John 13: 1-17, 31b-35
Maundy Thursday April 6, 2023
Rev. Dr. Galen E. Russell III
“So if I, your Lord and Teacher, have washed your feet, you also ought to wash one another’s feet.”
“I give you a new commandment, that you love one another. Just as I have loved you, you also should love one another.”
Prayer: Holy One, may we love and serve you by loving and serving others in your power and strength. Amen.
We are wrapping up our Lenten worship and sermon series RUNNING FROM EMPTY this evening. Way back in February, on Ash Wednesday, I shared with us that the whole series was about us running from empty and misleading things that pretend to give us meaning in life. And in each worship service and sermon, we were encouraged through the practices of surrender, emptying, and letting go, to run to God who alone is the One who gives us meaningful life—life for real. To have faith in God for the spiritual sustenance that we need for real life.
Now we explored a bunch of topics that don’t have the power to give us real life, and we’ve only scratched the surface. Because there are many more. But for tonight, I’d like to explore one more topic—and it’s a biggie—it’s ourselves, our self interests. Excessive looking out for number one. Seeing only what’s good for me. What I want to do. What I’d like to have happen. Trusting in only my perspective. Believing only in what I see. Hanging on to only my opinions.
What makes this tricky is that we have to have a degree of selfishness. We have to take care of ourselves. Self care is strongly encouraged especially for those who are in the helping others professions. So, having a balanced dosage of selfishness is good. And needed. You know, like the oxygen masks on the airplane—the flight attendant instructs you in an emergency to put the mask on yourself first. Then you have a supply of oxygen to help those around you.
And that’s what Jesus teaches. Run to God first. Get your supply from God first. Make your self care with God primary. Have faith that God will give you what you need. Know that God will wash your feet figuratively, cleansing you. Making you whole and holy. Believe that God loves you, and in fact, has loved you first. Take all that in. Fill up on the living water of that spiritual fountain.
Then you’re ready and able to turn to others. Then you’re supplied with God’s energy and love so as to pay it forward as it were. Jesus was like an ancient pay it forward person. He said to his disciples, “If I, your Lord and Teacher, have washed your feet, you also ought to wash one another’s feet.” Pay it forward. He said, “Just as I have loved you, you also should love one another.” Pay it forward.
In our day, pay it forward became a thing. Back in 2014, eight-year-old Myles Eckert found a $20 bill in a Cracker Barrel parking lot. Instead of pocketing it, he paid it forward by handing it to a nearby customer. As it turns out, the customer Myles gave the money to was veteran Lt. Col. Frank Dailey. The colonel reminded Myles of his father he never knew because Myles’ dad died in Iraq. So, he handed the $20 to the soldier with this note attached: “Dear Soldier—my dad was a soldier. He's in heaven now. I found this 20 dollars in the parking lot when we got here. We like to pay it forward in my family. It’s your lucky day! Thank you for your service. Myles Eckert, a gold star kid.”
Well, Lt. Col. Dailey told the story about Myles giving him $20, and soon it went viral on social media. Myles was invited to be on “Ellen” and also at former president George W. Bush’s Presidential Library. Years later, Myles and his family created the “Power of 20” campaign with the intention to help other veterans and their families. Little did Myles know that his “pay it forward” gesture would ultimately touch millions of lives (30 Real Life “Pay it Forward” Stories That Will Warm Your Heart — Best Life (bestlifeonline.com) retrieved April 6, 2023).
When we love one another because we’ve first been loved, we touch lives. It’s one to another to others. When we pay love forward, we are following Jesus’ instruction.
I hope we realize the impact of what tonight means on our spiritual lives, that God decided to live among human beings in Christ and taught about paying love forward. That Christ died a horrible death clinging to God’s love for humanity and the world, and descended to the dead. And then God defeated death for once and for all in the resurrection. God then promises that we too will rise from death—any kind of death, that death indeed, in any spiritual eternal way, has no sting to it whatsoever on our lives.
This is our God for you! This is what our God does! This is the God who brings us to new life. This is the God who loved us first. Who washed our spiritual feet first. It’s God, giving love to another—each of us.
And we disciples are encouraged to give love to others. This is why we as a church are engaged in mission and outreach. This is why we seek to respond to the needs of others—because our needs were tended to by our loving God first. Everyone of us can engage in helping others. Our Outreach Committee regularly creates opportunities for us to love and serve God by loving and serving others. I am inviting your help on this committee.
We’ve often said that mission is the backbone of our church. It is. We’ve been going on mission trips every year for over 40 years. There’s another one this summer. It’s our way of practicing paying love forward, one to another to others.
But, did you know that our Outreach committee also engages in projects that feed other people? That provides emergency food bags for those in need when they come to our church? That puts diapers on baby’s bottoms? That supports mission organizations every year to the tune of 10% of our operating budget? That’s over $40K!
You see? Everyone of us has first been loved by God. We can pay it forward by loving others. Please let the Holy Spirit stir your hearts, and let us know that you can love and serve others because you’ve first been loved and served by God.
Lastly, not conclude, I want to say what I said as we began back in February. The spiritual practice of running to God is an ongoing thing. It takes us way past tonight. Way past the season of Lent. Whenever we find ourselves wanting something so bad, or believing that if this particular thing happened, we would be deeply happy—those are the moments to run from the emptiness of those ideas and to turn toward God who alone offers true happiness, who alone makes our lives full and rich. So, keep focused on the true fullness that God offers. All the time. Amen.
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