GENESIS PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

27 November 2011 The Awakening Mark 13:24-37

Do you sense the irony of Advent? We are to begin our personal preparation for everything the coming of the Lord means, as somehow we recover from the season of Thanksgiving, only to be Black Friday-ed to Christmas.

We are preparing all right. We are trying to figure out how we will get the family together this year. We are needing to know what is on everyone’s Christmas list. We are worried how we will find time to clean the house and cook cinnamon breads and pecan tassies, or whatever it is we make just for Christmas. The sheer weight of the preparation directed at Thanksgiving and now to Christmas leaves little, if any, time for preparing for the coming of the Lord. Or, is it just me.
In the midst of our hectic holiday preparation Marks gospel message to us is this, ‘keep awake.’ Keep awake. Seriously. We are so tired we fall into bed and cannot will ourselves to fall asleep. So, here we are this morning. Tired and just a little bit cranky. Or, is it just me.

Mark really does paint a pretty harsh picture of our coming future. The sun will be darkened, the moon will not give us light, the stars will be falling from heaven, and the powers of heaven will be shaken. The Son of Man comes in the clouds with great power and glory and the angels begin to gather his elect from the ends of the earth to the ends of heaven. I would say from these accounts creation is pretty well done and only our judgment awaits us.
It sounds like Mark is wedging into these holidays has story of the coming of the end of the world and of human history. The Greek word for this is apocalypse. It’s translated as an uncovering or revealing of the end of the world.

On the other hand, Mark’s gospel insists the message to us is one of comfort and hope. When we see these things, we need to know a rebirth is coming. A transformation is on the way. A change to fulfill the words of the Lord is upon us. This rebirth foretells the second coming of our Savior, Jesus of Nazareth.
We may wonder, why didn’t Mark just say so! Why all this end of the world as we know it stuff? We can breathe a little easier now. Better things are to come.
Of course, before we become too relaxed, Jesus tells us only the Father, God in heaven, knows the day or hour for Jesus’ return. And lest we forget, Jesus will return for the judgment and the gathering of his elect.

So, beware and keep alert is the gospel message this morning. Be aware and be alert. The doorkeeper for the Lord is commanded to be on watch. Therefore, keep awake, or we may be found asleep when Jesus comes. His coming will be sudden. And what is said to us is said to all: Keep awake.

We do sense there is more at play here. Jesus is calling us to be more than just awake. Being awake alone requires nothing more than just not being asleep. Instead, our state of wakefulness must be filled with living. Let us be careful, however, that the living we fill our life with is on the surface and in the depths more than rote, scripted meaningless formality. More than Thanksgiving gatherings and Black Fridays. If our joy is found only in the events, milestones, or miscellaneous trappings of our life, we may need this Advent season more than we realize.

We come into this world not knowing much. We spend our lifetime trying to figure out the facts of life, the meaning of life, trying to learn how to live in the real world. Early on, things are not too complicated for us. Food, clothing, shelter, a dry diaper, a full belly, a warm bed to sleep in.

Later, when we mature, we discover there are boundaries to what we call the facts, the truth, the world as it is. That is when complications arise. We discover our world view is limited. Limited to where and when and with whom we are raised.
This limit becomes obvious when we journey outside our boundaries. We no longer find ourselves to be like everyone we know. We discover a place or truth or awareness or person who could never fit in and be like everyone we know. This is when we have our first glimpse of the possibility of something else, something new, something different about life.
We should always wonder and never think we have known all there is to know. We should ask. What else is there? What is possible? What may be new and different about life? What other way is there to live?

If, like Jack, we climb up the beanstalk, and find a world ruled by a giant, good or evil, would we come down the beanstalk any different than when we went up? I dare say we would!

If we then wonder, why me Lord, consider instead, why NOT me Lord? Why do we think life can be filled with predictable and scripted living without regard for the possibility of something more?

The truth of this morning’s gospel is this, life cannot wait for us to discover or be discovered for something more. We know judgment is coming. During advent this message comes to us loud and clear. Someone new is coming into our lives.
In preparing us for the coming of God in human form, God calls out the major players to get our attention. And what a better, if unwelcome, wake-up call than Isaiah proclaiming in 64:6 that “we have all become like one who is unclean, and all our righteous deeds are like a filthy cloth.” And then God sends us Jesus.
Advent means preparing ourselves to celebrate not only the birth of Jesus but his second coming too. Life cannot wait for us to come to terms with our un-righteous righteous deeds. We know not the hour or the day!

Think, therefore, of Advent as a glorious ‘in between’ time. A time between one event that has already happened, the first coming, the birth of the Messiah, and another event yet to happen, a second coming. A time for possibilities understood and real change. It is a time for transformation. For cleansing our filthy cloth. Advent wakes us to a rebirth, a rebirth through a life of change brought about by the Holy Spirit and our entrance into the eternal family of God in the judgment of the second coming.

How then do we, as the church and as followers and friends of Jesus, wait during this in-between time? I’m not sure. Clearly life does go on despite our questioning, our anxiety, or lack of preparedness. Do we just take it easy, kick back biding our time until judgment day? I think not.

The truth is it is hard to wait. The expected end time begins to dim in our minds, we loose the motivation, we do not feel the expectant excitement or worry that the time is near. We do not know the day or time like we did for Thanksgiving and like we do for Christmas.

In our waiting malaise we may even forget what we are waiting for. When we’ve been waiting for something a long while, it can be difficult to continue living with expectancy.

Expectancy of what, we wonder. We certainly have experienced reliving Jesus’ birth through the centuries. How then do we go from this known event, Jesus’ birth celebrated at Christmas, to an unknown event, his second coming and judgment? Again, I’m not sure.

We do not have first-hand experience of such a coming. Yet, how we wait is important. How we wait becomes our link with expectancy. It does matter what we do during the ‘in-between’ time. If not to us, then to Jesus.

Ruth Patterson sees this in-between time as a threshold time, a thin time, as if the veil between what we see and touch and know and the unseen world of wonder, of spiritual reality, is very fine and at any moment could be lifted. Perhaps knowing this, that the veil will be lifted at any moment, is just the thread we need to keep us guessing how we should live right now.

Patterson suggests we consider one of two waiting ways. One passively the other passionately. Passive waiting seems safest but there is something to consider in passionate living.

It is easy to know what we are passionate about. If we simply look at our life and be honest with ourselves about those things we do again and again, those things we cannot leave alone, those things we spend most of our time with, we will know our passion. Do we have routines, habits, hobbies, or past times that keep our interest day after day, that keep us feeling alive? There lies our passion.

The expected passion for us Christians is to live passionately for Jesus Christ. In our routines, habits, hobbies and past times are we known to be in a relationship with Jesus? If we are waiting passionately, living in Christ, then we are going to stay alert and keep watch, ready to pick up any sign of what God is doing, and to join in, to cooperate with God. If we have a passion for God, then that passion must translate itself into a shared compassion for others, a yearning and an aching to see a world where justice and right relationships prevail, and a willingness to become makers rather than simply lovers of peace.

The title of Eugene Peterson’s book, “Christ plays in ten thousand places,” comes from a poem by Gerard Manly Hopkins called, “As Kingfishers Catch Fire.” It ends with these words:
For Christ plays in ten thousand
Places,
Lovely in limbs and lovely in eyes
Not his
To the Father through the features
Of men’s faces.
In this poem we here that Christ plays through the limbs and the eyes of our faces. Christ plays through us. As we play, Christ plays. We have become Jesus’ passion.
Peterson’s book is about spiritual theology. Theology is the attention we give to God, knowing God is revealed in the Scriptures and in Jesus Christ. Spiritual is the insistence that everything that God reveals is capable of being lived by ordinary people passionately.

When we are living our Christian ‘in-between’ time we would benefit from joining our revealed knowledge of God with the practical knowledge that what God reveals is to be lived by each of us in Christ-like passion. For Peterson, spiritual theology is the attention we give to the details of living life in the way of Christ.

This is how we are to live during this time in-between Jesus’ first birth and his second coming. Living because of God, living in and with God, living to the glory of God.

Peterson says, “The end of all Christian belief and obedience, witness and teaching, marriage and family, leisure and work life, preaching and pastoral work is the living of everything we know about God.”

Christ, the God-revealing Christ, is always ‘playing’ in all of life. Christ plays in creation, in history, and in the continuing community of the Holy Spirit. Our Lord Jesus Christ’s desire is for you and me and everything around us to get in on the playfulness of living in relationship with Christ.

With this truth before us, every day is Advent. We are on the threshold of so much. God is pointing to countless doors of opportunity to share his good news. God has equipped us for these opportunities with every spiritual gift we need as we live and wait for the return of Jesus. So, there are no excuses for our malaise, our forgetfulness, our falling asleep or for giving up any hope of Christ’s return.
Jesus entreats us this morning, in his absence, to be on the watch. To be on the watch filled all the while with passionate living. A passionate living that helps us to truly be Advent people, to live as we have been called to live, to make special preparations to welcome the Beloved, for maybe, just maybe, he will come earlier than we expect. Maybe, just maybe Jesus will come to us today and reveal his love for us, looking for our passionate love in return.

Be therefore awake, dear ones, be awake.

In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit one God now and forever. Amen 112711.gpc

Sunday, November 20, 2011

20 November 2011 “Little Things Count” Matthew 25:31-46

20 November 2011 “Little Things Count” Matthew 25:31-46

You may remember we enjoy reading mysteries at our house. One of my favorites is “Murder in the National Cathedral” by Margaret Truman. The setting for her book is the National Cathedral in Washington D.C. By all accounts it is a stunning place. It was built on the highest hill in town. It is adorned by towers that seem to reach to the heavens. The Cathedral has beautiful scrollwork, fancy finials, and wild looking gargoyles. It seems any church worth is salt has wild-looking gargoyles. One must keep the evil spirits away!

I have read there are three doors at the entrance with creation scenes carved into the arches above them: the birth of the moon is on the right side, the sun on the left, and in the middle, the first human beings emerge from the swirling waters of creation. Inside, the stained glass windows reach so high you may hurt your neck craning to see their top. And when the sun is bright you can walk under them through streams of sapphire, ruby, and emerald light that cover you as if you were walking through a rainbow.

At the high altar in the far back of the cathedral is where Jesus sits on his throne at the end of time. He is surrounded by the whole company of heaven as he balances the round earth on the palm of his hand like a piece of ripe fruit. Well, actually, it is not the real Jesus. It is an image of Christ the King, preparing to judge the world.
This is where we enter Matthew’s gospel this last Sunday of the Christian year. The feast of Christ the King. On this day Jesus is preparing to judge the world. Our judge happens to be the one who knows everything we have ever done. We might pray Jesus never writes a mystery novel with us as the main character.
I am told the National Cathedral has a sign over the cash register that says, “We may not have seen you take it, but God did”. Let there be no doubt whose house this is! We are so guilty!

Next Sunday is the first Sunday in Advent, with Christmas not to far behind. So, we just as well begin today to try and make that turn from hiding our true nature to our full acceptance into the heart of the gospel. For this season of new birth is about to begin.
Jesus has been telling us these past few weeks we need to be prepared because we do not know when our bridegroom, our king, our savior will come again. He has told us the importance of recognizing our inability to invest in this world on our own. And we hear this morning of our pending judgment before Christ our King.
Ezekiel brings us to this place by reminding us of our dependence on God for all things. We are so lost that God must take the trouble to find us and then rescue us. God said, “I will seek the lost, and I will bring back the strayed, and I will bind up the injured, and I will strengthen the weak, for I will judge the strong and the weak.”

This talk of judging, of sorting out the sheep, sounds frightening and worrisome. We have this flawed human belief that judgment is our job alone. The thought of being judged, especially by our God who sees all things and knows all things about us, should frighten us more than knowing Santa is always watching to see who has been naughty and nice.

Ezekiel calls us on this. Judgment belongs to God alone and God’s concerns are not our own. When God begins the sorting of the flock it is not to divide the good from the bad. God sees what we have refused to see. God is seeking out the weak.

Judgment in Matthew’s gospel, on the other hand, is a sobering account of the second coming. While Ezekiel warns us against claiming for ourselves tasks that belong to God, Mathew tells us that we are to take on other tasks on God’s behalf.

The judgment in Matthew speaks to what we are to do in the present, if we truly believe that Christ is among us. To really push us beyond our comfort zone, we are to act as if Christ is in other people, even the stranger, the prisoner, the sick and the hungry.

All too often this truth, that Christ is among us in that other person we come in contact with, produces a disappointing harshness in us. Fred Craddock, a gifted preacher, describes it as “the ability to look at a starving child…and say, ‘Well, it’s not my child.’ To look at a recent widow or widower and say, ‘it’s not my mom, it’s not my dad.’ It is within the capacity of the human spirit to look out upon the world and everything God made and say, I don’t care.”

It’s is really more than that. We cannot be complacent and think just because we have never said words like these we will be judged righteous. Remember, our action or inaction speaks louder than our words.
In our defense, we echo the gospel, “When was it that we saw you, Lord?” The beauty of this question is that it is asked by both the blessed and by the accursed. Being unaware of the good we have done or equally unaware that we have done something wrong, our question is the same. When was it that we saw you hungry or thirsty, or a stranger, or naked, or sick or in prison and did or did not take care of you?

We need not spend too much time trying to figure if we are sheep or goats. Matthew uses these animals to make a point. The sheepherder, Jesus, separates the sheep from the goats. The sheep are blessed and inherit the kingdom and eternal life. The goats are accursed and inherit the eternal fire and eternal punishment.
It really does not matter what image Matthew uses; wheat and tares, good seed and bad, wise maidens and foolish ones. What matters is we hear and know the gospel message that relationship with God is not a matter of having faith alone, but of doing faith.

What is difficult about Matthews point is life is never as clear cut as he makes it out to be. It is as if God waits for a moment like this and really turns up the heat.

If we travel to the National Cathedral in Washington we will be confronted with a lot of homeless people. We have people here in Austin who are homeless. That is not news to us. We have actually lived here long enough to begin to recognize them on their street corner. Perhaps you have helped them. Perhaps not. Either way, you may have asked yourself. Was that the right thing to do?

Matthew sounds like he knows. He seems so sure about what is right and what is wrong, about who is blessed and who is cursed. And in our anxiety about doing what is right, about being on God’s good side, we risk finding our motivation rooted in personal judgment. So we do a mental assessment. I need to help at least one person who is hungry, one who is thirsty, a stranger, one who is naked, one who is sick, and a prisoner. Now, isn’t that a bit much?

The truth is, we cannot make law out of the gospel. There is always a problem thinking we only need to do what the memo says in order to satisfy the boss; nothing more, nothing less. Sometimes doing the right thing has little to do with following the rules alone. Only God knows what is in our heart and what will be on the final exam.
In Matthew’s gospel both groups were totally baffled by their final grade. They did not even remember being tested! “When was it that we saw you” and acted or did not act. What had we done that was right, what had we done that was wrong? And when? We have not seen you. That is what we want to know too.

William Willmon, former Dean of the Chapel at Duke University and currently Bishop of the North Alabama conference of the United Methodist Church tells a story of having traveled to Haiti.
He says, “Haiti is a desperate country. It is one of the poorest nations in the world. The average life span is just over 40 years. Unemployment runs somewhere over 80 percent.
During my visit to the city of Port-au-Prince I met a little woman, in her sixties. Her name was Ruth. She had come from her native Wisconsin and went to work as a nurse in Haiti among the poor. Eventually, Ruth began collecting children off the street, children who had been abandoned because they were severely physically or mentally handicapped. Ruth, and her fellow workers, now have about 30 of these children in a home in the city. Most of them will live with her until they die, for there is no way they can ever live on their own.
They are organized into small families, where they are lovingly taken care of. Ruth finances her operation with funds from wherever she can get them, mostly from churches in the United States.
Smilingly, even enthusiastically, Ruth moves about her work, taking time to hug each child, praising them, calling each by name, many who can only lie in bed all of their lives. After their visit with Ruth and her home for children, one of the members of our team said, “I think I’ve been in the presence of a living saint.”
Ruth may not describe herself that way. She minimizes herself in her work. She said, “I just saw a need and tried to do what I could.” One person in the group asked her if she felt that her work was effective?
Ruth replied, “I try not to ask myself about effectiveness. I try to disciple myself to just do what I can do today, one child at a time, and let the Lord worry about tomorrow.”

It is important we notice, at the last judgment, Jesus did not say a word about effectiveness. His only question will be, did you feed those who were hungry? Did you visit those in jail?

We should all take comfort in this good news. In the end, we will not be judged on whether or not we were able to effect justice or to change the world. In our arrogance we forget, the world is not going to be changed by us, but by God.

If we go to a place like Haiti worrying about effectiveness, we probably won’t be there very long. If we find ourselves in front of a person gripped by addiction or pervasive poverty and we worry about effectiveness, we probably won’t be there very long either.

It is God’s job to worry about issues of effectiveness, long-term worth, and eternal value. It is our job to be faithful, to be, in our lives and deeds, an outpost of the kingdom, a guiding light in the storm of life, a credit to the king.
To this end, our job to be faithful is within our control. We can do our part for the gospel message, for the kingdom here and now and the kingdom to come. Thankfully, we need not look to change the world overnight. Small baby steps will do. The time spent visiting one afternoon, the card sent in sympathy to someone who is afraid or grieving, and yes, perhaps even a dollar or two to the homeless man or woman are the baby steps. The biggest surprise just may be that when we take these steps with these unsuspecting folk, Jesus counts everything done for them as if it had been done for him.

Supposing then that Jesus really is present in every single person whose path crosses ours, how do we live? What difference might that make? I don’t know, but I do know that we are being asked to wrestle with these questions, to let them challenge us and unsettle us. To perhaps for the first time actually see the person before us and look them in the eye knowing God may be returning our gaze. Then we will know what to do.
God sees what we may refuse to see, for God seeks the weak and lowly. And when the time comes to sort us out, those are the eyes that will meet our eyes, the eyes of the judge who sees, who knows and who loves us so much he lays down his life for us all. Our Christ IS King.

In the name of the Father, and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, one God now and forever. Amen

Resources:
“The Christian Century,” November 15, 2005, pg. 18.
“Lectionary Homiletics,” Volume XVI, Number 6.
“Pulpit Resource,” Volume 36, Number 4.
112011.gpc

Sunday, November 13, 2011

13 November 2011 Our Stewardship with God Matthew 25:14-30

13 November 2011 Our Stewardship with God Matthew 25:14-30

In the accounts of family life there are rules. At our house we begin our day with the one cup rule. There are a number of does and don’ts associated with this rule but one of the most sacred is no budget talk in the morning until we have both had at least one cup of coffee. To even dare start talking about the budget too early brings on the biggest frown or scowl or glare sending the perpetrator to silence. That would be me, the perpetrator.
I certainly understand the need for the rule. We do not want to be inundated or overburdened and depressed before we are awake. We want to be sharp in order to understand the details to make a good plan. We do not want to make a mistake for then we will not have a good plan – one that will keep us safe, take care of our obligations, and help us have fun.

This morning we celebrate Stewardship Sunday. I trust you have all had your one cup of whatever you need. Jesus is calling us to a budget meeting of sorts. One where we will be faced with tough questions. What are we willing to do for this church, given our situation? What are we willing to give for God’s work, knowing we have limited resources? What are we willing to sacrifice that the kingdom of heaven will come, knowing we are timid and afraid?
Listening to Matthew’s gospel for answers we may sense the need for a one cup rule. Each of the servants in this parable are singled out according to their ability, and entrusted accordingly with a sum of money to invest. One in particular seems overwhelmed. Perhaps it is not just a cup of coffee he needs.

When the time comes for a budget talk we find this poor slave has not invested wisely. He actually has not invested at all. He hid the talent in the ground. I guess this was the best he could do without adequate caffeine.

First impression is this parable is about wise investment and judgment. For those astute in this sort of thing there is comfort. Not so for those who are less astute or afraid.

This passage is near the end of the final major teaching section in the Gospel of Matthew. Jesus has announced signs of his return and the future establishment of God’s empire. He says now is the time for disciples to be faithful and hopeful in their anticipation of God’s future return even though no one knows when that will be. The important reminder from Jesus is that we, his disciples, are to be faithful and wise.

Last Sunday we read the parable about the five wise bridesmaids and the five foolish bridesmaids. Jesus’ message was one of being prepared. Not out of fear, but out of hope. A hope grounded in the assurance that the coming of the Son of Man brings forgiveness, comfort, rest and eternal salvation. Today, Jesus gives us this parable of the talents. Wisely investing verses foolishly burying.
We can look at the object to be invested, the talent, in one of two ways. In New Testament times, as money, the talent was equal to six thousand drachmas, worth more than fifteen years’ wages for a laborer.

In a different way, a talent may also be a gift we have been given from God in the form of an individual skill, or ability, or characteristic, or passion. Something special we can do that is unique to us.

Being near the end of his earthly life, Jesus wants to leave us with another important teaching. He calls us, his slaves, and entrusts his property to us in the form of our special talents and abilities. He expects we will use our talents and abilities to his glory, to grow his kingdom here on earth, for he will come again.
We don’t need to know when, we just need to be prepared, be wise, we must be ready, and use the talents we have been given. When Jesus does come again he will settle accounts with us.
The scripture makes it clear, we are to take the talent from him, be trustworthy in our investing in the kingdom of heaven, the kingdom here in our midst, for to those of us who have much even more will be given for we will ultimately have an abundance. The foolish slave, who buries the talent, who does not use their God given gifts, even what they have will be taken away and they will be thrown into the outer darkness.

This sounds so harsh. I understand Jesus will come again in judgment, but the requirement to invest wisely or be judged unworthy for inclusion in the kingdom sounds like we have to work towards our salvation. Didn’t Jesus pay the price for our salvation once and for all on the cross? How could that sacrifice have been forgotten and replaced by a works righteousness sort of rule?
Perhaps we haven’t truly understood this parable after all. We know Jesus is on a fast track to teach us who he is, who God is and the price he is about to pay to remove our sins forever. We know Jesus is teaching about the kingdom in our midst, what we as disciples must do, what we must give, how we must live to be faithful servants in the kingdom here and now. There is also the promise of the kingdom to come, the promise that Jesus will come again to take us, his disciples, with him. But we are here now and we have a role to play and sometimes we are not the most attentive students.

The unwise bridesmaids were left out of the banquet and the unwise slave is thrown into the outer darkness. Sounds like punishment. Sounds like having oil on hand to keep our lamp burning and being wise in our investing will include us in the kingdom. Or does it?

Everything we have in this world comes from God. As such, nothing we can do alone will help us be faithful disciples destined for this kingdom or the kingdom to come. Everything we have comes from God. We, therefore, are individually inadequate to the task of discipleship no matter how hard we try.

It is true that God gives us skills, abilities, and talents to invest in this kingdom. God gives them to us because we are inadequate otherwise. But there is more. Not only does everything come from God, everything belongs to God. Those talents are not ours. They are Gods.

I once read the Christian Century magazine about a popular little book called The Kingdom Assignment. It is the story of a pastor, Denny Bellesi, who gave out $10,000 in $100 increments to church members one Sunday. Please do not look under you pew cushion, you will not find $100 unless it slipped out of your purse or pocket.
He gave the church members $100 with three requirements: The $100 belongs to God. You must invest it in God’s work. You must report your results in 90 days. The reports were startling: people made money hand over fist to contribute to the work of the church, creative ministries were begun, lives were transformed, people wept for joy – and it was all covered by NBC’s Dateline.
This is a heart warming story. But let us be careful about being overly joyful with their good fortune, we might be placing a limit on our possibilities for real joy. Let us also be careful we not limit our investment in the kingdom of God to $100.

Jesus gave his slaves a talent, in terms of money, a huge amount, in terms of individual abilities, a great confidence. If we consider the talent we have been given may be not only money or individual abilities but the very gospel of Jesus Christ, why then we see how astounding this parable is. Jesus is calling on us to prepare ourselves this very moment, in this very place, to invest our lives, not in money or individual abilities alone, but in the gospel message of the good news of Jesus Christ who is our Lord and our Savior, sovereign about all things.

Our Book of Order lists six Great Ends of the church. They are: the proclamation of the Gospel for the salvation of humankind ; the shelter, nurture, and spiritual fellowship of the children of God; the maintenance of divine worship; the preservation of truth; the promotion of social righteousness; and the exhibition of the Kingdom of Heaven to the world.

In her recent book, The Promotion of Social Righteousness, the Reverend Doctor Cynthia Rigby from Austin Seminary addresses the theological and practical implications of the promotion of social righteousness.

She writes, “…to imagine justice is to envision everyone having what they need, and to move from imagining justice to participating in it so deeply that we make a contribution to it (that) requires fundamental change not only to how we handle our material resources, but a lot to who we are.”

What would it mean for everyone to have what they need from us here at Genesis Presbyterian Church? What would it mean in respect to the Gospel? To the nurturing of the children of God? To the maintenance of divine worship? To the preservation of the truth? To the promotion of social righteousness? To the exhibition of the Kingdom of Heaven? How would we be fundamentally changed?

Jesus is calling us this morning to imagine what we can do to help fulfill these needs. More than as an individual, we are being called as a church. It is to this corporate body, Genesis Presbyterian Church, the Mission Presbytery of which we are a member church, the Presbyterian Church (USA), this is to whom the gospel has been entrusted. The rewards are not neat progress reports after 90 days, but the joy of the messianic banquet. The table where just this past Sunday Jesus offered again his body, given for us, and his blood, shed for us for the forgiveness of our sins. Where each time we eat the bread and drink from the cup we proclaim the saving death of the risen Lord, until he comes again.

Isn’t this worth more than $100? Isn’t this worth more than a reserved giving of our time and talent? Why should we give everybody $100 and say, “This belongs to God,” implying the greater amount in our investment portfolio is ours?

Would it be more honest if we admitted this morning how difficult it is to do what this parable is asking us to do, to realize what Jesus has called us to invest, not just a talent or two, but our entire life, all of it? Isn’t this part of Jesus’ call to fundamental change, to transformation, to servant discipleship?

If it is Jesus’ intention that an astonishing gift like his gospel has been unloaded upon an unsuspecting church like ours that has not the faintest notion how to handle it, then might it be that the parable asks from us not the offering up of our individual abilities, but rather the frank, embarrassing admission of our corporate inability?

Instead of thinking we can with any degree of confidence have insight into the gospel we have been entrusted with maybe God needs for us to huddle up, shake our heads and confess, “We just have no idea, the treasure is too big, too heavy.” We haven’t had our cup of coffee yet!

Maybe then, and only then, in our humility, can we dare do something for God. God does not give the gospel to me or you so our individual ability alone can be put to good use. No, God gives the gospel to all of us so our inability might be exposed and instead of feeling ourselves glorified in what we think we have done, God will be glorified. God will be glorified because our work is inadequate. We must depend on God’s ability for ours is too small. We must depend on God’s ability to unleash the fullness of the gospel message. The gospel is too big, remember, left alone, we will bury it. We will bury our best intentions and we will bury the church!

The gospel isn’t being unleashed if we begin to think an extra $100 or so is all that belongs to God. The message of the gospel is too big for such trifles. Fundamental change requires we give our all. Time, yes. Talents, yes. Tithes, that too.

Surely it is only to the dumbfounded, to the clueless, to the overwhelmed, to those of us who are under no illusion that God calls. For we have never known quite what to do because of what Jesus did for us and asks of us and we don’t pretend it has ever have been otherwise – surely this is our shared inability, or inability to bear the weight of the gospel alone.

Yet despite that, we dare unleash the gospel, not for ourselves, but for God. We dare trust in God and unleash the gospel that those lost will be found, that those hungry will be fed, that those lost will be loved.

To unleash the gospel is our calling. For when we do and when we give our all we will become the ones to whom God will ultimately say, “Well done, good and faithful servant.” Well done.

In the name of the Father, and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, one God now and forever. And all God’s people say. Amen


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Sunday, November 6, 2011

06 November 2011 Get Ready for God Matthew 25:1-1

Mrs. Gay, my first boss taught me several valuable lessons. The one that I will never forget is to always be busy. At first I thought if I looked busy that would be enough. I was wrong. I learned I had to actually be busy and not according to my standards, but according to hers.

The lesson was actually an easy one to learn. She would find me somewhere back in the shop, it was a Pontiac dealership, and ask, “What are you doing”? If what I was doing wasn’t, in her opinion, of extreme value, she would find something else for me to do. And usually what she found for me to do was difficult and wasn’t nearly as much fun as what I was doing. So, I learned, be busy and be busy at something worthwhile according to Mrs. Gay’s standards.

Now this management style, while it did produce results, was pretty intimidating and clearly charged with fear. It kept me ever vigilant and on task.

It is not too difficult to recognize a similar element of fear in this morning’s gospel. It is as if Jesus is asking, “What are you doing?”

Ten bridesmaids took their lamps and went out to meet the bridegroom. The foolish ones did not plan ahead in case something went wrong – they did not bring extra oil for their lamps, just in case. The wise ones, on the other hand, were ready. They had plenty of oil, just in case.

So, when the bridegroom comes late who know what the ladies are doing. The five wise ones are ready with extra oil to stay alert to the coming of the bridegroom whatever the hour. The five foolish ones are not ready. What were they doing? Standing around in the dark, fearful, knowing they will have to try and recover for their lack of preparedness, these ones miss being with the bridegroom at the wedding banquet.
When asked, “What are you doing,” they had only looked busy. With empty lamps in hand fear gripped them as they realized they were losing their hope. Perhaps forever.
There may be a tendency here to harshly judge these five poorly prepared ladies for not being mature in their faith, for not watching intently enough for the bridegroom, who we know to be our savior Jesus Christ.

It may also be that we begin to feel guilty that in our own life we have become so attentive to living, working, tending to our most immediate needs, that we too are woefully ill prepared and are not watching intently enough for the coming again of our savior, that same bridegroom, Jesus Christ.

But this story isn’t directed just to those of us who feel afraid that we are ill prepared for faithful living and duty. No, let us not forget, all ten of the bridesmaids fell asleep. Those prepared and those not. The primary difference is that one group anticipated the bridegrooms delay and made contingency plans. One group stayed ready for any possibility, rainy day or worse. The other group? Well, they were thinking only about the honeymoon and not about the days and years to come.

There’s a Quaker word that’s been used to describe the bridesmaids with the extra oil for their lamps – the word is “all-there-ness”. “What it means is that in the Christian life, it is important for us to be truly present to what’s going on – so we’ll be “all there”.

I recently read, “. . . living the Christian faith isn’t so much about getting ready for the end times. It’s preparing to follow in the way of Jesus Christ when God’s promises are not fulfilled as soon as we had hoped.” To be truly present to what’s going on – so we’ll be 100% all there when asked, “What are you doing?” What are we doing day in and day out to follow in the way of Jesus? The way to truth and love and grace.

Perhaps one of the more famous stories making this point comes from a time in France during World War II. “When the darkness of Nazi Germany fell across southern France during World War II, the villagers of Le Chambon provided shelter to more than five thousand Jews, saving them from the death camps. One documentarian, seeking to identify some dramatic moment of decision among the villagers was surprised to hear villagers explaining the actions by saying, “It happened quite simply.”

The bible says to feed the hungry, to visit the sick. It’s a normal thing to do. One villager, asked to explain her decision to hide Jews after the German army had occupied southern France said matter-of-factly, “I don’t know. We were used to it.”

They were used to living this way, the way of truth, love and grace. They were used to living the ways of Jesus Christ giving their life, their day, their labor all to God. They would never fear anyone who questioned what they were doing.
Andrew Connors reminds us, “It’s easy to trust God’s promises when peace looks reasonable, the economy is on the upswing, and relationships are going well. It’s easy to trust that God is ushering in a new world when you see a hungry child given a full meal, a once declining church on the upswing, a sick family member healing with successful care. It’s easy to trust that Jesus is going to show up when you first hear the promises that he had made to come and make all things new.

But when it’s midnight, and you’ve been waiting for peace that never seems to come, waiting for a few extra dollars to get you out of a hole that never seems to shrink, waiting for something to change in a relationship that seems beyond repair…when you see hungry children go suffering, when you watch your church struggling, when the doctors tell you reluctantly that there’s nothing more they can do…that’s when we draw on the fuel that we hoped we would never need, fuel that enables us to live into God’s promises long before they are fulfilled.”

With this truth before us, this morning’s parable need not be read as a warning about being fearful and ill-prepared. No, our teaching is one of hope. There is good news to be found for those who follow Jesus Christ.

Embedded in this morning’s story is a gracious promise: Though today we may be frustrated with the inactivity of God in our lives – be patient. The Lord promises to come to us. God will come to us. God will find you. What is God doing? Seeking each of us.

Though we may be discouraged and tired from waiting, though we may have worn out our knees from praying for the living God to be present in our lives in a meaningful and undeniably real way – take heart. What is God doing? Longing for each of us.

Though we may be lost to what God wants us to do in our life, despair not, God has work for you and for me and God will, in God’s good time, call upon each of us to do it. What is God doing? Loving each of us.

By our human standards God may be moving too slowly. When we are in pain or difficulty any wait can seem too long. But be well assured, our God is a living God. Our God keeps the promises made. And our God has promised to come to you and to me in times of joy and in times of tragedy, in times of light and in times of dark, in times of laughter and in times of tears. Our God has promised to be ready, I wonder if we will? I wonder, what are we doing?

What are we doing about being “all there”, prepared and focused on God’s real presence in our lives? We do see God’s presence in our lives don’t we? It can happen quite simply. It is here in the love he has for us felt in the blessings of loved ones and friends, in this time and this place and in each of the pieces of our life story, the good times and the times not so good. Especially during the times not so good. That’s what God is doing. Standing with us always.

For us, being acutely away of God’s presence is a long and slow process. A process that comes from practicing God’s presence day after day and year after year, as we live and pray and worship, as we study and seek God’s comforting wisdom. As we follow in Jesus’ way of love and service.
Here is how Julian of Norwich, a mystic who lived in the late 14th century in England would sum this up:

“So God tells us: You will yourself behold that all will be well. It is as though God were telling us: Take it now in faith and truth, and in the end you will see truly, in all fullness and joy.

Creator, Christ and Holy Spirit will accomplish an action on the last day; what it will be, and how it will be accomplished, no creature…knows, and so it shall remain veiled until the act is accomplished. God wishes us to know this so that our spirits might be surrendered to God’s love, and we might then ignore every disturbance which thwarts our true rejoicing in God.”
This my friends is how we are to prepare ourselves to follow the way of Jesus. Knowing God will act on the last day, we are to follow our heart by surrendering to God’s loving presence now, rejoicing in our life filled with God’s grace, being “all there”, hearing the bible tells us how to prepare and how to live and follow Jesus Christ, being 100% present to what’s going on in our lives and the world so we can be 100% there for Christ to be his servant to the world.

We know what God has done and is doing for us.

What I wonder are we doing in return for God?

In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever more. And all God’s people say, amen.

Additional resources:
“Lectionary Homiletics,” Volume XIX, Number 6, pgs. 48 – 55.
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