Some weeks I find myself trying to decide what style the sermon should have. As I worked through this sermon, I originally had three points about holy moments (1. We often need someone to help us have a holy moment. 2. Holy moments are about real life. 3. Holy moments change us). Each point had either one of the two biblical stories or a reflection.
But, when I saw the reflections that had bubbled up in my reflections, I decided to make it a sermon that just flowed from reflection to reflection without very little comment on the reflections. For people that like stories, that works well; for people that want more structure and explanation, the stories run together and do not work as well. it also means that the stories interpret themselves for the listener, which makes it more open-ended (as if listeners aren't interpreting the sermons as they see fit anyway!).
There is also the issue of having permission to tell the stories without breaking confidentiality. I named no names, but in one or two instances people hearing (or now reading) the sermon may be able to recognize the person(s) being described. I did get permission for one of the stories; one was just a composite story; one is commonly told by the person and I changed some it; one references a person who is no longer around to give permission and I believe could not be identified by the way the story is told). One of the fears of telling people's stories is that I do not want people I interact with now to think that I am just waiting to tell their story in a sermon one day.
I had a follow-up question from someone about whether any moment can be a holy moment. I would answer that with a qualified yes to affirm that God can be at work in all situations. But, when I think of holy moments, I think of those times when time stands still as your spine tingles (at least that what happens to me) and then something is revealed that transforms the person, or persons, or situation. I am reminded of Moses' sharp rebuke of the Israelite leaders who got upset when Medad and Eldad were filled with the Holy Spirit while not attending the leadership gathering: "Would that all the Lord's people were prophets, and that the LORD would put his spirit on them!" (Numbers 8: 29)
“Holy
Moments” March 25, 2012; FPC, Troy; Lenten series; Genesis 23:
1-16; Exodus 3: 1-10
Introduction:
As
we travel along our faith journeys, we have moments when we encounter
the holy; when time seems to stop and you know you are in the
presence of God. Often those holy moments give new meaning to what
you are experiencing in life or they become moments that move you to
a new understanding of what God is doing in your life.
Holy
moments can occur in expected places where we go to discover God; or
they can take happen in unexpected places in surprising ways.
I
recently read about the Miyajima Island in Japan. It sits off the
shore of Hiroshima. Apparently, it is a beautiful island that also
has beautiful views of the the mainland of Japan.
It
is considered to be a holy island. It is more than just a beautiful
island, it also is home to Buddhist temples and Shinto shrines. Holy
monks have often resided there or visited there.
In
fact, it has the nickname “shrine Island.”
In
the past, women were not allowed on the island and old people were
shipped elsewhere to die, so that the ritual purity of the site would
not be spoiled. In other words, to maintain its holiness no births
or deaths were allowed. I suppose they were too real, too messy, too
grounded in the humanity of our existence.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Itsukushima_Shrine
When
I talk about holy moments on your faith journey, I am not referring
to moments or events that take place outside of our life's journey,
instead look to those moments that embrace our human existence and
help us interpret them.
As
you hear the following reflections (I have been given permission to
share them, or they are commonly told stories, or just composites of
stories), do not look to identify someone, look for yourself.
Move
1: Consider Abraham's holy
moment that we read in Genesis this morning.
a.
the text does not tell us that is a holy place, but we know it is
because we have been there, been to the place where life meets death
and we need to give meaning to it.
b.
A lot has transpired since we first met Abram and Sarai.
- They have heard God's call and left for a new place.
- God has promised many descendants; they have tried to help God out because they didn't think God could get it done; they have dealt with problems created by their lack of trust in God.
- Sarah has given birth to Isaac and laughed about it.
- their names have even changed.
b.
now Sarah has died.
- In his grief, Abraham desperately wants to bury her in a special place.
- he wants her burial place to speak for generations; to be more more than a burial place, but to be a holy place.
- he has someplace in mind, but he does not own the place.
- so he asks for help from the Hittite king.
- notice that the Hittite king, a non-believer, still gets it. He recognizes that human need to find meaning in the face of death.
- So he works with Abraham to make it happen. To establish a burial place for Sarah.
A
holy place and holy moment to speak to death; and we notice that
Abraham needed someone to help him in that holy moment.
Move
2: The
final campfire at Kirkmont can be s special place. The exhaustion of
the week and the excitement of new friends culminate as you sit
around and sing songs and laugh together. You are caught up in the
moment. Time seems to stop and you don't mind because staying here
forever seems okay.
One
of the small groups reads the Scripture lesson and does a little
skit. You remember the story from one of the hot afternoons you
spent in the Christian ed component.
Now
the minister starts to talk. Sounds like it's going to be sermon,
but even that cannot take away from the way you feel in that moment.
Suddenly,
the minister says something that grabs your attention. “god has
called you,” she says. A strange sensation comes over you. Maybe
it's a sugar high from the three S'mores you have eaten.
She
keeps talking about God knowing you by name, and God having a plan
for your life, and God wanting you to follow Jesus Christ.
You
no longer notice the chatter from your friends next to you. All you
can hear is “God has called you.” the words keep repeating
themselves in your head. Slowly it dawns on you that all that stuff
you have heard in church through the years really matter. It's true.
God wants to be a part of your life. It's true. God has a plan
for you. And you want to give your life to Christ. You want to
follow him wherever he leads you. In that moment, it seems as if you
see the world in a way you've never seen it before.
A
holy moment has changed your understanding of yourself and of the God
who has met you in that holy moment.
Move
3: it's
a Wednesday night during Lent. There is a worship service in the
chapel. The worship committee has planned a weekly Wednesday night
service during Lent, and each service has some type of special ritual
associated with it.
Tonight
is the renewal of baptismal vows. The baptismal font has been
carried to the front of the chapel. The service is taken right out
of the book of common worship. We follow the liturgy and say those
words that are proper for this moment.
I
look out at those gathered there, and I think that this is just one
of those worship things we do that does not seem very connected to
the world in which we live and the lives that we lead.
In
fact, the gathered crowd has quite a bit of gray hair. Not all, but
most of the people look like their baptisms had taken place so long
ago that there is no way they could have remembered them. And, of
course, most of them were probably baptized as infants, so they
wouldn't remember it anyway. Come to think of it, most the people
have probably even forgotten presenting their children for baptism
was a distant memory.
There
are on the second row is a woman in late stage of ovarian cancer.
She sits with her husband. They do not know the exact date, but they
know that death will soon arrive for her.
In
the face of life and death and looming loss, some liturgical piece
seems a bit silly. But the water is poured. Words are spoken.
People are invited up to touch the water if they like.
Some
venture forward to dip their hands in the water; most timidly touch
the water as if it might be too hot.
Then
the husband and wife come forward. First he takes her hand and
gently scoops water up to let is wash over them. He seems to caress
her hands with the water. She does the same for him.
It's
as if time stops and for a minute or two her march to death is halted
at the baptismal font. No words are spoken. But the touch and the
look speak of the deep love that has grown through the years; the
deep love that cannot be thwarted by disease or death.
We
will say the words, “in our baptism we are united with Christ in
his death and resurrection,” but the words are not needed. We have
already witnessed that truth and the love of God who claimed us in
the waters of baptism.
Move
4: Wedding
-- the groom is standing at the front of the sanctuary as the
wedding begins. He has finally made it to this moment.
He
has made it through the pre-marital counseling that he had to do
because his future spouse not only wanted to be married in the
church, but she is a professing Christian. It wasn't too bad. The
minister was a pretty nice guy. The minister did not even hassle the
groom about being a professed atheist. Never pressured him at all.
He did tell the groom that they were going to read scripture and
there would be a sermon, but since they were getting married in a
church, the groom didn't think that was unreasonable. Besides, it
would make his bride very happy. The wedding ceremony was sort of
like one of those couple showers that you had survived. Keep smiling,
and soon it would be over.
His
bride looks looks pretty good in her white dress coming down the
aisle. Of course, the groom figures he looks pretty good himself.
When
the minister starts to read the Scripture, the groom pays attention,
or at least he acts like his is paying attention because everyone is
staring at him.
He
hears the Scripture as they speak about God loving us, which allows
us to love each other. He briefly considers how his life has had
lots of things happen in it that would cast doubt on the, but as he
glances out at all the smiling people gathered in the sanctuary and
looks into the eyes of his loving bride, he figures it is true that
people can love. That's not an acknowledgment of God's love, but a
comment on all the love he feels in that moment.
Now
the minister is preaching. He's saying something about the mystery of
God's love and how that speaks to the mystery of loving one another
in a marriage.
The
groom begins to wonder. Could these people really love me because
they know something about God's love that I do not?
Could
God really love me? He has always steered clear of any mention of
God's love because he didn't believe in God; but this moment defies
anything he's ever experienced. the love in the air is so real you
can almost see it and touch it.
And
now he is overwhelmed with more than the love he feels for his bride;
he suddenly feels God's love for the first time in his life.
His
wedding become the holiest of places.
Move 5: A living room became holy ground as the older woman shared her story. The visitor happened to come to her house on the anniversary of the car accident that had killed her husband and oldest son.
It
had happened over thirty years previously, but it details were still
fresh in her mind. She told the visitor her story. For her, it had
become something of a faith statement. A testimony to God's
faithfulness that God had helped her through the moment. Most people
were overwhelmed at her faith in the face of this tragedy.
But
the visitor had never heard the story and he heard it differently
that day. To him the sweet lady and her story of God's faithfulness
seemed more like a disguise.
He
gently asks her if she had gotten mad at the man whose car had killed
her husband and son.
“No,”
she said, I never got angry. God carried me through that time. But,
how, he asked, is that possible?
She
tenaciously holds to her story. He gently, but firmly asks, “how
can you ever forgive the man, if you never blame him?”
Stunned
silence now permeates the room. and then silent tears begin run down
the older woman's face. Her shoulders shake as the tears overwhelm
her. The unspoken words of thirty years now erupt from within the
woman. "how could he have done it? how could that man have
killed my husband and son?" The accusations and anger never
before shared now fill the room.
And
then, finally, the woman can begin to speak words of forgiveness.
Words that had been buried with the anger. In that moment, the
God whom she had used to deny her anger, meets her in that anger and
offers her new life that moves beyond the anger she had kept inside
for all those years.
Move
6:
Moses
knows he is about to encounter the holy because the voice from the
burning bush tells him to take off his sandals, because is on holy
ground.
Moses
has been out tending the sheep. His daily routine interrupted by
this holy moment.
a.
Moses' life had already has several surprising moments.
- At birth, his life is spared by trickery and then he is raised by Pharaoh's daughter.
- As a young man, he saw one of the Israelite slaves being mistreated and killed the Egyptian.
- Now he stands before a burning bush.b. The voice of God speaking to him.c. this voice of God finding him in this holy moment and calling him to a new task. A new place. A new understanding of who he is.
conclusion:
the
God who comes to live among us in Jesus Christ is the God who will be
found among us – leading us, claiming us, sending us, loving us –
in those holy moments of our lives.
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