Exodus 12: 1-14
Romans 13: 8-14
September 10, 2023
Rev. Dr. Galen E. Russell III
“Besides this, you know what time it is, how it is now the moment for you to wake from sleep.”
Prayer: As we remember you and your works, O God, may we also find our faith restored and our desire to serve you renewed. We offer our prayer in your name. Amen.
Hearing Paul’s words, “… you know what time it is, how it is now the moment for you to wake from sleep,” I thought, “Yeah, that’s good for Spirit Sunday. We have to wake up from the slow-down and sleepiness of summer-time worship habits, and get back into the full swing of stuff here at church.” Aaaaand...here we go.
But then I was asked, “What’s so important about Spirit Sunday?” And honestly, I had to think about it. I mean yeah, we’re rallying around getting back at church again. And yeah, we’re sharing in Holy Communion, and yeah, we have six people joining our church. And there’s the picnic after worship. All that’s cool and exciting!
But is that what’s so important about Spirit Sunday? When I wrestled with the question this past couple of weeks, I kept getting the feeling that there’s something more than all that.
Considering our texts for today, when put together, I realized the ‘something more’ was starting to get clearer for me. Because both texts invite us to awaken and remember what God has done, restore some spiritual practices, that help us renew our baptisms awakening us for what God may do through us.
In Exodus, it’s all about remembering. God passed over the houses of the Israelites that had blood on the doorposts, thus saving the firstborn from the plague of death. This event forced Pharaoh to free the Israelites from the bondage of slavery and let them go back to their homeland.
This was huge in Israelite history. So huge that their entire calendar changed. The month of the Passover became the first month of their year. And they were to remember the Passover meal, restore the spiritual practice of celebrating it in perpetuity, and let it renew them and their faith. Remember the Passover.
In Paul’s letter, he encourages people, in effect, to remember what God did in Jesus Christ, that God’s plan of saving grace reaches its fulfillment through Christ.
And when you open your heart to discern the truth of that, it’s a pretty huge deal. So huge that it changes you on the inside, and restores a spiritual desire to love your neighbor as you love yourself. Which fulfills all the laws found in the Bible.
So huge that people, restored by love, can renew their baptisms, our perpetual reminder of who we are and whose we are. Of how we are God’s own beloved. How we are loved. Graced. Forgiven. How we are empowered to serve God by letting God work through us. So Jesus Christ is a pretty huge deal… and yeah, the calendar for the whole world changed and now is based on Jesus Christ’s place in history.
So, in the past couple of weeks I was remembering some of the things God did in our lives and in our church. I remembered the people whose pathways crossed mine, and my pathway crossed theirs. You know the saying that God brings people into our lives. Some are with us for a short periods of time, others a longer periods of time.
In either case, it is good to remember that people aligned with God love others and are loved by others. People in God’s light support others in faith and are supported by others in faith. Just before vacation, I saw four of our church people whom I haven’t seen in a long time. I felt their love. I heard of their faith. I shared my love for them and my faith with them, as well.
I also remember that God inspired our church to grow into and continue emerging as a place of total acceptance. Complete inclusion. God is doing that through us.
The day we approved our ONA Covenant was a huge day. Why? Because God is a God of total inclusion. God’s plan of salvation is the light of acceptance of every person. Jesus Christ reflects God’s total acceptance, and God’s glory shines through him. That’s one reason we call him Savior. Not just of our lives. But of the world.
So today, on Spirit Sunday, and all Sundays, for that matter, let’s remember what God has done. Bringing people to us, bringing us to people, and helping us emerge as an all-inclusive ONA church.
It’s also important I think to restore some spiritual practices that deepen our faith in God as Christians. Take the spiritual practice of communing with God. Our ordinary view of communing with God is mostly when sharing in Holy Communion during worship. And it is that, to be sure.
But it is so much more. It is prayer. It is meditation. It is seeking the divine in nature. In others. Or with your family. Or both. This past week I got another chance to go fishing with my brother in Ohio. I communed with God, with nature, with my brother, and with the fish! See? A 2 lb. largemouth! He was fun to catch and then release!
Communing with God is feeling the divine presence when listening to beautiful music like Andrea Bocelli and Celine Dion singing “The Prayer.” Or Amy Grant singing “Breath of Heaven” at Christmas time. Oh my! Touches my heart!
Communing with God means soaking and taking in God’s holiness for one reason and one reason only: to be close to God. And closer still than that. To nourish the life of the Son of God in you. Communing with God is living in relationship with God. In all kinds of ways. We restore spiritual practices.
OK. Homestretch. Today on this Spirit Sunday, what an excellent time to renew our baptism! To recall the fact that God speaks words of love to the inner soul of who we are. Where the Spirit of Christ lives in us. To remember that God calls out to each of us and says, “I love you with an everlasting love. You did not first choose me, but I have chosen you to be a recipient of my love.”
We have people joining our congregation today. This ceremony is not just standing up and saying, Yeah, I want to be a member of this church. It is that, but again, it is so much more. Joining our church involves first of all, an affirmation of baptism. Each person proclaims their faith in God who names and claims them, who chooses to love them. Each person proclaims faith in God’s Son who redeems them, and in the Holy Spirit which sustains them.
But it’s not just the new members who are affirming faith, but each one of us does this as well. As our new members proclaim their faith, we do the same all over again. We affirm our baptisms by proclaiming that we are named and claimed by the God who chooses to love us, who walks where we walk. The God who goes with us in the deserts where we are thirsty, and in the places where we have an over abundance. And everywhere in between. The God who sees us as we are in all our glory and when we are one hot mess. And God’s love graces us. And nourishes us. And empowers us to be at it for God.
When we renew our baptisms, we renew our calling of God. The Spirit living within us awakens us to God at work through us. So, next Sunday we’ll hear from our Mission Trip crew. We don’t need to rejoice in a successful mission trip. We rejoice that God worked through us on our mission trip. We were at it for God out there.
We don’t celebrate what we did for God when we decided to become an all-inclusive church. We celebrate what God does through us by bringing more and more people to God through our church of all-inclusive welcome and hospitality. We renew our baptism!
So what’s so important about Spirit Sunday? I think it has something to do with realizing that now is the moment to remember what God has done, restore some spiritual practices, that help us renew our baptisms awakening us for what God may do through us.
Aaaand, here we go.
Amen.
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