Matthew 4: 12-23
1 Corinthians 1: 10-18
January 22, 2023
Rev. Dr. Galen E. Russell III
“For Christ did not send me to baptize but to proclaim the gospel, and not with eloquent wisdom, so that the cross might not be emptied of its power.”
Prayer: O God, as our light and our salvation, please won’t you shine your light on our paths that we may see your way and follow in your footsteps. In Christ, we pray, Amen.
Are any of you Philadelphia Eagle fans? [raise your hands]. Yeah, that’s me. Or New York Giant fans? Well, too bad for you that the Eagles beat the Giants last night. And, great for you if you’re an Eagle fan. Are any of you Pittsburgh Steeler fans? Or Baltimore Raven fans? Only Baltimore is in the playoffs still. But, it’s all NFL football, right?
Lots of Philadelphia fans are here, yes? [raise your hands]. Yeah, that’s me. Some Yankee fans? Yes? Boston Red Sox? Pittsburgh Pirates? Baltimore Orioles? [raise hands] But, its all Major League Baseball.
We might consider different churches in the same way. We have lots of different Protestant churches right here in E-town. Of course, we belong to the UCC. But, others in town belong to the United Methodist, Church of God, Baptist, Presbyterian, Lutheran, and a variety of Brethren churches. There’s Mennonite and Episcopalian, Quakers, Moravians, Seventh Day Adventists, and Jehovah Witnesses. And that’s just for starters. There are different denominations of churches all over the US. But, we’re all Christians.
And, there are non-denominational churches like LifeGate, LCBC, Grace Chapel, Mount Calvary Church, and more. And, of course there’s the Catholic Church which is a branch all by itself, and it has a bunch of divisions as well. There are literally hundreds, maybe thousands of churches and denominations that make up the Christian Church, but we’re all Christians. There’s been squabbles and quarrels on this and that subject, and one group will split off and make a new church, while others see similarities and join together. But, we’re all Christians.
I like what Frederick Buechner wrote about the Christian Church: “There’s no reason why everyone should be Christian in the same way and every reason to leave room for differences, but if all the competing factions of Christendom were to give as much of themselves to the high calling and holy hope that unite them as they do now to the relative inconsequentialities that divide them, the church would look more like the Kingdom of God for a change and less like an ungodly mess (Buechner, Frederick, Whistling in the Dark, A Doubter’s Dictionary, HarperCollins, San Francisco, 1993, pgs. 37-8). Well said, Rev. Buechner! What I hear him saying is that the em-PHA-sis is on the wrong sy-LA-ble!
Even though Jesus prayed for the church “that they may all be one,” (John 17: 21) that unity is elusive. It’s like the rabbit out in front of the racing greyhounds. Never quite able to reach it. It’s because of the human-factor. Human nature allows for choice. And of course that brings in agreements and disagreements, which have happened ever since the beginning of the Christian Church.
Paul became aware of the quarrels and divisions within the newly established church in Corinth. Back in those days, because of the culture where different leaders and teachers had disciples (like John the Baptist had his, Jesus had his, etc.), those followers aligned themselves with those leaders. It created a sense of belonging and allegiance. Which is what our human nature makes us prone to do sometimes.
However, it can divide us. Make us competitive. And it can start arguments. And it’s easy to get caught in the ‘if you don’t agree with me, I’m done with you,’ mentality. There’s a lot of that today. Or worse, ‘I will insist on my own way, even violently if necessary,’ which is totally outside of God’s way shown in Christ.
But Paul appeals for unity in Christ. Has Christ been divided? No. Christ is one. Was Paul crucified for you? No. It was Christ who died for you. Were you baptized in the name of Paul? No. You were baptized in the name of Christ. Paul ways saying the em-PHA-sis is on the wrong sy-LA-ble!
Paul then says he’s grateful that he baptized only a few people so this ‘allegiance to Paul’ thing can’t get much traction. He makes it clear that allegiance is to God, not to who baptized you. Put the emphasis on the right thing. Because Paul did not come to baptize people. Instead, he came to preach gospel of Jesus Christ. Not with fancy words or flashy PowerPoint slides. Just preach the good news of what God did in Christ for humanity, and let the Spirit of God go to work in the listener.
And the Good News of Christ for everyone is this: that Christ’s death on the cross reveals God’s power to break the power of sin, evil, and spiritual death because God raised Christ from death into life. So to believe he is the Christ, or to be baptized in his name, or to follow in his ways means we can live a new way of life. Believe in Christ, have new life. Sounds like a mantra! Believe in Christ, have a new way of life. And that new way of life is the realm of God coming into existence within you and me.
Which is exactly what Jesus was talking about when he started his ministry. He told people to repent—which means to turn around from ways that are not God’s ways and turn toward the way of life called the realm of God which has come near.
Call it the realm of God, the kingdom of God, the kindom of heaven, call it life after death, call it whatever you like, it is not a place, but instead it’s the effect of God reigning in our lives. Remember that Jesus said that “my kingdom is not of this world (John 18: 36). That’s because it’s when God has the highest influence of love, holiness, justice and peace upon us. It’s realizing that the way we see the world has changed. We see it from God’s perspective with new insights.
Which I think means, among other things, understanding that in God’s realm the poor, the lost, the unwelcomed, the marginalized of society are given dignity and importance and full rights just as everyone else here in our world. It means that the powerful and privileged of society can in the name of Jesus give up entitlements and stretch to lift up others who are not so advantaged. It means people of faith speaking and acting in the name of Jesus to dismantle the structures and systems that support the divisions of society.
It means people of faith making diligent efforts to not silence voices of opposition, but instead call for dialogue and openness to hear each other out. To believe and practice that everyone has a place at the table. That every voice at the table is important. The conservative and the liberal are to converse together. The Christian nationalist and the Christian Realm-ist are to hear each other out. And then come to a place of reconciliation and mutual acceptance.
Can we put the emphasis on the power of loving relationships, not in rightness or wrongness of faith, theology, or even cultural understanding? Can we put our interests, our allegiances, our perspectives, even our differences and conflicts in the context of God’s reconciling love and Jesus’ way which reveals God’s vision of Shalom? And then act?
What I’m saying is like a legendary story of Queen Victoria of England way back in the late 1800s, hosting a state dinner for a visiting King of Africa. Everything elegant was set. The finest china, crystal, long tables, guests all dressed up, the whole nine yards. In front of each guest, the was a finger bowl: a tiny container filled with water, with a piece of lemon rind floating in it so the guests could cleanse their fingers before eating. The African King, however, was from a totally different culture, and not knowing what to do, picked up the finger bowl and drank the water! GASP! The room fell silent. Everyone saw what the king did, but nobody knew what to do about it. There seemed no way to recover gracefully, without the king being publicly embarrassed. Except what Queen Victoria did next didn’t miss a beat. Reaching for her own finger bowl, she lifted it to her lips and swiftly drank the water. And everyone else did the same. An embarrassing moment was averted, and the honored guest was made to feel at home (Healing Divisions over Dinner | Homiletics Online , retrieved January 21, 2023).
That’s what I’m talking about. Can we emphasize doing things in the context of God’s reconciling love and Jesus’ way, to help another person feel at home? Can we place emphasis on working toward a world that is safe and just for all? A place where each of us can feel at home? A place where there is room enough for our differences and big enough for everyone? That’s emphasis on the right syllable.
Because we’re all Christians. We’re all invited to be part of God’s realm. People all over the world. Every tribe, every tongue, every nation. It’s all God’s people singing glory, glory, hallelujah, God reigns. God reigns.
I’d like to close by sharing a song from the Newsboys called “He Reigns.” Please look past the non-inclusive God language in the title of this song and place the emphasis on the message of God and God’s realm reigning in our lives, and in the lives of Christians everywhere. Amen.
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