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Click to hear this sermon sermon100321
Over Lent
we've been talking about water, and how important it is in the Bible, in
our
faith, and in life in general -- important for drinking, for cleaning,
for
baptism, for life
itself.
"The Moment For Daring Faith" - Luke 5: 1-11- March 21, 2010
- Cicero United
Methodist Church
- Everett J.
Bassett
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Over Lent
we've been talking about water, and how important it is in the Bible, in our
faith, and in life in general -- important for drinking, for cleaning, for
baptism, for life
itself. Finally, this week, we get to talk about the most important aspect -
the thing water
is most essential for; and that, of course, is fishing. This morning's New
Testament
lesson is one of the world's greatest fish stories It is a story that I
identify with greatly,
not just because I like to fish, but mainly because any time I catch a fish,
it's pretty much
a miracle. And as all of you who study the Bible know, over time you gather
particular
verses that apply to your life, and you cherish those verses most of all. This
Bible story
has one of those verses for me that just seem to come true again and again.
It's verse 5:
Master, (I) have fished all night long but have caught
nothing. That's my story, too.
As we know,
this scripture is not really a story about fishing. It's a story about life
with Christ, and about the mission of the church in particular. I think it
describes
something that we are living through right now, and it contains a great
challenge for us,
just as it did for those fishermen in Jesus' day. It's a challenge of faith,
and it sounds
something like this: Will we as followers of Christ have faith to launch out
into deeper
water? But more than that, this is a story of unbelievably good news. It's a
story that
makes the audacious claim that if we are ready to launch out in faith, God is
ready to fill
our nets. There are some powerful moments in this story where that happens. I
want to
lift up at least three such moments.
Moment
Number One is described in the first verse of the chapter: "Once while
Jesus was standing beside the lake of Gennesaret, (which we more commonly know as the Sea of Galilee) ... the crowd was pressing in on him to
hear the word of God ... " Right here, at this first moment, we of the
church might feel a little lost. Because the truth is, as a whole, the church
in America
is not experiencing much of the crowds pressing in to hear the word of God.
Quite the opposite, we are told, the crowds are pressing out. Church attendance
has dropped significantly over the last few decades. Atheism and agnosticism
are on the rise. Society is becoming more and more secular, and faith is taking
a back seat to sports and leisure and the pursuit of the Almighty Buck (and I
don't mean the one with antlers, but that might apply as well.) People no
longer desire faith, we're told.
I don't
believe it. I believe the desire in people for an authentic spiritual word is
just as strong as ever. What we've done is to mistake what people don't want
for a lack of
desire for God. Here's some of what people don't want: they don't want to go
someplace where they will be judged before they'll be loved; they don't want to
go
someplace where people are enacting rituals that no one can explain; they don't
want to
go someplace that follows a legalistic interpretation of scriptures; they don't
want to go
someplace that doesn't connect to their lives, or speak their language, or play
their music;
they don't want to go someplace where they are preached at with deep
theological
thoughts, instead of engaged with a message that touches what they're living
through.
All of
those things that people don't want make us think that they don't want the word
of God anymore. Don't believe it. People are spiritually hungry. And just like
2000
years ago, when Jesus speaks the pure, wonderful message of God's love, the
crowds
press in. When we in the church manage to get some of our human obstacles out
of the
way, and Jesus can be heard, powerful things happen in peoples' lives.
That brings
us to a second critical Moment in this scripture, Luke 5: 2-3: "(Jesus)
saw two boats there at the shore of the lake; the fishermen had gone out of
them and were
washing their nets. He got into one of the boats, the one belonging to Simon,
and asked
him to put out a little way from the shore. Then he sat down and taught the
crowds from
the boat." Here's what I think that might be saying: the main task of the
followers of
Christ, or the Church, if you will, is to provide Jesus with a place to teach.
The crowd is
hungry and pressing in; Jesus has the hope that they need. But he has no boat.
He has no
place to sit and address the crowd, unless he can turn to someone here and say,
"1 need
you to give me the place and the time and the opportunity to teach - the word
of hope and
peace and God's love to people who desperately need to hear it."
That is how
I conceive the purpose of this building. Why do we need this property? This
facility? I bet many a Trustee has asked that very question over the years.
This is the boat we provide so Jesus can bring the word of God to the crowd.
When someone drives up Route 81 and sees the steeple of this church, they can
say, "Oh ... Jesus teaches there." When Jack or I lift up your
offering in our worship services, it's a way of saying, "Here's the boat,
Lord. Let your word be heard." And, to be more timely for our church, when
we purchase the Conference facility it's a way of saying, "Here's the
boat, Lord. Teach your children. Reach your youth. Inspire your
musicians."
That's one
material way of seeing the boat. But I think the boat is also the
opportunities in our relationships that we provide for Jesus to speak. One
woman said
this to me once, when she was explaining why she spent so much time out in the
neighborhood connecting with the young people. "I just keep building the
bridge to each
young person. And 1 believe that sooner or later, at just the right time, Jesus
walks over
that bridge." And that is our job, I think. To keep giving Jesus the boat
to teach from-
the bridge to cross over into another person's soul.
But then
there's a third Moment - and here's where it really starts to get fun. It's
Luke 5, verse 4: "When (Jesus) had finished speaking, he said to Simon,
'Put out into the
deep water and let down your nets for a catch." Now, Luke doesn't tell us
exactly what
Simon was thinking at that point, but I've got it on good authority that Simon
was
thinking, "No! It's one thing to borrow my boat, but now you're going to
tell me, a
professional fisherman, where the fish are. They're not there. I've just
cleaned my nets.
I'm done for the day. No way." The words Luke recorded were the more
polite version
of that: "Simon answered, 'Master, we have worked all night and have
caught nothing.'"
And then there is a period at the end of that sentence; and
every once in a while in the
Bible there is a punctuation mark that carries a whole life on its back. That
little space
between, "Master, we have worked all night and have caught nothing,"
and the very next words: "Yet if you say so, I will let down the
nets," was the turning point in Simon's life.
That little period was the difference between doubt and faith. It was the
difference
between being careful and reasonable, and taking the leap of faith. It was the
difference
between spending your life just getting by, throwing your nets out again and
again and
again, and doing something extraordinary that could change the world. That
brief
moment was Simon's moment for daring faith. If he missed it, with Jesus
standing right
there in front of him, it might be a long time before it came back.
I think faith
is a daily walk that we reinforce by disciplines - prayer, Bible reading,
worship, and so on, that we repeat over and over again. But I also think that
there are some turning points - just a few of them in our lives - where Jesus
says, "Go out into the deeper water. Take a bigger step of faith."
Maybe it's a career moment; maybe it's a family moment; maybe it's a church
moment; maybe it's a 'Speak up for God' moment.
Whatever it looks like, it's a turning point. It's the type of thing White
House Chief of
Staff Raul Emanuel referred to when he said, "Don't let a good crisis go
to waste." How
you respond at that moment is going to shape your life from now on.
And the
first reaction to the outrageous request - 'take the boat out deeper' - is to
reason, or even argue, with it. We've been fishing all night. I don't know if I
can handle
that job. I don't know if I can make that move. If I choose this, I won't be
able to do
that. I'm too old to do that now; or, I'm too young, or too timid, or too busy,
or
whatever. There's always a good reason to say No to the daring moment of faith.
But we're here today because people said Yes - people like
Abraham and Moses and
David, and Mary and Simon Peter and Paul and Martin Luther and John Wesley and
Martin Luther King, Jr., and the first Methodists here in Cicero and the people
who first
envisioned this great sanctuary. Every one of them, and millions of others,
said Yes
when God presented them with a daring moment of faith that could change their
destinies
and make them part of something far greater than they had ever dared dream
before.
It's
important to note Simon's words: "Yet if you say so, I will let down the
nets."
The whole thing turns on who that 'you' is. Can you imagine
if Simon's brother Andrew
had said, 'Let's throw the nets in again.' I can picture Simon saying, with
great sibling
affection, "Go jump in the lake." And that would have probably been
his response to
most anybody. But now, it is Jesus. Now it is the One who has touched his heart
with a
new hope, a new dream - if You say so, my Lord and my God, I will let down the
nets.
I said that
this is where it starts to get fun - and that's true; that doesn't mean that it
starts to get easy. Because when you step forward in faith, you find grace
wanting to
overflow, and it gets messy. The next thing you know, the nets are so full
they're starting
to break, and the boats are about to sink with all the blessing. And you have
to do some
things to catch up with God. Whoa! This new job is great, but I better learn
this new
skill fast! Or, Wow, this new relationship is a blessing, but I better
re-arrange my
schedule to give it time. Or, Whew, this growing church is wonderful, but we
better buy/
find some more space. God's grace, when we jump on its wave and ride with it,
is more
abundant and beautiful than we can ever imagine. But it's also overwhelming. We
know that in this church. We prayed for God's word to be powerful in this place
- for God's Spirit to move - and the next thing we knew the nets were full, and
the boat wasn't big
enough. And we've been trying to catch up with God's dream for this church ever
since.
So it's so important that we follow Simon's reactions a few
Moments further.
Because here he is, eyes a-poppin' as he looks at this
amazing, unexplainable take of fish
- and the first thing he does is fall on his knees. That's a pretty good place
to fall at a
moment like that. "Go away from me, Lord, for I am a sinful man!" I
can't deal with all
this; it's way over my head. It terrifies me. That's when Jesus steps forward
and says,
"Do not be afraid; from now on you will be catching people." And then
the conclusion of
this powerful story of faith and trust is this: "When they had brought
their boats to shore,
they left everything and followed him."
It's 2010,
and people are still spiritually hungry. And Jesus has the words of life - but
he needs us to give him places to teach and to touch lives and to heal. He also
needs
something more. He needs us to go out to deeper waters, and, in daring moments
of
faith, to let down our nets. When we do, hang on! Because grace will overflow,
and
we'll scramble to keep up with God's great dream. But if we begin on our knees,
and
listen for the one who would take away our fear and uncertainty, great things
will happen,
and we will have only one choice really - to follow him wherever he leads.
That's my
prayer for this church. And it's my prayer for every one of us, when we
come to those turning points - and many of you are there right now. Don't let a
good
crisis go to waste. Make this a daring moment of faith. Spend good time on your
knees.
And trust the one who would take away every fear you're feeling right now, and
multiply
grace beyond your dreams. It may be hard to see from where you are at the
moment. But
millions of people can look back and realize - oh yeah. That moment when I felt
so lost
and unsure of how I was going to get by - God was doing something amazing
there. In
the end, there are no better words to say than those that have echoed down to
us through
the centuries: "If You say so (my Lord and my God), then I will let down
the nets.'
Fishing, anyone?
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