Monday, April 14, 2014

Highway to the Danger Zone, Part II




Palm Passion Sunday
April 13, 2014
Matthew 21:1-11; Philippians 2:5-11

            There is a tumblr blog that I follow called “Ev’ry day I’m pastorin’…”  A recent entry is titled “The Plight of the Associate Pastor” with a video clip from the movie “27 Dresses” showing the lead actress Katherine Heigl wearing one of her 27 bridesmaid dresses.[1]  The caption reads, “Always preaches Palm Sunday, never Easter.”  I truly don't mind, because there’s an advantage to preaching the same holy day each year, and that is that I remember what I preached about last year.  You see, it had a catchy title: “Highway to the Danger Zone.”  Last year I focused on how Jesus enters Jerusalem knowing that his Passion is coming, knowing that Good Friday is coming, knowing that the crowd that today shouts “Hosanna!” will in just five days shout “Crucify him!”  This year has become Part II because I’d like to take that idea a little further.  This year, I realized that Jesus does the joyful procession with the palms not just knowing that Good Friday’s coming, not just knowing that Easter’s coming three days later, but knowing the long-term future, the last things, the end of time.  He does this triumphal entry into the danger zone not just knowing danger is imminent, but from the vantage point of God’s kingdom fully come.  Jesus knows the end end game. 
            A couple weeks ago my Disciple class did an exercise that invited us to consider present events and dilemmas from the last things of your life, and I’d like us all to think about it for a minute.  Close your eyes, and think about what’s going on in your life right now.  What’s troubling you?  Now, imagine yourself at the end of your life.  In your last hours, your last days, will that trouble matter?  Looking back at your life from that vantage point, will whatever you’re going through be all that important?  What will be important then?  [pause]  You can open your eyes now.  It’s an interesting way to gain perspective.  Jesus perceives events this way throughout the Gospels, he views the present from the angle of the future.  He tells the disciples multiple times what’s going to happen with regards to his death and resurrection and that God’s kingdom is going to come.  And yet, even though Jesus can look back on his passion from the future, that doesn’t seem to make it any easier for him to go through this week.  He seems somewhat reluctant to go through with what he knows is coming, and he even knows how it’s going to turn out! 
We are all plagued with fear and doubt at times, and that includes Jesus.  As our second reading, also known as the Philippian Christ hymn, explained, in Christ, God took on human form.  Jesus is fully God and fully human and his fully human self experiences the whole range of human emotions.  He enjoys spending time with his friends and he weeps when his friend, Lazarus, dies.[2]  Jesus gets mad when he enters the temple and kicks out everyone who set up shop inside a holy place of worship.[3]  He calls King Herod a “fox”![4]  And as we journey with Jesus through Holy Week, we discover that while he is willing to carry out God’s will, there are times he doesn’t really want to.  Listen to his prayer in the garden of Gethsemane: “My Father, if it is possible, may this cup be taken from me. Yet not as I will, but as you will.”[5]  Or, in another translation: “Father, this is the last thing I want. If there is any way, please take this bitter cup from Me. Not My will, but Yours be done.”[6]  Or my husband’s paraphrase: “Seriously, Dad?  Do I have to?  Can’t we just do the fire and brimstone thing again?  No?  *sigh* Fine.” 
Jesus seems to have a few doubts.  He’s reluctant to do what God’s calling him to do.  The path is clear.  The happy parade into Jerusalem will lead to the cross will lead to victory over death and the salvation of the world.  Jesus knows God’s long-term plan, he knows what he’s gotta do, and he knows today begins a time of great trial and tribulation that will eventually lead to his death on a cross.  The disciples, on the other hand, think today is great!  Jesus is finally entering Jerusalem and will inaugurate his kingdom!  Yay God!  But Jesus has a different perspective on things.  He knows the rest of the story after today, and while the long-term is good (who doesn’t want to defeat death?), the short-term is fraught with peril (or, in modern parlance, sucks). 
Is that something you can identify with?  Are there times when you know God is calling you to something, but the journey from now to that place seems full of potential for disaster and so many unknowns?  You know God’s calling, but how he’s going to make a way just isn’t clear?  It’s all right to be reluctant.  Captain America in his newest movie has his doubts about what he’s doing and whether he’s doing the right thing or not.  Right and wrong were a lot clearer during World War II than they are now.  However, Captain America is a soldier, and soldiers obey orders.  He has his reservations, but he still does as he’s told. 
Because what’s important is that we follow through with it, anyway.  God calls us to follow him boldly, despite our fears and doubts and questions and reluctance.  Even Jesus, “being found in human form, humbled himself and became obedient to the point of death—even death on a cross.”[7]  Jesus was obedient to God’s plan for his life.  He knows that the crowd cheering him today is fickle, and will turn on him by Friday.  But I can’t imagine him not smiling and enjoying today’s procession and enjoying the people’s happiness.  Jesus doesn’t sulk his way through the crowd.  He goes through with it, boldly. 
The very first sermon ever I preached before I’d even had a class on preaching and was at my first summer field ed.  The text was from Genesis 22, when God asks Abraham to take his only son Isaac and sacrifice him.  God had already promised to Abraham that he would make of him a great nation through Isaac, offspring as numerous as the stars.  It doesn’t say what Abraham was thinking, we’re just told his actions, but Abraham had to be wondering.  What God was asking him to do didn’t make sense.  But Abraham trusts God and obeys him, anyway.  He does what God asks, even though it didn’t make sense.  Since this was my first sermon, it didn’t have three points and I only had one illustration, taken from my life.  Before seminary I had been serving in Nicaragua on a three-year contract with a mission agency.  After only one year, God said it was time to leave and to go to seminary.  I had my doubts about that, as you might imagine.  Leaving early meant leaving my students, breaking my contract with the mission agency, and announcing an abrupt change of plans to my supporters.  Plus, I had already done grad school once and I swore I was never going back to school!  It didn’t make sense for me to return to the U.S. permanently at that time.  But I did.  And two weeks after I finished that first field ed is when my husband and I were married.  God knew the long-term plan; he has that advantage.  He knew it was the right time for me to return.  I had to put aside my doubts and follow. 
If we face our fears with our faith in God, he will see us through.  A lot of us are going through major life changes this spring: selling a house, changing jobs, the death of a parent, the birth of a child, the graduation of a grown child.  I don’t know if it’s the season, or what, but it seems that a lot of us are going through major transitions this spring, some which we chose and others which we didn’t.  We have our doubts and our fears about what’s going on.  We may pray for a sign for reassurance that we’re doing the right thing.  Sometimes God sends neon signs and sometimes it’s harder to interpret.  Sometimes it’s our own fault and we ignore the sign because we don’t actually really want to do what God’s calling us to do and we’d rather pretend otherwise. 
Christian comedian Ken Davis tells the following story about waiting for a “sign from God.”  A Christian gets on an empty city bus, walks to the rear, and sits down.  ‘Lord,’ he prays, ‘if you want me to speak to someone about you, please give me a sign.’  At the next stop another passenger boards the bus, goes all the way to the back, and sits down right next to the Christian.  The passenger asks, “Do you know anything about Jesus?”  The Christian excuses himself for a moment and slowly bows his head and once again prays, ‘Lord, if you really want me to talk to this stranger, I need just one more sign.  Please turn the bus driver into an armadillo.’[8] 
Now, if you’re praying for armadillos, then it sounds like you don’t really want to do whatever it is you’re praying about.  You don’t want to obey God, whether out of fear or doubt or for some other reason.  Are you praying for armadillos?  Or are you ready and willing to follow your Savior wherever he may lead, including this week, to the cross?  God doesn’t always call us to things that make sense by the world’s standards.  He calls us to die to ourselves and live to him.  He calls us to be obedient.  And if you are obedient, God will see you through. 
My Disciple class moved into the book of Acts this week and the first few chapters talk about how the apostles and early believers act and preach boldly.  Moreover, the early church prays for more boldness!  What would happen if we were to pray for more boldness?  If we were to act more boldly, and less fearfully?  If we were to follow Jesus, wherever he may lead us, secure in the knowledge that there’s no safer place to be than in the center of God’s will?  Sometimes following Jesus leads us through a danger zone.  Sometimes it means we go through a period of uncertainty as we wait for God to open a door, or even a window.  Sometimes it’s hard to follow Jesus, but he’s a better wingman than Iceman or Maverick, and he will see us through, just as he will see us through this Holy Week as we follow him yet again to the cross.  Maundy Thursday and Good Friday services are both at 7 p.m.  Come listen to the story again, discern where God’s calling you to obey him, and gain the courage to take up your cross and follow him once more.

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