YOU RE FANTASTIC When We Need to be a Superhero Text: Mark 6:30-34

Similar documents
SoulCare Foundations I : The Basic Model

Julian day number: , Day of week: Saturday, Gregorian calendar: 14 April, 29 AD, Jewish calendar: 14 Nisan 3789

5 Things God Uses to Grow Your Faith Week 5: Personal Ministry

Hurry sickness has a number of different definitions attached to it. Here is one of my favorites:

NOTHING SESSION ONE. If only I had... if only I drove... if only I wore... if only I knew...

BURNING BUSH 1. You have a message January 2-3, 2016 *****

Session 1 The God who Speaks

Don t Bless the Mess: We Need Something More

Sunday Sermon. May 21, The P Word: Teach Us to Pray Luke 11:1 4, 9 10 Rev. Judy Wismar Claycomb, Lead Pastor

37 But he answered, You give them something to eat. 38 How many loaves do you have? he asked. Go and. see.

Send Us Your Light: The Listening

ONE THING IS NECESSARY (Luke 10:38-42) Sunday, January 27, 2019 Series: The Gospel of Luke, Message #49 - Summit EFC - Pastor Doug Corlew

Where You Goin in Such a Hurry? Luke 10:38-42 November 25, 2012 Travis Collins

DELIGHTING in the LORD

Tending the Flock John 21:1-19

METRO CORE SESSION #15 THE HOLY SPIRIT: THE GIFTS OF THE SPIRIT February 26, 2014 Greg Cahalan & Jeremy Schossau

There are at least four different ways in which we are to pray as a congregation.

Dear Parents of Graduating Seniors,

BEDTIME STORIES WELCOME

SoulCare Foundations I : The Basic Model

Responsive Reading LEADER: I am the good shepherd; I know my sheep and my sheep know me... and I lay down my life for the sheep (John 10:14-15).

Mary s Faith, Luke 1:26-38 (Second Sunday of Advent, December 9, 2018)

The Shepherd's Heart for Us The calming of the storm, the Geresene demoniac, the woman with chronic bleeding, the raising of Jairus daughter, the

Seeing With Spiritual Eyes. Mark 2:1-12

Moving from Solitude to Community to Ministry

Parables of the Kingdom

Magnify Lesson 1 Aug 6/7 1

Building A Vibrant Spiritual Life

Psalm 42:1-2 Deepening our intimacy with God

Spiritual Formation Silence and Solitude Lesson 2 Purpose: To learn about the spiritual disciplines of silence and solitude

Psyc 402 Online Survey Question Key 11/11/2018 Page 1

There s A Letter for You A study of the letters written by James, Peter, John and Jude

Get in the way, know the truth, live the life

Uniquely Jesus November 6, 16 Mark 6:30-56

Kingdom Supply - Mark 6:34-44 Sunday 12/2/18 Jeff Lyle

GOOD SHEPHERD John 9:35-10:21

Wade Street Church am SENT John 20:19-23

is good. How happy is the man who takes refuge in Him!

PENTECOST 19B 9/30/18 The Church as a Healing Community (James 5:13-20)

John 4:43-54 Amplified Bible (AMP) - Not the same story as the healing of the Centurions Son

BELOW EXPECTATIONS THIRD SUNDAY OF EASTER APRIL 30, 2017 BECKY ROBBINS-PENNIMAN CHURCH OF THE GOOD SHEPHERD, DUNEDIN, FL

Building Your Life on Values That Empower Building Your Life with Outreach (Part 1)

Who is this King? Mark 6:30-56 Emily Carpenter Sermon audio and text available at What do you see?

Have you ever faked being someone s friend in order to get something?

Resurrection Joy and Laughter

JESUS, AT PRAYER, IN THE SCRIPTURES

DURING: AFTER: Clean-up, make any notes in notebook on behavior issues, activity challenges, etc.

SERIES: DECIDING TO LIVE LIKE A BELIEVER #1: Keeping the Royal Law (James 2:8-9) by Rev. Dan McDowell April 15, 2018 There were 2 brothers, Joe and

Dearest brothers and sisters in Christ, grace and peace be with you all. Amen.

Ungrateful Nine Lepers React by Jennifer Graham Jolly

Spiritual Gifts Discovery Questionnaire

I Can Do It Myself! really wanted believed

RULE OF LIFE Version approved July 2016

Tombstone Testimonies Living Your Life on Purpose

The William Glasser Institute

Acts: The Universal Gospel Acts 10:34-43

Eisenkopf. The Crimson Fairy Book

The Story: Jesus Ministry Begins Mark 1:21

The Word in the Wilderness - Matthew 4:5-11 Sermon Pastor Joe Davis Union Baptist Church February 11, 2018

[123] TWENTY-THIRD SUNDAY OF ORDINARY TIME B

Kindergarten-2nd. February 22-23, The Prodigal Son. Luke 15:11-32 Adventure Bible for Early Readers (p. 1151) God Loves Us No Matter What

AUDIENCE OF ONE. Praying With Fire Matthew 6:5-6 // Craig Smith August 5, 2018

Kindergarten-2nd. Samson. August 29-30, Judges 13-16; Proverbs 3:5-6. God gives us special abilities to serve him.

Weapons for the War Ephesians 6:10-18 September 14, 2014

September 14, Are You Cultivating Good Fruit in Your Life? Dare To Plug In to God s Love With Passion!

Travelogue beyond infinity

If you ve ever known a guy who said, Yeah, Honey, those pants do make you look fat. They are not with us anymore, may they rest in peace.

The questions at the end of each day are totally optional and may need rephrasing for your unique audience!

zxå Chapter 21: The Summons in the Night

Sermon by Pastor Tim O Brien. Come Away With Me

So I Send You Meditation on John 20:19-31 April 8, 2018 Merritt Island Presbyterian Church

Three points to the sermon today: first, what are spiritual gifts? Second, how are they distributed to the church? Third, how are we to use them?

Colossians 3: Julie Hester

: INTRODUCTION TO THE EIGHT-WEEK PROGRAM

SoulCare Foundations I: The Basic Model

Loving God: Obedience. John 21

1. Jesus practiced what he preached. (46-50)

C: Cloe Madanes T: Tony Robbins D: Dana G: Greg

Didn t he know that it was likely to be a person, not an animal, who came out of his house first?

LARGE GROUP. The Way of Wisdom Lesson 6 July 15/16 1

Mizizi Supplemental Journal Questions and Scripture Readings

Video: Called: Discover Your Vocation

Jim Gill March 3, 2019 Vision On The Mount Exodus 34:29-35 Psalm 99 Luke 9: Corinthians 3:12:-4:2

Why By Nora Spinaio. Scene I

Psalm 23. Rabbi Harold Kushner. June 23, Rev. susan Cartmell. The Congregational Church of Needham

Strength given to the weary

The Syrophoenician Woman

Lectio Divina. 1) Find a place where you can spend at least a few uninterrupted moments. There are no rules about how long the

Hebrews 11:1-3,8-16. May God bless to our understanding the Words that we hear today.

AND SO INSTEAD OF THE DISCIPLES TELLING JESUS ALL THAT THEY HAD DONE, MAYBE IT SHOULD READ THAT THEY TOLD JESUS ALL WHAT HE

Stories and Henna Patterns

SHINNING THROUGH -THE DARKNESS-

Sermon September 9, Verses Covered Ephesians 1:6-7 2 Corinthians 5:21

HEART WORM What Does God Do with a Self-Righteous Heart? Text: Luke 15:1-32

School, Friends and Faith in Jesus!

JOHN 10 John Series: Get a Life in Jesus

Jesus Feeds the Multitude

Overshadowed by the Holy Spirit. Brendan Mc Crossan

The Flourishing Culture Podcast Series How To Be An Inspirational Leader October 24, Al Lopus

21 Sunday B August 26, 2018 St. Patrick Theme: Jesus ever gives us a choice to decide on our deepest longing. Decide today whom you will serve,

Transcription:

YOU RE FANTASTIC When We Need to be a Superhero Text: Mark 6:30-34 Finding Ourselves in the Fantastic Four Of all the comic books turned into motion pictures of late, my favorite one is the Fantastic Four. For those not in the know, it is a tale about some astronauts who, when subjected to some strange space radiation, suddenly acquire some fabulous powers. The group is headed up Reed Richards, Mr. Fantastic. He can not only extend his brilliant mind to solve almost any problem, he can also stretch his body like Silly Putty to meet various needs. Reed s heartthrob Sue is the Invisible Woman, played by the voluptuous Jessica Alba. Sue can make herself completely disappear when that is needed and she can project these fabulous force fields to protect herself and others. Then there s Sue s brother Johnny, the Human Torch. Johnny can burst into flame at will without being consumed. He can fly and start fires with a flick of a finger or a wink of his dashing good looks. He can even set-off, in a good-natured way, the fourth of the Fantastics -- big Ben Grimm -- a gravel-voiced, rock-plated tank on two feet that others call the Thing. Ben s got a soft-heart, but such a tough exterior that he can take phenomenal punishment and just keep getting right back up again. I guess it doesn t take much imagination to realize that these characters are simply comic book versions of the personas that many of us often idealize or seek to be ourselves, in some sense. Maybe you re one of those people who try to stretch your mind and physical resources to incredibly elastic lengths to meet the needs of others. Perhaps you re a person who lets your own needs go invisible to yourself or others a lot of the time. Or you project protective fields for others or maybe yourself. Then, again, you might be someone who tries to save the world, or at least your corner of it, with your blazing energy, charm, or speed. You sizzle along, rarely worrying too much about whether you ll burn out. Or just perhaps you re most like the Thing. You re gonna tough it out. You re going to be the strong one who doesn t let the pressure or pain stop you. You ll clobber your way through whatever comes at you, and get right back up when you re knocked down. Can you resonate with any of this? Which one of those four personas would the people who know you best say is most like you? Where Does the Drive to Be Fantastic Come From? Like so many of the impulses that move us today, these ones I m describing aren t all crazy or bad. Sometimes we feel that we genuinely need to be something of a superhero simply because of the serious needs outside of us. If we re gifted or talented at all then, frankly, wouldn t we be remiss in our duty or calling if we didn t use our Godgiven capacities as heroically as we could to meet these needs? After all, Jesus himself says in Luke 12:48, From everyone who has been given much, much will be Daniel D. Meyer / Christ Church of Oak Brook / 10-14-07 1

demanded; and from the one who has been entrusted with much, much more will be asked. The truth is that there are too many people in this world who are unwilling to stretch themselves very much to help others. There are plenty who refuse to let their own needs go invisible when they ought to be spending their energies protecting others. There are too many in our world whose passion for any cause or concern beyond themselves never burns very brightly. And there are more than enough folks who when necessity demands that they get up again from life s poundings because other people are counting on them, wilt and whimper instead of standing strong. There is not a family, workplace, church, or community that could not use some more heroic people. It would be fantastic. Learn to Live Out of the Father s Love But let me qualify that statement in two important ways, and the FIRST one is this: It is fine to pursue the fantastic life if we have taken the time to discern what is driving it. The reason I say this is because sometimes we feel this desire to heroically stretch, or surrender our visible needs, or strive passionately, or stand strong -- less because of the deep needs around us than because of the distorted needs within us. You are probably much healthier than I am in this regard, but I have had to confront something painful about myself and it gets very complicated. All I can tell you is that I ve come to see that there is a continuum of motivations that drives me in life. At one end is this desire to be faithful with the gifts God has given me in life. I want to hear God say Well done, good and faithful servant, whether anyone else in this world recognizes what I bring or not. But at the other end is this desire to have people say: Oh, you re wonderful, Dan. How do you do what you do? Why, the way you stretch, and serve, and strive, and stand strong, is really quite amazing. You re fantastic. There is a body of Christian tradition, dating all the way back to the earliest centuries of the church, that says that genuine spiritual health and transformation lies in ruthlessly naming and exposing to God s light the darkness of what theologians have called the false self. The false self is that angry, anxious, or fearful voice within us that asks other human beings to establish for us our identity and core value. Did I do this perfectly enough for you? Am I loving and helpful enough? Am I impressively competent? Have I pleased you with how unique I am? How insightful I am? How loyal and responsible I am? Have you noticed how much fun I am? How powerful and decisive I am? How agreeable and pleasant I am? All of these are various ways of asking the same question of people: Am I fantastic? The restless yearning to have other human beings answer this question for us is one of those demonic influences the Bible warns us about that can make our lives just crazy. In my own case, I ve found that there will always be people who answer NO, who answer I DON T KNOW, who answer I DON T CARE or SHOW ME MORE, or the most insidious of all: SHOW ME AGAIN NEXT TIME. But if the accolades or appetites of Daniel D. Meyer / Christ Church of Oak Brook / 10-14-07 2

others are what drive the use of our gifts, we will never be at peace. The false self does not rest. It just occasionally collapses from working so hard to fill its bottomless well of need. There is another way, however. We can live out of the motivation that comes from the other side of the continuum. The true self, the basis for real spiritual health and truly heroic action in the world, can be found if we will let into us the affirmation of God our Father -- spoken to us as he spoke to Jesus at the time of his baptism: You are my child, whom I love; with you I am well pleased. 1 Do you know that about yourself? Can you hear God saying this to you today? How can you more deeply? Identity Tests In Mark chapter 6, the gospel writer helps us start to see just how important this is as we watch Jesus undergoing an identity test. Jesus goes to minister to the people of his own home town (Nazareth) but is publicly rejected by them. If Jesus had been living out of the false self side of the motivation continuum, that experience alone would have been an absolutely devastating one. Yet we get no sense from the text that Jesus felt anything more than humble sadness for the blindness of those who d missed the truly fantastic gift right in front of them. How did Jesus keep his identity and motivation rooted not in the acclamation of the crowd but in the affirmation of the Father s love? Shortly after this, Jesus sends his twelve closest disciples out to face an identity test of their own, as they go minister to the needs of people around them. Returning breathless from this experience, verse 30 recounts: The apostles gathered around Jesus and reported to him all they had done and taught. The underlying impression here is that, unlike Jesus in Nazareth, the disciples have actually met with rave reviews from the people to whom they ve gone. People have said, in effect, You re fantastic! Keep ministering to us. This impression is confirmed two verses later when we read in verse 33: Many who saw them leaving recognized them and ran on foot from all the towns and got there ahead of them. We get a picture here of not only how steady the demand there always will be for crowd-pleasing superheroes, but also of how easy it is to get sucked into playing primarily for that crowd. It s not that we re meant to go around suspicious of the people around us or resistant to them. The very next verse makes clear that Jesus never stopped loving the people around him. Verse 34 reads: When Jesus landed and saw a large crowd, he had compassion on them, because they were like sheep without a shepherd. So he began teaching them many things. Learn to Live Within Limits But it is what happens in the middle of this story that I really want to invite you and me to pay especially close attention to. I said a little earlier that two things are particularly required to live a life that is truly heroic in the best sense. The first is to keep asking ourselves what is driving our efforts in relation to other people? Are we motivated by Daniel D. Meyer / Christ Church of Oak Brook / 10-14-07 3

the love of God for us and for other people or is it really about propping up our false self by getting others to say You re Fantastic! But the SECOND requirement for a healthier life is equally important. It is crucial we learn to live within limits. I have been a student of Jesus now for some three decades and I continue to be amazed at how He of all people did this. He accomplished things that were truly fantastic. Yet he did so without taking on the methodology of the famous four we ve talked about today. On the contrary, Jesus took care NOT to get stretched out of shape by others expectations. He made his need for food, for drink, for rest, or for personal response from others very visible and clear. There was a radiant power to the presence of Jesus, but it showed itself more frequently in a deliberate rather than a dashing pace and he took great care not to burn himself out. Jesus certainly proved himself a Rock, not by faking perpetual strength, but rather by regularly drawing upon the strength of his heavenly Father in prayer. And so, in the middle of this highly demanding moment recorded in Mark chapter 6 -- when the crowd was pressing in all around and the disciples were tempted to just keep on working harder in order to please their human audience, Jesus reminds his disciples of their limits. Verse 31 reads: Then, because so many people were coming and going that they did not even have a chance to eat, he said to them, Come with me by yourselves to a quiet place and get some rest. So they went away by themselves in a boat to a solitary place. I m not sure I ve ever been busier than I am right now. This past week was an absolute whirlwind, starting at 5:30 most days and going late into the night. I can t tell you how many meals I missed and how few times I even went to the bathroom. Frankly, the week ahead looks worse. Our Board of Trustees meets on Tuesday, there s a big staff retreat on Thursday. A friend from Scotland arrives on Thursday night. My parents are coming to visit on Friday. I leave for Africa on Sunday. I ve got about 16 hours of lectures to prepare in the next week, back to back meetings most days, and the email inbox is overflowing. And so yesterday, I got up shortly before 5:00 a.m. to get a jump on all this. I want everyone in my life to feel that what I produce is fantastic. I did think it a bit strange when I felt this prompting to go back to bed about 7:00 a.m. And stranger still when it seemed O.K. to stay in bed on a Saturday till 3:00 in the afternoon. I don t know how long it s been since napping, reading a fun book, and rubbing the dog s belly seemed like things core to my mission, but I had this sense they were. I ate pizza by candelight with the family. I finished this message. I feel somehow more ready to enter this week ahead in a healthier way. How about you? Do you want a genuinely heroic life or merely a harried and haunted one? Here are three steps you can take to prepare for one more like Jesus and his first disciples. First, find a quiet place, a silent place this week and take in the tremendous love the Father has for you. Secondly, carve out some solitary place in the next few days and sort through what is really driving your behavior. And finally, set some limits so that you genuinely have a chance to eat and to get some rest. Daniel D. Meyer / Christ Church of Oak Brook / 10-14-07 4

What Jesus is trying to say to you and to ME is that doing these things are not stoppers to the fantastic life; they are the secret to it. Answer Christ s call: come with him to a silent place, a solitary place, and get some rest. 1 Matthew 3:17 Daniel D. Meyer / Christ Church of Oak Brook / 10-14-07 5