John 10: 1-10
1 Peter 2: 19-25
April 30, 2023
Rev. Dr. Galen E. Russell III
“For to this you have been called, because Christ also suffered for you, leaving you an example, so that you should follow in his footsteps.”
Prayer: May we learn to follow you, O Christ; I mean really follow you. Amen.
As many of you know, Barb and I are experiencing the joy of having grandchildren, now going on three years. We have four from three families and one more is on the way! Whoo hoo!
When they are that little, most of us look at the baby and try and see which parent the child looks like, right? I mean we say, “Oh, I see her mother in her.” Or “He’s a spitting image of his dad!” Or, “She has her granddad’s nose” (poor thing!) Or, “He has his mother’s eyes,” and so on.
On some occasions, as in the case of my youngest granddaughter, I was having a hard time seeing which parent she favored… until I saw a picture of her mom when she was a baby! Oh my! Now there’s the family resemblance! Our 6 month old granddaughter is not a mirror reflection, but she bears a striking close resemblance to her mom.
And as I was thinking about that, I began to wonder if this is similar to what it means to be a Christian. What it means to be a follower of Christ. I mean obviously, we don’t look like Jesus (that would be weird), but with an ever-deepening, ever-ongoing, ever-developing relationship with God, a practiced spiritual life, maybe we too can develop a strong family likeness to Jesus. Transforming into Christlikeness. Resembling his values, loving what he loves, listening for and following his voice, walking in his footsteps.
You remember a few years ago an age-old question became popular again. It was the WWJD question—What Would Jesus Do? Every once in a while you might see a billboard or a makeshift WWJD sign on the highway. It was used sort of as a formulaic guide. If you had a perplexing question, just ask yourself ‘What Would Jesus Do?’ Or you were wondering what to do in a particular circumstance? WWJD. And yes, it can be a nice sentiment, a good question to ask. And it could guide you. Because it does point us to the central idea that Jesus Christ is the norm of the entire Christian Bible. Which, of course, is why we are called Christians. And all that is good. Up to a point.
Until you realize that Jesus was totally under the influence of the Holy Spirit all his life. And he responded to his circumstances and situations from that inspiration.
Which I think is the greater point for us. That as Christians, we are also under the influence of the Holy Spirit. I don’t think we are supposed to do what Jesus did (our circumstances are totally different). We’re not called to imitate him, to be a mirror image reflection of Jesus. Instead I think we are inspired to resemble him and what he practiced. To emulate his trust in God. To discern the Holy Spirit that lived in Jesus also lives in us and is influencing our lives the way the Spirit influenced Jesus’ life. He got all his energy from his ongoing relationship with God. His ever-developing spiritual life with the Holy One. That’s the example he left for us, that we should follow in his footsteps. And we are to practice that all through our lives.
But Jesus’ example for us goes even deeper. That in the midst of being influenced by God and God’s ways, the principalities and powers of the world didn’t like his call to return to God’s ways. To repent. To reform. To be renewed. To resemble him. His call was to have a strong likeness to him, to listen to his voice and bring God’s good news to the poor, to do justice by proclaiming release to the captives, to love kindness. And these ways of God showed up in his political viewpoints. In his circumstances. And Jesus suffered for that and was put to death. But, because he suffered for what was right and just, Jesus had God’s approval.
Which is very likely what we can expect. Jesus’ example, to resemble him I think means that we can expect a struggle for following what God loves and values in our most vexing and challenging of circumstances. And this has God’s approval. Even when some of our neighbors, or friends, or colleagues in our society appear to go in a different direction. Who listen to a different voice. Who kowtow to the false gods of this world.
I’m reminded of a “Far Side” cartoon by Gary Larson that has a huge flock of penguins all just existing, doing what penguins do on the ice cap. All except one. This one penguin is above all the rest singing “I gotta be me, Oh! I just gotta be me!” Someone once circled that penguin and wrote underneath “Be that guy!”
Well, when it comes to something innocuous, it’s not too difficult to stand up and sing, “I gotta be me.” But honestly, in matters of resisting the worship of the false gods of this world, to be that guy, it’s a whole lot more difficult. To resemble Jesus, to be critical thinkers that discern what God loves and values, to understand what Jesus stood for, to trust the Holy Spirit’s influence in our spiritual lives, well, that takes a lot more.
Consider the three politicians banned from the House of Representatives in Tennessee in early April because they took part in a protest on gun control on the floor of the house just after the horrific Nashville shooting that killed six people. I don’t know if those three led the protest based on faith principles, but I do know that God loves each person, and God values human life. And our society is being torn apart by gun violence.
The irresponsible love of guns is a thief and a bandit. It steals life. It kills and destroys. It is a false god of this world, the golden calf of our society and is totally opposite of what God values. And these three representatives, Gloria Johnson, Justin Jones and Justin Pearson are now in good trouble, with Jones and Pearson getting expelled, and Gloria Johnson barely keeping her seat by one vote. Sometimes resembling Jesus means being morally courageous, and has God’s approval, even if suffering comes with it. Thankfully, both Justin Jones and Justin Pearson were reinstated one week later.
So, my prayer for us this week is that we come unto God often. All the time. Let God be your life. Living and breathing. Work that spiritual relationship. So that you’ll be able to frequently refocus on the shepherd and guardian of our souls. This will help you develop a strong family likeness to Jesus. You can discern Jesus’ Holy Spirit living in you.
And I believe that the powerful and holy presence of God will strengthen each of us as we follow in his footsteps, living the example that he showed for us. And hang on to this: that even if you suffer for following Jesus, you will have life and have it abundantly. With God’s approval. Thanks be to God. Amen.
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