Sunday, November 27, 2016

Watching & Waiting for What’s Already Here (Advent 1)

Isaiah 64: 1-9 & Mark 13: 24-37
Roger Lynn
November 27, 2016
1st Sunday in Advent
(click here for the audio for this sermon)

Today is the first Sunday in Advent – the season in the Church’s calendar which focuses our attention on watching and waiting and preparing. The theme for the first Sunday in this season is “Hope.” For thousands of years people have been hoping and longing for God to come among them and make a difference in their world. And we know about such desires, for they are our desires as well.

So, when I read today’s text from Isaiah I thought, “Oh my – this is our story – this is the story of our world today.” Maybe not you individually, at least not right here in this moment. But certainly all of us collectively who find ourselves in this tumultuous time in history. The world is a mess in more ways than we can even begin to count, and we want God to “tear open the heavens and come down...” We want God to go face to face with God’s adversaries – certain as we so often are that there is such a thing as “enemies” of God. We want someone to blame. We just get confused about who that might be – sometimes even sounding like children who ever so quickly shout, “I didn’t do it – it’s not my fault!” “You were angry, God, and so we sinned.” OK, yes, we made a mess of things – but it’s only because God left us and we got lost and scared. Where is God anyway? We even know what it is to plead with God as Isaiah did. “Do not be exceedingly angry, O God, and do not remember our iniquity forever. Remember instead that we are your people. Remember that you care for us.” As I read Isaiah’s prayer and reflected also on our own similar prayers, I couldn’t help wondering who he was trying to convince – God or himself?

Sunday, November 20, 2016

Remembering to Celebrate

Deuteronomy 26: 1-11 & Philippians 4: 4-9
Roger Lynn
November 20, 2016
Thanksgiving Sunday
(click here for the audio for this sermon)

We forget! We get busy. We get distracted. We get overwhelmed. And we forget to celebrate the blessings of life. The blessings don’t stop coming just because we forget. Indeed, it is my firm conviction that we live abundant lives in an abundant world. The bounteous gifts of God are beyond measure or comprehension. But all too often we forget to notice. And in so doing our experience of life is diminished. Our experience of God is diminished. It’s a bit like starving in a room full of gourmet food because we were too busy or too distracted to look around and notice that the feast was there. Remembering to celebrate keeps us in touch with the fullness of life and helps us integrate the blessings into our living. 

Sunday, November 13, 2016

Abundant Giving

Deuteronomy 14: 22-29 & 2 Corinthians 9: 6-10
Roger Lynn
November 13, 2016
Stewardship Commitment Sunday
(click here for the audio for this sermon)

Last Sunday I warned you that I was preaching a stewardship sermon, and that I would be preaching another one this Sunday. That warning is still in effect. And this week, in contrast with last week, I will actually be talking about giving. So, consider yourself warned.

There is a long list of things I could say in a stewardship sermon about giving. I could tell you that you should give because the church needs the money. I could tell you that you should give because the Bible says so. I could tell you that you should give because it is more blessed to give than to receive. This list could go on and on, and if you have spent very much time in church down through the years then you have probably heard most of them, just like I have. So you will probably be happy to know that I’m not going to go there. I actually think that when it comes to the subject of giving, “should” language isn’t very helpful. Even the Apostle Paul recognized the need for some other way of approaching the topic. “Each of you must give as you have made up your mind, not reluctantly or under compulsion, for God loves a cheerful giver.” (2 Corinthians 9:7) If we are giving because we think we “should,” it might raise some funds in the short-term, but we would be a well-funded church without a soul.

Let me be clear. I firmly believe that giving is important – even vital. I believe that the need to give is built in to the very fabric of our being. But it is not something that can be forced. It is not something that can be compelled. True, genuine, abundant, faithful giving is always a response which flows out of our awareness that we have been blessed with abundance and are thus empowered to share abundantly. When giving is about “have to” then we are far less likely to even recognize the abundance or to experience the joy. When giving is about “want to” then both joy and abundance flow naturally into our awareness. 

Sunday, November 6, 2016

Abundant Living

Isaiah 55: 1-3 & Philippians 4: 6-13
Roger Lynn
November 6, 2016
Stewardship Emphasis - Part 1
(click here for the audio for this sermon)

In the interest of full-disclosure, I need to warn you that this is a stewardship sermon. In fact, it is the first of two stewardship sermons. I tell you this now because otherwise you might not notice, since there will not be any references to giving. I’ll make up for it next week, but for now you’ll just have to take my word for it – this really is a stewardship sermon.

“I came that they might have life, and have it abundantly!” (John 10:10) That’s what Jesus says in John’s Gospel. Abundant life sounds pretty good. But what does it mean? If we listen to the many and various messages which come to us in our culture today we are likely to understand abundance in terms of stuff. Abundance has to do with owning a big house, fancy cars, the latest technology, the coolest toys. Abundance and opulence have become synonymous. And, to make matters worse, it often plays out as a game of comparison. It isn’t just how much I have, but how much I have compared to someone else. All of this is summed up pretty well in the response which billionaire J. Paul Getty is supposed to have made to the question,  “How much is enough?” His reply, “Just a little bit more!”