Monday, December 31, 2012

Reflections on "Gifts You Can't Buy at the Store: Forgiveness" Colossians 3: 12-17; Jeremiah 31: 31-34


Getting near the end of the series.  I have noticed that preaching without my notes in front of me on the pulpit has impacted my style a little bit.  I think I have always had good eye contact, but it is much better now.  It also makes the transition to the notes a bit harder.  

I have tried doing three specific points the last couple of sermons (in speech tournament jargon from high school that would be a "three-point ramble!").  not sure if it helps the sermon or not.  

I liked this sermon.  I did reflect later if I should have made a biblical rationale for Move 2 a bit more obvious.  Sometimes the line between pop psychology and preaching can get blurred.  I think forgiving ourselves is a natural extension of the biblical note that God forgives us, so we ought to do the same.

This sermon left out repentance.  I did that on purpose to give a clear argument about God's forgiveness without cluttering it up with other things that could make forgiveness seem conditional. But, to take God's forgiveness and not have it change how we are living our lives is probably not the best response to God's forgiveness!

Gifts You Can't Buy at the Store: Forgiveness” 1st Sunday of Christmas; FPC, Troy; December 30, 2012; Colossians 3: 12-17; Jeremiah 31: 31-34
Introduction: Did you get some gifts? Gifts given out of love.
God gives us the gift of forgiveness out of love.
Move 1: God forgives
a. “Christ the Savior is born; Christ the Savior is born”
  1. not Christ the Superhero.
  2. Not Christ the great leader.
  3. Not Christ the star athlete
  4. Christ the Savior. The one who saves us, who save the world, from our sinfulness
b. The prophet Jeremiah shares the word of the Lord to God's people generations before Christ is born.
  1. Surely the day is coming,” says the Lord, “when I will forgive their iniquity and I will remember their sins no more.”
  2. The day has arrived.
  3. The baby in Bethlehem brings to us from God the gift of forgiveness.
Move 2: Share the gift of forgiveness with ourselves
a. How much of our lives are spent dealing with what we call “baggage” these days.
  1. If I had done this, my life would have been different.
  2. If I had not done that, my kids' lives would have been so much better.
  3. If we do not forgive ourselves, we hold ourselves to a higher standard than God does.
b. By not forgiving ourselves, we make the world about us.
  1. Everything revolves around what we have done or not done.
  2. Give it up.
  3. Forgive yourself.
Move 3: Share God's gift of forgiveness with others.
a. In the passage to the Colossians, Paul tries to describe for the early Christians what it would be like to live lives that would be pleasing to God.
  1. As God's chosen ones, “Forgive each other.”
  2. Simple enough.
  3. But Paul goes on to write, “just as the Lord has forgiven you, so you also must forgive.”
  4. The gift of forgiveness demands the giving of forgiveness.
  5. As followers of Christ, we must (note the must) be people who respond to God's forgiveness by forgiving.
b. Forgiveness frees us.
1. Nelson Mandela. A friend of mine who knows him well said, "Mr. Mandela, when you were released from prison, when you were let out of that cell block, you marched across the yard to the gates of the prison. I got my daughter up in the middle of the night to see the scene. As you were marching across the courtyard, the camera zeroed in on your face and I'll never forget your face. It was full of anger and hatred, animosity. I have never seen so much anger and so much hatred written on a man's face. That's not the Nelson Mandela I know today."
Mandela said, "It's interesting you should say that because as I left the prison block and marched across the courtyard, I thought to myself, 'They're letting me go, but everything that was important is taken from me. My cause is dead.'" He did not know that it was not dead. He had been kept in solitary confinement. He did not know he had become a folk hero. "My cause is dead," he said. "My wife, they have taken her from me. My friends have been put to death. Everything and everybody that means anything to me, they've taken away. It's all gone and I hated them for it. Then I remembered what Jesus said about forgiveness and God spoke to me and said, "Nelson, for twenty-seven years you were their prisoner but you were always a free man. Don't let them turn you into a free man only to make you into their prisoner.' And I realized the importance of forgiveness." Tony Campolo, “the hope that Came from Faith,” sermon and interview broadcast, Chicago Sunday Evening Club 30 Good Minutes, November 7, 1999. www.csec.org.
1.
2. Nevada Barr, in her book Seeking Enlightenment Hat by Hat (20, 21), comments on the passage where Jesus tells the disciples that if they forgive, then sins are forgiven. If they do not forgive, the sins are retained. “to me it sounded not as if a power to forgive or not to forgive was being bestowed but rather the apostles were being reminded, perhaps warned, that every transgression they did not forgive would be retained. Retained by them, by us, by me. Carried by me, fed by me, watered, hauled from place to place by me. Or I could forgive and be free….I realized what had been alive and biting was not the original evil, but my oft-rehearsed, dearly held memory of evil”
3. forgiveness frees the person being forgiven and the it frees the person who forgives.
Move 4: Do not wait to give the gift of forgiveness.
a. pat Conroy, south of Beach: Chad Rutledge, the wealthy Charleston son has hurt Trevor and Niles, two of the orphans. When Chad asks forgiveness, Sheba, Trevor's sister, says Leo King has to forgive him first. Leo ponders forgiveness: “ 'Father,' I[Leo] asked, 'do I have to forgive Chad tonight? Or can I go on hating him for another month or two?' 'Here's what yo don't know about time, son,' Father said. 'It moves funny and it's hard to pin down. Occasionally time offers you a hundred opportunities to do the right thing. Sometimes it give you only one chance. You've got one chance here. I wouldn't let it slip out of your hands.'” (401)
b. We found the box at the very back of the bottom shelf of a basement storage area.
Wonder what’s in there?” we asked as we blew the dust off the unmarked cardboard box.
My brother-in-law pried back the cardboard flaps to find Christmas gifts from 1954, still wrapped. Labels indicated that the presents were for my husband’s parents and his older brother—the only sibling born at the time—but they had never been opened.

Huh,” my husband said. “These must be from the year of “the falling out.”


The gifts were from family members that I had heard about but never met, because after “the falling out” the relationship had never healed properly and soon was irrevocably broken. “The falling out” in 1954 had obviously happened at some point between the delivery of the presents and Christmas Day.
What did they fight about?” I asked.
I have no idea,” my husband said.

We looked down on 57 years festering resentment stored up in a dust-covered box. What’s more, the family had moved in 1965, so they had packed up this box 11 years later and moved it from one house to another.
What should we do with them?” I asked.
It’s about time we opened them,” my brother-in-law said.
We found two shirts for my father-in-law, a dressing gown for my mother-in-law and a little shirt and pant set for the then 2-year-old brother. Of all the poignant moments that we experienced when we cleaned out my mother-in-law’s house, that stays with me as the saddest.
Conclusion: Christ the Savior has given God's gift of forgiveness. Receive it. Give it.

Thursday, December 27, 2012

"Gifts You Can't Buy at the Store: Forgiveness" Colossians 3: 12-17

Not sure where this sermon will end up, but at this point I have three moves in mind.

God gives us the gift of forgiveness; we need to give the gift to ourselves and to others.

I have several illustrations in mind, but I'm not sure which ones will make the cut.  Here they are:


pat Conroy, south of Beach: Chad Rutledge, the wealthy Charleston son has hurt Trevor and Niles, two of the orphans. When Chad asks forgiveness, Sheba, Trevor's sister, says Leo King has to forgive him first. Leo ponders forgiveness: “ 'Father,' I[Leo] asked, 'do I have to forgive Chad tonight? Or can I go on hating him for another month or two?' 'Here's what yo don't know about time, son,' Father said. 'It moves funny and it's hard to pin down. Occasionally time offers you a hundred opportunities to do the right thing. Sometimes it give you only one chance. You've got one chance here. I wouldn't let it slip out of your hands.'” (401)


A number of studies have found that narcissists are less likely to forgive others. The see others’ transgressions against them as a debt and want them repaid. Narcissists are also less wiling to forgive God for their problems or troubles in their own lives.” the Narcissism Epidemic: Living in the Age of Entitlement, Jean M. Twenge and W. Keith Campbell, 245)


The ability to learn to forgive is crucial for the destiny of this planet. A man that has shown us the capacity to forgive is Nelson Mandela. A friend of mine who knows him well said, "Mr. Mandela, when you were released from prison, when you were let out of that cell block, you marched across the yard to the gates of the prison. I got my daughter up in the middle of the night to see the scene. As you were marching across the courtyard, the camera zeroed in on your face and I'll never forget your face. It was full of anger and hatred, animosity. I have never seen so much anger and so much hatred written on a man's face. That's not the Nelson Mandela I know today."
Mandela said, "It's interesting you should say that because as I left the prison block and marched across the courtyard, I thought to myself, 'They're letting me go, but everything that was important is taken from me. My cause is dead.'" He did not know that it was not dead. He had been kept in solitary confinement. He did not know he had become a folk hero. "My cause is dead," he said. "My wife, they have taken her from me. My friends have been put to death. Everything and everybody that means anything to me, they've taken away. It's all gone and I hated them for it. Then I remembered what Jesus said about forgiveness and God spoke to me and said, "Nelson, for twenty-seven years you were their prisoner but you were always a free man. Don't let them turn you into a free man only to make you into their prisoner.' And I realized the importance of forgiveness." Tony Campolo, “the hope that Came from Faith,” sermon and interview broadcast, Chicago Sunday Evening Club 30 Good Minutes, November 7, 1999. www.csec.org.

"Amid all the sensations that we seek and enjoy in a highly sensuous age, there is one we have missed--it is the feeling of cleanness and freedom that comes to those who know they are forgiven." Sam Shoemaker.

Nevada Barr, Seeking Enlightenment Hat by Hat (20, 21): Commenting on the passage where the disciples are told if they forgive, then sins are forgiven. If they do not forgive, the sins are retained. “to me it sounded not as if a power to forgive or not to forgive was being bestowed but rather the apostles were being reminded , perhaps warned, that every transgression they did not forgive would be retained. Retained by them, by us, by me. Carried by me, fed by me, watered, hauled from place to place by me. Or I could forgive and be free….I realized what had been alive and biting was not the original evil, but my oft-rehearsed, dearly held memory of evil”
If you have a powerful story of forgiveness, send it to me.

Peace,

Richard

Monday, December 24, 2012

Reflections on "gifts You Can't Buy at the Store: Jesus" Christmas Eve service, 2012


I actually used notes tonight, which I don't normally do on Christmas Eve, but then I think I only looked at them once or twice.  But, it was a comfort to know that I had them there if necessary. 
The first story worked for about half the congregation; other half didn't seem to get it.  Slow start!  Worked ok.  I thought the first move and third move worked better than the second move.  

we have a new sound system, which is much more user friendly for me and allows me to expand changes in voice and volume.  I do like that.

Merry Christmas!

Gifts You Can't Buy at the Store: Meditation from the Lessons and Carols Service; FPC, Troy, OH 12/24/2012
Introduction: During this holiday season when we busily buy gifts to give, we have been reflecting on gifts that we cannot buy at a store.
Gift of hope; time; relationships; talent
Now, no surprise, but the gift we celebrate tonight on Christmas Eve is the gift of Jesus, a gift you can't buy at the store.
newlyweds beginning to decorate for Christmas, looking to institute their own religious traditions, search out a proper site for this home of Jesus, within their home. Ready to try anything, the husband asks his bride, "Honey, what if we place it on top of the television? We'll be looking at it all the time." Although not sure if the TV is the appropriate spot, the wife says she’ll try it. A signal of the differences in the newlywed's upbringing comes when he asks, "My parents always left the manger empty until Christmas Day. Where should we put the Christ-child until then?" Her response surprises him, "In my home we always kept the whole set together, dear." “But it doesn't seem appropriate to put the baby in the manger, darling. We're in the season of Advent. That means we're waiting for the Christ to come. If Christ is here then we've missed the waiting." She responds, “Sweetheart, Christ has already come. Besides, if we separate the figures, it'll be just one more thing to do at a time when I'm, ... when we're going to be very busy." "Honey bunch, ...." "Sweetheart" "Tell you what," the bride says sweetly, "let's compromise. I don't want to argue and I'm on my way to choir practice. I'll take not just one, but two of those items on the television, just as you want, and whenever you find them, then we’ll finish out the nativity set for the rest of Advent. that way we’ll have a manger scene your way for Advent and my manger scene before Christmas. "Two? But one of them has to be the baby Christ, or it doesn’t work....? O.K. and you can’t hide them in an obvious place" says the husband, “O.K.” she says, suddenly sensing he has won, with no intention of doing any searching until Christmas Day, he relents. Later that night, he asks "Honey, have you seen the remote control?"

Hear the good news. Jesus has been found. He is hanging out in a manger in Bethlehem.

The gift of God has arrived.

Three things to know about this gift.

Move 1: God gives the gift of Jesus for you and for ya'll.

a. Everyone gets a Christmas present.
  1. Christ comes for you....and you...and you...and even you.
    1. God sends Christ to join us in the particularity of our lives.
    2. Christ invites us into a personal relationship with him.
    3. It's about you.
      b. But God also gives Christ for ya'll.
        1. For you plural.
        2. For us collectively.
        3.And even beyond us to those others out there.
          4. We cannot control, contain, or keep Jesus from others.
          5. God sends Jesus to all the world.
          God gives the gift of Jesus for you and for ya'll.
Move 2: secondly, the gift of Jesus changes us.

a. Think about the people involved in the Christmas story.
  1. go back before Jesus' birth to Zechariah and Elizabeth, John the Baptist's parents.
  2. Or Mary and Joseph, Jesus' parents.
    1. Or the shepherds who left their sheep in the fields to go to Bethlehem and then told everyone what they had seen and heard.
    1. or the wise men who came a long distance and went home another way.
5.Everyone involved in the coming of Christ was changed by the event.

b. We are changed by the the birth of Jesus.
  1. Christ's birth means that we can dare to be people of hope, even when we face death and tragedy or difficult time – because we know that God is with us.
    1. the coming of Jesus means that when we look in the mirror and see the person who is not quite who we want to be, we can dare to change, and work toward the person we believe God is calling us to be.
  1. Maybe some of us are here tonight just for the music, or candle lighting, or to honor family tradition.
    1. But many of us are here because we have this restlessness of spirit that wants to believe in something more .
    1. We want to follow Jesus to that new place where he leads us.
The gift of Jesus changes us.

Move 3: Thirdly, Jesus saves.

a. One Christmas I decided instead of buying gifts for my family, I would make them. I'm not clear if that were an attempt to save money, or if I had somehow been inspired to share of myself and my talents.

I say talents loosely.

Took two pieces of wood and nailed them into a cross. Got some blue paint – I wish I could now tell you that is was a beautiful, majestic, or some shade of royal blue. But, it was an ugly shade of blue.

Where the two pieces of wood intersected at the center of the cross, I painted in black “Jesus saves.” I wrapped it and put it under the tree. Imagine the anxious parent who sees that gift from a child waiting to be opened!

'm not sure how my father reacted to that gift. But he hung it in the garage, not too far form the kitchen door. For years, as you came and went through our garage, this ugly cross hung on the all with the words Jesus saves.

God gives us the gift of Jesus, who will become the one who is hung from an ugly cross; Jesus the one who comes to save the world.

Conclusion: Hear the Good News! God has given you the gift of Jesus. Amen.

Reflections on "Gifts YOu Can't Buy at the Store: Talent" Deuteronomy 34: 5-12


This is the full text of what I preached at the Chapel service yesterday.  The Sanctuary service had lots of special music, so my reflections in that service were basically and abbreviated Move 1 and Move 3.  I had intended on using "The Juggler" in the Sanctuary service, but the illustration of giving the gift of clothes worked better in the Chapel service, so I stuck with it during the Sanctuary service.

It is sort of an interesting exercise to think about taking the full sermon and reducing it to two short reflections.  One thing that got cut that probably should have made it was the mention of Moses.  I dislike it when the sermon does not seem to include the read text, and at the Sanctuary service that is what happened.

I will not have thoughts on the Christmas Eve sermon, but I will post it later.

Gifts You Can't Buy at the Store: Talent” 4th Sunday in Advent; FPC, Troy; Deuteronomy 34: 5-12;
Introduction: I went shopping yesterday, or at least I arrived at a parking lot of a department store, got one of the last parking spot far away from the front door, went in and saw the check-out line about 30 people deep, and decided I needed to pay more attention to my sermons and move on to gifts I can't buy at the store!
This week, we think about talent.
Perhaps in the sanctuary service, when we have the musical talents of the choir and the jazz quartet on display, this theme makes more sense.
But think about the talents you have; look around at the people you know sitting around you; think about friends and family; reflect on the gifts they have, those abilities that they have, those talents that when asked where we got or developed that talent we quickly respond, “they are a gift from God.”
they are indeed a gift from God.
Move 1: God gives us these these talents, these tangible gifts.
a. You can see them (or hear it).
b. Each of us has unique talents.
  1. Deuteronomy reminds us that at different times, different people with their gifts are needed.
  2. Moses – the ability to confront Pharaoh and lead God's people into the Wilderness.
  3. He negotiated with God.
  4. The Israelites may not have always appreciated Moses' talents, but he held them together; he led them through a difficult time.
    c. Joshua will be the one who uses his skills when the enter the Promised Land.
      1. One of the spies.
      2. Stood firm in his belief that Israel could succeed in the Promised Land.
      3. Different gifts than Moses.
      d. Jazz band
    1. Different instruments.
    2. Take the lead at different time.
    1. unique gifts
  1. Christmas story
1. Zechariah – religious
2. Shepherds
3. Wise men
4. Different backgrounds; different talents
5. All impacted by the birth of Christ.
Move 2: give to the glory of God.
a. God gives us our talents.
b. Use them to give back to God.
c. The Juggler
Many centuries ago, as written by Anatole France, there lived a man by the name of Barnaby. He was a juggler who lived from day to day on the small donations he received. He went from town to town and he would take knives or balls and juggle them.
that was all that he could do. He felt embarrassed over his lack of talent. He almost felt totally useless. People in the town in which he juggled would be involved in their business work. Some would run small little shops. Some were doctors and teachers. And Barnaby would see all these people working every day and be more discouraged with each passing day.
One day on his travels he was passing a huge monastery and he started to think and pray. Maybe, if they let me enter this monastery I can do the most menial tasks, do something positive and save my soul and have more meaning and happiness in my life.
He knocked on the monastery door and was greeted by the brother who was in charge of all the monastic duties. Barnaby told him he would perform the most menial tasks for just a place to sleep and a little something to eat. He was admitted and was given a small place in which to live and told when meal time was to happen. He did this for months and seemed to find more meaning and happiness to his life. But then his sense of meaning and happiness started to lessen. He knew all around him that the brothers of the monastery were preparing for Christmas. One brother was writing a new musical score for the midnight Mass. Anther brother was making special bread to be given to the poor on Christmas Day. Another brother was making a beautiful Christmas crib for the birth of the Christ Child. They were busily preparing for the Feast of the Nativity.
Barnaby, in seeing what was done by others so talented, felt more inadequate than ever. His sense of his own inferiority became more painful than ever. Christmas was coming closer. And what was he doing but the most menial jobs in the monastery. He went to bed each night heartbroken.
Tradition had it that if the statue of the Virgin Mary were pleased with the gifts given to her in honor of the Christ-child, she would shed a tear of compassion for humanity.
That year when the gifts were presented a at the Feast of the Nativity, the statue did not respond.
Barnaby was so upset that he snuck into the Chapel that night. He had nothing to do or offer but juggle. And so he did. He stood in front of the statue of Our Blessed Mother and gave her the only talent he had, the art of juggling. At that moment something extraordinary happened.
IN that moment, To make a long story short, the statue of the Virgin Mary shed a tear -- and the baby Jesus in her arms smiled.
Move 3: Share your talents.
a. Lots of clothes are given as gifts in our house.
  1. Display it when it's bought.
  2. Wrap it and give it.
  3. Try it one after you open it.
  4. Wear it out and then talk about it when you get home.
  5. The gift is very public, shared again and again.
    c. light of mine, I'm gonna let it shine”
  1. Hide it under a bushel?” “NO! I”m gonna let it shine.”
  2. God has given you the gift of talent.
  3. Use it.
  4. Share it.
c. Here is the quote by Erma Bombeck:  "When I stand before God at the end of my life, I would hope that I would not have a single bit of talent left and could say ' I used everything you gave me' " A member shared this quote at the 11/11 Session meeting. It had been on a cross at the church that hosted a PDA camp in TX.
Conclusion: If you're counting, Two shopping days left. You have a countless number of days to share and use the gift of talent that God has given to you.

Friday, December 21, 2012

"Gifts You Can't Buy at the Store: Talent" Deuteronomy 34: 5-12; Philippians 1: 3-11

The sermon preparation has taken place in the midst of distractions:  the looming Christmas Eve service and sermon; knowing that there is not a sermon at the Sanctuary service, but a short reflection to go with the jazz music in the service;  knowing that I'll be preaching a sermon in the Chapel service, but it won't be needed beyond that service.

I picked talent as the gift because the musical talent of our choir and the jazz musicians will be on display at the Sanctuary service.  I have picked the story "the Juggler" to tell as the central part of my reflection in the Sanctuary service.  The story is an old French tale that some of you may know.  Robert Fulghum in his book Uh-Oh mentions this story.  It has several variations, and I'll add Richard's variation on Sunday!  It will be in my blog next week, but I won't spoil it for you before the sermon.

In the sermon for the Chapel, my points look like they're going to be:

   a. Our talents are tangible gifts from God.

b. Give your talents to the glory of God.

c. Give all of yourself.

Basically, the Sanctuary reflections will have the first point and "The Juggler."

Peace,

Richard
 

Monday, December 17, 2012

Reflections on "Gifts You Can't Buy at the Store: Relationships" I Thessalonians 3: 6-13; John 1: 1-


Leading up to this sermon involved more intentional choices than normal.  First of all, I contemplated scrapping the sermon and preaching on the tragedy that took place in CT.  Not sure what the right answer was, but I chose to stay on the announced sermon topic.

Secondly, I intentionally chose not to use a sermon illustration from the CT shootings.  I could have worked it in as a counter-example on needing to be in relationship with people who make us better, but I decided that would almost trivialize what had taken place.

Thirdly, I intentionally chose to use images from movies as a way of connecting with people who do not read a lot, since my sermons have been heavy (this one included) with illustrations from books.  

We also were celebrating Mario Bolivar's graduation from seminary, and again, I chose to not drag that into the sermon, but instead allow it to have its own time later in the service.  

The kids seem to still be enjoying taking the poster out of the gift box, but I am beginning to wonder when the gift theme will wear off.   I have enjoyed having such a focused preaching series for Advent. 

Again, the following text is more accurate to what happened at the chapel service; less accurate to the Sanctuary service since I am preaching there with less easy access to my sermon notes.

The John passage fit very well with the sermon; I would probably pick another passage from Paul instead of the one from Thessalonians, if I were preaching this sermon again.  It did not fit that well.  In fact, when I went to pull the sermon together and read through the text again (I do that periodically in the process to make sure that I am staying grounded in the text), I wondered why I had picked that text.  That's generally not a good sign!

Gifts You Can't Buy at the Store: Relationships” 3rd Sunday in Advent; FPC, Troy; John 1: 1-4; I Thessalonians 3: 6-13
Introduction: One of my favorite Christmas movies It's a Wonderful Life. It begins with George Bailey at a crisis point in his life, wondering if his life is worth living. As he wanders around town trying to figure that out, people are praying for him.
We see the faces and hear the voices of people like
Mr. Emil Gower: I owe everything to George Bailey. Help him, dear Father.Giuseppe Martini: Joseph, Jesus and Mary. Help my friend, Mr. Bailey.Ma Bailey: Help my son, George, tonight.Bert: He never thinks about himself, God, that's why he's in trouble.Ernie Bishop: George is a good guy. Give him a break, God.Mary: I love him, dear Lord. Watch over him tonight.Janie Bailey: Please, God, something's the matter with Daddy.Zuzu Bailey: Please bring Daddy back.
At a time when George Bailey probably does not have enough money to buy any gift at the store, he discovers that he has a gift he cannot buy at the store, the gift of relationships.

Move 1: This morning as we continue to reflect on gifts you can't buy at the store, we celebrate the gift of relationships that God gives to us.
a. We recognize that the gift of relationships grows out of our basic understanding that God is a relational God.
  1. The Triune God we know depicts the relationship between God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit.
  2. As the opening verses of the Gospel of John remind us, the three work in tandem, inextricably intertwined.
  3. We may not understand it exactly, but we recognize that by definition God is a God of relationships.
b. And in the act of creation, God reveals God's God desire to be in relationship with us.
  1. Why would God create?
  2. To have people to love and engage.
  3. Why create Adam and Eve? Because we are made in the image of a relational God and are called to be in relationship with one another.
Move 2: God gives us the gift of relationships to help us become better people.

a. Paul's letter to the Thessalonians that we read this morning is like a lot of Paul's letters to the early churches.
  1. Paul tries to help these early Christians discover what it means to follow the resurrected Christ.
  2. This is new territory into which they are venturing.
  3. And again and again Paul describes the relationships that develop when they follow Christ.
  4. Being a christian brings you into relationship with others.
  5. To pray for one another; to support one another; to challenge one another.
    1. Paul describes how those relationships give him strength and enable him to do his work.
    2. They need each other to grow into who God calls them to be.
b. In Mitch Albom's The Time keeper, Father Time chooses two people with whom he shares the secret to time. 
  1. Not one person, but two. And as the story progresses it becomes clear that the two people need each other.
    1. Neither one of them could bear the truth alone. In fact, as the older, powerful businessman who no longer needs anyone in his life nearly decides to move on and leave the young, high school girl on her own, she looks at him and says, “Please.” And he could not turn away from her when she needed him (Mitch Albom, The Time keeper:  a novel, p. 187).

    2. And they will discover that neither of them could take the opportunity to change on their own. They need each other to grow as people.  
  1. You are perhaps familiar with the well-known book Three Cups of Tea that depicts how Greg Mortenson accidentally discovers the Balti people and commits to building schools in Afghanistan and Pakistan to help them.

    1. The title, three cups of tea, comes from what Mortenson learns as he tries to help these people.
    2. He is told that if he wants to help the people, if he want to be build schools for them, if he wants to give them the gift of education, he must first develop relationships with them
    3. the first time you share tea with a Balti, you are a stranger. The second time you take tea, you are an honored guest. The third time you share a cup of tea, you become family.”
    4. Mortenson learns that he must make time to share three cups of tea, by which he means Mortenson needs to build relationships with the Balti people if he wants to accomplish his goals in the region (I have read three Cups of Tea, but for this quick reference I went to the on-line sparknotes at http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/three-cups-of-tea/)
  1. The gift of relationships requires work
    1. Sort of like giving someone the gift of exercise equipment – they have to work at the gift.
    2. This gift takes us back to the first week when we reflected on the gift of time.
    3. One of the reasons God gives us the gift of time is so that we can work on relationships.
    1. So we can engage others in relationships that allow us to become the people God is calling us to be.

Move 2: God gives us the gift of opportunities to redeem broken relationships.

a. Why did God send Christ?

1. Because God desires to redeem the broken relationship between God and humanity.

2. God not only models for us the desire to heal broken relationships, but God calls us to do the same in our own lives.

b. Holiday season gives us special opportunities.
  1. Movie Home Alone – Kevin, a young boy, gets left at home sleeping in the attic when he family leaves for the airport to fly to France. He spends several days by himself, which is a lot of fun, but also has some scary moments.
  2. One of those scary moments is when he runs into the neighbor Old Man Marley. The neighborhood kids tell stories about how he murdered his family kept his victims in his garbage can full of salt, and that the salt was supposed to have turned the dead bodies into mummies.
3. When Kevin meets Marley outside his house, he turns and runs back inside his house, afraid.
4. Later, Kevin discovers Old Man Marley at church, listening to the kids choir rehearse for a musical presentation for Christmas Eve. While talking to him at church, Kevin discovers that Old Man Marley is actually a nice guy, who has been estranged from his family for many years after a fight with his son. In fact, he is in the church listening to his granddaughter sing at rehearsal because he is not invited to join the family on Christmas Eve.
  1. Kevin shares his little kid advice – call your son. Even if you're scared. Call him.
  2. As the movie ends after Kevin is reunited with his family, he walks over to the window, and sees that across the street Marley has taken his advice and reunited with his son, daughter-in-law and granddaughter.
  3. I know, a silly movie, but...
  1. Think about the holiday gatherings you will attend this year – maybe a family gathering; or a work party; or a neighborhood gathering.
    1. For many of us, those gatherings will include someone with whom we are at odds.
    2. or maybe there is a person who will not be there because of issues
    3. Now is the time to risk yourself; to extend yourself.
4. God gives us the opportunity for healing our broken relationships.
Move 3: Finally, God gives us the gift of a relationship with Christ.

a. Our anticipation of the coming of Christ is more than just waiting for the baby to arrive.
  1. it's about what this baby brings to us.
2. Hope for new opportunities.

b. The opportunities that begin with an invitation to be in relationship with God in a new way.
  1. In relationship with God in flesh.
    1. Our call to follow him.
    1. To be a part of what Christ is doing in the world.
4. Do not miss the invitation that the baby in the manger extends to you to be in relationship with him.

Conclusion: No store will sell you the gift of relationships.

But God gives it to you, along with the call to redeem broken relationships and an invitation to be in relationship with Christ.

Amen.

Thursday, December 13, 2012

"gifts You Can't Buy at the Store: Relationships" I Thessalonians 3: 6-13; John 1: 1-4

This week we focus on relationships.

1.  The Triune God we know depicts relationship as Father, Son and Holy Spirit are connected one to the other.  As the opening verses of the Gospel of John  remind us, the three work in tandem, inextricably intertwined.

2. We see God's desire for relationship in the act of creation -- God desiring to be in relationship with humans (which will be shown again in the coming of Christ) that leads to the act of creating; God creating man and woman so that human relationships develop.

3.  When Christ comes to redeem the relationship between God and humanity;  he models for us the hope that we can redeem or repair our broken relationships.

4. This focus on relationships connects us back to the sermon on time -- we need to commit time to develop stronger relationships; and it projects us forward to a future week when we discuss forgiveness, since forgiveness is necessary to maintain good relationships.  I had not realized how intertwined the sermons would be with each other.

5.  The title of the now well-known book Three Cups of Tea comes from what Greg Mortenson learns from Haji Ali about the meaning of having tea :  "The first time you share tea with a Balti, you are a stranger. The second time you take tea, you are an honored guest. The third time you share a cup of tea, you become family.” Haji explains to Mortenson that he must make time to share three cups of tea, by which he means Mortenson needs to build relationships with the Balti people if he wants to accomplish his goals in the region.

6.  I'm thinking about these three points:  God gives us the gift of relationships that make us better; God gives us the opportunities to redeem broken relationships; God gives us the gift of a relationship with Christ as the foundation of it all.  Not sure which order the points should be in for the most effective sermon.

7.  In Mitch Albom's The Time keeper, Father Time chooses two people to share the gift of time.  The two need each other. one cannot do it without the other (or so it would seem).   


8.  Joan Baez: "the easiest kind of relationship for me is with ten thousand people. the hardest is with one."



Monday, December 10, 2012

Reflections on "Gifts You Can't Buy in the Store: Hope" Jeremiah 33: 14-16; Romans 5: 1-5


The second week of this series.  I am still enjoying the visual illustrations that Kathy (our Program Director) creatively put together.  It gives some added energy to the sermon, and it also provides a weekly task for the "Time with the Young Disciples" that makes it clear that they are invited to the same conversation that their parents are.  In the both the chapel and sanctuary there is a visual aid(s) that will keep a running record of what gifts we have already discussed.  I think that will be a subtle, but powerful tool for tying the whole series together.

To help create the scene of the gift box front and center, I am not preaching from behind the pulpit in the sanctuary.  In a way, it is good that I have spent a lot of time preparing for this series, because it is much harder to reference easily my sermon notes when I'm not behind the pulpit.  It also means that the text provided here syncs much better with the Chapel sermon (where I am using the pulpit) than the Sanctuary sermon.  It will be interesting to see if one service seems to get better sermons!  In terms of style, the Chapel is a more intimate setting, so using the pulpit does not take away from that; in the Sanctuary, not preaching from the pulpit probably helps make it seem more intimate.

One of the challenges for any sermon is how to make in apply to our everyday life.  This is particularly challenging when preaching about tings like hope -- it's one thing to say we are people of hope; another thing to figure out what the means for each of us.  I attempt to make that connection in the second move of this sermon.  It probably is still not concrete enough, but I hope it did challenge people to think about how being people of hope matters.  The Jeremiah buying land illustration could have actually fit in move one or move two.  Late in the sermon writing process I ran across a Dietrich Bonhoeffer quote from a letter he wrote to his fiancee while imprisoned in the German concentration camp in which he describes why getting married is a statement about their hope in God in the midst of their current crisis.  I did not have time (it was just before i went to bed Saturday night) to add it to the sermon (I have a rule about not adding illustrations on the fly because i have on occasion added a story late and half way through it find myself thinking, "oops, that's not right!").  I will find a place in some other sermon to use that story.




Gifts You Can't Buy at the Store: Hope” 2nd Sunday in Advent; FPC, Troy; Jeremiah 33: 14-16; December 9, 2012
Introduction: We continue reflecting on gifts you can't buy at the store. Last week, we talked about time. This week we think about hope.

To test my hypothesis that you can't buy hope in a store, I went to Amazon.com this week and searched for items under the topic of hope and discovered a wide assortment of gifts I could buy (it occurred to me that I could really surprise my wife this year by buying her one of those items!)

Here is a sample:
There is a certain irony that the top choice was a a novel entitled Hope: A tragedy; somehow that does not sound very hopeful


The One Year Book of Hope (One Year Books) – a different reading each day. Presumably they create more and more hope as each day progresses.


The jewelry department had a couple of options: DMM Expressively Yours Bracelet - Peace, Hope, Serenity

Sterling Silver "Live The Life You Love. Learn From Yesterday. Live For Today. Hope For Tomorrow" Reversible Necklace, 18"


Demdaco Willow Tree Figurine, Hope


Hope Springs -movie with Tommy Lee Jones and Meryl Streep; 2003 movie with Colin Firth and Heather Graham that does not seem to have the same plot – Streep and Jones is $16.99; firth and Graham can be downloaded for $1.99 and watched immediately. Some hope costs more than others!


Hope Word Decorative Metal Wall Art


I'm pretty sure that none of those items fit with what Jeremiah had in mind as he prophesied to the Israelites God's word of hope.

Let's take a look at what that kind of hope looked like

Move 1: The hope God gives to us takes a long-term view.

a. I want to be clear that buying gifts is not a bad thing.
  1. In limited doses, I even like shopping for gifts.
  2. One of the great things about buying gifts is that you get to give them to someone.
  3. You get to see the surprise and excitement the person shows as he or she receives the gift.
  4. Remember when you watched your child's face light up as he opens the box holding the toy he'd been dreaming about discovering under the Christmas tree.
  5. Or that glow on your mother's face when she opens that gift and realizes how much trouble you must have gone to to find the beautiful sweater in her favorite color.
  6. Instant gratification for both the giver and receiver.
b. But how do we compare that instant gratification with the hope to which God calls us?
    1. Jeremiah did not tell the Israelites that today everything will be perfect; instead, Jeremiah prophesied about Israel's future hope.
    2. Jeremiah told them about the God who will rescue them; the who will save them them; about the God who will one day come in the Christ-child; about the God who will one day come again

    c. To best illustrate that point, remember a story about some land that the prophet Jeremiah bought (you can go back to chapter 32 to read that story again).
    1. Remember that Jeremiah is prophesying in about 588 B.C.E., during the siege of Jerusalem by the Babylonians.
    2. things are tough for Israel and for Jeremiah personally as he found himself imprisoned in the royal palace of King Zedekiah of Judah.
    3. He had been charged with desertion and treason and insurrection because he had been forcefully pleading for Israel to turn from their ways.
      4. He saw the gathering storm of Babylon coming from the north. He spoke God's word of judgment for Israel's social injustice and idolatry.
    5. In the midst of all that, Jeremiah gets an opportunity to buy some land.
6. Israel had the right of redemption when it came to property. Instead of a family member losing property, another family member can buy the property. Jeremiah's cousin, Hanamel, asks the prophet to buy the family field in Anathoth.
5. It is an absurd request. Who in their right mind picks the time of crisis, the time when exile approaches, the time when Israel is about to almost disappear from the face of the earth, who in their right mind will invest in buying property?
7. Jeremiah will because God has told him to do so as a sign that the days are surely coming, when God will rescue Israel.
  1. A reminder that King Zedekiah of Israel will not have the final answer; that the Babylonians who are about to conquer do not have the final answer; that God has the final word, and it is a word of salvation, a word of hope.
(I found the summary of Jeremiah's plight very helpful at the following:  http://day1.org/2197-when_battered_and_besiegedbuy, sermon by Rev. Thomas Warren)
  1. some gifts come and go rather quickly.
    1. How many times have young children opened a toy, been so excited about it, and then 15 minutes later you look over and the toy is tossed aside and your child is having more fun playing with the shiny wrapping paper.
    2. 6 or 7 years ago I received one of the coolest gifts – a hand held electronic football game just like I played with in Jr. High. I played it and played it that first few days. I saw it the other day sitting in a drawer; I haven't played it since that first week.
    3. Some gifts have a much longer life span. The clock in my mother's family room has been there since I gave it to her my first Christmas out of college. It still works!
    4. But all the gifts we can buy at the store will break, or become boring to us, or become that thing we no longer need.
    The gift of hope God gives to us will follow us into the future as long as we live and beyond because God continues to be at work saving us and saving the world.
    A hope for the future.
Move 2: Our hope for the future shapes how we live in the present.

a. Steve Earle has a song entitled “Some Dreams.”
  1. If you ever saw the movie the Rookie, you have heard the song because it was the theme song.
  2. The Rookie, you may recall, is based on the true story of a science teacher in small town in TX who is able to make his dream of pitching in the major leagues come true by leaving his job as a teacher and working his way to the major leagues, where he debuted as a 40 yr. old rookie relief pitcher and struck out the first batter he faced.
  3. The movie shows how he acted on his dream, how his determination and desire led to his one day fulfilling his dream of pitching in the major leagues

4.The chorus of the them song reads like this:

some dreams 
they never come true
they never come true
yeah, but some dreams do

http://donteatalone.com/an-earring-of-hope/  January 18, 2012

b. Imagine the opport7unity and freedom we have to act on the hope God gives to us, a hope that will always come true.
  1. You can dare to change. To take the risks and make the effort to the person you envision God desires you to be because in the end, God will take care of you.
    1. You can face the difficult times in life with confidence – not because those challenges re not real, but because you know that God is with you, guiding you into the future hope.
    2. We spend too much of our lives afraid of the future, fearful of what might happen, and that fear paralyzes us.
    1. Sure, we may fall on our face in the moment, but our hope is not in our momentary success or failure; our hope is in the God who has claimed us and invited us into the days that are surely coming, the days when God's will reign.
We are called to act in the present based on our future hope in God.

Move 3: God gives us hope; we receive it by faith.

a. Paul reminds that Romans that we receive God's hope by faith.
  1. When the world says that the gifts of today have more value than our hope in the God of tomorrow, we are called to be people of faith.
    1. To put our faith in God like Jeremiah did.
b. Not just our faith, but the faith of those who have come before us.
  1. The Israelites could believe Jeremiah because they knew the story of the exodus. The knew that God had acted to save Israel previously.
    1. We can have faith that hopes in God because we know that God has come in Christ.
    2. We can act in faith because we see signs of our hope in God as we hear others tell their stories of how God has acted in their lives.
    3. We can tell our own stories about how God has acted in our own lives.
      God sends us the gift of hope wrapped in the stories of how God has acted in the past; it is up to us in faith to receive and open that gift.
      Conclusion: Amazon.com had a book called The Perfect Hope: Book Three of the Inn BoonsBoro Trilogy (The Inn Trilogy).

      Not a bad title.

      I have not read the book, but I bet it is not as good as the story we tell of our hope in the God who sends the perfect one, Jesus Christ, to be born in Bethlehem, the one who saves the world and gives us hope beyond all measure.