Difference between revisions of "Sermon for March 27th, 2016"

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Restoration and Resurrection are not the same things.  We want restoration.  We want things to be like they used to be, in our church, in our country, in our lives at a happier time.  But God doesn't do restoration.  God does resurrection.  In order for something to be resurrected from the dead...it has to die first. And we really don't like that.  What you get on the other side of restoration is exactly what you had before.  What you get on the other side of resurrection is something completely new. Restoration turns around and goes back to the past.  Resurrection brings something from the past into the future, and breathes new life into it, making it something new, and different.
 
Restoration and Resurrection are not the same things.  We want restoration.  We want things to be like they used to be, in our church, in our country, in our lives at a happier time.  But God doesn't do restoration.  God does resurrection.  In order for something to be resurrected from the dead...it has to die first. And we really don't like that.  What you get on the other side of restoration is exactly what you had before.  What you get on the other side of resurrection is something completely new. Restoration turns around and goes back to the past.  Resurrection brings something from the past into the future, and breathes new life into it, making it something new, and different.
  
2. Power vs. Prestige.  We want to be important.  We want to be first. 
 
  
 
3.
 
  
  
 
I don't want First Presbyterian Church to be the biggest church in El Paso, or anywhere.  I don't want First Presbyterian church to be the best church in El Paso, or the most important, or the wealthiest, or the most influential.  I don't care about any of those things.
 
I don't want First Presbyterian Church to be the biggest church in El Paso, or anywhere.  I don't want First Presbyterian church to be the best church in El Paso, or the most important, or the wealthiest, or the most influential.  I don't care about any of those things.
  
But I do have a dream for First Presbyterian Church, and it's this:  That we might be a new kind of church, a different kind of church, filled with a new and different kind of people that the world has never seen before.  People who don't get caught up in the world's struggle for power through strength, wealth, property, and prestige.  People who, instead, have an inner power that comes from a sacred and unshakeable place, from a message of faith, hope, and love that we share with everyone--Christians and non-christians alike.  And we don't get hung up on trying to convert people to our religion--we simply share with them our story.  We walk with them through life's journey, through thick and thin.
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But I do have a dream for First Presbyterian Church, and it's this:  That we might be a new kind of church, a different kind of church, filled with a new and different kind of people like the world has never seen before.  People who don't get caught up in the world's insane struggle for power through strength, wealth, and prestige.  People who, instead, have an inner power that comes from a sacred and unshakeable place, that comes from a message of faith, hope, and love that we share with everyone--Christians and non-christians alike.   
 +
 
 +
And we don't get hung up on trying to convert people to our religion--we simply share with them our story, the one about this guy named Jesus, who taught us to look out for each other, and to take care of each otherAnd so we walk with each other through life's journeys, through the darkest valleys as well as the brightest mountaintops.

Revision as of 19:15, 26 March 2016

Acts 1:1-11

1In the first book, Theophilus, I wrote about all that Jesus did and taught from the beginning 2until the day when he was taken up to heaven, after giving instructions through the Holy Spirit to the apostles whom he had chosen. 3After his suffering he presented himself alive to them by many convincing proofs, appearing to them during forty days and speaking about the kingdom of God. 4While staying with them, he ordered them not to leave Jerusalem, but to wait there for the promise of the Father. “This,” he said, “is what you have heard from me; 5for John baptized with water, but you will be baptized with the Holy Spirit not many days from now.”

6So when they had come together, they asked him, “Lord, is this the time when you will restore the kingdom to Israel?” 7He replied, “It is not for you to know the times or periods that the Father has set by his own authority. 8But you will receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you; and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem, in all Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the earth.” 9When he had said this, as they were watching, he was lifted up, and a cloud took him out of their sight. 10While he was going and they were gazing up toward heaven, suddenly two men in white robes stood by them. 11They said, “Men of Galilee, why do you stand looking up toward heaven? This Jesus, who has been taken up from you into heaven, will come in the same way as you saw him go into heaven.”

First Church: Is This the Time?

A Baptist, a Catholic, and a Presbyterian all die in a tragic accident, and are met at the pearly gates by Saint Peter, who tells them they can enter heaven if they can answer one simple question: What is Easter?

The Baptist replies, "Oh, that's easy, it's the holiday in November when everybody gets together, eats turkey, and is thankful..."

"WRONG," replies St. Peter, and turns to the Catholic. What is Easter?

"Is it the holiday in December when we put up a nice tree, exchange presents, and celebrate the birth of Santa Claus?"

"WRONG," replies St. Peter in great disgust. But the Presbyterian just simles, looks St. Pete in the eye, and says:

"Easter is the Christian holiday that coincides with the Jewish celebration of Passover. Jesus and the disciples were eating at the Last Supper, and He was later deceived and turned over to the Romans by Judas, one of the disciples. The Romans took Him to Pontius Pilate, made Him wear a crown of thorns, and He was hung on a cross. He was buried in a nearby cave which was sealed off by a large boulder. Every year the boulder is moved aside so that Jesus can come out, and if He sees his shadow there will be six more weeks of winter."

I'm guessing that the vast majority of you here today are actually quite familiar with the story of Easter, and the resurrection of Jesus Christ. In fact, as I look out at the congregation today, I think it's probably a fair assumption that the vast majority of you are lifelong church-goers, and so you've heard the Easter story dozens of times or more--probably every Easter Sunday stretching back as far as you can remember.

So because we're such an advanced crowd, I'm going to skip forward this year. We're not going to begin with the resurrection of Jesus, but rather what happens in the wake of that resurrection. We ARE going to talk about new life, something at the heart of the Easter story--just not the new life God gave to Jesus, which is where the gospels end. We're going to talk about the new life God gave to the church, and to the people, which is where the book of Acts begins. And we're going to talk about how God continues to give new life to the church and to its people in every generation, including today.

Now, when I arrived here as pastor in 2012, I noticed that members had a curious habit of refering to this congregation as "First Church." That's how we would answer the phones, too: "First Church, may I help you?" Or, "I attend First Church."

I always wondered how the folks at First Baptist Church, or First Christian Church, or Trinity-First Methodist church felt about that. I mean, we were certainly the first Presbyterian church established in El Paso, but not the first church--that honor belongs to the Ysleta mission, which is not only the oldest congregation not only in El Paso, but also in all of Texas.

I suspect that the members of this congregation probably knew that when they called themselves "First Church." I don't think they meant "first" in the chronological sense. "First" can also mean "foremost" in the sense of "best" or "most prominent." And, for much of the 20th century, that was a legitimate claim, if you're counting membership numbers, or influence in the community. Long before the big mega-churches of this century existed, First Presbyterian Church was, throughout the 50s, 60s, 70s, and 80s, the largest church in town, often the wealthiest, and its membership list read like a "Who's Who" in the City of El Paso.

But our numbers today are greatly diminished, and there are plenty of churches who have surpassed us in terms of wealth and influence. Honestly, I'm not sure that being "First" in that sense is all that it's cracked up to be. Over and over again, I hear stories from people in the community who tell me that in those days, when "First Church" was at its height, they did not feel, and could not feel welcome here. Prominence often comes with a price.

In this, I think we have a lot in common with the followers of Jesus in today's scripture passage. When they encounter the resurrected Christ, their very first words, their first question is revealing.

Verse 6: So when they had come together, they asked him, “Lord, is this the time when you will restore the kingdom to Israel?”

You see, they didn't see themselves as something part of a new movement, but rather as part of a very old one: The Kingdom of Israel. A kingdom that used to be great, powerful, wealthy, and influential. The didn't want a new religion. They wanted Jesus to magically bring back the one they grew up with.

Is this the time, Jesus? We've followed you for three years now, through the wilderness and through the cities, through persecutions and executions. We left our homes and our families...we gave up everything...but now here we are. Here you are, raised from the dead. Is this the time when you'll raise our church from the dead, too? Is this the time when you'll restore our country to the way it used to be? Is this the time when you'll make us great again, too?

These of course, are exactly the sorts of questions we ask all of our would-be-saviors, even today, whether they are religious leaders, business tycoons, or political candidates.

Notice that Jesus does not say, "Yes, now is the time." Nor does he say, "No, now is not the time." Instead, he says, "That's in God's hands, not yours."

But he doesn't leave them completely emptyhanded. He promises them two things: "You will receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you; and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem, in all Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the earth.”

In other words, there is an amazing future in store for you--but it's not going to look anything like what you were expecting. In fact, your expectations were too small. And you were looking in the wrong direction.

Let's unpack those two promises, as well as the two "course corrections" that Jesus gives his followers, and which, incidentally, are great for us, too.

First, "You will receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you."

You see, power was exactly what the followers of Jesus wanted. They wanted military power to fight against the Roman Empire and win Israel's independence back again. As mostly poor, undeducated fishermen from the backwoods of Galillee, they also wanted political, economic and religious power to stand up to the Jewish priests in Jerusalem, who controlled access to the Temple, and therefore to God.

But Jesus says to them, in effect, power--real power--doesn't come from strength, or wealth, or status, which in any case are external things. Real power comes from Spirit, which is internal. And not just any spirit, but a holy spirit. When we hear "holy spirit" we think of the third member of the trinity (Father, Son and Holy Spirit) but that doctrine hadn't been invented yet when Acts was written. I think the best way to understand "Holy Spirit" here is a spirit that values what is Holy, what is Sacred, what is set apart from the world.

Second, Jesus promises that "you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem, in all Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the earth."

Here again, renewed prestige is what the followers of Jesus wanted and expected. If Jesus was going to (finally) restore the kingdom of Israel, they wanted to be his ambassadors, his representatives, his sub-rulers among the twelve tribes of Israel. And Jesus tells them, you will be my representatives, yes, here in the capital city of Jerusalem, but then in all Judea and beyond that in Samaria, and even beyond that to the ends of the earth.

And that poses a problem. Because Jesus' followers don't want to represent him and his message outside of Israel--those people, the heathen, unbelieving gentiles were not part of God's covenant or plan. They wanted to defeat them, not share a message with them.

Incidentally, as an aside, the rapid spread of Christianity in the first and second centuries--from Jerusalem, to Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the Mediterranean world at that time--was made possible by a brand new technology that had just appeared on the scene: The Paved Roman Highway. It had been invented by the Roman Empire to transport vast armies for conquest. But early Christian evangelists like Paul traveled it to plant communities of faith, hope, and love, and used it to keep those communities connected via letters sent by messenger.

Eighteen centuries later, it was another new technology that revived and renewed the church in El Paso, Texas. First Presbyterian, First Baptist, St. Clements Episcopal, and Trinity First Methodist were all established in the year 1882, one year after the railroad arrived, connecting El Paso to both the East and West coasts and ending its relative isolation.

In the 1970s and 80s, the pastor of First Presbyterian Church, Dr. Robert Young, made effective use of yet another new technology--radio and television--in order to bring the message of the church directly into the homes of thousands of El Pasoans.

So it's worth asking the question, what new, game-changing technology born of our own generation will carry our message of faith, hope and love faster and farther than was possible before...and are we still willing to be at the forefront of that technological curve?

The earliest followers of Jesus did not want to take his message to the ends of the earth. Their vision was small. They only wanted to reach out to fellow Jews. At first, "outsiders" were welcome, but only if they converted. And I don't mean to Christianity. In order to be a legitimate follower of Jesus, at least in the first few decades, you had to convert to Judaism. It took the Apostle Paul to say "let the Jews be Jews and let the Gentiles be Gentiles. And let them each follow Jesus in their own way." By the way, when said that, almost all the church leaders at the time, including Peter and James, disagreed with him.

The movement that began among the followers of Jesus ultimately changed the entire world. But it never ended up being quite what they had wanted or expected.

Is this the time? If we're going our own way, and expecting Jesus to follow us, the answer is always no. If we're going God's way, and expecting to follow wherever Jesus leads us, the answer is always yes.

Restoration and Resurrection are not the same things. We want restoration. We want things to be like they used to be, in our church, in our country, in our lives at a happier time. But God doesn't do restoration. God does resurrection. In order for something to be resurrected from the dead...it has to die first. And we really don't like that. What you get on the other side of restoration is exactly what you had before. What you get on the other side of resurrection is something completely new. Restoration turns around and goes back to the past. Resurrection brings something from the past into the future, and breathes new life into it, making it something new, and different.



I don't want First Presbyterian Church to be the biggest church in El Paso, or anywhere. I don't want First Presbyterian church to be the best church in El Paso, or the most important, or the wealthiest, or the most influential. I don't care about any of those things.

But I do have a dream for First Presbyterian Church, and it's this: That we might be a new kind of church, a different kind of church, filled with a new and different kind of people like the world has never seen before. People who don't get caught up in the world's insane struggle for power through strength, wealth, and prestige. People who, instead, have an inner power that comes from a sacred and unshakeable place, that comes from a message of faith, hope, and love that we share with everyone--Christians and non-christians alike.

And we don't get hung up on trying to convert people to our religion--we simply share with them our story, the one about this guy named Jesus, who taught us to look out for each other, and to take care of each other. And so we walk with each other through life's journeys, through the darkest valleys as well as the brightest mountaintops.