The Narrow Gate
Welcome to the continuation of my blog, post-seminary. Ministry and evangelism have brought me back home to Chattanooga. I welcome your company on my journey.
The original blog, Down In Mississippi, shared stories from 2008 and 2009 of the hope and determination of people in the face of disaster wrought by the hurricanes Rita and Katrina in 2005, of work done primarily by volunteers from churches across America and with financial support of many aid agencies and private donations and the Church. My Mississippi posts really ended with the post of August 16, 2009. Much work, especially for the neediest, remained undone after the denominational church pulled out. Such is the nature of institutions. The world still needs your hands for a hand up. I commend to you my seven stories, Down in Mississippi I -VII, at the bottom of this page and the blog posts. They describe an experience of grace.
Monday, January 14, 2013
Day 36 - Fire and Chaff
Last week I
said the readings for worship since Advent provide hints or pieces of the
answer to the question, “Why did Jesus come to earth?” Today we
shall think about the baptism of Jesus in the light of that question.
Did you
ever wonder why Jesus the Son of God was baptized?
When you read these
words of John the Baptist about gathering the grain and throwing the chaff into
the fire, what do you think? Your answer
really depends a lot on your religious heritage. If you are of a more
Pentecostal bent or come from a Baptist tradition like me, you may think of
some of the old fire and brimstone preachers you heard challenging you to
repent or risk burning in the fire of Hell.
Presbyterians,
and for that matter all of the reformed faith, believe baptism is the sign of
new birth, we have discarded the old clothes of death and put on the new
clothes of life as begin a Christian life. Presbyterians might
also say some of us are elected to receive that grace and others the fire of
Hell.
I’m not going to argue with John Calvin on predestination for at least two
reasons, first I’m not presumptuous enough to know if you or I are elected or
not; and second, like Paul I know that no matter how clearly I know the good thing
to do, I will do what is bad.
Baptism is a sign of
our redemption from that inescapable reality of sin. Our strength in Baptism
opens the way for the Holy Spirit to come to us and seal our redemption.
Think about it like
this. If I have the option to choose to be saved, then may be I don’t need
Jesus, I can do it own my own. But if I accept the fact that I am a totally
lost person and can do absolutely nothing to be saved; the freely given gift of
God’s grace of salvation and redemption through Christ takes on very great
power and meaning as an unmerited gift.
The traditional way we describe this gift is
to say God has reckoned us righteous
in spite of our sin; he has justified us.
To reckon someone righteous means regardless of guilt, before there even
is a trial God has dismissed the charges and said, “I make you righteous.” That
is what he did to Abraham. When Abraham obeyed the Lord he was reckoned righteous for his faith alone.
That is quite a gift
and obligation that I am not sure we can fully understand unless we find an
answer to the question, “Why did Jesus come to earth?”
Sometimes we
don’t really appreciate that Jesus came to earth as a complete human being. We
think he is really God and God can do anything. God could have blessed us with
the grace of salvation with no more than a willful thought or wave of the hand…
Why did God
work in this way, come to earth in the complete form of a human and suffer our
life of temptations, compassion, mean-spirited urges and death? Why did Jesus
come to earth as a human? I suggest to you that it is tied up in God’s
declaration, “It is very good.” In
Genesis after all, when he created us he said it was very good. That
sounds really close to the words from heaven at Jesus’ baptism, “You are my Son with you I am well pleased.”
We can see
the baptism of Jesus as a validation of that blessing at our original creation.
Baptism is a sign of redemption for humankind accomplished by the ultimate
human experience of the death by crucifixion and resurrection of Jesus. It is a sign of our justification as one of
God’s beloved children, the gift of grace of salvation.
Let me explain it
this way. Paul’s remark about knowing what is right strikes at the heart of
what baptism means. Baptism is more than a sign of redemption and justification
of righteousness in the face of that sin. Being reckoned righteous is Jesus walking up to you and saying, “I just
wrote your name in the book of life and now that I have reckoned you a
compassionate, righteous person, go act like it.” Our obligation when we put on
those new clothes - when we are reborn – is to seek something called
sanctification. That is what the great
commission speaks to the disciples:
Matt. 28:19-20 Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing
them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and
teaching them to obey everything that I have commanded you. And remember, I am
with you always, to the end of the age.” (NOTE: There are only 2 commandments –
what are they?)
A Story about Justification and
Sanctification
In my spare time, which I find very little of lately, I build furniture
and work on our house. When I need to I can rewire an old circuit if it is
simple or run a new one. I can repair the end of rotted roof rafters, install a
gutter, rough in a doorframe or an interior wall or even build my own kitchen
cabinetry.
I’m not bragging though because I would never call myself a carpenter or
electrician, I’m only good enough to get in trouble. In fact every time I look
at one of my pieces of furniture, I see an edge that should have run
differently, or a less than perfect gaps on that cabinet door. I see my
mistakes that most folks don’t ever see.
I picked up these skills over the years. I lived in Pittsburgh thirty or
so years ago while I was working as a metallurgist for Alcoa. I bought my first
house, a wood-framed two-story structure about a hundred years old. It was
framed out of 2x4 hemlock two stories tall. If you know anything about old
houses, you know I bought a project. That is where I started practicing on rotten
roof rafters, roofing and tile work. Like many of you who a lot better at it
than I am, when something needs to be done, I just go out and do it.
I hadn’t thought a lot about that old house until this past December. My
oldest son who I love dearly is a “starving artist-type.” That means under-employed, but finally he has
found a way to purchase a house. For him, buying a house means buying a fixer
upper - a serious fixer-upper. It reminded me how I learned to work on old
houses.
He called to ask, “Dad, can you come down to Atlanta and help
me assess what needed to be done on my house? Dad, I don’t want you to do the
work l want to do it myself, but I don’t know much about carpentry or
electrical work and I’m really not very confident tackling what needs to be
done. If you could come down and help, show me how to do things and what tools
I need, and maybe loan me some of your tools, then I can learn from you, ask
you for advice when I’m in a bind, and do the rest myself.”
After I got down off cloud number 9 from where that complement sent me,
and packed away my pride, I thought about how what he said so mirrors
sanctification.
I realize I had absolutely no choice about being born in Akron, Ohio or
growing up in Rome, GA where my father grew up, no choice to be born in a poor
family barely a generation removed from poor, working farms or even of being on
this green earth at all. Who I am, where I am, is all beyond my control. God
put us here for his reasons.
Two of my blessings are my father and mother. My dad, long deceased, worked as an
electrician with his stepfather early in his youth. His stepfather was the
first one who didn’t work on a farm but they were still poor. Granddad and my
tag-along Dad did most of the work that needed to be done. By the time my dad
was an adult, he never hesitated to tackle a problem on our home. When he
wanted to convert our duplex into a single family home he learned to build a
roof truss in the attic so he could tear out a load-bearing wall and not have
the ceiling fall.
My confidence came from watching my Dad do it. I learned not so much
techniques as confidence in the face of challenge. And now, here I have my son calling with the
confidence he can do it, if I’ll help him learn.
That confidence to do what needs
to be done is what being reckoned righteous means -justification. I realized I
could watch my Dad, or find the information in a book and then start trying it
by myself. My first few projects were
not ready for Country Living Magazine or Fine Homebuilding, more likely better
for firewood. But with every project my skill improved.
That practice and learning is what sanctification is all about, watching
fellow Christians do good things; reading about how Jesus lived his life as a
model for us; and practice, practice, practice. For us, the human catch to
being reckoned righteous, of being justified without having any say to it is
the hard work of sanctification that follows - unless we want to abuse that
gift of righteousness.
Only God Can Do It
Why did Jesus come to earth? God
chose the time, place and human person. It is important is that Jesus came to
earth as a human person and felt every positive and negative thought and
urge…and experienced our death. This is God’s ultimate statement of our
relationship to him, being a comrade in arms with Jesus.
He experienced every trial and temptation we experience but filled with
the Holy Spirit, the helper and advocate, he remained sinless and fully
sanctified. He promised to leave to us that Holy Spirit that he called our
guide, our helper, our defender. Baptism is the mark of that we are justified
righteous and empowered by the Holy Spirit with the charge to seek
sanctification.
The task before us now is every day to get a little closer to living this
life as Jesus lived his.
None of us are the perfect grain of wheat or rice to be plucked and
placed in the granary as is.
We are not gods. We have all sinned and fallen short of the glory of God. Sin is the great equalizer. What we can do is
work in humility with our fellow travelers seeking to perfect our behavior and
thoughts, rubbing our shoulders with the world and breaking off the husks, the
chaff and the dirt that cover us until we begin to shine like polished grains
of life in the darkness of the world spreading the compassion being made
righteousness brings.
We are reckoned righteous… God did that. We can’t say, “Oh today I’m
going to be saved.” We can choose to say, “Today I know I am going to stumble,
I’m going to forget to measure twice and cut once but with God’s help, the Holy
Spirit, I am going to pick myself up from my stumble, hug my neighbor, ask for
forgiveness, and begin again to perfect my living as an example of Christ.”
Paul said our path is to seek justice and peace. That is what the Church
is about, that is what we are about, that is baptism is about. That is what
Jesus being on earth is about - growing in justice and peace honoring the
greatest two commandments. Amen.
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2 comments:
Satan has deceived the whole world until the woman of Rev 12 delivers the true word of God Rev 12:5. She is not a church, she is not Israel, and she is not Mary. She is the prophet like unto Moses and Elijah Matt 17:3, Acts 3:21-23, Luke 1:17 delivering the true word John 1:1 from the wilderness Rev 12:6 to prepare a people for the Lord’s return. God our Father will not put any child of his into a hell fire no matter what their sins. It never entered the heart or mind of God to ever do such a thing Jer7:31, Jer 19:5. Turn your heart to the children of God. A gift is now delivered and proven to the whole world as a witness Matt 24:14. http://minigoodtale.blogspot.com. A righteous judge gathers ALL evidence before making a judgment. If you are called to know the true word- Prove all things. God chose a woman.
Val, I am not sure I understand your point. I think you are agreeing with me that "chaff" may refer to our errors and sins, something all persons have and the process in "sanctification" polishes those from us, rather than be a statement of judgment of some being pure and others not.
I am also not sure how you are using the word and occasion of "judgment". Since none of us can see beyond the veil of death, we must rely upon the illumination of the Holy Spirit to understand the scriptures.
Please do not forget Revelation was a diatribe against Rome and its imperial theology.
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