Text:
Matthew
13:31-33, 44-52
Focus:
Principles of Church Growth
Form:
Bible Study
Intro:
I was learning CISM in Baltimore, working with social workers.
A woman asked why it
was important for her friend of several years, who just got saved, to
constantly preach at her.
Does God want the
Church to grow?
Does God want us to
share our faith with unbelievers?
How does the Church
grow?
Why does the Church
grow?
There are three
principles given in close succession in this place of Matthew's
gospel.
The Parables of the
mustard seed and the yeast, the Parables of the hidden treasure and
the pearl of great price, and the parable of the dragnet.
I am going to take them
in reverse order.
The dragnet. Angels
cast a net, collect fish and then they separate the good from the
bad.
Like last week, the
parable of the dragnet is about God being the gardener, not us. In
this case, it is about God's angels separating the good fish from the
bad fish.
The emphasis is that
God, not us, does the reaping and the separating.
And this is a principle
of Church growth.
A church will grow when
it lets God be the one who does the separating. (repeat)
Many remember that
several of my brother's children attended worship two weeks ago.
After worship and the
deacon's meeting, Kathy and I went to their cottage for a visit.
In my twin brother's
family, there are 3 full time preachers and 2 other ordained
preachers who are serving in other roles. All are from the Church of
the Nazarene, except one who is an Orthodox Priest. Most come from a
pretty conservative theological background.
We have some lively
theological discussions.
They were discussing
the reason why so many young people are dropping out of Church.
My niece said: “it is
because the Church has taken upon itself to be the judge of all
different kinds of lifestyles instead of bringing people to the good
news.”
She wasn't speaking
about the perception outside the Church, she was speaking about young
adults who are leaving the Church.
I mentioned my phrase:
“cursing the darkness instead of shining a light?”
And she said:
“exactly.”
Let the angels do the
separating. When the Church takes it upon itself to parrot a
political party, either party, or to condemn or condone certain
people for whatever reasons, it loses its focus and misses this
principle of Church growth.
The fish swim in the
same lake, the weeds grow together with God's plants.
One of them then said
this: “It is like the Church wants to be a museum for saints
instead of a hospital for sinners.”
Now we are Agape. We
stand for Love. We stand for the Love of God.
I tell people, just get
them here and Agape will keep on loving them into the Kingdom.
But people perceive
Christianity as merely hating this and that. And you know what? Some
of the rhetoric I hear on the national airways justifies their
belief.
We need to remember
that God does the separating, not us.
And that is good news
because God is a lot more loving toward our enemies, or people who
are different than us than we are. Praise God?
So, the first principle
is that the Church will grow when God does the separating, not us.
The second two parables
are about treasures.
The Kingdom of God is
like a hidden treasure in the field whereby a man sells everything he
has and buys the field, or like a pearl of great price that a person
is willing to sacrifice everything to obtain.
The Kingdom of God has
great value in a person's life.
I used to often think
of this in context of Matthew
16:26, or Psalms 49:8. These passages tell us that it is
impossible for anyone to ransom or redeem their own soul.
In my earlier
understanding, I reckoned it to mean that God sets the price and
whatever we have to do to get it is God's prerogative. God, being God
can do what God pleases.
And in Matthew 16,
Jesus tells us that gaining the whole world and losing one's soul is
not worth it. Apparently this is true since eternity is forever.
That was when I
perceived the Kingdom of God as something I will achieve after I die.
But then I learned that
the Kingdom of God is not only a coming Kingdom, but the Kingdom of
God is here and now.
The Kingdom of God is
here and now and is already valuable. That is what these parables
mean.
Its value is not merely
a fire escape from hell.
It has present day
value.
I love our statement
about the Church of the Brethren: “A different way of living.”
God's Kingdom is here
to bring healing to the world. We are here to bring healing to the
world.
Mary Hoff, one of the
presenters at our VBS turned out to be married to one of my childhood
friends.
She gave me one of the
best compliments I have ever heard about another Christian. No, she
wasn't speaking about me. She was speaking of Rick Flickinger. She
said that he was indeed a sincere Christian and she believed in his
faith.
Rick, don't get a big
head. But Rick demonstrates the value of the Kingdom of God today.
When the Church merely
focuses on getting people saved so that they end up in heaven instead
of hell, they short change the value of the Kingdom of God.
I don't believe that
Mary came to Church the next Sunday because I was here, she came to
see what kind of place nurtured Rick Flickinger's Christian witness.
So what value does it
have?
The Kingdom of God
heals the world.
The Church grew like
wildfire across the Roman world in the first three centuries because
the Church was the only institution in the world that was caring for
the poor.
People saw actions of
faith that were consistent with the words of their faith.
That, my friends, is a
physical demonstration of the value we place on the Kingdom of God.
Across Fort Wayne, we
see the history of the blessing of the Church in the fact that all
three hospitals, Parkview, which used to be knows as Parkview
Methodist Hospital, Lutheran Hospital and St.
Joseph's Hospital are all ministries of the Kingdom of God.
Pastoring in Lancaster
Co, PA gave me a sense of pride because of what the Atlantic NE
district is doing there. They have an organization that they started
called COBYS.
Church of the Brethren Youth Services.
They facilitate
adoption, foster care, marriage counseling and domestic violence
abuse protection. They do so well that the court system in Lancaster
Co uses them almost exclusively.
When Kairos
comes to the prison, the Kingdom of God here and now comes there.
Each weekend, which costs over $7,000 is paid for by the team of 40
people serving. We meet 9 times for 3 hours in order to prepare. And
we get nothing in return. We do it because the Kingdom of God has
great value, not just for the future but for today.
I have a friend who
lives in South St. Louis. She tells me Joyce Meyer
ministries has over 16 homes for desperate women. She said: “I
heard that they are feeding half of the poor in St. Louis!”
When people want to
criticize Christianity as a bunch of haters, I want to shout out what
good the Kingdom of God is doing in the world.
And the Church will
grow when it is known for the good that it does.
All of these actions
take place at the sacrifice of time and money by individual people as
Christians and the corporate actions of people.
A man named Steve was
in two weeks ago and he asked me to thank the entire congregation.
In January, we gave him
a voucher for 100 pounds of food. He didn't have the gas to get to
the South side of FW. But before he left, he spent 45 minutes with me
asking about job interview skills. He brought it up. We prayed
together.
We gave him a voucher a
second time. He found a job! He was just getting paid and needed
help. And then he was in two weeks ago collecting his final gift from
us. I gave him a gift card for gas. He said: “tell the congregation
that I love them. Jesus loves them. And tell them that I don't need
any more help. This will purchase the gas to help me get to LaPorte
for my final training. I got a good job and I have you all to thank
for it.”
Because of our actions,
the sacrifice of our actions, we show the value of the Kingdom of
God, here and now.
The Church will grow in
proportion to how well we value the Present day Kingdom of God.
And finally, the
parables of the mustard seed and the yeast.
Both parables tell the
same story from a different perspective.
The mustard seed is
very small. And yet, the bush that grows from it is as large as a
tree. It is so big that birds nest in its branches.
The point being that
God does great things with small beginnings.
God owns the plant, not
us. Remember, God is the gardener. Sometimes God weeds the garden and
prunes the tree and it is painful.
But the plant grows
from small things.
We cannot despise, or
lose hope at a small beginning.
And the parable of the
yeast. This is my favorite.
We cannot see yeast do
its work with the naked eye.
I imagine that to a 1st
century hearer of this parable, yeast almost seemed magical.
But here is the thing.
It spreads from molecule to molecule.
One molecule is changed
and that changes another and that creates the chain reaction.
The Kingdom of God
grows through the individual cell.
We cannot actually see
it work, but it does.
Jesus wanted the
disciples to understand the mystery of the Holy Spirit as God warms
heart to Jesus' love and the Kingdom of God spreads.
If the bread does not
come into contact with the yeast, it will not rise.
When we come into
contact with others, the Kingdom of God comes into contact with
others.
I had a pagan boss
once. He knew I was a Christian. And the business had trouble. So the
bosses wife, an elderly and devout Catholic Christian woman, would
ask me to pray for the company.
She knew that the
Kingdom of God means a blessing to the people we come into contact
with it.
We are Agape.
Our name means Love.
We are the visible
demonstration of God's love for this world, in this part of the
world.
Let us remember that
God will cause growth in a divine any mysterious way.
God wants us to value
what it means for us to be part God's Kingdom.
And God wants us to
share grace instead of judgment.