Showing posts with label Paulene Theology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Paulene Theology. Show all posts

Friday, March 9, 2012

Fools For Christ


Sermon for Lent IIIB Preached at St. John’s 11 March 2012

Exodus 20:1-17

Psalm 19

I Corinthians 1:18-25

John2: 13-22

It made perfect sense- selling sacrificial animals in the Temple courts. People came from all over the world to sacrifice, and they could not be expected to bring their animals with them. And was it really so bad if the people providing the service made an honest living? After all, the Scriptures say that “the laborer is worthy of his hire.” The problem was that people got so caught up in the day to day administration of the program that it seems they forgot what the program of sacrifice was all about. The people on the spot demonstrated this lack of understanding when they failed to understand what Jesus was saying about his upcoming resurrection as he discussed the “allegory of the temple’s destruction and rebuilding.” This preacher from Galilee just didn’t make sense.

In the same way, the commandments of God from the first lesson don’t make a lot of sense in a modern and cosmopolitan world. Surely we all want to respect God and our neighbors, but can you really believe this Moses. He says that you have to do it his way, and that if you don’t, God will judge you, your children, your grand-children, and your great-grand-children. Is it really so bad if someone swears by using God’s Name? And I only get off two days a week. What is the big thing about giving one of them exclusively to God? I suppose the rest of the rules make some sense, about honoring parents and murder and stealing and the like. But all of this puritanical pre-occupation with sex and absolute honesty is not very realistic at all. And how can I ever make a living for my family unless I am willing to drive my competition into the ground and increase my own market share? Moses just isn’t willing to understand that it is dog eat dog out there in the business world today.

As usual, Paul was right. In our second lesson for today, he points out that “The message of the cross is foolishness to those who are perishing.” And goes on to say “I will destroy the wisdom of the wise, and the discernment of the discerning I will thwart.” “Has not God made foolish the wisdom of the world?” We are so enamored with ourselves. At least we are until things really fall apart. We trust in our own schemes and live our lives according to our own choices. We create false gods who will justify our own thoughts, actions, and desires, and do what makes sense to us at the time. And then comes the horrible time of divorce, violation of our safety and self-worth, death of a loved one, loss of a career, or our mobility, or our health, or our financial security. We realize that all of our imaginations were just that. And we cry out to God. And in his mercy and love he comes to us. When everything else lets us down ‘the message of the cross is to us who are being saved the power of God.’

It makes no sense whatsoever that God the Father would send his only begotten Son, the second person of the blessed Trinity, to bear the punishment I deserve and give me another chance. It makes no sense that The Blessed Holy Spirit, the third person of that same Trinity, would come to comfort and strengthen me in my hour of trial. In fact, it makes no sense that God would care about me at all. There are millions upon millions of people who have lived throughout history. There seem to be a nearly infinite number of star systems. History seems to roll on and on and I do so little to impact or control it. And yet God himself knows my name and has called me to be among that number of people who are being saved.

Today I stand before you as a Staryets, a fool for Christ, to encourage you to accept this radical and irrational message that by this bizarre and unbelievable methodology, God has chosen to show his love for you. He reveals to you and to me a model of how we might so live that we will find peace and consolation in this world, and life everlasting in the world to come. It is too simple to be real. Believe today that Jesus of Nazareth is the Christ, the Son of the living God. Tell him that you are sorry for the bad things you have done, and that you will do your best with his help to amend your ways. I assure you today that he will keep his promise to you and to us all, and we shall be known as the people of God.

In just a few moments, we will stand and say together “I Believe.” We will confess that Jesus is the Christ. Then, after we bring our needs and concerns to God in the prayers of the people, we will repent and ask for his forgiveness for our sins. Then he will forgive us and invite us all to come to his holy table, which is an extension of his heavenly banquet table. Those of us who have been baptized he invites to receive the Holy Communion of the body and blood of Jesus. Those who have not been baptized he invites to come for a blessing and to begin preparation for baptism. In this act of faith, he will pour upon us the assurance of his love and strength for the challenges of this coming week. I urge you to join me as a Staryets, a fool for Christ. Set aside your own wisdom and embrace that true wisdom of God today. “For God’s foolishness is wiser than human wisdom, and God’s weakness is stronger than human strength.” In the Name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. AMEN.

Friday, July 23, 2010

On Being Christian

Sermon Proper 12C Colossians 2:6-19

Paul starts today’s lesson with an incredible assumption: “As you therefore have received Christ Jesus the Lord.” He assumes that all of those to whom his words are addressed are Christians; that they have “renounced the devil and all his works, the vain pomp and glory of the world, with all covetous desires of the same, and the sinful desires of the flesh, so that they will not follow, nor be led by them.” He assumes that they “believe in Jesus the Christ, the Son of the Living God, and that they have accepted him, and desire to follow Him as Saviour and Lord.” He begins with the understanding that his readers “Believe all the Articles of the Christian Faith , as contained in the Apostles’ Creed,” that they have “been baptized in this Faith,” and that they have purposed by God’s help to “obediently keep God’s holy will and commandments, and walk in the same all the days of their lives.” It is a significant assumption, but it defines who we are expected to be, and how we are expected to live our lives.
Having established the identity of his readers, Saint Paul proceeds to encourage and admonish the believers at Colossae:
1. “Continue to live your lives in Him, rooted and built up in Him“- Happy is that man or that woman whose foundation is Jesus Christ, the author and finisher of our faith“. Bishop Berkley taught that if Christ ever stopped thinking of us, ever stopped loving us, ever stopped interceding for us for even a moment, we would cease to exist. This is the idea beyond his famous ontological proof of the existence of God, which has confused and frustrated undergraduates for centuries. Saint Paul must have had in mind those older teachings of the prophets which spoke of the day when all of the followers of God would be grafted into the tree of Jesse, that ancient ancestral stock of Israel from which was to spring forth a Messiah, who would redeem his people from their sins. Imagine the comfort God offers us by cutting us away from those roots of bitterness and addiction and pain and prejudice which have led to so much unhappiness throughout our lives, and grafting us into the pure, undefiled rootstock of grace and love which is in Jesus Christ our Lord. The prophets spoke of a day when the old hearts of stone would be taken out of us, and new hearts, tender hearts of love and purity would be put in their places and the law of God would be written on our hearts. In that day, no one of us would serve God or our neighbor because we had to, but rather we would do so because we wanted to. Our motives would be perfected, and we would find the true joy of living lives of love and compassion. That day is upon us as we draw our motivations and attitudes from Him, and we are built up into that Kingdom of our God in the here and now; and they will know we are Christians by our love.
2. The Apostle continues that we ought to be “established in the faith, just as you were taught.” But what is the faith that we have received? What is that common core of truth which has been believed by all Christians, at all places, and in all times? The skeptic might say, Surely there has never been such unity of belief. Certainly there has always been variety of practice and liberty in non-essentials, but where is there evidence of essential unity in the Early Christian community? And yet a careful study of the New testament, and of early church history shows that there is that core of faith which Bishop Lancelot Andrews said was characterized by “one Scripture, Two testaments, three Creeds, Four Ecumenical Councils, and five centuries.” There is a basic statement of our faith which we deny to the peril of our souls. We may never completely understand it, we may never fully appreciate it, but it is there, contained in the creed we repeat every Sunday and lived out in the Sacramental community of which we are a part. You see, God has revealed Himself to us in the books of nature and scripture. In nature, we see the benevolence of a loving creator who makes a world characterized by order and purpose, and says at the end of the day “behold, it is good.” The book of Scripture is the God inspired and God superintended record of the coming of the Christ into the world. In it we see clearly our need established, and God’s loving and merciful provision to meet all of our needs in Jesus Christ. Often, we are tempted to jettison the historic understanding of the people of God about how God shows his mercy to each of us, and to all of us. We imagine in our pride that our understandings and our judgments are wiser and better than those which have been shared by God’s covenant community of faith for the past 3,400 years. Such prideful arrogance is a heady liqueur which has led many to deny the faith received, imagining themselves to be some sort of new Solon or New Solomon. It is a deadly thing to do, to overthrow or ignore the wisdom of the ages, revealed in the books of Natural Science and the Revelation of Christ, and to imagine ourselves wiser than God Himself. It is the idolatry of our age, and of every age.
3. St. Paul’s next admonition perhaps provides the experiential basis for applying what we have learned today to every aspect of our lives. “abounding in thanksgiving.” Is a spirit of thankfulness evident in your life? Is you demeanor such that you are able to see God’s everyday mercies, and the evidences of his love in the midst of life’s vicissitudes and disappointments? Is your experience of God deep enough and regular enough that you sense his love in your family, your employment, and the laughter of friends? Are you able to find a sense of meaning, of purpose in your current situation and in the situations of those around you? Or are you so caught up in the negative events and attitudes of life that thanksgiving, and its companion- joy, has fled from your experience? God offers us that peace which passes all understanding. It is not the giddy false happiness of denial, but rather an abiding confidence that we are loved, and that even in the midst of a sinful and sometimes dangerous world, God is working through the bad as well as the good to perfect our character, and to make us more humane, more self-controlled, more responsible, and more heavenly. In short- he is getting us ready for heaven, and so building our character that others may know the reality of his presence among us. It is this holiness of life and outlook , this set apartness by God and for God which enables us to be thankful in the darkness as well as in the light. At its very heart is that faith which is the “substance of things hoped for, and the evidence of things not seen.” It is that confidence that in all things God loves us, and that he is working out his purposes for all mankind in spite of our bad decisions, and through the agency of our good decisions. And for all of these things we can be thankful.
And so we who are signed with the cross, we who are marked as Christ’s own forever, are admonished to look to Jesus as the author and finisher of our faith, the developer of our motives, and the motivator of our deeds. We are called to embrace and practice the faith we have received, not thinking more of ourselves than we ought, and not imagining ourselves to be wiser than the community of faith through the ages. And finally, we are reminded to give thanks in all things, ever remembering that the God who made us and called us loves us as his very own. Through Jesus Christ our Saviour and Lord. AMEN