Category: Preaching Notes
Sermon Brief
Honored to be blessed with the trust of the pulpit yesterday at First Christian in Hennessey. I had never preached John 15:9-17, and some may say I still haven’t. The paragraphs below represent the sermon brief.
Reside, Tolerate, Endure, Wait, Accept, Suffer: Abide
John 15:9-17
This is the Year B in the Lectionary, that organized way to read through most of the bible in a three year cycle. In Year B, we hear about Jesus of Nazareth through the Gospel of Mark. Mark is what I call an outline gospel. It is the short story that Matthew and John turn into their own novels, and then the author of Luke-Acts uses all three. Matthew, Mark, and John, to create a made for TV movie that could be optioned as a screen play.
Today, we meet up with Jesus and his disciples in a sort of flash back moment. Jesus is with the disciples in Jerusalem in the middle of a monologue that began with setting for you, for me, and anyone that would follow, an example: he washed the disciples’ feet. If you are ever unsure about what gospel looks like in your life, in your community, or in the world, John’s gospel suggests it begins with a basin of water, a towel, and humility.
The good news of God is always counter-cultural in deed and in word.
As Jesus continues to talk he reminds the disciples in that room, and this one:
- Just as Jesus has loved you, you also should love one another.
By this everyone will know that you are his disciples if you have love for one another;
- Anyone who believes in Jesus will do the works that he does and do even greater works than his;
- If you love Jesus, you will keep his commandments;
- Abide in Jesus as he abides in you. Just as the branch cannot bear fruit by itself unless it abides in the vine, neither can you unless you abide in Jesus.
And there is that word seldom used anymore: abide. Like so much of Jesus’ life and ministry, abide is a verb:
to remain; to reside; to continue in a particular condition, attitude, or relationship; to tolerate; to endure; to wait; to accept; to suffer for.
Remember, John’s gospel novel is not for the newly initiated believer or novice follower of Jesus. The language invites theological conversation that requires you to have spent some time personally struggling with God,
personally struggling with Jesus,
intimately struggling with Jesus in relationship with others; and risk.
Risk the friendship of disagreeing with someone you’ve known your whole life. That someone may be the face you see everyday in the mirror, a family member, co-worker, or neighbor. Risk disagreeing with Christian tradition’s presentation of Jesus and its presentation of God.
Jesus doesn’t make it easy. I’ve got to figure out how to abide in Jesus’ love, which is an example of God’s love, and be a model of reciprocal love with our State and Federal legislators, some whom flaunt their Christianity as a qualification for office, yet cannot apply love your neighbor as yourself to budgets, tax policy, healthcare, or discriminatory religious freedom laws.
Christianity is pretty comfortable with the idea that abide means “to suffer for” when it is others or when it is Jesus doing the suffering. But Jesus says, abide in my love. Whom have you ‘suffered for’? Did that feel redemptive?
It is common for clergy to discuss the text for the week, with colleagues and friends from a broad spectrum of belief and practice. Sometimes we even do that on social media. Talking with my colleague, Rev. Charles Ragland, minister at First Christian in Claremore, about one of the definitions of abide, “suffer for”, he noted:
“Suffer for” as in, “allow for”? As in “Suffer the little children…”? May I suggest that when we suffer [for] others (in the above sense), we “allow” them space in our lives. We make room (take time) for their needs. God constantly makes room in God’s life to abide with us, and seems to me that is a mark of authentic love as Jesus did it: to make welcoming space in your life for others.” Whom have you suffered for?
In John’s gospel the friendship based mutual, collaborative, risky, joyful, self-sacrificing, reciprocal companionship that Jesus wants for his disciples, and any who would follow, is enfleshed in the ability to abide in Jesus’ love;
abide in Jesus’ way of loving;
abide in keeping Jesus’ commandments.
Maybe it is a way of seeing the world, interacting with creation and people; it is a lifestyle as much as a faith statement about who God is and what Jesus means. Abide in Jesus and his way of loving, and your joy may be complete.
You’ve seen complete joy.
It is people who send some of their store of hay or feed or clothing or money for those whose lives have been consumed in flames, by flood, swallowed by earthquake, or blown away by wind.
It is the believer and non-believer alike that does what is right because it is right, even when it is unpopular.
It is Job declaring, “It is the Lord. Let the Lord do what seems right to the Lord.”
Disciples in Hennessey . . . abide.
Queasy lent
This year during the lenten season I’ll be posting weekly with the notes I would use if I were preaching every Sunday. The post below is part of what I posted for my Region’s lent blogging with our Regional Youth Council. These words would be the background of the preaching I would do this first Sunday of lent.
Lent (def) verb: simple past tense and past participle of lend.
Lend (def) verb
1. to grant the use of (something) on condition that it or its equivalent will be returned.
2. to give (money) on condition that it is returned and that interest is paid for its temporary use.
3. to give or contribute obligingly or helpfully;
4. to adapt (oneself or itself) to something;
5. to furnish or impart;
[lent. Dictionary.com. Dictionary.com Unabridged. Random House, Inc. http://www.dictionary.com/browse/lent (accessed: February 8, 2018).]
I am beginning the season of lent at sea. My companion and I are on holiday touring the southern Caribbean on a cruise ship. We like cruising and we’ve been to the ports of call many times. What we can see from our limited perspective are islands recovering using tourist’s dollars and the other aid they can get. May the odds be ever in your favour. If you live in an area that is prone to nature’s cleanse, it will be your turn to lend a hand cleaning up or seeking a hand to rebuild what is lost.
The first full day and night and the second day at sea we sailed for Puerto Rico. The wind was blowing 25-35 knots from the south southeast. The ship navigates along a similar course sometimes head on and sometimes broadside the wind and wind driven sea. Normal seas are 4-6 feet. The first full day and night the seas were 8-12 feet and transitioned to 12-15 feet. I can be prone to motion sickness on the sea. My sea legs are not deep within me. That disorienting queasy feeling settled into my brain and stomach. Pressure point bracelets that once helped were adorned too late to make a significant difference. Non-drowsy motion sickness medication eased the disorientation and queasiness, but it did not completely go away. Now, calmer seas and moored at the dock of our second port of call I still have a sensation that the ship is pitching and rolling through the water as I write and reflect on the experience, though without the sick feeling.
In those days Jesus came from Nazareth of Galilee and was baptized by John in the Jordan. And just as he was coming up out of the water, he saw the heavens torn apart and the Spirit descending like a dove on him.And a voice came from heaven, “You are my Son, the Beloved; with you I am well pleased.” And the Spirit immediately drove Jesus out into the wilderness. He was in the wilderness forty days, tempted by the Satan; and Jesus was with the wild beasts; and the angels waited on him.
Now after John was arrested, Jesus came to Galilee, proclaiming the good news of God, and saying, “The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God has come near; repent, and believe in the good news.” [Mark 1:9-15]
Maybe that is what I need to experience: a queasy lent, O God. Something disorienting that is not soothed by reading the sacred stories, singing the hymns, or participating in the ancient rituals. The ancient ways and stories are meant to disorient, but have become a medication for the sensations caused by believing in Christ instead of following Jesus. Being a follower of Jesus can make, will make, you queasy more often than not. My “Jesus legs” may not as deep as I thought.
And from the rolling sea rises a response. Michael. Why is following Jesus disorienting? Is he not what being fully human looks like? Don’t you want to be fully human and touch the Imago Dei, the divine spark, in you? Is it not tempting? The kindom is near. Believe the good news.