Sunday, September 13, 2015

New Blogger Address

For reasons that I cannot fully understand, Blogger does not like this ancient account.  I think it has to do with the fact that I set it up before Blogger was taken over by Google, and now Google does not like the fact that I log in (or attempt to log in) using a non-gmail address.

So, after a number of attempts to get around the problem, I have given up.

There is a new Blogger address where I will begin posting my e-devotions and sermons.  That address is
www.PastorChrisHeavner.blogspot.com

This site will still be viewable, I just can't post anything new here.  So the new stuff is at
www.PastorChrisHeavner.blogspot.com

Thank you,
Pastor Chris

Thursday, September 3, 2015

Devotion - Thursday, September 3

I must say how impressed I was with the "Wisdom" passed on from our senior students at last night's LCM Dinner.  Define yourself by who your are - not merely what you do; take some leisure skills classes, it is okay to get a B; remember why you chose this major; you are here to get an education and a job; don't over commit; carry a stapler in your book-bag. All good advice for incoming and returning students.

Anna gave us great advice for everyone.  She spoke of being considerate toward your professors.  She spoke of remembering that they, like you, have a life outside of class and that that life may be experiencing a few bumps and bruises.  

A few years back, I was sent a placard which read:  "Remember that everyone you meet is facing demons of which you are totally unaware."  Too seldom do we stop to think about what the person we are interacting with may be facing.  The anger coming forth may be misplaced aggression.  The tears may be pent up emotions brought forth by the smallest of pin pricks.

Surely God hopes His servants would be cognizant of the larger context of the lives of others.  Surely, God's servants can remember to be kind and gentle and understanding.  Since God has been so gracious and understanding of us, ought we not show the same toward the rest of His children?

Good advice, Anna.

Wednesday, September 2, 2015

Devotion - Wednesday, September 2

It is in Mark 12 that Jesus is challenged by a group in the hopes of entrapping him.  The exchange gives rise to a trap into which many continue to be lured.

They ask him if it is lawful to pay taxes to Caesar.  He asks for a coin. "Whose image is on this coin?"  Caesar's.  Then he says, "Return to Caesar that which is Caesar's and return to God that which is God's."

Too often, this exchange is used to pretend that there is an divide between "church and state" which is never, ever to be crossed.  Too often, this exchange is used to insist that talk of religion and talk of politics are to remain in two completely separate realms.

Read Mark 12 for yourself.  Be reminded that Jesus isn't giving an opinion, he is thwarting the attempts of those who would entrap him.  This does not mean that he speaks words which he does not intend, but it should give us pause when interpreting those words.

"Politics" are not evil.  We must pay attention to how we live together.  And, how we live together is a matter of great concern to God.  We have lost the skill of talking politics, in large part because we so quickly become entrapped in partisan talk.  

Jesus' words we not received well.  Those who asked him were of the mindset that God's people ought never participate in the realm of Rome's empire. Many (myself included) hear Jesus telling them to acknowledge those parts of their lives where the state does have a role.  

There will always be politics.  And the people of God must become active in the political debates.  We must avoid partisanship.  Every vote, every candidate, every letter written to a Representative must be informed by what it is that God has laid on our hearts about this issue.  

We are to return to Caesar an accurate depiction of how God has told us to live among others.  Caesar may not listen, but that does not mean we will become silent or withdrawn.

Tuesday, September 1, 2015

Devotion - Tuesday, September 1

The parable Jesus tells in Mark 12 is shocking.  A man plants a vineyard and let it out to tenants.  When the crop is harvested, he sends servants to collect his share.  The servants are beaten and sent back empty handed.  

Other servants are sent. Some are beaten, others are murdered.  Finally, the man sends his son.  The tenants kill him also.

The story is told, initially, to make the chief priests and scribes and elders reflect on the way they have responded to God's servants.  Every story in the bible had a life when it was told, but takes on new life when it is retold among us.  What is this story saying to you?  To me?

Certainly, we continue to benefit from a vineyard which we did not create.  Clearly, we have harvested much good and desirable fruit.  What of that are we returning to the one who placed us in this vineyard?

When asked if  we will join others on Sunday afternoons to  tie fleece blankets for needy neighbors, will we respond?

Could we sacrifice our Sunday afternoon (Oct 4)  to walk in the CROP Walk for Hunger?

Are we prepared to make a few phone calls to students who have left their childhood homes,come to this new and strange place, and remain in need of a caring community of support?

Are God's servants going away empty handed, when they come to us to ask for a share of our energy and our time?

Read Mark 12.  Hear this parable - as a message to you.  Do not allow it to merely justify thoughts of condemnation for others.  How is God calling you to apply this story in your own life?

Monday, August 31, 2015

Devotion - Monday, August 31

For the sake of new additions to this listserve, allow me to repeat one of my most treasured axioms on quoting the bible.  It is from Philip Melanchthon:  "Never quote a verse of scripture unless you can quote two more:  One which reinforces the first; and another which challenges the first."

I was directed this morning to Mark 11:26, where I read one of the "challenge" verses for me.  Jesus is speaking, "But if you do not forgive, neither with your Father who is in heaven forgive your trespasses."

So much of scripture tells us that Jesus forgives, even more abundantly than we are able to ask.  Over and over again Jesus says he came to the lost.  We are comforted to know that the spirit finishes our prayers which are too deep for understanding.

Then, I read Mark 11:26.

I don't want to dismiss this verse, or find some way to explain it away.  What I fear most is that I might latch on to it and use it as a way of holding trespasses over the heads of those whose transgression has affected me.  

Here is where my prayers this morning lead me:  I continue in my confidence that God is more willing to forgive than I am to ask for forgiveness.  Since I draw my very life from that God, then I will surely understand the significance of that forgiveness.  As one so dependent on a forgiving God, as one so moved by God's forgiveness, how could I possibly withhold forgiveness?  So, I will forgive.  As I have first been forgiven.  And even if Mark 11:26 is a hard and fast rule, it won't affect me.  After all, if the only reason I forgive is out of a fear that I won't be forgiven, am I really forgiving or merely pretending so as to qualify for a greater prize?

Scripture will always surprise us and challenge us.  It is important we read the verses which bring us pause and challenge us.

Thursday, August 27, 2015

Devotion - Thursday, August 27

In Mark 10, two of the disciples come to Jesus to ask for places of honor.  That is sort of an odd thing to do, but it allows Jesus to tell all of his followers what places of "honor" mean in his Kingdom.

Those places are places of service.  Jesus tells us "whoever would be great among you must be your servant, and whoever would be first among you must be slave of all."

The life of a Christian is to be recognized  by our eagerness to step into such roles of service.  The identity of a Christian is formed as we live the life of a slave.

Peter Marshall offers this advice for how we live this life and come to this self-understanding:

returning good for evil,
returning soft answers for sharp criticisms,
being polite when I receive rudeness,
being understanding when I am confronted by ignorance and stupidity.
May God aid you this day as  you seek to be the slave of all whom you meet; as you live the life of service.

Wednesday, August 26, 2015

Devotion - Wednesday, August 26

When we decided to study the letter of Paul in our Tuesday night bible study, I didn't realize how tough that would be without first considering the Book of Acts.

To study the letters of Paul, you need to know a bit about Paul.  It is helpful to realize how contentious Paul's message was to some of the other early church leaders.

This morning I read from Acts 21.  

Paul has been preaching (mostly) among the Gentiles.  The followers of Jesus who were Jews have not been totally supportive of Paul's methods.  Some of them had held to the notion that to become a follower of Jesus, you had to first convert to Judaism.  Paul didn't think this to be necessary.

In Acts 21, James announces that becoming a Jew is no longer a necessary step to becoming a Christian.  This is a big step.  This is a huge change.

We take for granted that no one has to observe Jewish customs in order to be a Christian.  But as the Book of Acts points out, this was not a foregone conclusion.  It is helpful to know this history, and to know this about Paul.

It may be helpful to us, today, as we examine our expectations for someone "becoming" Christian.  What do we "require," formally or informally?  Are we even aware of the assumptions we make about who can and who cannot be considered a member of the family of God?

Jesus' style was to welcome people in, then to start to talk to them about what it means to stay.  He fed the 5,000 and after their bellies were full he told them what had just happened in their midst.  The threshold for entry is very low; the expectations for staying are discussed once you know you are welcome and have a place.

Tuesday, August 25, 2015

Devotion - Tuesday, August 25

The Book of Acts, or the Acts of the Apostles as it is sometimes titled, gives us a much needed insight to the birth of the Church.  The names and events spoken of here will continue to figure into the other books of the New Testament.  Acts allows us to track the movements of Paul, as he shared the good news throughout the rest of the region.

It also recounts a time when the members of the Church were much more open to being "lead by the Spirit."

We in the western world of Christianity have become much more comfortable with the theological statements of the Church.  In the eastern part, there was a greater emphasis placed on what the Spirit was saying to us.

This evening I will lead a Bible Study on the Letters of Paul.  I will be concentrating on the insights and wisdom and instructions Paul leaves for us.  Might I also acknowledge Paul's on-going and active exchanges with the Spirit through prayer and visions.

This may be an area where we can aid one another.  Within the safety of a group where we are known well and know each other we can risk acknowledging the times when we made a life-choice based on the urging of that which cannot be fully understood.  We might be able to speak of where the Spirit is leading us, particularly when it is leading us to places we might not otherwise go.  The Spirit is active in our lives; the activity which is lacking is our speaking of it and acknowledging how powerful is its influence on us.

Monday, August 24, 2015

Devotion - Monday, August 24

Reading my Bible brings me the greatest of all joy.  It also lifts up the greatest of challenges.

Realizing the opportunity entrusted to me - to preach and to teach - I am very aware of how such an office could be misused.  So, in my prayers I continually ask that God would guard me from such temptation and tendencies.

I am a firm believer in GRACE.  I like to say that you either believe in GRACE or you don't.  If you are firmly convinced that GRACE is God's mindset, then everything changes.

You cannot exclude from God's family those who hold differing opinions.  It is GRACE, not right thoughts which bring us into God's household.

You cannot exclude from God's family those who worship differently.  It GRACE, not particular rituals which bring us into God's household.

But one of the scripture verses I need to remember and understand is Acts 20:30.  "Some even from your own group will come distorting the truth in order to entice the disciples to follow them.  Therefore be alert..."

I struggle and I pray continually that God will help me to see His way.  I will not turn a blind eye to Acts 20:30 and I will not merely assume my words are true and faithful.  With one message I will preach the confidence of a GRACE-filled life; with another I will tell the discerning to always question and wonder.

The place I am honored to occupy allows me the opportunity to preach and to teach; it does not give me the right to spew forth my own ideas and opinions.  Test the words of these humble offerings.  Stand firm in your faith; but do not shun away from the questions or doubts for these will make your own proclamation of the Word more sound.

I remain, unquestionably, committed to GRACE.  If not for GRACE, I would be lost.  It is God's GRACE which holds me firm, when I preach or teach as well as when I wonder and question.

Sunday, August 23, 2015

Sermon - Pentcost 13 -Year B


John 6:56-69                                    

                                                               Where can we go? 

            “Lord, to whom can we go?  You have the words of eternal life.” 

            That is the verse I would like for you to remember and repeat at least daily in the week to come.  Too often we think learning our Bibles means biting off large chunks.  We learn as much when we take small pieces, and reflect on what a few well-selected words mean. 

            Repeat the verse with me:  “Lord, to whom can we go?  You have the words of eternal life.” 

            Jesus’ acts of compassion have been uncovered as a foreshadowing of where he intends to go.  Jesus’ confusing words about his body being the bread he will offer has sent many of his followers scattering.  He turns to the twelve and asks them, “Do you also wish to go away?”  And how do they answer him?  “Lord, to whom can we go?  You have the words of eternal life.” 

            They might have gone – had there been anywhere else to go.  But while there might have been other places to go to, none of them would have resulted in the “eternal life” which Jesus is able to offer. 

            I want to retell a story from the summer.  But I want to retell it from a slighting differing angle.  It is about the Youth Gathering in Detroit.  Rick and Cindy Sanders, Mary King, and Christine Hart are my fact-checkers for this retelling. 

            At the Youth Gathering, Lutheran Campus Ministry’s area in the interaction center involved framing the wall sections for four Habitat for Humanity houses.  You can probably imagine where the idea for such a project arose.  This was actually the third youth gathering at which Rick and Cindy and Laura and I were in the middle of planning such a project. 

            But this was the first time we had attempted to frame four houses.  This was the first time we had tried to work in partnership with Lutheran Disaster Response.  This was the first time we had arranged for twelve campus ministry participants from across the U.S. to come along for the ride.   

            It was, to say the least, a challenge.  Particularly on Saturday night, four hours after everyone else had left the Cobo Center to enjoy the evening’s programing and we were still loading wall sections onto the truck.  Greg’s Fitbit told him that on Friday he had walked 10 miles, all within the confines of our two football size work-space. 

            And yet, by the time the van crossed the SC State Line (did I mention that we DROVE to Detroit in the church van?)  By the time the van crossed the SC State Line, we were heard making plans for a repeat, in three years, when the youth gathering is held in Houston, TX. 

I in no way want to pretend that our work at the Youth Gathering is of equal importance to the work carried out by the twelve apostles.  But, it may serve as a comparison.  The path chosen is tough, too tough for any sane person to continue.  But there is an ending too precious to be missed. 

“Lord, to whom can we go?  You have the words of eternal life.” 

 Tradition has it that every one of the twelve apostles suffered.  Most were martyred.  The itinerant preacher they chose to follow set a pattern which was played out in their own lives.  Not a single one of them ever settled down, in a comfortable little cottage with a spouse and a few kids.  Had they known where all this was leading, would they have left?   

But then, maybe they did know.  At least they knew what needed to be known.  Simon Peter is the spokesperson for the group.  He certainly seems to know.  His words bear evidence to the reality that while this whole following Jesus thing is a tough path, it is the only path which is likely to lead to the place one wants to be.  When presented with the option of leaving, Simon responds, “Lord, to whom can we go?  You have the words of eternal life.” 

Jesus dies so that this bread might be available to us.  Is it any surprise that those who eat of this bread might be called give over our lives as well? 

That sounds scary, and it is.  That sounds ridiculous, and it might be.  But it is when we lose ourselves to something greater than ourselves that we find ourselves. 

Few of us will be called upon to experience martyrdom.  That might happen, for fellow believers, living in other parts of the world.  The Coptic Christians in Egypt have been forced to choose between their faith and their lives.  Few of us will be called upon to give up our lives, but we are continually being asked whether we will yield significant aspects of our lives.  Will we give an overnight to staff Family Promise?  Will we be a chaperone for a youth trip?  Could we share some of our money with the families in Clemson who don’t have groceries? 

Jesus’ words, the very words which are the words of eternal life, are words which call upon us to see our lives as a part of a larger (shall we say “eternal”) framework. 

In her book, Reclaiming the “L” Word, Kelly Frayer speaks of life in the Church as an outing at the beach.  Some will sit on the sand and watch the waves.  There is something wonderful about that, very peaceful, enjoyable.  Others will wade in the shallows.  Here, you get a bit wet.  And you are likely to get a bit of sand sticking to your skin.  Some will venture into the deeper water.  Out there you ride the waves, taste the salt, float on your back and look up at the sun.  But out there you also risk shark bites.  Only a few will don scuba gear and delve to the depths, discovering all that the sea has to offer. 

You can decide how deeply you will venture into the Christian life.  You are always welcome to come and sit on the sandy beaches.  If that is all that you are prepared for, enjoy.  Return often.  But, to experience the fullness of that which motivated the first followers of Jesus, you will need to get a bit wetter. 

The twelve knew what they were getting into.  They understood what it would mean for their lives.  They may have had a slight tone of resignation in their voices, but they were quick to reply – Lord, to whom can we go?  You have the words of eternal life. 

Amen.

Thursday, August 20, 2015

Devotion - Thursday, August 20

I mentioned on Tuesday how helpful it would be to have a list of Bible stories to recommend to someone, when they ask me where to begin in studying their Bible.  Pastor Jack Saarela lifted up Romans 8:31-39.  Good suggestion.

This morning, my devotional guide sent me to another.  This is the story of the Transfiguration.  Each of the four Gospels include this story (which suggests it is very important.)  This is the story where Jesus goes up on the mountain with Peter and James and John.  While there Jesus' body begins to radiate light.  With Jesus are Moses and Elijah.  

This story allows the disciples (those with him that day and those who read of it in our day) to see Jesus as the One sent by God.  We are allowed to see that Jesus is something new and different and yet he is firmly rooted in the unfolding of God's story which is displayed in Abraham and the prophets who came after.

When Moses comes into the story, the story becomes deeper and more instructive.  When Elijah comes into the story, the story becomes deeper and more instructive.  Now, Jesus has entered the story.  

What does Jesus tell his disciples?  How does he allow us to see the story unfolding in our own lives?  

For today, it may be enough for us to ponder the simplest of pieces of this story.  Jesus' transfiguration involves light - and that light calls attention to him.  Light enables us to see.  Before we look to see what we can see, our eyes have to adjust to the light, we have to register there is a light which allows us to see.  For today, think about how the Light which is Jesus affects your vision.  How might it affect your vision?

Mark's version of the Transfiguration is in Chapter 9.

Wednesday, August 19, 2015

Devotion - Wednesday, August 19

I am going to return to Mark 8 again this morning.  One of the last verses of this chapter reads:  "What does it profit someone, to gain the whole world and forfeit their life?"

For the sake of "the world," we do too often exchange our lives.

By "the world," neither Mark or I am shunning the beauty and wonder and fascinations that surround us.  The reference is in this verse is to the things the world tries to put forward as those things of ultimate concern.  The list might include power, prestige, personal wealth.  For the sake of these things too many will sacrifice their lives.

"Their lives" is a reference to one's person, to one's central core, to one's self-identity.  It is the person God made you to be and the person God knows you have the ability to become.  

Your one wild and precious life is much too valuable to allow it to slip through your fingers or pass you by.  Jesus invites us into the Kingdom of God where our lives matter and where we are allowed to know how deeply we are loved.

As you start your classes today - ask of each one this basic question: "How is what I am going to learn in the class going to help me value the life God has given me?"  Sure, you will need to also know what you need to do to get a good grade, and there is some of the information which will be helpful in the next class you take.  But don't forfeit your life for the sake of a grade or a future glory.  Find in each class the thing which makes it worthy of your time.

God bless you today.

Tuesday, August 18, 2015

Devotion - Tuesday, August 18

When I am asked for guidance in reading the bible, I ought to be better prepared.  There are a number of chapters in the bible which ought to be familiar to every student of scripture.

One of these is Mark 8.

Jesus is going about the villages, doing his thing, when he gets all serious with the disciples.  He stops them and and asks, "Who do you think I am?"  After some missteps, they get it right.  Peter is their spokesman.

It is important that every student of scripture be familiar with this exchange.  Important in part because of the story's inclusion of titles for Jesus which would be great titles, but don't quite get it right.  Too often, titles are suggested for Jesus which are good things to think about him, but they too fall short.  Even before we come to understand what it means to call Jesus "Christ," we ought to know that this is the only title which completely fits.

Mark 8 goes on.

Immediately after making the confession that Jesus is Christ, Peter makes the mistake of assigning to the Christ his own expectations.  Peter wants Christ to fit his model or understanding.  This is an ongoing temptation.  It is a constant and continual struggle to understand what it means to know Jesus as "Christ."  As we make our way, it is likely that we, too, will speak of him as less than what he is.  Being a Christian is a constant tension between affirming Jesus as Christ, and seeking a clearer understanding of what that means - for us, and for the world.

Read Mark 8.  And help me to note other stories in the Bible too filled with meaning to be ignored.  Someone should start a list.

Monday, August 17, 2015

Devotion - Monday, August 17

irst off let me say how much I appreciate this opportunity.  The Spiritual journey can be lonely, filled with unsettling twists and turns.  I am grateful to have companions on this adventure; and delighted if any of the encouragements God whispers into my ear can also be encouragement for you.

I was reading this morning from 2 Samuel 7.  David is anxious to build a "house of cedar" for God and God's Holy Ark.  The prophet Nathan receives a visit from God.  You can read the details for yourself and share how God's words to Nathan relate to your quest.  For me, the words were a reminder that too often we put our emphasis on the things others will see, while the essential thing is that which we experience.  

David worried that he had not built a house for God.  The Word of God which came to Nathan addresses God's promise that God "will not take my steadfast love from him."  

It isn't what can be seen; it is what is experienced.

I hope you will "show" your trust in Jesus by the way you live among your hall-mates, by the words you choose to use, by being seen reading your bible.  But pay the greatest attention to the words God whispers in your ear.  As Pastor Hartsell said in yesterday's sermon at UniLu, it is a word of acceptance and love.  It is a word of invitation and affirmation.  It is a word about relationship.

You will need to decide how public you want to be with the words whispered in your ear.  They are your words, and you can surely keep them to yourself.  I have found it helpful to explore them with others - thus I send out these humble offerings.  But the sharing must not be some vain attempt to build a "house of cedar", should there be a shaky or unsure relationship.  Attention needs to be given to hearing the Word of God; how you act on it is (truly) of less importance.

Welcome back!  I look forward to a great year together of discovering what God is saying to all of us.

Pastor Chris

Sunday, May 31, 2015

Sermon - Trinity Sunday


Trinity Sunday – Year B

                                                                We Are Triune Christians 

When the ELW was printed, the third of our approved “Creeds” was omitted.  The ELCA confesses three Creeds:  The Apostles’, the Nicene, and The Athanasian Creed. 

The Athanasian Creed has typically been used once a year – on Holy Trinity Sunday.  Written later in church history (sometime around the 6th century), it is the only creed in which the equal natures of the three persons of the Trinity is explicitly stated.  (It is also the only one of the Creeds which states that those who do not hold to the statements of the creed are condemned.) 

Having (seemingly) expressed my dissatisfaction at the non-inclusion of the Athanasian Creed, let me say that I found it troubling when we did use it, year after year, on Trinity Sunday, with no real explanation.  Its language is harsh.  I wondered how those who had not sat in a seminary classroom might respond to its insistence that “those who do not believe these things are condemned already.”   

On the other hand, I do believe it to be a good teaching tool.  And I am all about teaching.  Especially on a concept as difficult to explain (and understand) as the Trinity.  It is important, on Trinity Sunday, to turn into a teacher and attempt to teach as much as can be learned about the Trinity, and why understanding the Trinity is important.  Our Christian faith is a faith in a Triune God.  We worship One God, in three persons.  And if it takes the jolt of the Antanasian Creed to remind us how serious all this is, so be it.  

You would be hard pressed to find a modern day gathering of Christians who doesn’t make use Father-Son-Holy Spirit language.  But not all of them will be observing Holy Trinity Sunday.  We do.  Just like Christmas and Easter and Pentecost, Trinity Sunday is set on our calendars as one of the major Church festivals. 

One God, three persons; indivisible, yet distinct.  This is the way we talk about God; this is the way we understand God.  It is the way we have come to understand God.  This does not mean that the earliest gathering of Jesus’ followers understood God to be a Trinity.

 

Before they were called “Christians,” the followers of Jesus were referred to as participants in “The Way.”  Before there were official Church statements, there was a whole plethora of statements of understanding.  Yes, it is completely true (and never denied,) that there are other “gospels” out there, in addition the four collected in our bibles (Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John) and it is also true (and never denied,) some of these other accounts speak quite differently about Jesus and about his relationship with the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.  The Church statements, developing over time, decided which perspectives were to be embraced (some would want to say “allowed”) and which were to be regarded as informative, but not normative. 

The perspective of one God in three persons, which we now share, was not universally shared by all those who in the first century A.D. were trying to figure out what it means to follow Jesus.  They had the core teachings which lead to the formation of the Doctrines associated with God as Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.  But, they would not have used that formula, nor insisted that each worship service begin and end with it. 

Over time, the understanding of God as one yet three is the perspective which the followers of Jesus came to share.  They/we found this perspective to be helpful and informative.  Seeing God as One God, in three persons, allowed us to see in its entirety the message which Jesus taught. 

Father – Son – Holy Spirit.  These are the “names” associated with the Triune God.  Some prefer to refer to the functions of these three, so you will hear formulas like Creator – Redeemer – Sanctifier.  The perspective being sought is one in which God is understood as larger than and more complete than anything we could envision or describe.  God needs three names to even begin to speak of who he is and what he does. 

God the Father/God the Creator, is an acknowledgement that in God all things find their ground of being.  Who we are is rooted in God.  We are all God’s creation; everyone one of us.  The God whom we worship is the maker of all things.  The God to whom we offer our prayers, is the One who called all things into being.  When we insist on a Triune perspective we are instructing followers that no one in the whole of God’s creation is to been seen as anything less than one of God’s children.  Their ethnic heritage or the color of their skin, nor even the creed they confess changes or denies that they are God’s.  Everyone, and everything, in the whole of creation, belongs to God.  

In talking about the Son, it is helpful if we begin with the opening words of John’s Gospel.  John writes, In the beginning was the Word,  he tells us that this Word of God called into being everything which is.  After painting a marvelous vision of the power and strength of this Word of God, he tells us that this Word has become flesh and dwelt among us. 

The Son, the Redeemer, is that part of God’s person which seeks to be known.  It is the facet of God’s person which allows us to understand.  It is that self-expression of God which liberates us from the fears associated with darkness and death.  We have come to believe that Jesus is the Son of God, the One sent among us to save us. 

Within the Trinity, the Son embodies what it is that we believe and teach.  It is the invitation from God to think right thoughts. 

The name of the third person of the Trinity is the one which varies the most.  Like many of you, I grew up referring to the third person as the Holy Ghost.  “Ghost” language begins to be changed to “Spirit” language sometime around the early 70’s.  “Spirit” is a better word.  And “Ghost” has too many non-religious connotations.  In scripture, this third person is referred to as the “Paracleat,” or more simply, “Helper.”  In another part of John’s Gospel, the Spirit is called “the Advocate.”  The Spirit is that part of God which guides us into righteous living.

The Spirit is concerned with how we live.  The Spirit addresses the realization that God not only concerns God’s self with who we are and what we think but also with what we do.  Salvation may be associated with the second person of the Trinity, but our relationship with God isn’t complete unless we are also actively seeking sanctification.

Father – Son – Holy Spirit; Creator – Redeemer – Sanctifier; who we are – what we believe – how we live or lives;  this is what it means to embrace the concept of a Triune God. 

Who we are – what we believe – how we lives our lives; all three are important to those who continue to desire to participate in the Way of Jesus. 

The Doctrine of the Trinity is one of those Church statements which developed over time, reaching it final formulation centuries after the death and resurrection of Jesus.  Those who formulated the Doctrine (and those accept the Doctrine) believe that all of the parts are there in the earliest writings.  Most importantly, we see in the Doctrine of the Trinity a way to direct the perspectives of those who would seek to become Christian, encouraging them to see all that there is to be seen when one considers who God is and what it is that God calls upon us to do. 

Father – Son – Holy Spirit.

Creator – Redeemer – Sanctifier.

Who we are – what we believe – how we live our lives. 

Our identity as Christians includes all three.   

Amen.

Sunday, May 24, 2015


Pentecost Sunday - Year B                                                                                                        

Acts 2:1-21     (Gen 11:1-9)                                                  

 

                                                   The Spirit-Gift to Community for Mission
 

            Thomas G. Long, professor of homiletics at Princeton Theological Seminary, tells of teaching a confirmation class in which he was discussing the major festivals of the Church Year.  The Children knew about Christmas and Easter, but no one in the class could remember the significance of Pentecost.  Dr. Long explained that the day of Pente­cost was the day the Holy Spirit came from heaven with the sound of a rushing wind, and fire rested on the heads of everyone gathered in Jerusalem, and they all spoke in different tongues.  At that point one girl raised her hand and said, "I don't remember that.  My family must have been out of town that Sunday." 

            The story exposes one of the major difficulties which confront us on Pentecost Sunday: how do we bridge the gap between the events recorded in Acts and the experience of the church today.  Many of us are troubled and confused by the circumstances surrounding the birth of the church.  If anything resembling the events in Jerusalem ever hap­pened in our church, it had to have happened on a Sunday that we were away. 

            The timing of Pentecost increases the likelihood that we were away.  Today is Pentecost Sunday on the liturgical calendar; on the calendars we carry in our pockets, it’s the first Sunday of summer - the vacation season has begun.  Our congregational calendar is also slowing down.  We have one more week of Sunday Church School?  Then we move to one service (at 9:30 am).  With all that comes the general expectation that attendance will be lower from now until sometime in August.
           Confusion and calendar location - is it any wonder that the mention of Pentecost is met with blank stares? 

            The story of the rushing wind and the tongues of fire is one of the best known stories of the bible.  Unfortunately, its popularity is not accompanied by a high degree of understanding.  All too often, the second chapter of Acts is the source of major misunderstandings about the role of the Holy Spirit in the Christian community.  The events recorded here are too often used to bolster the mistaken view that the gift of the Holy Spirit is a reward for special righteousness, that the Spirit is concerned only with individual believers, and that the primary manifestation of the Spirit's presence is the speaking in tongues.  In fact, the text itself makes three very different affir­mations: 

1 - The Holy Spirit is a gift, given by God;

            2 - God gives the Holy Spirit to the community of faith;

3 - God gives the Holy Spirit to the community of faith for mission.

            First, Luke proclaims that the gift of the Holy Spirit is God's gift.  It is not, and cannot be earned, and it is not deserved.  It is simply a gift.  This point is missed or misunderstood by too many of our contemporaries.  While none blatantly insist they have a right to an outpouring of the Holy Spirit, they speak of spiritual disci­pline in such a way as to imply that one positions oneself for the Spirit's arrival.  The pure, the chaste, the pious - - such members of the community carry themselves in such a way as to suggest that they are more deserving of the Spirit's visitation.  The author of Acts has no such illusions. 

            Those who were gathered in Jerusalem were not seeking the gift of the Holy Spirit, they could only accept it.  They did not create the Spirit's power, they could only claim it.  They did not program the Spirit's arrival, they could only respond to it.  The Holy Spirit is God's gift, freely given to those whom God chooses. 

            The second affirmation within the biblical text is the affirma­tion that God gives the Spirit to the community of faith.  In Jerusa­lem, the coming of the Spirit created unity were there had been division.  That long list of difficult names read for us are a remind­er of the variety of nationalities and peoples present in Jerusalem.  The Spirit comes, and diverse people become the one people of God. 

            Congregationalism among the modern church has eroded our ability to see the diversity of those who assemble in God's name.  It is our tendency to join congregations where folks look and act and talk in the same way we do.  At Pentecost, the Spirit swooped through the crowd, as with an out-stretched arm.  Gathering together all those who had once been individuals; making of them children of God. 

            The events described in Acts 2 are set in juxtaposition with the events in Genesis 11.  This is another well-known, but often not-so-well-understood biblical story.  Genesis 11 is the story of the Tower of Babel. On first reading, the story of the Tower of Babel seems to show human pride destroying human unity - resulting in God's punishment of scattering the people of the earth literally (geographi­cally) and symbolically (linguistically).  But a second reading reveals a more complex plot and deeper meaning. 

            The people who settled on the plain of Shinar were unified.  They shared a common language and a common purpose.  They wanted to make a name for themselves and keep themselves from being scattered to the corners of the earth.  The unity they sought, however, was contrary to God's instruction - given in Genesis 1.28 - to be fruitful and multi­ply, and fill the earth.  The Tower of Babel is a warning against all attempts to establish unity on the basis of human autonomy and self-sufficiency.  The unity desired by God is based not upon common lan­guage or common goals but on a common commitment to do God's will and to live according to God's purposes. 

            The Holy Spirit is given to the community of faith.  The spirit comes to the individual believer only in the larger context of restor­ing proper relationships in the community of faith and empowering the community of faith for service. 

            The third affirmation present in the story of Pentecost is that God gives the Spirit to the community of faith for mission.  The Spirit is God's active presence in the world. 

            When the Spirit is considered an individual gift; when the Spirit is considered a reward for pious living; it ceases to be active - rather it becomes a trophy, held with great pride and dis­played for all to see, but never used in the accomplishment of an even greater task.  God's gift to the community of faith - the Holy Spir­it - is given to us so that we might be about the work of God in the world. 

            Here again we can learn something from that story in Genesis 11. 
God punished the people by confusing their language so that they did not understand one another.  The word rendered "understand" is the Hebrew shema, the same word that appears in the affirmation "Hear, O Israel:  The Lord our God is one Lord."  (Deut 6.4)  This connection is important because it focuses attention on hearing as an essential ingredient in the divine-human relationship and in relationships within the human community.  Whether between parents and teenagers, husbands and wives, men and women, or God and humanity, when hearing fails, relationships fail. 

            This emphasis on hearing, not the speaking in tongues, is the link between Genesis 11 and Acts 2.  The word “hear” appears at several crucial points in the Pentecost narrative in Acts (2.6, 8, 14, 22, 37).  The events of Pentecost do not, as is usually assumed, reverse the punishment given to the builders of the tower but rather results in a "fresh capacity to listen."  (W. Brueggemann, Genesis, Interpretation, John Knox Press.) 

            In spite of all the speaking in other tongues, those who gathered in Jerusalem heard the gospel in their own language. God did not restore a single language or one homogeneous community.  Instead God enabled the diverse and scattered peoples of the earth to hear one another.  On Pentecost every nation under heaven is embraced.  It is that same Spirit which empowers and sustains the church as it seeks to give voice to God's word of salvation and become a channel of God's work in the world.

            God gives the Holy Spirit to the community of faith for mission.  When we lack an understanding of the mission God has given us; when we consider the Spirit an individual prerogative; when we link the Spirit's arrival with our own faithfulness - it is highly likely that we will be away, should the Spirit ever descend.  Let us open our hearts and our minds, receiving this gift of our God's, allowing it to unify us in Christ and setting us forth to proclaim the Good News. 

Amen.