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Click to hear this sermon sermon070722
Today we're
beginning a new series of sermons that I call "Home is Where Your Heart
Is". Now, normally this type of
sermon format isn't my forte, but for the next four sermons I'm going to look
at different aspects of family life.
"Home is Where Your Heart Is: How to Create a Tight-Knit
Family" Jack
Keating Cicero
United Methodist
Church July 22, 2007 John
10: 22-30
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Today we're
beginning a new series of sermons that I call "Home is Where Your Heart
Is". Now, normally this type of
sermon format isn't my forte, but for the next four sermons I'm going to look
at different aspects of family life.
When
you read John 10:22-30, it is pretty obvious that Jesus is not specifically
talking here about the nuclear family. But I think he is saying something that
all families need to learn. He is talking about his relationship to his father
and their relationship to us, the sheep. In the same way that Jesus relates to
the father, and he and the father relate to us, we are to relate to one
another. And I think we can learn from this passage how to build a stronger
family.
Let's
think first about what a family is. We all know the traditional idea is of a
mom, dad, kids, and possibly a dog. The fact is though that only one out of
every six people in the United
States live in a traditional setting of one
mom, being married to one dad, one time, with children from that marriage only.
So, what about the remaining 84% of people, you ask? Is their family
life doomed forever? No, of course not! If your home has been broken by death
or divorce, God has not turned His back on you. Whatever family situation you
find yourself in right now, God wants to help you be the strongest family you
can possibly be.
Now, the U.S.
Census Bureau defines a family as people who live in the same house. Others
would define a family as people who share the same last name. But there is so
much more to it than that! So today we're going to look at six characteristics
of a tight-knit family.
First of all ..
1. A TIGHT-KNIT FAMILY LISTENS TO ONE
ANOTHER
Jesus said, "My sheep (or my family) listen to my voice."
The
biggest obstacle in our personal communication is not the inability to say
what's on our mind; it's the inability to listen as the other person says
what's on his or her mind. Stephen Covey says, "Many people do not listen
with intent to understand. They listen with the intent to reply." This
kind of listening isn't really listening at all. The book of Proverbs says,
"He who answers before listening - that is his folly and shame."
(Proverbs 18:13)
This
proverb describes the way many parents listen to their children, and the way
many spouses listen to one another. And this is why communication breaks down
in many families.
Chris
Conway is a single parent - the father of two teenage sons. The boys had gotten
involved with a youth group and were very enthusiastic about it. Mr. Conway
asked them what they liked about the group, and his older son answered,
"We can tell the leaders really care about us by the way they listen to
us." This surprised Conway,
and he said, "I listen to you." His son said, "I know that. But
you are always doing something else. All you ever say is 'yes' or 'no' or 'I'll
think about it.' At that moment Chris Conway decided that he was going to focus
on listening to his sons. At dinner each night, whenever one of the boys would
speak, he would stop eating, set down his fork, turn to him and listen. This
revolutionized his relationship with his sons. And since he spent so much time
listening at the dinner table, he also lost fifteen pounds during the first
five weeks! Most importantly though, the average length of their evening meal
went from less than 10 minutes to almost 45 minutes. You see, the close-knit
family listens to one another. Secondly, Don't you think it's amazing how
people with the same last name can live in the same house for years and never
really know anything about one another?
One
time I spoke at a Confirmation retreat in another church and I spoke to the
kids in the morning and their parents later on in the day. During the morning
session I asked the kids a series of questions like, "What is your
favorite color? What is your favorite TV show? How do you like to spend your
spare time? Where would you like to go on vacation? Who is your favorite
musician?" They wrote down their answers, signed their name, and gave me
their papers. Later on that day, when I met with the parents, I gave them a
test. As I read the responses to each question, I asked the parents to identify
which one belonged to their child. Of the more than two dozen parents there,
only a handful- maybe 3 or 4 - got it right, and I think they were guessing! These
people shared the same last name, and lived in the same house, but they were
strangers to their own children.
One
reason the TV show Frasier was
so popular is that people could relate to it. The premise of the show is that a
father and son who know nothing about each other - and are as different as
night and day - end up living together. And the series is primarily about how
these two grown men - father and son - are finally getting to know one another.
Jesus
said about his sheep, "I know
them." The great news of the gospel is that our relationship with God
is personal...it's intimate ... and God wants to be close to us, and for US to be close to Him. He says, "I know you." And the same
bond we share with Him ... he wants us to share with others.
My brother
moved out of the house 27 years ago, and we now live some 4000 miles apart. We don't get to see each other nearly enough,
and we only seldom touch base on the telephone. But it's amazing how when we
are together we never run out of things to talk about. Sometimes he will
suggest that I read a certain book or watch a certain movie and usually I can
know I'm going to like it. And sometimes something funny will happen and I have
to call him and share it with him because only he will appreciate the humor in
the situation. This is because we know each other. A family is more than just a
group of people that live together, a family takes time to get to know one
another. Thirdly ...
3. A TIGHT-KNIT
FAMILY IS SUBMITTED TO THE LORDSHIP OF JESUS CHRIST.
There is an important distinction in
teaching children obedience. It's not a case of my children having to live by
my rules, it's a case of our whole family being under the authority of Christ
and living by His rules.
Jesus said, "My sheep follow me." There is an understanding that we
have a path to follow; we're not making our own rules or calling our own shots.
We have a standard to live by, and that standard has been established by Jesus.
My kids used to hear me preach every
Sunday. Hopefully they learned a little bit about their faith in the process.
Their greatest lessons, when they were young however, were not learned in the
pew. They were learned at the soccer field where I was a coach. Each summer
night at practice and Saturday morning during the game, my kids got a
microscopic look at how serious I was about following Christ. They saw how well
I took losing, how well I took winning, how fair I was to the less gifted
players, whether or not I showed favoritism to my own kids, whether or not I
coached with a "win at all costs" mentality, how I responded to
criticism and on and on. They've seen me get off track and get back on track.
They have seen me make principled decisions that were based on priorities other
than winning. Throughout the whole process they got to see first hand that I'm
not Iiving according to my own ides of right and wrong. I am submitted to the
Lordship of Christ, and the rules that I challenge them to live by are the same
rules that I strive to follow. Next ...
4. A TIGHT-KNIT FAMILY HAS SPIRITUAL
VALUES.
Jesus said, "I give
them eternal life."
In 1987 Larry Norman wrote these words
in a song called Somewhere Out There, written to his son.... "Every
night I'm praying that the second birth, will someday be the first thing on
your mind."
Jesus
doesn't just want us to be happy; he wants US to be holy. He teaches us that
there is more to life than meets the eye. We are to live with an eternal
perspective. It's not enough for your children to get into the right school and
make good grades and get a good job and earn lots of money. If your children
don't learn spiritual values at home - if they don't learn to live with an
eternal perspective - they will not be prepared to face the world as an adult.
If
you know anything at all about college football, you will remember the
reputation the Oklahoma Sooner football program had in the 1980's. To put it
bluntly, it was a program out of control. Recruiting rules were ignored, and
players were at the same time pampered and exploited. A significant percentage
of players never made it to graduation; more than a few found themselves in
serious legal trouble, facing charges of rape, robbery, drug possession, drug
dealing, assault with a deadly weapon and so on. Someone once joked that
University officials should work out a deal with prison officials so that
players could keep the same number in prison that they wore on the field! Barry
Switzer had not exactly built a program known for its academic excellence; he
was no Greg Robinson. Barry in fact once joked that the reason OU has a
recruiting advantage over state rival OSU was because the name of his school
was easier to spell!
Into
this program came J.C. Watts. He played quarterback for the Sooners, and led
them to consecutive Orange Bowl victories. Watts
was exposed to the same life-style that ambushed so many other careers, but it
didn't phase him. He graduated with a degree in journalism, and went on to play
in the Canadian Football league. Eventually, he went back to Oklahoma and ran for public office. He was
elected to the US House of Representatives where he served in several
leadership positions, has spoken at the Republican National Convention, and is
now an ordained Baptist pastor.
What made the difference in this man's
life? His answer is his family. J.C. Watts is the son of a pastor, and his home
life was more than just religious, it was spiritual. He grew up knowing he had
a call on his life to serve God. When you hear him talk today, you quickly
discover that he saw his political life as more of a ministry than a career.
This is because he grew up in a family committed to spiritual values that
taught him to live life with an eternal perspective. Next ...
5. A TIGHT-KNIT FAMILY OFFERS ONE ANOTHER SECURITY.
Jesus
has a long term commitment to his sheep. He doesn't consider you part of the
fold just as long as it's convenient to him. As for as he is concerned, your
relationship with him is here to stay. He said, "No one can snatch them
out of my hand."
Always
remember that God's love for you is not based on your own goodness. Paul said,
"God demonstrates his love toward us in that while we were yet sinners
Christ died for us." (Romans 5:8)
A
high school student once said to me, "I've been saved nine times."
Imagine that! He was 16 years old, and in his opinion he had fallen in and out
of grace nine times! He believed, I think, that he was part of God's family
only as long as he was perfect. Every time he failed, he was sure that God had
disowned him.
But
this is not how God treats His children. He says, "No one can snatch you
out of my hand." There is security in our relationship with Him. In the
same way, there should be security in our family relationships. Children need
to hear the message: "There is nothing you could do that could make me
stop loving you ... You are, and always will be, an important part of this
family." And lastly ...
6. A TIGHT-KNIT FAMILY HAS A BOND OF UNITY.
Jesus said, "I and
the father are one."
When he said
this, he was asserting his divinity. He was saying, "I am God in the flesh." He was also saying, "I and the father are of one mind and
purpose." There is a unity of purpose between the father and the son,
and being in God's family means that we share that purpose. God's purpose is
that all the world should come to know Christ, and as members of God's family,
that is our purpose as well.
You've
heard the old saying" A family that prays together stays together."
There is truth in this saying. When a family pursues common interests they are
strengthened in unity.
I
heard a man named David Parker give a speech called" Multi-Level Marketing
Saved My Marriage". And he was serious. He had, it seems, lost his job and
the family was under tremendous financial pressure. As a result, his marriage
became rocky and he was losing his grip on his home life. Then he signed up in
a multilevel business. He convinced his wife that this was the answer to their
money problems. They recruited their children to help them run the business.
They sectioned off part of their house as a work area and spent hours together
filling orders. As their business grew, and their financial problems began to
disappear, they found out that they had gained something more valuable than
money; family unity. His story is about much more than "how to get rich in
multilevel marketing". It's a lesson about the power of family unity.
As
families we should do things together that everyone in the family will enjoy
... to go places together where everyone will have a good time ... to get
involved in a project that everyone believes in. This strengthens the bond of
family unity, and helps the family become more than just a group of people with
the same address - it helps them develop into a team.
The relationship between Jesus and his
father, and their relationship to us, are our examples of how we are to live as
families. Our families should also be characterized by listening to one
another, knowing one another, being obedient to Christ together, growing
spiritually together, accepting one another unconditionally, and sharing a
common purpose together.
It comes down to this; A family is
more than just a group of individuals with the same last name or the same
address. A family is a team, a group of
people committed to one another, who are "for" one another. The message
of the gospel is that God is "for" us; the hope of the family is that
together we remain committed to him and committed to one another.
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