Monday, December 24, 2012

Some Reflections on Christmas Eve 2012, After the World Didn’t End in Apocalypse at the Hands of Pagan Prophecy

I am blessed to have a number of friends who do not profess to be Christians. That may seem like an odd thing to observe for a Presbyterian Minister but I recall a while back hearing a sermon where the preacher commented that for most people within two years of becoming Christian all of their friends are Christians. This might be good for spiritual growth and community and fellowship, but I think it may make evangelism difficult. Because of the generalized disdain (and sometimes outright hostility) our culture has for “Christians,” most Christians would rather keep their affiliation quiet. It’s a normal reaction, but it really makes it hard to make disciples. Let’s not forget that the last thing Jesus commanded his followers was to make disciples. (Mt. 28:19-20; Acts 1:8).

Now I think our society has good cause to be suspicious of Christians. Inside our fortress church we talk to each other about the depths of the Father’s love manifest in Jesus Christ. But outside the fortress what do Christians profess? Most try to fade chameleon-like into their surroundings and unless you happen to have seen one at church you wouldn’t guess they were followers of Jesus. You can’t tell the difference between them and anyone else. And if we do happen to see each other on the street, it is with great trepidation and embarrassment. I heard a funny joke once: Catholics don’t recognize the Mormons, Protestants don’t recognize the Pope, and two Baptists don’t recognize each other in a liquor store. We, maybe it wasn’t that funny after all.

Then there is a kind of hybrid Christian who tries to identify both with Jesus and the culture simultaneously. These are the ones who drive around in Humvees with Jesus bumper stickers, and indulge in every excess of society, but have convinced themselves that they are living “godly” lives. They attend church regularly, raise their kids in the church, probably tithe, maybe are even involved in service activities and small group ministry. I think it is also mainly this group who seeks to identify Jesus and his kingdom with man-made institutions such as political parties, or even nations. But they mistake prosperity and right standing before their peers for intimacy with Jesus. I once saw an SUV with a license plate that said “HIS GIFT.” I wondered what it would be like to have a God who gave away cars. For these, I am afraid Jesus is only the means to the end of middle class respectability.

Finally there are those who I believe are the worst kinds of Christians because they are the most righteous. They are the ones who make nuisances out of themselves by going around quoting scripture to condemn their neighbors to hell. They are certain that they are saved and everyone who does not believe as they do are not. There cannot be any better example of this kind of Christian than the Pharisee who self-righteously condemns the sinner standing near, saying, “God, I thank you that I am not like other men, extortioners, unjust, adulterers, or even like this tax collector,” (Luke 18:11 ESV).and then cataloguing his supposed righteous acts. Jesus condemns this Pharisee in no uncertain terms, not because of his righteousness, but because of his hypocrisy. He puts his trust in his own behavior, rather than in God’s mercy, and because of that he walks away unchanged, untouched, and unjustified.

At the farthest end of the spectrum of this kind of “Christian” are the Koran-burning Terry Joneses and the hate-filled Westboro Baptists. Few who truly know the true gospel of Jesus condone their chicanery. But they are vocal enough to catch the attention of the media, who are only too happy to associate them with all Christians in the public eye. And don’t get me wrong, they are the most extreme, but every time I even silently condemn any of my brothers or sisters to hell I am the same as they are, no matter how convinced I may be of the depths of their sin.

Well in the last few paragraphs I’ve condemned most of my brothers and sisters who profess the name of Jesus, so doesn’t that make me just like the Pharisee? And I have to answer yes; I too, am a sinner and a hypocrite. It’s unavoidable, really. That is the nature of the world. I am not proud of it, nor do I excuse it. The best that my own understanding and effort can come up with is far short of the perfection required to be justified before God (Ro. 3:23). And this is the point of Christmas.

So there is a real distance between the Biblical vision of the Christian Church and how our society experiences Christianity. The negative image many have of Christians is well-deserved, even if it is incomplete and misleading. It doesn’t help to indignantly deny that the picture is true. What is needed is a more compelling message.

I started out this little reflection by observing that I feel fortunate to have so many friends who do not profess to be Christians. I didn’t mean that because I don’t like Christians because I do, by and large, like most people, even Christians! But I’m happy to have so many non-Christian friends because it gives me the opportunity to proclaim Jesus to them, not by preaching at them and condemning them to hell, but by living with them and allowing them to see Jesus in real life. Jesus himself calls those who are his, and he is irresistible. (John 10:14-16).

Now that may seem a bold statement and it is and yet it is the promise of the gospel. If I am a follower of Jesus, I have been given a new life in Jesus. As time passes, often in spite of my own will and wishes, the Spirit works in me to form a new person in the likeness of Jesus Christ. Paul writes, “I have been crucified with Christ. It is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me.” (Galatians 2:20 ESV). I am not required to be righteous to be justified, I am justified and so I am commanded to be Jesus. This does not mean that I cease to be human nor that I suddenly cease to sin (or start walking on water and producing wine out of tapwater). Paul declared himself to be the chief of sinners (1 Tim. 1:15), and this is not just false humility. And we are advised that he continued to struggle with sin (2 Cor. 12:7-10), and yet who has been a greater evangelist than Paul?

How am I, a disciple of Jesus, called to make disciples? In the same way that Jesus did: through self-sacrificing love. As Jesus did, I must be willing to give up myself for the benefit of others. Jesus tells us, "A new commandment I give you, that you love one another: just as I have loved you, you also are to love one another. By this all people will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another." (John 13:34-35 ESV). The birth of Christ binds his followers to love as Jesus loves. Christians are called to live in the world, as Jesus did, and to love, as Jesus did, and we are promised that Jesus himself will build his church (Mt. 16:18).

Mother Teresa, highly revered by many both Christian and non-Christian, committed her life to working among the poorest of the poor in India. Many of the people she ministered to were not Christians; they were Hindus or Muslims. But she gave everything she had to their care, regardless, because she said she recognized Jesus in them all – in his most distressing disguise. She once remarked,

How you live your life is proof that you are or not fully His. We cannot condemn or judge or pass words that will hurt people. We don't know in what way God is appearing to that soul and what God is drawing that soul to; therefore, who are we to condemn anybody?

To me this says that I am to love everyone, not just those close to me but those who annoy me and those whose lives I disapprove of and even those who hate me (Mt. 5:44) as Jesus loves. The life of Mother Teresa provides a wonderful example. It is not my task to determine your relationship with God; it is my task to be Jesus to you, no matter what.

So Christmas presents to us the dawning of the glorious good news, but it ought also to bring us to sober reflection on the burden receiving that good news places upon us. It is a burden impossible to bear in humanity. Jesus is born the lowest of the low, the weakest of the weak. Jesus is born in a barn. His gospel is pronounced first to outcasts: to the shepherds, and to me (Luke 2:8-10). “The people who walked in darkness have seen a great light.” (Is. 9:2 ESV). May I, waiting in darkness like the shepherds, greet the light with joy, and proclaim it by self-sacrificing love to all of my brothers and sisters in this broken world. Amen.

Merry Christmas to all. Peace on earth.

--
Grace and Peace.

Rock Presbyterian Church 6910B Miramar Rd. Second Floor, San Diego 92121. Email: rockpresbyterian@gmail.com. Facebook:https://www.facebook.com/SDRockPresbyterianChurch. Telephone: 760-271-7285

Sunday, December 23, 2012

Sermon Notes 12/23, Luke 2:8-14, “Peace on Earth”

Christmas is the affirmation that the well of God's mercy is infinite.

Good morning. Merry Christmas. Grace and peace to you all from God our Father and The Lord Jesus Christ. I am wishing you “the generous overflow of the love of God the Father” and “a state of wholeness with God with no deficiency.” Grace and peace.

This morning we are going to celebrate the birth of our savior by looking at a passage from the Gospel according to Luke. We are looking at Luke Chapter 2 verses 8-14.

8 And there were shepherds living out in the fields nearby, keeping watch over their flocks at night. 9 An angel of the Lord appeared to them, and the glory of the Lord shone around them, and they were terrified. 10 But the angel said to them, “Do not be afraid. I bring you good news that will cause great joy for all the people. 11 Today in the town of David a Savior has been born to you; he is the Messiah, the Lord. 12 This will be a sign to you: You will find a baby wrapped in cloths and lying in a manger.”

13 Suddenly a great company of the heavenly host appeared with the angel, praising God and saying,

14 “Glory to God in the highest heaven, and on earth peace to those on whom his favor rests.” (Luke 2:8-14 NIV).

For the past several weeks in the EM we have been celebrating the season of Advent. Advent is a time at the beginning of the church calendar that reminds us of our need for a savior. It employs the symbolism of waiting in darkness to recall the time between the sin of Adam and Eve and the coming of Jesus. It recalls the depth of our depravity and brings to mind the helplessness and the hopelessness of humanity. But it also reminds us that from the time there was a need for salvation God had a plan for salvation.

Celebrating Advent reminds us that God has made that plan real in the person of Jesus Christ. And so we are today celebrating the greatest gift in all creation. Imagine what it must have been like for these shepherds. I think it is significant that the first announcement of the "Good News" (the gospel) was to them. Shepherds were among the lowest people in the ancient world. They didn't smell very good. Their sheep would destroy pasture land, so people didn't want them on their property. And they were thought of as dangerous and probably dishonest. In many ways the people of the ancient Near East probably thought the same about shepherds as some in our society do about so-called illegal immigrants, or homeless street people.

Now in the story we read today we see these shepherds out in the fields and waiting in darkness. The lowest of the low, lost and outcast, shivering in the cold darkness. And all of a sudden there is a great light, an angel of The Lord announcing "Good News." And let's be clear that we’re not just talking about "good news" like "Good news, I just got a new car!" or, "Good news, I just got a raise!" or even "Good news! I just won the lottery!"

The word used here signifies the announcement of a great victory by an emperor or military commander. So it's not like "good news," it's more like "unbelievably great proclamation of a major victory." And hearing it would have brought on great joy and celebration the these shepherds.

In this story we see this great news being proclaimed to a bunch of outcasts and misfits. And that by itself ought to be comforting to us. Because the Bible, and our experience, makes it clear that, left to our own devices, we too are a bunch of outcasts and misfits. The announcement the angels made was not to the high and mighty, but to the poor, the lonely, the downtrodden, people who were waiting in darkness, maybe not even knowing there would be a light, certainly not expecting that a light would come to them. And it was made to us, too, who also have waited in darkness, with our only hope being the Advent of a divine savior.

Joy, and Peace

Well, what is this great news? "Today in the town of David a Savior has been born to you; he is the Messiah, the Lord." (Luke 2:11 NIV). You will find him in the lowest of the lowly places, the angel said. You will find him in a barn, outcast like you.

The people of Israel had waited centuries for the Messiah. Pretty much everyone believed that God was going to send his Chosen One to make everything right, but nobody really knew how it was going to happen. The scriptures were not clear. Many people expected a great warrior king like David. The shepherds who heard the good news must have been surprised and puzzled to learn that the Messiah had come in the form of the weakest of the weak. But they believed it. Luke tells us that they went to Bethlehem to see if it was really true, and finding that it was true, they immediately told everyone they knew about the good news. And those who heard it were amazed.

Now the scripture tells us that these angels were announcing peace to the earth. I want to just focus briefly on what that means. We have an idea of peace but I think our idea is a little different from what the shepherds or other Jewish people of first century would have heard. When we think of peace, we usually think of the absence of conflict. We are at peace if we are not at war. We are at peace if we are not arguing.

But for the people of the ancient Near East the word would have had a much richer meaning. In the Hebrew language the word and the concept Luke is getting at is “Shalom.” You probably know that a common greeting among Jewish people even now is “Shalom.”

Shalom does mean the absence of conflict, but it also means much more. In the Hebrew language Shalom can be both a verb and a noun. When we think of peace, we think of it as a noun, as a state of being. Hebrew speakers think of it this way too, but there is also an action associated with it.

God's creation was an act of shalom. The world was created in shalom. God created Adam and Eve to live in the Garden of Eden in perfect joyful communion with him. There was no sadness, no pain, no sickness, no suffering. They had no troubles and no need for anything. So that is why one definition of Shalom is “a state of wholeness with God with no deficiency.”

And it also refers to relations between people. So, for example, if two neighbors lived at peace with each other, we could say that they lived in a state of shalom. But if one of the neighbors did something that harmed the other, then that peace would be broken. In order to restore it, the guilty neighbor would have to do some act of restitution. He could pay for the damages, and that would be an act of shalom that wold restore the peace between the two called shalom.

When the angels announced "peace" on the earth, they were announcing both things. God had created the world in shalom. Adam and Eve broke that shalom by disobedience, bringing about all of the brokenness and misery of the world. The problem that Adam and Eve and their descendants, and that includes us, had and have is that we are incapable of repairing what is broken. We do not have enough money to pay for the damages. And that means that a state of conflict and broken relations exists between God and the people that people cannot fix. It was upon them to fix it, because they had broken it, but they could not. And so God and man were in a state of war that could not end.

But because of his great love for us, God himself devised a way to pay the debt. He sent his own son, who was the only one wealthy enough to pay the price, to pay it for us. Christmas is an affirmation that the well of God's mercy is infinite. God himself paid the price that restored the relationship between God and man. God himself did the action of shalom that restored the peace of Shalom. In the words of the ancient hymn, "God and sinners reconciled."

In Christ

Now I'm not going to get into a long theological discussion here but I have to tell you that our old lives were so damaged that the only way we could be restored was by receiving new lives. We had to be born again. And when we were born again, we were born into Christ. The apostle Paul writes to the church at Galatia, "I have been crucified with Christ. It is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me." (Gal. 2:20 ESV). Our life is in Christ.

And if we are reborn into the life of Christ, we are also born into the work of Christ. Christ's work is a mission of shalom. It is a mission to restore our broken world. We, the church, as the Body of Christ, are now entrusted with that mission. It is upon us who are "in Christ" to continue Jesus’ work of restoring the peace between God and man. God chose us to be the coworkers of Jesus in the work of shalom.

How do we do that? In the same way Jesus does it: through self-sacrificing love. As Jesus did, we must be willing to give up ourselves for the benefit of others. Jesus tells us, "A new commandment I give you, that you love one another: just as I have loved you, you also are to love one another. By this all people will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another." (John 13:34-35 ESV). So the birth of Christ binds us to love as Jesus loves.

Let us remember this Christmas Day the great light that burst forth in the darkness and announced the magnificent good news of Jesus’ birth so long ago, the news of peace on earth to the lowest of the low. Let us be grateful for the work of Jesus Christ that gave us new life in “a state of wholeness with God with no deficiency.” And let us identify in the work of Christ our own calling to announce peace on earth, by living lives that reflect his light to everyone.

Merry Christmas. Shalom

--
Grace and Peace.

Rock Presbyterian Church 6910B Miramar Rd. Second Floor, San Diego 92121. Email: rockpresbyterian@gmail.com. Facebook:https://www.facebook.com/SDRockPresbyterianChurch. Telephone: 760-271-7285

Thursday, December 20, 2012

Prayer for the Third Sunday of Advent

This was my closing prayer for my message about joy on the third Sunday of Advent:

Let us pray. Father we bring before you today all of our anguish and all of our fears and all of our brokenness. We bring before you our suffering at how dark the world is. We confess that we have failed to take your Word seriously and so we find ourselves surprised when confronted with unspeakable evil. We confess that we have become lost and confused in our pursuit of joy in things outside of you, in things that can never bring real joy. We confess that we sometimes wonder where you are in all of the tragedy we see around us. And we confess that we have lost sight of our calling to make disciples by shining your light on the world around us. Lord, in the midst of all of this brokenness, we pray that you would remind us of your presence. We ask that you would once again fill this community and each of us individually with your Holy Spirit, not only so that we ourselves might be comforted, but so that we can bring your comfort and your joy to those who are still waiting for you in darkness. We look forward with great anticipation to the Advent of your son Jesus, bursting forth in light upon this gloomy world. We pray that we can recapture the joy of your apostles, and rejoice in such a way that we bring all nations into you in a kingdom of righteousness, justice, and love. And we pray all of these things in the name of your son and our mighty savior Jesus.

And all God's people said...

Thursday, November 22, 2012

For Thanksgiving I Wish You Brokenness

Some Reflections on Thanksgiving Day 2012

First off I have to confess that I am not giving much thanks today. In my mind giving thanks would mean more than a passing glance heavenward and then devoting myself to diversions and over-consumption. Must it not mean that I acknowledge the great mercy I have received by obeying the one I received it from: to share that mercy with my fellows? I think giving thanks would require a reaching out to those who are suffering today: to the homeless, the sick, the brokenhearted, the lonely…. What am I doing of that? I’m just going to do my laundry, get caught up on some work, maybe go for a walk later, and then a small feast with my son. It’s all pretty self-centered actually.

I recently come to understand that there are those who really couldn’t care less about the scholarly and historical aspects of things and so if you are one of these and you happen to be reading you can stop now because I want to take a backward peek at the roots of our Thanksgiving celebration. The holiday of giving thanks has been celebrated in North America since 1621 when a group of the first Puritan settlers in New England celebrated a good harvest. I wonder what that must have been like. It must have been like being on another planet: left to your own devices, surrounded by danger on every side. For them life itself must have seemed miraculous, and so they paused in the midst of hardship to give thanks to God.

As a national holiday Thanksgiving has been celebrated at least since the beginning of the Republic. George Washington issued a proclamation for a national day of Thanksgiving in 1789. The date that we celebrate now, the fourth Thursday in November, was established by Presidential Proclamation of Abraham Lincoln in 1863. That date was approximately four months after the Battle of Gettysburg and the fall of Vicksburg, when the tide of battle in the Civil War appeared to be turning to the favor of the Union.

I admit that I am not a scholar of the Civil War nor really of Thanksgiving, so I don’t know if the battlefield outlook in 1863 had anything to do with Lincoln’s decision to call for a day of Thanksgiving. It would be fully another year and a half before that conflict came to an end. But again, I wonder how the people of the United States then must have experienced Thanksgiving. The future of their Union was far from certain, and there was terrible loss on every side. And yet in the midst of their hardship they stopped to acknowledge the blessings they had received from God.

In the case of the so-called Pilgrims in 1621, they paused to give thanks while pursuing a larger vision. For them it was the “city on a hill,” the demonstration of what the Kingdom of God ought to look like on earth. In the case of Lincoln and the Union in the midst of the Civil War, the people paused to give thanks while looking ahead to a brighter future, albeit a more secular vision than that of the Pilgrims, but still striving to build a better world. In both cases we see people in the midst of hardship devoted to a vision of a better world.

What about us? There is plenty of hardship. There are many things wrong, from violent bloodshed overseas to sickness and hunger within blocks of where we sit reading this. But what is our vision? Do we even have a vision beyond filling our bellies and satisfying our material lusts, not even our needs but “spending money we don’t have to buy things we don’t need to impress people we don’t like”?

How ironic that this morning in my meditation I read these words:

I did not understand duty very well. But how well I understood – precisely because I had come from a life of pleasure – that when a poor person, a suffering person, a sick person, could smile, that was the perfect sign that God existed, and that he was helping the poor person in his or her difficulties.

The social struggle in my day was lively and intense… Everywhere there arose groups professing poverty and preaching poverty in the Church and the renewal of society. But nothing changed, because these people did not change hearts….

No, brothers and sisters, it is not enough to change laws. You have to change hearts. Otherwise, when you have completed the journey of your social labors you shall find yourselves right back at the beginning –only this time it is you who will be the arrogant, the rich, and the exploiters of the poor.

That is why I took the Gospel path. For me the Gospel was the sign of liberation, yes, but of true liberation, the liberation of hearts. This was the thrust that lifted me out of the middle-class spirit, which is present to every age, and is known as selfishness, arrogance, pride, sensuality, idolatry, and slavery. – Carlo Carretto

I think we today may be faced with even greater danger than the Puritans or those who lived in the United States during the Civil War. Because for them the danger was easily recognizable. It was easy to sense a forbidding wilderness. It was easy to see the destruction on the battlefield and to count the dead. But for us, our danger lies precisely in those things we call blessings, made manifest in the means by which we claim to give thanks. It is because our lives are so easy that we are unable to really pause and give thanks to God. We have become Pharisees, so proud of our own accomplishments we can’t see the depths of our depravity and our gigantic need for restoration. And so we go on trying to fill our great emptiness, our need for forgiveness, with too much food, too many things, unsatisfying diversions.

I don’t mean everyone of course. I am looking in the mirror mostly. But if you can see yourself in my mirror then I pray for you on this Thanksgiving Day that you come to really experience your brokenness, so that the Gospel can pierce your heart. I end with the end of the passage quoted above:

You can reproach me, go ahead. But I saw, in the Gospel, a road beyond, a path that transcended all cultures, all human constructs, all civilizations and conventions.

I felt the Gospel to be eternal; I felt politics and culture, including Christian culture, to be in time.

I was made always to go beyond time.

Sunday, November 11, 2012

Sermon Notes 11/11, “The Greatest of All Happy Endings”

Romans 9:1-5, "The Greatest of All Happy Endings"

Most of you who have been here know that we have been working our way slowly through Paul's letter to the Roman Christians. We just finished with Chapter 8 which is one of the most profound books in the Bible. As we considered Chapter 8 we talked about such topics as "the Body of Christ," our new life and new identity in Christ, life in the flesh vs. life in the Spirit, and our adoption into the family of God. We talked about how God is re-creating the world using the church, the Body of Christ, as his instrument, and how we are therefore co-workers with God in bringing about his restored kingdom. We considered the concept of Providence, the idea that God makes everything work for our good and his glory. Finally Paul ends Chapter 8 of Romans with a triumphant conclusion, that because of the work of Jesus Christ, we are more than conquerors; that our eternal glory is assured. Why don't we just read that part again?

37 No, in all these things we are more than conquerors through him who loved us. 38 For I am sure that neither death nor life, nor angels nor rulers, nor things present nor things to come, nor powers, 39 nor 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. (Romans 8:37-39 ESV).

Just so you know, this kind of writing, where the author expresses himself with heightened emotion, is called a doxology. The root of the word is the Greek word doxa, which means glory. It is used in various places, particularly in Paul's letters, to emphasize how amazing God's grace and love for us is. You may have heard the word before but now you know what it means. So these particular verses in Paul's letter are a kind of a shout for joy at our deliverance. It's like a giant, "Yay God!"

Some of you might remember that several weeks ago I used a clip from the movie "The Return of the King" to illustrate the magnitude of the victory Christ accomplished over the forces of sin and corruption. Do you remember that? The original story of The Lord of the Rings published in three volumes by J.R.R. Tolkien in the 1960s was a story that is motivated at least loosely by the Christian gospel. The universe that Tolkien created mirrors our own experience in that there was an original perfection, a fall from grace, and an ongoing struggle between the forces of darkness and light.

You might not care but I'm going to tell you anyway that the work is not allegorical like the Chronicles of Narnia. You may recall that in C.S. Lewis books the lion Aslan represented Christ, and the witch represented Satan, and each of the characters represented somebody from the Christian Bible. But in The Lord of the Rings the struggle is not depicted in that way. You can't say, well Gandalf represents Jesus, and Frodo represents... well, who does he represent? See what I mean? There isn't a simple correspondence. The story is more generalized.

But in the big picture you can see close association of Tolkien's story and the gospel. In particular, you can clearly see the conflict between light and dark, what we have called the Spirit and the flesh. So anyway, just in case you're not familiar with the story, the number one bad guy, Sauron, who I think you would have to equate with Satan, is trying to get his hands on the one ring of power, because he has concentrated his power in the ring.

I don't think it's a stretch to suggest that the ring represents sin. It seems like a good and desirable thing to whoever has it. But whoever tries to use it becomes trapped by it. The ring destroys their life, but they can't let go of it. They yearn for it desperately, even though it separates them from everything they love. Isn't this what sin feels like?

Anyway the quest of the story is to destroy the evil one's power by destroying this ring, which can only be done by throwing it into the lake of fire in the place it was forged, at Mount Doom in the middle of the evil one's land of Mordor. In the film after about ten hours in real time, at the end of the third movie, we finally come to the place where the character carrying the ring, Frodo, stands at the edge of the lake of fire in Mount Doom and is able to destroy the ring.

He almost flubs it, but in an unexpected plot twist the deed is accomplished by the least likely character Gollum, somebody who has been eaten up with madness by the ring, and who snatches from Frodo by biting off Frodo's finger. In his mad celebration he loses his footing and falls into the lake of fire and is destroyed along with the ring. In the meantime all of the other characters are involved in a hopeless fight against the forces of evil before the gates of Mordor.

It is hopeless because even though they are good, and they fight valiantly, they are utterly incapable of overcoming the magnitude of Sauron's evil. I do think this represents our own struggle against the forces of darkness. No matter how hard we try to resist, without Jesus we are doomed.

So at the climax of the movie we see Frodo, his helper Sam, and Gollum, all hovering at the brink of either destroying the ring once and for all or being utterly consumed by it, bringing about the triumph of evil, And that scene flashes back and forth with the scene of the hopeless battle of the forces of good, Gandalf, Aragorn, the Elves, Hobbits, and Dwarves, versus the overwhelming forces of evil. Their only hope is for the ring to be destroyed.

Then, and this is the part of the movie I showed before, when Gollum falls into the lake of fire and the ring is destroyed, the power that holds together Sauron's evil empire is destroyed. Sauron loses his sway over his evil forces; they cower and run away, and even the mighty towers and walls he has built crumble and are destroyed. In the movie there is really triumphant music, and we as the audience get to thrill to the idea that the deed has been accomplished. Tetelestai, it is finished.

But now when I show this clip I want you to notice what happens. At first there is that real sense of triumph, but then something else happens. Let's watch.

 

What's going on here? These guys were all really stoked, cheering like they are the Padres and they just won the World Series against all odds, but in the end they're all bummed. Why?

The Text

That's right. They're afraid that their friend Frodo has died in the process of destroying the ring. And even though they're happy that the power of Sauron has been forever destroyed, they miss their friend. They think it's a high price to pay. What do you think?

Well, going back to the scripture, we see something very similar happening in Paul's letter to the Romans. Remember we just read Paul's doxology at the end of Chapter 8, it seems as though he couldn't have been any happier. Now at the beginning of Chapter 9 we see Paul is sad all of a sudden. Let's read it and then we'll see what kind of connections we can make.

9 I speak the truth in Christ—I am not lying, my conscience confirms it through the Holy Spirit—2 I have great sorrow and unceasing anguish in my heart. 3 For I could wish that I myself were cursed and cut off from Christ for the sake of my people, those of my own race, 4 the people of Israel. Theirs is the adoption to sonship; theirs the divine glory, the covenants, the receiving of the law, the temple worship and the promises. 5 Theirs are the patriarchs, and from them is traced the human ancestry of the Messiah, who is God over all, forever praised! Amen. (Romans 9:1-5 NIV).

Paul seems to be really sad about his own people the Jews. Let's see if we can figure out what the problem is.

Paul the "Super Jew"

Let's just think for a minute now who Paul is. We know from the Book of Acts that Paul was a very zealous Jew. He was a highly educated scholar and like many of his contemporaries put all of his hope in the promise God had made to Abraham to bring all people to righteousness through him. Paul believed that the Jews were especially blessed, chosen by God to be light to the world. He was passionate about keeping the law of Moses because he saw the law as the means by which the Jews could maintain purity so that they could bring all people to God. That was why when the Church started to grow in Jerusalem he saw it as a great threat and he worked hard to destroy it. In his letter to the Philippians Paul writes about his life before he encountered Christ. He writes,

If someone else thinks they have reasons to put confidence in the flesh, I have more: 5 circumcised on the eighth day, of the people of Israel, of the tribe of Benjamin, a Hebrew of Hebrews; in regard to the law, a Pharisee; 6 as for zeal, persecuting the church; as for righteousness based on the law, faultless.

7 But whatever were gains to me I now consider loss for the sake of Christ. (Phil. 3:4-7 NIV)

Before Paul met Christ, he was a "super Jew." But we just read that after he met Christ, he looked at all that he had once been so proud of about his Jewish identity as loss. In the next verse he uses even stronger language, calling all of this external evidence of being a Jew "garbage." Why do you think he uses such strong language? [because he met Christ].

Because Paul met Christ on the road to Damascus, and he was changed on the inside. Because he was changed on the inside, none of the external things mattered to him any more. When Paul met Jesus on the Road to Damascus he was suddenly able to realize that far from being an enemy of the law, Jesus was in fact what God had been promising all along. He was able to see that all of his efforts to be right with God through religious practice were useless. He came to see that God had fulfilled the law in Christ, so that those who were in Christ could be right with God just through faith in Jesus. And he came to see that the promise God had made to the Abraham wasn't meant for the Jews alone but for everybody.

When his eyes were opened he was able to go back over everything he knew about the law and the prophets and realize that everything in the Bible points to Jesus. So for example Paul could see that the scripture that Mike read this morning, from the Prophet Hosea, was about Jesus. "I will show my love to the one I called 'Not my loved one.' I will say to those called 'Not my people,' 'You are my people,' and they will say, 'You are my God.'" (Hos. 2:23 NIV). Paul's change was profound.

In the book of Acts we read about the scales falling from Paul's eyes so that he was no longer blind. It's very reminiscent of the great hymn "Amazing Grace," I was blind but now I see. Have you ever had that experience where all of a sudden everything makes sense? I know I have. When you suddenly see things in a new light, it gives you a sense of awe and exhilaration. If you're like me you want to run right out and tell everybody what you just discovered. And that's the way it was with Paul. That's why Paul went from being the Church's greatest enemy to the Church's greatest evangelist.

The Stiff Necked People

Well, here's the problem. Paul had seen the light. And some of the Jews had seen the light. But most of the Jews continued to think the way Paul did before he met Christ. So while in Paul's mind the gospel he was preaching came out of God's promise to Israel and was the fulfillment of the law, more and more Jews came to see the church and its gospel as a threat to Judaism. Sadly, the traditional Jews and the Christians grew farther and farther apart. In the first few years after Jesus' resurrection the original Christians had thought of themselves as Jews. But mostly because of the exclusiveness of the way Jewish people thought at the time, they grew apart, and eventually Christianity became a separate religion, as it is today,

Now, in some ways you can't really blame the Jews. Every Jew was educated in the history of the Jews and there were a few events that were fundamental to Jewish identity. One of these events was the story of the Exodus, where God had delivered the descendants of Abraham from slavery in Egypt. It was then that God gave the Jews the law, and made a covenant with them that if they followed the law and lived the life of righteousness, justice, and love that God expects from his people, that they would be blessed in the Promised Land.

Another event was the exile in Babylon. Because the Jews had failed to keep the law, in fact eventually forgetting they even had the law, God had punished the Jewish people by using the Babylonians to burn the temple, destroy Jerusalem, and carry the people into exile. When the Jews were liberated from exile in Babylon and allowed to return to their homeland, their religious leaders had created a way of understanding and obeying the law that sought to ensure that they would never again forget and suffer the consequences.

This was when the Pharisees had built a number of rules on top of the law and in addition to the law that were supposed to keep the people from screwing up. So it is important to remember that what the Pharisees did had a good intention: to make sure that the people didn't violate the law so that they were not punished again. The problem was that by focusing on the rules and regulations the Jews had forgotten the original reason for the law, which was to create a people who lived such blessed lives that they caused all other people to want to live as they did. They were to be light.

But instead of being light, the rules became oppressive. No one could keep them. The Jews themselves were either arrogant and hypocritical, pretending they were obeying the law when they weren't, or burdened with guilt because they knew they couldn't keep the law. And the people who were not Jews were repelled by what they considered to be arrogance and religious silliness.

The Jews were called to be light, but they were not light. And yet many of them clung to the idea that only by careful and strict observance of the law could they come into right relationship with God.

When the scales fell from Paul's eyes he could see the fallacy of Jewish religious understanding. Almost immediately he set out to try to convince everyone he came into contact with that Jesus had provided a way to get right with God without being bogged down by religious nit-picking and without guilt. This proved to be a compelling message for the Gentiles. The idea of being let off the hook was a powerful one that brought huge numbers of Gentiles into the church.

But that same idea was alien to the Jews. The idea could not have been more foreign and threatening. It would be like saying to us, "you don't have to believe in Jesus to be saved. As long as you believe in something and you lead good lives you're going to be right with God." We know that's not true and if someone came in here trying to preach that gospel we would throw them out on their keester. And of course that would be the right thing to do; faith in Jesus is at the foundation of our relationship with God and well supported in scripture.

But the Jews' faith in the law was not supported in scripture. It was a reaction to historical events that tried to add on to the scriptures. The Jewish scholars of the time called it "putting a fence around the law." But nevertheless they believed it as if it was scripture. And because of that when Paul and the Christians preached that you didn't need the law to be saved but only faith in Jesus Christ, most Jews saw it as a threat. And they still do.

So most Jews in Paul's time rejected Christ and saw Christianity as dangerous blasphemy, and many still do. And this is why Paul is so upset in the scripture verses we are looking at today. He knows that Jesus is the fulfillment of everything the Jews believe in, but the Jews of his time can't see it. And so Paul's brother and sister Jews were rejecting for themselves the promises God had brought to the world through them, while the Gentiles were eagerly accepting God's salvation.

And so Paul is bummed. Just like the characters in the clip we just watched. There has been a great victory over sin. But it seems that the cost has been high. It seems to Paul that he had to lose his friend in order to experience freedom from the bondage of sin.

Three concluding observations

I'm almost finished talking about this but I want to make three observations about this scripture that I think we can take away as lessons for ourselves. The first one is, we cannot rely on any external indication for assurance of salvation. What I mean by this is that our relationship with God is not dependent on the way we were raised or by the advantages we may have had in our upbringing and education.

I think in much the same way as the Jews of Paul's time relied on scrupulously keeping the law to assure their right standing with God, many Christians today rely on their relationship to the Church or their religious actions and attitudes to bring themselves to believe that they are right with God. If I go to church every Sunday and put money in the offering basket and try to be good then I must be OK, right?

I mean at least I'm not going out on Friday night and drinking and doing all kinds of sinful things. And I don't swear (well, not too much), or judge others (well, OK I do that but only when they deserve it), or curse others (well, except when I'm driving on the freeway, or when someone insults me or threatens me), or consider myself better than others (but wait, if I think I'm OK and you're lost I guess I do think that). You can see how this kind of thinking isn't really getting us where we want to go, can't you?

But anyway I believe in Jesus, that's an automatic ticket to heaven isn't it? But all of those things just indicate that we are trying to rely on religion for our salvation. We're no different than the Jews who tried to rely on the law for salvation. What they missed is what we are also missing, and that is that salvation is by God's grace alone. You cannot earn God's grace by being religious. In fact, as we see with the Jews of Paul's time and many people today who claim to be religious, our religion can be a barrier to grace. We can think that because we are good we don't need grace, and no one is more lost than someone who thinks that.

So if we cannot earn God's grace, and we cannot come to salvation by any of our own efforts, where does that leave us? Are we at the mercy of a capricious God? We are at God's mercy, but he is not capricious.

How do we know if we are "in Christ"? I think the best indication is not by what you do but by what drives your life. You may be selfish, but when you are selfish do you feel convicted? You may be dishonest, but when you are dishonest does it hurt you on the inside? You may be stingy, but do you feel the suffering of the less fortunate and wish you could do something about it? Do you hear the inner voice that tells you to act more in keeping with the Spirit, more righteous, more generous, more fair? Are you obeying it, even if imperfectly? Do you obey it more and more as time goes on? These are signs that God is moving us out of the world and into his kingdom.

The best way to live like a Christian is to obey the inner voice that calls us to live like Jesus lived, to live lives of righteousness, justice, and love. The best way to live like a Christian is to try to live lives that look like Christ. Of all the things that Christ was, he was not religious, which was shy he was always in trouble with the religious authorities. If you are not sure what a Christian life should look like, read the Sermon on the Mount in Matthew Chapters 5-7.

The second observation is that you cannot substitute yourself for those you care about. Paul writes that he wishes he could substitute his own salvation if it could bring the Jews to salvation. But just by the way he wrote it we know that he knew he couldn't do that. He could pray for the Jews and work to try to bring them understanding, but in the end he knew that their fate was in God's hands.

And so it is with us. Are there people who you are concerned about? Who you wish you could bring the gospel to, but who refuse to listen? Are there people close to you who have rejected Christ, who you fear for their eternal souls? I think we all know people like that, and I think it's natural to wish that we could give up something of ourselves in order to bring them to salvation. The closer they are to us, the more we will be willing to give up.

But while we may sacrifice ourselves for the gospel, and in fact if we are in Christ we will sacrifice ourselves for the gospel, we cannot by our own sacrifice bring anyone to salvation. The work of salvation that needs to be done begins with Jesus.

You may remember the story from John's gospel of Jesus raising Lazarus from the dead. Lazarus was Jesus' friend and he had died and been placed in the tomb. Those who loved Lazarus, his sisters Mary and Martha, prayed to Jesus to do something, but they knew they could do nothing to change the situation. Like Mary and Martha, we may be able to pray outside the tomb of the unrepentant sinner, but that person will not come to life until Jesus calls. "Lazarus, come out!" (John 11:43 NIV). Jesus called in a loud voice.

We cannot bring our friends and loved ones to life, but we can show them the way to life. We can pray outside the tomb, and we can be there to love them when they awaken. Finally, we can look at the moment of despair as only a moment. In Paul's letter he despairs for the Jews in the same way that Frodo's friends in the movie despaired for his safety. But we know that it was only a moment, a single scene in a continuing drama. And if we are familiar with Tolkien's story we know that Frodo was saved by the eagles, and that he lived a long and full life and that eventually he was able to cross over into the undying lands. We know that for all of its moments of uncertainty and sadness, in the end Tolkien's tale had a happy ending.

What we must also believe and rely on is much more so than Tolkien, who in my mind was a great author, God is an even greater author. And he is the ultimate author of happy endings. As we continue to study Romans we will see that Paul will eventually conclude that somehow God will bring the Jews to salvation. Neither he nor we know exactly how.

I think some of you may wonder why I gave this message the title, "The Greatest of All Happy Endings." It doesn't look like there's very much to be happy about in Paul's writing. Paul doesn't point to any happy ending; he ends on a note of despair. But we know that in spite of what our limited vision shows us God has a glorious future in store for us. God's story has a happy ending that has no ending.

So even though we might experience moments of despair, let's always remember that our God is a loving and merciful God, and that he has given all to rescue us from sin and bring us to salvation, and that because of all of that, we can look forward to the greatest of all happy endings.

Let us pray. O my God, you are very near, in my heart and in my life; yet often you do seem far away and my soul faints looking for you: you do lead me through dark places and it seems that you withdraw your presence from me. In the desolate time, when I feel perplexed and forsaken, I think upon the cross of my savior and his dreadful cry, and my faith holds fast in his faith, and despair cannot seize me. Help me to remember the days of vision and sure confidence, guide me to rest my soul in the revelations of yourself that you have given me in times past through all of your prophets and servants, and bring me out of the valley of the dark shadow once more into the light of your presence, through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

Sunday, October 28, 2012

Sermon Notes 10/28, “Christians and Politics” (2 Cor. 5:16-6:2)

The Tuesday after next Sunday is Election Day, Because I won't be here next week I wanted to take this opportunity to put a biblical perspective on the whole election and voting issue. Some of you can't vote yet and some, like myself, have already voted, and I'm not going to try to persuade you to vote for or against anything or anybody.

There is a quote I read recently by John Wesley (John Wesley is considered to be the founder of the Methodist church), that I think gives good advice: "I met those of our society who had votes in the ensuing election, and advised them, 1. To vote, without fee or reward, for the person they judged most worthy: 2. To speak no evil of the person they voted against: And, 3. To take care their spirits were not sharpened against those who voted for the other side." I am going to advise those of you who can vote, to vote your conscience.

I think it is appropriate to talk about the whole issue of the upcoming election for a very important of reason. There is an misguided and unfortunate tendency in politics to try to associate the church with one or the other side. This is completely without basis in the Bible. Jesus is not a member of the Republican or the Democratic Party. If we look at the life of Jesus we will see that he did not involve himself in the affairs of politics. We will recall that some of Jesus' followers hoped that he would use his messianic gifts to rid Palestine of the Romans and reestablish the Kingdom of Israel. But Jesus made it plain that his mission went far beyond rearranging earthly political systems.

Jesus came to establish a new kingdom that will supersede every other kingdom that has ever existed. And he did this not by seeking political change but by seeking change in peoples' hearts.

When we become Christians we become citizens of this kingdom. The apostle Paul tells us this plainly in his letter to the Philippians "our citizenship is in heaven." (Phil. 3:20 NIV). And, in fact, as citizens of this new kingdom we are called to help God to build, we are ambassadors of God's kingdom.

The Text

We might wonder what that looks like in practical terms. So today I have chosen a text from another of Paul's letters to help us to consider the issue. We will be reading from Paul's second letter to the Corinthian church, Chapter 5 verse 16 to Chapter 6 verse 2:

16 So from now on we regard no one from a worldly point of view. Though we once regarded Christ in this way, we do so no longer. 17 Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, the new creation has come: The old has gone, the new is here! 18 All this is from God, who reconciled us to himself through Christ and gave us the ministry of reconciliation: 19 that God was reconciling the world to himself in Christ, not counting people’s sins against them. And he has committed to us the message of reconciliation. 20 We are therefore Christ’s ambassadors, as though God were making his appeal through us. We implore you on Christ’s behalf: Be reconciled to God. 21 God made him who had no sin to be sin for us, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God.

6 As God’s co-workers we urge you not to receive God’s grace in vain. 2 For he says,

“In the time of my favor I heard you,

and in the day of salvation I helped you.”

I tell you, now is the time of God’s favor, now is the day of salvation. (2 Cor. 5:16-6:2 NIV).

The Corinthian Letters

We need to get some background on these verses. Paul had founded the church at Corinth during his second missionary journey. It was one of the first churches that was made up of mostly Gentile believers. Paul stayed in Corinth for a long time but he had a rocky relationship with the church there.

Corinth was a seaport town and pretty free-wheeling in terms of morality. Some who were members of the Corinthian church had trouble letting go of their worldly ways and embracing their new life in Christ. They continued to live as if they had not been born into a new family by baptism into Christ, and they engaged in some really sinful behavior.

Part of the reason for that was because there were other Christian preachers, Paul calls them "false apostles", who denied that Paul was a real apostle, and presented themselves as evangelists of a different gospel that can be summed up in the words, "If it feels good, do it." Naturally, many of the Corinthians thought that kind of a gospel sounded pretty good, better than the one Paul was preaching.

Eventually Paul had a falling out with the Corinthian church Paul's first letter to the Corinthians was essentially a scolding for missing the truth of the gospel and denying his authority. Paul's second letter to the Corinthians was written sometime later, after the Corinthians had reconciled with Paul. The second letter is an extended defense of his ministry along with advice on how to live the authentic gospel.

In the section of the letter we are looking at today we think that Paul is responding to some of the criticisms of his personality. Paul had been accused of not being a strong speaker and leader. This accusation, coupled with the fact that Paul had not been a follower of Jesus before he was crucified, led some people to suggest that he was not a true apostle, but an imposter.

In the bigger picture, Paul responds by saying the truth of his being an apostle is the Corinthian church itself. It was Paul who had first brought the gospel to Corinth. There would be no church were it not for his efforts. Therefore, even though he didn't fit the model of an itinerant preacher in the first century, with a bold stature and a powerful speaking voice, he was nevertheless a true apostle of God. The word apostle comes from the Greek ἀπόστολος which means, "one who is sent." In this case Paul argues that he was sent by God to preach the gospel in Corinth, and that his mission had obviously been successful because God had made converts there.

So this part of the letter is a call to the Corinthians to raise their consciousness above worldly things and try to look at things from a more divine point of view. Paul says, "I once thought about Jesus in a worldly way. I thought only a scoundrel and criminal would end up crucified by the Romans. Anyone who believes in him as the Messiah must be seriously deluded." But then Jesus confronted Paul on the road to Damascus.

Paul, who was called Saul then, was on his way to Damascus to arrest and kill the followers of Jesus there. The scene where Jesus meets Paul is recorded in the Book of Acts:

3 As he neared Damascus on his journey, suddenly a light from heaven flashed around him. 4 He fell to the ground and heard a voice say to him, “Saul, Saul, why do you persecute me?” 5 “Who are you, Lord?” Saul asked. “I am Jesus, whom you are persecuting,” he replied. 6 “Now get up and go into the city, and you will be told what you must do.” 7 The men traveling with Saul stood there speechless; they heard the sound but did not see anyone. (Acts 9:3-7 NIV).

Can you imagine this? Paul actually meets the resurrected Jesus on the road to Damascus. And from that time on he is changed from Christianity's greatest enemy to become Christianity's greatest missionary. Paul is telling the Corinthians in today's scripture that they too have had an encounter with the risen Lord, and that they too should be changed at the core.

New Creations

Paul goes on to say that after his encounter with Christ on the road to Damascus he became a new creation because he left the realm of the world (the "flesh") and entered the realm of the Spirit. We have spent a lot of time in Romans thinking about what it means to go from the realm of the flesh to the realm of the Spirit. To be in the realm of the flesh is to be driven by the attitudes and desires of the world. These things would include wealth, power, property, physical strength and beauty, and prestige. To be in the realm of the Spirit is to be driven by the things the Spirit desires. These things would include justice, righteousness, and love.

If we have been baptized into Christ, we too have become new creations. Paul writes, "if anyone is in Christ, the new creation has come. The old has gone, the new is here!" (2 Cor. 5:17 NIV). Our change should be as dramatic as the change Paul experienced. Part of that change includes being adopted into God's family. Paul tells us in Romans, "15 The Spirit you received does not make you slaves, so that you live in fear again; rather, the Spirit you received brought about your adoption to sonship. And by him we cry, 'Abba, Father.'” (Romans 8:15 NIV). We are no longer orphans, children of the world. We are children of the living God.

And, we inherit everything that comes with being members of that family. So we inherit all things that God has to give (which is everything, in case you were wondering). And we also inherit our stake in the family business. What is the business of God's family? Paul tells us in the next verse in 2 Corinthians, it is "the ministry of reconciliation." If we are "in Christ," meaning that we have had an encounter with the risen Lord, we are new creations, adopted into the family of God, and entrusted with the "ministry of reconciliation."

The ministry of reconciliation is God's reconciling the world to himself. It is reversing the curse of Adam and Eve. It is restoring the love relationship between humans and God. God has made all of this possible through Christ. Jesus has accomplished all that was necessary to reconcile humans to God, by dying on the cross to pay the penalty for our rebellion. But that work, though already accomplished, is not yet fully apparent. This is the "already and the not yet." The work is already accomplished, but it is not yet completely evident. Jesus has already reconciled all things, but the kingdom is yet to be fully realized.

The work of realizing that kingdom is Christ's work. And if we are in Christ, it is our work. Paul writes in verse 19, "he has committed to us the message of reconciliation." (2 Cor. 5:19 NIV).

Christ's Ambassadors

And so what does Paul write next? "We are therefore Christ's ambassadors, as though God were making his appeal through us." (2 Cor. 5:20 NIV). This is unbelievable. God has lifted us up out of the mud, at great cost to himself, and raised us to the level of ambassadors!

Do you know what an ambassador is? The dictionary definition is, "a diplomatic official of the highest rank, sent by one sovereign or state to another as its resident representative." An ambassador actually represents the country he or she was sent by in a foreign country. So, for example, the US ambassador to Japan actually represents the United States in Japan. Whatever our ambassador there says or does, it is as if it were being done by the United States, by us.

Today, ambassadors are in close communication with their home governments. But in Paul's time, it might take weeks for communication to occur between the home government and the ambassador, and so the ambassador had great powers to represent the sovereign, the King, or maybe even, the Emperor, and to act in his name. And here Paul is saying that because he is "in Christ" he is an ambassador of God. And if we are "in Christ," we are also Christ's ambassadors.

George Shultz was the American Secretary of State during presidential administration of Ronald Reagan. As Secretary of State he was responsible for all of the US embassies around the world. Whenever a new ambassador was appointed by the President, Schultz would bring the appointed ambassador into his office for a consultation. In his office he had a globe that showed all of the countries in the world, and Schultz would always ask the new Ambassador to go to the globe and find and point to his country. Invariably the new ambassador would go to the globe and point out the country he or she was being sent to.

When Mike Mansfield was appointed Ambassador to Japan Schultz did the same test with him. But when Mansfield went to the globe, he found and pointed to the United States and said, "That's my country." From then on Schultz told that story to all new Ambassadors. He would tell them, "Never forget you're over there in that country, but your country is the United States. You're there to represent us. Take care of our interests and never forget it, that you're representing the greatest country in the world."

I really think that is a great story. And I think it a story that we ought to take to heart when we consider that we have been made Christ's ambassadors. It means that we represent the Kingdom of God and its King to this foreign land in which we find ourselves. It is true that we live in the United States and most of us have citizenship here and it really is our responsibility to participate in the affairs of the country. But as I already mentioned, and we should never forget, we may live here in this country, but, as Paul wrote to the Philippians, "our citizenship is in heaven." (Phil. 3:20 NIV).

Citizens of Heaven

There are a number of different ways that Christians feel they should respond to this dual citizenship. Some Christians choose not to participate in worldly affairs. I can sympathize with this attitude but I don't believe it is biblically grounded. On the other hand some Christians see it as their duty to identify their Christian faith with their nation and even with their particular political preferences within that nation.

For example, Christians identifying themselves as "Evangelical" have identified themselves mostly with the Republican Party in the United States, so much so that now the members of any congregation that wants to call itself Evangelical are branded in the public eye as right wing Republicans. So Jesus becomes identified with a particular political position in the mind of the public. And we see Christians at the same time pretending to proclaim Jesus and denouncing their neighbors who are of a different political persuasion. Let me quote here the Apostle James, "From the same mouth come blessing and cursing. My brothers, these things ought not to be so." (James 3:10 ESV).

And this is done not just by misguided Christians but by equally misguided Christian leaders. People who ought to be using the pulpit to proclaim the Good News are instead using it to seek advantage in worldly power struggles. Christian leaders willingly and openly identify themselves and their congregations with particular countries and particular political positions, making the gospel of Jesus Christ a tool for division, exclusion, and condemnation. My brothers, these things ought not to be so.

I really believe if Paul were on the scene today he would be writing letters of rebuke like 1 Corinthians to those churches that are trying to link Jesus to their own brand of politics. To try to harness the awesomeness of God for gain in worldly partisan politics, left or right, or to hijack the name of the Great I AM to endorse any man-made creation, structure, or institution, is nothing less than blasphemy. It is idolatry. It stands in irreconcilable opposition to the absolute sovereignty of God.

I'm not saying Christians shouldn't participate in the affairs of the world. Of course we have an obligation to do so. But our participation must be to advance the interest of God's Kingdom, which is our family business. When God's Kingdom comes, it will not be characterized by political positions and borders. It will be characterized by the triumph of justice, righteousness, and love, for all people.

The prophet Isaiah speaks of Christ and those who are in Christ, "I will make you as a light for the nations, that my salvation may reach to the ends of the earth." (Is. 49:6 ESV). We are that light. Not a light to one nation, not a light only to Republicans or Democrats, but a light to bring God's salvation to the ends of the earth.

Christians in the World

So as we approach the upcoming election we will be called upon to consider how we might best represent Christ to the world. I am not going to suggest that you vote one way or the other, that you vote for one thing or against another, but that you remember that you are citizens of heaven, representing the greatest kingdom and the greatest king.

Baptist minister Martin Luther King, Jr. provided us with a great example of how to represent the Kingdom of Heaven on earth. King saw how institutionalized evil could be overcome using the power of love and the ballot. King employed a strategy of openly challenging the social structure that perpetuated segregation and race hatred At the core of that strategy was the proposition that he and his followers were not enemies of those who advocated leaving things as they were, but that they must approach them with nonviolence and agape love.

Rev. King was jailed in 1963 while conducting a campaign for black voter registration in Birmingham, Alabama. King was not from Birmingham but was Pastor of the Dexter Avenue Baptist Church in Montgomery, Alabama. Because of this a group of white ministers from Birmingham published an open letter criticizing King as an "outside agitator." King responded by writing another open letter that has come to be known as the "Letter from a Birmingham Jail." It is an incredible piece of writing that connects human politics to the heart of the Christian gospel, and I urge everyone to read it. It is freely available on the Internet.

But one passage from that letter stands out as particularly appropriate for the ideas we are considering today. Those preachers who had criticized King had openly identified themselves with the social system that allowed segregation and race violence. In that I really believe they were little different from those preachers who today identify the gospel with politics of any persuasion. But King called them, and us, to a higher vision of the church, and one that I believe is more biblical. He wrote:

"The church must be reminded that it is not the master or the servant of the state, but rather the conscience of the state. It must be the guide and the critic of the state, and never its tool. If the church does not recapture its prophetic zeal, it will become an irrelevant social club without moral or spiritual authority."

We are called to be prophets. We are called to be ambassadors. We are called to be light. As prophets, as ambassadors of God's kingdom, as light, we must use all of our strength individually and as a church to represent God's love to the world.

Being a prophet has never been easy. Prophets are not popular. In the Bible we see story after story of prophets who were shunned, ignored, abused, and sometimes brutally killed. Thankfully, in our country and our day we have freedom to openly live the life of Christ with no more persecution than that which comes with being out of step with society. That may not feel good, but that is what we are called to as Ambassadors of Light.

As we go into this last week before the election, let us pray that we might faithfully represent our true country, the Kingdom of Heaven to everyone we meet, and let us pray that through our faithfulness we might bring closer the day when God's kingdom will triumph on the earth. Amen.

Let us pray.

Dear Heavenly Father, the God of all justice, righteousness, and love: Give us all grace and strength to conceive and execute whatever might be for your honor and the welfare of our nation; that we may become, at last, through the merits and intercession of our common Redeemer, a great and happy people, because a wise and understanding, a just, righteous, and loving people, to your honor and glory. Amen

Monday, October 22, 2012

Sermon Notes 10/21, “Signed. Sealed. Delivered. The Deed is Done.” Romans 8:31-39.

I've got some good news for you guys. Our text this morning is going to be in Romans. But before we look at that text I want us to look at another text that I think is one of the most dramatic texts in all of literature. It comes from the gospel according to John, and it describes the death of Jesus on the cross.

28 Later, knowing that everything had now been finished, and so that Scripture would be fulfilled, Jesus said, “I am thirsty.” 29 A jar of wine vinegar was there, so they soaked a sponge in it, put the sponge on a stalk of the hyssop plant, and lifted it to Jesus’ lips. 30 When he had received the drink, Jesus said, “It is finished.” With that, he bowed his head and gave up his spirit. (John 19:28-30 NIV)

My friends if you have been paying attention at all to anything you know about the Bible you should be in awe at what I just read. Because in those few words we have heard described all that was necessary to reverse the curse of Adam and Eve and bring the world back into relationship with God.

But I want us to consider the word Jesus uses to describe the event. "It is finished." In the Greek the word is tetelestai. Interestingly, it is a word from law and commerce. The root of the word is telos which means end. But in this formulation the word applies to a legal and commercial transaction that is completely finished. So in this way it calls to mind the English idiom "signed, sealed, and delivered."

It indicates that a legal transaction has been completely accomplished. In law, the proper use of the term is "Signed, sealed, delivered. The deed is done." What's interesting about this I think is that I doubt that we think of our relationship with God in legal terms.

I think we tend more to think of things in terms of family relationships. We want to see God as a loving but often disappointed parent who is willing to overlook our waywardness and quick to let us off the hook for our misdeeds. Certainly God is a loving parent. But God is also holy. And because God is holy, no sin can be overlooked. If God could allow sin without consequence, He would not be a holy God. He would instead be a capricious tyrant: holding some, maybe his favorites, to a lower standard than others. That kind of a god would not be worthy of worship.

Today we are going to come to the end of Chapter 8 of Paul's letter to the Roman Church. At the same time we are going to come to the end of Paul's exposition of the Christian faith. As we look back on it we can see that Paul has presented his arguments in legalistic fashion from the beginning. In the section we are going to read today we see Paul summarizing his case. It is like a lawyer making his closing remarks before sentence is passed. Let's look at it:

31 What, then, shall we say in response to these things? If God is for us, who can be against us? 32 He who did not spare his own Son, but gave him up for us all—how will he not also, along with him, graciously give us all things? 33 Who will bring any charge against those whom God has chosen? It is God who justifies. 34 Who then is the one who condemns? No one. Christ Jesus who died—more than that, who was raised to life—is at the right hand of God and is also interceding for us. 35 Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? Shall trouble or hardship or persecution or famine or nakedness or danger or sword? 36 As it is written:

“For your sake we face death all day long;

we are considered as sheep to be slaughtered.”

37 No, in all these things we are more than conquerors through him who loved us. 38 For I am convinced that neither death nor life, neither angels nor demons, neither the present nor the future, nor any powers, 39 neither height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord. (Romans 8:31-39 NIV).

Amen.

Let’s spend just a couple of minutes reviewing Paul's argument. We have spent quite a few weeks looking at it and it is quite complex, but we'll try to just focus on the main points and then we'll be able to work our way through this last section of Chapter 8.

The main idea of the first three chapters was that God has a case against every single human being who has ever lived. In the case of the Roman church Paul addresses two groups of Christians: the gentile Christians and the Jewish Christians. Which follows the idea of the way first century Jews divided up the world between those who are among the chosen (the Jews) and those who are not (everyone else).

To those who were not among the chosen God made himself known in nature. Everyone had the requirements of God's law written on their hearts. Yet because of humanity's corrupted nature, people chose to worship created things rather than the Creator. And thus they were deserving of God's wrath. To the Jews, who relied on the fact that they had been given the Law of Moses. Paul pointed out that they had been unable to keep the requirements of the law. And thus they too were deserving of God's wrath.

In legal terms, at this point in Paul's argument what he has proven is that all people are guilty and deserving of the full penalty of law. Thus, the scene that is set at this point is that the criminal is standing before the judge. The guilty criminal is every human, including you and me. The jury has already declared its verdict:guilty as charged. The judge is about to pass sentence: death.

We might think at this point that the criminal would be remorseful, and maybe he or she is. But it's just as likely that the criminal is defiant and disrespectful. If we were watching on a TV show we might hope at this point that the judge will throw the book at this criminal, who isn't even sorry for his crime. That is, until we realize that we are that criminal.

Then, at the end of Chapter 3, Paul makes the most amazing statement. God looks at the guilty criminal, who might be sneering at him in contempt, and says, "You know, I love you so much, I can't stand to sentence you to be separated from me forever. I can't stand to see you spend the rest of eternity without love, eaten up by a longing that can never be satisfied. But the law requires that the penalty for your crime must be paid in full."

And then the most amazing thing happens, the judge calls his own son before the bench. A beautiful, innocent little boy, who has never gotten in trouble, or ever done anything wrong. Who the Father -- the judge -- loves so much that now we see him weeping. And he says to the contemptible criminal, "I am going to sentence my own son to pay the penalty for your crime. I am going to sentence him to death instead of you. Because you will never obey me, and he will, and without obedience the law can never be satisfied. And more than that, I am going to adopt you into my family. And I am going to put into you my Spirit, the Spirit of my son, so that from now on when I look at you I am not going to see your rebellion and disobedience, I am going to see the righteousness and obedience of my beautiful son. And my Spirit will eventually change you from the contemptible creature that you are now to the likeness of my own son. You are free to go." And the son obediently is led away to the most horrific execution, and you are set free. This is mind boggling. You couldn't make this stuff up.

In the world Paul lived in to be adopted into a new family was legally and actually the same thing as being given a new life. Everything about your past was forgotten, and you instantly received the full benefit of being a member of the new family, including becoming an heir to the family fortune, but also becoming responsible for the family business. In this case, becoming the heirs of God makes us incredibly fortunate because God has all things, so that is why Paul is able to say in verse 32 that God will graciously give us "all things." And, becoming a part of the family business means that we are involved in the same business as God's only son Jesus, and that is the restoration of the world.

I know this may sound silly but this is a great illustration of our new condition. And that is the comparison of a cucumber to a pickle. Before the sentence that was passed that set us free we were cucumbers. After, we are pickles. We are fundamentally different than we were before. We can never go back from being pickles to being cucumbers. Now there is a lengthy discussion of the difference between cucumbers and pickles, only luckily for us Paul describes it as the difference between life in the flesh and life in the Spirit.

Life in the flesh is the way we lived before we were saved. This is the way of the world. What does this look like? Look at the values of our culture. We value physical beauty, wealth, power. We think of things in a transactional way; we think that we have to earn our value. We rarely care for others, only when doing so will benefit us. We always worry about what's in it for us. We can't see the future very well. We live for the moment. In his first letter to the Corinthians Paul quotes the prophet Isaiah in the slogan of those who are perishing, "Let us eat and drink, for tomorrow we die." (1 Cor. 15:32 NIV).

Now let us contrast that with what it looks like to live in the Spirit. I can't think of a better description of this that what Paul writes in his letter to the Galatians: "22 But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, forbearance, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control." (Gal. 5:22-23 NIV).

Life in the Spirit is a life that is lived to please God. It is a life that is lived to participate in the family business of restoring God's kingdom. It is a life that is characterized by the same kind of obedience we saw from God's own son. The self-sacrificing, self-forgetting love that is willing to give all for the stranger, even for the enemy, without any thought of reward other than the welfare of the other. This is a way of life that values things very differently than the world. This is a life, in fact, that is offensive to the world. That is why anyone who is very good at it is bound to suffer persecution or even death.

Paul tells us that because God gave us his Spirit our lives driven to look like what I just described as life in the Spirit. Here we run into a real conundrum because any of us who are honest with ourselves know that our lives don't always look like that. Some of us, especially when we are new Christians, look a lot more like people who live by the flesh than those who live by the Spirit. So how can we seriously say that we have been given new lives when our behavior makes it look like we're still living the old way?

Part of it, we have seen, has to do with what we intend, what we desire. People who are driven by the desires of the flesh are not concerned about pleasing God. They are only concerned about pleasing themselves. People who are driven by the desires of the Spirit are concerned about pleasing God. The fact that they are not always able to demonstrate the characteristics of life in the Spirit, that they are not always able to produce the fruit of the Spirit, that they are still prone to selfishness and sin; the fact that that causes them to suffer guilt and remorse shows that they are in fact being changed into someone who is a member of this new family. What Paul calls being conformed to the likeness of Christ.

Let's recall how Paul describes his own struggle with sin in Chapter 7 of Romans:

Although I want to do good, evil is right there with me. 22 For in my inner being I delight in God’s law; 23 but I see another law at work in me, waging war against the law of my mind and making me a prisoner of the law of sin at work within me. 24 What a wretched man I am! (Ro. 7:21-24 NIV)

"What a wretched man I am!" This is not the cry of a man who doesn't care about pleasing God. And it is not the cry of a man who is free from sin. It is the cry of every Christian; none of us are able to live up to the standards of our new family. Not yet, anyway. But we will be.

"Who will rescue me?" is Paul's agonizing question. And the triumphant answer is, "Thanks be to God, who delivers me through Jesus Christ our Lord." (Ro. 7:25 NIV). Remember the scene I just described earlier in the courtroom, where the judge went off his head and substituted his own son for the criminal. That is the deliverance Paul is describing here.

Let us go back to that scene and finish out the legal scenario. Here we are the criminal who has been acquitted and adopted into a new life of freedom. That life of freedom we now live is not something that will become evident right away. We may not feel that we are worthy of our new life. We may doubt that what we just witnessed was real. After all, it makes no sense whatever. We know we are guilty and continue to accuse ourselves.

And there are others who accuse us. The world, the flesh, and the devil. We can imagine our great adversary, Satan, rising up at the verdict and shouting "Objection!" And we might be filled with fear that our newfound freedom and righteousness will be short-lived indeed. This is where Paul's closing argument poses four unanswerable questions that lead to the assurance of our salvation and ultimate glorification.

The first question is: If God is for us, who can be against us? God is the judge in this courtroom. There is no higher court, there is no one to appeal to. Anyone who would want to see us condemned is without recourse. God's judgment stands, even if it doesn't make sense. If God has acquitted us, no one can stand against us. We will come to glory.

Question number two. Who will bring any charge against those whom God has chosen? It's not that no one wants to bring charges against us. We can see all of our enemies: the world, the flesh, and the Devil, angrily pointing at us and accusing us of all of our transgressions, past and present, and even future. Can you imagine it? "How can you do this? How can you let this criminal off the hook?" But since it is only God who judges, and only God who condemns, and since we have already been acquitted by God, the judge's ears are closed to further accusation.

The next question. Who then is the one who condemns? No one can condemn. The penalty for all crimes has been paid by Christ. God's own son is standing at the dock, and whenever anyone suggests that we owe anything to God, he says, "No, dad. I already paid for that. This person has no debt to pay. I already paid it in full. Tetelestai, it is finished."

Finally, Paul asks, “Who shall separate us from the love of Christ?” Christ's love has been demonstrated only because of his love and not because of anything we did to deserve it. God loved us when we were totally undeserving of love. When we deserved to be condemned forever, God loved us unconditionally. Because we didn't do anything to earn God's love, we can't do anything to lose it. And even though for now we may have to endure the conditions Paul describes: trouble, hardship, persecution, famine, nakedness, danger, or the sword. In the end, because we are in Christ, we will rise with Christ. As Jesus told his disciples, "In the world you will have trouble. But take heart! I have overcome the world." (John 16:33 NIV).

And so we are more than conquerors. Nothing can stand between us and eternal peace and happiness. The curse of the world has been reversed in us and can never harm us again. Jesus paid it all. "Tetelestai. It is finished." As Paul has stated elsewhere in his letter to the Philippians "I always pray with joy, because of your partnership in the gospel from the first day until now, being confident of this, that he who began a good work in you will carry it on to completion, until the day of Christ Jesus." (Phil. 1:4-6 NIV)

And so Paul can triumphantly announce:

37 No, in all these things we are more than conquerors through him who loved us. 38 For I am convinced that neither death nor life, neither angels nor demons, neither the present nor the future, nor any powers, 39 neither height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord. (Ro. 8:37-39 NIV).

Signed. Sealed. Delivered. The deed is done.So how should we respond to this? Let's once again take Paul's advice, this time from his letter to the Philippians: "Rejoice in the Lord always. I will say it again: Rejoice! 5 Let your gentleness be evident to all. The Lord is near. 6 Do not be anxious about anything." (Philippians 4:4-6 NIV).

This week, do something that publicly demonstrates your assurance of salvation. Show someone selfless love. Be public in your joy of salvation. Be a peacemaker. Use forbearance. Be kind. Be good. Be faithful. Be gentle. Use self-control. Let the world know that your life is driven by the awesome Spirit of the living God. Amen.

Let us pray.

Blessed be the Lord our God for the love which you have shown us through Jesus Christ our Lord. In him who loved us we are conquerors over hardship, distress, persecution, famine, nakedness, peril and the sword. In the silence of abandonment and solitude, of sickness and death, pour out the riches of your blessing, that we may be ever more faithful to serve you in our sisters and brothers, and that our joy to do your will be ever greater. We bless you and glorify you, for you listen to the silence of our hearts. You act within us with power, healing us and leading us to speak in the name of Jesus, your Son. Send us into the world to carry out your will and to break down the walls of silence which separate us. May we witness to you, our only Savior, being ever more united by “one faith and one baptism”. And may we grow in grace and in the peace of God which passes all understanding, that your name may be glorified. Amen.

Sunday, October 14, 2012

Sermon Notes 10/14, Romans 8:28-30 “All Things Work for Good?”

Sometimes when I’m watching suspenseful TV shows and something shocking happens in the middle it gets really hard to watch. For example if the drama is set up in such a way that it seems like one of the major characters has had something really catastrophic happen to them. This is deliberate of course. The writers want you to be concerned and afraid; that’s part of the dramatic effect. I wonder if I really enjoy those parts of the show. If it’s on a DVD or I’m streaming I sometimes will look at the clock-counter to see how much longer I’m going to have to suffer, reassuring myself that the show will eventually be over and the plot complications resolved. And I often have to remind myself – reassure myself really – that this character can’t die or get fired or quit, because they are essential to the plot line. The show couldn’t go on without them. You know that somehow it’s all going to work out because you know the character is in next week’s episode. So I am able to endure the uncertainty of the moment because I know in the end it’s all going to be OK.

Have you ever had that experience? From watching a TV show or maybe from reading a book? What about in real life? The same thing happens in real life doesn’t it? We find ourselves in some uncomfortable position and we endure it by thinking about what it will be like after it’s over. I experienced that quite a bit when I was in the Navy. One of the major topics of conversation of the guys who were my shipmates was how great it was going to be when our tour of duty was over and we got to go to our next duty station. Or home. It was always going to be great. And somehow dreaming about the good things we believed would happen in the future made it easier to endure the suffering that was happening right now.

This week we’re going to go back to Paul’s letter to the Romans. We’re still working our way through Chapter 8 and at the rate we are going we should have it pretty well covered by New Years. That’s supposed to be funny. I will grant that we are working our way through the chapter slowly, but that’s because there is so much to learn from these few verses of scripture.

For example, there have been whole volumes written trying to come to terms with the concepts that are presented in the three verses we are going to look at today. Because these verses touch on two topics that are the most debated and controversial in all of Christian doctrine: Providence and Predestination. It is entirely accurate to point out that wars have been fought, kingdoms toppled, and tens of thousands of people killed defending or trying to promote their own ideas about these concepts. I think that in itself is a tragedy. It is one of those things that non-believers point to when they try to dismiss the Christian faith. “How can they say that they are following Jesus’ commandment to love,” they rightly ask, “when they are busy killing each other over theological niceties?” This is not the way to draw people to God.

Let’s go ahead and read the text, and then we’ll talk about some of the ways it has been controversial, and how we might make some sense of it from a Reformed, or Presbyterian, or Calvinist perspective:

28 And we know that in all things God works for the good of those who love him, who have been called according to his purpose. 29 For those God foreknew he also predestined to be conformed to the image of his Son, that he might be the firstborn among many brothers and sisters. 30 And those he predestined, he also called; those he called, he also justified; those he justified, he also glorified. (Romans 8:28-30 NIV).

There is an old maxim that has been attributed to St. Augustine in the 5th century that goes, “In the essentials, unity. In the non-essentials, liberty. In all things, love.” I think this is a good way to approach differences of opinion with our Christian brothers and sisters who believe differently than we do. We do not surrender any truth, but we approach what we believe to be error with the attitude of Christ. I’m pretty sure Jesus wouldn’t burn anybody at the stake.

Now what are we looking at here? It seems to me that we could rephrase the whole thing in one sentence: God makes all things work for good for those who love him, because he has chosen them to love him. Even stating it in this simple way, it must seem unbelievable.

I’m going to spend the next few minutes looking at two things: Providence, the idea of all things working for good, and Election or Predestination, the idea that God choses some and not others to receive his special blessing. Again, I am going to approach these topics from a Reformed perspective because I believe that perspective to be more biblically sound, and because we are a Reformed congregation, but along the way I am not going to disparage anyone who differs with this interpretation.

Let’s look at the first part, “…in all things God works for the good of those who love him….” (Ro. 8:28 NIV). Can this really be true? Isn’t this saying that if I love God I won’t experience hardship and suffering? Doesn’t this seem like the philosophy of one of those New Age prosperity groups who put forward the idea that if you just imagine good things happening they will happen?

I have to say that if that was what was being said here by Paul, that I would have to agree that it was a bald-faced lie. Did you ever think about what that means? Why do you think a bald-faced lie is worse than a regular lie? Well anyway if that was the worst kind of lie there is, this would be one. And we all know it. We all suffer and experience hardship, probably on a daily basis. And we also experience blessings. We are generally healthy and prosperous and surrounded by those who love us. But this is not so because we love God. Lots of people who deny God experience these things.

We don’t suffer because we don’t love God, and we don’t prosper because we do. Just think if that was true we could just work our way into the right frame of mind – loving God (whatever that means) – and we’d never have to suffer and we’d always have everything we want. That would make things a lot easier and more pleasant wouldn’t it? But, for whatever reason, that would not serve God’s purposes. And of course what God intends is supreme: it will happen. God is absolutely sovereign.

And so we have to conclude that whatever Paul is saying in verse 28, it is not that we won’t suffer and will prosper if we love God. I think the first thing we have to settle is what Paul means by “good”. And I won’t claim that I have the definitive answer but I do think we have to consider that what God considers to be good goes beyond what we can experience in the present moment. Let’s look at a really good biblical example of this, in the Book of Genesis and the story of Joseph.

Joseph was one of the sons of Jacob who was renamed Israel. So the twelve children of Jacob were the fathers of the Twelve Tribes of Israel. You all remember that Israel was the people chosen by God to be his coworkers in reversing the curse of Adam and Eve and building a new kingdom of God.

The story of Joseph starts in chapter 37 of Genesis. The first thing we learn is that Joseph was a young and handsome man. He was seventeen when the story begins. Jacob loved Joseph more than his other sons because he had been born to him in his old age, and he demonstrated this by making Joseph an ornate robe. This made Joseph’s brothers jealous. Joseph had two dreams that seemed to suggest that at some point Jacob and Joseph’s mother and all of his brothers would bow down to him, and that he would rule over them. Joseph’s father rebuked him for this, and his brothers hated him,

The animosity between Joseph and his brothers became so great that when the brothers had the opportunity they decided to kill him and they threw him into the bottom of a well. But at the last minute, rather than killing him, the appearance of a caravan going down to Egypt gave them the opportunity to sell Joseph into slavery. Once the caravan arrived in Egypt Joseph was sold to Potiphar, who was captain of the Pharaoh’s guard.

Joseph was a good servant to Potiphar and eventually Potiphar put him in charge of his whole household. But because Joseph was young and good looking he had some trouble with Potiphar’s wife. She tried to seduce him. Joseph refused to be unfaithful to Potiphar and to God, but this made Potiphar’s wife angry and she falsely accused him of trying to rape her. In reality it was the other way around, but the upshot of it was that Joseph ended up in prison.

The rest of the story is one of those complicated Old Testament tales, but as time goes by Joseph is delivered from Prison by using the gift of interpreting dreams God has given him, and eventually he ends up in charge of all of Egypt, second only to Pharaoh himself. After this the entire region, including Egypt and Canaan, the land where Jacob and his sons lived, experienced a terrible famine. Joseph was wise enough to have stored enough grain in Egypt for the people to survive, and because of that people came from the surrounding countries to try to trade for grain.

Jacob sent his sons down to Egypt to buy grain, and it is there that they once again encounter Joseph, although they do not recognize him. Through another complex series of events Joseph manipulates the situation such that eventually he is able to bring his father and all of his brothers to Egypt. There he cares for them through the rest of the famine. When his father Jacob dies in Egypt the brothers are afraid that Joseph will exact vengeance, and they all bow down before him (just like in the original dream that Joseph had) and say, “We are your slaves.” (Gen. 50:18 NIV). And then we read this in the last chapter of Genesis:

19 But Joseph said to them, “Don’t be afraid. Am I in the place of God? 20 You intended to harm me, but God intended it for good to accomplish what is now being done, the saving of many lives. 21 So then, don’t be afraid. I will provide for you and your children.” And he reassured them and spoke kindly to them. (Gen. 50:19-21 NIV).

“You intended to harm me, but God intended it for good…” Let’s look at this story and see how it fits with what we read in Romans about all things working for good for those who love God. If something like this happened in today’s society, Joseph’s brothers would have all gone to jail for kidnapping and human trafficking. And this would be no small offense; we’re talking about spending decades in prison. And although there wasn’t any state to enforce laws against such things in Canaan where Jacob and his family lived at the time, the offense was little less serious then. Otherwise why would the brothers have been so guilt ridden even years later when Jacob sent them down to Egypt?

And this could not have been a pleasant experience for Joseph either. Think of it. He is the youngest and favorite son. He trusts his brothers, but they take away his prized robe and throw him in a well leaving him to die. Then later they come back and sell him into slavery. He is falsely accused of rape and ends up in prison. I don’t know about you, but if all of this happened to me I’d start to wonder what God had against me. What could I possibly have done so wrong to deserve this calamity after calamity?

There was nothing good about this situation. On the one side you had malice, jealousy, and hatred; and on the other you had undeserved suffering and calamity. I doubt that when Joseph was in the well waiting to die, or when he was in Pharaoh’s prison, he was thinking, “Well, I’m sure something good is going to come from all this.” He could not have seen the good that God was arranging.

And yet, years later when he is able to save his father and brothers and their families, Joseph was able to recognize that all of the suffering and hardship that had befallen him had worked together for the greater good: the salvation of his loved ones. And even then, Joseph could not have seen that this was just one episode in the bigger story of the redemption of the whole world.

Because of the circumstances Joseph had been forced to endure he was able to preserve the children of God’s promise to Abraham, the ancestors of those chosen by God to be coworkers with him in reversing the curse of Adam and Eve and builders of God’s new kingdom of righteousness, justice, and love. Our own ancestors in the faith. How could Joseph have seen that through his suffering he was to play a crucial role in God’s overall plan of salvation? Even if someone had told him, he would probably have thought it was all a lie. And in this I doubt if he was that different from us. He must have thought to whole thing unfair. But we know now, in retrospect, that this was God’s Providence; God working to arrange all things for good for those who love him.

And here I think we can catch a glimpse of the second part of Paul’s verses in Romans: the idea of “Election,” or “Predestination.” Joseph must have spent his whole life asking “why me?” At first it was “why have I been chosen to endure all of this undeserved suffering and injustice?” Later, it had to be, “why was I chosen to rule over Egypt and bring about the salvation of my people?” And in either case I’m sure he would not have been able to come up with a satisfactory answer. Even now, when we can see so much more than Joseph had been able to see, how could we state with any certainty why it was Joseph who was chosen and not one of the other brothers, or someone else entirely? We cannot. It is beyond our reckoning.

But we can say with certainty that God does choose those he wants to do his work of salvation. He does it not because of any attribute that we know of in those who are chosen. If we look through the Bible at those God chose to do his work, we find an amazing array of rogues. We see cheaters, liars, murderers, adulterers, prostitutes, foreigners, tax collectors and sinners rising up to accomplish God’s purposes. These are not the ones we would expect. If we were writing the story don’t you think we would make Pharaoh the major character instead of some shepherd from the middle of nowhere who had the misfortune to be sold into slavery by his jealous brothers? And don’t you think we’d make those brothers come to some unhappy ending for their crimes, instead of making them the revered patriarchs of God’s chosen people?

Now let me just drift away from our main topic here to briefly address this issue of Election or Predestination. Look at the diagram and look at the first item on the list Election. The two basic ideas about how people come to be among the Elect (chosen) are referred to as Predestination and Prevenient Grace. Prevenient grace holds that God makes his salvation available to all people indiscriminately, and that some chose to take advantage of the offer of grace and others do not. The Calvinist or Reformed idea that is more in keeping with the traditions of the Presbyterian denomination holds that God is absolutely sovereign in his choice of who is to be saved; and that those who are saved can neither choose it nor deny it.

The first idea, Prevenient Grace, at first glance seems better. Everybody gets an even break. If you don’t take it, that’s your fault. You go to hell and it’s your own choice. The second idea seems harsher. First off, it seems to violate our ideas of equality of all people. If God has chosen some and not others that means we’re not all equal. And going beyond this is the idea that some people will spend all eternity in hell just because God capriciously chose that way. And finally, there is the idea that if my salvation is determined by God then it doesn’t matter how I behave. If I am not chosen, I can be the most pious person who ever lived and I will still go to Hell. If I am chosen, I can be the worst lying , cheating, back-stabbing, stealing, violent, self-centered, lustful sinner and I am still going to heaven. Does that sound fair?

When we get to Romans Chapter 9 we are going to look at some of the scripture that supports both sides. The main scriptural support for the idea of Prevenient Grace comes from 1 Timothy where Paul tells us God “wants all people to be saved and to come to a knowledge of the truth.” (1 Tim. 2:4). I will not argue with that statement. But as difficult as it may be to accept the witness of scripture seems to be that God doesn’t always get what he wants.

God wanted Adam and Eve to obey, but they did not. God wanted the Israelites to live according to the law, but they did not. The history of God’s relationship with people is one of God earnestly desiring his people to do one thing for their own good, and people rebelliously choosing to do another to their destruction. In his infinite love, scripture tells us from first to last that God wants everyone to be in full communion with him. He wants it so badly that he sent his son to die to make it possible. But when we look around us in the world, I think we have to agree that there are many who have no relationship with God. So we have to admit that it looks like God doesn’t get what he wants.

The biggest problem with the idea of prevenient grace is that it takes away God’s sovereignty. It puts the choice of salvation in the hands of people rather than God. This may sound liberating but it is not supported in scripture. Scripture tells us in various places that those who are chosen are chosen by the sovereign will of God and no other reason. In Chapter 11 of the gospel according to John we read about Jesus raising Lazarus from the dead. Did Lazarus ask to be raised from the dead? How could he? He was dead! Was there no one else in Palestine that died that Jesus could have chosen to raise? I’m sure there were plenty. But out of all of those, Jesus chose Lazarus. Why? I don’t know. Ask Jesus. I don’t know why he did it, but I know he did it. Jesus chose, not Lazarus. Lazarus was incapable of choosing.

On the other side, the objections to God’s sovereign choice are not founded in scripture. The idea that if I have been chosen I can sin in any way I want to and still go to heaven is refuted by a number of scriptures including the chapters in Romans we have been looking at where we have noted that if we are living according to the Spirit we will grow to become more and more Christ-like, the process called sanctification. If I am truly chosen, though I am still capable of sinning, I will more and more choose not to sin because it grieves the Spirit and causes me too much pain.

Secondly, and I think this is the greater objection, how can God just choose to indiscriminately send people to hell? What kind of a loving God is that? This idea brings up the picture of someone standing before the judgment throne pleading for one last chance to repent and God saying, “Nope. Sorry. It’s too late.” And the miserable creature falls through the sky to land in Hell forever.

We can talk on a different day about what Hell is. We can talk on a different day about whether we can hold God to our standards of justice, and how God might go about choosing who is among the Elect and who is not. But let me assure you right now that no one who desires God will ever miss him. No one who desires heaven will miss it. Because if you desire God, that is a desire that God gave you. God chose you to desire him, just like Jesus chose Lazarus.

Look around at those people who do not live as if they were among the Elect and you will notice that they have no desire for God. Ask them. Say to them, “God has a plan where you can live at perfect peace and freedom forever in intimate communion with him.” We have a duty to say that, both in word and deed, to the whole world. How do people respond? Some will jump at the chance, but others will be repelled by the message. “What? Are you nuts? What kind of medieval nonsense is that? I don’t want peace and freedom I want cash!”

Paul tells us in the first letter to the Corinthians, “For the message of the cross is foolishness to those who are perishing, but to us who are being saved it is the power of God.” (1 Cor. 1:18 NIV). Even though at first glance it seems to violate our own notions of justice, in the end the doctrine of God’s sovereign choice is both more logical and better supported in scripture. If you desire God, God desires you even more. As C.S. Lewis writes:

There are only two kinds of people in the end: those who say to God, "Thy will be done," and those to whom God says, in the end, "Thy will be done." All that are in Hell, choose it. Without that self-choice there could be no Hell. No soul that seriously and constantly desires joy will ever miss it. Those who seek find. Those who knock it is opened.

So I think the best evidence indicates that our election is entirely in the hands of God. But having said that, I will note that there are many who disagree completely with this idea. I am called to love them with the same love that Jesus showed to us. In the end none of us can know the mind of God. But when we are enjoying God forever, we will not be bothered about who was right about election.

Going back to our main topic of God making all things work for good for those who love him, we can’t deny that God is bring all things together for good just because we are suffering. The story of Joseph shows us that even though we may experience what seems to be injustice and undeserved suffering, God has a bigger plan that we can’t see. God knows the end of the story. We each are chosen to play our own part in it. Sometimes it’s confusing. Sometimes it hurts. But God knows the end of the story, and the end is good, for us, and for everyone.

Remember at the beginning of the message today I talked about how sometimes we are in the middle of a TV show and it seems that things are not going well but we are able to endure the drama because we know in the end it’s all going to be OK? It is the same in our lives. We may suffer and hurt, but we know in the end it’s going to be OK. God is the author of happy endings. He has promised us a happy ending. Go and read the last two chapters of the Bible, and you’ll see what God has in store for us. It is so amazingly good.

Let us pray. This prayer is from Paul’s letter to the Ephesians.

“I kneel before the Father, from whom every family in heaven and on earth derives its name. I pray that out of his glorious riches he may strengthen you with power through his Spirit in your inner being, so that Christ may dwell in your hearts through faith. And I pray that you, being rooted and established in love, may have power, together with all the Lord’s holy people, to grasp how wide and long and high and deep is the love of Christ, and to know this love that surpasses knowledge—that you may be filled to the measure of all the fullness of God.” (Eph. 3:14-19 NIV).