Thursday, February 6, 2014

Hearing God

Sermon manuscript for Green Lake Church for Sabbath, February 8, 2014-preliminary version published on Thursday to be revised on Friday.

Texts:
1 Samuel 5
Isaiah 56
Joel 2
Acts 10


Sermon

A few weeks ago, a smiling young woman met me at the door after church with a wonderful story. When she was a child she knew she was special because God talked with her. She had frequent, prolonged conversations with God. To her this was incontrovertible evidence of “specialness.” Other kids might have imaginary friends. She did not need such childish props because she had an actual friendship with God.

Her remarks reminded me of stories told by others here at Green Lake Church, people who have direct experience with hearing God speak.
I was also reminded of a passage in the autobiography of George Fox. Three hundred years ago, he wrote,

On a certain time, as I was walking in the fields, the Lord said unto me, “Thy name is written in the Lamb's book of life, which was before the foundation of the world” and as the Lord spoke it, I believed, and saw in it the new birth.

Another time:

As I walked towards the jail [to visit some people who were imprisoned for their religious beliefs] the word of the Lord came to me, saying, “My love was always to thee, and thou art in my love.” And I was ravished with the sense of the love of God, and greatly strengthened in my inward man.

George Fox heard God speak. He taught others to pay attention and seek to hear God for themselves. It was not enough to be an expert on the words of the Bible. Fox insisted that genuine religion consisted in a direct, personal engagement with God. God spoke to the apostles and prophets in Bible times. And he still speaks. George Fox went on to found the Religious Society of Friends or Quakers as they are commonly called.

Puritans and other Protestants were fiercely critical of the Quakers. Real Christianity, they argued, consisted of studying and obeying the Bible. If you start imagining God talks to you directly, you'll end up with all sorts of problems and craziness.

Maybe, but consider the fruit of George Fox's work.

Quakers were the first Christians to insist that all people were created equal. Not just all educated, wealthy White males, which is what Thomas Jefferson meant when he wrote the opening of the Declaration of Independence. Quakers believed all people were created equal. Americans and Nicaraguans. Russians and Chechnyans. Palestinians and Israelis. People with fine clothes and impressive titles and nobodies. Quakers were perhaps the first group of people to see that a person on trial was no less worthy of respect than the lawyers and judges of the court.


Quakers—in stark contrast to the ancient Puritans (and their modern descendants like Mark Driscoll and Sam Pippim) believed that every person—male and female—was animated by God and could be called by God into public ministry.

Quakers were the only American religious group with significant membership in the South to abolish slavery among themselves before the Civil War.

Quakers led the way toward the humane treatment of the mentally ill and criminals.

For three hundred years Quakers have maintained a testimony against war as a tool of foreign policy.

Quakers could and did cite Bible verses in support of every one of these advanced moral perspectives. But they did not come to these exalted moral perspectives from reading the Bible. After all those who argued in favor of the exalted status and privileges of the aristocracy, those who defended slavery and advocated the subjugation of women, brutal treatment of the insane, torture for criminals, and war all based their arguments on the words of the Bible. Words on the page were not and are not enough to inspire a bold, new moral vision.

Quakers, following the example and teaching of George Fox, practiced listening for God's voice. And the entire world has benefited from their listening.

Dramatic moves forward among the people of God come as a result of hearing a new word from God. It is when we hear God for ourselves that we receive the wisdom and the courage to act.

We see the same thing in the Bible stories themselves.

In Caesarea there lived a Roman army officer named Cornelius, who was a captain of the Italian Regiment. 2 He was a devout, God-fearing man, as was everyone in his household. He gave generously to the poor and prayed regularly to God. 3 One afternoon about three o’clock, he had a vision in which he saw an angel of God coming toward him. “Cornelius!” the angel said.
4 Cornelius stared at him in terror. “What is it, sir?” he asked the angel.
The angel replied, “Your prayers and gifts to the poor have been received by God as an offering! 5 Now send some men to Joppa, and summon a man named Simon Peter. 6 He is staying with Simon, a tanner who lives near the seashore.”
7 As soon as the angel was gone, Cornelius called two of his household servants and a devout soldier, one of his personal attendants. 8 He told them what had happened and sent them off to Joppa.

The description of Cornelius as a “devout and God-fearing man” means he had embraced Jewish theology with its central vision of a single deity who was fundamentally good. This, in stark contrast to the other views common at that time which imagined a supernatural realm populated by competing, amoral gods. Cornelius was a good man, that is he was moral. He was devout, that is he worshiped the God of Judaism. But he had not officially converted. He was not a proper Jew. So there was an impenetrable wall between him and Jewish people, including Jews who were devotees of Jesus.

So God takes action to destroy that wall.

The next day as Cornelius’s messengers were nearing the town, Peter went up on the flat roof to pray. It was about noon, 10 and he was hungry. But while a meal was being prepared, he fell into a trance. 11 He saw the sky open, and something like a large sheet was let down by its four corners. 12 In the sheet were all sorts of animals, reptiles, and birds. 13 Then a voice said to him, “Get up, Peter; kill and eat them.”
14 “No, Lord,” Peter declared. “I have never eaten anything that our Jewish laws have declared impure and unclean.”
15 But the voice spoke again: “Do not call something unclean if God has made it clean.” 16 The same vision was repeated three times. Then the sheet was suddenly pulled up to heaven.
17 Peter was very perplexed. What could the vision mean? Just then the men sent by Cornelius found Simon’s house. Standing outside the gate, 18 they asked if a man named Simon Peter was staying there.
19 Meanwhile, as Peter was puzzling over the vision, the Holy Spirit said to him, “Three men have come looking for you. 20 Get up, go downstairs, and go with them without hesitation. Don’t worry, for I have sent them.”
21 So Peter went down and said, “I’m the man you are looking for. Why have you come?”
22 They said, “We were sent by Cornelius, a Roman officer. He is a devout and God-fearing man, well respected by all the Jews. A holy angel instructed him to summon you to his house so that he can hear your message.”

Going into a Gentiles house was forbidden. Especially eating there. The voice of God is directing Peter to violate well-established religious rules. Peter would have never done it without direct guidance from heaven. So God gave him direct guidance.

23 Peter invited the men to stay for the night. The next day he went with them, accompanied by some of the brothers from Joppa.

24 They arrived in Caesarea the following day. Cornelius was waiting for them and had called together his relatives and close friends. 25 As Peter entered his home, Cornelius fell at his feet and worshiped him. 26 But Peter pulled him up and said, “Stand up! I’m a human being just like you!”

27 So they talked together and went inside, where many others were assembled. 28 Peter told them, “You know it is against our laws for a Jewish man to enter a Gentile home like this or to associate with you. But God has shown me that I should no longer think of anyone as impure or unclean. 29 So I came without objection as soon as I was sent for. Now tell me why you sent for me.”

30 Cornelius replied, “Four days ago I was praying in my house about this same time, three o’clock in the afternoon. Suddenly, a man in dazzling clothes was standing in front of me. 31 He told me, ‘Cornelius, your prayer has been heard, and your gifts to the poor have been noticed by God! 32 Now send messengers to Joppa, and summon a man named Simon Peter. He is staying in the home of Simon, a tanner who lives near the seashore.’ 33 So I sent for you at once, and it was good of you to come. Now we are all here, waiting before God to hear the message the Lord has given you.”

Peter replied, “I see very clearly that God shows no favoritism. 35 In every nation he accepts those who fear him and do what is right. 36 This is the message of Good News for the people of Israel—that there is peace with God through Jesus Christ, who is Lord of all. 37 You know what happened throughout Judea, beginning in Galilee, after John began preaching his message of baptism. 38 And you know that God anointed Jesus of Nazareth with the Holy Spirit and with power. Then Jesus went around doing good and healing all who were oppressed by the devil, for God was with him. 39 “And we apostles are witnesses of all he did throughout Judea and in Jerusalem. They put him to death by hanging him on a cross,fn 40 but God raised him to life on the third day. Then God allowed him to appear, 41 not to the general public, but to us whom God had chosen in advance to be his witnesses. We were those who ate and drank with him after he rose from the dead. 42 And he ordered us to preach everywhere and to testify that Jesus is the one appointed by God to be the judge of all—the living and the dead. 43 He is the one all the prophets testified about, saying that everyone who believes in him will have their sins forgiven through his name.”

This sermon could have never happened if Peter had not heard God speak. Peter could not have gotten this sermon out of the Hebrew Bible. There are passages in the Hebrew scriptures that can be adduced in support of what Peter preached. But no one understood them the way Peter preached it that day. Peter himself would have never believed God included the Gentiles in the promises of God apart from the personal words of God to him and to Cornelius.

Acts 10 goes on to report further validation of Peter's sermon.

Even as Peter was saying these things, the Holy Spirit fell upon all who were listening to the message. 45 The Jewish believers who came with Peter were amazed that the gift of the Holy Spirit had been poured out on the Gentiles, too. 46 For they heard them speaking in other tongues and praising God.
Then Peter asked, 47 “Can anyone object to their being baptized, now that they have received the Holy Spirit just as we did?” 48 So he gave orders for them to be baptized in the name of Jesus Christ. Afterward Cornelius asked him to stay with them for several days.

Classic Christian orthodoxy imagines that God did his best work 2000 years ago then went silent. God had nothing more to say. Our only access to God is through studying the words in the Bible.

Classic Adventist orthodoxy agrees that after the New Testament was written God went silent. God had nothing more to say. But then in the middle 1800s God finally spoke again. This time God spoke through the words of the Adventist prophet, Ellen White. But once Ellen White died, God again went silent. We are left with only words on pages.

I disagree.

Yes, God spoke. Through the ancient prophets and the scribes who wrote the Bible. Supremely through the words and example of Jesus. Through the words of the apostles. Through the words of Ellen White. Yes. Yes.

And God still speaks. And it is our privilege and responsibility to listen. To hear.

We do not all have the same gift of hearing. Prophets are unusual people. Reformers and visionaries are not ordinary people. They have special gifts. George Fox was not an ordinary person, not as a kid, not as an adult.

We cannot all hear in the same way. So as I have mentioned before, again today, I challenge you: If you have a gift for hearing God's voice, listen carefully. Share with us what you hear.
Ask God what vision he might have for Green Lake Church. Given our resources—a beautiful building, a highly visible location, a theology that is not contaminated with the horror of eternal hell fire, a belief in the radical commitment of God to human well-being, a varied congregation with all sorts of abilities and connections—Given our resources and our privileges, what is God calling us to do?

When someone says they have heard from God, how do we know if it really was God?

The Bible offers some guidance on this. First: God's highest principles are mercy and peace. When people imagine they are hearing God and they call us to be active in condemning and attacking, we do well to reject their claims.

One of the more troubling bits of sociological research in recent years is the finding that conservative Christians are more likely to approve of torture and war than even the general public. How tragic. They clearly are NOT hearing God's voice.

Peter and Cornelius opened the way for the inclusion of all humanity in happy purposes of God. George Fox heard God's voice and created a movement that has elevated humanity in all sorts of ways. Ellen White heard God's voice and led our church toward a deep appreciation of the human body and an emphatic rejection of the monstrous ideas of predestination and eternal hell fire.

What now? What is the new thing that God would like to do through us here in this place, in this time? If you have a history of hearing God, would you spend some time specifically inviting God to speak to you again and give you a vision that is worthy of the best energy of the Green Lake Community?



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