Redeemer will hold its Sunday School Christmas pageant tomorrow. I am finding it emotionally difficult to think about those beautiful children in their costumes singing God's praise and confessing His Name in light of the evil that infected us yesterday in Connecticut. It sparked my memory of this terrible line from this sermon: "Some kids do not return. They
disappear over the Summer without a word." Thanks be to God, that is the not the end. Some don't return, it is true. But we can go to them. God save us, someday, we will.
2004-08-28
Trinity 12
Luke 7:31-37
In the Name of the Father and of the +Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
People like Fall because of the leaves. It is pretty. I find it, however,
slightly discouraging. I know they are only going dormant for the
winter, but it looks like the trees are dying. It is pretty, to be sure,
but for such a brief moment. It is pretty like fire. It is the color of
destruction. For me, Autumn means the loss of freedom. I´ll have to
bundle up before going outside. I´ll have to get up earlier to clean off
the driveway and let the car warm up. I´ll have to mop the foyer floor
again and again and spend the early mornings ever searching for lost
mittens and boots. There is one thing, however, that I like about the Fall. One thing, I find enchanting: the sounds of the playground.
It is a scientific fact that the autumn air carries the laughter of
children further than the Summer, Winter, or Spring. It must be
something in their backpacks. If I lose freedom in the Fall, how much
more the children! And yet the playground is raucous. The dreariness of
arithmetic while the skies outside are still blue and the sun is shining
enhances the laughter. It is like the last meal of a condemned man.
There are few joys on this earth like recess in the first weeks of
school.
Our day to day life is a bit like arithmetic in the Fall. There is
work to be done. We don´t understand it. Nor do we really understand why
we must do it, what its purpose is, or what good it does, though we get
glimpses on occasion. But there it is. We´re stuck indoors. The
playground is empty. We have to work. Sometimes there are tragedies and
heartbreak in the lunch room and hallways. Some kids do not return. They
disappear over the Summer without a word. There is danger in the locker
room, embarrassment and awkwardness in the classroom. Every child knows
there are pitfalls, hazards, and obstacles at school. There is also
some good stuff. For every now and then, a pretty girl is appointed to
be our partner or we get to write a report on Star Wars or we solve for x
all on our own. But mostly it is just work. Often as not, it is boring.
It is arithmetic, grammar and rules, no fun at all. We waste a lot of
time doodling and daydreaming while we hang on for recess.
I don´t know what recess is for you. Maybe it is a vacation in the
Caribbean or a 12 year old bottle of scotch. I´d take either of those
without question. But those are more of Winter and Spring recesses. For
the pure, unbridled, exuberant joy of a recess in the Fall there is
nothing like Divine revelation. It is bit unexpected, a bit like being
roped into square dancing or karaoke against your will and then having a
blast, like a spontaneous party. It is not the thing that pops into
your mind under “fun.’ But there is nothing else like it and all
pleasures of this earth fade away in comparison.
God reveals Himself through His Word. He speaks and you hear. Your
heart burns within you. It starts like arithmetic. God is counting and
it is not good. He says, “I should punish you! I should pulverize you,
destroy you, burn you to cinders. I should reject you, ignore you, leave
you alone, let the devil have his way with you. For you have betrayed
Me and your sins are many.’ Then comes the surprise. God says, “But I
don´t. I love you. I´ve reversed the decision. I´ve paid the price. I
couldn´t go on without you. I wanted you so badly that I sent My Son to
exchange His life for yours. I love you because I love Him. I have
written your name in the book of Life. I have spoken you righteous. You
are Mine. You are without sin, malice, stain or blemish. I make you
perfect in every way. You are as unique as a snowflake, as pure as Jesus
Christ. You are washed in His Blood, born in His death, raised by His
Life. You are Mine! I seek now only to calm your troubled heart. For
soon this workaday world will end. I will bring you to Myself in heaven.
In the meantime, I come to you. I give you recess. I make the sun
shine. I make the ball land on the line. I give you chocolate, Calvin
and Hobbes, pretty girls, and thousands upon thousands of good things.
But mostly, and mainly, I give you Myself.’
But what a shame when we´d rather sneak around the corner, smoke
cigarettes and use vulgar words for cheap laughs than run and play in
the sun. What a shame our self-absorption has made recess boring! What a
disaster when the playground becomes a place of vengeance and violence,
of cliques and prejudice, a place for exclusion and judgment. What a
shame when the girls sell themselves for attention and the boys use them
like equipment for barter. What a shame when we spend recess looking
for the best deal and the greatest return; when we ruin it or squander
it all by ourselves. And what of when the bullies get the best of us;
when they drag us into their games; when we desire their approval and
will suffer any degradation they imagine simply to “fit in’? There are
dangers on every hand, some self-afflicted, some brought on by others,
still others utterly beyond our control. Even recess can be scary.
But the worst perversion of all is when recess becomes arithmetic;
when the gym teacher watches over the playground and recess is just like
school: one more measured, evaluated performance; one more grade for
effort; one more place for failure and disappointment.
Thus comes Our Lord. He drives off the bullies and the gym teachers.
He grabs us by the collar and brings us into the sun. He stamps out the
cigarettes. He sticks His fingers into our ears. It hurts. It is weird.
It is embarrassing. We want it to stop. He spits and wipes away the
smudge of ash upon our foreheads. He traces a cross. He touches our
tongues. It is gross, yet healing. His Body, crucified and risen, enters
into us by way of the mouth. Our hearts are clean. Our joy returns. The
Spirit does not depart. He makes us His Temple. Past transgressions are
forgotten. New life begins. We hear again what He has been saying all
along, “It is okay. I love you. I forgive you. You are redeemed. You are
free. Have fun."
And we can sing and we can laugh again. No longer
tongue-tied, no longer afraid, we are astonished beyond measure. We
confess: “He has done all things well. He makes both the deaf to hear
and the mute to speak."
That is recess in the Fall.
In +Jesus´ Name. Amen.
Every time I read a sermon by Petersen I am reminded of when Guitarist/Songwriter Al Stewart saw Jimi Hendrix for the first time in London...Al, who had hitherto played a lot of electric guitar...just shook his head...in awe...and put his guitar away for ever (he of course would still strum chords etc on an acoustic as backup) and said of Hendrix "now that's playing; everything else is sort of beside the point" When I read a Petersen sermon, I too am in awe and just want to go and become a brick mason (a vocation which would still let me hear Petersen...I'd move back to Ft. Wayne too :) )
ReplyDeleteI totally agree.
DeleteSo will we be seeing pastors twenty years from now telling people they learned homiletics from Professor Peterson at CTSFW? :)
DeleteYes. A recent post noted that good preaching makes one want to preach. I think there is also a sense that good preaching makes one want to quit preaching and just listen.
ReplyDelete