I don’t know how many people have heard of the Walk to Emmaus Cursillo retreat, but I think it is interesting how today’s texts brings us all together on focusing upon our spiritual walk, our formation to faith both individually and as the Body, (to be in the world, not of it). With that “short course” in Christianity, which is what the word Cursillo literally means, we are brought through to remember and spiritually grow from what the power of the life, death and resurrection of Christ is to mean to drive, inspire our lives, to live beyond ourselves with genuine New being and purpose! This is the reality of the lifestyle of Grace—that enduring road we all must travel.
This past week, I was blessed to talk on Radio Tribune, a
small media company right here on the east side of Las Vegas. The circumstances were actually an amazing
moment of unrelated events connecting in conversation to eventually be invited
to talk about ministry and our church.
This unrelated event was simply initially coming into a U-Haul center to
rent a truck to move items my husband and I have sorted to go into an
air-conditioned storage unit. These
would basically be things we couldn’t keep in our garage. Unbeknownst to us, the proprietor of the
U-Haul center was the wife of a Las Vegas Tribune reporter who came from
Chicago as well, and whose studio/ office was literally right behind the U-Haul
center! Talk about serendipity, God
leads you into amazing unexpected things—daily, if you pay attention! I really
believe that as a person of faith.
Now keeping that unexpectedness in mind, let’s dive into
this week’s Gospel. This week’s Gospel is St. Luke’s picture of these two disciples
on the road to Emmaus. These two
disciples are grieving Jesus, and they encountered Jesus as a stranger at first.
They were clouded and spiritually weighed down by the many things of their
recent circumstances, experiences… They listened to Jesus teach them the
scriptures as well as declare why the Messiah had to suffer. Their hearts would only be opened completely,
however, by the Living Word and the breaking of bread to truly realize Jesus
was there! How incredible, it is even
more incredible that St. Luke, a companion of St. Paul, mind you, and the
writer of the Book of Acts (!) wrote from what he experienced as a church
planter for the early church! He experienced
spiritually, first hand, where people were with their spiritual formation and
discipleship—he was led by God to share his witness on describing that journey
for 2,000 years of hearts to hear and take heed to.
This probably is to be an “ah-ha” moment, of thinking
once again, about our call and commissioning into the great cloud of witnesses…
or to use one of those old Reformation terms, realize our place within the
priesthood of all believers. For all of
the New Testament is literally “testament” to what is seen, heard and
experienced both literally and most importantly spiritually, of the Greatest
story ever told—the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ, our Lord! I think we have a hard time with remembering
all of that, especially because we have the finished Bible in our hands and
don’t necessarily see the years and centuries of blood, sweat and tears, it
took to put it together to concretize our faith as we know it today!
Correct tense of verbs as well, should begin to open the
eyes of your heart to see… For when I said testament to what is seen, heard and
experienced; hopefully you noticed, I didn’t use the past tense of has or have
seen. The way the world so successfully
interferes with our faith formation, we hardly ever see or understand things in
life as happening with a purpose or a mission to it. We see death or “a past tense,” we rarely
think about the reality of the life of grace as Jesus’ disciples in the here
and now. The power of the Resurrection within a faith-filled, obedient heart
has grown spiritually above the world to live in both the here and now of
always trusting, knowing that God is with them, but also graciously accepts the
mystery of God’s timing and work in our lives—Kairos time.
Kairos time is a wonderful Biblical Greek word that
begins to address the notion of time through a lens of faith, God’s sovereign
presence and activity in our daily lives.
He knows the beginning and the end as well as of course everything in
between! This is what we witness in
today’s Gospel, when Jesus makes his all of the sudden appearance to the two
disciples on the road. Their hearts were
troubled, but they were still enduring that road… The interview I was blessed
to have, reinforced these Easter texts upon my own heart, for I did feel like
Peter in both the snippet from the Book of Acts and his first letter addressing
purpose, mission and goal! I was being
very bold in sharing and not shying away from what the Gospel means, what
ministry means for all of us individually and as the Body—the church. To answer what we hear the Apostles say—“What
should we DO?” We have plenty to do but
we need to begin that internal work first for it to genuinely flow as faith
from our hearts through our voices, hands and feet!
As that old Christian evangelist saying goes, in order to
“walk the talk,” we must spiritually embody, realize the talk—opening our heart
to hear, see, and experience, the promises of the Gospel at work in our
everyday lives. God is always speaking…
He is always teaching us something whether we realize it or even want to
understand it(!) He’s got a lot to
impart to us and our Baptism is to remind us of how we spiritually come to
discipline our lives to His Living Word. We are always living into an internal
process of reconciling ourselves to the power of the cross and it’s
Resurrection—this is responding naturally to God’s Grace through a transformed
heart.
“Words,” as we know, as a person of faith, disciple of
Jesus, can get you into trouble… It is
hard to fathom but Christians are still being persecuted today, but with
greater and more complicated measures.
This goes beyond the persecuting evil acts of ISIS and related, but Christians
are being polarized by politics, sadly, pigeon-holed by Old Nature terms such
as intolerance/ tolerance and having their voices forcefully shut or muted by a
growing populace of those seeking to erase the reign of God, spiritually from
culture. Instead of walking down that
spiritual path towards the Son rising in our lives as restoration, New Life,
hope and faith; we are falling back into a spiritual bondage of willfulness,
lawlessness and temptation.
Just like those disciples on the road to Emmaus, even
meditating upon, preaching those thoughts are something that I have grieved to
see and experience, not just as a pastor, but truly and most importantly as a
disciple of Jesus. The Living Word of
God will affect you that way—what can I do in the here and now, as His
disciple? This is one of the spiritual challenges that the Easter season encourages
us to look at and reconcile our hearts and minds to God with. It is seeing the resurrection of our very
spiritual selves to realize the New Nature planted within us! Peter once again,
is wonderful encouragement for us to understand this, he says: “21Through Him you have come to
trust in God, who raised Him from the dead and gave Him glory, so that your
faith and hope are set on God. 22Now that you have purified your
souls by your obedience to the truth so that you have genuine mutual love, love
one another deeply from the heart. 23You have been born anew, not of
perishable but of imperishable seed, through the living and enduring word of
God. 24For “All flesh is like grass and all its glory like the
flower of grass. The grass withers, and the flower falls, 25but the
word of the Lord endures forever.” That word is the good news that was
announced to you.”
For
all flesh is like grass… but is it allowed to freely grow? No, we mow it down, pour poison upon it to
mold it into our picture of perfection and live unto ourselves and it’s our
so-called “raison d’etre…” This is
basically human Nature with the Good News, the Gospel, removed. The next few months I am greatly looking
forward to, as I have agreed to, talk once a month at Radio Tribune and share
not only how the Good News has renewed and restored my life as a disciple of
Jesus, but how we, as a burgeoning church family, walk forward into that Son
set which soon turns to be the Son rising! Don’t let the Son go down upon your
heart, keep your eyes and ears open through Grace to see Christ’s
invitation. This is His invitation to
come to the table to break the bread of salvation—reconciliation not just
between you and He, but prayerfully with your neighbor. As a closing thought, we are called to harbor
the brotherly love of motivation to naturally DO so, is our walk to Emmaus.
Let
us pray,
Gracious
Lord Jesus
May
our lives reconcile to Your ever-flowing Grace
May
we realize the power of Your Resurrection burning in our hearts
As
that continuing purpose, You have restored our lives with
May
enduring that road only grow our faith, hope and resolve
For
a “here and now” that reveals the promise of Easter
The
Kingdom of God—
AMEN
April 30th,
2017; 3rd Sunday of Easter; Year A; SOLA Lectionary
Sermon by:
Reverend Nicole A.M. Collins
Psalm 116:1-14;
Acts 2:14a, 36-41; 1 Peter 1:17-25 & Luke 24:13-35
The link below is to this sermon's delivery at 9:30am at First Congregational UCC Church:
https://youtu.be/mhTsgJ97w9g
Thank you for scripture lesson and sermon. As you've said, God shows up in amazing places,time, and in things that are "normal" i read this and again, norished. Thank you
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