Sunday, February 28, 2010

Hold Fast, Stand Firm


                   

Sunday, February 28, 2010
Lent 2C
Jerusalem Baptist Church (Emmerton), Warsaw VA
Philippians 3:14-4:1
Theme:  Remaining faithful through trials and tribulations


14 “I press on toward the goal for the prize of the heavenly call of God in Christ Jesus.
15Let those of us then who are mature be of the same mind; and if you think differently about anything, this too God will reveal to you. 16Only let us hold fast to what we have attained.
17Brothers and sisters, join in imitating me, and observe those who live according to the example you have in us. 18For many live as enemies of the cross of Christ; I have often told you of them, and now I tell you even with tears. 19Their end is destruction; their god is the belly; and their glory is in their shame; their minds are set on earthly things. 20But our citizenship is in heaven, and it is from there that we are expecting a Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ. 21He will transform the body of our humiliation that it may be conformed to the body of his glory, by the power that also enables him to make all things subject to himself.
4 Therefore, my brothers and sisters, whom I love and long for, my joy and crown, stand firm in the Lord in this way, my beloved.”

I have to ask myself – I HAVE to:  If the news had been different, what would I be saying now?

You’ve already heard me say before: we live in a broken world.  We live in a world where creation is groaning for the coming reign of God.  It just doesn’t often groan that close to home. 

So what do we do with this?  What is our response to it?  On one level we are relieved.  Three hundred sounds like a much better number than two hundred thousand, or two hundred fifty thousand a few years ago with the tsunami in Southeast Asia.  And yet, for those three hundred and their families, it is as devastating as any of the others that have been affected. 

Watching the scenes of destruction on either the computer screen or the television screen, there was a sense of disconnect yesterday with the reality that I had in my mind of those places.  Proud old buildings that are now crumbling dust and bricks; the terrible devastation of pan caked structures and highways and flipped trucks and cars, speak to a level of destruction that we never experienced in our years in Chile.  And yet, there is going to be a part of us that, just as after the tsunami and after the earthquake in January, is going to want to try to make sense of this, to lay blame, to point to maybe some other pact with the devil that resulted in this.

I would caution against that.  Leslie mentioned this morning that it is our response that is what counts, our response is what marks the event.  It is where our faith intersects with this present reality. 

We’ll see if I can tie this into the text as we move through.  As you may understand, this is coming from the heart. 

It was interesting throughout the course of the day yesterday, I kept getting emails and notices and notifications, from friends whom I’ve known over the last twenty five years, they kept saying “as soon as I heard I thought of you.  How’s your family?” or “do you still have family there?” and “Is everybody okay?” I took those, for better or worse, as prayers, because in a Christian context, I believe them to BE that. 

I gained an appreciation that I did not have for families of persons that are serving in the military.  Going day after day after day, trying to live your life and carry on with the daily activities, and not think about the harm that may come to your loved one.  My heart goes out to them. 

But we live in a broken world. 

We have this task before us, we have this mandate (if you want to call it that), and we have this example that Christ set, which Paul alludes to, that he actually spells out earlier in Philippians, of how we are to carry on, how we are to be in events like this. 

I read this morning that approximately two million people were affected by the earthquake in Chile.  I we correlate that, it’s roughly twenty percent of the population, no, more like 15 % … if we were to take a similar comparison, estimating that we are around 300 million here in the United States, how would we be … what would our conversation be if we were talking about some natural disaster that had affected … 40 million … right?  No … okay … 45 million US citizens?  Would we be overwhelmed?  Would we be scrambling to figure out what to do? 

I know… it’s coming up on two o’clock in the afternoon in Chile … I know, I know I know congregations gathered and worshipped, maybe under a tree in a central plaza, maybe out in the open, I know prayers were lifted and I know hymns were sung – and I know that my brothers and sisters in Chile are on task to figure out the best way that they can, to provide assistance, to provide comfort, and care and BE JESUS to their compatriots, their neighbors, their communities. 

As close as this is to my heart, and as obvious as I’m making it,  I hope that we would not respond any differently to this than we did to the disaster in Haiti, or to the help that we can be to those folks who have been affected by the storm in the Northeast over these last few days.  If we can channel, first and foremost, channel our prayers, as was mentioned this morning, prayers for strength, for endurance, for patience, for courage, especially.  But that we would seek active ways to be engaged in that incarnational ministry, in that fleshing out of the ministry of Christ on earth. 

We don’t know yet what plans have been made, in fact, I think we are still waiting to hear from the organizations and the churches and the communities in Chile as to what they need.  I know the governmental response has been “We’ve got things under control”, and I don’t doubt that that’s an overstatement.  I think that it’s an accurate statement on their part.  I would HOPE that they would still receive assistance as they see necessary, because watching suffering and pain like that and NOT doing something takes away from our sense of the common bond of humanity. 

I promise, ‘Hold Fast and Stand Firm”, when I decided on that title, another earthquake was not anywhere in my mind… and yet, the tie-in, the stories I read of folks waking up when they were thrown to the floor from the bed, just underscores how suddenly our life can change.  If there is a lesson to be learned both from the text and from the experiences of the last 48 hours, it is that we are not free from that possibility.  We are just as likely to suffer something that devastating.  And our question to ask ourselves is “How would WE respond if we were in the midst of that?”  Not just sitting here comfortably … our hearts going out, yes, but still, just sitting here, being able to go along with our lives.  Being able to turn on the water faucet, turn on the light at the switch, to stay warm. 

I would invite us as we pray … to pray first and foremost … I’m going to put two priorities to this:  For those who are suffering.  For courage and the courage of our convictions – to step into what God wants us to do, and for wisdom to discern what it is. 
 

Would you pray with me?

Lord it has not been so long since we suffered a disastrous weather event, and rallied together, linked arms as a community of faith, and cared for each other, and checked on each other, and visited, and shared, and were your presence to each other.

So even as we know of those who are hundreds and thousands of miles away – and tens of miles away – who are going through their own tragedies.  Even as we become aware of those experiences, we ask, Lord, that you first make yourself known, but that then you would make your will known to us, in how to respond.  We ask for generosity of spirit, we ask for strength and endurance, we ask for your Spirit to dwell in us richly, and call us to your service. 

Through him who gave himself for us, even Christ our Lord.

Amen.

1 comment:

Kenny said...

Aristiono -
Hi friend, and peace to you as well.
Thank you for your questions. It was surprising to see it come up so soon after I posted the transcript of the message. It's length and substance leads me to believe that you didn't actually read the posted message or are actually engaging with what was said. It would seem that you have a 'set form' of questions for just such an occasion... or it may be an automated program. Either way, I would like the opportunity to engage in this conversation with you, understanding and respecting the fact that we DO come from different perspectives.