B060514
EASTER 5: MAY 14, 2006
John
15:1-8... ( SERMON 1: “ABOUT
VINES: A NEW PARABLE”)
1
John 4: 7-21... ( SERMON 2: “STANDING WHERE JESUS STOOD”)
Acts
8:26-40...
Psalm
22:25-31
FINDING FOCUS
The
joy of the risen Christ be with you all.
And also with you.
Life
is forever open-ended.
No
vine or tree is meant to be forever fruitless.
Loss
is only for a little while and joy comes in the morning.
Despondency
and despair have no permanent ground in this universe.
Faith,
hope and love are gifts that last forever.
But
the greatest of these gifts is love.
The love of the Lord Jesus be with you
all.
And also with you.
OR
Christ
our Host is present with us.
We are convened by his own Spirit.
Drink
gladly from this True Vine,
for
you will never drink in vain.
Here the poorest can eat and
be satisfied,
and all seekers shall praise
the Lord
with joy in our hearts
forever!
The
good news shall be passed on to each generation,
people
as yet unborn will proclaim his salvation.
For the final word belongs
with our Lord
the people of all nations
shall come under his rule.
TURNING TO GOD
Holy
are you, God of the risen Christ.
Wonderful
are you, God of grace and beauty!
Glorious
are you, God of eternal life!
We
bring before you, most loving God, that mixture of eagerness and reticence,
truth
and distortion, love and indifference, which constitute our human nature.
We
bring the totality of our true selves to you, holding nothing back.
We
know that you do not despise even the least or worst of earth’s children.
Please
bless us according to our individual needs, and lift us up from all distraction
into the unbridled pleasure of thanksgiving, love and worship.
Through
Christ Jesus our brother, your true Son.
Amen!
ADMITTING OUR FAILURES AND
TRUSTING FORGIVENESS
Jesus
said: “I
am the vine, you are the branches.” Let us pray.
We
thank you, gracious God, for Jesus Christ the true vine, with his roots
eternally grounded in you. We rejoice that by grace we have been grafted into
him, to be branches on a vine which bears the loveliest of all the fruits of
earth. Yet we confess that all is not well with the way we live.
Please forgive us for the
occasions when
we have been the ones to introduce disease into the vine,
preferring its contamination to the vigour of health.
Forgive us for neglecting to
draw deeply on the sap of Life,
for our tendency to wander instead of growing on the framework
your provide,
for being content, and sometimes even proud of, a few sparse or
undersized fruits,
for the apathy which lets us to go through some seasons without
bearing any fruit.
Have
mercy on us. Please do not lose patience or sever us completely from the true
vine. Rather heal our diseases, discipline and train our wandering tendrils,
prune our unfruitful branches and cut away our diseased ones. May we remain in
Christ and he in us, through all the changing seasons of life. Let us delight
in bearing the fruits of love which are our true purpose and joy. For your
Name’s sake.
Amen!
FORGIVENESS
Jesus
said: “If
you reside in me, and my words reside in you, ask whatever you will and it
shall be done for you.” Friends, we
have asked for forgiveness and correction. It has been truly done for us. It is
being done for us. And it will be done for us.
Thanks be to God!
PRAYER FOR CHILDREN
It
isn’t enough God.
It
isn’t enough that we learn of you
and
about your dear Son, Jesus.
We
need much more.
We
want the true vine of Jesus
to
live and grow within us,
and
to bear good fruit;
that
fruit which can be shared
with
others.
It
isn’t enough, God,
to
say these prayers.
Please
help us to become
living
prayers.
In
the name of Jesus.
Amen!
PSALM 22:25-31
In
the presence of your gathered people,
I
make my vows to you, holy God.
Here ‘nobodies’ shall eat
the bread of life
and they shall be fully
satisfied.
Those
who seek you shall find a praise
which
will live in their hearts forever.
Every corner of the world
shall remember
and turn to you, most loving
God.
Every
family from every country
shall
come and worship you.
For authority belongs to you
alone,
your love will rule all
nations.
To
you even the most arrogant men
must
finally bow down and worship.
All are made of dust and
must admit it;
not one of us can keep
ourselves alive.
Our
far off descendants shall serve you,
they
shall speak of you in ages to come,
A people yet unborn shall
name you Saviour,
because you have made it so
to happen.
Ó B D
Prewer 2002
PRUNING
Grape
growing is not for wimps,
it
requires tough pruning decisions;
a
costly willingness to wound
and
amputate limbs of the vine;
in
order to stimulate and shape it
towards
the better fruit and wine.
****
God
reads a season’s potential,
fights
pests, weeds, mildew,
supports
productive branches
and
severs fruitless fears;
Grace
is as free as sun and rain
and
as hard and sharp as shears.
Ó
B D Prewer 2000
BRIEF PRAYER
Loving
Lord, apart from you we can do nothing. With you all things are possible. Graft
us into your true vine, inflow us with your resurrection sap until we become
aligned with your direction and destiny.
When
the fruits have been picked, our leaves fall, and autumn comes with a chill
wind, help us to accept whatever pruning back is needful for your glory.
In
the name of Christ through whom all things are possible.
Amen!
SERMON 1: ABOUT VINES: A NEW
PARABLE.
Jesus
said: “I am the true vine and my Father is the vinedresser.”
Today
is not a sermon but a parable, a story. You will have to take careful notice,
and look deeper, as I speak about vines. You need to conduct your personal
harvest. There will be no pre-packaged answers or explanations.
So,
are you ready to bend your mind and soul to the task of picking your own
grapes, and maybe discovering some new wine in your cup?
----MY
PARABLE OF THE VINES----------------------------------------------------------------------
My
parable concerns vines in my garden at home, but it is really about Christ and
God.
We,
my wife Marie and I, have two grapevines. After some years in our garden they
have not earned their keep. Only a few tiny grapes have been produced. They are not fulfilling their prime purpose.
Some would label them a waste of space. Why do we tolerate their existence?
1 Because we chose them, gratefully observed a
good friend help plant them (I was incapacitated at that time) and we watch
over them and love them. They are our vines.
2 Because they spread their limbs over a small
pergola and provide welcome shade on a hot, summer day. So they are not
completely useless.
-------WHY
SUCH POOR
FRUITING?------------------------------------------------------------------
Why
don’t they produce good fruit? There
are a few reasons that come to mind.
1.
We did not chose the best soil. After our house extensions were completed with the
builders rubble everywhere, and bricklayers sand and lime scattered around, a
“bobcat” was used to smooth over the site, pushing the detritus underground and
out of sight. Not being physically well that year, I left it like that and
allowed the vines to be planted in it. I don’t think our vines like the ground
in which they were so injudiciously planted. We have fertilised them, and
trained them, pruned them and fussed over them. But nothing can make up for the
fact they are in poor ground. It’s hard to bear fruit if your ground is inferior.
2.
They do not get enough sunlight. Adjacent to our garden is a municipal reserve.
Along our fence are growing eucalypts which increasingly permit only a small
amount of sunlight to nurture our garden. Our grapevines are seriously deprived
of light. They manage to produce some foliage, and bestow on us shade, but they
cannot cope with much more than that. To be fruitful, vines need plenty of
light and warmth. Nothing can make up for the fact that our vines, which we
cherish and wish could fulfil their destiny, are starved of the sunlight.
3.
I am not a skilled vinedresser. I lack understanding and skill. I have no training
in the art of pruning and the basic needs of vines. I read the books; then
prune them, but no doubt get it somewhat wrong. In the hands of a qualified
grower who knows grapevines like his own soul, these vines, in spite of the
poor soil and limited sunlight, would do far better than they do in my hands.
They need a good vinedresser; some one who really knows vines. Nothing can make
up for the fact that I am not that good vinedresser.
4.
They have serious competition. Near them and beneath them grows other foliage
competing for the nutrients, water and light. Through late autumn, winter and
early spring, the ground would look bare without some ground cover. We have
provided tough, perennial ground cover. It’s not as if I let many weeds grow. I
deal with them---most of the time. It’s others plants that we have cultivated,
and sometimes permit to run a bit wild, that compete with the vine. Maybe if I
were really serious about getting fruit, I would have to make the decision to
put my vine ahead of everything else. Put the vines first. If nothing mattered
more than the vines, then fruits might come and grace the branches. Nothing can
make up for the fact that the vines are not put absolutely first.
5.
They might not receive adequate water. The region of Sunbury, where we live, receives a
low annual rainfall. Although I have installed a drip system around the garden,
and the vines receive some water along with other plants, for the same period
of time each week, I don’t think they receive adequate refreshment. A good vine
might need as much as I give the rest of the garden put together. A vine is
thirsty for water; it thrives on growth. Maybe, listening to those government
voices that keep telling us to conserve water, we have starved our vines of the
water of life. Nothing can make up for the fact that our vines are deprived of
abundant water.
-------OVER
TO YOU------------------------------------------------------------------------
There
you have it. The story of our grape vines. Will we be willing to put up with
our fruitless vines forever? I don't know. Our love for them is not
unconditional.
It
has to be a very special vinedresser for there to be unconditional love. In
fact, it has to be a unique person if there is to be unconditional love.
Jesus
said: “I am the true vine” [Read verses 1-7]
SERMON 2: STANDING WHERE JESUS STOOD
1
John 4: 7-12
Benjamin
Dreghorn, an clergyman of the church of
England in the Victorian era, (as told
by Anne Perry in her brief but insightful murder mystery, A Christmas Visitor) had
declined parish ministry to be an archaeologist in the Holy Land. Like the
other members of the family, Benjamin comes home to the family estate for the
Christmas vacation. It proves to be a home coming soured by the violent death
of the eldest brother, Judah. A wise family friend, Henry Rathbone, has come
down from London to be with them in their sorrow. He is the only visitor at
that season.
A
few days after Benjamin’s arrival home from
Jerusalem, while seated at dinner,
his sister-in-law Antonia asked Benjamin about what he would be doing on
his return to Jerusalem. Benjamin’s face briefly lost its grief and came alight
with enthusiasm. He described the thrill of exploring the streets of the
ancient city where Christ spent his last days. He became even more animated as
he outlined his new project: trying to the find the garden by the empty tomb
where Mary Magdalene had spoken with the risen Christ on that first Easter
morning.
:Can
you imagine?” exclaimed Benjamin. “ We will stand where she stood when he said ‘Mary’ and she knew Him.”
Another
sister-in-law, Naomi, responded. “Perhaps
that is where we are all trying to stand. Only I’m not sure it is a place, I
think it is matter of the spirit, it is what we become”
Now
that is, I believe, a direct hit. A bull’s eye. Three point basket. Hitting a
six out of the park. Serving an ace. A hole in one! Standing where Jesus stood?
“Perhaps that is where we are all trying
to stand. Only I’m not sure it is a place, I think it is matter of the spirit,
it is what we become”
To
stand where Jesus stood is not a matter of geography or archaeology. but of a
faith and commitment right here and now. For now is where the risen Christ
Jesus stands. With us and for us.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
THE
FIRST LETTER OF JOHN
The
writer of the first Letter of John was standing where Jesus stood. By the time
his letter was penned, many years had gone by and John was far away from the
Holy Land. Yet when he wrote his succinct letter, he leaves no doubt about the
ground on which he stands:
My
dear friends, let us love one another, because love comes from God and loving
person
is a child of God and knows God. If you are not a loving
person, then you do not know
God, for God is love.
This
is how the love of God is revealed: It is through the coming of the Son of God
into
this world that through him we may discover what it is to
really live. If you want to find
the source of such
love, do not start with us. It begins with God who first loves us
and sent his son to expiate our sins.
Dear friends, if God so loves us, we must love each other. No
one has set eyes on God.
Yet if we love each
other God lives in us and his love become complete in us.
1
John 4:7-12
What
a remarkable and beautiful statement of belief! It could only be written by a
person who knew they were standing where Jesus stood. Love was the beginning
and the end of the Gospel of Christ Jesus, Son of Mary, Son of God. That is
where John stood.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
THAT
WORD “LOVE”
Let
us pause and highlight in red a point you should have heard many times. It is
about the meaning of the word love.
The
love of the Gospel is a unique brand of love. It has little to do with what
people label as love in our western culture. It is not the love displayed in a
sonnet of Shakespeare, nor that understanding of love which shaped the music
either of Richard Wagner or Elvis Presley. [You won’t often find those two
mentioned together in the one sentence!]
Nor
is love the self-centred thing Sigmund Freud wrote about, and which in his
“Civilization and its Discontents” he grossly confused with the Christian
meaning of love.
And
these days? The Gospel meaning of love has zilch in common with that euphemism
wilfully employed these days to describe the mere conjunction of genitals.
“Making love?” O yuk! How banal! What have we done (or not done) to allow a
word like love to be degraded until it becomes interchangeable with “having
sex.”
The
love of the Gospel, is in another league.
It employs that Greek word “agape.” [I know you may have heard this
before, but it needs repeating to rescue the word from triviality.] Agape was
an almost forgotten, and a colourless,
Greek word for love. The Christians took it down from the shelf, dusted
it off and used it to describe the totally new thing which had came with Jesus
of Nazareth.
Agape
is not a primarily a mood or a feeling. Not predominantly a sentiment or
passion. Agape is a pledged way of life. It is involves not gushy impulses but
an strong decision of the human will. Repeat: a decision of the human will.
Agape is a committment. Commitment is essential to is nature. Therefore it
should never be confused with whether we like certain people or not.
God
love us. This does not mean that God has all positive feelings about
earthlings, or that he likes what we do to each other. It means that God is
committed to our well being with all the Divine “heart and soul and mind and
strength.” Love has utter integrity.
God’s agape is noted for its fidelity.
Jesus
it the exemplar of such love. The only perfect example. Christ’s death is the
apex of the revelation of this unique love.
The
late Dr Alan Richardson, a wise student of the Bible depths, wrote: “ The meaning of love in the New Testament
can be summed up with two words: Christ Jesus.”
To
stand where Christ stood is to be committed to the fidelity of love.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
LOVE
IS UNDIVIDED
Love
God, love one another. When it comes to our embracing of agape (or being
embraced by agape), it cannot really be divided into two segments.: Not
one segment of our love for God and a second segment of our love for one
another.
We
might speak that way for convenience. Indeed Jesus spoke that way in his prime
commandments, on which he believed all the other teaching of Moses and the
prophets hinged: Love God with all your being, and love your neighbour as you
love yourself.
But
in truth, each is a facet of the same love. They cannot be split asunder. If we
truly love God we will find ourselves loving those around us. If we truly love
those around us, without self seeking, then we will find ourselves growing in
love for God.
One
Sunday morning, in a colourful poem-sermon (a few in the congregation were
delighted and deeply moved; most people wondered what I was on about!) I tried
to express this inseparable relationship between loving God and loving others,
with the graphics of a wagon wheel. Pictorially, God is thus the hub of the
wheel and each of us live on the spokes that lead in to that Holy Hub. When we
try to link hands more tightly with others across the gap between the spokes,
we will find ourselves being pulled in closer to God. And the closer we get to
the hub of God, the closer will we find our neighbours on the other spokes of
life.
Love
is one.
In
this sense, the agape of Christ Jesus, the gape of God, is indivisible. To
employ another simile, love is like the robe of Christ (John 19: 23), woven
without any seam.
To
stand where Christ stood, is to trust now, without reservation, the life of
commited loving. Loving both God and our fellow human beings.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMING UP
In
the brief book, A Christmas Visitor, with which I commenced this sermon, the guts
of the story is the loving integrity of the Dreghorn family. In solving the
crime against their brother Judah, they also discover that the estate and
mansion they share (and for which their late father had paid good money) is not
legally theirs. With much pain yet without hesitation, they take steps to place
the property in the hands of its legal owner, and to place themselves in a
pecuniary position.
As
a family, they knew that to stand where Jesus stood, is not a matter of
geography. As Naomi commented to archaeologist Benjamin:
I’m
not sure it is a place, I think it is matter of the spirit, it is what we
become”
One
more comment about this brief book by Anne Perry. As I first contemplated the
title of the book, I thought it a bit weak: A
Christmas Visitor? On the surface
this title appeared to just refer to the family friend, Henry Rathbone, the only outsider in the story, who comes to stay with the family in their
time of grief and becomes the catalyst in discovering why big brother Judah was
murdered..
But
on reflection I realised another possibility. Inside the costly, loving
fidelity of this family, is the very Spirit of Christ. He is the Christmas
visitor. To stand true as the family did, literally meant standing with the
living Christ stood in that situation.
As
I quoted earlier from Dr Alan Richardson:
“The
meaning of love in the New Testament can be summed up
with two words: Christ Jesus.”
A s
St John wrote:
My
dear friends, let us love one another, because love comes from God and loving
person
is a child of God and
knows God.
Love
begins with God who first loves us and
sent his son to expiate our sins.
Dear friends, if God so loves us, we must love each other. No
one has set eyes on God.
Yet if we love each
other God lives in us and his love become complete in us.
BELIEVING
I
believe in God, Source of all things seen and unseen:
in a universe where the basic reality is
Spirit-Mind,
present in human beings as a reflection of
this hidden Spirit,
who has unconditional love for all the
world.
I
believe in Christ Jesus, God’s only true Son:
in grace which surpasses all our ideas of
justice,
in suffering that redeems the previously
unredeemable,
in life that bursts free from graves and
all captivity.
I
believe in the Holy Spirit, our immanent Friend:
in a world where no human being is ever alone,
in a inner light that opens our eyes to
truth,
in a sap which makes the fruitless become
fruitful.
I
put my trust in God.
I
put my trust in Christ.
I
put my trust in Spirit.
Amen!
INTERCESSIONS: SHARING GOD’S
CONCERN FOR THE WORLD
What
a great world it would be, God our Friend, if we all kept our lives grafted in
Christ Jesus, the True Vine, and like good branches produced the bountiful
fruits of his Spirit.
God we pray for your earthly family,
That they may know the fullness of your love.
What
a great world it would be if we cared for the sick and the handicapped, the
diseased and the mentally ill, like Jesus did.
God we pray for your earthly family,
That they may know the fullness of your love.
What
a great world it would be if we sought the lost and bewildered people and
restored their dignity and hope, as Jesus did.
God we pray for your earthly family,
That they may know the fullness of your love.
What
a great world it would be if we opened our hearts to misfits and outcastes, and
our arms to the untouchables, as Jesus did.
God we pray for your earthly family,
That they may know the fullness of your love.
What
a great world it would be if we practised forgiving our enemies, and doing good
to those who spitefully abuse us, like Jesus did.
God we pray for your earthly family,
That they may know the fullness of your love.
What
a great world it would be if we let others borrow what we have, and gave gifts
without looking for reward, as Jesus did.
God we pray for your earthly family,
That they may know the fullness of your love.
What
a great world it would be if we created a new community out of disparate types
of people, as Jesus did with his disciples.
God we pray for your earthly family,
That they may know the fullness of your love.
What
a great world it would be if we were prepared to carry our own crosses with the
courage and faithfulness of our Lord Jesus Christ.
God we pray for your earthly family,
That they may know the fullness of your love.
Loving
God, bind us close to your lovely Christ, let his Spirit flow within us,
healing our defects and enabling us to produce the fruits of love both in and
out of season. To the glory of your name.
Amen!
SPENDING A NEW WEEK WITH
CHRIST
How
will this new week will unfold for each of us?
There
may be new opportunities, there may be setbacks and dangers.
If
we cherish our place in the vine of Christ,
receiving
the very sap of his abundant life,
Some
things might frustrate us but nothing shall defeat us.
Thanks be to God!
Go
cheerfully then, and live boldly.
The grace of the Saviour,
the love of the Creator,
the friendship of the Lover,
is yours forever!
Amen!