Sunday, April 25, 2021

 

"Love in Truth and Action" - A Sermon preached at the First United Presbyterian Church of Lackawanna Valley on Sunday, April 25, 2021  

   Newport Presbyterian Church is nestled in a neighborhood in a section of Bellevue, Washington.  Once you duck under the overpass of Interstate 405 and turn off the bucolic Coal Creek Parkway you travel along tree lined streets dotted with lovely homes.  Downhill behind the homes is a body of water known as “the slough,” connected to Lake Washington.  Streets to the right lead up the mountain into neighborhoods with names given to them by their developers in the latter half of the twentieth century. One of those roads, identified by a carved wooden sign, leads instead into the property of the chu          The road winds in to the left, and the church appears on the right.  The building was built in keeping with the Northwest surroundings: its dark wood siding blends into the landscape of towering trees.  The driveway leads to a series of parking lots that ring a small island of trees and shrubs, in the middle of which is a rugged wood lectern surrounded by five or six log benches arranged in a circle, where one can imagine a Sunday School class or an adult Bible Study gathered on a warm sunny day.

    As habit dictates, the car in which we drove nestled into a parking space in the section of the lot where we always park when attending this church.  For my wife, Jan and I, prior to Covid 19, that meant, once or twice a year.   For the other occupants of the car, our eldest daughter, her husband, and our two granddaughters, it means slightly more than that…but not by much, I’m sad to say. (All the more reason the bedtime “Jackson the Monkey” stories Jan tells the girls have lessons embedded in them to point “the way” a child of God should go.)

    As my son-in-law put the car in park and shut down our battery driven ride, we noticed something different about the parking spaces next to us.  In the first stood a port-o-potty and one of those recep-tacles specially designed for disposing cigarette butts. At the end of the other two spaces there were wooden stakes pounded into the ground bearing signs.  In bold black letters on white backgrounds the signs read:                                                                 

Reserved for our 
 Overnight Guests
7:00 PM – 7:00 AM

     “I have a question,” announced the six-year-old who is rarely without one.  “Why is there a port-o-potty in the church parking lot?”

    Her mother answered: “It is for the people who must sleep in their cars because they have no place to live. The church lets them park their cars here in a safe place at night.”

     Accustomed to seeing the colonies of domed tents of nestled under overpasses and in the side yards of churches in and around Seattle, our little one didn’t need any further explanation. After church, on the way to brunch near the iconic Pike Street Marketplace, we would pass several encampments.  For the moment, as we walked up a slight hill to enter the church behind a young Asian-American woman being pushed in her wheelchair by her mother, it was enough to conclude the impromptu lesson on living as Jesus commands by noting that their church was doing what it can to live love, “not in word or speech, but in truth and in action.”

    Those words from the first letter of John are part of what many consider to be a commentary on the Gospel of John. They come as the author attempts to teach the twin themes of John’s Gospel: belief, that is, trust, in the power of the name of the Lord Jesus Christ, and the commandment to love one another as Christ has loved us. The living out of that trust or belief, and the love the Lord commanded, rooted in the example of Jesus himself.

    The love Jesus commanded and lived is more than mere words. It issues in action.  “We know love by this, that he laid down his life for us—and we ought to lay down our lives for one another,” writes the author of John. Talk is cheap.  Actions speak louder than words.  “Life reveals the children of God,” as one notable Christian put it.[i]  In words similar to those found in the Letter of James, John writes: “How does God’s love abide in anyone who has the world’s goods and sees a brother or sister in need and yet refuses to help?

    A few years ago, I was typing those very words into my scaled-up-so-I-can-read-it Sunday morning script when there was a knock on the door.  There stood a familiar figure whose life has taken at least two steps backward for every half-step he manages forward.  I listened to the latest chapter in his tale of woe that included a severe medical condition, and co-pays for every visit for treatment or medication prescribed to counter side-effects.  With the words of First John across the room on the computer screen, and a balance in my Pastor’s Discretionary Fund, I was confronted with the question raised in our reading: “How does God’s love abide in anyone who has the world’s goods and sees a brother or sister in need and yet refuses to help?

    The only choice possible was to embrace the answer John provides: “Little children, let us love, not in word or speech, but in truth and action.” So from the funds my congregation set aside for such moments, my visitor was provided a tankful of gas to get him the next treatment and enough dollars to cover the co-pay. 

    One Saturday evening during our visit out in Washington, we once more loaded into the son-in-law’s car, drove down from the heights of Cougar Mountain to an indoor soccer field on the valley floor.  It was a chance for Jan and I to watch our granddaughter enjoy a team sport in the company of others who are fast becoming their best friends. I must say that being indoors, with a snack bar and beverages available was a much better deal than sitting on a frigid aluminum bleacher a few days later freezing as a bunch of four, five, and six year-olds held their last T-ball practice.

    After watching our team win, with my older granddaughter making several saves as goalie, one of the other player’s fathers, who had been standing beside me most of the game, began to talk about his church. (Everyone has apparently been clued in that Katie’s father is a minister.) Dan is a successful lawyer who was serving on the Pulpit Nominating Committee of a Lutheran Church in the University section of Seattle.  He and his wife had begun attending while students at the University of Washington, and stayed involved even after they bought a home half an hour out of the city.  He lamented declining attendance and lack of participation by his generation; he spoke of the difficulty they’re having at-tracting a candidate to relocate to an area with such a high cost of living.  He told of conversations the Lutheran congregation is having with the Methodists nearby about finding a way to work together, possibly merging, and putting one of the buildings to work as a resource for the community and a shelter for the homeless.

    What I thought would be an intrusion on my vacation, became another uplifting moment. To hear about congregations that are willing to go beyond “the way we’ve always done it,” that are thinking outside the box, that are looking to meet the needs of neighbors beyond their own membership rolls was a gift. It was uplifting to hear of people who are being honest in their attempts to be the church in the midst of changing times. It was heartwarming because back here in Pennsylvania I was serving a church working its way into a new future by sharing facilities with another congregation, and dis-covering how to serve our new neighbors.  When Dan spoke of meeting the needs of their neighbors, it was another reminder that there are people who have heard and are heeding the message to love, “not in word of speech, but in truth and action.”

    Writing in a recent edition of The Presbyterian Outlook, pastor and author Roger Gench calls love, “the foundation-al fruit of the Spirit,” adding these words of clarification: "In our cultural context, we tend to think of  love as an emotion, and thus may need to be  reminded that love, in the biblical idiom, is not so much something you feel, but rather some-thing you do. It is an action rather than a feeling—an action on behalf of another’s well-being—some-times regardless of how we feel.”[ii] To put it ano-ther way, the love Jesus commanded and demonstrated and John writes about is a conscious, positive choice that seeks what is best for the other, whomever that other happens to be: friend or foe, an intimate or an enemy, someone special or the stranger you happen upon.

    Expressions of this kind of love occur around us and to us and through us all the time.  Someone questions and researches the validity of a hurtful Facebook post that turns out to be real “fake news.” She warns others not to believe it or pass it on.  A person doing their daily steps through the mall notices the vacant, frightened look on the face of someone standing still at the intersection of two hallways. He stops and offers assistance until a relieved caregiver comes along searching for the sheep that has strayed. An individual who once was living meal to meal with more than a few skipped along the way, quietly places some soup cans and cornflakes in the food pantry collection box. The size and scope of active love matters little, because the impact will be large and lasting.

    Our Sunday sojourn into Seattle was nearing its end. After brunch in a trendy spot just a ways down from the original Starbucks, we walked through the Pike Street Marketplace. We stopped briefly while the girls and their grandmother taste-tested some chocolate covered chucker cherries. We made our way past what seemed like acres of fresh cut flowers for sale, and booths with vendors selling t-shirts and paintings and all manner of hand-made crafts.  We passed the open air seafood market where tourists line up to watch the sales force toss huge salmon back and forth before placing them on the scale and bagging them for a customer.  Before we went out toward the street, we passed over a walkway and looked down on the famous gum wall, watching as people took “selfies” or made their own additions to the multicolored confectionary collection.

    Once on the street we headed down to the waterfront, eventually taking a set of steep steps beside a beautiful fountain, down, down, down until we were at the level of the piers.  Our destination was near the huge Ferris Wheel that is in all the pictures of the Seattle Waterfront. There the National Park Service has an attraction called “Wings Over Washington.”  Rising from the side of the pier is a building that looks like a great wooden lodge you would expect to find in one of the National Parks. After buying your tickets, you line up and wait to be escorted into a small room, where a Park Ranger gives a humor-laden introduction to the natural wonders and the first nation peoples of the region.  Then with some safety instructions for the ride you are about to take, you are led into a theater. Once in your seat, you buckle into a three-way seatbelt harness as instructed.

    The lights dim; the knee-wall in front of you is lowered; the floor drops out from under your feet, and on a curved screen in front of you an eagle appears. Next thing you know, you are flying behind the eagle, up and over the mountains, down across the Haro Straight where the Orca’s rise and dive and splash you near the Lime Kiln Lighthouse.  Over the endless tulip fields of Skagit County;   up and over the mountains, down through white water valleys just above some kayakers; into the blasted out side of Mt. Saint Helens as it is about to erupt again; more countryside; out to the Olympic National Park, around through Deception Pass, before coming across Puget Sound into Elliott Bay and back to Seattle. It is a thrilling ride for those who keep their eyes open; an adventure to endure to the delight of your grandchildren if you are a grand-mother who afraid of heights.

    While our eyes adjusted to being open again, we made our way along the waterfront in the direction of the parking garage below the Market.  Just past the Seattle Aquarium there was a crosswalk leading under the Alaskan Way Viaduct which has since been replaced by a tunnel being dug beneath our feet.  In the shadow of the viaduct a dozen or more tents were pitched, a multi-colored patch-work of temp-orary housing that for many is all too permanent. Attempting to be polite and respectful, I tried not to stare, but something caught my eye.  There, in the midst of the homeless folk in their multi-layered, worn and weary donated outfits, was a family dressed in their Eddy Bauer best: a mom and a dad, and two children.  In front of them was an array of brown paper bags with handles, the kind deli’s and restaurants provide for carry out meals. The woman was reaching into the bags and handing out sand-wiches.  The man was breaking bottles of water out of the plastic wrap of the case at his feet.  The kids were helping pass out bags of chips and cookies. The day ended as it began, with a teachable moment to help us all discover what love “in action” looks like.

            An act of kindness; an expression of love; a reminder amid all the evidence of selfishness and self-indulgence which surrounded us, that there are people who see “a brother or sister in need,” and do something to help. Such sights call us to do whatever we can, whenever we can, wherever we are.

            “Little children, let us love, not in word or speech, but in truth and action.”  Amen.


[i] William Barclay, The Letters of John and Jude, The Daily Bible Study Bible, Second Edition, (Philadelphia, PA: The Westminster Press, 1960), p. 97

[ii] Roger J. Gench, “Love: The Foundational Fruit of the Spirit,” The Presbyterian Outlook, Richmond, VA,  April 5, 2021, p. 17


Saturday, April 10, 2021

 

SPRING PADDLING PALS


Under a cloudless sky
so blue it takes your breath away
a Cormorant rests
on a floating platform built for turtles
to sun themselves.


Pleased to leave behind the banter
of three jolly fishermen
disturbing the peaceful lakeshore
a Mallard takes to wing
quacking in protest.


Silence returns.
Only the sound of
a paddle blade dripping
greets the ear
as Mergansers silently slip by.


Gentle breezes
ruffle the fluff
of last year’s cattails.
In the distance a Cardinal calls:
“pretty, pretty, pretty!”


The Cormorant launches
from the turtle platform
splashing as it goes-
a dark silhouette
bringing light to a long-wintered heart.


(c) 2021 James E. Thyren

 


Saturday, April 3, 2021

 

The Secret Is Out!

To the troubling spirit that cried out,
“I know who you are, the Holy One of God”
He said:
“Be silent.”[i]

To the leper who asked
if He would chose to make him clean,
He said:
“I do choose, Be made clean!”
and
“See that you say nothing to anyone.”[ii]

After He took a dead child by the hand and said
“Little girl, get up!”
“He strictly ordered that no one should know this.”[iii]

After a double touch opened sightless eyes
He said:
“Do not even go into the village (or tell anyone).”[iv]

When He asked: “Who do you say I am?”
Peter answered correctly
“You are the Messiah.”
Then He “ordered them not to tell anyone about him.[v]

Not wanting to be labeled as an exorcist
Not willing to be hemmed in as a healer
Not wishing to be confined by conflicting expectations
He waited until the moment was right
to acknowledge who He was:
“Again the High Priest asked him,
‘Are you the Messiah, the Son of the Blessed One?’
Jesus said,
“I am.”[vi]

To the untrained ear
the two word answer seems a simple reply.
But to those given ears to hear
the condemned man’s words
contain an audacious claim
as the name first heard by the light of a burning bush is repeated
“I am.”[vii]

Thus the secret so long kept is revealed.
The Son and the Father who sent him are One.
“God-with-Us”
is
God for Us!
God!
God on trial
Falsely Convicted
Mocked and Abused
Crucified and Entombed
“Here is the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world!”[viii]

Though it seemed the voice which said
“I AM WHO I AM”
was silenced for all time
the One who called Creation into being
brought order to chaos once more by declaring
“I WILL BE WHO I WILL BE”
through the words of a young man dressed in white
who said:
“Do not be alarmed;
you are looking for Jesus of Nazareth who was crucified.
He has been raised, he is not here…
But go, tell his disciples and Peter
that he is going ahead of you to Galilee;
there you will see him, just as he told you.”[ix]

The secret was out and permission given
to Go and to Tell!
Still, Mark’s pattern--
of people not doing as they were told held firm--
“So they went out and fled from the tomb,
for terror and amazement had seized them;
and they said nothing to anyone, for they were afraid.”[x]
Except they must have found their voices
for if they had not
how would we know all this?

Knowing the One who so often told the faithful,
“I will be with you,” promised disciples
“I AM with you always to the end of the age,”[xi]
the secret is ours to tell.
“The light shines in the darkness,
and the darkness did not overcome it.”[xii]
Go and tell!
Be silent no more.

[i] Mark 1. 23-26
[ii] Mark 1. 40-45
[iii] Mark 5. 21-43
[iv] Mark 8. 22-26
[v] Mark 8. 27-30
[vi] Mark 14. 53-62
[vii] Exodus 3. 13-15
[viii] John 1. 29
[ix] Mark. 16. 1-7
[x] Mark 16. 8
[xi] Matthew 28. 20
[xii] John 1. 5

Portraits of Faithfulness – a Sermon based on Luke 2. 22-40 resurrected from the archives and edited to be presented on Sunday, December 31,...