Wednesday, December 11, 2013

And a Little Child Shall Lead Them

Isaiah 11:1-10

December 8, 2013

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            If life were recorded on a scorecard; if everything you did, and everything you had were tallied with check marks in boxes; then the scorecards of Leonard and Hazel Wiles would have been unmarked save for one check.  They had each other.  But, even that relationship was shaky.  Other than each other though, they had little to show for their lives.

            Neither had much education. They had little money, and even less hope.  Each had been married and divorced.  Each came from family backgrounds, which were wastelands of love.  Each had seen their lives spiral downward because of the bottle.  Alcohol provided a fog to cover their pain.

            Their marriage bore no children, which was probably just as well, because it is hard to raise a family on next to nothing.  She was in her forties, and he was in his mid fifties.

            They lived their lives on a flat gray plane, no color, and no spark, empty of any real meaning or purpose.  Their prison had no walls and no bars; yet still they dragged the heavy chains of disappointment, discouragement, and depression.

            A hundred miles away, another life squeaked into existence.  His name was Andy.  He was a thalidomide child.  His mother, when she was carrying him had used a prescription drug called thalidomide, which the medical world said was safe and beneficial during pregnancy.  The medical world was wrong. 

            Hundreds of babies were born with severe birth defects.  Andy was one of the worst.  He had a strong, active and healthy mind; but he no arms and no legs.  Abandoned by his mother and father because of his disability he lived a life trapped…trapped by his physical infirmities, trapped by the institution in which he lived; trapped because no one would love him.  He was a helpless, completely helpless child.

            The lives of the Wiles’ and Andy existed oblivious to each other for six years.  Then through a wildly coincidental series of events, the Wiles’ became the guardians of Andy for legal purposes only.  They were the ones who needed to sign the papers to keep Andy institutionalized.  It was a simple formality.  They did not even have to see him.  It could be done through the mail.

            After a while, this shallow relationship began to tickle Leonard’s mind.  He began to wonder what the boy was like.  So, one day he took a train to visit and see the child with no arms and no legs.  The seeds of friendship formed.  On the way home, Leonard felt good.  He had done something nice for someone else with no thought of any return.  Other visits followed.  They went on outings, to cafes and such.  Then one day Leonard brought Andy home for an overnight visit.

            Something began to happen.  The spark, the enthusiasm for life this limbless child had began to rub off on Hazel as well.  And their lives for the first time began to have color, began to have hope, and began to have purpose, because their lives for the first time were really beginning to be shaped by love.  In their efforts to help Andy overcome some of the limitations of his disability, they also began to overcome some of their own limitations.  Everything about their lives turned around.  They were transformed, changed by the life of this little child.[1]

            The Bible puts it this way, “The wolf shall dwell with the lamb, and the leopard shall lie down with the kid, and a little child shall lead them.”[2]

            These words, were of course, originally spoken to declare that the Messiah would come into our world as a little child, and that in the kingdom of God, the attitude of a child will become the modis operandi or “method of operating among God’s people.   “Whoever does not receive the kingdom of God like a child”, Jesus said, “shall not enter it.”[3]

            These words, “and a little child shall lead them” are spoken as a promise to each succeeding generation at Christmas. The promise is that the wolf shall lie down with the lamb, that enemies shall live in peace, that those who suffer from internal turmoil shall be healed.  But, how is that possible?  How is it that a child can bring such redemption?  How can such a child re-order life like that?  How can we understand the power of Bethlehem?

            Let’s go back to that couple who thought they had nothing going for them, and a limbless child who didn’t have anything going for him.  Maybe we’ll see how that’s done.

            In the transformation, which took place in these three lives, three things happened, three things that should be happening in Christian lives everyday.

            First, Andy, the helpless child brought out the best, the very best in two people who had only seen the worst in life.  Because he needed them, they soon saw that they also needed him. He helped them to reach a higher potential, a greater goal.  They extended themselves; they stretched themselves beyond all the limits they ever set for themselves.

            Because of   Andy’s limitations, Leonard became an inventor.  At 55 years of age he took up a new skill. He tinkered and studied and planned and worked so he was able to create a machine that would help Andy become more mobile.

            And Hazel, in her late 40’s now became an instant mother.  More than that, she became a mother to a child that many saw as repulsive.  She bathed, disciplined, and loved a child that many saw as unlovable.

            Yet, not only did their skills and knowledge increase; but so also did their ability to give, their inclination to help, and their desire to love.  Andy is not the only child to bring that out in people.

            One of the things I remember when we lived in Pittsburgh and miss about Christmas back then was following the KDKA Christmas drive for Children’s hospital.  There, nearly the whole broadcast day for a week or more was dedicated to raising money for the children.  They set up the announcer’s booth in an open-air storefront and anyone who brought in any contribution at all could get on the radio.  And thousands of people come with money they’ve collected at school or work or in their neighborhoods; singing carols and selling cookies.

            When they get on the radio they would call out “Hi” to Mom and Dad, or they would talk about how they raised the money, and maybe they’d even sing a Christmas carol.

            Now, I majored in Broadcasting at Penn State, and according to every principle I learned, this should have made for lousy radio, because these ordinary people who would find themselves on the air often couldn’t sing…at all.  Many of them couldn’t really talk or make coherent sentences.   They didn’t come close to the voices of the professional announcers. But, it didn’t matter, because these people have stood out in the cold, they extended themselves, they stretched themselves, they gave of themselves so that children might be given a chance at life.  That is good radio.  I think it is great radio.

            “And a little child shall lead them…” 

Leonard and Hazel Wiles found that out.  They discovered they could do more than they thought they could.  But, they also discovered something else.  They found a purpose to their lives.  They came to see that life does not simply exist for the receiving and acquiring.  They discovered that eternal truth that God has been trying to impress upon stubborn hearts since time began.  That simple fundamental truth is that the joy of living does not rest in how much you get, but in how much you give.  Sometimes you discover that these opportunities come when you least expect them.

            Dr. Bryant Kirkland, former pastor of the Fifth Avenue Presbyterian Church in New York City, tells of traveling to preach on the West Coast one winter:  “I needed the time on that three hour flight to study and prepare”, he said, “so I buckled down and let everyone near me feel the tension.  I sent out by my attitude a message – don’t bother me, I’m a busy man with places to go and work to do.” 

When you are traveling by yourself you don’t really get to choose who will sit in the seat next to you.  In this instance a young woman and her toddler child slipped into the seat next to his.  Dr. Kirkland thought to himself, “This will be difficult”. So, he said, “I kept a straight face, stared at my sermon notes, and looked very Presbyterian.”  That lasted for about six minutes.  Pretty soon, this little boy began fussing around.  “Man, man,” he cooed at me and strectched out his arms.  That was it.  “I couldn’t resist.  So, I put my sermon back into the briefcase and picked him up out of the seat and just loved him all the way across the country.  When we landed in Los Angeles, his mother said to me, “Thank you for doing that.  He lost his father not long ago, and he has no man to muss him up like that and love him.  Thank you so very much.”  And Dr. Kirkland said that he didn’t realize how much joy and peace that little boy had brought into his own heart until he was back in that airport crowd.  And a “little child led him” when he least expected it.

            Finally, the Wiles learned something, gained something they thought they could never have.  That is hope.  In circumstances that would seem to knock anyone down, which would seem to kill all hope, in circumstances which could seem to get no worse; Hazel and Leonard Wiles learned to have hope in the future.

            Each day brought a new challenge.  How much more can Andy learn to do?  How much more can we learn to do?  Their outlook, their perspective, and their lives were now oriented toward the future.  Rather than focusing on what Andy couldn’t do, they imagined, they tried to think of what he and they could do.  When they did that they left behind their self-imposed limitations.

            In the midst of financial difficulties, in the midst of advancing years, in the midst of Andy’s disabilities, they all learned to hope.

            If you ever tried to put yourself in the Bethlehem scene, you can do no less.  In the midst of a country oppressed by Roman rule, in the midst of a province governed by a jealous ruler who wanted to see that child dead, in the midst of a cold stable, in the midst of all this, a child is born who brought a new hope for us all.  We have hope in the future because the future that child brings.[4]

            It is that future that each of us needs to hold onto.  That child grew up.  He no longer lies peacefully in a manger.  He grew up.  He preached, he healed, and he laid down his life for you and for me.  Because He lives, you and I also live lives of purpose and hope and love.

            Jesus stretches us.  He helps us to extend ourselves beyond the limits we have set on ourselves.  He tames the wolf within us so that it may live with the lamb within us.

            The transformation is often quiet.  Its power is like that of a child.  It is not coercive.  It does not command.  Rather it beckons.  It calls to us like the cry of a child.  Anyone who has ever heard that cry recognizes the power it has.  People will move heaven and earth because of it.  This is the lesson learned by Leonard and Hazel.  It is one we should all remember.

            So, if you will be fortunate enough to celebrate your Christmas in the presence of a young child, count your blessings.  If not.  If children are grown and gone; remember that it is the Christ child whose birth we celebrate who calls you forward and lifts you upward.

            “The wolf shall dwell with the lamb, and the leopard shall lie down the with kid, and the calf and the lion and the fatling together, and a little child shall lead us.”

                       
Let us pray:

            God, our Father, help us to truly be your children.  Help us, where we need it, to become like children in our approach to life and to our faith. We ask now that if there is anyone here who needs to be renewed in Jesus Christ that Your Spirit will touch that person’s life right now, and that the change will take place.  We pray in Christ’s name.  Amen

           
             

           





[1] Wallace, Margorie, Robson, Michael: ”On Giant’s Shoulders”. Reader’s Digest, September 1978, pp 219
[2] Isaiah 11:6
[3] Mark 10:15
[4] Matthew 2:16

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Dressing Up for Christmas

Romans 13:11-14

December 1, 2013

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There are in every life - moments that matter.  There are times we remember with great clarity: the first day of school, your first kiss, the day you were married.  You may even remember “the hour you first believed”.  Some can tell you to the second, the moment they came to believe that Jesus Christ was and is who he said he was, “the son of the living God”. (Matthew 16:17)  They can tell you on which day they made their confession of faith.  For others that moment is more blurred; and memories not so clear; but its impact is just as profound. 

There is a spiritual birthday for all who claim Christ; but like all birthdays, they mark only the beginning of life; the beginning of a succession of moments that matter. The time that we have is a gift from God.  It is a gift which moves and matters.  It takes us from one place and leads us to another; and it carries with it meaning and purpose.

“Salvation is nearer to us now than when we first believed”; so take care you do not squander the time you have left.  God can help you make the most of it; make it matter. So, use your time wisely; for it is a most precious gift.  Before we begin to unwrap this gift; let us pray:

God of Eternity; you have placed within each of us a spark of eternity, a glimpse of what is to come.  Yet, we remain trapped in time which seems too short and goes by too fast.  So, we pack the hours and days with activities, with things to do, places to go, and people to see.  Yet, at the end of the day or even our lives we look back and wonder - what was it all for.

Awaken us to the opportunities you place before us; strengthen us for the challenges ahead.  Help us to make our moments matter as we learn to live and love through Jesus Christ.  Amen.

Today is the first Sunday in Advent. That means there are twenty-four days to Christmas.  Now, if you are a young child anxiously waiting for a favorite toy or game that will feel like an eternity. Time will tick away through molasses. The very young ones may wake up every morning and ask “Is it Christmas yet?”  If you are a parent or especially if you are a grandparent, time will fly faster than Santa’s sleigh. You have so much to do and prepare for that before you can blink an eye it will be here.

We all have different experiences with time. About thirty years ago, I had the opportunity of staying with a Jamaican friend and his family deep in the mountains some twenty miles south of Montego Bay.  That’s where I learned that there are two kinds of time.  There is obsessive-compulsive, calendar watching, clock winding, be there five minutes early, northern American time - and then there is Jamaican time.

Now, Jamaican time ignores the clock and barely acknowledges the calendar.  “I’ll pick you up outside the Sandals Resort at three o’clock” really means “look for me about four, but it will probably be five.”  My friend didn’t leave me waiting to be rude.  For him it was not a matter of control or exerting power.  It was not done out of a feeling of self-importance; of thinking that his time was more important than mine. Rather, I discovered his view of time was formed by his tendency to become “lost in the moment”. That is, he gave his full attention to the people he was with and the activity in which he was involved.  He was so present to the moment that he was living now that he didn’t think much about the next moment until this one is over.



Contrast that with the view of time which dominates our community especially at Christmas. We will fill up our calendars, trying to fit as much activity as possible into the time we have. We will check off our to-do lists with frantic urgency.  Yet, at the end of the day, or year, or at the end of our lives we wonder with great anxiety if we have really lived or if we have just gone through the motions. We are always thinking about the next thing we’re supposed to do, or the next person we’re supposed to see, or the next place we’re supposed to go. As a result, we are not really present to the people we are with right now. We become like those annoying people we meet at cocktail parties whose eyes are always scanning the room looking for someone more important to talk to.  We move through life as if on autopilot; not really paying attention.

To that way of thinking, to that way of living Paul says, “Love is the fulfilling of the law.  So, be aware of what hour it is, how it is full time now for you to wake up.  For salvation is nearer to us now than when we first believed.” (Romans 13:10-11) In other words, be present to the people you are with; be aware of what God is doing; and cherish the time you have.  The Greek word for this view of time is “Kairos”.

Kairos is God’s time, the existential moment of opportunity and decision.” (Stott, John: Romans pg 351) It differs from another Greek word for time - “chronos”; from which we get our word chronometer or clock. Chronos simply refers to minutes, one piled upon another.  Chronos is the second hand slowing to a crawl at two-thirty on a Friday afternoon.  Chronos is being stuck in traffic when you are already late for an important appointment.  Chronos is a boring preacher who never seems to get to the point. (Now, I can see many of you are puzzled by this last statement; but believe me, this does happen --- in other churches, of course.)

“Kairos” on the other hand refers to those moments that matter; that make a difference.  The hands on the clock seem to spin faster during those Kairos moments.  Time telescopes because we become less aware of ourselves and more aware of the people and circumstance around us.  We become more present to one another.

 Shortly, we will enter into one of those moments that matter.  We stop what we’re doing.  We pause from the hustle and bustle; hopefully we even keep from reflexively checking our watches in order to be “present unto the Lord.” 

It is an appointment that Jesus makes with us. “Wherever two or three are gathered in my name, there will I be.” (Matthew 18:20) The Lord’s Supper is our standing appointment to be present to the Lord; because he promised he would be present unto us. The Lord’s Supper is that in-between time, the transition between the Kingdom of the world in which we live and the Kingdom of God into which we will soon enter. It can be one of those moments which move us from one place to another; which provide meaning and purpose.



When you taste the bread; when you drink the cup Christ reminds you of what he has done; the sacrifice he has made for you; and he calls you to respond to that precious gift by returning to Him the time he has already given you.  The Lord’s Supper reminds us of what Christ has done; focuses us on what Christ is doing; and calls us forward to what he promises will yet be.  It is about our past, our present, and our future.

This is what the apostle meant when he said, “the night is far gone, the day is at hand.  Let us then cast off the works of darkness and put on the armor of light.” (Romans 13:12)

Now most of us think it is darkness not light that will protect us. If someone doesn’t see what we are doing we think we will be safe.  That’s why students sit in the back of class. When the teacher asks a question they do not know the answer to, they will shift in their chairs to hide behind the student in front of them figuring that if the teacher doesn’t see me the teacher will not call on me.

That’s why some people look around when they ding someone’s bumper in the parking lot. They figure if no one saw it they can get away with it.  They can walk away from it. Darkness they think will be their friend.

But, sometimes it is not. If you are walking down a dark alley late at night in a neighborhood you do not know, you look for the light, you run to the light because you know it is the light that will protect you. People are less likely to hurt you in the light of day, less likely to do you harm if everyone else can see.

It is light that protects us and so Paul wrote put on the armor of light and later clarifies what that means, “put on the Lord Jesus Christ”.

This is the time of the year, when people will put on their Christmas clothes of red and green.  They will wear the Christmas ties and their Christmas socks and some will don their Christmas sweaters.  That’s how we put on Christmas, but how do we put on Christ?

Paul tells us in the letter he wrote to the church in Colossae, “Therefore, as God's chosen people, holy and dearly loved, clothe yourselves with compassion, kindness, humility, gentleness and patience.” (Colossians 3:12) The old bumper sticker summed it up.  Ask yourself WWJD?  In every circumstance, in every trial, in every temptation, “What would Jesus do?”

As we move toward our Christmas celebration we will become increasingly time conscious; when in fact, we should become more Christ conscious. In a Santa Claus world this is not easy. Few television programs let Christ into their holiday shows. The gift giving idea sold by department stores is not connected at all with the gifts of the Magi offered to a new born King; but is instead interwoven with presents we give to each other.

Yet, if the season is to have any impact on our lives at all it will be when those “kairos” moments break through the “chronos”.  It will be when we cast off the works of darkness and put on the armor of light that we will better catch a glimpse of God moving in our lives.

Thirty years ago, while waiting outside the Sandal’s Resort for my friend who said he’d pick me up at three; I learned the difference between the “chronos” and “kairos” view of time.  I never did adopt the Jamaican view.  I fret if I’m late, I keep a calendar and check my watch; but since then I’ve tried to recognize those “kairos” moments that God gives. These are the moments that give our faith muscle.  These are the moments that lift our eyes upward.  These are the moments that keep us facing forward. 

 It demands a spiritual awareness.  It requires you be “present unto the Lord.”  Jesus has made an appointment with you; and in a few moments he will keep that appointment as he promised.  Somehow in the mystery of this Holy Supper Christ will be you.  Awaken to his presence in your life as you remember what He has done; as you open your eyes to what He is doing; and as you hold onto the promises He has made for your future; for salvation is nearer now than when you first believed.

Let us pray:

            Almighty God, who came to us long ago in the birth of Jesus Christ, be born in us anew today by the power of your Holy Spirit.  We offer our lives as home to you and ask for grace and strength to live as you faithful, joyful children always. Amen


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