Oops. I posted one for a different Sunday by mistake. But Facebook readers are enjoying it, so I'll leave it up.
St. Paul in Prison by Rembrandt Van Rijn |
GALATIANS 6:11-18 * MATTHEW 6:24-34
The scriptures today warn us of two kinds of
deception, namely the deception of false religion and the deception of the
cares of this world. And, what we see connecting these passages of scripture is
summed up perfectly by our Lord when He tells us to seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness. In that
seeking we are not escaping reality, rather we are facing it in its fullest. We
can face good news and bad, even the fact of our own mortality, with a brand of
courage unknown except by faith.
“I marvel that ye
are so soon removed from him that called you into the grace of Christ unto
another gospel: Which is not another; but there be some that trouble you, and
would pervert the gospel of Christ. But though we, or an angel from heaven,
preach any other gospel unto you than that which we have preached unto you, let
him be accursed. As we said before, so say I now again, if any man preach any
other gospel unto you than that ye have received, let him be accursed.”
These words may sound harsh to people who
imagine that all religion is good: But every genuine pastor, every sincere
bishop, priest, or deacon, must teach faithfully what has been revealed and
handed down. We cannot simply smile and accept what is taught in cults, or even
in churches that are turning away from a clear and faithful adherence to
"the faith once delivered to the saints (Jude 3)."
The heresy addressed in this Epistle was a new
teaching that all of the Gentiles who had converted to Christ could not be
saved unless they were circumcised and kept the Six Hundred and Thirteen
Commandments of the Torah, and then only as interpreted by their approved
Rabbis. Today we have false teaching of every sort all around us, and it has
terrible consequences spiritually, and sometimes physically.
For example, the Jehovah’s Witnesses not only
teach the Arian and Pneumatimachian heresies by denying the Trinity, by denying
the existence of the Holy Spirit, and denying the bodily resurrection of Christ
(who appeared to witnesses). They also cause their people to die, and at times
have caused the deaths of their own children, because they forbid something as
good and practical as blood transfusions. It is tragic. For many years my
father worked side by side with a good friend, a man we all liked very much,
who died at the age of sixty from heart disease. A very simple medicine could
have kept him alive to this day; but he was a member of Mary Baker Eddy’s
so-called “Christian Science Church,” (three misnomers) and so he would not
take medicine. As a result of his beliefs he died before he could retire,
before he could meet his grandchildren. The picture we are given of God, by
these kinds of doctrines, is one of a very unreasonable and harsh taskmaster
who demands the impossible without providing grace.
To avoid false gospels we need sound doctrine,
and true theology.
In the Gospel Jesus lifts our eyes heavenward.
The Book of Common Prayer (1928, American) does something unusual in this
passage. It does not use the exact words of the King James Bible, “give no thought
for the morrow.” Instead, this one passage uses the 1888 Revised Version: “Be
not anxious for the morrow.” Anxiety can take your mind off of the Lord; it can
disturb your peace and ruin your whole life. Anxiety is the opposite of faith.
Isaiah the prophet tells us:
“Thou wilt keep him
in perfect peace, whose mind is stayed on thee: because he trusteth in thee.
Trust ye in the LORD for ever: for in the LORD, the LORD, is everlasting
strength (Isa. 26:3,4).”
This strength is real and effective for us here
and now in this life, and it is the only strength that lasts forever. No matter
what evils come in this life, as people face the death of loved ones, as they
face betrayal, economic hardship, illness, their own mortality and the
hostility of an unbelieving world, in the Lord is everlasting
strength.
“Ye have heard of the patience of
Job,” we are told (James 5:11). Let us look as well to the suffering of the
Apostles. One of the most moving passages in all of Saint Paul ’s Epistles, at least for me, is a
personal plea that he wrote near the end of his life to his son in the Faith,
Timothy. It is not a deeply theological passage, at least not in an academic
sense. It is not a passage that we can use to illuminate our minds with
doctrine- and yet is a very useful passage for theology and doctrine if you
reflect upon it. In the last chapter of Second Timothy we find two requests.
First he wrote: “The cloak that I left at Troas
with Carpus, when thou comest, bring with thee, and the books, but especially
the parchments.” Then he wrote, “Do thy diligence to come before winter.”
Think about that. When the Romans locked up a
prisoner they did not feed him, or tend to his needs. That had to be arranged
by family and friends. At the end of his many years of service, which he once
described as involving constant persecutions, and other troubles such as
shipwrecks, hunger and cold, he had come to this. The Saint, the former Rabbi
who was the father of the Gentile Christians, the man who wrote about charity
in words more meaningful than any other passage ever written about love, the
man who gave us most of the words of the New Testament, bearing in his body the
marks of Christ, glorying only and ever in the cross of Christ, had instead of
retirement and a nice pension, a cell in a dungeon and a sentence of death. He
was going to face Nero's executioner. To get through his last Winter on this
earth he asked Timothy to bring the cloak, and to hurry up and get it to him
before the cold winds of Winter could blow through his cell.
Well, that may not seem like a very deep
theological passage. But it is. We see the faith of this saint who looked above
the things of this world, this last witness of Christ’s resurrection facing
death without fear, suffering the loss of all things with joy. His needs were
real. He needed the cloak. Also, he wanted his books, probably hand-written
copies of the Old Testament scriptures. What good were “the books, especially
the parchments,” to a man on death row? The answer is, he wanted to keep his
mind fed with the word of God, because he knew, living in prison and facing
death, that the truth of the word of God was his anchor.
“Seek ye first the Kingdom of God
and His righteousness, and all these things shall be added unto you.”
Everything you need for this life will be added. You have no cause for anxiety
as unbelievers do. But more than that, more than food and drink, clothing and a
place to lay your head, in the Lord is everlasting strength, the gift of
sharing immortality with the Risen Christ, and the hope of partaking of the
Divine nature through grace. You need not fear that the one who died to take
away your sins, and who has promised in His resurrection to be with us forever,
will change His mind and break His promises. What you need in this life will be
provided as you seek first His kingdom and righteousness. But, even more so,
“in the Lord is everlasting strength.” The pledge is eternal life through the
risen Christ who has overcome death.
This is the faith that takes you through a life
of real struggles and temptations. To feed and strengthen this faith you need
to know what to rest your hope upon. For that you need the teaching that God
has given by the revelation of His word. Dare I say it? You need the stable
anchor of true theology and sound doctrine, the same Gospel the Apostles
preached, because His word revealed in Scripture and known to His Church is
where you discover the truth of God’s love.
1 comment:
Thank you again for a sermon which is spoken for the common people,
a sermon we, the ordinary people, can grasp and feed upon. So well
you lay before us the life of Paul in his last days upon this earth.
Sister in Christ Jesus,
Nellie
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