Lakeside Sermons Lakeside Baptist Church Rocky Mount, North Carolina Jody C. Wright, Senior Minister

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Transcription:

Lakeside Sermons Lakeside Baptist Church Rocky Mount, North Carolina Jody C. Wright, Senior Minister JULY 8, 2012 THE SIXTH SUNDAY AFTER PENTECOST Shazam! II Corinthians 12:2-10; Mark 6:1-13 I have been thinking a lot about Mayberry this past week. Most people realize that Mayberry is a fictional town based on Mt. Airy, North Carolina. But for those of us who watched the Andy Griffith Show unfold fresh week by week or who now watch it in syndication, who appreciate a simple life in a simple community with simple but strong values, Mayberry is real. I have been thinking a lot about Mayberry this past week. With George Lindsey, also known as Goober, dying a couple of months ago and Andy Griffith, beloved by us all, dying this past Tuesday, I suspect Mayberry has been on all our minds. That little town was home to so many delightful characters: Aunt Bea, Opie, Floyd and Howard, Otis and the Darlings, Gomer. Who could forget Gomer? Like his cousin Goober he was simpleminded but affable, a comic relief, and a good soul. Given that comic books were about the most advanced reading he ever did, Gomer borrowed a phrase familiar to boys who grew up in the 40's and 50's from the superhero Captain Marvel. Shazam! he would exclaim when something amazing happened. Shazam! When you heard it, you knew Gomer was surprised. Gomer himself was a bit of a surprise. Well, Jim Nabors, the actor who portrayed Gomer, was a surprise. He was discovered by Andy Griffith in a nightclub in Santa Monica, California called The Horn. Andy Griffith spotted his comedic talent right away and urged him to join the show. For those of us who love Mayberry and all of its characters, Jim Nabors was Gomer. So after watching Nabors bumbling character on TV and hearing that nasally twang of his, anyone would exclaim Shazam! to hear Nabors sing in that rich baritone voice of his. I think I first heard him sing on The Ed Sullivan Show. I am certain that the song was The Impossible Dream from Man of La Mancha, one of his signature songs. The impossible dream that is sort of what the people in Nazareth thought about Jesus. Here was a carpenter from a little nondescript town in Galilee pretending to be a prophet or messiah or something. He must have been well-known for his craft, but the people in his hometown thought he was

getting a bit big for his britches (or robe) when he started healing people and talking about prophesies being fulfilled. He obviously had big dreams impossible dreams but no way to fulfill them, so they thought. We tend to have high standards for the people who will lead us, especially on a national or global level. Presidential candidates are scrutinized from every angle to determine if they have what it takes to lead this country. Are they strong and confident and open to the opinions of other people? Do they have a good understanding of economics and global relationships? Are they courageous enough to lead our military and wise enough to know how? Are they familiar with how government works and sensitive to the needs of the average citizen? Are they good administrators? What is their vision for the future? What is their background? Can they lead this nation through good times and challenging times? Jesus understood why the people who knew him best were skeptical about his abilities. They had watched him grow up. They knew his family. As fine a people as they were, they were not the kind of folks who were going to be able to fulfill the ancient longings of the Jewish people. When they questioned his credentials and his audacity to claim fulfilment of Isaiah s prophesy, he reflected, Prophets are not without honor, except in their hometown, and among their own kin, and in their own house. As a consequence, he was unable to do much of consequence among his own people. I suspect that the skepticism of the good citizens of Nazareth had more to do with their own lack of self confidence than with their support of Jesus. We tend to overlook our own abilities and downplay the potential that we have for doing good and simple things around us not to mention accomplishing great things in the world. Because of the limited exposure I had of Jim Nabors through the character of Gomer I never would have imagined that he had such a beautiful singing voice. The men who had grown up playing with Jesus had no reason to believe that their childhood friend was the Savior of the world. An impossible dream, they thought. Sallie Bailey is working in Richmond, Virginia this summer in the Church Hill Activities and Tutoring program. She was accepted as a summer intern to use her gifts as a dancer, artist, and musician to minister to young people in that challenging section of Richmond. As most of us do at some point when trying to figure out what we are supposed to do in life, Sallie has struggled to get a handle on where her life is going. A week into the summer 2

program when the challenges presented by the young people under her charge loomed large, she wrote about this struggle and mentioned some advice a friend offered for the summer. Be ready for your life plans to change he said. When you go back to your lives, nothing will be the same. That is wise advise for anyone immersing themself in another culture for a period of time as Sallie is doing. What is notable is Sallie s honest and refreshing response to her friend s advice. She wrote, Here s the thing, I have no plans. I am a somewhat aimless art student who has a passion for modern dance, a southern lifestyle, inner city kids, social justice, country music, animal rights, and Spanish culture. In case you ever wondered, these things don t quite fit together. Some may call me lost. [My friends] Tony and Ryan helped me to re-realize this: I am everything but lost. The fact that I don t have a plan allows me to be more open to whatever God has planned for me. So here, God. Take me as You will and don t worry about my plans getting in the way because I really don t have many. 1 Sallie certainly has a plan that includes preparing herself for her future, but she is aware that God may unfold her life in ways she has not yet imagined. Like many other people, Sallie is living as a disciple of Jesus Christ. Not yet knowing how God will use her unique gifts and abilities, Sallie is testing the waters, finding ways to reach out to others as she knows God has called us all to do. She is open and willing, two essential characteristics of a disciple of Christ. Despite the criticisms of the people of his hometown, Jesus forged on with the ministry to which he had been called. He sent out his twelve handpicked disciples, two-by-two, like the animals going into the Ark except they were going out to share good news with the Jewish people. Those first disciples certainly seemed to be an ill-equipped group. Several of them were fishermen. One was a tax collector while another might have been a scholar from a royal family. The rest may have been farmers, weavers, or bakers for all we know. What is certain is that none of them were evangelists. None of them were miracle workers. None of them were prophets or priests. What did they know about sharing the Gospel? What did 1 Sallie Bailey, I Am Not a Cookie and God Is Not Milk, CHAT Blog (June 24, 2012); available online at: http://www.chatrichmond.org/2012/06/24/i-am-not-a-cookie-and-god-is-not-milk/. 3

they know about the Gospel? What did they really know and understand about Jesus? They were just learning themselves. Jesus method of sending them out on this first excursion was rather odd. Their resources were few. They could take nothing more than a staff no provisions, no extra clothes, no money. There was no plan other than to go to the villages throughout Galilee and talk to people about Jesus and the fulfilment of the Hebrew Scriptures. The only advice Jesus offered was to stay where you are welcomed and leave when the door is closed against you. What could he have hoped to achieve with a plan like that one. An impossible dream it seemed. Tomorrow morning over 150 people will leave from our parking lot to go out into this community. We won t go two by two. In general, we will travel in groups of a dozen or so. We will have tools, lots of tools, and plenty of expertise from people who are trained to repair homes. But we will feel ill-equipped nonetheless. When we arrive at those houses and see firsthand all of the work that needs to be accomplished in five days, we will feel quite ill-equipped. Who are we teenagers, teachers, car salesmen, social workers, ministers to presume that we can rehabilitate a home in a week? It happens every year. Workcamp is always a daunting experience. Then again, life itself is daunting when you consider what is asked of us and what is at stake day by day. Each of us goes out into the world every day to take the Gospel with us. I doubt whether any of us feels equipped to represent Christ to the world. I suspect none of us feels fully prepared to be Christ to the people we meet. For all of his braggadocio, and he did have a rather large ego, the Apostle Paul recognized his personal limitations in light of God s calling on his life. In the passage we read earlier, despite his own feeble attempts to be humble, Paul mentions an ecstatic spiritual experience he had when he felt transported to another dimension and learned secrets that are known only in heaven. Recognizing that he could have used this experience for his own gain, Paul tells his friends in Corinth that a chronic physical condition kept him aware of his humanity. It was this weakness, Paul says, that kept him humble and reliant upon God for everything. In turn, this weakness became his greatest strength because it forced him to depend upon God. 4

It is when we learn to trust God to help us do what God has called us to do that we truly become his disciples. It was that trust that enabled the first disciples to go out two by two and not only to share the Gospel but to meet a variety of needs among the people they served. It is that kind of trust that makes it possible for Sallie Bailey to love middle school girls who are vastly different from her and to use her God-given talents to minister in what some people would argue is a God-forsaken place. It is reliance upon God that will allow everyone who is a part of Workcamp this week to accomplish the nearly impossible dream of rehabilitating broken houses into safe and secure homes for the people who live there. It is trust in God that enables you and me to do amazing things in the name of Christ and to help change lives in the process. Shazam! We are an unlikely group, I will admit. Rocky Mount is a lot like Mayberry in many ways. It offers a simple life in a simple community with simple but strong values. And despite the phenomenal talent and ability gathered in this sanctuary today, we may seem to be an unlikely group to change the world for the better and to share the love of Christ in challenging times. Because God calls us, however, we can do it. We must do it. We will do it. Shazam! What an amazing way to spend one s life! 5

July 8, 2012 Prayer of Thanksgiving and Intercession O God who calls us out of our comfortable places, who equips and empowers us by the Holy Spirit, and who sends us out to minister in your name, move among us now, to call us, to empower us, to send us. Transform our hearts and minds that our love for you might run so deep that we would be willing to give of ourselves for the sake of others, in this week and beyond and in this community and beyond. In the tasks that are before us, teach us to rely not on our own abilities but, in humility, to encourage the gifts we find in others and to rely on the strength which comes from you. We give thanks for the opportunities we will have to work, to serve, to speak a kind word, to form relationships and, in all things, to demonstrate the love of Christ. We pray, O Lord, that as we embark on this journey of faith and mission we call Gatekeepers Workcamp, you would go ahead of us to prepare the way. Open the hearts and minds and lives of the homeowners we will serve that they might receive your touch of mercy and your word of hope through us. Open us that we might be used by you and receive a blessing through our work. Bless these your servants who have answered your call to love their neighbors and to take on challenging tasks. Give us the words you would have us to say, the message you would have us to share, and so fill us with your love that it cannot help but overflow to all we meet. Strengthen us with the support and prayers of this church family, for which we give you our thanks. And we pray that you would mold and change the life of each one of us, that we might be bold enough to be about your work of compassion and reconciliation wherever or whenever you call us. In the name of the One who came to give us grace and peace for all the journeys of our lives, even Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen. Elizabeth J. Edwards Associate Minister

Lakeside Sermons Lakeside Baptist Church Rocky Mount, North Carolina Jody C. Wright, Senior Minister JULY 8, 2012 THE SIXTH SUNDAY AFTER PENTECOST Shazam! II Corinthians 12:2-10; Mark 6:1-13 I have been thinking a lot about Mayberry this past week. Most people realize that Mayberry is a fictional town based on Mt. Airy, North Carolina. But for those of us who watched the Andy Griffith Show unfold fresh week by week or who now watch it in syndication, who appreciate a simple life in a simple community with simple but strong values, Mayberry is real. I have been thinking a lot about Mayberry this past week. With George Lindsey, also known as Goober, dying a couple of months ago and Andy Griffith, beloved by us all, dying this past Tuesday, I suspect Mayberry has been on all our minds. That little town was home to so many delightful characters: Aunt Bea, Opie, Floyd and Howard, Otis and the Darlings, Gomer. Who could forget Gomer? Like his cousin Goober he was simpleminded but affable, a comic relief, and a good soul. Given that comic books were about the most advanced reading he ever did, Gomer borrowed a phrase familiar to boys who grew up in the 40's and 50's from the superhero Captain Marvel. Shazam! he would exclaim when something amazing happened. Shazam! When you heard it, you knew Gomer was surprised. Gomer himself was a bit of a surprise. Well, Jim Nabors, the actor who portrayed Gomer, was a surprise. He was discovered by Andy Griffith in a nightclub in Santa Monica, California called The Horn. Andy Griffith spotted his comedic talent right away and urged him to join the show. For those of us who love Mayberry and all of its characters, Jim Nabors was Gomer. So after watching Nabors bumbling character on TV and hearing that nasally twang of his, anyone would exclaim Shazam! to hear Nabors sing in that rich baritone voice of his. I think I first heard him sing on The Ed Sullivan Show. I am certain that the song was The Impossible Dream from Man of La Mancha, one of his signature songs. The impossible dream that is sort of what the people in Nazareth thought about Jesus. Here was a carpenter from a little nondescript town in Galilee pretending to be a prophet or messiah or something. He must have been well-known for his craft, but the people in his hometown thought he was

getting a bit big for his britches (or robe) when he started healing people and talking about prophesies being fulfilled. He obviously had big dreams impossible dreams but no way to fulfill them, so they thought. We tend to have high standards for the people who will lead us, especially on a national or global level. Presidential candidates are scrutinized from every angle to determine if they have what it takes to lead this country. Are they strong and confident and open to the opinions of other people? Do they have a good understanding of economics and global relationships? Are they courageous enough to lead our military and wise enough to know how? Are they familiar with how government works and sensitive to the needs of the average citizen? Are they good administrators? What is their vision for the future? What is their background? Can they lead this nation through good times and challenging times? Jesus understood why the people who knew him best were skeptical about his abilities. They had watched him grow up. They knew his family. As fine a people as they were, they were not the kind of folks who were going to be able to fulfill the ancient longings of the Jewish people. When they questioned his credentials and his audacity to claim fulfilment of Isaiah s prophesy, he reflected, Prophets are not without honor, except in their hometown, and among their own kin, and in their own house. As a consequence, he was unable to do much of consequence among his own people. I suspect that the skepticism of the good citizens of Nazareth had more to do with their own lack of self confidence than with their support of Jesus. We tend to overlook our own abilities and downplay the potential that we have for doing good and simple things around us not to mention accomplishing great things in the world. Because of the limited exposure I had of Jim Nabors through the character of Gomer I never would have imagined that he had such a beautiful singing voice. The men who had grown up playing with Jesus had no reason to believe that their childhood friend was the Savior of the world. An impossible dream, they thought. Sallie Bailey is working in Richmond, Virginia this summer in the Church Hill Activities and Tutoring program. She was accepted as a summer intern to use her gifts as a dancer, artist, and musician to minister to young people in that challenging section of Richmond. As most of us do at some point when trying to figure out what we are supposed to do in life, Sallie has struggled to get a handle on where her life is going. A week into the summer 2

program when the challenges presented by the young people under her charge loomed large, she wrote about this struggle and mentioned some advice a friend offered for the summer. Be ready for your life plans to change he said. When you go back to your lives, nothing will be the same. That is wise advise for anyone immersing themself in another culture for a period of time as Sallie is doing. What is notable is Sallie s honest and refreshing response to her friend s advice. She wrote, Here s the thing, I have no plans. I am a somewhat aimless art student who has a passion for modern dance, a southern lifestyle, inner city kids, social justice, country music, animal rights, and Spanish culture. In case you ever wondered, these things don t quite fit together. Some may call me lost. [My friends] Tony and Ryan helped me to re-realize this: I am everything but lost. The fact that I don t have a plan allows me to be more open to whatever God has planned for me. So here, God. Take me as You will and don t worry about my plans getting in the way because I really don t have many. 1 Sallie certainly has a plan that includes preparing herself for her future, but she is aware that God may unfold her life in ways she has not yet imagined. Like many other people, Sallie is living as a disciple of Jesus Christ. Not yet knowing how God will use her unique gifts and abilities, Sallie is testing the waters, finding ways to reach out to others as she knows God has called us all to do. She is open and willing, two essential characteristics of a disciple of Christ. Despite the criticisms of the people of his hometown, Jesus forged on with the ministry to which he had been called. He sent out his twelve handpicked disciples, two-by-two, like the animals going into the Ark except they were going out to share good news with the Jewish people. Those first disciples certainly seemed to be an ill-equipped group. Several of them were fishermen. One was a tax collector while another might have been a scholar from a royal family. The rest may have been farmers, weavers, or bakers for all we know. What is certain is that none of them were evangelists. None of them were miracle workers. None of them were prophets or priests. What did they know about sharing the Gospel? What did 1 Sallie Bailey, I Am Not a Cookie and God Is Not Milk, CHAT Blog (June 24, 2012); available online at: http://www.chatrichmond.org/2012/06/24/i-am-not-a-cookie-and-god-is-not-milk/. 3

they know about the Gospel? What did they really know and understand about Jesus? They were just learning themselves. Jesus method of sending them out on this first excursion was rather odd. Their resources were few. They could take nothing more than a staff no provisions, no extra clothes, no money. There was no plan other than to go to the villages throughout Galilee and talk to people about Jesus and the fulfilment of the Hebrew Scriptures. The only advice Jesus offered was to stay where you are welcomed and leave when the door is closed against you. What could he have hoped to achieve with a plan like that one. An impossible dream it seemed. Tomorrow morning over 150 people will leave from our parking lot to go out into this community. We won t go two by two. In general, we will travel in groups of a dozen or so. We will have tools, lots of tools, and plenty of expertise from people who are trained to repair homes. But we will feel ill-equipped nonetheless. When we arrive at those houses and see firsthand all of the work that needs to be accomplished in five days, we will feel quite ill-equipped. Who are we teenagers, teachers, car salesmen, social workers, ministers to presume that we can rehabilitate a home in a week? It happens every year. Workcamp is always a daunting experience. Then again, life itself is daunting when you consider what is asked of us and what is at stake day by day. Each of us goes out into the world every day to take the Gospel with us. I doubt whether any of us feels equipped to represent Christ to the world. I suspect none of us feels fully prepared to be Christ to the people we meet. For all of his braggadocio, and he did have a rather large ego, the Apostle Paul recognized his personal limitations in light of God s calling on his life. In the passage we read earlier, despite his own feeble attempts to be humble, Paul mentions an ecstatic spiritual experience he had when he felt transported to another dimension and learned secrets that are known only in heaven. Recognizing that he could have used this experience for his own gain, Paul tells his friends in Corinth that a chronic physical condition kept him aware of his humanity. It was this weakness, Paul says, that kept him humble and reliant upon God for everything. In turn, this weakness became his greatest strength because it forced him to depend upon God. 4

It is when we learn to trust God to help us do what God has called us to do that we truly become his disciples. It was that trust that enabled the first disciples to go out two by two and not only to share the Gospel but to meet a variety of needs among the people they served. It is that kind of trust that makes it possible for Sallie Bailey to love middle school girls who are vastly different from her and to use her God-given talents to minister in what some people would argue is a God-forsaken place. It is reliance upon God that will allow everyone who is a part of Workcamp this week to accomplish the nearly impossible dream of rehabilitating broken houses into safe and secure homes for the people who live there. It is trust in God that enables you and me to do amazing things in the name of Christ and to help change lives in the process. Shazam! We are an unlikely group, I will admit. Rocky Mount is a lot like Mayberry in many ways. It offers a simple life in a simple community with simple but strong values. And despite the phenomenal talent and ability gathered in this sanctuary today, we may seem to be an unlikely group to change the world for the better and to share the love of Christ in challenging times. Because God calls us, however, we can do it. We must do it. We will do it. Shazam! What an amazing way to spend one s life! 5

July 8, 2012 Prayer of Thanksgiving and Intercession O God who calls us out of our comfortable places, who equips and empowers us by the Holy Spirit, and who sends us out to minister in your name, move among us now, to call us, to empower us, to send us. Transform our hearts and minds that our love for you might run so deep that we would be willing to give of ourselves for the sake of others, in this week and beyond and in this community and beyond. In the tasks that are before us, teach us to rely not on our own abilities but, in humility, to encourage the gifts we find in others and to rely on the strength which comes from you. We give thanks for the opportunities we will have to work, to serve, to speak a kind word, to form relationships and, in all things, to demonstrate the love of Christ. We pray, O Lord, that as we embark on this journey of faith and mission we call Gatekeepers Workcamp, you would go ahead of us to prepare the way. Open the hearts and minds and lives of the homeowners we will serve that they might receive your touch of mercy and your word of hope through us. Open us that we might be used by you and receive a blessing through our work. Bless these your servants who have answered your call to love their neighbors and to take on challenging tasks. Give us the words you would have us to say, the message you would have us to share, and so fill us with your love that it cannot help but overflow to all we meet. Strengthen us with the support and prayers of this church family, for which we give you our thanks. And we pray that you would mold and change the life of each one of us, that we might be bold enough to be about your work of compassion and reconciliation wherever or whenever you call us. In the name of the One who came to give us grace and peace for all the journeys of our lives, even Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen. Elizabeth J. Edwards Associate Minister