Come, See a Man–Bishop Hutchinson, Ordination Sermon for Louisiana Conference of The United Methodist Church

“Come See a Man”

Ordination Sermon

Louisiana Annual Conference

Shreveport, Louisiana

June 6, 2011

Bishop William W. Hutchinson

John 4: 1-30

Smiley strikes again!  I shared last year some sage wisdom from Smiley Anders, columnist for the Baton Rouge Advocate.  He has provided fodder for the mill once again.  In the April 29, 2011 edition of The Advocate he related the essence of this story that I had actually received earlier from a friend in New Mexico.

“The year is 2016 and the United States has just elected the first woman, a Louisiana State University graduate, as President of the United States, Susan Boudreaux.  A few days after the election the president-elect calls her father and says, ‘So, Dad, I assume you will be coming to my inauguration?’

‘I don’t think so.  It’s a 30 hour drive, your mother isn’t as young as she used to be, and my arthritis is acting up again.’ ‘Don’t worry about it Dad.  I’ll send Air Force One to pick you up and take you home.  And a limousine will pick you up at your door.’

‘I don’t know.  Everybody will be so fancy.  What would your mother wear?’ ‘Oh Dad,’ replies Susan, ‘I’ll make sure she has a wonderful gown custom made by the best designer in New York.’ ‘Honey,’ Dad complains, ‘you know I can’t eat those rich foods you and your friends like to eat.’

The President to be responds, ‘Don’t worry Dad.  The entire affair is going to be handled by the best caterer in New York.  I’ll insure your meals are salt free.  Dad, I really want you to come.’

So Dad reluctantly agrees and on January 20, 2017, Susan Boudreaux is being sworn in as President of the United States.  In the front row sits the new president’s Dad and Mom.  Dad, noticing the senator sitting next to him leans over and whispers, ‘You see that woman over there with her hand on the Bible, becoming president of the United States?’

The senator whispers back, ‘Yes, I do.’

The Dad says, ‘Her brother played football at LSU!’”

Let me share a story that puts LSU and football in proper perspective.  It too is about a very important woman who had been similarly overlooked.

Jesus and his disciples were headed from Judea back to Galilee and he decided it was much shorter to go through Samaria than to go around this distasteful area populated by Jews who had stayed behind in the Exile period and who had married the foreign invaders, making them very impure in the eyes of the orthodox.  They came to a small Samaritan village where they stopped to rest.  Jesus, worn out from the trip sat down at the town well while the disciples went on into town to get a few things for lunch.

While Jesus was sitting there, a Samaritan woman came to draw water from the well and the conversation ensued that was read for us by Anice earlier.  Jesus asks for a drink.  She is taken aback and asks, “How come you, a Jew, are asking me, a Samaritan woman, for a drink?”

They get into a conversation about the difference between the water she is drawing and the water Jesus can offer, “Living water”, water that satisfies thirst forever, “an artesian spring within, gushing fountains of endless life.”  The woman asks for the water Jesus can give so she will never thirst again, or ever have to come back to the well.

Then Jesus throws her a curve ball.  “Go call your husband and then come back.”  “I have no husband.”  “I know”, says Jesus. “You’ve had five husbands, and the man you’re living with now isn’t even your husband.”

“Oh, so you’re a prophet!” she says.  And then the conversation is totally diverted from the water issue and onto the religious histories of the Jews and Samaritans, the proper place for worship, the proper way to worship, and similar questions of the established religious traditions of the day.  Jesus cautions her that her background and his background are not that important.  But the important thing is to present our very being, our spirits and our true selves, in adoration of God and that is what constitutes true worship.

“Well,” she says, “I don’t know about that but I do know that one called the Messiah is coming and when he comes he can straighten out our concerns.”  “I am he,” said Jesus. “You don’t have to wait any longer.”

About then his disciples returned with the lunch groceries and they were shocked to find him talking with this woman.  “No one said what they were all thinking, but their faces showed it!”  What a great way to say they disapproved!

The woman took this opportunity to run back to town – not to hide or get away from these crazy Jewish men, but to tell everyone there, “Come see a man who knew all about the things I did, who knows me inside and out.  Do you think this could be the Messiah?”  And they went out to see for themselves.

“Come see a man ….” she says.  “Come see a man…”

In a recent meeting in Indianapolis hosted by the Lilly Foundation for Conferences and organizations who have had Lilly grants for “Sustaining Pastoral Excellence”, Krista Tippett, the public broadcast host of the program “Krista Tippett on Being,” asked this question of the audience of those who are attempting to raise the levels of pastoral excellence across the Church.  “Are we going to be a movement of the people of God or an institution?”   (Repeat)

Sound familiar?  You’ve heard that a lot in the last year.  I’ve put it this way, “We are an institution that would be a Movement.”  Even public radio hosts as asking the question!  That tells me it is important and relevant.

And then Krista Tippett made a very profound statement, “Seminary gave us vocabulary, but it didn’t give us voice.” (Repeat)

So true!  If there’s been any one thing I’ve learned since becoming a bishop it is that there is a big difference between vocabulary and voice!  So, in an attempt to use my voice, with the vocabulary of faith, and in an attempt to give you encouragement to use your own voice in your own places of service, let me make a couple of observations about this well-known, often ignored, but begging for the attention of our voice, story.

Jesus, as true to course, was the initiator of this encounter.  If he had not spoken to the woman, she would never have spoken to him.  It would have been one of those “elevator encounters”.  You know the kind where you step on the elevator and everyone looks up at the numbers for fear someone might speak to them or that would call for them to speak to another.  It would have been quite easy for Jesus just to ignore her.  But she had something he needed:  Water.  And he had something she needed:  Living Water. 

They weren’t far into this theological and spiritual conversation when she slammed him with this conversation stopper.  “Oh, so you’re a prophet!  Well, tell me this…”  And she immediately leads him into a rabbit-chasing conversation about history and preservation of that history.  “What about our well?  What about our ancestry?  What about you snarky Jews? “

Oh, how we can get sidetracked from the relevant into the irrelevant!  How we can be derailed from spiritual content to societal content!  How we can jump the track when someone is trying to get our attention with life-changing discussion!

And the Church can be the worst place to be caught up in the irrelevant of any place I know!  Here’s an example:  When I was a boy, my mother, daddy and I went one night to a revival meeting held in one of the two churches in our little community.  Let me quickly say it was not a Methodist Church!  We had gone because friends had continued to invite us to come.  They were practicing evangelism!  After the opening songs, prayers, and purported welcome, the evangelist stood to preach.  But before he preached he asked for all who belonged to that church to raise their hands.  Then he asked for all who belonged to that denomination to raise their hands.  Then he said, “Will all the rest of you who are not yet saved move over to this side of the aisle.”

In the ensuing “saved vs. unsaved shuffle” my Dad ushered us out of the church.  I don’t think he ever went back to that particular church except to attend my piano recitals that were held there. 

Jesus says to the woman of Samaria, “the time is coming – it has, in fact, come – when what you’re called will not matter and where you go to worship will not matter.  It’s who you are and the way you live that count before God.  Your worship must engage your spirit in the pursuit of truth.  That’s the kind of people the Father is out looking for: those who are simply and honestly themselves before him in their worship.  God is sheer being itself – Spirit.  Those who worship him just do it out of their very being, their spirits, their true selves, in adoration.”

That visiting evangelist must have never heard this story!  He was all about protection and preservation of a certain way of looking at the life of following Jesus.

Do you hear the point?  Christianity is not about preservation but about introduction!  “Come see a man!”  It is not about preserving our way of life and our understandings.  But the faith of the followers of Jesus is about seeing life in a new way because we met a man who showed us something different!!  It’s our role and responsibility simply to introduce people to him!

The Samaritan woman left her water jug at the well, and while Jesus had a “come to Jesus meeting” with his disciples, she was on her way to town to say to the townspeople, “Come see a man who knew all about the things I did, who knows me inside and out.”  And they went out to see for themselves.

John, the gospel writer, goes on to say that many from the village committed themselves to him because of the woman’s witness.  They asked him to stay on so they could learn more and he stayed an extra two days.  Many more entrusted their lives to him and their last recorded statements are, “We’re no longer taking this on your say-so.  We’ve heard it for ourselves and know it for sure.  He’s the Savior of the world!” 

All the woman did was to introduce people to his presence.  “Come see a man . . . Let me put you in touch with him and he can and will do the rest!”

We don’t have to guard Jesus’ church for him!  He’s big enough to take care of that himself.  In fact, when we try and guard the church we are not worried about protecting Jesus, we’re really worried about protecting ourselves.  Jesus can take care of himself!  We’re the ones who are afraid because we don’t trust him enough to care for us while he also cares for them!

It is unfortunate, un-Methodist, un-Wesleyan, and unnecessary to guard the flock. It isn’t necessary for us to conserve or protect the Means of Grace!  Our place is to roll those out frequently and prolifically so others can experience him through whatever Means possible!  Jesus himself is the good shepherd and he has placed himself across the entrance to the sheepfold and he can admit whoever he wants!

 “Come see a man!” That’s our role. Pastor’s, you do not need to be given the judicial authority to guard the church.  Jesus will guard the church!  Your role is to introduce and welcome people in that he might do his work!  I’ve been shut out!  I’ve been deemed unworthy and unsaved!  God forbid I should convey that to someone else!

Ray Bowman, his real name and one of the true poor, came with his mother every Sunday to First Methodist Church (not “United” at that point) in Hobbs, New Mexico.  He and she were truly the poor – – poor economically, poor mentally, poor physically, poor hygienically, and desperate for acceptance.  They weren’t like most of us there, but they were part of the church family.  I grew up with Ray Bowman.

When I was in college I worked one summer as a volunteer with the youth and Ray was part of the group.  He was so disruptive that the regular sponsors wanted him banned from coming because he was unruly, bold, smelly and difficult.  But he was no more difficult than were those sponsors!  He was no more difficult than some of the most controlled and controlling, most intimidating and sinfully manipulative, well perfumed and well-heeled and impossible-to-deal-with people in the church today.  And we break our necks to recruit and appease them that they might give their stamps of approval from the secure confines of their Sunday school classes and might drop a little of their amassed wealth (and don’t even question how that came about!) into our thirsting coffers!  When I and another college student went to the senior pastor to tell him what was happening, he asked the sponsors to step aside and let us handle the youth group for the summer.  Ray continued to come and, I believe in his own limited way, he knew this Jesus who accepted him for who he was!  He met the man!  All we had to do was introduce him!

Jesus said to his disciples, “Well, I’m telling you to open your eyes and take a good look at what’s right in front of you.  These Samaritan fields are ripe.  It’s harvest time! . . . I sent you to a harvest field you never worked.  Without lifting a finger, you have walked in on a field worked long and hard by others.” (John 4: 34-38)

The Samaritans committed themselves to Jesus because of the woman’s witness: “he knew all about the things I did.  He knows me inside and out!”  And so they asked him to stay on, which he did for two more days.  Many more gave their lives to him once they heard him and met him.  And in the end they said to the woman, “We’re no longer taking this on your say-so.  We’ve heard it for ourselves and know it for sure.  He’s the Savior of the world!”

“Come see a man!”

Do you see who this Samaritan woman has become?  From an outcast gender, an outcast race, an outcast theology, and an outcast class and caste, this woman, this un-savable person has become the very symbol of liberation and change, acceptance and desirability.  The outcast who lives a disreputable life is being offered “living water” by “the Way, the Truth and the Life” himself! 

This woman at the well opened the door to all kinds of change, although it was a door that has taken us hundreds of years to pry open in our societies, and in many that door is not open yet!  How long did it take for us to have women clergy?  Far too long!  How long did it take for us to elect a female Bishop?  Far too long!  How long did it take for us to rid ourselves of the racially segregated Central Jurisdiction?  Far too long!  And then how long did it take for us to have a cross–racial appointment, with a black pastor serving an all-white congregation, and a white pastor serving an all-black congregation?  Far too long!  And now combine all of these changes and you get the ultimate combination – a black woman Bishop!  Get ready Louisiana!!  Times they are a changing! And the same Savior who had a noon-time visit with a Samaritan woman and shocked his disciples by having done so is having similar conversations today with the outcasts and undesirables of our world and our shocked churches don’t respond much better than did these first disciples!

And would you believe that 2000 years later we’re still trying to get this one right?  We’re so very good at exclusion.  We need to begin to practice inclusion!  We are so very good at discrimination!  We need help with color-blindness!  We’re so very good at “our fathers and mothers did it this way and our uncle Jacob gave us this land, and this church building, and even the well that goes with it!”  We need help with “maybe our way has run its course and now your way, Lord, a calling to ‘engage our spirits in the pursuit of truth’ is what matters!” 

There’s a whole lot of “mantle passing” we need to do and a lot of “freeing up” we must allow.  The banquet table has been set before us and ALL have been invited!  But the ones who are most interested in preservation have married a wife and bought a cow and they can’t come!!  So open the doors!  Let those on the highways and byways come in to sit with the master!  Don’t preserve – – – – – Introduce!!!  And once they have been introduced, let them and “the man” take it from there! Get out of the way!  Jesus is a big boy and he will handle these new relationships quite well.

He even had to fight his way out of his own home town to keep them from killing him because he told them he had come to preach good news to the poor, and to proclaim release to the captives and recovering of sight to the blind and to set at liberty those who are oppressed, and to proclaim the acceptable year of the Lord!  And then he said Elijah could have gone to many widows in Israel in the midst of the great drought that resulted in famine over all the land, but Elijah wasn’t sent to any of them, but to a widow in Zarephath, or “Sarepta” (sound familiar?), in the land of Sidon; and there were many lepers in Israel in the time of Elisha, and none of them was cleansed, but only Na’aman the Syrian. (Luke 4: 18-30)  God wasn’t about preserving!  God was about introducing!  And they were filled with anger and tried to throw him headfirst off a cliff! But he passed through them and went away.  Whenever we try to introduce the most challenging of Jesus’ teachings we still get push-back and condemnation!

Is all of this dangerous teaching?  Is it unsavory?  Yes it is!  It got the one who taught it killed eventually. And it may get some of us, including me, in trouble today!  But fear not, we are in good company! And our role today still is to introduce everyone we can to this very teacher!! 

“Come see a man!!!”

On May 21, 2011 the latest predicted eschaton, or end of the world, was to have happened.  A great earthquake was to begin the horrible destruction that would lead to the final end of the world as we know it.  The day came and went with no appreciable natural disasters.  So, we ho-hummed the next morning and said, “Wasn’t that interesting?”  But we didn’t get out quite that easily.  We’re still here!  And that means one main thing to the faithful —we still have to deal with “him!”  And he is challenging us to the core of our very way of being and begging us to move beyond preservation of the past to introduction to the future.

“A Louisiana senior citizen drove his brand new Corvette convertible out of the dealership.  Taking off down the road, he floored it to 80 mph, enjoying the wind blowing through what little hair he had left.

‘Amazing,’ he thought as he flew down I-20, pushing the pedal to the metal even more.

Looking in his rear view mirror, he saw the highway patrol behind him, blue lights flashing and siren blaring.  He floored it to 100 mph, then 110, then 120.  Suddenly he thought, ‘What am I doing?  I’m too old for this,’ and pulled over to await the Trooper’s arrival.

Pulling in behind him, the Trooper walked up to the Corvette, looked at his watch and said, ‘Sir, my shift ends in 30 minutes.  Today is Friday.  If you can give me a reason for speeding that I’ve never heard before, I’ll let you go.’

The old gentleman paused, then said, ‘Years ago, my wife ran off with a Louisiana State Trooper.  I thought you were bringing her back!”

‘Have a good day, Sir,’ replied the Trooper.”

Well, people, I’m bringing Him back!  “Come see a man!!”  And I’m saying to everyone here, we, clergy and laity alike, ought to be about bringing Him back!  “Come see a man!!”  He will change our very beings and our lives.  He will change our church!  He will change our relationships!  He will change everything about us.

It’s not about whether I know how to balance my checkbook or not, but it’s about whether I know how to love my neighbor who has no bank account to balance.  It’s not about whether my children get to go on a ski trip, or a summer mission trip.  It’s about whether they know Jesus the man.  It’s not about whether I have a latte or a Frappuccino at the church café!  It’s about whether I can drink the cup he drank which can contain some pretty bitter and disappointing ingredients.

“Come see a man!!”

It’s not about technology – It’s about theology.  It’s not about whether I have a legitimate birth certificate – it’s about whether I have been born again!  It’s not about whether I agree with you or whether you agree with me – it’s about whether we submit to Him and whether we both agree with Him!

“Come see a man!!”

It’s not about tweets – it’s about “twust” (thank you Tweety!).  Are our hearts “twitter pated” with his joy and his mystery, or are we just “twitter pated” in the head?!

It’s not about football – it’s about foot washing!  It’s not about the death penalty – it’s about giving life and giving it abundantly!  It’s not about capitalism – it’s about becoming a captive.

In the words of Tom Brokaw, “It will do us little good to wire the world if we short circuit our souls.”  (From a commencement address, “Celebrate the Common Cause of Restoring Economic Justice and True Value”)

“Come see a man!!”  I’m bringing him back!! But he never really left!  We left him!  And when we return to him he will fling open his arms, draw the water from his own deep well and will quench our raging thirsts with the sweetness of his unfathomable grace!

Oh!  Come see a man!

Oh! Go show a man!

Oh! Go serve a man!

Oh!  Bring him back!  Bring him back!  Bring him back!

It's a Bird? It's a Plane? Pentecost Sunday

 

“That was totally wicked!” the young boy exclaims after waiting for weeks to see something amazing.  Jesus tells the disciples to not leave Jerusalem, but to wait there for the promise of the Father.  The little boy waited outside on the curb, and Mr. Incredible asks him, “What are you waiting for?”  “Something amazing, I guess.”  The disciples waited in Jerusalem, and something amazing did happen!

                Our text today begins with all of the disciples in one place.  This past week Methodists gathered in one place for Annual Conference.  It was a blessed time together.  Dot Miller, Debrah Griffith, Lynne Givens, Ray Owens and Diane Turner were there with us, representing Broadmoor, and you should ask them about their experience.  It was a spirit-filled four days where we worshiped together, praised God for lifting up new clergy, we debated and argued and ate together.  One exciting legislation which was passed was the Task Force on Church Extension report, in which the Louisiana Conference was challenged to make developing new congregations a top missional priority.  This is a good thing.  The most effective way to bring new people into the church is by planting a new congregation.  This does not mean established churches like Broadmoor are ineffective in bringing new people to Christ, but it is a challenge to our established churches to regain the fire and excitement of new churches, making hospitality a top priority, introducing people to Christ as the number one mission.

Our story today is what it’s like to experience the start of something new and exciting.  The disciples were there gathered together, “And suddenly from heaven there came a sound like the rush of a violent wind, and it filled the entire house where they were sitting.  Divided tongues, as of fire, appeared among them.”  Notice that the wind came from heaven.  As I said last week, God did not send Jesus to establish a kingdom of Israel, but a kingdom of God for Israel.  Israel means, “One who wrestles with God.”  Jesus was sent not to establish a kingdom of those who wrestle with God; rather Jesus inaugurated the Kingdom of God for those who wrestle with God.  This heavenly wind sounded like the rush of a violent wind.  In the greek, the word “violent” is more like the word, “burdened.”  It was a heavy wind, a burdened wind, a wind which was carrying something heavy.  Then this wind led to divided tongues, as of fire . . . do you hear the symbolic language?  It was like a violent wind.  Divided tongues, like fire, rested upon them.  Sometimes our human language just cannot adequately express the work of God.  Nevertheless, these tongues of fire rested upon them, and it seems a strange occurrence.

Throughout scripture God appears as fire.  Moses stood before a burning bush, which was not consumed.  God led the Ancient Israelites through the wilderness as a pillar of fire by night.  Elijah, while facing the prophets of Baal, called down fire from heaven to consume his offering.  Instead of being caught up in what the tongues of fire were or what it was like, notice that this is the first time that this fire from heaven rested upon mortals.  The tongues were divided for the first time, being gifted upon the disciples.  In the past the fire was in one place, the bush, the pillar, the altar, but now the fire is divided and given to the church.  God is doing something extraordinary, and the miracle isn’t the fire, it’s that the fire is now divided and offered to the church.  Maybe this is what Jesus was getting at when he broke the bread and divided it among his friends and his enemy during their last supper together?  Maybe this is what Jesus was getting at when he sat down with the multitudes and he divided bread among the thousands so that all would have their fill?

All of those who had gathered were filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak in other languages, as the Spirit gave them ability.  There were others there who were asking what was going on.  It’s a bird?  It’s a plane?  What’s going on, and one of the funniest verses in the Bible is recorded.  Some said, “they must be drunk,” but Peter says, “No, they are not drunk, for it is only 9:00 in the morning.”  Any way you slice that, that’s funny!  All of the people there, no matter their language or heritage or ethnicity heard the disciples speaking in their native language.  Some time ago there was a husband and wife missionary team who was sent to some islands in the pacific.  One day a little boy began climbing a coconut tree in order to get some breakfast.  As he steadied himself at the top of the tree, he grabbed his machete, ready to cut.  His mother ran out of the hut and started yelling at him.  The female missionary told her husband, “She’s warning him to be careful.”  Their translator was amazed saying, “I didn’t know you could speak our native tongue.”  The woman replied, “I can’t, but I do speak ‘mother’.”  You see, the disciples were not blabbering or speaking a spiritual langue in which no one could understand.  Quite the opposite.  They were speaking in different languages so that all could understand. 

In a way, this moment is a reversal of the Tower of Babel.  In Genesis 11 humanity gathers to construct a tower which would reach into the heavens.  In another very funny verse, God comes down from heaven just to see what they were up to.  God says, “Come let us (trinity reference, by the way) go down, and confuse their language there, so that they will not understand one another’s speech.”  With the tower, humanity had gathered to build a city for themselves, so God confused their language.  On the day of Pentecost, the community had gathered to begin building the Kingdom of God, so God blesses them with the Holy Spirit, bringing them together for the work of God.  This moment of the outpouring of the Spirit is a celebration of diversity, but it is not a celebration of diversity for diversity itself.  We are a diverse people.  You are you and I am me.  I am not expected to be you and you are not called to be me; however we are all united into the life and unity of Christ.  If this text was about simple conformity, then the disciples would have spoken one language in which they could all understand.  If this was simply about diversity, the disciples would have been telling different stories.  The text is about people recognizing their distinctness, but they are being called together into one life, one Lord, one God.

A man visited a church for several weeks and he quickly became discouraged.  After one of the worship services he asked the pastor when he was going to do stuff.  “Stuff?” the pastor replied.  “Yeah, the stuff in the Bible, like feeding 5,000 people with bread and fish and healing the blind, you know, that stuff.”  The pastor answered, “Oh we believe in those things, but we don’t do them.”  Needless to say, the man never returned.  This outpouring of the Spirit which laid the foundation of the Church, has blessed the church with an extraordinary gift, the gift of power and meaning.  The Spirit gives teaches us the meaning of what Christ is calling us to do and the Spirit gives us the power to do it.  David Brooks, in a recent New York Times article wrote, “Most successful people don’t look inside and then plan a life.  They look outside and find a problem, which summons their life.”  The Holy Spirit doesn’t solve our problems; rather it gives us power and meaning in order to recognize them and work them out for the glory of God, and these two things, power and meaning, are held in tension with one another.  If we had power without meaning, we would align ourselves in a survival of the fittest, dictatorship in which power is the answer to all problems.  If we had meaning devoid of power, we would understand the mysteries of the world, but be impotent in how to apply them within the world.  Power and meaning, the Spirit provides, and these two gifts lead us toward vocation, our calling, our purpose.

Fredrick Buechner once wrote, “The place God calls you to is the place where your deep gladness and the world’s deep hunger meet.”  What fills you with gladness?  What nourishes your soul?  I love asking people, “If you could do anything all day, what would it be?”  My next question is, “Then why aren’t you doing it?”  What are your dreams?  What is your passion?  But it’s not just about our desire.  Truth be told, I would wander around Epcot all day if given the opportunity, but that doesn’t seem to benefit God’s kingdom.  I should know.  I’ve thought about it.  It is where our passions align with the deep hunger of the world.  What is your passion and how is God calling you to use it in the Kingdom of God?  This is the super power with which you have been blessed.  The Holy Spirit has been poured out upon us to hear God’s voice and to respond to God’s voice.

This may get me into trouble.  Don’t wait for a committee.  Don’t wait for the church council to give you a mission.  Now, it would be helpful to talk to a pastor about what God is calling you to do, and I only say that because when someone says they’ve been talking to God, it’s helpful to seek affirmation from the community.  Never mind the fact that when someone says that God has spoken with them and they want to be a minister that one of the first requirements is a psychological assessment.  It’s just helpful, but understand that God is asking you to receive a blessing, not seek permission.  The Louisiana Conference has adopted new church development as its top missional priority, which means that our number one priority is for our churches to be captured by the excitement and fire and passion of this Pentecost experience.  What has God been putting on your heart?  Are you being called to feed the hungry?  Are you being called to spiritually nourish your brothers and sisters here?  Are you being called into a Disciple Bible Study?  Are you being called to teach scripture in Cuba?  Are you being called to form a cell group in your home on Thursday evenings?  Are you being called into the jail cells to love the unlovable?  We have been given a Holy gift of power and purpose, and it is “Totally wicked.”  In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit.  Amen!

It’s a Bird? It’s a Plane? Pentecost Sunday

 

“That was totally wicked!” the young boy exclaims after waiting for weeks to see something amazing.  Jesus tells the disciples to not leave Jerusalem, but to wait there for the promise of the Father.  The little boy waited outside on the curb, and Mr. Incredible asks him, “What are you waiting for?”  “Something amazing, I guess.”  The disciples waited in Jerusalem, and something amazing did happen!

                Our text today begins with all of the disciples in one place.  This past week Methodists gathered in one place for Annual Conference.  It was a blessed time together.  Dot Miller, Debrah Griffith, Lynne Givens, Ray Owens and Diane Turner were there with us, representing Broadmoor, and you should ask them about their experience.  It was a spirit-filled four days where we worshiped together, praised God for lifting up new clergy, we debated and argued and ate together.  One exciting legislation which was passed was the Task Force on Church Extension report, in which the Louisiana Conference was challenged to make developing new congregations a top missional priority.  This is a good thing.  The most effective way to bring new people into the church is by planting a new congregation.  This does not mean established churches like Broadmoor are ineffective in bringing new people to Christ, but it is a challenge to our established churches to regain the fire and excitement of new churches, making hospitality a top priority, introducing people to Christ as the number one mission.

Our story today is what it’s like to experience the start of something new and exciting.  The disciples were there gathered together, “And suddenly from heaven there came a sound like the rush of a violent wind, and it filled the entire house where they were sitting.  Divided tongues, as of fire, appeared among them.”  Notice that the wind came from heaven.  As I said last week, God did not send Jesus to establish a kingdom of Israel, but a kingdom of God for Israel.  Israel means, “One who wrestles with God.”  Jesus was sent not to establish a kingdom of those who wrestle with God; rather Jesus inaugurated the Kingdom of God for those who wrestle with God.  This heavenly wind sounded like the rush of a violent wind.  In the greek, the word “violent” is more like the word, “burdened.”  It was a heavy wind, a burdened wind, a wind which was carrying something heavy.  Then this wind led to divided tongues, as of fire . . . do you hear the symbolic language?  It was like a violent wind.  Divided tongues, like fire, rested upon them.  Sometimes our human language just cannot adequately express the work of God.  Nevertheless, these tongues of fire rested upon them, and it seems a strange occurrence.

Throughout scripture God appears as fire.  Moses stood before a burning bush, which was not consumed.  God led the Ancient Israelites through the wilderness as a pillar of fire by night.  Elijah, while facing the prophets of Baal, called down fire from heaven to consume his offering.  Instead of being caught up in what the tongues of fire were or what it was like, notice that this is the first time that this fire from heaven rested upon mortals.  The tongues were divided for the first time, being gifted upon the disciples.  In the past the fire was in one place, the bush, the pillar, the altar, but now the fire is divided and given to the church.  God is doing something extraordinary, and the miracle isn’t the fire, it’s that the fire is now divided and offered to the church.  Maybe this is what Jesus was getting at when he broke the bread and divided it among his friends and his enemy during their last supper together?  Maybe this is what Jesus was getting at when he sat down with the multitudes and he divided bread among the thousands so that all would have their fill?

All of those who had gathered were filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak in other languages, as the Spirit gave them ability.  There were others there who were asking what was going on.  It’s a bird?  It’s a plane?  What’s going on, and one of the funniest verses in the Bible is recorded.  Some said, “they must be drunk,” but Peter says, “No, they are not drunk, for it is only 9:00 in the morning.”  Any way you slice that, that’s funny!  All of the people there, no matter their language or heritage or ethnicity heard the disciples speaking in their native language.  Some time ago there was a husband and wife missionary team who was sent to some islands in the pacific.  One day a little boy began climbing a coconut tree in order to get some breakfast.  As he steadied himself at the top of the tree, he grabbed his machete, ready to cut.  His mother ran out of the hut and started yelling at him.  The female missionary told her husband, “She’s warning him to be careful.”  Their translator was amazed saying, “I didn’t know you could speak our native tongue.”  The woman replied, “I can’t, but I do speak ‘mother’.”  You see, the disciples were not blabbering or speaking a spiritual langue in which no one could understand.  Quite the opposite.  They were speaking in different languages so that all could understand. 

In a way, this moment is a reversal of the Tower of Babel.  In Genesis 11 humanity gathers to construct a tower which would reach into the heavens.  In another very funny verse, God comes down from heaven just to see what they were up to.  God says, “Come let us (trinity reference, by the way) go down, and confuse their language there, so that they will not understand one another’s speech.”  With the tower, humanity had gathered to build a city for themselves, so God confused their language.  On the day of Pentecost, the community had gathered to begin building the Kingdom of God, so God blesses them with the Holy Spirit, bringing them together for the work of God.  This moment of the outpouring of the Spirit is a celebration of diversity, but it is not a celebration of diversity for diversity itself.  We are a diverse people.  You are you and I am me.  I am not expected to be you and you are not called to be me; however we are all united into the life and unity of Christ.  If this text was about simple conformity, then the disciples would have spoken one language in which they could all understand.  If this was simply about diversity, the disciples would have been telling different stories.  The text is about people recognizing their distinctness, but they are being called together into one life, one Lord, one God.

A man visited a church for several weeks and he quickly became discouraged.  After one of the worship services he asked the pastor when he was going to do stuff.  “Stuff?” the pastor replied.  “Yeah, the stuff in the Bible, like feeding 5,000 people with bread and fish and healing the blind, you know, that stuff.”  The pastor answered, “Oh we believe in those things, but we don’t do them.”  Needless to say, the man never returned.  This outpouring of the Spirit which laid the foundation of the Church, has blessed the church with an extraordinary gift, the gift of power and meaning.  The Spirit gives teaches us the meaning of what Christ is calling us to do and the Spirit gives us the power to do it.  David Brooks, in a recent New York Times article wrote, “Most successful people don’t look inside and then plan a life.  They look outside and find a problem, which summons their life.”  The Holy Spirit doesn’t solve our problems; rather it gives us power and meaning in order to recognize them and work them out for the glory of God, and these two things, power and meaning, are held in tension with one another.  If we had power without meaning, we would align ourselves in a survival of the fittest, dictatorship in which power is the answer to all problems.  If we had meaning devoid of power, we would understand the mysteries of the world, but be impotent in how to apply them within the world.  Power and meaning, the Spirit provides, and these two gifts lead us toward vocation, our calling, our purpose.

Fredrick Buechner once wrote, “The place God calls you to is the place where your deep gladness and the world’s deep hunger meet.”  What fills you with gladness?  What nourishes your soul?  I love asking people, “If you could do anything all day, what would it be?”  My next question is, “Then why aren’t you doing it?”  What are your dreams?  What is your passion?  But it’s not just about our desire.  Truth be told, I would wander around Epcot all day if given the opportunity, but that doesn’t seem to benefit God’s kingdom.  I should know.  I’ve thought about it.  It is where our passions align with the deep hunger of the world.  What is your passion and how is God calling you to use it in the Kingdom of God?  This is the super power with which you have been blessed.  The Holy Spirit has been poured out upon us to hear God’s voice and to respond to God’s voice.

This may get me into trouble.  Don’t wait for a committee.  Don’t wait for the church council to give you a mission.  Now, it would be helpful to talk to a pastor about what God is calling you to do, and I only say that because when someone says they’ve been talking to God, it’s helpful to seek affirmation from the community.  Never mind the fact that when someone says that God has spoken with them and they want to be a minister that one of the first requirements is a psychological assessment.  It’s just helpful, but understand that God is asking you to receive a blessing, not seek permission.  The Louisiana Conference has adopted new church development as its top missional priority, which means that our number one priority is for our churches to be captured by the excitement and fire and passion of this Pentecost experience.  What has God been putting on your heart?  Are you being called to feed the hungry?  Are you being called to spiritually nourish your brothers and sisters here?  Are you being called into a Disciple Bible Study?  Are you being called to teach scripture in Cuba?  Are you being called to form a cell group in your home on Thursday evenings?  Are you being called into the jail cells to love the unlovable?  We have been given a Holy gift of power and purpose, and it is “Totally wicked.”  In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit.  Amen!

Pastoral Prayer, Pentecost Sunday

 

            Gracious God, as Your Spirit hovered over the waters and the darkness of the earth, you brought forth creation.  Pour out your Spirit to the ends of the earth, that your children may return from exile as citizens of your Kingdom.  Heal our divisions by your word of love and righteousness.

            Perplexing, Pentecostal God, you infuse us with your Spirit, urging us to vision and dream.  May the gift of your presence find voice in our lives, that our babbling may be transformed into discernment and the flickering of many tongues light an unquenchable fire of compassion and justice.

            Holy Father, you who raised Jesus from the tomb, you who gave life to the valley of dry bones, make the dry, bleached bones of our lives live and breathe and grow again.  Holy Spirit, blow through us.  Turn the sin and sorrow within us into faith, power, and delight.  We pray this in the name of Jesus Christ, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever, as we continue to pray saying:

Our Father, who art in heaven

Hallowed be thy name

Thy kingdom come, thy will be done

On Earth as it is in heaven 

Give us this day our daily bread

And forgive us our trespasses

As we forgive those who trespass against us

Lead us not into temptation

But deliver us from evil 

For thine is the kingdom and the power and the glory forever.  Amen.

Look, Up in the Sky, Ascension Sunday

It’s contagious, isn’t it, when someone looks inquisitively into the sky?  You can’t help but use your hand as a visor and peer into the blue hoping to see something miraculous, dangerous, or fascinating.  After Jesus tells the disciples that they will receive the power of the Holy Spirit, he is taken up into the clouds, out of their site.  And the disciples just stood there, maybe slack-jawed, maybe in amazement, maybe they were thinking, “Is that what the power of the Holy Spirit will allow us to do?!”  Two men in white robes suddenly appear, men who are immune to this contagious act.  They said, “Men of Galilee, why do you stand looking up toward heaven?”  BECAUSE JESUS JUST FLEW INTO THE CLOUDS LIKE NEO DID IN THE MATRIX!  WHAT A STUPID QUESTION!

                There seems to be something deep within our DNA which causes us to be drawn to super heroes.  Maybe it’s our deep seeded belief that the good guys will defeat the bad guys, that good will always triumph?  Maybe it’s our way of teaching ideals, you know, truth, justice, and the American Way—With great power comes great responsibility?  Super heroes come in all shapes and sizes, Superman, Batman, Spiderman, Wonder Woman . . . etc.  In whatever form they take, super heroes hold one thing in common—a secret identity.  Maybe that’s what draws us to them?  A regular guy like Peter Parker is Spiderman.  ClarkKentworking a 9-5 job is really Superman.  Maybe Trcey is really Wonder Woman?  Within each one of us lies a desire to be great; rather what lies behind the every day that you see in me is something great.

                Theolphilus, to whom this letter is written, would make a great super hero name.  “In my former book, Theolphilus, I wrote about all that Jesus began to do and to teach.”  The former book is the Gospel of Luke.  Acts is, more or less, a sequel to the Gospel of Luke, and both are written to a person named, “Theophilus.”  Scholars aren’t sure who this Theolphilus was.  Maybe it’s a secret identity, but I think there’s something more powerful going on.  You see, “Theophilus,” means, “One who loves God.”  So maybe it wasn’t written to an individual two thousand years ago, maybe it was simply written to those who love God, those who desire to feast on the work and the teachings of Christ, those who desire to be transformed by the perfecting work of the Spirit, those who have gathered here this morning.

                Today is Disciple recognition Sunday, where we celebrate those who over this last year made a covenant to read and study scripture in Christian community.  I can’t too highly recommend making this covenant, and you should, today, sign up to be a part of this community of Theophili—lovers of God.  We will talk more about this later in the series, but there’s power in community.  As United Methodists we read scripture through the lenses of Tradition, Reason, and Experience.  We read scripture through the lens of Tradition, which means along side the Word we read and meditate on what the church has taught about the Word.  How did Augustine understand this text?  How did we understand these texts as United Methodists one hundred years ago?  We also read scripture through the lens of Reason—how does this text make sense with what we understand about God.  We also read scripture through the lens of Experience, and this is where Disciple Bible study really comes into play.  Experience isn’t necessarily what I think of the text or what you think of the text; rather it is what we understand about the text in community.  It’s communion in a way.  Christ is offering himself for us and we are called together to share and to be nourished.  We don’t come together to come to a consensus.  If we had to agree on everything I’m afraid we would be eating communion alone.  It is about learning and growing and being transformed by the grace of God, but it is also about the Christian discipline of community, the discipline of forgiveness, acceptance, and being able to break bread with one another even in the midst of disagreement, and this can be a difficult task.  This community is a safe place where those questions we lock away in our secret identities can be asked without judgment . . but we will talk more about that in a couple of weeks.  All of that to say, it’s a really good thing, and you need to do it.

                Just before flying into the clouds the disciples ask Jesus, “Lord, are you at this time going to restore the kingdom to Israel?”  This gives me hope because even after spending forty days with the Risen Christ they are asking the wrong question.  Remember when Jesus entered Jerusalemand the crowd was shouting, “Hosanna, Hosanna!”  Hosanna means, “Save us,” and they weren’t talking about their souls.  They wanted Jesus to be king.  “Save us from Rome,” is what they were calling him to do.  Well now Jesus is back, so now he will be ascending to the throne and establish the kingdomof Israel.  You see, “Israel” means, “He who wrestles with God.”  Jacob was wrestling with God all night and when the struggle was over God changed his name to Israel, gave him a new identity—one who wrestles with God.  Jesus was never about establishing a kingdom of those who wrestle with God.  He set about to establish the kingdom of God, a Kingdom of God in which those who wrestle with God will find grace and comfort and conviction and purpose.  “When will you restore the kingdom to Israel,” they ask.  Jesus replies, “It is not for you to know the times or dates the Father has set by his own authority.”  So, it wasn’t May 21st or October 21st or December 21st 2012.  It may very well be happening right now.  Why should it matter?  Shouldn’t we treat every day as a blessing?

                Jesus continues saying, “But you will receive power when the Holy Spirit comes on you; and you will be my witnesses inJerusalem, and in all Judea andSamaria, and to the ends of the earth.”  You will be bitten by a radioactive spider.  You will be in some freak, atomic accident which will give you amazing powers of witness.  Ok, so I’m paraphrasing, but Jesus says “you will,” not you might or it’s likely.  You will receive power and you will be my witnesses.  Next week, on Pentecost Sunday, we will hear about this transformation the disciples experienced, but for now understand that faith in God is not believing in the impossible; rather it is believing in God’s promise, and this is the promise, that you will receive power and you will be my witnesses.  It’s a large job description.  You will witness and you will have the gifts to do it.

                The disciples are receiving a new identity.  They once walked with Christ, but now they are to be witnesses of Christ and God will give them the power to do it.  They were Jacob, but will now be Israel. They were Bruce Wayne, but now they will be Batman.  But it is not a secret identity.  I think too often our Christian walk is like a secret identity not because we only wear our crosses on Sunday, but because it is a personal and powerful experience.  It is also, and just as important, a communal experience.  It does matter how we live together.  It does matter how we treat our friends and our enemies.  It has eternal importance.  You see, super heroes have a secret identity, but not with those whom they love and trust.  Alfred knows who Batman is.  Lois Lane knows who Clark Kent really is.  In this place our secret identity should melt away in the breaking of the bread and the sharing of the cup.  The Spirit of Christ living in me should recognize the Spirit of Christ living within you, especially here, but not just here within these walls.  We are to go to Shreveport, and to Bossier . . . to the ends of the earth being witnesses of Christ.  So, let it be contagious, like looking up into the sky and seeing a beautiful rainbow.  How many of you have seen the beauty of a rainbow and kept it to yourself?  Let us be witnesses of the beauty and wonder of God for the transformation of the world.

                So, as Christians you have all been blessed with a super power.  Do you want to know what it is?  We’ll experience it together next week!  Go in peace.  Amen.

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Pastoral Prayer, Ascension Sunday

             Gracious God, your ascended Son promised the gift of the Holy Spirit.  Send your Spirit of revelation and wisdom that we may witness to your grace and forgiveness, freedom and hope, joy and salvation.  Open our minds to understand your will, so that when sin cripples our hope, we may discover the freedom of your forgiveness; when suffering and death overtake our lives, we may know the joy of the Risen Christ; and when we feel abandoned, we may comprehend the power of the promised Spirit.

            Holy Father, Father of the Risen and Ascended Christ, you surround us with witnesses who have shown us the way.  Inspire us with your Spirit to stop looking into the heavens and start doing the work of the kingdom.  Help us to seek justice, becoming a people who nourish and clothe and lament.  Help us to love kindness, becoming a people who forgive and accept forgiveness, a people who show mercy and live in charity.  Help us to walk humbly with you, becoming a people whose secret identities melt away revealing the Christ living within.

            Sovereign Lord, Father of all in the power of the Spirit, we continue to pray for those have suffered the devastation of rising waters and violent winds.  Help us to reach out in need to those desperate for help.

            Almighty God, whose blessed Son our Savior Jesus Christ ascended far above the heavens that he might fill all things.  Mercifully give us faith to perceive that, according to his promise, he abides with his Church on earth, even to the end of the ages.  We pray this in the name of Jesus Christ, who lives and reigns with You and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever, as we continue to pray saying:

Our Father, who art in heaven

Hallowed be thy name

Thy kingdom come, thy will be done

On earth as it is in heaven

Give us this day our daily bread

And forgive us our trespasses

As we forgive those who trespass against us

Lead us not into temptation

But deliver us from evil

 For thine is the kingdom and the power and the glory forever.  Amen.

Open Letter to Leaders

I found (with the help of http://www.twitter.com/fastchurch), this open letter to leaders from Perry Noble, Pastor of NewSpring Church in South Carolina.  I thought it was timely:

Dear Leader,

Leadership matters!  It is listed in the Scripture as a spiritual gift (Romans 12:8), there are books in the Bible dedicated to what happens when God empowered leadership is embraced (Ezra, Nehemiah, Judges, Esther) and God has called you and raised you up for the purpose of making a difference.

You are going to have to make hard decisions…ones that will cause you to be unpopular and misunderstood.  Remember, the Bible says that fear of man is a snare that leads to a place you do not desire to be (see Proverbs 29:25)…and also remember that if it is your goal to be popular, understood and loved by everyone then it is impossible to do so and be a fully devoted follower of Jesus (see Galatians 1:10).  MANY people see the problems…very few people actually possess the courage to do something about it…and that is what God has called, equipped and empowered you to do what you do.

God has not called you to do this alone.  One of the most amazing things about leadership is that the Lord WILL surround you with men and women to come along side to serve with you and help you do all that God has placed in your heart.  LISTEN to other people (See Proverbs 15:22) and understand that being the leader DOES NOT mean that you are the smartest person in the room!  (When you believe that…it’s over, the smart people will leave and eventually, over time, you will be the smartest person in the room in a room full of morons!)  ASK FOR HELP OFTEN…it doesn’t mean your weak, it actually communicates to those you lead that you are strong!

You are going to get hurt…all great leaders do.  People you thought loved and cared about you will turn on you, attack you and make false accusations against you.  This will cause tremendous amounts of insecurity, pain and frustration.  However, don’t allow one person who goes Judas on you to cause you to believe that everyone you have around you will eventually betray you.  I’ve seen so many leaders isolate themselves because of things like this happening and it just isn’t necessary.  The only reason that you believe leadership is lonely is because you have most likely chosen to isolate yourself.

Your character can never be compromised–EVER!

Don’t feel the need to waste time responding to every critic.  Life is too short and hell is too hot for you to come down off the wall and have a conversation with people who have a history of attacking others and who make ridiculous accusations against you but have never even taken the time to try to get to know you!  (See Nehemiah 6:1-4.)  AND…STOP obsessing over what “they” say about you…and my friend Craig Groeschel says, “Becoming obsessed with what people think about me is the quickest way to forget what God thinks about me.”

Pay the price to grow and develop as a leader (see Proverbs 4:7!)  Don’t always expect everyone to hand you something for free.  Conferences cost money!  Books cost money!  Quit complaining about the cost!  Great leaders never whine!

And remember, He who has called you is with you…He will never leave you…He will finish what He began (Philippians 1:6)…you should NOT give up (Galatians 6:9)…and He has called you to fear no one or no thing but HIM (II Timothy 1:7!)

The UMC Needs a Bit of Entropy

This morning I continued reading a book my Father had given me titled, “From Eternity to Here,” which details the quest for the ultimate theory of time. There’s nothing that fascinates me more than thinking about time and how it works, especially in the context of theology. What does it mean for God to be outside of time? If time slows down as an object approaches the speed of light, does that mean that Christ as the “light of the world,” isn’t so distant? I may be speaking for myself, but the Gospel becomes even more extraordinary when Quantum Physics is a part of the narrative.

In “From Eternity to Here,” Sean Carroll writes about the difference between the past and the future. It would make perfect sense to say to a friend, “Let’s change our Spring Break trip from Cancun to Paris.” This gets confusing if the conversation goes something like this: “Let’s change last year’s Spring Break trip from Cancun to Paris.” Of course, all bets are off after watching “Inception.” The reason changing the future seems as easy as making a decision, and changing the past is as impossible as, well, changing the past, is that all things move from low entropy to high entropy, or all systems move from order to chaos. It’s like putting ice cubes in a glass of water. The ice cubes will melt and the hot water will become warm. Things break down. It would seem quite odd for a warm glass of water to become hot while producing ice cubes.

Sean Carrol writes, “The punch line is that our notion of free will, the ability to change the future by making choices in a way that is not available to us as far as the past is concerned, is only possible because the past has a low entropy and the future has a high entropy. The future seems open to us, while the past seems closed, even though the laws of physics treat them on an equal footing . . . Every crisis is an opportunity, and by thinking about entropy we might learn something important about the universe” (43). I would argue that thinking about entropy is not only valid in understanding the universe; it also aids our thinking about the creator of the universe and the church with which God has blessed us.

There are two statements I would like to ponder. One, Entropy makes life possible. Two, The only objective truth is “possibility.” First, Entropy makes life possible. Carroll writes, “In the real universe, the reason why our planet doesn’t heat up until it reaches the temperature of the Sun is because the Earth loses heat by radiating it out into space. The only reason it can do that is because space is much colder than the Earth.” In short, the universe is not static. The law of entropy expresses how the order of the Big Bang breaks down over time, and this breaking down actually makes life possible. (I am a simpleton when it comes to discussing these things, so if this explanation doesn’t work for you, read “From Eternity to Now,” for yourself for more details.) This breaking down allows for possibility. If the universe moved from chaos to order, there would be no room for possibility. Possibility would be determinism or, as Calvin would shout, Predestination.

This brings me to my second point–The only objective truth is possibility itself. I wish I had a transcript of the conversation between me and my father a few weeks ago. This whole thing made much more sense then. My dad and I were talking about objective truth. We were going back and forth about the relationship between truth and the individual. In our postmodern world, the predominant thought is “If I think it is true, it is.” This is dangerous, never mind that fact that there’s nothing objective about it. But then I started thinking if objective truth existed, could we ever know it.

Theologians have a clever way of discussing this in terms of the Trinity. Orthodox teaching communicates that there are two natures of God, the economic and the essential. The Economic Trinity is the way in which we have experienced how God is who God is–Father, Son, and Spirit. The Economic Trinity is, more or less, a subjective truth, in the sense that it is an expression of humanity’s experience of God. The Essential Trinity, if we can even use that language, is forever shrouded in mystery. We will never know what lies at the heart of the essential trinity.

For example, how do you know your best friend? Do you know her by her actions and words? You may know her exceedingly well to the point when you can complete each other’s sentences; however you will only know her through what she communicates (Economic Trinity). You will never know her thoughts or be able to dive into her memories or fears (again, we’re not talking Inception here), which essentially makes her who she is (Essential Trinity).

What kind of truth exists independent of our experiences? Considering Entropy and the Essential nature of God, my father and I decided that the only objective truth is possibility. It is what happened when God said, “Let there be light.” The perfection of unity within the essential Godhead spilled forth when God said, “Let there be light.” From order to chaos, relatively speaking. This spilling forth fundamentally is an expression of “possibility.” There are other verses I could expound upon, but my battery is low, and with a temper-mental computer, you ought to not upset it. Let me say this, that understanding possibility to be the only objective truth gives profound meaning to “All things are possible through Christ,” as Paul reports.

To make a lame post short, I say all of this because I think The United Methodist Church is in need of a little entropy. Just like the couple who impossibly wants to change last year’s vacation, we need to stop looking into the past in order to change the future. Times are a changin’. The institution needs to move from order into a bit a chaos. Those of my generation are not interested in institutions. They are hungry for movements, life-changing movements which bring meaning to life and life after life, not meaning to the institution itself. We need to live into the scary, unpredictable possibility God blesses us through Christ in the power of the Spirit. We need to live into the chaos which teaches us to rely on God and not the things our hands have made.

Anyway, my computer is running out of battery power, and with a temper mental computer, you ought not to tempt it. Give me your comments. What are your thoughts on time, possibility, entropy, the church . . . etc?

Do You Remember the Story? Easter 5 A

               Do you remember the story?  This is what the Motion Picture Association of America is asking.  The summer is here and it is full of summer blockbusters, but interestingly, some of the biggest movies are sequels.  We have Cars 2 and Pirates of theCaribbean4 and Harry Potter 7.5.  The motion picture industry knows us well.  They know that when there is a downturn in the economy, and entertainment dollars are scarce, we will flock to what we know and what we have enjoyed in the past.  The movie industry is banking, literally banking millions of dollars that we have remembered the story.  Toy Story 3 was released 10 years after Toy Story 2.  Tron Legacy eclipsed that by releasing a sequel 20 or so years after the first chapter of the series. 

                  How is it that we have remembered a story from 20 years ago that we would be interested in hearing more of the story?  Our nature is divided.  There’s part of us that feels uncomfortable unless the story has a definitive ending.  We want the good guys to win, the bad guys to loose, and we want the Death Star to explode, never to be rebuilt.  But there’s also part of us that craves the next chapter.  We know that life doesn’t always end like it does in the movies.  We know that our heroes wake up the next morning waiting for the next adventure.  The same holds true in scripture.  I’ve always wondered what happened the next day when the prodigal son awoke.  After giving him rings for his fingers and a fatted calf, did the father also give the prodigal and brand new pair of work boots?  Jesus tells the rich young ruler that he lacks one thing, to sell everything, give to the poor, and follow.  The man walks away sorrowful, but we don’t know whatever happened to him.  Did he walk away in sorrow because he wouldn’t follow?  Did he walk away sorrowful because he was about to sell all of the possessions he dearly loved?

            Our text today is a sequel of sorts.  More appropriately it’s an epilogue.  Jesus shows his wounds to Thomas and Thomas replies, “My Lord and My God!”  The next few sentences say, “Now Jesus did many other signs in the presence of his disciples, which are not written in this book.  But these are written so that you may come to believe that Jesus is the Messiah, the Son of God, and that through believing you may have life in his name.”  It’s a fitting ending.  Jesus is triumphant, the disciples believe, but don’t close the book yet.  Chapter 21 begins saying, “After these things Jesus showed himself again to the disciples.”  You mean, there’s more?  Of course there is.  Even though the Gospel ends in triumph and great belief, the reader is left asking, “What am I to do?”  Our Christian journey doesn’t end with faith.  It begins with God’s Prevenient Grace which leads us into God’s justifying grace in Jesus on the cross, which drives us into Sanctifying Grace, the work of the Holy Spirit.  Our story doesn’t end with confession, and neither does John’s.

            John 21 begs us to remember the story and to put that story into action.  Jesus again showed himself to the disciples.  Remember the story.  This is not the first time Jesus reveals himself.  “Gathered together were Simon Peter, Thomas, Nathaniel, James, John, and two other disciples.”  How would you like to have been remembered as one of the other two disciples who were there, but remember the story!  Jesus’ ministry began when two unnamed disciples asked where he was staying.

            Simon Peter encourages the disciples who are there to go fishing, in other words, to go back to their day jobs.  Peter has been to the Easter service.  He has seen the lilies and hydrangeas, he has heard the trumpets and the Hallelujah Chorus, but things are back to normal now.  They load up the boat and they go fishing, and it was night.  Remember the story.  The fact that it’s night is not a novelist description.  John throughout the Gospel shows that when darkness abounds there is confusion and mourning, Nicodemus meeting with Jesus under the cover of darkness, Mary weeping at the darkness of a garden tomb.  It should come to no surprise to you that they caught nothing.  They were fishing for the wrong catch without the help of the light.  In him was life and the life was light and the light shined in the darkness and the darkness did not overcome it.

            Just after daybreak Jesus stood on the beach, the Gospel reports . . . don’t you just love the picture John is creating?  Just after daybreak . . .  Jesus stood on the beach and the disciples did not know it was him.  Remember the story!  After the Resurrection, Mary mistook Jesus for a gardener.  Jesus cried out to them, “Children, you have no fish, have you?”  So they cast their nets on the other side of the boat and they caught more fish than they knew what to do with.  The Beloved Disciple says, “It is the Lord,” and Peter puts on some clothes and jumps in the water. Now . . . what an odd detail, unless . . . you remember the story, and this one goes way back.  God gives to the man and the woman a garden, and they could eat of any tree except the tree of the knowledge of good and evil.  They ate from the forbidden tree and their first act following their disobedience was to hide their nakedness because they were ashamed.  Peter who recently denied having even known Jesus, sees his Lord on the Lakeshore and immediately clothes himself.  Then he jumps into the water.  He doesn’t wait for the boat to come in with the fish.  He jumps into the water, submerging himself.  Remember the story!  What are you doing, Jesus.  Why are you washing my feet?  Unless I wash you, you have no share in me.  Then wash all of me.  No, I only need to wash your feet.  Peter, with his denial fresh in his mind dunks his whole body in the water, water which he hopes will wash away his clothed shame.

            Jesus was there cooking breakfast, preparing for them fish and bread.  Remember the story.  Jesus multiplied the fish and the loaves, and through the abundance of God there were twelve baskets left over.  The fish Jesus was preparing did not come from their catch.  It was already there.  That is so true of God’s Prevenient Grace.  A meal had already been set for them, and they were simply asked to eat and be filled.  Our story says that after breaking the bread, “This was now the third time that Jesus appeared to them.”  In the breaking of the bread, Jesus is revealed.

            When they had finished breakfast, Jesus asked Peter, “Simon, son of John, do you love me more than these.”  Remember the story!  When Jesus first met Simon he named him Peter.  He seems to have lost that title, at least, for now.  When Jesus says, “Do you love me more than these,” we’re not sure what “these” are.  I imagine that Jesus might be pointing to the burning charcoals.  The last time Peter was around charcoal is when he was warming himself in the courtyard while he was denying Christ.  Do you love me more than these?  Do you love me more than power or preservation or status?  Do you remember these burning coals?  The coals with which I used to burn Isaiah’s lips to make them clean?  The coals I now show to you so that you might be clean?  “You know that I love you,” Peter replies.  Jesus answers, “Go and feed my sheep.”  I am the Good Shepherd Jesus once said, and now he is entrusting Peter with this great responsibility. 

Jesus asks him to feed his sheep once for each time that Peter denied Jesus.  I wonder what the world would be like if we answered our doubts and our denials with good works.  It is easy to respond with good works when we are faithful and times are good.  I wonder what it would be like if when we are faced with doubt or anger or frustration that we respond with good works anyway.  Lord, you know I love you, but I’m just so angry . . . go and feed my sheep.  Lord, you know I love you, but I’m doubting . . . go and feed my sheep.  Lord, you know I love you, but that guy who claims to be a Christian . . . go and feed my sheep.

The Gospel ends with a call to action.  It is why the next book in the New Testament is the Acts of the Apostles.  It’s not the devotion or the discipline or the orthodoxy, it is the Acts, the Actions of the Apostles.  It is the story of a community of faith who spread the word, ate together, shared all things together, and began a revolution which is still transforming the world.  It is the mission statement of our church.  We are called to make disciples for the transformation of the world.  Remember the story.  Jesus’ ministry began with two unnamed disciples.  I imagine that you might know two people who need to know the love and grace and mercy of God.  Remember the story, and remember that you are a part of that story.  In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit.  Amen.

Pastoral Prayer, Mother's Day, Sunday Easter 3 A

                              Gracious God, our companion on the way, you walk behind, beside, beyond; you catch us unawares.  Break through the disillusionment and despair clouding our vision, that, with wide-eyed wonder, we may find our way and journey on as messengers of your good news.

            Mothering God, our Holy creator who gave life to the world and who raised Christ from the dead to redeem the world, fill us with new life this day.  We pray for all of our mothers and those who have been like a mother to us.  As we honor the care they have provided, help us to care for others.  As we honor their guidance, helps us to hold each other in loving accountability.  As we honor the confidence they bestowed upon us, help us to confirm the gifts in others.  As we remember the hardships they have faced, help us to carry each other’s burdens.

            On this Mother’s Day let us remember the mothers of faith who have shown us your way.  Let us walk with Deborah, who judged the Israelites with authority and strength.  Let us walk with Ester, who used her position as queen to ensure the welfare of her people.  Let us walk with Mary, the mother of our Lord who heard his first cry in the manger and wept at his last at the foot of the cross.  Let us walk with Mary Magdalene, who wept at the tomb until the risen Christ appeared.  Let us walk with Pheobe, who led an early church in the empire of Rome.  Let us walk in the company of those whose names have been lost or silenced. 

            We pray this in the name of Jesus Christ, who lives and reigns with You and the Holy Spirit, one God now and forever as we continue to pray saying:

                                                      Our Father, who art in heaven,

Hallowed be thy name

Thy kindom come, thy will be done

On earth as it is in heaven 

Give us this day our daily bread

And forgive us our trespasses

As we forgive those who have trespassed against us

Lead us not into temptation

But deliver us from evil 

For thine is the kingdom and the power and the glory forever.  Amen.