Today, we are celebrating two special occasions in the
life of our Diocese-Mission Sunday, and Anglican Church Women Sunday. Anglican Church Women Sunday also
celebrates an important ministry in the life of both our Parish and our
Diocese. It is appropriate that both ACW Sunday and Mission Sunday are
celebrated during the season of Epiphany. The season of Epiphany emphasizes
mission and ministry, and the Gospel reading from Matthew that we heard a few
minutes ago is especially appropriate for today.
Our ACW members are some of the hardest working
members of the congregation. The old saying “Idle hands are the devil’s
playground” certainly does not apply to them. They have been called to a unique
Christian ministry, and it is similar to the call Jesus issued to the first
disciples-a call we heard in our Gospel reading. Jesus and the disciples
combined ministry that met people’s physical needs with ministry to the minds
and hearts-namely, proclaiming the gospel of the kingdom). Our ACW members also
minister to the physical and spiritual needs of people, and they do it in their
unique, individual ways. Their ministry, like that of Jesus, leaves no areas of
human lives untouched-family relationships, friendships, and our perspectives
on life, work, leadership and our world.
Being an ACW member is just one of many calls to ministry
that Jesus issues to us. He has called all of us to serve others as he did, to
follow him, to sacrifice comforts, to bless the lives of others, to minister to
the sick, and to proclaim the good news of the kingdom. ACW members and all who
answer Jesus’ call live in the light God gives them.
Jesus walks by all of us, observing our efforts on the
job and in our communities, and he calls us. He calls ordinary people,
including the ACW members, to do extraordinary things. He asks all of us to
love him above all else and fully commit to obey him. When we do, he will
accomplish more through us than we could even imagine. Through him, we can make
something of our lives.
The kingdom of heaven is the place where God rules. If
God rules in our hearts, that the kingdom of God is in our hearts, and it is
certainly in the hearts of our ACW members. God speaks to us through their
words and deeds, among other ways. They are the example to follow when we want
to learn how to live our lives with honour.
An orchestra was giving a concert in a large church
hall in England. The place was packed. Afterwards a casual member of the church
very flippantly asked the pastor of the church when the hall would ever be
filled like that for Sunday morning worship. The pastor answered solemnly, “It
will be filled when like that conductor I have eighty well-trained, committed
and disciplined men and women to work with me.” Oh, how the church needs that
today!
When we answer his call, we show that we are willing
to leave everything to follow the way, the truth and the life, just like the
first disciples left everything to follow him. ACW members are the same. They
all have other commitments, but they set them aside to do the work that God
calls them to do when he calls them to do it. Jesus invites us to reform and
reshape our lives and look at things through the gospel lens. ACW members turn
to the needy with acceptance and compassion and whatever form of healing and
comfort they can offer.
ACW members are ordinary people just like all of us
are. They are called to follow Jesus and grow with him just like all of us are,
but there also comes a time when we have to move from being followers to being
leaders. A church should never have trouble finding people to teach Sunday
school, or work with youth, or sing in the choir, or to take on leadership
positions. God blesses all of the work we do in his name, including the work of
the ACW. God calls us each in our own way to do his work in the world.
A minister was delivering a series of sermons in
another pastor’s church. While there, a young boy took a special
interest in him and sat beside him every evening. I the minister was on the platform,
that’s where the little boy sat. If the minister was in a pew, the little boy
sat with him in the pew. The minister said later that the little boy was not a
bother---he just wanted to sit where the minister sat. Later, the minister
found out that he boy’s parents did not attend church.
One evening, when the minister was sitting in the first pew, the boy came and snuggled up very close to him. The boy looked up and asked the minister, “Why are you a preacher?” The minister replied, “Because that is what God told me he wanted me to be.” The boy paused for a moment and said, “God told me just to be a kid”. The minister later wrote, “His response stuck me. I wonder how many of God’s people really know just what God wants them to be.”
In 2006, U.S. President George W. Bush hosted the 64th
annual National Prayer Breakfast. During this interfaith event, Christians,
Jews and Muslims are included and given time to make a few remarks. The guest
speaker that year was the rock star known as Bono, leader of the group U2. During the breakfast, he said, “A number of
years ago, I met a wise man who changed my life. In countless ways, large and
small, I was always seeking the Lord’s blessing. I was saying, you know, I have
a new song, look after it…I have a family, please look after them… I have this
crazy idea…and this wise man said: stop. He said; stop asking God to bless what
you’re doing. Get involved in what God is doing, because it is already
blessed”.
Bono believes God is calling him to be an advocate for
the poor. He said to the National Prayer Breakfast, “Well, God, as I said, is
with the poor. That, I believe, is what God is doing. And that is what he is
calling us to do”. All Christians should be committed to helping the poor, but
it might not be our chief emphasis. Not everyone receives the same call from
God. As I mentioned a few moments ago, God is calling each of us in our own way
to do his work in our world. ACW members answer that call, each in her unique
way.
Some of you might remember a TV series from the 1960s
called “Mission: Impossible”. If not, some of you might have seen the “Mission:
Impossible” movies starring Tom Cruise. In either case, there is a point near
the beginning of each episode or movie where the main character receives a
message from his superiors telling him what his mission is going to be, and the
message always includes the words, “Your mission, should you choose to accept
it…”.
Jesus gives us a similar message. Our mission, should
we choose to accept it, is to proclaim the good news of the kingdom to our
world today. That does not mean that we have to seek an active role in ministry
such as mine or Rev. Judy’s or Chaplain Lawton’s. We are all given gifts from
God to use in our mission. For example, our ACW members are called to use their
gifts for their particular ministry. Some of us are called to leadership roles
on our church and parish councils. Still others are called to ministry in the
community as lawyers, doctors, accountants, fishermen, mechanics or plumbers.
While at first glance these roles in the community might not seem to be a call
from God, it is how the people in these jobs perform their daily duties that
shows God’s ministry, especially if these tasks are done in an honest, caring
and compassionate manner.
Many of you have probably heard the old saying, “No
man is an island”, and nowhere is that more applicable than in Jesus’ call to
mission. He calls us to do his work as members of the body of Christ and not
just as individuals. Lay people and ordained people share the same discipleship
or call to ministry, and we are called to complete this mission as a team. We
are not always singled out as individuals. In fact, with the exception of Peter
(who was often singled out by his failures that were caused by human
weaknesses), Jesus rarely singled out any one of his disciples for a special
role or function.
Jesus has called us today to be part of the
fulfillment of Isaiah’s promise: to bring light into the darkness, joy to those
in distress. We are the ones called to smash “the yoke that has burdened them”.
Perhaps someone we know who is: going through a harsh divorce; lost a loved
one; is looking for work; being put out of their homes; has a runaway child; is
in jail; homebound; losing a struggle with a terminal illness, etc. Can we hear
Jesus’ personal invitation, “Come after me…”? How should we respond? Where can
we strike a light of hope for someone “dwelling in a land overshadowed by
death”?
In some ways, ACW members are like essential personnel
who still have to report to work in the event of a strike or bad weather. They
are the people who have to be absolutely necessary. They are among the people
who are modern-day disciples. Jesus saw the talents of the ACW members, and he
called them. He said the word that transformed their lives. He set them to
their tasks.
Epiphany is a season about proclamation and the power
of God at work in God’s people, to be sure; but it is also a season when the
church examines its life and witness and how it understands itself to be the
incarnated Christ planted in a local community. Our job is to look outward, to
see the opportunities for mission, and engage in them. That is how we proclaim
the Good News to a community, and that is how we avoid pettiness and conflict. ACW
members are a good example-an example that each and every one of us should try
to follow in our Christian lives.
1.
Matthew
Henry Concise Commentary. Part of Wordsearch Bible software package.
2.
Lead
like Jesus Daily Devotional, Monday, Jan. 10, 2011 Devotional. Retrieved from www.messagingstudio.com
3.
Exegesis
for Matthew 4:12-23. Retrieved from www.sermonwriter.com
4.
LWF
Daily Devotional. Retrieved from www.lwf.org
5.
Stan
Mitchell, “A Calling”. Retrieved from www.forthright.net
6.
Dr.
Charles F. Stanley, “An Ordinary Person”. Retrieved from www.crosswalkmail.com
7.
Joe
Stowell, “Making the Cut”. Retrieved from www.rbc.org
8.
Kelly
McFadden, “’B’ Team”. Retrieved from www.crosswalkmail.com
9.
Jude
Siciliano, “First Impressions, 3rd Sunday in Ordinary Time, Year A”.
Retrieved from www.preacherexchange.org
10. King Duncan, “Called to be Disciples”.
Retrieved from www.esermons.com
11. King Duncan, “A New Calling”. Retrieved
from www.esermons.com
12. William B. Kincaid III, “Essential
Personnel”. Retrieved from www.esermons.com
13. Charles l. Aaron, Jr., “Letting Go of Our
Nets”. Retrieved from www.esermons.com
14. Joe E. Pennell, “The Called Ones”.
Retrieved from www.esermons.com
15. Thomas A. Pilgrim, “The Man from Galilee II:
The Transformation of His Call”. Retrieved from www.esermons.com
16. John Shearman’s Lectionary Resource, 3rd
Sunday after Epiphany. Retrieved from www.seemslikegod.org/lectionary/archives/thrid-sunday-after-epiphany-%e2%80%93-jan.
No comments:
Post a Comment