Sunday, November 30, 2014

Don't You Dare Turn Away: Advent I Sermon

Don’t You Dare Turn Away
A Sermon Preached by Rob Lee
Mark 13:24-37
FBC|WJ

Will you pray with me?
God may the words of my mouth and the meditations of all our hearts be pleasing in your sight oh God our strength and our redeemer. Amen.

I am a basket case of anxiety. Now you may wonder how that’s different from any other day in my life, but nonetheless this week I have anxiety on top of anxiety. You see in the scheme of things I shouldn’t be worried; in the scheme of things what I’m anxious over pales in comparison to the realities of our world today. Even still anxiety has overtaken my life. You’ve all heard it from me before, some time before December 19th, I will hear from Duke Divinity School regarding my acceptance or lack thereof from that prestigious university.
            Now some of you who know me may feel like I am a broken record. While children have sugarplums dancing in their heads, I have the blue devils dancing in mine. I’m pretty sure my girlfriend Stephanie has watched me flip out every time the phone rings. I’m pretty sure my mom and dad are ready to move on with their lives and not hear about Duke as much as they are right now. But for me, this is one of the most important moments in my life thus far. This is the reality in which I live, and for right now, I’m having to be patient and wait. But honestly at this point it’s keeping me up at night.
            Today we hear eschatological words from Jesus. Eschatology, a theological term for the study of the end things, but today my favorite part centers around the last part of the passage. Jesus says, “Beware, keep alert; for you do not know when the time will come.  It is like a man going on a journey, when he leaves home and puts his slaves in charge, each with his work, and commands the doorkeeper to be on the watch. Therefore, keep awake—for you do not know when the master of the house will come, in the evening, or at midnight, or at cockcrow, or at dawn, or else he may find you asleep when he comes suddenly. And what I say to you I say to all: Keep awake.” I love how one translation puts it, “Keep your eyes open.”
            Keep awake. In our go, go, go culture it can be hard to stay awake and keep watch. But I’ve been especially mindful this week that God calls us to keep our eyes open, wide open to the complexities of this world. And this time around ground zero for where God is calling us to look is Ferguson, Missouri.
            For those of you who haven’t turned on the television this week, Darren Wilson, the white police officer who shot an unarmed black teenager wasn’t indicted for his actions, regardless of what you think of what happened, racial tensions are at an all-time high with looting and protests in the streets and threats of Ku Klux Klan activity. This has been a rough week for race relations. But where has God been in all this?
            God has been pleading with us to keep our eyes open, to keep awake and see the horrors of systemic racism and inequality in our society. You see Advent is a time when we are called to see the terrible things that go on in our world.
            Right here at home, I think of how this is playing out, I think of Kelly Vannoy and Michael Sexton who every day keep their eyes open at the Sharing Center to homelessness and poverty right here in our back yard. I think of Laura McClure and her ability to keep her eyes open to the pain our world feels and her combatting that by working with Operation Christmas Child. I think of our youth who every year keep their eyes open to pain of a community like Birmingham or Washington DC every time they go on a mission trip.
            Perhaps this year, this Advent season as we wait for the crescendo of our year at Christmas we could begin to keep our eyes open. Perhaps we could stay awake. Maybe just maybe we could fight the injustices we face with an Advent hope. A hope that says nothing, NOTHING can keep us from the love and grace of the incarnation of Jesus Christ.
            You see as the text suggests, we are all along the watchtower keeping our eyes wide open to the hope of the incarnation of God. The fullness of our beings will be made complete in the hope of this time of year. In a world hell-bent on commercialization of this holiday, we as the church must keep awake to the coming glory of Christmas.
            You see the problem with Ferguson, Missouri and other places of violence in our world is that we as a people don’t let our hearts break. Why you might ask? We’ve become numb to the problems of our society. But let me assure you that the God we know, the God we have our hope in, God’s heart is breaking. So my prayer for you this season is that the things of this earth that break God’s heart might break yours as well. Keep awake dear people, keep awake.
            This season don’t you dare turn away. Don’t you dare fall asleep because ultimately who else will face the problems of this world with the love and compassion that Christ offers. For this season, the incarnation means that we are the hands and feet of Christ.
            But where is the hope in this sermon? Of course it’s the Sunday of Advent where we celebrate hope. Our hope is that our hearts don’t have to stay broken. The reality of the incarnation is that God loved us so much that God incarnated God’s self into humanity’s form. God came to our backyard, and we should welcome him into our hearts yet again this season.
            Dear people of God I wouldn’t be a good preacher if I didn’t address the rest of the text, especially this week. Jesus is telling us to keep awake because the end is near. Christ reminds us that Christ had died, Christ is risen, and that Christ will come again. What would you do if the world would end tomorrow? Martin Luther was once asked what would he do if the world would end tomorrow, and he said he would plant a tree. I’ve been thinking and if I knew the world would end tomorrow, I’d give my family and friends a big hug and I’d go down to a place like Ferguson, Missouri and I’d plant a tree. I’d plant a tree and remind whoever would listen that God is still God. That in Christ there is neither Jew nor Greek, slave nor free. I would hope that in some small way, that tree would stand as the world ended and Christ would know that there is still hope for humanity.
            Where would you plant your tree? Where would you find your hope if the world were to end tomorrow, you see with the promise that world could end at any time we have the duty of investing in today. We have the duty of keeping awake to the problems of our world because the end of our time here on earth could come at any moment.
            Every Christmas Eve I stay up and watch the Christmas mass from Vatican City, as Calvin Miller says I’m the Pope of First Baptist so I might as well do my religious duty and tune in to watch the other pope do his duty. It lasts forever and is often times goes late into the night. It often makes me tired and in need of sleep come Christmas morning. But regardless of how tired I am, it’s worth it because I know I have seen the incarnation of God here at First Baptist and at Vatican City.
            As Christmas is on the horizon, as we reach the hope of this season, keep awake. Keep awake and know that God is in the business of using you to change the world. This is the hope of this season. Know that in the economy of God, racism and sexism the things we’ve witnessed this week along with all the other “isms” will ultimately be eliminated.  
             Duke Divinity School has made me anxious these past few weeks and especially now. But I was reminded of the beauty of this season by none other than Pastor Michael, you see Michael and I have a deep relationship and he always keeps me on the right path. He’s one of the greatest mentors I’ve ever had, and I’m thankful for his friendship. I texted him one night and told him about my anxiety, my lack of sleep, and my fear of what would happen if I didn’t get in. Michael texted me back and said, “I know you are anxious, but you are going to have to continue to exercise patience and genuinely trust in the peace of Christ. Duke is not the essence of your identity.”

            First Baptist Church, I echo those words today. As we keep awake and keep our eyes open to the terrors of this world, we’re going to have to genuinely trust in the peace of Christ, and remember that Duke Divinity School, that our jobs, that our fears and anxieties are not the essence of our identity, God is. God is the essence of who we are and who we are called to become. So keep awake, keep awake and know that God is still God. Thanks be to God. Amen.

Monday, April 14, 2014

Considering the Anxious Lilies: A Sermon Preached on Holy Monday




Considering the Anxious Lilies
FBC|WJ
April 14th, 2014, Monday of Holy Week
Luke 12:22-28

Will you pray with me?

            God of Holy Week,
            May the words of my mouth and the meditations of all our hearts be pleasing in your sight oh God our strength and our redeemer. In the name of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit, Amen.

            Go with me if you will to the year 1959. Rogers and Hammerstein created what may be one of the greatest musical masterpieces that turned into one of the favorite movies of so many. The Sound of Music changed the way we look at films and musicals, and the beauty of that movie still captivates young and old to this day.
            In one scene of the movie, Captain Von Trapp in the face of the Nazi regime defiantly sings a song of love to his Austrian homeland. “Blossom of snow may you bloom and grow
bloom and grow forever
 Edelweiss, Edelweiss
 bless my homeland forever.” He stood with poise and courage in the face of Nazi power. The words he sang were a metaphor for his beloved Austria, and with Nazi Germany closing in the words reminded the people of the resiliency of the nation they loved.
            Today we hear about a different flower. The text we hear today is on its surface a very weird text for Holy Monday. Part of me wonders if Jesus even remembers the words that he said when he said, “Therefore do not worry about your life.” If anything, Jesus is very concerned with his life during this week of doom and gloom.
            Don’t worry about your life, even to Captain Von Trapp that was counter-intuitive. The reality is that we are creatures who worry, we worry because we are scared, alone, afraid, or in trouble. We worry because of jobs, of friendships, relationships, our own personal failings, or the fact that tax day is tomorrow and you haven’t started your taxes yet. Human beings are extremely good at worrying. But God is even better at causing us to give pause in our daily lives and give us peace.
            God gives us the lilies, the edelweiss, the flowers of Easter to combat the darkness of this week, of any week where worry threatens our very souls. God comes to us in the Christ Child, in the man on the cross and in the empty tomb to remind us again and again that worrying is ok, but worrying should not consume for God is Lord over time and space.
             As a person who suffers from anxiety of the worst kind, this text speaks profoundly to me because it reminds me that all of creation is a part of the magnificent plan of God to take care of all of us. If God can keep the lilies from worrying in all their splendor, can God not keep us safe as well? If God’s eye is on the sparrow, then where does the love of God’s heart lay down? It must be in our very souls.
            So as Jesus turns his face towards the cross and we too turn our eyes towards what is to come we are called not to be anxious. I wonder if Jesus remembered these words he spoke in Luke 12 by the time he got to Luke 22. I wonder if Jesus considered the lilies as he stood before Pilate and the crowds. I wonder if a sparrow flew over in peace as the crowds were yelling crucify him! Crucify him! Crucify him!
            You see we have the ability to be on this side of the resurrection, we know the outcome. But think of all the worry and despair the disciples must have had this week. The Passover was at hand and they had to make ready for that and on top of everything their Rabbi was telling them he wouldn’t be with them much longer. This was truly a week of worry and anxiety for all those gathered round.
            In one of the most thought provoking scenes in my favorite book series, Harry Potter is dealing with a dying Professor Dumbledore who will not survive the mortal wound he had been blown. The scene has lines such as these, “It's going to be all right, sir," Harry said over and over again, more worried by Dumbledore's silence than he had been by his weakened voice. "We're nearly there ... I can get us both back ... don't worry ... "I am not worried, Harry," said Dumbledore, his voice a little stronger despite the freezing water. "I am with you.”
            God comes to us during the Holy Weeks of our lives and says, “There’s no need to be worried, I am with you. Just like it was on that first Holy Week all those years ago, in the midst of it all Jesus broke bread and gave wine. He reminded the disciples whose they were and even in their denial there was grace extended.  Just like Captain Von Trapp they sang a hymn the night before he was betrayed. I wonder if it had anything to do with the flowers of the field or the beauty of the created world. Ultimately that doesn’t matter because Jesus faced his death with anxiety, and yet he fulfilled the task set before him since before the dawn of time.
            How will you face this week? Will you face it with anxiety and fear for what is coming on Good Friday? Will you face the future with caution and despair or will you shout yes to what God is doing to bring about Easter morning? These are the juxtapositions of our lives, Holy Week and Easter, death and resurrection, anxiety and joy. But ultimately, Easter, joy and resurrection win!
            Considering the lilies, the next time I’m anxious I’m going to give that a try. The next time I face my cross I’m going to consider the sparrow. Maybe you can do that too? Perhaps you can look into the eyes of whatever is staring you down and remind it that nothing on earth or under the earth or above the earth can stop God’s calming peace to be upon you. Anxiety and worry have no place in the Kingdom of God, and Jesus knew this even when he was anxious on Maundy Thursday.
             At the Garden of Gethsemane, even as Jesus’ anxiety and worry was reaching a boiling point he didn’t let the atrocity of what he was about to face overtake him. He considered all he had preached, all he knew about God and said, “Your will be done.” Even though Jesus went through hell and back to reach Easter morning he didn’t let his worry or anxiety consume him.
            We have a wonderful church member here at First Baptist Church named Diane. Diane is here with us today and the other night we went and saw the movie Noah together and followed it up with discussion at the local coffee house. Diane told us the story of her sitting under an orange tree in Florida worrying about a possible third pregnancy. Thoughts raced through her head and her worry was consuming her until her young son James came up and tapped her on the shoulder. She turned and looked at him and James without knowing the situation said in a childlike voice, “It’s going to be ok, it’s going to be ok.”
            Friends if this is not the lesson of Holy Week I don’t know what is. As Captain Von Trapp prepared to sing Edelweiss at the Salzburg Festival he says, “I know you share this love. I pray that you will never let it die.” Jesus, the one we know as Lord never let love die, even in his own mortal death he was clothed with immortal love in spite of his anxiety and worry and pain. So however you consider it, whether it be through Captain Von Trapp standing without worry over his actions or through Diane’s story of sitting under the orange tree, counter to everything we have ever conceived, worry has no place in this week, anxiety has no place in this week for we are bound for the kingdom of God, we are bound for the resurrection and it’s going to be ok! It’s going to be ok! It’s going to be ok!