Thursday, April 30, 2020

It’s Not a Sprint Its a Marathon

It’s Not a Sprint Its a Marathon
Sunday May 3, 2020
A Sermon by The Rev. Dr. John A. Dalles
Psalm 23; John 10:1-10; I Peter 2:19-25

Who would have thought it?  That what began as precautions has turned out to be a way of life.  Not the “new normal”, as people are fond of saying.  But a new reality until further notice.  When we began this coronavirus warranted set of precautions, it was March.  Now it is May.
We have been learning things along the way that we may not have wanted to learn.  
We have had to make sacrifices that we may wish we did not have to make.  
We have adjusted our way of life, which before that time, was well ordered and more or less pleasant.  
We have formed new habits of social distance. 
We have learned to use the phone, and texting, and email more than we did before.  
We have avoided crowds, touch, travel…and more. 
The list goes on.
We know that while not unprecedented, this is highly unusual.  We have compared it to what happened at the time of the Three Mile Island event – if we lived in Pennsylvania at that time.  
We have compared it to the worries surrounding Y2K, and have wondered if perhaps we could have managed a bit more preventive steps so that the impact of this pandemic would have been less.  
We have compared it to when the planes hit the Twin Towers and the Pentagon, and the Shanksville field, on 9-11, and realized that the uncertainty as well as the horror, are palpable.
What have we – who trust in Jesus – learned in this time?
We are dealing with stressors that are different from but not disconnected to his own.  
Peter talks about that in our New Testament lesson:
23 When he was abused, he did not return abuse; when he suffered, he did not threaten; but he entrusted himself to the one who judges justly. 24 He himself bore our sins in his body on the cross, [a] so that, free from sins, we might live for righteousness; by his wounds[b] you have been healed. 25 For you were going astray like sheep, but now you have returned to the shepherd and guardian of your souls.
So, are we to think that Jesus was weak, and that we should be pushovers?  
No.  He suffered for a reason.  
Like a lifeguard who jumps into the water to save someone who is drowning.  He exerted effort on our behalf, so that we could have live and have it abundantly. 
And he entrusted himself to God.  The one who judges justly.
Sometimes we have to do that.  Because even though we know in our heart of hearts what is the wise, prudent, challenging, hard thing to do, not everyone else will agree with us. We will get a lot of pushback.  But somehow – trust me I ow it to be so – when we entrust our entire pathway to God, God will respond in kind with a trustworthy response.  
Jesus is in the business of saving people’s lives.  
That is what the word “Savior” tells us.
So, you have to put him in the same category as an EMT or firefighter, a police officer, a lifeguard, and so forth, whose daily work puts their life on the line, on behalf of others.
Wiling to go and to risk and to do and all because of you.  You are the person in need of help, you are the person trapped in the burning building, you are the person being held hostage by a criminal, you are the person who is being swept out to sea.
And then, Jesus comes along.
Who is Jesus?
Yes….
-       Jesus is the one who teaches us the way.  
-       He is the one who reminds us who God is. 
-       He gives us precepts for living that are the high road of truth and love and justice.
But all of this is a subset to the larger realty that he has come to save you.
And that is exactly why…
23 When he was abused, he did not return abuse; when he suffered, he did not threaten; but he entrusted himself to the one who judges justly. 24 He himself bore our sins in his body on the cross, [a] so that, free from sins, we might live for righteousness; by his wounds[b] you have been healed. 25 For you were going astray like sheep, but now you have returned to the shepherd and guardian of your souls.
I am thinking that you may be up against something today that is overwhelming you.  
-       It is that problem that you cannot solve.  
-       It is a hill you cannot climb.  
-       It’s a puzzle you cannot solve.  
-       It is … More than you can handle on your own.
The good news is that you do not have to.  Someone is here to help.  Give it to him and I promise you without a doubt that he will save and solve.  
I don’t know exactly how.
But I have seen it happen.
Pray and trust and someone will come into your life with just the right answer at just the right moment.
They will take on what you cannot carry.
They will give you the insight you couldn’t find yourself.
They will build up and encourage.

They will take the problem on, and solve it.

Does it sound like a miracle?  Yes.
So, hang in there.  
You are running a race that is NOT sprint, it is a marathon.  And God has given you most of what you need to run it.  And God will provide the rest of what you need to run it.
Through the love and strength of Jesus.

I suppose that I have never heard a sermon on the strength of Jesus.  I do not know why.  He is the strongest man who ever lived.  
-- Not the Charles Alas kind of strength (If you don’t recognize that reference look it up later).  
-       Not the kind of strength that come from power lifting…
-       Wait maybe I have that wrong.  
-       He has the power to lift you to where you need to be.  
-       So, talk about power lifting!  . Jesus is your man.
And he will knock down whatever is trying to bear you down, all the while lifting you up again.
Setting you on in a place that is safe and secure and solid.
Trust Jesus.  
He has done it again and again.  And he is ready to do that for you.
This is the wishful thinking of an optimist, someone will say.  
No.  this is the proclamation of the Good News of Jesus Christ.  Which it not a Pollyanna approach to life.  It is a God of the ages approach to life.
Who do you always want on your side?
The one who gets you to the finish line as a winner, a victor, 
First, second, third or last.
The one who gets you to the finish line as a winner, a victor,
My friend Sean is a marathon runner.  I have seen him out running.  In Fact, I used to see him every day along Wekiva Springs Road, the main road between my home and my church., in Florida I would call out, “Yo, Sean!” and he would smile and wave and keep on running.
I have seen him out running.
It isn’t pretty.  
Sean sweats a lot, and he wears t shirts that get drenched from the long runs he takes.
And usually, Sean’s hair is matted.  
And he has a runner’s gait that is not like a dancer’s.  
In fact, I am not sure how he does it.  
He is what we would call middle age.  
But he has run the Boston Marathon a number of times and he is fast.  I am glad Sean is fast.  Because he finished in so much time back in April 15, 2013, that his mother and he were miles away having lunch when the bombs went off – at the finish line on Boylston Street …

And in the exact spot where his mother had been standing to watch Sean run past, during the race.

Sean is also a dedicated youth leader in his church and has been on more mission trips than anyone else in the congregation.  I believe the number is thirty – as a youth, and as an adult leader.
I asked him, once, if he had to sum up what makes for completing a successful marathon, he said:
“Practice and Persistence.”
I suspect you know a marathon runner, who would say something similar, if you asked him or her.
And I suspect you know any number of followers of Jesus Christ who would say something similar.
/////
Jesus would also tell us that sometimes you have to save people who don’t want to be saved. 
         We get that message all through scripture and especially in the beloved words of Psalm 23…
He is the Good shepherd and people are the sheep of his pasture who ought to be along still waters and sanding in green pastors.  It is a strange thing that they wander off and get into trouble.  
They think they can do it on their own.  
They think that they know better than God knows. 
They are certain that everyone’s viewpoint matters but not as much as their own.  
They doubt that God can do much for them.  
Oh, there are any number of reasons they would give.
But would a person trapped in a burning house turn away the firefighter who came through the flames in order to get them out safely. No.
……….
A ship stopped, mid ocean, at about ten after nine in the evening.  The husband and wife, who were in their stateroom, noticed that the ship had stopped moving.
“Something is wrong.” He said.
“What do you think it is?”
“I think someone fell overboard.”
“Oh no really?” She said, in quiet disbelief.
But a moment later, the ship began moving again, and on the TV monitor screen in the room, that indicated the ship’s progress, it was clear that the ship was turning around.
In a few moments it stopped again. And then gigantic spotlights were trained back and forth, on the dark, deep, open ocean.
As that was going on, a launch was lowered into the water.
And about half an hour after that, the ship started up again, and turned to its original course, and was underway.
In that short period of time, the crew had rescued a woman who had fallen into the water, from the 13th deck.
She was tremendously lucky, that she hadn’t fallen on to some other portions of the ship on her way down.
She was even luckier that people on the 13th deck had seen her fall, and had thrown a life preserver, that lit up the moment it hit the water.
She was even more lucky that the captain and crew were quick to act.
And luckiest of all - that she survived her ordeal.
Now…
Would a person who is all alone in the water, in the dark, mid ocean, say,” Oh no I don’t need that life preserver.”
But it is strange, isn’t it, that people who are perishing, resist what Jesus can do for them.
I would urge them to reconsider.
We would all urge them to take the help that is extended to them.
We would say – let Jesus do what he came to do.
Let him keep you safe.
If you have a chance to save someone who doesn’t think they need it, do that.  
And remember, it may take a while.
But this is a marathon, not a sprint.
/////
There is an old hymn, not much sung anymore.  No matter, it expresses what we are talking about.  What we are experiencing in these unusual times.  (Far off I see the goal).
1 Far off I see the goal—-O Savior, guide me;
I feel my strength is small-—be thou beside me;
with vision ever clear, with love that conquers fear,
And grace to persevere, O Lord, provide me.
[Robert R. Roberts, 1925]
Amen.



This is an original sermon by The Rev. D. John A. Dalles, Interim Senior Minister and Head of Staff of Shadyside Presbyterian Church, Pittsburgh, PA .  It was delivered on the date indicated in the text. You are encouraged to read it and reflect upon it.  Please keep in mind that the sermon is Copyright © 2020 John A. Dalles.  Permission from the author is required to reproduce it in any fashion.

Friday, April 24, 2020

Through Paths Unknown

THROUGH PATHS UNKNOWN
April 26, 2020
Sermon by The Rev. Dr. John A. Dalles:
Psalm 116:1-4, 12-19; Luke 24:13-35

When I am reading scripture, I find myself thinking – I wish I had been there… there are many passages that have such a startling brilliance about them, that I think how wonderful it would have been to be right there in person – and to see and hear and sense what was happening.
It is wonderful that we have the written word – holy and inspired – to get us more than halfway there.  Close up.  As if we were participants in the event.  And to read and visualize what we are reading.
Of the many vivid passages we can read, this is one of my very favorites.  The fact that one of the two disciples is unnamed is a great invitation for me to think of myself as one of them.  To put myself on the road to Emmaus.  To be filled with all kinds of emotions having to do with what had happened to Jesus.  To find myself wondering and hoping and wishing and believing and doubting and worrying and caught up in the tremendous clash of feelings that go with losing my teacher and friend and one who surely is the Messiah and yet who has been tried and tortured and put to death and whose body was placed in a tomb.
Finality of finalities.
I have been to ever so many cemeteries, so I know the finality of such places, even the most beautiful of them.  I have seen the tender inscriptions on tombstones, and sensed the love and devotion that such inscriptions hold.  I have stood before grand mausoleums of the people who even now are remembered as leaders in business or society or politics.  I have seen the even grander monuments and memorials to presidents and statesmen, and traced the words of they said, as they appear etched in stone.  And I have stood in memorial gardens and columbariums, and read again the names of those I have loved long since and lost a while.
Humble or grand, simple or elaborate, they all have one thing in common.  They speak of those who have lived and who have died.
Walking to Emmaus, those disciples with whom I identify surely held that thought as a fact.
Jesus died.  Jesus was buried.  Now it was the third day.
In the chronology of the events of the life of our Lord, we are still on Easter Day with this passage from Luke.  Not only is the news that Jesus has risen brand new, but it is so new, that the two disciples on the road to Emmaus have reason to wonder about the news they had heard. 
And then someone draws alongside.  And walks with them and talks with them.  Someone who seems to be a stranger.  But who knows more about what they had experienced than they knew, themselves.
-       Who opened the scriptures for them.
-       Who connected the dots, 
-       So that the picture of what happened fell into place, and made sense, and gave them a new awareness.
But still and all, not the whole picture…
Did they dare hope?
Fast on the heels of that question is the more personal question:
Do we dare hope?
We who have stood beside an open grave as a casket is lowered, who have returned home to find that familiar place changed entirely by who is no longer there.  Who have closed the book on a love and friendship that was a joy and delight.  Who have heard the quiet that speaks louder than words.
Do we dare hope?
The Christian religion is all about the answer to that question.  We believe and trust and depend upon the message that – yes – we dare to have hope. We are given the reason why, in what happened to those two disciples, as their Easter Day unfolded.
As they walked through paths unknown.
/////
I must say that if someone came alongside me, and told me things I had been longing to know, about myself, and about what is most important in the world – that I would have done as they did.  I would have encouraged that person to stay. 
“Stay with us, because it is almost evening and the day is now nearly over.”
We don’t want to be alone.
We don’t want to miss what we might gain by your being with us.
So, please, stay with us.
“Stay with us, because it is almost evening and the day is now nearly over.”
         That is an invitation from the heart.
-       We whisper it in the darkness.
-       We pray it in the morning.
-       We long for it all the day.
-       We depend upon it when things are rocky and uphill.
-       We bask in it when the days are sunny and filled with joy.
-       To be with our dear companion and friend.
-       To enjoy his presence.
-       To feel his unconditional love for us.
-       To learn from him.
-       To lean on him.
-       To linger with him.
“Stay with us, because it is almost evening and the day is now nearly over.”
I am so glad they asked him to stay.
You know – our Lord longs for our invitation to stay.
But do you notice that he does not insist upon it. It seemed as if he would go on…
It is apparent that Christ respects the freedom of our thoughts, and our affections, and our purposes.  It fact, his respect is complete.
He never forces his own gifts upon us.
There are there, and he offers them freely.
But unless we actively accept them they remain ineffective, as far as we are concerned.
So I am glad they asked him to stay.
I am glad that you have asked him to stay.  That he does stay and he does form this everlasting bond with you.  
/////
         There is a painting of the meal at the table in the inn that evening...
“The Supper at Emmaus”, it is titled, appropriately enough.



“The Supper at Emmaus is a painting by the Italian Baroque master Caravaggio, executed in 1601, and now in the National Gallery in London.  You can find it very quickly doing an on line search.
         Is shows Jesus and the two disciples seated at the table, and a man standing alongside – presumably the innkeeper, 
The faces of the men are bathed in light.  The room is darkness. I think of that painting as a reminder that when we are in Jesus’ presence we, too,,, are bathed in the light of his presence.  No matter how dark the world around us may be.
It is at that very moment when their eyes were opened.
And they recognized him.
Here is one disciple, with the shock of recognition so great that his arms are extended in an exclamation of surprise.  One of his hands is on Jesus’ shoulder.  He has to be sure that what is happening is happing.  That Jesus is real. That Jesus is really alive.  That Jesus is really there in the room with them.

Over here, the other disciple leans forward toward Jesus, almost out of his chair.  He is griping the arms with such force that the sleeve of his coat has torn open.

And in the center of the frame, is Jesus himself.
-       Looking tremendously healthy and fresh of face.
-       Unquestionably, Jesus is alive, and well.
And there is one detail more, that just fills me with excitement and joy…

         THE HAND OF JESUS IS extended outward, toward us, the viewers of the painting.
-       It is one of those brilliant moments that artists give us, that take the moment one step beyond what the gospel writhers reveal.
-       For there is the invitation from our Lord himself.
-       He reaches out to us.
-       We have but to respond.
You have Jesus reaching out to you today.
-       He may be reaching out to ask you to help with some particular need of the church or of the world.
-       He is reaching out to you.
-       His invitation is to you specifically.
-       He has you in mind for the task at hand.
-       You have what he needs.
-       And he has what you need.
-       He may be asking you to take on a new responsibility.
-       His invitation is for you.
-       He may be calling you to renew your commitment to him.
-       THROUGH PATHS UNKNOWN
You have Jesus reaching out to you today.
He is meeting you – more than half way.
You know what he wants you to do.
Reach out to him.  Receive his love and grace.  
Amen.

This is an original sermon by The Rev. D. John A. Dalles, Interim Senior Minister and Head of Staff of Shadyside Presbyterian Church, Pittsburgh, PA .  It was delivered on the date indicated in the text. You are encouraged to read it and reflect upon it.  Please keep in mind that the sermon is Copyright © 2020 John A. Dalles.  Permission from the author is required to reproduce it in any fashion.

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