Sermon for Sunday, April 28, 2024
"Walking the Way of Love" preaching series
Here we are at week 4 of our Easter-season
preaching series about Walking the Way of Love. Each Sunday from Easter to
Pentecost, we’re focusing on one of the fundamental spiritual practices that
our Baptismal Covenant gives us. Every
time we have a baptism or confirmation, we all stand up with the candidates and
promise that we, too, will take certain steps on our walk with God. You can see all seven steps in the article
about the sermon series, at the beginning of the bulletin this morning.
Along with preaching about these seven
steps, we’ve been asking you to take a spiritual inventory called My Way of
Love, and that’s mentioned in the article, too. The results will help you see where you are in
your own walk with Jesus, and follow-up emails will suggest next steps you
might take in your own spiritual practice.
I know some of us have had trouble finding the replies to the inventory,
and we’re reaching out to the provider about that.
Anyway, you might be asking: “OK, then
what? What’s the end game here?” Well, I’ve mentioned this before, but just to
recap: For your clergy and Vestry, our
major project this year is creating something we’re calling the Pilgrim’s
Pathway to Heaven on Earth. I’m
imagining this as a guide for your spiritual journey, an answer to the
question, “If I want to follow Jesus’ path and grow closer to God, what could I
be doing? And what resources can St.
Andrew’s offer to guide me?” So far,
we’ve been describing these seven steps along the path of spiritual growth:
turning toward God, resting, blessing, learning, worshiping, praying, and going
into the world to live like Jesus lived.
Practicing these seven actions is how we walk the Way of Love to find
heaven in our earthly lives.
OK, so what’s the “deliverable” with this
effort? My prayer is that, by the Annual
Parish Meeting in January, we’ll have a guide we can put in your hand, or maybe
an app we can put on your phone, to help you use the resources of this parish
to make your journey toward heaven on earth.
So … today’s spiritual practice is to
“learn.” Now, you may hear that and flash
back to Sunday school – memorizing books of the Bible or answering questions
from the catechism. That’s not all bad,
but it’s not the kind of learning I have in mind. The learning that leads us toward heaven on
earth isn’t about racking up points on a heavenly scorecard; it’s learning that
changes your heart and empowers your life.
It’s learning that shows us how God’s story is our story,
lighting our path in ways we never expected.
The amazing thing is that for the big questions and challenges we face –
like, “Who am I?”; “Where’s the meaning in my life?”; “How can I bear pain that
seems fundamentally unfair?” – the answers to those big questions come to us
when we learn God’s story and find ourselves in it.
I think that’s what’s happening in today’s
reading from the Acts of the Apostles. Philip,
one of the first deacons of the Church, is in Samaria, telling the story of
Jesus and healing people. It’s part of
fleshing out what Jesus had said just before he ascended to heaven – that his
followers would proclaim his good news to “Jerusalem, in all Judea and Samaria,
and to the ends of the earth” (Acts 1:8)
Well, in the category of proclaiming “to the ends of the earth,” the
Holy Spirit sends Philip down through the desert wilderness toward Gaza, though
Philip doesn’t know why. And along they
way, Philip meets this surprising character who rides into the story out of
nowhere – a powerful official from the court of the queen of Ethiopia. Now this man is about as different from
Philip, and Jesus’ other followers, as anyone could be. He’s powerful, in charge of the queen’s
“entire treasury” (Acts 8:27). He’s a eunuch,
a man who’s been castrated as a sign of submission to his monarch. He’s from Ethiopia, so he looks different
from the people of Judea and the Romans who ruled over them. Actually, his African darkness was highly admired
in Greco-Roman culture, seen as a mark of beauty.1 And, although this Ethiopian official was
returning home from worshiping in Jerusalem and was reading the prophet Isaiah,
he wasn’t Jewish – wasn’t allowed to be, actually, because he’d been castrated,
which Jewish law didn’t allow (Deuteronomy 23:1).2 The Ethiopian was what they called a “God
fearer,” someone inspired by the God of Israel but not fully part of the
community.
So, why would this Ethiopian court
official have gotten the Holy Spirit’s attention? Because of God’s promise in Isaiah that
outsiders like him would be welcomed into the family of God when the messiah came
to bring the kingdom of heaven to earth (56:3-5). In fact, Isaiah says specifically that foreign
eunuchs will be welcomed in, no longer seen as “a dry tree” who can’t raise up
children to honor the one true God.
Instead, the messiah will welcome these outsiders to join with the
people of Israel and “come to the water” of blessing (Isaiah 55:1).
Well, the Ethiopian is reading the prophet
Isaiah when Philip comes alongside his chariot.
Philip hears him reading out loud where Isaiah describes God’s suffering
servant who will be exalted as messiah, the one who will be struck down and
“cut off from the land of the living” (Isaiah 53:8) – much as the Ethiopian has
been cut off from his future because he can’t have children. Turns out, this messiah has suffered right
alongside the people he’s saving, even right alongside this Ethiopian stranger,
Philip explains. And when God exalted this
suffering messiah to glory, God welcomed even this stranger to share in that
glory. So, this powerful, castrated,
dark-skinned court official says to Philip, “Sign me up.” “Look,” he says, “here is water! What is to prevent me from being baptized?”
(Acts 8:36). And the ultimate stranger
becomes part of the family of God, a full citizen of the kingdom of heaven on
earth.
To me, this story is all about the
spiritual practice of learning – learning that changes your life. It’s not just that the Ethiopian needed some new
information. The significance of
spiritual learning goes beyond that in at least two ways. First, the new information he needs is
powerful enough to change his heart and change his life. Through this new learning, God says to the
Ethiopian, “I don’t care who you are. I
don’t care what your background is. I
don’t care what your past has done to you or how much you feel like a stranger
in a strange land. What I care about,”
God tells the Ethiopian, “is you.
You are my beloved child,” God says, “and with you, I am well-pleased.”
So, that’s the first significance of what
the Ethiopian official learns – that it changes his life. And here’s the second: This life-changing
learning comes to him from another pilgrim walking along the road. Philip is willing literally to come alongside
someone whose life has intersected with his.
In that right place at that right time, Philip simply enters into a
conversation with the Ethiopian about how Jesus’ good news had changed his own
life. He begins with an invitation to chat:
“Do you understand what you’re reading?” he asks (8:30). Do you want to talk about it? And the Ethiopian says, “How can I
[understand], unless someone guides me?” (8:31). In other words, learning happens best in
community. We can read books by
ourselves all day long, and that’s great.
We can listen to a hundred podcasts, and that’s great. But life changes for us when we come
alongside other pilgrims and let the Holy Spirit take head knowledge and plant
it in our hearts.
That happens here all the time, and not
just for kids in Sunday school. Here’s a
case study, a glance at the church calendar from just the past
week. Last Sunday, people here gathered
in CafĂ© 9:15 to learn about the readings for that morning’s worship, while
others gathered as the Christian Journey group to discuss the book The
Meaning of Jesus by Marcus Borg and N.T. Wright. On Tuesday, people gathered for Sacred Ground
to explore the theological dimensions of race and racism in America. After that, people gathered to learn how to
listen to each other with open, loving hearts.
On Thursday, guys gathered for a Men’s Bible Study; women learned about
hospice care at Trinity Guild; and that evening, others gathered to learn about the Sacraments at
Trailside. That’s a typical week, and
more is coming. In May, we’ll offer our
All-Parish Read of the book Nine Essential Things I’ve Learned About Life
by Harold Kushner, and we’ll discuss that book on Thursday nights at
Trailside. After that, watch for a new
offering of Bible study at Trailside Thursdays, led by your clergy.
And, of course, we don’t just learn together
through groups or classes. Sometimes,
what opens our eyes to God’s kingdom in our midst is the learning that happens
when we’re doing something else. For
example, today, we’re celebrating the centennial of our Altar Guild. For a hundred years, sacristans have been
preparing the elements for Communion, and ironing linens, and tending candles,
and cleaning holy hardware. But the Altar
Guild experience doesn’t stop with that service. I can’t count the number of times over the
years that sacristans have said to me, “One of the best things about Altar
Guild is what you learn about how and why we worship.” And right alongside that is this holy truth –
that maybe the best thing about Altar Guild is that their blessed
service and learning happens among a community of friends.
And the great thing about both the
learning and the people who share it here is this: No tests – not in any sense, actually. There’s no required list of Scripture’s
greatest hits to memorize. There’s no
background check: Wherever you’re coming
from, you’re part of this band of pilgrims seeking heaven on earth. And there’s no dotted line to sign: Whatever questions you bring, whatever doubts
you hold, you’re part of this journey we take together.
Let me share one more snapshot from last
week. I was talking with someone who’s
been following this sermon series, someone who’s been involved in our work to
serve people in the community, someone who’s been going to church for a long
time. And now, she’s getting a sense
there’s more to discover and deeper places to go. So, she tried reading a scholarly work on the
nature of Christ, but it left her dry.
She said, “It would be so much better discussing it with a group. Basically, I want to have faith,” she said; “I
want to believe in all things Christian.
But,” she said, “I wasn’t born with that trusting-God gene.”
Well, neither was I. My hunch is that very few of us were. It sure would be convenient if we could hear the right story, or read the right book, or listen to the right podcast, and just get this faith thing. But we don’t do that on our own. It takes the rest of the folks on the journey, too. We trust God so much more deeply when our hearts are formed together. As the Ethiopian stranger said to Philip, “How can I [understand], unless someone guides me?”
1. HarperCollins Study Bible, 2073 (note).
2. HarperCollins Study Bible, 2073 (note).
No comments:
Post a Comment