I am so proud of the way our
church is living out our commitment to God through our Unbinding Your Heart E-vent.
Wow! If you're a guest today, you have come to a church that is on an incredible
journey with God. We're asking how God wants to transform us spiritually to be
a growing community of faith. Today, we're exploring together the three relationships
that must be healthy for our church to be all God wants us to be.
The story of Pentecost boggles
our minds to this day. As the Bible tells the story in Acts 2, the Holy Spirit comes and
touches all of the disciples. They suddenly are able to speak in different
languages. Many people, 3000 the text says, get baptized and start following
Jesus that day.
The miraculous stuff of this
story steals the show. It's usually what we focus on when we think of this
story. But there's something more ordinary going on that we need to see. In the midst of all
the hubbub, in the middle of the bold signs of God's presence, something is quietly
happening that is essential to the story. Look closely.
The wind, the flames, the
speaking in tongues bewilder the crowds that have gathered. Wouldn't you be as
well? This stuff might scare us more than thrill us. Peter overhears some of
the crowd talking. He realizes that they don't understand what is happening.
So he stood up to explain. Maybe
this isn’t that remarkable to those of us who have grown up in the church
because we have read this text so many times. But there is something extraordinary happening
here. Have you ever wondered how Peter could stand there and preach like
that after what he had done?
How was he able to do this? Just
before Jesus was killed, Peter promised to stick with Jesus through thick and
thin. But as soon as Jesus was arrested, he told people he didn’t even know
Jesus! Then Peter totally abandoned Jesus at the cross. In the back of our minds,
you and I might have the story at the end of John's gospel where Jesus restores
Peter by telling him to feed his sheep. But that is not the way Luke tells the
story.
Remember, the author Luke wrote
both the gospel and the book of Acts. Luke ends his gospel with no
reinstatement of Peter. There is no specific moment of forgiveness between him
& Jesus. So in the gospel of Luke the question hangs in the air: how will Peter
respond to Christ's death and resurrection? What will Peter do now that the crucifixion
is over and Christ has been raised?
In Unbinding Your Heart, Martha
Grace Reese introduces us to the "Trinity of
Relationships." After
studying 150 mainline churches that are really alive and growing, she
discovered something. All of these vibrant churches had a set of three
relationships that were very real and healthy: (1) relationships with God (2)
relationships with people outside the church, and (3) relationships with each
other within the church.
When Peter stands up to explain
things to the crowd, something remarkable
is happening in the Trinity of
Relationships in his life. We'll briefly talk about the
first two relationships. Then I
want to focus on the third.
First, something remarkable
happened in Peter’s relationship with God. Imagine being Peter, knowing how
miserably you had failed Jesus. When Pentecost Day dawns, and the Holy Spirit
comes upon all of the believers, Peter is included. He receives the power of
the Spirit of the Risen Christ. Imagine his relief! Imagine his joy at the new
start he receives from God!
The denial . . .
The abandonment . . .
The broken promises . . .
They are all water under the
bridge in Peter’s relationship with God. They are washed away, removed as far
as the East from the West. Peter accepts the clean slate God gives him. How can
Peter stand? He is living out his forgiveness. He is bearing the fruit of a
spiritual reality. This is what a person freed by God’s love looks like:
Standing boldly,
Proclaiming freely,
Sharing the love of God
generously.
Peter is experiencing a whole
new, fresh start given to him by God. He is living out a moment of forgiveness.
Literally, the last words that the author Luke has Peter say in Luke 23 are, "I do not know who Jesus is."
But the words Peter says now are:
"Let me tell you who Jesus is!"
Peter's relationship with God has been renewed. He is living in bold joy due to
the forgiveness he's received. Only if our relationship with God is renewed
like this everyday will we be able to stand up and speak up when we hear confusion
in someone's life. At Pentecost,
something remarkable happened in Peter’s relationship with God.
Second, something remarkable
happened in Peter's relationship with people outside the circle of believers.
Peter is moved to his core by these people who don't know that God has sent
Jesus for them.
Verse 40 says Peter "pleaded with them." When
you've received forgiveness like Peter, when you've gotten that kind of relief,
you want to share it. This won't be the last time Peter is compelled to share
the gospel. In a couple of chapters, he gets in real trouble by taking the news
of Jesus to a non-Jew! This Pentecost day catapults Peter into a no-holds-barred
compassion for people who don't know Christ.
Third, something remarkable is
happening to Peter's relationships with his fellow disciples. This is where I
want to focus with you. When Peter does stand, notice Peter does not stand
alone. The second chapter of Acts, the fourteenth verse says: "Then Peter stood up with the eleven and addressed the
crowd." When he rises to speak the other disciples get up to stand
with him. They stand together.
Yes, the other disciples know
that Peter has a big mouth that gets him into trouble. They know that Peter
promised Jesus more than he could deliver. They know that Peter bragged about
how faithful he would be and then failed. But they also know their own sins against
Jesus. They could have just pointed the finger at Peter. They could have said, "Here he goes again, talking the big
talk." But they didn't. In humility, they got up to support him by
standing alongside him.
They are a vibrant picture of
forgiven people forgiving each other.
They are tangible evidence of the
reality of the mercy of God.They are the most believable witness to the grace of Jesus Christ.
Together, they are a community of the redeemed.
All of the aspects of the Trinity
of Relationships are essential for us to grow us a church. We need real and
vibrant relationships with God, with people outside the church, and with each
other. But right now I want to ask you about our relationships with each other.
Are we real with each other?
Are we forgiving each other?
Are we standing with each other,
as Peter and the disciples stood
together?
I wonder what the community sees
when they look at this community of believers,
when they look at our church? Do
they see a community of redemption, a place
where people are genuinely
gracious and supportive of one another?
In your bulletin is a drawing of
the "Trinity of Relationships." Prayerfully think about which of
these three essential relationships needs your attention this week. Let’s take
a moment right now. This is just between you and God. Let me strongly encourage
you to especially consider the relationships you have with other church
members. Is there something that is not right in your relationship with
someone here? Be real with God and with yourself about the need for reconciliation.
Take a deep, gentle breath.
Exhale slowly. Close your eyes. Simply ask God, “Where do you want to work in my relationships?” Just listen for a moment. Ask God
for help to make things right again. [Pause for one minute]
Has God put someone on your heart
in our church? Here in front of our
alter, you’ll notice that we have a basin, a pitcher of water, and a towel. This is to remind us that we are drawing
closer to Holy Week and that time when Jesus washed the disciples’ feet at the
Last Supper. It’s this same spirit of
humility that we are to offer to one another in our church relationships.
I was reading about a church that
has been experiencing a lot of growth. They had been adding several members a
month but that suddenly stopped. Visitors came but they wouldn't join. The
pastor finally asked a visitor to tell him what was keeping them from becoming
a part of the church. They confessed to him, "We like the church, but . . . it's cold!"
And they were right. The church
members talked about being a friendly church, but the crossed arms said
otherwise. Visitors didn't have to know all the details.
They could sense people were
tense. They could tell members were angry with each other. They could feel that
forgiveness was being withheld. The energy of the church members wasn’t going
to new people because they were so wrapped up in the conflict of the church.
The pastor realized his own lack
of forgiveness and how he had also been contributing to the big chill. He and another
leader in the church had a conflict that was causing ill feelings. It was one
of those heads-butting, arms-crossed tensions. The pastor mustered his courage,
prayed, and called on the man he was at odds with. The pastor did his part in
resolving the issue. In the following weeks, 2 people joined the church, and 4
more the next week.
After all of this, the visitors
who had complained about the coldness of the church finally became members of
the church. When the pastor asked why they had decided to join, they said to
him, "It felt right all of a
sudden."
When we stand in God's love, when
we stand together, and when we stand for people who need to know Jesus Christ,
it's Pentecost all over again. It IS right all of a sudden. It is all that is
required, and everything that is needed, for the Spirit to work through us.
One of the names we give to the
Sacrament that we are about to receive this morning is “Holy Communion.” When we share in the bread and the cup, we do
this together. Regardless of our
diversities, our opinions, and our backgrounds, first and foremost, we are a
communion of brothers and sisters in Christ.
A holy communion. Thanks be to God!
.
1 comment:
I really enjoyed the sermon today. Thank you for taking the time to meet my friend, Tina. For her first visit to FUMC, the sermon could not have spoken more directly to her and her current situation. FUMC may very well become a part of her "fresh start" and I'm thankful I was able to connect her with such an amazing church home.
Thank you,
Wendy
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