February 17 Deuteronomy 26.1-11, *Romans 10.8b-13 “Abundant
Love – No Shame”
This week we heard that Pope Benedict is leaving his post
within two weeks. This creates a few rumbles around the religious world. He is
breaking a 600 year-old tradition that holds that the job of pope is not over
until you leave this earth. What’s
helpful about the rumbling is that the pope draws our attention to the church
in Rome. The church to whom apostle Paul wrote the letter from which we read this
morning.
Rome, Italy was the heart of the Roman Empire whose
aristocracy has impacted so much of our modern society. Our libraries and
courthouses have Roman columns and fountains.
Children use Roman numerals in school and study the works of Michelangelo
and Leonardo Da Vinci.
If you have visited St. Peter’s square, you are perhaps an
eyewitness to the 4000 year old red granite Egyptian obelisk – a 453 foot high
pillar that was moved with the force of 1000 men, 140 carthorses, 47 ancient cranes.
Architect Benini’s fountain is in the square that stands just before St.
Peter’s Basilica, the church where St. Peter is commonly said to be buried. St
Peters is not far from the Sistine Chapel where Michelangelo painted 12,000 square
feet of the creation story with 300 figures.
Our Christian roots encompass the vastness of a Rome that is
still so breathtaking in its reminders of the Church that existed there in the
first century when Paul wrote his letter.
The first century was a time of political turmoil and great
debate about Christianity in the Roman Empire. Emperor worship was preferred
over the worship of God. You can imagine the competition. You can imagine the
tension in the air when Paul dares to write a letter of encouragement and
direction to the church in Rome. There was a great deal of tension. Suspects
were getting arrested, acts of violence were a regular threat, there were more fearful
frowns than sweet smiles in many neighborhoods.
Humans in this world are still learning the art of smiling in
the midst of tension. There is an art to disagreeing without being
disagreeable. It starts with our family history, our cultural history, our
political history. Then it all boils down to whether we even care enough to
speak the truth in love, whether we are disciplined enough to exhibit
self-control, whether we are secure enough not to be too defensive! Whether we
are skilled and determined enough to seek peace and pursue it as Psalm 34
directs us.
Paul writes the letter to the church in Rome in spite of the
threat of religious terrorists. It is no surprise that terrorists were part of
the ancient world. They are certainly a part of OUR world. According to one
graduate of Princeton and the University of Pennsylvania, (Austin Cline), since
9/11, there have been 45 domestic terrorist plots involving Muslims. On the
other hand, there were 80 terrorist plots by non-Muslims. There were 63
domestic terrorist plots involving Christians –anti abortionists, racial
supremacists and others. We see this with the suicide plane attack on a Texas
IRS building in 2010, the bombing of the Arizona Office of Diversity and Dialogue that injured three
employees in 2003, and the torching of a Planned Parenting clinic last year.
Just last week there was a report that arsonists had set fire to 4 United
Methodist churches in North Carolina. This week’s news also indicated that
efforts to resolve conflicts in Syria came to a halt because both sides simply refused
to come together to talk.
How blessed we are when we enjoy a season of rest and peace. Still,
we are not naïve enough to believe that times of peace and rest just happen.
Just as the devil is always busy, so God’s people are always busy. We know the
things that make for peace and we do them. We know how to access the
resurrection power that help us to be peacemakers, speak the truth in love,
create safe places for new people, dare to dialogue, care enough to
communicate, smile sweetly in the midst of tension, and speak the truth in
love.
We need the resurrection power to keep our hearts right with
God. If our hearts are right with God, they will be right with everyone else. As
Elaine Richardson reminded me a few weeks ago, we only love God as much as we
love the one we love the least. We only accept God as much as we accept the one
we accept the least.
For those who have everything they need, the resurrection is
crazy talk. Those who understood that we desperately need each other and we
desperately need the God who created us know that we die daily and we need the
power of the resurrection all the time to bring us new life.
To be without the resurrection power is a living hell. This
week a business woman in her thirties told me that she forgot all about God
until she realized she needed help running her business. In desperation, she
prayed and asked God for help and the very next day, she felt God’s presence in
a special way and made a pledge to keep her hand in God’s hand. She was
concerned about her husband who shares the business but does not share the
richness of her faith. She does not want to go to church without him. I
reminded her that just like she asked God’s help for her business, she can ask
God’s help for her husband. I am praying that she has the vision and the
courage to take the next step, whatever that might be.
Those who need God and care enough about people to learn to
speak the truth in love also care that Jesus was raised to a new life. They
care that the old ways can pass away and all things become new. The
resurrection power is the power of creation, the power of Spring, the power of
new beginnings, the power of holy change, healthy habits, and hearty hope. It
is a power that has touched all of our lives. That’s why we have an opportunity
to post something on the Resurrection Cross, noting – God Did It. God has done something awesome
in all of our lives. I hope you will take advantage of Linda Condy-Wynn’s
inspired artwork and make a post on the cross as an act of gratitude and
acknowledgement of God’s blessings.
We are not hopeless with the power of God on our side. We are
filled with hope. We know that our bodies can get better, that we can
endure every crisis with God’s grace. We know that loneliness won’t last
forever, that love can be had by all, that the fruit of the Spirit is
delicious, and if we dedicate our spiritual gifts to the Glory of God and
answer God’s call to serve, the church will thrive and flourish according to
God’s will, purpose and plan.
Verse 11 tells us that if we believe in God, we will not be
ashamed. In other words, God will not guilt us. Rather, believing puts us in
position to experience God being gracious to us. Our sins will not overcome us.
Believing puts us in position to experience Jesus as covering us with his
righteousness.
The journey of the Lenten season positions us to enjoy who we
are and whose we are. The altar is purple because the soldiers assigned to
detain Jesus mocked him by putting a purple robe on him. It is a dark purple
signifying the darkness of the crucifixion. He was accused of treason since he
was in Jerusalem which was officially territory ruled by the Roman Emperor, and
he was claiming to be the son of God, the king of Kings. Crowds were following
him and organizing around him. They followed him as if her were a king.
The synagogue rulers considered Jesus a threat because they
were afraid their synagogues would become emptier and emptier as the crowds
followed Jesus. The synagogue rulers had become more political than faithful at
that point. Some in the crowds that were now following Jesus were not
interested in a religion that was overgrown with hypocrisy and corruption. They
saw that Jesus was innocent, pure and kind. The Roman government used the
synagogue rulers as political allies to keep the little people in line.
The synagogue’s high standing with the Romans came because they had political
power and economic influence. They were afraid to lose it.
Caesars’s Roman governors were not threatened by Jesus, but
they did want to do favors for the Pharisees, the Sadducees, and the Sanhedrin who
ruled the synagogue. The Romans knew there was no real case against Jesus, but
to save their political connections, they arrested him. While abusing him, the Roman
soldiers laughed and draped a purple robe around his shoulders, and they took
it off before they led him to Calvary to be crucified. They had to take it off.
No one could be crucified wearing a king’s robe. We put it back on to remember
that Jesus rules our hearts and lives. In the Methodist church, Bishops wear a certain
shade of purple that other United Methodist Clergy don’t wear. The pope wears
symbols and liturgical garb that is only worn by the pope. If you do not work
for the government and you wear a government badge, you are considered
fraudulent. The soldiers took the purple robe off after they mocked him. The
king of Kings was now as low as one could get.
This morning we have read the 10th chapter of
Paul’s letter to the Romans, but in the first chapter Paul says I am not
ashamed of the gospel, because it is the power of God that brings salvation to
everyone who believes: first to the Jew, then to the Gentile.
Shame distracts us. Our lowliness is not our bottom line. Love takes away our shame. We
are royalty. We are children of the king. Our focus should always be on Jesus
when we are following him. The Lenten season is an invitation to follow him
more closely, knowing that in the light of his love we find the truth that sets
us free. With him we find the solution for all our problems and the strength
and courage we need to do what is important.
The Lenten season is an invitation for us to test our own
faithfulness. Mass media is such today that everywhere we turn we have an
opportunity to test ourselves. There are surveys to help us know if we are the
best parents we can be, if we indeed are happily married or likely to get the
next promotion on our jobs. Lent is a way to survey our covenant relationship
to our God.
Many people give up sweets for 40 days like I have decided to
do for the first time this year. The giving up does not necessarily include
giving up on Sundays because Sundays are not counted in the 40 days. Afterall,
Lent is not supposed to be a means of self-punishment for one’s guilt. Rather,
giving up something can help us come face to face with certain evil impulses lurking
in our midst. It can help us learn to resist temptation. We may never know how
strong the devil is in our homes and hearts until we try to resist the devil.
And, if we resist the devil, scriptures tell us the devil will run away. It
will be worth the fight as God leads us in the battle. We can trust God to help
us every step of the way.
You may have been through camp exercises where you are
invited to trust your group. They ask you to close your eyes and fall backwards
trusting that everyone will be there for you and catch you. In the same way, we
trust God. Lean back, lean back, lean back, all the way….all the way….all the
way…..so what happens next? Easter, of course. Easter. We can trust God without
shame!! Amen.
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