The Apostle Paul tells us that it is in Christ that we have obtained an
inheritance. This was in the opening verse of our Ephesians reading this
morning. When we first heard this, we might have been wondering what Paul meant
by that word, “inheritance.”
We
had to be a little patient because it’s a few verses later when Paul spells it
out for us. Paul writes, “This is the
pledge of our inheritance towards redemption as God’s own people, to the praise
of his glory.”
Our inheritance includes redemption. Redemption is a powerful word. It’s
at the center of the good news of our faith. Redemption means that we have been
rescued from sin and death through the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus
Christ. Redemption means that not even death can separate us from God’s eternal
presence.
When we stand at the graveside of a loved one, we hear these words of
hope and promise, “Almighty God, into
your hands we commend this person in sure and certain hope of resurrection to
eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord.”
I’ll never forget one of those times that I shared these words of hope
at a graveside service for one of our church members. It was a very cold and
cloudy winter day. Everybody was bundled up. When the cemetery service had
concluded, this elderly gentleman, now a widower continued to stay seated there
by the grave.
By
the look on his face, I knew he wanted to tell me and his loved ones something
very important. After several moments of
silence he said to all of us, “When you
were saying that prayer, the sun came out from behind you and it was shining so
brightly. And I felt a warmth.”
And I knew that by the way he told me this that he wasn’t referring only
to a physical warmth. He had felt a
spiritual warmth in that moment. The clouds of death and grief had given way to
an assurance of God’s presence at the top of that cold and blustery cemetery
hill.
I
nodded my head to indicate that I understood what he meant. And as he got up from his chair, he kept
repeating to himself, “It was the
strangest thing. It was the strangest
thing.”
The Apostle Paul wants us to know that even as we face the struggles and
pain of life, that God has given us an inheritance of redemption that can never
be take away from us. Later in our scripture passage, Paul calls it a glorious
inheritance. And it is glorious! It’s so
glorious that we don’t have to wait for this inheritance. We can have it in the
here and now. Paul says that this is made possible through the Holy Spirit
which is a pledge of our inheritance.
This past
February, Penny and I were standing in front of the historic St. Louis
Cathedral in the French Quarter of New Orleans on a sunny day enjoying our
three day get away. With the mighty Mississippi River in front of us and the
smell of those wonderful Big Easy beneigt treats in the air, we found ourselves
in the middle of an impromptu jazz concert there on the street. This was the
New Orleans we were hoping to experience.
The casually dressed five member jazz band was performing a very long version of "O When the Saints Go Marching In." During different times of the song, a band member would step out and offer his unique instrumental solo to the delight of the crowd. One young man who looked to be in his early 20s had a trumpet in one hand and a trombone in the other and he played them back and forth effortlessly during his masterful solo performance.
As the band continued to play, we
sat on a park bench and that's when I received the call about my aunt who had
been in failing health in Maryland. This was my mom's sister who just eight
months earlier had attended my mom's funeral. Aunt Isabelle & Uncle Bill
lived on a farm in Maryland.
Hospice was now caring
for Aunt Isabelle and the phone call was to let me know that she had just
passed away. My heart sank as I thought about these two sisters who were very
close to each other. Even in the midst of that sad moment, a smile came to my
face as the jazz band continued to play very loudly in the background, O when the saints go marching in, O
when the saints go marching in. O how I want to be in that number when the
saints go marching in.
I took comfort in knowing that they were now reunited in that glorious eternal kingdom where there is no more sickness, sadness, dementia, tears, or death. They were in a place of total peace and joy.
Looking back on that afternoon this past February when I received the phone call about the passing of my Aunt, I wonder if that was one of those sacramental moments when heaven and earth mysteriously overlapped there in front of the St. Louis Cathedral. For that brief moment in time, I experienced heaven's welcome of another of God's saints, New Orleans style.
An elderly widower feels an unexpected warmth at a cold cemetery which leaves him repeating to himself, “It was the strangest thing. It was the strangest thing.”
A pastor
receives a phone call about the death of a family member as a New Orleans jazz band
is performing, “O When the Saints Go Marching In.”
Yes, it is possible that these kinds of
things are just coincidences. But I think, it has something more to do with the
good news of our faith. Through Christ we can receive redemption from sin and
death. Through Christ, we can experience a glorious inheritance…
New Orleans
style.
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