Matthew 13: 24-30, 36-43
Romans 13: 12-25
July 23, 2023
Rev. Dr. Galen E. Russell III
“I consider that the sufferings of this present time are not worth comparing with the glory about to be revealed to us. For the creation waits with eager longing for the revealing of the children of God.”
Prayer: Holy God, please help us to live and practice what you see in us. In Christ we pray, Amen.
As most of you know, eight of us from Christ Church went to an area just north of New York City for the first half of last week. We worked on Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday at four different sites where there was need.
Now, our Mission Team will share a lot of their reflections and stories at an upcoming worship service, so I’m not going to say anything more about the trip except this one thing. On Monday, we were split up at two sites, an old Quaker Meeting House at Chappaqua, NY and the other, a house at Millwood, NY. Both buildings are getting rehabbed for low income families. Both have an architect’s rendering of what the building will look like once it’s done. But doggone it… I only failed to get a picture of the house in Millwood, NY. But here’s a picture of the actual house in Millwood. Note the boarded up windows… a depiction of where the windows likely will be when all is said and done in the future.
And that’s the connection I want to make. Whether it’s an architect’s rendering or fake window depictions, both are examples of seeing ahead of time of what could be. What isn’t now but has the potential. It’s imagining the future!
And Jesus, like Moses, and Joshua and the prophets, and Paul, they had the uncanny ability to see ahead of time. They all had a fire in their bones for the kind of world God desired for people to live in. The kind of world it could be. A world of peace and prosperity, of justice and equity, of health and wholeness.
Jesus saw ahead of him the potential of the realm of God. If it is to be a condition of life where goodness is supposed to grow vibrantly and evil is to be kept at bay. His parable about the weeds and wheat shows that good and evil exist simultaneously, which I think is a major takeaway from this parable. I mean injustice, inequities, intolerance of other religions (aka religism), are all weeds growing among the goodness that exists in the world. We’ve got bigotry and hatred growing right alongside the love for others that people share. We’ve got violence and wars mixed in with the good done for those in need. We see human rights get denied in the midst of the fight for justice. We see complacency alive and well as care and compassion are offered for those who are desperate.
And if we’re honest, we know that each of us has weeds and wheat growing in us. A mixture of righteousness and unrighteousness within us. I mean we are holy but God knows we are wholly inconsistent about living our faith. We are saints but also sinners. We are indebted to the Spirit who makes us new, but like INXS song says, “Every single one of us has the devil inside.” It’s the suffering of the present times, as Paul says.
One morning a few weeks ago I came to the church and found a homeless man sleeping on our steps. And I thought, “Oh great. What’s he doing here? Is he dangerous? Is he hungry? He’s going to want money. He’s going to disrupt my whole day.” Whine, whine, whine. But, God was like, “He’s one of my children.” Oh, alright. When he woke up, I took care of him in spite of myself. And God love him, he was mentally unstable, thought that the cops were chasing him, and he told me he was one of God’s prophets in the world sent to declare that now is the time that the book of Revelation is coming true. Y’Ok. Maybe he is a prophet of God. I don’t know. He stayed for the morning then decided to move on.
A week later, I came to the church and there was another homeless man sleeping on our steps! And, I was like, “Oh God, not again!” And God was like, “Get over yourself. Take care of him, too.”
You see, creation is unfinished. We are unfinished. I am unfinished. We have the good and not so good living inside us. But, we are all interdependent with one another in this life seeking to embrace the whole of our lives in light of God’s grace, even with our weeds, the inconsistencies of faith that grow inside us.
But, here’s the beautiful thing… God searches us and knows our hearts. God understands where the wheat is growing and where the weeds are growing in us. And lo and behold, God is not out to get us with such knowledge, but instead God desires to love us, to grace us, to give us new life! I think God sees us ahead of time, ahead of who we are right now to who we can be. God’s desires to make us children of God with the Spirit alive in us. God desires that we feel the joy of being known, graced and loved.
And then, as children of God, we get the gift of seeing ahead of time, if we choose to see it. The sufferings of the present day are not worth comparing with the glory about to be revealed, says Paul. We see ahead of time. We can step back and see the bigger picture. We can view a just world for all. And then we come to see and believe that we are part of God’s larger work.
Sometimes when we’re in the thick of things, in the middle of countless decisions, it’s good to step out of the minutia and get to a larger vantage point. To “go to the balcony and look over the top” as my neighbor used to say, for a larger perspective. To see how we are part of God’s larger work.
Last Sunday I was reminded by Jim Kondras that the Notre Dame Cathedral is still under construction after the devastating fire in April of 2019. It will not be finished for several years. There’s so much that needs to be done. There are timbers to be cut and built into support beams. There are bricks that need to be laid. There are stones for the flying buttresses that need to be installed. Artisans are working to restore damaged artifacts and paintings Each worker is doing their job cutting wood, laying bricks, installing stones, restoring paintings. But the wise worker is the one that sees ahead of time to the finished product and says, “My work is rebuilding Notre Dame Cathedral.”
I encourage each of us to see ahead of time, visualizing who God wants you to be, and live toward that end in your life. That whatever you’re going through, have faith and hope that it’s part of God’s bigger picture. That God can use what you’re going through for God’s bigger picture and purpose.
I also welcome you to imagine our future ahead of time to see what it looks like for us to be an all-inclusive church. Our building accessible to all. Our mission and ministry deepened. I invite you to come and see today’s Imagine the Future Dream team’s updated presentation.
But above all, have hope that God’s overall work is happening through your small part and our small part in the world. Have hope that we are God’s children in the world, for the world around us waits with eager longing for us, as children of God, to live out God’s dream of a just world.
Remember Bryan Sirchio’s song we’ve sung here several times? “Dream God’s Dream?”
Dream God’s dream, Holy Spirit help us dream
Of a world where there is justice and everyone’s is free
To live and move and love, and to simply have enough
The world will change when we dream God’s dream.
Well, with all due respect to my friend Bryan, I wonder if changing the word from “Dream” God’s dream to “Live” God’s dream helps makes the point. That as we live God’s dream of a just world, we move ever-closer to what we see ahead of time becoming a reality. May it be so. Amen.
Monday - Thursday: 9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Closed for lunch from 12 noon - 1:00 p.m.