Mark 1: 4-11
Acts 19: 1-7
January 7, 2024
Rev. Dr. Galen E. Russell III
“On hearing this they were baptized in the name of the Lord Jesus.”
Prayer: Ever-present God, please help us live in your light that we may be your people and share your light. Amen.
Here we are, one week into the New Year. Lots of people have started something new. Anyone make a New Year’s resolution? I asked the same question last year and was blown away that not one person raised their hand! Well, maybe you didn’t make a specific resolution, but did you at least think about making a change in your life? Something for the better? Turn over a new leaf? Make a fresh start? Get to the gym? At least walk to work off the extra pounds from the holidays?
My stomach and my heart have been talking with each other. My stomach says “We’ve had a good time these last two weeks—don’t blow it now!” My heart says, “All that extra weight is not good. Get walking. Get to the gym!”
I hear gyms are packed right now. But, I wouldn’t know. Because honestly, I haven’t been there yet. I have not yet resolved to get there. Because making a resolution is a matter of willpower. It’s an internal decision. One that involves the inner spirit. The heart and mind have to collaborate with the body.
That’s the problem with New Year resolutions. We can make the shift initially. We can gear up. We can have good intentions. We can even convince ourselves that it’s a spiritual decision. Determination from within. We have willpower! And it’s enough for the moment. And, it’s all good. We are on the right track.
But after the initial energy burst wears off, after a few days of the gym’s brutal reality, we realize that the inner willpower we started with is fleeting. That it is incomplete. And we realize that have to dig for deeper resolve, for renewed willpower, and so often, we don’t. That’s why come February, most gyms are no longer packed.
I think there are times on our faith journeys when we realize that what we started with was good for that moment but that’s not all there is. We are on the right track, but there’s more that we have to have desire to tap into.
This is illustrated by our two bible stories today. Because when Paul comes across some believers in Ephesus, he finds out that they were on the right track. They were baptized by John who proclaimed a baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins.
So the awareness of forgiveness is good, but it was not the end all. It wasn’t complete. Things that are good can be cherished. But don’t stop there. There’s more to tap into.
Even John knew this. John prepared people. He was like—repent! Be forgiven! And change your lives. Repentance means change. And changes takes willpower. The other gospel stories say that some people asked John, “What shall we do?” And John said shift away from self-centeredness. Help each other. If someone is in need of a coat, give the person one of yours (see Luke 3: 1-18).
Lots of people were inspired by John. They wanted God’s forgiveness, and got baptized. Some even became his disciples. But, John clearly told the people—don’t stop your faith journey here with me. Get ready to make the shift from me to one more powerful than me. Get ready to move from a baptism by water to baptism by the Spirit. Baptism by water was good but not the end all.
So, Paul invited John’s disciples to make the shift from being followers of John to being followers of Jesus. To move from knowing nothing about the Holy Spirit to actually experiencing it. To grow from a baptism by water for repentance for forgiveness to a baptism by the Holy Spirit that brings renewal of faith and willful responsibility.
Because, dear Church, having Christ in our hearts, having faith in God, is never and has never been solely a personal proposition. So much of the Christian messaging I hear on the radio or Christian memes I read on Facebook are about having a personal faith in God. Personally knowing God and God’s forgiveness. Cherishing the Holy Spirit’s voice that says I am God’s beloved. And all that’s good. And all that’s needed. Powerful!
But it is not complete. Yes, being a disciple of Jesus I think means having personal relationship with God which heals us on the inside, but it also calls for a renewal of faith. And willfully being responsible to help God bring God’s light into someone else’s life. In other words, we are never a Christian solely for personal reasons. We are Christians in community with others so that God can work through us to reach those who long to know the Holy Spirit’s presence and power, grace, and forgiveness.
This is one of the basic principles of AA or AL Anon, or other support groups for those suffering from addictions. When addicts hit bottom and come to the brutal reality that they are powerless to fix their addiction and that only a Higher Power can help, that’s when the desire to tap into the Higher Power pushes forward. And God, the Higher Power acts. With enough spiritual energy for the moment. And it’s good. And life-saving.
But, the Higher Power’s energy must be renewed. And it gets renewed when two addicts talk to each other, and call upon the Higher Power again. They support each other with their stories, and give each other encouragement to not abuse alcohol, drugs, or whatever again. And that’s how AA meetings are born. Two drunks talking with each other.
And dare I say it, that’s how the Christian community is born. When imperfect people who know God’s saving grace and forgiveness make the shift from that personal experience to willfully being responsible to serve God by serving others in the community.
So I think AA and other support groups are splendid examples of what it means to be the church. Even if they aren’t church in the conventional way of understanding church. Because recovering alcoholics know the grace of the Higher Power, even in the midst of all their sinfulness, but they also know the responsibility they have for each other’s sobriety.
Isn’t that like the church? I mean each of us imperfect people knows the grace of God and can know God’s light in our lives by knowing Christ. And each one of us is called to share the light of God with those who need it.
When I was in seminary in the 80’s I went to AA meetings as part of my seminary education. I found those meetings amazing because of the stories. The help given to each other. And at the end of those meetings, everyone said the “Serenity Prayer” originally written by the late theologian Reinhold Niebuhr:
God grant me the Serenity
to accept the things I cannot change,
Courage to change the things I can,
And the Wisdom to know the difference.
And, at the AA meetings I attended and I suspect many other AA meetings, one of the last things AA members say to each other is “Keep coming back. It works!”
And I say to us in this new year, “Keep coming back to Christ Church. Because God works!” Let us resolve to come to church this year. Make an internal decision. Involve the Spirit. Dig deep for willpower. For determination from within. Share the journey with each other. Love and serve God. Amen.
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