Several years
ago we passed near Reading and visited an automobile museum,
a factory where some interesting cars had been made during
the first several decades of the auto industry.
Some of them
were beautiful objects, but there they sat, not moving, not
doing anything, just sitting there, getting polished once in
awhile.
They ran once;
many years ago they scurried through the valleys and climbed
the hills; but not now.
They just sit
there, beautiful objects in the museum.
With the right
fluids and the proper care, they could do their job again;
perhaps modified because of changed conditions, but they
could be active in some way.
But they just
sit there in the museum, beautiful objects with nothing to
do.
In science class
we learn the difference between potential energy and
kinetic energy.
Potential energy
would be one of those cars sitting at the top of a hill,
gassed up and ready to go.
All that is
needed is to release the brake and let it get rolling,
engage the clutch , and it would come to life and go on its
way,
and it then
represent kinetic energy, energy in motion, energy doing
what is intended.
There are so
many things that can impede the movement of that car.
The brakes might
be stuck,
the gas line
clogged,
the engine not
properly lubricated,
stones in front
of the tires,
the tires
lacking air,
the keys not in
the ignition,
the driver not
present, or not ready,
and so
on.
It takes all of
those parts and all of those actions in order for the
machine to make use of the opportunity opened to it.
It is a very
complex operation.
I vividly
remember the time when I was a high school kid, driving home
from a late band trip to an away football game.
It was after
midnight, and I was not supposed to be driving then anyway,
and so I was on a back country road with no traffic... and
then1 ½ miles from home I ran out of gas.
There was
nothing I could do but hike home, and then drag myself out
of bed early in the morning and go help my father try to
get the 1960 yellow Oldsmobile station-wagon refueled and
started again.
One needs to pay
attention to all of the details, to all of the components of
this application of potential to kinetic energy.
You know that
I'm not really intending to talk about cars today, but about
the love of God and the nature of the church.
Potential energy
is God's gift to us, not just once at Holy Baptism, but on a
continuing basis.
He fills us with
potential energy fuel, lubricates us and repairs us as
needed, and is ready to guide and direct us when we are
willing to listen to his Word.
And the Word is
“Go, make disciples of all nations, baptizing
them in the name of the Father Son and Holy Spirit,
teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you.
How do we do our
proper job, making disciples?
(1) Baptizing--
for which we prepare and do once, and
(2) Teaching –
an ongoing process to shaping mind and body to do what is
appropriate and needed.
That part of
things will take time, lots of time, indeed, a life-time!
Just the other
day I was talking with a person who pulled out the old line
“I don't need that catechism stuff; I did it as a youth.”
What would
happen if one never did anything with the windshield wipers
on the car?
Their job is to
make things clear.
But if they are
not renewed regularly, they smear the window instead of
clearing it, and eventually they can scratch and damage the
window.
The purpose of
catechetical study is to make our way clear.
Without it, this
church would be headed for a ditch.
Without the
headlights of the scripture, we can't see through the
darkness around us.
Without the
breath of God in our tires, we can't move.
When we only
talk and don't get around to doing something,
it is as if the
brake of reflection and planning is never released, so that
potential can become kinetic.
We could go on
and on making these kinds of comparisons, but perhaps this
is enough to firm up the idea in our hearts and minds.
Each and every
part of the church has a role, and if that role is impeded
in some way, the movement of the whole church is impeded,
and we have
trouble moving the church from potential to kinetic energy.
Paul has a
wonderful image that he uses to talk about the church:
Just as the
body is one and has many members, so it is with the church.
For in the one Spirit we were all baptized into one body....
If one member
suffers, all suffer together with him/her. [1 Cor 12]
The whole church
is hampered when groups and individuals are spiritually
sick, or unstudied, or who have given up on the prime
directive of disciple-making.
Paul was
particularly peeved with the part of the church that
gathered in Corinth.
He knew full
well that they were living in a difficult situation,
in a
busy cosmopolitan city
with
every kind of distraction
and
every kind of evil lurking at hand.
In bold and firm
language,
he points out
all of their failings,
where
they have fallen short,
where
they are ill-prepared for action.
Each year on
these January Sundays
we hear
about those problems in 1 and 2 Corinthians.
--jealousy,
anger, sexual immorality, following false teachers,
laziness, messing up fellowship and communion...
the list goes on
and on.
Yet in the
section we hear today from1 Corinthians 12, Paul gives out
the central Good news of their situation.
In spite of all
of these very real problems which do indeed need to be
addressed, Paul reminds his hearers
You are
the body of Christ and individually members of it.
Not “you might
be someday”
or,
“if you're really, really good”
or,
“when you get all of these problems solved”
No, “You are
now the Body of Christ!
Here is the
extended wonder of the Incarnation which we celebrate
especially at Christmas:
that Jesus takes
into his Body all of us with all of our problems, our
limitations, our willful disregard for the Word, and all of
the rest of the mess.
You are
the Body of Christ, together, even now, Paul reminds us.
What an amazing
thing to say to them.
What amazing
thing to say to us as well!
Yes, even though
I think he still has a few goofy ideas, we should be
reconciled with the Bishop of Rome.
I don't know
how, but the task is in front of us....because together we
are the Body of Christ.
Yes, even though
we really don't know much about each other, we should be
reconciled with the patriarch of Constantinople, ...because
together we are the Body of Christ.
Yes, even though
we are becoming separated, and even though they make me
angry,
we should keep
some level of engagement with those within our ELCA whom I
think are doing things which are disastrously wrong...
...because
together we are the Body of Christ.
Like it or not,
for all of our many faults, we are the body of Christ, the
visible form the risen Christ takes in the world.
That's something
to ponder and marvel!
I read a little
note about a man named Patrick Bissel.
Likely none of
us have ever heard of him.
At age 20, he
was already handling roles in ballet far beyond what would
be expected at his age.
A rising star,
he was proclaimed.
And then his
fiancée found him dead in his apartment, with a drug
overdose.
And the world is
poorer for not having received the gifts he was given by
God to share.
... because
together we are the Body of Christ.
No matter what
kind of a day it is for us as individuals or groups of
Christians,
whether it is a
sunny day, or rainy, or depressing, or exuberant,
whether we are
feeling hemmed in by sin or are reveling in freedom of
spirit and mind, we need to keep asking:
Of what use can
I make today of the gifts which are mine to manage?...
...because
together we are the Body of Christ.
One time the TV
host Mervin Griffin had a muscle-builder on his show to be
interviewed.
He asked one of
the guys with the beautifully oiled and bulging muscles “For
what purpose do you use all of those muscles?”
And the
body-builder struck one of his poses.
“No, you didn't
understand me: For what purpose do you use all of those
muscles?”
“I'll show you.”
And he struck another pose.
“Read my lips:
how do you use them?”
and he
posed yet again.
All those
muscles, no apparent use for them except display...like a
car sitting in a museum,... like members of the church who
are content to be names on a list rather than taking active
parts.
All that
potential energy which needs to be transformed into kinetic.
The continuing
question for the day is this:
what part of
disciple-making is mine to do.?.. ...because together we are
the Body of Christ. Amen.