When Jesus entered Jerusalem on the day we now commemorate as Palm Sunday, he was greeted with cheering crowds waving palm branches and spreading their cloaks on the path as they shouted, "Blessed is he who comes in the name of the LORD." Where did the inspiration for that particular cry of acclamation come from? The words are from Psalm 118, the last of the six psalms that were part of the celebration of Passover, Pentecost, and the Feast of Tabernacles. When pilgrims came to Jerusalem for these important festivals, the words they chose to apply to Jesus were already on their minds.
When looking at the context of Psalm 118:26, we discover that just a few verses earlier in verse 22 is the line that Jesus applied to himself after telling the parable of the tenants, "The stone the builders rejected has become the capstone". There in that one psalm is both the joyous praise offered to God because of the miracles and teaching of Jesus, and the realization that he will be rejected at first only to be vindicated by God.
The psalm ends as it began, with thanksgiving to God for his goodness and his unfailing love. As Jesus entered Jerusalem to the cheers of the crowd, he well understood that he would be leaving the city less than a week later to the sound of jeers, and he wouldn't wouldn't be gently riding a donkey, but struggling under the weight of a cross. Jesus knew this, and he also knew that he was following the will of the Father, that death would be swallowed up in victory, and that God would deserve even more thanksgiving when the implications for humanity of the triumph of Easter were shared as the Good News of the Gospel.
To watch the video, click on the link below:
Sermon Video
Tuesday, March 31, 2015
Clash of Clans, sub-prime mortgages, and Dave Ramsey
Stay with me for a minute as I explain why a game that I play on my iphone is connected in my mind to the financial meltdown that happened in America nearly a decade ago and the financial guy from the radio. For most of the free apps that people play on phones or tablets, the way in which they make money is to get you to purchase the ability to speed things up. Clash of Clans is much the same, in it you build castle walls to defend your settlement and raise armies to attack the castles of other players. Each task has a countdown timer ranging from a few seconds for small tasks to several days for the large ones. If you have the patience to wait for the timer to run its course, the game is entirely free, but if you can't wait that long and want to speed it up, the game makers are more than happy to sell you that ability.
I was re-reading Niall Ferguson's The Ascent of Money this week, it is a brilliant primer on the history of finance, much like all of his books, and it contains a chapter on home ownership that among other things, explains the debacle of the sub-prime mortgage crisis that engulfed the American housing market during the mid 2000's. That crisis was, in part, the result of people not being willing to wait until they were financially sound enough to afford a traditional long-term fixed mortgage, or not being willing to wait to save up money for other purposes but instead choosing to utilize the equity in their home by re-financing to give themselves money but at the cost of taking on a mortgage whose terms were certainly not sound in the long-term.
Both of these situations revolve around patience, a virtue that I'm sure has been in short supply throughout history, but also one that seems to be more difficult to uphold in a society that offers so many ways to try to get around having to develop patience. All of this reminds me of the mantra repeated over and over by Dave Ramsey on his radio program that debt is the enemy and to be avoided at all cost. Ramsey often tells people, for example, not to take out a loan for a car but instead to save up the cash needed to pay for it outright. This sort of delayed gratification is of course hard to do, ensuring that short-term gain will always look good to those unwilling to invest in their own future.
This same discussion about patience could be applied to how we take care of ourselves, how we eat and whether or not we regularly exercise, and certainly it applies to our political choices because politicians are consistently going to tell the public what they want to hear now in order to get elected instead of what they need to hear about the future.
As we begin Holy Week, the virtue of patience and long-term investment is necessary for all those who plan on attending church on Easter to fulfill their Christmas-Easter twice a year obligation. Being a Christian is hard work, it takes dedication and commitment, it takes regular participation, it takes more than being in the house of God twice a year.
If you want to spend $5 to speed up that game on your tablet, go ahead, but when it comes to the important things in life, there's a reason why patience is a virtue.
I was re-reading Niall Ferguson's The Ascent of Money this week, it is a brilliant primer on the history of finance, much like all of his books, and it contains a chapter on home ownership that among other things, explains the debacle of the sub-prime mortgage crisis that engulfed the American housing market during the mid 2000's. That crisis was, in part, the result of people not being willing to wait until they were financially sound enough to afford a traditional long-term fixed mortgage, or not being willing to wait to save up money for other purposes but instead choosing to utilize the equity in their home by re-financing to give themselves money but at the cost of taking on a mortgage whose terms were certainly not sound in the long-term.
Both of these situations revolve around patience, a virtue that I'm sure has been in short supply throughout history, but also one that seems to be more difficult to uphold in a society that offers so many ways to try to get around having to develop patience. All of this reminds me of the mantra repeated over and over by Dave Ramsey on his radio program that debt is the enemy and to be avoided at all cost. Ramsey often tells people, for example, not to take out a loan for a car but instead to save up the cash needed to pay for it outright. This sort of delayed gratification is of course hard to do, ensuring that short-term gain will always look good to those unwilling to invest in their own future.
This same discussion about patience could be applied to how we take care of ourselves, how we eat and whether or not we regularly exercise, and certainly it applies to our political choices because politicians are consistently going to tell the public what they want to hear now in order to get elected instead of what they need to hear about the future.
As we begin Holy Week, the virtue of patience and long-term investment is necessary for all those who plan on attending church on Easter to fulfill their Christmas-Easter twice a year obligation. Being a Christian is hard work, it takes dedication and commitment, it takes regular participation, it takes more than being in the house of God twice a year.
If you want to spend $5 to speed up that game on your tablet, go ahead, but when it comes to the important things in life, there's a reason why patience is a virtue.
Wednesday, March 25, 2015
Too dangerous to let them live?
Nicole and I went to the Tuesday evening cheap movies, as is our habit when there is something worth seeing, to see Insurgent, the second in the Divergent series. I'll say this generically so as to not create a spoiler, in the movie, two primary characters who are identified with the "good guys" shoot two "bad guy" prisoners, one in handcuffs, the other in a prison cell. The scenes themselves aren't graphic, the movie is PG-13, but still rather disturbing, and certainly a harsh topic for inclusion in a movie geared for teens. This reminds me of the discussion about the end of the last Superman movie, Man of Steel, where Superman kills General Zod by snapping his neck to prevent him from killing some innocent bystanders. My friend and neighbor, Pastor Jeff Little from First UMC, objected strongly to that decision because as life-long Superman fan, he was adamant that Superman always has to find a way to win without killing anyone. With the finale of the Hunger Games due out this fall, and a sequel to The Maze Runner on the way, it seems clear that the topic of killing to protect the innocent, or to advance a worthwhile cause, will continue to be present in the movies. This is starkly contrasted with the epiphany of Harry Potter at the end of that franchise when he finds pity for Voldemort instead of hatred, and the ending of the latest version of Cinderella, which happily ends with a moment of Christ-like forgiveness for one who doesn't deserve it.
We live in a world with dangerous terrorists, with those willing to blow up churches, mosques, pizza shops, planes, anything and everything in order to kill as many men, women, and children as possible. Our government routinely orders remote drone strikes in foreign nations as a response to this threat, along with whatever other clandestine means are used to eliminate those who pose a threat, often before they can act. I'm not offering up a solution to the moral dilemma of having government officials acts as judge, jury, and executioner over the lives of foreign citizens; the quagmire we find ourselves in does not allow for easy answers. This is simply an observation that art is imitating life, our comic book and dystopian movies that we view as entertainment have come face to face with one of the moral questions that our society has yet to come to grips with. To save the innocent is indeed noble, but what is it when that saving involves killing others without trial, and what is it when they're killed preemptively? These are questions worth asking, questions our films are confronting more directly than our government.
We live in a world with dangerous terrorists, with those willing to blow up churches, mosques, pizza shops, planes, anything and everything in order to kill as many men, women, and children as possible. Our government routinely orders remote drone strikes in foreign nations as a response to this threat, along with whatever other clandestine means are used to eliminate those who pose a threat, often before they can act. I'm not offering up a solution to the moral dilemma of having government officials acts as judge, jury, and executioner over the lives of foreign citizens; the quagmire we find ourselves in does not allow for easy answers. This is simply an observation that art is imitating life, our comic book and dystopian movies that we view as entertainment have come face to face with one of the moral questions that our society has yet to come to grips with. To save the innocent is indeed noble, but what is it when that saving involves killing others without trial, and what is it when they're killed preemptively? These are questions worth asking, questions our films are confronting more directly than our government.
Tuesday, March 24, 2015
Sermon Video: The Sign of Jonah - Luke 11:29-36
How does God respond to unbelief and doubt? While it is true that God often shows
exceeding amounts of patience, especially to the Lost who do not know him, God
also responds with disappointment, even anger, when those who should already
know him persist in not hearing his word and obeying it. Jesus was asked by a crowd of his fellow
Jews, people of the Covenant who have the Law and the Prophets to guide them,
who have the Temple and the priests, and who were raised to know the name of
the LORD, for a sign from heaven. This
request for a sign came on the heels of yet another miraculous healing by
Jesus. The response to the request by
Jesus was to tell the crowd that no new sign would be given to them except “the
sign of Jonah”. Jesus then explains that
the people of Nineveh, a wicked people with no advantages of Law and no
prophets before Jonah, had repented when he warned them of God’s impending
judgment, and because they repented, despite their lack of advantages, that the
people of Nineveh would condemn the generation who listened to Jesus and
rejected him. When you consider all the
advantages those listening to Jesus had in comparison to the people of Nineveh,
it is little wonder that God would be exasperated with them.
Jesus
then offers a second analogy, comparing the curiosity of the Queen of Sheba,
who came to hear of Solomon’s wisdom after hearing a rumor of it, to the
stubbornness of those listening to Jesus who though they already know of God,
are not interested in listening to his emissary. After having told the crowd that no new sign
would be forthcoming, Jesus concludes by comparing the doubt and unbelief of
those who know God, or know of God, but won’t listen to him, to someone who
lights a lamp and then places it under a bowl.
The purpose of a light is to shine forth, if the Covenant people are too
darkened by sin and unbelief to accept the light, then that light will go
elsewhere.
The
warning to the Covenant people that the Gentiles, who found God’s grace despite
not being a part of the Covenant, will stand in judgment against them, is a warning
that applies equally to the Church.
There will be no excuse for those raised in the church, or those living
in lands where the Church of Christ is active, who fail to respond to the
message of the Gospel. What excuse do a
people have who live in freedom, who have an abundance of Bibles, and a
Christian neighbors demonstrating the love of Christ, if those people fail to
accept God’s offer of forgiveness?
None. The warning is dire, but so
is the need for humanity to accept the grace of God through Christ. As Christians, such a warning ought to spur
us on to vigilance in our own house (both family and church) knowing that each
must choose Christ, and it ought to give us further incentive to continue our
efforts of personal evangelism to those in our lives who have not yet found the
light of Christ.
To watch the video, click on the link below:
Tuesday, March 17, 2015
Sermon Video: A House Divided - Luke 11:14-26
As Jesus resume his journey toward Jerusalem for the final
confrontation, he heals a man tormented by an evil spirit which had made him
mute. The miracle itself was no
different than dozens of other miracles that Jesus had performed, and the
healing no different than many, many others that Jesus had healed, but some in
the crowd saw this not as the act of grace that it was, but as an insidious
attempt by the devil to deceive the people of God. The doubters in the audience accused Jesus of
casting out demons under the authority of Beelzebub the prince of demons, in
other words, they were calling Jesus a double-agent, saying that his acts of
righteousness were in reality acts of deception. That such an accusation, against Jesus of all
people, is ludicrous doesn’t stop it from happening, just as the lack of
evidence doesn’t stop some people from withholding vaccines from their
kids. This crazy situation is troubling,
but it does provide Jesus with a chance to illustrate a principle that is
applicable in nearly every human interaction and even within the life of every
person: A house divided against itself will fall.
The universal principle given by Jesus has wide application,
it applies to nations, too many of which are torn by civil strife, it applies
to businesses, institutions, churches, families, and marriages. We cannot long endure when were are
fundamentally divided as a group of people.
This is a danger in secular situations just as it can be deadly to a
church. Because division is so
dangerous, we ought always to be supporting reconciliation and healing, trying
to hold together those who are in danger, and helping to pick up the pieces
when splits do occur. That this is a
fundamental problem in the church and society as a whole is beyond doubt. The divorce rate in America confirms our
weakness on the issue of unity, as does the poor record of church splits.
Beyond the groupings of people in danger because of
division, we must also be aware that individual people can be torn internally
by conflicting goals, an unclear sense of purpose, or even simply a lack of
commitment. We cannot serve two masters,
both will be disappointed in us, and we cannot avoid choosing which side we are
on because we have already begun by being on the side at war with God, our only
chance is to make peace with God through Jesus Christ.
Jesus ends his comments with two important additions to this
principle: Those who aren’t with me are against me, and it will be worse for
those who see the light but don’t change.
These two thoughts remind us that this is no game, God takes very
seriously our choice to either continue as we are or repent and follow him, the
good news is that when we do choose to join his side and help out in the work
of the kingdom, we’ve chosen the side that has already been victorious in the
battle, a battle won by Jesus on Easter morning.
To watch the video, click on the link below:
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