Gospel of Matthew

Sentness - Sent People

Matthew 28:16-20

Now the eleven disciples went to Galilee, to the mountain to which Jesus had directed them. When they saw him, they worshipped him; but some doubted. And Jesus came and said to them, "All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything that I have commanded you. And remember, I am with you always, to the end of the age."


So I had the idea, after we used this SENTNESS book as part of our council’s leadership retreat a few months ago, that there was enough good stuff in the book – good, faithful, thoughtful, practical ideas about being the church in the world – that maybe it would be good to share some of those good, faithful, thoughtful, practical ideas with the rest of you. So that’s what’s up with this SENTNESS plan for the next few weeks.

The book suggests there are at least six “postures” – or six ways of being and living as followers of Jesus – that get it right, if we want to carry out God’s mission in the world. Those missional postures are listed on the back of your bulletin so you can see where we’re headed. But before we get to the first theme, or missionary position, “SENT PEOPLE,” I want to set the stage a bit.

So, I want us to think for a moment about why we’re here. I don’t mean why we’re “here” in a cosmic sense – we’ll get to that, perhaps later. I mean why did you roll out of bed this morning and show up for worship in this place, at this time? And why wasn’t it another place? Or at another time? Or both?

I suspect…and I’m admittedly being quite presumptuous, I realize…but I suspect that most of us gather here looking for something we are reasonably certain we’ll find, right? We come listening for a certain type or style or quality of music and liturgy? We come at 8:30 or 10:45 or 5 p.m. because we have things to do and places to be and this is the time that works for us. We come hungry for bread and wine or grape juice if that’s what we prefer – and the good news and promise those things pour into our lives. We come looking for a sense of peace and comfort, perhaps, through the prayers we’ll pray and through the familiar friends and family we expect we’ll see here.

At the risk of being too simplistic or crass, perhaps, don’t we choose to worship here, as we do, for many of the same reasons we might have chosen to eat out at whatever restaurant we opted for last time we went to dinner – because we were in the mood for Mexican, or pizza, or whatever; because we knew we could get a table; because the price was right… the place is clean… because someone we know had been there and liked it... maybe, just because there was a special occasion or a special reason to go out and make that dinner special in some way.

So, I posed the question about what brings us each here today – or any given Sunday – because I suspect our answers will illustrate in as quick, as easy, and as personalized a way as I could think of, the premise of why and where we can begin this conversation about BEING SENT PEOPLE.

Because, as good and as holy as many of the things are that bring us here from one week to the next may be, the reality is many of us come looking for ways to be served, not so much to find ways we can serve. Not enough of us Christians are showing up to our respective houses of worship because we have something to offer, something to give, something to share – not just with our own particular congregation, but with the world around us, too.

So, again with the question, why are we here? Did any of us think that we came here – that we come here week after week – because we are looking to be used? Do we come here believing that what we could gain from or offer to all of this is completely separate from those things that make us comfortable or meet our needs – things like the time, the music, the liturgy, the sermon, the prayers? Do any of us think that we come here because we couldn’t wait to give our offering? Do any of us come here because we wanted this short and sweet little hour out of our week (not more than an hour, please) to light a match under our behinds and to send us out to give and serve the world around us?

It may not be true for all of us, all of the time, but the opening premise of this “SENTNESS” book is that the church has fallen victim to and is complicit in perpetuating the same culture of consumerism that’s making a mess of the rest of our society. The presumption is that we’ve worked so hard at meeting each other’s needs that we’ve failed to meet the needs of the world around us; that we come to “get” too much of the time, rather than to “give” as much as we’re able; that we work really hard to meet people’s expectations – here in church – rather than expecting each other to respond to the challenge of God’s grace in their life.

Some of you saw this little ditty from Shane Claiborne that I posted online last week:

This is too much of what the weekly ritual of “church” has become for too many. Church has become a place to which we go, instead of the movement of which we are a part. Too many church people think about how to get more people into the church, rather than about how to get the church out into the world. Too many church people worry about how the world might change the church, instead of working to see how the church might change the world.

So our Gospel for the day is appropriately known as “the Great Commission.” And one of my favorite professors and theologians, Mark Allan Powell, pointed out once that we often forget or leave out or are in denial about the most important part of Jesus’ Great Commission. We understand we’re to make disciples of all nations; that we’re to baptize in the name of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit; that we’re to teach all sorts of things about God’s love and God’s law.

But the first – and maybe the most important – part of that commission is to GO. Not “build it so that they will come.” Not “turn on a light so that they can find their way up the drive.” Not “unlock the door and wait for someone to show up.”

No. The power of our baptism is in the unsettling, challenging, uncomfortable, scary, sometimes, “GO” of it all. “Go therefore…into your neighborhood, into your offices, into your schools.” “Go…into your community, into the hospital, into jails and prisons and soup kitchens.” “Go…into a new career, into a different income-level, into another way of living, perhaps.” “Go…to that person who’s waiting to be invited; go to that person who’s waiting to be forgiven; go to that person who’s waiting to have a deeper conversation than the small talk you’ve exhausted so many times already.”

And this isn’t all rocket science and it doesn’t have to mean hopping a flight to Haiti or Honduras. There’s a story in this book about a guy who recruits the owner of the gym where he exercises to sponsor events in his gym that build wells for fresh water in Africa. The gym owner doesn’t even consider himself a Christian, but he’s doing God’s work and loving it.

There’s another story about a woman who builds relationships with the needy people in a trailer park in her community, where she helps them manage finances, find child care, and organizes rides the grocery store.

Yesterday, Anne Janelsins told me a complete stranger brought her a fresh bottle of water from the hospital vending machine, because this stranger could tell she needed something while she sat in the waiting room while they ran tests on her sick husband.

I had a conversation this week with someone who’s interested in revamping our Eucharistic Ministry program where you all can help share communion with people – in their homes or in their hospital rooms – when they can’t make it to church. So scribble something on the Grace Notes today if you’re interested in being part of that.

These are all holy, profound, simple – sometimes – examples of what it means to be SENT PEOPLE.

We are here as God’s children, in this place, at this time, by virtue of the baptism we share with Jesus Christ. And the power of that baptism doesn’t just call us here to sit and stay for an hour each week. Our baptism, and this place, I hope, are our anchors as we walk or waddle or fly our way out into the world. This place is merely the practice field. This is a filling station. What we do here is a dress rehearsal.

We are a people called AND SENT for the sake of God’s creation. We are children of God SENT to love one another; SENT to love our neighbor as ourselves; SENT to love our enemies; SENT to heal the sick, preach good news to the poor, promise and proclaim the resurrection of the body and SENT to set our hopes on a life everlasting.

And of course, all of this is possible only because of and when we believe the last part of Jesus' Great Commission: "Remember, I am with you always, until the end of the age."

Amen

"Give More. Worship Fully." - Matthew 2:1-3, 8-11

Matthew 2:1-3, 8-11

In the time of King Herod, after Jesus was born in Bethlehem of Judea, wise men from the East came to Jerusalem, asking,'Where is the child who was been born king of the Jews? For we observed his star at its rising, and have come to pay him homage.' When King Herod heard this, he was frightened and all Jerusalem with him. Then he sent them to Bethlehem, saying, 'God and search diligently for the child; and when you have found him, bring me word sot hat I may also go and pay him homage.' When they had heard the king, they set out; and there, ahead of them, went the star that they had seen at its rising, until it stopped over the place where the child was. When they saw that the star had stopped, they were overwhelmed with joy. On entering the house, they saw the child with Mary his mother; and they knelt down and paid him homage. Then, opening their treasure chests, they offered him gifts of gold, frankincense, and myrrh.


Well, Pastor Aaron and I decided before we got into this Advent Conspiracy series that, since we only have three mid-week services, we’d focus on three of the four themes – “Spend Less,” “Give More,” and “Love All”. We thought we’d forego the other theme, “Worship Fully,” by virtue of the fact that we live that out by gathering for so much worship these days – on Sundays and midweek Wednesdays and for special services, like Blue Christmas and Christmas Eve. We worship pretty fully around here from one year to the next, during Advent.

But Pastor Aaron did such a good job last Wednesday encouraging us to “Spend Less,” and he also gave us some good ideas about ways to “Give More,” which was to be my topic for tonight. So I wondered what else there was left to say about that that would be new or different or better for tonight. So as I stewed about all of this over the course of the past week, I noticed something that changed my plan.

Because I was spinning these themes around in my head – “Give More.” And “Worship Fully.”  “Give More.” “Worship Fully.”  What if we “Give more worshipfully?” Get it? What would happen if we approached the whole gift-giving enterprise and exercise of Christmas, from a place of worship – whether we’re preparing gifts for our first-born child or for our great Aunt Betsy; whether buying for our best friend or for our children’s school bus driver; whether we’re shopping for our spouse or for that silly secret-Santa gift we have to get for the office Christmas party?

What if, in all of it, we could “give more worshipfully,” like the wise men, those magi, who came looking for Jesus; following a star; bearing gifts; longing to pay the king homage in a holy, humble, worship-filled way, so many years ago? What if our Christmas – and all of its gift-giving – looked more like that?

See, those wise men came presenting gifts, not as a birthday surprise for the baby Jesus. Not as a baby shower. Not as uncles-so-and-so trying to out-do one another with the latest, greatest thing from the Toys-R-Us catalog. They came bearing gifts because they were looking to find a King. And back in the day, when you entered into the presence of a King, you were expected to bring a gift – out of respect; out of reverence; perhaps with some measure of gratitude and humility.

So, if we think about what Christmas morning looks like in most of our homes, it may look like a birthday party. We may even acknowledge that it’s Jesus’ big day somehow. But when was the last child’s birthday party you went to where everyone got a gift except for the birthday boy? And isn’t that what most of our living rooms look like on Christmas morning? The gifts get piled up and passed around, but how many of us have a pile of presents for Jesus?

Okay, maybe there’s a way to wrap some gifts up for Jesus – and that would be a really great lesson and tradition to begin, perhaps – but that’s not exactly what I’m getting at. I think we can still give gifts AND I think we can give wisely and faithfully and with Jesus at the center of what we offer. I mean there are ways to do good and to share grace in our giving. There really are ways to “give more worshipfully” – to include Jesus in the mix – and I think some of this can be as practical and as holy as we’re willing to let it be.

There are companies like TOMS with what they call their “One for One” business model.  Buy a pair of shoes from TOMS and someone in need, somewhere else in the world, gets a pair of shoes themselves. They do it with eyeware, too. Buy a pair of sunglasses from TOMS and they’ll help restore the sight of someone in need, somewhere on the planet. You get cool shades and someone else gets to see? How great and holy is that? And they’ve just gotten into the coffee business, too, so every bag of coffee you by from TOMS Roasting Company, provides a week’s worth of clean drinking water for someone in need. That’s GIVING WORSHIPFULLY, if you ask me, and it’s a way to include Jesus on your shopping list. (Shop at TOMS here.)

Of course, there are ways to do that closer to home, too. Give the Fair Trade coffee, tea and chocolate we sell here because it helps farmers and families make a living they wouldn’t otherwise be able to sustain.  (Learn more about Lutheran World Relief and their Fair Trade project.) Take a tag from the tree in the entry and get it back here by next week so someone who might not otherwise be able to, will have a better kind of Christmas this time around. Whatever offering you leave on these Wednesday nights we’ll use to throw the party we’re planning for foster families from Hancock County next Friday.

There are lots of ways to do this – to keep Jesus on, or to add Jesus to our Christmas shopping list, I mean – so that we’re not celebrating his birthday without including him in the fun.

Here’s one more.  What if we did some math and tithed our Christmas gift-giving and meal-preparing budgets in order to do something for Jesus?

Statistics are all over the map about this, of course, but I saw that, a couple of years ago, the average parent spent $271 per child on Christmas gifts. That same year, 1 in 10 families spent $500 per child on Christmas gifts. That may or may not surprise you. That may or may not be a reality in your house. I’m not judging it either way, necessarily. But it did make me wonder, if those are the numbers for parents, what in the world must the numbers look like for all of you offspring-spoiling grandparents out there?! (You know who you are!) And what difference could a tithe of that kind of money do for the sake of Jesus in the world?

What if we totaled up all the money we will spend this Christmas and gave 10% of it back to God somehow? It sounds so practical, but it’s holy, too, don’t you think? Hard, perhaps. A whole new way of doing Christmas for many of us. But holy, for sure. A mere 10% for the guest of honor? It sort of seems like a no-brainer.

And I don’t mind suggesting you could check out the new, updated “Wish List” I put together just for the occasion. (It’s full of things we could use around here for the sake of our ministry.) Or know that we could use your “Christmas tithe” for the ministry of our General Fund. Or you could sponsor a kid in Fondwa, Haiti. (You can do that through Family Health Ministries or by talking to Pastor Mark.) Or help to re-stock our food pantry, after a busy holiday season.

And what if we really did wrap those gifts and put them under the tree? And what if we really did open them before or after we open up all the other loot and booty that's ours on Christmas morning – just for a little perspective?

The bottom line here is that if we “Give More Worshipfully,” we might do Christmas differently. We may spend more. It may mean we’ll spend less. I don’t know what it might mean for you or your family. But I believe it will help us to spend what is right. I have to believe we’ll spend less on things that don’t matter all that much in the long run. I think we’ll buy more wisely. I imagine we’ll invest in things and in people and in places that make our giving more meaningful – for us and for those we love.

And I believe that if worship is at the heart of how and what we give at Christmas, we’ll honor God, like those wise men did so long ago. And, ultimately then, God’s grace will be revealed to us and through us and for the world in ways that really are what Christmas – and the coming of Jesus – are supposed to be all about.

Amen