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February 12, 2014

A Voice Like A Trumpet February 9


Isaiah 58:1-9a; Matthew 5:13-20

“Shout out; do not hold back! Lift up your voice like a trumpet!”

With a voice like a trumpet, “Shout out; do not hold back!” Be brave and be blessed, my friends: ask the hard questions, not the whiny ones: What bushels are covering my life keeping me from shining God’s light before others? We can explore the same question regarding our life together as the body of Christ.

There’s an old, old story of a small country church that was given a big gift of money. They had a board meeting to decide how to spend this money. One little lady stood up and said, “I’d love to see us put a new chandelier in our sanctuary.”

One older brother got up and protested. “We don’t need any new chan-dee-leer in this sanctuary!” He said, “In the first place, I doubt that there’s anybody in this church who can even spell chan-dee-leer. In the second place, even if we had one, I doubt there’s anybody here who could play it. And in the third place, what we really need is more light in this room!”[1]

On an early Wednesday morning in November of 2004, the back chan-dee-leer, there, fell out of the ceiling and crashed onto the pews. [It was the night after the presidential election.] Larry, our sexton, found it that morning when he came into the sanctuary on his usual rounds.  Those of you who know Larry know that he is easily and dramatically startled. I can only imagine the look on his face and his hand grabbing his chest when he saw the bent brass frame on the pews, broken glass everywhere, some shards embedded into the wood. If you look around back there, you can still see the scars left behind. As a cautionary measure, we shut down the electricity up there, so it was a few weeks while everything was being repaired that we literally worshiped in a lightless sanctuary. And on one of those Sundays, I believe the furnace had broken down during the night so we not only sat in the dark, but we also sat here in the cold!

That morning, as we worshiped in this sanctuary together, we were the light in here. So we have some practice at being the light. Rural communities like those addressed in Matthew 5 knew very well how blinding darkness could be. “You are the light of the world,” Jesus told them; yet, they had no idea what it meant to be light. “You are the salt of the earth.” Neither had they a clue about what it meant to be salt.

“If salt loses its taste, how can it become salty again?” (MT 5:13b); “No one after lighting a lamp puts it under the bushel basket, but on the lamp stand, and it gives light to all in the house. In the same way, let your light shine before others, so that they may see your good works and give glory to your Father in heaven” (MT5:15-16).

What was Jesus talking about?  Jesus was teaching his followers about the ethics of the kingdom; in other words, how to be a disciple. The bottom line of salt and light is this: “a professed disciple who does not live this lifestyle of the kingdom is worth about as much as tasteless salt or invisible light.[2]

Christians have a great ethic to live by, yet how easy it is to substitute religion for faith. We like the purposeful predictability and comforting traditionalism—you know, that concept of an ol’ time religion: “It was good for the Hebrew children… and it’s good enough for me.” The problem with that ol’ time religion is that “good enough for me” is not good enough for God. That’s the message God is trying to get through the Hebrew children in our passage from Isaiah this morning. Hear the frustration in these instructions to Isaiah:

 Shout out; do not hold back! LIFT UP YOUR VOICE LIKE A TRUMPET!” (ISA 58:1). Now, just as salt and light were staples in everyday life in Jesus’ day, trumpets are also very important to their lives. Trumpets (shofars) were essential instruments in life and religion of the Hebrews. There are 55 references to trumpets in the Bible. Trumpets call the people to temple, announce wars and victories, feasts and celebrations, disasters and doom and ultimately in the end times, the coming of the Kingdom of God. The sound of the shofars carried great distances; it was the original instant messaging of the ancient world, the call all to immediate attention—something big, big, BIG was about to happen. Remember when Joshua fit the battle of Jericho? What happened?

The trumpet still carries that mega message in modern times. In The Sound of Music, do you remember this exchange between Herr Zeller and Captain von Trapp?

Herr Zeller: Perhaps those who would warn you that the Anschluss is coming - and it is coming, Captain - perhaps they would get further with you by setting their words to music.

Captain von Trapp: If the Nazis take over Austria, I have no doubt, Herr Zeller, that you will be the entire trumpet section.

Herr Zeller: You flatter me, Captain.

Captain von Trapp: Oh, how clumsy of me - I meant to accuse you.[3]

 

The Israelites did not get it that their religious rituals were not pleasing to God because their rituals merely meant they were going-through-the motions, which means they were worth about as much as tasteless salt and invisible light. Fasting and bowing like the bulrushes, they thought God was getting what he asked for, but they were only flattering themselves. It’s Isaiah’s job to convey the sad news, accusing the Hebrews of completely missing the meaning of their relationship with God. “Look, you serve your own interest on your fast day…” (ISA 58:3b). “Such fasting as you do today will not make your voice heard on high.” (ISA 58:4b).

 

The people were fasting, but it was God who was starving…starving for the fast that God chooses: to loose the bonds of injustice, to undo the thongs of the yoke; to let the oppressed go free, and to break every yoke; to share bread with the hungry; to bring the homeless poor into one’s house; to cover the naked; and not to hide” (ISA 58:6-8). This is the fast that God chooses. God promises those who choose his fast that “your light shall break through the dawn and your healing shall spring up quickly; your vindicator shall go before you, and the glory of the Lord shall be our rear guard. “Then you shall call and the Lord will answer; you shall cry for help, and God will say,[ with a voice like a trumpet I am sure], “Here I am.”

 

That is the good news, today; that God is here in Jesus Christ, equipping us to Be the attitude of God’s light in the world: so, let’s SHINE! We can also be the salt of the earth and teach others to savor the flavor of God’s love. So let’s shake it up, Baby! We can be the entire trumpet section for the blessings of God’s kingdom. As you can see, our sanctuary’s chandelier’s long been fixed. No matter how we spell chan-dee-leer,  though, what we really need is more of Christ’s light in here [heart]—and out THERE! Let this be our new beginning! Amen.

 

February 9, 2014

First Parish Federated Church of South Berwick, ME

The Reverend Donna Lee Muise, Pastor

 



[1] King, Duncan. “The Foolishness of God.” In Dynamic Preaching, January February March 2014, p 29.
[2] RC Sproul. Devotions: “Salt and Light”; @ www.ligonier.org.
[3] Rogers & Hammerstein. “The Sound of Music”; 1965.

February 06, 2014

Blessing Reframed February 2, 2014




Micah 6:1-8; Matthew 5:1-12

With what shall I come before the Lord, and bow myself before God on high?


I guess I was a little nervous. When I was first here at FPFC, I had not officiated at many weddings yet. The ceremony was held in the Great Room upstairs, and we had gotten through the charge, declaration, the exchange of vows and rings quite well. The next thing in the great order of nuptials is "the Kiss."

The right way to do it is to say to the Groom, "You may now kiss your bride." But I misspoke. What came out of my mouth was, "’Sam’ you may now bless your bride." He turned to me with eyes this big and a smile this wide and said, "Right here?!" Everybody lost it, and I’ve never forgotten it. Maybe I’ve forgotten that I’ve already told you this story?

Did you know that the word bless actually comes from an OE word blod, which sounds like our word blood, doesn’t it? In fact, the word originally described a pagan ritual that involved sprinkling blood on an altar. It doesn’t have anything to do with blood.

The word bless has been usurped into the vernacular in statements like, "We were blessed to get a parking space by the door"; or "We were blessed to win the Megabucks." Being blessed has nothing to do with getting lucky—no matter what my groom thought. The word we know as "bless" actually came from an ancient word, blod, which meant to spread blood on an altar, a pagan ritual beyond our ken.



For Christians, blessings come from God and have everything to do with faith. Yet, clearly the world is taking some of our faith language and "reframing" it to mean something completely different. For instance, a redemption center is not a church but a place to bring returnable bottles and cans.

How many phrases (idioms) can you think of that contain a form of the word "Bless"? We have the blessed event; bless your heart; bless your soul. We have mixed blessings, unexpected blessings, blessings in disguise; counting our blessings; bless one’s lucky star; bless her cotton socks (British/Australian humor). There’s even a proverb: "blessed is he who expects nothing, for he shall never be disappointed."

In the OT lesson this morning, we meet Micah, a prophet speaking for a disappointed God—disappointed and frustrated by Israel’s reframing the rituals of sacrifice to meaning that they were "good with God." Micah’s message to the masses is that calves a year old, thousands of rams, numerous rivers of oil, or firstborn infanticide" means nothing to God. If one’s life of faith fails to seek justice, love kindness, and walk humbly with God, then what one might think is a blessing from God is probably nothing more than a case of getting lucky. There’s nothing blessed about it.

In the NT lesson, Jesus begins his very first sermon with the word "Blessed." Blessed are the poor in spirit; blessed are those who mourn; blessed are the meek; blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness; blessed are the merciful; blessed are the pure in heart; blessed are the peacemakers.

This list of seven blessings is called the Beatitudes. The name comes from the Latin translation of the Sermon on the Mount, which begins each blessing with the word "beati" which means "happiness" or "wealth." If you wanted to, you could replace "blessed" with the words "happy" or "wealthy." They fit, but they do not frame the true meaning of the message.

Happy and Wealthy have connotations far afield of blessedness. The passage may sound like the outline for a best-selling self-help paperback, but for the followers of Christ, it’s unwise to reframe the beatitudes into the seven secret ways to find happiness or become wealthy.

Truly, the Beatitudes are about finding God-given strength in humility. Just as I Corinthians 13 is the classic passage on love, Matthew 5:1-12 is the finest treatise on humility. Let’s find out why1:

1 Sproul, RC. "The Beatitudes." www.ligonier.org



 The poor in spirit are those convinced of their spiritual poverty. Nothing humbles a person faster than the recognition of just how far they are from the person God created them to be.

 Those who mourn acknowledge their continued sinfulness because of their spiritual poverty, and such recognition causes them to mourn over their condition. Also humbling.

 The meek have strength of character allowing them to withstand mistreatment by others and abide in adverse circumstances in their lives without becoming resentful or bitter toward God or anyone else. This is humility of self-understanding.

 Those who hunger and thirst for righteousness have a growing recognition of their continued sinfulness, coupled with humbling realizations that their sins are covered by the blood of Christ. The tension between what they desire to be and what they still see themselves to be produces a continual state of humility toward God and other people.

 The merciful are those who realize how much they have been forgiven, and they readily forgive those who sin against them. Mercifulness begins with humility, with a deep sense of one’s own spiritual poverty coupled with a growing realization of how much one has been forgiven by God.

 The pure in heart have not achieved sinless perfection, as one might think. Their lives are characterized by a sincere desire for and an earnest effort toward holiness even though only God is holy. This, too, is humility.



 Peacemakers take the initiative toward peace even when they have been wronged. Only when we have this attitude toward ourselves can we seek to be peacemakers among others. Humility leads to peace.

The Beatitudes, I think, reframe for followers then and now God’s message through Micah to people prone to disobedience. You see, God requires us to seek justice, to love kindness, and to walk humbly with him because God is faithful in all things to us.The faith we practice as individuals, as congregations, and as the body of Christ is not about attaining happiness or wealth or good luck for ourselves; it is about the blessing of being in covenant with a wholly holy God who only requires us to seek justice, love kindness, and walk humbly with him.

These requirements and the necessity of obedience are not God’s way of humiliating us. They are there to bring us the best blessing of all: new life in Jesus Christ. Through the sacred meal we are about to share, we remember that Jesus took on the ultimate humiliation of death on a cross. This is a blessing, a spreading, or shedding, of blood, that the world will never understand.

How does one reframe the action of an innocent man, the Son of God, being whipped and stripped, a savior pleading and bleeding, to secure for sinners and for lost and disobedient souls God’s ultimate blessing: everlasting life for those who seek justice, love kindness and walk humbly with God.

So for better, for worse, for richer for poorer, in sickness and in health, and in plenty and in want, let us take a vow today to be a blessing to people through lives reframed and refocused on seeking justice, loving kindness, and walking humbly with God.

And with humble hearts, friends, let’s bless one another in God’s name—and, oh yeah, do it right now. Amen.

February 2, 2014/First Parish Federated Church of South Berwick, ME/Rev Donna Lee Muise, Pastor