Isaiah 5:1-7
Psalm 80:1-2, 8-18
Hebrews 11:29-12:2
Luke 12:49-56
Psalm 80:1-2, 8-18
Hebrews 11:29-12:2
Luke 12:49-56
Have
you ever tried to distill the Good News down to one sentence? If someone asked you, “Just what exactly is
the Good News of Christianity?” what would you say? I’ve been thinking about it this week, and
this is what I have come up with for my answer for now:
Jesus
shows us a new way to live that transforms us, allowing us to live a life of
wholeness, love and deep satisfaction, connected to all people and all
communities.
It
is hard to distill the Gospel down to a sound-bite. And that sound-bite would
need a lot more explanation and lived experience to go with it, but it is a
necessary part of our lives as Christians to be able to define the Good News as
we know and understand it. And while it
is good to get a handle on being able to express the Good News in a receivable
format---it doesn’t make it any easier to live.
Just
think about the words in my own current definition: new way to live (code for change): transforms us (code for
change); to all people and all
communities (code for getting along with others). And frankly, even the word “change” is a code
word. Change means loss; change means
death; change means sacrifice and compromise.
And
yet, we still often think of church as being a place we go to in order to be
comforted and a place where we always know what to expect and where there are
not any surprises. A place where people have their acts together and will treat
me and all others the way we want to be treated.
Sounds
like a great place, I guess, if you are perfect just as you are and you don’t
need any transformation in your heart, your mind, or your behavior. A great place if you are satisfied with the
status of the world, its communities and nations, and your relationships are
wholly knit together just as they should be.
Does
this describe anyone’s current reality?
NO? It doesn’t describe
mine. So, I don’t expect simply church
to be “heaven on earth.” I also expect church---this gathering of people who
worship, study, grow, and serve---to be more of a “boot camp” instead of a
garden party at Downton Abbey.
Church
is the community that stretches us, challenges us, and empowers and equips us for
the ministry God has given us, which is the ongoing ministry of Jesus in the
world: healing the sick, befriending the lonely, turning unjust systems upside
down, and being living examples of mercy, compassion and forgiveness---even to
our enemies, even to the outcast, the annoying, the leper, the hateful.
Today
Jesus makes it clear that this discipleship thing is no garden party. Jesus
says: I came to bring fire to the
earth….to bring division. Not really comfort food for us to partake
today. But, it shouldn’t be surprising
to us---not really---not if we are clear on what exactly the Good News is and
what is our part in being agents of this Good News.
In
the military, they have a method of scorching the earth that is used to completely remove an
enemy from a geographical area by burning the houses, the food sources, and
other resources that can be used to sustain the enemy. For Jesus, this
cleansing fire is meant to burn out all the things we use, other than God, to
give us security. The fire of baptism
Jesus provides is meant to eliminate our tendency to find our security in
possessions, in wealth, in power, in status-----leaving us to understand that
what sustains us and provides our need is nothing other than God.
Burning
the earth is used in agriculture as well---farmers burn fields in order to
provide for new growth---lush, green, verdant growth that can strengthen and
replenish a depleted field. The fire
wipes out weeds and other plants that threaten the ability of the field to produce
abundant growth, and makes room for new plants to take hold and flourish. This method reminds me of the need for the
fire of Jesus to burn all the “religiosity” within us, and in our churchspeak,
that points to the illusion that we can guarantee our own salvation if we
simply do all the right things, and follow all the right rules, and make
certain to point out and call out those who are not living “right,” like
us. We need this type of religiosity
burned from us because this understanding of Christianity puts us firmly in the
driver’s seat and not God. It keeps us
in control---just the way we like it----but certainly not the way of
Jesus. Jesus’s way is the way of
surrender---complete and utter surrender with the entirety of our lives---Not
my will, but Yours, O God.
As
theologians and preachers, Eugene Boring and Fred Craddock write in the
People’s Commentary: “the peace of God is not an anesthetic that makes one numb
to the conflicts of the world; indeed it may sharpen them. As Christ
contemplates the cross he will endure in God’s service, he is not peaceful, but
under stress and turmoil. The road to
God’s peace is not a detour around the cross but goes straight through it.”
(pg. 230)
Pretty
daunting, isn’t it, when we stand back and fully appreciate just what God is
asking us---and empowering us---to do as Christians? Here at Intercession, we are descended from a
great cloud of witnesses. A cloud of
witnesses who ran the race set before them and who have handed the baton on to
us now. In 1848, General Albert Ellis invited
others to join him in his home here in Stevens Point to worship as
Episcopalians.
About four years later,
they moved to a schoolhouse on the north side of Clark Street and officially
became a church on December 6, 1852. The
church built its first building in 1853 on the corner of Clark and Church St.
with the Rev. Thomas Greene serving as its first rector. They expanded and added a parochial school in
1875 (and an organ---the church existed for 23 years without an organ for
goodness’ sake!) when the Rev. Ebenezier Thompson was its rector.
In
March of 1880, with the Rev. William Henry Walter at the helm, the Sunday
School expanded and a small building was added to the back of the church
building to serve as a guild hall (what we call a Parish Hall). Ten years later, the Rev. Reginald Weller had
a rectory constructed on the south side of Clark St. between Church and Pine
streets. And then, the church realized
it had the opposite problem that we have today.
Their church was too big for their building (whereas our building is too
big for our church). Rev. Weller and the
church decided to build a new building, on the corners of Church and Ellis
Streets, laying the cornerstore in 1892 and finishing the building in 1894 at
the cost of $35,000 . Today’s equivalent
is closer to $900,000. The first service
was held in this building on January 2, 1894 with a congregation of 400.
In
1915, there was a fire which destroyed the guild hall and damaged the interior
of the church building. A time for
reassessment. The leaders of the church
took this time as an opportunity to cast a new vision and they repaired the
damage in the church and rebuilt the Parish Hall---the one we now use—so it
could serve the entire community with a gym, a stage, and a bowling alley. Proms, dances, dinners, and meetings were
held here.
We
live in a time and place that our ancestors did not know---a time when many
people do not find the church relevant; they do not see us as having any
particular Good News for them or their lives; they ask themselves: Why Church?
In
response to this reality, our leadership, like the generations before them,
have cast a new vision for us as we seek to be a flourishing and vital faith
community in this Post-Christian world.
Leadership is reading the signs of the time and have determined that it
is time to make a change that will enable new growth and fruitfulness. While many of us are like Peter at the
Transfiguration who simply want to build a place which would enable us to stay
right where we are and sit in God’s presence, Jesus says no. Jesus says our
role is to go down the mountain---into the world---head toward Jerusalem and
the cross. To carry the weight of what
it means to live in God’s way, not the world’s way.
And
Jesus makes it clear: living this way brings division. Not because Christianity demands division,
but because we as people—in response to Jesus’ radical call to sacrificial
love---often divide ourselves. As we
live this way of Jesus, people will call us crazy---even people we know and
love; people won’t understand; people won’t believe it is possible; people will
think we are wasting our time. But we
are choosing to live by faith---belief put into action---like the great crowd
of witnesses before us. We too have a choice
to make: is it time to leave these buildings or are we prepared and equipped to
put the time, energy and effort it will require for us to stay here? Which path will lead to fruitfulness for our
Vision and God’s mission to restore and redeem all people and all of
Creation?
Many
of our Intercession family members have been working and struggling with this
question, meeting, learning, talking, and researching to find out what are our
best options. These people have been
carrying the weight for us in many ways.
But now we are arriving at a time when we, like the generations before
us, must make a decision. In September,
our options will be explained and presented.
In early October, as a parish family, we will discuss and discern the
gains and losses, the possibilities and challenges of each option. After prayer and reflection, we will provide
the Vestry, our leadership team, with our input which will equip the Vestry to
make a decision. A decision as to how we
will run the race that has been set before us, at this time and place, how we
will live and move as a great cloud of witnesses for the next generation---how
we will respond to God’s call to restore all people to unity to God and each
other in Christ.
The
Gospel—when we let if fully enter our bloodstream and flood our
heartspace---the Gospel changes everything.
How we see the world, how we see others, and how we see ourselves. The Gospel changes how we live and move and
have our being, so that we longer align with the world’s ways---instead we
align with Jesus.
Joan
Chittister writes: “The whole purpose of wrestling with God is to be
transformed into the self we are meant to become, to step out of the confines
of our false securities and allow our creating God to go on creating. In us.”
In
us, through us, with us, and for us. We
are living in an exciting time of Intercession’s history. Trusting in God, we need not be afraid—in
fact, Scripture tells us to be not afraid more than anything else. So, like today’s Psalmist, let us sing out in
prayer: “Restore us, O LORD God of hosts; show the light of your countenance
and we shall be saved.”
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