Your Life: Priceless!
This sermon was preached Sunday June 9, 2013 at St. John's, Henderson NC on the lessons below. You can read the scriptures by clicking on the quick link to the right.
1 Kings 17:17-24 - http://bible.oremus.org/?ql=237823994
Galatians 1:11-24 - http://bible.oremus.org/?ql=237824081
Luke 7:11-17 - http://bible.oremus.org/?ql=237823874.
Yesterday, I talked to a longtime friend at the
Cary Y. This person was my neighbor
before I got married. His working career
has been in computer sales. He told me
how he had been let go twice during his career.
Today, he said, there is no such thing as a permanent job. We’re all contract workers. Years ago I talked to a man who said that a
company executive told a meeting of employees that each worker had to look out
for him or herself because the company was looking out for itself. This is the reality in corporate
America. The days in which people worked
for one company their entire working life, with rare exceptions, are long gone.
In today’s world, people are little more
than disposable parts.
Today’s lessons reveal that there
are no throwaways in the Kingdom of Heaven.
Each person is invaluable regardless of his or her status in the
world. God cherishes each of us.
Today’s
Gospel lesson is similar to the Old Testament lesson. Elijah and Jesus each resuscitate a young child. Occasionally people say that the god of the
Old Testament is different from the god of the New Testament. The Old Testament god, they say, is wrathful
and the New Testament god loving. Today’s
lessons reveal that the god of the Old and New Testaments are one and the same. In both Testaments, God is a god of love and
compassion. God is also a god of justice
in both. We tend to focus on one more
than the other in each Testament, but it is easy to find examples of God’s
justice and God’s compassion in both the Old and New Testaments.
A key point in understanding God’s
compassion in the lesson from 1 Kings and Luke is that the woman who has lost
her only son is a widow. Widows in the
Ancient World were a vulnerable and marginal group. In ancient agrarian society, a woman had few
options outside of her home and family.
She depended upon her husband to farm for food and her children to care
for her in her old age. The social
safety net did not exist. The
desperation of a woman without a husband and children can be seen in the story
of Tamar in the book of Genesis. Tamar
disguises herself as a prostitute to conceive a son by her father-in-law Judah. Society in the Ancient World and today
privileges the powerful and the wealthy.
God, however, values each person regardless of whether he or she is rich
or poor, young or old, married or single, able or disabled. God values each of us equally regardless of
our status in the world.
The radical nature of God’s love is
seen even more dramatically in Paul’s letter to the Galatians. Paul confesses that he “violently” persecuted
the church of God and tried to “destroy it.”
If someone tried to destroy us, how would we react? As we know from the news, our response would
be to send out a killer drone to take out that person. God, though, responds differently. Instead of retaliating, the risen Jesus appears
to Saul, converting him to faith. This
former persecutor becomes the greatest of all the apostles, the one who takes
the Good News of Jesus Christ to the Gentile world. Many scholars argue that it is because of
this persecutor that Christianity is the worldwide religion it is today instead
of a small Jewish sect.
God’s economy dramatically differs from
the world’s economy. We value people
because of their position in society - their wealth, their looks or their popularity
-, but God values each person regardless of her or his worldly status.
I recently started working part-time
at the YMCA in Cary. I am currently between
churches and wanted a way to get out of the house, earn a little money and be
with people. I have been a member of the
Cary Y since 1994. I like the culture -
the values, the staff and the members.
My job as a Wellness Coach is to assist people in the workout areas and
to give wellness orientations. The Y is very
people oriented. An important part of my
job is meeting people. The Y pays me to
walk around and talk to them. As far as
I’m concerned, you can’t beat that! In
the course of only a few shifts, I have met many amazing women and men. One man that I talked to Thursday is an
investigator for Blue Cross and Blue Shield.
He investigates fraudulent billing.
You will be reassured to know that these are only a very small fraction
of all Blue Cross and Blue Shield’s insurance claims. When I asked him how he had gotten into this
line of work, he said that he had studied criminal justice in college. Afterwards, he had worked as a sheriff’s
deputy, welfare and Department of Defense investigator – more than a fulltime
job! Intrigued I asked him to tell me
about his most interesting case, he replied, “It sounds corny, but I can’t tell
you. It’s classified.” I told him to say no more as I didn’t want
him to have to kill me. As is true for
most of us, he takes his life story for granted. He didn’t think it was particularly special,
but I thought it was fascinating. I knew
nothing about that world. And his story
is one of many that I have heard in the last few days - the retired
mathematician from India who moved from Virginia to Cary a month ago to be near
his daughter and grandchildren; the Campbell law school graduate, who works
from home on family law cases and hopes one day to have children with her
lawyer husband; the eleven year old girl who likes to play the video game World
of Warcraft and who misses her friends in Colorado from where she just moved; the
Spanish speaking Y maintenance man who grew up in a Puerto Rican family in New
York City. Each of us has a fascinating
story. Each of us is priceless in the
eyes of our loving God.
Today’s lessons call us to look at
each person whether rich or poor, young or old, abled or disabled, black, brown
or white with God’s eyes, with eyes that cherish and love each person
regardless of his or her position in society.
The lessons call us perhaps more challengingly to look at ourselves with
those same eyes, to realize that you and I are precious, irreplaceable in the
eyes of our loving God. When we look at
others and ourselves with God’s eyes of love, we can begin to fulfill Jesus’
command to love our neighbors as ourselves.