It’s All about the Cross
a sermon based on Galatians 6:1-16
by Rev. Randy L Quinn
Last Sunday, we rose early and headed toward the Lake of the Ozarks
where Melissa attended camp from Sunday until Friday. When it was “about
time for church to start,” we began looking for a United Methodist
Church – and joined a congregation between here and there. (I won’t tell
you the name of the church or its particular location, but I did send a
letter to their pastor related to some of our experiences there.)
I was impressed by their vision and mission statement – which were both
printed on the cover of their bulletin:
Name UMC is a light in the darkness for those who are non-churched,
once-churched and badly churched. We offer culturally relevant worship
services to engage the heart, soul and mind. If you feel that God has
given up on you, or you have given up on God, just give us 1 hour of
your life on Sunday morning. We will help you reconnect and get back on
the right path.
Name UMC makes disciples through
connecting people to God and neighbor.
It probably says more about me than it does about them, but I liked what
I read. I also liked the statement of faith they used in worship:
It’s not about me, it’s about God.
It’s not about us, it’s about them.
It’s not about here, it’s about there.
It’s not about my needs, it’s about their needs.
It’s not about now, it’s about eternity.
As I said, it may say more about me than it does about them, but I liked
what I read and what I heard. The problem was the apparent disconnect
between what I read and what I experienced. As a visitor, it felt like
it was about their little circle of people and not about newcomers. Not
a soul spoke to us. The pastor shook our hands and said he was glad we
came, but no one asked us our names. No one asked us if we were new in
the area. No one asked us if we were “non-churched, once-churched, or
badly churched.”
They claimed their mission was to connect people to God and neighbor.
And while we may have made a connection with God that day, there was
very little connecting with neighbors.
Now let me be quick to remind you that I did send a letter to their
pastor expressing my concerns. It may be that this was an unusual Sunday
in terms of key people who generally greet visitors, I don’t know the
details. I do know I want their church to be effective in ministry in
their location – in part because I’m United Methodist and I want all
United Methodist Churches to be effective and in part because I am a
Christian and I want every church to be effective as they respond to
their own unique calling and settings. I believe that about the other
churches in this community as well as our own. We are not in competition
with one another – we are partners in ministry.
Let me also tell you that I have spoken with several visitors here over
the past few years and have been glad to hear how many have felt
welcomed and included. Unlike the church we visited last week, you know
how to welcome visitors.
My point in telling you the story is simply to remind us all that we
need to remember our purpose. It’s easy to forget why we are here –
especially when we don’t have such a clear mission statement that
everyone can recite. It’s easy to forget, for instance, that we gather
here to worship God because in gathering together, we meet and greet
people we haven’t seen in a week or a month or longer. We forget that we
have opportunities to focus on our relationships with one another in
other settings. In this hour of worship, our focus is on the God of our
salvation, the One who has called us and saved us and sent us.
And when I or anyone else gets in the way of that purpose, we have
forgotten whose we are as well as why we are here.
Paul says the same thing to the church in Galatia. He implies that folks
had become settled in their faith and forgotten that it isn’t the
trappings and ceremonies that make them the church – it’s the life and
death and resurrection of Jesus. It isn’t about what we do or can do;
it’s about what God has already done on our behalf.
How many of you know who Steve Williams is? (I suspect there may be one
or two who have heard of him.) I’ll give you a clue. He is a key figure
in the golfing world that easily makes $500,000 a year. He is from New
Zealand; in his forties. Steve Williams is the caddie for Tiger Woods –
and has been for several years now.
I confess that I didn’t know who he was, either. I didn’t know because
I’m not much of a sports fan, but also because he knows his job is to be
the servant, to remain in the background and not be noticed. I knew
Tiger Woods had a caddie – but I had to search the internet to find out
about the man.
How many of you have never gone golfing? I tried it for a while, but I
didn’t like it enough to keep at it. But I did learn that if you carry
your own clubs you will be tired from the walking – and can easily lose
your concentration on the later holes on the golf course. Caddies carry
those burdens for players so they can better focus on their game.
Sometimes caddies will also suggest which club to use.
Caddies don’t play the game, though. They simply carry the burdens for
those who do play. Steve Williams knows that his whole life is about
making Tiger Woods successful. He does that by carrying his burdens and
paying attention to what he needs and wants. He does that well, and in
doing so Steve has become a trusted confidant – and a close personal
friend.
I don’t know about you, but that’s the kind of relationship I want to
have with God.
And in order for that to happen, I need to remember that it’s all about
the cross. It isn’t about me and my sin. Nor is it about me and my
righteousness. And it isn’t about my favorite hymns, either. It’s about
the cross, the cross where Jesus bore my burdens and invites me to share
in the ministry of bearing the burdens of others.
In ancient times – and in some recent places as well – churches were
intentionally designed after the shape of the cross so that when ever
you entered the room, you were reminded that we are here because of the
cross. The cross has taken a central place in many places of worship,
including our own, but we have often betrayed our allegiance as we have
placed the focus of our lives on other things instead.
The cross has too often become like a piece of jewelry that adorns our
lives rather than a reminder of how we are to live our lives. Putting
the cross in the center of our lives demands that we take the servant’s
role.
For too many of us, our faith has been relegated to right words or right
prayers or right positions in the voting booth rather than the behind
the scenes activities that let others know they are loved, actions that
silently drown out the noise of the heretics, as the needs of those
around us take precedence over our own wants and wishes.
Putting the cross of Jesus in the center of the church’s vision is part
of Paul’s admonition to the church in Galatia – and it’s just as
important to remember today. It’s the cross that draws us here and it’s
the cross that leads us out of here.
You see, it’s all about the cross, the cross where Jesus became our
caddie and bore our burdens.
Thanks be to God. Amen.