Sermon for North Hill Adventist Fellowship
Sabbath, November 19, 2011
Final version -- only slightly modified from the version published earlier.
I received a phone call this week
asking if I would be participating in something called “The One
Project in Seattle.” I googled “One Project Seattle.” Here's
what I found:
Event Description
The ONE Project is committed to the
idea that a Jesus-driven, Jesus-bathed, Jesus-backed, Jesus-led,
Jesus-filled, Jesus-powered, all-about-Jesus Adventist Church is the
uncompromising directive from our past, the joy of our present, and
the hope for our future. . . .
The ONE Project seeks . . . to
stimulate preaching, worship, and adoration of Jesus within the
Adventist church.
The two days set aside are simply to
refresh yourself with leaders of all ages passionate about following
Jesus, excited about honest open conversation, and celebrating the
supremacy of Jesus in the Seventh-day Adventist Church.
Jesus. The organizers of The ONE
Project seem to really like Jesus. You might even say they are
happily obsessed with Jesus.
I couldn't help contrasting the
happiness evoked by the supremacy of Jesus with the emotions evoked
by other powerful people who have been in the news over the last year
or so.
First it was President Ben Ali in
Tunisia. He had been in power since 1987. At the end of 2010, the
nation erupted with protests against him. He was forced from power.
Then his friends were forced from power. Enough! He thought he was
beloved. In reality, he was hated. And when he was gone, there was
dancing in the streets.
Then there was President Mubarak in
Egypt. He imagined he was indispensable to the well-being of his
nation. He insisted he loved his country and his country loved him,
but tens of thousands of protesters demonstrated otherwise and
celebrated his fall.
Muammar el-Qaddafi ruled Lybia for 42
years. When protests began, he denounced them. He would never leave
power. He would squash them like rats. In the end he was pulled from
a culvert and battered and killed and most of the population was
jubilant.
Most recently, it was Silvio
Berlusconi. He had served as prime minister three times beginning in
1994. He was in love with himself and thought Italy could not prosper
without him. Then suddenly economic realities forced him to resign in
disgrace. Many people in Italy and elsewhere rejoiced.
In contrast to these men who imagined
themselves beloved only to find themselves despised, Jesus moved from
obscurity to fame and global affection. What makes the difference?
Why is Jesus the focus of The ONE Project? Why is Jesus the subject
of hymns he did not commission, the focus of poems written by poets
he did not pay, the model for artists he did not control?
What is the difference between Jesus
and Ben Ali, Qaddafi, Mubarak, and Berlusconi—men who imagined
themselves beloved and indispensable and found themselves suddenly
disgraced, rejected, despised?
Ben Ali, Mubarak, el-Qaddafi and
Berlusconi were similar in their love for themselves and their love
of power. Their first objective was preserving their privileges,
their prerogatives, their power.
Jesus' first objective was the
well-being of others. In dramatic contrast to Ben Ali, Mubarak,
Qaddafi, Berlusconi, and the Democrats and the Republicans, and
Goldman Sachs and Bank of America, Jesus freely gave power away.
We celebrate Jesus because he poured
life into the world instead of sucking into himself. He calls us to
do the same.
In one of the most dramatic
conversations in the New Testament, Jesus asked his disciples, “Whom
do people say that I am?”
The disciples answered, “Some say you
are John the Baptist risen from the dead. Others say you are Elijah.
Still others say you are Jeremiah or one of the other prophets.”
“What about you?” Jesus asked. “Who
do you say I am?”
Peter said, “You are the Christ, the
Son of the Living God.”
“Blessed are you Simon son of Jonah,
for this was not revealed to you by man, but by my Father in heaven.”
Or, to put it into everyday English:
Right on, Peter. You got it exactly right (Matthew 16).
Who is Jesus? The Messiah of God, the
one destined to rule the nations with an iron rod, the one who will
steamroll evil and every person and force that opposes the triumph
and righteous transformation of God's people. The Savior of the
world. The King of Peace.
Jesus is the One the world has been
waiting for. Now, there will be no more waiting. Put Jesus in charge
and there will be no need to ever again hold elections. No need ever
again to ask who should be in charge. One boss for all people for all
time. We're done.
That's how we see it. But that's not
the way Jesus voiced it. Notice his segue out of his affirmation of
Peter's declaration:
“You are right Peter. Your insight
comes straight from God. And I will build my church on this truth.”
I would expect these words to mean that Jesus will remain in charge
forever, the single figure at the pinnacle of an eternal pyramid.
(This is the picture behind the papacy and most other denominational
visions of the church. In these visions, the denomination is the
indispensable extension of the singular authority of Jesus.)
The classic interpretation of Jesus's
response to Peter's affirmation is something like this: After eons of
waiting for the perfect boss, he has arrived, to remain in charge
forever (along with his lieutenants, the clergy). That's how Qaddafi
and Mubarak and Berlusconi saw themselves. They were God's gift to
humanity. They could not imagine that anyone could ever come close to
them in wisdom and force of character. Their nations, their
economies, their legal systems, their cultures could not survive
without them.
But this is not where Jesus goes.
Instead of pointing to his own permanent spot at the pinnacle power,
Jesus immediately segues into announcing his replacement. Jesus
announces he is going to build his church on the truth of his
own rightful claim to power and authority. And to this church he is
going to give the keys of the kingdom. Jesus' successors will have so
much authority that whatever they bind on earth will be bound in
heaven. Whatever they loose on earth will be loosed in heaven.
Jesus gives away his power!
How does this apply to us?
First, it is a wonderful affirmation.
Jesus trusts you.
Last week, I focused on the words of
Jesus in John 8, “Neither do I condemn you.” Jesus is not into
condemnation. He does not attempt to batter people into repentance.
He does not berate people for their failures and their sins. Instead
he calls them forward into a renewed pursuit of holiness and
wholeness.
Today, I pointing an even more
mysterious wonder. Not only does Jesus not condemn us. He trusts us.
He gives us power and authority.
In Matthew 9, Jesus calls a tax
collector to serve in his inner circle. Not only did Jesus forgive
someone who had a very questionable livelihood. Jesus trusted him to
exercise leadership. (In that historical setting, tax collector was
synonymous with corruption. Tax collectors were widely regarded by
Jewish people as traitorous both religiously and politically).
The Apostle Paul was part of
Christian-eradication campaign when Jesus called him. When Jesus (in
vision) sent Ananias, a Christian leader, to go meet the transformed
persecutor, Ananias said, “Lord, I have heard many reports about
this man and all the harm he has done to your saints in Jerusalem.”
Jesus responded to Ananias, “Go! This man is my chosen instrument
to carry my name before the Gentiles and their kings and before the
people of Israel. Acts 9:13
Jesus did not merely refuse to condemn
Paul. Jesus trusted him.
Jesus trusts you. He gives you
spiritual authority. He trusts you to pour blessing into the lives of
people around you.
In Matthew and Mark, there is the
fantastic story of a woman who sneaks into a banquet and pours
fantastically expensive perfume on Jesus. Others present criticize
her for this shocking waste. Jesus not only refuses to condemn her.
He celebrates her. “She has done a beautiful thing..” He says.
“Wherever the gospel has been preached, this will be told in
memory of her. Mark 14:6 and Matthew 26.
Jesus trusts her. Even when she blows a
huge amount of money on a sentimental, extravagant act. Jesus honors
her. “She has done a beautiful thing.”
And God trusts you.
Then there is the story of the demoniac
in Mark. He is a raging, uncontrollable beast, living among the tombs
outside of town. Jesus releases him from the demonic possession, then
commissions him – IMMEDIATELY – as a preacher. “Go, tell the
people who know you what God has done for you.”
It worked. The same people who that
afternoon urged Jesus to leave their district, a few months later
welcomed Jesus and sat spell bound listening to him for days.
Jesus trusted a man just minutes out of
demon possession.
Jesus trusts you.
As a capstone on the Bible witness to
Jesus' confidence in you, consider this:
The words I say to
you are not just my own words. Rather, it is the Father living in me who
is doing his work. Believe me when I say that I am in the Father and
the Father is in me; or at least believe on the evidence of the
miracles themselves. I tell you the truth, anyone who has faith in me
will do what I have been doing. He will do even greater things than
these, because I am going to the Father.
And I will do
whatever you ask in my name, so that the Son may bring glory to the
Father. You may ask me for anything in my name, and I will do it.
John 14:10-14.
Jesus says the charm and force of his
words is rooted in their origin in the Father. By implication, Jesus
is challenging his disciples to allow the Father to speak with equal
charm and power through them.
Jesus speaks so highly of his disciples
that if anyone other than Jesus said these things we would be tempted
to think it was blasphemy.
“You will do greater things than I
have been doing.”
“I will do whatever you ask in my
name.” Really? WHATEVER?
We tame these words down by citing
other passages. We tame them down because we have asked for stuff
that did not work out the way we asked. How to think about the
difference between our requests and what we observe to happen is an
important question. But before we chase that question, let's make
sure we have heard what Jesus said. “Because I am going to my
Father, if you have faith in me you will do what I have been doing.
And even greater things will you do.”
In this passage Jesus did not present
himself as indispensable. He presented you and me as indispensable.
He was leaving – of his own free
will. By leaving he was creating space for us to work. He was
creating a stage that begged for our performance. Jesus trusted us.
Just before he went back to heaven, he
told a small group: It is not for you to know the times or dates the
Father has set by his own authority. But you will receive power when
the Holy Spirit comes on you; and you will be my witnesses in
Jerusalem . . . and to the ends of the world. Acts 1:8.
Our job as Christians is not to pretend
to know the date of the end of the world, rather we are to share what
we really do know: our testimony about the goodness of God. We are to
bear witness to the character of the One who will have the last say
in the course of history.
And Jesus trusts us to do it. Jesus is
not wringing his hands. Jesus is not kicking the walls and punching
his fists through hollow-core doors in frustration. I can't
believe these stupid people. What was I thinking when I allowed them
in on this?
Jesus trusts us. We can do it. We are
doing it. Let's keep doing it.
And let's trust each other. We may not
be flawless, but we are good enough. We have enough potential that it
worth developing. We have enough goodness, that we have no excuse for
not putting it to work.
Let's trust our kids. Surely they are
not less likely to succeed than we were. Let's trust younger people
in the church – people who are younger chronologically and people
who are younger in experience, new converts, non-clergy.
[If we accept Jesus as our model, we will not imagine that God's plan for his church involves "getting back" to some mythic golden era. Trying to recover the zeal and spiritual life of our pioneers is NOT the way forward. God calls us to our own work, to lives and ministries that serve the world we live in. Our cooperation with must necessarily look different from the cooperation with God practiced by anyone in any other era.]
Since Jesus trusts us, we will
demonstrate our fullest partnership with him in the ways we trust one
another.
7 comments:
Hi John,
I just red your post and the one below around sin based christianity. It is so good to read sermons that focus on love and the positive side of the christian story. I have always found the fire and brimstone message never resonated with me. It always made me wonder why fear had to play such a large role in the faith, it often felt to me like I should be scared into believing. Your messages, on the other hand, make me want to get involved and learn more. It's a bit like the everlasting life message. I could never really relate...it just seemed so far away from what I was going through each day. Religion changed for me when I found what it could do for me now/today in this life. The positive effects it has on my day are tangible and a constant confidence boost to keep going, keep reading keep learning. Thanks again, I to am glad the posts remained on this site. Have a great week. (Euan commenting from Grace's computer).
I wish this message had come from "Conservative Adventist Pastor", because I believe this represents the true spirit of early Adventism. When traditionalists want to kick people out of their job for not teaching the "Fundamental Beliefs", this is the Fundamental Belief I wish they were enforcing. In my opinion, it is the only one worth enforcing.
typo alert: The words I say to you are [not] just my own words.
What a great sermon! John, you consistently hit home runs with this blog; I must read it more! But I fear the temptation to plagerize for my own pulpit will be too great!! Casey
Casey,
In preaching circles, plagiarism is the highest compliment. I wish many preachers would give voice to the perspectives presented in this blog.
God trusting us is an interesting idea. I would like to be trust worthy, but I get it wrong more often than I would like. Sometimes I don't know if my reactions and responses to others comments or actions are particularly right. I would like them to be and most of the time I am trying to get it right. Unfortunately, sometimes I'm just mad and I don't always care. I would like to do what God wants me to do I just don't know if I always understand what he wants.
Careful, John, if people started plagiarizing you in their sermons and discussions, our denomination might become so user-friendly that we would not know what to do with all the people breaking down our doors in order to get in! ;-)
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