Sunday, August 27, 2017

Gracious Formations; Sermon for Sunday, August 27th, 2017 by: Rev. Nicole A.M. Collins, OSST


Coming this November, it will be literally ten years ago that Phil and I, saw the Grand Canyon. This was going out to meet his folks, for the first time, in Arizona.  It was also my first time visiting Arizona, ever.  I frankly never saw anything like that before. The artist in me took something like 1,200 photographs—God bless digital cameras! But then, I’m still in awe of living near the Red Canyon Mountains here! I think even seeing how the rain clouds form and expel rain are beautiful and incredible!  The Grand Canyon is a great witness to God’s natural, creative activity in the world.  Scientists still debate its exact origins of how it was created.  Nonetheless, we could fairly say that they are truly God’s gracious formations in nature.

Gracious formations take time, when it comes to humanity, to confess the revelation that God has spoken to our hearts, (the first and most important church), to truly hear! One of the insights from a lot of reading and discussion, I was doing this past week had a sad revelation to communicate—are we willfully letting the light of the Gospel begin to grow dim?  What an awful and depressing thought!  I would hope that we still give credence, to being hope-filled, instead of being skeptical and too immersed in the dark voices that try to shout down, the reality of the Gospel, and the truth that God is not only still speaking, but He has never stopped! Yes, I do love that slogan.  God is always speaking, period!

St. Paul’s message this week gives us the greatest jolt of hopefulness, as well as encourages us, what we should focus on above the chains and oppression, of the world and its’ all too often, dim outlook.  He says most beautifully: “2Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your minds, so that you may discern what is the will of God—what is good and acceptable and perfect.”  Amen, I say!  Thanks be to God for his encouragement, that in my heart, sounds timeless and most faith-filled! This one verse holds as much spiritual optimism for me, as does my favorite Psalm’s verse which some of you have seen in my email, this is Psalm 69:32— “Let the Oppressed see it, and be Glad; You who seek God, let your hearts revive!” 

The funny thing about that Psalm, in particular, is that’s probably the most positive verse out of that entire Psalm.  The rest of the Psalm reveals the author’s “angst” about not only his sense of feeling worldly oppression, but being shaken down to that fragile core of the “rock” of our faith—the heart (where God works or should I say, works upon). Both of this week’s Old Testament lessons, Psalm 138 & Isaiah 51 shout out above the anxiety and oppression that they felt during that time of human history, in essence, to declare with great faith and hope, that God’s love and purpose is indeed delivering and encouraging them onward. They needed to, seek it however, they needed to keep their eyes, ears and hearts open to God.

I don’t think though, that we do a “where’s Waldo” search, for God enough… Our lives are too cluttered, and our days, sometimes, or all too often, lose their way on God’s trail, mapped out for our own Spiritual Formation.  The perfection that both Jesus and St. Paul are talking about today have nothing to do with our earthly sense of “perfection” at all.  In fact, this perfection or development is 100% spiritually attuned to allowing the Holy Spirit to do its miracle grow on the seed of the New Nature planted within us.  This New Nature seed is one, we are called by God to reap naturally as the fruit of faith from an abundant Grace given. This was by no means a cheap Grace given, but one most costly as we must spiritually receive as being priceless and boundless in the heart, the first church.

There is so much that God’s Grace tries to teach us.  This instruction is preached to the heart by God’s Word.  This very statement I make from my own witness, as we all have our own witness, to hopefully hearing God’s Living Word, and allowing ourselves to be most truly transformed by it!  One of the insights from reading for my doctoral class, this whole past week about the quote “new secular age” growing, more or less out of control in the world, was that this one author claimed that people are not connecting and seeing or finding spiritual transcendence from the Gospel as it was most naturally meant, intended to do.  What a tragic movement for a quote progressive 21st century culture to have evolved?”  Both of those thoughts, the light growing dim and becoming “disenchanted” with the meaning and purpose of life given by God, almost brought me to tears, honestly. 

Elton John’s song—'Don’t let the Sun go down on me,’ I think we need to hear as Christians being—‘Don’t let the “Son” go down and out of your faith.’ Faith takes work, it’s like going to the gym. Many of us can be like Homer Simpson and say what’s a Guyime? That was his pronunciation of it…  A spiritual gym is what we need to be concerned with from today’s lessons.  This spiritual gym requires us to believe, receive, incorporate and share.  You’ve seen me demonstrate that before, it is a learning nugget gift I received from the pastor I studied under, Pastor Eric.  This was his summary of coming to understand how we are called to exercise our faith. I frankly, think it makes the clearest observation of exercising faith.

Exercise is not to be mistaken with exorcise… which, what has been going on in the world lately, in regard to activities, seems to allude to the need for God’s help to eliminate evil… Oppression, in any form, is the tragic downfall of the human spirit losing its battle against evil’s temptations upon our willfulness, by offering shallow solutions or “empty promises” and the delusion of ultimate control, and advancement. We are not serving one another, the way God intended for us to do, which requires exercising our faith as our spiritual gifts learned from and earned by Grace being: compassion, selflessness, kindness, innocence, extravagant welcome and truly, truthfully and most importantly through brotherly love that comes unshackled of agenda, ideology of the self, and is abundantly shared.

When I was just starting to do field education in seminary through different parishes, Pastor Dawson told me that the best thing I could do to truly learn what serving other selflessly and most graciously, would be to take a job at the customer service center at a Kohl’s or a Walmart.  I never took that advice, literally, but imagined humorously how we approach people in those circumstances.  Probably many of you drift to an old Saturday Night live episode or think of that infamous scene from Seinfeld where people are coming up to carefully give their order to the “soup Nazi,” who if you recall that episode, if you got one thing wrong—he would yell: “no soup for you!”  More often the reverse happens and people are notably sharp and hostile to those behind the counter, for some reason or another.

Putting on or exercising that New Natured faith, is hard stuff.  It takes the heart to keep open, to hearing God telling you to keep the faith by discipling the self into loving responses to “bad behavior” or bad ideas.  This is what I do:  Ok, pushing the 3rd eye back in, and now I’m going to be New Nature!  Trust me, it’s a lot harder than it looks!  Wouldn’t it be wonderful, if we could muster up that rock-solid faith that is in there, within us, to just turn it on, and turn off, the willfulness of the Old Nature? We are too scared to make bold confessions like Peter today in the world, without worrying about persecution and misunderstanding of what is a Christian.

What is a Christian?  A Christian is someone whose discipleship has confirmed and confessed that Jesus is the Christ—the Messiah, Son of the Living God, whose Living Word is commissioned to us to carry and share!  The other day I saw a disturbing post on social media claiming that a gnostic Gospel, the Gospel of Barnabas, discovery says that Jesus was never crucified.  Josephus, the earliest and most accurate historian of the early church declares that is not true.  The whole story of Josephus and his writings are, in itself, a fantastic testimony of history and faith.   This man was commissioned by the Romans, to disprove and debunk, the early growth of Christianity known back then, as the “Way,” but what we came to learn from his observations, they did and accomplished, the complete opposite!  Next to St. Paul as our great faith-filled witness to the Holy Spirit in church planting, discipleship and developing an understanding of faith being “theology,” we owe a lot to Josephus’ unknowing witness to the truth of the greatest story ever told.

The greatest story ever told, is the Gospel, its firm foundation begins with Christ at its center and the solid ground it stands or falls upon is the heart.  Peter’s character we will come to see from many lessons throughout scripture was challenged by his developing faith.  The Gospel we hear from this morning is before his infamous caving into fear and denying Jesus to those seeking to round up and torture Jesus’ disciples.  He was chicken, welcome to the many problems of human nature—its willfulness and frailty.  Keeping the fire of faith burning in the heart is hard stuff, yet alone being brave with your faith. 

Speaking for my own journey, this picture I’m sharing here this morning, is one I have next to my bed to wake up and see every day.  It is the beautiful altar piece painting that is in St. Catherine of Sienna’s monastery in Europe.  I don’t know what it is to this painting, but for me it always encourages me and I feel God is speaking through this beautiful portrait, to keep on truckin.’ Keep on truckin’ with the ups and downs of trying to navigate a messy faith journey.  Keep on truckin’ together as the Body to serve the Gospel by bearing it and sharing it in all that you say, do and example in the story of your life.  Be a rock for others to cling to in seeing the beauty and awesome power of God active as love, peace, mercy and most importantly graciousness. 

Let us Pray,
Gracious God of love and life,
Continue to help us conform to Your Gospel, and not that of the world’s
Help us to truly be, live enchantment and grow encouraged, transformed and renewed daily by Your Living, life-giving Word.  May we never let Your loving light of Grace grow dim in our hearts. May we live a triumphant faith for Your glory and Kingdom come. AMEN



August 27th,2017; Twelfth Sunday after Pentecost; Proper 16; Year A; SOLA Lectionary
Sermon by: Reverend Nicole A.M. Collins, OSST
Psalm 138; Isaiah 51:1-6; Romans 11:33—12:8; Matthew 16:13-20







 The link below is to this sermon's delivery at First Congregational Church at 9:30am

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