Showing posts with label languages. Show all posts
Showing posts with label languages. Show all posts

Sunday, June 16, 2019

"Trinity Sunday" - Palms Westminster Presbyterian Church

Proverbs 8.1-8; John 16.12-15


For thine is the kingdom, the power and the glory.
In the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit.
Grace, mercy and peace.
Faith, hope and love.
Guilt, grace, and gratitude.

The widow, the orphan, the alien.

Morning, noon and night.
Past, present and future.
Height, width and depth.
On your mark, get set, go.
Three coins in the fountain.
The Three Stooges and the Three Musketeers.
And a three-point sermon.

Huey, Dewey and Louie.
The three little pigs.
Goldie Locks and the Three Bears.
Porridge, too hot, too cold, and just right.
Month, day, year.

Three temptations in the wilderness.
Three crosses on a hill …
Jesus with Elijah and Moses.
Peter, James and John.
The lost sheep, the lost coin and the lost boy.
Noah had three sons.
And then there were Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego
And we three kings of orient are.
A priest, a rabbi and a minister, too.
Lots of things come in threes, it seems.

Today is Trinity Sunday … a celebration of the majesty and goodness of God … 
The Three-in-One God, God in Three Persons.
The God and Father of our LORD Jesus Christ, who both send to us the Spirit of Truth, the Comforter, the Advocate, the Teacher, the Holy Spirit, 

It’s Trinity Sunday, dear People of God.
Father, Son and Holy Spirit.
Creator, Redeemer and Giver of Life.

What does the Trinity give to us?

I believe in God the Father, Almighty, Maker of heaven and earth.

We live in a God-hallowed world, a world created by the loving word of God, declared good by the word of God … all the creatures of this earth … great and small … the very life of every human being … all of it, good, all of it, sacred, all of it, from the hand and heart of God.

The God of Creation … who gives to us this world as our world, and commands us to care for it, to tend the garden, to oversee and guard its life.

The whole of the Creation Story is our mandate to pay attention to the earth … to love it as a precious gift from God, something to be cherished and preserved, guarded and maintained, honored and loved … God created us to be stewards, caretakers, of sea and sky, earth and air, and all the creatures, great and small.

Let there be no doubt that the God of Creation calls us to pay attention to what’s going on these days … human pride and greed fill the air with carbon dioxide … the oceans with plastics and pesticides … threatening the wellbeing of animals and humans all across the globe … even as Wall Street cheers its obscene profits and wallows in its wealth … at the price of destroying God’s good earth.

Some would say: “We can’t destroy God’s earth.”
Oh, yes, we can … we have that kind of power, because it’s the power God gives to us, to use, for good, or for ill. 
Don’t be fooled by the false prophets who proclaim peace when there is no peace.

Some would say: “God will never allow that.”
Well, that’s what the folks of Jerusalem said even as Nebuchadnezzar pounded down the city gates and hauled the people off to captivity. 
Again, false prophets … false prophets proclaim false security, lulling the people into irresponsibility, believing in their own privilege rather than taking up their responsibilities.

Whatever God’s ways are, we are fools to think that God will never allow the consequences of our foolish behavior to come to pass … 

Whatever God’s purposes may be, they include this earth … and woe to those who would so casually use the earth for their own advantage, their own momentary gain, at the expense of the polar bear and the elephant.

I believe in God the Father, Almighty, Maker of heaven and earth.

And in Jesus Christ, his only Son, our LORD, conceived by the Holy Spirit, born of the Virgin Mary.

The God of Creation is also the God of Covenant … the God who comes close to us, who takes up our cause, walks with us, talks with us … and bears our burdens.

The whole of the Judeo-Christian Story is centered in a God who addresses us with compassion and mercy … who pays a visit to Abram and Sarai, to create a new family upon the face of the earth … and when things go awry, and the family ends up in Egypt, enslaved by the proud and the powerful, God hears their cry and set’s the captive free.

We celebrate the Second Person of the Trinity, Jesus Christ our LORD, conceived by the Holy Spirit, born of the Virgin Mary … the God who becomes a human being; the human being who is God …

To seal the bond of love … to show us the way of life.

He is our Savior … doing what we couldn’t do, and doing it for all of humanity, because God’s love is for all the world.

He is our Teacher … revealing to us the ways of life … three years of eloquent teaching and three years of courage … challenging the proud and the powerful, overturning their tables and confounding their expectations … those rich and powerful people expected Jesus to be on their side, and when Jesus choose the side of the poor and the oppressed, the powerful people of Jerusalem got angry, roused a mob, arrested Jesus, took him to Pilate, forced Pilate’s hand for the death sentence … that’s how the rich and the powerful dealt with Jesus.

But in all of that, the work of God … what it means to live life, the life of God … sometimes full of danger … not always easy, choosing the right and resisting lies and deceptions.

Throughout the ages, women and men have heeded the call of Christ, the call to courage, to withstand the onslaught of lies and bigotry … many Christians have suffered and died as their LORD did … it doesn’t always end easily, but it always ends well … for no matter what, in life and in death, ’tis better to have served Christ and lost the world, than to gain one’s life and lose one’s soul

To believe in Jesus Christ is to follow in his footsteps … and no time has ever been more important than now for the church of Jesus Christ to give ear to his teaching, and to embrace his way of life … to set before the world an example of grace, mercy and peace; faith, hope and love; kindness, care and compassion.

In Christ, we belong to God, and in Christ, God gives to us life … life enduring, life always … life incorruptible … life everlasting …

I believe in Jesus Christ …

And I believe in the Holy Spirit … the deep and powerful presence of the Father and the Son … in the life of the church, in your life and in mine, here and now, in this place, and forever … the life of God - in a flower blooming, a bird singing, a whale breaching … the life of God in a child crying, a mother weeping, a father in despair … the life of God in a politician who tells the truth, a minister who preaches the whole counsel of God, a teacher who inspires a child to reach for the stars … the life of God in a kindly hand upon your shoulder, a gentle word to bring comfort, a smile to brighten someone’s day … all of it, and more, the life of God, the Holy Spirit.

The same Spirit that hovered over the dark waters of a formless void … the Spirit of wisdom … the Spirit of Mary’s Womb, the Spirit of Pentecost, tongues of flame, and the miracle of language … oh, how I love that story … everyone’s tongue, everyone’s language, honored by God … they didn’t have to learn another language to hear the Gospel, because God speaks their tongue, and the Spirit enabled those disciples of the Upper Room to speak the languages of the world.

We live in a city of many languages, and here in Palms Westminster, many tongues … and sometimes, for White People, it’s frustrating, and some folks demand that everyone should speak English … “if ya wanna be an American, speak American, and if you don’t, go back to where ya’ came from.”

Maybe some of you have heard that.

Well, thank God for Pentecost and the Holy Spirit … the Spirit of many languages, the Spirit of every tongue, because God is the God of every tongue, and God honors all the languages of the earth.

Our schools need to be multilingual.
We need to honor every language.
We need to be patient with one another.
And we need to learn some other languages, too.

Whatever the language, God be praised.
Whatever the tongue, Glory to God.

My little granddaughter now lives in Amsterdam, and she’s learning Dutch … and who knows how many other languages to follow … she’ll be multicultural, multilingual, and she’s multiracial, too.

I love how that represents the magnificence of God’s world … a large and glorious world full of diversity and color, tongues and ways of life, a world full of food and music, dress and design … all of it celebrated by God.

Because God is a family, Father, Son and Holy Spirit.
God is neighborhood, a community, a town.
God is diversity.
God is female and God is male; God is young and God is old.
God is every color and every shape.
And everything in between.
God is light, God is love, God is hope.

I believe in God the Father.
I believe in Jesus Christ the Son.
I believe in the Holy Spirit.


Hallelujah and Amen

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

May 27, 2012, "Winds of Change"

Acts 2.1-21


God doesn’t care what we believe!
That gets your attention, doesn’t it?

For the last 500 years, Christianity has made a huge fuss about “what we believe” … slicing and dicing the gospel into little bits and pieces:
The Trinity, predestination, salvation, damnation, virgin birth, heaven and hell, the last judgment, the resurrection, creation and eternal life, and 5000 other little points and pieces.
Doctrine.
Dogma.
Teaching points.
And then arguing about it, even going to war about it.
Methodists fought Baptists, Baptists fought Episcopalians, Episcopalians fought Roman Catholics, Roman Catholics fought Presbyterians, and Presbyterians fought amongst themselves!

All because of “what we believe”?
What does it mean to believe?

A living, vibrant trust and love and commitment.
But for many Christians, it’s all about ideas … cold, hard facts … points of doctrine.
What it comes to such belief ...
Even the Devil believes, says James.
The Devil believes in God, the Devil believes in Jesus, the Devil believes in the resurrection from the dead, and all the other things Christians fuss over … yes, the Devil believes, thoroughly and knowledgeably.
But there’s no love in the Devil’s heart … no loyalty … no commitment … not a shred of trust.
To simply believe that something happened, that something may be true, even to defend it and argue over it, this is not what God intends.

God doesn’t care what we believe about God! 
God cares deeply how we live for God!
The truth we live.
The mercy we show.
The forgiveness we practice.
The justice we seek.
The peace we create.
You shall know them by their fruits, says Jesus.
The fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control. … If we live by the Spirit, Paul writes, let’s follow the Spirit … 
When the New Testament talks about belief in Jesus, it’s all about trust and commitment and love and loyalty … a way of life that follows in the footsteps of Jesus … a way of life that embraces the life Jesus reveals … the quality of life laid out for us in the Beatitudes … the Golden Rule … Matthew 25, kindness to the least of these is kindness to me, says Jesus.

Think of the Apostles Creed …
I believe in God the Father Almighty … and in Jesus Christ his only son, our Lord… and I believe in the Holy Spirit.
I’ve heard the Yellow Pages read with more passion.
Lots of folks say the creed, claim to believe it, even fight over whether it ought to be “ghost” or “spirit” or “living” or “quick” - but saying the creed, or even fighting about what we believe about the virgin birth and resurrection, isn’t enough; not even close.
To capture the power of the original word credo, “I believe”from the Latin, two words: cor, meaning “heart,” from which we get the word “cordial” or “accord” - and do, meaning to set, place or give… thus, to say, credo, “I  believe” means, to set the heart upon, or give the heart … to God!
We might translate the Apostles’ Creed like this:
I give my heart to God the Father Almighty … I give my heart to Jesus Christ, his only Son, our Lord … I give my heart to the Holy Spirit … and to the life of the Spirit … the church … forgiveness … resurrection … eternal life.

If we say to someone, “I believe in you” … 
It’s not their “physical existence” we believe.
We believe in THEM!
We rely on them, admire them, trust what they’re doing, and more than that, we want the best for them.
Think of saying all of that to God:
Dear God:
I rely upon you.
I admire you.
I trust you.
I want the best for you.

At the heart of the Christian life, a deep and abiding surrender … life given to God … love for God, love for the things of God … to love what God loves; to do what God does.
John Calvin’s motto … O LORD, promptly and sincerely, I give my heart to you … 
The surrender of the self.
All to Jesus I surrender;
Now I feel the sacred flame.
O the joy of full salvation!
Glory, glory, to His Name!

The Holy Spirit comes to the church.
The first breath of a new life.
The creation story all over again … a handful of dirt, the breath of God, the dirt becomes a living creature!
Ezekiel’s Valley of Dry bones.
Can these bones live again? God asks. 
Of course they can … by the word of the LORD … and breath from the four winds.
The word for Spirit in the New Testament, pneuma … we get the word “pneumatic” or “pneumonia” … breath, wind, Spirit … the same in the Old Testament, ru-ach - breath, wind, Spirit.
Like a mighty wind comes the Spirit, and with fire!
Life to the church.

The flames of love came to all in that upper room.
No one’s flame was bigger or brighter than anyone else’s flame.
All were empowered to proclaim the gospel in all the languages of the world …
The gift of many languages compels us to pay attention to one another … to listen carefully … speak clearly … strive for understanding … ask questions … learn other languages … in a world of many languages.

On the street of any major city anywhere in the world … Paris, London, Cape Town, Rome, Cairo and Los Angeles … many tongues, all kinds of dress … restaurants with foods from around the world … music and dance from every corner of the globe.
More and more even in small towns … the world is on the move, and getting smaller every day … peoples, languages … all on the same sidewalk, shopping in the same stores, going to the same schools.
Many languages … a gift from God!

Because there are so many ways to speak the language of love.
The language of love is bigger than one language!
The glory of God requires many languages, many words, many tongues … 
O for a thousand tongues to sing
My great Redeemer’s praise,
The glories of my God and King,
The triumphs of His grace! 
Amen and Amen!