Monday, May 21, 2007

The Story Goes On...

OK. I’m a horrible blogger. There are so many times I have intended to blog. For those who check this site every once in a while, I’ll try to do better. At least I’ll post some snippets from my sermons. Here is a piece of my sermon from yesterday. It was the last sermon in my series “You will be my Witnesses,” a series in Acts.

For two whole years Paul stayed there in his own rented house and welcomed all who came to see him. Boldly and without hindrance he preached the kingdom of God and taught about the Lord Jesus Christ. Acts 28:30-31

The clock flips to 6:30 AM. It is another day, and yet, it isn’t because Phil, a weather man sent to cover the story of whether Punxsutawney Phil would see his shadow, is stuck on Groundhog day. So every day he wakes up to a new day, that is really the same day playing out the same story. He finds himself weaving in and out of the same story, day after day, year after year. As the story goes on he finds himself more and more connected to the narrative that is playing out before him. Earlier, he is cold and disinterested, removed, then he begins to enter the story, making friends, saving the boy who falls out of the tree, helping people, becoming part of the community. He found himself growing into the story. I think this is the story of the church. We have been born of the Gospel of Christ and we are trying to live into that story, weaving in and out of the Gospel until we are completely consumed by it. Acts ends with a comma because the story goes on. God continues to tell the story of how his son Jesus Christ is the hope of the world. The church is the continuation of that story. We are Acts 29. With the Holy Spirit continuing to move among us we, like the church in Acts, are trying to discern how the Gospel story will play out in our time and place.

The church in Acts wondered "Lord, will you at this time restore the kingdom to Israel?" (1:6). They wondered when the story would end and all the promises be fulfilled. Luke gives no answer except, “the story continues.” No need to stand staring into the heavens (1:11) there is work to be done, the story goes on. The invitation in 1:8 “You will be my witnesses….” is still open for contemporary witnesses to proclaim the gospel "unhindered" (28:31).

We are not there yet. We are not yet who God wants us to be. We are on a journey into the future. But, there is anticipation, expectancy, a sense among us that we are going somewhere. And that somewhere is not a program, not an accomplishment, not an attendance number, not a building, not a goal, but is a more faithfully lived life in the story of the Gospel. That somewhere is the formation of a people for God’s own possession. God is using us, these vulnerable, fragile, clay jars, to show the world what he intends for it. We are called to be God’s people. That means something. It means that we, the church are the preview of what God hopes to do in and with the world through the story of Jesus Christ who lived for our sanctification, was crucified for our sins, raised for our justification, and ascended to give us hope of eternal life.

2 comments:

Ed said...

It's so humbling to be a part of God's continuing story. My desire is to be like Paul, welcoming everyone while boldly and without hinderance preaching the kingdom.

Danny Mercer said...

So true Ed. To think that I am part of God's unfolding story means so much more than Christianity merely being a list of rules to obey.