Preached July 14 in the Throop and Dunmore UMC's
This is the
very beginning of Romans. You may
remember in your Bible studies about Romans that this book is the pinnacle of Paul’s
theological thought. Of all the letters
that Paul wrote to the churches in the Mediterranean sea region, Romans is the one
that is written to a congregation that he did not start. It is an existing congregation that he is
introducing himself to. He doesn't know
the context, as he would in Corinth or Colossae.
He’s
presenting his bona fides to the Roman Christians. So the first part of this letter is a very
basic understanding of the Christian faith, one that he builds on later, but is
simple here.
2which he promised
beforehand through his prophets in the holy scriptures, 3the
gospel concerning his Son, who was descended from David according to the flesh 4and
was declared to be Son of God with power according to the spirit of holiness by
resurrection from the dead, Jesus Christ our Lord, 5through
whom we have received grace and apostleship to bring about the obedience of
faith among all the Gentiles for the sake of his name, 6including
yourselves who are called to belong to Jesus Christ, (NRSV)
All of this statement is basically orthodox
(and did anyone else notice that, even though it is 5 verses, in this version
of the text, there is not a complete sentence in it anywhere? It is one fragment), and nothing that the Romans
would see as controversial.
Until you get to verse 5, where he states that
gentiles can also be part of the body of Christ. That might be a little controversial in Rome,
or anywhere else, for that matter. That
was a relatively recent decision to the believers, certainly within 30
years. And here’s Paul saying this is
what Christians are called to do and be, and this is what I am about.
The most operative part of the verse, however,
is the second half of five, where it says that “we have received grace and
apostleship…” In the Common English bible,
it says it this way:
Through him, we have received God’s grace and our appointment
to be Apostles.
When Paul says “we”, here, he isn't talking
about himself, or Peter, or James, or John.
When he says we, he is talking to his audience. We are Apostles. And while yes, he may or may not have been
thinking about future generations of Christians, it is nonetheless our entry
into this text. We have the same access
to grace through Jesus Christ into the love of God. It would then make sense that we, too, are
called to be Apostles.
So, now that we are all Apostles, let me tell
you about another one. The founder of
our practice of Christianity was named John Wesley, who was born in 1702, and
was an Anglican priest. (Anglican means
Church of England, which in America is today called the Episcopal church).
He had a difficult ministry, I don’t know if he
ever had his own parish. His spiritual
journey is well documented though, though his own diaries and sermons.
For all his being raised the son of a priest
and a wonderfully inspired mother, he still was in doubt about his salvation. It took a difficult sailing voyage and recent
failures in his life to put enough stress on the question of salvation,
however, and the answer began to be seen in watching German Pietists sing
joyful hymns and pray in peace while on the same ship. (According to Free Online
dictionary, it is A reform movement in the German Lutheran Church
during the 17th and 18th centuries, which strove to renew the devotional ideal
in the Protestant religion.)
He began to seek earnestly for that same sense
of peace, and it took a few years. But
one evening, he went to a Bible study run by these Pietists, and found himself
assured of his salvation in a way he had not ever had before. Methodists call it his ‘heart strangely
warmed” experience. He knew that, if he
were to die, he knew that where he wanted to go, he would. And he wanted to share it with the world.
So he began to preach this new message wherever
he could, guesting in other pastor’s pulpits.
But after a while, he rubbed to many people the wrong way, and was not
asked into pulpits anymore. He decided
then to become “more vile”, and began to preach on top of tree stumps, or wagons,
rock ledges, or stacked boxes. One time,
he even stood on his father’s crypt to preach.
When he changed the venue, he changed the
audience, and the movement started among working class and the poor.
They did not know, had not heard, about the grace
that God extends in Christ.
This is who
we are, as Methodists. Yes, we are
Christians, just like Paul writing to the Romans, we believe in the essentials
of the faith. We believe in the Trinity,
We believe that Christ was the son of God, we believe that Jesus was
resurrected from the dead. Everything
else in the Christian faith is discussion and opinion.
Nowhere in
our faith do we have a political requirement.
Nowhere in our faith do we have a requirement to maintain a social
status quo, Nowhere are we required to defent our society when it deviates from
the gospel. In fact, we are called to
extend grace to those to whom grace is not extended.
What do we
do when people are hungry? Tell them to
pick themselves up and go get a job and some self respect? Not if you are Christian. Not if you are Methodist. You walk by a beggar in New York city, he’s
got a buck after 6 hours in the cold.
We can find
ways to help those who are in need without enabling behaviors we don’t want to
support. My old internship church in
Dallas would do food bags for the homeless that are so much more prevalent in
warmer places like the south-we would take plastic newspaper bags, toss in some
tuna that could be opened with a pull tab, some crackers, carrots or celery or
something, and a Gatorade, and keep them in the car for when we came to street corners.
We've always had great ideas as Methodists, as Christians. Abraham Lincoln is quoted as saying, once, “Thank
God for the Methodists! No religion has
put more soldiers in the field, and more nurses in the hospitals (not an exact
quote). It meant that Methodist acted on
their convictions, and they knew their actions were their evidence of faith.
This is who
we are, this is who we've always been. As
Methodists, we emphasize grace, over almost everything else, while holding to
the basics. Everybody is entitled to
grace. Everybody is entitled to the love
of God. The only way that gets
communicated is by our actions. We can
sit in church and feel all warm and fuzzy about the folks at the local soup
kitchen, or addicts’ recovery house, or veterans’ home, or children’s home, but until our bodies are in their presence,
until our feet are on the same floor, our hands are building or cooking or
making what they need for life, there’s no witness.
This is who
Methodists are. This is who we are. The guy who founded the movement, preached
off of tree stumps and tombstones, preached the message of grace and love. It is possible to have a relationship with
God.
Paul said,
we are apostles. Just like his people,
and there is no difference between us and them, other than that we are not
wearing togas.
No comments:
Post a Comment