Sunday, April 25, 2021

Expanding the Flock

Happy Easter!

Easter isn’t a day; Easter is a season. We have several more weeks of Easter Season to celebrate the Risen Christ.

He is Risen. He is Risen. He is Risen Indeed!

Brian Scalabrine – “Scal” to his friends, is a television analyst for the Boston Celtics. He is 43 years old, 6’9”, and bit pudgy at 250 lbs. But he played for the Celtics and the Bulls for 12 years, from 2000 to 2012, retiring 9 years ago. He wasn’t much of a star – he was a benchwarmer who averaged 3.1 points per game, knowing that every game might be his last game because he was so poor a player.

When he came back to Boston a few years ago, as a promotional stunt for his television show, he challenged the top players in the Boston area to send in try-out videos. The top four players were selected to go one-on-one against him. He won 11-3, 11-0, 11-0, and 11-3. Then, he played against a group of three commentator from the Sportshub – beating them 11-1.

How did he do this? After all, he was one of the weakest long-term NBA players, and he was over-the-hill.

He pointed out that for 12 years, he was one of the top 500 basketball players in the world, frightened every game that if he missed his assignment, he would lose his job. He even told himself – “If I miss this shot, I’ll lose my job and my kids will die.” It motivated him – and he survived 12 years in the game.

Other professional and former professional players often get challenged in pickup games or in summer camps. Professional women’s players get challenged by random men. The results are almost always the same. The professional or ex-professional always wins. It’s like the end of a martial arts movie when the old white-haired master walks onto the scene. He may be 70 years old, but he has moves that the young student has never seen.

We often forget that even the worst professional athlete has something that the best amateurs don’t have. It’s like they have an extra gear or something. And someone like Scalabrine who survived being cut for 12 years definitely has something that makes them valuable at the end of the game. As Scalabrine’s friend put it, “Scal, you look like you suck, but you don’t suck.” Scalabrine wasn’t Larry Bird, but he played for the Celtics, and that meant he was special.

I’d like you to keep that difference between the professional and the amateur in the back of your mind while we work through today’s scripture lessons, lessons about sheep, a good shepherd, Jesus Christ, and what it means to be a Christian.

Let’s start with this short video I came across that shows the relationship between a young shepherd and his sheep.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4DZNMgiqFYE

Does this remind you of anyone you know? Have you been rescued by Jesus from a dark place, have you run free, and jumped right back into that same dark place? Is it any wonder that sheep have a reputation for being stupid animals?

Have you ever wondered why most of the world prefer raising sheep and goats, while Americans prefer raising cattle? After all, one cow probably weighs 1400 pounds, while a sheep may weigh 80 pounds or so. So sheep are a lot more work. But both cattle and sheep can provide milk.

But here’s the advantages of sheep. Sheep can be handled by women and teenagers – unlike cattle who are dangerous to even big, strong men. Sheep can provide both meat and wool. You don’t need as much land to support a sheep – about a tenth that of cattle, which is important if you only have an acre or two of ground. Sheep eat many plants that aren’t grass – in fact, the extension services out west have now decided that ranches can add a sheep for every cow and it won’t hurt, but will actually help the pasture because the sheep will eat the weeds the cattle won’t touch.

Finally, when you live in a land without refrigeration, it is much more efficient to butcher an 80 pound sheep or a 30 pound lamb than a 1400 pound cow. After all, how are you going to eat all that beef before it goes bad without refrigeration? Yet, the sheep or lamb is about right for a couple of families. Furthermore, the amount of milk a sheep provides, about a half-gallon, is much more practical for a family than the 7 to 15 gallons a day of a modern dairy cow. And that’s why the rest of the world prefers raising sheep and goats over cattle. For many families, most of their wealth lies in their flock. Lose the flock – and the family enters poverty. But having a large flock means wealth, sheep are four-legged coins walking around.

But sheep are not able to defend themselves well against predators such as wolves, wild dogs, and such. And so, for centuries, sheep have been tended by shepherds, often the teenagers of the family – or hired hands who will work for a bit of mutton, some milk, and some wool. The shepherd’s responsibility was to protect the sheep, to lead the sheep to good pasture, to keep them away from fast-moving streams where they might get sweep away. The sheep come to know the voice of the shepherd and follow the shepherd, trusting the shepherd’s rod and staff to protect them even in the scariest places.

Anointing? Sheep can be tormented by insects. A bit of olive oil poured on the sheep will become a sticky trap for those biting insects. So the shepherd would anoint the sheep by putting just a drop or two of olive oil onto the sheep.

And so, in the Middle East – and most of the rest of the world, even America up until World War II, sheep raising culture was widespread. Everyone understood the role of the shepherd – and the importance and value of a flock of sheep. And so David talked about being a sheep in the 23rd Psalm that we began with today, and Jesus referred back to that Psalm when He spoke of being the good shepherd. He said in John Chapter 10:

“I am the good shepherd. The good shepherd lays down his life for the sheep. The hired hand is not the shepherd and does not own the sheep. So when he sees the wolf coming, he abandons the sheep and runs away. Then the wolf attacks the flock and scatters it. The man runs away because he is a hired hand and cares nothing for the sheep."

There is a real difference between the shepherd who owns the sheep – and the hired hand to whom the sheep is just a job, a meal ticket. Ben Franklin talked of being “born to the printing business”, how being raised in a printer’s family gave him insight into the business than no one who bought his way into a printer’s shop could ever have. Jesus continued:

“I am the good shepherd; I know my sheep and my sheep know me— just as the Father knows me and I know the Father—and I lay down my life for the sheep.”

Jesus is referring to his listeners as his sheep. And he is telling us that he will sacrifice his life to protect his sheep, something that would happen in just a few months when Jesus went to the cross. And many of his listeners understood this, because they owned sheep or grew up in a sheep-owning family – and they may have lost sheep when they hired an amateur for cheap pay.

Jesus was speaking that day to the people of Jerusalem. He was speaking to a crowd which was probably completely composed of Jews. But then he expanded his talk and began to speak of non-Jews, people like us, people who lived in other countries.

"I have other sheep that are not of this sheep pen. I must bring them also. They too will listen to my voice, and there shall be one flock and one shepherd."

Jesus came to the Jews and spoke almost entirely to the Jews. But Jesus understood his mission was to the entire world – Europeans, Asians, Africans, Americans, Australians. Sheep of other sheep pens which would be brought together as one flock.

And then Jesus spoke of why His Father had entrusted Him to take care of Father’s sheep:

“The reason my Father loves me is that I lay down my life” Jesus was willing to die for the sheep.

But because Jesus was actually God on earth, God the Son, Jesus had an ability and an authority from the Father to go even further.

“The reason my Father loves me is that I lay down my life—only to take it up again. No one takes it from me, but I lay it down of my own accord. I have authority to lay it down and authority to take it up again. This command I received from my Father.”

Jesus understood that He had to ability from God the Father - indeed the command from God the Father – to lay down his life – and then take it up again. Jesus had been given the ability to die – and to live again, at His choice, His “own accord”.

And a few months later, Jesus would use that ability as He died on the cross so His sheep would not need to die – and then He came back from death so that the world would respect Him for who He was and is – God the Son.

For this was the key difference that made Jesus divine, God in the flesh, a step above ordinary men and women. This ability to rise from the dead, like the “extra gear” that professional athletes have, is why Jesus could never be just an ordinary man. The ability to defeat Death is the difference between a human and God, for God created Death just as God created Life, and so God can defeat Death, just as God can destroy Life. We puny humans can only tinker around the edges, postponing Death for a few years at best, never defeating it – while we are very good at destroying Life.

And yet… Our shepherd has told us that if we follow Him, if we follow Jesus, He will defeat Death for each of us. We must follow the Shepherd, though, not merely believe that there is a great Shepherd somewhere. We must come back from the thorn bushes of life, we must walk away from the cliff edges, we must listen for the voice of the Shepherd and return to following that Shepherd.

But, you know, there is a way that we are like professional athletes. For there is a real difference between the worst Christians and the best of those who do not believe. There are extra gears that all Christians have – some don’t ever use it, but it is there, while unbelievers don’t even have access to it as long as they insist on doing their own thing and not following Jesus. There are abilities promised to all Christians which is not promised or even given to those who choose their own path.

Those extra gears are the facts that the worst Christian is promised life eternal, the worst Christian is given access to the Holy Spirit’s guidance, the most terrible Christian in the world has had their sins forgiven by God when they asked.

For God protects His sheep, and when we choose to follow Jesus Christ, admitting that He is far wiser and more powerful than we can ever hope to be, when we bow down and admit that there are simply some things Jesus can do for us that we cannot do for ourselves, when we stand back up and say, “Please guide me, Jesus! I will follow You!” That is when we become His sheep and He protects and guides us. It is a choice that we each must make once in our lives, and you can make that choice today. Look to the Good Shepherd and admit your weakness, but also admit that you are worthy enough to be led by the Prince of the Universe, because you are a human, and that is enough, just as a shepherd will accept into the flock any sheep that chooses to join that flock. Join this flock and be led by the Good Shepherd.

“I have other sheep that are not of this sheep pen.”

Our shepherd has asked us to look for lost sheep. Each one of us has been given a command to find other sheep and bring them into the flock. And how shall we do this?

We should take advantage of our abilities and powers given to us as Christian believers. We each received the Holy Spirit at baptism, and that means we have access to the right words to say, the right actions to take, the best methods to encourage lost sheep to join our flock. We simply need to ask the Holy Spirit and then listen as the Spirit tells us who, when, and how to speak to our friends, neighbors, and family members. The Spirit will even guide us to speak to strangers about Christ – if we listen to the Spirit’s voice deep in our minds.

And we mustn’t get caught up in fear. It is not our job to decide who joins the flock – the Spirit will decide that. It is our job to be pleasant, attractive people who speak praises of Jesus and God the Father, and who are bold in explaining what Jesus has done for us.

I know a woman who has led many people to Christ. Her secrets?

First, she assumes that God wants everyone to follow His Son – and so she assumes that all people are welcome in God’s flock and need to understand Jesus. She has made dozens of friends in that way at the supermarket, the park, various meetings, and at work.

Second, she has learned that God will protect her from angry people – and she has heard God clearly say “Don’t bother” when speaking to certain people, just a handful over the years.

Third, she relies upon the Holy Spirit to give her the words to say – and she understands the Spirit will also tell her when to be quiet and let the other person talk or think.

And finally, she has learned that sometimes, her role is to simply speak truth in a pleasant manner, like telling someone that to get to Morgantown from Parkersburg, you first have to travel East on Rt 50, not West – and someone else will eventually lead the person to Christ, just as there are signposts in Clarksburg that point north to Morgantown.

For my friend, who, as you may have guessed, is my wife. She considers that it is her life mission to lead people to Christ. Mine, too. And it can become your life mission also.

I know of a man who was diagnosed with leukemia several decades ago – a fast-moving leukemia. This was in the days when there was a ward in the hospital where the patients stayed. When he was diagnosed, he chose that time to turn his life over to Christ and to bring sheep into the flock. And so he talked with other patients in the hospital, listened to them, and prayed with them. His pastor visited him when time was running out after about six months. “Well, I found fourteen sheep,” he said. “I’m so sorry I didn’t start earlier, because I really wish I’d been able to find more sheep.” He had led fourteen people to Jesus over the previous six months.

There are professional athletes who seem to have an extra gear over the amateur athletes. Can you imagine what would happen to this church, this county, this nation if we would each choose to become professionals at leading people to Christ? What would happen if each of us led, not fourteen people, but 6 people to Christ this year? Even one or 2 people?

According to Brian Scalabrine, his extra gear came into play when he told himself, “If I miss this shot, I’ll lose my job and my kids will die.”

As Christians, if we pass up the opportunity to speak with someone about Jesus and God, they may end up dying the real death. But if we speak to them, we may find we’ve been part of leading them to eternal life. If we speak to them, we will make a real difference in this world forever. If we speak to them about the love of Christ, one day they may greet us under the Tree of Life in New Jerusalem and say, “Thank you for having that talk with me that led me to be here, today.” Speaking to another may be eternally important for them.

But we need to understand the basics ideas of our faith.

And so, as we will continue throughout the Easter season, let us remind each other of the core parts of our faith that we have kept over the centuries:

Let us join together in reciting what we believe, as expressed in the ancient Apostles Creed (UMH #881)

I believe in God, the Father Almighty,
maker of heaven and earth;

And in Jesus Christ his only Son, our Lord;
who was conceived by the Holy Spirit,
born of the Virgin Mary,
suffered under Pontius Pilate,
was crucified, dead, and buried;*
the third day he rose from the dead;
he ascended into heaven,
and sitteth at the right hand of God the Father Almighty;
from thence he shall come to judge the quick and the dead.

I believe in the Holy Spirit,
the holy catholic** church,
the communion of saints,
the forgiveness of sins,
the resurrection of the body,
and the life everlasting. Amen.

Sunday, April 18, 2021

Fish and Tips

Happy Easter!

Easter isn’t a day; Easter is a season. We have several more weeks of Easter Season to celebrate the Risen Christ.

He is Risen. He is Risen. He is Risen Indeed!

In ancient times, ghosts and spirits were known to be real. We have mostly forgotten this truth as our minds have closed to ideas which cannot be explained by the scientific method. In I Samuel 28, King Saul had already upset God and God refused to speak with Saul. So Saul visited a medium in the town of Endor, a woman who could consult the dead. At Saul’s strong request, she brought up the spirit of Samuel the recently dead high priest of Israel. For this evil action, Saul was killed in battle the next day. And this event was buried deep in the memory of all the people of Israel, a story told by grandparents to grandchildren for ten centuries. It was remembered by the disciples of a rabbi, a teacher named Jesus a thousand years after King Saul died.

It was Sunday evening. They had seen Him die on Friday afternoon, buried Him before sunset. They separated to mourn on Saturday. Sunday morning the women and then Peter and John reported the tomb was empty – Mary said she’d seen Him alive, but who could believe her? So that evening, they returned to a safe house, to come together in fear. Peter reported that Jesus had appeared to him; two men came running in, telling them all that they’d seen Him on the road to Emmaus.

Luke 24:36-48

They closed the door. They were hidden away, hiding from the world who might want to kill them for His name’s sake. And suddenly, Jesus himself stood among them and said to them, “Peace be with you.”

Was the man in front of them a spirit? Had He come back like Samuel the prophet from the dead? What did this mean for them – would they soon die? Was the spirit in front of them about to curse them for all time? It was frightening and scary. For it was known that an evil spirit could assume a false shape – and then that spirit could lead people to their destruction. They wanted to be sure this man really was Jesus and not a false Jesus, insubstantial without any real power.

The man spoke.  “Why are you troubled, and why do doubts rise in your minds? 39 Look at my hands and my feet. It is I myself! Touch me and see; a spirit does not have flesh and bones, as you see I have.”

A spirit, a ghost. The Greek word pneuma is used in the original manuscripts. It means spirit, ghost, wind, breath. Something with a thin substance, somewhere between living and not living – no body, yet you can feel it – barely, like you can feel the wind or a strong breath from your neighbor. Something unearthly – not quiet real, yet not quiet imaginary. A spirit is from another realm, the realm of God or the afterlife. Yet this person said to touch him and see.

And he showed them his hands and feet, punctured with holes from the huge nails that had been driven through the wrists and ankles, torturing him as they connected with the nerve bundles. Tearing with the weight of his body on the cross. Yet the holes were healing, indeed the skin had healed, the bleeding stopped, the scabs washed away. The scars would remain forever, but the damage had been done. Anyone who had seen Jesus on the cross or being carried to the tomb knew it was Him, and so they were joyful and they were amazed, but how? How could it be true? They had seen Him die! They had seen and heard Him forgive His executioners, and then they had seen Him die. They had even seen the Roman guard stick a spear into His side and they had seen the water and the blood pour out as that spear had punctured His lungs full of fluid from the torture and then the spear had punctured his heart and the last of his blood came out, draining out like a priest drains the blood from a sacrificial lamb.

And they had seen Him taken down, His blood clotted upon him. They had seen Him carried to the tomb, mummy wrapped with over forty pounds of spices and left there while the huge stone was dropped in the trench in front of the entrance. Like reasonable men, they had never expected to see Him again.

And yet… here He was talking to them, looking fresh, active, even more alive than He had been during the days walking on the highways of Galilee. He spoke again: “Do you have anything here to eat?” And so they fumbled around, and one of them gave him a piece of broiled fish, and he took it and ate it in their presence. No one had ever heard of a spirit being hungry and eating fish! And so they began to believe.

They began to believe that this was actually Jesus, not just a spirit, but Jesus in the flesh, recovered and healed and stronger than ever before, standing in front of them eating that bit of tilapia from the Jordan River. But how had this happened? How could He be alive again? They knew He was dead – but He was alive! Their brains spun around in circles while their hearts leaped with joy!

Like most men, the disciples had not stopped to consider what His presence meant to them during the days on the road over the previous three years. He was a good – no, a great teacher, a great man – but they had not realized how much they had grown to love Him, to rely upon His steadiness, His strong, quiet power that was like a stallion under His perfect control. He had spoken with each of them many times and His gaze was soft – and yet piercing. You knew He loved you, you knew He cared for you, and yet, you knew He expected and demanded great things of you. And so as His disciples, we had grown to depend upon His strength and love and guidance. And so, when He had been taken away from us, we were lost.

And then, that evening, He was back again with us and we were filled with joy and amazement as we watched Him eat that little piece of broiled fish. It was so ordinary – things were once again right, the world was normal again, our fear was gone.

He said to us, “This is what I told you while I was still with you: Everything must be fulfilled that is written about me in the Law of Moses, the Prophets and the Psalms.” And then in our minds, we began to connect all sorts of things we had read about and heard in the old scriptures with Jesus. We saw the Angel of the Lord standing before Joshua and Jericho with the face of Jesus. We saw the leader of the three men who came to visit Abraham before Sodom was destroyed with the face of Jesus. We saw the suffering servant of Isaiah 53 with the face of Jesus on the cross. We saw the Son of Man of Daniel standing before us. Our minds had been opened to the true meaning of the scriptures. And we knew Jesus was the Messiah, come back from the dead!

He told us, “This is what is written: The Messiah will suffer and rise from the dead on the third day, and repentance for the forgiveness of sins will be preached in his name to all nations, beginning at Jerusalem. You are witnesses of these things.”

And so we began to tell others of what we had seen and heard, what we had simply witnessed. We began with our brother Thomas who was missing that night – and the next Sunday, Thomas saw and believed.

Many people over the centuries have missed the point of the fish-eating of Jesus. Many people have walked away with a complete misunderstanding of what will happen after a Christian’s death. Let’s take a look at what this episode teaches us.

First, Jesus did not come back to visit the disciples as a spirit, or a ghost. Jesus came back among them in his new, glorified body – a body which was basically repaired from the ravages of the cross – yet still had at least the scars, with pierced wrists and ankles as larger versions of pierced ears. Healed, yet not fully repaired. Jesus was strong and healthy – he had just walked the six miles to Emmaus that afternoon.

Later, in Revelation, John sees Jesus as a strong warrior with the white hair of wisdom and age.

And so, theologians speak of the full resurrection of the body, a repaired body which does not breakdown over time like our current body does – an immortal body which is still a physical body. It is like having a body which has a perfect healing and immune system.

In our letter from I John 3, John writes: “Dear friends, now we are children of God, and what we will be has not yet been made known. But we know that when Christ appears, we shall be like him, for we shall see him as he is.”

Our resurrected bodies will be just like Jesus’ resurrected body. It will be repaired, with perfect healing and immune system, a body that will not wear out, a body that will not require knee replacements, artificial heart valves, and similar repairs.

You know, I used to think, “Wow, I’ll have a new 20-year old body in the resurrection.” Now, I’d be happy with a forty-year old body.

Our body will be like the body Jesus had.

Do not be taken in by the lies that have dominated Hollywood movies and their portrayal of life after death. We do not become spirits in the Resurrection. We do not acquire wings. We don’t become angels – after all, angels are the created servants of God – As John tells us in our reading from I John, “See what great love the Father has lavished on us, that we should be called children of God! And that is what we are!” Angels are the servants – we are God’s children.

The disciples were tempted to fall prey to the lie that Jesus had come back in the spirit or perhaps as an idea in their minds, a hypnosis, a suggestion. They were tempted to declare that they had seen the Spirit of Christ. But a little piece of fish changed all that. That little bit of fish proved to them that Jesus had been truly resurrected, that His body had come alive once more. And that little bit of fish convinced them that there was hope for them and their bodies in the future.

I mentioned last week that many people actually have two different views of the afterlife, depending on when you ask them the question. First, there is the happy view, the view that everyone goes to Heaven and flits about on wings as angels, playing harps. The only way we don’t make it to Heaven is if we are a serial murderer or an evil Hitler-type Nazi. And we aren’t. We know in our minds that we have sinned some, but we’re not as bad as Charles Manson. After all, all that we’ve done is to borrow a few paperclips from the office. We’ve said a few nasty things to people in our life. We’ve lusted after a couple of television stars. But who hasn’t? So we’ll end up in Heaven with the rest of the good people.

And, of course, this view is wrong, for Jesus taught that lusting is the same as committing adultery and hating is the same as committing murder. All have sinned – and the wages of sin is death. By justice is when we get what we deserve, and what we deserve is death.

The other view people commonly have is that there is no hope. We are aware of our sin or sins – the one big sin or the repeating smaller sins. We recognize that we can’t break free by ourselves. We are addicted to doing wrong. So when we understand this, we often resign ourselves to either a real death or an eternity in Hell because we are hopeless.

John, in his first epistle, explains this. He writes that “Everyone who sins breaks the law; in fact, sin is lawlessness. But you know that he [Jesus] appeared so that he might take away our sins. And in him is no sin. No one who lives in him keeps on sinning. No one who continues to sin has either seen him or known him.”

Jesus takes away the sin of people who live in him. Now I want you to notice something – “living in him” is a much stronger statement than “believing in him”. You may believe that Jesus is the Son of God, you may believe He died for you, you may even believe that He died to remove your sins. But John tells us that we need to “live” in Jesus to stop sinning. What does this mean?

You’ve probably heard about “abiding” in Jesus – which means living in Jesus as though He were a house or a home. We are to be surrounded by Jesus, we are to spend our lives with boundaries set by Jesus, we are to move as though He is beside and around us like a tent that we carry with us as we move.

Too often, we say, “Jesus, we’re on your team”, and then we continue to live our lives the same way we used to live our lives – we might make a couple of minor changes, watching our language, cutting back from 5 or 6 beers to at most a couple of beers – and those are positive changes, no doubt.

But John is telling us to live in Jesus. We need to put on Jesus as a skin, presenting Jesus to the world! And this is where we need to be extraordinarily careful, for we can put on a false Jesus if we’re not careful. We want to show people the real Jesus, a caring, loving, wise individual with real flesh and bones – not a false Jesus who leads people to their destruction by speaking things without any real power, by lying about what is true and important. We don’t want to mislead any new disciples.

So what’s the difference?

  • A false Jesus tells people not to sin. The real Jesus forgave sins.
  • A false Jesus hates people who break moral and ethical laws. The real Jesus loves people who are failing, pities them, and helps them succeed in life.
  • A false Jesus is arrogant about how good he is. The real Jesus is humble, yet strong, suggesting gently and guiding others toward good.
  • A false Jesus wants to destroy evil people. The real Jesus knows that people are the victims of evil who need to be led to a better way.
  • A false Jesus has little patience with people who repeatedly sin. The real Jesus forgives people at least seven times seventy times.

We need to put on the real Jesus skin and live within him. And the only way to really begin to do this is to get to know Jesus closely, intimately. There are four things we can do today which will help us know Jesus closely.

First, we must read the stories about Him, particularly the New Testament. Have you read entirely through the New Testament? It is about 185,000 words long, about the length of an average novel. Reading it aloud, as though you were standing in the pulpit reading to a congregation, will take about 18 to 20 hours – or less than a month if you read for an hour a day. You may read much faster. But reading is the way we become familiar with His character.

Second, we should practice two-way prayer. Speak to Jesus and listen for the reply deep in your mind from the Holy Spirit. Take time in the shower, when driving, when sitting on your porch in the cool of the morning. Begin holding conversations with Him. This will help you become familiar with how you respond to Him.

Third, out of gratitude, begin serving Jesus and the body of Christ, which is the assembly of believers. Do things for other Christians – and non-Christians – on behalf of Jesus. At first, do what comes easily to you – call up homebound people, make or deliver meals, pick up people and bring them to church, repair porches, build handicapped ramps, repair cars, mow lawns. sing in the musical groups, organize the church, teach children or adults.

Fourth, learn to lead others to Jesus. Nothing will bring you closer to Jesus than trying to lead others to Jesus. Just strive diligently to put on a true Jesus skin rather than a false Jesus skin. If you are asked questions you can’t answer – study or ask wiser Christians for the answers. Being the teacher will always teach yourself faster and better than being the student – as long as you are trying to be the best teacher you can. And teaching can begin with just simply talking to your friend, neighbor, or relative about what you learned today in church.

You know, when the disciples gathered together in that room and Jesus walked in that Sunday evening in the early spring, it began a forty day period of the final teachings of Jesus to that group of disciples. It is like a dandelion that flowers for a while, then tightens up into a little cluster while the seeds are maturing. And then, the dandelion turns into the white ball phase, the wind blows, and the dandelion seeds are blown everywhere by the wind to begin new dandelion plants.

The disciples had walked with Jesus for three years. Now, over forty days, they received their final teaching, maturing. And soon, they would be scattered by the wind of the Holy Spirit around the world to plant new groups of disciples. Much the same can happen here with us.

We can each teach our own group of a dozen or so people, leading them from no knowledge of Christ to baptism and becoming strong disciples. And then, as jobs and college and life moves us around, we can each begin again to teach about Jesus to the people the Spirit puts into our lives.

It is not important how educated or how good a speaker we are. It is not important how well we read or how many friends we have. What is important is that we each try to put on the real Jesus skin, to avoid the false Jesus, to step forward and teach what is true and godly and faithful to the Jesus who gave His life upon the cross, so that we might each be free from the slavery of sin and have eternal life.

Did you notice that the disciples had great joy? They had joy because they realized that their leader had claimed to be able to die and come back from the dead – and then He did so. He also claimed that He could and would give eternal life to all who followed Him. He had previously raised Lazarus – surely He could now raise His loyal followers. Like the men and women there in that room that evening so long ago. Like us today. Have joy! Share the joy of Christ!

And so, let us remind each other of the core parts of our faith that we have kept over the centuries:

Let us join together in reciting what we believe, as expressed in the ancient Apostles Creed (UMH #881)

I believe in God, the Father Almighty,
maker of heaven and earth;

And in Jesus Christ his only Son, our Lord;
who was conceived by the Holy Spirit,
born of the Virgin Mary,
suffered under Pontius Pilate,
was crucified, dead, and buried;
the third day he rose from the dead;
he ascended into heaven,
and sitteth at the right hand of God the Father Almighty;
from thence he shall come to judge the quick and the dead.

I believe in the Holy Spirit,
the holy catholic** church,
the communion of saints,
the forgiveness of sins,
the resurrection of the body,
and the life everlasting. Amen.

** catholic means universal

Let us sing,

Closing Song: Softly and Tenderly Jesus is calling.

Benediction: May you find the real Jesus and live within Him, listening to the Holy Spirit and speaking of the love of God to everyone you meet!

Sunday, April 11, 2021

A Practical Man

Happy Easter!

Easter isn’t a day; Easter is a season. We have several more weeks of Easter Season to celebrate the Risen Christ.

He is Risen. He is Risen. He is Risen Indeed!

The disciples all celebrated!

They had seen Him die on Friday after. They had seen Him buried. The women went to the tomb early Sunday morning to clean His body and cover it with spices before reburying Him. Mary came to the disciples and told them that Jesus wasn’t at the tomb. Peter and John raced to the tomb – and He wasn’t there. They went back to where they were staying. Two men walking to Emmaus were joined by a third man, a man who joined them for an early supper – and turned out to be Jesus. The two raced back to Jerusalem to spread the news. Jesus had appeared to Peter. Ten of the disciples and some others gathered in a locked room – and Jesus appeared to them. He gave them the Holy Spirit and the power to forgive people’s sins.

Notice that Jesus breathes on the disciples and says, “Receive the Holy Spirit.” They have received the holy breath of God Himself, Jesus. As I’ve mentioned before, the Greek word Pneuma means breath, wind, or Spirit. They receive the Holy Spirit through Jesus’ Holy Breath.

And then Jesus gives them great power. He says “If you forgive anyone’s sins, their sins are forgiven; if you do not forgive them, they are not forgiven.” Such power passed onto the disciples. Such power that passes down to us, 2000 years later.

Have you considered that, as a representative of Jesus and God on earth, you have great power to do good – and power to do harm? So many times a person comes to us wanting to unburden their souls of some sin, great or small. We need to listen to them, for healing begins when we listen to the injured person.

And the person who is talking to you will tell you about some argument or fight they are having with another person, or they will tell you of something they have done that they feel guilty about. Now in the case of hearing one side of a fight or argument, you can’t forgive the person that is not there. But you can help the person who is talking to you understand what they’ve done wrong – possibly it is just their reaction to a great provocation – someone injured their pride and they fought back, like the man who was slapped on his cheek and punched back, when Jesus clearly tells us to simply turn the other cheek. And then, if they are sorry for whatever they’ve done, forgive them. Assure them that God will also forgive them if they ask God to be forgiven. Say, “I forgive you – and I know God also forgives you, or will forgive you.” And they begin to heal – and a step is taken for healing in the future because your friend will be less likely to respond in anger in the future. Simply saying “You are forgiven” is powerful healing.

But when might you say, “You are not forgiven.”? Perhaps when the Holy Spirit tells you that your friend is not the least bit sorry. For the whole purpose here is for people to recognize that they must be humble in front of God, recognizing that God has the right to set the rules and the power to enforce those rules, and the first and greatest rule and commandment is to love the Lord your God. And that requires a recognition that God is more powerful and worthy of respect than I am. We must bow down in Spirit, if not with our physical bodies.

Why does God care that we bow down to Him and His Son?

Because God knows and understands that a soul who will not humble himself or herself will grow more and more distorted by that pride over the centuries. If we will accept that God is wiser and more powerful than we are, we can be taught. No matter how messed up we are, over the centuries, God can teach us how to live well and how to be a pleasant soul to be around. But if we will not bow to God, God cannot teach us, and, left to our own devices, our soul will grow more twisted over the centuries.

Imagine the kind old lady who has practiced being kind for 70 years. Imagine how kind she will be after a thousand years of practice! Now imagine the gruff old man who has practiced causing trouble for 70 years. Imagine how evil he will be after a thousand years of practice!

God wants to guide us onto a better way. He wants us to be pleasant to be around in eternity. And we must bow down to Him and Jesus to be teachable.

That evening, those disciples who were there received the Holy Spirit and began to become men who would start the healing of the world through forgiveness.

But Thomas wasn’t there. Why not?

Thomas, the surviving twin, had shown himself to be a practical young man, a bit sarcastic. When Jesus said He was going to return to the Jerusalem area where he had almost been killed a few months before, returning because Lazarus was dead, Thomas had said, “We might as well go with Him to die also.” Thomas was loyal, yet practical. He knew what was likely to happen when Jesus showed up in Jerusalem.

On Thursday night, When Jesus started to talk about going to His Father’s house, and told the disciples, “You know the way to the place where I am going”, Thomas said to him “Lord, we don’t know where you are going, so how can we know the way?”

Practical, loyal, sensible. Thomas wasn’t into miracles; He didn’t care about visions or dreams. He cared about what he could touch and feel and see himself. He was practical. If he were living today, he would probably have made a good auto mechanic, a good chemical operator, a truck driver. Thomas wasn’t a dreamer, a visionary, a man who would write novels or motion pictures. He might write a book on “How to repair a Ford 460 V8 Engine” or “Build your own household solar energy system.” Thomas was a practical man.

And so, when Jesus died on the cross, Thomas was no where around. Thomas wasn’t hanging around the foot of the cross like John. When Jesus had been arrested late Thursday night, Thomas skedaddled. He knew he wasn’t going to fight a bunch of Temple guards. He left the area and hid out. Friday, he watched Jesus nailed to the cross, die on the cross, and be stabbed in the side by a Roman spear. But he watched from a distance where no one would see him or talk with him. He wasn’t going to get crucified by the Romans, too. He was practical about such things.

And so he was missing in action on Easter Sunday and nobody saw him when Jesus came back from the grave. For Thomas had never seen anyone else come back from the grave – except Lazarus. But that was special. You see, Jesus had the power to raise Lazarus. But if Jesus were dead, who could raise Jesus? It had been a great run, three years together on the road, wonderful times together, but it was over. It was time to figure out what to do with the rest of his life. Would he find a girl and settle down on a few acres of farmland up in Galilee? Or would he travel, maybe going down to Egypt to study under a different rabbi. Whatever it was, the Jesus part of his life was over. His hopes had been raised and then dashed. You can almost see Thomas sitting somewhere with a bottle – no, a large jug of wine.

And then, the other guys, they met him in the streets that week and they all said the same thing, “We have seen the Lord!” But you know how young men are together. They tease, they play jokes, they prank each other. It wasn’t funny, them all telling Thomas that Jesus was alive. He didn’t believe them. He was practical – Jesus was dead. He told them, each time a new disciple met him in the street, “Unless I see the nail marks in his hands and put my finger where the nails were, and put my hand into his side, I will not believe.” Thomas was very practical. But he did agree to join them the next Sunday evening for prayer.

And so that next Sunday, the disciples were there, all except Judas who was dead. Even Thomas was with them. They locked the doors – and Jesus came and stood among them and said, “Peace be with you!” And then Jesus turned to Thomas and said, “Put your finger here; see my hands. Reach out your hand and put it into my side. Stop doubting and believe.”

Thomas, the practical man, did the practical thing. He said to Jesus: “My Lord and my God!” You see, Thomas bowed to Jesus and accepted that Jesus was God – and Thomas’ Lord, the one he must follow forever.

And then Jesus gently, so gently chewed him out as He accepted Thomas back: “Because you have seen me, you have believed; Blessed are those who have not seen, and yet have believed.”

The disciples stayed together several months before the persecution began with Stephen’s death. It appears that even after this persecution began, at least a core group of disciples remained in the Jerusalem area for several years, perhaps a decade or so, for they were still together when Paul and Barnabas come to Jerusalem to get a ruling on how difficult it would be to accept Gentiles as Christians. During these years, the assembled Apostles settled much of what is today Christian doctrine. Although they did not make the Apostles Creed – it was first written around 381 – they largely settled the ideas that it is based upon.

We don’t hear about Thomas, though, after the second chapter of the Book of Acts. He might have stayed with the others, or he might have moved on.

Early Christian tradition has it that eventually the Apostles cast lots and then dispersed to evangelize their areas. Thomas is said to have received Parthia, which is the part of Iran near Tehran in the north. He traveled with Bartholomew, and then traveled into what is today Pakistan and northwest India. Here, after a while he was attacked. He got onto a boat and according to the people of southwestern India, Kerala state, in A.D. 52 Thomas stepped off the boat and began establishing churches in southern India.

When we lived in Atlanta, a couple from Kerala, India moved into the house next to us. After some discussion, we found that they were believing Christians, from the church of St Thomas the Apostle, to whom they looked back to the founding of their churches. These Christians call themselves, “Nasranis”, which is derived from Nazareth.

Thomas may have taken a trip to Indonesia and also to China, but he returned to south India. He was martyred in the town now known as Chennai, formerly Madras, on the southeastern coast, around the year 72. His churches today have about 5 million members of the Churches of St Thomas.

But what does the story of Thomas the Apostle have to do with us today?

There has long been a tendency for us to separate two realms – there is the world of God and the world of humans, Heaven and earth. Thomas effectively believed this. Jesus had been on earth for awhile and now Jesus had returned to God’s world, to Heaven, and the door between Heaven and earth had slammed shut, just as it always did when someone died.

Thomas was very much a man of earth. He did not even expect Heaven one day – few did, for that was one of the ideas that Christ brought to us. In Thomas’ day, when you died, you were dead.

The Greeks believed in an underworld where you lived a terrible life, tortured like the guy who was sentenced to trying roll a huge boulder up a hill which always came crashing down on him just as he got to the top, or like the other man who had to fill a huge pool with water carried in a bucket with hundreds of holes in it. And to a certain extent, the popular Jewish imagination of the day had somewhat bought into this idea. But officially, when you died, you were dead. Life was over.

Thomas believed this, no matter what Jesus had said about a resurrection. And, you know, today people have a strange mixture of beliefs.

On the one hand, many people believe that everyone actually goes to Heaven except a few very evil types. If you aren’t a serial murder or Adolph Hitler type, you’ll go to Heaven. This is what most people believe when they are healthy and happy. This is what Thomas believed when Jesus preached it on the roads while they walked around the Holy Land.

On the other hand, when sickness comes, when they are lonely, when they are lying awake in the middle of the night listening to the clock tick away and sirens in the distance, most people believe and worry that when you die, you’re just dead. That’s the end. That is what I see with many people in that time between the death of a loved one – and the funeral itself. There is a tremendous hopelessness that many people have when faced with death – their death or the death of a loved one. And this is what Thomas believed when Jesus died on the cross. Dead meant dead.

Yet when we hear the story of Jesus’ death and resurrection – and his promise that His followers will rise again, we can begin to have more hope. We want to believe, we want to be joyful, we want to say, like Thomas, “My Lord and My God!”

So often we, like Thomas, are practical. We also have to see some sort of proof. We have to see the miracle, to touch the miracle, to feel Jesus’ hands and put our fingers in Jesus side where the spear thrust into Him. We want to believe, but there is doubt with us simply because – we are practical men and women.

And so the story of Thomas is our story. How can we get that assurance that we can truly live again?

C.S.Lewis, a powerful Christian mind, wrote “The Lion, the Witch, and The Wardrobe”, a delightful book that is simple enough for children to understand and deep enough for adults to love. There are four British children who have been sent from London into the countryside during World War II to stay at an old professor’s house. Edmond and Lucy are the two youngest children. Edmond is always lying and playing tricks and generally can’t be trusted; On the other hand, Lucy is honest, sweet, never causes trouble, and generally is a great kid.

Lucy finds something miraculous, Edmond joins her and also sees the miracle. So they go back and Lucy tells the older children. Edmond says it didn’t happen, that Lucy is lying. And indeed, the miraculous thing sounds pretty far-fetched. So they take it to the old professor, who asks, “Who usually tells the truth?“ The older children answer: “Lucy.” The professor continues, “Who usually lies?” They respond, “Edmond”. The professor concludes, “Then why don’t you believe Lucy?”

Do you want assurance that miracles can happen? Ask people you know and trust, who always tell the truth as they know it. Ask them what they have seen of Jesus, of God, and of miracles. Join us here and listen to the stories of the miracles we’ve witnessed. Listen to their stories and our stories, trust them and store them up in the cupboard of your mind. Eventually, those stories will burst out of that cupboard because you’ve tucked away so many of those stories and late one night you will get out of bed, get on your knees, bow your head and say, “My Lord and My God!” And your healing will begin.

And if you already have seen miracles – be ready to tell others about those miracles. Don’t exaggerate, don’t go overboard. Just tell people what you have seen and heard, what you felt and what you smelt when the miracle happened. Tell of the day when you were delayed just enough that you missed the wreck. Tell of the time when the tumor was diagnosed, the church prayed and the tumor went away even before chemo started. Tell of the day the money arrived just in time to keep the checks from bouncing. Tell of the day when God spared your friend. Let your testimony become the reason your friend, your relative, your neighbor, even your enemy bows to Jesus and says, “My Lord and My God.”

For Thomas did not believe when the first apostle spoke to him. Thomas did not believe when the second apostle spoke to him. Thomas did not even believe when he walked into that room and the doors were locked behind him that Sunday evening. But then Thomas saw a miracle – and practical Thomas believed!

So what do we believe?

Let us join together in reciting what we believe, as expressed in the ancient Apostles Creed (UMH #881)
I believe in God, the Father Almighty,
maker of heaven and earth;
And in Jesus Christ his only Son, our Lord;
who was conceived by the Holy Spirit,
born of the Virgin Mary,
suffered under Pontius Pilate,
was crucified, dead, and buried;*
the third day he rose from the dead;
he ascended into heaven,
and sitteth at the right hand of God the Father Almighty;
from thence he shall come to judge the quick and the dead.
I believe in the Holy Spirit,
the holy catholic** church,
the communion of saints,
the forgiveness of sins,
the resurrection of the body,
and the life everlasting. Amen.

Sunday, April 4, 2021

The Core Message

He is Risen! He is Risen! He is Risen!

Today is Easter, the day we celebrate the Resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead. And through that Resurrection, we who believe know that we will also have a resurrection and eternal life with Jesus and the Father, forever and ever.

Today, I’m going to stick to basics. I’m not going into any detailed teaching. But I’m going to focus upon the core message of Christianity, the center of what we believe, the part of the Christian message that is most important.

If you are a believer already, perhaps today’s talk will help you lead a friend, a relative, or a neighbor to Christ. If you are not a believer, I hope this talk will lead you to begin to believe – or at least to investigate further. And if you’ve just stumbled on this talk because a friend, a relative, or a neighbor has shared it with you, I hope you’ll take a few minutes to watch or listen, because your friend cares deeply about you and wants to share something deeply personal with you.

First, let me tell you about myself. I grew up in St. Marys, the son of a chemical plant worker who was the safety manager at his plant and a bookkeeper. I learned from their examples that facts are facts – and facts are important. When I went to college, I majored in physics – the most mathematical of the sciences. Once again, opinion had little place in my life – what were the facts and where was the logic? If you call yourself an engineer, a scientist, a medical professional, I think you understand. If you make your living with numbers or mechanical things or chemicals, you know that facts matter – is that cloud of vapor steam or a poisonous gas? Is the lug-nut tightened enough – or not? Does the patient have COVID or not? Is there enough money in the checking account to cover next week’s bills? Is there enough fuel in the tank to get to Charleston?

After college, I worked fifteen years in the factory automation business, helping companies improve quality, reduce waste, or make things faster. Once again, only the facts mattered. My wife and I started an internet-based business. Every day, the question was whether or not we had money to make payroll or not. Later I taught math and physics at Parkersburg Catholic high school and similar classes at both WVU-Parkersburg and Ohio Valley University. What are the facts?

Here are the facts about Christianity:

Around the year 30, almost 2000 years ago, a man named Jesus of Nazareth began to walk around the Holy Land that is now Israel and the West Bank, teaching. He taught many things, but the most important – and the most controversial thing Jesus taught was that He was God’s Son – God walking on earth.

He said, “If you have seen me, you have seen the Father.” He also said, “I and the Father are one.” He repeatedly said and did things that led the crowd around him to believe He was claiming to be God Himself – and they often picked up stones to throw at him because they considered these claims to be blasphemy, an outrageous insult to God. Yet Jesus persisted in these claims, and based His credibility largely upon these claims being true.

Eight men for whom we have names – Matthew, Mark, Luke, John, Paul, Peter, James, and Jude and one unknown writer, the writer of the Book of Hebrews – they all wrote separate books about Jesus and His teachings. All of these books were written within 75 years of Jesus death by men who mostly had known Jesus personally. One – Luke – did not meet Jesus, but he specifically spoke with Paul, several of Jesus’ students, and Jesus’ mother to write his detailed account of Jesus’ life.

One thing which these nine writers all agreed upon was that Jesus died, most likely on Friday, April 3rd, of the year 33 and then, miraculously, on Sunday morning, the 5th of April, Jesus rose from the dead and began appearing to, speaking to and teaching, eating food and even cooking breakfast for groups of his students. He was seen alive after his death by over 500 people in at least eleven different appearances at different places to different people in different situations. And this is of utmost importance, for if these reports of the resurrection of Jesus Christ are true, then His claim to be God’s Son is true and every word He said is of extreme importance for our lives!

But how do we know these are the facts? How do we know this happened? After all, have you ever seen anyone resurrected? – And notice – we are not talking about a temporary heart stoppage that can be restarted by any Emergency Room physician with a charged up defibrillator. No, we’re talking about a man beaten, losing much blood, hanging on a cross for hours, and being stabbed in the side by a Roman guard, just to make sure he was dead. We’re talking about a man being taken down from the cross and put in a tomb for between 36 and 42 hours. We are talking about true death here. And yet the nine writers all insist that he rose from the dead.

Finding out the facts about a past event is difficult, even today. Even today, with all of our cell phones and television cameras, with our huge investigations, many people are not sure what happened at recent events. Even going back just 60 years, we aren’t sure how many gunmen there were the day John F. Kennedy was shot. So investigating events almost 2000 years ago is difficult, very difficult. How would you investigate?

But this much we know:

After writing their accounts of Jesus Christ separately, some accounts within ten years of the events, some as much as 70 years later, these nine writers traveled and spoke to many people about what they had seen and heard from Jesus. These 27 scrolls and letters were then gathered together about 100 years later, after circulating and being copied and recopied by the young churches in the Roman world. It was only then that these 27 different documents written by at least nine men became know as a single book, the New Testament of the Bible.

Other documents were considered, but rejected, usually because the documents could not be traced to a close associate of Jesus or a friend of an associate. Many were rejected because they claimed special, secret knowledge of Jesus – a man who famously said that he did nothing in secret. (Some of these documents are like the book that claims to have been written by an anonymous former CIA agent who claims to have once seen a file that had a secret source who said extraterrestrial aliens actually shot Kennedy. Sure!)

Each of the nine writers appears to have been Jewish, except possibly Luke. Each of the nine writers definitely believed that Jesus was the Son of God. John claimed to be his best friend; Paul was for a time His follower’s worst enemy, chasing them down and throwing them into prison – until Paul had an encounter with Jesus. One may have been Jesus’ brother; another was a fishing boat captain before he met Jesus. Several were Jesus’ students.

And there was another man, a man named Josephus. When the great Jewish revolt happened in the late 60’s that resulted in the destruction of the Temple in Jerusalem, Josephus was for a time a general for the Jewish armies in the north, but after his capture, wrote a detailed history of the Jewish nation for the Romans. Josephus was not a Christian – but mentions the Christians as a particular group that began in the 30’s.

Another man, Pliny the Younger was a governor of part of Greek-speaking Turkey in the early 100’s, and wrote letters which we have to the Emperor describing Christians and asking for advice on how to handle them.

A hundred years ago, we had great missing pieces of evidence when we looked at the archeology. Where, for example, was Nazareth? Where was a particular road which the documents say Jesus traveled upon? Where was any evidence outside the Bible documents that a man named Pontus Pilate even existed, the man who condemned Jesus to death? Where was the Pool of Siloam, a bath in Jerusalem where Jesus sends a blind man to wash and recover his sight? None of these could be found.

But the particular road was found during WWII when aerial photography found it, exactly as the Bible said. Nazareth was found and excavated around 1960. Also, about the same time, a plaque was found with the right dates, indicating that Pontius Pilate had donated money for a particular building in Israel. And in 2004, the Pool of Siloam was found by Israeli archeologists. Many other places, people, and items mentioned in the Bible documents have been confirmed over the past hundred years by archeologists. In fact, the New Testament documents have been confirmed to be extremely accurate. The men who wrote these documents were precise recorders of where they traveled, what they saw, and apparently who said what. As near as we can tell from all the evidence, they understood that what they were recording was extremely important – and so they tried to be equally precise, doing an excellent job by the standards of the time.

But how do we know the Bible documents haven’t changed over the centuries?

In the 1920’s, a fragment of parchment was found with a group of scrolls found in southern Egypt, apparently buried in the desert for safe-keeping. That fragment, known today as the Ryland fragment, contains part of the Gospel of John document that, based upon the shape of the letters, was written in western Turkey around the year 110, possible about 30 years from the original document.

For the New Testament documents were so important that they were hand-copied time and again by professional writers, known as scribes. These highly paid professionals used a number of tricks to keep from making errors, such as counting the total number of letters, figuring out which letter was the middle letter in a document, double and triple checking the copy, and similar devices. They were not in a hurry – they were professionals with reputations to uphold.

We have today over 5000 hand written copies of New Testament documents from ancient times. They are regularly compared against each other. There are also over 20,000 copies of sermons from ancient times – it has been estimated that the entire New Testament could be reconstructed just from the quotations found in the sermons. And, although differences are sometimes found and controversies arise over the precise translation of a particular word or phrase – the core idea that Jesus was Son of God, claimed this, died and then rose from the dead is not in dispute.

And this is why over 2 Billion people worldwide claim to be Christians. This is why scientists such as Isaac Newton, Gregor Mendel, Louis Pasteur, politicians such as Winston Churchill, Abraham Lincoln, Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan, performers such as Fred Rogers, Bono, Tom Hanks; writers such as Dorothy Sayers, Harper Lee, Daniel Defoe, C.S. Lewis, JRR Tolkien all claimed Christianity.

For Christianity’s central message, the core message of Christianity of a part of God who came to earth, taught us that God loves us and died to show us how much God loves us, and then returned from the dead to show us that death does not have to be the end; this message changes people for the better.

When we realize that Jesus claimed to be God on the earth, died specifically because of that claim, and came back to life, we begin to study his other teachings much more closely, recognizing that these teachings are very important simply because of who the teacher is.

And Jesus taught that the Father, God, loves us very much, as His children. Jesus taught us to not return insult for insult, to not fight our enemies, but rather to accept insults, to pray for our enemies, to do good things for all people. And we do this because it makes us stronger. We do this because Jesus asked us to do these things. We do this because it is what is meant by following Jesus.

And Jesus told us that all who follow Him will receive the gift of eternal life with Him and the Father. We will not be alone, we will not be left to struggle through death by ourselves, we will be loved and have companionship.

If understanding the facts about Christianity is difficult, now we come to the second barrier in our lives. It is hard to accept that miracles happen, especially if we have never seen a miracle. It is hard to accept that a good, loving God exists, especially if we have been taught that gods and miracles cannot exist. It is particularly hard for men and women who have always been strong and self-sufficient to accept that there are some things that we cannot do by ourselves.

Yet the smartest, the wisest, the most open-minded of people recognize that they cannot defeat death. Even the billionaire men of Silicon Valley who plan to freeze their bodies or put their consciousness into machines know deep down, that they can only delay death for, at best, a few years. You, my friend, know that you do not have the knowledge or the wisdom to keep your soul alive an hour after your brain dies.

And so, accept that there is solid evidence, as solid knowledge as we can hope to have, that almost 2000 years ago a man claimed to be the Son of God, taught us how to treat each other, was tried and convicted of claiming to be the Son of God, God Himself on the earth, was brutally beaten and nailed to a cross for this claim, and died there on a Friday afternoon. And also believe that on Sunday morning, the day we celebrate today, Jesus of Nazareth came back to life, appeared to many people, spoke to them, taught them, ate with them, prepared breakfast for them, and eventually was seen by over 500 people, of which eight or nine wrote down on very expensive parchment what they thought was valuable for us to know.

For if Jesus is the Son of God, what He says defines good and bad, life and death, living eternally or suffering eternally. If Jesus is Son of God, He must be listened to and followed!

Jesus is alive. He is Risen from the dead. Hallelujah!

He is Risen! He is Risen! He is Risen Indeed!

I ask that you share this far and wide to all your friends, your relatives, and your neighbors. For Christ has risen from the dead and we are to tell the world!

Amen!