Sermon manuscript (preliminary) for Green Lake Church of Seventh-day Adventists
For Sabbath, November 28, 2014.
KitchenAid Mixer
My daughter, Bonnie, moved to Wyoming
this past fall. It was a bit traumatic. How were we going to manage
without her? She attempted to mitigate my grief by leaving her
KitchenAid mixer.
A KitchenAid mixer is an apparatus of
joy. When Bonnie was home, it produced all kinds of amazing stuff:
challah and sourdough bread, pumpkin bread.
Now Bonnie is gone. The machine no
longer produces the same astonishing array of tantalizing goodies.
But it still produces cookies. You dump in eggs and butter and sugar
and oatmeal and chocolate chips and a little later you have the world
finest chocolate chip cookies. And these cookies are not merely
delicious. They are emergency sustenance. When you've gone all day
without eating and you have to have something RIGHT NOW, before the
rice can cook, before the broccoli gets tender, you can grab one of
these cookies and boom, just like that you're able to keep
functioning.
I've enjoyed enough goodies from this
machine, that merely glancing at it sitting in its corner on the
counter, gives me warm feelings. But if all I did was keep it clean
off, if I kept the dust off, this apparatus would fail to provide the
rich joy it was designed for. For this mixer to function to its full
capacity as an apparatus of joy. I have to put it to work. I have to
use it to make some tasty food.
Our scripture describes an apparatus of
joy.
It was Jesus' final evening with his
disciples. Jesus and his associates arrived at a room in Jerusalem,
planning to share supper together. When they walked in everything was
ready. They found their places around a table. Then curiously,
instead of pronouncing the blessing and beginning the meal, Jesus
gets up, walks over to a side table, picks up a basin and towel and
moves to wash the disciples' feet.
It messed with the disciples' head.
Washing feet was common courtesy in a society that wore sandals on
dusty roads. But it was done only by women and servants. There were
rules governing the relationships between rabbis and their disciples.
One of those rules was that a disciple could not be required to wash
the rabbi's feet.
Still, Jesus gets up, and begins
washing the disciples' feet.
When he got to Peter, Peter protested.
“I can't let you wash my feet!”
“You don't understand now, but you
will,” Jesus said.
“No way. I will never let you wash my
feet.” Peter was intending to honor Jesus in this protest. Peter
was intending to express his profound regard for Jesus. Peter had put
Jesus on far too high a pedestal for him to imagine ti would be
appropriate for Jesus to stoop to washing his feet.
Okay, Jesus said. But if I don't wash
your feet, you have no place in my kingdom.”
“Well, why didn't you say so? If
that's how it is, don't was just my feet. Wash my head and hands,
too.”
Jesus laughed. “No, Peter. It's
enough to do your feet. If someone has had a bath, all they need is
to get the dust off their feet, and they'll be all clean.”
After Jesus finished was all the
disciples' feet, including the feet of Judas, Jesus sat back down and
asked, “Do you understand what I've done?”
“I'm your master. If I have washed
your feet, you should practice the same among yourselves.”
Then he added this, “If you do this,
if you do for each other what I have done for you, you will be
happy.”
Washing feet was an apparatus of joy.
If the disciples treasured the memory
of Jesus washing their feet, that would add joy to their lives. It
would be a sweet, reassuring memory. But this would be the merest
taste of joy. It would be like the smell I experienced when I walked
into our house Thanksgiving after being outside for a hour. Shelley
and Karin were baking. The scent when I walked in was heavenly.
But I would consider myself terribly
impoverished if the closet I could get to their cooking was the
aroma. Food is meant to be eaten, savored, felt in the stomach.
In the same way the gift Jesus gave
that evening with the disciples was meant to be experienced deeply.
And the key to the deepest experience of joy is to put the gift to
work. We know most of grace, of divine generosity, when we begin
practicing sharing it with others.
The great passage in Micah summarizing
God's dream for his people is actually a recipe for joy. It is a
discription of the apparatus of joy.
He has shown you what is good and what
the Lord requires of you. It is this: to do justice, to love mercy
and to walk humbly with your God. This is a weighty obligation.
Sometimes this vision will contradict the allure of a higher income.
It may interrupt more convenient plans. But when we order our lives
in harmony with this wisdom, when we devote our selves to serving, we
will discover it is an apparatus of joy. We will find deep
satisfation.
God calls us to be holy, to serve, to
ameliorate suffering, to order our world so that the lowly ones have
a good chance at doing better and prospering. This is our duty. It is
also the path to happiness. It is the apparatus of joy.
2 comments:
Hi John,
I liked the poster and wanted to thank you for your response to my feedback a few posts ago. It was honest and genuine...mine was a little emotional but we move on.
Thanks again and I get the point about it being a
Hi John,
I liked the post..thanks. Thanks also for your honest and genuine response to my comments a few posts ago. Change can be slow and I appreciate you writing back after my comment.
I get the point you make here...I never really get the whole "live forever" piece..I always felt the most appealing part of faith was what it does for my day to day experience. It's always better.
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