Church of the Open Door:  First Christian Church, Ukiah
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BORN ANEW ... AGAIN

5/31/2015

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John 3:1-12
Now there was a Pharisee named Nicodemus, a leader of the Jews. He came to Jesus by night and said to him, "Rabbi, we know that you are a teacher who has come from God; for no one can do these signs that you do apart from the presence of God." Jesus answered him, "Very truly, I tell you, no one can see the kingdom of God without being born from above." Nicodemus said to him, "How can anyone be born after having grown old? Can one enter a second time into the mother's womb and be born?" 

Jesus answered, "Very truly, I tell you, no one can enter the kingdom of God without being born of water and Spirit. What is born of the flesh is flesh, and what is born of the Spirit is spirit. Do not be astonished that I said to you, 'You must be born from above.' The wind blows where it chooses, and you hear the sound of it, but you do not know where it comes from or where it goes. So it is with everyone who is born of the Spirit." 

Nicodemus said to him, "How can these things be?" Jesus answered him, "Are you a teacher of Israel, and yet you do not understand these things? Very truly, I tell you, we speak of what we know and testify to what we have seen; yet you do not receive our testimony. If I have told you about earthly things and you do not believe, how can you believe if I tell you about heavenly things? 
This story is the first time Nocodemus is mentioned in John’s gospel – the only gospel which mentions him at all, by the way.  He turns up two more times further along in John – first, when the Sanhedrin is looking for ways to charge Jesus, Nicodemus reminds his fellow Pharisees that the Law says a man must be given the right to speak before he is condemned - not a reminder that made him popular with them.  His last scriptural appearance comes after the crucifixion when Joseph of Arimathea has claimed Jesus’ body from the cross and Nicodemus arrives to help, bringing the herbs and salves needed to properly prepare the body for burial.

Nicodemus is not only a Pharisee but a member of the Sanhedrin, the rabbinic court that was somewhat like our Supreme Court today – the high court that could overrule lower court decisions.  As such, it is clear that Nicodemus was an important man.  He was educated in the Law and respected in the Jewish community.  As Christians, we are predisposed by the gospels to see the Pharisees as the enemy.  I suspect, as in many things, our judgment of them depends on where we stand in the story.  The gospels almost always portray them as acting against Jesus, so we are against them, but for those standing in another part of the story they would have been the defenders of tradition and Jewish values.  The presence of Nicodemus and Joseph in the gospel certainly makes it clear that not all pharisees feared or hated this new teacher or his emerging Jesus-followers.

Still, it is entirely unusual when a pharisee comes to seek out Jesus in order to speak with him “up close and personal,’ instead of trying to catch him in some blasphemy, and that’s why Nicodemus visits at nighttime.  He doesn’t want others to know that he is meeting Jesus, and so he comes under cover of darkness – but darkness is not, in John’s gospel, just the opposite of day – it also represents ignorance and lack of understanding.  In this story, it is Nicodemus - the learned, the scholar – who comes in ignorance.  He has heard of or seen some of Jesus’ “signs and marvels” and wants to see more for himself.  This does not sit particularly well with Jesus – it never does – he often rails against those who don’t pay any attention to what he actually says and just come out instead to see his miracles – come for the “raree show” as the old carnival barkers used to say.

Nicodemus begins humbly enough (for a Pharisee) by acknowledging that no one can do the things Jesus does unless he is connected to God, and when Jesus makes a reply about people needing to be born again, Nicodemus makes it clear he doesn’t get it - but he is willing to pursue the question with Jesus, resulting in what has been one of the more puzzling and misunderstood teachings in the gospels.

Christianity today is full of people who will tell you exactly what being born again means and how it must come about – the words you have to say and the actions that must follow, and for many of these if you didn’t say the exact words or perform the exact acts dictated by them, then rebirth never happened – you ‘failed’ somehow to be reborn.  It becomes just one more thing they can use to close themselves inside the circle of Jesus’ favorites and to shut others out as unacceptable.

The original word Jesus is recorded as saying can be translated as either “again” or “anew,” implying more than a simple repetition, but movement into a whole new realm.  Listen again to Jesus’ response as it is given in The Message translation:
Let me say it again. Unless a person submits to this original creation—the ‘wind-hovering-over-the-water’ creation, the invisible moving the visible, a baptism into a new life—it’s not possible to enter God’s kingdom.....So don’t be so surprised when I tell you that you have to be ‘born from above’—out of this world, so to speak. You know well enough how the wind blows this way and that. You hear it rustling through the trees, but you have no idea where it comes from or where it’s headed next. That’s the way it is with everyone ‘born from above’ by the wind of God, the Spirit of God.
This is not about being “born again” – this is about returning to a state and time of original innocence – to a state which is just as God created us to be, before it all went wrong.  There is nothing here about saying the “right” words or having the “right” experience – nothing about “asking Jesus to be your personal Lord and Savior” – nothing about the rules so many people want to place on this “born again” experience. This is about the wind of the Holy Spirit – the wind we talked about last week on Pentecost – that wind that was present at the beginning of everything – it’s about allowing that wind to cleanse you back to God’s original intention for you.

This is about being willing to set aside your status, and your good opinion of yourself and your importance, and all your education that has always ranked you higher than others around you, and your assurance that you know how to do it “right” and your conviction that you are “in” even though others are “out.”  It’s also about allowing God to take all the time God wants to work in you.

The gospels give us very little to go with about Nicodemus’ life but John implies that his coming to follow Jesus was a gradual thing, and that it was only at the end that the Spirit had worked enough in him that he was willing to take a public stance as one who followed this teacher, this miracle man who taught and lived and personified God’s Spirit among us.

Be born anew,” Jesus tells us, and the ever-inviting Jesus knows we will all receive the invitation in our own time and in our own way, not by one set of rules set out by the Sanhedrin or by some TV evangelist.  

The wind of the Spirit blows where the Spirit wills – oh, thank God.  

Amen. 
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SOMETHING DIFFERENT

5/17/2015

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NOTE:  This week we again did something a little different.  The previous week I had attended a Regional Ministry Council meeting and out of that meeting and my preparations for it I came up with an idea.  

I am constantly reflecting on the journey that the Church of the Open Door is taking these days and the changes happening with us.  I came up with a question that I posted to three different facebook Group pages, 2 of which are discussion sites for clergy (one Disciples and one UCC) and I asked for replies.  Several good folks did share their answers with me, which I appreciate greatly.  I was so excited by the responses that I took them to church with me last Sunday and shared them (in a generalized way, since several were very personal and I hadn't asked permission to share them in toto).

In church, we talked about the question and some of the responses and my congregants shared their thoughts, as well.

I offer my original question below for any who didn't see it in the original settings.  I am always interested in why we do what we do - not just what do we do.  In that light, I believe this is a question worth pondering.  Here it is:
I have a question, I’m asking this to gather information for our Church Off the Center Mission Cluster (DOC) and I seriously hope some of you will take a few minutes to think about it and respond, whether you consider yourself part of an “off the center” church, or not.

WHAT DO YOU DO NOW IN THE LIFE OF YOUR CHURCH THAT WOULD HAVE BEEN UNTHINKABLE 10 OR 15 YEARS AGO?

By definition, a Church Off the Center is one that is going through changes – many of these changes have been forced by circumstance such as shrinking numbers or budgets insufficient to carry on as usual – but other changes have come about with a shift of direction and emphasis within the congregation – a change of heart, perhaps, or a changing idea of “what church means.”  Many of you who would not classify yourself as ‘off the center” have also made substantive changes to your way of being church.

Please especially note that word “unthinkable” in my question.  I’m not talking about cosmetic or surface changes – I’m looking for those things that, had they been suggested at a board meeting 15 years ago, would have met with either blank stares or outright resistance.  As an example, in the case of my church (Church of the Open Door, Ukiah), we were forced to make changes and we have come to love them, but if the church of 15 years ago and the church of today were to meet I’m not sure they would even recognize themselves as the same church – because we certainly look different and we act different and we see ourselves differently, as well.

So – what is it in the life of your community, whether worship or outreach or whatever, that once would have met with an implacable “NO” that is now a normal part of who you are?  How and why did this change?

Just something to think about .....
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WHAT IS THIS THING CALLED LOVE?

5/10/2015

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John 15:12-17
[Jesus said:]  "This is my commandment, that you love one another as I have loved you. No one has greater love than this, to lay down one's life for one's friends. You are my friends if you do what I command you. I do not call you servants any longer, because the servant does not know what the master is doing; but I have called you friends, because I have made known to you everything that I have heard from my Father. You did not choose me but I chose you. And I appointed you to go and bear fruit, fruit that will last, so that the Father will give you whatever you ask him in my name. I am giving you these commands so that you may love one another."

“Love” may well be one of the most over-worked and mis-used words in our vocabulary and yet understanding this word is the key to grasping this week’s scripture.  We love our favorite singer’s newest song; we love the smell of roses after the rain; we love to sleep-in on our days off; we love ‘Moose-Tracks’ ice cream!  I’m pretty sure what Jesus is talking about here goes a lot deeper than any of these.

Much of the New Testament was originally written in Greek, and the folks who read Greek (I don’t) tell us there are five different Greek words commonly used for love in New Testament times.


First is mania, which is lust taken to the point of obsession.  I think we can safely eliminate that one.  Another is storge – this is commonly translated as mother love – the love we feel for those we take care of.  Someone might be willing to lay down their life because of this love -- a mother for her child, for instance – but this is too narrowly focused for what Jesus is getting at here.  


Philos is brotherly/sisterly love, the love we feel for those who are in a similar situation or circumstance with us.  It probably comes the closest to describing the love we here in church feel for each other.  We share interests, we share experiences, we work together and we grow to love each other through that experience.  This is a good kind of love and often used to describe the early Christian communities but still not what Jesus is referring to here.  Philos is a fairly easy-going kind of love, not generally the kind that requires us to lay down our lives for it.


Eros is the one of these five Greek words that isn’t actually in the Bible.  It is where we get our word erotic, and goodness knows there’s enough of that is scripture – but it isn’t really just about sexual love - it’s about passionate, emotional, romantic love - it is certainly alluded to but never actually used in the Bible.


The last of the five words is agapao.  This is the word that describes what Jesus is talking about in this reading.  Agape is a love that is all about the giver, not the recipient.  God loves us because of who God is, not who we are.  There is not a soul on earth who has ever “earned” God’s love because God’s love isn’t saying anything about us at all.  It’s all about God. God loves because that’s who God is.


This is the love that St. Paul tells us “never fails.”  Agape makes it possible for us to love our enemies – even though we may not like them at all – we make a choice to love them for Jesus’ sake – period.  This is the love that lays down it’s life for another.  This is the love Jesus commands us to have for each other. 


Jesus commands us to love in this way – and assumes we will obey – not because of any forceful compulsion or threat – but simply because if we truly claim to know Jesus and follow Jesus and love Jesus – there is no other way we can possibly go.


We will love everyone with whom we come in contact – we will love them for Jesus’ sake, and for their own sake, and.....for our own sake.  Drug addicts, welfare cheats, liars, haters, foreigners, Wall Street robber barons, illegals, atheists, people of every color, shape, gender, sexual orientation – the arrogant, the clueless, the down-right nasty – we will love them all with the compassionate, caring love of Jesus.  Not because they all deserve to be loved, but because that’s the kind of people we have become in Christ.  We are the people who recognize that Jesus loves us – the clueless, the selfish and the self-absorbed - not because we in any way deserve to be loved, but because that is the kind of Lord Jesus is.


If we commit to following Jesus there is no backdoor through which we can escape this agape love.  We will lay down our lives – and even harder than that, we will lay down our cherished opinions and assumptions – all for these sisters and brothers we never wanted but – oh, look – here we all are together.  Brothers and sisters in the all-encompassing love of the God who loves us all – because that’s just who God is.

We can buy in – or not.  We can accept Jesus’ love for us – or not – but that won’t in any way change the fact that we are loved.  But if we don’t buy in – if we are not ultimately willing to set aside our pride and our treasured  resentments and our assumptions of rightness – if won’t do these things we will never truly know the deep, deep joy of loving as Jesus loves.  


It really is not that hard.  Just let go of demanding our own way and try following Jesus’ way.  We might actually find that we like it.


“This is my commandment, that you love one another as I have loved you.”
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AN UNPREPARED SUNDAY

5/3/2015

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Last week, on May 1st, I was blessed, alongside my husband, Hilary Marckx, pastor of the Geyserville Christian Church, to celebrate the 50th anniversary of our wedding.  It is still somewhat overwhelming to type that number - it seems very unreal.  On Saturday, the 2nd, we had a wing-ding of a party -- with so many good friends and tons of food and great music -- to celebrate.
The up-shot of this celebrating was that I arrived at church Sunday morning with no proper sermon-message and only a bare outline of how the service would proceed.  Luckily for me, the folks of The Church of the Open Door are flexible and willing to cut an occasionally unprepared pastor a little slack.
I can always talk.  I think most pastors -- especially those who have been doing this awhile -- are capable of giving a fairly cohesive message off the cuff -- but we decided to do something different.  We rounded up three different translations of the Bible that we had present that day -- the NRSV, the New American Standard, and The Message.  A congregational member then chose a scripture at random (something in 1st Corinthians, I think) and we spent the next ten minutes reading the different translations and discovering the differences and similarities to be found in the three.  That turned out to be so interesting that we read out the rest of the chapter and discussed it as well.  
One member remarked that she didn't remember ever reading or hearing those particular words before, even though it was a relatively commonly read scripture.  I believe we are so used to hearing scripture read in church that we often do not truly "hear" what is being shared unless we are ourselves involved in reading and unpacking the words.
Our extemporaneous 'message' was such a success that I am seriously considering doing it more often -- perhaps once a month?
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    Picture

    Rev. Cherie Marckx

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