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Understanding the times through the lens of God sending a plague to address our idolatry and sending a promise to draw us closer to him as we turn with signs of repentance.
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When Silas ended the journey with Paul from Antioch to Philippi, they were thrown in jail. While he was shackled next to Paul, he reflected on what he had learned about grace—that grace not only tells us how we are saved but also who is saved. Finding some of those “who” in Philippi gave him a deeper view into God’s unconditional love and a joy in serving it. And that moved him to join Paul in praising God.
If the church could follow Silas from Antioch to Philippi, we wouldn’t need a Sunday to remind us of mission. We would all experience the joys of sacrifice and the visions of God’s wider mercy. I will try to take us into Silas’ head on that journey and see what he can impart to us.
Silas first met Paul in Jerusalem where Paul had come from Antioch to defend his teaching. The gospel Paul presented was grace apart from the stipulation of circumcision. The Jerusalem Council, with Peter’s strong defense, supported Paul and sent him back to Antioch with their blessing.
The church in the West has accepted grace alone for how we are saved. We get that. After all, that is a perfect fit for the ethos of our culture. We are through and through an individualist society, pursuing whatever brings self-realization and self-fulfillment. The message of free grace, of forgiveness, and adoption by God delivers all of that. What else could there be?
What we don’t get is why Paul told Silas to pack up and get ready to go to regions unknown, places and people that were ignorant of the terms of God’s grace. Silas wondered why Paul wanted to leave Antioch. What else could there be?
There were days and days for Silas to pursue that question with Paul as they walked across Asia Minor.
Paul’s answer began with his specific charge from Jesus Christ to be God’s instrument and pioneer in showing the dimensions of grace to all. God eliminated any distinction between the Jews and the Gentile nations. The Jews sinned in the same way that the nations have sinned. Abraham, the quintessential Jew, was also the father of all nations. God would deal with Gentiles just as he would deal with Jews.
What would that mean about the extent of God’s kingdom? Is it wide enough to include the nations? Yes, God is the God of the nations as well. What about those non-Jews who go before him by faith alone? He will justify the circumcised by faith as he will justify the uncircumcised by faith. The promise of grace includes the nations.
The logic is simple: Since there is no qualification required for grace, anyone may apply. If anyone may apply, then the promise extends to everyone. If grace is meant for everyone, then God wants no one excluded.
The mission of the church was God’s method of ensuring no one would be omitted. How shall they hear? God will send his people to them. God has committed to the church the task of extending the invitation to people in each and every nation.
That is what Silas learned about grace as he moved from Antioch to Philippi.
Today’s church has stopped at Antioch. The message of personal salvation fits so well. We put the individual at the center, absorbing all that comes with forgiveness, and then showing up in church as a happy believer. What else is there?
That is why we need a Sunday reminding us of mission beyond Antioch. That is why over 28% of the world doesn’t know about Jesus. That is why over two billion people of “everyone” have not moved to “no one excluded.” That’s why the church devotes no more than 10% of our resources for the two billion people of the world that remain outside the knowledge of the gospel.
It should take more than numbers to reverse this. What should move us is the unconditional love that has taken Jesus Christ to the cross. We should share in the broken heart of God that many do not know of Christ’s redeeming sacrifice.
I suggest three easy steps, steps that can lead to meaningful participation in this mission.
Begin with learning. Who are these people and where do they live? Find out about the Beja near the Red Sea, and the Qashqa’i herders of western Iran. Learn about the 10 million Marwari of Rajasthan who have less that 25,000 believers.
Then pray. That’s how God plants love in our hearts for these nations. See the beauty that God has put into them. But see also their dreaded habits and patterns that destroy and bind them to Satan’s powers. Go to the Global Prayer Digest. Every page of it lays out a profile of a different nation and how to pray for them.
That makes connections easy. There are scores of agencies working in these parts of the world and can be a channel for your interest and support. Notable for the Anglican world are Anglican Frontier Missions (AFM) and Society of Anglican Missionaries and Senders (SAMS). The New Wineskins Network will take you further into resources and connections.
What Silas discovered by moving from Antioch to the Philippian jail was more than theological insight. He saw God’s love in the cross of his Son Jesus Christ as he brought people within the reach of Christ’s saving embrace. The praises come as the church goes to the ends of the earth with the never-ending love of God.
At our first talk Eutychus had been somewhat subdued, knowing that I was going to bring up Paul’s sermon. You know, the one he slept through.
We foWe follow Damaris in this message. This lady was singled out in Acts 17 as one of Paul’s converts fromWe follow Damaris in this message. This lady was singled out in Acts 17 as one of Paul’s converts from his discussions with the Greek philosophers on Mars Hill, just beside the Acropolis. She will help us with the question if we can see God in the pandemic. I will offer a partial answer to that, and, no, I have no clue as to where the other parts of the answer may be.
A partial answer, I realize. One that sees in God the one who made us; who suffered as one of us; who judges our idolatry and oppression; who wants us to go back to him; and who then extends mercy that restores us. his discussions with the Greek philosophers on Mars Hill, just beside the Acropolis. She will help us with the question if we can see God in the pandemic. I will offer a partial answer to that, and, no, I have no clue as to where the other parts of the answer may be.
A partial answer, I realize. One that sees in God the one who made us; who suffered as one of us; who judges our idolatry and oppression; who wants us to go back to him; and who then extends mercy that restores us. llow Damaris in this message. This lady was singled out in Acts 17 as one of Paul’s converts from his discussions with the Greek philosophers on Mars Hill, just beside the Acropolis. She will help us with the question if we can see God in the pandemic. I will offer a partial answer to that, and, no, I have no clue as to where the other parts of the answer may be.
Let me begin with a parallelism: Eternity is to the coronavirus as stars are to daylight. We do not see the stars during the daylight hours. We miss the immensity of the universe and our part in it; yet the stars are there, invisible to the naked eye.
Similarly, eternity is present in the midst of the coronavirus, but it remains out of our sight. Hence we miss all it brings in these calamitous days. We fathom the dangers and the diseases of these times apart from the reality of eternity.
Paul knew some people who had a preview of eternity. He mentioned in Corinthians the 500 people who saw the Lord Jesus Christ after his resurrection. Some were living at the time he wrote. What Jesus said isn’t as important as his leaving eternity and briefly appearing before 500 mortals. In Jesus we see beyond our time and space into his.
I want to insert the reality of eternity into the coronavirus. Its presence replaces many places of darkness. I will explore four places seen in the light of eternity. As is my custom I will rely on one of my consultants. This one again is the Rev. Helmut Thielicke, pastor of a congregation in Stuttgart, Germany, during its bombing in 1944.
1. First fear. The coronavirus brings multiple fears—of the virus itself, of protection, of contracting it, and finally of death. The virus is small, it lurks in hidden places, it seeks out randomly, and it kills. And it generates fear.
What we need is assurance, assurance in triple dose: assurance of the future, of our own health, and of whatever lies beyond death. All that we find in Jesus. As the Lord and maker of creation, he holds the future in his hands. As the one who brings unlimited living water, he gives peace. As the one who was resurrected from his own tomb, he brings hope beyond death. One of his recurring statements is, “Have no fear.” He is the great contradiction to the rule of fear.
In a sermon on Christ’s kingdom Thielicke told how he found that in the depths of human experience. “When standing over a crater that had had a direct hit, killing more than 50 persons, a woman came up to speak to me. She said, ‘My husband was in that crater. His place was right under the hole and all that was left was his cup. But we were there when you preached last in the cathedral, and my husband believed what you said. And here, standing before that pit, I want to thank you for preparing him for eternity.’”
2. Sorrow. I realize this makes for a strange mixture—God’s sorrows in the midst of a pandemic that has his fingerprints. Nevertheless, they do mix. “There is no place where earth’s sorrows are more felt than up in heaven.” There is lamentation in heaven just as in families grieving over the results of COVID-19. The tears of Jesus at the grave of his friend Lazarus give us a lens for his sadness at the deaths of all his friends around the world.
Again from Thielicke:
Could human eyes endure the sight of this vast sum of distress and gloom, of mutilated bodies and mortal dread? Could human ears bear the cries of misery that rise to heaven every day? Because he hears it in love, it wounds and hurts him. His heart is pierced by every knife that is drawn, every bullet shot, every evil word that is spoken. The Savior is literally riddled with the sufferings of the world.
3. Evil. Habukkuk is the place where we hear God’s answer to evil. Brandishing fist in anger, the prophet asks God to show his justice. God has tolerated evil in his world, and Habakkuk wants to know if God will ever act against the evil and their wickedness . God gives two answers, definitively and robustly. First: “The just shall live by faith” (2:4). That is, not by sight, not soon, not by seeing justice in this world. But it will come. At the Day of the Lord. And the second: “The Lord is in his holy temple” (2:20). Not absent, not disinterested, not unobservant. He sees, he knows, he is angry, and his is keeping a list. The perpetrators of evil will meet the holy God.
4. Preparing for life in heaven. Paul expresses his longing for heaven: “When I consider whether to remain and work or to die, I much prefer to die, for then I would be with Christ” (Phil. 1:23).
I will only offer two suggestions for preparing for eternity with Christ—contrition and praise.
For the first, we look at Paul’s self-description, “I am the chief of sinners.” Paul’s eager anticipation for heaven was founded nowhere else—that Christ’s death bought him forgiveness for his sin, even for his persecution of the church. He, the chief of sinners, received the means of grace and the hope to live forever in the presence of Christ and his Father.
Our eagerness for heaven, our preparation for eternity with Christ, is measured by where we place ourselves under the chief of sinners. The deeper our contrition for our sin, the nearer our rank to Paul. The dearer our love for our Savior, the greater our desire to worship him in his glorious majesty.
The second is praise. Praise in this life is our orientation life in eternity.
Again from Thielicke:
To praise God means to see things from the perspective of their end. One day a man told me why he had such calm composure and could inspire that in others. In the most frightful moments of an air raid he stopped praying and continued only to praise God. Looking beyond that mortal terror he saw the vast expanse of eternity. Those anguished seconds were nothing more than a swiftly passing moment in the perspective of the end of things.
The coronavirus leans into our lives with ferocious strength. The reality of eternity gives us the resources of God to stand.
Poor Demas, a man covered with the shroud of the one who lost his faith.
His short story goes like this: The first time Paul was imprisoned, Demas stayed with him. But Paul had a second imprisonment. That was when Nero, the Emperor, led a zealous persecution of followers of Jesus. Demas knew that Paul’s arrest guaranteed his own execution. What followed comes from these words from Paul:
“For Demas, in love with this present world has deserted me and gone to Thessalonica” (2 Timothy 4:14).
There is some question about how far Demas fell. It could be that he only abandoned Paul, avoiding persecution. Rather than open identification as a Christian in a hostile environment, he fled.
Or it could have been a total loss of faith, doubts that encircled and defeated his once strong faith. No good answers came, and his faith left.
When we consider falling away from Christ today, we can think of it as a virus. The virus takes two shapes, paralleling the two possibilities of Demas’ fall. The first possibility is to avoid identification as Christian. Today the stigma of being a follower of Jesus is becoming more severe. Temptations to avoid public identity are never far away. They arise in conversation with friends, with family, with neighbors, with the myriad of people who scorn the things of God. More and more, a clear Christian witness today often brings open scorn and heavy consequences.
The other strand of virus stems from Paul’s phrase that he was in love with the world. More and more what the world admires is at odds with the abundant life Jesus offers. And we hear the message of the world, complete with rewards and reinforcements, far more clearly and more often than we hear the call to take the narrow way.
In either case, what ensues is a looking back to discover a faith that is no longer there.
Keeping with the metaphor of virus, we do have vaccinations. One simple but essential one is Christian community—gaining encouragement from being with other Christians. Finding Christian community has taken different forms in the times of pandemic, but we have new options. We can attend worship in an international setting like Canterbury Cathedral. A more personal setting keeps us with our small groups. In these we find intimacy and growth. And the most obvious source of community is to stay tuned to the worship and gatherings of our own congregation.
The warning from Demas’ story takes us to a far weightier theatre than our own personal walk. We live in times of multiple plagues with new and dark forces roiling the landscape. And so “we look unto the hills, from where does our help come?” We know the answer: “Our help comes from the Lord.” Only his mercy and blessing will take us out of the chaos. OK, but how does that come. He tells us:
If my people who are called by my name humble themselves, and pray and
seek my face and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from heaven and will forgive their sin and heal their land. (2nd Chronicles 7:14)
This is what lifts followers of Christ out of the perspective of personal faith. We are instruments of the healing of the land. God looks at “my people called by my name” and names his expectations.
He lays out several conditions for his healing. I will only explore “turning from places of wickedness” and will look at three in particular--corporate, social, and personal.
The first evil concerns the people of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. They are bereft of vaccinations for COVID-19 and will not see any in the near future. And the people of Bangladesh, Bolivia, Uzbekistan, and many other nations. The reason is simple. The United States and the European Union have bought up as many vials as possible for the citizens of these countries. The rationale seems to be, “Are we not the exceptional people?” The exceptional Uzbeks and others will get their vaccines but they will have to wait and wait and wait.
The second evil, the social one, is the rift that has contaminated civil discourse. We make little effort to listen to those of different views, much less show respect for them. It is a toxic and damaging contamination.
Simon the Zealot and Matthew set our example. Simon was a revolutionary, wanting to overthrow the Roman government. Matthew was a tax collector, semi-employed by the Roman authorities. No doubt they got into it, but their higher allegiance to the Lord made room for respect and friendship.
The third wickedness is pornography. From the statistics that I see, it is likely that some readers of this may be addicted; probably some leaders in our congregations; certainly members in our pews. The statistics horrify:
Three of the top ten web sites that are the most viewed are hard porn, often with graphic material of teen-agers, young teen-agers.
45 million people are regular users of pornography. 10% of users are women.
35% of all downloads are of graphic pornographic material. That is more downloads than Netflix.
Like Nicolas Kristof wrote about these and other facts, “Folks, this is disgusting.”
Pornography is a silent but deadly virus. It is an invisible scourge, venomous and toxic. It leaves no visible scars but tears apart marriages and deadens souls. There is help for this addiction, hard won but firm. The Holy Spirit’s light goes deep, and the healing can be a painful journey, but the scourge can be vanquished.
Demas has many followers today. They don’t care much for God, and it seems that goes both ways. The promise for today’s plagues lies with the church. God holds out the promise of his blessing and his mercy-- by the holy living of those who are willing to be called by Christ’s name.
The Plague and the Promise Stop the "Stop the Steal" View this email in your browser “White evangelicals” have a distinct identi...