Sermon for North Hill Adventist Fellowship
North Hill, October 15, 2011
Imagine some friends of yours got
married in Kansas three weeks ago. They are now back in Seattle where
both of them have jobs. You have been invited to a reception at a
venue in Seattle that is completely unfamiliar to you. There is one
question you're very likely to ask yourself. If you're married, it's
almost certain your wife is going to ask this question. “What are
people wearing?”
Of course, the intent of this question
is to come up with the right answer to another question: “What
should I wear?”
Humans are social beings. And clothing
is one way we signal each other. You don't want to walk into a party
in a suit and tie only to discover everyone else is wearing shorts
and T-shirts. You would want to show up for a concert in jeans and
look around and see that every one is is dressed in formal evening
attire.
A couple of weeks ago I talked about
standards using as “the minimum acceptable level of performance.”
I compared church standards to standards in the practice of medicine
or in engineering. You don't want lab techs getting “creative.”
You want them to run the same test the same way every time. If you
are about to be anesthetized, you want to know the medical staff is
going to do exactly right thing. One way hospitals work to eliminate
errors is by through standards of care. There are certain procedures
that must be followed every time. Without exception.
That's a standard.
When engineers are designing the
construction process for a jet engine, they detail every step that
must be followed in the assembly. Do it exactly this way! They
prescribe the performance characteristics of every bit of steel that
is used. The steel cannot be softer or more brittle or more
susceptible to corrosion than is specified in the standards. If a
part doesn't meet the standard it must be discarded.
There are very few standards of the
church that fit this category. Forgiveness is one. If we don't
forgive, we will not be forgiven. Abuse of children is another
standard. Jesus said that if you harm a child, it would have been
better for you to be drowned. The Ten Commandments are standards.
Concrete, specific – and most of them – minimums. Don't kill,
steal or cheat on your spouse is not a prescription for an idyllic
life. This is a list of minimums for ordinary living.
Today, I want to talk about standards
in a very different sense. I want to talk about standards as
expectations. In every community way beyond rules or laws there are
all kinds of expectations that just part of the culture. We expect
these behaviors of one another almost without thinking about it.
Clothing is one example of this. When
we go to a social event we feel more comfortable if we are dressed in
a way that other people will find acceptable. And the easiest way to
feel acceptable is to dress like everyone else.
The problem this raises for church is
that once you manage to get everyone to dress in the same style, more
or less, dressing in that style becomes the cost of feeling
comfortable in church. So anyone who comes in, not knowing the
community ahead of time, runs the risk of feeling out of place. Also
anyone who finds the dominant style alien is likely to experience
church itself as an alien place – a place where people like them
don't belong.
One way we've attempted to address this
here at North Hill is to encourage a wide variety of styles. Suits
and ties, stylish dresses. Jeans and T-shirts. Polish shoes. Flip
flops. Biker's leathers and preppy sweaters. This way, no matter what
someone is wearing when they come through the door, if they look
around, they'll see someone dressed just like them. They will see
that they belong.
I guess you could say our dress
standard (in the sense of minimum acceptable level of performance) is
please wear some.
At North Hill we are not so
laissez-faire about everything. One traditional standard that we
vigorously uphold is a T-totaler's stance on alcohol. Certainly,
there are some among us who use alcohol, but as a community, our
public stand is crystal clear: we believe the damage consequent to
alcohol use is so huge that the only responsible stance for us as
adults is oppose it.
Let me ask a trick question: Have
you ever known some one who was hurt while riding their motorcycle
without a helmet?
In church, when I asked this question
people began nodding and raising their hands. I warned them: Don't
raise your hands yet. This is a trick question. My guess is that your
friends who got hurt were not hurt while they were RIDING. They got
hurt when they quit riding their bikes and began riding the pavement
or a telephone pole or the side of a car.
If people who ride motorcycles without
helmets could avoid accidents they wouldn't need to wear helmets.
People wear helmets because accidents are hard to plan. We never know
when some car or truck is going to switch lanes right into you. We
never know when there might be some oil or sand spilled on a corner,
right at the spot where your tires need maximum traction.
Because of the statistical likelihood
that if you ride a motorcycle, eventually you will make unplanned
contact with the pavement or another hard surface, we expect people
to wear helmets.
Because of the statistical likelihood
that if drinking is a common practice in our community some of us
will make a wreck of life, we actively, publicly renounce alcohol as
a beverage. Drink something else.
Using alcohol can appear very
glamorous. Maybe all your friends are drinking. Or you think they
are. We want to create expectations among us here at church that we
will not drink. We want to create a community that deliberately
cultivates an awareness that drinking is dumb. And getting drunk is
really dumb. And binge drinking is really, really, really, really
dumb.
It's not the unpardonable sin. There is
no devil in the bottle. There are not even any verses in the Bible
that explicitly condemn moderate alcohol consumption.
What the Bible does tell us is that we
are to do to others what we would have them do to us. If I have a
genetic predisposition to alcoholism, would I want my friends at
church encouraging me to drink? If my son or daughter had a weakness
for alcoholism, would I want my church to encourage or discourage
drinking?
In my time at North Hill, we've buried
two young men who were killed in auto accidents. In both cases, our
young men were sober. They were obeying the law. They were killed by
other teenagers running red lights.
Alcohol is the most destructive drug in
the world today. It is more destructive than cocaine or marijuana or
heroin. Of course, part of the reason alcohol has such a high social
cost is that it's legal. It's used more than all other drugs, so it
gets abused more than all other drugs.
Alcohol ruins families. It is strongly
associated with domestic violence and child abuse and neglect.
Impaired drivers kill thousands.
So as a community committed to the
ministry of Jesus—the ministry of healing—we are publicly,
outspokenly against the casual consumption of alcohol. It causes too
much havoc.
As humans we affect one another.
Hanging out in a community where drinking is considered ill-advised,
stupid and even immoral will tend to influence all of us away from
drinking. The standard of not-drinking is experienced as an
expectation of ourselves and others. And this expectation will
influence our behavior. It will bear good fruit.
Now, it's important to recognize what
this kind of standard cannot do. It can't fix the past. Healthy
standards are forward focused. They have nothing to say about
yesterday – about your performance or the performance of someone
else. The standard does not tell how you should have acted, looking
back. It only tells us about today looking forward.
I remember a while back asking someone
if they had done their exercises that week. It was a bad question.
The reason I asked it is that I suspected the person had not done
them. If they answered truthfully, who would the information help?
I resolved to change the way I ask this
question. From now on, I'm going to ask, “Will you do your exercise
this week?” This now is a helpful question. It is rooted in a
helpful standard. My expectation will add weight to the advice from
the doctor and physical therapist. I'm letting them know that their
well-being matters to me. I'm hoping they will find the motivation to
get moving.
Jesus used standards this way. In the
most famous instance – the woman caught in adultery – Jesus
refused to say anything about the woman's past. But he did express an
expectation about her future. “Go and sin no more.”
In Luke 13, some people asked Jesus
what he thought about some people who had lost their lives. Jesus
dismissed their question, basically saying, Don't ask about their
past. Change your future.
Jesus boldly, strongly voiced
standards, expectations. He was hopeful for people to change, to do
better, to be better. He was gracious and forgiving toward their past
and insistent and commanding toward their future. He wanted people to
be well, to do good.
There is a second thing that standards
cannot do. They cannot give personalized help to people who are
trying to live up to the expectations. One of the values of AA is
that it offers personalized, non-judgmental support for a person
trying to change their life.
As the community of Jesus, we join him
in communicating clear, challenging expectations of one another
moving forward. We also join him in doing something that standards
are utterly helpless to accomplish: we understand people's struggles.
We look for personalized help. We practice forgiveness.
Curiously, this brings us back to the
most fundamental, the most indispensable of all church standards:
gracious forgiveness toward one another.
Behavioral expectations are important
in the life of the church as they were in the ministry of Jesus. And
as we move forward expecting good things from one another we rely on
this most of all: here, there is grace and pardon, forgiveness and
laughter. For all of us.
2 comments:
I have been a foster parent and have raised children affected by fetal alcohol syndrome. This is really bad stuff. People aren't really thinking about messing up their kids brains, but it happens. It is so frustrating to the kids and those who are raising them.
A very thoughtful, and wise, talk on something that has become acceptable in our church community. It is worth considering for those who believe it won't "harm" anyone; all of our actions impact those around us in one way or another. Thank you for having an honest and open dialogue on this very real and present issue!
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