THAT'S THE SPIRIT
a
sermon based on Romans 8:12-17
by Dr. David Rogne
Several
years ago in San Diego,
a ship strayed off course and became stuck in a reef at low tide.
Twelve tugboats were brought in. They attached cables from the tugs to
the ship and tried to pull it, but that did not work. Then the tugs
moved to one side and tried to push the ship off the reef. Black smoke
was belching everywhere. The water around the big vessel had turned to
a white foam with the twelve tugs pushing with all their mighty power
against the ship, but they could not budge it! Finally, the captain
instructed the tugs to back off. He sighed, "I'll just be patient and
wait." He waited until high tide. Eventually, the ocean began to rise,
and what human power could not do, the rising tide of the Pacific Ocean
did by lifting the ship and putting it back into the channel. The water
was the visible instrument, but the invisible tide provided the power.
It occurs to me that the Holy Spirit is like that tide--not so much seen
of itself, but nevertheless a power at work in the world.
For me, the Holy Spirit is not so much a distinct person of the Godhead,
but rather a description of the activity of God. Even before Christ,
the Psalmist, referring to God, said, "Where shall I go from your
spirit? Where shall I flee from your presence?" God and Spirit were
interchangeable. The New Testament repeatedly interchanges such terms
as Holy Spirit, Spirit of God, Spirit of Jesus, Christ, and Lord. Paul
says quite plainly, "The Lord is the Spirit." To be under the guidance
of the Holy Spirit, therefore, is to be open to the leading of God in
our lives. To the degree that we are receptive to God's Spirit, our
lives will give evidence of that presence. In Paul's letter to the
Christians at Rome, from which we read this morning, he points out at
least three ways in which the presence of God's Spirit ought to make a
difference in the lives of Christians.
For one thing, he says, the presence of God's Spirit reminds us of an
affiliation: Paul says that the Spirit witnesses that we are children
of God. (Romans 816) When we do not recognize our divine parentage, we
lose our sense of family. Madalyn Murray O'Hair, was once America's
most famous atheist. Then, she disappeared from public view. There was
speculation that she had died and been quietly buried in some
undesignated place for fear that some zealous Christians would come and
perform religious rites at her grave. In his book, My Life Without
God, O'Hair's son, William Murray, indicates that his mother became
an atheist after she ran outside during a lightning storm and dared God
to strike her dead while she cursed and blasphemed. When that didn't
happen, she was satisfied that her survival proved that God did not
exist. She raised her children in atheism. She first received public
attention in 1960, when she filed a suit in Baltimore
to cause schools to stop all forms of religious observance. Eventually,
she established a foundation to promote atheism and combat the influence
of religion. Her aggressive denial of God put her at odds with society,
and even with a member of her family. She chose not to see herself as a
child of God.
On the other hand, when we allow God's Spirit into our lives, we come to
recognize that we are God's children. In 1977, William Murray broke
with his mother, though he was still an atheist. The Spirit of God
began to work in his life; he began to read the Bible to test some of
the anti-God conditioning his mother had inflicted upon him. He began
attending church, and in time was converted. His calling then became to
work to convert atheists to the Christian faith. He goes into cities,
gets a telephone installed, then runs ads in newspapers daring atheists
to call him. When asked what she thought of her son, O'Hair called him
"a religious nut, like Billy Graham." When asked about his mother,
William responded, "She is a white-haired lady who is totally devoid of
divine spirit." A spiritless woman, whose mission in life is to spread
dismal unbelief, and a spirit-filled son, whose mission in life is to
spread the joy of God's presence. It is the presence of God's Spirit in
our lives, says Paul, that enables us to call God Father, and to
recognize that we are children of God. We are affiliated with God and
with one another.
A
second way in which God's Spirit becomes evident is in changed
attitudes. A few verses before the passage read this morning, Paul
says that “those who live according to the flesh set their minds on the
things of the flesh, but those who live according to the spirit set
their minds on the things of the Spirit.” (Romans 8:5) I think that
means that those persons who don't see any spiritual dimension in life,
persons who are preoccupied with the physical in life, tend to be
concerned only with themselves. Our lower natures take over and blind
us to the concerns of others. Jean Paul Sartre, the French
existentialist, has a character in one of his plays say, "Hell is other
people. People limit our lives. People who expose and humiliate us.
Those who nag us with their poverty and pleading just when we have found
security and prosperity. The people with empty mouths and aching
hearts. Oh! that we could be rid of them and forget all about them,
“says Sartre.
A
mature, well-dressed Wall Street banker had car trouble on his way to
work one morning in the Bronx, and he ended up taking the subway.
Naturally, the subway crowd showed no more respect for him than anyone
else, so he got pushed and shoved in normal style. He was annoyed and
very irritated. Finally, he couldn't stand being quiet about it any
longer. He turned to a guy in overalls, carrying a lunch box and
hanging on to the strap next to his, and said, "You know, I hate this
subway. I hate being jammed in here with all these people. As a matter
of fact, this is the first time I have been compelled to ride it in over
ten years." At which the guy in overalls replied loudly, "Mister, you
couldn't possibly have the slightest idea of just how much we've missed
you." When we are self-absorbed we think that what is happening to us
is all that matters.
On the other hand, the person whose nature is being moderated by the
Holy Spirit, is moving from concern for self to consideration of
others. A higher nature begins to show. In his book, On Being a
Real Person, Harry Emerson Fosdick wrote: "A great day comes when a
man begins to get himself off his hands. He has lived, let us say, in a
mind like a room surrounded by mirrors. Every way he turned he saw
himself. Now, however, some of the mirrors change to windows. He
begins to get out of himself--no longer the prisoner of self-reflections
but a free man in a world where persons, causes, truths, and values
exist, worthful for their own sakes. Thus to pass from a mirror-mind to
a mind with windows is an essential element in the development of real
personality. Without that experience no one ever achieves a meaningful
life." God's Spirit moves us beyond ourselves.
In her book, The Healing Light, Agnes Sanford talks about how we
may see other people in the light of God's love. She suggests that we
try to connect in spirit with the love of God, send that love to the
other person, and see that person re-created in goodness and joy and
peace. Mrs. Sanford writes about a girl who tried it: "'Gee, I never
saw anything work like that in my life!' cried a little girl, to whom I
taught this method. “Before I got up this morning, I lay there and
thought of my Mom like she is when she's all happy, and I said, "Thank
you, God, because you love her and you're making her like that now."
And then I thought that way about my Dad, too. And Gee! My Mom she
came up and kissed me and she smiled so nice I just stood there and
looked at her! And my Dad, he pulled out a dollar and said, "Here, go
and have a good time, Kid." Gee! I never saw anything like that in my
life!'"
Those who are responding to the Spirit of God are discovering that their
attitudes are changing from self-absorption to concern for others.
A
third way that God's Spirit becomes evident is in changed actions.
People who are not open to God's Spirit are afraid to open themselves to
love because love can be costly. After reading Ernest Hemingway's first
book of stories, D. H. Lawrence said that the moral of the stories could
be characterized like this: "Avoid one thing only: getting connected
up (to anyone)." Scott Donaldson, in a study of Hemingway, says that
that really was his philosophy. Hemingway once fired a babysitter
because his sons were starting to care for her too much. Hemingway said
that you could only love a person so much, but then you had to stop or
you'd get hurt.
Doestoevsky, in his novel, The Brothers Karamazov, counters that
idea when he writes: "Love all of God's creation, the whole and every
grain of sand in it. Love every leaf, every ray of God's light. Love
the animals, love the plants, love everything. If you love everything,
you will perceive the divine mystery of things. Once you perceive it,
you will begin to comprehend it better every day. And you will come at
last to love the whole world with an all-embracing love." Love is
evidence of the presence of God's Spirit.
Those who are being led by the Spirit of God, are learning to act in the
interest of others. It is that kind of action that makes us useful. I
heard a basketball coach give a speech a few years ago in which he was
describing the characteristics of his players. Of one of them, he said,
"This person is not a great player, but he is a good player. He is the
kind of person who can give other people the ball. He makes others look
good. Such people are necessary for team spirit. They make us a good
team." As the Spirit gains ascendancy in our lives, we can give up
being hotshots who need all the glory and put our efforts forth for the
common good.
Not only do we become useful when we act in behalf of others, our own
lives are enriched. How cramped our lives are when all we can rejoice
in are our own achievements or good fortune. How numerous, on the other
hand, are our opportunities for rejoicing, if we will allow ourselves to
enter into the good fortune of others. Those of us who are parents know
how enlarged our lives become when we enter into the victories of our
children and grandchildren. If we could also learn to identify with the
good fortune of our neighbors, or with the hometown boy who made good,
or with the Californian who has made a discovery, or with the American
who has landed on the moon, or with the human being who has won the
Nobel Peace Prize--how filled with good will our world would be and how
much happier our own lives.
Of course, our natural attitudes and actions do not change quickly.
Indeed, they only change at all because God's Spirit fills our lives
with something beside ourselves.
In the movie "Rain Man," a selfish, hustling salesman discovers that his
wealthy father has died and left him only a 1948 Buick. He discovers
further that he has an institutionalized, autistic, older brother who
has been left three million dollars. He takes his brother away from the
place where he is cared for in an effort to make himself guardian, and
thereby gain control over his brother's inheritance. Daily he learns
how much care his brother needs and how ill-prepared he is to provide
it. Little by little he becomes more concerned for his brother's
well-being and less concerned with himself. The self-concern which has
dominated his life is replaced by genuine love and affection for
another. And he becomes a decent human being in the process.
In such a way God's Holy Spirit fills our lives, changes our attitudes,
changes our actions, and helps us to discover a new affiliation--that we
are children of God. As Paul says, “...all who are led by the Spirit of
God are children of God.” (Romans 8:14) The Holy Spirit may not be
something we can see, but like the rising tide, we can tell where it is
active. All we have to do is to look for the rising tide of love in our
midst. Amen.