Community
Church Sermons
Twelfth
Sunday after Pentecost, Year B - September 3, 2000
"WGOD
- All Talk, All The Time"
James
1:17-27
One of the neat things about long-distance
automobile travel is that you get to discover what we Americans hold in common
from state to state to state. As Sandy and I made the nearly thousand-mile trip
from here to New England last month, and then - a few days ago - turned around
and drove back again, it struck me that there is a common thread running
through this great country of ours.
Now, at first glance, you might think that we are a
nation of Cracker Barrel restaurants. But no, the further north you drive,
the fewer Cracker Barrels you find. So it's not the Cracker Barrel that
binds us together. And we who live in the south might think the common link
across the nation is highway billboards. But, strange to say, Sandy and
I have learned that there are actually places in our land where people do not
agree that billboards are a true form of American folk art, and where
highways are completely bereft of their beauty. Now, another possibility might
be the University of Tennessee football team. Surely, Orange Fever infects
people all across America! But, alas, Sandy and I were literally shocked to
learn that up in Virginia all they are talking about is Michael Vick and the
Virginia Tech football team. And to listen to Lee Korso and company on ESPN
radio, the Vols this year are predicted to be just an average team.
And that silly ESPN radio prediction is what finally
gave me the insight. What really runs through America like a common thread,
available to all people everywhere, is not any restaurant chain, not any form
of highway art, not even an allegiance to a particular football team.
The blessed tie that binds our entire nation is talk
radio. And it is EVERYWHERE!
And when you're in the throes of a fifteen-hour-long
drive, listening to station after station after station, you come to realize
that even talk radio exists on two levels. First, there are the programs
of local interest - the daily obituary report with soft organ music playing in
the background - the daily stork report from the local hospital with Brahm's
lullaby playing in the background - the daily swap show where people call up
and say they have for sale a 1986 Yugo automobile that does not run and has
been stripped of all it's parts, and where five people call up in the next ten
minutes to ask what the phone number for that Yugo was. Local talk radio is one
of my favorite things.
But talk radio exists on another level too.
There are the big syndicated shows. You can follow them from Tennessee to
Virginia to West Virginia to Maryland to Pennsylvania to New York and even up
into New England. We were driving along - listening to Dr. Laura give
sound moral guidance to some soon-to-be bride who doesn't want to invite her
soon-to-be father-in-law to the wedding because he offered her soon-to-be-groom
- his son - fifty thousand dollars to not marry her - and all of a
sudden, the station began to fade in and out, and hiss and whine. So Sandy -
who has advanced training in this - rushed for the Scan button, pushed it,
listened carefully for some slight hint of Dr. Laura's voice, and then - not
hearing it - expertly switched over to the FM band and repeated the process.
And - lo and behold - mere milliseconds later - there was Dr. Laura again!
She's everywhere. Talk radio reaches into
just about every nook and cranny of our land. Rush Limbaugh. Imus in the
Morning. Dr. Joy Brown. Dr. Dean Edel. G. Gordon Liddy. Howard Stern. Oh my.
But my favorite talk radio show of all is the
National Public Radio production of Car Talk - hosted by Click and
Clack - the Tappet brothers. In real life, Click and Clack are Ray and Tom
Magliozzi from Boston. Their publisher describes the show this way: Experienced
mechanics who learned auto repair the professional way--by making mistakes on
their customers' cars--tell you how to get the most miles out of your car and
how to save big bucks on auto repairs.
And what I like about Car Talk is that it's
not like most other talk radio shows. It isn't about one person spouting off
some ideology to which listeners respond by calling up and either agreeing or
disagreeing But rather, it's about identifying issues that are relevant to real
people, and simply outlining what to do about them.
"Sell that car! It's a piece of junk!"
"Run a wire from your battery to your windshield wipers and see if they
work then. And if it starts a fire, call 911." Or, the one we heard last
Sunday, "The best way to keep your car from scraping bottom when it
goes from your steep driveway onto the level road is to chop out a piece of
your driveway until it doesn't scrape anymore!"
I mean, it's good, down-to-earth, practical, do-able
stuff!
Which brings us – in a sort of roundabout way - to
the New Testament letter of James.
Some people say the James who wrote this letter was
Jesus' brother James. Others say the richness of the Greek in the letter
suggests someone else is the author. But what everyone agrees on is this: the
letter of James expresses a great concern that the early Christians were
listening to too much Imus In The Morning, and not enough Car Talk.
In other words, they were getting so caught up in discussing ideas and
beliefs and philosophies and theologies that their faith was becoming
passive and inactive. And so James writes this letter in which is found our
text for today urging us to not be hearers of the Word only, but doers of
the Word.
Now, it strikes me that our Christian Faith is sort
of like a talk radio show. Maybe we could call it WGOD - all talk,
all the time. And you and I have to decide how we will listen to it. We can
listen to this station merely for the purpose of filling our minds with beliefs
and ideas that never go anywhere or do anything. Or, we can listen to it as a living
word - seeking guidance for how to live and how to act as God's people
in the world.
Now, James encourages us to take this latter
approach. Don't just HEAR the Word. DO THE WORD! As a recipient of the
grace of God, it’s not as important what you believe as what you do. And
he provides us some practical insight about how to take what we believe
and turn it into action.
First, in verse seventeen, James touches on
something that we all know is true. He reminds us that our lives are a
gift. You did not create yourself. Your parents provided the necessary
chromosomes, but God is the one who gave you both your parents and the spark
that brought those chromosomes to life! And so, James argues, if your life
itself is a gift from God then you need to work on living as a
gift to others. You yourself are a gift from God to the people of
your family - your spouse, your children, your parents, your siblings. In the
words of James, God sent you down from above - for them! And the same is
true of your neighbors, and of your church, and of your world. "Every
generous act of giving, every good and perfect gift given" by you to
others has a sacramental quality. The good you do to others actually originates
up above - with God.
This is so very important in our particular
community. For if ever there was a gathering of extremely gifted people, this
is it! But what a terrible witness to Christ it would be if, when we come to
the end of our days, all that can be said of us is that we were thankful
for our gifts, and we enjoyed them very much, and yet, for all our
giftedness, the world was not changed. Things weren’t made better for the poor
of Loudon County. School children weren’t helped to achieve more. Strangers
weren’t welcomed and befriended. People were divided rather than united. What a
terrible disappointment to God that we would have wasted the very purpose of
our birth. This is why Jesus said, "Of those to whom much has been
given, much will be expected."
So do you want to know what to do to live
as a Christian? James tell us to be generous givers. Be generous with
your love. Be generous with your time. Be generous with your money. Be generous
with your skills. Be generous with compliments. Be generous with patience. Be
generous with encouragement. Be a generous giver to others of the gifts God
gave you!
One of our church families has a grandchild who’s
undergone very complicated and serious surgery up at Children’s Hospital in
Boston. Being from Tennessee, this child and his parents are quite alone way up
there in Massachusetts as they go through this trying time. When I learned of
their situation, I called my old colleague Ralph Marsden up in Worcester. I
said, “Ralph, we have a family from down here with a baby over at Children’s
in Boston.” Almost before I finished, Ralph said, “Well, they’ll need
some support. Do you think they’d mind if I paid them a visit?” I told Ralph
I was sure they’d appreciate it. And so he did. While I’m sure Ralph – like you
and I - had a million and one other things to do on a Friday afternoon, he
dropped everything and drove the fifty miles to Boston to be a friend to this
family he’d never met before. Generosity like that is a far more powerful
witness to God’s love than any sermon preached from a pulpit.
Then, in verse 19, James tells us something else we
can do to live the Word. Learn to listen!
Here is James’ practical advice: “Be slow to
speak, slow to anger, but quick to LISTEN! In other words, before you offer
your two cents worth to other people, and before you get up your ire about what
you see as the failures of others, sit down with them and listen. Really
LISTEN!
When I was a kid, one of the books that stirred my
soul was David Wilkerson’s The Cross and the Switchblade. It was about
Wilkerson’s journey as a young Assemblies of God minister into the world of
gangs in New York City. At first, David tried preaching at the gang members,
but it didn’t work. And sometimes he would vent his anger at them, and tell
them in no uncertain terms what he thought of them. But finally, David
Wilkerson learned to listen to these very lost young men and women. And
as he gained understanding of how they saw themselves, how they
saw and experienced life, how they saw God, his ministry became more
effective.
There are people in your life today who desperately
need someone to listen to them. They don’t need speeches. They don’t
need anger. More than anything, they
need someone to understand them.
So
be a generous giver. Be a good listener. These are two of the bedrock practices
of the Christian faith.
And finally, James tells us, work at being pure and
unstained by the world.
Unfortunately, there seems to be a great deal of
confusion these days about what it means to be pure and unstained. Some think
it has to do with removing ourselves from the world and all it’s influences.
Some believe it means to rid ourselves of evil thoughts and evil deeds. Some
surmise it has to do with becoming theologically correct, or liturgically
proper. In most of our minds, to be pure and unstained has something to do with
achieving a certain level of personal piety.
But the Bible that's taught over radio station WGOD has
a different take on it. Last month, in Ephesians, we learned that to be
blameless before God is to live in love. And today here’s how James defines
what it means to remain pure and unstained by the world: go and visit widows and orphans.
You see, the impurity of the world that God is
concerned about is the way people turn their backs on each other, and neglect
each other, and become unloving toward each other. The stain of the world to
which we are to be resistant is the mindset that it's okay to kill each other,
and be rude to each other, and let some people go without while others have
more than they could possibly need, and let some people fail while others
succeed. Impurity and spiritual stain has nothing to do with how we treat
ourselves, but has everything to do with how we treat others.
Visit widows and orphans. I suppose, in our society,
that would include single mothers, and kids living in single-parent homes. How
we respond to their needs is the way God measures our righteousness. And
not just women without husbands and children without parents, but all who are
weak and vulnerable and in need.
God put you on this planet to help them!
Be generous givers! Be terrific listeners! Get
involved with people who need a helping hand!
And the world will see God through you!
A number of years ago, most of the Protestant
denominations located their headquarters in one building in New York City. 475
Riverside Drive. One day, a Christian woman came to New York to do some
business at 475 Riverside Drive. The cabbie, who picked her up at LaGuardia
Airport, said, "Hey, I know that address. I take people up there all
the time! What actually goes on up there?"
The passenger explained that 475 Riverside Drive was
where many Christian groups had their headquarters.
The cabbie said, "Well, now that you mention
it, most of the people I take up there are really nice. They're not like
everyone else in this city. They don't grumble. They always ask me about myself
and my family. And they're usually pretty good tippers!"
Then the cabbie looked at the woman through the rear
view mirror and said, "How the blankety-blank do you people GET THAT
WAY?"
Dear friends, may people ask you that
question as you go this week to give generously, to listen carefully, and to be
good to widows, orphans, cab drivers, and many others.
In other words, as you go to DO THE WORD in Jesus'
name!