Monday, August 24, 2015

God sends us and goes with us


As I prepared for this sermon, I prayed in color the main passages I would be preaching on.  I've included a picture of the prayer at the end of each reading.

A reading from Jeremiah (29:10-14)

10For thus says the Lord:
       Only when Babylon’s seventy years are completed will I visit you,
              and I will fulfill to you my promise
              and bring you back to this place.
       11For surely I know the plans I have for you,
              says the Lord,
              plans for your welfare and not for harm,
                     to give you a future with hope.
       12Then when you call upon me
              and come and pray to me,
                     I will hear you.
       13When you search for me,
              you will find me;
                     if you seek me with all your heart,
       14I will let you find me,
              says the Lord,
                     and I will restore your fortunes
                     and gather you from all the nations
                     and all the places where I have driven you,
                            says the Lord,
                                   and I will bring you back to the place
                                          from which I sent you into exile.

The word of the lord.


The psalm, which I don't really reference in the sermon was Psalm 80.


A reading from Romans (8:26-39)

26Likewise the Spirit helps us in our weakness;
       for we do not know how to pray as we ought,
              but that very Spirit intercedes with sighs too deep for words.
       27And God, who searches the heart,
              knows what is the mind of the Spirit,
                     because the Spirit intercedes for the saints
                            according to the will of God.

28We know that all things work together for good
       for those who love God,
              who are called according to God’s purpose.

29For those whom God foreknew God also predestined
       to be conformed to the image of the Son of God,
              in order that the Son might be the firstborn within a large family.
       30And those whom God predestined God also called;
              and those whom God called God also justified;
                     and those whom God justified God also glorified.

31What then are we to say about these things?
       If God is for us,
              who is against us?
       32The very Son of God was not withheld,
              but was given up for all of us;
                     will God not along with the Son also give us everything else?
       33Who will bring any charge against God’s elect?
              It is God who justifies.
       34Who is to condemn?
              It is Christ Jesus, who died,
                     yes, who was raised,
                            who is at the right hand of God,
                                   who indeed intercedes for us.
       35Who will separate us from the love of Christ?
              Will hardship,
              or distress,
              or persecution,
              or famine,
              or nakedness,
              or peril,
              or sword?
                     36As it is written,
                            “For your sake we are being killed all day long;
                                   we are accounted as sheep to be slaughtered.”

37No, in all these things we are more than conquerors
       through the one who loved us.
              38For I am convinced that neither death, nor life,
                     nor angels, nor rulers,
                     nor things present, nor things to come,
                     nor powers,
                     39nor height, nor depth,
                     nor anything else in all creation,
                            will be able to separate us
                                   from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord.

The word of the lord.


The holy gospel according to Matthew (28:16-20)

16Now the eleven disciples went to Galilee,
       to the mountain to which Jesus had directed them.
       17When they saw Jesus,
              they worshiped him;
                     but some doubted.

18And Jesus came and said to them,
       All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me.
              19Go therefore and make disciples of all nations,
                     baptizing them
                            in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit,
                     20and teaching them to obey everything that I have commanded you.
              And remember,
                     I am with you always,
                            to the end of the age.

The gospel of the lord.

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We are here today to celebrate God’s work through the witness of Christ the King over the last 8 and a half years.  To celebrate the ways that Christ the King has brought us closer to God and the ways that through Christ the King we have been able to share our faith with others.               And we are here to close Christ the King.  It is a complicated day, to say the least. 

Yet into this complication, God speaks words of assurance.  God has plans for us.  Those plans may no longer be tied to this particular congregation or maybe not to any congregation at all right now.  God’s plans for us are plans for goodness.  God’s hopes for us are hopes for love, for wonder, for generosity.

Some of you already know the community of faith that you will be a part of and some of you are unsure.  Even if you know where you are going, this will be a time of wandering, a time of searching.  As we wonder at where God is calling us and wander to other communities of faith, we search for God.  We search for where God is calling us and we wonder where God is, if we will even find God, if God will find us, if God will guide us to our new future.  We are stepping out of this box that has been comfort and challenge and support.

And God is outside of that box anyway.  God bursts through our walls of comfort, disturbing our security.  God brings us into the world and assures us, saying, “I know the plans I have for you, … plans for your welfare and not for harm, to give you a future with hope.  God is with us in this time of uncertainty.

And in this uncertainty, we hear from Paul, at great length, that nothing can separate us from God. “neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor rulers, nor things present, nor things to come, nor powers, 39nor height, nor depth” nor closing nor leaving, nor hardship, nor doubt, nor despair, “nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord.

God is with us and for us and for all of this creation.  God comes to us and the Holy Spirit breathes through us—in prayers of sighs too deep for words—candles lit and cranes folded for the sake of the world, in the joy and proclamation of love for all of God’s children.

Christ comes to us in the waters of baptism, the snow and showers that have cleansed this land over the years and the water poured out over Aria, Jordan, Sophia, Benjamin, Asher, Kaleb, Elsa, Sharon, Olivia, Deryck, Hayden, and Lukas in their baptisms, water and Word as God claims us all as beloved children.

Christ comes to us in communion—in broken bread for these, our broken bodies, this broken body of Christ, still yearning and working towards wholeness that will come when God’s reign really is on earth as it is in heaven.  The bread and wine that nourish and uplift us—that gather us in community around Tables here and in our homes.  Christ feeds us.

And it’s not that nothing in creation will separate us from God, it’s that Creation brings us together with God.  Creation brings us to God—to the wonder and mystery of God as we experience the change of seasons—summer to fall to winter to spring—the gross, the cool, and the scary of bugs and birds and bats.  Creation sings God’s praise and God’s glory, and points us toward our creative Creator, God who loves us always and continues to call us into the world.

However we may explore God’s call to us and God’s will for all of creation, God assures us, “You will find me” but more importantly, “I will let you find me.”  God hears our laments at losing Christ the King as we have known it, yet God is not hiding.  God is with us in our tears and sorrow, our anxiety and fears about where we will go—if they will like us, if we can participate as we want or rest as we need for a while.  And God walks with us in all of that.  We will find God because God will let us, because God is beside us, walking with us, even carrying us in our uncertainty.

And into that uncertainty we hear Jesus’ words, the Great Commission to his disciples.  After the Resurrection, the disciples gather and worship Jesus, and some of them doubt (I would reckon that     that some     was probably quite a large some of them).  They know that Jesus died on the cross, he was buried and yet now he lives!  These disciples are still wrestling with being a follower of Christ, a people of both death and resurrection.  They’re a bit unsure about Jesus and this whole resurrection thing and what they’re going to do.  

And so Jesus speaks to them.  And you know what?  Nowhere in the Great Commission does Jesus say, “Go start a church.  Establish a community of faith in which to worship me.  And then all will be well.” There is uncertainty and doubt, but that doesn’t stop Jesus. No.  Instead he says, “Go!  Get out of here!  Baptize and teach!  Make disciples!”

God, I think, is not quite as interested or invested in our institutions—our churches, denominations, or congregations—as we are.  Don’t get me wrong.  I love Christ the King and the ELCA and I also deeply value communities of faith with whom I can wrestle about the problems I see in the world, where God could be in it all; and who can know my struggles and support me in them.

But that’s not necessarily God’s focus—more of a side effect of God’s true focus—making disciples, teaching, and baptizing—sharing God’s love in and with the world.  That is what God, in Jesus, is about.

And we as humans have decided that churches are one of the better ways to do that.  They’re still never the purpose, though.  A church does not exist for itself.  It exists to make disciples of all nations.  Similarly, there are more ways to make disciples—to share the love of God and the Good News of God’s grace with the world—than just through churches or through the continuation of a congregation. 

Christ the King has been living out this Great Commission over the years.  We have baptized, we have affirmed baptisms.  We have learned and taught through Bible studies, conversations, and service opportunities: Project Linus, the CROP Walk, donation collections, and youth trips.

God has used Christ the King as a vessel for work and for proclamation of the Gospel, the Good News that God’s love is for everybody.  Now, as we lay this vessel to rest, we find that there are new ways to continue to follow Jesus.  There are other communities that we can join, fellowship and conversations—this community of people is not bound by the walls and official gatherings of Christ the King.

Because making disciples happens through you!  At work, in your neighborhood, at school, in service to others, in work for justice and peace, and yes, even in new communities of faith.  Jesus is still talking to you, still sending you out. 

The Great Commission is still your commission—to go, make disciples, baptize, and teach. Jesus’ last words assure us, “And remember, I am with you always, until the end of the age.”

Thanks be to God.

Sunday, August 09, 2015

God comes to us


The first reading is Deuteronomy 6:1-9.

The holy gospel according to Luke (2:8-14).

8In that region there were shepherds living in the fields,
       keeping watch over their flock by night.
       9Then an angel of the Lord stood before them,
              and the glory of the Lord shone around them,
                     and they were terrified.
       10But the angel said to them,
              Do not be afraid;
                     for see—
                            I am bringing you good news of great joy for all the people:
                                   11to you is born this day in the city of David a Savior,
                                          who is the Messiah,
                                          the Lord.
                     12This will be a sign for you:
                            you will find a child wrapped in bands of cloth
                                   and lying in a manger.”
       13And suddenly there was with the angel a multitude of the heavenly host,
              praising God and saying,
                     14Glory to God in the highest heaven,
                            and on earth peace among those whom God favors!”

The gospel of the lord.

-----

What a day for these readings.  Over the last couple of months, I have enjoyed hearing about your favorite passages and verses from the Bible.  I have also been pleasantly surprised by the ways different passages work together.  The “shema,” the Hebrew word for hear, from verse 4 in Deuteronomy fits so well with today as we will spend today and the coming weeks continuing to make meaning out of our time together at Christ the King. 

Will we recite stories to our children from our time together—the bingo and silent auction fundraiser that raised money, yes, but more than that, it brought our community and friends of our congregation together to enjoy each other’s company and to support our youth.

When we are at home, will we talk about the homes comforted by Project Linus blankets, by children’s books donated to Family Promise, or beautiful images now covering abandoned buildings in Detroit? 

When we are away, will we tell people of the community of faith that gathered each week to worship the God of love and grace, to receive holy communion and be drowned in the waters of baptism?

How will we wear our faith, bound as a sign on our hands?  How will we do God’s work with those same hands? 

How will the sign of the cross, fixed as an emblem on our foreheads at our baptisms, shine for all to see?  Will our doorposts and gates be filled with words of welcome and hospitality learned and practiced so deeply here?

Will we “Hear, O Israel: The Lord is our God, the Lord alone”?

What will we do as we go from here?  More importantly, though, the question I ask myself is what will God do?  Where will God be as we leave here?  How will God be present to me and to us?

And I think of the shepherds, perhaps wondering where God was in the loneliness of a night filled with sheep, or wondering at God in the stars scattered across the sky.  Because when God comes to us, and to the shepherds, in Jesus, God does the same thing that God has been doing throughout our whole human history.  God chooses once again to come to us in a new way.  God chooses to become us—to take on all of our human-ness and be with us in this new way—in Jesus the Christ.

God did it in the beginning, too.  God began with wind and spirit—Ruah, she was called.  Then God walked with Adam and Eve, the first humans, and when they left the garden, God was still with them.  God encountered Sarah and Abraham as strangers and angels, receiving hospitality.

As the Hebrews cried out in Egypt, God heard them, and came to Moses in a burning bush.  God brought the Hebrews out from captivity.  God led them in pillars of cloud by day and fire by night.

Throughout all of history, God has come to humans, to be with us and love us, to bring us to our best selves, to guide us in community, in service, and in justice.  To crowd us around a manger, a Table, a cross, and an empty tomb.

In all of these times that God comes to us, God comes with signs.  From pillars of cloud and fire to staffs that turn into serpents.  The prophets always have a sign that supports their claims against injustice.  What are our signs these days?  For the shepherds, the sign was a baby wrapped in scraps of cloth, lying in a feeding trough.  What are your signs of God’s presence with us?

As we go from here, God is coming to us again.  Not in cloud and fire, necessarily, but in love, in memories, and in new opportunities for community. 

Many of you have talked about finding a new faith community that is a small community, like Christ the King.  While I can fairly easily assure you that none will be quite as small as Christ the King, will your sign in a new community be as simple as a friendly face, a warm welcome?  Will that be enough?

Or will your sign of God’s presence come as you read the Bible, reading for whose voice is left out, reading for the questions that arise?  Will God’s presence come in continued gatherings—for fellowship or Project Linus?

How will you encounter God?  How will God encounter you?  Will a new faith community write itself on your heart?  Will Project Linus carry you forward into the unknown?  How will God yet again encounter you in a new way?

There are signs of God’s presence all around us.  I’m not always open to seeing them, but when I pay attention, I see God in the new life of babies.  I see God in the way the Wasatch Mountains climb into the sky, majestic and powerful.  I experience God in the hugs of friends and the late night conversations, solving the world’s problems with the optimism only found late at night in our God of hope.  The man I pass each week on my way to the Pride Center, who stands by Dunkin’ Donuts with a sign asking for money.  He is a sign of God’s presence for me as we greet each other with a familiarity built up over weekly encounters throughout this year.

One of my favorite quotes from the movie August Rush, a movie about the power of music, is, “Listen. Can you hear it? The music. I can hear it everywhere. In the wind… in the air… in the light. It’s all around us. All you have to do is open yourself up. All you have to do … is listen.”  That’s how I feel about signs of God’s presence.  They are everywhere—in the wind, in the air, in the light and the dark.  All you have to do … is listen, look, open yourself.  God is all around.

Thanks be to God.