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Sunday, February 8, 2015
Sexagesima Sunday
Sermon - Rev Jack Arnold
Church of the Faithful Centurion -
Descanso, California
Today’s sermon brought
the Collect, Epistle and Gospel together and is partly contained in the
forewords above.
Consider these words from the
Collect:
…put not our trust in any thing
that we do; Mercifully grant that by thy power we may be defended against all
adversity …
In the Collect, we tell God we
put our trust for eternal life not in our actions, but in His Power. If we do this, then we must do as He
asks us. For, to make trust in His
Power rational, we must follow His Direction. If we do not follow His Direction
then we are surely just going be as lost as before we accepted Him into our
hearts. It would be foolish to think that we could guide ourselves, when in
fact we need Him to guide us. The problem is that often, at least in my case,
pride gets in the way of seeing that I/We need to relie on Him for guidance. We
need Him as our navigator to guide us along the rocky paths of life, so we
don’t crash into the rocks of Sin and Death! We need His directions if we are
to proceed upon the path to Heaven.
This squares with what Paul tells
us, that is salvation, honor and glory come not from what we do or have done,
but rather from God. Therefore, we
should turn to Him for guidance and not ourselves. By following His Word that
is where the salvation, honor and glory come from. And that is also to whom we
should give credit and not us. We havn't earned the credit, so we should give
it to whom it is due, that is to God our father. Nothing that we have done as
far as anything good or significant is not from us on our own volition, but
from God. He will guide us through all of our lifes trials, if we let him.
Paul, who as Saul, had been a super star on his way to being the number one
rabbi in the Hebrew nation, he was more learned, more vigorous in following the
law, more vocal in all things.
When he “saw the light” and converted, he took that same approach to
Christianity. No one was more in
any thing than he. He had been the
best of the worst and the best of the best. Now he was keenly aware of how short he himself fell. But even more importantly, he was
keenly aware of the saving perfection of Christ. Because he had been at rock
bottom, he was able to recover, which then brought him to his best, so that he
was aware of the saving power of Christ. From this he could tell us of the
experience of the power of God first hand, using his life as an example of
that. He told us these things not to glory himself, but to show the glory and
honor that comes from on high, from following His Word. He wanted to highlight God’s
saving power and Grace, which had helped him, and show us how it can help us as
well. He wanted us, other Christians to learn from his example and to do their
best to follow Him. Thus he counseled all to take comfort and pride in God, not
themselves. Do your best and look
towards God.
This brings us right in to the
well known Parable of the Sower, which might be better referred to as the
Parable of the Four Soils, for the seeds were all alike.
Like the seed sown by the sower,
The Word is spread throughout the world for all to hear and act on:
·
Yet, some will not even hear The Word (Hard
ground);
·
Others will hear, act quickly and abandon God’s
help at the first sign of adversity (Stony ground);
·
Still others will hear The Word, but The Word is
overtaken by the “pleasures” of this world and is choked out by them. Like the line from the Bible, where
your money is, that is your worldly effort, there is the evidence of your
heart. The temptation of this
world is great, the reward from God should be greater, but you have to look
long term;
·
Finally we come to those who accept and act on
The Word, like the one seed planted growing into a great plant bearing its
fruit, the rewards are manifold, though the effort is also great, the end
reward far greater. For the seed
to grow to full fruition and glory, with its manifold blessings, it must have
the ground prepared, carefully tended against encroachment of the evil weeds,
it must be continually watered by the life blood of those around it. There is much effort required on our
part, but the ultimate reward is so much greater.
While we are on the subject,
consider the issue of weeding. Is
this not part of the reason for the Church, that is to say the body of
believers, to exist. We cannot
often pull our own weeds, but we can help others and they can help us. We
cannot pull our weeds alone, but with help, we can remove them one by one.
Christianity is not a religion of hermits; it is a social religion where we can
help each other. This is why it is
best that believers attend a Bible believing Church, where they can get
valuable friendship and from that friendship, spiritual mentoring for their day
to day lives.
So, think about this, we need to
understand eternal life and indeed on a shorter term, happiness in our life
here, comes not from our self-directed actions, but those of God and our action
following His direction. If we follow our self-directed actions, we will find
death and misery awaiting us. However, if we put our trust in Him and follow
His commands, we will “live long and prosper” to quote Spock. Do your best and
look towards God for the Light to illuminate your path. If you prepare your heart, as the
farmer prepares the field, root out the forces of this world as the farmer
roots out weeds, cultivate the good given by God, water your heart with His
Water, your life will be manifold.
Be of God - Live of God - Act of God
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