Sermons and thoughts on faith on Scripture from my time at Old Presbyterian Meeting House and Falls Church Presbyterian Church, plus sermons and postings from "Pastor James," my blog while pastor at Boulevard Presbyterian in Columbus, OH.
Monday, June 19, 2017
Sunday, June 11, 2017
Sermon: Telling Stories
Genesis 1:1-2:4a
Telling Stories
James Sledge June
11, 2017, Trinity Sunday
When
Naomi was a child growing up in Jerusalem, her parents often told her stories
about Abraham and Sarah, Moses and Joshua, Deborah, King David and Solomon. From
these stories and more, she learned that God cared for Israel. She was part of
God’s chosen people.
Their
God was better, more powerful than the gods of other nations. Jerusalem was a
light on a hill and Israel was special, exceptional. And so when the Babylonian
armies showed up, Naomi was not worried. Babylon’s gods were no match for
Yahweh.
But
Babylon’s armies had destroyed Jerusalem, had destroyed the great temple that
Solomon had built. They had marched Naomi, her family, and the leaders and well
to do of Jerusalem, off to Babylon. Every day Naomi saw the temples of the
Babylonian gods; now and then, one of the Babylonians teased her and asked what
had happened to her God.
About
that time, Naomi heard a new story, told by the religious leaders who had been
brought from Jerusalem along with the other, defeated Israelites. The story
went like this.
1In the beginning
when God created the heavens and the earth, 2the earth was a
formless void and darkness covered the face of the deep, while a wind from God
swept over the face of the waters. Or maybe it was the Spirit of God, Naomi
wasn’t sure because ruach could
mean wind, spirit, or breath.
Sunday, June 4, 2017
Sermon: Drunk on the Spirit
Acts 2:1-21
Drunk on the Spirit
James Sledge June
4, 2017 – Pentecost
How
many of you have ever seen someone speak in tongues? If so, I’m guessing it
probably wasn’t at a Presbyterian church. I’ve only seen it once. I was
visiting a service with a group of other seminary students. It was a huge
service, with hundreds of worshipers, and it happened a good ways away from me.
To my admittedly untrained eye, it looked like an odd combination of worship
hand-waving and a seizure. I couldn’t hear it well, but what I could was
unintelligible.
When
the subject of speaking in tongues comes up in the New Testament, it usually
speaks of something similar to what I saw. There’s even a technical name for it,
glossolalia, from the Greek words for
“tongue” and “speak.”
You
could attend hundreds of Presbyterian churches and never see anyone speak in
tongues or do anything labeled Pentecostal. For me, Pentecost has little to do
with the glossolalia version of speaking in tongues. It’s about our reading
from the book of Acts, where tongues instead refers to speaking in other
languages.
This
is a version of Pentecostal that a Presbyterian can handle. The Spirit gives
the disciples abilities they hadn’t had before. I’m perfectly fine with being
Pentecostal if it means the Spirit unearths some previously unknown talent. I’m
happy with the idea of the Spirit empowering us to do things we didn’t know we
were capable of. I could be that sort of Pentecostal. Thank you, Luke, or
whoever writes the book of Acts, for giving us this tamer, more palatable
version of speaking in tongues.
But
there is something odd in the story. After telling us that people from all over
could hear the disciples speaking in their native languages and that everyone
was amazed, the story adds, But others sneered and said, “They are
filled with new wine.” Even Peter seems
to accept that reasonable people might think the disciples are drunk. His
defense is, “We may look drunk, but hey, it’s only nine in the morning.”
Saturday, June 3, 2017
Tuesday, May 30, 2017
The Best of Us - The Worst of Us
When I was a little boy, my father often played the folk music that had become popular in late fifties and early sixties. I grew up listening to Peter, Paul, and Mary, Joan Baez, and a group called the Weavers. They were from an earlier era but had been "rediscovered" in the folk music resurgence.
One particular song from the Weavers made an impression on me, a Woody Guthrie ballad entitled "The Sinking of the Reuben James." It was about a US ship sunk by German U-boats during World War II. Guthrie wrote the song during the war, but the version I learned from the Weavers, sung in 1960, had an added verse at the end.
In today's gospel reading, Jesus sends "the seventy" out on a mission trip. As he instructs them for their work he says, "See, I am sending you out like lambs into the midst of wolves."Clearly this is more than colorful speech, more than metaphor.
It is difficult to make sense of such a world, to understand how it is that the worst create pain and conflict, while the very best suffer and die as a result. We do not want it to be that way. Sometimes we insist it is not that way. That is why it is so tempting to "blame the victim," to imagine that people somehow deserve their suffering, their tragedy, their poverty, their loss.
Of course Jesus is the perfect example of that not being so. He is the innocent one who suffers at the hands of the guilty. He is killed for doing what is right, just as the two men in Portland were. In a very real sense, Ricky Best and Taliesin Namkai-Meche embodied Christ in a way that many who speak in Christ's name so often fail to do. That these two men gave themselves for someone who happens to be Muslim, a person many Christians feel free to hate, only makes their incarnation of God's love that much more poignant.
I am heartened to hear so many people speak of Best and Namkai-Meche as heroes, as the best of humanity and American values. And yet, all too often, we prefer the ways and methods of the worst of us. We prefer the way of power and force and intimidation. We prefer to look for a reason that the other does not deserve our help. We prefer to look the other way in the face of suffering rather than risk ourselves to help, a tendency that only grows stronger the more different the other is from us.
In this time when hate is seeing a resurgence, when many feel freed to demonize the other based on their politics or faith or color or orientation or birthplace, I wonder if the tragic events in Portland last week might not have some small measure of redemptive power. If we can indeed embrace the actions of Ricky Best and Taliesin Namkai-Meche as the best of us, as a model we are all called to emulate, then perhaps their deaths will serve some lasting purpose.
Click to learn more about the lectionary.
One particular song from the Weavers made an impression on me, a Woody Guthrie ballad entitled "The Sinking of the Reuben James." It was about a US ship sunk by German U-boats during World War II. Guthrie wrote the song during the war, but the version I learned from the Weavers, sung in 1960, had an added verse at the end.
Many years have passed since those brave men are goneI thought of those lyrics as I read about the heroes killed in Portland when they came to the aid of a Muslim woman being accosted by a white-supremacist. Two of the best in our society died at the hands of one of the worst. They died precisely because they did what was right, because they stood up to evil.
Those cold, icy waters, they're still and they're calm
Many years have passed and still I wonder why
The worst of men must fight and the best of men must die
In today's gospel reading, Jesus sends "the seventy" out on a mission trip. As he instructs them for their work he says, "See, I am sending you out like lambs into the midst of wolves."Clearly this is more than colorful speech, more than metaphor.
It is difficult to make sense of such a world, to understand how it is that the worst create pain and conflict, while the very best suffer and die as a result. We do not want it to be that way. Sometimes we insist it is not that way. That is why it is so tempting to "blame the victim," to imagine that people somehow deserve their suffering, their tragedy, their poverty, their loss.
Of course Jesus is the perfect example of that not being so. He is the innocent one who suffers at the hands of the guilty. He is killed for doing what is right, just as the two men in Portland were. In a very real sense, Ricky Best and Taliesin Namkai-Meche embodied Christ in a way that many who speak in Christ's name so often fail to do. That these two men gave themselves for someone who happens to be Muslim, a person many Christians feel free to hate, only makes their incarnation of God's love that much more poignant.
I am heartened to hear so many people speak of Best and Namkai-Meche as heroes, as the best of humanity and American values. And yet, all too often, we prefer the ways and methods of the worst of us. We prefer the way of power and force and intimidation. We prefer to look for a reason that the other does not deserve our help. We prefer to look the other way in the face of suffering rather than risk ourselves to help, a tendency that only grows stronger the more different the other is from us.
In this time when hate is seeing a resurgence, when many feel freed to demonize the other based on their politics or faith or color or orientation or birthplace, I wonder if the tragic events in Portland last week might not have some small measure of redemptive power. If we can indeed embrace the actions of Ricky Best and Taliesin Namkai-Meche as the best of us, as a model we are all called to emulate, then perhaps their deaths will serve some lasting purpose.
Click to learn more about the lectionary.
Sunday, May 28, 2017
Sermon: Bigger Plans
Acts 1:1-14
Bigger Plans
James Sledge May
28, 2017
According
to the book of Acts, the risen Jesus hung out with the disciples for more than
a month after that first Easter, speaking with them about the kingdom of God.
Presumably he is continuing to teach his followers, just as he had done prior
to his arrest and crucifixion. No doubt it was easier for them to understand certain
things on this side of the resurrection.
Curiously,
there is nothing at all on the content of Jesus’ teachings. Nothing about what
Jesus said over those forty days besides the final instructions that we just
heard. I can only assume that means there was no new content. Jesus didn’t cover
any new ground. A refresher course, a bit of “Ok, now do you understand?” but
nothing that we’ve not already heard.
All
that makes the disciples’ question to Jesus even more startling. “Lord,
is this the time when you will restore the kingdom to Israel?” Really?
They’re still thinking about restoring Israel, about throwing out the Romans?
After all this they still think Jesus is a local Messiah, sent to rescue them from
their enemies? What a face palm moment.
I
don’t know if Jesus did face palms, but if he did, he must be doing them still.
His followers are still trying to turn Jesus into a Messiah who’s especially
concerned with their group. The Jesus I grew up with was a white, European guy,
and becoming a Christian was synonymous with acting like a white, European.
We’re a bit more sophisticated on this nowadays. We know that Jesus was Middle
Eastern and that faith transcends cultural divides. We know, as the Apostle
Paul said, there is no longer Jew or Greek, slave or free, male or female. All
are one in Christ Jesus, but we’re reasonably sure that becoming one means others
becoming more like us, preferring our style of music, worship, politics, and so
on.
Some
Christians are convinced that Jesus is especially worried about America. Some
of them voted for Donald Trump because they thought God would somehow use him
to restore the kingdom to America.
A
parochial, provincial view of what Jesus is about seems to be a perpetual
problem for the followers of Jesus. We’re forever imagining a Jesus, a God, who
is especially concerned with what concerns us, worried about what frightens us,
interested in helping us acquire whatever it is we want. Never mind how many
times Jesus says, “If any want to become my followers, let them deny themselves and take
up their cross…”
Tuesday, May 23, 2017
Bad Shepherds - Bad Budgets
Happy are those whose help is the God of Jacob,
whose hope is in the LORD their God,
who made heaven and earth,
the sea, and all that is in them;
who keeps faith forever;
who executes justice for the oppressed;
who gives food to the hungry.
The LORD sets the prisoners free;
the LORD opens the eyes of the blind.
The LORD lifts up those who are bowed down;
the LORD loves the righteous.
The LORD watches over the strangers;
he upholds the orphan and the widow,
but the way of the wicked he brings to ruin.
whose hope is in the LORD their God,
who made heaven and earth,
the sea, and all that is in them;
who keeps faith forever;
who executes justice for the oppressed;
who gives food to the hungry.
The LORD sets the prisoners free;
the LORD opens the eyes of the blind.
The LORD lifts up those who are bowed down;
the LORD loves the righteous.
The LORD watches over the strangers;
he upholds the orphan and the widow,
but the way of the wicked he brings to ruin.
Psalm 146:5-9
Often it is difficult to trust that the psalmist's words are true. Over and over the Bible speaks of God's special care for the poor and the weak. Over and over Jesus says the same, at times going so far as to speak of wealth as a curse. Not that we're much inclined to agree with him.
Now comes the first proposed budget from Donald Trump. Many evangelical Christians voted for the president, seeing him as someone who would advance a Christian agenda. If this budget -- one that gives huge tax cuts to the rich, financed by slashing programs for the sick and the poor -- is part of that Christian agenda, then clearly the term "Christian" does not refer to the ways of God or the teachings of Jesus.
I confess that I find faith in a God who is especially concerned for those who are poor, oppressed, hungry, strangers, or bowed down difficult to hold onto right now. I wish I were better at seeing the long view of things as Jesus could do, as the prophets could do. They could somehow look at a world struggling mightily against the ways of God and still have hope, still glimpse a day when the lowly were lifted up, when those Donald Trump calls "losers" were exalted.
And so right now, when my own words fail me, perhaps the best I can do is to borrow words from one of those prophets. Ezekiel spoke against the rulers, the shepherds of Israel. "Ah, you shepherds of Israel who have been feeding yourselves! Should not shepherds feed the sheep? You eat the fat, you clothe yourselves with the wool, you slaughter the fatlings; but you do not feed the sheep. You have not strengthened the weak, you have not healed the sick, you have not bound up the injured, you have not brought back the strayed, you have not sought the lost, but with force and harshness you have ruled them... Thus says the LORD GOD, I am against the shepherds."
What was it that allowed prophets to see such a day? What allowed Jesus to speak of the poor lifted up and the powerful brought down when he knew that the powerful would execute him?
O God, give me faith to see and speak the hope of your new day in Jesus. It seems so very far away.
Addendum: After writing this I was driving to the regular meeting of my presbytery, our regional governing council. I had another stop on the way and so travelled a different route than I typically use. It took me by the South African embassy with the statue of Nelson Mandela out front. Nelson Mandela, who was imprisoned for years by the shepherds of his nation, who surely despaired that he would die in prison. As I drove by that statue of Mandela, showing him walking out of prison with his fist raised in the air, I couldn't help but feel a twinge of hope, a nudge from God to keep looking to the horizon and the coming of God's new day.
Addendum: After writing this I was driving to the regular meeting of my presbytery, our regional governing council. I had another stop on the way and so travelled a different route than I typically use. It took me by the South African embassy with the statue of Nelson Mandela out front. Nelson Mandela, who was imprisoned for years by the shepherds of his nation, who surely despaired that he would die in prison. As I drove by that statue of Mandela, showing him walking out of prison with his fist raised in the air, I couldn't help but feel a twinge of hope, a nudge from God to keep looking to the horizon and the coming of God's new day.
Sunday, May 21, 2017
Sunday, May 14, 2017
Sermon: Construction Materials
1 Peter 2:2-10
Construction Materials
James Sledge May
14, 2017
When
I meet people for the first time on a Sunday, no one ever asks me that standard
question, “So what do you do?” But when I meet people outside of church I do
get asked that. Sometimes when I say that I’m a pastor people will respond,
“What church?” When I say “Falls Church Presbyterian,” it almost always elicits
a shrug. I have to tell them that we’re on East Broad Street, but usually,
that’s still not enough. Finally when I say that we’re the stone church just
down from Applebee’s, I finally get, “O yeah, I know where that is.” Sometimes
they’ll say something about how pretty it is.
We
do have a beautiful stone building, so it’s not surprising that people have
noticed it even if they’ve never actually read our name. Buildings are an
important part of most churches. When a new church first starts, it may meet in
school or a movie theater, but that’s temporary. Even before the first worship
service at the movie theater, people are thinking about plans to acquire land
and build a building.
For
many people, a church building is what makes it feel like church. That likely
explains why I get a fair number of phone calls from people who attend other
churches but want to get married here. Sometimes they’re at one of those
churches meeting in a movie theater. More often, their church has a building,
but it’s a contemporary space that doesn’t look like a church. For their
wedding, they want a church building that looks like a church.
Church
buildings are important and so we have a committee dedicated to our building
and grounds. That committee has to worry about keeping up all our buildings and
property, making sure there are plans for when we need a new roof or a new
boiler or have to repave the parking lot. It takes a lot of work and a lot of
money to keep all our buildings in good, working order.
Not
that anyone thinks church is just the buildings. Many of you likely know the
old rhyme where you form a church building with your hands and fingers. “Here’s
the church and here’s the steeple. Open the door and see all the people.”
Without those people, a beautiful church building would be nothing but a
museum.
That’s
why along with that committee that makes sure our buildings are well cared for,
there are other committees focused on what people do in the buildings. People
discuss and plan for worship, Sunday School programs, youth groups, mission
efforts such as our Welcome Table program, fellowship events, and much more.
As
important as buildings are – providing a place for worship, Sunday School,
youth groups, Welcome Table, etc. – who we are as a church is more about what
people here do.
Wednesday, May 10, 2017
On Receiving Help and Love
The following was written for the upcoming church newsletter.
Dear Friends,
As some of you may well know, I
like to think of myself as strong and self-reliant. I’m convinced that I can
handle anything that comes my way. This has often served me well. During my
flying career an emergency didn’t rattle me. It was simply a problem to be
dealt with.
However, there is a significant
downside to my self-image. I can become very frustrated when I’m unable to do
something. There are plenty of things I know I’m not good at, but when I think
I should be able to do something but cannot, or do it poorly, I often beat
myself up pretty badly. To make matters worse, asking for help can feel like
failure. And so I’m not very good at either asking or receiving help.
That likely explains why only
after things got really bad, only after my wife had encouraged me for months,
did I seek help for a deepening sense of sadness, burnout, and depression. Even
then I hoped that a few sessions with a counselor would let me figure
everything out and quickly get back to “normal.” I certainly wouldn’t need
ongoing therapy or medication, a certainty that quickly disappeared.
I have a long way to go in
getting back to “normal,” whatever that is, but I hope I’m on the right path.
I’ll spare you any more details of what already feels to me like oversharing. I
felt compelled to share, however, for a couple of reasons. The first is that
I’m hardly the only person who puts off getting treatment for mental health
issues because it feels like admitting to failure or weakness. Perceptions have
changed in recent years, but there is still a stigma attached to mental
illness. I hope my sharing is one more small chip knocked out of that stigma.
I also see a faith dimension to
this. At a very basic level, Christian faith is about being open to receiving
help. Our Presbyterian/Reformed Tradition understands relationship with God and
faith itself as a gift freely given to us by a loving God. Jesus is the
embodiment of a love that is not earned but is simply received. One does not
merit or deserve it. Jesus doesn’t love me because I’m so lovable but because
God is so loving. But I tend to measure my own worth by what I accomplish. And
so I have trouble loving myself, much less believing that God could love me,
really love me.
Our society encourages a culture
of performance, and this emphasis on achievement seems only to be growing. We
began putting pressure on our children to perform, to do well, to engage in
“enrichment” activities and sports at an earlier and earlier age. No parent
means to say, “I’ll love you if you do well, if you are successful,” but no
doubt some of our children hear just such a message.
The church also gets caught up
in our culture of performance, but that is a distortion of the gospel. At its
heart, the gospel is and always has been counter-cultural. That is why is says
silly things such as the last shall be first, the poor are blessed, and being
part of God’s new day isn’t about more success but about letting go and
becoming more like a little child. (Children had little “worth” in Jesus’ day.)
As the church, we are called to
embody Christ and his gospel. That means being a community where people
experience the love of God that is not dependent on measures of performance or
success. That means being able to accept and love ourselves, and it means being
able to accept and love those around us whether or not they “deserve” it based
on our personal measures of success or worth. Perhaps there is no greater gift
we could give our children, our neighbors, or ourselves than to rest so fully
and completely in God’s boundless love in Christ that it transformed us into
agents of Christ-like love.
Grace and peace and love,
James
James
Monday, May 8, 2017
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