Showing posts with label holy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label holy. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

Pushing Them Out

Trinity Presbyterian Church of Bethesda/United Korean Presbyterian Church
Pentecost Sunday, 2008 Rev. John An, Rev. David Williams

Scripture Lesson: Acts 2:1-12

Being a mom is not easy.
It’s hard for all kinds of different reasons.

Taking care of kids is hard.

They take your time.

Are they hungry?

They’ll let you know.

Are they thirsty?

Guess who gets asked to get them a drink.

They’re almost as bad as husbands that way.

Who gets to worry over kids when they’re sick?

The mom.

Who gets the call when they mess up at school?

The mom.

Who is always, always going to worry about her babies?

And they’re still your babies, even when they’re about to turn forty.

They’re always your babies.

But the part that we men always marvel about

The one that seems impossibly hard

Is how moms manage to shove the babies out in the first place.

Here you’ve got this tiny person, growing in the womb.

But they don’t stay tiny for long.

They get bigger and bigger and bigger.

And mom gets bigger and bigger

Going from that cute little size 2 you buy at Macy’s

To dresses that look like you’d buy them at Dick’s Sporting Goods.

Not the clothes section.

The tent section.

The whole time, the baby is happy as a clam.

It’s warm.

It’s comfy.

It’s completely safe.

But when the time comes to go out into the world

Who manages to push it out?

The mom.

Remember that scriptural saying about a camel passing through the eye of a needle?

Remember how impossible that seems?

Well, giving birth is only very slightly easier than that.

Through efforts that most men can’t even grasp

And might not want to even grasp.

It happens.

And something new is born into the world.

It’s a new person, full of life and potential.

They’re no longer hidden away inside the womb.

They’re out there for all the world to see.

Today is Pentecost Sunday

It’s the day we Christians remember the birth of the church

We heard today about the gathering of the disciples

They were all together in a house.

Those who had gathered were still huddling together.

They were excited at the knowledge that Christ had risen.

But they weren’t out there in the world.

Jesus has promised them that something would happen.

So they were waiting around

They were comfortably ensconced in their closed circle

Surrounded by other disciples

Secure in a safe house

But when the Spirit descended, that all changed.

When the Spirit descended, they could no longer remain inside.

Instead of being isolated from the world

Talking only to each other

Unseen by all and unheard by all.

Suddenly all those around were aware of them

As they proclaimed and cried out

Telling the whole world that something new had begun.

That moment fulfills a promise made earlier in the book of Acts.

Back in Acts chapter 1, verses five and eight,

Jesus promises that the Holy Spirit will arrive.

It also fulfills a promise that was made back in Luke’s Gospel.

Luke is, remember, the first part of the one book we call Luke/Acts.

In Luke chapter 24, verse 49, we also find that promise.

Jesus pledges that the disciples will be “clothed with power from on high.”

This is the day we remember that moment of power

That moment when the church was born

And this is also the day we remember that moment

That moment when a mom becomes a mom

And as we remember those two moments

We remember what they have in common.

They both mark a great effort

That moves a people out into the world

As we look towards the days beyond this day

We must strive to remember the way that God’s Spirit works.

The Holy Spirit is all about movement and life.

All of the words that describe it in scripture are about movement and action.

In the Bible, the Spirit is ruach in Hebrew and pneuma in Greek

Both words mean “wind” and “breath”

Which are the embodiment of movement and life.

The Gospels proclaim the Spirit as the one who Comforts

And giving comfort or showing caring requires action.

The Gospels proclaim the Spirit as the Advocate

And a silent and motionless Advocate would be useless.

The Holy Spirit doesn’t call us to close ranks around one another

The Holy Spirit doesn’t promise us a comfy and quiet place

Where we can ignore the cries of the rest of humanity.

The Spirit labors to heave us out into the world

Out into a world that needs to hear Christ’s message

A message of both forgiveness and repentance

A message of both love and justice

As God strives through the Spirit to work in us,

That work drives us out into the world.

Like a mother, it gives us life and pushes us out

So that we can bear witness to the Good News of Jesus Christ

To our friends

To our neighbors

To our city

And to the ends of the earth.

Tuesday, May 6, 2008

Staring Into Space

Trinity Presbyterian Church of Bethesda
05.04.08; Rev. David Williams

Scripture Lesson: Acts 1:6-14

If you’ve ever worked as part of team, or been part of a group project at school, you know there are as many different ways to mess a project up as there are human beings. Every project meeting is blessed with at least one or two of these personalities...maybe they’ll seem familiar.

There’s the perfectionist control freak, who immediately assumes that they are in charge of the project and starts giving orders to everyone and presenting everyone with the graphs and timelines and flow charts that show how this project fits neatly within their six year plan for world domination. You’re right there on their chart, no, not there, there, that little dot down there, right below the market capitalization plan for the factory in Indonesia that will build their giant army of mechanized warbots.

There’s the attention-seeking hypersensitive, who immediately assumes that that comment that you just made about maybe going out to get lunch afterwards was your snide way of saying that they had personally failed to bring snacks, and who then requires everyone to spend the rest of the meeting telling them that, no, no, you do a great job, that wasn’t what we meant at all. It’s worth noting that attention-seeking hypersensitives are unusually susceptible to the effect of tasers.

Not that I’m suggesting that. I’m just saying.

There’s the monologuer, who when asked to give their perspective about the direction of the project immediately begins telling the whole group about this time when they were at this place where they met this very important person you’ve never heard of, who told them something sort of related to the project that was said by this other very important person you’ve never heard of, and then proceeds to talk for 45 minutes straight without apparently ever pausing to breathe. I know what you’re thinking, but unfortunately, tasers have no effect whatsoever on the monologuer.

There’s the attention-deficit-disorder multitasker, who spends the whole time trying to listen while simultaneously responding to emails on their BlackBerry, texting on their iPhone, rereading the background material for the meeting, checking their voicemail, and furtively searching for a relevant document on their laptop. Though they’re the busiest person you’ve ever known, you’ve recently noticed that they haven’t actually finished anything, including a complete sentence, since August of 2003.

Then there’s the space cadet, who appears, well, they appear not to be there at all. Their eyes have this far away look, their focus cast far away to the distant horizon outside of the meeting room walls. They’ve gone to their happy place, and are completely and utterly inert, in a Zen state of complete and utter nonproductive disengagement. They’re so far into their journey into never-never land that if everyone gets up and leaves very quietly, they’ll probably still be there when you get back, a little trickle of blissful drool running down from one corner of their slightly open mouth. We actually did this at our last session meeting, but I’ll leave you to guess who it was.

It is our human tendency to become this last one, the space cadet, the witless dude-where’s-my-project person, that gets a little bit of attention during the planning meeting up on top of Mount Olivet.

We’re at the very beginning of the Book of Acts. The first handful of verses connect our story to the end of Luke’s Gospel, and now we’re told more detail about what Jesus did as he prepared for his departure. The disciples have gathered together with the risen Christ, and during the question and answer session at the end of the meeting, they’re trying to figure out what in the world is going to happen next. Is this it? Is God’s Kingdom finally here?

Jesus tells them pretty clearly that things aren’t going to happen as they originally thought. They’d been hoping that this was the thing they’d expected, the arrival of Jesus as the great warrior who would liberate all of Israel, bringing about the fulfillment of the Kingdom. Jesus tells that that this isn’t how it’s going down. When exactly things are going to completed, when the age of messianic fulfillment will come, none of those things are to be known by anyone but God. It’s not on the table. It’s not going to be shared, at least, not in the way that they expect. But something else, something they had not expected, is going to happen.

In response to their question about the Kingdom, Jesus goes on to tell them that power will come to them through the Holy Spirit, and that from that, the disciples will become witnesses to Christ in Jerusalem, in the southern kingdom of Judea, in the northern kingdom of Israel, and to the ends of the earth itself. Having told them what was important, Jesus then gets up and leaves the meeting, and by getting up, I mean really, really up.

The disciples watch him go, staring gape-mouthed into the sky, frozen and inert. As they continue to stand there, unable to act, unable to move, two “men in white robes” appear. “Men in white robes” is just a different way of saying angels, and the word aggelion in the Greek just means “messenger.” These two messengers have something very specific to say to the disciples.

What they have to say is this: “Hey! You! Jesus already told you what you what you’re going to need to do, and what’s going to happen! This book’s supposed to be called the Acts of the Apostles, not the Standing-Around-and-Staring-into-Space of the Apostles! Get moving!”

And so they do. What are they moving towards? They’re moving towards what Jesus tells them in verse eight of chapter 1, which is also proclaimed in verse five of chapter one, which is also proclaimed in verse forty-nine of the last chapter of the Gospel of Luke. They are moving towards an event that is deeply vital and pivotal to the Gospel proclamation in Luke and Acts. They are moving towards the arrival of Holy Spirit on the Day of Pentecost, God’s own Spirit, which comes down from heaven and fills them with the power that they’d need to spread the message of Christ’s love and justice and salvation throughout the entire world.

Oddly enough, next Sunday is Pentecost, though it’s close to two thousand years later. And over those two thousand years, we Christians have done a whole bunch of staring into space. We’re waiting for Jesus to return. We’re waiting for that one perfect impossible moment when we’ll have it all together, for that moment when the stars in the night sky align and say, Hey! You! It’s finally time for you to act.

So some don’t act at all, but most of us look towards that distant and impossible future, keep staring towards the heavens, and we wait. And we wait. And we wait. And our eyes are glazed, and we’re off in our happy place. We don’t see the task at hand, which is to share Christ’s saving love with the world. We don’t see the task at hand, in the here and now, in a human being in need of a kind word or an open ear. We don’t see the task at hand, in a world that burns with the fires of war and the cries of hungry children.

That’s a pity, because the guy in charge of this project really, really does not want us to mess it up.