Sunday, October 31, 2010

Be-Attitude Living: A Series on the Beatitudes (4) Act with Mercy

  • Matthew 5:1-12 (7) - read this text online here »
  • Matthew 18:21-36 - read this text online here »
“Blessed are those who show mercy to others, God will show mercy to them.”

In his sermon “Blessed Are the Merciful” [www.preachingtoday.com], Rev. John Koessler told a story about a mother who came to Napoleon on behalf of her son who was about to be executed. The mother asked the ruler to issue a pardon. But Napoleon pointed out it was her son’s second offence and justice demanded death.
“I don't ask for justice,” the woman replied. “I plead for mercy.”
The emperor objected, “But your son doesn't deserve mercy.”
“Sir,” the mother replied, “it would not be mercy if he deserved it, and mercy is all I ask.”
Her son was granted the pardon.
“Blessed are those who show mercy to others, God will show mercy to them.” This is Jesus’ fifth Beatitude that theologian Dale Bruner calls one of the three help Beatitudes [Matthew A Commentary Volume 1: The Christbook. Revised and Expanded Edition, p.155. Wm B. Eerdmans Publishing, Grand Rapids, Mich.]. It is called a help Beatitude because it focuses on service and love to others and requires an intentional action on the part of those who show mercy. The disciples and others who climbed the side of the mountain to spend time with Jesus would have needed to hear more than one brief statement from Jesus about mercy -- or about any of the other nine blessings for that matter. That’s one reason Matthew structured Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount the way he did. He knew Jesus’ listeners would need to hear how Jesus’ stories in the rest of the Sermon unpacked the meanings underlying the Beatitudes. They would have much to ponder and to do.

At first glance, the people listening to Jesus would understand that those who were merciful to others had some feeling of sadness and compassion for a person’s bad situation – maybe even of his or her own making -- and were trying to do something about it. Those who were merciful were being kind or forgiving or generous to such a person in serious need. Unless they were strict Pharisees, that is. In Jesus’ day, traditional pharisaic theology would have affirmed another kind of beatitude: “Happy are those who are righteous – who have cleaned up their act, who are good and have it all together -- then God will be merciful to them.” They would have had a difficult time with Jesus’ attitude and teachings that conflicted with theirs.

Mercy is mercy because it does not figure out what a person might deserve. The Oxford Canadian Dictionary says mercy is “compassion or forbearance shown to a powerless person … with no claim to kindness.” Mercy would not be mercy if it acted on what a person deserved. On the contrary, mercy allows people to make a fresh start and often involves forgiveness and the release from their indebtedness to others – perhaps even to the one showing mercy. So being merciful as Jesus teaches can be personally costly.

Let me put it this way: Mercy is good if I am the one receiving mercy! However, if I am the one required to show mercy, then there is considerably more to struggle over. That’s because, in this context, the only kind of person to whom I can show mercy is someone who clearly does not deserve it. In fact, the person may never be able to pay me back for whatever I do to show mercy. That’s why I asked John to read Jesus’ story about forgiveness and the servant who would not forgive in Matthew 18. The story is about a king whose servant owed him an impossibly large sum of money – millions or billions or even zillions of dollars, as one commentator suggested. When the king called in the debt, the servant begged for patience. He asked the king to give him a chance to pay it all back. This desperate request was as impossible as the debt itself because it would have taken several lifetimes to repay the amount he owed! Of course, the king knew the servant's situation was hopeless. So what did the king do? Instead of giving the servant more time to repay or making him pay for the debt with his life – which he could have done with all justice -- the king showed great mercy and cancelled the entire debt. 

But that’s not the end of the story. We wish it were. No sooner did the servant leave the king he found a fellow servant who owed him a relatively small debt compared to what he had owed the king. The servant grabbed him by the throat. “Pay up! Now!” he demanded.

His poor fellow servant fell to his knees and begged him, “Give me a chance and I’ll pay it all back.” Did you notice these were the very words the first servant had used with the king when he pleaded for more time to pay back his impossibly large debt? But the irony was lost on him. So he had his colleague thrown into jail.

Jesus then said: “When the other servants saw this going on, they were outraged and brought a detailed report to the king. The king summoned the man and said, ‘You evil servant! I forgave your entire debt when you begged me for mercy. Shouldn’t you be compelled to be merciful to your fellow servant who asked for mercy?’”

You would think so, wouldn’t you? But you and I also know differently, don’t we? Acting with mercy toward someone who has slighted or offended us is not easy, is it? Forgiving someone who has hurt us or said something behind our backs is not easy, is it? Being generous toward someone who has taken advantage of us or been mean to us in some way is not easy, is it? But when we listen to Jesus, we are faced with the fact of acting intentionally with mercy toward such people. Otherwise, we are in difficulty with God. James, the half-brother of Jesus, told us clearly in James 2:12, 13 [GNT]: “Speak and act as people who will be judged by the law [of mercy] that sets us free.” (We are to love our neighbour as ourselves -- even the undeserving neighbour.) “For God will not show mercy when he judges the person who has not been merciful; but mercy triumphs over judgement.”

What would persuade us to be merciful – to act with mercy to someone who does not deserve mercy? Is not what persuades us found in our inner being, in our hearts, because we have responded to God’s remarkable grace and costly forgiveness of us -- we who are entirely undeserving of God’s love of us? William Shakespeare had a well-developed sense of biblical themes and their application to our lives. Showing mercy was one of them. You might recall the familiar quotation from The Merchant of Venice when Portia asked Shylock to show mercy.
He said,
“On what compulsion, must I?”
She responded:
“The quality of mercy is not strained.
It droppeth as the gentle rain from heaven
Upon the place beneath. It is twice blest:
It blesseth him that gives and him that takes.
Tis mightiest in the mightiest; it becomes
The throned monarch better than his crown.
His sceptre shows the force of temporal power,
The attribute to awe and majesty,
Wherein doth sit the dread and fear of kings.
But mercy is above this sceptred sway;
It is enthroned in the hearts of kings;
It is an attribute of God himself;
And earthly power doth then show like God's
When mercy seasons justice.”
What compels us to show mercy – to act intentionally with kindness, compassion, forgiveness and generosity -- toward someone who deserves to be dealt with differently? It is, first of all, having a heart out of which mercy flows. Twice in Matthew’s Gospel [9:13, 12:17], Jesus quoted from Hosea 6:6 where God said, “I want mercy and not sacrifice.” Religious sacrifices and rituals can be done casually, by habit, with little thought or meaning or personal consequences in our behaviour. But mercy calls for our intentional compassionate identification with others. My theologian friend Dale Bruner observes that God’s call for mercy in Hosea is the Old Testament equivalent of the New Testament’s golden rule: “Do for others what you want them to do for you: this is the meaning of the Law of Moses and of the teachings of the prophets.” And it was Jesus who said these words in Matthew 7:12. So for Jesus, a fundamental priority in Be-Attitude Living is showing mercy graciously to those who do not deserve mercy [Matthew A Commentary Volume 1: The Christbook. Revised and Expanded Edition, p. 421. Wm B. Eerdmans Publishing, Grand Rapids, Mich.].

Saint Augustine, who is accepted by most scholars as the most important figure in the ancient Western Church, said that those who act with mercy are also those who “come to the aid of the needy.” Ambrose, another theologian and church leader in the fourth century wrote: “There is your brother, naked and crying! And you stand confused over the choice of an attractive floor covering.” (As true in the fourth century as in the 21st century!)

In his book The Best Kept Secret of Christian Mission [Zondervan, 2010, pp. 97-98], author John Dickson writes about Tim Winton, Australia's most celebrated novelist and also well-known for his Christian faith. Winton was interviewed on a television show and asked about the time a stranger visited his family. That visit profoundly affected young Tim as well as the rest of his family. Dickson sums up Winton's response:
Tim Winton [told] how his father, a policeman, had been in a terrible accident in the mid-1960s, knocked off his motorcycle by a drunk driver. After weeks in a coma, he was allowed home. [Winton said], “[My father] was like an earlier version of my father, a sort of augmented version of my father. He was sort of recognizable, but not totally my dad.… Everything was busted up and they put him in the chair.… I was terrified.”

Winton's father was a big man and Mrs. Winton had a great deal [of trouble] bathing him each day. There was nothing that Tim, five-years-old at the time, could do to help. News of the family's situation got out into the local community and shortly afterward, Winton recalls, there was a knock at the door. “Oh, g'day. My name's Len,” said the stranger to Mrs. Winton. … “I heard your hubby's [not well]. Anything I can do?” Len Thomas was from the local church, Winton explained. This man had heard about the family's difficulties and wanted to help.

”He just showed up,” [Winton said], “and he used to carry my dad from the bed and put him in the bath and he used to bathe him -- which in the 1960s, in Perth, in the suburbs, was not the sort of thing you saw every day.” 
According to Winton, this simple act of kindness from a single Christian had a powerful effect. “It really touched me in that, regardless of theology or anything else, watching a grown man bother, for nothing, to show up and wash a sick man -- you know, it really affected me.”
Jesus says those who show mercy to others will be blessed by God. So we rightly ask the question: When will God show mercy? There are at least three answers we can give because of what we know from the Scripture. First, God has already shown his mercy to the world in Jesus’ death on the cross for the forgiveness of our sins. We hear this often, I know. But underlying the seventy times seven forgiveness theme that Jesus prefaced his story about the king and the unforgiving servant with is the costly and generous and amazing mercy of God in Jesus. And Jesus did that for all humanity.

Second, those who act with mercy toward others will themselves be treated with mercy in the future on God’s final Day of Judgment. Mercy and forgiveness are not meant to be withheld but to be passed on to others. So God promises he will be merciful and forgiving to those who intentionally act with mercy to others who do not deserve mercy -- any more than we do. But where forgiveness and mercy and kindness are not passed on to others, there is judgment.

There is also a third sense of when God shows mercy. It is included in today’s Call to Worship. God said to our spiritual ancestor, Moses: “I am God, the God of mercy and grace, endlessly patient with so much love and forgiveness for you.” And as the Words of Assurance of God’s Forgiving Love reminded us this morning, adapted from Psalm 103: “God is sheer mercy and grace and not easily angered. God is rich in astonishing love. God doesn’t treat us as our sins deserve. As far as sunrise is from sunset, God has separated us from our sins.” I like the way Canon Michael Green expressed when God shows his mercy to us in his commentary on Matthew’s Gospel [Green, M. (2000). The Message of Matthew: The Kingdom of Heaven (90). Leicester, England; Downers Grove, Ill., U.S.A., Inter-Varsity Press]:

“[Those who are merciful to others] have tasted the sheer mercy of God who received them into the kingdom. They have come to share that quality of divine love. And they will be shown mercy throughout their lives and at the Day of Judgment.”

May this be so for you and for me.

Rev. Chris Miller
October 31, 2010

OYM Oriole-York Mills United Church, Toronto
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Sunday, October 24, 2010

Be-Attitude Living: A Series on the Beatitudes (3) An Appetite for God

"You're blessed when you've worked up a good appetite for God. He's food and drink in the best meal you'll ever eat. Matthew 5:6

Possessing an appetite means you have a desire for something. You have developed a taste for something. On the one hand, your appetite could be weak so that even a small taste would be enough to satisfy you. In the long run, whether you actually get that taste or not may not really matter to you. On the other hand, your appetite could be strong. You have really worked up an appetite for something. Your appetite may be voracious. You crave something. You long for it. You absolutely need it. You may even believe you cannot live without it.

That is the sense underlying Jesus’ fourth Beatitude when he talked about those who “hunger and thirst for righteousness.” For these people, their entire body and soul ache to be satisfied or filled with what God says is the right way and the good way to live. In Jesus’ sermon, this Beatitude follows immediately after three other Beatitudes similar in tone and character. Each of these four blessings expresses being poor or being poverty-stricken. I appreciate how theologian and commentator Dale Bruner [Matthew A Commentary Volume 1: The Christbook. Revised and Expanded Edition, p.155. Wm B. Eerdmans Publishing, Grand Rapids, Mich.] gives structure to the 10 Beatitudes in Matthew’s Gospel. He divides them into three groups. Each Beatitude in each of the groups connects with the other Beatitudes in its group. Bruner calls the first group poor Beatitudes. That’s because each Beatitude is about people who are incomplete, deficient and lacking in some way. They are people who are in a condition of deep need. They are people to whom God extends his grace simply because they need his help.  

Beatitude One: “Blessed are those who are poor in spirit” -- or spiritually poverty-stricken. Beatitude Two: “Blessed are those who mourn” -- or are broken-hearted.” These are people who are poor because they are without joy of heart. Beatitude Three: “Blessed are those who are humble.” These are people who are poor because they are without power in the eyes of the world and have no power to commend themselves to anyone around them. They are similar to those who are poverty-stricken in their spirit. And Beatitude Four: “Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness” -- or those who have a deep and voracious appetite for what God desires in their lives and in the lives of others, for what is good and right. That appetite still needs to be satisfied in all our lives whether we recognize it or not.

In the weeks that follow, we will look at the fifth and seventh Beatitudes: “Blessed are those who are merciful” and “Blessed are those who are peacemakers.” They are in the second group of Beatitudes that Bruner calls the help Beatitudes because they focus on service and love. And then there is the third group that Bruner calls the hurt Beatitudes because they consist of two Beatitudes centred on persecution – on “those who are persecuted for righteousness” and on “those who are persecuted because they are devoted to Jesus.”

Human beings possess appetites for many things. Some things are good and some things are bad. Some appetites lead to harmful actions and addictions while others may be more annoying than anything else to others.
A father told the story about his eight-year-old daughter who left six green beans on her plate. She normally ate her vegetables so, usually, the father was not bothered by this kind of thing. However, on this particular night, he was irked for some reason and said to her, “Eat your green beans.”

She replied, “Dad, I'm full to the top.”

“You won't pop,” he responded.

“Yes, I will pop!” she said.

“Risk it!” he said. “It will be OK.”

“Dad, I could not eat another bite.”

Her father knew that night they were having her favourite dessert -- pumpkin pie squares. So he asked, “How would you like a double helping of pumpkin pie squares with two dollops of whipped cream on top?”

“That sounds great!” she responded as she pushed her plate back, ready for dessert.

“How can you have room for a double helping of pumpkin pie squares with two dollops of whipped cream and not have room for six measly green beans?” he asked.

She stood up tall in front of her chair and, pointing to her belly, said: “This is my vegetable stomach. This is my meat stomach. They are both full. Here is my dessert stomach. It is empty. I am ready for dessert!” [www.preachingtoday.com/illustrations]
So what do we hunger for? In this Beatitude, Jesus is not necessarily comparing different hungers and thirsts. At least he doesn’t give any examples. But he says clearly that the blessed are those who keep hungering and keep thirsting for God, for righteousness – that is, for what God desires, for what is right according to God’s standard for their lives and for the lives of others. Jesus knew -- and so did his disciples and the other listeners -- that the picture of hungering and thirsting for God meant a deep longing for God. At some point, I can imagine Jesus unpacking the meaning of this blessing by quoting from the prophet Isaiah in Chapter 55:

“The LORD says,
‘Come, everyone who is thirsty -- here is water!
Come, you who have no money -- buy corn and eat!
Come! Buy wine and milk -- it will cost you nothing!
Why spend money on what does not satisfy?
Why spend your wages and still be hungry?
Listen to me and do what I say,
and you will enjoy the best food of all.
Listen now, my people, and
come to me; come to me, and you will have life!’”
It would cost the thirsty and hungry nothing only because God, in his amazing grace and love, paid the cost!
Listen to how King David expressed his deep longing for God in Psalm 63, verse 1:
“You, God, are my God, earnestly I seek you;
I thirst for you, my whole being longs for you,
in a dry and parched land where there is no water.”
The meaning of this hungering and thirsting for God is to continually seek God with all our heart, to desire God above all else.

Everyone who listens to Jesus and this blessing is challenged with such questions as: How hungry and thirsty am I for God? How hungry and thirsty am I to think, speak and do what is good and right in God’s sight? How hungry and thirsty am I for what God wants for me and for others, especially those living in unrighteousness ways and in unjust conditions? How much do I truly want the justice and will of God not only for myself but also for others? These are questions I frequently ask myself. And it is not so much a question of feeling (How do I feel?) as it is of behaviour (What do I intend to do?). I believe Jesus is challenging us to hunger and thirst to be a doer of God’s will. And we will discover more and more of what God’s will is through the teachings and commands of Jesus, focused here in his Sermon on the Mount. The content of his sermon in Matthew, chapters 5 through 7, is a summary of what God wants for us in our relationship with God, within ourselves and certainly in our relationships with others.

There is an intriguing yet encouraging irony in this Beatitude. Those who hunger and thirst for right conduct (another meaning for “righteousness”) are blessed, not because they are righteous but because they are continually craving the personal, moral and social righteousness that God wants for them and for others. That captivates me. Again, Dale Bruner says it so well [Matthew A Commentary Volume 1: The Christbook. p.168. Wm B. Eerdmans Publishing, Grand Rapids, Mich.]:
“God’s promise is given to people for whom righteousness ... and right conduct seem painfully missing, in themselves and in others ... ”
Bruner then says:
“The meaning of ‘hungering and thirsting’ is this: these persons do not believe they can live until they find or see righteousness. They long for what is right, they crave justice, they cannot live without God’s justice prevailing; for them right relations in the world are not just a luxury or a mere hope but an absolute necessity if they are to live at all.”
Thomas Merton was a writer and Trappist monk known for his depth of spirituality, his contemplative life and his passionate desire for peace and justice. In his little book Thoughts in Solitude [Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1999), p. 79], Merton wrote 15 lines that have become known as "The Merton Prayer.” As I pray this prayer, I hope you will sense his poverty of spirit and his bottomless appetite – his deep hunger and thirst -- to do God’s will and not his own:
“My Lord God, I have no idea where I am going. I do not see the road ahead of me. I cannot know for certain where it will end. Nor do I really know myself, and the fact that I think I am following your will does not mean that I am actually doing so. But I believe that the desire to please you does in fact please you. And I hope I have that desire in all that I am doing. I hope that I will never do anything apart from that desire. And I know that if I do this you will lead me by the right road, though I may know nothing about it. Therefore I will trust you always though I may seem to be lost and in the shadow of death. I will not fear, for you are ever with me, and you will never leave me to face my perils alone.”
For me, Merton’s thirst is most evident in the line: “I hope that I will never do anything apart from that desire” – the desire to please God. Are you starved for more of God? Are you hungry and thirsty for more goodness and righteousness in your own life and in the lives of others? Jesus says: “Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for what God wants, God will satisfy them fully.”

When will God satisfy those who are hungry and thirsty to do what is just and right in God’s sight? When will God finally satisfy their longing for personal obedience and social justice? I say finally because the hard reality is that, while we can enjoy a taste of satisfaction now, full satisfaction will not happen in this life. We may seek to do our best to live God’s way and to help others but we often fail personally. As well, the evil forces in this world can thwart the justice we hope for and work for. But one day, God’s judgment will come and this will be good news for those who, in this life, have received little if any justice. For God has deep compassion for those whose lives are hard, who are spiritually broken, whose hopes are constantly dashed and whose lives are powerless. And many of these very people in our world today, who are oppressed or persecuted and long for justice, look beyond this life to God’s justice and the life to come. For then they will be finally and fully vindicated when they enter fully into God’s kingdom where they will “neither hunger nor thirst anymore,” as the Scripture says in John’s Revelation, the last book of the Bible. (I have read that verse in more than one funeral service, especially for those whose lives were difficult and poverty-stricken indeed.)

God’s judgment will also come with mercy and forgiveness and freedom and joy for those who hunger and thirst for God’s righteousness in themselves. They desire, like Thomas Merton, to please God in all they do but know they fall far short of God’s standard. But they are forgiven and, in the life to come, they will experience the righteousness they long for because of Jesus’ death on the cross for them.

I know some of you follow the game of baseball and are watching the World Series games these days. In his book The Sacred Way [Zondervan, 2005, p.31], author Tony Jones suggests that the Christian can learn something from the life of a baseball player. He writes:
“Becoming more adept at following Christ … is like being a baseball shortstop. A young player can watch videos, read books by the greatest shortstops of all time, and listen to coaches lecture on what makes a good shortstop; but what will make him a truly good shortstop is getting out on the field and practicing. The only way he'll really get a feel for the game is to field ground ball after ground ball, to figure out when to play the ball on a short hop, when a pull-hitter is at bat, and how far to cheat toward second base when the double play is on. The more practice he has, the better he'll be.

“Getting a ‘feel for the game’ in following Jesus is much the same. You can listen to innumerable sermons and read countless books, but the true transformation happens only when you practice the disciplines that lie at the heart of the faith.”
I believe what Jesus is doing in all the Beatitudes is helping us get a feel for the life God promises to bless. When we listen to what Jesus says, we sense God’s loving heart, strong compassion and amazing grace for all people who are in deep need. And as followers of Jesus, we pray that our hearts will resonate with God’s compassion for others. We also get a good feel for what following Jesus means in the fourth Beatitude. Do we have an appetite to do God’s will? Do we hunger and thirst to obey Jesus’ commands? If so, let us pray our appetite is to love God with all our heart and mind and soul and strength and to love our neighbour as we care for ourselves.

May this be so for you and for me.

Rev. Chris Miller
October 24, 2010

OYM Oriole-York Mills United Church, Toronto
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Sunday, October 17, 2010

Be-Attitude Living - A Series on the Beatitudes (2): Loss is Gain

  • You're blessed when you feel you've lost what is most dear to you. Only then can you be embraced by the One most dear to you. Matthew 5:4
If I remember correctly, there were about 200 or so students when I attended my first lecture at university. The attendance thinned out after a while for a variety of reasons. One reason I stayed was quite realistic, I thought: since I paid good money to be there, I wanted to get my money’s worth. But I also discovered some students paid very little to be there because they audited the class. They had no strong financial commitment to the class but they were interested enough in the subject and perhaps in the particular teacher to sit and listen, at least for a while.

This is something like what was going on with Jesus the teacher and those who attended Jesus’ class on the mountain. We are in week two of a five-week message series on the Beatitudes of Jesus [5:3-12] from the Gospel of Matthew. Beginning with the nine Beatitudes was Jesus’ way of introducing his class to his teaching in the entire Sermon on the Mount. Jesus’ class comprised two groups. His 12 disciples were those who really wanted to hear and live by Jesus’ teaching [those who wanted “to get their money’s worth”] because they had already made a strong commitment to follow him. Then there were those who were on the edge auditing his class – perhaps some were casually listening and others listening only to critique what Jesus said. They had enough interest to spend time listening to Jesus because he was an unusual teacher. Some were impressed he spoke with such authority, the Scripture says – apparently, quite different from the other religious teachers they usually heard. Matthew framed the Beatitudes and the entire Sermon on the Mount in the following manner. Hear how The Message Bible begins Matthew 5 and then concludes Jesus’ sermon in Chapter 7, verses 28 and 29:
“When Jesus saw his ministry drawing huge crowds, he climbed a hillside. Those who were apprenticed to him, the committed, climbed with him. Arriving at a quiet place, he sat down and taught his climbing companions….

“When Jesus concluded his address, the crowd burst into applause. [Not only his disciples heard Jesus teaching but so did the crowd with them.] They had never heard teaching like this. It was apparent that he was living everything he was saying -- quite a contrast to their religion teachers! This was the best teaching they had ever heard.”
What is significant to consider here is that the disciples and the crowd are drawn to listen to the teacher Jesus and not merely to another religious teacher. He was the extraordinary one who was worth listening to and, for some, worth their personal commitment. We only have to read the first four chapters of Matthew’s Gospel to see how extraordinary the person of Jesus is: his genealogy, his birth, his baptism, his temptations and his life of light and hope and healing for the entire world. No wonder people wanted to know more about Jesus and what he taught. So they sat down with him to listen and to ponder how to respond to such a teacher and to such teachings.

It intrigues me Jesus began his Sermon on the Mount with blessings rather than commands. But these “blessings” may have sounded a little startling at first. The disciples and the crowd would hear about his commands and his ethics soon enough but, first, Jesus wanted them to experience God’s grace and love. With the Beatitudes, Jesus laid a foundation of God’s grace upon which his 12 disciples and the others who followed him could respond to his often difficult commands. For instance, those who are “the poor in spirit” are those (then and now) who realize their spiritual poverty – that they do not have adequate goodness of their own to stand before a holy God. They know they need God’s own goodness! They realize they are blessed in God’s presence -- or in God’s kingdom -- solely because of God’s grace and love for them shown in the death of Jesus on the cross for them. As they grow in their understanding of God’s grace, they will become increasingly careful of the way they relate both to God and to other people. They know God’s grace extends not only to them but to everyone they encounter, both friend and foe. And if at times they fail to live God’s way or miss the mark or sin, grace means God also forgives them and forgives them and forgives them. And they will learn that Jesus calls them to forgive others as they have been forgiven.] So they get up and keep on loving others, themselves and they keep on being open to God’s love.

This morning we heard Jesus’ second blessing: “Blessed are they that mourn: for they shall be comforted.” This is a paradoxical or counter-intuitive blessing. It sounds as if Jesus is saying, “Happy are those who are sad.” Or, as The Message Bible puts it, “You’re blessed when you feel you’ve lost what is most dear to you.” Or “loss is gain” as I titled this message. G. K. Chesterton once defined a paradox as “truth standing on its head calling for attention.” That is certainly true here. Jesus states one of the essential truths of the life God blesses in such a way that it cries out for all to come and take a good long look at what he means -- a look that can bring life to them.

I think there are two things going on in this Be-Attitude for living. First, Jesus says that the attitude of being brokenhearted, grief-stricken and in mourning is the attitude God blesses. Jesus was not at all explicit about what the circumstances might be that cause someone to mourn. But just as Jesus spoke before of spiritual poverty he is now speaking of mourning spiritually. Jesus wanted his hearers to feel in themselves that God comforts those who are brokenhearted and filled with deep sadness. As theologian Dale Bruner translated this verse: “Blessings on the brokenhearted, because they will be comforted.” [Matthew A Commentary Volume 1: The Christbook. Revised and Expanded Edition, p.154. Wm B. Eerdmans Publishing, Grand Rapids, Mich.].

Bruner also said something important when he wrote:
“Jesus [blesses] mourning, not moping [or pouting] (cf. esp. 6:16-18). He does not counsel the long face. He does, however, bless real sadness, a state that can as easily coexist with an outwardly happy life as do all the other normal contradictions of living. (The deepest joy may reside in persons with the deepest sadness.) Sadness and joy are not mutually exclusive; they are often cause and effect. (Much folk music lives from this strange but strong combination.) Jesus lends his authority to the perception that it is those for whom sadness is deep that God is real (cf. Ecclesiastes 7:2-4).
But we also want to know more about the kind of circumstances that break peoples’ hearts – what causes such deep personal sadness. Those listening to Jesus might recall what the prophet Isaiah said (Isaiah 61:1-2): “He has sent me to bind up the brokenhearted … to comfort all who mourn.” Or someone else who knew the Scripture well may have remembered Ezekiel 9:4: “Go through the city, through Jerusalem, and put a mark on the foreheads of those who sigh and groan over all the abominations that are committed in it.” Another person might have remembered the words of the prophet Amos 6:6: “Woe to those who drink wine from bowls, and anoint themselves with the finest oils, but are not grieved over the ruin of [their country]!” In these Old Testament Scriptures, Jesus’ listeners – who were really paying attention -- could sense how injustice, societal evil and sin would cause deep wounds in people’s spirits. These wounds would break the hearts of people sensing God’s heart because those who could help to heal the wounds of hurting people in a selfish and unjust society did not care enough to do so. These wounds would grieve peoples’ spirits sensitive to God’s Spirit because such evil and injustice and sin seemed to go on all around them.

However, when we ponder our human experiences, and are also aware of what is happening in our society and in the world, do we not realize that what breaks our hearts is not only what’s wrong with society or the world, but also what’s wrong with us? If we connect Jesus’ first beatitude – “Blessed are those who know they spiritually poor” -- with the second one – “Blessed are those who mourn” – then we may see one more circumstance that may cause us to be brokenhearted: our own tendency to fail and to miss the mark of God’s good intentions for our lives. We call it sin.

One speaker said it like this:
“We twist the truth to get out of a jam. We say hurtful things to people we love. We commit adultery in our hearts. We spend on ourselves what we could give to others. We lose our tempers and look down our noses. We spread gossip, and we wallow in envy. We do these things knowing they’re wrong, that they’re hurtful to others and to us, and that they fall far short of the good things God created us to do and be.” [Bryan Wilkerson in his sermon “The Heartbreak Gospel,” PreachingToday.com]
Rev. Andy Stanley points out that we need to take care we do not call our sins “mistakes.” There is a big difference between the two. A mistake is an error, a blunder, a slip-up, an oversight or a miscalculation. We both regret and apologize for a mistake. We try to make amends for our mistakes. But we don’t mourn a mistake. What we mourn is the fundamental flaw in our character that compels us to think or say or do the wrong thing. What we mourn is a twist in our spirit that consistently takes us in the wrong direction. We were made to be generous, but we tend toward greed. We were designed to treasure our sexuality, instead we trash it. We were wired to worship God. Instead we worship other things – even something good like nature or ourselves. As Stanley puts it, we are not merely “mistakers,” we are also “sinners.”

Jesus said “Blessed are they that mourn: for they shall be comforted.” And the blessing and the comfort are from nowhere else but God!

Those listening to Jesus in his day would have understood that and so must we in our day. To mourn over the evil and the injustices in our world is a good thing. I hope our mourning will cause us to act, if at all possible, to be generous givers and sensitive but strong peacemakers – to be part of the solution and not part of the ongoing problem. God wants us to be healers with Jesus of the wrong in our world.

If we listen to Jesus in our day and mourn over what is wrong in ourselves, Jesus promised us the blessing of God’s comforting presence with us. In John’s Gospel – especially chapters 14 to 16 -- Jesus makes us more than aware that the One who guides us into truth, who helps us and who comforts our spirits in this life is God’s Holy Spirit.

But we are pondering the blessing for those who mourn. Let me be clear that Jesus’ blessing and God’s comfort embraces all mourning, whatever loss we face in our lives. The Message Bible has it right when it states: “You’re blessed when you feel you’ve lost what is most dear to you. Only then can you be embraced by the One [that is God] most dear to you.” But I also believe that the mourning Jesus blesses and for which God will provide comfort extends even to people who grieve about their seeming difficulty to believe. One commentator put it this way:
“Sometimes one seems unable to believe, [but] there is faith in this very longing [to believe] …. Such mourners have already pressed into the second [Beatitude]…. I think it was Teresa of Avila who said: ‘I do not love you, Lord; I do not even want to love you; but I want to want to love you.’” [Matthew A Commentary Volume 1: The Christbook. Revised and Expanded Edition, p.165. Wm B. Eerdmans Publishing, Grand Rapids, Mich.]
My friends, if you are mourning today, then be prepared to be embraced by the grace and love of God in Jesus and to be comforted by the gracious presence of the Holy Spirit. If someone you know is struggling to believe that Jesus Christ has come to bring them new life, then trust that God’s grace and love is there for them to receive in Jesus. Pray that, in their struggle, they will come to experience the blessing and comfort of God’s presence in their lives as Jesus promised. Pray that they will want to want to love God.

May this be so for you and for me.

Rev. Chris Miller
October 17, 2010

OYM Oriole-York Mills United Church, Toronto
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Sunday, October 10, 2010

Be-Attitude Living: A Series On The Beatitudes 1.Less Is More

  1. Matthew 5:1-12 (5:3) - read this online here »
  2. Micah 6:6-8 - read this online here »

There is little question the Sermon on the Mount is the most well-known of Jesus’ teachings. Rev. Dr John Stott called it “the nearest thing to a manifesto that [Jesus] ever uttered, for it is his own description of what he wanted his followers to be and to do” [Stott, J. R. W., & Stott, J. R. W. (1985), The Message of the Sermon on the Mount (Matthew 5-7): Christian Counter-Culture. The Bible Speaks Today (14–15). Leicester: Leicestershire; Downers Grove, Ill.,: Inter-Varsity Press]. A manifesto is a public declaration of a person’s principles, policies and goals. What we have in this teaching in chapters 5 through 7 of The Gospel of Matthew is the essence – the ultimate standard -- of right or righteous living that Jesus wanted for every one of his followers, without exception.

The Sermon is so famous and powerful we can hardly underestimate its influence. The great poet and preacher John Donne of the early 17th century wrote:
“Our blessed Saviour, in these three chapters of this Gospel, hath given us a sermon of texts, of which, all our sermons may be composed. All the articles of our religion, all the canons of our Church, all the injunctions of our princes, all the homilies of our fathers, all the body of divinity, is in these three chapters, in this one sermon in the Mount.”
Lutheran minister, scholar and theologian Dietrich Bonhoeffer, hanged by the Nazis in 1945, based his classic book The Cost of Discipleship upon its teaching. And the influence of the Sermon on the Mount is not limited only to Christians. Anyone who is familiar with Mahatma Gandhi’s approach to political life understands Gandhi’s acknowledgement of Jesus’ teachings, especially in the Sermon on the Mount.

For those who want to be serious followers of Jesus, the Sermon on the Mount focuses on the kind of life Jesus wants for us. It highlights attitudes and behaviours found in those who confess their belief in Jesus as the One to whose extraordinary life and teachings they have committed their lives. While we won’t be dealing with the whole of the Sermon in chapters 5 though 7, we will spend the next five Sundays on the beginning of the Sermon on the Mount -- the Beatitudes of Jesus.

I have called this series “Be-Attitude Living.” Someone else has called Jesus’ Beatitudes “beautiful attitudes.” In these Beatitudes, we see the character and nature of the life Jesus sets out before us. We will see who we are – and who we ought to be – as people who confess we follow Jesus Christ. We are going to centre our attention on five of Jesus’ Beatitudes. Today, we will think about “Less Is More” as seen in verse 3: “Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.” In the following weeks, we will consider “Loss Is Gain” in verse 4. We will see we need “A Good Appetite for God” in verse 6. We will be challenged to be people who “Act With Mercy” in verse 7. And then we will reflect on what it means to be people “Working for Peace” in verse 9 – an appropriate message, I hope, for the Sunday we celebrate Remembrance Day. These are the attitudes that are to characterize all followers of Jesus Christ.

For those who don’t have enough food to eat today or a bed to sleep in tonight, to hear that less means more would be seen as cruel, even ridiculous. So it’s important to realize that Jesus is not saying material poverty in and of itself is a good thing. The Bible Jesus read – which is the Old Testament -- says in the Book of Deuteronomy:
“If there is among you anyone in need, a member of your community in any of your towns within the land that the LORD your God is giving you, do not be hard-hearted or tight-fisted toward your needy neighbor.… Open your hand to the poor and needy neighbor in your land.” [Deut. 15:7, 11 NRSV]
Jesus knew God’s compassion for those who were poor is so great that ignoring the plight of the poor is grounds for divine judgment. In the New Testament, we read in Galatians 2:10 that those who follow Christ are to “remember those who are poor.” In Acts 20:35, the Apostle Paul quoted Jesus who said, “It is more blessed to give than to receive.” Today, many people give to a broad range of charities – some faith-based and some not – whose mandate includes helping those who are poor to receive the assistance they need and to get out of poverty if at all possible. So Jesus is not saying that living in a state of constant material poverty is what he wants or what God blesses either.

But Jesus is describing the kind of person God blesses. He wants us to know the character of the people who are on the receiving end of God’s blessing. The Good News Translation uses the word “happy” instead of “blessed.” It says “happy” are those who are poor in spirit or who mourn or who are humble or who are merciful. But when we think of being happy, we usually mean we feel happy. We feel good in ourselves. But in Jesus’ Beatitudes, he is not declaring how people feel. Rather, he is stating what God thinks of them. So Jesus says those who know they are poor in their spirit are those who find approval with God. They are the kind of people whom God blesses.

One of the most difficult hurdles some of us encounter in our relationship with God is to recognize we are spiritually bankrupt before God. For those of us who have everything or almost everything we need to live a good life, it is sometimes hard to believe we might be spiritually poor or spiritually poverty-stricken. That’s why some translations make this beatitude – “Blessed are the poor in spirit” – as clear as possible in its intent. For instance, the Good News Translation says: “Happy are those who know they are spiritually poor.” The New Living Translation says: “God blesses those who are poor and [who] realize their need for him.” And the New Century Version says: “They are blessed who realize their spiritual poverty.” So in the kingdom of heaven -- God’s kingdom – saying less is more means we acknowledge our personal spiritual poverty for that is the kind of person God blesses.

It may feel strange to connect God’s approval or blessing with being spiritually poor. However, Jesus wants us to see there is a connection. Let me come at it this way. In the Oxford Dictionary, the first definition of the word “poor” is “lacking adequate … means.” In the New Testament the word “poor” bears something of the idea of a poverty so deep that the person who is poor is fully dependent on the giving of others. People who are poor do not have enough of what it takes to survive. In this case, people who are poor recognize they do not have enough goodness of their own to stand before God. So if we connected this meaning of “poor” with the words “in the spirit,” we have the idea of “Blessed are those who know they cannot stand before God on their own merit.” Or “Blessed are those who are so desperately poor in their spiritual resources that they realize they must have help from outside sources.”

Of course, being “poor in spirit” does not mean that we have no value as persons. It does not mean we should have no self-worth. It does not mean we are merely shy or we lack spiritual interest or energy. Being “poor in spirit” means we simply acknowledge our deep need of God’s goodness rather than relying on our own. Being “poor in spirit” means we come to God with open hands and heart to receive God’s loving grace rather than thinking we have enough goodness in ourselves to present to God. When we come to God this way, we recognize we cannot survive without “help from the outside” – without expressing our dependence upon God. That was a major issue between Jesus and religious leaders in his day. They prided themselves in their own goodness and were unwilling to acknowledge their dependence -- not on their own efforts but -- simply on God and God’s grace.

Do you remember the story of the Pharisee, a respected religious leader, and the publican or tax collector, regarded then as a notorious sinner? Both went into the temple to pray. In Luke’s Gospel 18:10-14, The Message Bible puts the story this way:
Jesus told this story to some who were complacently pleased with themselves over their moral performance and looked down their noses at the common people: “Two men went up to the Temple to pray, one a Pharisee, the other a tax man. The Pharisee posed and prayed like this: ‘Oh, God, I thank you that I am not like other people -- robbers, crooks, adulterers, or, heaven forbid, like this tax man. I fast twice a week and tithe on all my income.’
“Meanwhile the tax man, slumped in the shadows, his face in his hands, not daring to look up, said, ‘God, give mercy. Forgive me, a sinner.’
Jesus commented, ‘This tax man, not the other, went home made right with God.’ ”
Actually, being “poor in spirit” is no respecter of persons. We can be respectable or not. We can have money in the bank or not. We can have a nice home or not. We can be a churchgoer or not. What matters is having an openness of spirit and a willingness to come to God realizing we have no spiritual resources of our own or within ourselves to commend ourselves to God. That’s the kind of person Jesus says God blesses.
Dr. Perry Buffington, a licensed psychologist, author and columnist, in an article titled “Playing Charades” [Universal Press Syndicate (9-26-99)], wrote about various situations in which we often fool ourselves. He concludes with this comment: “And, finally, as we take our seat in church or synagogue, we try to fake out the Almighty that we’ve really been good all week.”

You may recall hearing this next true story in a previous message but I believe you will sense in it an acknowledgement of being spiritually poor.
Dr. Helen Roseveare was the only doctor in a large African hospital. Because of the constant interruptions and shortages of medical supplies, she became increasingly impatient and irritable with everyone around her. Eventually, one of the African pastors asked Helen to come with him. He drove her to his humble house and told her that she was taking a personal retreat -- two days of silence and solitude. She was to pray until her attitude adjusted. All night and the next day she did pray and she struggled. She said her prayers seemed to bounce off the ceiling. Late in the evening on the second day, as she sat with the pastor around a little campfire, with humility and desperation of spirit, she confessed she was stuck. With his bare toe, the pastor drew a vertical line on the dusty ground. “That is the problem, Helen: there is too much ‘I’ in your service.” He gave her a suggestion: “I have noticed that quite often you take a coffee break and hold the hot coffee in your hands waiting for it to cool.” Then he drew a horizontal line across the first one making a cross. “Helen, from now on, as the coffee cools, ask God, ‘Lord, cross out the “I” and make me more like you.’” And that became a daily routine in Helen’s life.
Helen Roseveare is a follower of Jesus whose spirit reflects the be-attitude of less is more. This is the kind of person The Message Bible depicts this way: “You’re blessed when you are at the end of your rope. With less of you there is more of God and his rule.”

“Be-Attitude Living,” according to Jesus, is an attitude of life that God desires to see in all those who call themselves Christians. Being “poor in spirit” means acknowledging our total dependence on God to help us live our lives God’s way. We need the help of the Holy Spirit to live the way Jesus taught – we cannot live his way on our own. That open attitude to God’s involvement in our lives is the kind of character Jesus loves to see in his people. And that is the kind of attitude that takes God seriously. Less really is more when we cross the “I” of our lives with the cross of Jesus. Then God is able to bless us – fill us -- with more love, more hope, more joy, more patience, more kindness, more goodness, more faithfulness, more humility and more mercy than we could ever imagine. When we rely on God like that, Jesus says, the kingdom of heaven will truly belong to us!

May this be so for you and for me.

Rev. Chris Miller
October 10, 2010

OYM Oriole-York Mills United Church, Toronto

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Sunday, October 3, 2010

Why Church? Reason: Spiritual Mentors


Twenty-five years ago, product developers at Matsushita Electric Company were trying to develop a home bread-making machine.
”But they were having trouble getting the machine to knead dough correctly. Despite their efforts, the crust of the bread came out overcooked while the inside was hardly done at all. Employees exhaustively analyzed the problem. They even compared X-rays of dough kneaded by the machine and dough kneaded by professional bakers. But they were unable to obtain any meaningful data.
“Finally, software developer Ikuko Tanaka proposed a creative solution. The Osaka International Hotel had a reputation for making the best bread in Osaka. Why not use it as a model? Tanaka trained with the hotel’s head baker to study his kneading technique. She observed that the baker had a distinctive way of stretching the dough. To imitate that, the engineers added special ribs inside the machine and developed a unique ‘twist dough’ method. In its first year on the market, their bread-making machine set a record for sales of a new kitchen appliance.”
But it is true, isn’t it, some things can’t be learned in a lab or with an X-ray machine. There are some things we can only learn by spending time with another human being. [Story told in Ikujiro Nonaka, “The Knowledge-Creating Company,” in Harvard Business Review on Knowledge Management (Harvard Business Review Press, 1998), pp. 26-27.]

A mentor is one human being spending time with another human being. A mentor is a person, usually older and more experienced, who helps and guides another person’s development. This “trusted counsellor or coach” does what she or he does not for personal gain but for the benefit of someone else.

A little interesting history: Did you know the original “Mentor” is a character in the legendary Greek poet Homer’s epic poem The Odyssey? When Odysseus, King of Ithaca went to fight in the Trojan War, he entrusted the care of his kingdom to Mentor. Mentor also served as the teacher and overseer of Odysseus’s son, Telemachus.

Many of you here this morning have been mentors to someone else (and no doubt you have been mentored yourselves) at various times in your lives. And it does not matter what your vocation or background or life experience has been, being a mentor or being mentored applies in virtually every area of life -- in business, in schools, in the church, in community concerns. Mentoring occurs with adults of all ages, with children and youth, and with adults-at-risk and children- and youth-at-risk. I remember very clearly my grandfather mentoring me as my driving instructor. He did not want me to become a 16-year-old youth-at-risk while driving a car -- especially his 1956 sky-blue Chrysler New Yorker. If I were to ask you who mentored you or whom have you mentored, I suspect I would hear some interesting and motivational stories.

I have another word this morning for mentors. We could also call them “connectors” because mentors are those people who help other individuals learn and develop in their lives by connecting them with new knowledge, with spiritual inspiration and with other gifted people.

This morning I want to talk with you particularly about “spiritual mentors.” Spiritual mentors are spiritual connectors. They are individuals who help others make at least three significant connections in their lives. One, spiritual mentors help someone else connect with God – with life-changing faith in God. Two, spiritual mentors connect people with life-changing faith in God through personal inspiration and not with merely information. Three, spiritual mentors connect people with the truth and blessing, the richness and relevancy of Jesus Christ for our lives and for the world.

Spiritual mentors help people connect with God -- with life-changing faith in God. This is life-altering faith in God with a track record. In Timothy’s case, his first spiritual mentors were in his family. His grandmother Lois passed down a vibrant faith to her daughter Eunice -- Timothy’s mother -- who in turn passed that rich faith down to him. In our Scripture from 2 Timothy 1, we heard how the Apostle Paul reminded his young protégé, Timothy, of how his dynamic faith was intimately connected with his family’s faith in God.

The Apostle Paul’s own personal faith was also built on that same life-altering faith in God with a track record. He said in verse 3 of 2 Timothy 1, “I give thanks [for you] to God, whom I serve with a clear conscience, as my ancestors did.” Or as The Message Bible puts it: “I thank God for you, the God I worship with my whole life in the tradition of my ancestors.” Paul did not disregard the rich faith of his Jewish ancestors. He had not left the God of Abraham to worship and serve another God. Instead, he recognized that Jesus was the long-promised Messiah of the Scripture [cf., Acts 23:1, 24:14, 26:6], which meant Paul affirmed a continuity with the faith of his Jewish ancestors.

For us, the Christian faith has 2,000-plus years of significant history, as well as the 2,000 or so years of our Jewish roots back to Abraham, that help us connect our faith with the life-giving God who exists, who is real and who cares enough to respond to all who seek him -- as Hebrews 11:6 states so plainly. As young Timothy’s spiritual mentor, Paul thanked God for Timothy night and day. He asked God to give his grace, mercy and peace to Timothy as he had experienced God’s grace himself. Through Paul’s mentoring and laying on of hands, God gave Timothy the gift of ministry with the power, love and self-control of the Holy Spirit. Paul also coached Timothy to accept any suffering he might encounter as he witnessed to the truth of the Good News. And Paul said God would give him strength to endure that suffering. As Timothy’s mentor, Paul was constantly encouraging Timothy to stay connected to the rich and vibrant faith in God that he had received from his mother, grandmother and Paul – and which he had come to believe.

Spiritual mentors also connect people with life-changing faith in God through inspiration and not merely information. I remember some of the spiritual mentors in my life who inspired me to grow in the faith. I remember Paul -- the university student leader in our church youth group. He inspired me by the way he lived his life as a believer in Jesus: his love for God, his hunger and respect for the Bible and his disciplined life in training to be a medical doctor. I remember “Mary,” the 80-year-old retired missionary, who inspired me with the way she prayed -- simply yet passionately, especially that one time when it was just the two of us praying together for the worship service soon to begin. I remember Pastor Art who inspired me with his messages and his pastoral prayers Sunday after Sunday. I remember a business man, Martin, my Sunday school teacher, who inspired me with his knowledge of the Bible -- yet more so for his acceptance of us questioning and sometime mischievous young boys who were trying to figure out what the Christian life really meant. All of these mentors were constantly connecting me with faith in God that was real and that worked. As I think back, I know now they were hoping to ignite my soul to love God and to love the people of this world.

My spirit resonates with what Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel once wrote:
“Let them remember that there is a meaning beyond absurdity. Let them be sure that every little deed counts, that every word has power and that we can do – every one [of us] -- our share to redeem the world in spite of all absurdities and all frustrations and all disappointments. And above all, remember that the meaning of life is to live life as it if were a work of art.”
I like that. We are living, breathing works of art God is restoring for his glory. We need to inspire each other to see God painting or weaving or sculpting or moulding or orchestrating our lives for his glory. As spiritual mentors, we can help one another connect with the amazing love of God, the master artist of all that is good and beautiful and wholesome. Being that kind of connector is my heart’s constant cry.

Finally, spiritual mentors connect others with the truth and blessing, the richness and relevancy of Jesus Christ for our lives and for the world. Jesus Christ is the ultimate goal and the source of life-giving faith in God. Union with Jesus Christ, beginning now and extending into eternity is “the promised life” from God that Jesus sent Paul as his Apostle to proclaim. That’s in the first verse Les read this morning in 2 Timothy 1. That’s the kind of faith we mean when the church states it is the church of Jesus Christ. As spiritual mentors, we can help each other connect with God’s salvation through the death of Jesus on the cross for the world. As spiritual mentors we answer God’s call to be the people of God and to tell the Good News that God has ended the power of death for all humanity and has revealed the reality of eternal life through Jesus. This is the kind of faith Paul wanted Timothy (and us) to see when he wrote:
“[God] saved us and called us to be his own people, not because of what we have done, but because of his own purpose and grace. [God] gave us this grace by means of Christ Jesus … He has ended the power of death and through the gospel has revealed immortal life.”
The celebration of Holy Communion -- or simply Communion -- is an opportunity for each of us to connect again with life-changing faith in Jesus Christ. Communion is the opportunity for each of us to connect with life-changing faith in God as we allow ourselves to be loved by God in Jesus Christ. And as we thank God for the love he showed by sending Jesus -- who gave his life for us, who rose again from death and who lives to pray for us forever -- we will experience the deeper connection with God we long for. Communion connects us once again with Jesus Christ who has taken away all that separates us from God and who has made us friends with God and with one another.

The celebration of Communion is the recognition that Jesus Christ invites all who believe in him, all who long to be nourished and strengthened on their journey of faith with him and who seek to live justly and in peace with their neighbours, to sit with him and share in this joyful table that is his.

My friends, God has called us to be spiritual connectors with others. Some of you experienced being connectors recently with our youth during their journey of Confirmation. You shared with them your connection with the relevancy of Jesus Christ in your own lives. That’s one way we are spiritual mentors or connectors with one another. So, this morning, we thank God he has brought us together to this table to be strengthened and encouraged and connected to his love through the life, death and resurrection of his life-giving Son -- Jesus Christ.

May this life-giving connection be so for you and for me.

Rev. Chris Miller
October 3, 2010

OYM Oriole-York Mills United Church, Toronto

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