A United Methodist Pastor's Theological Reflections

"But thanks be to God, who gives us the victory (nikos) through our Lord Jesus Christ." - I Corinthians 15:57


Sunday, January 8, 2012

Sermon (January 8) "The Baptism Barrier"


Have you ever thought of yourself as an evangelist? You know, an evangelist.
Someone like this deacon named Philip in today's Scripture reading. Someone who
shares the gospel with people who don’t know about Jesus. Have you thought of
yourself as someone who tells others about Jesus?

I'm betting that shockwaves just went through your body. Very few of us warm to the word evangelism. It seems to either make us feel guilty because we're not doing it, or turn us off because there's no way we would ever want to do it.

A very large study has just been done on evangelism in churches like ours. The conclusive finding was that the vast majority of people would rather go get a root canal than talk about, much less DO, evangelism. For the last forty years, most churches have been in decline. It seems we’ve developed a life-threatening aversion to evangelism!

Right now, at this very minute, we may want to put our fingers in our ears and sing “la, la, la.” Anything to drown out the “E” word!

Why do so many of us have such a visceral reaction to evangelism? There are all kinds of reasons why not much evangelism is happening in most congregations. I'll give you some of my own reasons.

I don't want to be anything close to the stereotype that comes to my mind when I think of an "evangelist."

I don't want to wear a fancy white suit every Sunday
or bilk people out of their money.

Nor do I want to offend people by pressuring them with rhetoric
about where they'll spend eternity.

Besides that, I wonder sometimes what business I have telling people what they ought to be doing or believing. I have enough trouble in my own life doing and believing what I should.

I'd rather just do the best I can, being the best Christian I can be, and hope that is a good enough witness to others.

After all, St. Francis of Assisi said, “Preach the gospel at all times. Use words if
necessary.” I do fine talking faith language with you here at church. But when I’m
with people who aren’t churchgoers, words fail. I flounder. I hope words aren’t
necessary.

But what happens when we meet someone who obviously needs to hear some words about God’s love? Someone like the Ethiopian eunuch. He is an African man with an important job that came at a high price. Most likely, he had been castrated at some point in his life so that he could serve the queen of Ethiopia. That’s why he's called a "eunuch." He was unable to be married or have children.

Religious law kept him from participating in worship services. Yet, somehow, he had heard of God and wanted to know more about God. What do you do when you don't think of yourself as an evangelist but you come across someone like this man?

Someone who bears deep wounds inflicted by the world . . .

Someone who is not welcomed by traditional religion . . .

Someone who looks successful but feels empty . . .

Someone who is searching for God, searching for something besides what he has . .

Someone who needs to hear about God’s love.

Someone like Rick. Rick was a successful businessman. He attended a church in the “Bible belt” of this country. He came because he saw an ad they had placed on TV. The minister of the church had been opposed to putting ads for a church on television. "Only fundamentalist mega-churches do that," he said. "It costs too much anyway. We should be using that money for caring for the poor. Besides," he said, "What kind of people pick their church from ads on television?"

But the church did it anyway. They got dozens of visitors who had never before been to any church in their lives. One of them was Rick. Rick brought his 8-year-old son, Andy, to church one Sunday. The children's Sunday school happened to be studying Esther that day, and Andy was part of the class.

Monday morning the minister got a call from Rick. "My son is so excited about this story he heard at church," he said. "He said the story is from the 'book of Esther.' Can you tell me where I can get a copy of that book? I want to read it to him at home. Can I buy it at Barnes and Noble or somewhere?'"

Rick, a college graduate and successful businessman, had never owned a Bible. He had no idea that Esther is a book in the Bible.

Here’s the reality.  There are many people in our community who do not know that
Esther is a book in the Bible. This is increasingly true. In 1910 only 3% of
Americans were growing up with no faith training, but in the 1980s 14.5% were
growing up with no faith training. And the number of people coming to adulthood in the U.S. with no faith training at all continues to increase.

In our own county, according to the Association of Religion Data Archives, the latest demographic study shows that 68% of our neighbors have no religious identity. They are not Muslim, Jewish, Buddhist, or Christian. They are not connected religiously at all.

"What is to prevent me from being baptized?" the Ethiopian man asked. That’s a good question.

For people like Rick, the obstacle to being baptized, to becoming a
Christian, is simply that no one has ever told them about God. Let me say that
again. No one has ever told them about God. Friends, I wonder if we are
preventing people from hearing about God. Are we keeping people from hearing about God’s love? Are we constructing barriers between the gospel and the people who desperately need to hear it?

Is our fear of being like a stereotype of a bible thumper a barrier?

Is our lack of confidence in ourselves a barrier?

Is our desire to give people their "space" about religion a barrier?

Could it be that for many people like Rick, we are actually preventing them from
knowing more about God? Are we keeping people from becoming followers of
Jesus Christ?

You know how tight lids on sport’s drink bottles can be sometimes? These grip things are wonderful, aren’t they? [Hold one up] Can you imagine standing there with one of these in your hand, keeping it to yourself, while someone, even someone you know really well, struggles to get to that refreshing drink? Of course not! You would gladly share what you had to make things better for someone else. You wouldn't just keep it to yourself if someone needed it!

But this is exactly what the church does when we do not share the gospel with those in need. We sit with the keys to the waters of baptism in our hands. Meanwhile, neighbors around us are desperately thirsty to know that God loves them through Jesus Christ. Let the redeemed of the Lord say so!

Maybe that is easier said than done. It certainly seems that Philip had it easier than we do. After all, the Spirit of God seemingly transported him to the Ethiopian man's side and compelled him to share the gospel! It seems like all Philip did was show up and God did the rest. If we were to be evangelists, do you think it would be like that for us? How could we partner with God? How could we be authentic to who we are, not trying to be some stereotype or push something over on someone?

How would the Spirit work with us? Where would the Spirit of God send us?
Who would be on our pathway?

Friends, I invite you to come on a spiritual adventure with me. What would it look like for us to be evangelists? This is what we'll be exploring together as a church for 6 weeks beginning on Sunday, February 19th and going all the way through the end of March.

You are invited to pray, to study, to question, and to think about how God might be sending us out to share the gospel of Jesus Christ. As a church, we will be reading the short book, Unbinding Your Heart. It came out of the study I mentioned earlier.

And guess what?  Thanks to a generous financial donation by a couple in our church, we have a book for every single person in church today.   Not one book per family but one book per person!  People in our church have prayed over each of these books, knowing that it will have a transformative impact for our lives and for our church. Several of these books are on our altar this morning as a symbol that God wants us to have this gift and that people have been praying for us.

The purpose of the book is for you to read and use as a resource as you participate in one of many Unbinding Your Heart small groups that will meet for six weeks beginning the week of February 19 and throughout the Season of Lent leading up to Easter.  You can pick up your gift book in our church parlor where we gather for fellowship time or as you leave the building today.  Someone will be there to assist you. 

As we join in this “Unbinding Your Heart” journey, we will be inviting God to show us what it would look like for us to become evangelists. What would it be like for us to share God’s love in our own unique ways?

A family shared one of the most memorable Christmases they ever had. It was
the last Christmas they spent at their grandparents' house. The grandfather had
Parkinson's disease. Soon, they would move to an assisted living center. It had been their family's tradition to gather around the Christmas tree and listen to the granddad read the Christmas story from the Gospel of Luke.

This year, when Granddad tried to read, he could barely move his Parkinson’s-locked jaws. He just couldn’t manage to speak the words aloud. The family sat there and watched him struggle. No one seemed to know what to do. Should they say something? Would it hurt his pride if someone helped him?

No one did anything for what seemed to be a very long time. But Emily, the 6-year-old granddaughter, had just learned to read. She knew exactly what to do. She quietly tiptoed over to his chair and plopped herself beside him. Then, taking his finger into her hand, she helped him point to each word, saying them out loud with him as they read along together:

“Unto you is born this day
a Savior, which is Christ the Lord.”

"Do you know what you're reading?" Philip asked the Ethiopian eunuch. The man
nearly begged, "How can I unless someone guides me?"

So Phillip went and sat beside him.

Who will God lead you to sit beside?
.
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Based on the resource, "Unbinding the Gospel: Real Life Evangelism," Chalice Press, 2008
.

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