Luke 15: 1-10 Rev. Dr. Galen E. Russell III
1 Timothy 1: 12-17 September 11, 2022
"Recover! Renew! Rejoice!"
“I am grateful to Christ Jesus our Lord, who has strengthened me, because he judged me faithful and appointed me to his service, even though I was formerly a blasphemer, a persecutor, and a man of violence.”
Prayer: O living Christ, thank you for searching for and finding us, for making us new again. We rejoice in the power of your Holy Spirit. Amen.
I think it’s fair to say that we’ve come through the most significant, the most turbulent 2½ year storm in our history, wouldn’t you say?. Covid killed over a million people in our nation alone and millions more worldwide. And the months before any vaccine was ready were pretty scary. People were panicking and freaking out. Can you imagine how much more magnified that would be if we didn’t have a vaccine yet? Oh, I can’t even imagine!
But, 2½ years later, we came through it, right? We recovered from the massive hit we took. And, we’re still recovering. Covid is still with us. Bob Sorozan has Covid now and can’t be here today. So do some other church members. Even this past month, some people got infected and are recovering. It is endemic now. Covid will always be with us, I think for the rest of our lives. But, honestly, once a year vaccines are on the way. What a storm this has been!
Christian people back in the 1st century didn’t have a pandemic storm like this, not that I’m aware of anyway, but they were dealing with a totally different kind of storm. It was a religious/political/spiritual storm that took years, even centuries for the Christian Church to recover from.
Because back in the day when Paul was still Saul, at the time when the first letter to Timothy was written, it was not safe to be a Christian. In fact, Paul was the beginning of the storm. And you know what? We have NO IDEA of how bad it was for Christians. They could not let their faith in Jesus be known. They could not be associated with the religious/political movement called “the Way” attributed to Jesus as its founder. Because if anyone was found out as followers of The Way, they would be arrested and jailed. “The Way” was considered by the religious authorities to be a subversive movement emboldened by its leader Jesus who was crucified and believed, by the believers, to be resurrected.
So, Christians lived in the closet. Underground, all the time. That’s why they used symbols that were a secret code, like the fish. You could draw a fish on the ground as a secret code telling someone else that you are Christian. The word for fish is ICTHUS. Each Greek letter stands for (I C TH U S Jesus Christ, God’s Son, Savior).
Or, the SATOR Square. Have you seen this? This is thought to be a secret code, too. Because when you unscramble the anagrams and palindromes in this 1st century Roman word puzzle, you have in Latin “PATERNOSTER” in the shape of a cross with Alpha and Omega in the corners. PATERNOSTER translates to “Our Father” from the Lord’s Prayer, and Alpha and Omega reference God as the beginning and the end (Rev. 21: 6). Amazing isn’t that?
Well, Saul, a Pharisee was commissioned by the Pharisee Sanhedrin Council to find followers of The Way, arrest them, and throw them in jail. And he could use lethal force if necessary.
Go read Chapter 9 of the Book of Acts which describes how Saul was literally knocked off his high horse by Christ. And the letter to Timothy describes how Christ was merciful to Paul, even though Paul called himself the worst of the worst sinners! And still, Christ called him to serve.
That’s a big takeaway for us from this letter to Timothy. Because if Christ can forgive Paul, the worst of the worst, then there’s hope for the rest of us. Paul is an example of how Christ can enable recovery from a wayward life to a renewal of heart and mind filled with The Way of Christ for anyone who believes. So, yeah, using the imagery of Jesus’ parable, Paul was one of the lost sheep that was found. But, Paul first had to recover from his murderous ways. And that recovery opened the door to Paul’s renewal as a person.
As we recover from Covid with our faith and trust in God, the door is open for our renewal. Let the grace of our God overflow on us we are strengthened and appointed to Christ’s service, with all of who we are as people… with all of the resources available to us as a church, with our spiritual energy, with everything we have to offer.
And I do mean everything we have to offer… Wherever you are on your life’s journey, you can offer your renewed gifts, your talents. your resources. your abilities. You’ve got a renewed passion for your neighbors around you, especially someone struggling with some loss due to Covid? God can use your renewed compassion. You’ve got a renewed desire to share the music in your soul that you can feel down to your bones? God can use your musical gifts. You’ve got a renewed awareness that you have a love for youth and children and would love to be a mentor for youth in our Confirmation class or teach faith formation? God can use your mentorship. And so on. What gifts can you offer?
But offering everything also includes our mistakes. Our mess-ups. Our failures. Because in each mistake there’s a learning moment, yes? In each mess-up there is a place to build. Each moment of failure there can be a graceful bloom. When you fall down, that’s when a new discovery can be made, and you find something within to get back up again.
So, offer the mistakes you’ve made. Offer the decisions that you may regret. Offer the choices that made you lose something precious. Offer to God the mess-ups. God can use those. And, you will find the Spirit giving you new life.
To be honest, as we recover and renew from Covid, I have to acknowledge that we lost some precious people along the way. Some were among million plus in our nation that died. Some left us in disagreement over the way we handled our church life going through Covid. Some struggled with little things that built up over time. And honestly, I would love to get those precious members back, each one.
But, more profoundly, I wonder if the struggle points, if each mess-up and failure, if each person departing from us, I wonder can each of those be moments of grace? Can each moment be for new life? For learning something new? Even moments of rejoicing?
Now that’s sounds odd, doesn’t it? But, follow me here… If it’s true what Jesus says—that when a shepherd finds the one sheep that is lost, or the woman finds the one coin buried in the couch, or when the Spirit finds Saul and turns him into Paul… that these are reasons for heaven to rejoice, then how much more warranted is the rejoicing when the Spirit finds us and renews our spiritual energy? When we find grace in our worst moments, and we engage as a servant God with renewed vigor? When we engage in Christ Church’s ministries with a fresh start? If it’s true that the worst of the worst can recover, receive grace, and be renewed, then how much more justified is heaven’s rejoicing when we’ve come through Covid and have new beginnings at Christ Church?
We are recovering from the struggle. God renews our faith and spiritual energy. We can rejoice in God’s power and presence, God’s greatness and love to make all things new. This is true for us as people. This is true for us as a church. God in Christ makes All Things New. Let’s celebrate this today, on Spirit Sunday—a day to recover, renew, and rejoice!
I invite you to help me end this sermon by praying again the Prayer of Affirmation we did in the beginning of worship. Only this time, I encourage you to pray the prayer in the context of us as people and a church recovering from Covid, renewing our gifts in ministry, and rejoicing in God’s grace we live in. Let’s pray together:
Everlasting God of all the years, you have been companion through all the mysteries of the past, upholding us when we didn’t know the way. You took our spiritual hands and guided us through the days of the pandemic. You didn’t let us fall; you gave us wisdom and courage.
Please take our spiritual hands now and open us to the new life you have in store. May we grow deeply in your love and wisdom, trusting in your light, and rejoicing in the power of your Holy Spirit! Blessed be the Lord, the God of Israel, from everlasting to everlasting! Let all God’s people shout Amen!
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