Thursday, June 30, 2016

'The Real "Health-Wealth" Gospel;' Sermon for Sunday July 3rd, 2016 by Rev. Nicole A.M. Collins, FODM


I don't think we realize what that moment just may have been like for those disciples in today’s Gospel... It is even more ironic that Luke was not an eyewitness but captures that symbolic moment when Christ commissions the 70 into active discipleship!

More or less it seems like Jesus is talking about priorities too. Do we have or harbor good priorities in regards to our faith? Do we make discipleship a priority? Do we think of ourselves truly as Jesus disciples or are we more or less in a Sunday-only frame of mind? What makes this gospel in particular very powerful for me is just going there in my imagination and seeing Luke walking along with his fellow companion church planters St. Paul, Barnabas and others wondering how the future of the church will come together.

The same thing is happening today but in the sense that we talk about it more than we do it... Do we really go out into the streets and as that old Cursillo saying goes actually "make a friend, be a friend, and bring a friend to Christ?" A few years back when I was doing field Ed at a church in Joliet, the pastor had us go out and give bulletins like brochures to various people in the neighborhood as well as congregants who have not been at church for a while. Actually this proved to be a good process as well as an interesting one too. I don't know how many other people just simply more or less just drop something in the mail.  This was a wonderful way to reconnect personally and authentically with people.

“Make a friend, be a friend, bring a friend to Christ ...” Remembering that statement goes back to those very fond memories of when I made my first Cursillo retreat. I can almost remember how the person who gave that talk said it like she needed a small megaphone proclaiming it to everyone in the room! It was quite amazing. It motivated my spirits so much that I could see very clearly that brand new path the Lord was definitely and would definitely point to, proving to be an exciting journey into Ministry!  I'm sure that both the Gospel and in Paul's letter to the Galatians there is some excitement to hear about this wonderfully positive encouragement to spiritually incorporate for those seeking truly to be led and fed in developing their faith.

Keeping positive and motivated can be a challenging thing especially when you are engaged in active Ministry. I was recently challenged this past week in hoping for mutual accountability with those I've been serving with. Yes, we are all human but I have hoped for a while now that this person would take their call seriously. There's a point as you see in the Gospel where are you at a Crossroads—one where your priorities need to be in serving and caring for others. Jesus commands the disciples in many senses to take a good long look at every single step that they take, discern.

We all can go there and say and probably be justified in saying that we have, on occasion, too much on our plate... our hearts are heavy and we are very burdened with many things.  But we must go there we must persevere this journey and it takes some time for introspection to develop a true sense of where you are, who you are as a person of faith—disciple of Jesus. 

One of the things that St. Paul alludes to in the letter is that he was someone who exhibited the stigmata. The Stigmata sounds almost surrealistic to us because it is such a fantastically bizarre manifestation to take over the body. In many ways it is a profound and bizarre manifestation of faith in the physical flesh itself. Talk about someone who truly did roll up his sleeves get his hands dirty in the work of Christ Jesus and his gospel! Practicing What You Preach is a matter of faith it is truly a building block of your heart's journey with God.

The “health wealth” gospel people preach a Christ who acts more or less like a vending machine of Grace lavished over us as we sit back and we merely "prosper."  In some ways their gospel seems to preach to the Wasteland of people sitting and staring at a TV screen while things go idly by. Truth be told however the genuine Gospel, the Sovereign truth in the Living Word of God, teaches us something quite the contrary.  We need to roll up those sleeves and get our hands and feet engaged but it starts in that first church, the heart.

The heart is an amazing vessel something that should prove to you right there, the profound power of God in how this strange little muscle moves and relates without or consciously thinking for it to operate. On that same note the other operation the heart is in charge of is developing that relationship with the Sovereign God in loving our neighbor as we truly are and commissioned to be.
You've heard that saying before—“having the heart to do something?” I don't have the heart to do it can be something that is a deep Secret in your soul or can manifest itself in how little you truly commit to what you do and say on the Gospel's behalf...   The spiritual aspect of the heart which is that first church and the most important church that the Holy Spirit needs to work in and through us for the common good and goal of the Gospel— is our responsibility to nurture,  take seriously.

The freedom Paul talks about is the gift from the new nature which now releases from what the Evil One binds us to as well as what the world binds us to. That bondage creates a wasteland where the heart doesn't feel a reason or understand its purpose in moving forward in producing works of faith.... As we know there is so much going on in the world these days our minds are weighed down with despair at times. Survival doesn't seem to be something about the creative expression of the joy of creation as it once was but now seem to be more like an ugly and brutal reality.

Jesus lectures the disciples almost like a course instructor in discipleship. It's not only as mentioned, a matter of prioritizing but in some ways to tune into focus where they need to be and become, as wonderfully created vessels of the Gospel for the Lord.

That Cursillo talk I mentioned was just one of many on that very special weekend literally a little over 12 years ago that missional number 12... It was also that weekend I heard a female mentor say that Grace was like dust in the air. I will remember her saying that always because it was such a beautifully powerful personal Witness to God working in her life through her Ministry. The other woman who talked about discipleship and making a friend, being a friend and bringing them to Christ, her journey was amazing in how God guided her path. She is now an Episcopal Priest.  In some ways she, just like myself, took a few years to then make the commitment to take the grand leap to go to Seminary. Her daddy was a pastor my husband's daddy is a pastor incidental only, but everyone in our lives’ Journey has something to lend to that walk. It's been more than a couple of years since I last served a Cursillo retreat; I really do miss them greatly. But I know that, that initial instruction or "little course" as the word Cursillo actually means, motivated me to step beyond myself and truly serve as I am beginning to do today.

At the moment in what I have been doing— I do feel like Luke and the other followers from that early church.... I have been engaged in some wonderful, but fairly challenging Ministries. I have planted a house church as well as I have helped plant two physical Church plants one of which now I'm serving as their spiritual formation pastor. It is all volunteer but I know what that feels like to "make a friend, be a friend and bring someone to Christ"—grow into discipleship! The next Leg of my journey I am greatly looking forward to.  It is my hope to serve an established faith Community with all that my faith Journey has taught my heart to bear, and I can only hope that Christ Jesus Gospel instructs others to see where they could go and what they could bring to the world for a greater purpose!

So you see that the “health” is in the heart where God's Grace & Holy Spirit build a firm foundation of freedom and responsibility. The “wealth” part of that is in knowing the love that you share coming from a heart filled and discipled by faith, is opening the door to the kingdom of God!

This is the only “health wealth” gospel I would be preaching and teaching. I hope to be truly a nurturing and compassionate guide to those seeking to express what faith is for them.  Paul in today's letter is doing just that, he is instructing the Galatians that his journey was definitely indeed very real for him (in more ways than one) and they need to look beyond what they been doing and make it very real for themselves as well.

Life is a long road but it doesn't have to be a lonely one as well as a pointless one.  The beauty of harboring and persevering faith is that it builds that hope and optimism that we need to then see the abundance and meaning God gives us in everything that is around us. This is the beauty of realizing the reality of Grace all around you and living into it too!

Let us pray,
Most Gracious and Loving Father
We thank you for everything that you teach our hearts to grow and go with.
May we truly come to realize what we must do and become
May we do it joyfully through that beautiful Grace which surrounds each and everyone of us.
In your most holy and precious name we praise you and Thank you, Amen

July 3rd, 2016; Seventh Sunday after Pentecost; Proper 9; Year C; SOLA Lectionary
Sermon by Reverend Nicole A.M. Collins, FODM
Psalm 66:1-7; Isaiah 66:10-14;  Galatians 6:1-10, 14-18; Luke 10:1-20



This sermon was delivered at a special Thursday evening vespers at the Grace Hub's house church
https://youtu.be/Yr66hDH2vxI

Saturday, June 25, 2016

"A Spirited Path;" Sermon for June 26th, 2016 by: Rev. Nicole A.M. Collins, FODM


Today’s Gospel has us contemplate the task of discipleship as a spirited walk commissioned by Christ to not only “talk the talk” as they say but truly “walk” onto that spirited path. This is our discipleship journey’s path that the Lord has laid forth for us through the victory of the Cross.  As we have come to know especially where we are currently in this day and age—“walking and talking” the Way of Christ is met with many challenges not just for ourselves but in who truly leads us…

This past week I had an epiphany of considering expanding upon my skills as a pastor.  This was partly due to spending a good chunk of the week composing two syllabi for the Faith Points Lutheran Bible Institute to which I will be teaching eventually a few theology classes online.  It wasn’t so much the art of composing what books to put on the required list and what not… It was more looking back into where my theology is and what I have to offer. This goes beyond denominations and truly becomes more of a matter of faith and commitment.  Which is what today’s texts are all about.

Here’s where the epiphany was, my heart is dedicated and consecrated to truly “BE” a pastor.  What does that mean?  It does seems redundant but the greatest task of the pastor is to care for others.  How I have been doing that, became an interesting journey of reflection in itself. Which lead me in part to contemplate seeking very slowly, a doctorate in pastoral care and parish ministry.  A lot of pastors do engage in higher or continuing education, but is it done following what Jesus is saying in today’s Gospel?  Am I truly striving with a dedicated heart to proclaim the Kingdom of God through ministering to others?

The caregiving I have been doing essentially for “an income” around my many wonderful varied pastoral activities confirmed that in order to truly make disciples and spread the Good News of the Gospel—it requires “walking the Talk,” “Living the Talk” as an open, authentic, intentionally loving individual.  The pastor at the beginning of my journey into ministry exampled that kind of beautiful behavior that St. Paul wishes for the Galatians to spiritually infuse into everything they do and say. This pastor’s early mentoring taught and inspired me to initially move forward in the journey to becoming a pastor.

It is that larger umbrella of the Christian faith that we need to take seriously as an identity and calling to be and become a freely responsible servant of Christ Jesus and His beautiful Gospel of Grace and Love the world NEEDS to Hear! The Gospel the world NEEDS to hear—here and now in a time of many trials and spiritual turmoil across the globe.

What we do and say as Jesus’ Disciples must be willingly shaped by the Spirit.  When it is willfully shaped to another spirit is where we fall away.  We fall away from understanding as well as to commitment—why do we need to be and live into being a child of Grace and promise, if we have now seemingly made it irrelevant to our own gospel?  Our lives shouldn’t create a gospel but DELIVER the one, true Gospel of Jesus Christ the Lord! This is what Jesus meant by insisting those questioning Him in today’s Gospel. In order to truly follow Him, we must live—disciple by His Gospel, not ours.

Staying on that Spirited Path is the task and cost of discipleship.  The Galatians were still struggling with reinventing the Law into a works righteousness of expressing their commitment to Christ. Which is a very human thing to do.  It’s a very human thing to DO things with an expectation of getting something…  When it comes to the Spirit however, we must look, learn and live through a lens of faith shaped by that beautiful Grace Christ Jesus imparted upon us at that Cross. There’s the real “feel good” theology the world is not even realizing they truly are hungering and thirsting for!

Why are we not desiring this very spiritually demanding Gospel? Is it because we are seeking but finding and forming our own lens of faith that purely justifies itself and has no real need for God?  I thought about this a lot this past week in not only completing these syllabi for “systematic theology,” but in the purpose and pursuit of a possible doctorate alongside of serving.  Who is at the center of my faith? Christ.  Who is at the center of my ministry?  Is it Lutheranism or some other perspective of Christianity?  No, it is Christ.  Who do I pastor, why do I Pastor?  I pastor on behalf of the gifts of the Spirit Christ Jesus taught my heart to live for as FAITH.

In order to love God and neighbor, the Holy Spirit keeps my heart aligned to serve through His Word.  Serving through His Word is staying on that Spirited Path.  It is a life time’s journey but one which each one of us is called to.  Those who profess Jesus Christ is Lord to the Glory of God the Father, IS called and commissioned to come and follow.  The task of ministry is all around us people! But it is not a task about us, more than it is a task beyond us. When we live through and by faith alone is when all our agendas, politicking, and worldly goals are left behind and we truly FOLLOW!

If I were to look at my future in a worldly way, the pursuit of higher education is merely a notch on the pastoral belt of “success…”  What success is it if I not thinking and truly incorporating my gifts to care? As I once heard a colleague jokingly remark, “Climbing DMin mountain is a good ego trip for some pastors…”  How much is it dedicated to the future progress of ministry and truly ministering to others, though?

The face and nature of ministry is changing in the world, not necessarily for the better…  One of the most powerful concluding scenes in the 1973 musical movie, ‘GodSpell,’ shows all of Jesus’ disciples returning to their everyday world.  The dancer, the waitress, the cab driver, the student… all of them return to their lives BUT singing “Prepare Ye the Way of the Lord.”  All of them were touched and centered by the Holy Spirit to continue in following Christ into their everyday lives!

This is what “success” should truly look like.  If we really did live into the fruits of the Spirit which St. Paul has listed as: “22b…. love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, generosity, faithfulness, 23gentleness, and self-control.”  Just think where the world would be?  Perhaps that is the reality of the Kingdom we need to truly strive for with commitment, willingness and intentionality to learn, grow and go with the Gospel!

Having and living faith is to struggle with not knowing at times, where your priorities should be.  The Evil One and the world can at times be quite successful at tempting you to look at your life with despair and disappointment.  Other may add to this in making you definitely feel unwelcome.  They did this to Jesus in today’s Gospel—the Samaritans didn’t welcome Him but Jesus kept moving forward with His efforts focused on Jerusalem—the place we know where He would embrace that cross to save us in more ways than we could ever realize… But MUST, if we are to survive!

“Survival of the fittest,” through Satan’s eyes and our own gospel produce merely the works of the world or as St. Paul says of the flesh: “19b… fornication, impurity, licentiousness, 20idolatry, sorcery, enmities, strife, jealousy, anger, quarrels, dissensions, factions, 21envy, drunkenness, carousing, and things like these.”  Aren’t we seeing a lot of the headlines in the local and global news to be nothing but strife, conflict, violence and other self-oriented battles that leave the heart grieving?

Just this past week, a couple quarreling on the Red Line EL train in Chicago in Hyde Park ended with the man stabbing the woman death in broad daylight in front of everyone. World news has the European Union being slowly divided as the UK decides to leave over financial irresponsibility and instability on behalf of other contributing nations.  State budgets, programs and people are becoming more and more divided, falling away into despair and graceless behavior… Desperation is the last act to come to fruition.

Yes, we are of the flesh but we are also of the Spirit. We cannot and should not continue down a self-justifying path of destruction… but we are! Instead of being overwhelmed by this “bad news” and its unholy gospel…  We need to come together and refocus.  Who is at the center and purpose of our being?  Who gave us New Life through His Living Word?  Christ Jesus the Lord, that's who!  You and I have this one earthly, fleshy life to live. Let’s live it to the fullest and give our hearts to follow in Grace through a profoundly bright HOPE that we can change—for it is the Spirit which is watching, waiting and speaking to us to DO so!

Let us Pray,
Gracious and Loving God,
We thank you for Your loving, guiding a willing Spirit
To have patience with us
As You instruct our hearts to be shaped by Your Gospel’s Path
May we open to the truth in all we Do and Say as faith-filled disciples
AMEN

June 26th 2016; Sixth Sunday after Pentecost; Proper 8; Year C; SOLA Lectionary
Sermon By : Reverend Nicole A.M. Collins, FODM
Psalm 16; 1 Kings 19:9b-21; Galatians 5:1, 13-25; Luke 9:51-62





The link below is to this sermon's delivery at the Grace Hub house church service at 8am:
https://youtu.be/eiKe5vhJIfk

Thursday, June 16, 2016

"Battlefields;" Sermon for Sunday June 19th, 2016 by: Rev. Nicole A.M. Collins,FODM



I found it interesting that both the ancient world as well as our current times do not have a clear acceptance or understanding of the demonic, or diabolical evil active in the world.  Today’s Gospel sounds like an amazing, surreal picture where a man possessed by a legion (thousands upon thousands) of demons, calls out to Jesus and Jesus enacts an amazing miracle of power by sending the demons into swine who then careen off of a cliff to their death!

Today we would probably have the same reaction, of not only unbelief, but would almost not want to seek understanding of how this happened in the first place.  Which leads me to reflect upon this past Sunday’s mass shooting in Florida.  Everyone has pretty much drawn up the initial assessment of the situation choosing to polarize the evil/ sin into social, political sides, or choosing to finger point to either religious fanaticism or gun control…

The plain and most profound truth, however, is humanity and murder.  Perhaps it goes beyond capping the story to mere political religious fanaticism and thinking or entertaining for a moment: this was an act of pure, unadulterated, and  calculated EVIL.  Evil standing alone working through a man’s blackened heart to kill nearly 50 people and wound another 50 plus people in a barrage of bullets.  Looking at the nature of evil and the accountability behind this man’s actions should help us not clutter up our realizing that the power of evil is very real.  It was real enough some 15 years earlier to use two jet airliners to take down the twin towers filled with nearly 3,000 people! Wasn’t it?!

Those moments however almost don’t seem real though, we see the headlines, we watch the news on TV… but do we think about the other active battlefields?  These battlefields I am referring to is spiritual warfare—the turf is your heart and you are fighting Satan.  Yes this is using and looking through a lens of faith not fantasy—definitely reality!  Harboring faith as a “post-modern Christian” against a burgeoning godless culture is getting more and more difficult to do.  This is because people are becoming more and more divided where the new stumbling blocks to growing in Christ have become politics, personal/ social agendas and secular control…

Some “post-modern Christians” call this progress; is it really progress though when we find creative ways to make Christ and His transformative work in our lives, mythology and irrelevant to our own agendas?!  We are certainly a culture in love with the ‘Scarlet Letter,’ as a lens to pigeon hole and alienate ourselves further away from the truth, the Gospel is calling us to truly be accountable to! 

Just the other day, in praying for the victims of this tragedy among another bloody weekend in Chicago…  I found an interesting quote online by the founder of “Wiki-Leaks,” Julian Assange.  He says something very profound here: “Every time, we witness an injustice and do not act, we train our character to be passive in its presence and thereby eventually lose all ability to defend ourselves and those we love.” I then posted it on social media and someone posted almost immediately afterwards that this man has been accused of rape.  Actually in looking up the current views upon this man, it is speculative or as they say the court is still out upon the circumstances of this case.

What we have to be careful about is beyond the circumstances of the man who made this quote.  Did the person really hear or read what was said?  Going back to what happened in Florida, can we purely strip away to the raw evil and feel compassion and pain for our neighbors who were slaughtered in cold blood?  Can we think about a human being murdering 50 people without the other labels?  I don’t think we can.  Its’ been usurped most successfully to Satan’s delight to be a tool to political and social agenda fodder. Where maybe we’re blinded to the root causes of evil… active in the things we do and say. 

How we return to seeing and facing the reality of evil is through being accountable spiritually in how our hearts are being shaped.  Are we allowing our hearts to be shaped by and for Christ Jesus and His Gospel of Grace and Promise or the Gospel of the world and its ruler, Satan? Are we purely living into a false empire of “progress” as a kind of self-idolatry?  The mirror of the law, St. Paul talks about in this week’s segment from Galatians, leads to a beautiful promise of our spiritual formation progress being how we realize not only what Christ Jesus gave us at the Cross and through His resurrection, but how we live by faith to know our true heritage as His sons and daughters.

The battlefield is real and it goes beyond a physical, verbal plain of assaults we inflict upon one another further dividing our hearts from reaching out to love and care for our neighbor…  It’s been nearly 70 something years since the close of WWII, I wonder how many people spend the time to think about the reality of evil and its consequences seen through the rise of Hitler and in the hearts of many to commit horrible crimes against humanity? Do we dismiss it easily to the consequences of history, government and insanity?  How many could entertain it as “Satan’s attempt to rise and eventually fall” in this past century to complete his rule over the world?  Yes, that’s a tall order, maybe we don’t want to think about it too much and dismiss to something more comfortable and tangible we can understand…

Hitler knew the power of the scriptures, he actually used a segment of Romans 13 to start many of his propaganda speeches to a desperate people in Germany to eventually sway to his diabolical path of death and destruction.  The Legion of demons knew the power of Jesus’ words when He drove them into the swine.  Which to we choose to hear and BELIEVE more deeply in?  The point of recounting these examples of evil in our own history is to inwardly look within ourselves to test and challenge our own beliefs.  Have we equipped and taken our developing faith seriously, or enough?

What do we “pick and choose?”  Is Satan helping us inadvertently to choose to be indifferent to the truth?  Is he helping us to build theological and ideological walls against one another, where harboring faith, yet alone living it becomes irrelevant to our own gospel?!  We are both Saint and Sinner, but this doesn’t have to be a “death sentence…”  You can allow the Gospel and the Holy Spirit to open and prepare your heart for battle!  I choose to grow in my faith, harbor a “lens of faith” being living into the promise and Grace of God through hope and prayerful action NOT for myself but to know and LIVE love for God, My Father—heavenly parent and my Brothers and Sisters—humanity. 

Compassion is not a two way street—the Evil One, makes this appear so.  Instead of living into the human label of “being” a “post-modern” Christian; why don’t we live into the present as children of God under His law of love? Why can’t we look all around us removing all the labels Satan has created to become stumbling blocks to the real “progress” Christ Jesus’ Gospel needs us to realize in the here and now of our transforming lives of Faith?

This needs to become a personal creed to fuel your daily journey as a disciple of Jesus:  “Jesus Christ is Lord to the Glory of God the Father, upon the cross He, indeed, defeated sin, death and the power of the devil to start our journey of faith as children of grace and promise.”  If we can truly confess and reflect that evil is real, in this world… this is the first half of the battle.  If we can affirm and not deny the reality of things only Christ and the Holy Spirit can shape—then we can recognize and develop our faith’s spiritual formation to God’s Will, not our own. 

In order to realize the peace of Christ, we must go on that internal battlefield—it is a battlefield where the turf is your heart and Satan is the force trying to overtake it.  We have this one solitary earthly life; we must choose to live it beyond ourselves if we are to truly survive.

Let us Pray—
Gracious and Loving God,
Help us to prepare for that daily Spiritual warfare
Help us to not be wound up in ourselves
To the Evil One’s glory
And lose the battle in loving and living beyond ourselves
Through Grace, may we harbor a great hope
May we live into that hope as Your children
For Your Gospel and glory alone
AMEN

June 19th, 2016; Fifth Sunday after Pentecost; Proper 7; Year C; SOLA Lectionary
Sermon by Reverend Nicole A.M. Collins, FODM
Psalm 3; Isaiah 65:1-9; Galatians 3:23 - 4:7; Luke 8:26-39




The link below is to this sermon's delivery at 8am at the Grace Hub's House church service.