Do
you not know that your mere presence here gives a testimony
—that you are a Christian at all, points to the Holy Spirit, for it is by the Spirit alone that you have heard the Gospel in such a way that it has brought you to faith.
—that you are a Christian at all, points to the Holy Spirit, for it is by the Spirit alone that you have heard the Gospel in such a way that it has brought you to faith.
Many
a Christian has described their own faith life, and relationship to worship as,
“Some days I don’t know
if I go to church because I believe, or
so that I can believe.”
After all it is here that
we are again confronted by the Word of God:
The Word of God that works as a Mirror, showing us our sins; as a Window, allowing us to see our society more clearly; and as a Love Letter, wooing us with words of passion, truth, and love…
The Word of God that works as a Mirror, showing us our sins; as a Window, allowing us to see our society more clearly; and as a Love Letter, wooing us with words of passion, truth, and love…
Yet,
this Word of God must be accompanied by the Holy Spirit
—for it must be heard with ears of
faith, otherwise it can sound like an idle tale, like finger nails on a
blackboard, like a tale told by drunks—as Peter and his crew are accused of at
Pentecost.
Truly, when the Word of God and the
Spirit of God come together something powerful happens,
we are killed and made alive,
Sin’s reign in our hearts and in the machinations of all humanity, are exposed to the healing light of God’s love! Death itself dies that resurrection can occur. That is the power of the Spirit—she allows us to trust the love of God found in Christ Jesus.
Sin’s reign in our hearts and in the machinations of all humanity, are exposed to the healing light of God’s love! Death itself dies that resurrection can occur. That is the power of the Spirit—she allows us to trust the love of God found in Christ Jesus.
Did
any of you take a moment and watch the Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Church
preach at the Royal Wedding yesterday?
It was one of those events where the
whole world stops to watch,
one of those times when a message can
cut through the daily grind of this world and cut through the various bubbles
we encase ourselves in,
the walls we erect to silo ourselves
off from others, in moments like those cross sections of communities can still
come together for a common purpose.
And, in such a moment as
that, Bishop Curry preached about the Love of Jesus—we could argue he focused more
on love than on Jesus, maybe even that he confused Law and Gospel, but compared
to what many preachers would choose to do at such a moment of import, either
showboating, or focusing on the bride’s beauty or the groom’s bravery,
he used that moment as an opportunity to tell folk about Jesus and his love.
he used that moment as an opportunity to tell folk about Jesus and his love.
And
friends, we are in a similar position to the good Bishop… Have you looked
around your neighborhood? We live in both a time and place that is a great
crossroad
—globalization and travel has put us in
a spot, here in central Jersey, where representatives of the whole world have
gathered to live
—it is perhaps not too unlike Jerusalem where Africa, Asia, and Europe meet together in the middle, where on a few special holy days—Pentecost being one of them—it seemed the whole world gathers together… and we too are in just such a time—how can we not tell them all the Truth we have been given about God?
—it is perhaps not too unlike Jerusalem where Africa, Asia, and Europe meet together in the middle, where on a few special holy days—Pentecost being one of them—it seemed the whole world gathers together… and we too are in just such a time—how can we not tell them all the Truth we have been given about God?
Yes,
in these days, where our voices may be amplified by every gadget imaginable, we
must lift every voice! Each of us is called to preach the Gospel of Jesus
Christ.
Yes, you heard me—this isn’t a calling
for Bishops only, or Pastors only and Deacons only, we are all called
to preach the Gospel.
One
of the things I worried about when I started dating my girlfriend Lisa, was
that she is a Quaker, and they don’t have clergy, and I thought that might be
kinda weird, being that I’m clergy, right… But when we got talking about it,
her description of this choice really struck me. It is not that they eliminated
the clergy, but instead that they
eliminated the laity. We Lutherans
talk about this way of being Christian! The Priesthood of All Believers—well the
Quakers just worked that idea out differently than we did.
We are all called to preach the Gospel, not
just Pastors or Bishops or any other official, but all of us, in a myriad of
ways, as compelled by the Spirit!
The Gospel, that God’s
love has come into the world, that God has acted for us before we ourselves
could act.
That
God’s own Son, Jesus Christ, lived, died, and rose, that we might trust in him
and live eternally… that is the Gospel we are compelled to preach!
Have
you ever looked around and noticed the state of the church, or looked inside
yourself and seen your soul, or listened for the soundless groanings of the
world—all of it, all of us, yearning for the love of God found in Christ Jesus.
All
of it confronted by the Gospel, confronted by the rightness of creation—and
confronted too by the world as it is… from Texas to Gaza to an overturned
school bus north of us on 80…
ought and is
swirling past one another in stirring acrobatic form and never catching,
and all the earth wonders, “Can we get
there from here? Can we get from Is to Ought?”
Have
you not noticed as well the tension
in all those things, what Paul describes as the tension between Flesh and
Spirit…
That
we find ourselves to be justified
sinners, Flesh and Spirit
That
we find in this group gathered together a mixed
body, Flesh and Spirit
That we find the goodness
of the world promised to us to be already
complete and whole… and at the same time not
yet finished, Flesh and Spirit
We answer the question
again and again, “No… we can’t get there from here… we can’t get there from
here save through the Spirit!
Daily the Spirit drags us
to the Jordon River to be with Christ, reminds us of the gap between ought and
is, helps us to pray when we have no words, cultivates her fruits within us,
calls us to be little Christs in the world even as the Spirit calls us to point
to the one and only Jesus Christ and renews our trust in him daily.
Siblings in Christ, after
I send you out of worship today, we will be eating fruity desserts, as we
consider the Fruits of the Spirit. I ask you to consider the following
questions as you eat and talk—after all the Spirit doesn’t just preach the
Gospel out of my mouth, right?:
1. How did the Spirit allow me to first
believe, how does it continue to do the same in my life?
2. Who might the Spirit be calling me to
tell about Jesus and his love?
3. Where do I see a tension between what
ought to be and what is? In myself or in the wider world?
4. Where does the world especially need
the good new of Jesus Christ?
5. What fruits of the Spirit: love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness,
faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control—are most needed today? Why?
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