Rev. Fa Lane | July 7, 2024
1 Samuel 5:1-5; 2 Corinthians 12:2-10
Today and each week we gather as a congregation to thank God for all the blessings we have. We commit ourselves to service in Christ’s name to improve the world we live in so that it aligns with God’s better vision for the world. It is a vision written in Isaiah 61 that speaks of good news to the poor, care for the broken-hearted and the value of freedom for all.
In two weeks, Christ Church will serve through the new and exciting venture called Threads and Treads - a Saturday full of activities for families with food trucks and games. We pray that the proceeds raised will provide good news to the school kids who will be given new shoes or clothes that fit. May our collective efforts encourage the broken-hearted parents who are doing their best to provide for their children but need a little help.
Prophets, like Isaiah, spoke the words God had given them, words of warning to kings and words of inspiration to a nation’s people to provide justice and liberty, hope and peace for the world. Lord, help us to hear your words today too and do your bidding.
At the end of the time of Judges, when the Israelites favored wanting a king like other nations had, they clamored for Saul, and later for David to be crowned King. The people turned from the judges and prophets who spoke of living according to God’s word. They exchanged their unique relationship with God for a government led by a king who would rule their lives. It was the choice of the people to give away their power to a monarchy.
We read in the history books of the Bible of the Kings’ victories and of their sins, of the stability they achieved and the terrible wars and quests for domination of neighboring tribes.
You can trace through the Bible the thread of selfishness in the tapestry of coveted grandeur that tore apart and threw together people of different cultures and traditions. Religion and Politics have been strange bedfellows ever since Constantine put the cross on his warrior’s shields beginning a pattern of using Christianity to inspire Nationalism.
Constantine, whose mother was Christian, had a super-natural vision on the out skirts of Rome just before a great battle. The story goes that in the vision he was told to put the sign of the Christian cross on his soldier’s shields. One historian said it was a vision of a fiery cross with the words meaning “in this sign you shall conquer.” Visions can be very powerful encouragement.
The Apostle Paul, too, could tell of the vision he experienced on the Damascus Road. In our reading today he says: “ I know a person in Christ who fourteen years ago was caught up to the third heaven—whether in the body or out of the body I do not know; God knows.” He speaks of himself and his conversion on the road to Damascus. “And I know that such a person—whether in the body or out of the body I do not know; God knows— was caught up into paradise and heard things that are not to be told, that no mortal is permitted to repeat.”
The reason he writes of this to the church at Corinth, is that at this point in his ministry, Paul has to contend with false apostles who were speaking to the Corinthians to whom he had ministered. They tried to smear his reputation among the Corinthians and out maneuver him. He goes on the defense and accuses them of treating the Corinthians as fools. In verse 20, he writes, “For you put up with it when someone makes slaves of you or preys upon you or takes advantage of you or puts on airs or gives you a slap in the face.”
This all sounds oddly familiar, in this election cycle, does it not?
Paul accuses these ‘fake-apostles’ who opposed him of misleading the people with insinuations and bragging too much. But unlike some blustery, charismatic personalities with no decorum or boundaries, Paul is reticent to repeat the tale of his dramatic religious experience. He could boast but chooses the better path of giving the victory to God. “On behalf of such a one who was “raptured right up to paradise” I will boast; but on my own behalf I will not boast, except of my weaknesses.
Paul contested these imposters who were preaching quite another Jesus than the one Paul preached. He called these scam artists money-grubbing preachers giving themselves special status as Christ’s agents.
Paul knew his witness to Christ was strong and valid. He had shared with the Corinthians his experience of being ‘raptured right up to paradise in the ‘third heaven’. But, in his letter he chose not to boast of his own abilities to withstand imprisonment, illness, shipwrecks, being stoned and so on.
In the previous chapter, Paul writes that he could have picked up the habit of bragging like those charlatans, but they didn’t have anything on him. Paul had worked harder and endured more than they had He could have bragged about all that he had suffered, but he chose, instead, to turn the focus on the grace of Jesus Christ. “I’ll brag about the humiliations that make me like Jesus”. He reveals his brokenness, his faults and weaknesses. All because he had learned that God’s grace was sufficient in his failures.
Paul gave away his right to brag choosing instead to be humble and give God glory. The Christian community sometimes forgets that Christ’s grace is sufficient for it every time it seeks to secure its existence in the world by means of its own strength and influence, every time it allies itself with worldly power rather than allowing Christ to be revealed in its weakness.
It goes against our nature to show no weakness. It’s a message we get from all sectors of life. From high school football games to courtroom proceedings to closed-door arguments with people we love, we’re taught explicitly and subconsciously to show no weakness, no cracks in our armor, no sign that we’re limited or incapable. But Paul writes, “So I will boast all the more gladly of my weaknesses, so that the power of Christ may dwell in me.”
Humility is a sign of Christ in your life. But, our society has been practicing the self-sufficiency model for so long and hardening our hearts and minds against one another. Some see humility as unbecoming. Some have become indifferent to the plight of other or hostile for fear of losing something. We can not bear the unintended slight. We do not have grace for mistakes, or perceived weakness. We bully or make pre-emptive moves to stay in a position of power. We’ve forgotten the way we taught our children to play nice, to share, to forgive. Do you remember Robert Fulghum’s book All I Really Needed to Know I Learned in Kindergarten?
It's one of those Facebook quotes that gets picked up and sent again and again. It’s a poem, a proverbial reminder to keep life simple and kind. There are ideas like “Share everything. Play fair. Don't hit people. Put things back where you found them. Clean up your own mess. Don't take things that aren't yours. Say you're sorry when you hurt somebody. When you go out in the world, watch out for traffic, hold hands, and stick together.”
I hope these are still being taught in school. These are ways to share the power of humility. When we humble ourselves before God and confess our times of needs, our temptations and weaknesses, we learn more about God’s love.
The children who will receive clothes and shoes from the funds raised at the Threads and Treads event will hear of an experience where people shared out of love.
Our strength is not in our jobs or possessions or titles. Our strength is not ever ‘our’ strength, it’s God’s gift of love. Humility is the strength needed when everything is going wrong, when you’re scared, when you’re desperate. It’s the strength to leave your ego behind and submit to the power that is in the love of God which knows best.
As a prayer practice using paper hearts you received at the door, I invite you to consider how God is calling you to recognize your weaknesses. Write your answers on a heart and place them in the offering plate on the worship table after the service. Let us er God our weaknesses, knowing that God loves us in our weakness—not in spite of—but even in our weaknesses.
We are united through the love of God and the grace of Christ to be one. No matter who we are or where we are on life’s journey.
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