Sunday, October 5, 2014

Sermon: Falling into God

Philippians 3:4b-14
Falling into God
James Sledge                                                             October 5, 2014 (Stewardship1)

Seminary students sometimes have a bit of nerdy fun translating today’s Philippians passage. When Paul says the immense value of knowing Jesus has made all he once valued “rubbish,” the word he uses has a bit more shock value. One Greek dictionary defines it simply as “dung, excrement.” And so at least one seminarian in any class will inevitably translate it using a four letter word I can’t repeat here.
But what is it that would make Paul so thoroughly reassess his former life? Despite how large Paul looms over the New Testament, I’m not sure the Church – and especially the Protestant Church – has always had the best answer.
Heavily influenced by Martin Luther, Protestants have typically understood Paul’s experience, and so salvation and conversion, as rescue from some failed past. This was Luther’s personal experience. As a priest, he was racked by feelings of guilt, sure he could never follow Jesus well enough or confess his failings fully enough to be acceptable. But Paul’s writings on grace, on how restored relationship with God is a gift and not earned, freed Luther from his guilty past.
Five hundred years later, Luther’s notion of faith and salvation as this sort of rescue still exerts great influence on Protestant theology and thought, even if it fails to connect with many in pews. One reason lifelong Presbyterians, Episcopalians, Lutherans, etc. say they’ve never had a “conversion experience” is because they understand it as rescue, but they’ve never really thought they needed rescue, having grown up in the church.
But it turns out that Martin Luther’s faith experience did not mirror Paul’s. Unlike Luther, Paul never felt oppressed by God’s law. He wasn’t seeking freedom from guilt and worry. In our reading this morning, he describes himself so, “…as to righteous under the law, blameless.” That doesn’t mean he thought he was perfect. It simply means he tried diligently to live a life ordered by God’s law, and could be forgiven when he failed.
But now that he is “in Christ,” Paul views everything from his past in a new light. And many of us have had a similar experience even if we’ve never had a religious conversion: the experience of falling in love.

Think about what happens when someone falls head-over-heels in love. It is life altering, totally reshuffling plans and priorities. Things that formerly were important suddenly take a back seat. This is not  rescue from a failed past. The old life isn’t despised or escaped. Rather, something new and wonderful has reprioritized everything.
Falling in love isn’t usually a long, drawn-out, incremental thing, not something that begins as a child and slowly comes into flower. It is a conversion. People don’t say, “Oh, I grew up in a loving home so I don’t really know what it means to fall in love.”  Growing up in a loving home is an advantage for people when they do fall in love, but falling in love is something new and different, a wonderful thing quite unlike anything before.
This is what has happened to Paul. No doubt he regrets once persecuting followers of Jesus, but he does not see his past as some terrible thing he escaped. He is proud of his rabbinical, Jewish background. He still thinks of himself as a Jew. He quotes his Jewish Scriptures regularly. “Yet,” he writes, “whatever gains I had, these I have come to regard as loss because of Christ. More than that, I regard everything as loss because of the surpassing value of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord”
To my ear, if you take out “Christ Jesus” and replace it with “you,” it sounds like a love poem. “Whatever I once had I have come to regard as loss because of you. More than that, I regard everything as loss because of the surpassing value of knowing you.” You could put that in a Valentine’s Day card.
At this point I should probably confess that this sermon took a turn I had not expected or intended. This was supposed to be a stewardship sermon. Paul’s letter seemed to have real stewardship possibilities. It speaks of “The surpassing value of knowing Christ Jesus…” For Jesus to be such a high priority would seem like a great starting point for talking about supporting the work of the church. After all, people who are really committed to Jesus and make him a top priority tend to give generously to the church, not unlike how people who fall in love  want to do things for and give things to the one they love.
But how do you preach falling in love? No one ever got talked or convinced into falling in love. And I don’t know that it’s any different when we’re talking about falling in love with Jesus. So perhaps the best I can do is to say, don’t be afraid to fall in love.
There are reasons to be afraid. People caught up in religious fervor have committed great evils in the name of faith. It also can be scary to lose control. The same can be said about romantic love. Romantic passions can motivate envy, jealousy, abuse, and other terrible acts. Some have even labeled “in love” a form of temporary insanity. Still, most of us are willing to take a chance on romantic love. But we seem less inclined to risk the sort of passion Paul knows. Perhaps falling in love with another person is less scary because it’s with an equal, another human, but falling in love with God risks losing ourselves in something so much bigger than us and so risks losing control on a whole other level.
But I am convinced that we do not become fully alive, we do not become fully human, until we lose ourselves in the vast otherness and bigger-than-us-ness of God. 
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I receive a daily email devotion from Richard Rohr who, like Paul, seems to have passionately fallen into the immense grandness and love of God. This was in a recent devotion.
But after any true God experience, you know that you are a part of a much bigger whole. Life is not about you; you are about life. You are an instance of a universal and even eternal pattern. Life is living itself in you. It is an earthquake in the brain, a hurricane in the heart, a Copernican revolution of the mind, and a monumental shift in consciousness. Frankly, most do not seem interested.
Understanding that your life is not about you is the connection point with everything else. It lowers the mountains and fills in the valleys that we have created, as we gradually recognize that the myriad forms of life in the universe, including ourselves, are operative parts of the One Life that most of us call God. After such a discovery, I am grateful to be a part—and only a part! I do not have to figure it all out, straighten it all out, or even do it perfectly by myself. I do not have to be God.
It is an enormous weight off my back. All I have to do is participate! My holiness is first of all and really only God’s, and that’s why it is certain and secure—and always holy. It is a participation, a mutual indwelling, not an achievement or performance on my part.
After this epiphany, things like praise, gratitude, and compassion come naturally—like breath and air. True spirituality is not taught; it is caught once our sails have been unfurled to the Spirit. Henceforth, our very motivation and momentum for the journey toward holiness and wholeness is just immense gratitude—for already having it![1]
True spirituality, like true love, is caught rather than taught. But we do need to embrace it, to be open to it, not to be so frightened of it that we try to hold it at arm’s length lest is sweep us up. And when we do catch true spirituality, when we fall into God and find ourselves “in Christ,” I wonder if stewardship sermons are even necessary.


[1] From Richard Rohr’s September 15, 2014 devotion, “You Are about Life.” Learn more at The Center for Action and Contemplation website, https://cac.org/

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