Monday, April 21, 2014

Easter Sermon


My wife posted something recently that I thought was a cute way to begin my Easter message.  It was a picture of “buddy Jesus”—you know the one, Jesus with a hokie smile on his face, giving the world a thumbs up expression—and Jesus was saying, “Don’t eat my candy! I’ll be back in three days.”

That’s the promise—“I’ll be back in three days.” It had nothing to do with candy, but it did have a lot to make us joyful.

Before Jesus’ death on a cross he promised his disciples he would be back in three days. But, his disciples didn’t believe him. They thought it was an empty promise. John’s gospel points out that the disciples were struggling to believe that he was alive, even after witnessing the empty tomb.

And so it is with us, still today, that Jesus’ resurrection, even as we sit here this Easter morning, is hard to believe.

I recently came across this story, it was told by “Dear Abby” in a response to someone’s question. 
A young man (Bill) from a wealthy family was about to graduate from high school. It was the custom in that affluent neighborhood for the parents to give the graduate a car. Bill and his father had spent months looking at cars, and the week before graduation, they found the perfect car. On the eve of his graduation, his father handed him a gift-wrapped box. Expecting to find the keys to his new car inside, Bill excitedly opened the box. But, to the young man’s dismay, inside the gift box was not keys, but a Bible. So angered that his father got him a Bible instead of a car, Bill threw the Bible down and stormed out of the house. For weeks he allowed his selfishness to drive a wedge between him and his father…refusing to speak to him, refusing to talk about it. He went off to college, time passed, and the father and son relationship began to heal, but they never spoke of the Bible or the car…until, during Bill’s first year of college, the news of the father’s death brought him home. As he sat, grieving the loss of his father, going through his father’s possessions, he came across the Bible his father had given him. Unlike the last time, this time he opened it, and inside the cover he found a cashier’s check, dated the day of his graduation - in the exact amount of the car they had chosen together.
As I thought about this story, I couldn't help but wonder how often we do the same thing to our Heavenly Father’s gift of resurrection. How often we literally toss aside this wonderful gift, assuming it to be an empty promise.   In our world, we are taught that; “if it sounds too good to be true, it probably is.” So many of us have been taken in by “empty promises,” that we are leery of anything or anyone that tells us we can have something for nothing.  The world simply does not work that way!

But – while we live and die in this world, we are baptized and chosen by God for a greater world.  One that exists simultaneously with the other one, but one that does not operate the same as the other.

In God's world, God most certainly does work that way!

With God’s gift of resurrection, we get something for nothing. And it strikes us as empty because, just like the disciples at that tomb, it seems too good to be true. So, we don’t trust it, and in its place we trust ourselves, our own abilities. We discard, and reject the Kingdom of Heaven.  But, soon we learn that our abilities only get us so far…in the end they are as weak and unreliable as anything else in this world. Our attempt to save ourselves, is just one more empty promise we try to convince ourselves.

The truth of the matter is the world is full of empty promises. Everywhere we look there are promises being made to us…telling us that we can fulfill all of our dreams if we just do this or that, or buy this or that. It doesn’t take long before we have been fooled enough to know that the world’s promises are full of emptiness.

But, God is different.
God promises life and hope, and God’s promises can be trusted…Easter is the proof!
Instead of promises full of emptiness, on Easter, God gave us an emptiness that is full of promise.
The emptiness of the tomb is God’s promise that:
grace and mercy will always overcome guilt and shame.
that faith, hope and love will never be stopped by anger, hatred, and violence.
that life will always defeat death.

Because Christ lives, so shall we, both eternally as well as right now; through the difficulties we face today.
Because Christ lives, God is with us, and will remain with us forever.
Because Christ lives, we will one day be reunited with all of those who have died in the faith ahead of us.

Now----we can believe this—and allow this promise to hold us upright, and give us hope for something new, something we can’t understand today—something good and meaningful that God will bring with us. And, we can allow that tiny amount of faith in God to open us to ways in which we might begin trust God’s direction right now, to begin this new life—this new creation—with us…NOW!

Or, we can allow our modern intellect to deny it, reject it—like the young man who rejected his father’s gift.
We can trust God’s promise in the emptiness of this tomb, or we can discard it and be left only to our own abilities.

The choice is ours.
But, really, is there any choice?

I saw this video on Youtube recently that exemplifies what God is capable of doing with the things we discard.

The video shows a plastic grocery bag being thrown out the window of a car along a busy residential street. The camera, fixed on this piece of trash, shows it catching the wind from the cars passing by. The bag never hits the ground, never gets hit by a car. Instead, the wind fills this empty bag and gives it life. It bobs, weaves, up and down, back and forth. Creatively, the video was then given background music. And, suddenly this discarded piece of someone else’s trash appeared to be dancing.

Jesus was discarded, thrown away in a tomb.
Most of us know what that feels like.
All of us know what it is like to have our lives emptied, discarded, lifeless.

But, by the wind of the Holy Spirit, life was blown back into Jesus.
He was filled with new life, and he lives even now, through us and through the church.

And, because he lives, we too, no matter how lifeless we feel…no matter how discarded and rejected are God's promises, God will fill us with new life once again.

The emptiness of the tomb—is the promise that fills us with new life.
Hold onto that promise, and no matter what happens, God will fill you with life,
and a reason to dance.


Amen

Wednesday, April 09, 2014

Ezekiel 37:4


Take a look at the news.  It doesn't matter whether it's a newspaper, TV or an App on your smart phone.  Take a good look at it, and you're hard pressed to find any good news.  It is well known that bad news sells a whole lot better than good news.  But, in today's world of 24/7 news coverage the constant dose of negative thoughts and ideas can be down right depressing.

Seriously, there are psychological effects to being plugged into bad news all day long.  Here's an excerpt from an article in Psychology Today.
We’ve known for a very long time that the emotional content of films and television programs can affect your psychological health. It can do this by directly affecting your mood, and your mood can then affect many aspects of your thinking and behaviour. If the TV program generates negative mood experiences (e.g. anxiety, sadness, anger, disgust), then these experiences will affect how you interpret events in your own life, what types of memories you recall, and how much you will worry about events in your own life.
When it comes to the news, there is enormous pressure on networks like CNN and FOX to keep your attention for 24 hours constantly.  Gone are the days of the news being a 30 minute program at 6pm and again at 11pm.  Now, the news is reporting constantly.  So, how do these networks attempt to keep us watching all day long?   First, with negative sensationalism.   Like a moth to a flame we are attracted to the flashing, overhyped negative spin that is given to just about any news story.  We don't just get the basic who, what, when, and where these days.  We get the finer details of the scandal behind the story, or the possibility of a scandal.  This type of thing has been gradually increasing over the past 20-30 years.

Another way these networks keep us watching is by knowing their audience.  CNN knows that its demographic are primarily liberal Democrats.  FOX knows that their audience is conservative Republicans.  These competing networks simply report the news in a way that their audience wants to hear it.  

My friends, wisdom isn't in the hype or the sensationalism of a story.  Wisdom is found in the truth.
Likewise, wisdom is not being able to regurgitate your own narrow-minded spin.  Wisdom is found in the endeavor to understand those with opposing views.  Don't be fooled by these tactics to keep you tuned in, watching their barrage of bad news all day long.   It's like submitting to brainwashing.  And, the constant dose of bad news leads to poor psychological and emotional health.  

Do you know someone who is constantly glued to the news?  

They are cynical, cranky, hopeless, constantly spouting negative comments about the state of affairs with the world, the president, the times.  You might say they become like dry bones, as in the valley of dry bones from today's Ezekiel reading...hollowed out, and unable to see the good around them.  

God says to the prophet Ezekiel, "Prophesy to these bones, and say to them, 'O dry bones, hear the Word of the Lord.'"  The Word of the Lord is good news..it's always good news.  God sends Ezekiel to speak good news to the dry bones.  And, when Ezekiel speaks good news the dry bones are given new life.  

The good news of God's love and mercy can breathe new life into us.  Good news can even breathe new life into those who have heard nothing but bad news for a very long time.  

Into a world filled with bad news we are sent like Ezekiel to tell the good news.  Saint Paul says, The Spirit of Christ dwells within us.  To tell the good news is to let that Spirit come out in our words and our actions.  God sends you to bear the good news of His love and mercy to a world that is becoming more and more dry beneath the weight of bad news.  Tell others the good news.  Show them the good news with your actions.  Then, watch as God breathes new life into these dry bones.  

Amen






Wednesday, April 02, 2014

Psalm 100:2



I am one of the greatest singers I know...
                                                          when I'm alone...
                                                                                and in the car.

Honestly, catch me driving down the road by myself and I am either listening to some sort of talk radio, or I am SINGIN'!

Are you like me?
In secret, when no one is around to judge you, are you the best singer you've ever heard?

I've always been like this.  As long as I can remember.

My favorite music to sing is either Contemporary Christian, Country, or Classic Rock.  However, Country and Rock go back a bit further with me than Contemporary Christian. I was well into my 20s before a CD of Contemporary Christian broke into my glove box collection.  The first one to do so with any kind of serious standing among the Garth Brooks, Van Halen and John Cougar was Steven Curtis Chapman.  His Signs of Life quickly became a favorite of mine.  There was one particular song that really grabbed my attention, Lord of the Dance.  The song featured Steven rockin' a steel guitar, and the band offering a gutsy rock feel that seemed to cross the boundary between the usual sentimental sap of contemporary Christian of that day and the soul of the other music I appreciated.  I'd put this in and I would sing out loud...no, I would turn it up and I would jam.  But, it wasn't just the music that grabbed my attention, it was the lyrics like these in the refrain:
I am the heart, I need the heartbeat 
I am the eyes, I need the sight 
I realize that I am just a body 
I need the life 
I move my feet, I go through the motions 
But who'll give purpose to chance 
I am the dancer 
I need the Lord of the dance

Watch the song's video below, or click HERE to watch on Youtube.

The Psalmist declares, "Serve the Lord with gladness! Come into His presence with singing!"  This is how I feel when I'm singing "Lord of the Dance".  The only thing missing is a congregation to join me.  Imagine what our worship experience would be like if on Sundays our churches were to sing as if we were alone in the car?  Wow!!  But, then again, the reasons that make us the best singers we've ever heard in the privacy of our cars are the same reasons that prohibit us from singing like this in church.  It's not our favorite musical selections, and we're not in private.  Still, it is worth imagining...because this, according to Scripture, is a glimpse of what Heaven will be like.  All of us singing together...no, not like the way we do now in church...I mean we'll be cranking it up, and jammin' with fearlessness alongside the angels.  Not with the rebelliousness and chaos of a concert, but with the reverence and ritual of worship.

So, jam on in the privacy of your car, and loosen up a bit in church.  You're coming into the presence of the Lord.  Think of it as rehearsal for eternal life.  :-)

Heavenly Father, I am the voice but you are the song.  Today, help me to allow my life to sing!  Amen


Pastor Rich

Pastor Rich