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St. Matthew's United Methodist Church 14900 Annapolis Road, Bowie, MD 20715 (301) 262-1408 |
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"Wanting To Learn Is Key"
Sermon Preached By Rev. Richard E. Stetler - March 9, 2003 Genesis 9:8-17; Psalm 15:1-10
Now that we are in Lent, I thought we would spend some time today
considering what might be helpful as we live through this turbulent
period of our nation's history. The
Lenten season offers us the traditional theme of self-reflection.
Many Christians use this time for giving up certain habits and
routines. Today we are going to consider how we can move forward, rise
above life's challenges and navigate through experiences more
creatively. The types of decisions we are going to discuss today are
not easy to make.
The process of learning new information happens to us every
day. We use what we have
learned in our decision making, our relationships and our work
environment. Think how much easier life would become if we remembered that we are
students who one day will become highly effective, skilled human
beings. Without this
awareness, we remain mere recipients of what happens to us.
For example, when a teenaged boy listens as his steady
girlfriend tells him that she would like to date other boys, he is
learning that relationships can change. When a well-liked, highly skilled employee in a Federal
agency gets bumped by someone who has more years of service, she is
learning that skills are often secondary to seniority.
When a mom and dad decide that they no longer wish to live
together, their children learn that life can be confusing. No one asks for such experiences to come, but they come
nevertheless. We often agonize about life if there is no one coaching us on
what such experiences can mean.
When many of us were younger, we learned that, "Sticks and
stones may break my bones but words will never hurt me."
The problem with such wisdom is that it only applies to those
who have learned a particular skill.
Words do hurt us. For
those of us who have not learned how to rise above the insensitivities
of other people, words can profoundly affect the spirit by which we
live. Indeed, they can
hold us prisoner for months and even years.
How many of us are truly eager to learn new skills?
Of course, we all say, "Yes!
Absolutely! Who
would not want to learn new skills?"
Even though we read, study and join churches, often we find
ourselves spinning our wheels when it comes to developing new habits,
better ways of communicating and more wholesome attitudes toward the
"old crimes" others appear to commit against us.
While Lois and I were in Arizona, we were in daily contact with
a number of seniors. Each family unit had several shoe boxes filled
with bottles of natural remedies for blood pressure regulation,
cholesterol, arthritis and a host of maladies we associate with aging.
We were probably looking at hundreds of dollars worth of bottled
promises. Also we were
surrounded with magazines filled with the latest health tips about
green tea, garlic and esoteric sounding herbs grown in China, India
and Tibet.
Both sets of our parents and so many others like them have
become apostles of over-the-counter life-extenders.
Lois and I heard more about controlling our intake of
carbohydrates and about the cancer fighting properties found in the
skin of tomatoes and grapes than we care to admit. However, last
Sunday we went to brunch at a place called The
Old Country Buffet. How
much we had learned was about to be tested!
For $6.50 you could eat anything you have ever conceived of
having for brunch. The freshly baked sticky buns and cinnamon rolls
filled the air with aromas that would shatter the dining disciplines
of even the most resolute disciples of healthy eating habits.
The line of patrons eager to eat their weight in food extended
into the parking lot.
While we were eating brunch, the staff of the restaurant began
their transition into the dinner menu.
The eggs, Belgian waffles, sausage and bacon surrendered to
sliced ham , prime rib, real mashed potatoes and gravy.
In checking with the waitress, we learned that customers could
stay at their table all day if they wanted to without paying another
cent. Needless to say, we
left the restaurant in the early afternoon.
How quickly we discover
that learning all kinds of information has little value if we cannot
apply it during our most vulnerable moments. If,
however, we could understand that everything that can produce pain and
pleasure comes to us for a wonderful reason, we might become more
aware of how God guides us toward higher levels of awareness,
consciousness and fulfillment.
Psalm 15 is entitled, What
God Requires. It
begins with the question, "Lord, who may enter your Temple?"
The verses that follow are like a menu of behaviors and
attitudes that will better equip people to be in fellowship with God.
Similarly the Beatitudes of Jesus offer the same kind of
spiritual flow chart of attitudes as that of the Psalmist.
Jesus said, "Happy are those whose greatest desire is to
do what God requires; God will satisfy them fully." (Matthew 5:6)
Perhaps the key question that each of us could ask ourselves
during our Lenten season is this, "How can we understand every
episode of life as an invitation for growth?"
How do we learn this? We
can meditate each morning. We
can study and memorize Scripture.
We can pray without ceasing.
We can be faithful in our responsibilities to our church. Will
such activities help us accomplish the goal we seek?
How can we recognize this
invitation for growth when we are verbally insulted, abandoned,
betrayed or deceived? Are we equally aware of this opportunity when we are facing
more food than anyone could possibly eat for $6.50, or when we are
asked to dance by the Homecoming Queen, or when someone leaves us an
inheritance of a 2-acre parcel of real estate on Martha's Vineyard?
We must always keep in mind that our feelings are not perfect
indicators of what is happening to us.
Only the student who really wants to learn how to reveal their
inner light will sort through the pieces of each experience so that
their spirit will shine- not
get even, not demand justice, not clamor for a re-vote, not gloat over
our superiority or good fortune but shine.
This means learning how to allow our divinity to show.
We cannot have
information in our heads and call ourselves "informed."
There are many
brilliant people in our world who do not know how to reveal peace,
harmony and self-control. They
may not know how to understanding someone's hurt feelings or enjoy the
pleasures that come from generosity. It
is one thing to know about such things and quite another to reveal
them.
The retirees who live next to Lois' parents in Arizona loaned
me several power tools for a project my mother-in-law had asked me to
do. During the course of our conversation, they told me an incredible
story.
The couple had sold their home in another state and put their
furnishings into a local storage facility until they could make other
arrangements. Within a
matter of days, a truck entered the storage area, thieves broke into
their bins and took their belongings. These individuals got into the
couple's file cabinets, stole their identities, and were in the
process of emptying their accounts and extending their credit card
debt when an observant employee at the bank alerted the couple.
They have good reason to suspect that the theft was an inside
job, but there were no witnesses, no video tape and little they could
do but file a police report. The things that adequate insurance will
not replace are memories, keepsakes and antiques that were mom and
dad's.
For a while they were very bitter.
Then they realized that not only had the thieves stolen their
belongings, but they had succeeded in stealing something over which
the couple still had control -- their minds, hearts and spirits.
The woman said, "Of course, we were very saddened by this
experience. When we die, we were going to leave everything behind
anyway. With help from
the thieves, we just did that a little earlier than we had
planned." After
saying that she smiled. I
told her that she was in possession of the pearl of great price.
What they knew served them during a very fragile moment and it
showed.
All of us know that we live in very challenging times. We have
successfully gotten through the ordeal of two snipers who were
predatory in their world view. There have been the code
orange days where the sounds of jet aircraft flying over head may
have heightened our anxiety. Our President talks about disarming Iraq
one way or another. Many
of us are connected to people whose life-paths have been diverted by
military obligations. The
Psalmist wrote, "Lord, who may enter your Temple?" and the
menu of attitudes follows. Fellowship
with God is not a given to us. To experience that, we must first clean
up a lot of our thought patterns.
The moment we awaken each morning, events begin to happen to
us. Husbands are hogging the bathroom, children are irritable, we
cannot find the right pair of shoes, the car battery is dead -- if you
can name it, it will happen. This
is just the beginning of our day.
When we become aware
that our experiences are nothing more than a parade of events
prodding, encouraging and cheering us on to pick up heavier spiritual
weights, we have successfully learned how to become eager
students. When we are
ready, we plunge into life with one objective -- to create a better
version of ourselves than we were the day before. This is another
definition of what it means to be a follower of Jesus Christ.
Such changes are not automatic simply because we hold certain
beliefs. They appear when
we choose to let what we know show.
According to the Gospel of John, Jesus "overturned the
tables of the moneychangers and scattered their coins; and he ordered
those who sold the pigeons, 'Take them out of here!
Stop making my Father's house a marketplace!'" (John 2:15)
There is no mention of him using such violent behavior again.
He changed and moved on to more loving responses.
We steadily watch Jesus mature in spirit until he arrived at a
place where he said, "I have come into the world as light, so
that everyone who believes in me should not remain in darkness.
If people hear my message and do not choose to believe it, I
will not judge them. I have not come to judge the world, but to save it."
(John 12:46f)
This is true for all of us.
We live in a world where not everyone can see the light of
God's Temple. Not
everyone knows how or wants to be in fellowship with God.
As we have heard before, "If our only tool is a hammer, we
will tend to see every problem as a nail."
God has equipped us with an infinite number of tools that are
far more creative to use than the violence that comes from a hammer.
This Lenten season, let us spend time finding them and move
beyond the tools we have used for years.
Perhaps on Easter morning we, too, may experience a
resurrection of our spirits. Let
us allow this Lenten season to better prepare us for the rest of our
lives. THE CONGREGATIONAL PRAYER Eternal
God, how grateful we are that you love us.
We are aware of our confusion over what is important in our
lives. We often are drawn
to areas that appear to add to our security and physical comforts.
Our relationships are often defined by how others respond to us.
We remain uncertain how our decisions and judgments create the
experiences we have. We
pray that during this Lenten season, each of us might examine our lives
more honestly. Encourage us
to make our decisions more thoughtfully.
As we strive to be more peaceful in our attitudes, we thank you
for sending Jesus to be our guide and friend.
Amen. THE PASTORAL PRAYER Merciful
and loving God, during these Lenten days we are glad that we can
experience our walk together. We
look eagerly for the winds of inspiration to give flight to our wings,
and for the stream of spirit to enable more warmth and kindness to
become part of the spirit by which we live.
As
we reflect on this past week, we remember with gratitude the times when
we checked our anger and replaced it with patience.
We remember a moment when we gave time to listen to the thoughts
of another. We thank you
for the privilege of giving before being asked, of being caring in the
presence of another's frustration, and of carrying our burdens with
peace as we realize that frequently they are much lighter than those
others must endure. We
thank you for the quality of faith that has enabled us to take risks.
We thank you for experiences that have allowed us to broaden our
horizons. We thank you for
the voice of conscience that has called us back when we have found
ourselves entering circumstances of compromise.
Continue,
O God, to challenge us with life's many alternatives while we attempt to
walk peacefully in a world where so many are crying out for a community
where acceptance, sharing and love abound.
We pray these thoughts through the spirit of Jesus, who taught us
to say when we pray . . .
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