Sermon for November 26th, 2017
Haggai 2:10-19
10 On the twenty-fourth day of the ninth month, in the second year of Darius, the word of the Lord came by the prophet Haggai, saying: 11 Thus says the Lord of hosts: Ask the priests for a ruling: 12 If one carries consecrated meat in the fold of one’s garment, and with the fold touches bread, or stew, or wine, or oil, or any kind of food, does it become holy? The priests answered, “No.” 13 Then Haggai said, “If one who is unclean by contact with a dead body touches any of these, does it become unclean?” The priests answered, “Yes, it becomes unclean.” 14 Haggai then said, So is it with this people, and with this nation before me, says the Lord; and so with every work of their hands; and what they offer there is unclean. 15 But now, consider what will come to pass from this day on. Before a stone was placed upon a stone in the Lord’s temple, 16 how did you fare?[a] When one came to a heap of twenty measures, there were but ten; when one came to the wine vat to draw fifty measures, there were but twenty. 17 I struck you and all the products of your toil with blight and mildew and hail; yet you did not return to me, says the Lord. 18 Consider from this day on, from the twenty-fourth day of the ninth month. Since the day that the foundation of the Lord’s temple was laid, consider: 19 Is there any seed left in the barn? Do the vine, the fig tree, the pomegranate, and the olive tree still yield nothing? From this day on I will bless you.
Stew(ardship) - Haggai's Stew
Vincent Calloway III was, by all accounts, a man blessed with financial prosperity. He also had a reputation for being excessively materialistic; more concerned with his many expensive possessions than with the people or circumstances around him.
One day, as Vincent arrived at the office and got out of his brand new BMW, eager to show it off to his colleagues, an eighteen wheeler came from out of nowhere, and took off the driver's side door with Vincent standing right there beside it. "NOOO!" he screamed, because he knew that no matter how good a repair shop tried to fix it, the car would never be the same again.
At that moment, a police officer came by, and Vincent ran up to him yelling, "My Beamer was just ruined by some idiot truck driver! Can't you do something?" To which the police officer responded, "Sir, it's just a car, and in any case the car should be the least of your worries--it looks like that truck tore your left arm completely off at the shoulder!
In Shock, Vincent looked down at the mangled shoulder where his left arm had once been, and with a horrified yelp, exclaimed, "Oh No! Where's my Rolex?"
We may laugh at this extreme example, but how often are we, too, blinded to the damage caused by our passionate pursuit of possessions? I'm always confounded this time of year by reports of Black Friday shoppers aggressively elbowing, shoving, or otherwise causing harm to each other in order to grab the last great deal off the shelf...something that is presumably intended to be a gift to a friend or family member given in the kind and generous Spirit of Christmas.
By now, we all know (even if our actions don't always reflect it) that the only antidote to greed is generosity. This is a teaching that all major world religions agree upon.
In the Muslim Q'ran, we read that "You cannot attain righteousness until you give to charity from the possessions you love. Whatever you give to charity, GOD is fully aware thereof."
And in the Hindu Bhagavad Gita, we read that "A gift that is given without any expectation of appreciation or reward is beneficial to both giver and recipient," while a "gift that is given reluctantly and with the expectation of some advantage is harmful to both giver and recipient."
In the New Testament, we find the words of Jesus, who says that "it is more blessed to give than to receive."
And even outside of religion, in the realm of science, a recent study of 2,000 individuals by sociologists at the University of Notre Dame discovered that across all income levels, those who give a significant portion of their income to charity are happier, healthier, and more successful in their career goals than those who do not. A similar study from the University of Buffalo discovered that (again, across all income levels) those who give more tend to live longer, and stay healthy for longer as well.
Boy, have we got an opportunity for you today!
We are nearing the end of our annual stewardship campaign, where we remind our members of their commitment to give to support the ministries of the church, and where we remind our long-term visitors and friends that they too, can reap the amazing benefits of generosity by making a pledge of support to First Presbyterian Church in 2018. If you haven't taken the time to fill out a pledge card and put it in the offering plate, please do so today!
As we talk about stewardship this year, we're also talking about stew (the kind you eat) and using this as a metaphor for our giving. The words stew appears two-and-a-half places in the entire Bible. We talked about those first two places the past two weeks, and so today we come to the "half." I say half, because the words stew *barely* appears in today's passage, among a list of other things in an obscure legal question raised by the equally obscure Old Testament prophet, Haggai.
If last week's prophet, Elisha, lived in the shadow of the great prophet Elijah, then Haggai must have lived in the dark. He doesn't feature in very many sermons, songs, hymns, or works of art, and his book is only two chapters long.
But Haggai shows up at a very important time in the story of ancient Israel--the Jewish people have returned from their 40 year exile and captivity in Babylon, and have begun to rebuild the great temple in Jerusalem. Barely begun, that is. Really, all they did was lay the foundation, and then they kind of forgot about it for the next 18 years, as they went about the business of rebuilding their own homes and lives in their ancestral city.
When asked about the progress of the temple, the people say (in chapter 1 of Haggai) "It isn't the right time yet" which is a variation on the age-old excuse, "We don't have time for that right now. Our plates are pretty full." Sound familiar?
Enter the prophet Haggai. God, speaking through Haggai, says, "Wait a minute...what? Is it the 'right time' for you to live in your nice, finished homes while MY home sits in ruins?" God goes on to say (again through Haggai)
"Take a good, hard look at your life. Think it over. You have spent plenty of money, but you don't have much to show for it. You keep filling your plates, but you never get filled up. You keep drinking and drinking, but you're always thirsty. You keep putting on clothes, but you can't stay warm. And those of you who earn wages, you're just putting your wages into a bag full of holes."
Essentially, the people of Jerusalem are spinning their wheels in pursuit of things that have no power to fulfill them, while the one thing that can is the one thing they have neglected for so long. Again...sound familiar?
Growing up in my six-person family, there was never any question if, whether, or which of the evening leftovers would go into the giant stew-pot that lived in the freezer. Each night, everything that wasn't eaten for dinner got added to that stew pot and frozen, waiting to be thawed, reheated, and reclaimed at the end of the week. The only real question was how this particular leftover ingredient or that would affect the taste and character of the stew when the pot was full. And despite some highly questionable additions (like pancakes, or spaghetti, or applesauce) somehow the stew always ended up being surprisingly good--and completely different every week!
Story of the spoons in heaven/hell