Ambassadors are
sent out from a national government to other countries in
order to represent our government and our business and
diplomatic interests in that other setting.
What would
happen if we had an ambassador to ...(lets pick a dreadfully
poor country like Bangladesh)...who, when he arrived in the
country, called a press conference and announced that the US
would be giving a new 60” flat screen TV to every child
under 16 in that impoverished nation.?
What would
happen?
The ambassador
would be immediately recalled, probably be given a
psychiatric examination, and fired.
He was not sent
out with those instructions;
he had no
authority to make promises like that.
So if we are
ambassadors for Christ, what do we say and do?
What are our
instructions?
Or do we make up
anything we want?
The conclusion
of Matthew's Gospel is very clear about the instructions,
isn't it?
Go therefore
into all the world and make disciples, baptizing in the name
of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit, and teaching them all
that I have commanded you;
and there is a
promise attached for us:
I
will be with you to the close of the age.
“Make disciples”
is the job.
And we know how:
teaching, preaching, baptizing...
and the very
presence of the Lord Jesus is with us as we get to work on
this, our assigned task.
Our Second
lesson today comes at this way of understanding our lives
in different language.
Paul says:
God was in Christ reconciling the world to himself... and
entrusting the message of reconciliation to us.
God is making
his appeal through us, as his ambassadors.
We are sent,
with a message, with a task.
There are those
times when we get to feeling useless: “I'm not worth
anything...there's nothing important that I am to do...
This feeling can
pop up at many diferent junctures:
--at
a boyfriend/girlfriend breakup
--at
a job loss
--at
a retirement
--when the last child goes off to school
just to name a
few of the stressful times that we identify.
Because of this
or that crisis point, I'm worthless, I think.
We need not make
light of these critical points in our lives, or deny that
they exist, or minimize their impact upon us.
But we do need
to recognize that because we belong to Christ Jesus, these
things are actually on the second level of importance, not
the first!
The prime
directive stands ahead of all of these difficulties, and in
fact, is the element that can overcome all of them.
When we keep
asking
“How am I an
ambassador for Christ, today?”
“How is God
intending to make his appeal through me, today?”
“How is what I
do giving honor to God and opening Good News for my
neighbor?”,
worth and value
do not have to be manufactured or pretended.
We are
infinitely valuable
just because we
are God's creation and because he has tasks aplenty for us
to do.
There is an
ambassadors portfolio available to each of us
Abraham was
valuable not because he was good, kind, and nice,
but simply
because God chose him, and Abraham said OK and went along
with the adventure.
In Biblical
language, Abraham heard God's call and picked up and went,
as the Lord had commanded him.
And the Lord
reckoned it to him as righteousness.
God stirred up
faith in him, and he responded.
Our human
tendency is to look for the loopholes, the ways to avoid
responding to the gifts that have been granted to us.
Not me, not now,
too hard, too much... we rattle on and on.
But fortunately,
God is more patient that we are foolish, and he keeps on
calling, and gifting, and expecting us to respond.
In the area of
money, if the question to us is “Are you tithing?” and we
give our reasons why not, then the question becomes
“What little
step can you take in that direction?
What new thing
can you undertake today?”
If the question
is “What have you been doing to lead someone to Christ?” and
we line up our excuses and reasons,
then God shifts
the question a bit to: “Where can you practice, and how can
you best learn these skills?”
And he points us
to Sunday School, and Bible studies, and friends with
questions to discuss, and the Way, and....
If the question
is “How is God doing his aim of reconciling the world to
himself through us as means?” and we deny that there is any
connection,
then God will
shift the question a bit to:
“Will you stop
sniping at one another within the household of faith, and
thus learn how to deal with those outside of it in a more
positive and winsome way?”
That is a first
step in grace.
Persistently
gracious, this God of ours!
It is not that
we are to improve ourselves by positive thinking,
deep-breathing, or some other self-help technique.
It is a new
creation which is to overtake and remake us, Paul says in
our lesson today.
Not a little
tinkering around the edges, but a total re-make is what God
intends.
“Can't happen,”
we exclaim.
“Yes, I will do
it in you!” God insists.
Charles Wesley
in the final stanza of the hymn Love Divine, All loves
Excelling [LBW 315] writes this:
Finish then
thy new creation,
Pure and
spotless let us be...
Perfectly
restored in thee.
God isn't done
with us yet.
Each day, God is
intending to draw us nearer, refashioning us a bit more.
Its not a matter
self-help or determination.
It is a matter
of God being faithful to his own intentions for creation.
To be “in
Christ” is to be allowing God's “Yes” to be stronger than
our “No”,
to be looking
toward what we will yet become, not clinging to what we have
been.
That is the
lesson learned by the younger son in Jesus' story today.
That is the
lesson which we wonder whether or not the older son learned,
too.
That is the
lesson opened to us as well.
Me, a new
creation?
Me, a
disciple-maker?
Me, an
ambassador for Christ?
Yes, we are, and
will become even more so!
Yes, we have the
instructions, the commission, and are beginning to gather
the tools that we need in order to live out that commission.
In a moment,
we're going to sing three petitions this way:
Help us in our infirmity...
Grant us to grow in grace each day...
Grant us your Holy Spirit. [LBW 194]
The Good News is
that this new creation is to include all who sing this
prayer with joy.
Amen.