Thursday, August 25, 2016
CWYNAR: My New Website - Premier Homes by Paul
CWYNAR: My New Website - Premier Homes by Paul: Paul connects with people. He learned to connect with people through his years of pastoral ministry by listening to individual needs and de...
My New Website - Premier Homes by Paul
Paul connects with people. He learned to connect with people
through his years of pastoral ministry by listening to individual needs and
defining their issues. In doing so, Paul establishes trust. In short, Paul will
give you his undivided attention.
Coming from a profession where trust is paramount, Paul also
brings passion and empathy to the real estate industry. “Trust is paramount in
any relationship, especially between people selling or buying a home and their
real estate agent.”
Paul chose to work with d’aprile properties because its
mission and agents resonate with his core values. “I love working with the
people at d’aprile properties. They possess energy, passion, competence and creativity.
As a team, we get the job done right for our clients.”
Five years ago d’aprile properties was one agent. Today, it
is represented by 350 agents. The
d’aprile office in Naperville was recently recognized by Chicago Agent magazine
as the second fastest growing office in the Chicagoland area, and just received
the award as being one of the “Best of Naperville” realty companies. All of these indicate d’aprile’s commitment
to doing business the right way.
Paul and his wife, Cindy, live in Aurora. They are loving
grandparents of four grandchildren in Naperville, Illinois, and Marion,
Indiana. They enjoy their two dogs and their mysterious cat. Paul roasts coffee
beans and builds outdoor furniture.
Personally, Paul understands the underlying anxieties of
buyers and sellers. Having bought and sold multiple properties in four separate
states, Paul can personally relate to all aspects of the home buying process,
making it easier and more enjoyable for you. Most importantly, he will help you
sell or purchase your home anywhere in the world. Visit his website or call him at 630-453-4846.
Saturday, July 30, 2016
Simple Sermons for Serious Christians
Need some challenging,inspirational meditations on selected passages of Matthew and Mark? Click here for the link to order my new book.
Friday, June 24, 2016
A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Temple (Luke 9:51-62)
A
Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum is a musical inspired
by the farces of the ancient Roman playwright Plautus. It tells the bawdy story
of a slave named Pseudolus and his attempts to win his freedom by helping his
young master woo the girl next door. The plot displays puns, slamming doors,
cases of mistaken identity, and satirical comments on social class. The
musical's original 1962 Broadway run won several Tony Awards; and the original
lead, Zero Mostel, also starred in the successful film.
The
title is derived from a line used by vaudeville comedians to begin a story: “A
funny thing happened on the way to the theater.” Numerous individuals writing
stories on a variety of topics have repeated that line. Most recently, someone
wrote of the NBA Finals, “A funny thing happened on the way to that destiny.”
Another sportswriter penned an article about the US Open, “A funny thing
happened on his way to oblivion.” There is the TV program “A Funny Thing
Happened on the Way to the White House.” Finally, someone recently blogged, “A
Funny Thing Happened On The Way To Sainthood.”
Obviously,
one can repurpose comedy to fit any topic involving sports, politics and
religion. So, let me move to my second point and explain how my sermon title
addresses our passage.
Luke’s
Gospel is a narrative of the human life of Jesus and the message of the Son of
God.[1] It began with an
introduction in chapter 4, and moved into an account of his mission in chapters
5 through 9. In those chapters, Luke showed how the Church originated in the
life and work of Jesus. Now, his story takes up the great journey to Jerusalem
that led him out of history and into the heavenly sphere. This journey is also
the journey of the Church, which accompanies Jesus on his way to God.
Our
opening verse, “When the days drew near
for him to be taken up, he set his face to go to Jerusalem” – introduces
the journey and defines it in terms of its destination. Jerusalem is not a mere
geographical spot. The city marked the journey’s end where Jesus was received
up, an expression that referred to his ascension. Thus, his journey is to a
geographical spot and a symbol of its heavenly fulfillment beyond every
reality.
Although
Luke mentioned this journey repeatedly through the next ten chapters, he never
indicated that Jesus arrived. At a point when it seemed appropriate to announce
his arrival, Luke simply stated that Jesus entered the Temple. The journey
seems incomplete.
A
funny thing happened. Jesus set his face towards Jerusalem, and he never
arrived. He simply entered the Temple. … You may say, “Well, the Temple is in
Jerusalem. It’s implied he reached Jerusalem.” True. Yet, the more important
point of verse 51 is not what Jesus was determined to accomplish – he set his face to go to Jerusalem, but
what God was going to accomplish – When
the days drew near for him to be taken up. Jesus accepted the event and its
destination in order to return to his heavenly Father.
Now,
within our passage are a number of people – Jesus’ messengers, the Samaritans
and others. So, for my third point, people, we will examine the people in our
passage and in our pews (or chairs, in this case).
Jesus
sent the messengers ahead to prepare the way. To prepare the way for what? For
his exodus-ascension. However, unlike John the Baptist, who also prepared the
way for the Messiah, the disciples could not embrace the apocalyptic judgment
upon the Samaritans who did not receive him. The fire associated with the
Messiah’s coming would have its place, but not here and now. That transforming,
sanctifying, empowering fire of the Holy Spirit would come upon the Church
after Jesus’ Ascension. Jesus rebuked the messengers for their desire to
destroy the Samaritans, and then they moved on.
As
they moved on, anonymous figures emerged as types of persons who considered
following Jesus on his journey. Those who wish to join Jesus must disengage
themselves from any earthly home, from former responsibilities and from past
relationships. To proclaim the kingdom of God, one must live in a manner
befitting the kingdom and bid farewell to the past.
Setting
out on the journey to Jerusalem and the Ascension, Jesus demonstrated a
singular detachment from earthly matters. The first people who followed him on
his journey had to reflect that detachment and the way of life.
What
about people who follow Jesus on his journey today? What about us? Do we
reflect that detachment and way of life? Do our lives demonstrate a singular
detachment from earthly matters? Do we disengage from our earthly homes, former
responsibilities and past relationships to follow Jesus? Do I live in a manner
befitting the kingdom of God in order to proclaim it? Is following Jesus any
easier or tougher for us than it was for the first People of the Way?
Following
Jesus today is no easier for us than it was for the first People of the Way.
Personally speaking, I do not always live in a manner befitting the kingdom.
Selfishness and self-serving interests tempt me constantly. I am engaged to
home, duties and relationships. In short, I am spiritually lazy.
Experience
tells me to prescribe something to counter spiritual laziness – the five P’s of
Prayer: Passage, Place, Posture, Presence and Passage. All these P’s, Al will
put in a podcast so you can listen to them later.
Passage.
Depending on the circumstances, choose a Scripture passage. Slowly read it
several times until a word or phrase rises to the surface.
Place.
Choose a place where you will not be disturbed. It may be in your home or a
quiet church.
Posture.
Find a sturdy comfortable chair that will allow you to sit upright. Posture is
important. Do not slouch or lie down.
Presence.
Set a timer for 10 minutes. Start there and gradually increase your prayer time
to 25 minutes. Close your eyes so you are not distracted. Be present to God as
He is present to you. Thoughts, feelings, physical discomforts and audible
distractions will occur. Stand firm in the stream and let these distractions
flow by as flotsam and jetsam go downstream.
Passage.
When you get distracted, return to the passage and refocus. When your minutes
have passed, close your meditation by reciting aloud The Lord’s Prayer.
Because
Jesus loves you, try this for 25 minutes a day for the next 30-some years – the
lifespan of Jesus. I guarantee you a deeper, richer, fuller, more intimate
relationship with our Triune God. If it does not work, you can return it for
your old relationship with God.
Friends,
this summer, as we journey to various destinations throughout the world, funny
things will happen. Life will pull us in every direction of the compass. That
is why it is necessary for us to set our faces like Jesus and follow him – for
only Jesus, Father and Spirit will provide true direction to our heavenly home.
As we encounter uncounted individuals seeking direction, prescribe to them our
Five P’s of Prayer and a relationship with the Three Persons of the Trinity.
And when you do, may the peace of God that surpasses all understanding, keep your
hearts and minds in Christ Jesus. Amen.
[1]
Eugene LaVerdiere, Luke (Wilmington,
DE: Michael Glazier, Inc. 1986), 138ff. This accounts for the majority of this
section.
Saturday, June 18, 2016
Declare How Much God Has Done for You
Two weeks from today, we will celebrate
Independence Day, a federal holiday commemorating Continental Congress’
adoption of the Declaration of Independence on July 4, 1776. We declared that
the thirteen American colonies regarded themselves as a new nation, the United
States of America, and no longer part of the British Empire.
While we associate Independence Day
with fireworks, family reunions, parades, picnics and political speeches, we
also celebrate our nation’s history, government and traditions. All of this
occurs annually because of the Declaration of Independence.
A declaration is a public statement.
When I declare something, I say it in an official or public way, a strong and
confident manner, or I simply tell the government how much money I earned in
order to pay taxes.
Directly from the Latin words de and clarare, it means to make clear, reveal, disclose, announce. A year
ago, more than 20 people declared their candidacy for President of the United
States and many others have declared their support for a candidate. Judges
declare sentence on the accused. Individuals declare bankruptcy. Last Sunday,
my beloved Penguins declared victory.
In our Gospel today, Jesus ordered
the man to declare how much God has done for you.[1]
Before we declare how much God has done for us, my third point, I examine our
passage and what it meant to the Church. In short, Passage, People of the Way
and People Today.
First, Passage. The account is an
exorcism, and follows the usual pattern for an exorcism.[2]
Demons inhabited deserts, large bodies of water, the air and subterranean
regions. They caused blindness, muteness, all kinds of physical problems and
mental disorders. Demon possession was physical or mental possession, not
moral.
Luke wrote that seven demons went out
of Mary Magdalene. We assume she was immoral. She was not. All Scripture
passages portray her as serving the Lord.
In today’s passage, so many demons
possessed the man that it was named legion. He was naked and lived among the
tombs, frightening local citizens with his bizarre behavior, but there is no
mention of their influence over his moral life.
Since demons were from the
supernatural world, they recognized Jesus as a person of God and an opponent of
all forces that hurt, cripple, oppress or alienate human life. In his inaugural
address, Jesus announced his intention to relieve, release, heal and restore
life. We read in chapter 4, “The Spirit
of the Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me to proclaim good news to the
poor. He has sent me to proclaim liberty to the captives and recovery of sight
to the blind, to set at liberty those who are oppressed.”[3]
All persons or powers to the contrary must view him as an enemy.
Jesus was not the only exorcist
working the land. In chapter 9, when John the Apostle reported, “‘Master, we saw someone casting out demons in
your name, and we tried to stop him, because he does not follow with us,’ Jesus
said, ‘Do not stop him, for the one who is not against you is for you.’”[4]
When some challenged his authority to exorcize demons, Jesus responded, “If I cast out demons by Beelzebul, by whom
do your sons cast them out?”[5]
We also read about Jewish exorcists in Acts.[6]
Now, the demons recognized Jesus and
his power. He could send them to the abyss or netherworld, that is, Satan’s
prison.[7]
They knew the abyss was their prison and that it was not beyond the power of
Christ. So, they begged to be sent into unclean animals to escape their fate.
Mercifully, Jesus allowed their
request. He did not take pleasure in anyone’s death or in torturing demons for “God did not send his Son into the world to
condemn the world, but in order that the world might be saved through him. … But
whoever does not believe is condemned.”[8]
The unclean spirits entered the
unclean animals that plunged into the abyss and were banished. We hear nothing
more of them. Instead, Luke reports that the people of that village found the
man sitting at the feet of Jesus, clothed and in his right mind. Afraid, they
asked Jesus to depart.
At this point, you might be
wondering why the villagers asked Jesus to leave. Luke’s second book, Acts,
helps answer our question. In chapter 16, we read that as Paul and Silas were
in Philippi, they “met a demon-possessed
slave girl. She was a fortune-teller who earned a lot of money for her masters.
She followed Paul and the rest of
us, shouting, ‘These men are servants of the Most High God, and they have come
to tell you how to be saved.’ This went on day after day until Paul got so
exasperated that he turned and said to the demon within her, ‘I command you in
the name of Jesus Christ to come out of her.’ And instantly it left her. Her
masters’ hopes of wealth were now shattered, so they grabbed Paul and Silas and
dragged them before the authorities at the marketplace. ‘The whole city is in
an uproar because of these Jews!’ they shouted to the city officials. ‘They are
teaching customs that are illegal for us Romans to practice.’ A mob quickly
formed against Paul and Silas, and the city officials ordered them stripped and
beaten with wooden rods. … and then they were thrown into prison.” After the earthquake opened the
prison doors, the city officials begged Paul and Silas to leave their city.[9]
Philippi’s city officials and
Gerasene’s villagers asked the Apostles and Jesus to leave out of economic loss
and fear. They learned to live with the evil spirits, but were afraid of an unknown
power greater than evil spirits.
The Gerasene villagers knew where
evil resided, and spent considerable time and expense guarding and containing it.
They tolerated and managed evil, but the power of God disturbed the way of life
they had come to accept.
Let me leave my first point, and
segue into my second, People of the Way.
People of the Way described the first
followers of Jesus. They were named Christian when Barnabas brought Saul to
Antioch. We read, “For a whole year they
met with the church and taught a great many people. And in Antioch the
disciples were first called Christians.”[10]
What did the first Christians take
from this brilliantly told passage? Irony. Given Christianity’s origins in the
Jewish world, Luke’s Gentile readers were keenly sensitive to Jesus sending
unclean spirits into unclean animals. They enjoyed the fact that the demons
unwittingly invited their own banishment into the abyss.[11]
While that generated fear among the
Gerasene villagers, the first Christians also took courage from this passage.
It gave them courage to overcome any fear about proclaiming the Gospel and
declaring how much God did for them.
Because Jesus, a Jew, was not afraid
to cross into Gentile territory, they too – baptized in His Name – could cross
cultural, societal, racial and economic boundaries to proclaim the Gospel.
Because Jesus, anointed with the
Holy Spirit, faced the demons and enemies who opposed Him and His work –
proclaiming good news to the poor, liberty to captives, recovery of sight to
the blind, and freedom to the oppressed – the People of the Way could face the
demons and enemies who opposed them and their work. They endured imprisonment,
beatings, stonings, mocking and even death. They endured this from people who
feared the power of the Gospel. Read what the People of the Way endured in
Acts, and what Paul endured in Second Corinthians.[12]
The People of the Way learned a lesson in courage by proclaiming what God did
for them.
Finally, People Today. To
distinguish Law from Gospel properly, we know that the Good News is what God
has done for us. Gospel is that God worked out our salvation, and with
salvation comes blessings.
Now, I do not expect you to stand on
a street corner or at the mall and declare how much God has done for you, but
there are opportunities for each of us to proclaim that. And with that, I would
like to say this.
Today, my hair is grayer, my step
slower, my eyes weaker, my waistline larger, blood pressure higher and wallet
lighter. Yet, my heart is greater. God filled my heart with joy because of what
He has done for me.
God blessed me with wife and family,
extended family and friends, health and home. God granted me the opportunity to
see the world and the wonders of new life. God has blessed me in many ways. At
times, I wonder how to thank God properly for what He has done for me. And our God,
who simplifies everything, even provides my response.
The Psalmist wrote, “I love the Lord for he has heard the cry of
my appeal; for he turned his ear to me in the day when I called him.” He
continued. “How can I repay the Lord for
his goodness to me? The cup of salvation I will raise; I will call on the
Lord’s name.”[13]
Sound familiar? It is our traditional offertory.[14]
Friends, during the Lord’s Supper,
we raise the cup of salvation and call on the Lord’s name. That is why
Christians have always called the Lord’s Supper, Eucharist. Eucharist is simply
a Greek word that means thanksgiving.
Our post-communion prayer reads, “We
give thanks to You, almighty God, that You have refreshed us through this
salutary gift, and we implore You that of Your mercy You would strengthen us
through the same in faith toward You and in fervent love toward one another.”[15]
Our canticle’s lyrics? “Thank the
Lord and sing His praise; tell everyone what He has done. Let all who seek the
Lord rejoice and proudly bear His name. He recalls His promises and leads His
people forth in joy with shouts of thanksgiving. Alleluia, alleluia.”[16]
Friends, God simplified life and
worship. We need not invent praise and thanksgiving. Praise and thanksgiving
occurs every time we worship. Each Sunday when you worship, you declare how
much God has done for you. When we do that, the peace of God that
surpasses all understanding keeps our hearts and minds in Christ Jesus. Amen.
[1]
Luke 8:39
[2]
Fred Craddock, Luke (Louisville:
Westminster John Knox Press, 2009), 65f.
[3]
Luke 4:17-18.
[4]
Luke 9:49-50.
[5]
Luke 11:19.
[6]
Acts 19:13-17.
[7]
Philippians. 2:9-11; Romans 10:7; 1 Peter 3:19; Revelation 20:3.
[8]
Ezekiel 18:32; John 3:17-18.
[9]
Acts 16:16-23, 38-39. New Living Translation.
[10]
Acts 11:25-26.
[11]
Eugene LaVerdiere, Luke (Wilmington,
DE: Michael Glazier, Inc., 1986), 119f.
[12] 2
Corinthians 11.
[13]
Psalm 116:1-2, 13-14.
[14]
Lutheran Service Book (St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 2006), 159.
[15]
LSB, 166.
[16]
LSB, 164.
Thursday, June 9, 2016
Separate Responses: A Reflection on The Woman with the Ointment (Luke 7:36-50; 8:1-3)
When I research words, I go to a
dictionary or an etymology website. For example, last week I defined and
detailed the history of anticipate and visit. Researching a phrase, such as
today’s theme, takes me to topics that boggle and baffle my brain. Separate responses led me to sites
explaining software protocol, cell biology, auditory attention and text
messaging. If we should pray, as Al did last week, for an understanding of my
words and God’s Word, I will definitely avoid the aforementioned topics.
I entitled this sermon Separate
Responses for two reasons. First, we need to separate the version of The Woman with the Ointment in Luke from
Matthew, Mark and John. Second, the responses of the woman and the host are
distinctively separate.
These two reasons lead me to three
points: The importance of separating gospel accounts; the separate responses of
Simon and the unidentified woman; and our response.
First, the importance of separating
the gospel accounts. Every book in the Bible has a particular purpose. For
example, Genesis explains the origin of things. Psalms are a songbook for God’s
people when they worship. Paul wrote Romans so that the righteous might live by
faith. John wrote, “These
are written so that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God,
and that by believing you may have life in his name.”[1]
Luke wanted the lover of God, Theophilus, to “have certainty concerning the things you have
been taught.”[2]
Each Gospel has a particular view of Jesus,
his ministry and the Church. This view determines what they included and
excluded. In short, to understand more deeply the Bible, we cannot blend
everything into a book or movie. We must separate out each version of what the
evangelist wrote.
Matthew, Mark and John place their
versions of The Woman with the Ointment closer
to Jesus’ Passion. Matthew and Mark set theirs immediately after the Conspiracy to Kill Jesus and before Payment to Judas. Similarly, John placed
his account between a lengthier version of the Conspiracy Against Jesus and the Plot to Kill Lazarus. While Luke’s Passion included the Conspiracy and Payment, he separated out the Anointing.
His version occurred between the Questioning
of the Baptist’s Disciples and Jesus’
Preaching in Galilean Villages.
That brings us to another obvious difference,
the setting. Luke put Jesus in Galilee; the other three put Him in Bethany. Still,
another difference is that John identified the woman as Mary, sister of Martha
and Lazarus, whereas the Synoptics allow her to remain anonymous.
These differences lead us to
conclude that we cannot harmonize these accounts, and beg us to ask Luke the
purpose of his account. The other accounts point to Jesus’ burial. Luke’s
clearly points to another purpose – forgiveness. In this case, divine
forgiveness. One who has been forgiven, must love.
One who has been forgiven, must
love. The genius of Luke is to take a similar account, separate it from the
others, and conclude with a different response. We find these differences in
Jesus’ Teaching of the Lord’s Prayer and the Parable of the Mustard Seed.
Matthew and Luke differ in the former, and Luke differs from Matthew and Mark
in the latter. … Take some time later today to examine these various accounts. That
brings me to my second point: the separate responses of Simon the Pharisee and
the unidentified woman.
A question for everyone, including
ourselves, is who is Jesus? Throughout chapter 7, Luke referred to Jesus as
Lord. Here, he identified him only by name. Simon thought to himself, “If this man were a prophet, he would have
known who and what sort of woman this is who is touching him, for she is a
sinner.”[3]
His dinner guests wondered, “Who is this,
who even forgives sins?”[4]
While Simon and his guests are still wondering who Jesus is, the woman, treats
Jesus as Lord.
It is important to note this, for as
one colleague wrote, Jesus’ establishment of the new Israel, along with its
ethic and the way it reaches out to both gentiles and Jews and in particular to
sinners, [means that] one must recognize him as Lord and as the human being par excellence. Such recognition
requires both love and faith, two keys to both forgiveness and salvation, and
the grounds for receiving the Lord’s peace. Without these Jesus’ identity
remains a question, and one does not enter into the shalom of the new Israel.[5]
The woman entered the shalom or the
peace of the new Israel, while the others remained outside scratching their
heads. To address Simon’s questions about his identity and the woman’s response,
the Lord Jesus related the parable of a creditor and two debtors.
The parable drew attention to
various degrees of love. The parable did not concern the creditor or the love
that might have inspired his cancellation of the debts. Rather, Jesus focused
on the two whose debt was forgiven and how the degree of their love corresponded
to the amount of debt forgiven them. Simon conceded that the one with the
greater debt forgiven loved his creditor more, which Jesus forcefully accepted.[6]
Simon’s response became Jesus’ point
of departure as he compared the woman’s loving gestures and his host’s limited
welcome. He concluded his comparison stating, “Her sins, which are many, are forgiven – for she loved much.” After
this, Jesus said to the woman, “Your sins
are forgiven.”[7]
The part puzzles me. One would think
the woman responded to the Lord because she had been forgiven many sins. Rather,
she first demonstrated her love, and then Jesus forgave her sins. Her response
sprung not from forgiveness but from faith in Jesus as Lord. The woman was
saved by loving faith and her salvation called forth the Lord’s peace.[8]
You see, like the creditor, God
forgives both debtors. Both the woman and Simon have their sins forgiven, and
both responded differently. What separated their responses was their
recognition of Jesus as Lord and Jesus as some guy.
Then, there is this. Jesus said to
the woman, “Your faith has saved you; go in peace.”[9]
… Where did the woman go? To answer that question, we look at her identity. She
was a notorious sinner from the city, or a woman of the streets. Most likely,
her associates would welcome her. And that, folks, brings me to my third point,
our response.
Where did the woman go? Of course, where
she was welcomed, and the one place she was sure to be welcomed by was the
street. There her associates and clients welcomed her. I know this because I
started and managed a program for Jubilee Soup Kitchen in Pittsburgh entitled I to I, Incarceration to Independence. We served incarcerated mothers at
the Allegheny County Jail. Most of the women were notorious sinners or women of
the street. They were also mothers.
Our goal was to assist them
transition from incarceration to independence by providing counsel, support,
clothing and housing resources once released so that they did not have to
return to the street where they would be welcomed by their associates and
clients.
There are few things less depressing
than 30-year-old mothers in orange jumpsuits talking about how they miss their children
and how awful they feel about their choices. There are few things less
frustrating than working with incarcerated women who return to the streets and
then to prison.
So, where did this woman go? One
would think that she returned to the streets, but as one scholar concluded, she
needed a community of people like her. She needed a community of notorious
sinners forgiven and loved by the Lord Jesus. She needed the Church.[10]
In the concluding verses of today’s
passage, women healed of evil spirits and infirmities went with Jesus and the
Twelve proclaiming and bringing the good news of the kingdom of God. I assume
the unidentified woman was among them.
Folks, one who has been forgiven,
must love. We, notorious sinners, loved and forgiven by the Lord Jesus, are
called to love. Jesus calls you to love much. Love like the woman, not Simon.
Love much, not with measure. Love with tears of repentance and tears of joy.
Loving much does not mean you must
minister to incarcerated mothers or travel on mission trips. Loving much means
hospitality for notorious sinners who need a community, who need a Church.
Loving much means being part of that Church, that community of notorious
sinners healed of evil spirits and infirmities that proclaims and brings the
good news of God’s kingdom to people in our villages today.
Friends, like the companions of
Jesus, we are blessed to be part of that community of notorious sinners
forgiven by the Lord Jesus. Knowing Jesus as Lord and knowing we are forgiven
is reason enough to love much and to welcome others to join us.
This week, ask someone to join us.
Ask your family and your friends, but more importantly, ask the people you
consider the most notorious sinners to join us. Tell them that we are notorious
sinners forgiven by the Lord. Tell them that we have joy in our hearts like the
unidentified woman and invite them to join us. When you do, the peace
of God that surpasses all understanding will keep your hearts and minds in
Christ Jesus. Amen.
Friday, June 3, 2016
Anticipation
As an artist or musician, you know
you made it when others imitate or commercialize your work. The most imitated
artists are Michelangelo, Rembrandt and Leonardo da Vinci. The most imitated
modern musicians are the Beatles, Michael Jackson and Elvis Presley. It only
makes sense to imitate the masters if you want to excel in art, music or any
other field.
During our contemporary service, we
hear songs from ApologetiX, a Christian band that rewrites secular songs with
Christian lyrics to create parodies with Christian messages. The band blends
Weird Al Yankovic and Billy Graham. They derive their lyrics from Biblical
passages and practices. Their hits include parodies of Charlie Daniels’ The Devil Went Down to Georgia, renamed The Devil Went Down to Jordan, and Alice
Cooper’s School’s Out, renamed Schoolhouse for Prophets.
Most artists fear others who imitate
their works will dilute or contaminate them for popular or commercial gain.
Such was the case when Heinz approached Carly Simon. In the 70s and 80s, Heinz ran
commercials for its ketchup that featured Simon’s hit, Anticipation. She feared people would remember only the commercial
and forget the original song.
Anticipation. I am sure you were anticipating
when I would get to my theme. Anticipation is keeping you waiting, isn’t it?
A simple definition of anticipation
is a feeling of excitement about something that is going to happen or the act
of preparing for something. The Latin root of anticipate is anticipare which means to take care of
ahead of time. It literally means to take into possession beforehand from ante – before – and capere – to take.
We know something lies ahead, and we
want to take care of it or prepare before it happens. Cindy and I are anticipating
the birth of two more grandchildren by Thanksgiving, and everyone, especially
their mothers, is anticipating birth and new life by preparing now. We know
death lies ahead. We prepare for it by embracing our Savior’s promise of
eternal life and by making funeral plans. We anticipate expected and unexpected
events – graduation, unemployment, victory, defeat, disease and a dozen others.
You are thinking, “What does
anticipation have to do with our Gospel or my life?” Good question. What does
anticipation have to do with our Gospel and my life? To answer that let’s delve
into our passage.
Obviously, Jesus’ raising the young
man from the dead anticipates the Resurrection, but before we explore that, we examine
other aspects of our passage.
Luke’s story is similar to other
miracle stories, but this is clearly his story, and he connected it to his two favorite
prophets: Elijah and Elisha.[1]
We read the account of Elijah raising the son of the widow of Zarephath.
Likewise, Elisha raised the son of the Shunammite.[2]
Luke’s parallels to Elijah are
remarkable: the mother was a widow, the prophet met her at a city gate, and
after life is restored, “he gave him to
his mother,” an exact quotation by Luke.
Luke’s use of the Old Testament does
not offer proof of an argument, does not establish the prophecy/fulfillment
pattern, but allows the Old Testament narrative to provide a way of telling.
Luke does not bring 1 Kings 17 to the reader’s attention. It remains just
beneath the surface. If the reader does not know the Old Testament, the Elijah
story does not come to mind at all.
What, then, is Luke doing? It could be
simply a case of imitation, widely practiced and respected as a guiding
principle of literary art in a culture free of copyright laws. More likely, if
Luke’s readers knew the Old Testament, our Gospel today could give a sense of
continuity, of being at home, of recognizing the truth. What Luke is doing is
using an effective method of teaching – repetition. Who hasn’t learned the
catechism through repetition?
Secondly, Luke offers a dramatic
example of Jesus’ ministry of compassion. The object of his compassion is the
mother. His total attention is on this woman who is a widow and whose only son,
her sole means of support as well as being her whole family, is dead. When I
buried my parents, there was sadness. When parents bury children, there is
overwhelming sadness. With Jesus’ attention focused on the woman, the
storyteller seems unaware of the bearers, the mourners and the crowds following
the mother and Jesus. Moreover, without drama, ritual or prayer, Jesus raised
the man to life.
The crowd now re-enters the story,
expressing praise and fear of God. However, their principal role is to give
voice to the faith generated by Jesus raising the dead. There are two
expressions of faith. “A great prophet
has arisen among us!” and “God has
visited his people!”[3]
Here, Luke embraced the term prophet,
describing Jesus whose ministry reminded people of Elijah and Elisha. The early
church preached Jesus as a prophet like Moses. In Acts, Peter spoke, “Moses said, ‘The Lord God will raise up for
you a prophet like me from your brothers. You shall listen to him in whatever
he tells you. And it shall be that every soul who does not listen to that
prophet shall be destroyed from the people.’”[4]
Before the high priest, Stephen
preached, “This Moses, whom they
rejected, saying, ‘Who made you a ruler and a judge?’ – this man God sent as
both ruler and redeemer by the hand of the angel who appeared to him in the
bush. This man led them out, performing wonders and signs in Egypt and at the
Red Sea and in the wilderness for forty years. This is the Moses who said to
the Israelites, ‘God will raise up for you a prophet like me from your
brothers.’”[5]
To say that Jesus “was a prophet mighty in deed and word before
God and all the people” is not to say all that Luke or we believe
about Jesus. The prophet spoke for God. If Jesus’ contemporaries taught that
the age of prophecy was closed, then the crowds around Jesus announced that God
reopened it, for the phrase – “has arisen among us” – is drawn from Deuteronomy:
“I will raise up for them a prophet like
you from among their brethren.”[6]
The second expression, “God has
visited his people,” is also a favorite of Luke. In his Benedictus, Zechariah
speaks, “Blessed be the Lord God of
Israel, for he has visited and redeemed his people.”[7]
When Jesus wept over Jerusalem, he lamented, “They will not leave one stone upon another in you, because you did not
know the time of your visitation.”[8]
In Acts, James spoke these words during the Jerusalem Council, “Simon has described to us how God first
visited the Gentiles, to take from them a people for his name.”[9]
The word visit is from the Latin visitare meaning, "to go to see or
come to inspect." It also means to "come upon or afflict" with
sickness or punishment. Depending on who the visitor was, you would either
welcome or reject him.
God’s visit may be in wrath or in
mercy, but for Luke it is always an act of grace.[10]
When Jesus wept over Jerusalem, he predicted its destruction not as a divine
visitation, but because the city did not know the time of its visitation. The
people did not welcome God appropriately.
Finally, we turn to the location of this
story within Luke. In addition to having its own message, this unit anticipates
the next story about Jesus’ message to John the Baptist. It does so in two
ways. First, the raising of the son of the widow of Nain provides concrete
support for Jesus’ word to John, “The
dead are raised up.”[11]
When Matthew recorded Jesus’ message to John,[12]
he was already told of Jesus raising the daughter of a ruler.[13]
In Luke, that story is told later.[14]
Therefore, the raising of the dead at Nain serves Luke as preparation for the
summary statement of Jesus’ activity sent to John, a statement that includes
raising the dead.
This passage also anticipates the
following story about John by referring to Judea in our closing, “This report
concerning him spread throughout the whole of Judea.”[15]
The reference to Judea rather than Galilee permitted the report of Jesus’
ministry to reach John whose ministry was in Judea.
Our minds anticipate the climax of
the Gospel: God raises Jesus from the dead. Luke must have had similar
thoughts; after all, the whole story of Jesus is narrated from the perspective
of one who is looking back through an empty tomb.
However, Luke would correct us by
saying that while the resurrection of Jesus was the climax; it too was
anticipatory in the sense that the Spirit, which empowered Jesus, was given to
the Church for its life and mission. This major story of Luke described the
ministry of Jesus as the middle and not the end of the story.
So, if our passage today anticipated
Jesus’ Resurrection, and the Resurrection anticipated Pentecost, what does
anticipation of the Holy Spirit have to do with my life? In other words, how is
the Spirit leading you? How is the Holy Spirit active in my life as an
individual, as a family, as Church?
Your ministries, such as youth and
women, your ongoing work with the Angelman Society and Habitat for Humanity,
your outreach to the Asian Indian community and preschool are evident that the
Holy Spirit is active at Word of Life Church. As you call a new pastor, the
Holy Spirit, and not personal preference, must guide your prayer and process.
As individuals, we always need the
guidance and power of the Holy Spirit, for without it, we could not even
believe. There are particular times when we pray to the Holy Spirit. Our list of
prayers is endless, and I am certain that yours includes healing of body, mind
and spirit, renewal of relationships and religious fervor. Does our list
include imitating Jesus and anticipating we will have a heart like His?
A colleague of mine wrote recently
these words. Like Jesus, we are capable
of performing acts of mercy and compassion for those in need. Our culture might
hold up as ideals power, control and strength, especially for men, but at the
heart of Jesus’ strength is compassion for weakness, mercy for the helpless.
The person who acts against the victimization of women, the proliferation of
pornography, the scourge of human trafficking and slavery is acting like Elijah
and Jesus with compassion and mercy. Those women and children released from
poverty and sufferings share in some part the resurrection of Jesus in the
world. This is a model for us, the type of people Jesus calls us to be for
those in need.[16]
Friends, this week pray to the Holy
Spirit to fill your heart with compassion that you may live with a heart like
Jesus, and when you do, may the peace of God that surpasses all
understanding keep your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus. Amen.
[1] Much
of this section is from Fred B. Craddock, Luke
(Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox Press, 2009), 95-98.
[2] 1
Kings 7:17-24; 2 Kings 4:18-37
[3]
Luke 7:16.
[4]
Acts 3:22-23.
[5]
Acts 7:35-37.
[6]
Deuteronomy 18:18.
[7]
Luke 1:68.
[8]
Luke 19:44.
[9]
Acts 15:14.
[10]
Exodus 20:5; Psalm 106:4.
[11]
Luke 7:22.
[12]
Matthew 11:2-6.
[13]
Matthew 9:18-26.
[14]
Lue 8:40-56.
[15]
Luke 7:17.
[16]
James W. Martens, “Rise Up!”, America,
June 3-10, 2013.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)



