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Imagine walking at night through the forest and you are lost
Its cold outside, youre hungry. Every shadow seems like something
creeping up on you. Youre mind starts imagining all kinds of terrible
things: wolves leaping out of the darkness, bad guys jumping out from behind
a tree, a great panther gliding noiselessly along in the bushes, his eyes
glowing green in the dark as he carefully watches youre every move.
And just when you think you cant possibly take another moment of this,
right there through those trees you see the glow of a fire. And the warmth
of security and safety washes over you and you want to bolt and dash as hard
as you can to that safe amber glow. Such is the power of light.
Refuge. Safety. Warmth, Security. It allows us to see things
for how they really are. Theres truth; everything is transparent; there
is nothing hidden from view. Thats a picture of Gods world. The
bible speaks of the world to come as a city on a hill, shining brightly where
all nations can see Gods glory.
Paul wrote a letter to his friends at church and told them that
they could shine like stars in the universe. He wanted them to stand out like
a warm, inviting light on a really dark night. And what a dream this is that
Paul has for these people: to shine brightly and clearly in a hurting world.
Here is an example of this kind of desire to shine. Chicago
Bears Hall-of-Fame Middle Linebacker Mike Singletary says:
The first thing in my life by far and the reason I do everything
is my love for Jesus Christ. Number two is my familybeing there for
them and making sure I'm not missing time that I can't get back. Number three
is my work, speaking to corporations about teamwork, leadership, and cultural
diversity and trying to help people come together.
I don't care where I'm at or what I'm doing, the thing I want
to do now in my life is make a difference and serve with a capital S. Serve
in my home. Serve in my relationship with my wife. And serve my fellow man
.
For me, it's a matter of "What am I doing to make a difference? What
am I doing except making money." There are a lot of people out there
who are hurting.
Light opens things up, it brings things together. Light is a
metaphor for human relationships. The prophet Isaiah speaks of people who
are lost in sin as people walking in darkness and when Christ
comes, they have seen a great light. In John chapter 8, Jesus
said, I am in the light of the world. He who follows me shall not walk
in darkness but have the light of life. This is the simple point: light is
having the right relationships with God and other people. dream Gods
dream is that we live in obedient fellowship with him and in harmonious fellowship
with one another; in short, that we be a real family.
And thus we enter into another chapter of Pauls letter
to his friends. In this one we see him wishing them to really be a family
that glows brightly in a dark world. He dreams of them glowing in such a way
that people are drawn to them and find life. God dreams that for your life
and my life today. But how can we really live like a family who draws other
people to itself? How can we really have an impact on the lives of those we
live around? In a moment, well look closer at Pauls wisdom he
offers us on this point, but let me admonish you here: this is very simple
and basic. Dont overlook the magnitude of what we talk about.
The first thing we come to after Paul makes it clear he is talking
to people committed to being a family is this phrase: do nothing out
of selfish ambition
Now thats an interesting word. Ambition.
Does that ever creep into human relationships? Does that ever creep into the
church? Indeed it does and many times it sneaks in, slowly and without our
knowing it. Ambition what you want out of life. What do you want for
yourself? Thats a question about what you really value and think is
of eternal significance. We are well advised to periodically stop and reevaluate
our own ambitions for life.
A striking mark of holy ambition is that it elevates Christ
and not the ambitious striver. (Citation: James D. Berkley, Leadership, Vol.
11, no. 3.)
Pauls ambition is to see his friends really love and serve
each other. This is the spiritual glue that holds any family together: Mutual
concern; watching out for one another. It is not coming to worship in the
same place at the same time that makes a group a family; it is shared commitments
and common values lived out day by day.
Whats behind this ambition? Paul wanted them to love the same thing
be like minded and go the same direction one in spirit and
purpose. You want to be able to see clearly how life is to be lived?
Throw yourself full-fledged into relationships within the Body of Christ and
let your consuming ambition be to see that group of people become unified
and purposeful in living together! That will ignite your understanding of
your life and its purpose God made it that way!!
Do not be selfish in how you live. That will erode and sabotage
the family. There is no room in community for individual agendas and activities
that are designed to elevate ones self above the crowd. Instead, Paul
encourages and admonishes, put the other guy first.
Belden Lane tells this Jewish legend: Time before time, when
the world was young, two brothers shared a field and a mill, each night dividing
the grain they had ground together during the day. One brother lived alone;
the other had a wife and a large family.
Now, the single brother thought to himself one day, "It
isn't fair that we divide the grain evenly. I have only myself to care for,
but my brother has children to feed." So each night he secretly took
some of his grain to his brother's granary to see that he was never without.
But the married brother said to himself one day, "It isn't
really fair that we divide the grain evenly, because I have children to provide
for me in my old age, but my brother has no one. What will he do when he's
old?" So every night he secretly took some of his grain to his brother's
granary. As a result, both of them always found their supply of grain mysteriously
replenished each morning.
Then one night they met each other halfway between their two
houses. They suddenly realized what had been happening and embraced each other
in love. The legend is that God witnessed their meeting and proclaimed, "This
is a holy placea place of loveand here it is that my temple shall
be built." So it was. The First Temple is said to have been constructed
on that very site. (Citation: Belden Lane, "Rabbinical Stories,"
Christian Century)
Finding the right direction in life and becoming a person of
impact requires our ambitions to become focused on others rather than ourselves.
Pauls great desire was to see others unified in the Body of Christ.
What are our ambitions pushing us towards today?
Everything in me wants to move upward. Downward mobility with
Jesus goes radically against my inclinations, against the advice of the world
surrounding me, and against the culture of which I am a part. (Citation: Henri
Nouwen in the New Oxford Review, April 1987.)
This doesnt mean we are to run around thinking badly of
ourselves and trying to make ourselves suffer as much as we possibly can.
What it does mean is that we become, with the help of the Spirit, brothers
and sisters who really take on the burdens of one another and make the welfare
of our family members as significant a part of our day to day lives as our
own welfare. I warn you, if you dont immediately recognize itin
todays culture, thats a radical way of living. But I am convinced:
there is emerging a generation hungry and eager to respond to such a way of
life. Is it possible that a family of believers who learned to live this way
would draw lost and lonely people into the glowing circle of love and acceptance
and life-change? Would you let God make you that kind of a family member today?
Paul presses the point: have the attitude of Christ Jesus. Out
ambitions for life drive our attitudes about life and thus determine our values.
Paul quotes here a very famous passage. Its called the kenosis passage.
Kenosis is a word with a similar root to the word kinetic, motion.
Kenosis is the movement of emptying oneself. This is God; this is Jesus; taking
all the greatness and glory that was indeed his and giving it all up in order
to be a humble servant to humankind. This passage is likely a hymn used in
the church by the early Christians prior to Pauls writing here. He would
have been very familiar with it and chooses to use it in this passage as a
way of illustrating how Jesus Christ himself had the attitude of a servant.
Toward the end of his life, Albert Einstein removed the portraits
of two scientists--Newton and Maxwell--from his wall and replaced them with
portraits of Gandhi and Schweitzer. He explained it was time to replace the
image of success with the image of service. (Citation: Christianity Today,
August 12, 1988, p. 72.)
Servanthood is the most unstoppable force on earth. Gandhi overthrew
an empire; Martin Luther King, Jr. brought about ethical and moral reform
in the worlds most affluent nation. Martyrs throughout history have
impacted others because of their willingness to serve in the face of great
persecution.
Timothy Keller, pastor of Redeemer Presbyterian Church in New
York, writes:
Pastors often hear, "I work my fingers to the bone in this
church, and what thanks do I get?" Is that the way it is? Your service
was for thanks? Are you in your right mind? Servanthood begins where gratitude
and applause ends. (Citation: Timothy Keller, Ministries of Mercy )
These are hard words, are they not? In a way. We sometimes dont
like speaking of sacrifice and giving up that gets a little closer
to home, and after all isnt the Christian life all about joy? Oh, yes,
but let us not fail to recognize where the joy comes from. God has designed
us so that we are the most happy and joyful when we are giving things away
to others. Kids, have any of you ever felt that before? Youve done something
nice for somebody else, given them something of yours, perhaps, or taken time
to help them with something they needed? Didnt that feel good? Well,
guess where that comes from. God! Hes wired us to be most successful
when we are most desirous to see the other guy win. Now thats upside-down
thinking, huh?
I once read a story about a bicycle race in India. The object
of the race was to go the shortest distance possible within a specified time.
At the start of the race, everyone cued up at the line, and when the gun sounded
all the bicycles, as best they could, stayed put. Racers were disqualified
if they tipped over or one of their feet touched the ground. And so they would
inch forward just enough to keep the bike balanced. When the time was up and
another gun sounded, the person who had gone the farthest was the loser and
the person closest to the starting line was the winner.
Imagine getting into that race and not understanding how the
race works. When the race starts, you pedal as hard and fast as you possibly
can. You're out of breath. You're sweating. You're delighted because the other
racers are back there at the starting line. You're going to break the record.
You think, This is fantastic. Don't let up. Push harder and faster and
longer and stronger.
At last you hear the gun that ends the race, and you are delighted
because you are unquestionably the winner. Except you are unquestionably the
loser because you misunderstood how the race is run.
Jesus gives us the rules to the eternal race of life. The finish
line is painted on the other side of our deaths, right in front of the throne
of God himself. There you will be repaid at the resurrection of the righteous.
The winning strategy for this life and for all eternity is caring about others
and not about ourselves. It is letting others go first and not pushing to
the front. It is giving without the expectation of getting in return. It is
to be humble, like Jesus. (Citation: Leith Anderson, author and pastor of
Wooddale Church in Eden Prairie, Minnesota; from sermon "The Height of
Humility")
Finding the right direction in life and becoming a person of
impact requires an attitude of wanting to humbly serve those around us. The
Body is unified when everybody in it wants to help the other guy get ahead
and be first. That kind of community draws people to it. What do each of us
need to bring to the table individually in order for the family to be like
this? God our Father came to show us how to love this way, he came to serve
us, and through the power of the Holy Spirit we can seize this powerful, self-giving,
humble attitude that builds everybody around you up.
We are challenged here by Paul to take our spiritual lives seriously.
We live in a world driven by the urgent but unimportant. How many of us seem
to function by going from one crisis to the next? This is not healthy. Theres
work to be done; not salvation by works, but the deepening and making real
every day what Christ has done and wants to do. The spiritual disciplines
and the coming together of the Body are of utmost importance and urgency.
We too often are willing to live in fear and trembling of other
parts of life because they make the most noise. This is not the way to shine
in a dark universe!
From Saul Bellow's collection of traditional Jewish tales comes
this story:
In a small Jewish town in Russia, there is a rabbi who disappears each Friday
morning for several hours. His devoted disciples boast that during those hours
their rabbi goes up to heaven and talks to God.
A stranger moves into town, and he's skeptical about all this,
so he decides to check things out. He hides and watches. The rabbi gets up
in the morning, says his prayers, and then dresses in peasant clothes. He
grabs an axe, goes off into the woods, and cuts some firewood, which he then
hauls to a shack on the outskirts of the village. There an old woman and her
sick son live. He leaves them the wood, enough for a week, and then sneaks
back home.
Having observed the rabbi's actions, the newcomer stays on in
the village and becomes his disciple. And whenever he hears one of the villagers
say, "On Friday morning our rabbi ascends all the way to heaven,"
the newcomer quietly adds, "If not higher." (Citation: Jim McGuiggan,
Jesus, Hero of Thy Soul)
The way to eternal life is to walk into the light. If today you are in the dark, outside the camp looking in, I invite you to come into the warmth of the fire of Gods family. Let him take you in. Accept the life hes offering to you. For those that are the family here, let Pauls challenge resonate loudly in your hearts and in your friendships: SHINE as brightly as stars in the universe as you day by day and moment by moment, a little bit here and little part there hold out the words of life to those around you in how you treat them, help them, love one another, bear each others burdens, and walk the journey of your lives down the same road of Gods purpose in this world. Shine. Brightly. Brilliantly. Flame with Gods holy love as he shines his light down into your lives even in this moment. Will you be this kind of light?