Sunday, February 24, 2019

Measuring Up; Sermon for Sunday February 24th, 2019 by: Rev. Nicole A.M. Collins


The only way Adam and Eve and the children of God could find their way back to Eden is that the old ways, the old nature must die. What must rise instead is that changing of one’s way of life, a spiritual conversion, a transformation of the heart also known as metanoia. Metanoia is a transliterated Greek word for what repentance, reconciliation is to mean. Over the centuries we have heard those words reconciliation and repentance perhaps too often without understanding what God needs to have happen within us.

I was surprised to see that the lessons we have for this Sunday haven't been preached upon together for quite some time. The Gospel we have this afternoon is beautiful. This is the Gospel with the Golden Rule. It is literally Jesus wrapping up His Sermon on the Plain by telling us to “love our enemies, do to others as you would have them do to you.” Being merciful as our God is merciful, forgiving each other being compassionate and beyond ourselves is something we're not very comfortable with truly working upon. We can read these beautiful verses in scripture and get the warm fuzzies on what God needs us to do… but do we really DO it?

In my doctoral catechism class, we were talking about the role of the scriptures to transform the world. The professor stopped short when it came to the problem of evil in the world. It might be theologically perfect to the Lutheran tradition, but I cannot agree, or I should say vehemently disagree that we are not called to aspire towards changing the world together. It can't be just in the little house Church of the Grace Hub that we change this little corner of the world. It can't be in so-and-so's Lutheran Church that we change just what we do together as Church? The moment we confine ourselves to the steeple, we really do forget about the people beyond it and beyond ourselves!  We are all called to encourage and motivated one another to change the world together through the power of God’s love shining through us.

St Paul's wayward Corinthians can only think in terms of: “Let us eat drink and be merry for tomorrow we die.” They couldn't get past the things that did need to die and the things that did need to rise, in order for them to really live into the Christian Journey—the lifestyle of Grace. We are all to die in Adam, he says, or in Eve (in my case), so all will be made alive in Christ. Being alive in Christ… what does that look like in the 21st century? What does that look like in your own little universe of who you are? Do you have your feet firmly on the ground of where God needs you to be? Planting your feet firmly on the ground of where Christ needs you to be is realizing that spiritual change of heart.  Sin, death and the devil are not going to be vanquished by “pretty words” with no action or by a theological treatise with no purpose beyond itself.

I think it's wonderful and beautiful that these scriptures we have today are just before the Transfiguration and literally towards the end of the Epiphany season before our time of Lent. For what we are challenged with today is to see the radical love of God plus to contemplate and incorporate this radical love of God. This radical love of God is agape love. “It is the full Monty of the Gospel.” It is the most powerful source of God's work in the world. For Love takes down all enemies. Love vanquishes evil and Love changes us truly into the children of Grace and promise that Christ needs us to be.

We've got a radical lesson from Genesis that first book of the Old Testament today. Joe comes home, and no he isn't going to kill his two brothers for shipping him off to slavery in Egypt… He actually comes in the front door and completely forgives them. They're expecting the worst and almost want to hide underneath the tables and under the beds.... instead he soberly tells them that God has sent him on a mission to rescue them as well as other people and that he didn't come there for them. “God sent me to help you,” he says. The radical image of his forgiveness is at the very end where he hugs his brothers and weeps on them. It's amazing what toxic stuff families can do to one another either from putting curses on you, to calling relatives in the middle of the night prompting you to have to put an order of protection against them or avoiding talking to you for maybe 30 something years. I guess many of us have families that are like the Corinthian people. We're probably not as lucky to have someone as Saint Paul to be our pastor, however.

“I am only human” only goes so far. It can’t justify us for being self-seeking jerks in the world. For the Christian is to believe, receive, incorporate and share the Good News as well as the Christian is called to reflect, confess, repent and renew. I had a very good teacher being a child of conversion and coming back to the faith late in life. My first teacher had the whole sense of what living into your baptism daily means. Pastor Eric knew how to get you to think about: what does it look like? You could look at it as a spiritual calisthenic or you could think of it as just like opening our eyes in the morning to see there's something we really need to focus on, and it is the Son. 

Every time I have heard the versions and remaining lessons within the Sermon on the Plain as Luke calls it or The Sermon on the Mount as Matthew calls it, it's hard to believe that perhaps beyond the eyewitness of Peter, there was a source of sayings by Jesus that perhaps informed how we're seeing and experiencing these writings today. My favorite movie Franco Zefferelli’s Jesus of Nazareth from 1977, all 382 minutes tries to go into every nook and cranny of the Gospel writers’ vision of Jesus and His ministry in the world. They show His Sermon on the Mount or Sermon on the Plain in one sitting. Now that would be one gloriously long sermon, I certainly wouldn't mind sitting all afternoon and listening to. But in that listening is that becoming faith in my heart to make that change?

When your life is spinning in circles and nothing seems to be moving forward that breaks apart the human spirit and that's what the devil wants to do. What is evil and nihilistic in our world today has a divisive purpose of tearing down the human spirit from being able to grow and go with light in the world for all to see. If your light is becoming an amber, and your heart hurts… what good is that to you if the mission dwindles? When the weight of the world is upon your shoulders and your heart is heavy, are you calling upon Christ to lift you? Maybe some of us picture that Footprints poem where Jesus falls down trying to lift our girth in the air to carry us.... for there was a time and a place we ate, and we drank, and we got too merry and we woke up the next day and wondered what the hell we did that for?

Paul lays it out for the Corinthians in probably a last-ditch effort to get them to listen to the truth of what a full life in Christ really means. He says to them: “If with merely human hopes, I fought … what would I have gained by it?” It continues to tell them not to be deceived because bad company does ruin good judgment or discernment. He says it as plainly as a father to his children: “Come to a sober and right mind and sin no more.” Coming to a sober and right mind is that heart changing and turning towards God. That is perhaps the oldest Biblical concept out there of the heart discerning and transforming to God's Will and purposes. All of life has a purpose but is not necessarily what we want… it is what God has put in store. That's probably a really good hard one for us to take in and be okay with: “Letting go and letting God” for we feel better when we are in control, don't we? When evil becomes a problem in our lives, and it doesn't seem to be a part of what we've done but outside of us… we point fingers and blame God and we get our own “Job complex.”

Speaking of Job, Joseph’s story kind of sounds a little similar… (but not as bad obviously.) Joseph’s brothers sold him down the river. For all they knew he could have gotten killed or whole bunch of other unpleasant things could have happened, but they could have cared less. They got rid of him and they were happy about that(!) Job’s story is obviously much more complex… but after getting angry at God, he understands the nature and reason of the valley he was to walk through and survive through. I think it's those valleys that we have in our lives that really test us. They test our capacity to do and they test our capacity to be. Sometimes it's just all too much. It doesn't make sense and it certainly doesn't make sense to our human logic. “We want, what we want, when we want it.” Those are the drum skins verses of the consumerist Modern Age.

When we are at the helm of our lives, but the rudder is broken underneath… what are we really steering towards? That's what I think is so interesting with the troubled times we have right now with the death work of politics distorting peoples’ thoughts and getting people to do ridiculous things. I've never been one to watch the Fox TV show ‘Empire,’ I don't like TV soap operas. Probably the last time I watched a TV soap opera was in the 80’s with ‘Knots Landing’ and shows like ‘Dallas.’ One of the stars of ‘Empire,’ Jussie Smollett tried and successfully staged a fake attack upon himself to make a moral sensational justification about his hatred for “Republicans” and his hatred for a label upon people he wants to declare bigots. It did get him thrown in jail or paying a big fine I believe and not much more beyond that though.

If we have now come to the point of inventing purposes and reasons to accomplish our own agenda over that of Gods... we are not only exampling a futility of purpose, but we are exampling, moving backwards. We are not advancing as a people to love our enemies and do good to others. We are becoming condemning self-righteous judges and juries. We're seeing what we can do to hurt one another in order to proclaim a self-righteous victory. God and the devil in the book of Job, were basically betting upon and seeing what they could do to see how strong Job’s Faith would be.  Joseph's brothers, outside of still recovering from being in shock from seeing him again, thought that they had it all wrapped up. They had their elaborate plans complete to get rid of him, but it essentially backfired. Joseph’s example of a radical love coming from a devoted faith illumines how he was a messenger and he had a task to do. Jesus was a messenger for us as well, not only our Savior and Lord of course, but Jesus always tried to get us to think beyond ourselves, beyond our comfort zone.

When we think of that cross of discipleship we must carry, do we see ourselves stretching to the point of our limbs ripping and straining? Do we think that there must be an “easy button” out there for us to push to get what we need to do, done? The greatest battle we have is in our own hearts. The movement we need is on our shoulders, but it does begin in the heart. This makes you think about something: are we measuring up to the task of being new people? As people of the new nature, are we still just following the leader of Adam and Eve through the wilderness, or are we following Christ? St. Paul had to really get in the Corinthians’ face to have them hear that the Christian life is certainly not easy. It is certainly not one that you can circumvent the challenges to. But just like how we are today, we wanted to have our cake and eat it too. We want to do things the easiest way we can with little to no accountability or compassion.

I don't know if we'll see more escapades of Hollywood actors or actresses staging events to make self-righteous statements about their perspectives on life… but I can only hope that we grow beyond our own navel-gazing to see what the Gospel really needs us to do. We had our first measurable snowfall since 2008 in the Las Vegas area. Being from Illinois, it didn't look anything special to me. I did feel sorry for the trees this week in wondering about the weight upon their limbs of this wet and heavy snow. The mountains truly looked beautiful, but I'm sure for many it was just so strange. It was a complete change from how winters are “supposed to be” here. For many it wasn’t necessarily a good thing… everyone has their opinions. The difference between opinions and beliefs are truly a matter of faith. The difference between judgement and discernment is a willingness to listen to God and to neighbor. The difference between self-righteousness and love is the love that God requires of us is that radical new nature.

Let us pray
Loving and Gracious Lord Jesus
Help us to do the right thing
Help us to be a renewed people
That has the complete transformation and turns our hearts to you.
Help us to not be lost in that valley but find and know the power of Your Love.
Gracious and loving Lord
Your love is what helps us to be new people
It gives us light and it gives us strength
We thank you for everything
May we never not be grateful
AMEN

February 24th, 2019; Seventh Sunday after the Epiphany; Year C; SOLA Lectionary
Sermon by: Reverend Nicole A.M. Collins
Psalm 103:1-13; Genesis 45:3-15; 1 Corinthians 15:21-42; Luke 6:27-38








 The link below is to this sermon's delivery at the Grace Hub at 12:30pm

Sunday, February 17, 2019

A Beautiful Mind; Sermon for February 17th, 2019 by: Rev. Nicole A.M. Collins


“But by the grace of God I am what I am and His grace toward me has not been in vain.” What a beautiful thought from a beautiful mind. What makes someone beautiful I think this is something we have seen with the many shades of the Beatitude from the Gospel writers. This Beatitude variation from Luke has some of the same features but perhaps has more of its feet rooted in the ground.  A beautiful attitude definitely has something to say about our spiritual warfare battle between the flesh, the devil and the world. 

The last few weeks we've been dealing with a lot of contemplation for us to utilize upon ourselves, the reality of death and the reality of the new. We are just beginning to understand the heart’s journey to turning to God and what transformation and reconciliation are really to mean in light of the Gospel. We've been overdosing on many of Paul's pastoral conversations to his wayward Corinthians. It was bad enough how much they were challenged by the ego and challenged by all the temptations of the world… In this week's message they had a big-time problem with the Resurrection. In fact, today there's modern heresies that claimed the Resurrection never happened. Then why have there been thousands upon thousands of martyrs that the church has built its Foundation upon their flesh’ witness?  If the churches of the world were to be built only from bones, more than half of the world’s churches would be made from bones.

Being a Christian and surviving in the world today is going to be even greater of a challenge if you take Christ's way, for you must abandon the values of the world. If you take on the values of the world, you will most definitely abandon Christ.  The Gospel is for the world, in the world but actually not of the world.  The short time I have been on my journey I have witnessed more evil in the church than I have ever witnessed out in the world and I wonder, how this could be? Its something much more sinister than hypocrisy and power, that’s for certain. If people profess to be commissioned and ordained to adapt the Beautiful Mind of Christ, in all that they say and do and serve others... why do people do evil things? That has always perplexed me not just in the sordid stories I hear from other colleagues but just from the behavior of some colleagues themselves who found the wages of sin, a greater route over the life of the Gospel.

You must always be a student and one that is humble. You must be a student that hears God's Word most firmly and are challenged by God's Word to grow. If you cannot love your neighbor and “pretend” to do so because it seems like a great "self-righteousness"... then you've not been called by Christ, you've been called by Satan. I love the analogy and imagery we have in a few of our lessons today that have us think about the Tree of Life. The trees that are mentioned in both the Psalm and from the Prophet Jeremiah talk about being planted, talk about flourishing, talk about the watering and nurturing that helps them to grow. It's truly a hope that we commit ourselves to adhere to when it comes to what Christ Jesus did for us and why we are, who we are. "But by the grace of God, I am what I am!" I love Saint Paul, he has us hear things in such an amazing way. What I have to say is that "I am what I am" because of Christ, on one level, this is true. I am what I am as well, because of the wages of sin, death and evil.

Our Beatitudes from Luke this afternoon has those wonderful "woes" in them. “Woe to you who are full now, for you will be hungry.” Outside of seeing that in relation to “blessed are you who are hungry now, for you will be filled.” I thought about that very spiritually in wondering if we are starving to death in the world because we have turned our hearts away from Christ? Perhaps “we,” is too strong of a word, for some have turned their hearts away from Christ and filled themselves with the glory and empty treasures of the world. "Nice guys finish last," a cruel statement but sometimes true. If I but trust enough in God yet alone a little bit in myself perhaps I could be a tree in the desert offering life because of the Gospel through someone like me.  You're only as alone as the world makes you feel.

This past Valentine's Day, the weather in Vegas made me wonder if there was an ark someplace hidden around backside of Mount Charleston and pretty soon, we were going to start seeing Noah loading the animals and things in it… for it rained all day long. Since I came from the Chicago area, that had “normal weather,” (pretty much being all the seasons and too much of the seasons...) this seems like a regular rainfall in Illinois. What was wild however, living on the side of a mountain, is my husband and I were seeing the waters roll down the Hills and in and out of the gutters. It was literally a fast moving, flash flooding stream. We had to “dust off” our umbrellas, yet alone find them… when we went to go out and have a little bite to eat to celebrate our 11th engagement anniversary. Yes, we are one of those silly couples who celebrates not only their engagement anniversary but also their wedding anniversary.

While we were driving to this little Japanese restaurant, I thought about wondering if the trees and the shrubs and the burnt grass of Vegas made sounds of sighs of relief. You know like that cartoon, where the tree falls in the wilderness and it is yelling…. I'm sure “they” (the trees, shrubs and grass) were thanking God, if they could as a plant that is. Though I did see on social media with all amusement, a vegan study was done to see that a plant sends out distress signals when it's being eaten… I have no idea how that is even remotely possible but amusing and thought-provoking at the same time. On that same breath, I remember a few years ago this wonderful eco-friendly invention that was created to not only help Mother Earth, but to return someone to the Earth in a natural, organic encasement that would grow a tree from the persons remains. The loved one is fitted in a fetal position within the pod and then the pod is planted. I’m sure that will make one hell of an enchanted forest that would come from a whole Cemetery of nothing but trees that came from one's remnant.

Remnant— things that remain.... This is our human battle: we are both aspiring saints and willful sinners. The most direct and bold statement the Reformation could have ever made about the problem of the human condition. The time of Jeremiah as well was prophesying to a Remnant people. A people searching for themselves— who they were, why God left them here and what does it all mean. We're still wandering in that same wilderness. This is the same wilderness I've been talking about for weeks now. We are in the wilderness of the world following the path first tread by Adam and Eve trying to find a way back to Eden... Will we ever truly find it? This rests in God’s hands and in His timing.  That Secret Garden in the heart needs to be fed and lead as well. Within it lies the seed of the New Nature waiting for us to reap it as we put on Christ.

That secret garden just like the wilderness of the world beneath our feet has its weeds however as well.  Sometimes we dress up those weeds and we think they are a new expression of a “choice” we have been happy to make. I had a dream the other evening which was quite lovely in many ways, as I'm sure we have all dreamed of what our Lord looks like. I was walking towards Him and I was trying to reach out to Him, and He looked straight at me. And before He could even begin to speak, my cat Louie walks on my stomach and wakes me up!  I'm sure we have all wondered what would we ask our Lord about first? I know I have said this before but I'd love to have the whole retelling of the book of Acts, blow-by-blow or see the motion picture in heaven... I think I would ask Him though, if I had had the chance to, in this dream: why things happen the way they happen and what does He need me to learn from them?  Perhaps we all have those Job-like questions percolating in our hearts…

Being grateful is something that challenges us, not only with our humility, but challenges us in our prayers. This is especially when the world is more than a stumbling block to the truth of the Gospel.  We must remember Luke was never an eyewitness to Jesus in the midst of His ministry with the original 12. Luke was a fellow church planter and traveling witness with Paul and Barnabas and a cast of the early church we may have not seen recorded. Like Luke, Paul was not an eyewitness with the original 12, Paul did however, experience Christ on the road to Damascus that is certain. The book of Acts, the Gospel of the Holy Spirit, Luke ventures into having the world grasp the power of God unseen but definitely active in the world. Even with this painting of His gospel sharing Jesus famous Beatitudes, he is allowing the Holy Spirit to have us see both sides of the human struggle, the struggle of the disciple—Spiritual warfare.  

Speaking of the Holy Spirit that TobyMac song from a number of years ago, ‘I don't want to gain the world and lose my soul,’ started to play in my head. I never watch any of the music videos anymore, but I did think it began in an interesting way.  The opening scene shows a young girl coming to a pawn table to sell her wedding ring and she receives some money for it and her ring is put in the display window case. The last character that comes in is a man who trades in his gun for money but then buys it back, but then gives it back again. We don't see if the girl goes back for her wedding band or not and tries to buy it back, but we do see a great statement of choosing peace over violence. Perhaps that was one of the main messages of the TobyMac video. When we think of ourselves as not only disciples of Christ but as human creatures God's Children of Grace and promise, I just wonder how aware we are of the Life and Grace all around us because of Christ. yet alone of the death that the world has come up between us as those weeds and stumbling blocks.  

Love is what grows roots and that growth is Christ. The love of God is an unconditional love and we who are witnesses to the truth of the Gospel as Disciples of Christ know that He was crucified, died and was buried on our behalf. He rose on the third day to women disciples. Love made manifest as Grace poured within us, washing over us and working through us. The love of God nowhere meets what we understand is love. Even the day we celebrate is a day of love. Valentine's Day was named after a 3rd century Roman bishop who was martyred for helping convert people to Christianity. The gory details of his martyrdom sort of sound like a Stephen King movie outtake… but during that time, what we don't realize, the Christian persecutions for centuries would be profoundly violent and brutal.  Just one of many people, one of many witnesses of the Gospel working in their lives and challenging their lives to be a light to others, at all costs. I'm not sure what Saint Valentine thinks of himself being memorialized by decadent chocolate candies and “Eros” love verses agape love but such as the culture has changed.

No matter where you are, know that God loves you and has given you purpose. This is a purpose you may not trust enough to understand, yet alone have confidence in yourself to understand, but God's love is that solid foundation is that mighty rootage that keeps us grounded.  Err boldly on the side of Grace and God reveals his paths for us. Sometimes it may seem like He takes His sweet time and the world is winning in its battle to crush our spirits. What I have to say to that is that you need to stand boldly in your faith, one that is not for the world but is because of Christ.

Let us Pray
Loving and Gracious Lord Jesus
I thank You for all that You have given
I say this not only for myself but my whole family
I thank You for the beauty of the Earth
And I thank You for the beautiful mind and the Heart of Christ
That keeps me encouraged to move forward.
I lift this prayer to You, O God. Amen

February 17th, 2019; Sixth Sunday after the Epiphany; Year C; SOLA Lectionary
Sermon by: Reverend Nicole A.M. Collins
Psalm 1; Jeremiah 17:5-8; 1 Corinthians15:1-20; Luke 6:17-26






 The link below is to this sermon's delivery at the Grace Hub at 12:30pm: