Sunday, July 14, 2013

How The Gospel Grows


Psalm 119:1-20; Colossian 1:1-14

            I only have a green thumb when I’m finger painting.   And I haven’t finger painted with any color in very many years.   And even when I did, I don’t quite recall using my thumb.   Anyway, instead of a green thumb, I’m happier having a Gospel thumb.   I’ve spent my adult life trying to plant and help grow seeds of God’s gracious, Good News love in Jesus Christ.  I especially hope and pray I’m able to reveal a big Gospel “thumbs up” every week I have the privilege of the pulpit. 

            Ministry and gardening imagery is found throughout Scripture.   It began to come together for me in an especially influential way some eighteen years ago, in my second year of seminary studies.    I had a preaching professor, Dr. Nichols, who claimed he was “a gardener of sorts.”   He had built plenty of new gardens, had “reaped the special joy of seeing bare lots or tangled patches of woodland become places of beauty and abundance.”    But what he most enjoyed was coming upon gardens “once ordered and lovely, now gone to rack and ruin and crying out for restoration.”[i]   Tilling and tending to sin-stricken soil  was his true vocation in ministry.

            Let’s recall that God’s good garden, this amazing world we live in, was once upon a time perfectly, harmoniously ordered and lovely.   But then, as the great faith story of our beginnings goes, the first of our humankind freely chose to abuse the freedom they were created with.  They chose to rebel against their loving Creator.    The blight of sin settled in and began spoiling all the good fruit God had created.  It has been seeded within every one of our generations as a spiritual inheritance ever since.    Gone to rack and ruin, cries for holy restoration have been constant across the ages.   

            Those cries are fully and mercifully answered by the forgiving, garden-restoring Word of God in Jesus Christ.  Do you recall how our Lord chose to appear to Mary Magdalene after His resurrection?   As a gardener!    In Christ, all of us, in a myriad of amazing ways, are gifted with Gospel thumbs and called to go out and sow His Good News each day in this sin soiled world.

            As we go about this, we really should keep in mind an important teaching from this morning’s lesson in Colossians -- the Gospel grows itself.   Its reality doesn’t depend on us.  Our Lord’s blight-of-sin banishing, soul restoring truth is all-sufficient.   This is secure for us in heaven.    While it doesn’t depend on is, it is for us.   Through the mysterious working of the Holy Spirit, the Gospel is planted in our hearts and minds.  There, by grace and through our faith, it grows the good fruits that reveal and sow its restorative power wherever there is rack and ruin.  

            Listen again to how Colossians 1:5-6 speaks to the Gospel as an all-sufficient power unto itself that makes salvation and sacred living possible for us – “Just as it is bearing fruit and growing in the whole world, so it has been bearing fruit among yourselves from the day you heard it and truly comprehended the grace of God.”    The Gospel grows itself. 

            Do you recall how you first came to realize the Gospel was within you?  Were there moments when you truly felt God’s grace in Christ dispelling darkness and growing true light in your life?   What kind of good fruit – faith, hope and love -- has it born through you to feed the spiritual, emotional and physical needs of your loved ones and neighbors?   And who were the Gospel thumb gardeners who helped sow the Word within and with you?

            For the early people living in first century Colossae, the Gospel became known and grew when their garden, I mean, their congregation was planted.    It was not planted by the Apostle Paul.  This restoration garden was instead established by a convert from paganism named Epaphras whose Gospel thumb was trained, loved and admired by Paul.    

            As first Colossians makes clear, Paul, who was imprisoned in Rome at the time, was tremendously pleased to received reports from Epaphras about the ongoing good growth happening in this Christian community.   He rejoiced learning about all the fresh shoots of Jesus’ love, about their holding fast to sustaining roots of spiritual wisdom and understanding, about the many good works being done for all God’s people.   But he also exhorted them to stay strong, grateful and joyful in the Lord.  He reaffirmed that they needed to “endure everything with patience.”

            Why this word about patient endurance?   Was there a particular blight visiting their plot of world-restoring work in the Lord? 

            Bible commentaries tell us that there were indeed certain people trying to spoil the Gospel fruit grown from the truth of salvation in Christ alone.   Presbyterian scholar William Barclay simply and bluntly calls them “The Mistaken Thinkers.”   More academically, they were a movement known as the Gnostics.   These were intellectual elites who believed they alone were “in the know” and who were “dissatisfied with what they considered the rude simplicity of Christianity.”   They couldn’t accept that the only thing needing to be done for salvation was freely accept the Good News -- the Gospel -- of God’s love in Jesus Christ.  They preferred to think that there must be some further means in addition to this message, something else they could do to save themselves from sin.  They wanted to change the Gospel into yet another fancy world philosophy”[ii] such as were in vogue across the Greco-Roman empire.     

            There’s much more to what these mistaken thinkers taught, but suffice it to say Paul preached that any complicating, culturally coopted teaching about Christian faith is to be patiently endured and totally rejected.  Nothing further needs to be believed about the, yes, simple message that “God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, so that everyone who believes in him may not perish but may have eternal life.” (John 3:16).  There’s nothing rude and instead everything righteous about proclaiming in word and deed that God “has rescued us from the power of darkness and transferred us into the kingdom of his beloved Son, in whom we have redemption, the forgiveness of sins.” (1:13)  This Gospel graciously grows itself, we need only freely and faithfully accept the restorative fullness of it and commit ourselves to bearing its good fruit of faith, hope and above all, love.

            Next Saturday morning, many local Gospel thumbs are hitting the road to Warfield, Kentucky as part of the Appalachia Service Project.   This will be my ninth straight trip, my wife Stefanie’s second trip, and my daughter Anna’s first trip.  We are very excited for many reasons, including the fact that we’ll be in the good company of the following folks from our church family – Bob Eyet and daughter Katie Eyet, Gary Falkenstern, Lindsay Fritz, Rick Frost and daughter Emma Frost, sisters Avery Gavornik and Madison Gavornik, siblings Rachel Giardin and Garret Giardin, Gill Smith and son Kevin Smith.   Plus, we fifteen from our church family will also be there with 79 brothers and sisters from Presbyterian churches in Chester, Califon, Stillwater, as well as the United Methodist Church in Califon and St. Paul’s Lutheran Church in Flemington.  

            The 94 of us aren’t going to work on our salvation.  Again, as Colossians reminds us, is secure in heaven through Christ our Lord.   We are going there to be gardeners of the Gospel growing itself!   We’ll do this by sowing faith, hope and love as we simultaneously make the homes of poverty-stricken neighbors in great need warmer, safer and dryer.   

            We will be inspired and guided by a bible study theme, which, for this year, is “Radical Reversal.”   This means living into what it means to take on the attitude of Christ, an attitude which begins with the radical reversal of realizing that “people of faith don’t just make plans; they believe God has plans for them.”[iii]   For all of you who have been so supportive in prayer and fundraising, and by committing to go on this mission trip, I trust that at our returning worship service at the Community House on the 28th, there will be many fruitful words of love in the Spirit to share.   

            Over the coming two weeks, notice and use your Gospel thumbs.   And please pray Colossians 1, verses 11 and 12 for us preparing for and going to Warfield.  Please pray that we all may be “made strong with all the strength that comes from [Christ’s] glorious power,” and “be prepared to endure everything with patience, while joyfully giving thanks to the Father, who has enabled [us] to share in the inheritance of the saints in the light.”   Amen.

 

             



[i] The Restoring Word, J. Randall Nichols, p. 4
[ii] William Barclay, Daily Bible Study series, Colossians, p.114
[iii] http://resources.servicenetwork.com/AppServ/GroupLeaderResources/DevosforSummer.pdf

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