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Click to hear this sermon sermon071202
Throughout all of the scriptures there
is one common refrain, a refrain echoed over and over again -
"Being Prepared: Maintaining our Vision!" Jack Keating December 2, 2007
Cicero United Methodist Church Matthew 24: 36-44 Advent I
Throughout all of the scriptures there
is one common refrain, a refrain echoed over and over again - the refrain that
says that the final act of God's salvation of the world is coming,
- that
the time when the lion will lie down with the lamb,
- and
nations will beat their swords into ploughshares,
- and
their spears into pruning hooks
- and
God himself will judge between the nations.
This idea is expressed in many ways:
- it
is expressed by the prophets who speak throughout the old testament of the coming day of the Lord
- that
day which will bring the destruction of evil and the vindication of the good,
- it
is expressed by Jesus who speaks in each gospel of the coming of the Son of Man on the clouds with power and many
signs ... to bring peace to the
earth and to separate out the sheep from the goats
- and
it is expressed by the Apostles, who speak of the day of the Messiah's return and the triumph of the
righteous.
Today - this time
that we are in - is further represented by almost all of the prophets, and by
Jesus and the apostles, as a time of darkness: a time in which we must wait for
the day to come, a time in which we must nourish the vision we have been given,
a time in which we must stand by faith on the promises of God and be prepared
for them to be suddenly brought to fulfillment.
For sure this is
the theme of Advent - being prepared for the coming to pass of all of God's
promises; - being prepared for the time of peace, the time of justice, the time
that none shall hunger or thirst anymore.
It is about being prepared and about
the vision of the prophets and the apostles, and of Jesus himself, that I want
to speak to you today.
Many centuries ago a rabbi once asked
his students how they could tell when the night was passed and the day was on
its way back again.
One student suggested - "when you see
an animal in the distance and you can tell if it is a sheep or a goat."
Another student said: "When you can see
a tree in the distance and you can tell whether it is a fig tree or a peace
tree."
But the rabbi was not impressed with
these answers. So he finally told his students, "It is when you can look into
the face of any human being and see there the face of your brother or sister -
because of you can not do this, then no matter what time it is - for you it is
still night."
The vision of salvation that we have is
very important, because without an adequate vision, we are inadequately
prepared to live this life as God wants us to live, and without an adequate
hope, we are inadequately prepared to deal with the world.
Today's industries recognize the principle behind what
I have just said - and most of them now have pretty extensive orientation
programs for new employees:
- in
addition to the usual lectures on safety in the workplace, they give tours of the entire operation to the
new worker.
- They
show films of how the product they are making is designed and used,
- They
speak of the firm's philosophy and marketing strategy
- They
stress the care and attention that the firm pays to all its people
- The
attempt, in one way or another, to show where all the efforts made by the workers fit in and just how
important they are within the total plan of
the company.
The theory is that
if the employee feels that what they are doing makes a difference, if they feel
that their work is important and that they, as persons are truly valued in it,
if they catch hold of the company's vision, then they work harder, are more
committed, happier, and ultimately more productive.
And you know what? Vision is important
in every area of your life, not just in our workplaces.
A couple of years ago I was working
with a young man and young woman planning for their wedding. I asked them, as I
usually do, what kind of gifts they brought to each other.
The young man
looked at his fiancee and said, "She brings me a sense of meaning and purpose".
And I was struck by his response so I asked him to say more.
He
told me that before he had met her he had kind of drifted along, he had worked
hard but could not see any real purpose in it, but now, with a wife and,
hopefully children entering his life, he had a reason to live - he had someone
to care for and someone to care for him.
What happened to this young man happens
to many people when they come to love someone and are loved in return by them -
they catch hold of a vision - and that vision feeds their lives and brings
light to every step they make.
What vision sustains your Christian walk?
What helps us face the darkness, the
times when we are hurt by others, the times when we and those around us suffer,
the times when peace seems so far off and justice seems to be just a dream?
What vision
of God and of God's salvation do we have?
Well to many
the world has become a terrible place, an awful void, an appalling wilderness.
Yet many Christians, if they do not actually join the
chorus of complaints that are heard all around ... remain silent, passive, and
apathetic.
They do not nurture the vision of the
prophets and the apostles within them. They do not - it seems - believe in the
promises made through these apostles anymore.
And so they - with all who dwell in
darkness - suffer without hope. Indeed they add to the suffering of the world
by denying that world the hope that God intends it to have.
Why is this? Why have people let go of
the vision that God gives to us in virtually every page of the Bible?
Some would say that it is because the
promises of God are nothing but dreams. Others would say it is because - even
if those promises are true - their fulfillment is too far away to make any
difference.
I know many
of us are tired of promises that have no substance
to them.
We have come to realize that buying a
new car does not make us happier: that the brand new soap we saw advertised
does not really bring us a brighter bright: and that the new deodorant that
promises us confidence all day, does not really make a difference when we have
to speak in public or meet someone who is important to our future.
The promises of God are not empty
however, nor are they without substance. In fact, many of them have already
come to pass, they have already been fulfilled.
Remember the question the disciples of
John the Baptist asked Jesus? "Are you the one who is to come - or should we
wait for another?"
And Jesus answered them this way: "Go
and tell John what you have seen and heard: the blind receive their sight, the
lame walk, the lepers are cleansed, the deaf hear, the dead are raised, and the
poor have good news brought to them."
Someone once estimated that over 150
separate prophecies or promises of God came true with the birth, death, and
resurrection of Jesus.
God has kept his promises - those made
in days of old, those made to Abraham concerning the creation of a mighty
nation from his seed, those made later on concerning the rise and fall of Jerusalem as his chosen
city, and those made concerning the birth of the messiah in the line of David.
God has kept his
promises made in days of old and God keeps his promises - those meant for
today, those which concern his presence among those who believe, those which
concern peace and comfort and support to those who have faith, those which
concern strength, found even in weakness to meet adversity, those which concern
forgiveness and healing.
God has kept his
promises, God keeps his promises and God will keep his promises - those meant for
that day, that day which will yet surprise us in the future, the day of Christ's
return: the day of peace for all nations and people, the day of judgment and
vindication.
Vision is essential to our life.
Without it, and without the hope that the vision provides, we will surely turn
as dark as the night around us- and begin to die.
Vision needs to be
nurtured, however, if it is to be kept alive. It needs to be clung to,
especially when the darkness threatens us. It needs to be used - to be a filter
through which we can see all of life.
We can keep
the vision alive,
-
by remembering -
all that God has done
-
and by thinking
about what God is doing,
- and out of this foundation, by
believing what God will still yet bring to pass all that he has promised.
Martin Luther King Jr. once said "I have a dream" and he shared that
dream with others. And though he is gone
now - the world has changed because of that dream, and it continues to change
because of those who hold onto it.
We too have a
dream - a promise - a vision - and if we choose to hold onto it, if we proclaim
it to ourselves and others, without ever letting go of it, the world will also
change around us. The light will come and we will see the face of our brothers
and sisters. Our lives will have purpose and meaning. And we will see what God
has promised come to pass in this life - and in the next. Praise be to God.
Amen.
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