“For we are God's handiwork, created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which God prepared in advance for us to do.”
In the early 1980s, one dark and rainy night, Kit Summers was crossing the street on his way to the Atlantic City casino where he performed his world-class juggling show when he was struck, full speed, by a truck. Kit was thrown onto the hood of the truck, broke the windshield with his head, rolled off and tore off the side-view mirror with his body, and was thrown into a crumpled heap 30 feet away.
For 37 days, the juggler lay in a coma. When he awoke, it was quickly apparent that this man would have to learn to do everything all over again—eating, walking, talking, let alone juggling! In his mind, Kit knew how to do these activities, yet the pathways from his brain to his nervous system had to be established all over again. After a year of patience, dedication and discipline, and on the anniversary of his terrible accident, Kit performed his juggling act again before a live audience.
Kit would never again be world-class at juggling--it was physically impossible after the accident, but he found a way to use his talent for a very good work: the entertainment of juggling is now a background he uses to teach young people in schools across our country to set goals, make good choices, don‘t go to school to get good grades, go to school to learn. Summers calls this day-long presentation “Educational Entertainment Excellence.” If you go to his website (www.kit summers.com), you will find among many sayings of his these words of encouragement.
“Things don't get better by chance, they get better by change.”
“Learn from what happens--set-backs, successes, accidents, etc.--
then move on.”
We hear stories like Kit Summers' from time to time on the news, of people overcoming great challenges or heartbreak and use their experiences to motivate, encourage and bring healing to others. If you're anything like me, you might ask yourself questions like, “Would I have the strength, determination, and heart that it takes to overcome the odds?”
Maybe the better question is, “Would I be able to do that--to take a setback, limitation or calamity--and use it to achieve something important for others?
Perhaps the best question of all to ask ourselves is, “Will we trust God, who made us to be what we are, created in Christ Jesus for good works” (2:10)?
Most of us, fortunately, will never suffer such a catastrophic accident and injury like Kit Summers, yet I think one of the teachings from this Ephesians’ passage is that God created each one of us with a job to do, a purpose to accomplish, a ministry to share in and through the relationship we have with Jesus Christ.
Paul's testimony in his letter to the Ephesians reminds us that “We are what [God] has made us, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand to be our way of life” (2:10). [Other texts read, We are the handiwork of God.]
So, how do you feel about yourself today? Do you feel you are the handiwork of God? Do you feel you could change the world or are you satisfied to just get by, make your way through daily life--juggling mediocrity?
We are not created for a life of just getting by, taking care of our own, and turning away from those in need even when we are in need ourselves. Kit Summers used determination, commitment and sacrifice to regain his ability to juggle neon scarves, bowling pins and flaming torches. Then, Christ used Kit to carry out good works with youth across America. That’s when Kit Summers began juggling greatness. He is beautifully woven into the handiwork of God.
Paul’s words say that we are created for greatness--over the course of my ministry the last 17 years, when I am counseling someone who is struggling and about to settle for less--or worse, give up, I have used this promise: “You are created for great things.”
Greatness in God’s eyes is different from what the world sees as greatness. Some of us are called to be world-class parents, some world-class firefighters, some world-class nurses and teachers and grocery store workers. It’s not the actual job/work that encompasses greatness it is what you bring to it, how you put your personal mark of who you are created by God to be that makes all the difference. [Story of “Johnny the Bagger” (www.YouTube.com)]
There are thousands of people who do great things in our world, but the ones who know they are God’s handiwork are the ones who juggle true greatness. We become God’s handiwork when we unclench our death grip on our lives and ask Christ Jesus to live within us, so that we may engage, enact, and encourage others with acts of loving service in Christ’s name. “For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith--and this is not from yourselves, it is the gift of God….”
Friends, being the handiwork of God is not for the fainthearted, for folks who are willing to settle for mediocrity. Life does not get better by chance; it gets better is by change, and that change comes when we are willing to give Christ control of our lives.
It is not enough to know in our minds what God wants us to do through Jesus Christ; we have to establish and reestablish daily the pathway between our hearts and our hands, our faith and our Father, our works and our Savior.
Christ did not come into this world so that we can walk around comatose to the deep needs of others around us. Christ did not hang on the cross so that we might have the status of belonging to his church. Christ came to us, spoke to us, prayed for us, and died for us so that we can humbly and lovingly be world-class jugglers of God’s greatness. Thanks be to God. Amen.
March 18, 2012
First Parish Federated Church of South Berwick, ME
The Reverend Donna Lee Muise, Pastor