CHOSEN FOR WHAT?
APRIL
20, 2008
1
PETER 2:2-10
WESLEY
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
Douglas
Norris
There is power
in words.
In the darkest
hours of England’s history, when the Nazis were at the brink of
victory, Prime Minister Winston Churchill saved England with his
words.
In our own
history, Patrick Henry ignited the American Revolution with the
words, "Give me liberty or give me death."
There is power
in words. Peter encouraged Christians to face the threat of
persecution courageously with the words, "You are chosen,
destined and sanctified." Words have power. You can tell
yourself, "I am dumb, helpless, hopeless, and a victim of
circumstances." Or, you can tell yourself, "I am chosen,
destined and sanctified." There is power in words.
A church can
tell itself, "We are small, weak, unable to do much." After
I graduated from seminary, I was appointed pastor of four churches in
Minnesota. Three of them had memberships under 25. They thought they
were small, but I wouldn’t let them act small. I preached a sermon,
"When Is a Church Small?" A church of any size is small
when it thinks it is small, insignificant, powerless. A church is
big, significant, vital, dynamic, growing, busily doing God’s work
when it catches Peter’s vision in the powerful words, 1 Peter 2:9,
"You are a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation,
God’s own people."
That’s who we
are. We are not just a group of people who like each other. We are
not just an ethnic group where many share the same nationality. We
are not just a social group who gather together for dinners. We are
not just a United Methodist church. We are a chosen race, a royal
priesthood, God’s own people. Peter reached back into the Old
Testament, took powerful words which had been addressed to the nation
of Israel, and then applied those same powerful words to small,
scraggly, politically powerless churches made up primarily of slaves
and women (who had no status). Imagine! God said to them, "I
choose you. You are now my chosen people. You are now my priests. I
want you to intercede on behalf of people. I want you to do my work.
I want you to be my own special people."
Not that all
people aren’t God’s people, but we who are in the church are
special, set apart, sanctified for special work. Chosen for what? To
do what? What is the special work? vss. 9-10, "In order that
you may proclaim the mighty acts of him who called you out of
darkness into his marvelous light. Once you were not a people, but
now you are God’s people." Once you were nothing. Once you
were lost and staggering about looking for purpose, searching for
meaning, wondering where you belong, where you fit. Now we know who
we are, now we know where we belong, now we know what we are to be
doing. We are God’s own people, and we are called to do God’s
work.
How can you tell
God’s own people from everyone else? How can you tell if a church
is made up of the chosen, God’s own people? A fourth-grade class
played Balloon Stomp. Each child had a balloon tied on his or her leg
and the object was to burst everyone else’s balloon while
protecting their own. The children leapt ferociously on each other’s
balloons, except for the few who stood there, not quite knowing what
to do. Finally, there was one balloon left-- one child was the winner
and the others were the losers.
Then, another
class played the same game. But, these were special need children.
It took some time for them to understand that the balloons were to be
stomped, and then they played the game differently. They helped each
other! One girl carefully held her own balloon in place so that a boy
could stomp it, and then he did the same for her. When all the
balloons were gone, with none left, the entire class cheered in
unison. They were all winners! They practiced generosity, trust,
cooperation, gentleness, and concern for one another—characteristics
of a chosen church.
How can you tell
if a church is made up of the chosen, God’s own people? Clarence
Jordan visited a church in the deep south. He was surprised to find a
vital, dynamic, growing, integrated church, not only Black and White,
but also rich and poor. He asked the old hillbilly preacher, "How
did the church get this way?"
The preacher
said, "Well, when our preacher left our small church, I went to
the Deacons and said, `I’ll be the preacher.’ The first Sunday as
preacher, I opened the book and read, `As many of you as has been
baptized into Jesus has put on Jesus and there is no longer any Jews
or Greeks, slaves or free, males or females, because you is all one
in Jesus.’ Then I closed the book and said, `If you one with Jesus,
you one with all kind of folks. And if you ain’t, you ain’t.’"
Jordan asked what happened after that. "Well," said the
preacher, "the Deacons took me into the back room and told me
they didn’t want to hear that kind of preaching no more."
Jordan asked what he did.
The preacher
roared, "I fired them Deacons, and I preached that church down
to four people! Not long after that, it grew and grew and grew. And I
found out that revival sometimes don’t mean bringing’ people in
but gettin’ people out that don’t love Jesus." A chosen
church loves Jesus and all people.
How can you tell
if a church is made up of the chosen, God’s own people? There was a
woman whose life had been one tragic loss after another. She was now
a lonely widow, rejected by her remaining son. She struggled against
the pain of a debilitating disease, yet she made it to church every
Sunday. She lived in a little converted garage. She wore the same
shoes and dress to church week after week, year after year. Yet, when
there was a special need presented, hers was the first gift to be
received. Besides that, she made one of the largest annual pledges in
the congregation.
When the church
launched a building campaign, her pledge was the first to be received
and the pastor could not believe the amount she had pledged. He
decided to discuss her large pledge with her because he was afraid
she had overextended herself. But she said, "Every morning I sit
at this little table and I sing, Holy, Holy, Holy. Then I ask
God to help me live from the heart, to do what the heart tells me to
do. I have done that for many years, and although I have lost much
and had to relinquish loved ones, my health, my home and most of my
possessions, I have discovered that the only thing I cannot lose is
what I give. Please do not take that away from me! Receive what I
want to give in the spirit in which I give it. I do what my heart
tells me to do." A chosen church gives from the heart.
How can you tell
if a church is made up of the chosen, God’s own people? Charles
Colson tells of visiting a prison in Brazil that was turned over to
two Christians thirty years ago. They call it Humanita and they run
the prison on Christian principles. The prison has only two full time
staff; the rest of the work is done by inmates. Every prisoner is
assigned another inmate to whom he is accountable. In addition, every
prisoner is assigned a volunteer family from the outside who works
with him during his term and after his release. Every prisoner joins
a chapel program, or else takes a course in character formation.
Colson found the inmates smiling. He saw men at peace. He saw clean
living areas, people working industriously. The walls were decorated,
not with graffiti but with biblical sayings.
Humanita has an
astonishing record. Only 4% of its prisoners return, compared to 75%
in the rest of Brazil and the United States. Colson wonder how it was
possible and saw the answer when his guide escorted him to the
notorious punishment cell once used for torture. The cell now held
only one inmate. As the guide put the key into the lock, he paused
and asked, "Are you sure you want to go in?" "Of
course!" Colson replied. Slowly the guide swung open the massive
door, and Colson saw the prisoner in the punishment cell: a crucifix
beautifully carved by the inmates, the prisoner Jesus hanging on the
cross. The guide said softly, "He’s doing time for all the
rest of us."
Isn’t it
amazing what God can do! Isn’t it amazing what God can do with us
when we become God’s own people! God can even take prisons and
transform them into churches. If they ever ask me to design questions
for the District Superintendent to ask at the annual Church
Conference, I would have the Superintendent ask, "What miracles
have happened this past year?"
We are a church
of God’s own people who take care of one another, look out for one
another, help each other break their balloons so that there are no
losers, and everyone is a winner.
We are a church
of God’s own people who love Jesus and are one in unity with all
kinds of folks; a church who opens our hearts and doors to people of
all nationalities, colors, and sexual orientations.
We are a church
of God’s own people who live from the heart and give from the
heart. Our arms encompass the world as we give to missions through
our conference apportionments and with special offerings. This
morning at 1130, Celeste Cron will tell you about endowment and
creative ways you can give, while protecting your investments.
Please come.
We are a church
of God’s own people who do not keep the good news to ourselves, but
"proclaim the mighty acts of him who called you out of
darkness into his marvelous light." We are “a chosen race,
a royal priesthood, God’s own people.
|