Ephesians 1:11-14 Ordinary Time
How did you all celebrate the
fourth of July? We were reminded of the
birth of 0ur nation and we were reminded of these words: “We hold these truths to be self evident, that all men
are created equal, and are endowed by their creator with certain unalienable
rights, and that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of
happiness”. Perhaps you read George Will’s
column on the fourth of July from Mecklenburg North Carolina.
He points out that in May 1775, more than a year before Congress agreed
to publish the Declaration of Independence, Mecklenburg County North Carolina
had already declared their independence.
Mecklenburg
County was mostly Presbyterians,
and they were incensed by the Marriage and Vestry acts of 1769. The parliament in London made it illegal to preach or perform marriages
without a license, and licenses were reserved for the Church of England, and
Presbyterian pastors were fined if they performed a marriage. Mecklenburgers were incensed by these laws,
and when they received word of blood shed at Lexington
and Concord they declared “We, the citizens of Mecklenburg County do hereby dissolve the political
bonds which have connected us to the mother country. We do hereby declare ourselves a free and
independent people to the maintenance of which independence we solemnly pledge
to each other our lives, our fortunes, and our most sacred honor.” Thus did a settlement on the fringes of the British Empire declare war on that empire. No wonder that members of parliament in London referred to the
American Revolution as “that Presbyterian rebellion.”
We want such foundational truths as
we find in the declaration of independence to be in granite, unchanging,
inflexible, and therefore dependable, but he meaning of this self evident truth
“that all men are created equal” changed over the more than two centuries since
our nation was established, and “All men” which originally meant white men is
now extended to women and people of color, and we are far more inclusive today
than we were 230 years ago.
Paul had a concern for being more
inclusive too, for he understood God intended the Gospel for all, and to
include gentiles as well as the children of Abraham.
Hear again these words from
Ephesians: “We who first hoped in Christ have been
destined and appointed to live for his glory.
In Christ you also,
who have heard the word of truth, the
good news of your salvation, and have believed in Christ, were sealed
with the promise of the Holy Spirit”.
Note the “we” and “you” in this
verse. We Jews who first hoped in this
new truth of God’s self-revelation in Christ, but now you gentiles have also
received this truth. Hold on to it! This letter to the Ephesians is a plea to
Jews and gentile to recognize God has called all of us to be part of the
household of God. All of us, Jews are
now enlightened by this news, and we are now equal in God’s eyes. We hold on to this truth that God has made
all of equal, which has a familiar ring, doesn’t it? These newcomers to the faith were the Greeks,
out of culture renown for their philosophers, science, and art. People like us, that is. But the truth of God is something special,
not open to usual scientific investigation.
Rather, knowledge about God is something only God can reveal.
It is only the church that has the
mission to preserve this truth about how God has chosen to relate to us, and
this truth is the context for all other truth we know. There have been times in history when the
church was closed in its thinking.
Having taught that the earth is the center of the universe for
centuries, the church had difficulty hearing Galileo announce his evidence that
the earth revolved around the sun, and the church compelled him to say what he
knew was not true, while mumbling under his breath what he knew to be
true. How much better it would have been
for God and all God’s children had the church functioned like a real master
teacher and become a student of new truth.
It is the church that is mandated
to preserve this truth. The constitution of our church defines the six great
ends of the church as 1)the proclamation of the Gospel; 2) the nurture and
spiritual fellowship of the children of God; 3)the maintenance of divine
worship; 4) the preservation of truth; 5) the promotion of social
righteousness; and 6) the exhibition of
the Kingdom of God to the world. Today I
want to talk about the fourth: the preservation of the truth.
What is this truth? This truth we are talking about is that God,
the creator of all the worlds that are has chosen to relate to us, God’s
creatures as we are, and has sent us this special one, this Nazarene who lived
so briefly and died so violently 2,000 years ago, who enjoins us to live a
righteous and peaceful life, and who demonstrated to all the world the gracious
nature of God, and what it means to be fully human.
We proclaim this gospel to a world
which looks at the church and asks “Is it true?
This truth that God is a redeeming
God is a hard sell sometimes. Picture
this scene from a French novel where a physician is working in the children’s
ward of a cancer hospital. The doctor is
by the bedside of a little girl of 12 who has been fighting leukemia. She has been declining steadily and this day
the decline is precipitous and the end seems near. He goes and calls her parents and returns to
her bed and looks at her monitors. She
looks up from her drawn face and whispers “Am I going to die doctor? He looks at her face, the monitors, and down
at his feet. She whispers “I just want
to know”. Finally he looks at her and
says “I can’t know for sure, but I think yes” as a tears runs down her face and
tears also well up within him. He wants
to regain composure and goes to his office, shuts the door, and suddenly flings
his arms up in the air “Prove to me there is a God and I really shall
despair!” We can resonate with that
doctor’s anguish can’t we? How can our
message of a gracious God of love be true in a world where a child dies of
cancer or some other dread disease?
Let’s re-write that novel and add a
scene from real life, a little girl I knew in MN.
Her parents and sisters arrive and
go into her room. She whispers to them
what the doctor had said, and asks them to pray and they hold hands around her
bed and she leads them in prayer, thanking God for her family who have been
with her and for her all her life and in her illness. They softly sing a hymn they all know and the
doxology. Who has the truth here? What is
truth? Jesus told Pilate I have come to
bear witness to the truth. Pilate
cynically responds “What is truth?” and turns away from the one who is the very
embodiment of truth.
We hold this truth, not a self-evident truth, this
self-revelation that God has given us in Jesus the Christ, and this can be a
transforming experience for us when we take it seriously as God’s truth for
us. This truth has the power to change
lives.
The marvelous preacher H. H. Farmer
recounts an incident that suggests the compulsive power of this truth:
“Many years ago I was preaching on
the love of God; there was in the congregation an old Polish Jew who had
survived the Warsaw
ghetto uprising and the holocaust and after the war had converted to the
Christian faith. He came to me afterward
and said ‘You have no right to preach about the love of God until you have
seen, as I have, the blood of your family and friends flowing down the gutter
on a grey winter morning’. Farmer goes on
to say “I asked him how it was that, having seen such a massacre he had come to
believe in the love of God. The answer
he gave was that the Christian gospel first began to lay hold of him because it
bade him see God – the love of God – just where he was, just where he could not
but always be – in those blood stained streets and gutters that grey winter
morning. It bade him see the love of God
– not somewhere else, but in the midst of just that sort of thing, in the blood
and agony of Calvary. He did at least know, he said, that this was a message that grappled
with the facts; and then he went on to say something the sense of which I will
always remember though the words I have forgotten. He said ‘As I look at that man upon the
cross, as I heard him pray “Father forgive them for they know not what they do”
as I heard him cry in his anguish “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” I
knew that I was at a point of crisis and decision in my life; I knew that I
must make up my mind once and for all and either take my stand beside him and
share in his undefeated faith in God…or else fall finally into a bottomless pit
of bitterness, hatred, and unutterable despair.” I decided to take my place beside him and
share in his victory in God.”
“In Christ we have heard the word of truth, the good news for our
salvation, and have believed in Christ, were sealed with the promise of the
Holy Spirit”. Let us be among those who
preserve the truth and sing it on good days and bad, in a world that needs to
hear our song!
Amen