Setting Sail: Following the North Star

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Setting Sail: Weighing Anchor

Matthew 8:18-22
June 15, 2014

Now when Jesus saw great crowds around him, he gave orders to go over to the other side. A scribe then approached and said, “Teacher, I will follow you wherever you go.” And Jesus said to him, “Foxes have holes, and birds of the air have nests; but the Son of Man has nowhere to lay his head.” Another of his disciples said to him, “Lord, first let me go and bury my father.” But Jesus said to him, “Follow me, and let the dead bury their own dead.”

            This is an odd passage. It really reflects badly on Jesus, making him seem very insensitive. One guy steps forward, pledging to follow him, and Jesus basically responds, “I’m a wanderer. You don’t want this kind of life.” Why would he discourage someone who wants to follow? The other, a disciple who goes unnamed, is grieving over his dead father. Jesus basically says, “So sorry for your loss. Now,… either come with me or forget it.” Is this how you treat the people who like you,… who want to follow you?

            Why do you think Jesus was so mean? This seems to go against the whole image we have of him as a man of deep love and sensitivity. Was he really that insensitive? Was he trying to discourage his followers? Is this the way to build a lasting movement?

            Actually, I think he was trying to give a very blunt message to those who say they want to serve God: If you’re going to sail with me, you have to pull up your anchor, serve God, and trust the ways of the Spirit.

            I don’t know if you’ve ever heard this phrase, or said it yourself, but when I was younger I used to hear people say, “I want the church to be my anchor.” I don’t know that people still say or think it, but it’s still a common sentiment among many Christians today, even if they don’t say it the same way.

            What do you think it means when we say that we want the church or our faith to be an anchor? It means that in an ever-changing world, people want their church and their faith to be the one thing that’s constant. They don’t want change. Why? Because in a world of change, where else can we be safe? Think about the way the world is today. Everything constantly changes. For example, those of us who, in the 1970s and 80s were up on the latest audio technology, who had the best turntable, the best tuner and amplifier, and the greatest set of Boston Acoustics speakers, are now intimidated by our smart phones because we feel like they are so much smarter than we are. There has been more change in the past 40 years than in the previous 200. The change from horses to cars, or from radios to televisions, has not been nowhere near as dramatic as the technological changes in terms of the sheer access to information, entertainment, news, communication, travel, and so much more. When life changes this rapidly and dramatically, what are the constants? People want something safe.

            The desire for the church, religion, and faith to be an anchor is a problem, though. The problem is that if your faith or your church is an anchor, your ship really isn’t doing what it’s intended to do. What are the reasons you drop an anchor? It is to be in the harbor as you either load up or unload cargo. Or it is to be repaired and repainted. When a ship is at anchor, it is not really serving its purpose. The purpose of a ship is to be at sea—either going to new places, bringing goods and services to new places, or bringing people to new places. A church that is an anchor is doing none of those things. It does not serve others, it does not bring God to others, and it does not help us to move to where God is calling us to go.

            The Christian life is meant to be like a ship at sea where we’re willing to go where the Spirit takes us. But if we stay at harbor, we never really fulfill our purpose. In fact, if we stay at harbor, we are in one of the most dangerous places to be. It may feel safe, but if we are at anchor and a storm hits, we increase the danger of shipwreck and destruction exponentially. We are too close to shore, which means our ship could be tossed onto the shore and broken. The anchor also holds us in place while the waves crash, meaning that there is also a significant danger of the ship being pulled under the waves.

            Even if the ship goes a bit offshore and anchors near the shore, it can be dangerous. There’s the possibility of being tossed onto the rocks. The safest place for a ship is actually out at sea in a storm. It is frightening. It can make us sick from the motion. It can feel extremely dangerous. But it is much safer than being at harbor and at anchor. It is also much truer to the spiritual life. Sailing on the winds of the Spirit can lead us to stormy times. Just because we say “yes” to God doesn’t mean that everything will go well. It does mean that God will be with us to see us through. If we try too hard to keep the church at anchor, or our lives at anchor, we end up serving little purpose and not serving God.

            We’re called to be a people who are willing to sail on new adventures with God. A ship’s purpose is to serve, and so is ours. I see how members of Calvin Church keep the church sailing all the time. For example, two of our members, Kim Boyd and Kathy Efaw, are heading to Ghana on a mission trip this summer. They are willing to pull up anchor and set sail for a completely new place with completely new experiences. In the next month we will be sending mission trips to Camp Westminster in Michigan where are our teens will help the camp in its mission to reach out to inner city children. Then we’ll send another mission trip to the Wayside mission in Louisville, Kentucky to help in their ministry to the homeless and broken.

            This setting sail isn’t just about going somewhere else. This fall we are starting a new partnership with EnCompass Point, an afterschool program for teens between the ages of 12 and 16. It is a ministry to children who are often left alone at home in the afterschool hours—hours when teens are most likely to engage in risky behavior, drug experimentation, and crimes. We are trying to create a safe place for teens to be during those critical hours in a program that offers adult mentors, tutoring, games, teaching healthy living, and more.

            How did this program get started? It got started because one of our newer members, Rich Gigliotti (he and his wife, Ashley, just had their first baby this past Monday), felt a calling to help teens who were basically being ignored. He has taken a chance to set sail rather than to stay safe at harbor. This is an opportunity for you, also, to set sail. During the summer we will be looking for volunteers who can offer to be part of the program for one, two, three, four, or five afternoons a week. All you have to do is to be a person who cares about making a difference in teens’ lives.

            Another group that set sail is a choir that many of our members belong to, the Circle of Friends Choir. This is a choir that developed out of a very bad situation when they felt they could no longer continue as a church choir in another church in the area after their director, David English, was asked to step down. Many members of that choir felt they could no longer remain in the church. The fifteen-member choir, no longer part of a church, could have folded up and licked their wounds, looking for any safe harbor to plop anchor in. Instead, they decided to become a community choir serving as a mission to other churches, organizations, and charitable opportunities. Many of their members, including their director, belong to Calvin Presbyterian Church, but many don’t. It is not our church’s choir, even though they rehearse here. They have grown to be a choir of almost forty members who are incredible. They sing old songs. They sing new songs. They have a creative flair that is wonderful. And they make a difference for others by being a choir intended to serve others. This is weighing anchor and setting sail, even if it means setting sail out of the storms.

            This kind of pulling up anchor and setting sail is what our passage is all about. Jesus wasn’t trying to be mean or insensitive. He was simply telling the scribe that sailing with him in serving God was going to be difficult, not easy, and he had to be ready to sleep on the ground, eat crappy food, and wander as they served God together. To the other disciple he was saying that there is little time, and they had work to do with the living to prepare them for life after death, as well as for life in this life. He wasn’t being insensitive, he was telling them all to make sure they had their priorities.

            This passage arrives in Matthew 8 amidst of a series of passages about faith. First there was a passage in which a leper, an outcast, comes to Jesus for healing. Then a centurion, a soldier in command of over 80 men, comes to Jesus asking that his servant be healed. Jesus tells him that it will take time for him to get to his house. The centurion replies that Jesus is a commander much like himself, and that all Jesus has to do is to command that the servant be made well and he would be healed. Jesus proclaims this man, a pagan, to have more faith than all the Jews of Israel.

            Then comes our passage, telling us that we need to be ready to follow in faith no matter what happens. This is followed by a passage in which Jesus and the disciples are in a boat on the Sea of Galilee. A terrible storm rises up, and the ship is tossed to and fro as Jesus rests in the bow asleep. The disciples wake him up, asking him to still the storm. Jesus stills the storm, and then criticizes them for having such little faith and not trusting that God would care for them.

            Our passage for today comes in the midst of all that, and it is a passage that tells the scribe and disciple that if they are to follow in faith, they need to be willing to make faith in God the priority, not security and safety. This is our call, too. We are called to pull up our anchors, whatever that means for each of us, and to find a way to serve God.

            Amen.

Setting Sail: Catching the Wind

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Following Visions

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Act 16:6-10
June 1, 2014


They went through the region of Phrygia and Galatia, having been forbidden by the Holy Spirit to speak the word in Asia. When they had come opposite Mysia, they attempted to go into Bithynia, but the Spirit of Jesus did not allow them; so, passing by Mysia, they went down to Troas. During the night Paul had a vision: there stood a man of Macedonia pleading with him and saying, “Come over to Macedonia and help us.” When he had seen the vision, we immediately tried to cross over to Macedonia, being convinced that God had called us to proclaim the good news to them.

            Have you ever read a book that changed your life? I’m not talking about that self-help book that got you through a crisis, or a technical book that helped you figure out your career. I’m talking about the book that changed everything because after you read it you no longer saw life the same way. Your perspective on people, work, the world, and God changed. For me, that book was Catherine Marshall’s book, Beyond Ourselves.

            What made this book so life-changing for me was her basic premise that God is here, God wants to make a difference in our lives, and all we have to do is open up, which she then demonstrated through story after story. At the center of her book were these three basic ideas:
1.    God knows the past, present, and future, and knows what’s best for us.
  1. God loves us so much that God wants to guide us to what’s right.
  2. God can communicate to us what’s right, but we have to listen

            Marshall discovered these principles almost by accident. She says that her first big, and somewhat trivial, experience of these ideas came about when she tried to hang some curtains. She had seen curtains hung a certain way in a magazine and wanted to hang them in a similar way. No matter what she did, though, the curtain rod kept bowing. She invited a friend over to help her, and after an hour neither could figure it out. After her friend left, she tried again, but soon became discouraged. Going up to her bedroom she cried in frustration. She lied on the bed very still, and she heard a voice inside her say, “Do it this way,” and she sensed a series of steps she was to do. She went downstairs and did it. It was perfect. She felt that it was God.

            She even admits that this is SO trivial, yet she noticed in it that God seems to want to be part of even the trivial moments of our lives. She discovered God’s presence more profoundly in a healing experience she had that changed her life. In her thirties she contracted tuberculosis, and it slowly degraded her life. Tuberculosis is a disease of the lungs that slowly kills. It’s rare now because of the many antibiotics we have that cure people of tuberculosis. When she got it in the 40s, there wasn’t much treatment for it. For her, it eventually rendered her bedridden. She became helpless.

            She had been reading about the need to relinquish and surrender ourselves to God, so she decided to do so. Mustering all the strength she had while spending the summer in Cape Cod, she forced herself out of her bed. With all the energy she had left, walked to the beach. There she started praying. She began by confessing to God, telling God about her doubts, fears, and lack of faith. She offered herself to God and said that she would serve God no matter what happened in her life. Finally, she asked God for healing. Afterwards, feeling a bit more energetic and as though God was in her life, she walked back to her bed. 

            Over the next few months, she continued to pray for healing, and as she did she slowly recovered. The strength returned, and one year later there was no sign of the tuberculosis in her lungs. She was healed.
           
            What made an impact on me wasn’t just this experience, but how she reflected on it afterwards: “It was not until after my entering-in experience in 1944 that the inner Voice became a reality to me. Apparently this surrender of self is necessary groundwork, since not even God can lead us until we want to be led. It is as if we are given an inner receiving set at birth, but the set is not tuned in until we actively turn our lives over to God.”

            Catherine Marshall led me to discover amazing Christians I hadn’t heard of before--people like George Müller, who started an orphanage based on prayer in the 1850s, and over 40 years grew from 4 orphans to over 2050. She led me to people like Brother Lawrence, who wrote about turning everything into prayer—sweeping floors, washing dishes, and more.

            Her writings led me to experience similar things, and it led me to try her approach to life and ministry, which led us at Calvin Presbyterian Church to experience similar things. The fact is that Calvin Presbyterian Church has been a church that has grown because we live by Catherine Marshall’s principles.

            It’s these principles, and others like it that, have led us to our mission to Trinity Presbyterian Church, which we are embarking on today. We are helping Trinity to recover from a crisis that’s led them to shrink from 200 members to 17 over a three-year period. And we are doing it because we believe God is both calling us, and because God has great things in store for Trinity if we are willing to join God in what God is doing.

            One of the people who has also inspired me the way Marshall did is a Southern Baptist writer (a Canadian one,… go figure) named Henry Blackaby. He has listed Seven Realities of Experiencing God that have guided me in my life and ministry, and that speak to both what we try to do at Calvin Church and are going to try at Trinity Church. He realities are:

1.    God is always working around you.
2.    God pursues a continuing love relationship that is real and personal.
3.    God invites you to become involved with Him in His work.
4.    God speaks by the Holy Spirit through the Bible, prayer, circumstances, and the church to reveal Himself, His purposes, and His ways.
5.    God’s invitation for you to work with Him always leads you to a crisis of belief that requires faith and action.
6.    You must make major adjustments in your life to join God in what He is doing.
7.    You come to know God by experience as you obey Him and He accomplishes His work through you. 

            I want you to focus most on numbers 5 & 6. Too many people think doing what God works with us, life gets easier. What this says is that often doing what God wants leads us to a crisis, and that crisis moves us to number 6. When we seek to do what God wants, we have to adjust our lives.

            This is what we are doing with Trinity Church. They’ve gone through a crisis of faith and action. They’ve prayed. We’ve joined them in prayer, and we are adjusting ourselves to join them in what God is doing there and here. We have to change. Trinity has to change. We all have to adjust to what God is doing.

            God has plans for Trinity Presbyterian Church. God has plans for Calvin Presbyterian Church. What we are doing there isn’t the beginning, but it is the next big step. We are all being called forward, and God has great things planned, but we can only go forward if we are willing to join God in what God is doing.

            Amen.