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O WE OF LITTLE FAITH Karen F. Bunnell Elkton United Methodist Church June 18, 2017 Father s Day Genesis 18:1-15, 21:1-7 Every morning, after my alarm goes off, I Love Lucy goes on. Oh, it used to be that I would turn on the news, but I couldn t take it anymore starting off my day with mostly bad news, so I decided to start my day with a smile on my face and Lucy does it every time. A couple of weeks ago, the episode came on which began with Lucy and her best friend and neighbor Ethel talking about how Lucy hadn t been feeling well lately. She said she d been tired and feeling blah, so she was going to go to the doctor to check things out. After Lucy described out she was feeling, Ethel tentatively said, Maybe you re going to have a baby, to which Lucy responded with a chuckle and waved it off. You see, she and Ricky had been married eleven years already by then, and you could tell by her reaction that a pregnancy was the furthest thing from her mind. Maybe by eleven years into her marriage, she wondered if it would ever really happen, and she had learned to protect herself by not even dreaming about it possibly happening. Well, multiply that by decades of marriage and you ve got today s lesson from the Hebrew scriptures the story of Abraham and Sarah. When God told Abraham that Sarah, who was well advanced in years and far past child-bearing age, that she was going to have a baby, first he laughed, and then when Abraham told her, she laughed. Why? Well, come on, a baby when she was approaching ninety? No one with any common sense would believe that! Maybe that s why she laughed. Or maybe, her laugh wasn t a hearty one, but a bittersweet one. One pastor wrote beautifully about this moment in Sarah s life. Listen to how he put it: Sarah laughed, because at the age of 90 she had long ago finished crying. How many years was it? Probably not long after they were married she began to be afraid that something was wrong. Month after month, year after year, she and Abraham loved and were loved and in the morning she would wonder, Could it be that God answered our prayers? Maybe this year (just maybe) God s promise will come true. Perhaps now is the time when I will bear the promised child. But it never was. 1

And then came midlife and Sarah didn t wonder any more. She knew then that she would never have a son. And we can imagine Sarah as she would go about her work as usual as if nothing were the matter, but inside she was crying, and sometimes, if you looked closely, you might notice her eyes filling with tears. But those days were long past, Sarah didn t cry anymore. So when the Lord came again to renew the promise that she would have a son, Sarah only laughed. (On-line, Faith in the Face of Doubt, Louis B. Weeks, 1989) Oh friends, it s not that Sarah didn t trust God, it s that reality told her otherwise. She d been disappointed way too many times, so she wasn t going to let herself be hurt anymore, she didn t have it in her, so she laughed. Again, let me say again that Sarah was not an unfaithful person quite the opposite she and Abraham were very faithful people. Let me remind you of their story. Back in the 12 th chapter of Genesis, we learn that God called Abraham to leave his home and family and go to a land he has never seen. As he does, he tells Abraham that he will have many descendants, that he and his descendants will inhabit the land of Canaan and that they will be a blessing to the whole world. And so Abraham and Sarah believed God and stepped out in faith into a future unknown to them, but known to God. They believed God s promises, yet, as you heard, month after month, year after year, they failed to have a child. So how would he and his descendants inhabit the land of Canaan and be a blessing to the world if he had no descendants? You might remember what happened next. They took things into their own hands, actually Sarah did. She sent her maid Hagar in to be with Abraham and she conceived and bore a son, whom they named Ishmael. So now there was a descendant, but still not with his beloved Sarah. And then, years went on years and years and years. They settled into life, into the reality of their life as it was. So when God told them that now was the time, now the baby would come, all they could do was laugh, because as one writer put it so well, they laughed because they had reached a dead end in their lives and because they had adjusted to it. (On-line, Something Too Wonderful, Barry Robinson) That s a powerful statement, isn t it? They had reached a dead end in their lives and they had adjusted to it. They stopped expecting the joy of having a child. It hadn t happened, common sense and reason said it couldn t happen, wouldn t happen, so after so long, they reached a dead end and adjusted to it. We get that, don t we? We understand them. I mean, if we re disappointed too many times, like they were, we put a guard around our heart, so we won t risk being hurt anymore. If you don t hope, you can t be disappointed, right? If you don t trust, you don t open yourself up to being hurt. 2

That s one of the reasons we don t think seemingly impossible things can happen, because we don t want to be hurt if they don t. Another reason we sometimes tend not to think that God will do seemingly impossible things is that, in this day and age, we re fixated on facts and reality. If you can t prove it, we don t want to believe it. Or if facts show something can t be done, it can t be done (you know, like a ninety year-old woman having a baby. I read this week about the 1870 Annual Conference of the Methodist Church in Indiana, where, at one point in the presentations, the president of the college where they were meeting said, I think we live in a very exciting age. The presiding bishop said, What do you see? The college president responded, I believe we are coming into a time of great inventions. I believe, for example that men will fly through the air like birds. The bishop said, This is heresy! The Bible says that flight is reserved for the angels. We will have no such talk here. Oh after the conference, the bishop, whose name was Wright, went home to his two small sons, Wilbur and Orville. (On-line, No Laughing Matter, Dr. Keith Wagner, 2002) Guess God had the last laugh on that one, huh? How sad it is that too often we don t dream big dreams with God because we are fixated on facts and scientific proof and reality. When, in reality, as Pastor James Moore put it, The real truth is that the best things in life cannot be proved in a scientific laboratory love, courage, integrity, honesty, morality, perseverance, compassion, kindness, patience, faith you can t put those great things into a test tube, but we know how incredibly important they are. (James W. Moore, Attitude is Your Paintbrush, p. 91) Yet, even knowing that, too often we tend to trust facts more than faith. The bottom line is that, though we say we trust God with our future, just like Abraham and Sarah, too often we don t have great expectations, we don t dream big, and expect God will make big things happen. Too many people have, what one person called, a firm and unwavering belief in a tame and innocuous divinity. It s a faith that doesn t have any expectations that God will meddle in human affairs, intercede in your life, providentially guide human history, care for a loved one, heal the hurts we suffer or God forbid do the impossible. (On-line, God Has Brought Me Laughter, Daniel Clendenin, 2008) That s a pretty condemning statement, but maybe its truth is a little too close for comfort. Too many people have a lukewarm faith or to put it in a different way have faith in what they see as a lukewarm God a good God, yes; a loving God, a caring God; but a God from whom they don t expect a whole lot. Right or wrong, it s a way to believe where you won t get hurt. Oh, but God wants more for us than that, and frankly, God wants more from us than that. God invites us to dream big, and believe big, and trust that, even in the face of anything the world might say, he can make the impossible happen. 3

So how do we do that? Well, first - remember all the things God has made happen in the past, especially in your life. Remember all the things that looked impossible that God made possible. The unexpected joys, the hurdles you were able to climb over, the doors that swung open when you thought they were shut tight, the relationships that were healed, the illnesses that were overcome, the crises that were survived remember all of those things, and then look ahead, trusting that the God who acted like that in the past will do that in your future as well. A second thing we can do is choose to be positive, choose not to default to doubt or cynicism, but choose to be positive. I never tire of hearing the story that Tony Campolo tells of the parents who had two sons one of whom was an incurable optimist and the other of whom was an incorrigible pessimist. No matter what happened to the one child his spirits could not be dampened, and no matter what happened to the other, his spirits could not be lifted up. So they decided one Christmas to try to exercise some correctives on these extreme attitudes. For the pessimist, they bought tons of gifts, hoping that seeing them on Christmas morning, would bring about a sunnier disposition. Conversely, for the optimist, they gave him a bag of horse manure, hoping it would tame his over-the-top optimism. Well, Christmas morning came, and the family gathered around the tree, and the pessimistic kid began to open his presents a magnificent electric train, a brand new stereo, all sorts of great stuff. When he looked at the train, he moaned, It ll probably break. When he saw the stereo, Ah, I don t have any CDs to play on it, and on and on it went. Negative responses to everything. On the other hand, when his optimistic brother opened up the one present, the bag of horse manure, surprisingly he began to jump up and down and scream with joy. When his parents asked him why he was so happy, do you know what he said? Do you see what I got? Do you see what I got? There s got to be a pony around here somewhere! (Tony Campolo, Let Me Tell You a Story. p. 201) Oh, attitude makes such a difference. We can choose to be optimistic and trust that God will do what God says he will do, or we can be cautious and pessimistic, believing in a tame and innocuous divinity. Finally, and perhaps the best reason of all to believe in the God for whom all things are possible, even seemingly impossible things, is that it s the most wonderful, healthy way to live. As the great preacher Barbara Brown Taylor puts it, What better way to live than in the grip of a promise, and a divine one at that? (Barbara Brown Taylor, Gospel Medicine, The Late Bloomer, p. 40) Oh friends, indeed what better way is there to live than in the grip of the promises of God? To live knowing that, no matter what the news says on any given day, all will yet be well. To know that peace is possible, and relationships can be 4

healed, and babies can be born, and diseases can be cured, and wars can cease, and all will be well. And to know that God is the one who will make it happen. Isn t it better to go through life in the grip of the promises of God, rather than going through life with fear and cynicism and a lukewarm faith in a tame God? Friends, dream big, be bold in your faith, live in the grip of the promises of God. And if you falter, remember a woman named Sarah, and how her laughter turned to pure, unadulterated joy, when at the age of 90 with her 100 year old husband by her side, she cradled in her arms that beloved, promised child, and her heart was full! With God all things are possible. So believe it, dream big, be bold, and live in the grip of God s promises all the days to come. May it be so! Amen. 5