The Rev. Dr. Skip Ferguson
Manassas Presbyterian Church
Manassas, Virginia
April 28, 2013
On Notice
John
13:31-35
Head down, eyes
focused,
the mind absorbed,
so many things to
do.
How to juggle
everything on the list:
the job, the
commute, the family,
the schoolwork, the
shopping,
the cleaning,
the appointments;
bills to be paid,
calls to be
returned,
Facebook pages to be
updated.
A life overstuffed.
Sabbath rest? -
who has time for
that?
We race through
life,
moving through each
day with purpose,
yet feeling
overwhelmed,
falling into bed
exhausted each night,
then up again the
next morning,
to face another full
list.
We’re so busy that
we often fail to notice,
notice the world
around us,
as we text, tweet,
drive, work,
sleep, eat.
Oh yes, we notice
some things.
Who hasn’t noticed
the pollen
as it coats our
cars,
attacks our eyes,
and gives everyone a
case of the “sneezles”.
We notice the driver
who cuts us off;
the rude clerk at
the store;
the boss’s
increasingly short temper;
the children who
never seem
to put their clothes
in the hamper;
the parents whose
health
seems to grow
increasingly fragile.
Who among us has
made the time, though,
to step back and
notice,
truly notice,
that it is spring,
that the world is re-awakening,
even after a mild
winter;
that the birds are
singing,
the grass is
greening,
the leaves are blossoming.
How many of us have
stopped to take in the fact
that God’s creation is
hard at work
washing away
winter’s grit and grime,
and dressing itself
in the boldest colors.
We need to give
ourselves permission to notice,
“to let ourselves
out into the world with all our senses,”
our hearts leading
us,
taking it all in,
listening,
seeing,
smelling,
sensing;
computers and
cellphones off,
earbuds out.
Mind and heart together,
alert.
(Verlyn Klinkenborg)
“Look around,” God
says to us.
“Look around and see
the majesty,
see the glory,
see the beauty I
have created,
beauty I invite you
to share,
beauty I invite you
to help me tend.”
You and I should not
let the poets be the only ones who notice.
But perhaps the poet
Robert Browning can help us
to stop,
to open our eyes and
minds and hearts
as we take notice
using his words as
the lens through which we look:
“The year’s at the spring,
And day’s at the morn;
Morning's at seven;
The hill-side’s dew-pearled;
The lark’s on the wing;
The snail’s on the thorn;
God’s in his Heaven –
All’s right with the world!”
When we work at
noticing,
we tend to slow
down,
we tend to grow
calmer,
more patient.
When we step back
and notice,
we are more likely
to remember that God is in charge,
not you, not me,
not this group or
that,
that God is in
charge.
Still, we do
struggle to slow down and take notice,
for fear that
slowing down will cause us to lose out,
miss an opportunity,
fall behind.
But we need to slow
down,
just as we need to
Sabbath,
because slowing down
helps us to sync our lives
ever more completely
with God through Christ,
even if slowing down
doesn’t help us sync with our apps.
We should slow down
and notice
because God notices.
God notices all
things.
As our Lord Jesus
teaches us,
God notices every
hair on every head,
every sparrow in
every tree.
(Luke 12:7)
One of the things we
notice when we slow down
is the amazing outpouring
of goodwill and help
that always seems to
come rushing out after disasters:
Boston, Newtown;
explosions in Texas,
floods in New Jersey
and New York;
even disasters in the
farthest part in of the world:
the collapse of a
building in Bangladesh,
men and women killed
as they stitched clothing
for you and me.
Even when they
aren’t in our backyard,
even when they don’t
involve anyone we know,
we take notice of the
pain,
the suffering, the
anguish,
and we feel called
to respond,
respond with food,
clothing,
medical supplies,
blankets,
prayer shawls,
even just prayers.
We turn from our
busy lives,
turn from lives
focused inward,
lives focused on
ourselves,
our own wants, needs
and desires,
and we turn outward,
concerned for the
needs of others.
This is what we are
called to do, of course, as Christians,
the life we are
called to live by our Lord Jesus Christ.
We are called to
lives turned outward,
focused on serving,
working for the good
of others,
the good of the
larger community,
lives working for
the common good.
This kind of life is
antithetical, though,
to what our society
teaches us.
It was the novelist
Tom Wolfe who first used the term
“The Me Decade” to
describe the 1970s,
and I don’t think
we’ve had a decade since
that couldn’t
compete with the 1970s to claim that term.
The term “the common
good” doesn’t sit well with us
in a society that
focuses so much on the individual.
Use the term,
“common good”
and we probably
should brace for someone to condemn it
as suspiciously
socialist.
But John the Baptist told those gathered
on the banks of the
Jordan,
“Whoever has two coats must share with anyone
who has none,
and whoever has food must do likewise.”
(Luke 3:11)
In the Acts of the
Apostles in the New Testament,
we read of the
formative days of the Christian community,
when “All who believed were together
and had all things in common;
they would sell their possessions and goods
and distribute the proceeds to all,
as any had need.”
(Acts 2:4)
Building community,
seeking the common
good,
the good of all in
the community:
this is a very
consistent thread that God has woven through both
Old and New
Testaments.
When our ancestors
in faith settled in the Promised Land,
God commanded them
not to harvest every part of their fields,
but always to leave
a portion for the poor.
(Leviticus 19:9)
God instructed them
to welcome the alien, the stranger,
the immigrant into
the community,
“for the alien who resides with you shall be
to you
as the
citizen among you.”
(Leviticus 19:33)
And to help them
avoid filling their era with their own version
of “me decades”, God
taught our ancestors in faith,
“Do not say to yourself,
‘my power and the might of my own hand
have gotten me this wealth.”
(Deuteronomy 8:17)
These are our lessons,
too,
for all we have has
come from God,
and we are called to
share our resources for the good of all.
In his new book, the
Reverend Jim Wallis
calls us to put a
renewed focus
on this biblical
call to the common good,
He captures the call
well with this illustration:
“When it comes to
how we are to live together
our culture and
society,
I especially like
the African idea of Ubuntu.
[best summarized as]
‘I am what I am
because of who we all are.”
(On God’s Side, 283)
“I am what I am
because of who we all are.”
I am what I am,
and you are who you
are
because of who we
all are together,
in community,
caring for one
another,
the common good our
focus
as we look after and
build up one another.
This is the life we
are called to live as disciples of Christ,
and we are on notice
of our call
even if it seems antithetical
to almost everything
we’ve learned outside of church.
It may help us with
our struggle
to remember that
even the disciples
often struggled with
Jesus’ teaching,
crying out in
dismay,
This teaching is difficult;
who can accept it?’
(John 6:60)
We are on notice and
Jesus won’t let us off the hook;
indeed, he seems to
make it even more difficult with his words,
“Those who try to make their lives secure
will lose it,
but those who lose their life will keep it….
For
what will it profit you
if you gain the whole world
and forfeit your life.”
(Luke 17:33; Matthew 16:25)
Jim Wallis writes,
“The gospel of the
kingdom creates
disciples with
public commitments.
It spreads
throughout the societies in which believers live,
changing how they
treat the poor and the marginalized,
setting captives
free,
seeking the worth
and equality of all made in the image of God,
encouraging good stewardship
of God’s creation,
redefining those
around them and around the world
as their neighbors.”
(On God’s Side, 14)
Yes, Jesus’ teaching
is often difficult.
But learning
calculus is difficult;
learning to tango is
difficult;
learning to putt out
in two is difficult;
learning to make a
hollandaise that doesn’t separate is difficult.
Learning to be
patient is difficult,
learning to forgive
is difficult,
learning to live for
the common good is difficult.
But it is the life
we are called to, you and I,
as disciples of
Christ,
for we are Easter
people, born to new life,
new life in Christ, through
Christ, and with Christ.
And the only measure
of our discipleship that matters
is love – our love
for one another,
our love for
neighbor,
our love for all:
“By this everyone will know that you
are my disciples,
if you have love for
one another.”
AMEN
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