First Sunday of Lent
February 21, 2010

 
  Third Sunday of Lent
March 7, 2010
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Printer Friendly Version

April 18, 2010—Third Sunday of Easter

Lectionary Texts: Acts 9:1-6; Psalm 30; Revelation 7:9-17; John 10:22-30

Sermon Text: John 21:1-15

All By Myself

Jesus certainly did not fit the socially acceptable form of Israel. Wherever He went, He caused a commotion, stirred up trouble, gathered a crowd, or made the nice religious people mad. Jesus did things His way—God’s way, which often doesn’t fit our way—humanity’s way.

After His death and resurrection, Jesus’ different ways did not cease. They, if anything, became even more unusual. While His disciples and followers were weeping, afraid and disoriented, Jesus continues to pop in on them—for unexpected, surprise visits: the road to Emmaus, the upper room, and now the beach. Jesus refuses to go away—He shows up again and again, reassuring, revealing, and guiding His followers.

“I Did It My Way,” was a popular song performed by the famous crooner, Frank Sinatra. It could easily be the theme song for the Western parts of the world. Those of us in North America are particularly susceptible to notion that “I can do it by myself.” Like any energetic toddler looking for his independence, we often insist on doing anything and everything ourselves—whether we really know what we are doing or not.

God did not create us to live this way. God created humanity to live in community—and foremost in community with God. When we assert our independence (“we don’t really need God unless the ship is sinking, do we?”), we miss out on the beauty, health, and vitality of community. To think that we could do something that God does not even insist on: living in isolation. The Trinity is a community of love shared between God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit. We miss the point when we insist on living alone.

God is not in the business of setting us up with the game and rule and then standing aside as God declares, “Go for it!” The beauty of our relationship with God is just that: we have a relationship with God. Relationships, like all living things, must grow, be nurtured, and thrive in order to be healthy. Once this development ceases, that relationship or living thing is no longer living.

As the disciples are shown over and over by Jesus, God is with them. Death could not stop God from a relationship with us. It is this relationship that fuels our lives, and our mission for God. We are dependent on God. God is available to us. We can and must depend on God for life and mission.

When life gets tough, the tough go fishing . . . at least in the case of the disciples. How quickly they reverted to what they had known in life pervious to meeting Jesus—the One who had turned their worlds upside down. As they milled around, kicking stones with their feet and clearing their throats, Peter did what he did best: he impulsively acts, “I am going fishing.” Apparently not wanting to be alone and with nothing better to do in light of the recent events, the rest of the group joins him. And they get nothing. Not a single fish all night is caught.

It is only when a stranger standing on the shore points out the obvious (you do not have any fish) and tells them to fish off the other side of the boat (as if it’s worlds away from where they have been fishing), that the disciples start to recognize their dependence on God.

How long does it take for us to realize that God is not our gumball machine in the sky? That a dependence on God is a necessity for our existence? Can we live without God? Perhaps we believe we can completely shut God out, but ultimately we are not really living. Our congregation and community must know the grace of God in order to know life.

Not only is our dependence on God a key factor in this passage, but the health of our relationship with God is also important? Why? Because what those outside the Church see of God is our relationship to God, to those in the Body of Christ, and to those outside the Body. Jesus did not reveal himself to the disciples on the beach that day so that they could feel good about themselves. Jesus came to them that they might realize their dependence on God as they go out and share God’s grace with the world.

Each congregation is unique: the people, the time, the community. As pastor, we have the job of nurturing a strong relationship with God, guiding our people and sharing God’s guidance with them. As we prepare each week for the monumental task of sharing “what God has to say to us,” keep in mind the people of your congregation, the people of your community. Be careful to not forget those often found on the perimeter of the Body: children, teens, senior citizens, singles, and so on. How does God want to communicate His truth to them?