We quickly hear the apostle Paul remind the Corinthians of this very thing. They were wise and blessed with resources. They knew they had found true freedom in their faith. Paul reminds them that their freedom was not permission to do anything at all. They had made a choice to leave one sort of life but they had also bound themselves to one another and to God in a new way. Although they were free, they were also responsible for each other. They were also committed to living a new life, even if they were free to return to old ways.
Samuel was bound to the service of God by his mother Hannah, as an act of thanksgiving when she was finally blessed with a child. He lived in dark times. The temple was still a tent. The people lacked deep faith. The leaders were weak and ineffective. No one had heard the voice of God for some time. In the literal darkness, God calls to Samuel. At first, he thinks the old blind priest Eli is calling him. Eli has the wisdom to have Samuel respond and to listen to what God is saying. Samuel did not ask for the voice of God or even understand it. All he did was to allow himself to be open to what God might offer.
Philip follows Jesus and begins to be inspired by what he hears. He tells Nathanael about a teacher who might be the fulfillment of all their hope. Nathanael wonders, “Can anything good come out of Nazareth?” Philip brings him to Jesus and Jesus tells him he saw him under a fig tree. Nathanael is amazed at this miracle of foresight and heaps praise on Jesus. Jesus tells Nathanael he will see greater things than these. There’s a little play on names here. Nathanael is an Israelite in whom there is no guile. The person Israel, who was Jacob, got through life always trying to trick the people around him. It is because of his deceit that Jacob had to flee his brother. In the wilderness, he slept with his head on a stone and had a vision of angels ascending and descending a ladder into heaven. Nathanael, the deceit-less son of Jacob will have greater visions than his ancestor. He will see the new life offered by Jesus.
We have the same blessing. We have seen new life. We have tasted the love of God. It has made a great difference to each of us here today. If it is such good news, then why are we broke? Why is our sanctuary empty?
We are not the first people to live through dark times. We are surrounded by a culture that has lost faith, or pays far less attention to using faith to determine behavior. We may wonder at our future. What will be our place in the New Milford of tomorrow? What do we have to offer? Our message does not seem to be very popular. We are not very entertaining. If we have anything to offer, it is only the difference our faith makes in our life.
We are being called to give up some of our illusions about what mature faith is like. When my son got his first paycheck, he realized that the power of maturity (of earning pay and having money) is balanced by the responsibilities of maturity. The church does not exist to please us or to make us feel good. We have been given good news in order to be transformed into new people and to go out into the world and offer God’s love to everyone who needs it. Our calling is a wonderful blessing. We rediscover our place with God. We are bound to other people of faith in God’s work of restoring the world.
It is not easy work. The freedom and blessing we get also compels us to responsibility. We are called to receive God’s blessing by faith and we are called to follow Jesus by faith. We have to have courage to look beyond our present circumstances and not let our troubles define us. We are not the church that used to have an endowment. We are heirs of the kingdom of God. We are not the church that used to have many members. We are people called to proclaim good news, no matter how many people listen. We are not old and tired. We are born again. We have new life.
We are called by God for God’s purpose. If we really believe that God has called us here, then we must be ready to let go of our own demands of God. You may think that you came here this morning to hear wonderful music, or to listen to a well-crafted sermon, or to bring your children to Sunday school. The real reason you are here is because God reaches out in love to you, to draw you closer and to send you out with a job to reconcile the world.
The worship we do together, the singing and praying, the teaching and the encouragement all work together to make us a community of reconcilers. Much of our most difficult work is to simply learn how to be reconciled with each other. We have to learn what it means to love the people who are closest to us. We have to learn how to love people with whom we disagree. We are stretched to love people who are strangers to us and who are sick or in need. The work of reconciliation takes us out of ourselves and our own worries and our own needs. Maybe this is what will save us. If we can stop worrying about the budget or our kids or our fears – and if we can invest our lives in the transformation of the world then we will see the vision that Jesus promises us.
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