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Conference lgp30::christian-perspective

Title:Discussions from a Christian Perspective
Notice:Prostitutes and tax collectors welcome!
Moderator:CSC32::J_CHRISTIE
Created:Mon Sep 17 1990
Last Modified:Fri Jun 06 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1362
Total number of notes:61362

211.0. "the third Sunday of Easter" by OLDTMR::FRANCEY () Thu Apr 11 1991 00:24

Your suggestions are welcomed for a sermon I will be presenting 
this Sunday, the third week of Easter.  The lectionary scripture
chosen is Acts 3:12-19, Luke 24:35-48 and Psalms 3,4.  The sermon
title is "Sleeping in the Sanctuary".

Now, would you like to make a guess on where I'm headed or 
would you like to make some suggestions.  Supporting lectionary
includes 1 John 3:1-7.

Hint: in olden days, where did one get support from life's
embattlements?  Why?  Reference Psalm 3.  How does Jesus' 
appearance in the flesh and his eating relate to us today - in
comparison to the pre-Christian days?

-----
Sorry for the short notice but I just got asked to do the service
so that my interim pastor and his wife can enjoy a weekend 
celebrating their anniversary.

	Shalom,

	Ron
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211.1This is the Preachin'est conference! ;-}CSC32::J_CHRISTIEUncomplacent PeaceThu Apr 11 1991 19:1316
Ron,

Funny thing.  On very short notice I was asked to serve as pulpit
supply this coming Sunday so that my pastor might be present at his
granddaughter's baptism.

This is something I do willingly and gladly.  But, because of the
short notice and because my life is nearly drained of leisure time
right now, I personally feel less bound to adhere to the lectionary;
though I do agree that normally it is a worthwhile discipline.

I will pray that your message glorifies God and touches the hearts of
your hearers deeply.  I ask for your prayers, as well.

Peace,
Richard
211.2DPDMAI::DAWSONCould be....But I doubt it!Thu Apr 11 1991 19:534
    
    Ditto here....I've got the pulpit in my church this sunday also.
    
    Dave  :^)
211.3evangelizing we will goOLDTMR::FRANCEYThu Apr 11 1991 22:477
    It is fitting that the lectionary from Luke is Luke's version of the
    Great Commissioning!  Go tell it on the mouintain ...
    
    Peace and God-speed to both of you.
    
    	Ron
    
211.4How did it go?CSC32::J_CHRISTIEUncomplacent PeaceMon Apr 15 1991 23:404
    So, Ron, Dave.  How do you feel about the preaching you heard on the
    14th now that it's over?
    
    Richard
211.5DPDMAI::DAWSONA Different LightTue Apr 16 1991 00:409
    RE: .4   Richard
    
    
                       It went very well.  I preached on "Gods Gental
    Hugs", ( E Grace woulda been proud!) :^)  It felt very good being back
    in a pulpit again.  I came out of Proverbs 1:24-33.
    
    :^)
    Dave
211.6:^}DPDMAI::DAWSONA Different LightTue Apr 16 1991 09:279
    
    RE: .5  
    
                E Grace might have been proud IF I spelled it right!
    
                           Gods "GENTLE" Hugs
    
    
    Dave
211.7CSC32::J_CHRISTIEUncomplacent PeaceTue Apr 16 1991 19:067
The title of my message was "Death Is Not Optional."  Intriguing, eh?
I sense that it went well.  I received a lot of hugs afterwards.  But,
that's not a very good barometer.  I get a lot of hugs even when I don't
preach. (It's definately an E Grace kind of place. ;-})

Peace,
Richard
211.8the sermonOLDTMR::FRANCEYFri Apr 19 1991 11:48396


                                                                        1


                             "Sleeping in the Sanctuary"
                            April 14, 1991 - Ron Francey
                        Acts 3:12-19; Psalm 4; Luke 24:35-48
                                          

                  Maybe some of you are wondering, after noticing this

          week's sermon title, when it would be that someone - one of the

          ushers - would come down one of the isles with a long stick with

          a clump of feathers on the end of it, reach out and lightly

          feather one of the lightly sleeping women or bomp on the head one

          of the loudly snoring men - or would it be vice-versa?  Maybe

          you'll be distracted from the sermon because you'll be looking

          around the church to see who it is that is bobbing his or her

          head.  Maybe you anticipate a judgmental sermon about the

          requirement to pay attention, to absorb every word, every

          syllable emanating from the wisdom of one who speaks with

          authority from behind the pulpit, scholar that he is!  Maybe some

          of you know me better and know that none of these things would be

          likely - and you would be right.

          

                  In pre-Christian days, it was common for people to come

          from long distances to the temple to worship, to gather in

          community, to learn, to pray.  It was also common for those who

          were suffering from ill treatment, suffering from the woes of

          battle, anticipating the challenges of life to come to the place

          where God was known to exist, where God was known to be found.

          The temple was more than a place to find God; it was also a place

          to seek God's favor.

          











                                                                        2


                  In the days of the judges, people would also gather at

          the temple when they felt they had been wrongly accused of some

          deed.  Our responsive reading this morning may well have been in

          tune with such an occasion.  Recall the words of Psalm 4:

                    

                    [read the Psalm]

                    

                  And so it was that litigants would gather at the temple,

          each one knowing that he was in the right, knowing that God would

          find favor with him.  In preparation for a hearing before God in

          the temple, the litigants would spend the evening in the

          precincts of the sanctuary.  Verses 4,5 may relate directly to

          this: "When you are disturbed, do not sin; ponder it on your

          beds, and be silent.  Offer right sacrifices, and put your trust

          in the Lord."  And so they would sleep in the sanctuary - in

          order to receive dreams, revelations, or priestly interpretations

          about one's condition - the easier one slept and the priest's

          observance of such could only mean innocence for the sleeper.

          

                  Is life so different today?  Let us search our inner

          selves for the reasons we come to the temple today.  Many of us

          are hurt in many ways and come to God's home for nourishment;

          many of us feel wronged; we feel falsely accused of so many

          things - we feel that we are not known by who we really are.  We

          seek - and expect - God's favor.

          












                                                                        3


                  In ancient of days, people came to the church to be

          observed by the priests, to be vindicated based on how they

          appeared before the magistrate.  Those who appeared more

          righteous, those were the ones expected to be set free from the

          false charges.  What do we expect of the church today?

          

                  We are entering the throes of the search for a new

          pastor.  What are the qualities of the pastor that are right for

          us, for the good of the church, for the good of the community?

          Do we seek a pastor that will benefit us personally, who will

          come to know us for whom we really are?  Do we even know who we

          are?  Do we want a pastor who will find out how righteous we are

          or who will help us - change - just a little?

          

                  And what of the new pastor?  Are we willing to seek out

          the hopes and aspirations of the new pastor?  Are we willing to

          extend love, to care for, to hold a pastor - who, like us, maybe

          is just a little less than perfect, who might be just a little

          less of a scholar than he or she thinks they really are?

          

                  Are we willing to be tested, to be challenged, to walk

          the search for meaning in our lives, to explore the possibilities

          of who it is that God might want us to be, to become?  Will we

          only accept from a pastor, from this church only that which we

          want to hear or will we dare to take God's hand in ours and walk

          the journey of life together?

          










                                                                        4


                  This morning's selection of scripture is concerned with

          more than coming to the temple to seek God for it is witness to

          the first "sign and wonder" done through the apostles that Luke

          chose to record.  It is witness to action, to the acts of the

          apostles - to people near the temple but not in it.  This is

          witness to our resurrection theology.  It is Christianity in its

          formative days, in its formative ways.

          

                  And so the people, the congregants, were astonished to

          see the lame man, lame from birth, gather strength, be healed

          before their very eyes and walk.  Peter, the rock, immediately

          challenges the observers: "Why do you stare at us, as though by

          our own power or piety we had made him walk?"  It was God who had

          been at work in what had happened.  The apostles were instruments

          of God's grace.

          

                  In the ancient of days, the presence of God, the

          Shekinah, dwelt in the temple.  Now it was focused in the name of

          Jesus.  God no longer was seen to exercise divine power

          exclusively in the precincts of the temple, but now where

          prophetic deeds were done in the name of Jesus.

          

                  And so too are we called out of the temple and into the

          world to be instruments of God's grace.  It is not we who are to

          perform the miracles, it is not we who are the God of our people

          - but we have been touched by the Holy Spirit so that we might be












                                                                        5


          able to touch others, to work together toward peace and justice

          in this, God's created world.

          

                  In Luke's scripture, Jesus presents himself before the

          gathering of the disciples as they were busily discussing the

          meeting on the road to Emmaus and how they had come to know him

          through the breaking of the bread.  The disciples were startled

          and terrified believing they had seen a ghost.  Jesus asked them

          to touch him and see that he was real; he asked for food -

          something no ghost would need.

          

                  Jesus - God - was present in their midst.  He was

          physically present amongst them; he was real; he was beyond the

          temple walls commissioning the disciples to go forth.  Jesus

          opened their minds to understand the scripture and commissioned

          them that "repentance and forgiveness of sins is to be proclaimed

          in his name to all nations".  They were clothed with power from

          on high.  They were touched so they, in turn, could touch.

          

                  What meaning does this have for us today?  As we search

          for a pastor, are we only to be concerned about the pastor's

          strengths within the walls of this temple?  Do we seek one who

          will help us dance the dance of life, to do-se-do with strangers,

          to engage in life with those of different customs, beliefs,

          desires and needs?  Jesus calls us to repentance and to

          forgiveness of sins made against God.

          










                                                                        6


                  Jesus' resurrection is real.  Do we continue in life

          where we left off before we knew and believed in the

          resurrection?  Do we begin anew?  How are we to approach the

          temple, this church, today, tomorrow, in the years to come?  We

          can choose to come to this church, to come to this sanctuary, to

          sleep in the sanctuary - to receive dreams, revelations or

          priestly interpretations of one's sleeping behaviors, to be found

          innocent of acts of aggression and malice against us.

          

                  We can also come to this sanctuary, this church, to

          worship God, to sing praises to God's most Holy Name, to

          encourage others to join in the celebration of this world and the

          people in it, to celebrate the diversity each of us offers to the

          other.  And we can leave this church as renewed persons, touched

          by the Holy Spirit.

          

                  We carry the candle of light, let us carry it so that

          others can see by the light.  We carry the candle of truth, let

          us extend that truth in word and in deed that God loves all of us

          and that we are called to love each other.  We carry the candle

          of hope, hope springing from our resurrection joy; let us carry

          the flame of hope that illumines a world of Shalom, a world of

          peace and joy.

          

                  As we leave this sanctuary today, let us carry these

          candles into the world.  Let them shine, let them shine, let them

          shine!  Amen.







211.9Amen!!CSC32::J_CHRISTIEUncomplacent PeaceFri Apr 19 1991 22:555
    And, may they shine forever!
    
    Thank you, Ron.
    
    Richard