Discipleship
“But the truth is whoever gives even a cup of cold water to one of these lowly ones just for being a disciple will not lack a reward.” — Matthew 10:42.
Alice in Wonderland was written by one Charles Dodgson, under the pseudonym Lewis Carroll. It tells of the story Alice, who falls down a rabbit hole. The entertaining and unnerving part for the reader is this strange world, this fantasy world, makes a whole lot of sense.
One scene reads like this— Alice to the Cheshire Cat: “Would you tell me, please, which way I ought to go from here?”
The Cat: “That depends a good deal on where you want to get to.”
Alice: “I don’t much care where.”
The Cat: “Then it doesn’t much matter which way you go.” (Slight pause.)
Now, that’s a deep truth. If you don’t care where you’re going, it doesn’t matter which way you go. Indeed, if you don’t care where you’re going how can you get lost?
It seems to me that over the last decade ‘lost’ is not only the title of a popular television program, the word, itself, has acted as an explanation of society. We have often seemed lost. Is it that we have not paid attention to where we are going or is it that we just don’t care?
I’m not sure, but I’m not the only one pondering about how lost we are. Last December Time Magazine addressed the systemic failures of institutions in the first decade of the 21st Century, starting with our inability to decide who the president might be in the 2000 election— a failure of the political system.
Then we had terrorist attacks— a failure of the intelligence system. Then we had the initiation of two wars without clear objectives— a failure of the military system.
You get the picture. Time then enumerates failures from Hurricane Katrina to the economy— and lays the problem squarely in one place: these are institutional failures, it says. [2]
The paradox and the confusion for us as a society is that throughout the 20th Century institutions served us well. So, the obvious question is: does that mean we ditch institutions? Or does that mean we need to find out what’s wrong and correct it? (Slight pause.)
The wisdom of the Cheshire Cat says if you don’t care where you’re going, it doesn’t matter which way you go. Perhaps we have too often and too much relied on institutions to tell us where to go. And I think that’s the real issue. And I think that’s the real issue because we’ve got it backwards.
We are in charge, not our institutions. Institutions have no mind but ours. It is we who need to tell our institutions where to go or the institutions won’t know how to get there. (Slight pause.)
Is the church an institution? Yes. And unless each of us gives the church direction about where to go, the church does not and will not know how to get there.
Now, we create institutions and we create them with goals in mind. So, what is the goal of the church? (Slight pause.)
The goal of the church is to transform lives. I’m not making that up. That’s been true since the day of Pentecost. The goal of the church is to transform lives.
The future of the church lies in its ability, its competence, its readiness to transform lives. And who empowers the church to be able, to be competent, to be ready to transform lives? We do. (Slight pause.)
The church, you see, is only an institution. The church is only as able, as competent and as ready as we are. So, how do we empower the institution known as church to transform lives?
By acting as disciples. And, in the words of Jesus, when we give a cup of cold water to a lowly one, we are transformed. We become disciples. (Slight pause.)
What is church is about? Some will tell you church is about music. Some will tell you church is about fellowship. Some will tell you church is about buildings. Some will tell you church is about education.
All these are a part of the church but the church is about none of these. Church is about being disciples who transform our own lives by our own actions and through our relationship with God transform the lives of those around us by our own actions and through our relationships with one another. In short, the church transforms lives because we are disciples.
Music, fellowship, buildings, education are not a means to an end. Discipleship is the means. Music, fellowship, buildings, education are the results of discipleship.
Unless we strive to be disciples and unless we are disciples not only will we not know where we are going, the institution known as the church will not know where it is and not know where it is going. In short, discipleship actually means we are, each of us, leaders. Amen.
06/26/2011
United Church of Christ, First Congregational, Norwich, New York
ENDPIECE: It is the practice of the Pastor to speak after the Closing Hymn, but before the Choral Response and Benediction. This is an précis of what was said: “In the bulletin this morning you will find a list of so called United Church of Christ “firsts.” These range from some churches taking an early stand against slavery in 1700 to the Old South Church in Boston being a meeting place where leaders of the American Revolution gathered to being the first in historic Protestantism to ordain a person of African American descent to ordaining the first woman to ordaining the first openly gay person. But it was not the denomination or its predecessors who did this, nor was it even individual churches who did this. It was individuals acting within their institutions who did this. The individuals told the institutions where to go and what needed to be done. In short, everything starts with us— with you and with me.”
BENEDICTION:
May we love God so much, that we love nothing else too much. May we be so in awe of God, that we are in awe of no one else and nothing else. Amen.
[1] Note: This sermon is shorter than most in part because this church has its Annual Organizational Meeting inside the context of the service of worship.
[2] Some of the above examples: i.e.: the Cheshire Cat and the existence of the Time Magazine article, are found in Liberating Hope: Daring to Renew the Mainline Church by Michael S. Piazza and Cameron B. Trimble. I, however, go in a very different direction with my thinking.