Sunday, June 19, 2011

Make it Count (Acts 4:32-35)

Now the whole group of those who believed were of one heart and soul, and no one claimed private ownership of any possessions, but everything they owned was held in common. With great power the apostles gave their testimony to the resurrection of the Lord Jesus, and great grace was upon them all. There was not a needy person among them, for as many as owned lands or houses sold them and brought the proceeds of what was sold. They laid it at the apostles’ feet, and it was distributed to each as any had need.

On Father’s Day, I am thinking of my own father and how I am the person I am today, in large part, because of his influence on me. I am also thinking of my grandfathers and how they shaped my life.

My grandfather was an accountant his entire adult life. He served as his local church treasurer and even served as Conference treasurer for a number of years. To say that my grandfather watched money carefully would be a huge understatement. He and Grandma sold their home to the Metro system in DC, as the train lines serving our nation’s capital continued to expand into suburban Virginia. The block on which their home was located was claimed in the name of Imminent Domain to make way for a new train station and parking lot, and all the neighbors negotiated with Metro for the sale of their homes and moving expenses.

After Papa and Grandma moved into their new home, he sent Metro an itemized bill for two new clothesline poles, the cement to set the poles, and several hundred feet of new clothesline. Metro initially refused, but Papa was firm; he simply said, “I had clothesline at my old house.” Metro paid him for his expenses.

My grandfather watched money carefully, he was extremely careful with money, and you may get the impression that he was cheap, but friends, my grandfather was anything but cheap. My grandfather wasn’t cheap for one very simple reason: he was a Christian. He taught us all from an early age, both by precept and example, that to be a Christian is to be generous. You see, what we have is not our own. Everything we have is a gift from God, and God is the greatest giver we could ever know. Giving and sharing is inherently part of God’s character; for Christians who are growing more into God’s image every day, generosity is part of who we are, as well. Just take a look at our Scripture reading from the 4th Chapter of Acts, and that much should be abundantly clear. May we pray.

Who here is going to go out for lunch following worship today? If you go to a non fast-food restaurant, more than likely, your food will be brought to you – as will your beverage and all refills and everything else your table needs – by a waiter or a waitress. Who here has ever worked waiting tables – that is a thankless job!

Steve Dublanica writes for the blog Waiter Rant, and he asked his readers – table servers, wait staff, people who make most of their income from tips – he asked them “Who are the worst tippers?” and two responses emerged: people who come from countries where tipping is not practiced, and the Sunday after-church crowd.

Folks, we are known as bad tippers. Christians are known to those who wait tables as stingy and cheap. Think about that. Christians, those who claim to be following Jesus and becoming more like him, someone who freely gave himself for the world, are known as cheap. Christians, those who have embraced an identity as having been created in the image of a giving and generous God, are, at least in the eyes of wait staff, extremely ungenerous.

What does it say about Christians that we think so little of the people who serve us that we, as a people group, are known as cheap?

I have a friend who waits tables, and anecdotally, she confirmed that Christians are lousy tippers. Sunday lunch is her least favorite time to work. She says that church people are some of the most demanding and cheap customers she gets. They often stay twice as long as other customers, keeping the restaurant from turning the table and robbing the server of yet another tip. When she sees someone come in on Sunday afternoon dressed in a nice suit, talking about how great church was, offering a long, loud, public prayer at the start of the meal, she expects a 5% tip and a Christian pamphlet on how to get saved or steps to peace with God or something else.

She hates working Sundays, and she resents Christians. Like it or not, that’s our witness. If I am out to eat with someone and they leave a bad tip, I will intentionally leave something behind at the table – my keys, my sunglasses, or something – so I can go back to the table and not be embarrassed by the tip left behind.

Christ came to bless the world and lead all of us in lives of love toward God and neighbor. Christians who are blessed are to be a blessing, we are to show love toward God and neighbor that Christ modeled and taught. Everywhere we go, we are witnesses of Christ, and our lives are to be a constant manifestation of God’s grace.

So, any time you go out to eat, tip generously, because how you treat your server is a witness of what God is – or is not – doing in your life. Everything we have is a gift from God, and what we do with what God has given us indicates the priority God has in our lives.

And perhaps you’re wondering what this has to do with anything and why I’m telling you this, and I’m glad you asked, because it is impossible to bear witness to a God who is gracious and generous if we are stingy and cheap.

While the temptation toward stinginess is always there, for Christians who take the Bible seriously, we soon see that being cheap is not an option for the people of God. In the fourth chapter of the book of Acts, Luke presents us with a picture of the early church that is far from cheap and stingy:

“Now the whole group of those who believed were of one heart and soul, and no one claimed private ownership of any possessions, but everything they owned was held in common. With great power the apostles gave their testimony to the resurrection of the Lord Jesus, and great grace was upon them all. There was not a needy person among them, for as many as owned lands or houses sold them and brought the proceeds of what was sold. They laid it at the apostles’ feet, and it was distributed to each as any had need” (Acts 4:32-35).

Luke's depiction of the Jerusalem believers identifies a signature characteristic of their movement — in a word, generosity. Their social generosity expressed itself in community, and their financial generosity expressed itself in compassion.

A popular axiom of our day is often quoted, and many people swear it comes out of Scripture. You all know this one – finish it for me. God helps those . . . . who help themselves. It’s a cynical expression of our get-ahead, look-out-for number-one society. But today’s text is a witness against this sort of rampant individualistic thinking. In the young church and among new Christians there was no one who owned something and kept it to him or herself. Things were distributed to anyone who had need, and no one was ashamed to accept something. Their slogan was not, “God helps those who help themselves.” Rather, because God helps everyone, they were there to help each other.

Of one heart and soul

There are a couple of things we need to point out in this text about how this community is described. The first is that they were of one heart and soul. This unity is expressed elsewhere throughout Scripture. In John 17, Jesus prays that his followers will be one. In 1 Corinthians and elsewhere, Paul describes the Church as one body with many members. We recognize our connection with one another, and realize that when one member of the body suffers, we all suffer. When one rejoices, we all rejoice. Unity is our trademark. Unity is what we are meant for.

Following the example of Jesus, the first Christians broke down social barriers and disregarded religious taboos that distinguished between the ritually clean and the unclean, the worthy and the unworthy, the respectable and the unrespectable. They were "one in heart and mind, or soul," writes Luke. They subverted normal social hierarchies of wealth, ethnicity, religion, and gender in favor of a radical egalitarianism before God and with each other: "There is neither Jew nor Greek, slave nor free, male nor female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus" (Galatians 3:28).

About a century after Luke wrote, the early Christians had a well-known and well-deserved reputation for social generosity that built bridges of community rather than walls of separation. Tertullian (AD 155–220), for example, wrote, "Our care for the derelict and our active love have become our distinctive sign before the enemy. . . See, they say, how they love one another and how ready they are to die for each other."

Christianity is not a faith that can be practiced in isolation or apart from other people. It is a community religion, the goal of which is to stretch and grow us in our relationships with God and with one another. A solitary Christian, a Christian standing outside community is an oxymoron; you can’t live and grow as a Christian apart from others. Our relationships with God and others are mutually interdependent.

And so, when one member of the body withholds their gifts from the body, the whole body suffers. When one member of the church withholds their financial gifts, the whole church suffers. When one member withholds grace, the whole church suffers. When one member withholds their time, the whole church suffers. When one member withholds their expertise, the whole church suffers. Anytime God has given us something – whether that is time, talent, or treasure – and we withhold it from all God’s children, the ministry of Christ through the church is weakened.

Thankfully, as I look around the room at those who are present today, I don’t see withholders. I don’t see anyone here who would hold back of their own and refuse to share. You know that part of what it means to be a Christian – to follow Jesus, to be filled with the Holy Spirit – part of what that means is to be generous.

When you follow Jesus, your heart is filled with the Holy Spirit, and as such, it is turned outward. You can’t help but share the love of God and neighbor, you can’t help but to be generous. Generous with your resources, your time, your spirit, your attitude, your disposition. Christians are, by very definition, generous people.

It’s simple really – the goal of the Christian life is to grow ever more into the image and likeness of God, the God in whose image we are already created. We call that growth by a number of names – sanctification, going on to perfection – but to be very plain, it means that as we grow in our faith, we grow in God’s grace, and God’s grace makes us just a little more like God – a little better reflection of God’s divine image – each day. And God is the most generous, the greatest giver any of us could ever know; and since we are created in God’s image, we are fundamentally hard-wired to be generous. Further, since we are growing into that image, part of maturing in our faith and growing in God’s grace is that we become more and more generous.

Really, it’s quite simple – if you’re maturing and growing in your faith, then you’re also maturing and growing in your generosity.

Holding all things in common

Generosity is key to holding a community together. Generosity leads each of us to lay our own preferences, our own agendas, our own interests down for the sake of what is best for everyone. Generosity leads us to a place we share freely with everyone around us, to the point that we said to hold things in common with them.

Generosity leads to holding things in common, and holding things in common is foundational to community, which is why generosity is key to holding a community together.

We all want to find things in common with other people. There is something down within us that years for connection, for common ground, with other people. Sometimes you can find that in a sport or an activity or a club, a fraternity or sorority, a civic or community organization, or the alumni association of whatever school you went to.

Common ground is the heart of community, and communities are all about relationships that tie people together. Communities are about a sense of belonging. Our text describes the early church as holding all things in common; in other words, there were strong and tight relationships, bonds of belonging, holding the church together.

The very first part of our mission statement is that we exist to be a Christian community – that means that we are a place of relationships, a place of belonging. But we are not just any community; we are a Christian community. That means some things, folks. That means that our values and shaped and molded by Christ’s values. The things that were important to Christ drive everything we do. Christ gave himself in love for all people, which means we give ourselves for all people in his name. Christ welcomed all people, even and particularly “sinners and outcasts,” which means we welcome all people in his name. While the Pharisees were offering judgment and withholding grace, Christ offered grace and reserved the harshest judgment for religious people who were trying to exclude others from God’s favor; so let the modern-day Pharisees cling to judgment – we are a Christian community, and we’ll cling to grace.

The early church, as described in today’s text, were all of one heart and soul, they held all things in common, and with great power, great grace was upon them all. I don’t know about you, but that sounds like the picture of a Christian community I’d like to see myself in.

A generation or two after the early Church described by Luke, the theologian Justin Martyr (c. 100–165) summarized the appeal of Christian community: “We who once took most pleasure in accumulating wealth and property now share with everyone in need; we who hated and killed one another and would not associate with men of different tribes because of their different customs now, since the coming of Christ, live familiarly with them and pray for our enemies.”

Anyone who claims the name Christian has neither the time nor the right to be stingy and cheap, because God’s abundant grace fills us up to overflowing and there is still plenty more to go around, and whether we like it or not, those whose hearts are filled with God’s Holy Spirit find themselves growing in generosity – generosity of our time, our finances, our resources, our disposition, and our attitudes. Christian people are givers.

What you have is a gift from God. Who you are, everything you possess, the skills and expertise and time and everything else – everything you have is a gift from God. I learned that first from my grandfather. The early church also understood this, and as they shared freely, great grace was upon them all.

Ron Sider, in his book Rich Christians in an Age of Hunger: Moving from Affluence to Generosity, says that most of us in the American church are caught in “an absurd, materialistic spiral. The more we make, the more we think we need in order to live decently and respectably. Somehow we have to break this cycle because it makes us sin against our needy brothers and sisters and, therefore, against our Lord. And it also destroys us. Sharing with others is the way to real joy.”

The early church was of one heart and soul, and they shared freely, abundantly, and generously, and great grace was upon them all.

Sunday, June 5, 2011

All Fired-Up (Acts 2:1-21)

When the day of Pentecost had come, they were all together in one place. And suddenly from heaven there came a sound like the rush of a violent wind, and it filled the entire house where they were sitting. Divided tongues, as of fire, appeared among them. All of them were filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak in other languages, as the Spirit gave them ability.

Now there were devout Jews from every nation under heaven living in Jerusalem. And at this sound the crowd gathered and was bewildered, because each one heard them speaking in the native language of each. Amazed and astonished, they asked, “Are not all these who are speaking Galileans? And how is it that we hear, each of us, in our own native language? Parthians, Medes, Elamites, and residents of Mesopotamia, Judea and Cappadocia, Pontus and Asia, Phrygia and Pamphylia, Egypt and the parts of Libya belonging to Cyrene, and visitors from Rome, both Jews and Arabs – in our own languages we hear them speaking about God’s deeds of power.” All were amazed and perplexed, saying to one another, “What does this mean?” But others sneered and said, “They are filled with new wine.”

But Peter, standing with the eleven, raised his voice and addressed them, “Men of Judea and all who live in Jerusalem, let this be known to you, and listen to what I say. Indeed these are not drunk as you suppose, for it is only nine o’clock in the morning. No, this is what was spoken through the prophet Joel:

‘In the last days it will be, God declares, that I will pour out my Spirit upon all flesh, and your sons and your daughters shall prophesy, and your young men shall see visions, and your old men shall dream dreams. Even upon my slaves, both men and women, in those days I will pour out my Spirit; and they shall prophesy. And I will show portents in the heaven above, and signs on the earth below, blood, and fire, and smoky mist. The sum shall be turned to darkness and the moon to blood, before the coming of Lord’s great and glorious day. Then everyone who calls on the name of the Lord shall be saved.’

Today, we are celebrating Pentecost. Pentecost is the conclusion of the great Easter season, and it occurs fifty days after Easter Sunday. Pentecost is sometimes referred to as the birthday of the Church, because on the day of Pentecost the Holy Spirit was poured out on the followers of Jesus, and the Church began. Every year, the Church continues to celebrate Pentecost, and pray for the Holy Spirit to be poured out on us, just as it was on the first followers of Jesus.

Pentecost is all about the Holy Spirit; and you know what? It is imperative that the Church be filled with the Holy Spirit. Jesus promised he would give us the gift of the Holy Spirit when he had returned to heaven as a guide, an advocate, a comforter. The Holy Spirit gives us power, the Holy Spirit gives us direction, the Holy Spirit, gives us clarity and purpose. Without the power of the Holy Spirit in our lives as Christians and in our collective life as a church, we will always fall short of what God desires and intends for us. It is imperative that the Church be filled with the Holy Spirit.

Every time you walk in this sanctuary, you are greeted by a visual reminder of the enduring presence and life-giving power of the Holy Spirit; do you remember where it is? The red banner on the east wall. Every time you see that banner, pray for the Holy Spirit to fill your heart and blow through our church with flames of power. Red is the color of fire, and throughout Scripture, the Holy Spirit is represented as the wind, as a dove, and as fire.

Today, on Pentecost, we have asked everyone to wear red as a way of representing the Holy Spirit resting on each of us.

After worship, please stay for our annual Pentecost “Tongues of Fire Chili Cookoff” – there’s lots of chili, cornbread, mac-n-cheese, and ice cream sundaes – there’s plenty there for everyone! One way or another, we hope everyone will leave church today with tongues of fire!

Today, we conclude our worship series on “Life in the Spirit-Filled Church.” We have noticed how the early Church was filled with the Holy Spirit, and realized that, in our day and time, we are called to be filled with the Holy Spirit, as well.

Each week, we have looked at a different aspect of the Spirit-filled church. The first aspect is that the Spirit-filled Church is unified; through the power of the Holy Spirit, all Christ’s followers are made one with each other. The second aspect is that the Spirit-filled Church is prophetic, meaning we see things as they are, we see things as God intends, and we call attention to the distance between the two. And the Spirit-filled Church is bold: we are called to boldly go wherever the Holy Spirit calls us to go.

Now, it’s possible to exist as a church, not the real Church, mind you – but an institution, an organization, a building, a group of people – it’s possible to exist as a church without the Holy Spirit.

Perhaps you’ve heard the story about a young man who visited a prominent church in his town. Let’s just say he didn’t fit in. He was “different” than the majority of people who attended that church. After worship, he greeted the pastor on his way back outside, and said, “Pastor, I really enjoyed worship today. I think I’d like to join this church!” The pastor was visibly agitated by this – anyone could see that this young man was “different,” and the pastor didn’t need the headache of what people might say if someone like this young man joined the church. But, trying to be diplomatic and pastoral, he said, “Well, joining a church is very serious business. Why don’t you go home this week and pray for the Holy Spirit’s guidance about this very important decision?”

The young man walked away, and the pastor was surprised to see him sitting in the congregation the next week. As he left worship, the pastor said, “Did you pray about what we talked about last week?” The young man said, “I sure did, and I’ve decided not to join your church. I did what you said, and the Holy Spirit told me I shouldn’t bother; he’s been trying to get into this church for the last ten years!”

Turning back to our Scripture lesson for today, just before today’s passage, Jesus has commissioned his disciples to be his witnesses in the world. In other words, those who follow Jesus are supposed to continue doing the things Jesus did when he walked the earth. We are to continue his witness, playing show-and-tell on behalf of a God who is searching for lost sheep, a God who desires nothing more than all people being brought back to God. We are to continue his witness, offering hope and healing in Christ’s name, offering reconciliation to those who find themselves at the margins of society and perhaps even our churches. We are to continue his witness, our lives being the very signs along the path to point people toward God. We are to continue his witness, to love rather than judge, to accept rather than reject, to lay aside religious rules and embrace a living relationship with God.

The first followers of Jesus protested. “Jesus, we can’t do all those things on our own!” And Jesus said, “You’re right, and I don’t expect you to. The Holy Spirit will enable you to do that. The Holy Spirit will teach you everything. I will pour out the Holy Spirit on you, so that you may continue as my witnesses, doing all I have done and even greater things, all in my name, to continue the project I have started of bringing all humanity back to God.”

Historically, when the followers of Jesus have been serious about being his witnesses in the world, they have prayed fervently for the Holy Spirit to be poured out on them. Today, on Pentecost, we are praying for the Holy Spirit to be poured out not only on St. Paul United Methodist Church, but upon every church, of every denomination, around the world.

In seminary, friends used to speculate about whether the Holy Spirit even shows up at Methodist churches. One day, my friend, Oliver Box, a high-church Methodist from Aberdeen, Mississippi, said, “The Holy Spirit does, indeed, show up at the Methodist church. He just knows to mind his manners when he’s there.”

Take a look at our denominational logo, our trademark “cross and flame.” That red thing beside the cross is supposed to represent the fire of the Holy Spirit. Even on our logo, it looks like a pretty controlled burn, doesn’t it? Not getting out of control, burning quietly, never really flaring up too much – always there, steady, controlled – sort of like the pilot light on your water heater.

A controlled burn – that’s an interesting way to think about the Holy Spirit. And actually, I think the word “control” has a lot to do with it. As long as we want to remain in control – in control of our lives, in control of our church – we have closed ourselves off from living into a Holy Spirit-filled existence. If we truly want the Holy Spirit in our lives and in our church, we need to surrender our own control. In so doing, we are opening ourselves up to a world of possibility we may have never considered because the Holy Spirit will always move us beyond ourselves.

Take the first followers of Jesus in today’s Scripture reading. When they received the Holy Spirit, they found themselves getting into all sorts of things they never would have on their own. They were speaking in languages they’d never learned, prophesying about things they didn’t know anything about, not bound by a spirit of fear and timidity but boldness and courage – all because they received the Holy Spirit.

The same is true for us. Having the Holy Spirit in our lives means giving up control and opening ourselves up to things and people and experiences we would never seek on our own. It means getting out of the drivers’ seat and letting the Holy Spirit set the course. It means getting caught up in the wildfire of the Holy Spirit.

If we are truly going to be the church – the unified, prophetic, bold body of Christ; if we’re not just going to go to church but be the church, the authentic, God-glorifying, Christ-following community; the real hands and feet of Jesus in the world, sacrificially giving ourselves for the world just as Christ sacrificially gave himself for the world – if we’re going to do all that we have been called to be, we need the Holy Spirit.

Friends, we need some fire in our belly. When we see someone with passion for something, we say they have fire in their belly. Now, if someone has inflammatory bowel disease, they might be experiencing fire in their belly, but that’s not what we’re talking about. We need some passion for the things God would have us be passionate about.

Or, to put it another way, we need to get fired up. On cold mornings, my first car that I drove in high school – a 1986 Honda Prelude – had trouble getting fired up. You had to turn the ignition and then mash your foot down on the accelerator, hoping it wouldn’t die right away. The goal was to increase the RPMs on the engine and let it run long enough that it would warm up enough to not stall out when you let it idle. There were some mornings I had to turn the ignition 20 times just to finally crank it up enough that it would continue to run.

With that car, if it didn’t get fired up in the morning, do you know what happened? It didn’t go anywhere. Likewise, when the church fails to get fired up, we don’t go anywhere, either.

We need to get fired up. We need some fire in our belly. We need passion for the things God would have us be passionate about. We need the wildfire of the Holy Spirit. Without that wildfire, without that passion, without that fire in our belly, without getting fired up, we don’t go anywhere.

Every Sunday morning – early, before anyone else is here – I walk through the sanctuary and touch every pew, and I pray for the Holy Spirit to fill the hearts of the people who will sit there and kindle in them the fire of God’s love. I do the same thing for every door, praying the same thing for every person who will walk through them. I do the same thing in the nursery, and in the finance office, and pray for the people who will be in those spaces.

So, if you come into this building on Sunday morning, even if you never set foot in the sanctuary, I have prayed for you. As you sit in these seats and walk through these doors, I pray you feel the power of those prayers and sense the presence of the Holy Spirit upon you and within you.

How will you know if the Holy Spirit is at work within you? Well, there’s a couple ways to tell. If you find you’ve got some fire in your belly, if you find you’re passionate about the things Jesus was passionate about, if you’re all fired up about being Christ’s witness in the world, then the Holy Spirit is at work within you. If you find yourself boldly going places and doing things you might not otherwise do for the sake of reconciling people to God, then the Holy Spirit is at work within you. If you have given up control and couldn’t be happier, then the Holy Spirit is at work within you.

None of us can control the Holy Spirit. We can’t turn it on, make it show up, or do things for us. The Holy Spirit isn’t a genie in a bottle or a good luck charm. But while we can’t control the Holy Spirit, I am convinced that one of the keys to living in the Spirit is to do something very simple: to be intentionally open.

So today, I want to give you an opportunity to be intentionally open to the Holy Spirit. For those who genuinely and authentically seek to follow Jesus, Spirit-filled living isn’t an option; it’s simply part of what it means to be a follower of Jesus.

I just have two basic questions for you this morning. First, do you want to follow Jesus? Maybe for the first time today, maybe you are already a follower of Jesus and just want to reaffirm that, but if you want to follow Jesus, would you just stand up where you are?

Now, for those who follow Jesus, opening ourselves up to the Holy Spirit is part of the package. So if you’re standing, I am asking you to be intentionally open to the Holy Spirit; would you open your arms wide, close your eyes, and repeat after me as we pray?

Come, Holy Spirit. Fill my heart. Kindle in me the fire of your love. I surrender to your control.

Come, Holy Spirit. Put your fire in my belly. Lead me beyond my comfort zone.

Come, Holy Spirit. Fill our church. Make us unified. Make us prophetic. Make us bold. Get us all fired up, give us passion, passion for you, passion for people, passion to do what you want us to do. We love you. We’ll do what you want. We’ll go where you lead, in Jesus’ name. Amen.

Sunday, May 29, 2011

The Spirit-Filled Church: Bold (Acts 17:22-31)

Then Paul stood in front of the Areopagus and said, “Athenians, I see how extremely religious you are in every way. For as I went through the city and looked carefully at the objects of your worship, I found among them an altar with the inscription, ‘To an unknown god.’ What therefore you worship as unknown, this I proclaim to you. The God who made the world and everything in it, he who is Lord heaven and earth, does not live in shrines made by human hands, nor is he served by human hands, as though he needed anything, since he himself gives to all mortals life and breath and all things. From one ancestor he made all nations to inhabit the whole earth, and he allotted the times of their existence and the boundaries of the place where they would live, so that they would search for God and perhaps grope for him and find him—though indeed he is not far from each one of us. For ‘In him we live and move and have our being’; as even some of your own poets have said, ‘For we are his offspring.’

Since we too are God’s offspring, we ought not to think that the deity is like gold, or silver, or stone, an image formed by the art and imagination of mortals. While God has overlooked the times of human ignorance, now he commands all people everywhere to repent, because he has fixed a day on which he will have the world judged in righteousness by a man whom he has appointed, and of this he has given assurance to all by raising him from the dead.”

When they heard of the resurrection of the dead, some scoffed, but others said, “We will hear you again about this.” At that point Paul left them. But some of them joined him and became believers, including Dionysius and Areopagite and a woman named Damaris, and others with them.

Throughout this Easter season, which stretches all the way from Easter Sunday until Pentecost Sunday, we are in a worship series on “The Spirit-Filled Church.” Each week, we are looking at a different glimpse of the early Church as recorded in the book of Acts, noticing how the early Church was filled with the Holy Spirit, and realizing that, in our day and time, we are called to be filled with the Holy Spirit, as well.

It is imperative that the Church be filled with the Holy Spirit. Without the Holy Spirit, we can never fully live into God’s intended desire for the kind of community we can be and the kinds of things we can do. We human beings are clever and hard-working, and we can do an awful lot, but without the Holy Spirit, we will always fall short. Every time you walk in this sanctuary, you are greeted by a visual reminder of the enduring presence and life-giving power of the Holy Spirit; do you remember where it is? The red banner on the east wall. The dove is one of the most universally recognized symbols of the Holy Spirit; and red reminds us of fire, another way the Holy Spirit has shown up.

Each week, we have looked at a different aspect of the Spirit-filled church. Two weeks ago, from Acts 2, we understood this: In the Spirit-filled Church, we are unified. Through the power of the Holy Spirit, all of Christ’s followers are made one with each other. Last week, from Acts 7, we understood that the Spirit-filled Church is called to be prophetic: to see things as they are, see things as God intends, and draw attention to the distance between the two. Today, we build on that: the Spirit-filled Church is called to be bold. May we pray.

I have a confession to make to you this morning. I’m not exactly sure how to tell you this, but figured you all probably need to know. Are you ready? All right, here goes. I enjoy watching Star Trek. There, I said it! I’ll give you just a moment to let that sink in. I enjoy watching Star Trek. Now, I’m not a trekkie. I’ve never been to a convention, I’ve never dressed up in a Starfleet uniform, I don’t know the name and production date of episodes, but if it’s late at night and I’m flipping through the channels, I may just watch Star Trek. Anyone else here want to own up to that?

During the opening credits of every show, you will hear these words: “Space: the final frontier. These are the voyages of the Starship Enterprise, it’s continuing mission to explore strange new worlds, to seek out new life and new civilizations. To boldly go where no one has gone before.”

To boldly go where no one has gone before – that’s the part that hooks me. Doesn’t that sound like fun? Boldly going, setting out on a new journey, following the adventure wherever it leads us, not knowing what we’ll encounter, who we’ll meet, or what will ultimately happen to us, but trusting that the journey is good because the mission is right, trusting that the journey will take us, because the mission will lead us there.

Doesn’t that sound like fun? Doesn’t that sound like what church should really be about? Boldly going, setting out on a new journey, following the Holy Spirit wherever it leads us, not knowing what we’ll encounter, who we’ll meet, but trusting that the journey is good because the Holy Spirit is leading us.

If all that could happen on a TV show, why not in real life? If they could boldly go where no one has gone before, why can’t the church? If they were so clear and excited about boldness being a part of their mission, why can’t we be excited and clear and bold about God’s mission? And then it occurred to me – that’s nothing new for the church. That’s part of who we’ve been from the very beginning.

In our today’s Scripture, we catch up with St. Paul on his mission. He has been all over the Mediterranean world, preaching, establishing churches, constantly, boldly sharing the good news of God in Christ.

Some religious folks in every town disliked him. He was changing old customs and teaching new things. He told them their made-up rules didn’t really matter to God! Nearly every town Paul went to, he was run out. Religious leaders in the cities of Thessalonica and Beroea stirred up the people and incited a riot, and Paul was forced to leave. He sent word for his friends, Silas and Timothy to meet him in Athens, and there, he waited.

His time in Athens was supposed to be a little downtime, a little R&R. His first morning there, he slept late, enjoyed a leisurely breakfast at the hotel, and then was off with his Lonely Planet travel guide to see the sights and take in all the cultural and historical richness of this great city.

Everywhere he went, he saw altars and shrines to many gods. We know the Greeks & Romans worshipped a variety of gods, but they also picked up gods everywhere they went. They were deeply respectful of the gods worshiped in other places by other people, and would set up altars and shrines to them, as well. In fact, not wanting to leave anyone out, they even set up an altar to “an unknown god.” Just in case there was some god out there, somewhere, whose name they had never heard, they wanted to show respect to that god, too.

Like any good preacher, Paul saw the opportunity for a sermon and took it. When Paul, the apostle, the missionary, the evangelist, shared the Gospel with the people of Athens, he began with a compliment. He was sharing the Gospel with nonbelievers – he didn’t begin with an insult, by assuming they were stupid, by assuming they were somehow broken and in need of fixing. Paul starts by establishing common ground. Looking around at all the altars, he realizes that people are searching. They haven’t built these altars just for grins; they’ve built them because they’re trying to connect with the divine. And so many altars, so many shrines in one city – these people are definitely trying to connect with something beyond themselves!

And I’d argue that people today aren’t so different. People are searching for a connection with something larger than themselves. People are reaching for an experience of the divine, but we continue to reach for gods made with human hands. Some express their search in their automobile shrine, others in their excessive home, some in their bank accounts, some in experiences, some in drugs, some in sports teams – there are still lots of false gods out there vying for our attention, but their very existence and our religious devotion to them indicates that the search for the divine, the search for something beyond ourselves, is still alive and well.

Philosophers and theologians have had various ways of expressing this concept, often referred to as the God-shaped hole in every person’s heart. I think of it like the little shape ball I played with as a kid, trying to fit those yellow shapes into the various holes. You can try to cram all sorts of things in there, but there is only one thing that can fill the God-shaped hole in each of us – God. None of the false gods will do. As long as we keep trying to put the wrong thing in there, we remain empty inside.

Paul knew that the people were searching. He could tell, just from the prolific number of altars and shrines that peppered the city, that they were devout, religious, seeking people – people who were looking for a connection with the divine, people who were looking to be part of something that much larger than themselves. And Paul, rather than saying, “Hey idiots, that’s the wrong thing!” Patiently, Paul says, “You’ve been searching. You’ve been looking a long time – look at all these attempts you’ve made at connecting with the divine!” Referencing the altar to an unknown God, Paul says, “What therefore you worship as unknown, this I proclaim to you” (Acts 17:23). Paul tells them what they’ve been looking for is the one, true God.

Slowly, patiently, Paul continues to build common ground with his audience. Knowing them to be intellectually curious, he quotes Greek philosophers and makes Aristotelian arguments, slowly building bridges, establishing common ground, helping folks to recognize that they are all searching for the same thing.

Some have said that Paul had the gift of gab. Did you know that I have sometimes been labeled as having the gift of gab? Hard to believe, but it’s true. When I was three, my dad’s district superintendent came to worship and then was coming to Sunday lunch at our house. At the age of three, I climbed into his passenger seat and gave him turn-by-turn directions for the five-mile trip from the church to the house, while having a conversation with him about the paint color of his car, why he chose that color paint, and letting him know about the process by which cars are painted, which I had watched that week on some educational show.

Even at that age, my mom knew I was going to be one of four things when I grew up – a lawyer, a salesman, a politician, or a preacher. Her reasoning is that all four professions rely on a pretty interchangeable skill set. The product may be different, but the same basic skills are required. Most basic? The gift of gab.

Some have said that Paul had the gift of gab, and that is what gave him the ability to share the Gospel with his audience in Athens. But, you know that it was more than that. Paul had the gift of the Holy Spirit, and that is what enabled him to share so boldly. Yes, Paul understood his mission, he understood it with clarity and conviction, but that didn’t come from himself. It came from the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit gave him boldness in sticking to his God-given mission, to share God’s good news in the death and resurrection of Christ.

Can I let you in on a secret? The mission hasn’t changed. When Star Trek: The Next Generation started, its mission was exactly the same as the original Star Trek. Likewise, the church’s mission is still the same today as it was in the day of the apostle Paul – with the Holy Spirit’s guidance, to boldly go wherever there are people, to share God’s love and presence with them, to invite them to experience new life as disciples of Jesus Christ.

That’s the point of church. That’s why we exist. The apostle Paul was filled with the Holy Spirit, and he was bold in sharing God’s good news. Likewise, when the church today is filled with the Holy Spirit, we are also bold in sharing that same good news.

We exist to be in mission. The church doesn’t do missions. The church doesn’t have a mission program. The church doesn’t give to missions. We don’t do any of that for one simple reason: the church is mission! The church is God’s gift to the world to boldly share the good news, to hear the message of a God who loved the world so much that he willingly took on human flesh, became one of us, and lived among us in order to reconcile us to God. Mission, sharing, reaching, giving, offering ourselves, that’s the whole point. We exist to be in mission. We exist as missions. Mission is to Church as combustion is to fire. Take away combustion, and you don’t have fire. Likewise, take away mission, and you don’t have church!

As we spend these weeks leading up to Mission Awareness Sunday on June 12, we are reminded that our sole reason for existence is to be in mission! I am so thankful to Rob Neill and our Mission team who constantly keep this in front of us and remind us what our primary purpose as a church is.

The church is on a mission. The Spirit-filled church is on a mission – to boldly go. To boldly get beyond ourselves, to boldly get beyond what is comfortable, to boldly get beyond what is familiar – to boldly go wherever the Spirit leads us to share God’s love. When that happens, that’s the church truly being the Church! It’s the church as God intends, it’s the Church as Jesus desires, it’s the Church the Holy Spirit inspires – it’s the Church of St. Paul in Athens so long ago, and it’s the Church of St. Paul in Sedgefield today.

The Spirit-filled Church is on a mission – to boldly go. Being the Church, authentically following Jesus, is supposed to be active! Church is not what happens in a building for an hour on Sunday morning. That’s called “going to church” not “being the church.” “Going to church” is a passive activity. You can “go to church” your whole life without ever knowing God, following Jesus, or having your heart filled with the Holy Spirit.

However, “being the church,” well, that’s active. “Going to church” is something you can do for an hour a week, passively sitting here. But “being the Church?” That’s something that will take the sacrificial commitment of your whole self, it will take courage, it will take bravery, it will take boldness. Being the Church requires us to boldly go wherever the Holy Spirit leads us, radically and sacrificially following in the way of Jesus, giving of ourselves to bring the world back to God. That’s what Jesus did! And for those who follow Jesus, we are called to nothing less. If you’re going to be a Christian, you’ve got to be bold.

God wants us to do more than simply “go to church.” Far too many Christians are settling for staying in the pew instead of getting into mission. You know what the pew is? It’s a bench! And if all we’re doing is warming the pew, then we’re simply warming the bench. That’s not standing on the promises, it’s simply sitting on the premises! Church is active – we are called to get off the bench and get in the game.

I don’t know about you, but I’m done “going to church.” I want to “be the church.” I don’t want to just take up space for an hour a week; I want to be part of the living, breathing, moving, body of Christ – a body with real hands and feet, a body who represents Christ in the world, a body who is serious and bold about doing the things God wants us to do.

Don’t get me wrong – what we do on Sunday when we gather for worship is still vitally important. I don’t want anyone, for one second, to think that what happens as we worship together is unimportant.

When we worship, we gather to give God the glory God is due, making God a priority and at the center of all we do. Worship is a celebration. A celebration of what God has done as told through Scripture and song, and in the lives of saints long ago and saints sitting next to us. Worship is a time to be equipped. It’s a time for disciples to gather, to be taught, to be nurtured, to be challenged, to be equipped for faithful living in the world. And, worship is a time to encourage each other in our never-ending, continually unfolding journey of becoming Christlike people in the world.

But for the church, for the Spirit-filled Church, sitting on the pew isn’t the main event. We are most fully the Church when we boldly go; just warming the bench for a hour a week won’t do it! The Church is most fully the Church when we can boldly say, “Jesus has left the building!” The Church is most fully the Church when we can boldly say, “Church has left the building!” Being the true, authentic, Spirit-filled Church requires us to be bold.

These are the voyages of the Spirit-filled Church: it’s continuing mission to share God’s presence and invite people into new life, to seek out and save the lost, to boldly go wherever the Holy Spirit leads us to go.