Romans 4: 1-5,13-17
John 3: 1-17
March 5, 2023
Rev. Dr. Galen E. Russell III
“Very truly, I tell you, we speak of what we know and testify to what we have seen; yet you do not receive our testimony. If I have told you about earthly things and you do not believe, how can you believe if I tell about heavenly things?”
Prayer: Eternal God, may we open ourselves up to you and let you prod us and move us to the deeper truths you desire us to know. Amen.
About three weeks ago, I saw an ad on TV that I could trade my old phone in for a new one. Just go to AT&T and get started. And, Barb got an email that offered her a new iPhone that if purchased in the store was cheaper per month than if she ordered it online. So, off to AT&T we went. And I got a new phone to replace my old
phone which I got in 2018, and Barb got her new iPhone to replace the one we got her in 2016!
And, no surprise here, phone technology has really changed over that period of time! Not to mention that the phone plans we were on really changed as well, as in, they weren’t offered any more. And the prices for the new plans were considerably LESS than what we were paying on the old plan. Plus, my phone came with a new watch for half price! So, win-win all around!
And I was like, what’s the catch? Well, the catch is that the technology and how to use it is new. I’m still on the learning curve with what buttons to push to get my clock back on display. And for both Barb’s new phone and mine, what I’m calling the “Home” button, which was a real button, on our old phones is gone! Oh, the button is there, it’s just not a real “button” anymore. It’s part of the icons.
I’ll get the hang of it, of course, with practice and usage, but I have to expand my mindset. I have to learn new techniques. Because the old stuff no longer applies.
Nicodemus shows up one night where Jesus is staying, maybe as a representative of a group of Pharisees. He says to Jesus that they’ve been impressed by the works, the “signs” that Jesus was doing. You must be from God in order to do such amazing things, he says. No one can do them without God’s Presence. That’s Nicodemus’ pinpoint focus. He and his Pharisee friends basically only see the amazing signs Jesus was doing.
But Jesus invites Nicodemus to expand his mindset from that pinpoint to a much wider focus. Jesus says you can’t see God’s realm unless you’re born from above, which I take to mean, “You think these signs you see are because of the Presence of God? Yeah, but not just these signs. You have to be born from above to see the entire realm of God all around you because of the Presence of God.” Mind blown.
But, the trouble is, expanding your mindset is not an easy thing sometimes. Change is not always a walk in the park. It’s hard for Nicodemus to get his head around the ‘born from above’ part. He doesn’t get that Jesus’ earthly example—when you’re born into this world, you’re born in the flesh and of water—speaks of heavenly truth—when you’re born spiritually, you’re born in the Spirit. And that spiritual rebirth, that infusion of God’s Presence into your life is like the wind—you can’t see it, but you sure can feel the effects of it.
Nicodemus though, still stuck in the earthly realm, still dependent upon what he thinks he knows asks, How can these things be? How is this possible?
And Jesus is like, “What? You’re a teacher of Israel, and you don’t get it? We’ve been telling everyone what we know about God, and God’s realm and God’s Spirit, and you reject what we’re saying. I’ve been using earthly examples to help you believe, but you don’t. If I have told you earthly things and you don’t believe, how can you believe if I tell you about heavenly things?”
So, here’s the thing, dear Church. Jesus’ words are for us. Jesus is teaching us heavenly things. Can we use Jesus’ words to help us move from earthly things and ideas to heavenly ones?
On our spiritual journey this Lenten season, I’m encouraging us to expand and open our hearts and our minds to run from what you think you know already, which 99% of the time is what gets in the way of us expanding and growing. And run toward the heavenly truths that God invites us to absorb and live in.
But, it takes faith. It takes faith to help us expand beyond what we think we know. Faith, like the faith of Abraham. Faith that uses the head and the heart. Faith that God will stretch you. And expand you into new heavenly things.
It’s kind of like having faith that God is singing a love song to you in your inner life. Because God has incredible love for you. And for the world. It’s a song that sings of eternal life coming within you. That’s God in you. That’s Love in you. Right now. God sings, we hum along. And life begins. We’re often think that eternal life happens when life ends. I think we’re better off believing that eternal life is when life begins. It’s God’s song in you right now. Life going forward begins right now in a new way for you.
And when you choose to have that song play in your heart and your mind now, you begin to see things differently. Earthly things, like having the newest and best-est stuff—that doesn’t have as much pull anymore. Because, ultimately, having stuff can’t fill us. It’s empty. Earthly concepts like relying on your own common sense as the main guide for your life, or following all the rules and regulations to justify your actions, even if it means others are unjustly treated, or sticking with the age-old idea that you have to earn God’s love—all these, in the end are empty and lose their validity when you let God’s love song sing in you.
And yet we continue to make our own music and move with our own rhythms apart from God’s song. Our earthly songs of power and domination, greed and violence, racism and religism, and all other songs like it—these are our songs sung in a different key. We think these are forever a part of us. We think we can’t do much about them. But in truth, they are all hollow, empty, meaningless and are off-key from God’s song.
And we can do something about them. We can run from these earthly things that are empty. But, it takes our choice. It takes our discipline. It takes our desire to expand and sing God’s song in our hearts. Because God’s love is on the move, inviting us to expand with God constructing ever larger and more expansive circles of love to others. Ever-widening expressions of justice and fairness, grace and forgiveness.
Paul asks his readers to understand that God’s Promise is not dependent upon doing good works. Instead it is dependent upon having faith in God. Because things of the earth do not have the ability to give us God’s Promise. Only love for God does that. Earthly concepts do not renew our inner spirit. Only grace does that. So then God’s Promise rests on the love and grace of God, not on our good works that we do, not on our wealth or riches, not on our smarts or our privilege, not on our fine-tuned abilities. It takes love, grace, and faith.
On Thursday, my brother visited me, and we were working in my workshop because he loves wood working, too. And as he was putting some wood putty in the corner gap of a cabinet door frame I made that didn’t quite fit right, which is par for the course, he laughed and said, “Heh, shims, caulk, and paint will make a carpenter what he ain’t.” I laughed. “Where’d you get that?” He said, “Off a Home Depot video or something.”
But, I thought about that… and it’s true. Shims, caulk and paint will cover up the mistakes and make a not-so-good carpenter look good. And, the more I thought about that, I realized that the earthly things of shims, caulk and paint are speaking a heavenly truth. So with just a little tweaking of the words, listen to God’s truth: “Love, grace, and faith will make every saint what they ain’t.” See?
The only difference is—it’s not a cover-up. Our sins, our mistakes are not covered up. From God’s point of view, they’re seen, forgiven, then gone. When you said that bad word. When you ignored that person in need. When you failed in whatever. Expand your faith to believe that from God’s perspective they’re gone. Because it’s God’s love. And your love. Combined. God’s grace. Your grace. God’s faith. Your faith. All of it combined makes you a saint through and through. Completely. From God’ s point of view, because of Christ, our sins are gone. From there, we’ve been set free. Now we live differently.
It’s God’s promise made true because of love, grace, and faith. And the promise is life with God. Redemption and grace from God. Light and wisdom by God. Strength and courage in God.
Faith that God’s promise is for all. You perceive that promise is true when you have faith.
We can expand on that promise when we follow Jesus, even when it takes us to the cross of emptying of ourselves of earthly things. But it moves us to heavenly things—living eternal life now. Being with God now, as Christ is with God now. Being with each other now as Christ is with us. Now.
Let us stand and sing of the new life in Christ that fills us now and the promise of new life “beyond the river.” Amen.
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