Matthew 13: 31-33, 44-52
Romans 8: 26-39
July 30, 2023
Rev. Dr. Galen E. Russell III
“We know that all things work together for good for those who love God who are called according to his purpose.”
Prayer: May our partnership with you grow stronger each day, O God, so that our future with you unfolds. Amen.
A few weeks ago, Pastor Fa shared with us that the origin story of the United Church of Christ that most of us know is not the full story. What we used to know is that the Congregational Church merged with the Christian Church. And the Reformed Church merged with the Evangelical Church forming two churches.
And then in 1957, the Congregational Christian Church merged with the Evangelical Reformed Church to form the United Church of Christ. The four churches converged. We were known as a historically “white” church that was united and uniting, committed to social justice and inclusivity.
But, there is a fifth church—the Afro-Christian Convention—did you know that? It’s a faith tradition rooted in African people and culture that formed in 1892. And when the UCC formed in 1957, people from the Afro-Christian Convention were part of the discussions to create the UCC.
But there was pressure to integrate. So, the folks representing the Afro-Christian Convention, believing in inclusivity, decided that all their conferences, their churches, and their pastors would be integrated into the new UCC structure that we currently have today. But the trouble is that the history, the ministries, the missions of the Afro-Christian Convention started to move toward obscurity. And for almost 66 years, not much of their histories or their ministries were known.
But not anymore. Because this past July, at the 33rd General Synod of the UCC, the fifth stream of the Afro-Christian Convention was finally recognized and woven into the fabric of our history. Rev. Dr. John Dorhauer, president of the United Church of Christ made an apology for that grave omission. And I, for one, am delighted to weave this updated origin story of the UCC into what I teach to Confirmation youth and prospective new members. Because weaving the future means first recovering and valuing the wisdom of the past. Its people. History. Integrity.
And the past is vital. I mean we say ‘hindsight is 20-20,’ right? We learn from our past mistakes. And sometimes we keep repeating the same mistake over and over again until we learn the lesson. And other times the lesson is ‘out of sight, out of mind,’ and we forget the lesson learned, only to screw it up again. One step forward, two steps back. And to be honest, that feels like a point of weakness on our journeys, doesn’t it?
But here’s where the grace of God shines like the sun! Because in our weakness, the Spirit of God helps us. In our lowest moments, when we don’t even know what to say to God, all is not lost, because the Spirit intercedes on our behalf. And that gives us hope. Because for those who love God, like you and me, for those who have 1% faith as small as a mustard seed, like all of us sometimes and some of us all the time, through us, God is working things together for good. Weaving goodness into a new future with a sometimes dubious and messy past.
Now, this phrase “We know that all things work together for good” is one of the most misused phrases in all of scripture. Sometimes it’s used to justify evil occurrences. Another mass shooting occurs… “Oh, God’s working all things together for good.” No! God never justifies evil. God can use evil when it occurs, but God never justifies evil. Nor should we. The problems is people justify evil. Way too much. But God never justifies it from what I can see.
Other times the phrase is used to placate someone who’s going through a rough spot. “Just bear with it… God’s working all things together for good.” That’s an insulting dismissal of pain and suffering. It’s better to say nothing.
No, the feeling I get from Paul’s words is that God is at work for good through the people who love God, and who discern that God’s purposes are happening through them. And the future being woven together with God using imperfect people is always a work in progress.
The other evening, I was flipping though the channels like I usually do, winding down, and I came across the ending of the movie “Back to the Future III.” Doctor Emmet Brown just arrived in a locomotive-turned-time machine, and Marty and Jennifer greet him. Jennifer says that the message on this paper that she brought back from the future got erased away, and she wondered what that meant. And Doc says, “It means your future hasn’t been written yet. No one’s has. Your future is what you make of it. So make it a good one.”
Weaving the future with God means it is woven, but not fully woven yet. It’s in the works with God working for good through us. We are united and uniting. We as people of faith are not yet what we shall be, but we are growing toward it. So, with God’s help, make it a good future by weaving in all part of ourselves and our past.
And then, with God’s presence and guidance, can we become God’s agents of change for good in the world? To weave together a future for healing and fulfillment?
Why are you afraid? Have you no faith? is a book that collects some of the words from the Pope Francis’ daily messages when the world was in isolation during the “long Lent” in the spring of 2020, as well as the prayers he delivered. In this book, Pope Francis shares his uplifting messages of wisdom, hope, healing and love with those who have suffered in pain, loneliness, and fear.
But, here’s what I thought was really interesting. Even though you can buy the book at almost any bookstore, in June, a small satellite carrying a nano version of the book was launched into orbit aboard a Space X rocket from Vandenberg Space Force base in California. The project is called Spei Satelles, guardian—or satellite—of hope. And I’m like, Wow! The Vatican’s spokesperson said that the “satellite of hope is also a guardian” because “it carries Pope Francis’ message of hope for humanity” (The Christian Century, July 2003, pg. 11). This satellite is to transmit the Pope’s messages of hope and peace in English, Italian and Spanish that any amateur radio receiver should be able to pick up anywhere in the world. Pretty cool, huh? That’s weaving the future with strands of God’s hope and healing, love and grace all woven together with microtechnology to be God’s change agent for good in the world.
And you and me? And our church? Can we be God’s change agents called by God in the world around us? Can we who love God be the ones God uses to work all things together for good? We can. By weaving God and the truths about God into our thinking and into the circumstances of our lives. We can. So, I thought of some God-truths and God promises I believe in. Try putting some of these truths and promises onto your spiritual loom and weave them into the tapestry of your life:
Jesus asks, “Have you understood these things?” If you do, you’ve found the treasure hidden in the field. Or better, if you have faith that these things are true, then the pearl of great price is yours, and the mustard seed of God’s realm is growing in you.
And God, the Weaver, weaves our lives into a fine tapestry, richer still than we can understand.
Let us stand and sing Hymn no. 464.
Amen.
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