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Click to hear this sermon sermon090802
This
morning I'd like to conduct a little survey.
"To Each - Different Gifts - For the Common Good" Text: 1 Corinthians 12:
1-11
Cicero United Methodist Church August 2, 2009 Jack Keating
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This
morning I'd like to conduct a little survey. Now it only consists of two
questions. You have to wave your hands in the air to vote. You can wave one
hand, or both to register your vote. Let's practice. OK ... here's question
#1--- Who would like to hear me really play the piano today - to really sit
down and put all of myself into a hymn, or better yet into a solo ....
Come on -
put up your hands if you'd like to hear that.....
Now
question #2 --- Put up your hands if you'd rather Jared or Sally or Colin or
Ralph did it.
The reason
I conducted this straw poll is to make a point - A point about gifts and about
how we regard them and how we regard ourselves.
The point is
this .... Some gifts we have - and some we don't. Wisdom consists of knowing
what gifts we have - and exercising them, and equally wisdom consists of
knowing what gifts we don't have - and encouraging others who do have them to
use them.
I sometimes
wish - as I'm sure some of you wish - that I had the gift to play the piano ...
that I could play and lift up the hearts of all those around me in song - but I
do not. I also wish I had the gift of a photographic memory and the gift to be
handy with machines and wood and tools - but I do not.
Sometimes
these wishes of mine have caused me problems. They have focused my mind and my
heart on what I do not have. They have led me to feel incapacitated - inferior -
unable ....
But at other times these wishes have led me in the opposite
direction, they have led me to wonder what gifts I do have, they have led me to
wonder how God has gifted me and what it is that God has prepared for me to do.
In the
twelfth chapter of the First Letter to the Corinthians, the Apostle Paul speaks
at length about gifts and about how we should regard them. He also discusses
how we should regard our own giftedness and the giftedness of others.
It is an
important chapter - and I want to try to deal with the first part of it this morning
- the part the asserts that there are variety of gifts and of services and of
activities - and that each person is gifted with some assortment of gifts - and
that these gifts are the manifestation of the Holy Spirit in us - a
manifestation that is given for one purpose - and that is for the common good.
"Now concerning spiritual
gifts, brothers and sisters, I do not want you to be uninformed ... To each is
given the manifestation of the Spirit for the common good. To one is given
through the Spirit the utterance of wisdom, and to another the utterance of
knowledge according to the same Spirit; to another faith by the same Spirit, to
another gifts of healing by the one Spirit, to another the working of miracles,
to another prophecy, to another the discernment of spirits, to another various
kinds of tongues, to another the interpretation of tongues. All these are
activated by one and the same Spirit, who allots to each one individually just
as the Spirit chooses."
To each is given the manifestation of the Spirit for the
common good. The Spirit allots to each one individually, just as the Spirit
chooses.
What gifts
do you have?
What gifts
do you rejoice in - in yourself - and in others?
Is it the
gift of praying for others?
The gift of
caring?
The gift of
service?
The gift of
praise?
The gift of
witness?
Some gifts,
my friends, are glorious in appearance and dramatic in their effect. They are
easy to identify and easy to praise.
Other gifts
are more subtle, more ordinary in appearance, and have their impact over the
long term rather than in the instant and often they fail to receive the
recognition they deserve.
My home
church in Connecticut - Christ Episcopal
Church - was a bit like the church that Paul wrote to in Corinth.
In it we had
people with the highly visible gifts of prayer and prophecy, and others with
the gift of tongues and still others the gift of proclamation and of wisdom,
while still others had the gift of inspired music and of singing, and they
could set a meeting room on fire fairly quickly and inspire those around them
to feel new levels of enthusiasm for doing the mission of Christ in the world.
And in that
church too we had many quieter people, less visible people, who had different
gifts.
Some wrote
cards to those who were having birthdays; others made visits to the elderly and
to those who were shut-in. Some turned on the lights and welcomed those who
entered the church; others fixed the copy machine and plowed the driveway when
it snowed. Some touched the hands of the feeble and helped them to go upstairs,
others baked and cooked for those who were grieving. Some typed and filed, some
drove kids to soccer games, others built and painted and furnished. Some looked
after the babies in the nursery and played with the kids in the backyard, and
others wrote skits for people to perform in the Christmas pageant. Some
prepared minutes and agendas and newsletters to help the congregation, and
others prayed quietly every day for the pastor and leaders and all the people of
the church.
As I think
about it all, I know which gifts seemed more glorious to me at the time I was
there, when I was younger and more foolish than I hope I am now.
But I also
know that without all the gifts that were offered our church would never have
grown and that the ministry of Christ in our community would never have touched
as many lives as it did.
The
tabernacle of God today, as in the days of Moses, requires both ... fine linen
and leather, gold and bronze, gemstones and goats hair. Each has its place.
Each is needed for the worship of God - and for serving God.
A few years
ago some friends of ours got themselves a new family dog. The dog was about 7
months old when they got her - she was a puppy actually, but being a German
shepherd, she was still a good size. She was almost 22 pounds when they got her
and she got to about 50 pounds when she was full grown.
Anyhow,
this rather large pup was walking along one day shortly after arriving and
decided she had an itch that needed scratching, and that the itch was only
accessible to her back leg. So, while walking, literally in mid-stride, she
picked up her hind leg to scratch. And, of course, she fell over. OK ... so
she's not the brightest dog!
Now what,
you might ask, has that got to do with the gifts we have, the gifts that God
has given us?
A great
deal actually.
The
tabernacle of God's presence - the church - you and I together needs all it's
legs - and more - we need those legs to be coordinated, to be in agreement, to
work together freely - gladly - and without argument about which is more
important or which is less important.
We need the
leg of prophetic utterance and the leg of sound Biblical teaching and the leg
of inspired prayer and the leg of administration.
We need the
leg of letter writing and the leg of mechanical ability and the leg of
visitation and the leg of "eat, it's good for you" and the leg of
quiet companionship.
We need all
the legs - all the parts that God has made - and the gifts that God has distributed
among God's people.
Each gift
is important - and we want our brothers and sisters to give willingly - we need
our brothers and sisters to give willingly - for without them - we will fall
down!
If you
weren't here at all this past week, you missed the opportunity to see the gifts
of many used for the good of our whole community.
This past
week, more than 125 kids experienced first hand the love of God (in human form)
when they came here each morning for Vacation Bible School. I'm guessing that
when all counted up more than 60 volunteers used their individual and very
different talents, to help the kids learn about and experience God's love. Some
helped make crafts, some told stories, some grilled hotdogs, some undertook
roles in dramatic presentations, some escorted kids, some led games, and some
dished ice cream. And these 60 folks were led by Sue and Libby and, as a result
of all their efforts, the Word of God was preached and lived by many young
folks throughout this community.
My friends,
when each of us knows what gift God has granted to us and uses that gift as God
wants us to use it - in the task of walking together - of working together - to
do the ministry Christ has called us to do - we will be healthy and whole as a
community and as individuals, and this church will shine with the joy of
Christ's presence ..... you will shine with the joy of Christ's presence.
But is we
allow ourselves to become distracted - if we stop doing what we are supposed to
be doing and scratch the itches that crop up here and there in our life
together, -- if we forget what we are about and whose we are in the first place
we will all suffer - as a community - as individuals - and it will be cold and
dark here in this place.
We need to
claim and celebrate what God has given to us individually, and exercise that manifestation
of God's spirit within us for the good of all ..... without worrying about what
others may or may not think about our relative importance.
I know each
one of you today has something very special in your hearts - something that has
been placed there by God, something that is beautiful and good and precious in
his eyes, something that is of vital importance to our church, our community,
and our whole world.
If you're
not sure what gifts you have to offer, speak to Everett or me or consider
attending our next Spiritual Gifts seminar which Sharon leads. We'll help you recognize those
special talents and gifts that God has bestowed upon each of you.
You all
have gifts. Claim the gifts - open them up - celebrate them. And then use them use
them freely - without worrying whether or not your gift is greater than or less
than someone else's.
You are
worthy - and your gift is worthy - for God has made them, and God is the one
who gave them to you, the very thing you have to offer to his praise and his
service in this, his tabernacle - in this, his world.
Blessed be
his name, now and always. Amen.
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