William M. Finnin, Jr. - "Wrestling the Unknown" (July 26, 1992)
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♪ Give me a clean heart ♪ | 0:02 | |
♪ And I'll follow Thee ♪ | 0:09 | |
♪ For I'm not asking for the riches of the land ♪ | 0:17 | |
♪ I'm not asking for high men to know my name ♪ | 0:31 | |
♪ Please give me Lord a clean heart ♪ | 0:46 | |
♪ That I may follow Thee ♪ | 0:55 | |
♪ Give me a clean heart ♪ | 1:01 | |
♪ And I'll follow Thee ♪ | 1:08 | |
♪ Oh, sometimes I am up ♪ | 1:16 | |
♪ And sometimes I am down ♪ | 1:21 | |
♪ Sometimes I am almost ♪ | 1:30 | |
♪ Almost level to the ground ♪ | 1:34 | |
♪ Please give me Lord a clean heart ♪ | 1:44 | |
♪ That I may follow Thee ♪ | 1:53 | |
♪ Give me a clean heart ♪ | 1:59 | |
♪ Just give me a clean heart ♪ | 2:06 | |
♪ Give me a clean heart ♪ | 2:14 | |
♪ And I'll follow Thee ♪ | 2:24 | |
♪ The blood that Jesus shed for me ♪ | 3:02 | |
♪ Oh, way back on Calvary ♪ | 3:18 | |
♪ The blood that gives me strength ♪ | 3:29 | |
♪ From day to day ♪ | 3:35 | |
♪ It will never lose its power ♪ | 3:42 | |
♪ Oh, it reaches to the highest mountain ♪ | 3:54 | |
♪ Oh, and it flows to the lowest, the lowest valley ♪ | 4:08 | |
♪ Oh, the blood that gives me strength ♪ | 4:20 | |
♪ From day to day ♪ | 4:29 | |
♪ It will never lose its power ♪ | 4:36 | |
♪ It soothes my doubts and it calms all my fears ♪ | 4:49 | |
♪ And it dries all of my tears ♪ | 5:05 | |
♪ The blood that gives me strength ♪ | 5:16 | |
♪ From day to day ♪ | 5:22 | |
♪ It will never, never lose its power ♪ | 5:28 | |
♪ Oh, thank God it reaches to the highest ♪ | 5:40 | |
♪ The highest mountain ♪ | 5:48 | |
♪ And it flows to the lowest, the lowest valley ♪ | 5:53 | |
♪ Yeah, the blood that gives me strength ♪ | 6:05 | |
♪ From day to day ♪ | 6:14 | |
♪ It will never, never, never ♪ | 6:20 | |
♪ Never lose its power ♪ | 6:23 | |
♪ And it flows to the lowest ♪ | 6:48 | |
♪ To the valleys, yeah ♪ | 6:53 | |
♪ The blood that gives me strength ♪ | 6:59 | |
♪ From day to day ♪ | 7:05 | |
♪ It will never lose its power ♪ | 7:11 | |
♪ Lord, I want to be a Christian in my heart ♪ | 8:03 | |
♪ Lord I want to be a Christian in my heart ♪ | 8:21 | |
♪ In my heart, in my heart ♪ | 8:39 | |
♪ Lord I want to be a Christian in my heart ♪ | 8:56 | |
♪ Lord I want to be like Jesus in my heart, in my heart ♪ | 9:16 | |
♪ Oh, Lord I want to be like Jesus in my heart ♪ | 9:35 | |
♪ Oh, in my heart, in my heart ♪ | 9:53 | |
♪ Lord I want, I want to be a real Christian in my heart ♪ | 10:10 | |
- | Good morning, and welcome to Duke Chapel. | 10:53 |
There is no doubt that the worship of God | 10:58 | |
has already begun in this place, | 11:00 | |
and we welcome you to share in that experience. | 11:03 | |
I want to announce that next Sunday, | 11:10 | |
August 2nd, the chapel will be making a special collection | 11:13 | |
of canned and packaged food items, | 11:19 | |
which will go to the Durham Urban Ministries. | 11:23 | |
As you know, this is a very vital ministry in our community, | 11:27 | |
and there will be a box in the narthex | 11:31 | |
to receive contributions next Sunday morning. | 11:34 | |
So, please remember that and spread that word | 11:37 | |
to others who may be in attendance at that time. | 11:41 | |
Our preacher today is a Reverend Dr. William M Finnin. | 11:51 | |
Dr. Finnin is chaplain and preacher | 11:58 | |
to the university at Southern Methodist University. | 12:01 | |
He is a native of New Orleans, Louisiana, | 12:07 | |
received his education at Centenary College | 12:12 | |
of Louisiana, and right here at Duke Divinity School, | 12:15 | |
where he graduated with the highest of honors in 1972. | 12:21 | |
Going on, he was awarded the Doctor of Theology degree | 12:27 | |
in ethics and social sciences by the faculty of Iliff | 12:32 | |
School of Theology at the University of Denver. | 12:37 | |
He is an Underwood Fellow of the Danforth Foundation | 12:41 | |
and has three times been awarded the Baker Fellowship | 12:47 | |
of the General Board of Higher Education | 12:51 | |
of the United Methodist Church. | 12:54 | |
In addition to his duties as Chaplain | 12:58 | |
and university preacher, Dr. Finnin, | 13:01 | |
in 1986, was appointed an adjunct professor | 13:04 | |
in the Edwin R Cox School of Business at SMU, | 13:10 | |
and has now responsibilities for team teaching, | 13:16 | |
capstone courses in ethics and corporate responsibility. | 13:20 | |
He is active in a wide range of professional | 13:27 | |
and community groups and programs. | 13:31 | |
Dr. Finnin is married to the former Mary Laird Bingham, | 13:36 | |
who currently is Director of Bereavement Services | 13:41 | |
and Decedent Care at Parkland Memorial Hospital of Dallas. | 13:45 | |
Mrs. Finnin is with us this morning | 13:51 | |
and we welcome her. | 13:53 | |
They are the parents of two sons. | 13:55 | |
We welcome Dr. Finnin to this pulpit, | 13:58 | |
and we will hear him gladly. | 14:01 | |
May we join together in the greeting. | 14:07 | |
Will you please stand? | 14:10 | |
Ask and it will be given you, | 14:19 | |
seek and you will` find, | 14:23 | |
knock and doors will be opened to you. | 14:26 | |
(congregation prays) | 14:30 | |
Come to praise the responsive love of God, | 14:39 | |
who meets us in our need where we are. | 14:43 | |
(congregation prays) | 14:49 | |
Seek the Holy Spirit to God and protect. | 14:57 | |
God will give the Spirit to those who ask. | 15:02 | |
(congregation prays) | 15:07 | |
(organ music) | 15:16 | |
(congregation singing) | 15:47 | |
Please remain standing. | 19:07 | |
Let us pray. | 19:10 | |
God of mercy, we praise you | 19:14 | |
for the hunger you place in our hearts. | 19:17 | |
The longing to find our lives hallowed | 19:22 | |
and gilded by grace, | 19:27 | |
a yearning that impels us to seek, | 19:29 | |
ask and knock, until we find our heart's true desire. | 19:33 | |
Oh God, you hear our prayers of longing, | 19:40 | |
born of the hunger for all that is holy. | 19:44 | |
We praise you for steadfast love. | 19:50 | |
For like a friend at midnight, | 19:54 | |
you will rise to answer us when we call upon you. | 19:57 | |
Amen. | 20:02 | |
Please be seated. | 20:04 | |
- | Let us pray together the Prayer for Illumination. | 20:21 |
Open our hearts and minds oh God, | 20:26 | |
by the power of your Holy Spirit, | 20:29 | |
so that as the word is read and proclaimed, | 20:32 | |
we might hear with joy what you say to us this day. | 20:35 | |
Amen. | 20:40 | |
The first reading is from the Gospel According to St. Luke. | 20:44 | |
Chapter 11, verses one through 13. | 20:48 | |
He was praying in a certain place, | 20:54 | |
and after he had finished, one of his disciples said to him, | 20:57 | |
"Lord, teach us to pray as John taught his disciples." | 21:01 | |
Jesus said to them, "When you pray, | 21:08 | |
"say, Father, hallowed be your name. | 21:12 | |
"Your kingdom come. | 21:17 | |
"Give us each day our daily bread | 21:20 | |
"and forgive us our sins, | 21:23 | |
"for we ourselves forgive everyone indebted to us. | 21:25 | |
"And do not bring us to the time of trial." | 21:31 | |
And he said to them, "Suppose one of you has a friend, | 21:36 | |
"and you go to him ad midnight and say to him, | 21:40 | |
"Friend, lend me three loaves of bread. | 21:44 | |
"For a friend of mine has arrived, | 21:47 | |
"and I have nothing to set before him." | 21:49 | |
And he answers from within, "Do not bother me. | 21:53 | |
"The door has already been locked, | 21:57 | |
"And my children are with me in bed. | 21:58 | |
"I cannot get up and give you anything." | 22:00 | |
I tell you, even though he will not | 22:05 | |
get up and give him anything because he is his friend, | 22:07 | |
at least because of his persistence, | 22:12 | |
he will get up and give him whatever he needs. | 22:14 | |
So, I say to you, ask and it will be given you. | 22:20 | |
Search and you will find. | 22:25 | |
Knock and the door will be opened for you. | 22:30 | |
For everyone who asks, receives, | 22:34 | |
and everyone who searches, finds, | 22:38 | |
and for everyone who knocks, the door will be opened. | 22:43 | |
Is there anyone among you who, | 22:50 | |
if your child asks for a fish, | 22:52 | |
will give a snake instead of a fish? | 22:54 | |
Or if the child asks for an egg, | 22:58 | |
will give a scorpion? | 23:00 | |
If you then, who are evil, | 23:03 | |
know how to give good gifts to your children, | 23:08 | |
how much more will the Heavenly Father | 23:12 | |
give the Holy Spirit to those who ask Him? | 23:15 | |
This is the world of the Lord. | 23:23 | |
Thanks be to God. | 23:25 | |
Please stand for the reading of this alter. | 23:29 | |
Hear the words of David in Psalm 21, | 23:41 | |
a thanks giving for victory. | 23:43 | |
In your strength the kind rejoices, oh Lord, | 23:47 | |
and in your help, how greatly he exalts. | 23:50 | |
You have given him his heart's desire | 23:55 | |
and have not withheld the request of his lips. | 23:57 | |
For you meet him with rich blessings. | 24:01 | |
You set a crown of fine gold on his head. | 24:04 | |
He asked you for life, you gave it to him, | 24:08 | |
length of days forever and ever. | 24:13 | |
His glory is great through your help, | 24:16 | |
splendor and majesty you bestow on him. | 24:20 | |
You bestow on him blessings forever. | 24:25 | |
You make him glad with the joy of your presence. | 24:27 | |
For the kind trusts in the Lord, | 24:31 | |
and through the steadfast love of the most high, | 24:34 | |
he shall not be moved. | 24:38 | |
(organ music) | 24:42 | |
(congregation singing) | 24:51 | |
Be seated. | 25:41 | |
(organ music) | 25:46 | |
♪ Shackled by a heavy burden ♪ | 26:12 | |
♪ 'Neath a load of guilt and shame ♪ | 26:23 | |
♪ Then the hand of Jesus touched me ♪ | 26:34 | |
♪ And now I am no longer the same ♪ | 26:45 | |
♪ For He touched me, yes, He touched me ♪ | 26:55 | |
♪ And oh the joy that floods my soul ♪ | 27:07 | |
♪ Something wonderful happened and now I know ♪ | 27:20 | |
♪ He touched me and made me whole ♪ | 27:32 | |
♪ Since I met this blessed Savior ♪ | 27:46 | |
♪ Since He's cleansed and made me whole ♪ | 27:58 | |
♪ I will never cease to praise Him ♪ | 28:09 | |
♪ I'll shout it while eternity rolls ♪ | 28:21 | |
♪ Oh, He touched me, yes, He touched me ♪ | 28:31 | |
♪ And oh the joy that floods my soul ♪ | 28:43 | |
♪ That floods my soul ♪ | 28:53 | |
♪ Something wonderful happened and now I know ♪ | 28:58 | |
♪ He touched me and made me whole ♪ | 29:10 | |
- | Our lesson from the Old Testament this morning, | 30:17 |
the Hebrew Scriptures, comes from the First Book of Moses, | 30:20 | |
the 32nd chapter of Genesis. | 30:26 | |
Listen to a story about one of the patriarchs, | 30:34 | |
Jacob. | 30:39 | |
And Jacob sent messengers before him | 30:42 | |
to Esau, his brother, in the land of Seir, | 30:44 | |
the country of Edom, instructing them, | 30:49 | |
thus you shall say to my Lord, Esau, | 30:52 | |
thus says your servant, Jacob, | 30:56 | |
I have sojourned with Laban and stayed until now, | 30:59 | |
and I have oxen and asses, | 31:04 | |
fox, man servants and maid servants, | 31:06 | |
and I have sent them all to my lord | 31:10 | |
in order that I might find favor in your sight. | 31:12 | |
And the messengers returned to Jacob saying, | 31:19 | |
"We have come to your brother, Esau, | 31:23 | |
"and he is coming to meet you, | 31:25 | |
"and 400 men with him." | 31:29 | |
And later in that chapter, as Jacob and his tribe | 31:33 | |
come to rest on the River Jabbok, | 31:38 | |
we read these words. | 31:41 | |
The same night he arose and took his two wives, | 31:43 | |
his two maids, and his 11 children, | 31:48 | |
and crossed the ford at the Jabbok. | 31:52 | |
He took them and sent them across the stream, | 31:55 | |
and likewise everything he had, | 31:58 | |
and Jacob was left alone. | 32:03 | |
And a man wrestled with him until the breaking of the day. | 32:07 | |
When the man saw he did not prevail against Jacob, | 32:12 | |
he touched the hollow of his thigh, | 32:17 | |
and Jacob's thigh was put out of joint. | 32:19 | |
Then he said, "Let me go. | 32:25 | |
"The day is breaking." | 32:30 | |
But Jacob said, "I will not let you go until you bless me." | 32:32 | |
And he said to him, "What is your name?" | 32:39 | |
"Jacob." | 32:43 | |
And he said, "Your name shall be called | 32:45 | |
"no more Jacob, but Israel. | 32:48 | |
"For you have striven with God and man and have prevailed." | 32:51 | |
Then Jacob asked him, "Tell me, I pray, your name." | 32:57 | |
But he said, "Why is it that you ask my name?" | 33:02 | |
And then he blessed him. | 33:08 | |
So, Jacob called the name of the place Peniel, | 33:12 | |
saying, "For I have seen God face to face, | 33:15 | |
"and yet my life is preserved." | 33:19 | |
And he arose, and as he passed Peniel, | 33:27 | |
he limped, for he remembered his thigh. | 33:32 | |
Imagine years, years into the future for Jacob, | 33:41 | |
he's now an old man confined to his tent, | 33:47 | |
and takes delight only in the scores | 33:51 | |
of grandchildren who come to visit him. | 33:54 | |
One day, one of his granddaughters skips into the tent | 33:59 | |
and says, "Grabby, Grabby, Grabby Jacob! | 34:03 | |
"I have a question for you!" | 34:08 | |
Jacob turns to her and says, "Young lady. | 34:13 | |
"Come up on my knee and ask my your question." | 34:17 | |
And she says, "Grabby Jacob, | 34:22 | |
"why do you limp sometimes and not limp other times?" | 34:25 | |
And sadness falls across Jacob's face, | 34:33 | |
and he says to her, "Young lady, | 34:39 | |
"I haven't always been this sweet and gentle | 34:45 | |
"Grabby Jacob that you know as your grandfather. | 34:47 | |
"When I was a younger man I was a scoundrel. | 34:51 | |
"Oh yes, the limp. | 34:56 | |
"One night, long time ago, | 34:58 | |
"I had a bad dream when I was coming back | 35:02 | |
"to visit your uncle, Esau. | 35:05 | |
"And that dream turned into a nightmare. | 35:08 | |
"I wrestled with an angel of God, | 35:13 | |
"and before he let me go, he set my thigh outta joint. | 35:14 | |
"You know, your grandmother, Rachel, used to say | 35:20 | |
"that was to make me remember that | 35:24 | |
"God was God, and I was Jacob. | 35:26 | |
"She used to say it served me right." | 35:30 | |
Let us pray. | 35:36 | |
In the name of the Triune God, | 35:41 | |
who creates us, who redeems us, | 35:44 | |
and who sustains us in all our living. | 35:50 | |
Amen. | 35:55 | |
Down in Cajun Country... | 36:00 | |
Near a little town called Piapot, Louisiana, | 36:03 | |
not too far from where I was raised. | 36:06 | |
Teeboy Jeanson and his brother, Eber | 36:10 | |
had developed a significant reputation for fishing. | 36:15 | |
Their favorite adventures involved | 36:21 | |
grappling for catfish, | 36:24 | |
along the slews and streams that feed Bayou Pigeon, | 36:27 | |
on of the bayous that runs into the Atchafalaya river basin, | 36:35 | |
on the eastern border. | 36:39 | |
Now, some will say that grappling for catfish | 36:42 | |
has its origin in Central Mississippi. | 36:46 | |
But I'm not here to debate that point. | 36:50 | |
You've gotta know what grappling is. | 36:54 | |
Grappling is a form of fishing where | 36:58 | |
you walk along the banks of a bayou, | 37:02 | |
and with your foot, | 37:04 | |
feel for holes in the bank, | 37:09 | |
hoping that in one of those holes | 37:12 | |
you're going to find a fairly good sized catfish | 37:15 | |
layin' up away from the current after a big meal, | 37:19 | |
just resting. | 37:23 | |
And if you do, you're feeling with you foot, | 37:26 | |
and then plunge down and grab him behind the eye sockets | 37:29 | |
and behind the gills and bring him to the surface. | 37:32 | |
There's a certain economy to that kind of fishing. | 37:37 | |
On one moonless night, Teeboy and Eber | 37:44 | |
were out on the Pigeon. | 37:49 | |
Teeboy in the water feeling along the bank | 37:53 | |
and Eber pulling the pirogue, | 37:55 | |
when Teeboy felt | 38:00 | |
what he thought was a good one. | 38:03 | |
Holding it with his foot, | 38:08 | |
he plunged beneath the surface of the water, | 38:10 | |
grabbed him behind the head, | 38:13 | |
and pulled him to the surface. | 38:16 | |
And it wasn't a flash of a second between | 38:19 | |
the time he broke water and he realized | 38:21 | |
that both he and Eber were in deep trouble, | 38:25 | |
for there he stood face to face | 38:28 | |
with the biggest meanest looking | 38:30 | |
cottonmouth water moccasin | 38:33 | |
that he had ever seen, much less grabbed. | 38:35 | |
And it didn't take much time at all | 38:39 | |
for Teeboy and Eber to realize that | 38:41 | |
they were in dire straits | 38:44 | |
as that big water moccasin wrapped its | 38:45 | |
coil of body around his right arm. | 38:48 | |
Teeboy didn't know whether he had the snake | 38:55 | |
or whether the snake had him. | 39:00 | |
That warm summer moonless night on Bayou Pigeon | 39:08 | |
was the last time the Jeanson boys | 39:14 | |
went grappling for catfish. | 39:17 | |
Their encounter with the unknown... | 39:23 | |
transformed forever the way they foraged for food. | 39:29 | |
When the unknown breaks in on our lives, | 39:39 | |
we sit up and take notice. | 39:42 | |
The unknown shatters our expectations. | 39:48 | |
It plays havoc with our | 39:52 | |
predictable patterns of living. | 39:55 | |
It sets in a new perspective | 39:59 | |
everything that was familiar in our lives. | 40:02 | |
Everything we had taken for granted, | 40:07 | |
like a proverbial thief in the night or | 40:11 | |
like Teeboy's cottonmouth moccasin. | 40:16 | |
The unknown redefines | 40:22 | |
the way we look at the world. | 40:26 | |
It transforms us, and for certain, | 40:29 | |
we are never again the same. | 40:35 | |
A woman by the name of Diane Berger... | 40:42 | |
a homemaker, mother of three children, | 40:48 | |
wife, member of her church, | 40:54 | |
has written a compassionate and terrifying book. | 41:01 | |
She's called it, We Heard of Angels of Madness. | 41:07 | |
This text is a chronology of her teenage son's | 41:13 | |
agonizing struggle | 41:18 | |
and her family's frightening encounter | 41:21 | |
with manic depressive illness. | 41:24 | |
She writes that in the days before Matt's clear diagnoses | 41:29 | |
and long before his | 41:34 | |
final personal commitment to effective therapies, | 41:38 | |
the great unknown of manic depression | 41:43 | |
shook their family by their roots, | 41:46 | |
distorted their relationships, | 41:50 | |
and served as a demon in their midst. | 41:54 | |
Fear and confusion marked their days, | 41:58 | |
clouded their caring, | 42:01 | |
hoping against hope that | 42:06 | |
this demon would suddenly go away | 42:08 | |
proved no help at all. | 42:11 | |
Matt struggled with his own depression | 42:16 | |
and his family's confrontation with it | 42:18 | |
changed forever the way the Bergers | 42:20 | |
looked at themselves, at each other, | 42:25 | |
and at life itself. | 42:29 | |
Never again would they be able to | 42:32 | |
simply take a day for granted with out thanks giving. | 42:36 | |
Never again could they simply have a moment of | 42:40 | |
deep quiet or watch a sunset or | 42:45 | |
think about what health was | 42:51 | |
without feeling grateful for Matt's return to health. | 42:56 | |
I believe that you and I encounter the unknown | 43:05 | |
almost daily. | 43:09 | |
Now, I'm not talking about the heroic encounters | 43:11 | |
that Jacob's story represents or | 43:15 | |
Teeboy's grappling with | 43:21 | |
that water moccasin epitomizes. | 43:23 | |
No, when the unknown breaks in upon us, | 43:27 | |
it calls us beyond ourselves, | 43:35 | |
into the lives of others, | 43:38 | |
into strange and unknown territory. | 43:40 | |
Perhaps you're a parent. | 43:46 | |
I see many of you are. | 43:48 | |
I see many of you may have been. | 43:50 | |
Do you remember the first day you | 43:54 | |
left your child at preschool or kindergarten? | 43:57 | |
What your child experienced and what you experienced, | 44:05 | |
psychologists call separation anxiety. | 44:08 | |
It certainly affects both parents and children. | 44:13 | |
But no matter whether you're sending your child off to | 44:18 | |
preschool, or camp, or church sponsored youth activities, | 44:23 | |
or a well chaperoned band trip, | 44:27 | |
or a Camp Fire girls' cookout, | 44:32 | |
you know that there's more substance to your concern | 44:35 | |
than simply the uneasiness of the initial separation. | 44:39 | |
The unknown out there is not | 44:46 | |
a necessarily benevolent reality. | 44:50 | |
And we can hear as many psychologists | 44:56 | |
as you could get into this chapel | 45:00 | |
say we have got to turn them loose if we really love them. | 45:02 | |
But not at 10 or 12. | 45:08 | |
Now, up the ante, raise the stakes. | 45:16 | |
As we grow into parenting through the teenage years, | 45:23 | |
the unknown often take strange and bizarre forms. | 45:30 | |
I speak as a parent of teenagers. | 45:35 | |
What parent of nascent young adults | 45:41 | |
has not spent those anxious nights, | 45:43 | |
nights that have stretched into the early morning, | 45:48 | |
waiting for that phone call, just one, | 45:51 | |
which says, "I'm safe, I'm at Steve's house." | 45:56 | |
How many of you have taken those | 46:02 | |
somnambulistic walks through the house | 46:05 | |
in the early morning | 46:10 | |
before they get in, | 46:13 | |
after going out or just hanging out? | 46:17 | |
One of my friend's neighbors around the corner | 46:23 | |
observed to me about two weeks ago that | 46:27 | |
it was only recently that she had really | 46:30 | |
come to recognize and to accept that | 46:34 | |
her own son, now 19, had really begun | 46:37 | |
to establish a life of his own. | 46:41 | |
And it was that morning when she went out to get the paper, | 46:44 | |
and as she walked in, realized that | 46:48 | |
he hadn't gotten home yet. | 46:50 | |
We're not talking about | 46:58 | |
theory of adolescent development here, folks. | 47:02 | |
We're talking blood, sweat, and tears, | 47:05 | |
the agony of parenting, | 47:09 | |
and the joy of love. | 47:13 | |
The unknown... | 47:19 | |
We find it right smack dab in the middle of our families, | 47:23 | |
with those, in those, | 47:29 | |
among those we know the best. | 47:33 | |
On a late Thursday afternoon, | 47:42 | |
have you ever gotten a call from your physician | 47:44 | |
after your annual physical, | 47:48 | |
asking you to schedule just one or two | 47:51 | |
more tests just to make sure, | 47:54 | |
and she schedules you for Monday morning? | 47:58 | |
Have a great weekend. | 48:03 | |
The unknown redefines what is immediate, | 48:10 | |
what is central, what is important to us now. | 48:15 | |
Have you ever lost your job? | 48:23 | |
Most recent reports say that | 48:30 | |
in the past month, over 400,000 of our | 48:33 | |
sisters and brothers around this country | 48:36 | |
have experienced the unknown in that form. | 48:39 | |
Perhaps you've lost it for no reason | 48:50 | |
that you can account for. | 48:54 | |
Perhaps precisely because of the way | 48:57 | |
you performed your responsibility. | 49:00 | |
But the shock, the disbelief, | 49:05 | |
the anger, the loss, | 49:08 | |
the suddenly constricted horizons | 49:12 | |
bring you face to face with the unknown | 49:15 | |
right in the middle of your life. | 49:18 | |
The advent of the unknown among us | 49:27 | |
pushes us to the very limits of our living. | 49:29 | |
It drags us kicking and screaming | 49:36 | |
to the edges of our lives and forces us | 49:38 | |
to look across into the empty abyss. | 49:40 | |
Before the unknown, we stand vulnerable, | 49:47 | |
open, and at risk... | 49:52 | |
before both its peril and its promise. | 49:59 | |
Now, I think we can respond to the unknown | 50:08 | |
in a number of ways. | 50:12 | |
We can greet the unknown, the radically unfamiliar, | 50:15 | |
the uncomfortably different, | 50:21 | |
we can greet that unknown with fear | 50:24 | |
and trembling, and dread, shrinking from it. | 50:27 | |
But by such a response, we immobilize ourselves | 50:35 | |
and paralyze our actions, and deaden our spirits. | 50:39 | |
Or in good American fashion, | 50:47 | |
we can simply deny the unknown. | 50:52 | |
Deny its power. | 50:57 | |
Deny its capacity to focus our time | 51:02 | |
and our energy on things we don't want to think about. | 51:05 | |
But in denial, we abandon both the promise | 51:12 | |
and the peril the unknown brings to us. | 51:17 | |
Still, we find ourselves doing just that | 51:23 | |
more often than not. | 51:27 | |
We live as if there were no surprise, | 51:31 | |
no mystery, no wonderment in this life, | 51:34 | |
as if everything were flat and boring. | 51:40 | |
There's another way, | 51:53 | |
another way we can greet the unknown. | 51:56 | |
Jacob is its exemplar. | 52:00 | |
In that way, we can discover | 52:06 | |
the proximity of God's kingdom. | 52:07 | |
Yes, we can contend with the unknown. | 52:12 | |
We can struggle with it. | 52:17 | |
We can wrestle with it against odds we cannot calculate. | 52:19 | |
Perhaps in that encounter we discover a benevolent reality, | 52:28 | |
possibly a blessing, a word of hope, | 52:34 | |
an occasion for celebration. | 52:37 | |
But we will never know until | 52:40 | |
we contend and wrestle with that reality. | 52:42 | |
The faith tradition of Jews and Christians alike | 52:48 | |
call us with compelling clarity | 52:52 | |
to confront the unknown right in our midst, | 52:55 | |
to confront it with bold confidence and openness. | 53:00 | |
Moses, you will recall, was terrified by the Burning Bush, | 53:06 | |
debated his calling right there before God. | 53:13 | |
Job, Job actually argued face to face | 53:20 | |
with the divine reality. | 53:25 | |
As people of the book, ours is a faith | 53:30 | |
that holds a clear alternative to both | 53:34 | |
fear on the one hand and denial on the other hand | 53:37 | |
as the way to encounter the unknown in our midst. | 53:40 | |
Souther Baptist theologian, Wayne Oates, | 53:48 | |
recognizes that even in the face of death itself, | 53:53 | |
we Christians don't just stoically endure | 53:59 | |
the suffering of grief and loss. | 54:03 | |
On the contrary, we are a people of adventure, | 54:07 | |
a people who by faith wrestle with | 54:11 | |
the loss of loved ones, | 54:14 | |
whether permanently or temporarily, | 54:16 | |
through death, separation, and divorce, | 54:21 | |
mental illness, or any other separating power. | 54:26 | |
And the struggle goes on until fresh hope, | 54:31 | |
new growth, and greater potential for life | 54:35 | |
is revealed to us. | 54:39 | |
Even in the face of death. | 54:43 | |
Jacob greets the unknown in such a fashion. | 54:52 | |
In a cosmic wrestling match, | 54:57 | |
to his own amazement and to ours, | 55:01 | |
he discovered the partner | 55:04 | |
in that match to be of God. | 55:06 | |
Now, you have to realize that Jacob | 55:13 | |
was a scurrilous scoundrel. | 55:15 | |
He rightly feared Esau's violent response to his return. | 55:19 | |
Those 400 men Esau sent out were likely not cheerleaders. | 55:26 | |
Jacob had denied the covenantal relationship | 55:33 | |
which had knit families together | 55:38 | |
in God's grace for centuries, | 55:40 | |
yay, generations across time. | 55:43 | |
He had violated that. | 55:46 | |
In a moment of truth that resounds through Hebrew history, | 55:51 | |
Jacob ceased the unknown and wrestled it | 55:54 | |
to the point where it became promise. | 55:59 | |
Hope, hope for his future, even a blessing, | 56:02 | |
a certification of that promise, | 56:08 | |
a certification of forgiveness, | 56:12 | |
of hope, of grace | 56:16 | |
from the God how knows Jacob as an ungrateful jerk. | 56:19 | |
A lying, stealing, cowardly, | 56:26 | |
manipulating jerk at that. | 56:31 | |
A brother. | 56:37 | |
Like us. | 56:41 | |
Jacob chose not to lie down and roll over and die, | 56:45 | |
not to go willingly into that dark night of his soul. | 56:50 | |
On the contrary, he chose to contend, | 56:55 | |
to struggle, to wrestle the unknown. | 56:59 | |
And in that choosing, was blessing. | 57:01 | |
From his prison cell high in Northern Bavaria, | 57:09 | |
Dietrich Bonhoeffer, wrote to generations yet unborn | 57:15 | |
words of hope and promise. | 57:20 | |
He was a pillar of the confessing church, | 57:23 | |
an active resister against Hitler's godless rule. | 57:26 | |
In that cell, Bonhoeffer wrestled | 57:32 | |
with the certainty of depths unknown in his own life. | 57:35 | |
And in those final moments he proclaimed | 57:41 | |
that God's first and final word to us | 57:43 | |
is a word of graceful freedom. | 57:48 | |
You are free. | 57:52 | |
You are free to choose how you're going | 57:54 | |
to greet the unknown as it comes rushing, | 57:57 | |
rushing towards you. | 58:02 | |
Even if you cannot choose the shape, | 58:04 | |
or the character, | 58:08 | |
or the structure of that future, | 58:10 | |
you can choose how you're going to stand before it. | 58:15 | |
Daily, you and I must choose how to | 58:20 | |
greet the unknown as we stand before it. | 58:23 | |
We can cower in fear and trembling, | 58:26 | |
become twisted personalities | 58:30 | |
curved in on ourselves. | 58:32 | |
Obsessively absorbed with our fears | 58:35 | |
and consequently paralyzed by them. | 58:39 | |
Or we can assume a macho stance. | 58:43 | |
We can deny, we can reject the unknown, | 58:48 | |
we can remain above the fray, | 58:53 | |
disengaged and disentangled from its messiness. | 58:55 | |
Denying life's mysteries, | 59:06 | |
rejecting life's adventures. | 59:10 | |
Or, and here's the great divide, | 59:15 | |
we can contend. | 59:20 | |
We can struggle with the unknown | 59:23 | |
and its brash uncertainty, | 59:24 | |
hoping to wrestle from it the promise of a new day, | 59:27 | |
a sign of hope, the sign of the cross. | 59:31 | |
But remember, if you choose to struggle, | 59:38 | |
if you choose to contend, | 59:44 | |
if you adopt the wrestler's stance in your living, | 59:48 | |
like that scoundrel Jacob did, | 59:53 | |
you will never be the same, never. | 59:56 | |
You'll be changed. | 1:00:01 | |
You'll be bruised and battered. | 1:00:04 | |
Per chance, you'll even be transformed. | 1:00:10 | |
Now my friends, | 1:00:21 | |
may the new limp which is yours, | 1:00:26 | |
a limp you will surely develop, | 1:00:30 | |
may it be for you the blessing it was for Jacob. | 1:00:35 | |
God's blessing in all your matches. | 1:00:42 | |
Amen. | 1:00:48 | |
(organ music) | 1:00:51 | |
(congregation singing) | 1:01:45 | |
- | The Lord be with you. | 1:05:56 |
Congregation | And also with you. | 1:05:58 |
- | Let us pray. | 1:06:00 |
Please be seated. | 1:06:02 | |
Oh God, your spirit works without ceasing, | 1:06:10 | |
flowing as a great river through our lives. | 1:06:16 | |
We have felt the power of your spirit seeking us out, | 1:06:21 | |
dredging us up from despair and lifting us | 1:06:26 | |
on currents of grace and light. | 1:06:29 | |
We find that we cannot stay still, | 1:06:33 | |
but ar born by your spirit to encounters long avoided, | 1:06:37 | |
and to insights long resisted. | 1:06:42 | |
Oh God, the struggles between dawn and dusk are hard. | 1:06:47 | |
But perhaps the most fierce struggles | 1:06:54 | |
occur between dusk and dawn. | 1:06:57 | |
As Jacob crossed the river | 1:07:01 | |
and met his adversary in solitude, | 1:07:03 | |
we also cross over into a shadowy realm of struggle | 1:07:07 | |
during the nocturnal hours. | 1:07:12 | |
Give us, oh God, the wisdom | 1:07:16 | |
to decern our enemy's nature. | 1:07:19 | |
Are we fighting angels? | 1:07:24 | |
Resisting love? | 1:07:27 | |
Or are we battling our coward self at last? | 1:07:30 | |
Routing the side of ourselves | 1:07:35 | |
that has always taken the detours, | 1:07:37 | |
run from encounters, and resisted growth. | 1:07:40 | |
We praise you, oh God, for grace abundant | 1:07:46 | |
as a mighty river. | 1:07:49 | |
Have mercy upon us who have endured | 1:07:51 | |
long dark nights in struggle. | 1:07:54 | |
When the masks of self deception | 1:07:57 | |
are slowly lifted from our hearts, | 1:08:00 | |
on a viscering light of truth and self judgment. | 1:08:03 | |
Help us to remember, God, that you never | 1:08:09 | |
abandoned us to our deception, | 1:08:12 | |
but work in us through the dark nights. | 1:08:17 | |
You bring us, at last, to dawn, | 1:08:22 | |
where graced by the light of your face, | 1:08:26 | |
we find ourselves embraced and healed. | 1:08:29 | |
When at last the day breaks, | 1:08:36 | |
give us your blessing. | 1:08:39 | |
Gently turn us to face our world | 1:08:42 | |
and our destiny with humility, | 1:08:46 | |
and with a greater capacity, | 1:08:49 | |
for forgiveness and love. | 1:08:52 | |
Amen. | 1:08:55 | |
We are invited to give because | 1:09:00 | |
we need the discipline of giving | 1:09:03 | |
as much as the programs we support need our help. | 1:09:05 | |
We are expected go give because we cannot truly worship | 1:09:11 | |
without giving some concrete expression | 1:09:17 | |
of our gratitude to God. | 1:09:20 | |
Let us share with joy from our abundance. | 1:09:23 | |
(organ music) | 1:09:29 | |
♪ I'd rather have Jesus more than silver or gold ♪ | 1:09:58 | |
♪ I'd rather be His than have riches untold ♪ | 1:10:14 | |
♪ I'd rather, I'd rather have Jesus more than anything ♪ | 1:10:29 | |
♪ This world affords today ♪ | 1:10:43 | |
♪ Than to be the queen of a vast domain ♪ | 1:10:57 | |
♪ Or be held in sin's dread sway ♪ | 1:11:11 | |
♪ I'd rather, I'd rather have Jesus than anything ♪ | 1:11:24 | |
♪ This world affords today ♪ | 1:11:37 | |
♪ Oh, more than anything this world affords today ♪ | 1:11:48 | |
♪ Than to be a queen in a vast domain ♪ | 1:12:02 | |
♪ Or be held in sin's dread sway ♪ | 1:12:18 | |
♪ Oh, I'd rather, I'd rather have Jesus ♪ | 1:12:30 | |
♪ More than an-anything ♪ | 1:12:38 | |
♪ This world affords today ♪ | 1:12:45 | |
♪ Oh, more than anything this world affords today ♪ | 1:12:59 | |
♪ This world affords today ♪ | 1:13:18 | |
(congregation singing) | 1:13:49 | |
Loving God, we know that your gifts to us | 1:14:48 | |
are not to be hoarded, | 1:14:52 | |
but are given for spending in your service. | 1:14:54 | |
Help us in this time of offering | 1:14:58 | |
to be able to share not only our money, | 1:15:02 | |
but also our lives. | 1:15:06 | |
How, Lord, would you have us to spend our selves today? | 1:15:09 | |
Amen. | 1:15:16 | |
May we pray together a prayer that Christ taught | 1:15:18 | |
to his first disciples using the traditional version. | 1:15:22 | |
Our Father who art in Heaven, | 1:15:28 | |
hallowed be thy name. | 1:15:31 | |
Thy kingdom come. | 1:15:34 | |
Thy will be done on earth as it is in Heaven. | 1:15:36 | |
Give us this day our daily bread, | 1:15:40 | |
and forgive us our trespasses, | 1:15:43 | |
as we forgive those who trespass against us, | 1:15:46 | |
and lead us not into temptation, | 1:15:50 | |
but deliver us from evil. | 1:15:53 | |
For Thine is the kingdom, | 1:15:55 | |
and the power, and the glory, forever. | 1:15:57 | |
Amen. | 1:16:01 | |
May the deep peace of Jesus Christ be with you. | 1:16:04 | |
The strong arms of God sustain you. | 1:16:09 | |
And the pow... | 1:16:13 | |
You wrestle with the... | 1:16:18 | |
Of your life. | 1:16:21 | |
Amen. | 1:16:22 | |
(organ music) | 1:16:25 | |
(congregation singing) | 1:16:59 |