Tuesday, November 14, 2017

All In (Reprise)

23rd Sunday after Pentecost
November 12, 2017
Joshua 24:1-3a, 14-25

There’s a curious phenomenon on ESPN that’s been going on for several years now.  The channel that originally was the “Entertainment and Sports Programming Network” and became synonymous with sports, also shows poker games.  Poker is a game, like a basketball game or a football game, but it certainly lacks the physical athleticism that we associate with sports.  Yet there must be people who watch poker on TV, because otherwise ESPN wouldn’t air so many games and tournaments.  I’ve never watched for very long, because the players are usually all covered up with hats and sunglasses so that they can’t give anything away when they bluff.  I don’t find it very interesting to watch someone stare at cards.  But I’m told that at the end of a game, when a player goes “all in,” they push their chips in to the table, take off their sunglasses, and stand up.  When they’re ready to risk it all, they do so dramatically.
This morning’s Old Testament reading comes at the end of Joshua’s life. He has led the people for as long as it was his turn to do so. Israel entered the Promised Land and settled down into houses and started farming, quite a different lifestyle from their forty years of wondering in the wilderness.  Unfortunately, they also took up some of the habits of their new neighbors and started to forget what God had taught them during those forty years when they relied on him for their daily survival.  And so Joshua gives them a reality check.  He reminds them of their history, going back to the father of Abraham, of all that God has done for them so far, how God kept them safe during tough times and delivered them.  However, now that life is settled again and easier, some of them have turned to other gods and so Joshua tells them to choose this day whom you will serve.  The people all know that the right answer is God, and so Joshua really pushes them to make sure they’re not just saying they’ll serve God but will actually do it.  He makes them promise three times.  It’s easy to give lip-service and say you’ll do something, but to follow through, to put away the false gods and to pledge their allegiance to God.  100% allegiance to God means that we give everything to God, it means that God has our undivided loyalty, it means that we go “all in.”
The first thing Joshua reminded the people was of all that God had done for them.  In seminary, this was called their “salvation history.” How God saved them time and again over the course of their history as a people. Joshua starts off with Abraham, father Abraham, and yet doesn’t talk about Abraham “as a venerable leader chosen to become a blessing for all the families of the earth (Genesis 12:3), nor [Abraham] as a steadfast believer whose trust in the LORD's promises was reckoned as righteousness (Genesis 15:6), but simply as an outsider brought from Ur of the Chaldeans.”[1] Joshua starts off with Abraham’s origin story, how God “took your father Abraham from the land beyond the Euphrates and led him throughout Canaan and gave him many descendants,” including Isaac, and to Isaac was given Jacob and Esau.[2] All those middle verses that we skipped in the middle of that chapter, those were all Joshua retelling Israel’s history back to them, reminding them of all that God has done for them, the history of their salvation.
I expect each one of us has a similar story. How God took someone in our family, parent, grandparent, or farther up the line. How that person settled in this place, or another. Or perhaps they were a wanderer, or a traveling salesman, or a sailor. And whoever you’re thinking of, trace that lineage down to you, here, in this time and this place. What’s the story of how God brought you to live where you are today? And over the course of your life, start to name some of the different times when you know God had his hand on you, when God kept you safe, when you’d have been a goner if not for God. Consider some of the different people, whether saints or not, who formed you, who influenced you, for good or bad, and how their influence brought you to this place, to worship God here. What is your salvation history? It may involve surgeries, deployments, moves, divorce, heartbreak, heart restored again. We each have a salvation history, as does the church, God’s family. Our individual stories weave together to form part of the larger story of God saving his people, God saving his family. It is important to remember what God has done for you. When you start to forget, then you start to hold back some of those poker chips, you start to bluff, instead of giving everything to God.
The second thing Joshua reminds the people is that there are consequences for breaking the covenant with God. There are consequences if you fail. There are consequences when you go all in, and you don’t have the cards to back up your move. So remember, and keep, your promise to God. There are probably quite a few promises you’ve made to God along the way. Vows made when you were baptized, which, granted, may have been made for you, in which case, there are your confirmation vows. We make marriage vows in front of God and witnesses. We make promises when we join the church, to uphold it and participate in the ministries of the church through our prayers, our presence, our gifts, our service, and our witness. And every time someone is baptized or becomes a church member, we renew those membership vows.
What other promises have you made to God? I remember one I made that scared me, because I didn’t consciously make it or think it through beforehand.  I babysat a lot in high school, and one night, when I was babysitting for a new family, the power went out. The kids were already in bed and asleep. I had just been watching TV until the parents got home. When the lights went out, it was dark. The only light in the entire neighborhood was from a streetlight about three houses down the street. I had no idea where flashlights or candles were kept; I was not familiar with this house. So, I went to go check on the kids. As I went up the stairs, the thought I had, the prayer I had, was God, if you let anything happen to these kids, I will never believe in you again. And that prayer scared me, that something in me was willing to risk my faith in keeping those kids safe. Now, obviously, thankfully, the kids were just fine. I very well might not be in a pulpit today, otherwise. But I’ve never forgotten that spur of the moment yet very serious vow. It was a promise of going “all in.” And I was going to hold God to it.  
Yet, it’s not ever God who breaks a promise, is it? It’s us. That’s why Joshua is reminding the people that there are consequences when you make a promise to God and don’t keep it. Now, I will never advocate staying in a bad marriage or other unhealthy situation. My parents are divorced, my in-laws are divorced, my stepparents were each divorced before marrying my parents. I get it and this is not that sermon about when to break vows. The vows the people make at Shechem with Joshua are a covenant to serve the Lord their God. This is a promise to obey God and to not forsake him, which is to say to not abandon God, or leave him or disown him, like I threatened to do as a teenager. Yet even we who are Christians sometimes forget God, sometimes don’t trust God, sometimes believe in the myth of individualism and think we can do it all ourselves. Did you know that’s why the official Methodist line is against gambling? To gamble, to play poker or any other game for money, implies that you don’t believe that God will provide for you, that you don’t have enough, that you have to provide for yourself in some other way, like through betting. To truly “go all in” with God means you trust and depend on him. To serve God means you take care of the things he’s given you, like relationships and money and jobs and houses and time and our very selves. It means that when we get a $200 check in the mail, we don’t say, “Hey, cool beans, I’m going to use to go buy that TV I’ve had my eye on.”  But rather, we say, “Hey, thanks God, now, how do you want me to use it?”  It means that we put God first, in our homes, in our work, and try to honor him with everything we say and do.  Not deciding I’m going to do this, and then ask God to bless my action, but praying first, God, what would you have me do about this, and then doing it.  It means keeping his commandments, some of which are easier, like do not murder, than others, like don’t want what belongs to someone else.
When you give to God, do you give out of your leftovers, or after you make sure you have enough for you?  Or do you give generously, and write the check before you look at your bills?  Giving everything to God is recognizing that everything we have is not our own, we are merely the stewards, or caretakers, or what we have.  It’s on loan from God and one day he’s going to ask how we took care of it.  This church building, how well did we take care of it?  Your car, how well do you take care of it?  Your health?  Your finances?  Your family?  When you go all in, it means you don’t serve other gods first but you give your best to God, not your leftovers. It can be scary to do that, to decide what you’re going to give the church before you look at the rest of your bills.  But going all in, after they push the chips to the middle of the table, these players on ESPN then take off their sunglasses.  No more worrying about revealing their “tell.”  Nothing left to do but to trust that Lady Luck, one of those false gods, will see them through.  They stop hiding.  They face their fear that they might lose it all.  It’s a leap of faith to give it all to God, and that’s why Jesus and the angels and the prophets say so many times throughout the Bible, “Don’t be afraid!”  Do not fear!  Trust God to take care of you.
It can be hard, and that’s why, after remembering all that God has done for them and remembering that there are consequences for breaking the covenant, Joshua has the people renew their covenant with God again. Joshua says, “Choose, today, again, who you are going to serve,” whether all those false gods of wealth and security or God. Renew your vows to God. Make a conscious, intentional choice to continue to serve God. Remember that there is a cost to that choice, Dietrich Bonhoeffer’s “cost of discipleship,” “when Christ bids a man come, he bids him come and die.” We saw that again with the news this past week out of Sutherland Springs, Texas. It can be a risky thing to follow Christ. It can be dangerous to serve God, not just for when we fail, but for when we succeed and it costs us our life.  And yet here we are again, choosing again to continue to serve God, just like ancient Israel. Because we know that only Christ has the words of life.
In the Gospel of John, things get a little dicey in chapter 6, after Jesus has fed the thousands and walked on water, then he says, “I am the bread of life. Whoever comes to me will never go hungry, and whoever believes in me will never be thirsty… I am the living bread that came down from heaven. Whoever eats this bread will live forever. This bread is my flesh, which I will give for the life of the world.”[3] This teaching was too much for some of his followers, and John says that “many disciples turned back and no longer followed Jesus.”[4] Jesus asked Peter if he wanted to leave, too, and Peter says, “Lord, to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal life. We have come to believe and to know that you are the Holy One of God.”[5] Things get dicey sometimes. Sometimes it’s hard to trust, hard to believe, hard to keep going, hard to participate in the life of our church family for one reason or another. Yet each day we continue to choose again and again to serve God, to be part of his family. “It is not enough to promise and make a covenant. We also must be watchful and keep awake,” like those bridesmaids we read about in our Gospel reading, “so that we can be ready to meet God, and in so doing, continue to choose again and again to serve God.”[6] You see, each choice is a “continuous opportunity for every faithful person in daily living”[7] to serve God, to keep your vow to him, to remember and honor what God has done for you so far and believe he will continue to watch over you in all your ways, both “your going out and your coming in, forevermore.”[8] Amen.

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