Five Practices of Fruitful Congregations: RISK-TAKING MISSION AND SERVICE. Matthew 25:31-46

Similar documents
Evangelism: Dirty Word or Beautiful Feet? (Hot Topics pt3)

man covered with leprosy; and when he saw Jesus, he fell on his face and implored Him, saying, Lord, if You are willing, You can make me clean.

Living the Easter Life: FAMILIES

SID: Wait a second. Her parents are not believers. Tell me, between you and me, did they think you were a little meshuga, nuts?

Fruit of the Spirit: Radical Hospitality. Matthew 25: 31-40

SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON The Life of Jesus

Familiarity with the story is as much a problem for me as it might be for you.

Standing. Tall. After Feeling. Small. A Purple Monsters guide for professionals. A better childhood. For every child.

Let Love Live. By: Dary Northrop

Sermon June 8, 2014 Respiratory Therapy Pentecost Acts 2:1-21 Galatians 5:16-26

Visitation Sermon 2014

TRACTING THE FUTURE. by Jack Weyland. found on Michael, sixteen, was on his way to the house of his friend Josh.

Jesus Hacked: Storytelling Faith a weekly podcast from the Episcopal Diocese of Missouri

Club VBS 2013 Jungle Jaunt Day 1: Missions Story

Christ Presbyterian Church Edina, Minnesota September 8 & 9, 2012 John Crosby The Invitational God: God Invites Us Luke 14:15-24

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

Paul s main subject here is PRAISE, THANKSGIVING. Notice the other important words in these passages; ALWAYS, WITHOUT CEASING, and IN EVERYTHING

Crazy kingdom. January 23-24, Loving others like Jesus did can look pretty crazy. Matthew 5:11-12; 5:40-45; 20:26-27, 1 Corinthians 13:4

Beginner Teacher Guide February Table of Contents

EVERY CONTRIBUTION COUNTS!

Mark 12:28-34 Letting Your Faith Show 11/4/18-am All Saints Sunday

The mourners (v. 4): They grieve because God is not pleased with the world. They understand that the world is falling apart, and God must intervene.

Five Practices of Fruitful Congregations: INTENTIONAL FAITH DEVELOPMENT. Acts 2: Excellent churches grow faithful disciples.

Treated Like Royalty

Disciple-making 101: A 90 Day Challenge Asking Luke 6-12

Interviewee: Kathleen McCarthy Interviewer: Alison White Date: 20 April 2015 Place: Charlestown, MA (Remote Interview) Transcriber: Alison White

The Holy Spirit Acts: CAN I GET A WITNESS?

Lighthouse: ALL YOU NEED IS LOVE

Calvary United Methodist Church April 26, FUELED AND AFLAME Rev. Dr. S. Ronald Parks. Children s Sermon: Ephesians 4:1-7

Songs of the Heart: IT S GREAT TO BE FORGIVEN! Psalm 32. Making confession and receiving forgiveness bring us joy.

Easy Clues to Find and Fulfill Your Purpose. Doug Addison [Episode 07] March 8, 2017

Sharing Twinkies and Root Beer with God in the Park Matthew 25:31-46 Scott Huie Johns Creek Presbyterian Church July 12 th 2015

Taco Bell: A Holy Place? July 1, 2018 [Scripture Focus: 2 Corinthians 8: 7-15]

COME TO THE PARTY Luke 14: Dr. J. Howard Olds January 25, 2004

At the end the Storyteller should pray for the group and dismiss kids to Small Group 7. Small Group (20-30 Minutes)

Chapter 1. Love is the Answer God is the Cure, by Aimee Cabo Nikolov

Love and Compassion Ministries

Are You Listening? It seems that spiritually, we have some characteristics in common with goats.

SEEING PEOPLE THROUGH CHRIST S EYES LUKE 4:14-21 Faith in Action #2

Sermon for the Last Sunday of the Church Year

Sermon on the Mount, part 5. Blessed are the Merciful

Jesus Tells About the Good Samaritan

Moved with Compassion Pastor Joe Oakley - GFC

Living an Ethical Life; a Reflection on Matthew 25 ; Dale Ramerman; 11/26/2017; Yr A, Last Sunday after Pentecost; Matthew 25:31-46.

May 15, 2016 Acts 2 Living the Spirit. We are rapidly approaching the wedding season. I know that I have at least three

Sermon for Epiphany 5 Year B 2012 Have You Not Known? Have You Not Heard?

The love of Christ between us and each love. One: Thanks be to you O God, that we have risen this day. All: Let us worship and praise you. Amen.

SID: Well you know, a lot of people think the devil is involved in creativity and Bible believers would say pox on you.

THAT S WHAT FRIENDS ARE FOR Karen F. Bunnell Elkton United Methodist Church February 19, Mark 2:1-12

Why By Nora Spinaio. Scene I

We re in a series called DIY. You know, like those do it yourself. videos on YouTube. And one of the reasons we wanted to do the series is

Touching Heaven: A PRAYER OF THANKSGIVING

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.

Tamara Taggart: Two Conversations That Changed My Life (Transcript)

47. Hair or No Hair, God Wants You!

Osceola Sermon / The Five Practices of a Fruitful Congregation Radical Hospitality August 2 nd, 2009 / Pastor Bob Vale

Calvary United Methodist Church May 17, DO SOMETHING Rev. Dr. S. Ronald Parks. Children s Sermon: Psalm 91:14-16

ONLY GOD CAN CHANGE US WE MUST LET GOD CHANGE US ON THE INSIDE SO HE CAN USE US

Go Tell It On The Mountain Luke ,16-18 December 1, 2013 Rev. D2

Being A Credible Witness Matthew Pastor Douglas Scalise, Brewster Baptist Church

The New Community, pt 2 The Sacrifices of Discipleship ****

Don t Be A Goat Scripture Text: Matthew 25:31-46

Peer Pressure is hard to resist

Holy Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church

Sermon for Christ the King Year A 2014 Princes, Paupers, and Bleating Hearts

But what if there was something more? What if beyond the good life there was a better life?

Jesus Mission and Ours

FIRST THEY GAVE THEMSELVES THE FIRST PRINCIPLE OF CHRISTIAN STEWARDSHIP II COR. 8:1-7

Living Questionable Lives

A Felicity Bee Devotional 7 days to becoming more like The Proverbs 31 Woman. A seven day devotional journal.

One of the neighbor dogs had a birthday.

Touching Heaven: A PRAYER OF BLESSING

Lesson Plans That Work Year A Last Pentecost Gospel Lesson for Older Children

February 4-5, David and Goliath. God rescues his family. 1 Samuel 17

Sami Moukaddem on Living with Depression and Suicidal Feelings (Full Transcript)

St. Paul s Congregational Church November 18, 2018; Thanksgiving B Joel 2:21-27; Matthew 6:25-33 Do Not Fear The Rev. Cynthia F.

Neighbors, Episode 5.1

Leader s Guide for Session Two: Learning New Habits

Mexican side of the U.S. border that we would go visit. Over time, we became good friends with some of the Christians there.

Sermon preached at Faith Presbyterian Church, Springfield, Virginia, on Sunday, December 20, 1987, by the Rev. W. Graham Smith, D.D.

Lesson Plans That Work Year A Last Pentecost Gospel Lesson for Younger Children

CROSS CATHOLIC OUTREACH

Soul of Light. The lighting of the first Chanukah candle is opening day for the season of [light].

GENEROSITY: God s Extravagant Love. John 3:16-21 I John 4:7-12. Everything we are and have and give is a response to God s amazing love.

Kinda, Sorta, Christian Seeking The Lost

LA Dream Center Mission Trip Information

Breaking Bad July 29, 2018 Just Wait Till You Have Kids of Your Own Text: Ephesians 6:1-4 Scott Burgess

I was asked to come here this morning to share a story with you about my friend Eutychus.

History and Authenticity of the Bible Lesson 20 Interpretation of the Bible Part One

ONESIPHORUS By Don Krider

When Necessary: Be Gentle Sermon John 4:1-26

Genesis 37-48, Lamentations 3: God is always with us.

sermon: untouchables: poverty

MIRACLE ON MAIN STREET

Primary Teacher Guide February Table of Contents

Lessons From the Flannel Graph 2012 Jesus Feeds 5,000 (or When All You Have Just Isn t Enough) Turn with me to Luke 9 and then to John 6.

God s Promises April 3, Scripture: Reading from the Gospel of Matthew, Chapter 25, starting with verse 31. Jesus is speaking:

May I speak in the name of the living God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit. Amen.

The First Edition From Jerusalem To Rome

The Ten Lepers. The children will learn: ACTIVITY GAME

Transcription:

Five Practices of Fruitful Congregations: RISK-TAKING MISSION AND SERVICE Matthew 25:31-46 Excellent churches step out of the box to serve their neighbors. A sermon preached by Rev. Dr. William O. (Bud) Reeves First United Methodist Church Fort Smith, Arkansas September 30, 2018

There s a story about a management consultant who was leading a seminar on risk-taking and decision-making. She borrowed an illustration that had been used in many situations, but she gave it a little different twist. She got a man from the audience to volunteer, and she said to him: Suppose I put a 40-foot steel I-beam on the floor in front of this podium. Would you walk that I-beam for $20? The man said of course he would. The speaker continued, Suppose I took this same 40-foot I-beam and suspended it between two skyscrapers, 50 stories above the street. Now would you walk it for $20? This time the man quickly responded, No way! How about $100? she offered. Still no way. Then the woman went a step further. She said, Now suppose I m on top on one skyscraper, and I ve got one of your kids, and I m dangling him over the edge. I say to you, If you don t walk that beam and get your kid, I m going to drop him. Then would you walk across that I-beam? The man from the audience hesitated just slightly, then said, Which kid have you got? All of life involves risk. We constantly have to decide if our goals are worth putting our lives on the line to achieve what we want. Just growing up has risks involved, much less getting married, choosing a career, running a business, or raising children. Even retirement can be risky. But I think you ll agree that without taking the risk, we never receive the reward. What makes the risk worth it? Churches have opportunities that might be considered risky. Every church engages in some sort of service and mission. We have to have people to teach Sunday School, serve on committees, hand out bulletins, send money to missionaries, and so forth. There s nothing wrong with those sorts of service; in fact, they are necessary. But they re not very risky. Fruitful congregations take service and mission a step further and engage the culture and community in risky acts of compassion, mercy, and justice. Excellent churches step out of the box of usual church life

to serve their neighbors. Fruitful ministry focuses on what God is doing outside of our own church walls. Bishop Robert Schnase, in Five Practices of Fruitful Congregations, talks about Risk-Taking Mission and Service, which he says includes the projects, the efforts, and work people do to make a positive difference in the lives of others for the purposes of Christ, whether or not they will ever be part of the community of faith. Then he says, Risk-Taking Mission and Service is so fundamental to church life that failure to practice it in some form results in a deterioration of the church s vitality and ability to form disciples of Jesus Christ. When congregations turn inward, using all resources for their own survival and caring only for their own people, then spiritual vitality wanes and the mission of Christ suffers. 1 In a sense, Risk-Taking Mission and Service is the outcome of being welcomed with Radical Hospitality, fed by Passionate Worship, and grounded in Intentional Faith Development. If you have all that going on, you have to get out and serve somebody! And if you are serving in a significant way, it will welcome others into a relationship with Christ; it will fuel your passionate worship, and it will develop your faith. It all works together. Have we done any Risk-Taking Mission and Service at First United Methodist Church? You bet we have! We send a medical mission to Guatemala every year. We partner with schools in our neighborhood to provide food, clothes, mats, and support. We feed breakfast to the neighborhood once a month. We are involved with Salvation Army, Community Rescue Mission, and Hope Campus to provide ministries to the homeless and truly needy in our community. And oh yeah, we are part of the sack lunch program that provides thousands of lunches every year to hungry people. We have First United Methodist members serving in virtually every mission activity in Fort Smith feeding people, sheltering the homeless, treating the sick, helping addicts you name it, Methodists are there. We have people stepping out of the box all the time, and I have to believe that part of it has to do with them loving Jesus.

Is there more to do? You bet! There are still hungry children in our community. There are still families broken by drug addiction and poverty. Sebastian County still has hundreds of kids in foster care and hundreds of adults who are trying to find their way after being in prison. There are still many opportunities. Why is this so important? Why is it critical for an excellent church to be involved in risk-taking mission and service? First, risk-taking mission and service transforms the life of the recipient. People we help are really helped. It makes a difference in their lives. They are better for it. And when the help comes from somebody who loves Jesus, the people who receive the help know that Jesus loves them, too. A couple of weeks ago a group of our Knitters and Knotters took some of their product to the preschool at Tilles Elementary, one of our partner schools. We have a group of about 25 ladies (and one gentleman) that meet every Thursday and knit plastic bed mats out of the plastic grocery sacks. They get all colors and really do some beautiful pieces. Someone from the school took video of the distribution of the mats to the preschoolers. The look of surprise and joy and gratitude on their little faces was priceless. Our ladies were there, smiling and hugging the little kids. Even better, as of yesterday, that video had been viewed over 7,000 times, as a witness to the love of Christ and the compassion of our church. We see this sort of thing when we serve: the look of relief when a painful, infected tooth is removed in Guatemala, the look of gratitude when you put a plate of food in front of someone who has been waiting all day for something to eat. There s a look when the person served realizes that we are not serving them out of pity or a sense of superiority, but we serve them because they are children of God, and we are children of God, and we love one another because Christ has loved us. It transforms their lives. Risk-Taking Mission and Service transforms the lives of those we help. But second, and perhaps even more important, Risk-Taking

Mission and Service transforms the life of the servant. There is no way you can step out of the box and risk yourself to help someone else without being changed. Becoming a conduit for the love of God to one of his children will strengthen your own relationship to God. It will deepen your spirit. It will open up wellsprings of compassion that you never knew you had. It will energize you to serve even more. Patricia Miller was an ER nurse who had learned to shut herself off emotionally from the trauma she saw every day. After five years in the ER, she had cases to treat, but really didn t see them as people. Then one day God intervened. Patricia had admitted a young woman who had overdosed on drugs and had attempted suicide. Her mother had brought her in and was giving the information needed. The mother had been awakened in the middle of the night by the police and was so exhausted she could hardly speak above a whisper. Impatiently, Patricia dragged the information out of the mother and jumped to the copy machine to make a copy of the medical cards. Suddenly God clearly spoke to her heart and said. You didn t even look at her. Patricia stood at the copy machine and felt the voice again, You didn t even look at her. She felt God s grief for this mother and her strungout daughter. Patricia bowed her head and prayed, Lord, I am so sorry. She went back to the admissions desk and sat down in front of that mother and covered the woman s hands with her own. She looked deeply into her eyes and tried to send all the love she could muster and said, I care. Don t give up. The mother, of course, just exploded in tears, and she poured out her broken heart for her daughter who had struggled with drugs for years. Then she thanked Patricia for caring you know, the one with the hardened heart. Patricia Miller wrote, My attitude changed that night. My Jesus came right into the workplace in spite of rules that tried to keep him out. He came in to set me free to care again. He gave himself to that woman through me. My God, who so loved the world, broke that self-imposed

barrier around my heart. Now he could reach out, not only to me in my pain, but to a lost and hurting woman. 2 Don t enter into risk-taking mission and service if you are not willing to be led by God into spiritual places you have never been before. I remember sitting in a commons room at a mission house in Juarez, Mexico, about 20 years ago. I was leading a devotional for a mission team from our church. It was the last night after a week of construction. We had had a great experience, and God led me to ask the What now? question. I think what I actually said was, What will be different in your life because of this week? Would this just be a neat week, or did God have something greater in store for you? I didn t have any preconceived answers in mind for the group, and I don t remember what responses anybody made. But I know for one young woman, it was a question that changed her life. She decided she could not be content with her secular sales job any more. Neither could she be content to serve God as an active lay person. She felt a call to full-time Christian ministry. It took her a while, but she eventually went to seminary and was ordained as a pastor. She has now been serving in Arkansas United Methodist Churches for ten years. In risk-taking mission and service, both the one served and the one serving are transformed. There s a reason for that. It s because in Risk- Taking Mission and Service, the one we touch is Jesus Christ. Jesus told this parable of the Great Judgment, and it appears only in Matthew. But Matthew puts it at the culmination of the teaching of Christ, just before he begins the Passion narrative leading up to Easter. It s the climax of the teaching ministry of Jesus. And the punch line is this: Truly I tell you, just as you did it to one of the least of these who are members of my family, you did it to me. 3 And the converse is also true: Truly I tell you, just as you did not do it to one of the least of these, you did not do it to me. 4 Those who do the former are rewarded with eternal life, and those who don t well, you literally don t want to go there.

The simple but highly profound truth is this: when we serve others, we serve Jesus Christ. We say that all the time, but think about it. The face of that unruly child in Sunday School, the face of that teenager with an attitude, the face of that old person with Alzheimer s, the face of that homeless person, the face of that immigrant who doesn t speak English, the face of that drug addict, the face of our spouse or our grandparent or a complete stranger is the face of Jesus Christ. How can we not love them? One of my favorite stories that bears repeating today comes from Tony Campolo, a great preacher and professor of sociology at a college in Philadelphia. One day he was on his way to work, walking down the sidewalk in winter, dressed in his suit and overcoat, when he was approached by a filthy bum. The guy was dressed in a nasty, greasy coat. He was covered in soot from head to toe, and he had a huge beard. In the beard were remnants of his last several meals. The bum was holding a cup of McDonald s coffee and mumbling to himself. He and Dr. Campolo made eye contact, and the bum said, Hey, Mister. You want some of my coffee?" Campolo took the cup and drank a bit, just to be nice. He handed the cup back and said, "You're being pretty generous giving away your coffee this morning. What's gotten into you that you're giving away your coffee all of a sudden?" The bum said, Well, the coffee was especially delicious this morning, and I figured if God gives you something good you ought to share it with people. Tony could feel the set-up coming, but he walked right into it. He asked, "Is there anything I can give you in return?" He was expecting to be hit up for money. Unfortunately the bum said, Yeah, you can give me a hug. Five bucks would have been better. But there on the Philadelphia sidewalk, Tony Campolo put his arms around this filthy man, trying to avoid the pieces of rotted food in his beard, and the man hugged him back. And kept hugging him. He would not let go. People were staring at the

professional in the overcoat and the homeless bum embracing on the street. Tony was embarrassed, until suddenly his embarrassment turned to awe. Campolo said, I heard a voice echoing down the corridors of time saying, I was hungry. Did you feed me? I was naked. Did you clothe me? I was sick. Did you care for me? I was the bum you met on Chestnut Street. Did you hug me? For if you did it unto the least of these, my brothers and sisters, you did it to me. And if you failed to do it unto the least of these, my brothers and sisters, you failed to do it unto me. 5 I guess the question is, which group do you want to be in, the sheep or the goats? What kind of church do we want to be? Real Christians and fruitful churches engage in risk-taking mission and service. It s how we bear fruit for the Kingdom. It s how we transform the world. It s how we touch the face of Christ. 1 Robert Schnase, Five Practices of Fruitful Congregations: Revised and Updated (Nashville: Abingdon, 2018), 109f. 2 Patricia L. Miller, adapted from Pentecostal Evangel (10-15-2000), pp. 9-11, PreachingToday.com. 3 Matthew 25:40. 4 Matthew 25:45. 5 Tony Campolo, "Year of Jubilee," Preaching Today Sermon Tape #212.