Sunday, December 22, 2024

Waiting On Peace

Text: Micah 5:2-5a

Focus: Peace

Function: Advent 4.

But you, O Bethlehem of Ephrathah,
    who are one of the little clans of Judah,
from you shall come forth for me
    one who is to rule in Israel,
whose origin is from of old,
    from ancient days.
3 Therefore he shall give them up until the time
    when she who is in labor has brought forth;
then the rest of his kindred shall return
    to the people of Israel.
4 And he shall stand and feed his flock in the strength of the Lord,
    in the majesty of the name of the Lord his God.
And they shall live secure, for now he shall be great
    to the ends of the earth,
5 and he shall be the one of peace.

Good morning God’s beloved!

Today is the fourth Sunday in Advent and we are celebrating both the Candle of Peace and the Christ Candle.

And we’ll do them both this morning because this prophecy about the coming of the Messiah, Jesus, listing the specific town where he is to be born doesn’t actually name him as the Christ, but instead the prophecy identifies him as “One of Peace.”

One of my favorite names for God comes from the book of Judges when Gideon was thanking God for a miracle, he built an altar his name for God, “Jehovah Shalom.” The Lord is our peace. I actually have it as my only tattoo.

I thought if there was ever a marking that could identify my passion, this would be it.

Jesus is our peace. Jesus brings us peace. Peace is two things. Peace is a general sense of well being, and peace is an absence of conflict.

The Cross of Christ was anything but a general sense of well being, but it brought us our peace. Sometimes peace means confronting the evil that destroys a general sense of well being.

When we look at peace as a feeling, or a general sense of well being I realize that peace is confidence and rest in God and God’s love for us.

The mystery surrounding the incarnation of Jesus is that Jesus is the Word made flesh. John 3:16, For God so LOVED the World that they gave… demonstrates God’s love for all of humanity. All of us. Even our enemies are loved by God.

I read this week of a mystic, Caroll Housander, who had a profound two day long vision. She lived in London a nd for two whole days, every time she looked at someone, she physically saw what she believed Jesus would look like.

She understood that God’s Spirit was working inside of her to show her how much he loves and is in and believes in every single person.

I’d love to have that same revelation. It reminded her that Christ is present in all of creation, especially at the top of creation, humanity.

It reminded her to have compassion for everyone.

Can you imagine the way that revelation would bring peace if everyone had it? We would never see another person as an enemy, it would be impossible to hate them or despise them.

I love the angels announcement in Luke 2:14: Peace on earth, Good will to men.

Actually, many translations qualify who gets the peace, by implying that it only goes to people of Good will, or kind hearted people.

But I like the translations that render it as peace and good will to all of mankind. Sister Caroll’s vision showed her that it was all of humanity that Christ’s good will goes to.

They, like us, are all created in the image of God.

So I titled the message waiting for peace because that is what Israel was doing. But for us, our peace is already here, we don’t have to wait for it.

Unless, of course, we mean “waiting on peace,” as if Peace, Jesus the one of Peace, were our master and we are the servants of peace. We peace a priority in our lives by the way we love others.

I like that idea.

That brings me back to the introduction to the message.

Christ is our peace. And in a great move of God and rest in God’s power, the Christ was born as an infant, dependent upon his parents trust in God.

(read the Christ Candle)

He fulfills a prophecy that they were hoping for: Isaiah 9:6:

6For a child has been born for us,
    a son given to us;
authority rests upon his shoulders,
    and he is named
Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God,
    Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace.

Again, the Christ comes to as both Mighty God and Prince of Peace. Christ came as both a beautiful baby and a man of sorrows. He was born born to show us how to live in faith and love others. But he also lived and ultimately died to confront the injustices of the day confronted the injustices of the day. Through that, he showed us the path to salvation through living and loving others sacrificially.

We see God’s mystery in the nativity. The mighty God exalted is by a host of angelic beings, and yet a pure baby, regarded not by nobility, but by lowly shepherds, the poor class of society to welcome him.

Christ comes to us to heal and restore us to the path of love and forgiveness.

In the nativity we have the magnificence of God and the baseness of the human condition combined into one. What a mystery to ponder this Christmas season.




Sunday, December 15, 2024

A Joyful God

 

Text: Zephaniah 3:14-20

Focus: Joy

Function: Advent 3,

14Sing aloud, O daughter Zion;
    shout, O Israel!
Rejoice and exult with all your heart,
    O daughter Jerusalem!
15The Lord has taken away the judgments against you;
    he has turned away your enemies.
The king of Israel, the Lord, is in your midst;
    you shall fear disaster no more.
16On that day it shall be said to Jerusalem:
Do not fear, O Zion;
    do not let your hands grow weak.
17The Lord, your God, is in your midst,
    a warrior who gives victory;
he will rejoice over you with gladness;
    he will renew you in his love;
he will exult over you with loud singing
18     as on a day of festival.”
I will remove disaster from you,
    so that you will not bear reproach for it.
19I will deal with all your oppressors
    at that time.
And I will save the lame
    and gather the outcast,
and I will change their shame into praise
    and renown in all the earth.
20At that time I will bring you home,
    at the time when I gather you;
for I will make you renowned and praised
    among all the peoples of the earth,
when I restore your fortunes
    before your eyes, says the Lord.

Good morning beloved!

I love the Christmas season with the emphasis on hope, love, joy and peace. Today we are focusing on joy.

The scriptures say: “The Lord Loves a cheerful giver” and “It is more blessed to give than to receive.”

We know that second part almost intuitively because of Christmas and our practice of giving gifts to one another as an expression of our love.

Giving gifts warms our hearts and brings us joy.

I don’t know what it is, but when we see the happiness, or gratitude on the face and in the eyes of the recipient, our hearts are strangely warmed

My translation titles this passage, a Song of Joy.

And when I was choosing scripture for today, what struck me about the passage, even though it starts our with our reaction to joy which shouting and rejoicing and exaltation, it is more about the joy of God when God gives to us.

Jesus comes to us as our redeemer. He is the one we turn to to set things right. Jesus embodies our hope for justice through the mystery of the cross.

I find his words to the thief who was crucified with him: “Today you will be with me in paradise” to be the embodiment of our hope.

In Christ, God came to earth to give us hope, build our faith and show us how to love. When Jesus says today you will be with me in paradise, he reiterates the hope that we have that there is more to this life than just living and dying, we sense inside of us that we have an eternal soul and that soul is loved and doted over by God.

In our passage today, we read how God delights in saving us. Redeeming us brings God joy. We serve a joyful God, a God of joy.

This is the hope that the Israelites have. They are looking for a redeemer who has the power to forgive them and then deliver them from their oppression.

Jesus came to redeem us and he did it through the example given to us in the way that he died and rose again. It proves to us that we can rest in the power of God to accomplish God’s will through us.

Do you remember the story of the the three men and the fiery furnace and how God used them? The King decreed that they should worship a statue of the king and they refused because they worship the true God.

The king in his anger said: “What God can rescue you?”

And the three men replied this way. “We don’t know if our God will rescue us or not, but we know he can. Regardless, we can’t bow down to the idol.”

I love their faith in God’s power and sovereignty. They trust God because they believe that God can and they also know that they belong to God and God will do with what best suits God’s purpose.

They were willing to die, but the point was their faith in God’s redemption.

In the great chapter of faith in Hebrews we read how people with faith saw great miracles happen like the resurrection of their dead loved ones, armies defeated without using a weapon and other victories. But it also speaks of those who gave their lives as martyrs for the faith or those who endured hardships in faith.

God is God in both situations. God is God during seasons of suffering and victory.

How do we rest in God when we are suffering?

We remember that according to Hebrews 5:8 Jesus learned obedience to God through the things that he suffered. Even though he was a son.

And I find in the midst of suffering that God is present with me with God’s calming presence when I take the time to stop, ponder, pray, meditate, contemplate and sit in silence and listen for that still small loving presence of God in my Spirit to comfort me.

Comfort me, God” is a yearning of my heart and a constant prayer.

This passage shows us how God delights in doing just that.

God delighted in it so much that God left the throne of heaven, took on human form in the Christ so that he could show humanity the path to peace through love, mercy and forgiveness.

A baby born in a manger, weak and dependent is how the Christ choose to appear to us.

It shows us the potential of God inside of all of us.

Let us enjoy the love of God this Christmas season and all year long.



Sunday, December 8, 2024

Love's Salvation

 

Text: Philippians 1:3-11

Focus: Love

Function: Advent 2, love brings salvation

3I thank my God for every remembrance of you, 4always in every one of my prayers for all of you, praying with joy 5for your partnership in the gospel from the first day until now. 6I am confident of this, that the one who began a good work in you will continue to complete it until the day of Jesus Christ. 7It is right for me to think this way about all of you, because I hold you in my heart, for all of you are my partners in God’s grace, both in my imprisonment and in the defense and confirmation of the gospel. 8For God is my witness, how I long for all of you with the tender affection of Christ Jesus. 9And this is my prayer, that your love may overflow more and more with knowledge and full insight 10to help you to determine what really matters, so that in the day of Christ you may be pure and blameless, 11having produced the harvest of righteousness that comes through Jesus Christ for the glory and praise of God.

Good morning!

Well, here we are, the second Sunday in advent and we are on my favorite theme: Love. You know me and you know that I love preaching about Love.

I had a former parishioner who studied Ancient writings and as our church was going through the discernment process as to whether or not we wanted to officially be a church that welcomes people of all races, abilities, both mental and physical, and all the different ways people identify their sexual orientation, he too spoke of the importance of love. Even though he was conservative in his theology his research of ancient writings led him to what they said about John the Apostle in his later years. They said, he, I think like me, could only preach the message to his flock to love one another.

It isn’t a redundant message. Given the spiteful political speech that we all must endure these days, it is easy to fall back into the worldly system of retribution, anger, and separation.

That is contrary to the good news of Christ’s transforming power inside of us through the Holy Spirit.

In our scripture lesson today, we see the love and concern that the Apostle Paul was for the Philippian church. He believes not only in them, but in the power of God through the Spirit to keep them faithful to the end. He thanks them for their own love and support for him and they way that they partner with him in his calling.

And Paul, while thanking them and praising them and encouraging them in the introduction to his letter to them does exactly what the Apostle John did, he tells them that there really is only one important thing for them to focus on: Love for others.

He prays that they may know love more and more. The Greek word Philos, platonic love, is at the root of the name of their city. Philos love is the care and concern that we have for other people.

One of my all time favorite bible stories is Jesus with the woman caught in adultery in John 8:1-11.

As the accusers are arguing over her fate and trying to entrap Jesus by pronouncing a sentence against the woman that only the Romans could execute, pun intended, so that they can have him killed, he is simply doodling in the sand.

I wonder if he is writing their sins in the sand. It appears the effect is that they see him dismissing their urgent “biblical concerns” for purity. He is focusing on the plight of the woman.

Do you see this woman?” is my favorite line from the story. When we look at her as an human instead of a sinner, when we see her as the daughter of God, instead of a reprobate, our perspective changes. Imagining the possibilities of God for them changes our attitude toward people. God is able to redeem.

Jesus tells them to look at her and her need. And if they are truly religious and caring about people, loving others as the greatest commandment, they will give up their religious indignation over their purity code and care for her.

When I have a conflict, or some distress, or a disagreement with someone it causes me to regard that other person in a negative light. So, to keep the command of Christ to love them, I remind myself that they too are created in the image of the Christ and the Spirit of the Christ is also working to show them their need for love. Loving is easier when we imagine people as a children of God.

I believe that this call to love others is a universal call to all of humanity. It comes, for me, from loving God and all that God has created.

King Solomon said: God has made everything wonderful in its time. Everything is divinely placed and if we are looking for it, we will see God’s loving and creating hand in everything. We will also see the possibility of God in everyone.

Jesus was looking at the possibility of God in the woman and he offered her mercy and love. His compassion redeems her both from the crowd and from the destruction that has hallmarked her life .

I know that the text today is from the Apostle Paul and his prayer focus for them is John’s theme of Love.

First John speaks a lot of love and it gives a description of love in chapter 4, verse 7-8: 7Beloved, let us love one another, because love is from God; everyone who loves is born of God and knows God. 8Whoever does not love does not know God, for God is love.

We, as believers, realize that we have the blessing of God’s love for us everywhere. I get that often when black passengers exit my car and leave me with the blessing: “Have a blessed day.” It makes me feel good to know that their expression of their faith is love and concern for others. It is a loving witness to what God does for us.

So, we are the beloved and as you know, our continuing work for Jesus is to love one another.

This love is God’s gift to us, Love is from God.

And then we get to the title of the message, “Love’s Salvation.”

Everyone who loves is born of God.

I believe this. Everyone who loves is responding to the witness and power of the Holy Spirit in their life. God is working in them and through them. They are now born of God because their actions spring out of God’s love for others through them.

Praise God! We are gifted by God with God’s power to be God’s vessel of love toward others.

This is how we know faith. Jesus said it, we will be known as his followers by the way we love others.

I used to be all up in doctrinal precision so that I could be sure that I was perfectly describing what I believed to be the faith. All I was doing was making them table as small as my own imagination.

Then God began to show me how much they, the God, love the world’s people and all of creation.

When we love, we are doing the works of salvation that Jesus said will illustrate what faith in him looks like.

Sunday, December 1, 2024

Hope Reborn

 

Text: Luke 21:25-36

Focus: Hope, advent 1

Function: to see the mystery of prophecy fulfilled and to come.

25“There will be signs in the sun, the moon, and the stars and on the earth distress among nations confused by the roaring of the sea and the waves. 26People will faint from fear and foreboding of what is coming upon the world, for the powers of the heavens will be shaken. 27Then they will see ‘the Son of Man coming in a cloud’ with power and great glory. 28Now when these things begin to take place, stand up and raise your heads, because your redemption is drawing near.”

29Then he told them a parable: “Look at the fig tree and all the trees; 30as soon as they sprout leaves you can see for yourselves and know that summer is already near. 31So also, when you see these things taking place, you know that the kingdom of God is near. 32Truly I tell you, this generation will not pass away until all things have taken place. 33Heaven and earth will pass away, but my words will not pass away.

34“Be on guard so that your hearts are not weighed down with dissipation and drunkenness and the worries of this life and that day does not catch you unexpectedly, 35like a trap. For it will come upon all who live on the face of the whole earth. 36Be alert at all times, praying that you may have the strength to escape all these things that will take place and to stand before the Son of Man.”

Good morning!

Today is the first Sunday in Advent and we are focusing on the advent theme, Hope through the lens of prophecy.

I titled the sermon “Hope Reborn” because it is appears to be a dual prophecy about the destruction of Jerusalem in 70 CE and perhaps a prophecy about the second coming of Christ. Many scholars see it that way.

I love the morning texts that Dave forwards on to us. And he sent one asking me for some explanation and coincidentally, it goes in line with the theme of this mornings message.

The text was about how Orthodox Jews who are still waiting for the first coming of the Messiah and are living abroad and have a residence inside of Israel that they are leasing place a clause in the lease that says they must vacate within 15 days if the Messiah appears.

And they do that in the great hope that when the Messiah appears there will be paradise.

Hope is a powerful force and it is absolutely important for us to have hope, I believe, to maintain faith and confidence to face the world.

Remember, Christ came to give us an life without boundaries and has filled us with God’s Spirit so that we live this life for his bringing about God’s reign of love and justice to the world entire.

We are on a mission from God.

But these prophecies can be tricky. Hal Lindsey just died. He write “The Late Great Planet Earth” wherein he describes Jesus returning within 40 years of 1948 when Israel became a nation again.

I was convinced that Jesus was going to return before I became an older man. Now, I am not sure at all.

But we live in that hope of the Messiah coming and making all things right.

And I am not disappointed in my hope because I have been able to help bring about the new Kingdom during my lifetime while God is waiting.

But the kingdom isn’t merely future, it is here and now and it is our privilege to bring it about.

Daniel, in the Old Testament is another book of Prophecy. And in it, he interprets a vision that the king had. It is an interesting story. The king dreamed an alarming dream and required his wise men to tell him the dream and then interpret it or die. Of course, that was impossible for humans. But Daniel, with his life on the line, tells the King that God can give an interpretation. And God reveals the dream to him.

The vision is a statue with a head of gold, a breast made of silver, loins made of bronze and feet made of iron mixed with brittle clay. While the statue is standing, a voice from heaven declares an end to these kingdoms and a boulder is cut out of a nearby mountain and it flies through the air and crushes the statue. Then the boulder becomes a great mountain.

It is highly symbolic and a very accurate description of human history. The dream’s interpretation was that Babylon was the great kingdom with an head of gold. It was then replaced by the Persians who were the breastplate of silver. Who were then replaced by Alexander the Great and the Greeks, the loins of brass. And they were replaced by Rome, the legs of Iron and clay.

The significant thing in the vision is the boulder. It represents the Kingdom of God and it replaces the kingdoms of mankind.

God, I believe, is showing us, through the King and then through Daniel and recorded in the scriptures what hope we can have in the fact that God has something better than what humanity can imagine.

Our hope is in our faith in God. God is indeed faithful and we can rest in God.

He tells us in this passage that when these signs are taking place, to not be afraid, but expectant because our redemption has arrived.

The passage talks about how God helps us in times of tribulation. We are to pray that God gives us the ability to endure and be faithful.

I mentioned that studying these prophecies was a big part of why I came back to Christ. I admit I had a certain amount of pride in my research and I wanted everyone to know what I thought I had figured out.

I continue to study the scriptures to find out what God wants from us and wants for us, so that I can relay it to you as well and continue to build your faith and give you hope. God is faithful to give us hope.

Here is a lesson: We learn through tribulation to rest in God.

In the middle of a trial, we are sometimes faithful and sometimes we are doubting. But our wavering has never changed the faithfulness of God. God loves us as their children and will not let us down.

Jesus is telling them all of this while they are sitting in what history calls Herod’s temple.

Hope is inspired by the Spirit of Christ inside of us. We have the choice to allow it to build our faith, or ignore its vital properties in our lives.

So, as we prepare for Advent, let us let hope continually be born in our spirits and let it radiate Christ’s love to the world around us.