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Ascension Lutheran Church - Austin, TX - Sermons|Sermon 2006-07-23 Remember Episode
Sermon
Sunday, July 23, 2006
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| Seventh Sunday after Pentecost |
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[9]Ephesians 2:11-22*
Remember that you were at that time without Christ
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Remember
Why is it that we can remember some things, but forget
others? I dare say there are certain reminiscences that will stay with
us until the day we die*that moment when Dad took off the training
wheels and we zoomed down the sidewalk for the very first time, when we
finally passed the driving test, when we walked across the stage on
graduation day, when we walked down the aisle on our wedding day, or the
time we bid our final goodbye to a loved one. Those experiences of
profound emotion, excitement, joy and even grief are the kinds of things
not easily forgotten. At the same time there are plenty of things we
tend to forget*our lunch money, an appointment at the doctor*s office or
an important anniversary or birthday. I get kidded at home a lot of
times because while I am able to remember the most useless piece of
trivia from years and years ago, like the family telephone number when I
was five years old, 425-3858, I can*t remember to pick up all the items
on the grocery list. What*s that all about, I ask you?
Still there are those experiences in life that we remember all too well,
but would just as soon forget*the day we heard the news of a loved one*s
serious illness, the time when our words or actions broke another*s
heart, the moment we recognized that something or someone was completely
out of our control. We can forgive and be forgiven. We can do our best
to forget, but sometimes, the pain, the hurt, the resentment are
difficult memories we carry with us for a long, long time, maybe even a
lifetime.
We*re reminded too of how our forgetting can be just another means of
denial of not remembering. The past couple of Sunday*s, the Austin
American Statesman has run a series of articles on the sad story of the
systemic removal of African Americans from a number of communities
including some right here in the Lone Star State. We*ve all heard tell
of the horrific accounts of beatings and lynchings that we commonplace
and even celebrated with a kind of festival atmosphere, but the more
subtle story of racial cleansing has rarely, if ever been told. If
you*ve not had a chance to read about it I really encourage you to do
so. I*ve been especially struck by some of the letters to the editor
though, letters that ask wonder why the writers had to go and dig up all
that dirt from so long ago implying that we*d all be better off if we
just left it all alone. I*m reminded once again of what Holocaust
writer Ellie Wiesel has said. *Those who forget the past are destined
to repeat it.*
To a church that seems to be suffering from a serious case of amnesia,
Paul speaks a clear message. *Remember. Remember the way things once
were. And remember who you have become.* Man, woman or child*no matter
who you are, or where you*re headed, it*s a good thing to remember.
Yes, even as the church, we do well to remember.
The way that Paul urges the Ephesians to remember, you get the feeling
that times haven*t changed all that much. *Remember that at one time
you Gentiles by birth, called *the uncircumcision* by those who are
called *the circumcision**remember that you were at that time without
Christ, being aliens*and strangers to the covenants of promise, having
no hope and without God in the world.* If he goes to such great lengths
to get them to remember, you get the feeling that maybe they had begun
to forget something very important. In fact they had. They*d forgotten
that there had once been a day when they didn*t even had the proverbial
pot in which to take care of their business a started to believe in
themselves rather than God, that because they were such great people
somehow they were owed something.
It*s a temptation that church faces in every day and age. We may
consider ourselves life long Christians. For good reason, many of us
myself included might even be able to say that we*ve never known any
different. But even if we*ve been going to church, maybe even
especially if we*ve been a part of the church all our lives we are
called to remember. And it*s important for us to get out of the kind of
individualistic mentality that so shapes us and the way we look at
things. Instead, we need to think in terms of our collective identity
as the people of God throughout all of history. Let*s put aside all
that nonsense about progress in the human condition, that by virtue of
what we know about human behavior and the world around us, we*re better
people than all those who have come before us. Nonsense! Our humanity
connects us with every generation that has come before and that will
follow us, plain and simple. When it comes to understanding ourselves,
we too bear the tell tale signs of a serious case of collective
amnesia. We*ve lost that sense of our true identity.
We presume that because we are Christian, we*re on the inside track with
God. And because of that we*re afforded a position of privilege. We
know what*s right so there*s really no point in listening to someone
else. We know the difference between good and evil so what more is
there to say? By implication the church is a collection of like minded
folks like me where my needs are met, where I am made to feel good about
myself, where my particular world view and political opinions are
affirmed and blessed. After all, we are God*s chosen people and as such
we*ve got it coming to us. When our stock is rising, when our future
seems bright and full of promise, why worry about what has been? The
past is the past. Let*s get over it! All this talk of remembering gets
kind of old. That was then but this is now! The world is a different
place these days. We have to protect our own self-interests at all
costs. Secure the borders. Clamp down on anyone who dares to call our
God given heritage into question.
The trouble is though, the minute we start to think that we*ve got it
made, that we*re one of God*s insiders, it*s a sure sign that we*ve
begun to forget and that we*re liable to find ourselves on the outside,
looking in. So, it*s a humbling message that we*re met with today, a
call to remember that we are not Lord*s unto ourselves, that apart from
God we*re nothing, that to forget is to put our very lives in jeopardy.
But for people prone to forget, for those who for the life of them just
can*t remember, for you and me Christ has come. *Now in Christ Jesus
you who were once far off have been brought near by the blood of
Christ.* The wall of separation between us and God, between us and our
neighbor are gone. We are free, free from our past and yet free to
engage in holy remembering which leads us to recognize that we are who
we are today because of a God whose loving hand has been at work in
human history, molding, shaping and shepherding a holy people to live in
the bright light of grace.
Now because of what God has done in Jesus we don*t have lift ourselves
up by diminishing or demonizing others. Every one of us in our own way
can continue to keep the covenant God has made with us in baptism, to
strive for justice and peace in all the earth, to seek first the kingdom
of God and God*s righteousness.
*So then you are no longer strangers and aliens, but you are citizens
with the saints and also members of the household of God, built upon the
foundation of the apostles and the prophets, with Christ Jesus as the
cornerstone.* When it comes to building the church, the Spirit
definitely knows what the Spirit is doing. And as the Spirit works in
us through our collective remembering, the life we live together in
worship and praise of the one who is our hope, our peace, our
cornerstone, that a true and lasting foundation is laid. *In Christ,
the whole structure is joined together and grows into a holy temple in
the Lord; into whom you are being built together spiritually into a
dwelling place for God.*
As God*s own, we remember who we once were. At the same time, the Holy
Spirit leads us to remember that in Christ, God is for us. If God is
for us, then who can be against us? For the precious gift of memory let
us give our thanks and praise. Amen.
Pastor Brian Peterson
References
9. http://bible.oremus.org/?ql=20076741
[ Sun, 30 Jul 2006 04:19:29 -0500 ]
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