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Sermon 3-14-21
John 3:14-21 The holy gospel according to John
[Jesus said:] Just as Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, so
must the Son of Man be lifted up, that whoever believes in him may
have eternal life.

“For God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, so that
everyone who believes in him may not perish but may have eternal life.
“Indeed, God did not send the Son into the world to condemn the
world, but in order that the world might be saved through
him. Those who believe in him are not condemned; but those who
do not believe are condemned already, because they have not believed
in the name of the only Son of God. And this is the judgment, that
the light has come into the world, and people loved darkness rather
than light because their deeds were evil. For all who do evil hate the
light and do not come to the light, so that their deeds may not be
exposed. But those who do what is true come to the light, so that it
may be clearly seen that their deeds have been done in God.”
The gospel of the Lord

In the incident from the book of Numbers to which our gospel refers
the people of God are in the wilderness following their exodus from
Egypt and because of their grumbling, the Lord sends poisonous
serpents to bite the people, and many of them died. The people then
go to Moses, saying that they realize that they have sinned by speaking
against the Lord and against Moses. They plead for him to pray to the
Lord to take the snakes away. The Lord tells Moses to make a
poisonous serpent and set it on a pole, and everyone who looks at it
will live, which Moses does.

In our gospel text Jesus is still in conversation with Nicodemus and
replying to his last question, “How can these things be?” Jesus says,
“Just as Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, so must the Son
of Man be lifted up, that whoever believes in him may have eternal
life.” Jesus is trying to open Nicodemus eyes, to open our eyes, to look
to him being lifted up as the way that leads to a deeper and fuller life.

I can relate to Nicodemus’ approach in this conversation with Jesus. He
wants to have it all figured out. He wants Jesus to explain how God’s
salvation program works, but instead he’s just invited to trust in the
paschal mystery. For God so loved the world, that he gave his only Son,
so that everyone who believes in him…

Ah, there’s that word that can cause this most familiar and beloved
verse to be so misunderstood. This is especially true if we consider
believing to be an intellectual assent to some stated principle or
doctrine. [For example, Mark Twain was once asked if he believed in
infant baptism. Maybe you know how Twain countered this question
about his intellectual assent to the practice. He replied, “Believe in it,
why I’ve even seen it done.”] I don’t think that Jesus is inviting us here
to assent to an understanding about how God’s salvation program
works, but rather simply to trust that it does. Today, we’re invited to
look upon the one who has been lifted up and trust that there is
something very life giving for us here. What if every time the word
‘believe’ appears in this text we substitute the word trust? For
example: Those who trust in him are not condemned; but those who do
not trust are condemned already, because they have not trusted in the
name of the only Son of God.

When it comes to faith, our believing is more than an intellectual
assent. It’s a diving in and trusting in the unknown. There’s a reason
we call Jesus passion and resurrection, the paschal mystery. As Debbie
Thomas wrote in her Journey with Jesus blog this week: In the cross, we
are forced to see what our refusal to love, our indifference to suffering,
our craving for violence, our resistance to change, our hatred of
difference, our addiction to judgment, and our fear of the Other must
wreak. When the Son of Man is lifted up, we see with chilling and
desperate clarity our need for a God who will take our most horrific
instruments of death, and transform them, at great cost, for the
purposes of resurrection…The cross of Christ is a great mystery — and
that is as it should be. Among many other things, it is a stunning
paradox of sorrow and hope, judgment and mercy, despair and healing,
brokenness and hope. It’s okay not to understand — the invitation is
to see. So look up. Don’t be afraid. Don’t refuse the pain. Don’t turn
away. Look up and be saved.

As we look to the one who was lifted up, we see him lifted up on the
cross, lifted up from the grave, and lifted up in his ascension to
participate in the divine mystery of the Trinity. As we look we’re saved,
and our passage from Ephesians reminds us that this is not of our own
doing. “For by grace you have been saved through faith, (or through
trust), and this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God.”
Once we’ve experienced what Ephesians calls this immeasurable
richness of God’s grace. Once we too have died and risen, Christ’s ways
of sacrificial love become our ways.

Alan Barnhart is a businessman who runs a business that generated
revenue of 375 million dollars in 2018. When he and his brother took
over their small family business in Tennessee, Barnhart Crane and
Rigging, they set incomes for themselves that would enable them to
support their families in a modest middle class lifestyle and agreed that
anything the company made beyond that would be given to ministry,
particularly ministries in the developing world.

In their first year they were able to give away $50,000; in the second
year $150,000; and now they give away more than $1 million a month.
They have also placed 99% ownership of the company into a trust that
will ensure that when they have departed, all proceeds from the firm
will continue to be invested in ministry projects.
Alan, his wife and his children have been able to visit the projects they
support and see the impact in people’s lives. He exemplifies what
Ephesians calls being created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God
prepared beforehand to be our way of life. Alan tells people in a
matter of fact manner that God actually owns his business.

Ephesians reminds us that God owns all our business too. So what are
the good works that you’ve been created for? What way of life is your
dying and rising preparing you for? Is there anyone that you need to
forgive and be reconciled with? Is there some cause for justice or a
particular passion for serving in some ministry project being stirred up
within you? How might God’s gift of grace be transforming you this
very moment to stop following the dead-end ways of the world and
turn and trust in the one who leads us in the ways of life eternal?
At the heart of both the texts we heard read today is God’s love. It’s
the power of God’s love that continually transforms and saves our
world. Today, we look towards the one who was lifted up and trust in
the power of that love to shine its light upon us no matter what kind of
evil we might face.

During the deepest, darkest days of apartheid when the government
tried to shut down its opposition by canceling a political rally,
Archbishop Desmond Tutu declared that he would hold a church
service instead. St. George’s Cathedral in Cape Town, South Africa was
filled with worshippers. Outside the cathedral hundreds of police
gathered, a show of force intended to intimidate. As Tutu was
preaching they entered the Cathedral, armed, and lined the walls. They
took out notebooks and began recording Tutu’s words.
But Tutu would not be intimidated. He preached against the evils of
apartheid, declaring it could not endure. At one extraordinary point he
addressed the police directly. “You are powerful. You are very
powerful, but you are not gods and I serve a God who cannot be
mocked. So, since you’ve already lost, I invite you today to come and
join the winning side!”

With that the congregation erupted in dance and song. The police
didn’t know what to do. Their attempts at intimidation had failed,
overcome by the archbishop’s confidence that God’s goodness and love
would triumph over evil. It was but a matter of time.
Today, we gaze intently once again on the paschal mystery of the one
who was lifted up. We trust in this one who willingly entered into the
full depth of human suffering and injustice who now opens our hearts
in compassion to all who are marginalized and suffering. Today, we
come to the light to be schooled in God’s ways of love. For what more
is salvation than the orchestration of the deeds of our lives being done
in God? For God did not send the Son into the world to condemn the
world, but in order that the world be saved through him. Today it
happens through that body of Christ being lifted up in us.

AMEN