Sunday, April 29, 2012

The Good Shepherd

In this morning’s reading from the 1st Letter of John [3:16-24] we heard words which still to this very day are a deep and great challenge for each and every one of us as Christian believers; “Little Children, let us love, not in words or speech, but in truth and action.[1]  The author of this powerful letter is reminding everyone who reads these words that the call to being a follower of Jesus is not just one of words, but we are called into living a life of Christian actions as well as times of professions of faith, singing of songs, and reading of scriptures.  We, as Christians, are challenged to become a meaningful presence and a powerful image of Jesus in the lives of those around us.
I know that there are individuals who believe that our words of faith have within them great power, but I am also reminding all of us that the world that we are presently living in has become for so many people a place where individuals are truly being judged by their actions rather than their words.  Most of us have in the last few months been overwhelmed with the political words of individuals who are seeking to be elected as the next President.  My only comment here is about the difference between words and actions.  All parties in these political debates continue to challenge each other based on the differences between words and actions.
This morning, in our time of worship, we joined together in saying those truly powerful words found in the 23rd Psalm that bring such great comfort to so many people, “The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want.[2]  In fact the entire 23rd Psalm reminds many of us that the Lord would care for us for ever, and that the Lord has a purpose for us; “… and I will dwell in the house of the Lord for ever.[3]  This is more than a declaration of promise; this is a declaration of intention.  The ones who understand these words are openly declaring that they have chosen to be a part of the household of God and that they therefore will be with God for ever.
And who would not want to be a part of the household of God?  Who would not want to be a member of the flock that is tended by Jesus?  Jesus is the one who told those who would listen, “I am the good shepherd.  The good shepherd lays down his life for the sheep.[4]  We are called to be members of the flock, and we are called to reach out to those who are around us and have not found a place within the flock.
Do you remember all of what was read this morning from John’s first letter?  Do you recall hearing the question posed at the very beginning, “How does God’s love abide in anyone who has the world’s goods and sees a brother or sister in need and yet refuses to help?[5]  How can we claim to be a member of the flock cared for by Jesus and yet not be willing to reach out to others who are in need?  The other day I was watching a TV show and I saw a commercial which presented a very powerful message.  The action images were of six young children playing and studying in school.  The over-voice shared the fact that today … in America … right here in New York State … everyday 1 in 6 children does not have enough food to eat.  If this is also true within our community, then we - as members of the flock of Jesus - need to take action.  We need to reach out to everyone.  We need to remember that as members of the flock of the Good Shepherd not only are we freed from our fear of evil, but that we are also called upon by God to bring true hope and salvation to all those that we meet.


[1] 1 John 3:18 NRSV
[2] Psalm 23:1 NRSV
[3] Psalm 23:6b KJV
[4] John 10:11 NRSV
[5] 1 John 3:17 NRSV

Sunday, April 22, 2012

Repentance and Forgiveness of Sins

This morning I am going to share with you some of the thought process that has gone into my time of preparation for this service of worship and in particular this sermon that I’m now sharing with you.  I have known a few pastors who prefer to continuously select from a very limited collection of their own favorite scriptures to use as the starting point of both the time of worship and especially their moments of reflection and exhortation.  However, like many other pastors, I am a believer in following the three year cycle of the Lectionary.  Each week there is a listing of readings from a Gospel, a New Testament letter, one of the Psalms, and either a reading from the Hebrew Text or from the Book of Acts.
When I read through all of the listed reading for the week, there are very often a few sentences or phrases which will quickly capture my attention.  Over the years I have come to believe that I am being called by the Holy Spirit to share something with those around me.  This is the beginning of the process of reflection and meditation in preparation for writing the sermon that I will share in our time of worship together.
This week two passages have kept calling out to me.  The first is from 1st John 3:2 – “Beloved, we are God’s children now; what we will be has not yet been revealed.[1]  And the second is from Luke 24:47 – “… repentance and forgiveness of sins is to be proclaimed in his name to all nations …[2]
We are all God’s children.  Each of us gathered here is a child of God, and each person that we meet outside of this sanctuary is a child of God.  Whether they look like us, talk like us, or believe like us … they are still children of God and therefore they are our own Sisters and Brothers.  I have a sister, and for many years we were not on the best of terms … but over the years I have discovered that she has great value, love, and compassion as a person.  Some of this transition has been brought about as I have watched my own children and grand-children relating to one another.  I do not claim to be God, nor do I claim to fully understand God … but when I have watched my own children or grandchildren fighting or squabbling over “stuff” … I can only begin to imagine how much it must deeply hurt God to watch as humanity continues to hurt one another. 
When someone has hurt us, how do we forgive them?
Upon personal reflection and shared discussion with others, I have come to the following understandings:
1)                  It is easiest to forgive someone who has truly acknowledged their actions and have honestly and personally apologized.
2)                  It is not as easy to forgive someone who has been repeatedly hurting us, or is making a “fake apology,” or is so powerful that they don’t believe that they need to make any kind of a real apology.
3)                  It is often impossible for us as human beings to forgive someone who does not even acknowledge that they have done anything wrong.
Now that I have simplisticly reviewed the process of how we decide who we will forgive, let’s go to the even tougher question – what happens when we ask God to forgive us?
Do we remember that our own preference is that the one seeking forgiveness be honest in admitting their errors?  Do we remember that we expect an honest request without the expectation that the request will automatically be granted?  Do we remember that we expect that the one who is making the request for forgiveness should make every effort to be sure that the offence does not happen again?
In closing … when my grandchildren tell me that they are sorry, I am truly willing to forgive them.  But I am also praying and wishing that they will learn from their mistakes.  I am also praying and hoping that they will become more compassionate with each other and with the rest of the world as they come to understand that as humans … as children of God … we will all make mistakes.  The real challenge is to remain in love with our creator … and with each other.  The real challenge is to extend to each other the kind of compassion that we are asking God to extend to us.


[1] NRSV
[2] NRSV – omitted “and that … beginning from Jerusalem”

Saturday, April 21, 2012

Take Time to ...


He who kills time injures eternity.
Take time to think - it is the source of power.
Take time to play - it is the secret of perpetual youth.
Take time to read - it is the fountain of wisdom.
Take time to pray - it is the greatest power on earth.
Take time to love and be loved - it is a God-given privilege.
Take time to be friendly - it is the road to happiness.
Take time to laugh - it is the music of the soul.
Take time to give - it is too short a day to be selfish.
Take time to work - it is the price of success.

Unknown

Sunday, April 15, 2012

Doubting Thomas

This morning’s reading from the Gospel of John [20:19-31] is very likely among the top ten bible passages known around the world.  Most people refer to this story of the first visiting of Jesus with his disciples in the locked upper room after his resurrection as either the founding story of the Upper Room or the story of Doubting Thomas.

Actually, we were told that Thomas was not present with the other disciples when Jesus first appeared.  As our reading this morning pointed out, Thomas was somewhere else when Jesus appeared before the other disciples.  It wasn’t until a week later that the resurrected Jesus once again appeared to the gathered disciples, and this time Thomas was present. 

As the story is unfolded for us, we discover that Jesus somehow knew that Thomas had told the other disciples that “Unless I see the mark of the nails in his hands, and put my finger in the mark of the nails and my hand in his side, I will not believe.[1]  After Jesus has Thomas seeing his hands and touching his side, he asks Thomas if he now believes since he has seen for himself rather than just having to accept the word of his brothers in faith.  And so down through the ages many people have come to call this disciple Doubting Thomas.

But I would like for us to remember that in the opening two verses of today’s Gospel reading those same disciples who were present when Jesus first appeared did not rejoice until after Jesus had shown them this hands and the wound at his side.  It would seem that the rest of the disciples also doubted the actual presence of Jesus without first seeing his wounds for themselves.  And yet the title of Doubting is only reserved for Thomas.  It would seem that maybe the real reason for this title would be that Thomas had doubted the word of his fellow disciples.

This seems to be a faith challenge which is still present with many individuals today.  We can tell others that we met in this world about the life and the teachings of Jesus.  Sometimes they believe us and they even join with us.  But sometimes there are still those who doubt the reality of the risen Lord just because we tell them stories.  We need to be careful, for it would be easy to brand them also with the title of doubting. 

Some of us may also understand Thomas’ reaction.  We may have been told over and over about Jesus and his teachings, but for some of us it was not until we personally experienced the presence of Jesus within our own lives that our eyes of faith where then opened and we began to believe in the resurrected Jesus.  For some of us it was not so much the physical presence of Jesus as it was our watching how the belief in a resurrected Jesus had affected the lives, actions, and beliefs of those who are around us.

It should not be too big a surprise to discover that in our actions others have come see the presence of the resurrected Jesus.  Many of us have noticed that there are individuals that we have meet and spent time with who remind us greatly of Jesus.  If we truly believe in Jesus and his teachings, then we will discover that in many ways our actions will change to the point that others will come to see the presence of Jesus within us.  Yes, this is the calling of being a Christian … to grow each day closer to God, Jesus, the Holy Spirit … and to each other.


[1] John 20:29 b NRSV

Sunday, April 8, 2012

... "I have seen the Lord" ...

In many ways I do not consider myself to be either special or different from any other human, and yet each of us in our own way is indeed very special in the eyes of our Creator.  This is Easter Sunday and we have gathered together this morning to celebrate the depth of the commitment and love of both Jesus and God. 

Jesus was willing to teach all of humanity how to rediscover the true depth of the relationships between God and creation.  He came here to help us find our way back into a closer relationship with our Creator.  He was willing to offer himself as a model of how we should be willing to extend ourselves for our brothers and sisters in this world.  And for many of us, last week was a chance for us to remember that Jesus was also willing to sacrifice himself in order for us to have a closer and deeper relationship with God, and so he was crucified and buried.  But death was not to have the last word.

In this morning’s reading from the Gospel of John [20:1-18] we once again have heard the story of the discovery of the empty tomb, the foot race between two disciples to the empty tomb, and then Mary’s personal encounter with two angles and then the resurrected Jesus.

I can only imagine how I would react if I were to go to the grave site of a close friend or a relative, and discover that it was not only open but that it was empty.  I’m certain that my first impression would be that either some nasty grave robber had dared to disturb this site; or that for some reason an official required that the body be exhumed for a medical examination.  And I can not even imagine how I would respond if missing dead individual in question was to then come up to me and ask, “Why are you weeping?  Whom are you looking for?[1] 

 By the way, the fact that Mary did not at first recognize Jesus is not surprising to me.  I have in the past walked right by people that I’ve been trying to find.  It’s easy when they are not where you expected to find them, or dressed in the manner that you last saw them.

But when Jesus called to Mary by name … her eyes were opened, and she could see the real Jesus standing before her.  What joy must have filled her heart; Jesus was alive!  She must have wanted to embrace him because he had to tell her not to hold him … he had to go his Father … our Father … he had to go to God.  But he asked Mary to tell his disciples, “I have seen the Lord”![2]

The message of the resurrection of Jesus was first brought to his disciples by word of mouth.  Mary was the first to see the resurrected Jesus, and then she shared with the disciples.  The disciples believed her and shared the message of the resurrection of Jesus with others.  This passing of the witness of the resurrection of Jesus continues even unto this day. 

Most of us here today have in one way or another experienced the personal and powerful presence of God, Jesus, and the Holy Spirit within our lives.  But for most of us, our first knowledge of the resurrection event was through the word of mouth; someone told us about the resurrection.  Our’s is not a personal and private faith; rather we are called to give witness to the presence of God, Jesus, and the Holy Spirit.  We are called to give testimony to the vilidity of the teachings of Jesus.  We are called to share with all whom we meet that our lives have been affected by the teachings and the presence of God, Jesus, and the Holy Spirit.  But it is our choice … God has always given us the choice to respond with love and compation … or to turn our backs upon the teachings of Jesus.


[1] John 20:15a NRSV
[2] John 20:18b NRSV

Thursday, April 5, 2012

"... You also should love one another."


In our reading this evening from the Gospel of John [13:1-17 & 31b-35] we have heard the story that most of us know as “the last supper.”  This meal is to be the last meal that Jesus will be sharing with all 12 of his disciples before he is to be crucified.  In preparation for this last meal Jesus has washed the feet of his disciples, but we also have heard that Simon Peter asked Jesus to wash clean all of his physical body.  Jesus tells him that there is a responsibility for each of us to clean ourselves, and that Jesus was only interested in symbolically cleaning that part of his disciples that they could not keep clean themselves.

How often do we ask God to do for us what we truly should be doing for ourselves?  How often do we ignore our own responsibilities, and then ask that God or others take on these tasks?  How often do we, with a clear conscience, pretend that we are free of sin, and thus we can hold our heads and our pride high before God and everyone else?

However, we have also heard Jesus clearly telling his disciples, “Just as I have loved you, you also should love one another.[1]  But do we love one another?  Are we honest with one another?  Are we willing to extent honesty to each other in a gentle and kind manner?

Do we willing encourage, embrace, and help one another?  Are we willing to make sacrifices for one another?  Are we willing to reach out to those who are different from us?  Are we willing to help those who might not look like us, talk like us, or worship like us?  
We know that we are human and that sometimes we make mistakes.  Sometimes we wonder if we are good enough to be a member of God’s family.  Do we really understand that God loves us?  Do we really believe that God loves us?  Do we really accept that God loves us?
Before we prepare to share with one another in a time of Holy Communion, I would ask that we spend a few moments remembering that Jesus washed the feet of all 12 of the disciples, that Jesus shared the bread with all 12 of the disciples, and that all 12 of the disciples shared in the cup.  Yes, the feet of Judas were washed.  Judas shared in the beard and the cup with Jesus and the other disciples.  The love of God is withheld from no one … the choice of rejection is left up to each individual.

[1] John 13:34b NRSV

Sunday, April 1, 2012

“Blessed is the one who comes in the name of the Lord!”[1]

In this morning’s reading from the Gospel of Mark [11:1-11] we once again have heard the story of the tumultuous and triumphant arrival of Jesus into Jerusalem.  Personal, I can only remember two such outstandingly public and yet deeply moving events in my own lifetime.  The first occurred when I was a senior in high school.  The entire football team, as well as close to 600 North Syracuse high school seniors, had been invited to be at the Hancock Airport one day to welcome New York Senator Robert Kennedy.  We ended up being only a small part of a very large crowd which was present that day.  The second such event in my memory occurred in the state of Georgia; my son was returning with his Company of Combat Engineers from their second deployment to Iraq.  At both of these events there was a lot of shouting, thunderous applause, and more than just a few tears.  It had also occurred to me that there had been a lot of planning and advanced notice in setting up these special events.
We know how it came to be that Jesus, his disciples, and the colt were all present for this triumphant and tumultuous parade into Jerusalem.  But have you ever thought about how the crowd formed?
Somehow the news that Jesus was coming into Jerusalem had reached at least a few of the individuals who lived either close by or directly in Jerusalem.  I’d like to believe that most of you would react the same way that many of these people had to have reacted.  Can you imagine what would happen if we were told that Jesus would be coming into our town at the beginning of the next day?
First, I would call every one of my family members.  Second, I would call everyone who was a member of my worshiping community.  And only then, if there was still time, I would begin inviting neighbors and even strangers.  If I knew that Jesus was coming, I’d be telling everyone that I came into contact with.

And what would I do if I ran into someone who then turned to me and said, “Right, Jesus is come.  But just who is Jesus?”  Now it’s my turn to share the stories; to share the truth with someone who has not yet heard about Jesus.  Maybe I could tell them about how Jesus called his disciples and they just dropped everything and followed him[2].  Or should I tell them about the time that Jesus spat into a handful of dry dust, made a paste, put it unto the eyes of a man who was born blind, and now the man could then see once more?[3]  Or should I tell them about how Jesus cured the man with leprosy?[4]  Or the woman who suffered from years of bleeding?[5]  Or maybe I should be telling them about the time that Jesus was walking on water.[6]  Or maybe I could share with them the story of how Jesus feed over 5,000 men, women, and children with just 5 loaves of bread and 2 fishes.[7]  Or maybe I could tell them that Jesus was the one who called Lazarus from the burial tomb.[8]

All of these stories are from the past, and though they are true, maybe the real truth that we need to share with those around us is the deeper truth of how Jesus has had a meaningful effect upon our own lives, the lives of our neighbors, and the lives of our loved ones.  Jesus holds for each and every one of us a deep and truly special meaning.  As Paul wrote to the worshipping community in Philippi, [Jesus is] “the name above every name.[9] It is our calling, our challenge, and our honor to share with each other and with all of our sisters and brothers the stories of our faith and the actions of God within our lives.


[1] Mark 11:9b NRSV
[2] Matthew 4:18-22, Mark 1:16-20, Luke 5:1-11, John 1:35-42
[3] John 9:1-7
[4] Matthew 8:1-4, Mark 1:40-44, Luke 5:12-14
[5] Matthew 9:20-22, Mark 5:25-34, Luke 8:43-48
[6] Matthew 14:22-33, Mark 6:45-52, John 6:16-21
[7] Matthew 14:13-21, Mark 6:31-44, Luke 9:10-17, John 6:5-15
[8] John 11:43-44
[9] Philippians 2:9b NRSV