a privilege and joy it is to know this great God.”
What a shock it was to me about 10 years ago when during my daily devotion of reading the entire Scripture through at least once a year the words to this passage jumped out at me.
God said: “this is what it means to know me.” It shocked me because I realized that God didn't fill me up with His Holy Spirit in order to make me feel good. There is the privilege of responsibility to continue Jesus' mission when we know Him.
In this passage, God does not say that knowing Him meant simply that I had a strange warming inside of my heart. Often times, I get a strange warming in my heart, especially when I am praying, and sometimes when I am reading the Scripture, and sometimes when I'm singing hymns and praise songs, and sometimes when I'm hearing the testimonies of people like you.
There are many times when we sense the leading, moving, and empowering of the Holy Spirit. Those are wonderful times to me. It is part of Scripture, the promise of God, the seal of our salvation, that the Holy Spirit will literally live inside every one who believes in Jesus.

Ephesians 4:30

The Message (MSG)
30Don't grieve God. Don't break his heart. His Holy Spirit, moving and breathing in you, is the most intimate part of your life, making you fit for himself. Don't take such a gift for granted.
The indwelling of the Holy Spirit is real. In 2 Corinthians 4:7 it is called “a treasure hidden in human vessels.”
The feeling is great. It is a feeling of complete love and forgiveness. That is why, for example, in contemporary worship services they can focus on one line of a chorus over and over again. The worship leader and the congregation is caught up in the ecstasy of emotion as they realize that they are in direct communion with God.
But it is important to realize that the ecstasy is not what it means to know God.
God says it right here in His Word: “knowing me means that we spend our lives ensuring justice, fairness, pleading the cause of those less fortunate as a priority.”
This prophet was bold to say that. I picture him standing before that King with his hand extended in this finger-pointing. I picture the scene of the King who cared for no one but himself fuming in anger, and I picture the King's guard ready to run this prophet through with their spears.
Not only did he condemn the King, but he made a comparison between him and his father, in which he paints his father in a better light.
The prophet was not condemning the riches and the blessing of God given to the King's father. He tells him, financially your father did well. But he was also passionate about doing justice. God does indeed bless people who serve him. The king's father made sure that the poor and the oppressed that he was charged to care for were treated justly and fairly. And when that happened, every one prospered, not just the wealthy.
I am not talking current American politics here. What I am speaking to is the courage of the prophet to speak out against the injustices that were happening in his time.
And again, about 10 years ago, when I realized what this passage was actually saying about what it means is to “know the Lord,” my heart again began to regain the passionate way that Jesus addressed the people, the rich, the poor, the powerful, the weak, the religious, and the sinners when he constantly begged them to love everyone, even their enemies, as much as they love themselves.
I am often reminded, that although God's purpose for Jesus on the cross, was and is to pay the penalty for our sins, that Jesus was nailed to the cross by people, not God. And those people nailed Jesus to the cross, not because Jesus gave his money to the poor, but because Jesus, by becoming poor, condemned their selfish lives. He didn't just give money to the poor, He became one of them. And, as we mentioned it was a symbolic gesture that proves the point that Godliness does indeed lead to contentment.
They killed Him for it. They killed him to silence his message of loving others and living for the good of others as well as themselves. Jesus died to free us from our sins, but they killed him because he confronted their selfish lives.
This king got off track. How do we know that the practices, the doctrines, and the teachings that we emphasize are on the right track?
Let us look again at our first Scripture. It is a summary of the perspectives that we need to focus on in order to be considered courageous disciples.
He has shown you, O man – or woman, what God expects from you. Three things: first something to do: Justice. Second, a way of responding to love: Mercy. And third, a way to conduct our actions, walk humbly with God.
It is a great three-point sermon. I love the fact that it begins with “do justice.” It is always easier to preach when the preacher gets the chance to give people steps with which they can take action.
God spoke to the King and Jeremiah: “doing justice proves that you know me.” We will never fail in our Christian discipleship when we take upon ourselves the prophets mantle of doing justice. That is why many of you marched with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. That is why many of you are and were prepared to help children during times of disaster. That is why you are also generous in your giving to the churches food bank. Thank you.
Loving mercy. How do you feel when the bad guy in the movie meets a terrible end? Most often, I am relieved. Not that the violence, but at the justice. However, I constantly remind myself, that vengeance belongs to God and not me. I know that because God loves us, his justice is and will be fair, pure, and correct.
The thing about loving mercy that is so important to us as Christians is that God gave mercy to us, not because we earned it, but because he loves giving mercy. I believe that the most heroic act of Jesus, probably his most courageous statement, was his prayer for the men who murdered him, when he said: “Father forgive them for they do not know what they are doing.” The fact it is, God loves giving mercy. When we give mercy, we are true disciples. It takes courage to give mercy. It takes courage to forgive.
Walk humbly with God. Again, this goes back to knowing the Lord. When we know someone, we walk with them, we talk with them, we eat with them, we live in communion with them.
What is good and what is important for a man to do? Walk every day with God. Walk every day knowing, that the Holy Spirit is inside of you. Don't grieve him by continuing to send, and don't count him out of your life by shrinking back. And again, this takes courage.
Be courageous. Be humble when you are courageous. But be courageous. When you see injustice, speak out. You do not have to listen to filthy jokes. You do not have to laugh at racist comments. You do not have to nod your head in agreement when you hear someone gossiping about someone else.
Filthy jokes have the effect of making bad behavior seem more normal. And it takes courage to rise above that. Racist statements lead to more racism, fear and prejudice. It takes courage to rise above it and contradict it. Gossip is especially destructive. James says that the tongue is like a spark that ignites a huge forest fire. Don't listen to it. Don't repeat it.
There is a quote: “all it takes for evil men to triumph is for good men to do nothing.”
Knowing God means that God's Spirit is inside of us and he will give us the power and the courage to do justice, to love mercy, and to walk humbly, every day, hand-in-hand, with God.

Sunday, March 11, 2012

Foxes have Holes


Focus: Simple Living
Function: to help people adopt an attitude of conserving for the good of others.
Form: Bible Study

Intro: I used to love the Situational Comedy, “Tool Time.” Tim Taylor wanted more. More power, more tools, more Christmas lights. The show tried to live the American dream: More will make you happy.
We know better, don't we? What do you have? How much do you have? Are you truly measured by the size of your bank account, your house, or your car?
There is a temptation to measure yourself and others by those standards. And of course, we do a good job of resisting that temptation.
Apparently, this rich young ruler defined himself by what he had instead of who he was. What a tragedy. I believe that when Jesus told him to sell all he had and give it to the poor, Jesus could see right into the heart of this man and what motivated him. And Jesus offered him a chance for salvation.
For us, one of the most difficult NT passages is right here. Jesus says it is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter into the Kingdom of heaven.
And many people, especially the more affluent a culture gets, try to explain the meaning away. Some bible scholars have tried to say that there was a gate called “needle” in Jerusalem that was very narrow and camels have an hard time going through it. They say that is what Jesus meant. But that doesn't cut it. Because then, the whole point is lost. No. Jesus is using an exaggeration to illustrate His point. In the end, He mentions that anything is possible with God.
The man had a problem. He was trying to save himself. He was trying to earn his salvation by his good works. And Jesus was pointing out to him that no human effort could ever be sufficient.
But He certainly does “pick on” the rich man for his love of money. And in so doing, He touches on an important concept in Christian discipleship. He is picking on materialism, the god of money, -the false hope of way too many people. You see, Jesus didn't save us to make us rich.
The Spiritual discipline that we are looking at today is simple living.
I had a deacon, a VP at a local bank who called me one day, worried that he had just sinned.
Although I had to beg it out of him, he gave me permission to share this story from my perspective. I want you to see into the heart of Christian who is devoted to simple living.
The concern he had over the possibility that he just sinned was over the purchase of a brand new car. It was a Chevy Cavalier station wagon. He drove a brand new car right off the lot. And for those who do not know, at the time, the Chevy Cavalier was the cheapest car they sold in their entire line. And of all the lines of cars that GM produces, Chevrolet is their least expensive line. It is a simple car. It is basic transportation. He paid less than $10,000 for it. The financial incentives that they offered him were much better than buying a reliable used car.
But he believed in simple living. And to him, buying a new car didn't fit the bill. He was so frugal that I remember one day he was shocked that his wife went to lunch with her sisters, who were also members of the church, and the sticker price for his wife's lunch was over 7 dollars.
I am not making fun of this guy, not at all. He had one simple and distinct purpose in living so simple. And it wasn't to prove his worth to himself or others by the size of his bank account. He didn't hoard any of the money he saved in fear of a rainy day. Money didn't make him secure. He didn't hoard it in order to build himself a bigger house. He didn't hoard it to take $5,000 vacation. He didn't hoard it for a better retirement.
He lived that way so that he had more money to give away. For more money to give to the poor beyond his tithe. He would often call me up asking me if I knew anybody who was hurting financially, so that he could give money to him.
Did you know that the Bible lists “generosity” and “giving” as two of the spiritual gifts? (1 Corinthians 12) That was his. He wasn't stupid. Being a banker, he knew that people mismanaged their own money. And with his money, he never enabled the lazy, or empowered people to spend their money foolishly.
But he lived simply in order to have more to give. As it happened, a man joined our Church from Columbia, SA. He came to the U.S. in a perfectly legal fashion seeking asylum from the rebel forces in Columbia. But because of the delays caused by 9/11, he didn't become a documented resident before his visa expired.
And because he wasn't documented, when this man's children went to the local community college, they were forced to pay out of state tuition. Although the man held two doctorates from the university of Bogota, he couldn't even get a job above minimum wage. Sometimes he was forced to settle for less than minimum wage. And despite the rhetoric, the man paid taxes. And he paid them at a greater percentage than others in his income bracket because he couldn't collect earned income credit or a tax refund. To me, it didn't seem fair.
So my deacon paid the tuition for his children to attend college out of his own pocket. And, in order to do that, he gave up a big car, fancy dinners out and big expensive vacations.
He lives simply in order that others may live. He followed what it said in 2 Corinthians when brother Paul asked believers in one place, who are well off, to live with less in order to supply the need of believers in another place who are living in poverty. He says: but by way of equality— 14at this present time your abundance being a supply for their need,... ...that there may be equality; (2 Corinthians 8:13b-14)
Simple living was the practice of the early Church and that is why it spread so quickly across the Roman Empire. They lived differently than the world around them.
On Wednesday, at Ladies Aid, Waneta read the devotions from 1 Peter 2. And in the ninth verse we read: 9But ye are a chosen generation, a royal priesthood, an holy nation, a peculiar people; that ye should shew forth the praises of him who hath called you out of darkness into his marvelous light;
I love hearing that in the King James, especially when it says: “You are a peculiar people.”
We are different people with a different set of values. Some of it looks like the old hippie stuff of seeking peace, and living in harmony with the environment. Other parts of it preach and practice restraint when it comes to sexual promiscuity, preaches restraint when it comes to all the fashions and fads of this world in order that we may live lives that are focused on our mission.
This Rich young ruler wanted salvation -the best of the world to come- and he wanted the best of this present world. That isn't unnatural. Who doesn't want the best, especially for their children and grandchildren? We all do. But Jesus makes it clear that it must be the best for all, not just ourselves. This man's life was lived for only for himself.
And that is not what it means when we are baptized. When we are baptized we die to ourselves by being buried in the water and we rise out of the water as new creations with a new purpose in life.
And part of that purpose is living simply so that others may live.
In Luke 9:57-58 we read of another person who wanted to follow Jesus. He told Jesus that He would follow Jesus wherever Jesus went. And Jesus answered him: “Foxes have holes, birds have nest, but I have no place to lay my head.”
Jesus was speaking about His simple lifestyle -so simple that He had no home- oftentimes sleeping out under the stars. If He were alive today, some people would actually accuse Him of being a homeless man, maybe even a bum.
I don't picture Jesus panhandling, or never keeping good hygiene or other things that we associate with the homeless. But in fact, Jesus is telling us that he was homeless. He was homeless in a purposeful way. And he was warning His potential follower that following Him was a choice to live for others. I believe that Jesus poverty was another extreme, and it was lived like many of the prophets. John the Baptist lived simply as well. The Amish live simply. And all of that is a testimony that worldly goods do not make a person any happier. Jesus lived a homeless life symbolically. He isn't calling us to give up our homes, the shelters would be flooded. But He is calling us to live simply so that others can live. That is why the early Church spread. They actually cared for the world's poor.
Remember, Jesus said, “You cannot serve God and money.” (Matthew 6:24)
I preach this because I fear that too often we ourselves follow the God of our culture: money. And I want to preach a Biblical balance about money.
Although Jesus said: “Blessed are the poor, for theirs is the Kingdom of God.” (Luke 6:20) I don't believe that God's purpose is necessarily served by us becoming poor. God does bless believers.
My own twin brother went through a dramatic change when he became a believer. Before that, he served as common laborer at the K-Mart warehouse, just doing enough to get buy in his job and not get written up. When Jesus came into his heart, he believed that God had called him to do his best everywhere, even for his employer. And now, he is a Vice President for Sears Holding Corporation.
It was Jesus who turned around his worth ethic and his employer recognized his talent and blessed him for it.
Other people give up their addictions to alcohol, drugs, gambling and tobacco, all very expensive habits, then begin programs of self-respect because they both have faith and hope through Jesus and their financial position always improves.
And faith is also involved. Jim Cymbalta, the pastor of the Brooklyn Church, where the Brooklyn Tabernacle Choir comes from, tells the story of a young woman who was strung out on crack cocaine who happened into Church when she heard the music, became converted, got delivered from her drug addiction and started at the bottom.
He tells how one day, as she was walking she found a penny on the sidewalk, picked it up and claimed it as the first portion of the down payment on her own house. She now has an home and boards women who are coming out of the bondage of the sex trade in New York City.
A penny isn't much. And she claimed her new house by faith. And faith is important. When we get with God's program in our lives, His promise is to meet our needs. And oftentimes, the very changes that happen because of our Christian peculiarities have a corresponding financial blessings.
But it isn't about riches. Part of it is about faith, and the choice we have to have faith. But all of it is about Jesus.
Jesus was clear in His lifestyle to send the right message about serving Him or the God of money. So he says: “Foxes have holes....”
There is a prosperity preacher on TV who once preached about this passage and what he said appalled me. It was a direct contradiction to Jesus point. This prosperity preachers was preaching the God of money, not the simple lifestyle that Jesus demonstrated.
It is hard for me to believe this, but he actually said that Jesus' reference here was that he didn't need an home because Jesus was so rich that he could afford the best hotel in whatever town to which he traveled.
The man said, “Jesus had a front man who went before him and rented the best suites in the best inns everywhere he went.”
Well, If you know the geography of Israel at the time you know better. There were important trade centers throughout the area. There were Roman cites, nick-named the Decapolis, the ten cities. If you wanted a fine, luxurious suite, you had to go there. But Jesus kept his ministry confined to the smaller cities, the non important places, except when he traveled to Jerusalem.
It is obvious from the context that Jesus was not referring to luxury, but to simple living, in order to be blessing to others.
Brother Paul explains it like this: 1 Timothy 1:6-8 8If we have food and covering, with these we shall be content. 9But those who want to get rich fall into temptation and a snare and many foolish and harmful desires which plunge men into ruin and destruction. 10For the love of money is a root of all sorts of evil, and some by longing for it have wandered away from the faith and pierced themselves with many griefs.
Now, the passage does not say that money is the root of all evil. It says the love of it is. It says that if we want to get rich, if that is our motivation in life, we will only be sorry. We will be sorry, just like the rich young man who valued life on this earth over eternal life in heaven.
It is hard to keep money in perspective. That is why I preach about living for God and others so much. I need to remind myself as well.
We are constantly bombarded with the message that our money, and our indications of money are the sole proofs of our worth. It may be because we have a strong work ethic and we accept the social contract that in the west if you work hard, you will prosper. But the recent recession has shown us that even hard working people may suffer. Time and chance happens to everyone.
Our worth is not tied up in the things we possess. We are partners with God in a world changing organization that knows that people, community, faith, beauty and justice far outweighs personal wealth and greed.
What a wonderful calling we have!


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