Monday, July 10, 2017
Sunday, November 22, 2015
Celebrating God!, by Steven R Mitchell based on Psalm 111, final sermon for Mountain View United, Aurora, CO
Celebrating God!
By Rev Steven R
Mitchell
Mountain View
United, Aurora, CO 11/22/2015
Based on Psalm 111
The Psalmist tells us that we are to Praise the Lord,
to give thanks to God with our whole heart, in the company of the faith
community! This is what we are going to
do this morning. We are going to
celebrate God through worship. Worship
consists of a wide and varied spectrum, ranging from music, to readings, time
for reflection, opportunities for confession and re-assurance of God’s love,
space for prayer, for welcoming into the community new life through baptism, a
time for social affirmation of old and new friends as well as a time to say “goodbye”
to those we love. Worship is celebrating
God in our lives!
The psalmist gives us reasons as to “why” we should
come and celebrate God. We celebrate God because of the works that God has
done. We celebrate God because God is righteous, gracious, and merciful! God provides for our basic needs and never
forgets the covenant made with all of creation. We celebrate God in the good times. We celebrate God in the sad times as
well. For we recognize that God is with
us, walking along side, sometimes in Spirit, other times physically through
friends and family. All we have to do is
look around us and we see the power of God’s work. As I look upon you, I see the power of God’s
work!
This is my last Sunday to celebrate God with you as
your pastor. It may seem strange that I
chose to reflect about celebration on my last Sunday. But celebrating God is about celebrating life.
Life has an ebb and flow, there are beginnings
and there are endings; that is the cycle of all life. Beginnings are generally welcomed because they
are filled with joy and excitement. Good-byes
are not so easy, generally filled with mixed emotions, especially when significant
bonds have developed. For almost four
year, we have prayed together, sung together, come to Christ’s table together.
You have sat week after week listening to my reflections on scripture. It has been a great privilege serving as your pastor.
Since worship is to “celebrate God”, what are some of the
things we celebrate this morning? I have
seen a number of you grow in your spiritual hunger and growth. We have had the
opportunities to discuss some very deep personal questions about life, of learning
how others see God, heaven, community, and spirituality, and how all of that
ties together with our own experience. As
a congregation, we have been working on bringing God and the outside world
together into this sacred space of worship.
We realize that when we enter the doors to this sanctuary, we do not
check our problems at the door, but bring them into the sanctuary and lift them
up to God. As Thomas Parker, Theology
Emeritus of McCormick Theological Seminary, Chicago, Ill. says, “To live as if there were no God is to live
in a space too small for our souls to grow and flourish. It really is all about
cultivating a sense of the presence of God.” God is not just in this sanctuary, but is in
our living rooms, at our work, even at a Broncos game.
The greatest joy that I celebrate this morning is the
sense that ministry is happening here. We
should “celebrate God” for what has been accomplished during these three plus
years together. We have seen an outreach
to the larger community through our Hot Cakes and Hot Topics; bringing awareness
on many social justice issues and becoming a teaching congregation for the larger
community. This is possible because we
formalized our passion for social justice by creating a staff position designed
to reach outside of the congregation and through Pastor Wayne Laws, be our
voice among a number of secular organizations that also work on social justice
issues. We are a part of the coalition
to end gun violence. Mountain View is
now working with a network of churches that minister to homeless women. For some churches this would be enough, but
Mountain View is more than a church, you are a faith community and I am
confident that God will reveal to you more opportunities to present God’s love
to the Metro area. Because as ambassadors
of God, that’s what we do – share God’s love to the larger community.
Let
me close with why I “celebrate God”
this morning. I celebrate God for the
existence of Mountain View United, as a specific faith community. You have not just allowed me to serve you as
pastor, but you have allowed me into your lives, a space that is so very
sacred. You have let me stand beside you
at the hospital. I have buried you, married you, baptized you, and eaten at
God’s table with you. You have shared
your hopes, your pains, your losses, your fears, and your joys with me. We have prayed together, laughed together, and
cried together. Your pain has been my pain, your rejoicing has been my
rejoicing. My life has been deeply enriched
by serving you.
I celebrate God because I have watched a group of faithful
believers grow in strength, in confidence, in hope, and in spiritual wisdom.
You invited me in and allowed me to show you my understanding of God’s love, of
God’s forgiveness, and of God’s inclusiveness. You have given me freedom to
develop worship experiences that pushed the envelope of traditional styles.
Some of it worked, some of it didn’t, but the important thing was, the
willingness to explore.
I celebrate God, for I see a congregation that is
living out Psalm 111, “The reverence and awe of the Lord is the
beginning of wisdom; all those who practice it have a good understanding.”
Let us all continue to develop in
reverence and awe of the Lord. Let us
all “celebrate God” each day of our lives! New ministries await both you and me; let us
celebrate the God that honors these diverging paths. Amen
Tuesday, November 17, 2015
Listen for God's Voice, by Rev Steven R Mitchell based on Jonah 3:1-5,10 & Mark 1:14-20
Listen for God’s Voice
By Rev Steven R Mitchell
Mountain View United, Aurora 11/15, 2015
By Rev Steven R Mitchell
Mountain View United, Aurora 11/15, 2015
Based on Jonah 3: 1-5, 10 &
Mark 1:14-20
I have already started watching
Christmas movies, much to Paul’s dismay.
I love these stories not just because they remind us about faith, hope,
and love, but they are also filled with what many would call sappy
sentimentality. One classic Christmas
story is Charles Dickens, “A Christmas Carol.”
In the Dickens story, a man named
Scrooge, who for various reasons turned away from helping humanity to that of
serving money, is confronted by three Spirits of Christmas. With the help of the Spirit of Christmas
Past, Scrooge is reminded of the love and nurture given to him in his younger
years. In the same way, Scrooge is confronted
with his hard-heartedness as the Spirit of Christmas Present shows how lonely
and bitter he has become compared to the warmth of love and community of those
his life intersects with. Then comes a
profound revelation with the Spirit of Christmas Future when Scrooge asks, “Spirit, these things that you show me, are
they the shadows of the things that will be, or of the things that may be? Men’s lives lead to certain ends. But if those lives be changed, will not the
end be changed? Tell me that is true. Tell me! (There is silence on the part of the
Spirit) Why show me this if I am past all hope?
I will change my way of living. I
will live in the past, the Present, and the Future. I shall never forget the lessons that they
teach. Tell me that this will change my
future.”
There are many stories within
scripture that tell us of similar situations, where God is intervening in
someone’s life and that person has to make a decision as whether to listen and
follow or to ignore and go their own direction.
The story of Jonah is one of these great stories. One of the cool aspects about Jonah is how it
shows us more of the human side of a prophet’s life, one that helps us realize
that even though one is called to be a prophet for God, one doesn’t always
willing follow orders. Jonah is told by God to go to Nineveh and tell them they
have only forty days before they are destroyed. Jonah being the devoted prophet that he was immediately
turned and ran the other direction. But just
like in our own life, the decisions that we make affect more than just
ourselves, Jonah put the lives of people on a boat in danger.
Realizing how badly he has messed
up his life, and has endangered the lives of others, Jonah asks God to take his
life, for he couldn’t possibly go back in time and change his decisions. Then God answers by coming back to Jonah a
second time, and once again telling Jonah to go to Nineveh. So with much fear
in his heart, he travels into Nineveh and delivers the message that God told
him to deliver. To his surprise, the Ninevehites hear the word and repent and
their city is spared by God.
In the first chapter of Mark we
again see God approaching and this time speaking to four fishermen. Through Jesus’ invitation to join him in his
ministry, God’s voice was asking Simon and Andrew, James and John to leave the
lives that were familiar to them and become a part of something that was new. There is no indication by Mark that these four
fishermen had any prior knowledge of Jesus or of his mission, only that when
Jesus asked them to drop what they were doing and in following him, they did this
believing that God had asked them to do so.
For the people of Nineveh, they were not told of
why their city was going to be destroyed or by whom, nor were they instructed
to repent. Only that in forty days
Nineveh would parish. They just inherently knew that they needed to repent from
their actions.
The main focus in today’s readings asks us to ponder
upon the suddenness to which we can change when God speaks to us. Barbara Brown Taylor, professor of religion
at Piedmont College in Demorest, Georgia writes: Much has been written about the response of the disciples who dropped
everything to follow Jesus. Why did they do something so drastic, and how could
they up-end their lives so dramatically, and would that really be a good thing
for us to do, that is, if we could "manage" it?
Could we measure up to the standard of those disciples, and drop
everything, too? We might wonder why and
how those first four disciples could do such a thing, without even a stirring
sermon from Jesus, or maybe a dramatic miracle, or better yet, the sky opening
up and a voice announcing that this was God's own beloved, and that they should
listen to him. Such an incident would
have provided some clear explanation for their sudden abandonment of everything
to follow Jesus. What did they know, on that seashore that we don't know?
We're missing the point if we linger on such questions. This is
a story about God, not the disciples or us. To focus on what the disciples gave
up (and whether we could do the same), is "to put the accent on the wrong
syllable." This "miracle story," is really about "the power
of God - to walk right up to a quartet of fishermen and work a miracle,
creating faith where there was no faith, creating disciples where there were
none just a moment before."
Sermon Seeds, 1/22/2012
I realize that to many of you, my decision to end my
time as pastor here at Mountain View seems rather sudden. In some ways it is, and in others it is
not. I selected today’s scriptures
because it speaks to how God has been speaking to me over the last year or so. Like Jonah, I was not willing to listen to
God saying, “I have something new in store for you.” I love Mountain View and see great promise
here. I also love my home and would
become ill at the thought of moving from it.
So I ignored the voice from God.
But like the story of Jonah, God is very persistent and eventual I came
to terms with His beckoning. Like the
story in Mark, I am striking out on this new adventure not knowing where it is
going to lead me, but it is my faith in God that draws me to drop what I have
been doing here and to follow.
Because of the changes in my
life, this means there will be major changes going on within this community of
faith. With my leaving, you are going to be called to listen more closely to
what God is trying to tell you. I think
this is where the statement from Ebenezer Scrooge becomes so helpful. “Men’s
lives lead to certain ends. But if those
lives be changed, will not the end be changed?” Do we
truly believe that God has the power to lead us, like the fishermen, will we be
willing to drop what we have been doing and change course in order to follow
God? Or will we act like Jonah, sizing
up the request as being too expensive, too risky, and fall back on the false
sense of "prudent paths of action" or worse “I like how comfortable
things are” and try to run away from doing what God is asking of Mountain View?
We stand at the threshold of new
choices, you and I, of Listening for God’s voice. Will we run from the
challenges and continue to “do it our own way”, or will we like Scrooge begin
to “live in the past, the Present, and
the Future” by taking up the call of God and follow in faith,
trusting that God has many great things in store for us? Amen
Tuesday, November 10, 2015
What Pleases God? by Rev Steven R Mitchell based on Hebrews 10:5-12, 14 and Mark 12:41-44
What Pleases God?
By Rev Steven R. Mitchell
Mountain View United, Aurora, CO 11/8/2015
Hebrews 10:5-12, 14; Mark 12:41-44
By Rev Steven R. Mitchell
Mountain View United, Aurora, CO 11/8/2015
Hebrews 10:5-12, 14; Mark 12:41-44
Today I would like to speak a little about how we
serve God. One of those ways is through
our money. We are very quickly
approaching the time when we will be asked to present a pledge card indicating
the amount of financial support we are willing to commit this next year toward the
ministry that will take place here at Mountain View.
I often wonder what motivates us when we sit down at
the kitchen table and think about that magic figure that we put down on our
pledge cards (this is assuming that we give some thought to this process.) Do we sit with our spouse or partner and
discuss with one another what we are willing to give based on what our
household budget is; or do we direct our discussions through our heart and ask
questions like: How has God blessed us? How
much have we been blessed by attending this church? Or, if I give this much
money to the church, what can I expect in return? If you listen closely to the way that I
have asked these questions, you will note they all stem toward, “self” or
“what’s in it for me”. I don’t think we
intentionally mean to think this way, but it is a natural human
process of thinking.
Once the stewardship committee receives our pledge
cards, they meet with the budget committee and work out a budget for the
upcoming year, based on the total pledges made and estimated income from other
sources that are normally received. This
is the way it generally is done in most churches. It seems to be a very practical way to be
fiscally responsible. Yet I have to ask
myself, is this the way God wants us to be serving him?
From my Baptist roots, we talked about financial
commitment all the time. Generally we
were asked to give what we felt we could.
This was a comfortable way to approach financial stewardship, as it
allowed us to approach giving to God our leftovers, not making us stretch too
much in our financial commitment toward our faith community. I’m not sure we really thought too much about
our financial commitment as a part of how we serve God, but more of how we support
the institution. In the Hebrew
Testament, the understanding of honoring God was to give a Tithe. A tithe was the first 10% of your income and
giving it to the synagogue, leaving you with the other 90% to live on and do
with as you wished.
When I think about ministry that is done through the
structured organization of a faith community, I wonder if we go about preparing
our budgets backward. I recall while
serving my first church in Washington state, working through some potential
programming with the church council.
They would choose their projects by the cost of the project. I challenged them to step back and
re-evaluate this approach. I suggested
that they look at each potential project based on its merits, choose the one
that most excited them no matter what the cost might be, and then figure out
how they were going to pay for it. When
they started approaching their budgeting differently, amazing things started to
happen. Interest grew, participation grew, and achieving the goals grew.
This often meant having to think outside the box. As an example for us: We have almost two
acres of vacant land – how can we turn that into incoming cash to finance our
ministries? One suggestion could be, to
rent it out to a promoter who handles farmer markets or flea markets. This not only would bring in an income, but
give great exposure to the church, especially when coupled with some outdoor
activities on our part.
So I have to wonder if the reason some faith communities
stagnation comes because it bases its ministry on the cost instead of what they
want to achieve. I wonder if more faith
communities would be more vibrant if they first sat down and worked on what
they wanted to achieve over the next year, or two, or three, then figure out
what the budget would be to achieve those goals, present those goals to the
congregation and let the congregation figure out how to fund their desired
ministries.
Scripture says: 41 Jesus sat down
opposite the place where the offerings were put and watched… then a poor widow
came and put in two very small copper coins, worth only a few cents.
43 Calling his disciples
to him, Jesus said, “Truly I tell you, this poor widow has put more into the
treasury than all the others. Giving out of her poverty, she put in everything—all
she had to live on.”
Is Jesus telling us to give everything to
the point that there is nothing left to live on? I don’t think that is the point of his
observation. What I believe Jesus is
pointing out is not the amount that we give, but in “how do we give?” When we are
thinking about how much to pledge do we think about what comforts we are or are
not willing to forgo to promote the mission of our faith community? Am I looking out for myself first, or do I
give based on what God asks of me, that of giving my first fruits?
In our prayer of confession, there are
implications that, “While we do not willfully disobeyed God’s commandments, our
own short sightedness and impatience leads us to make choices based upon our
immediate needs over God’s desires, choosing desires and unnecessary wants over
potential ministries that as a collective could accomplish. Some questions
that come to mind around this implication are: What are the long term goals for Mountain View? What is
our church to this neighborhood? Why do people come to Mountain View or
better yet, why would they come to Mountain View? And the ultimate question: What is the potential that we can offer
them?
Another
part of our confession is: “We know you
created this world with enough for everyone. Yet, in this land of plenty people
know deprivation.” When we think
about financial commitment to our faith community the truth is, it evokes
fear. Are we guilty of letting these
fears overwhelm our faith and trust in God? How do we use our money, not the money that we
give to the church, but that portion that we don’t give to the church; how do
we use it? The Apostle Paul wrote, “In Christ, we are no longer slaves to
fear.”
Ministry
is what we call the thing that we do here at Mountain View. My challenge to you
this morning, is to honestly examine your heart and see how you envision the
minister of this church, and to what extent you are willing to support that
vision, and I don’t mean just financially. Ultimately – I hope the answers that
you start to come up with will be based through your relationship with Christ,
saying to God, “Here I am, I have come to do your will.” For no ministry truly exists without the Love
of God at its heart. Amen
Sunday, November 1, 2015
Giving Honor to Those Before Us, by Rev Steven R Mitchell based on Revelation 7:9-17 and 1 John 3:1-3
Giving Honor To Those Before Us
By Rev Steven R Mitchell
Mountain View United Church,
Aurora, CO 11/01/2015
Based on Revelation 7:9-17 and 1
John 3:1-3
This
morning is All Saints Day. This is the
day we in the church take time to honor those who have preceded us in death. As a part of this day, we in this
congregation have brought pictures representative of those we love and light a
candle in their honor. It’s a small
thing that we do, yet it is also a most powerful act on our part. The light from the candle represents the gift
of life, wisdom, and nurturing that they gave tous.
I
think it is safe to say, that most of us have some sort of believe or assurance
that life goes on after we leave this physical world. What this belief or understand maybe, varies
widely however. Some cultures believe in
the soul recycling it’s self many times over.
In the Tibetan book of the dead, they even believe that as a spirit, you
chose which parents you plan to be born to.
There are people who believe that life continues as pure energy,
existing in the universe. Within the
Christian traditions, we believe that once we pass from this life, our next is
lived in accordance to how we behaved and what we believed in this life. The book of Revelation speaks quite vividly
to how souls are either rewarded or condemned.
In
this morning’s scripture we are assured by the author that for those who are on
the side of God, they will live in the presence of the Creator, “never again to by hungry; and never
again will they thirst. They will not be
plagued by scorching heat due
to the sun beating down on them.” Over the centuries of the church interpreting
scriptures such as these, we have come to believe that they are addressing what
life will be like in heaven. In fact, a
large portion of the modern church has pretty much come to believe that the
book of Revelations deals solely with Heaven.
Being
more of a traditionalist, I am not sure that I would agree with many
theologians about understanding the Book of Revelations as dealing with
heaven. And here is my reasoning
why: As a collection of writings, the
books found within what we call the New Testament need to be consistent with
the teachings of Jesus. When you read
what Jesus talked about, you will find very little teaching about Heaven in the
way that most of us have been taught to think of Heaven. What Jesus generally talked about was how
life is to be lived here on earth. Jesus
tells us that the Kin-dom of God is present here on earth. For Jesus, Heaven or God’s Kin-dom was a
place where people lived in peace, looking after one another, making sure that
everyone had enough to live each day.
This was the accusing finger pointing to Cain when he responded with, “Am I my brother’s keeper?” In Jesus’ understanding of Heaven the answer
is “Yes” we are our brother/and sisters keeper.
So if
we re-read this section of passage in light to how Jesus understands the
Kin-dom of God to be, we would start to recognize that, “the never being hungry
or thirsty again”, speaks to equal distribution of resources to everyone. Of making sure that every person has equal
access to medical care, of housing, of food, access to education. When scripture speaks about, “not being
beaten down by scorching heat”, it is talking about equitable wages and working
conditions, where field laborers hold equal value to stockbrokers. It’s a world that challenges the 1% type of
behavior and the living by scarcity thinking.
Last
year the former Secretary of Labor and presently a Professor of Economics at
Berkley, Robert Reich, was featured in a documentary titled “Inequality For
All.” This film tries to explain the
impact of the widening gap of wealth in our country and what the effects are having
on our democracy. What I found most informative as a Christian
in this film was his sharing a personal story that he says changed his life
forever.
As a boy growing up he was very
short and the bigger boys would pick on him.
Then one day Robert realized that if he could make alliances with older
bigger boys to protect him, he wouldn’t get beat up so often. This worked very well for him. Then in the summer of his tenth year, one of
his older protectors had gone off to Mississippi to help sign up voters. This friend was one of three people who were kidnapped,
tortured and murdered in the summer of 1964.
Robert realized that at that point, he needed to dedicate his life at
trying to help protect those who had no voice from the bullies of our world. He has in effect been ministering to this
country through his knowledge and understanding of economics. In that story, my mind was immediately
recalling stories and actions of another man who fought against the bullies of
his world, Jesus of Nazareth.
We come to this table this morning
because of a man who fought against the bullies of his day, who went through
great tribulation, and was murdered because he spoke up about God’s
Kin-dom. Jesus saw the inequality of his
day; of how the Roman state took resources from the Hebrews for their own use,
and of how the laws of God had become overly burdensome by misuse and
perversion by their own religious institution.
For these reasons, Jesus began a ministry to those who suffered the
most, giving them assurances of God’s love, and calling into accountability
those who perpetuated a system that abused and denied justice to those without a
voice.
This morning we take time out to
remember not only Jesus through the bread and the wine and of his teachings and
his call to help build and reshape the kin-dom of God, but we are also
remembering those people who were very important in our life. Remembering heroes really, who we not only
looked up to, but received those foundational instructions in which we have
built our lives upon. We call them
saints, not because they were perfect, but because of the profound influence
they have had upon our lives.
We come to this table because we believe in a man who spoke truths about what the kin-dom of God was like. We come to this table, because we believe in the man who showed us how we are to live the kin-dom existence. We come to this table because we believe in the man who was so passionate about equality, about justice, and about mercy for all people. We come to this table to remember the Life and the teachings of Jesus and of his courage to stand up against those who felt they stood as equals to God.
It
is God’s desire that we live in a world where everyone has the basic needs of
life and that each person is not just black, or white, or brown, or yellow, gay
or straight, or transgendered, or Christian, or Muslim, or Hindi, or short,
tall, thin, fat, rich, or poor but that each person is related and connected in
a real relationship of care, concern, and love for one another; for we are all
the children of God.
As we remember those saints who have helped shape part of who we understand ourselves to be, we also have the assurance that we are still being shaped into who God wishes us to be. And what is that? His children! Amen
Tuesday, October 27, 2015
Surviving Change, by Rev Steven R Mitchell, based on Jeremiah 291,4-7
Surviving Change
By Rev Steven R
Mitchell
Mountain View
United, Aurora, CO 10/25/2015
Based on Jeremiah
29:1, 4-7
How
many of you have cell phones? How many
of you see them as a blessing? How many
of you see them as a curse? How well do
you understand all the functions on your cell phone? How many times have you upgraded your cell
phones over the past decade? I want to
show you a few of the cell phones that I have owned over my life time. The first phone that I ever had, I made
myself! (show two tin cans with string
attached) This was the only thing I
could afford at age 5!
At that time the
only type of phones we had were hardwired.
Then with the advent of the satellite we were able to talk wireless via
what we now call a “cell phone.” Like
computers, cell phones have undergone many changes. The first mobile devices looked alot like
walkie-talkies. But over the years they
slimmed down to the size of the palm of your hand. The oldest cell phone I have in my possession
today is what we call a “dumb” phone.
All I could do on it was talk and for an extra fee, I could send or
receive a text message. The phone that I
have had for the past 4 years is what we call an Android, or a smart phone. This meant I could pay for unlimited calls,
texting, and it has a camera where I can take pictures and actually send them
to someone.
This week I
upgraded my phone to a Samsung Note 5. I
understand that people should respond with “awe”! I have no idea what all it does, but I understand
that with the correct “app” it will actually wash dishes! Do you know that I don’t even have to send
pictures via text or e-mail if the recipient is standing next to me. All I have to do is hit a button on my phone,
they hit a button on my phone, we place the phones together, they vibrate and voila,
the picture has been exchanged. Needless
to say, there has been a lot of innovation since my tin can phone to my present
phone. It was tough enough to learn how
to operate my last phone, but for this one, the merchant is offering 3 levels
of classes (intro, intermediate, and advanced) to learn how to use it! This new tech-knowledge is so overwhelming, I’m
wondering “if I’ll ever understand all of
the capabilities of my new phone.”
This morning I want
to focus on surviving change. Just
because we know that change is inevitable, it doesn’t necessarily make it easy
to adapt or accept. In this morning’s
text we find Jeremiah speaking to a people who were carried off from their home
land, to a land far, far, a way. It is a
story of the Southern Kingdom, Israel, being carried off to the land of their
captures, the Babylonians; a land where a different language was spoken, a land
peculiar in behavior, a land with different ways of looking at life; a land
with unfamiliar gods.
How does one
survive when life is totally disrupted? Psalm
137 asks, “How can we sing the songs of
Zion (of praise)”, when change feels like being carried off into a foreign
land, where every aspect of life is so totally different than what one grows up
learning and understanding? Within this particular reading, Jeremiah tries to
address these questions as a way of giving comfort to those in the midst of
change, and also as a way of giving hope toward a better future.
While living in
Rock Springs, Wyoming, I had the privilege of becoming friends with a Jewish
couple. The wife, Liesel came to this
country at the age of twelve as a refuge from Germany, because she was simply born
a Jewess. One evening at dinner Liesel
wanted to show off a quilt that had been made by a friend, from pillow slips
that Liesel’s mother had packed in Liesel’s suite case as she and her sister fled
to Holland months ahead of their parents leaving Germany. These particular pillow cases had been a part
of her mother’s trousseau.
Liesel’s story of
her family coming to America is a story that closely reflects the writings in
Jeremiah. Their first home in America was in New York City, in Harlem. Not only were they foreigners in a new land,
not understanding the language very well, they were one of the few white
families in the neighborhood and they were Jews, where even in America you were
not well received. They were very much
like their ancestors, finding themselves having to cope in a land that was
totally foreign to them. At one point,
Liesel’s mother made the comment to her husband, “and for this we left Germany?”
How do we survive
dramatic changes in our life? Jeremiah
speaks to those who physically had been carried off to a foreign land, but
there are differing empires, those Babylon’s within our life’s that make
today’s lectionary reading personal to us. Empires with names like fear,
materialism, consumerism, violence in the home, mental illness, even loneliness
to name just a few. There are times in
our lives when changing circumstances dictate our having to leave what is
familiar to us and plunges us into a land that is unknown.
There are all sorts
of events in our lives that demand a change in what we are use to experiencing.
There are changes in our lives that
sometimes we bring upon by our own actions, or times there are changes that are
brought through the actions of others. Most
of you are aware that there are major changes occurring in my life with the
ending of my time as your pastor. When
changes occur in a pastor’s life, those changes affect not just the life of the
pastor and family, but also the life of the faith community that is being
served. Uncertainly, confusion, anger, possibly
joy are but a few of the emotions that occur within the life of the
congregation during these changes. When
we find ourselves in the midst of major change the question of, “how long will
we have to put up with uncertainty” is at the top of the list of concerns.
As a faith
community, questions like: how long will it take to get our next pastor; do we
need to hire an interim or can we get by with pulpit supply as we search for our
next settled pastor; what are we going to look for in our next pastor; what
behavioral changes must we make as a faith community in order to move forward
in our ministry are but a few of the topics that will need to be discussed as a
congregation. Change often seems painful
in the process, but when seen as an opportunity to examine the positives and
negatives, the end result will be a stronger and more productive community.
When God was
telling the Israelites who had been carted off to Babylon to: Build houses and settle down; plant gardens;
to marry and have sons and daughters; and pray to the Lord for peace, because if peace prospers, they too will prosper. God was saying, do not just sit and complain
and moan about how bad things are, but get in and make the most of it; in other
words become the solution.
For
myself, I feel very much like the exiles from Jerusalem. I am entering into a time of unknown
territory. As I leave Mountain View, I
do not know where I will be moving to next.
But I do know that by embracing change, coupled with the knowledge that
God is walking with me, I will survive this change and find myself in the
setting that God see’s for me.
So
as a faith community, look for opportunities that will help you prosper and
above all, pray to God and thank God for the unseen new opportunities, for it
is through God’s guidance that prosperity will occur. Change comes to us whether we want it to or
not. But the secret to successfully
surviving change is to trust that God is in the midst of all the confusion and
uncertainty. Change provides opportunity
for spiritual growth if we trust God enough to openly and honestly explore the
possibilities. In this way we can “sing the
songs of Zion.” Amen
Tuesday, October 20, 2015
Finding True Security, by Mark 10:17-25 by Rev Steven R Mitchell
Finding True
Security
By Rev Steven R
Mitchell
Mountain View
United, Aurora, CO 10/18,2015
Based on Mark
10:17-25
We
started our worship today in a prayer that stated our understanding that God has
created enough for everyone. But do we
truly believe that God has created enough for everyone? We also asked to remember that all we have
comes from God and to take Gods commandments to heart so we can do as Jesus
asks of us. But are we really willing to
dig deep into what Jesus is teaching in the Gospels in order to live out the
type of actions that Jesus says it takes to follow him? These are the questions that the story of the
rich young man is asking.
Scripture
that deals with giving up our finances are some of the hardest teachings to
accept for the American consumer. It is
most interesting that much of the church in America has developed what we call
“prosperity” theology – meaning that you live right and ask God for what you
want and you shall receive it. When in
actuality, Jesus talks about giving away possessions, not asking to receive
things beyond what is needed for today.
As
a product of my generation, these questions are really tough questions to
answer if I wish to follow the examples and teachings of Jesus. I am what sociologist
lable a Baby Boomer. Boomers have also
been referred to “The Silver Spooned” generation. It is descriptive of those born
in a time of unprecedented prosperity.
My parents
generation is referred to as the “Depression Babies”, meaning that they were
born during the time of this nation’s Great Depression. They grew up in a time
when a new pair of shoes from the store, often hinged on the sale of a farm
animal at the beginning of the school year and those shoes were to last you a
whole year! It was a time when you rarely had “ready to wear” cloths from the
store. There was no such thing as eating
out at the restaurant two or three times a week, just because you didn’t feel
like cooking. My parent’s generation tended
to be children during the Second World War and experienced daily life with
ration booklets. There was no longer the lack of money to buy things that you
needed or wanted, there just wasn’t anything available to purchase, because all
the natural resources were going toward the war effort, leaving only limited
items that were necessary to survival.
With the close of
the war, America emerged a world power. With the dawn of the 1950”, America was
entering into her zenith. A nation who had lived for several decades with very
little was now poised to give its children, my generation, all the things that
they were denied. Unprecedented housing development erupted; freeways were
built to expedite commerce and travel; families grew into a two car household; Boomer’s
were told to chose the job that made them happy, instead of working at one that
didn’t provide self-gratification. Consumerism became the new religion and the
phrase “conspicuous consumption” was coined to describe the mindset and
lifestyle of where we as a society have arrived.
The story of the
Rich Young Ruler is often associated with Stewardship drives. You are probably thinking right now, that this
is going to be a sermon on just how much money does the church want from you
this year, but you would be wrong. The story about the young man coming to
Jesus and asking what more must he do to be insured “eternal life” is about
stewardship. This story is not about the
“external” wealth of the young, but rather about the “internal” wealth of this
person. There is a huge correlation to
this young man’s questions about internal happiness and the lack of
satisfaction by many people living in a country as wealthy as ours.
From time to time,
I get asked the question of, “How did I receive my call to ministry?” It’s an honest question often asked by people
outside the church. My story goes
something like this: “Even though I grew up as apart of the ‘Silver Spooned’
generation, my family was pretty poor. However, because of the general
affluence within our society, I was able to utilize many of the advantages that
were available with respect to educational opportunities. I had vowed to work
hard and accumulate the wealth that I didn’t experience as a child.
While in my
twenties, I worked hard, went to college, saved, invested in real estate
successfully, and by age 27 had accumulated a very handsome looking portfolio.
I was well on my way in achieving the American dream and my goal of financial
independence. Yet, I found myself suffering from insomnia. At age 27 I had realized that I had
accomplished my entire short, medium and long-term goals, yet I was still
missing something in my life. Not
carrying for the accounting field, I found my way into management with a
convenience store chain. I also had become the chairperson of “the No-longer
Strangers Task Force” at church. This task force was responsible in working
with World Church Services and helping resettle Southeast Asian refugees who
were trying to immigrate into the United States. I found this work very fulfilling.
At the same time, I
became aware that many of my customers at the convenience store seemed to be
discussing unidentified yearnings for something greater in their lives;
something that would give them a deeper satisfaction and a sense of greater
self-worth. I grew to understand these
to be “Spiritual” issues and I recognized that my own lack of goal setting came
from “Spiritual” longings that were inconsistent with my previous mindset of
finding “wholeness and security” through the amassing of wealth.
Once I connected
all the dots and realized I should shift gears and go into parish ministry my
insomnia stopped immediately. But then
came the wrestling over personal wealth and the desire to accumulate more,
because we all know that being a minister is not the road one takes to get on
the list of the Fortune 500.”
Today’s questioning
by the rich young man is really very similar to many of us. Here is a man who
has it all. He was secure financially and was by all rights a very moral man;
he followed and never strayed from the Ten Commandments, yet there was
something missing in his life. If he had been satisfied, he would have never
been asking Jesus the question, “what
must I do to get eternal life?”
The answer of “sell
everything and give it to the poor” sent the rich young man off saddened
because he could not release his reliance of security that he found in his
wealth to a new security in following Jesus. This person, who knew that there
was something missing in his life, was unwilling to let go, so he might live
life more fully.
Christians have
historically struggled with the question of security. St. Francis of Assisi, challenged the church
of his day with the same issues as the rich young man had. St Francis was a man of great wealth in a
time when the church valued great wealth. When he gave all his wealth to the
poor and lived as a beggar, rebuilding a church and providing a meaningful
existence with very little, those in religious leadership couldn’t understand
Francis actions. We as Christians struggle today with placing too much reliance
on possessions, on money, and even on traditions while sensing that there is
more to life.
It isn’t the matter
of giving our wealth away and living like beggars that is the lesson here. The
lesson is stripping away the baggage that keeps us from reaching out to God in
the innocence of children, to live by God’s call for justice. The lesson for us
is not to rely on external possessions to make us happy, but rather to rely on
the inner peace that comes through our relationship with God. For it is in our
true poverty of self, that we gain our true wealth; that of the love of God and
our ability to share that love with others. It is in our poverty that we are
able to free ourselves from the sin of consumerism and greed. It is in our poverty that we can find true
security! Come, let’s follow God! Amen.
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