Church of the Open Door:  First Christian Church, Ukiah
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SPONTANEITY (AND THE JOY OF A SMALL CHURCH)

9/30/2018

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This past Sunday we enjoyed one of those occasions that can happen in a small church.  We are a small church at best and, because of an illness passing through the community, we were smaller than usual this day.

I had prepared a message and a proper order of worship, but somewhere in our Joys & Concerns & Moments of Grace sharing, my schedule went right out the window.  

We got off to a late start (another long story) and then it turned out that my folks had a lot to share -- updates on worries we've been praying about, concerns about our community and the world at large, and things that had brought them joy during the week -- and, my favorite part, those occasions when we had actually noticed God present in our day to day world.

This sharing time is often the heart of our gathering each week, but this one kept going and going.  I noticed the time going by, but what was being shared and discussed was important, so I let it go on.  And then I began to share a deep joy I'd experienced in my week (one of those noticing God present occasions).  I tried to give some brief (I did try for 'brief') context for my sharing, and they asked questions, and I kept sharing until I realized we had used up all our Sharing time as well as our Message and Discussion time and we really needed to move on into Communion and Closing Prayer.

And I wouldn't change a thing about last Sunday.

Our Message time is important.  It's a time we learn about scripture and God and ourselves, but every once in a while the Spirit says "this too, is important," and with a small church, we can freely respond to that word.  We do have a set liturgy -- not terribly formal, but a set liturgy nonetheless.  But we also have the freedom to make changes on the fly -- and, occasionally we do.

This is one of the things (among many) I love about a small church.  I spend a lot of time each week planning out a cohesive order of worship that builds to support my message and takes us where I believe we're supposed to go -- this planning ahead is an important part of a pastor's work.  But then there are those days when, right in the middle of things, the Spirit says, "Nah, let's go here instead" and those days are a deep, deep joy in my heart.

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WHAT YOU HAVE HEARD FROM THE BEGINNING

9/16/2018

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2 John 2:4-6
 I was overjoyed to find some of your children walking in the truth, just as we have been commanded by the Father.  But now, dear lady, I ask you, not as though I were writing you a new commandment, but one we have had from the beginning, let us love one another.   And this is love, that we walk according to his commandments; this is the commandment just as you have heard it from the beginning—you must walk in it.
​

Today’s message is going to be pretty short as we finish up the John letters.  We will easily be able to cover both the 2nd and 3rd letters.  They are remarkably short – one fifteen verses and one only thirteen. These are the ones that may or may not have been written by the same author as the first letter.  The second letter has some of the same phrasing as the first letter – but it also has enough difference to cause suspicion in some scholars.  We’re back to the same “we don’t know” that we have heard over and over in studying the New Testament letters – especially ones, like these, written in the second century.

As with the first letter, there’s a lot about love in this John’s teaching – and above all – the reminder that this is what they have had from the very beginning – from Jesus himself -- the command to “love one another.”

But there is another very important theme in these two letters – a theme that we also found all too often when we were studying Paul’s letters, as well.  That of false teachers – ones this author call “antichrists” – and false doctrines in place of that one they received from Jesus himself – the one they have had from the very beginning.  A teaching they received from those who heard it with their own ears and saw it with their own eyes.  This is a point the author or authors of the John letters make over and over again.

Again, as we discussed last week, these false teachings appear to primarily deal with differing claims as to the nature of Jesus.  For the community out of which the various “John” writings came there was no question.  Jesus was God, the Son -- at one and the same time both fully human and fully divine.

This is what most of us accept today.  We recognize it as paradox and something we cannot quite reconcile to fit our human brains, and so we say the theological equivalent of “oh well,” shrug our shoulders, and let it go.  I seriously doubt that anyone present in this room this morning spends a whole lot of time worrying about the nature of Jesus.  We just accept and get on with the business of living our daily lives while also serving God’s purposes for us.

But the emergence of the Christian faith took place in a polytheistic world.  In what is now southern Europe, the Near East and northern Africa, multiple gods were commonplace and these gods had, for centuries of belief descended and lived – briefly -- among humans – taking on human appearance but never truly relinquishing their godhood.

Even the Hebrew faith had only fairly recently come around to true monotheism – having for centuries claimed monotheistic ideals while in actuality operating on a “my god is better – tougher, stronger – than your god” belief.

If gods came and went on earth with such regularity then it’s easy to see that establishing just what Jesus was would have been a complicated issue for the emerging faith.  Remember that Christianity was built on and by communities from the Jewish, Zoroastrian, Egyptian and Greek systems – and more.  For each of these it would require not only learning new things about Jesus, but relinquishing a lot of old beliefs they had been taught for centuries.

Think, for a minute, about how hard it can be when we are faced with the truth that something we’d been taught as children, something we’d taken for granted all our lives, is wrong.  When we are called the change our minds.  Whether it’s a family secret, a cultural norm, or simply something we’d picked up by mistake – it isn’t easy to change the direction of a long-held belief.

We still have to do some of this for ourselves in examining our faith claims, but most of the heavy lifting was done for us in the first few centuries of Christianity by people like the all the New Testament writers we’ve been studying and by the Church ‘Fathers” who took those writings and shaped them into a mostly coherent doctrine.  All we have to do – which is heavy enough – is figure out what we accept and reject from all that and then, what we do with it on a day to day basis.

For the writer or writers of all three John letters the answer is simple – first and foremost – and above everything else – we are to do what we have been told right from the very beginning – we are to love one another.  This is repeated over and over again.  We are to love one another.  Everything else comes after that.
​
There are a whole lot of people today calling themselves Christians who would, I suspect, benefit from applying that teaching to their own lives and their interactions with the world around them.  Probably all of us.


  • But now, dear ones, I ask you, not as though I were writing you a new commandment, but one we have had from the beginning, let us love one another.   And this is love, that we walk according to his commandments; this is the commandment just as you have heard it from the beginning—you must walk in it.​
Love one another
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BECAUSE GOD FIRST (AND ALWAYS) LOVES US

9/9/2018

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1st John 2:3-11   (The Message)

Here’s how we can be sure that we know God in the right way: Keep his commandments.

If someone claims, “I know him well!” but doesn’t keep his commandments, he’s obviously a liar.  His life doesn’t match his words.  But the one who keeps God’s word is the person in whom we see God’s mature love.  This is the only way to be sure we’re in God.  Anyone who claims to be intimate with God ought to live the same kind of life Jesus lived.

My dear friends, I’m not writing anything new here.  This is the oldest commandment in the book, and you’ve known it from day one.  It’s always been implicit in the Message you’ve heard.  On the other hand, perhaps it is new, freshly minted as it is in both Christ and you—the darkness on its way out and the True Light already blazing!
​

Anyone who claims to live in God’s light and hates a brother or sister is still in the dark.  It’s the person who loves brother and sister who dwells in God’s light and doesn’t block the light from others.  But whoever hates is still in the dark, stumbles around in the dark, doesn’t know which end is up, blinded by the darkness.
Well, here we are again, on a Sunday when we weren’t planning to be here, and it’s time to pick up where we left off a couple of weeks ago.  Last week we didn’t meet at all because I was out of town, and the week before that we were here, but I veered off our current series to insert something from Acts that had caught my attention that week.  So it’s been awhile since we were last into our Summer Sermon Series.
 

We’re in the last block of the New Testament, looking into the “other letters,”  the ones that were not written by Paul or by Paul pretenders.  To refresh your memories, we have so far gone into Letters of James, Hebrews, and Jude – and now we arrive at the First, Second, and Third Letters of John.

As with the other “rest of them” letters we’ve looked at so far, there appears to be a lot more that we don’t know than what we can claim to be sure about here.

Back when we studied the Gospel of John I mentioned briefly that the Letters would be very similar and are believed by some to have been written by the same writer.  My guess is that they were not written by the same actual person but by someone from the same community of belief.  As we’ve mentioned before, John was an extremely common name at that time – as it still is today.  The writer may have been named John or he may have taken that name as a tribute to the writer of the gospel or as a means to tie his ideas to the gospel writer.  We don’t know.

There is also the same uncertainty as to when they were written, with the current consensus being that the first letter was written around the first decade of the 100’s.  The second and third letters may have been written near the same time or as long as a decade later.  And they may have been written by a different author yet.  We don't know.
 

The first “letter” doesn’t have any of the typical markings of a letter – no sender mentioned, no community to which it would be written.  It reads, instead, like an expository teaching that has been consigned to paper.  The second and third letters are clearly letters – referencing individuals and their communities in normal letter-style.

So – with all the “we don’t know’s” out of the way, what does this letter actually say?  And why are we reading it?  And what can it mean for us here today?

Well, first off, there is a goodly amount of perfectly lovely writing in this first John letter.  I always find it intriguing that some of the shortest pieces turn out to have the most memorable quotes in them.  The primary theme of this  letter is love – the love God has for us, the love we should have for each other, and the love that should shine out from us if we allow the love of Christ to shine through us.
​

There are only five chapters all together – and so much love.  Chapter three in particular seems to be full of memorable quotes we are all familiar with.  It begins with a reminder that we are God’s beloved children and love is our destiny:
See what love the Father has given us, that we should be called children of God; and that is what we are.  The reason the world does not know us is that it did not know him.  Beloved, we are God’s children now; what we will be has not yet been revealed.  What we do know is this: when he is revealed, we will be like him, for we will see him as he is. 
The chapter likewise ends with
 Little children, let us love, not in word or speech, but in truth and action.   And by this we will know that we are from the truth and will reassure our hearts before him whenever our hearts condemn us;  for God is greater than our hearts, and he knows everything.  Beloved, if our hearts do not condemn us, we have boldness before God; and we receive from him whatever we ask, because we obey his commandments and do what pleases him.
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And this is his commandment, that we should believe in the name of his Son Jesus Christ and love one another, just as he has commanded us.
Chapter four adds even more of these easily remembered verses:
Beloved, let us love one another, because love is from God; everyone who loves is born of God and knows God.  Whoever does not love does not know God, for God is love. God’s love was revealed among us in this way: God sent his only Son into the world so that we might live through him.  In this is love, not that we loved God but that he loved us and sent his Son for our sins. 

Beloved, since God loved us so much, we also ought to love one another.  No one has ever seen God; if we love one another, God lives in us, and his love is perfected in us ....
God is love, and those who abide in love abide in God, and God abides in them.  Love has been perfected among us in this: that we may have boldness on the day of judgment, because as he is, so are we in this world.  There is no fear in love, but perfect love casts out fear; for fear has to do with punishment, and whoever fears has not reached perfection in love.  We love because he first loved us.
​

Nothing here that we need to theologize about; nothing we need to struggle with – just love.  The only thing here remotely theological is the fifth and final chapter’s reminder that Jesus is both fully human and fully divine – not just a human with divine approval and most definitely not divinity just pretending to be human – a heresy that was circulating around at this time.

This is the one who came by water and blood, Jesus Christ, not with the water only but with the water and the blood.  Christ was born both of the water of the Spirit’s baptism and of a human woman, with all its physical messiness, just like every other human person.  Fully human and fully divine – a major component of any Johannine teaching. And the "John" writers legacy to us today.

I recommend you take the time to read the First of John’s letters – just for the beauty of what it has to tell us.
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Next week we’ll look into the second and third letters, each of which has only about 3 paragraphs.  We’ll see what they had to offer the emerging Christian faith and what they have to offer us today.
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    Rev. Cherie Marckx

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