A
People With A Purpose
a sermon based on
1 Peter 2:2-10
by Rev. Richard Thompson
Imagine you’ve just been handed a brick. A brick approximately
4” deep, 8” long, 2” high. Maybe it’s a brick similar to the ones
used to build this church building.
What will you do with it? What can a person do with one
brick? Use it as a doorstop or paperweight? Put it in the garage
because you’ll find a use for it someday? There’s not much a person
could do with one brick—at least, not much that’s useful—is there!
Now, think about this: there are several hundred people gathering
here to worship and learn this weekend. And all of us have
bricks.
What would happen if we put those bricks together? Maybe we
could do something significant then! We might be able to build an
attractive wishing well to decorate a lawn, or a short walkway for the
yard, or a piece of a wall. We could do something constructive
and useful if we put those hundreds of bricks together, along with our
abilities and our ideas and our determination.
A single brick isn’t worth much; it’s practically useless. But
put all of our bricks together, and then you’ve got something! Then
you’ve got possibilities, strength, and hope!
As it is with bricks, so it is with people.
Alone, we struggle. We often feel useless. Alone, we a hard
time discovering any purpose to our living, any joy, any hope.
But together—ah, that’s another story! Together we can
support the one who is hurting, or celebrate with the one who is
joyful. Together, we can do something, be
something, make a difference. When we live in community, grow and
share life together, life is good and joyful and real and vital!
Years ago, there was a commercial on the radio. On this Earth
Sunday, it would be good for us to hear it again, to remind us of our
call to care for the earth. Have we honored God’s command to till and
keep it for future generations? The commercial I’m remembering was
about the simple matter of recycling. One person begins,
contemplating the incredible amount of waste we humans generate and
dump into the ground or the water or the air. “I’m only one
person—what can I do?” the person laments. Then several more
voices join in: “I’m only one person; what can I do?” And,
before long, there is a strong and sturdy chorus of voices shouting
together, “I’m only one person, what can I do?” And the
listener gets the clear impression that, together, they can do an
awful lot to care for God’s good earth!
So it is with life in the church. Along, we can only do a
little. But when we’re joined to a worshiping, growing, serving,
outreaching community, we are valuable, and, together, we can make
a tremendous difference!
That’s what Peter wants us to remember
today. In his letter, he reminds us that, in our baptisms, we are
joined to just such a community. Now, we belong to Jesus Christ!
And, in Christ, we are not just a collection of individuals, but a
community of faith—GOD’S OWN PEOPLE!
Did you hear what Peter said about us?
He said we—the church—are “a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy
nation, God’s own people”. He said that once—before we belonged to
Christ—we were no people, but now we are God’s people.”
We are God’s own people!
Isn’t that good news—indeed, wonderful,
earth-shattering news! In Christ, in his life and death and
resurrection, God has claimed us as God’s own. God has taken our
individual lives and placed them on a solid foundation, a cornerstone
worthy of the name: God is building us, together, onto the foundation
that is Christ, and, in Christ, God is making us sturdy and strong and
formidable. But only in Christ is this true. It’s not because
of anything we’ve done, or how wonderful we are: it’s in Christ
that we are made a people!
And that’s a good thing. That’s a wonderful thing! We
are joined to Christ, joined to a community that is meant to pulsate
with the life and energy of the risen Lord Jesus Christ!
God CHOOSES us! God chooses us to be God’s won. In our
Baptism, God takes us into God’s own loving arms, giving us an
identity—“child of God”—and joining us to all of God’s
children, inviting us to grow together as God’s children so
that, together, we are the “people of God”.
What good news that is! What good news it is that we don’t have
to fumble our way through life, striving to make our own meaning.
That’s why we gather again this weekend—to acknowledge that there is a
sure and certain foundation for our life together, and that foundation
is Jesus Christ!
Yes, that’s wonderful news! It’s wonderful to be
called, in Christ, “a chosen race, a holy and royal priesthood, a holy
nation, God’s own people”. Yes, that’s wonderful news.
But, if all we do in the church is sit around and congratulate
ourselves and each other on how wonderful we are in God’s eyes, how
special we are, how highly God thinks of us, we are not fulfilling
our purpose.
God didn’t claim us in Christ, and join
us to the people of God, for that reason. Peter makes that clear.
God called us to life in Christ so that we can “offer spiritual
sacrifices acceptable to God.” God called us to life in Christ so
that we can “proclaim the mighty acts of the God, who called us out of
darkness into his marvelous light.”
Yes, we are God’s own people. And, in Christ, we are
people with a purpose!
Our purpose is to serve and reach out,
joyfully, to all, in the name of Jesus Christ. Our purpose is to
proclaim the good news of Jesus Christ, in word and deed!
Now, that’s not such an easy thing for Lutherans—to reach out in
the name of Christ. We’re conditioned, from our first 300 years in
Europe and 150 years in the United State, to being part of a church,
part of a world that was overwhelmingly Christian, much like us. We
didn’t sense any compulsion to reach out.
But now, that has changed. The world around us is profoundly
different, incredibly diverse, and we can no longer assume that
everyone has heard, let alone believes, the Christian story. We need
to embrace God’s purpose for us: “to proclaim the mighty acts of
God.”
That’s
why we’ve been gathered into the
community of God’s people. That’s why we worship and grow
together—so that we can be equipped and strengthened and empowered to
fulfill the church’s purpose in the world.
As our Natural Church Development visioning team reviews the
thoughts gathered at recent small group conversations, themes are
emerging. And one that is coming through very strongly is this one:
“We don't know how to tell our faith stories. And we want to learn!”
I like that attitude! I like that attitude which says, “Teach
us to reach out! Teach us to proclaim the good news!”
And that’s what we’re going to do.
Meanwhile, let me give you just a couple examples of how each of
us, in our own way, can proclaim the good news of God’s mighty acts.
The new girl at school got left sitting by herself. She was from
a different part of the world, a different culture, and her first
language was different from the language of other students, too. She
hardly ever spoke in class, and when she did, the other students had a
terrible time understanding her broken, heavily-accented English.
So when Alexis left her group to go sit with the new girl, people
looked up and noticed. “What you doin’ actin’ so nice to that weird
new girl?” one of her friends asked. Alexis replied, “It just seemed
like the right thing for me to do.”
“Why?” her friend persisted.
“I’m trying…I’m just trying to be a Christian!” Alexis insisted.
An older woman could no longer get out and about like she used
to, but she was still eager to serve Christ. She prayed about how she
might serve, and she talked to her Christian friends. Through that
process of discernment, she realized that she could be a blessing to
others by playing piano. So she placed an ad in the Oakland
Tribune: “Pianist will play hymns by phone daily for those who are
sick and discouraged. This service is free.” She included her phone
number. When people called, she would ask, “What hymn would you like
to hear?” Within a few months, her playing had cheered up several
hundred people. Many of them poured out their hearts to her, and in
this way she helped and encouraged many, and they, in turn, encouraged
her.
That woman had been faithful to her God-given purpose!
I believe this congregation will be as
well. I believe God has called us together, and blessed us
abundantly, and reminded us persistently that we are God’s own people.
And I believe that we will always remember that, and act on that
truth: Yes, indeed, we ARE God’s people! We are God’s people, and
we have a high and holy purpose—to proclaim the mighty acts of God.
May God grant it!
AMEN.