Indianapolis First Friends Quaker Meeting
Pastor Bob Henry
November 8, 2020
2 Corinthians 3:1-3 (The Message)
3 1-3 Does it sound like we’re patting ourselves on the back, insisting on our credentials, asserting our authority? Well, we’re not. Neither do we need letters of endorsement, either to you or from you. You yourselves are all the endorsement we need. Your very lives are a letter that anyone can read by just looking at you. Christ himself wrote it—not with ink, but with God’s living Spirit; not chiseled into stone, but carved into human lives—and we publish it.
Good morning Friends, before I start my sermon today, I want to remind you that we recorded this Meeting for Worship on Wednesday of this week.
Please understand how difficult it is to prepare sermons without knowing how the rest of the week will unfold. We pastors take seriously our preparation and the Spirit’s leading. And I pray this message speaks to your condition, today.
Last week on my day-long spiritual retreat, I began reading Elaine Pagels personal memoir, “Why Religion?” Elaine is definitely no stranger to suffering, which Beth spoke of last week in her sermon.
Elaine’s son died at the age of six from a rare lung disease and about a year later her husband fell to his death while mountain climbing. Many assumed she would simply “curse God and die” but that was not what happened.
Instead Elaine found a way to transcend her situations and embrace life. She found herself relating to the Old Testament character, Job, and delved into
· looking at the origins of Satan,
· what life after death really means,
· and a fuller understanding of the gospel we so often relegate to just a life after death transaction.
I know for me, when I have gone through tough times or even suffering, I have found myself being forced to see things from different perspectives and angles – sometimes to bring me comfort and other times to help me transcend my situation and embrace life more fully.
Maybe you are starting, or need to start doing that currently, in this pandemic, or this week because of the tensions surrounding the election.
Actually, as I had time to ponder last Thursday during my spiritual retreat, I realized that most of my breakthroughs in life have come during very difficult times.
Take for example my breakthrough and openness to understanding God’s unconditional love for me and ALL people no matter their race, gender, sexuality, or faith.
It came after I was personally attacked by so-called Christians who followed and believed in an angry, threatening, and judgmental God (not the God of love and grace that I had come to know)…and who took on those damaging racist, homophobic, xenophobic, and misogynistic attributes to hurt many including myself.
Instead of being followers of Christ bearing good news, new life, and forgiveness, they presented just the opposite, and I realized that is not who I wanted to be.
Now, if you are like me, I have wanted all week to transcend this world and find a way to embrace life more fully.
There is a lot of unnecessary suffering going on in our world right now. Our lawn furniture has been turned upside down (as Beth said last week) by this election process, and many are responding in ways that do not represent the Divine.
Many are even questioning the role of the Divine in our nation, right now.
But just maybe instead of questioning God or the leaders of our country or even religion, we need to turn the questioning on ourselves.
Victor Frankl out of his own Holocaust survival said it this way…
“…think of ourselves as those who are being questioned by life – daily and hourly…. Life ultimately means taking the responsibility to find the right answer to its problems, and to fulfill the tasks which it constantly sets for each individual.”
Just take a moment and ask yourself…
· How have I been questioned by life this week?
· What responsibilities am I being convicted of, to seek answers to the problems I am facing?
· What new tasks am I being called to, in this present moment?
Too often we spend our time demanding that our leaders and authorities be responsible and tasked with answering our questions for us.
If you think about it, the entire election process has been about demanding that those we elect execute roles that instead of helping us answer our call – simply fulfill the call for us.
And sadly, many have come to do the same with religion. For us Christians, we have limited our capacity to see our role in this world by allowing the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus to be our substitutionary sacrifice.
His life gets us off the hook…But does it really?
If only I could have Jesus sub in for me and do my work, raise my kids, get the oil changed in my car, deal with that family member who has differing political views….or maybe just play tag team with Jesus when life gets too tough – tapping him in when I need a break.
You see what I mean?
What if it was not solely a substitute, but actually as the early Christians believed, “THE WAY”?
Or as the Scripture Beth read said, “Christ himself wrote it—not with ink, but with God’s living Spirit; not chiseled into stone, but carved into human lives—and we publish it.”
It’s God’s Spirit living within us not just substituting for us. God wants to work with us so together we can bring more life and hope to this world.
Yes, Jesus was the way by giving us the ultimate example for us and filling us with his Spirit, so we too may overcome our suffering, daily struggling and dying and find new life and resurrection in the present moment.
What if all along we were to be seeing the suffering and problems we were facing in this world not as punishment for wrong doing, judgment, or sinful acts, but as teachable moments, conviction points, opportunities for relationship building, and possibilities for us bringing ongoing resurrection to our daily lives?
What if “Loving Wastefully” was ultimately living out the resurrection again and again in our daily lives and bringing “new life” to those around us?
Just think about this for a moment…
What if we saw this ongoing pandemic as an opportunity for us to experience resurrection in the here and now? What relationships, new endeavors, and life-giving opportunities might we seek to create?
Or what if we saw the election process we just endured as an opportunity for us to experience resurrection? What might we be concerned with, convicted by, and seeing as our calling, now?
What if the racial unrest in our country is an opportunity for us to experience resurrection? Who might need to experience “new life” and hope today?
What if the pain and suffering we are facing in our personal lives are not punishment for something we have done wrong but could be transformed into a vehicle for resurrection in our own lives?
· What if your divorce could be turned into a vehicle for resurrection?
· What if that therapy session could be turned into a vehicle for resurrection?
· What if your addiction could be turned into a vehicle for resurrection?
· What if your allegiance to a political party could be turned into a vehicle for resurrection?
· And the list could go on…
·
What if we sought how to transcend our guilt, our pain, our personal sin, or suffering into hope and new life?
Elaine Pagels helped me see this perspective even more vividly when she suggested taking a look at the Gospel of Truth – one of the additional gospels (or what scholars call a Gnostic Gospel) not included in the canon of the Christian Scriptures.
For those unfamiliar with the Gospel of Truth, it was written possibly by Valentinus between 90 and 160 CE. Through it is unique poetry focusing on joy, fulfillment, and sensuousness, it opens up a new, but helpful view of Jesus’ gospel. Pagels points out that
“the Gospel of Truth reframes the vision of the cross from an instrument of torture into a new tree of knowledge. Here Jesus’ battered body, ‘nailed to a tree,’ is seen as fruit on a tree of ‘knowing the Father,’ which unlike that tree in Paradise, doesn’t bring death, but life, to those who eat from it…
After years of contending with familiar Jewish and Christian sources, (Pagels says), I found here a vision that goes beyond what Paul calls, “the message of the cross.”
Instead of seeing suffering as punishment, this gospel suggests that, seen through the eyes of wisdom, suffering can show how we are connected, with each other, and with God; what Paul’s letter to the Colossians calls, “the mystery of Christ in you, the hope of glory.”
Instead of the substitutionary or transactional aspects, The Gospel of Truth returns us to the importance of relationships and how when we come to know ourselves, simultaneously we come to know God.
It is a gnosis – not intellectual knowledge, but a knowledge of the heart.
Pagels proclaims that, “What we first must come to know is that we cannot fully know God, since that Source far transcends our understanding. But what we can know is that we’re intimately connected with the divine Source, since “in him we live and move and have our being.
This past week, I have been reading through the Gospel of Truth and allowing it to speak deeply to my condition as well as help me see my connection to the Divine.
I have found myself re-reading this brief section titled The Good News and Hidden Mystery of Jesus. Just listen as I read it:
The Gospel of Truth 4:1-8
1 This is the good news of one whom they seek, revealed to those filled through the mercies of the Father. 2 Through the hidden mystery, Jesus Christ shone to the ones in the darkness of forgetfulness. 3 He enlightened them and showed them a way. The way he taught them was truth. 4 Because of this Transgression was angry with him and pursued him. She was distressed by him and left barren.
5 He was nailed to a tree and became the fruit of the Father’s knowledge. 6 It did not cause destruction when it was eaten, but it caused those who ate it to come into being and find contentment within its discovery. 7 And he discovered them in himself – the uncontainable, the unknowable Father, the one who is full and made all things. 8 All things are in him and all things have need of him.
Folks, what I believe Elaine Pagels was trying to help me see is that the mystery of Christ lives in You and Me!
That our inner light – that of God with in us – is the vehicle helping us to see the Way to new life (or Resurrection) and find hope in our world in the PRESENT MOMENT!
And through our relationships with others (who also have that of God in them) we get a front row seat in seeing the life of Christ unfold in our lives TOGETHER.
We get to be incarnate light in the lives of those around us.
We get to be the love, the hope, the NEW LIFE (resurrection) in our world.
Or as we have been saying through this entire series…we get to…
Live life to its fullest, love wastefully, and be all that we can be.
Something we desperately need currently in our country and world.
So no matter what is happening with the election, the pandemic, our personal sufferings and crises, the question we should be asking is how am I living out the Resurrection in real-time to make this world a better place – all while continuing to discover that we are in the Divine as the Divine is in us.
So now let us take some time to center ourselves and enter into Waiting Worship – here are some queries to ponder:
1. How might I see the struggles and sufferings in my life as a vehicle for bringing resurrection (new life)?
2. What relationships do I need to nurture so that I can experience the Divine more fully in my life?
3. What concerns, convicts, and is calling me to love wastefully in the present moment?