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Click to hear this sermon sermon080206
The psychoanalyst Carl Jung said that he had never
encountered a person over 40 having emotional difficulties where it did not
come back, in one way or another, to fear of death.
Ash Wednesday, February 6, 2008 -
Psalm 103:1-14; I Corinthians
15:42-49 Everett J. Bassett
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The psychoanalyst Carl Jung said that he had never
encountered a person over 40 having emotional difficulties where it did not
come back, in one way or another, to fear of death. Earlier in life, there may
be a kind of fearlessness or denial about it. But at 40 and beyond becomes an inevitable part of our thinking -
consciously or not.
We
are dust in the wind. We can kick against that, and do everything possible to
put it off - but nothing changes the fact that every earthly life has an
earthly ending. The wisest people I have known are those who have used the
reality of that to frame the way they live their lives. Rather than getting
depressed or morbid, they have said, in effect, "My days here are numbered. Therefore, the moments of my life
are precious. How I treat people is important. How I spend my time is important. The kindness I show, the love
and laughter I share - these things mean something. So let me do it well. Let
me not waste time on bitterness, or on regret, or in bad living, or out of
touch with the spiritual part of me that has eternal value. Let me be a
spiritual loving person whose limited days here on earth are given for what
really matters in this life."
I
don't know if such a person would ever say it this way, but he or she is an Ash
Wednesday person. Ash Wednesday is the day we are given in the Christian year
to most profoundly reflect on our mortality and what it means. For centuries
upon centuries, at services like this, people have received the symbol of ashes
with some variation of the words, "Remember that you are dust, and to dust
you shall return."
The
paradox is that the reason we take this time to contemplate the finite nature
of this physical life is not to be defeatist or gloomy - but rather to be fully
alive to the blessings and graces of life. The current movie The Bucket List
is but one of many stories about those who are suddenly awakened to their
mortality, and find that now they can finally focus on the truly important
things of life.
There
is no doubt that faith is an essential part of that: we gather here tonight as
children of dust; but we also gather in the presence of scriptural promises
that that's not all that we are. Part of our Old Testament lesson for tonight
says this: "As a father has compassion for his children, so the Lord has
compassion for those who fear him. For he knows how we were made; he remembers
that we are dust." Our mortality, our frailty as human beings, is one of
the things God knows very well about us. And he looks upon us with the
compassion of a loving parent to minister to our anxious hearts. That's the
first thing that we need to hold close tonight: We are children of dust; but
before that and after that we are children of God. And that lifts us to
something beyond mere dirt on the Path. That puts us in an eternal relationship.
It's
when we read our New Testament lesson that this relationship takes beautiful
shape. The apostle Paul talks about Adam and Jesus. Adam was the first human,
the one who represents the beginnings of each of us. Jesus is the Second Adam,
the firstborn of the new creation God is working on. So Paul writes things like
this: "The first man, Adam, became a living being; (but) the last Adam,
(Jesus) became a life-giving spirit...The first man was from the earth, a man of
dust; the second man (Jesus) is from heaven...Just as we have borne the image of
the man of dust, we will also bear the image of the man of heaven." Then
Paul goes on to celebrate that through Jesus the Risen Savior of Easter, death
has lost its victory; death has lost its sting.
Tonight
we claim that promise from scripture. We acknowledge that we are children of dust
- but we also celebrate that we are children of God. We have done this before we
all know where the season of Lent ends - Jesus died on the cross, overcoming
sin and evil. He rose from the dead, overcoming death, and throwing open the
door of salvation. That is the blessed assurance of our faith. But in order to
fully understand it, we need to journey with it for a while. We need to
consider the alternative - what if Christ had not come, had not died, had not
risen - and this life of dust was all there is? Thank God for the love of
Jesus; thank God for the salvation of his passion and death.
These
are the thoughts that lead us into the Lenten season - a time to prepare our
hearts for the fullest appreciation possible of our mortal need for grace, and
the God who is gracious beyond measure.
During
this Lenten season, we invite each person here to consider what will bring your
life closer to Christ. Some people have a tradition of giving up something for
Lent. Sometimes that is not done without a lot of sincerity. I was reading
about a pastor who told his congregation that at the beginning of Lent, he had
taken his family television and tucked it away in the closet. And his wife
whispered to her neighbor, "And believe me, it gets crowded in
there." For some people, giving up something may be a part of the Lenten
preparation - I would simply say that if you're going to do it, make it
something significant. Don't give up broccoli - give up bickering. Don't give
up chocolate cake-give up complaining. You see
what I mean.
But
instead of that, or in addition to it, we are going to invite you to plant
seeds this Lenten season. This Sunday in church, we will pass out seed packets
- they will include actual seeds that you can plant; but they will also include
three symbolic seeds for your life, and for the world. First, a seed of faith -
what can you do during this Lenten season to deepen your faith? Second, a seed
of service - what can you do to step forward to serve somebody, to make a
difference for God's love? And third - a seed of reconciliation - what can you
do to mend a fence, or to advance the cause of peace in this world. You may
want to pray tonight about how you will plant your seeds of faith, service, and
reconciliation.
Over a year ago, after a terrible attack in an Amish
schoolhouse, the world was stunned by the simple, Christian grace extended and
exemplified by the Amish community. When asked about it, one of the leaders
responded, "We can deal with this because we are prepared for death at any
time." I think that defines this night for us. We are here in full
awareness that we are children of dust; but through Jesus the Second Adam, we
bear the image of heaven. We are children of God. And if so, death has no
victory over us. God is taking care of us. Let tonight be the new beginning of
a journey of faith that convicts and shapes our lives by that wonderful truth.
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