Sermons

Too Scandalous

Too Scandalous

Imagine you’re reading the Bible for the first time. You decide to read it straight through like any other book. Genesis goes pretty well. It’s filled with great epic stories like Creation, the Flood, Abraham, Joseph and so on. Exodus starts out pretty well too. Baby Moses put in a basket and floated up the river to the palace of the very pharaoh who would have had him killed with all the other male Hebrew infants. Then he grows up among the Egyptians only to turn on them and set his people free from slavery. God parts the Red Sea and leads his people through the wilderness to the promised land. The story moving along just fine and then we get stuck. Our exciting pageturner almost instantly becomes a boring and sometimes incomprehensible file box of ancient legal documents. We might skim through to a couple of other highlights…. stories like David and Goliath or Daniel in the Lion’s Den, but for the most part we have a tendency to get lost in this ancient text.

Then some well-meaning Christian friend tells us we should start in the Gospels. “That’s the good part,” they say. “It’s the story of Jesus.”

Great, back to the story…. and so we turn to Matthew Chapter 1, the first page of the New Testament. If Moses’ story was exciting, surely this story about Jesus will be even better.

The book of the genealogy of Jesus Christ, the Son of David, the Son of Abraham: Abraham begot Isaac, Isaac begot Jacob, and Jacob begot Judah and his brothers…

17 verses and 14 generations later, we finally get to Jesus. That is, of course, assuming we make it that far without giving up. What kind of a story is this. No “Once upon a time,” or even “It was a dark and stormy night.” All we get is an ancestory.com report for a family we know nothing about…

Caught Between Truths

Caught Between Truths

For centuries Israel had been praying for a fulfillment of God’s promise, a king to sit on David’s throne for all eternity. For generations they had been a marginalized people under the oppressive rule of one empire after another, and they had gone through a number of “would-be messiahs” who promised to save them only to be killed in the end. Would God ever send a Savior?

Now the savior stands before the Roman authorities accused of treason. His own people declare that he is a threat to Ceasar. “We have no king,” they say, “but the emperor.”

How did we fall so far? We went from a people who would do anything to be set free from Roman rule to a people who would ultimately reject God’s own Son in favor of the Roman Emperor who the world calls the son of God.

We shouldn’t be so quick to judge. Perhaps we are more alike than we care to admit…

It's Personal

It's Personal

… In our culture we would say that David should be glad, or at least relieved, by Saul’s death. It was business, not personal. Or perhaps we might say it’s just politics, not personal. In any case, the path to the throne was now clear for David and more than that, he no longer had to fear for his life with Saul hunting him down around every turn. Saul died in battle and David was spared the guilt of having to kill his enemy himself. From a business or political perspective, all’s well that ends well.

But for David, all is not well. David understood that it’s never just about business or politics. It’s always personal. No matter how evil, hateful, and even murderous Saul had been, David knew that Saul was still God’s anointed. God loved Saul. God had chosen Saul. Saul’s sin, in David’s eyes, did not make him any less God’s anointed King…

Fit for God's Kingdom

Fit for God's Kingdom

On All Saints Day we remember and celebrate the lives of the Great Cloud of Witnesses who have passed through the veil of death to feast at Christ’s heavenly banquet. Despite this celebration, however, it is easy for us to be uncomfortable with our own mortality. We don’t like to think about death.

In some ways, David’s example prepares us for this final stage of our journey into God’s eternal kingdom. King Saul gave his armor to David to protect him in battle against Goliath, but the armor clearly didn’t fit. It was too big and far too heavy for this small, agile shepherd boy.

In the same way, the things we hold onto in this life to protect us at some point become too big and too heavy for us to bear. All our “stuff” becomes too hard to manage and most of what we have collected doesn’t seem nearly as valuable at the end of our lives. Dying is, in part, a process of shedding the “armor” that we have put on throughout our lives to protect us…

Rest or React?

Rest or React?

King Saul was ready for battle. His army was prepared, and the favor of the Lord was on his side. There was only one thing left to do… wait.

Saul understood that a ritual sacrifice must be made to the Lord before the battle began, and he waited seven days for the prophet Samuel to come and do just that. Apparently, Pastor Samuel was on vacation, or at least that’s how it must have seemed to the soldiers.

They grew restless and began to fall away. The longer they waited, the more they feared an attack from their enemy. They began to lose faith in their king and Saul knew it.

And so, he did what most any of us would have done. He took matters into his own hands. He had seen Samuel perform the ceremony. He knew the right words, the right actions, he could do the ritual as well as any prophet or priest. After all, he was God’s chosen king.

This act of disobedience was the beginning of the end of Saul’s reign. To us it doesn’t seem like that big of a deal. Why does it matter who makes the sacrifice? God is still being honored.

Samuel’s response in chapter 15 says it all… “Plain listening is the thing, not staging lavish religious production.”…

We Want a King!

We Want a King!

…We expect our politicians and our military leaders to protect us from other nations, to protect our jobs, our bank accounts, and our wallets, to keep us healthy and well-fed and educated, to maintain a comfortable infrastructure of roads and schools and public servants, etc., and to uphold a particular moral and ethical code for society to function freely.

Though we all have different ideas about how our leaders should go about meeting these needs, how they should fund their projects, and how involved they should be in our everyday life... we are all ultimately asking for... or voting for the same thing.... We want leaders who will make us strong and competitive like "other nations" and who will "fight our battles for us".... whether our battles against foreign governments, against poverty, against sickness, against crime... against anything that may disrupt our comfortable lives.

Yet in our "more civilized age", perhaps we have reverted to a way of life before God ever established a King in Israel...

A Nation of Slaves

A Nation of Slaves

excerpt from Steve Chalke:

… You see, before [God] gives any of the Ten Commandments, he introduces himself as the God who loves Israel. He lets them know that his is for them not against them. He wants the best for them. God didn’t sit in heaven making a list of all the things he knows human beings like to do and then outlaw them all to spoil our fun. Rather he knows the pain and heartache that we will cause others and ourselves if we pursue agendas that are contrary to the way he made us to be. The Ten Commandments is a loving God saying, ‘Look, I am the God who loves you. I’m on your side. I got you out of slavery. I’m the best deal you’ve got going for you. Trust me. Don’t steal. Don’t lie. Don’t abandon me. Don’t commit adultery because if you do it will unleash destructive powers that will slowly overshadow you, destroying you, your families, and your society. Trust me. Don’t be stupid.’”…

Sealed By Blood

Sealed By Blood

… Abraham had tried many times in his life to make God’s promise come true on his own terms. He had deceived others and put his wife in harm’s way to protect himself. He had a son with his wife’s maidservant just to make sure there would be an heir. Over and over, Abraham’s outward faith is challenged by his anxious behavior.

But this time is different. God had fulfilled his promise and was asking Abraham if he was willing to give it all up to trust God? When God’s promises or God’s blessings in our lives become more valuable to us than God himself, we have a serious problem.

But look at the rest of the story. A ram comes in the thicket and God spares Isaac. Abraham names the place, “The Lord provides” …

In the Shadow of Babel

In the Shadow of Babel

Most people assume that the separation of languages and culture came as a result of God’s curse at the Tower of Babel. This story has often been used to diminish other cultures in the name of promoting the unity God desires. The problem, of course, is that most of us assume that everyone should be unified around our own language, culture, and beliefs and the rest must be the inferior ones that were scattered. Let’s be honest, how many of us would feel comfortable with global peace and unity if it meant we all had to learn Mandarin Chinese instead of requiring the rest of the world to speak English?…

Re-Creation

Re-Creation
In the Beginning - Part 5
Sunday, September 19, 2021
Genesis 9:1-17

God said, “This is the sign of the covenant that I make between me and you and every living creature that is with you, for all future generations: I have set my bow in the clouds, and it shall be a sign of the covenant between me and the earth. When I bring clouds over the earth and the bow is seen in the clouds, I will remember my covenant that is between me and you and every living creature of all flesh; and the waters shall never again become a flood to destroy all flesh.

Genesis 9:12-15

Listen to this week’s sermon here:

In the beginning the Spirit of God hovered over the deep waters. “And God said, Let there be a dome in the midst of the waters, and let it separate the waters from the waters. So God made the dome and separated the waters that were under the dome from the waters that were above the dome. And it was so. God called the dome Sky” (Genesis 1:6-7).

We know there are no “waters” above the sky, but the ancient writers of scripture did not share our scientific understanding of the universe. For them, the only one with the power to hold back the deluge of water above the dome of the sky was God. God was gracious by opening windows in the dome, letting rain and snow fall through to nourish the earth. But God could just as easily let go the floodgates and wash away all of creation.

And in Genesis 6-9 that’s exactly what happens. Yet even in the midst of the flood, God separates the waters, this time with the keel of a massive floating wildlife preserve tended by Noah and his family. Later in Scripture we see God separating the Dead Sea and the Jordan river for the people of Israel to cross. In the gospels, Jesus speaks calm over the wind and the waves on the Sea of Galilee. In New Jerusalem, the dark depths of the perilous ocean have been replaced by a Crystal Sea, smooth and clear as glass.

Throughout the Biblical narrative and many other ancient writings, the sea represents chaos and evil. It is a dark place where sailors feared being lost to the depths, to sea monsters, or simply falling off the edge of the earth. The story of Noah, along with every other instance of God separating, calming, or overcoming the sea, reminds us that God alone has the power to control and contain this kind of chaos and evil.

Ancient kings would extend a bow to their conquered enemies, both promising never to attack them again while at the same time reminding them who holds the final authority.  In the same way, God offers his bow to humanity as a sign of his covenant.  He will protect and preserve humanity, but his authority remains absolute.

An unmaking of creation was necessary to begin the work of restoration or re-creation.  The destructive power of the flood is difficult to reconcile with a God of love, but when we consider this story against the motives and outcomes of other ancient flood narratives, it is by far the most merciful explanation given for this natural disaster which wiped out much of ancient Mesopotamia the way hurricane Katrina did in New Orleans.  Other ancient people believed the gods flooded the arbitrarily, angry at the noise humans made.  Some believed it was the gods intent that no human should survive, or that any who remained would only do so as slaves to the gods who had destroyed their land. 

We know God doesn’t “cause” natural disasters as a punishment today.  Given the assumption of divine wrath prevalent in the ancient world, however, the fact that God shows any mercy at all in the Biblical account speaks volumes.  What if God’s covenant with Noah is yet another reminder of grace?  What if it is the first step among the ancient peoples in realizing that the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob is different?  What if this God is not vengeful like the other gods of their lands?  What if this God who would hang up his bow in the sky is the same one who would one day sacrifice his own Son in order to make a way for humanity to come home?

Those who first told the story of Noah may never have understood this truth as we do today, but they certainly caught a glimpse of God’s true nature, God’s grace and love, in the midst of a world where most gods took very little interest in human thriving.

Consider the most tragic events of your life.  Where do you see glimpses of grace from the God who loves you through it all?