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Click to hear this sermon sermon080309
In our
Gospel readings through Lent, we've been reading some of the great stories in
the Gospel According to John - the story of Nicodemus, the Samaritan woman at
the well, the blind man at the pool of Siloam.
When It's Too Late - John 11 - March 9, 2008 - Cicero United
Methodist Church
Everett J. Bassett
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In our
Gospel readings through Lent, we've been reading some of the great stories in
the Gospel According to John - the story of Nicodemus, the Samaritan woman at
the well, the blind man at the pool of Siloam. Today, it's the story of
Lazarus, one that always seemed a little misplaced for me during Lent. This
story, a celebration of Resurrection, life, and the victorious power of Jesus,
makes more sense in three weeks, during the Easter season As one Sunday School
child said, "It's a good thing Jesus said, 'Lazarus, come forth.''' Why's
that? "Because if he'd just said, 'Come forth,' without calling
Lazarus's name, all the dead people from all time would have risen."
That child
was wiser than he or she knew - according to biblical Christian tradition,
someday exactly that will happen - the dead will all be raised. But that's
somewhere at the end of the story. There is something about that - and in fact,
about Easter Sunday that is a little surreal. It is the hope that sustains our
faith, but it is somehow lifted from reality to another place beyond where we
live every day.
The raising
of Lazarus, as John tells it, was an event in real life: the grief was real.
The tears were real. The stench was real. The funeral cloths
were real. And the resulting plot against Jesus was real. Certainly as this
story is told, the most amazing thing about it is that life went on. We have no
clue what happened to Lazarus after he was raised. There is one tradition that
he eventually was a bishop in the church, but that is almost certainly not
true. He seems to have no role to play in the scriptures after his revival from
the tomb. And Jesus, for someone having accomplished his greatest miracle, went
on amazingly unfazed. Real life didn't stop.
So my
inclination with this scripture story is to look for a real life lesson. How do
resurrection and life affect the daily lives that go on? And one of the things
that strikes me is the whole issue of timing. It seems throughout the story
that people were telling Jesus it was too late. "Lord," said Martha,
"if you had been here, my brother would not have died." What is
unspoken there is the implication, "But now is too late." Then Jesus
says, "Your brother will rise again." And Martha says, "I know
he will rise again ... on the last day." She still doesn't get it; in her
mind it's too late for this life. Then Mary comes out and has the same
conversation. And then some in the crowd says, "Could not he who opened
the eyes of the blind man have kept this man from dying?" But, of course,
now is too late. And finally, when Jesus instructed them to remove the stone
form the tomb, they protest - Lazarus is four days dead; the body was far gone
when they buried it; it's too late to open the tomb.
Well ...
when is it too late for God? Look at some of those times we tell God that it's
too late. For example, there are some people who tell God that it's too late to
learn. I've been depressed many times to think back to when I was in fifth or
sixth grade and realize that my mind was a sponge at that age. I think I peaked
at ten. At ten years old, I seemed to retain everything; I learned stuff that I
never should have learned. And I don't feel I've had that same mental grasp
since. You know, you can't teach an old dog new tricks.
Well ... or
can you? I'll never forget an afternoon I sat with a neighbor who was observing
her 99th birthday. It was
great. She talked about 'this young man' and 'this young woman', and it
gradually dawned on me that some of them were in their late eighties. And then
she got up and sat at the organ in her living room and played, "How Great
Thou Art." And I asked her if she had played the organ in church, and she
said, "Oh no, that's something I took up when I turned 90." It
happens that that very same afternoon I spent time with a 16-year-old young
man. And he said that he wished he knew how to play guitar. And I said,
"Why don't you take guitar lessons?" And he said, "Oh no. It's
too late now. You've got to learn something like that when you're young."
Well- when
is it too old to learn? Scientists tell us that the mind does slow down -but
only when we stop using it. We can exercise the mind just as we need to
exercise the body, and keep it alert and learning in most circumstances. And
while I still remember my fifth grade jokes better than the one I heard
yesterday, the experiences of life teach me lessons today that I could never
have grasped back then. Too late to learn? Only if we believe the naysayers and
don't believe God.
How about
too late to begin again? One of the realities of life is that we fail. We have
dreams and plans, we venture forth, and many times they don't work out. So,
what do we do? We can give up - say I tried it, it's too late to try again. But
I keep hearing about people who didn't do that. For example, Michael Blake left
home at 17, convinced that he was called to write a great movie. He failed, and
failed, and failed. Over a period of 25 years, 20 screenplays were rejected. At
what point did he say it was too late - there was no point in trying again? He
never reached that point. And in 1990 he won the Academy Award for writing Dances
with Wolves. History is full of stories like that. I heard an insanely
wealthy man interviewed, and he said that he lost everything he owned three
times. Failure isn't the question; failure is inevitable if you're going to do
anything at all. But failure doesn't mean Too Late. And success? All that means
is you picked yourself up one more time than the number of times you fell down.
Jesus said
to Nicodemus, "You must be born again." The great thing about that
statement is that "You can be born again." It's not too late
for a new start. And there are people here today who are close to giving up,
because things have not gone according to Plan A. And, of course, it's too late
to try again, or so it seems. But why close the door on dreams when we have a
Lord and Savior who can reopen tombs? With God, success is just getting up one
more time than the number of times the world knocks us down.
Now here's
a tough one - when is it too late to forgive? Forgiveness is one of the most
essential jobs we have as Christians. Every Sunday we pray together,
"Forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against
us," linking our forgiveness from God for our sins to our willingness to
forgive others who have sinned against us. Jesus clearly taught that principle
again and again, and demonstrated it from the cross. L. Gregory Jones, in his
book Embodying Forgiveness makes a compelling case that forgiveness is
what truly makes up the Christian life. And a Christian community - a church -
is a group of people who have formed together a forgiving community, embodying
forgiveness in the name of Jesus - forgiveness for others, forgiveness for
themselves, and receiving forgiveness from the loving arms of God.
Yet forgiveness
is the issue that people find about as hard to do as anything you could name.
Last November, the New York Times published a statement signed by 130
religious leaders from the Christian and Muslim faiths stating the need for
those two religions to affirm their commonalities. Since the publishing of that
ad, some of the Christian leaders who signed are backing out of the agreement.
Why? Because the Christian groups they represent object to the statements about
forgiveness - that Christians need to ask for the forgiveness of Muslims for
atrocities committed by Christians, and to forgive Muslims for atrocities
committed by Muslims.
Forgiveness
is tough. People carry around grudges for all kinds of large and small
misdeeds. Marriages crumble around unforgiven slights; neighborhoods become
battlegrounds; nations and ethnic groups launch deadly attacks. Jesus taught
mercy, but we just don't get it. And the cost is so great. Someone has written,
"When you harbor bitterness, happiness docks elsewhere." It is impossible not
to be negatively affected by a grudge you are carrying; it is poison to the
system. It is impossible to grow spiritually if your soul is shackled by a
bitterness you have not dealt with.
That's one
of the reasons why one of the three seeds that we encouraged all of us to plant
this Lenten season was a seed of reconciliation. Now, I'm going to make a guess
here. I'm going to guess that the other two seeds were decided on fairly
quickly by most people who took this exercise seriously. A seed of faith -
well, that we can plant - it just means getting more serious about our prayer
life, or our study life, and so on. A seed of service - that, too, is not hard
to conceptualize - I suspect we announce a half dozen opportunities to serve
every time we worship together on a Sunday morning. But planting a seed of
reconciliation - that is a much tougher deal. That digs into personal stuff,
and hits us where it hurts. But unless we're willing to dig in, to become
vulnerable, to let Christ teach us at the most tender pocket of our hearts -
then there will be a giant gap in our spiritual peace. Jesus and grudges can't
occupy the same house.
And I
really urge all of us to prayerfully consider where we can plant that third
seed. It can make all the difference in our lives. We have the example right in
front of us. They betrayed him, denied him, arrested him, falsely accused him,
mocked him, whipped him, crucified him. And he forgave them. He forgives us. We
must accept that gift, forgive ourselves, and forgive those who have trespassed
against us. There is no other way to grow in Christ. It's not too late.
Finally, it
is not too late to believe. Remember when it was easier to believe? We started
out, in most cases, with a childlike trust in what we were taught. I see it in
the children that are here in this place - the ability to believe. And I
remember it. I remember the child Everett who believed those things decades
ago, because that child never quite left me. Remember that childhood innocence
in your past?
But then we
grow up, and things are no longer innocent. And this is not some idealizing of
childhood. We're supposed to grow up; we're supposed to examine the things
we've been taught, and some of them we have to put aside. But what is tragic is
that in this skeptical, harsh world, of doubts and sophisticated theories and
all sorts of prideful human claims and all sorts of tragic events and greed and
cruelty - we get so jaded that nothing of innocence is left. And we reach a
point of weariness, where we might say, "I've seen too much. It's too late
to go back. I can't believe anymore."
I suppose
that's true if God is powerless or obsolete. But in the world where Jesus
raised Lazarus, it's not too late to believe. Jesus held up a little child in
front of his disciples and said, "It's not too late. Become like this
little child - reclaim the power to believe. Believe in the power of God to do
great things - believe in the ability of Jesus to call forth the dead parts of
your soul and revive them - believe in the extraordinary gifts of grace and
love and hope that are still the strongest force in this world - believe in the
gifts of salvation and eternity that Jesus came to deliver to you and to me.
Become like this child and believe, said Jesus, and you will enter the kingdom
of God.
That is the
offer that is before us today. Jesus said, I am the resurrection and the life.
That means it is not too late - to learn, to begin again, to forgive, (and to
receive the gift of forgiveness), and to believe. As we move into this prayer
time today, I invite us to think about the ways we have given up on the power
of God. I invite us to confess the weariness and the doubts and the loss of
innocence that tries to tell God that it's too late to do something extraordinary
with our lives. God is calling every one of us to recapture that childlike
faith and take a step forward.
As we pray,
you might want to express that on a prayer card, and bring it forward. Or you
might want to consider a new seed to plant in your life. We again extend an
invitation to anyone who might want to pray with someone to come forward after
the benediction, and someone will meet you here. God is so good, and so
powerful. It's not too late for your dreams and hopes, or for you to do something
great for your Savior. Can you take a step of faith today?
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