Youth Sunday Sermon, June 29, 2014
2 Pentecost, ap8, June 29, 2014
Jeremiah 28:5-9 Psalm 89:1-4,15-18
Rom. 6:1b-11 Matt.
10:24-39
(Connor
begins by serving pouring cups of water and serving them to the people in the front.)
Kalum: Connor, what are you doing? And could it not wait until after the
service?
James: I know
what Connor is doing. I give him credit
for reading today’s Gospel. But will his
shameless showboating really get him extra brownie points in heaven?
Connor:
You talking head preachers can preach the Gospel; some of us actually do the
Gospel. Jesus said whoever gives a cup
of water to these little ones will not lose their reward.
Kalum:
Well, excuse me, Saint Connor; I did not know I lived so close to a holy one!
James: Saint Connor, please could I get your
autograph before you become a relic?
Connor:
Are you being ironic or just plain mocking?
Kalum:
We are sincere……..in our mocking, that is.
But you have initiated a very worthy topic for discussion.
Connor:
I have? Accidents do happen. What worthy
topic do we have to talk about?
James: Well,
you are right about the importance of doing the Gospel rather than just talking
about it.
Kalum:
Yes, actions do speak louder than words.
Connor:
That’s a cliché which happens to be true.
But what else can we learn from the Gospel?
James: Well, we have just graduated from high
school. And we now have a diploma which
is an official record of our achievement.
And it is a piece of paper which represents more than just being piece
of paper.
Kalum:
What do you mean?
Connor:
I think that he means it stands for 12 years of blood, sweat and tears of all
of the work and study that we had to do to get it.
James: When we present our diploma, grade average
and test scores, we are able to gain admittance into colleges and universities.
Kalum:
The Gospel lesson is about accreditation and the credibility of the disciples
of Jesus.
Connor: Once Jesus was gone, his disciples worried
about their credibility. They worried
about whether people would accept their teaching. They did not have seminary diplomas and
official ordinations so how could they be sure that people would accept their
teaching as valid?
James: What it shows us is that authority and
respect comes from one’s wisdom, learning, character and the reputation that
one gets from studying with good teachers.
Kalum: I guess if you studied physics and you had
Albert Einstein as one of your professor, you might get a little more attention
for your resume than if you just studied with Joe Blow.
Connor:
So if the disciples were worried about whether they would be accepted, Jesus
reminded them that he had taught them well.
He had taught them not just to preach the Gospel but to live Gospel. So if
people did not accept the teaching of the disciples then they probably would not of
Jesus either.
James: Did you know that the church had its own way
of issuing graduation diplomas?
Kalum:
What would that be?
James: It is called apostolic succession. It is an unbroken record of church leadership
which has lasted these two thousand years.
Connor:
Is that why we have bishops?
Kalum: Each bishop is ordained by three bishops who
were ordained by three other bishops and so the Gospel has been passed down in
an unbroken chain.
James: I
don’t think that this means only bishops can do valid ministry. I think that a bishop represents that the
basic message of Jesus Christ has been transmitted from one generation to the
next over these many years.
Connor:
Because we have this unbroken tradition from Jesus, it means that we can
believe and trust that Christ is still present in the life and ministry of the
church.
Kalum:
We have the example of Christ which has been preserved in the writings of the New
Testament but we have 2000 years of people who have tried to follow the
teaching of Jesus.
James: Even though we have bishops and priest and
official ordinations, the proof of the authority of the Spirit of Christ is to
be found in how we live.
Connor: And how are we supposed to live?
Kalum:
We are supposed to live without sin.
Connor:
How can we do that?
James: St.
Paul wrote that living without sin is about learning impulse control.
Kalum:
I have impulse control; I choose chocolate over strawberry all of the time.
Connor: Bravo Kalum! How did you manage to set the bar so high?
James: I
think that St. Paul was trying to teach his students about the goodness of our
lives but also about the responsibility that we have because of freedom.
Kalum:
It is like he’s saying that life and the energy and desire is good; but it
still needs to be directed.
James: If we
get too fixated on idols or things which are not worthy we can become enslaved
to bad habits.
Connor: So sin is not about being bad or despising
ourselves; it is about understanding that we can always be better. Sin is like pain. Pain sends us a message about doing something
about what is causing us discomfort. Sin
is the awareness and we need to and can always do better than we have done before.
Kalum: So, being a sinner is not such a bad thing.
James: Well,
we don’t have to be proud of our sin but always learning from the condition of
feeling inadequate. Being a sinner is
good, if it means were always looking to amend and improve our lives.
Connor: The character of Christ comes from learning
the power and freedom of impulse control.
Kalum: I don’t think that we will ever graduate from
the School of Sinners.
James: Well,
you really don’t want a diploma for sin; not really the life achievement that
one wants to be proud of. But the
goodness of Christ is like knowledge and learning. In the field of learning we are ignorant of
what we have not yet learned.
Connor: So we are always sinners because there is
always more goodness to achieve.
Kalum:
Well, now we know how baptism is like commencement; we are always ending
something in order to begin something else.
James: At baptism we all have received our diploma
in the school of Jesus. And it is an
important diploma.
Connor: But it also means that we have to choose each
day to live up to the standards of love and kindness that we’ve learned from
Jesus Christ.
Kalum:
We sure have our work cut out for us.
James: Just
think of it in this way; we will never be unemployed Christians, because there
will always be more Christian things to do.
Connor: Let us thank God today for our baptismal
diplomas today!
Kalum:
We are now guaranteed a life time of much more Christian work! Let’s get to work! Amen.
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