Oct 05 2011
Sermon: Are you Ready? (Steve Higgins)
SERMON FOR OCTOBER 2ND 2011
A couple of weeks ago, we were having our lunch like any other normal day, and we received bad news.
Terrible news, the kind all parents have nightmares about.
Our old friends in Narembeen had lost their youngest son in a dreadful car accident the previous evening.
It was in truth an horrific accident with Adrian left dead, and the others in the car critically injured and lost,…… unable to explain to anyone where they were, ………so they waited while the emergency services frantically searched for them through the night.
What followed was a harrowing week for our friends as they tried to deal with it all and arrange for the funeral.
But as often happens in these situations, tragedy bought the best out of everyone. They were swamped with love……… from their church family
from their actual family………. and from the community.
The sheep were crutched, the paddocks were sprayed, meals were delivered along with a constant stream of visits, phone calls and messaged of support.
The funeral was like nothing I’ve experienced before.
It was a big one, maybe 6-700 people.
The church was full, the church hall via a video link was full,
there were people crowded outside.
The service had moments of abject misery as his siblings gave eulogies but as the service progressed a picture emerged of an amazing young man who had excelled in all areas of life, from his career, his church life and mission activity, sport, community service, philanthropy, and social activity.
A procession of over 100 cars proceeded to the cemetery where we were greeted to a 100m long guard of honour made up of police, fire brigade, St Johns ambulance, players from at least four teams in the hockey association, work mates and possibly more.
All this for a man who turned 21 just 3 weeks before his death.
This was a death that made you think a lot about life.
For those of you who know me well you will understand that mornings are not my best times.
You could say I’m a bit fragile in the mornings.
It takes a lot of concentration for me to get dressed properly.
It drains me ……coping with the complexities of boiling the kettle for my cup of tea, …………and choosing which breakfast cereal to eat, which spread to put on my toast.
If it wasn’t for my darling wife, helping me through this maze of morning activity I could end up out in the paddock half dressed, hungry and very disoriented.
If you have this mental picture in mind can you imagine my shock the morning after the funeral to read this on Luke’s nutri-grain packet.
“When the time comes ………
will you be ready.”
Repeat………
Now this is heavy, this is real heavy.
My eyes are now wide open and clear.
I’m grabbing the packet and reading it again to make sure that’s what it says.
I’m rushing around trying to find someone else to read it to make sure it’s not a dream ………that God is not talking to just me in some divine revelation.
But no, it was there all right.
There’s nothing like the death of a friend to make you think a lot about life is there.
It’s interesting how God works.
The lectionary reading for today comes to us from Philippians 3:4-14
I noted with interest that a lot of sermons are written on this passage, I saw a list of 158 one site on the net.
Because I’m not a great biblical scholar I like to read other sermons to give me an idea on how others interpret the passages.
But in this case, perhaps because of my recent experiences , I think they all kind of glossed over the passage a bit.
It was the lead into a motivational pep talk for a new years day service drawing on that theme Paul develops ;
in pressing on……..in striving towards the goal.
It’s a valid theme ….to refocus, to rededicate…. but there is more to it I think.
Much more.
If you read the book of Philippians, Paul clearly has a soft spot for the church in Philippi.
He has visited them several times and grown to love the congregation there.
In verse 3 of chapter 1 he say’s
“I thank my God every time I remember you”
Isn’t that awesome!
What an endorsement of the people from a guy like Paul.
Although I have often wondered what Paul would have been like in the flesh.
I had a friend called Ray in my youth.
He had a kind of restless energy and he was full of zeal.
He was relentless in his efforts to drive us to greater levels of commitment and service to Christ, or to football, or to cricket, or whatever it was.
You had to admire him, and he was a good mate, but he really could drive you mad.
I think Paul might have been a bit like that.
When he was with you ……..life was like an extreme sport……
just full on and dangerous
And when he moved on everyone took a breath and rested.
When he wrote the church a letter all the elders had to sit down for a week and absorb all the stuff that he was saying, all the deep and meaningful.
They had to brace for the verbal serve, the not very subtle illustrations of where they had gone off the rails.
This was Paul the apostle, Paul the theologian, evangelist and crusader.
There was some debate in the commentaries I read,….. but general agreement that when Paul wrote this letter he was in prison.
It is quite likely he was in prison in Rome where he was for held for 2 years and waiting for the outcome of his trial, which probably was going to be bad.
Philippi is about 6 weeks travel from Rome so it’s not that easy for the congregation to support him and not that easy to pass messages on.
Paul knows that his time is possibly up, and these are likely his last words to his friends in Philippi.
When you put it this context, this is not about new years resolutions.
This is about life and death.
This is messages on the nutri-grain box
“When the time comes will you be ready.”
In the verses leading up to our reading Paul is addressing an issue which has arisen in the congregation and it is the trend of self justification.
If I understand the issue correctly it is a timeless issue.
If we’ve done this good deed, if we’ve acted that way, if we’ve observed this ritual or custom then we are a child of God.
Paul then challenges them, and by association us,
In verse 4: Look if you think you are justified by your actions,
Whatever you’ve done …….. I’ve done more.
If you think you’ve been a good person, I’ve been better.
If you think you’ve got a superior background , I’m better connected.
“But do you know what !” he says……..
“I consider all that I was ………rubbish”
Some commentators suggest in trying to understand the meaning of the original word “skybalon” that the best modern translation of the word is “muck”.
Muck is kind of sticky and clings to you. You have to shake it off !
What is he talking about ?
You will remember Saul the zealous Jew… persecuting Christians in the pursuit of righteousness.
He has a close encounter with the risen Christ on the road to Damascus, …and his life is turned on it’s head.
He becomes the apostle Paul, evangelist and missionary.
“All that stuff I counted as important, I now count as loss for the sake of Christ” he says.
“I have no righteousness of my own that comes from doing good things
But I count only on the righteousness that comes from God and is by faith.”
The things he thought important has been completely turned on its head
In verse 10
“I want to know Christ and the power of his resurrection………”
Remember my friends ; Paul can sense the end !
He understands his time is not long.
This is not a time to mince words
This is not a time to give false hopes
Paul is trying to get his friends to focus on the big things, the important things.
And that is getting their relationship with God right .
In the context of eternity….. there is nothing more important.
And what’s changed for us today !
I’ve been thinking about it as I prepared for today.
I’m not as tough as Paul.
I find it hard to dismiss a persons attempts to live a good life as rubbish or muck.
But I did start to see that we live very much in two parallel realms.
As ordinary humans we live in the world as we know it. We work and strive to make money, to raise our kids as best we can.
We work even more to build up a nest egg in the hope of a comfortable retirement, and all the while trying to be a good person.
This is normal…………
But there is another realm.
That is the world of eternity.
Sooner or later we will all be experiencing that personally.
It’s something none of us can escape from.
Some of you might be young like Adrian.
You might be 95
But most of us are so absorbed in the realm of living this life ….
that we continue to ignore or put off dealing with the big issue of God …. and our eternal future with him.
We are not ready
We are not prepared.
We have not taken the job seriously of finding out what God wants from us.
I have to ask you today
Are you ready
Are you prepared.
If you’re not .. then when are you going to do something about it.
Make an appointment with David.
He is awesome at helping work through some of these issues.
Make use of him.
In the last section of our reading today, Paul talks about “pressing on toward the goal”
This is not some half baked new years resolutions.
This is the line in the sand.
This is an acknowledgment that although he is forgiven in Christ and he is confident of his eternal reward ………he strives on.
“Forgetting what is behind and straining toward what is ahead…….
I press on …….toward the goal to win the prize for which God has called me heavenward in Christ Jesus.
I thought long and hard about how to finish this.
Because it’s not all about misery and bleakness.
It’s about embracing the eternal love of God offered to us,
It’s about understanding his eternal promises to us.
It’s about then setting a path forward ; God’s path…….in obedience,
not in cowering submission,…. but in confidence and purpose and assurance.
This may not be relevant but I want to share some of Winston Churchill’s more famous defiant words during WW2.
This was Churchill willing the nation to press on toward the goal.
Note the determination in his words.
His first statement in Parliament as PM
“I have nothing to offer but blood, toil, tears and sweat.”
A few weeks later at Dunkirk
“We shall not flag or fail, We shall go on to the end. We shall fight in France
we shall fight on the seas and oceans.
And we shall fight with growing confidence and growing strength in the air.
We shall defend our island, whatever the cost may be
We shall fight on the beaches, we shall fight on the landing grounds
We shall fight in the fields and in the streets
We shall fight in the hills, we shall never surrender.
A few months later
“Death and sorrow will be the companions of our journey
Hardship our garment, constancy and valour our only shield
We must be united, we must be undaunted, we must be inflexible”
The following year.. addressing Hitler.
“We will have no truce or parley with you, or the grisly gang who work your wicked will.
You do your worst……. And we will do our best”
And later in 1941 addressing a boys school.
“Do not let us speak of darker days, let us speak rather of sterner days
These are not dark days ; these are great days
The greatest our country has ever lived
And we must thank God that we have been allowed,
Each of us according to our stations
To play a part in making these days memorable in the history of our race.”
If you have drawn that line in the sand.
If you are ready to press on with God , can you then join me in reading this statement that I read on the wall of the church hall at Adrian’s funeral..
If you are not ready then remain silent.
The choice has been made
There is no looking back
I have stepped over the line
I won’t let up, back up, give up or shut up
My focus is clear,
My path straight
My God reliable
I am a disciple of Christ.