Sermon for Proper 16 C RCL 8/22/2010, Offered by Nathan Ferrell for Trinity Episcopal Shared Ministry
Texts: Jeremiah 1:4-10; Psalm 71:1-6; Hebrews 12:18-29; Luke 13:10-17
Help us, O Lord, to become masters of ourselves, so that we might become the servants of others. Take our minds and think through them, take our lips and speak through them, take our hearts and set them on fire. Amen.
There’s a story of an old guy in the backwoods of Kentucky who used to show up for every tent revival meeting that they had in that area. Tent revivals originated in Kentucky and they remained common in this area whenever a traveling evangelist came into town.
At the end of each night’s service, an invitation was given for folks to give their lives over to Jesus, and at every invitation, this old backwoods guy would come on down the aisle. He would fall on his knees, raise his arms to the heavens and cry out, “Fill me, Jesus! Fill me! Fill me, Jesus!” Then, within a week or two, people around would notice that he was back to his old dissolute ways of living. But when the next series of revival meetings began, the old guy would be right there, kneeling and raising his arms in the air and praying to be filled.
One time, he was at one of these revival meetings, doing his thing, yelling out to the ceiling, “Fill me, Jesus! Fill me, Jesus!” But it seemed that some woman in the back of the congregation had had enough of these shenanigans from the old guy. So, in response to his pleadings to be filled up again, she suddenly yelled out, “Don’t do it, Lord! He leaks!” (Tony Campolo, Let Me Tell You a Story, 2000, p.96).
Well, the truth is that the old guy is certainly not unique in that department.
We all leak! And this is why we all need to have a revival! We all need to be revived and renewed.
If you are in tune to the American religious scene, you will know that the word revival is a familiar part of the code language of American evangelicalism. It is often used to suggest that we, as a nation, have fallen away from the moral purity of the past, and from the wisdom of our founding fathers. Please understand that I am not using this word “revival” in this way. Nor am I suggesting that we set up a tent out in the park and have a week of evening revival meetings (though I do think that would be an interesting experiment! An Episcopal Tent Revival!).
What I am suggesting is that, because we all leak, we all therefore need regularly to be re-filled. This, of course, is true in every aspect of our lives. How difficult is it for any of us to keep up our interest or enthusiasm for anything in life? When disasters happen around the world, we all watch on TV and read about them in the paper. But within a few weeks, our interest wanes and we move on to something else. The same is true for most people when it comes to sports. Most watch with intense interest only when the playoffs come around. Very few have the fortitude to watch every single Phillies game of their 162-game season!
This reality is true in all of our relationships as well. It’s very common for the intensity of love and devotion that many experience with our spouses and partners to fade and ebb over time. When I counsel couples before marriage, I encourage them not to think of their relationship like a contract in which they come to an agreement to provide certain services for each other over a period of time, but rather more like an infant. A lasting relationship of intimacy is like a baby who needs to be fed and cared for continually if it is to survive and to grow and thrive.
The same is true then of our faith, our relationship with the living God. It is not enough that once we were baptized, or once we were born again, or once we were confirmed, or whatever the crucial turning point might be. That one moment was simply the opening of the door for this new relationship with God.
Instead, we must continue to nurture this relationship if it is to survive, grow and thrive. And when our love becomes cold, then what we need is a revival!
I am speaking today of our need for revival, because this is the primary compelling concern and spiritual admonition of this Letter to the Hebrews, which we have reading through recently. You can see this thrust clearly in this last sentence of our reading today: “Therefore, since we are receiving a kingdom that cannot be shaken, let us give thanks, by which we offer to God an acceptable worship with reverence and awe; for indeed our God is a consuming fire” (Hebrews 12:29). Earlier, this letter encourages us to “not give up meeting together” (Hebrews 10:25, NIV), to “hold fast to the confession of our hope without wavering” (Hebrews 10:23), to “not abandon that confidence of yours” (Hebrews 10:35). And in the famous “Faith” chapter, the 11th chapter, we are presented with an amazing line-up of spiritual stars who have conquered and overcome by the power of faith in the living God.
Why all of this effort, you may ask, to encourage faithfulness among these Jewish Christian believers? The unnamed author of this letter is concerned. He writes because of “pastoral concern for a church plagued by neglect, apathy, absenteeism, retreat, and near the point of apostasy” (The New Interpreter’s Bible, Volume XII, Abingdon Press, p.160). In a word, their love for God has grown cold. Their passion for the Gospel has faded away.
Does this sound familiar at all to you? It most definitely does to me. It sounds like a fair description of the church in our own time and place. I’m not speaking of you here today, of course, you who are the regulars, faithful in worship. But this is indeed the general state of the church in our day: plagued by neglect, apathy, absenteeism, shrinking back in retreat, struggling with apostasy, cold in love, feeble in passion.
Because of this reality in his own day, the author of this letter strove hard to convey the need for reverence and awe among the disciples there.
“Let us give thanks, by which we offer to God an acceptable worship with reverence and awe; for indeed our God is a consuming fire” (Hebrews 12:29).
There can be no doubt at all that reverence and awe have been lost in our contemporary culture. How do we get it back, on an individual level and as a community of disciples?
We need a revival. Like that old guy in Kentucky, we need to be filled up once again by the Holy Spirit! We need our love to become warm once again. We need to have warm hearts and clear minds to see once again the magnificence and majesty of God, to see once again the amazing grace that God has given to us, to see once again the beauty of a life that is lived for the glory of God.
When the author here declares that “our God is a consuming fire”, he is making a reference to Deuteronomy 4:24 which states: “The Lord your God is a devouring fire, a jealous God.”
Like a jealous lover, God does not want ever to be in second place in the passion of your heart. The key to this revival of our reverence and awe, of our respect and love for God is in our intention. If we truly want to love the Lord our God with all our heart, our soul, our mind and our strength, and if we discipline ourselves to spend time with God on a regular basis, then it can happen. If we truly want it, we can keep our love alive and our relationship strong.
May God grant us the desire and the ability to worship with reverence and awe, to keep our hearts on fire with love and desire. Amen.
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