Sunday, July 18, 2021

Sermon - He is our Peace (Proper 11B)

 Pentecost 11B – July 19, 2015                                                              July 18, 2021

Ephesians 2:11-22 & Mark 6:30-34, 53-56                        Panzer Liturgical Chapel

He is our Peace

I thought when I decided to preach a series on our epistle texts there might be questions… turns out the first one came as we were leaving church last week. Why not preach on the whole epistle – why leave out large portions? Those are important and worthy of study, too – right? Worthy of study – absolutely, and I will refer to some of those passages as we work through the letter. The verses we read earlier are the chosen ones for today. That leads to the natural question of who chose these texts in the first place.

We use the Revised Common Lectionary in worship each week. Broken into a three-year cycle, the lectionary attempts to touch all of the major stories of the Old Testament, t
he themes of the letters to the early church, and the Jesus story as recorded in all four gospels. The lectionary that we use in our service is the same one used by many churches in our own traditions. It is the product of painstaking work begun by Protestant church leaders in the Consultation on Church Union in 1974, mirroring the lectionary that came out of the 2nd Vatican Council of the Roman Catholic Church in 1969. The readings have changed a little over the years, but since 1994, many congregations, both Catholic and Protestant, have heard the same lessons read each week, an exercise meant to display a measure of unity in our identity as the church of Jesus Christ, together.

So, this week, we skip over some of chapter 1 to focus on this passage from Ephesians 2. It’s a little unfortunate that we receive this chapter divided the way it is because it is also good to see these 22 verses as two halves of a whole. It’s a reminder that none of what we have now as chapter and verse in the Bible was written that way. It was narrative, like a good book. It was conversational, a teacher encouraging and molding students to a new way of life and thinking.

In the first 11 verses, Paul speaks of the vertical nature of our faith. While we are tied to our pasts by the things we have messed up, once we are in relationship with Christ, they do not define our future. Because of God’s mercy, we get to turn over to a new page and begin again. The rich mercy of God brought us to new life through the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ. And because of that, we are connected to God through Christ. This vertical relationship is the very definition of grace. God took our sin-dead lives and made us newly alive in Christ, all on his own, with no help from us. Through faith, we become God’s great accomplishment. We are God’s forever. But that doesn’t mean something isn’t required of us.[i]

Once we have accepted the gifts that God gives us in the process, we now have new responsibilities. We are citizens of a new community. And this community calls everyone who shares these faith gifts to be a part of our new tribe. People who were once our enemies are now not just friends, but brothers and sisters in faith. There’s nothing in this covenant that requires us to believe in or experience God and Christ the same ways.[ii]

For the Christians of Paul’s day, this meant that Jews, who had been taught that they were God’s chosen people, and Gentiles, who had been considered outsiders, even un-chosen, were now in the same family. Talk about seismic change. It was a source of great debate and disagreement for much of the books of Acts. And Paul spent most of his time teaching this new model of community, as shown in the volume of letters he penned and inspired.

Our gospel lesson gives us a clue to this new reality. Jesus continues his journey in the regions outside Jerusalem. In both Jewish and Gentile communities, he teaches and preaches, and heals without distinction to prior religious affiliation. Everywhere he went, even when he was trying to get away for a little rest and respite, people followed because they knew that he could change their world. And in verse 34 it says he had great compassion for them and began to teach all who would listen and heal all who had need.

Today’s verses 11-22 in Ephesians give us the horizontal dynamic of our Christian identity. Faith in Christ does not just ask us to change our way of thinking and believing. It asks us to change the way we think about one another – about how we think of everyone. And we can only do that with Christ as our peace. Our ability to love one another – to love our neighbor as ourselves – is not dependent on our ability to love. We can’t do that by ourselves. Our ability to truly love others is a gift we receive from God.

The Hebrew bible tells the story of how the Jewish community depended on the Law to define their behaviors. It was developed in the beginning to help people get closer to God. Over time, the law became the focus of the relationship, and strict adherence to the law became the definition of what it meant to be a good Jew. Jesus changed all of that. He tore down the wall that we used to keep each other at a distance. Instead of getting bogged down in fine print and footnotes, he asked us to start fresh, depending on him and then on one another. New day. New journey. New family. One church.

This is not easy. We don’t do a great job at rejecting division – in the church or the world. We defend our own beliefs by defining what faith should be like for everyone. It’s as if different or opposing views call our faith into question. In fact, we are very good at defending our faith identity to the exclusion of others, even if it puts their life and faith into question.

Look at the news and we see all the places where we allow division to define us. And this grieves God. Instead of putting Jesus’ crucifixion in the past, it keeps it right before us and sets up barriers to accessing the new lives that Jesus sacrificed for us. We give in to our fears – fears that the gifts of our past will crumble around us – fears that our hopes and dreams for the future will never be fulfilled. Our inability or unwillingness to step into a brave new future is evidenced by all the walls we have erected.

Drive a few hours from here and we can see the remnants of the Berlin Wall. Expand our vision and we can see the broader Iron Curtain and fear that remains in some communities because ideas of democracy and community are such a challenge to the imagined security of the past. Current walls in Israel and between the US and Mexico seek to make inviolate divisions between communities that previously were connected. Even a railroad track or a highway that cuts through a community can separate people who used to think of themselves as one town or city. And the ways we label people as “other” say as much about us as it does about them.

Jesus says, “No.” We are no longer strangers to one another. We are no longer enemies. As members of God’s tribe, God’s household, we are all built into the foundation of everyone who came before with Jesus as the Cornerstone. He defines who we are. And this is not something that happened in the past. It still happens every day. In 1 Corinthians 5, Paul writes that our bodies are the temple of the Holy Spirit… not just swirling around us like a mighty wind, but living in all of us. In 1 Corinthians 12, Paul says that we all have a purpose and that we are not created to be alike, but with different gifts - on purpose - for building up the Kingdom of God.

Before Jesus came, the Temple in Jerusalem was not only the religious heart of the nation, but also the pollical, social, and cultural center of Jerusalem. People remembered that Israel’s God has promised to live there – it was in some ways the place where heaven and earth met. But Paul turns that idea upside down. In these last verses of the chapter, Paul states that the living God is building a new Temple - not of stones and mortar, but of human beings. God’s dwelling place is no longer a building – instead, it is a community of people who allow God to take up residence in their hearts – and always becoming something new.[iii]

The Sagrada Familia – the famous Gaudi Basilica in Barcelona is one of the most famous churches in the world, and is still a work in progress, its cornerstone laid in 1882 – it might be completed in our lifetimes. I hope you can see it, because in my experience, it is one of the most exquisite buildings I have ever seen inside, and even in its perpetual construction state, I felt drenched in the Spirit as I stood in the glow of its stained-glass windows and highly arched ceilings. In its completion, it will be glorious, but even now, with scaffolding dotting both the interior and exterior construction, the Spirit is at work in the building itself and in the work of the congregation who worships there each week.[iv]

We are also a work in progress. Our progress and our failures are simply a snapshot of any day in time – the real question is are we moving forward? Do we allow the peace of Christ to be a defining principle as we live out our faith as individuals and as communities gathered for worship and work?

The real test might be in how we understand this kind of peace. We often think of peace as calming, soothing, comforting… but I’m not sure that is what Paul is talking about. Sometimes Jesus’ peace comes in like a wrecking ball, asking us to tear down – destroy – and eliminate the barriers and walls that separate us – just like Jesus did. For Jesus, it wasn’t an easy battle. Jesus became the enemy of the religious community and they did everything they could to weaken his message of unity and hope. Ultimately, it took death – everything he had to give – his life poured out for us. But he did it. He came in like a wrecking ball and got wrecked in the process. And because of that love, the walls came down. In the stillness of an open tomb, everything was made new.[v]

Our task is to receive Jesus’ gift of peace, and welcome both the comfort and disruption it brings to our lives. Jesus’ peace comes to us in an endless cycle – peace for the courage to encourage change – peace and trust that disrupts the walls already built and discourages the ones that get erected in their place – and peace to sit amid that change, knowing that if we don’t help bring the unity that Jesus inspires and demands, we will never know what peace is all about.

Our hymn of the day proves that words written over 230 years ago can still mean as much today as they did when they were written. We don’t know the name of the author, just that they were published in a collection of hymns from Carter Lane Baptist Church in London in 1787. I guess if I had to preach a sermon in five verses, this would be it.[vi]

1 How firm a foundation, you saints of the Lord,
is laid for your faith in His excellent Word!
What more can he say than to you he has said,
to you who for refuge to Jesus have fled?

2 “Fear not, I am with you; O be not dismayed,
for I am your God, and will still give you aid.
I’ll strengthen you, help you, and cause you to stand,
upheld by my righteous, omnipotent hand.

3 “When through the deep waters I call you to go,
the rivers of sorrow shall not overflow,
for I will be with you, your troubles to bless,
and sanctify to you the deepest distress.

4 “When through fiery trials your pathway shall lie,
my grace, all-sufficient, shall be your supply.
The flames shall not hurt you. I only design
your dross to consume, and your gold to refine.

5 “The soul that on Jesus still leans for repose,
I will not, I will not desert to its foes.
That soul, though all hell should endeavor to shake,
I’ll never, no never, no never forsake!”

Thanks be to God! Amen.



[i] James Howell, James Howell's Weekly Preaching Notions, “What can we say July 18? 8th after Pentecost, July 1, 2021,  http://jameshowellsweeklypreachingnotions.blogspot.com/

[ii] Paraphrased from The Message by Eugene Peterson, Ephesian 2

[iii] NT Wright, Ephesians Bible Study, IVP Press, pg 21.

[iv] James Howell, ibid.

[vi] https://hymnary.org/text/how_firm_a_foundation_ye_saints_of

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