PREACHED ON THE SUNDAY BEFORE THANKSGIVING, November 18, 2018
Scripture readings: Psalm 104:1-24; Luke 12:22-34
A woman
was at work when she got a call from her babysitter. The sitter told her that
her daughter was very sick with a fever.
A Few Family Photos Over the Years |
So, the
woman left work, and raced to the drugstore, to get some medicine for her
daughter. When she got back to her car, she found that she had locked herself
out. She ran back into the store, and she called home, and she told the
babysitter what was wrong, and the babysitter told her that her daughter was
getting worse and that, maybe, she could get a coat-hanger to open the car. The
store-clerk gave her a hanger and she ran back to her car.
She was panicking
now. She suddenly realized that she had no idea how to unlock a car door with a
coat-hanger. She prayed desperately for God to help her.
Suddenly
a beat-up old car, covered with bumper-stickers, pulled up next to hers. Out
came this hulking-bearded guy, with tattoos, and a biker’s jacket, and a skull
rag on this head.
He asked
if he could help. The woman told him about her daughter and her keys: “Can you
use this hanger to unlock my car?” And he says, “Sure thing!”
In a few
seconds, he gets the door open. The woman jumps on him and hugs him tight. Tears
running down her smiling face, she says, “Thank you, sir! Thank you, sir!
You’re such a nice man!”
The guy
says, “No ma’am, I’m not nice at all. I just got out of prison this morning. I
was in for car theft. I got released just a few hours ago.”
The woman
laughs, and cries, and hugs him again, and prays, “Thank you, Lord! Thank you
for sending me a professional!”
OK, the
verse we read from Luke don’t have the word “thanks”. Jesus is talking about
worry. Actually, he’s talking about the antidote, the treatment, for worry.
Worry is one of the enemies of thanksgiving. We, on the other hand, seem to
have designed our special Thanksgiving Day to be full of stuff to worry about:
perfect travels, perfect timing, perfect meals, and no family feuding.
Thanksgiving
Day is the celebration of being people whose very nation is built on the
heritage of giving great thanks. The Pilgrim’s experience taught them to think
of their presence in this land as a divine miracle, and that the Native
Americans were a part of that miracle, and the Pilgrims shared that celebration
day with them. At least that’s what they say. They must have done something
right that day. Plymouth Colony never fought the Native Americans and never
needed to.
What if
we thought that our presence, here in this land, was not our own doing, but a
miracle from God, so that we didn’t have to worry? If you know that you are
living a gift from God, you worry less and give more thanks.
So,
Thanksgiving is a celebration, and you can’t celebrate when you’re worried. You
might be able to fake a smile, but you’re not really celebrating. You can’t.
One of
the treatments Jesus prescribes for worry is to think, and to think again.
Jesus names this kind of thinking: “consider”. “Consider some things.”
“Consider the ravens.” “Consider the lilies.” Considering has something to do
with how you think, and how you see.
Worry
doesn’t start with a feeling, and neither does thanks. Worry and thanksgiving
come from a state of mind, from a way of looking at your surroundings and your
life.
Jesus
says, “Look around you.” And it’s true that Jesus is being selective in what he
wants you to look at.
Jesus
points to the grass of the field. Well, you can walk out into some field in the
spring, and you can enjoy the fragrance and the wildflowers; but you could also
choose to think about snakes in the grass. In a cow pasture you might choose to
worry about other things hidden in the grass. Maybe you ought to take it all
in, but don’t let the snakes and the cow patties make you worry and forget
about the wild flowers of the field.
Jesus
says, “Look at the world around you.” Look at how things fit together. See how
they work. See how everything has a place. There is beauty. There is order.
There is precision. There is design. This world is a work of art created by
God. And you are a part of it. You also are a work of art.
Here is
something we can see more than ever before, through the gift of science, which
reveals more and more amazing things every day, things that cannot be
explained. Oh, science can explain a lot: how it works, a bit of how the whole
thing is inter-related, what it’s made of. But science can’t really explain why
everything is what it is; at least not in terms of purpose: past, or present,
or future.
Look at
your hands. When I was in high school a girl once told me that I had nice hands.
Of course, they’re getting wrinkled now. How complicated they are: and the
feet, and ankles: so many little bones. And the skin: how different it is on
the tops than it is on the palm and soles. Each person who has ever lived has a
unique set of fingerprints, and probably toe prints, too.
Yet, if
you looked inside your hand, at one, single cell; and if you were able to see
what goes on inside that cell, how it’s fed and renewed, you would see a
process that was just as beautiful as anything you could see with your naked
eye, or more so. Then, if you could look deeper into that cell if, you saw the
atoms, and the subatomic particles, and the pure energy making everything work
by its attractions and repulsions, and how it was all like some faint cloud,
maybe a shining mist interacting with other shining mists, which are each
other.
There’s
no end of design: no end of beauty. Infinite skill! Infinite wisdom. Infinite
care. Not so much because they have no end, but the end disappears into the heart
of the artist where they came from.
Jesus
says: consider, look, think, wonder. If you are still worried, think again.
There’s a
word called “providence”: Such a fancy word, and not just the name of a lot of
hospitals. It has to do with God: with God providing. The teacher J. Vernon
McGee had a definition of providence. He said, “Providence is the means by
which God directs all things – both animate and inanimate; seen and unseen;
good and evil – toward a worthy purpose, which means His will must finally
prevail.” Put more simply: God, in his love, does what’s best for us, and gives
us what we need. Thanksgiving comes from thinking, considering, and seeing
this.
Another
treatment for worry is to consider that you are important, that you matter,
that you matter more than the birds and the grass. You are the objects of God’s
faithful care and love.
Some
people have trouble with this; and there are lots of reason why this is. Some
people have been told they are worthless, or else they’ve been shown this
through others mistreating them, or abusing them.
Shame,
guilt, anger come from this. All of these, and more, are a kind of
unsettledness akin to worry because something has gone wrong, or something
hasn’t been resolved.
Sometimes
the frequent defeat of our hopes, and purposes, and plans discourages us and
causes us to doubt our value. Yet there are those whose lives have been marked
by never having anything or any prospects, and they may have great loves, and
great ambitions, and because they dare to hope, they will attempt seemingly
impossible goals (which are simply about being safe, and knowing the people you
love are safe, and secure, and well).
Such
people may be more thankful than the richest, and the most powerful, and the
most beautiful people in the world. Nothing stands between them and God.
There is
something different in human beings that Jesus says is of special value. Jesus
says that life is more than food, and the body more than clothes. Do you
realize how strange that could sound? How can life be more than food if you
will die without food? How is the body more than clothes if, outside, in Desert
Aire and Mattawa, in winter, your body will certainly die without clothes?
What
Jesus is saying is that there is something in human life that is not physical
and not material. The word that Jesus uses for our life, here, is the word for
soul. “Do not worry about your soul, what you shall eat. . . for the soul is
more than food.” (Luke 12:22-23)
You are a
soul. You have a spiritual life that is stronger than your physical life and
accomplishes more. Jesus wants you to know that this makes you a being of
tremendous worth to him. This is the Lord who so much loved your life within
your body that he became human with a body of the same status as your own.
His death
on the cross, that was made possible by his being one of us, is part of the
treasure that makes his love so beautiful to us, and still makes us more
beautiful to him. But there is something eternal in each one of you and me that
the Lord Jesus treasures.
Consider
this, when you think about your worries, and your defeats, and your survival.
You are a treasure to others. You are a treasure to God. Keep thinking about
this.
There was
a girl who was asked what she looked for in a guy. Her answer was, “How he fits
his blue jeans.” (Well, there are boys who look for similar stuff in girls.)
These are values and expectations that won’t last, especially not long past
forty.
There is
something spiritual, eternal in us, that is made for everlasting life with God,
made for an everlasting home. Caring about that life, in ourselves and in
others, will give us values that last.
Those who
know the Lord have a different set of concerns. We have our hearts set on
different things. We’re motivated by different loves. To be in your garden in
the morning, to look in on your children, or grandchildren, or so on, when
they’re in bed (and not just to say, “Thank God they’re asleep.”), to look into
the face of someone you love who is still willing to put up with you, to make
something that runs well, that works well, that looks good, or tastes good, or
to hear or read a word that God speaks to you…in an instant you know, at least
for a moment, that your life is an awesome gift, and that you and they mean
something. This is an antidote for worry.
You
already know that this is part of thanksgiving. Just don’t forget it. Some
people forget.
Jesus
says, “Do not set your heart on what you will eat or drink; do not worry about
it. For the pagan world runs after all such things, and your Father knows that
you need them.”
Jesus
isn’t saying, “Don’t work.” Jesus worked as a carpenter to support his mother,
brothers, and sisters. When they were old enough, Jesus left that work, for
something much bigger and harder, in the end.
Jesus’
work on this earth made our work just as holy as his first work creating time,
and space, and the structures of the cosmos. Jesus’ work on the cross and in
the resurrection enable all our work, and all that we work for, to have eternal
significance.
Jesus
says to work for ourselves and for others, and to work and live for bigger
reasons and for bigger gifts. Live a life that’s different from what many
others work for, because you know that your life, and the lives of others, is a
treasure.
Jesus
says, “Seek his kingdom, and these things will be given to you as well.”
There was
a native Christian pastor in Laos some time past. The communist government there
wanted to stop him from preaching. They wanted to stop his church from meeting
and growing. They sent soldiers to his house. The soldiers gathered the pastor
and his family together. They held a gun to the head of the pastor’s
twelve-years-old son. They told the pastor to deny his faith. But, before the
pastor could say anything, the boy spoke up and said that he would never betray
Jesus. So, the soldiers shot him on the spot. The same thing happened with the
pastor’s wife. They took the pastor away to a prison work-camp.
Eventually,
he escaped to Thailand, where he devoted himself to sharing Christ among the
other refugees. Even though, by some standards, it could be said that he had
lost everything he held dear in life, yet, by his standards, he had not lost
everything. He followed Jesus who had lost everything for him, and who held
everything the pastor held dear in his own hands.
He heard
the voice that says, “But seek his kingdom, and these things will be give to
you as well.” He shared this Christ with others out of a thankful heart. People
who know the Lord find that their hearts are set on different things, and that
they are motivated by a different love.
Jesus says,
“Do not be afraid, little flock, for your Father has been pleased to give you
the kingdom. Sell your possessions and give to the poor. Provide purses for
yourselves that will not wear out, a treasure in heaven that will not be
exhausted.” Here Jesus says: know what counts and live accordingly.
When
Jesus said to cut off your hand or pluck out your eye, if they cause you to
sin; he was using strong, shocking language simply to say: take this seriously
or you will be saying “no” to my life.
When
Jesus said to be ready to sell what you have: he was using strong language
simply to say: make a real choice about where you stand. How will you live, and
what will you live for, if you believe that your Father has been pleased to
give you his kingdom?
What does
“his kingdom” mean? A kingdom is wherever its king rules, wherever the king’s
will is done. It means that you live a life in which God truly rules. God
provides for you. God works with you, and in you, and through you, and around
you. You live where God’s plan is at work, under God’s protection, in God’s
peace.
Heaven is
yours. The coming kingdom is yours.
In a very
real way, God has given you his kingdom already. You have come home. You have
come inside.
God gave
us his kingdom when Jesus died for us on the cross. Jesus carried whatever
separates us from God and each other. He carried those things on the cross. So,
that separation, whether it formed a wall or a chasm, has been broken down and
bridged over with the cross.
This is
the same thing John was talking about when he said, “God so loved the world
that he gave his only begotten son, that whoever believes in him should not
perish, but have everlasting life.” (John 3:16)
Knowing
the Lord is all about receiving a gift from someone who loves you, and whose
love you can trust. This is the antidote for worry. This is where real
thanksgiving comes from.
Thank you for another beautifully written sermon.
ReplyDeleteThanks also for sharing the photos.