Sermon manuscript for Green Lake Church
of Seventh-day Adventists
Sabbath, July 26, 2014
Texts
Exodus 20:1-6. A conservative
translation.
Revelation 4:1-11 (the entire chapter)
Synopsis
In worship we affirm and celebrate an
astounding hope: God will win. Peace, well-being and happiness will
triumph. This is incredible! We are not blind or unfeeling. We see
tragedy and injustice. We weep at the hurt. Sometimes, we get angry
at God for the mess in God's world. Then we come to worship and join
the saints across the millennia and God, too, in dreaming of better
things. In worship, we rekindle our hope that ultimately peace will
flow like a mighty river. Beauty and goodness will be as common as
beach sand and rain. In worship we savor this unbelievable truth,
allowing its sweet influence to shape our souls and fuel our own participation in the purpose of God.
The first Friday night of my freshman
year at Southern Adventist University I was sitting in the university
church. The place was full. You could feel the electricity of a
thousand, maybe 1500 students, alive with dreams and ambitions, full
of confidence they could master the knowledge and skills necessary to
change the world and build careers. For many of the students, all
this earthy expectation was connected deeply with God. We believed
God had plans for our lives.
I had my own dreams. I was going to be
a doctor doing research on the unique physiological challenges divers
faced when they spent a long time working at great depth. Or I was
going to be a minister who help people bridge the chasm between the
ordinary life and God. My dreams of making discoveries in medicine
were connected to the stories of the greats of medical
history—Pasteur, Fleming and Salk and Sabin. My dreams of
ministerial greatness were fueled by the stories of Fernando Stahl,
the Adventist missionary and social revolutionary who improved life
for the indigenous people of Peru, David Livingstone, the
missionary/adventurer/explorer in Africa, and Martin Luther, the
Protestant reformer who broke the stranglehold of the medieval
Catholic Church on the minds and souls of people in Europe.
Doctor or preacher, I would join a
stream of noble humanity. My work—whether furthering knowledge of
physiology or helping people experience God—would become part of
this grand work of God through humanity.
Sitting there in church at the very
beginning of my college life, it was easy to dream these dreams.
Then the organ began the introduction
for the opening hymn for the evening worship service. Full volume.
Pounding bass. A thousand college students stood and sang the words:
1. For all the saints, who from their
labors rest,
who thee by faith before the world
confessed,
thy name, O Jesus, be forever blest.
Alleluia, Alleluia!
2. Thou wast their rock, their
fortress, and their might;
thou Lord, their captain in the
well-fought fight;
thou in the darkness drear, their one
true light.
Alleluia, Alleluia!
3. O may thy soldiers, faithful, true,
and bold,
fight as the saints who nobly fought
of old,
and win with them the victor's crown
of gold.
Alleluia, Alleluia!
4. This verse was not in the
Adventist Hymnal
O blest communion, fellowship
divine!
We feebly struggle, they in glory
shine;
yet all are one in thee, for all
are thine.
Alleluia, Alleluia!
5. And when the strife is fierce, the
warfare long,
steals on the ear the distant triumph
song,
and hearts are brave again, and arms
are strong.
Alleluia, Alleluia!
6. From earth's wide bounds, from
ocean's farthest coast,
through gates of pearl streams in the
countless host,
singing to Father, Son, and Holy
Ghost:
Alleluia, Alleluia!
As we sang I felt myself to be truly
part of that countless host. I, we, the thousand students in that
university church, the Adventist doctors and nurses working as
missionaries in Africa, the Albert Schweitzers and Mother Teresa's of
the world, the Mohammad Unases and Paul Farmers of the world—we
were all part of the grand stream of humans participating in the
Kingdom of Heaven. We were all part of the work of God in the world.
Singing that hymn that evening was
perhaps the closest I've ever come to Pentecostal ecstasy in worship.
I felt my connection with good people, God's people, all across the
ages. All the doctors who have worked to ease suffering and enhance
health, all preachers who have inspired people to hope and to pursue
wisdom and goodness.
As I've gotten older my understanding
of the value of human work has expanded. Caregivers and IT
professionals, plumbers and fashion designers, biologists and
electrical engineers, chemists and hair stylists, moms and dads,
aunts and uncles and grandparents—all us are indispensable agents
of the Kingdom of Heaven. Each of us touches life, enriches life in a
unique way.
And when we gather in worship, we
affirm that our work, our lives, are part of the grand dream of God
of a world that will one day be free of pain and sorrow, a world
where peace will flow like a river and beauty and goodness will be as
common place as sand and rain. In worship we dream together of the
day when the happiness of God and the happiness of humanity flow
mingled in a mighty, unbroken current.
A couple of weeks ago I was visiting
with a young man. We were talking about God and faith. We explored
questions about who's in and who's out when it comes to God's eternal
plans.
I told him I no longer worried about
damnation. If I, as a father, could not imagine damning my children
for their imperfections and failures, how could I imagine that the
heavenly Father would damn his children because they had failed to
grasp just the right idea about faith or had failed to transcend some
deeply-rooted character flaw.
“But now, you're just doing
anthropomorphism.” My young friend protested. “You're ascribing
human characteristics to God.”
“Guilty as charged.” I said. “And
that is what Christianity does. It takes the grandest, most beautiful
attributes of humanity and says God is something like that, only
better.”
God is like the best father who ever
existed. Only better.
God is like the best mother who ever
existed. Only better.
God is like the most skillful,
compassionate psychiatrist who ever help people find sanity. Only
better.
God is a brilliant engineer, only
smarter.
God is a wise governor, only wiser.
A generous philanthropist, only more
generous.
A musician, only capable of stirring
our souls even more deeply.
We believe that at the heart of the
universe there is goodness, wisdom and compassion. But it's
unbelievable. So we come here to worship and in worship rekindle our
faith.
Some of us come with a buoyant,
confident faith. When we sing here, we are singing the same song our
heart sings all week. Others of us come barely believing anything
good. Our hearts are crushed with what we read in the news or what
has happened to our friends. Our own lives are so full of pain, we
vacillate between wishing for healing and praying for death.
We come here and worship.
We turn our attention once more to the
incredible Christian affirmations of God. We celebrate the richest,
sweetest, grandest affirmations about God imaginable. We let go of
our arguments because they merely touch the front of our heads. In
worship we believe with our gut, with our bodies.
We believe God would rather die than
live without us.
The Kingdom of Heaven belongs to the
poor in spirit. That is the Kingdom of Heaven belongs to me. And to
my friends whose mental illness whips them from sanity to insanity,
from appropriate behavior to violence, from speaking blessings to
spouting curses. Their situation is hopeless. Maybe medication can
dampen the swings. Maybe hospitalization can contain their illness.
In worship, we say theirs is the kingdom of heaven. God has good
plans for them. And God is able to accomplish those plans. In worship
we hope again, even for hopeless people.
And we know that our hope is the hope
shared across two thousand years of Christian hoping.
And our theology, our religious theory,
takes us back another two thousand years to Abraham, so that in our
worship we are keeping company with the hoping saints across 4000
years of time. Adventist theology pushes our worship connection back
another 2000 years to Adam and Eve. In our worship we are joining
6000 years of human hope and confidence in God.
The world is full of pain and tragedy.
Yes. We are not blind. We are not unfeeling. We weep at the hurt. We
get angry with God for the mess in God's world. Then we come to here
to worship and join the saints across the millennia and join God,
too, in dreaming of better things. We sing of hope and promise and
the triumph of love.
Here, we insist God is committed to the
ultimate triumph of shalom—peace, well-being, happiness. And God
will finally get his way.
Here, in worship, we insist that
justice ultimately looks like reconciliation and redemption.
These things are unbelievable. When we
pay attention to the news, sometimes listening to the stories of our
friends, this all seems like foolishness. For some of us, our own
personal pain threatens to drown out this happy song. Our experience
whispers hopelessness.
So we come together in worship to sing
again about hope. We sing together about the triumph of the community
of God—our community. We come together again and again, stubbornly
fanning the flame of hope.
Yes, the struggle is fierce and long.
Sometimes our arms grow weak, our hearts become faint. So we come
again to worship. We join the song. Our hearts are made brave again
and our arms strong as we sing Alleluia.
1 comment:
Hope and belief in such a God as you affirmed triumph over temporary and unimaginable pain. Thank you.
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