The
House of I'M
a sermon based on Matthew 7:21-29
by Rev. Thomas Hall
There once was a carpenter with a very strange name.
He was called I’M. Strange name, but he was quite an accomplished architect.
In fact, he was sought throughout the land for his architectural expertise.
Started out of college with odd jobs-a pig shed here, a tool shop there, and
then came the barns and houses. His career took him to the top of his field.
In his later years-at the pinnacle of his profession-he decided to create
his dream house for his retirement: the ultimate condo. His condo would rise
three stories high, have an atrium that would encase exotic flowers and have
little hedgehogs running around the flower pots. He would build four baths,
install beautiful Anderson bay windows, have a Jacuzzi, and crown molding
around the perimeter of his living room.
"Hey, Verge!" his wife yelled, "you want some tea before you
start?" I’M was embarrassed by his middle name. It was joke, really
that his parents had decided that his middle name should be "Very."
"Very?" So he changed the middle name to "Verge," though
everyone in town knew the joke.
"No," he said, "Think I’ll go straight to the lumber store
to get building materials." Now "I’M had thought this thing
through. He would spare no expense in building his condo. No short cuts, no
cheap imitations. That’s why he drove right past Home Depot on his way to
pay top dollar at a real lumber store.
"I’M sighed as he looked out over his newly purchased real estate.
What a great piece of land. His property was flat, a little sparse, maybe, but
an architect’s dream. No hills or rocks to navigate around or blast. He
still couldn’t get over the deal he had struck with the realtor. Fifteen
acres of land in the valley. I’M had sweat bullets all the way to closing.
He didn’t want the deal to fall through. For he knew he would never be able
to get land as cheap as this anywhere in the kingdom. He smirked as he looked
in the distance. There, another builder had not fared as well. He had paid
more and got only three acres. Worse, the poor guy had to haul his materials
all the way up to a knoll and then he had almost no soil-only one huge piece
of rock. "Probably some meteor that fell, " I’M mused. "Not
my property and not my problem."
Within weeks the cement block walls towered above the footers. And then the
walls and the wiring, and the sheet rock and the prep work and the interior
painting. Already, I’M’s house was turning heads. Passersby would talk
excitedly as they watched the progress.
Don’t get the wrong impression of I’M. He was no assembly line, pre-fab
kind of architect; no cookie cutter blueprints for him. Each design was
unique; and that’s what his retirement home would be-unique and masterful.
He also had focus. Got so engrossed that he all but forgot about his family.
They no longer asked him to take them shopping. They knew by now that
"dad was busy working on the condo." So they just didn’t ask
anymore. And mom knew that when it was time to bring the kids to band front,
Young Ladies for a Better America, German Club, Jazz Dance, violin or scuba
diving, she would bring them herself. Not I’M. No, I’M continued slowly,
carefully to build his condo in the valley.
One day a bystander said a startling thing to I’M.
"Hey, Verge."
"Yeah?"
"You do know what this land is, don’t you?"
"Of course! Flat level land. An architect’s dream."
"Well, "I’M, haven’t you noticed anything about the
soil? Like haven’t you noticed little shells scattered on your
soil?"
"Now that you mention it, yes I have."
"Well, what are they doing there?"
"Maybe, they’re fossils or something."
"Time for supper," I’M’s wife called out. That cut the
conversation short. But it did get I’M to thinking. So it used to be an old
river bed or something. But it was dry as a bleached bone now. It wouldn’t
be until much later that he would recall that conversation again.
The day finally arrived when I’M completed his condo. It was magnificent.
The local reporter did an interview snapping shots of the exquisite condo that
I’M built. Even made the six o’clock evening news. What a day! What an
accomplishment!
But I’M’s accomplishment wasn’t the only thing on the six pm news
that night. "We’re tracking Fran preeeettty close as she sweeps up the
coast line. Better button down the hatches, we’re going to have gale force
winds, maybe even a tornado will touch down." I’M should have listened
to the weather report, but he had already surfed over to his favorite program.
What else? "Home Improvement."
That night Hurricane Fran came within fifty miles of town. Everyone felt
it. Torrential downpours, gusting winds. Hit I’M’s house about midnight.
The kids had turned off the computer and were just dosing off. I’M in bed
with his wife who was already asleep, was himself slipping in and out of those
final moments before sleep wins. I used the best materials. I built this house
myself. My house is safe. I have nothing to worry about.
That’s when I’M recalled that conversation months earlier about the
shells and all. Right there in bed, as the winds began to pick up and rain
began to pelt his roof, he thought, Shells? Flat land? No trees? Why? The next
thought was a lightning rod: "We’re sitting right in the middle of a
wadi right in the middle of a storm!" His 911 level voice bolted the
family from sleep.
The family stumbled down the stairs, out of the condo and into the car,
pelted by rain and hail. They slipped and swayed on the driveway next to the
swollen wadi. I’M headed up toward the rocky knoll to his nearest neighbor.
Inside their car on the knoll the family sat in silence as they watched a
torrent of mud and water turn their life’s work into a catastrophe. The
walls of the condo caved in like a crumpled shoe box. Within seconds it was
all gone-the new carpet, the furniture, the priceless heirlooms-all smashing
into each other as the debris bounced up and down in the fierce current.
Their neighbor on the hill was pained to see someone else’s catastrophe.
All I’M had worked for had been reduced to toothpicks in a moment in time.
Only then did the realization come: he had built his life’s greatest
achievement on a dried up, old, river bed. And though he had gotten the
property at a basement bargain price, he had risked his life and the life of
his family by building on the wrong place.
"Listen," offered the neighbor, "I’ll help you get started
again. You can build up here near me. I’ve got plenty of space. By the way,
the name’s Wiseheart. John Wiseheart. But even though we’re neighbors, I
don’t believe I know your name."
"Oh," said I’M in a dreary monotone. "My last name is
Foolish. First name is, "I’M and my middle name is . . . well, just
call me ‘Verge’."
"These words I speak to you," Jesus once said of his teaching,
"are not incidental additions to your life, homeowner improvements to
your standard of living. They are foundational words, words to build a life
on. If you work these words into your life, you are like a smart builder who
built on solid rock. Rain poured down, the river flooded, a tornado hit-but
nothing moved that house. It was fixed to the rock."
"But if you just use my words in Bible studies and don’t ever work
them into your life, you are like a foolish carpenter who built his house on
the sandy beach. When a storm rolled in and the waves came up, it collapsed
like a house of cards."
Whoever has ears to hear this morning let them hear and understand upon
what-or upon Whom-they are building their lives. Amen.