2nd Sunday in Lent
12/03/06
Reading: Mark 8: 31-38
Imagine a situation where a homeless man is begging on the streets of London. A
well-dressed man in a stretch limo pulls up next to him and offers him a job as
vice-president of his company. You might think that sounds like a fairy tale;
but that is exactly what God has done for us. We don’t deserve it, but he asks
us to be a part of his kingdom and work for it.
But, now, let’s think about what must be going through the mind of the homeless
man. First, he will have to give up what is familiar to him. Obviously, it is a
terrible life, but it is the only life he knows how to live. Secondly, he has a
few possessions he carries around in bags, and the few clothes he owns are on
his back. And one of the conditions the man in the limousine makes is that the
man must leave everything and get in the car. Thirdly, the man will actually
have to work and accept responsibility. Life on the street was bad, but at least
no one expected anything from him. No one expected him to be any different. He’d
become comfortable there. So he turns away from the man in the expensive suit,
rejecting his offer.
Does the man in the story understand what he has given up? He would have had a
home, a job, wealth, a high position and a purpose in life. But he passed it up
to keep what he had. What a shame. This is why Jesus said, “If any want to
become my followers, let them deny themselves and take up their cross and follow
me. For those who want to save their life will lose it, but whoever loses his
life for me will save it” (Mark 8: 34).
But put yourself in his place – what will you do? Think about all the old stuff
that you will have to give up. Or, worse, think about all the new stuff you’ll
have to take up! Think about all the effort you’ll have to put in to learn new
things and new ways of working. I’m feeling miserable already, and my day job is
to help people make just that effort in their working lives!
But what if you understood that you were in line to inherit the business? You
were not just a partner, you were an heir. And the reason you were selected was
that the man in the limousine, unknown to you, was really your father who had
searched until he found you. He knew your potential. He understood what you were
capable of. He wanted to call you more than vice-president; he wanted to call
you his child.
Jesus understood that he was God’s son and that he had been given a great
responsibility. It was a hard thing God asked of him before he could take up his
crown: to “undergo great suffering, and be rejected by the elders, the chief
priests, and the scribes, and be killed...” but Jesus faced it squarely and
spoke of it openly so that his disciples and friends would understand what he
was about. But, of course, they didn’t understand, not even Peter who sometimes
seemed so close to understanding and had so much faith in Jesus.
Peter was “setting his mind not on divine things but on human things.” He was
thinking with human wisdom, not God’s holy wisdom. Peter sought to counsel his
friend and protect him and the other disciples from the impending violence that
Jesus suggested would follow soon. And Jesus had harsh words for Peter, he
wouldn’t allow himself to be dissuaded from the course of action he knew to be
right and knew to be part of God’s plan for saving his creation.
Most of the time God won’t be asking us to do anything dramatic like become the
vice-president of a corporation – unless that’s what you do or where your career
is likely to take you, in which case, go for it and do the best job you can!
Likewise, not everyone is required to die for their faith. What God will ask of
us is to live the life he has given us, with all it’s ups and downs, joys and
hardships. Our eternal life isn’t waiting for us in the afterlife, it starts
here, so we mustn’t let it pass us by – we need to try to live it to the full
with all the courage we can summon and then, in faith, take courage from him who
lead the way by dying and rising again after three days.
There’s a story of a weak sickly man who lived far away from the nearest town
and couldn’t get to a doctor, he seemed to be getting worse.
He lived in a remote cottage, very picturesque, except for the huge boulder in
the front garden.
One night, when he’d finally got to sleep, he had a vivid dream in which God
told him to go outside and push the rock all day long, day after day.
The man got up early in the morning, full of excitement as the dream had
inspired him to push the rock. He pushed all day until sundown, only resting a
short while.
And the rock-pushing gave meaning and a framework for his life where he’d had
none before.
Day after day he pushed. Days turned into weeks, and weeks into months, and he
faithfully pushed against the rock.
The summer passed and the weak sickly man became tired of pushing the rock and
in his tiredness he started to doubt his dream.
So one day he measured from his porch to the rock and then, at the end of each
days pushing, he measured again to see how much he had moved the rock.
After two weeks of pushing and measuring, he realized he had not moved the
boulder even a quarter of an inch. The boulder was in exactly the same place.
The man was so disappointed, he was tired and his dream seemed dashed on the
rock.
He sat on his porch and cried over the hundreds of hours he’d wasted.
As the sun was setting in the west, Jesus came and sat down next to the man as
he cried. Jesus asked, "Why are you crying?"
The man replied, "Lord, you know how sick and weak I am, and this stupid dream
gave me false hope and I’ve pushed with all my strength for the whole summer,
and that rock is exactly where it was when I started."
Jesus smiled and said to him, "I never told you to move the rock, I told you to
push against the rock."
The man thought about it and replied, "Yes, that was the dream."
Then Jesus told the man to step in front of his mirror and look at himself. So
the man stepped in front of his mirror and when he looked he was amazed, because
looking back at him was a strong, healthy man. He started thinking of how well
he’d felt for several months and the strength that he had built by pushing on
the rock. And, finally, the man realized: God’s plan was not for the rock, but
for himself.
God’s plan includes each of us. The storms, the trials, the heartaches, the
disappointments, are all part of the process. God is stretching us, growing us
and building us into his kingdom.
Later on in the service this morning we will sing a song called The Summons. The
songs verses form questions asked by God “Will you come and follow me? Will you
leave yourself behind? Will you use the faith you’ve found to reshape the world
around through my sight and touch and sound in you, and you in me?” The final
verse is our answer to his questions: “In your company I’ll go where your love
and footsteps show. Thus I’ll move and live and grow in you, and you in me.”
When I sing those lyrics today, I will be praying that I can live those words
truthfully and I hope you’ll join me in that prayer.