Saturday, August 30, 2025
Where are the angels in your life?
August 31, 2025
Hebrews 13: 1-8, 15-16
12th Sunday of Pentecost
Year C
Where are the Angels in our life?
Prelude
Greeting
Call to Worship for Labor Day
God said, “Six days you shall labor and do all your work,
But the seventh day is a Sabbath to the Lord.”
Jesus said, “Come to me, all who labor and are heavy laden,
And I will give you rest.”
We come in the name of the Spirit, resting from our labors,
Let us worship God this day!
~ posted on the Presbytery of the Cascades.
Prayer for the Day
In the face of all our realities:
We are the people who heal each other,
who grow strong together,
who name the truth,
who know what it means to live in community,
moving toward a common dream
for a new heaven and a new earth.
In the power of the love of God our Creator,
The company of Jesus Christ,
And the leading of the Holy Spirit.
Amen.
Adapted from the people of Pitt Street Uniting Church (Sydney, Australia), Prayers Encircling the World: An International Anthology (Louisville: Westminster John Knox Press, 1998), 212.
Song I was there to Hear your Borning Cry. TFWS 2051
A Sermon for all Ages
Children’s Sermon Outline: God Never Changes – by Tony Kummer
Introduction:
• Start by asking children what they do in their morning routine, like brushing their teeth, getting dressed, and eating breakfast.
• Explain that these routines involve small changes.
Body:
• Discuss other things in life that change, like weather, seasons, plants growing, and people growing up.
• Mention that change can be good, like a baby growing and learning new things.
• Acknowledge that change can also be challenging, even good changes, like getting new teeth or moving to a new house.
• Share other examples of challenging changes, like changing teachers, pastors, or friends moving away.
• Emphasize that sometimes we wish things wouldn’t change and that change can be scary.
Lesson:
• Introduce the concept that even though many things in life change, there is one thing that stays the same: God.
• Read Hebrews 5:5-10 to teach children that Jesus Christ is “the same yesterday and today and forever.” (Hebrews 13:8)
• Explain that this means God never changes, never leaves us, and always loves and cares for us, just like we take care of our children.
• Share that even when things are hard or confusing, God is always with us.
• Remind children that Jesus loves them and will never leave them, and they can always rely on him.
Conclusion:
• End by saying a prayer thanking God for never changing and always being with us.
• Encourage children to trust in God and rely on him, even when things are changing.
Teacher Script:
Hello, children! Today we’re going to talk about change. Can you think of things in your life that change? (Allow children to share their answers.)
That’s right! Many things change, like the weather, the seasons, and even ourselves! Change can be good, like when a baby grows and learns new things. But sometimes change can be hard, even good changes, like moving to a new house or making new friends.
Do you ever wish things wouldn’t change? (Allow children to share their answers.)
Even though many things change in our lives, there’s one very important thing that never changes: God! The Bible tells us that Jesus Christ is always the same, yesterday, today, and forever. That means God never leaves us, never changes, and always loves and cares for us, just like we take care of you.
So, even when things are hard or confusing, remember that God is always with us. We can always count on him and rely on his love.
Let’s say a prayer together and thank God for always being with us. (Lead the children in a prayer.)
Remember, children, God never changes, and he will always love you!
Labor Day Liturgy (Put on Insert)
Litany of Labor:
A. Let us pray to the Lord of all creation, from whom comes life and work and purpose.
Almighty God, when you formed us lovingly out of the dust of the earth, you breathed into us the breath of life and gave us work and purpose for living.
C. You placed Adam in the garden of Eden to till and keep it.
A. Through our work, you made us co-creators with you, shaping the world in which we live.
C. You gave dignity to our labor by sending your Son to labor with us.
A. By our labor, you enrich the world.
C. By our labor, we enjoy the fruits of creation.
A. By our labor, we find direction and purpose.
C. By our labor, our families are made secure.
A. For providing varieties of work and for blessing us by our labor:
C. We give you thanks, O Lord.
A. For those who plow the field and those who make the plow; for farmers and farm workers, for steelworkers and machinists; for those who work with their hands and those who move the earth:
C. We give you thanks, O Lord.
A. For those who tend the sick and those who seek new cures; for doctors and nurses, for scientists and technicians; for those who keep notes and those who transcribe:
C. We give you thanks, O Lord.
A. For those who think and those who create; for inventors and explorers, for artists and musicians; for those who write books and those who entertain:
C. We give you thanks, O Lord.
A. For those who work in offices and those who work in warehouses; for secretaries and receptionists, for stockers and bookkeepers; for those who market products and for those who move them:
C. We give you thanks, O Lord.
A. For those who inspire our minds and those who motivate us; for teachers and preachers, for public servants and religious servants; those who help the poor and those who work with our children:
C. We give you thanks, O Lord.
A. For those whose labor is tidiness and cleanliness; for janitors and sanitary workers, for drycleaners and maids; for those who produce cleaning products and those who use them:
C. We give you thanks, O Lord.
A. For those who sail the waves and those who fly the skies; for captains and attendants, for astronauts and deep sea divers; for those who chart and those who navigate:
C. We give you thanks, O Lord.
A. You bless us all with skills and gifts for labor.
C. You provide us opportunities to use them, for the benefit of others as well as ourselves.
A. Guard and protect those who labor in the world.
C. Bless the work of our hands, O Lord.
A. Look kindly upon the unemployed and the disabled.
C. Give health to the sick, hope to the bereaved.
A. Keep us from laboring only for greed.
C. Make us loving and responsible in all that we do.
P. Creator Lord, you are the source of all wisdom and purpose, you are the blessing of those who labor. Be with us in our labor to guide and govern our world. Give all men and women work that enhances human dignity and bonds us to one another. Give us pride in our work, a fair return for our labor, and joy in knowing that our work finds its source in you; through your Son, Jesus Christ our Lord.
C. Amen. (Thomas L. Weitzel)
Passing of the Peace
Scripture Hebrews 13:1-8, 15-16
Sermon Where are the Angels in our Life?
What is the one thing in life that we all can’t live without? The one thing that is catching on life wildfire. 50 years ago, even 40 years ago, no one would have even cared. But as time went on – it became a part of everyone’s life. Now we take it with us everywhere that we go. If we forget about it, you will soon turn around just to get it. If you want to ignore it – there is something that draws you back in. It is a part of every aspect of your life, you can’t do anything without it. I would like to say that I am talking about Jesus, but I am talking about our cell phones.
I would like to say that the pulpit is the one place where I don’t need my phone. But today I needed to make sure that it was fully charged, so that it can record the service. My phone has become my constant companion. When I am driving I have to bring it with me so that I can get driving directions and to listen to music. Even when I come the church and want to use my computer – I have to go back home to get my phone in order to get the code to sign in. If I exercise, I need my phone to record my steps, if I check my bold pressure I need to record it on my phone. The harder I try to disengage from my phone, the more dependent I become on my phone.
What used to be true for boats is now equally true for cell phones.
The best day of your life? The day you bought your boat.
The second best day of your life? The day you sold your boat.
That kind of love/hate relationship is even fiercer when it comes to our most beloved, most bemoaned tech toy — the “smart phone.” Every time you “upgrade” from a version “3" to “4” to “5” . . . it seems that only minutes later there is a version “6.” Almost as soon as you can get out your credit card, you are the proud owner of a dodo or a dinosaur.
Cell phone companies try to tie their customers to a strict “upgrade” schedule to keep them using their older model phones for two to three years. But lately the competition between all the big name “smart phone” providers has become so intense that the “upgrade” limits have been tumbling down or trashed altogether. All the major competitors seem to be welcoming the return of still warm “hot-off-the-presses” models in order to get new customers for their latest version of the twenty-first century’s “third eye” the eye that is a one-stop guide through an increasingly dense and entangled information jungle.
The newest, biggest draw or more accurately, the most relationship-trashing, out-with the-old/in-the-only-moments-new draw among smart phone adversaries is how easy is the access and adaptability of the “home page.” Cell phone providers are focused on making it easier and more intuitive for you to completely customize your “Home Page.” The most advanced smart phones make it easy for you to simply touch the screen of your smart phone after finding a new “like,” and drag it to your personal home page.
You might say one’s “home page” is the new “home land” — the habitation of all our personal loves and loyalties. Our “home page” is a small, safe, satisfying universe around which our lives orbit. Our home page is our “YOUniverse.”
What’s on your “home page”? How do you decide what makes it onto the “home page” of your “youniverse?” What is it that you want personally to experience and engage every day?
Shopping deals?
Auction sites?
Video clips?
Breaking news?
Stock updates?
Gossip networks?
Music trends?
In this week’s epistle text, the final chapter of “The Letter to the Hebrews,” the author offers an alternative to all those self-interests. The “home page” today’s text downloads is totally devoted to Jesus.
Jesus is our “home page.” What the Hebrews’ author is saying is that everything in your life, whatever it is, can be “touched” and then “dragged” back to our own personal Jesus “home page.” We can “touch” good stuff offering hospitality and welcoming those who are uprooted and unknown, touching the unclean, visiting prisoners, both in prisons made of steel bars and prisons made of emotional bars. All that is “good stuff” that can be touched and dragged to our home page.
But even if we “drag” back some questionable quests to our “home page,” not to worry. Jesus will help us figure it out. The ethical, empathetic and, most essentially, loving software provided by Jesus’s spirit will clear out all the toxic viruses and soul-sucking spam that the world sends our way. After all, the human soul was not created for sin, but for the presence of God in all God’s purity, peace and power. That’s what belongs on our home page: “whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable — if anything is excellent or praiseworthy” (Phil.4:8), this belongs on our home page.
Jesus is the constant in our lives. Scripture reminds us that cell phone technology is always changing. But Jesus Christ is the same yesterday, today and tomorrow. Jesus is our constant. The spirit of Christ is the one thing that we cannot leave home without. So, not only is Jesus the center of our lives- he is the source of our being. Jesus is our reason for being. Hebrews 13: 15-16 says 15 So let’s continually offer up a sacrifice of praise through him, which is the fruit from our lips that confess his name. 16 Don’t forget to do good and to share what you have because God is pleased with these kinds of sacrifices.
Praising Jesus is not just what we do when we come together on Sunday, it is how we live our lives. Hebrews gives us 3 ways to praise Jesus in everything.
1. Keep on loving – we should pass the love that we get from God onto to others.
2. Keep living by God’s law –
Mutual love as the framework of the passage
Keep what is mutual love?
a. hospitality to strangers
i. “The admonition ‘not to neglect hospitality to strangers’ sounds a bit grudging to modern ears, in which a more positive formulation would be welcome. Rhetorically however, the saying function to emphasize the importance of hospitality. In other words, not to neglect hospitality is to make certain that it is carried out.” (Beverly Gaventa, Texts for Preaching, Year C, p. 492)
b. compassion to prisoners
i. “Prisoners had tmo depend on those outside for food beyond basic prison rations, for clothing and other items; guards sometimes required bribes even to grant this much access. Prisons detained people until trial or execution, but prisoners could remain in custody for long periods of time until trial.” (NRSV, Cultural Backgrounds Study Bible, notes p. 2180)
c. faithful relationships
d. extravagant stewardship
e. sacrificial worship
3. Keep trusting in God’s word and direction. Verses 3-5 says it all: 3 Remember prisoners as if you were in prison with them, and people who are mistreated as if you were in their place. 4 Marriage must be honored in every respect, with no cheating on the relationship, because God will judge the sexually immoral person and the person who commits adultery. 5 Your way of life should be free from the love of money, and you should be content with what you have. After all, he has said, I will never leave you or abandon you.[a]
Keeping Christ first boils down to mutual love and hospitality. Loving and sharing with one another, and showing hospitality to the stranger. A lot of times I think we make the mistake of thinking that as Christians we should do one or the other. Either we focus on loving the people we know, or we seek out those we don’t know. But In Jesus world, they are one in the same.
As I think about God's best gift to us, I think of Jesus Christ. God so loved us that he gave us his only begotten Son. Every year during Advent, we sing carols that tell of his lowly birth. We picture that tiny babe of Bethlehem and remake how cute he is. We feel good, because babies always make us feel good. But we need to remember that with Advent comes a foreshadowing of Good Friday, a reminder that his purpose was all about sacrifice.
I want you to think about your relationship with Jesus Christ. How has he blessed you? Has he been there in your trials and in those moments when you have needed a rock to hold onto? Think about the story of Calvary. He told you that his body was given for you, broken for your sin as an offering to God. He told you his blood was poured out as an offering to seal the new covenant of eternal life. Jesus gave us his best gift and then he promised that it was just the beginning.
How are you going to respond to that? How will you offer your first gift of praise? Will you declare that you will come to worship him at church regularly for the next year? Will you declare that you will find a ministry that you can get involved with and take a lead so that your offering can bless others? Will you pick up your Bible and choose to read it regularly and even consider joining a Bible study so you can learn more about all of God's promises? Will you offer yourself to God and let him use you to bless your family, by promising to spend more time at home and with your children? Many of us have dedicated our homes to Christ and godly life. Will you find a way, a unique way that only you can find, to praise God in the coming months? Each of us was created in the image of God and yet we are each a unique individual with gifts given by God. Use your gifts to honor and praise God. Amen.
CSS Publishing Company, Inc., Sermons for Sundays after Pentecost (Middle Third): God Is Rock Solid, by Clayton A. Lord
We express the love that God shared with us to everyone. The CEB version of our scripture starts out by saying – Love each other like family. We have to keep expanding our definition of family.
B. Dale Galloway told a great story years ago in his book, Dream a New Dream. It is about a shy little boy by the name of Chad.
One day Chad came home and said, "You know what, Mom? Valentines' Day is coming and I want to make a valentine for everyone in my class."
Mom's heart sank and she thought, "Oh, how I wish he would not do that." Because every afternoon she watched all the kids coming home from school, and they would be laughing and hanging onto each other, books under their arms, all except for Chad. He always walked behind the rest of the kids.
But Mom was a good Mom, so she went along with Chad's idea. So glue, paper and crayons were purchased. For three weeks Chad painstakingly made thirty five valentines.
When the day came to deliver the valentines, he was so excited! This was his day. He stacked those valentines under his arm and he ran out the door. His mother thought, "You know, this is going to be a tough day for Chad. I'm going to bake some cookies and give him some milk when he comes home from school and maybe that will ease the pain. He probably won't be getting very many valentines."
That afternoon she had warm cookies and a glass of milk sitting on the table. She went over to the window to watch as the kids came home. Sure enough, here came the big gang of kids, laughing, valentines under their arms. They had really done well.
And there was Chad, coming up behind. He was walking faster than usual and Mom thought, "Bless his heart, he is ready to burst into tears. His arms are empty."
As Chad came into the house, and Mom said, "Mom has some warm cookies and milk for you."
But Chad's face was all aglow. He just marched right by her and all he could say was, "I didn't forget a one, not a single one!" (1)
That's the spirit of "philos," that's the spirit of mutual love. We may not be able to get everyone to love us in return, but that should never keep us from giving our love. Because love is the key to life and faith. The author reminds us that the measure of our new life in Christ is our ability to love. Radiate Love. "Let mutual love continue."
Through love the stranger become family.
Hospitality to strangers is a cherished tradition in Middle Eastern countries. There is an old legend that tells how Abraham pitched his great tent at a crossroad. The flaps of that tent were lifted on all four sides so that he might discern the approach of any stranger and hasten out to meet him. Once, when Abraham ran out to offer his hospitality to three strangers, he discovered that they were angels. They blessed him, of course. Maybe that is the story the writer of Hebrews had in mind.
Hospitality. Kindness to strangers. It's something we are short on in this modern world. We teach our children to be fearful of strangers. And if a stranger pulls out in front of us in traffic, we become enraged. Hospitality. What a sweet concept it is--particularly when we are on the receiving end.
“If you've ever been the stranger," writes Billy D. Strayhorn, “or the new kid on the block, then you know that it's frightening and unpleasant. And we don't like frightening and unpleasant. Who does? It ties our stomachs into knots and gives us nightmares. It unsettles our lives.
“Jim Morrison and the Doors, a rock group from the sixties wrote a song with a haunting melody and lyrics titled "˜People Are Strange.' The song talks about being the stranger. Its words go: "˜People are strange when you're a stranger, faces look ugly when you're alone. Women seem wicked when you're unwanted. Streets are uneven when you are down. When you're strange, faces come out of the rain, when you're strange. No one remembers your name, when you're strange, when you're strange.' Then it repeats." (2)
If you have ever been a stranger, a newcomer, then you know how great it feels to encounter any show of hospitality, no matter how small. Jesus said, “A cup of cold water given to a stranger in my name will not go unrewarded." (Matthew 10:42)
Last week I was having lunch with a group of pastors. The owner of the restaurant comes up to us to make sure everything was okay. In the midst of talking, he shares his story. He explains that he has cancer and the doctors have told him that there is nothing more that they can do. We invite him to come back to our meeting so that we can pray for him. He comes back and shares more of his story and more of his preparations to die. In that moment, Juan moves from a stranger to family. I think of him everyday, and pray for his peace in the midst of an unthinkable situation.
What does mutual look like in your life? How do you show mutual love to others?
What does mutual love look like in the face of the general divisiveness of current culture? How do we promote and practice mutual love with those whom we greatly disagree?
God is not the name of the supreme being. It is just the name that we use. God is not a person or thing that we touch, God is a way of being, a way of showing love.
In other words, God is not the name of God.
The word “God” which we thoughtlessly use for the name of God is really just a greeting. In the Talmud it states that “the name of God is peace” (shalom), and “shalom” is the most basic Hebrew greeting word. Our English “hello” is derived from the good-health greetings “Whole be thou,” or “Hail thou” (see Luke 1:28; Matthew 27:14) where “hail” means “healthy.”
In the earliest forms of the English language, “God” was a hospitality greeting that meant “Hello there,” and “hello” is a shirt-tail cousin of greetings that incurred God’s peace, wholeness and the personal presence.
The word “God” is not God’s name. The name of God is nameless. God has no name. “God” is not God’s Proper Name. God’s title is “I Am” or “YHWH” or “"that than which none greater can be conceived." The word “God” is actually an expression of Hospitality and Healing/Health/Wholeness. And “God” in English means “Hello There” or “Health to you.”
If “God” is not “God’s” name, “God” is still the ultimate expression of the good, the true, the beautiful extended towards others. So every time you say “Hello” to someone, you are really dragging them to your home page and blessing them.
“Hello” is nothing less than your hospitable extension to every person you meet of God’s healing and anointing presence, and your recognition that we all share the roles of host, stranger, and guest.
“Hello” is an invitation to someone to share a home page. “Hello” is a welcome to God’s wholeness and well-being.
And so is “Good-bye” . . . or “God be with you.”
Let’s extend a “Hello” to each other this morning, but after inviting people to you home page with a “Hello,” say to each person you greet the gift you are really giving them: “wholeness and well-being.”
The ultimate in hospitality is not giving and receiving gifts. The ultimate in hospitality is sharing one’s space, which is what we do as the body of Christ. The ultimate in a home page is being with another person, which is what brings wholeness and well-being.
So this morning: “Hello — Wholeness and Well-being to you.”
God is love in action. God is a being so that we can learn to be, God speaks to us so that we know what to say, God loves us so that we can love others. Love wins yesterday, today and tomorrow. Let us love one another like family and keep expanding on our definition to include the prisoner, the stranger, your spouse, your possessions and everything that God loves. Let love be a part of everything that we do! Let us pray for strength!
Song Here I am Lord UMH 593
Prayer
Yesterday, God of our days,
when our hunger for hope
had so weakened us
we could barely speak,
you fed us with
the Bread of life,
spread with the sweet honey
of your grace.
Today, Host to the poor,
when we look for you
in the powerful and the rich,
among the superstar and celebrity,
we will find you
seated with the children,
your knees squeezed painfully
under the table,
entertaining them
with your stories.
Tomorrow, Spirit of Service,
when we will be scrambling
for the seats of honor,
you will be in the kitchen
cooking dinner for the prisoners;
making up the guest room
for the immigrants;
singing lullabies of love
to the lost children
of our world. Amen.
Lectionary Liturgies, Thom Shuman
Lord’s Prayer
DO NOT PRINT - God in Community, Holy in One:
yesterday, today, tomorrow, always,
we will pray as Jesus has taught us,
Stewardship Moment
Some of us may remember the 1960s. Others may have heard stories about the huge shifts in the cultural identity of people across the US. What do you remember or know about “counter-cultural” life?
Often, reading the Gospels brings us to awareness of how counter-cultural Jesus is. Our reading from Luke 14 clearly points this out as Jesus teaches followers to function humbly rather than presumptuously at a wedding banquet. Once again, Jesus uses a common image to communicate about how God’s Realm works – a wedding banquet giving us an image for the heavenly banquet when all creation gathers.
How counter-cultural is this: Don’t take the best seat! You might get bumped “down.” Rather, take the less desirable seat, from which the host might invite you to move “up” to a better seat.
As we come to our offering, the counter-cultural idea might translate to “don’t flash your finances, announcing how much you give.” Or, don’t make sure everyone around you honors you for your giving.
Of course, generosity is a high value but not when accompanied by bragging or boasting. Rather, let your giving be a loving response to the abundance of your life, and an eager sharing with those who struggle.
All are invited to share financially in support of the “counter-cultural” Christ we seek to follow.
Prayer of Thanksgiving
Generous God, we offer these tithes and gifts as one sign of our desire to follow Jesus, who fully shared his life with the least, the lost, the lonely.
No blazing advertisement, no blasting rock band, no boasting braggado;
but grateful givers sharing symbols of our lives in check, coin and on-line connections.
Accept our gifts, and help inspire us to use them to build up your Realm here in this corner of the cosmos. AMEN. (Disciples of Christ, Center for Faith and Giving)
Announcements
Closing Prayer for Facebook
Having listened to God's words, we are sent to serve others.
Today and tomorrow, we will follow where God leads.
Having joined in songs of praise and hope, we will carry these gifts into the world.
Today and tomorrow, we will serve beside Jesus.
Having been filled with the Spirit of justice, we will go to be with all who struggle.
Today and tomorrow, we will bring justice and peace to those around us. (Lectionary Litrugies, Thom Shuman)
Community Time – Joys and Concerns
Benediction
Children of God, go from this place in the blessing of the Triune God, our Helper and our Friend, offering your sacrifice of praise and sharing what you have as you spread the love of God in mutuality and care to the ends of the earth and back again. Amen.
Written by Dr. Lisa Hancock, Discipleship Ministries, March 2025.
Additional Illustrations
In today's epistle text the writer of Hebrews concludes his remarks on the cosmic-wide shaking and quaking that will accompany God's final housecleaning with a point-by-point, action-by-action laundry list of good acts disciples of Jesus should do and be seen doing.
Here's one of the great juxtapositions of the Bible: the juxtaposition between the shaking of heaven and earth by a vast omnipotent deity in chapter 12, and the small acts of solidarity, love, compassion, and steadfastness called for in chapter 13. At first flush they seem almost comically incongruous. What does it matter what each one of us may or may not do in our own lives, within our own families, in the midst of our own community of faith, when God is preparing to conduct a thorough, global, indeed cosmic shake-down?
Tim Kimmel tells the story of love. In 1921, Lewis Lawes became the warden of Sing Sing Prison. No prison was tougher than Sing Sing during that time. But when Warden Lawes retired some twenty years later, that prison had become a humanitarian institution. Those who studied the system said credit for the change belonged to Lawes. But when he was asked about the transformation, here's what he said: "I owe it all to my wonderful wife, Catherine, who is buried outside the prison walls." She knew how to live a life pleasing to God.
Catherine Lawes was a young woman with three small children when her husband became the warden. Everybody warned her from the beginning that she should never set foot inside the prison walls, but that didn't stop Catherine! When the first prison basketball game was held, she went ... walking into the gym with her three beautiful children, she sat in the stands with the inmates.
Her attitude was: "My husband and I are going to take care of these men and I believe they will take care of me! I don't have to worry."
She insisted on getting acquainted with them and their records. She discovered one convicted murderer was blind, so she paid him a visit. Holding his hand in hers she said, "Do you read Braille?" "What's Braille?" he asked. Then she taught him how to read. Years later, he would weep in love for her. Later, Catherine found a deaf-mute in prison. She went to school to learn how to use sign language. Many said that Catherine Lawes was the body of Jesus that came alive again in Sing Sing from 1921-1937.
Then she was killed in a car accident. The next morning, Lewis Lawes didn't come to work, so the acting warden took his place. It seemed almost instantly that the prison knew something was wrong. The following day, her body was resting in a casket in her home, three-quarters of a mile from the prison. As the acting warden took his early morning walk, he was shocked to see a large crowd of the toughest, meanest-looking criminals gathered like a herd of animals at the main gate. He came closer and noted tears of grief and sadness. He knew how much they loved Catherine. He turned and faced the men, "All right men, you can go. Just be sure and check in tonight." Then he opened the gate and a parade of criminals walked, without a guard, three-quarters of a mile to stand in line and pay their final respects to Catherine Lawes. And every one of them checked back in that night. Every one.
When you live a life of praise before God, it doesn't seem like a sacrifice — it seems like a blessing. Ask Billy or Mother Teresa or Catherine Lawes, and they will tell you it wasn't a sacrifice at all. In fact, they were blessed by their choice. Think about your own relationship with your children or grandchildren. You make sacrifices for them, and you do it out of love. It is as though you were offering your life to God.
He follows these exhortations with teaching about sex and money, two important ways that we are called to be faithful. We all know how much hurt is caused by sexual infidelity. We see the pain splashed across our television screens, as celebrity marriages crumble from unfaithfulness. Let the church demonstrate to the world that we can practice self-discipline and build committed relationships.
This is why doctrine matters. We need to understand Christ rightly. Hebrews teaches us of a Christ who is the same yesterday, today, and forever. We rejoice in that stability. Jesus still reveals God to us, still takes away our sins. Hebrews also teaches us of a Christ who speaks to us in ways we can hear. Let us open ourselves to the ways Christ speaks to us now. What need do we have? What pain are we carrying? In what ways do we need to grow? That is where we will find Christ. Hebrews teaches of a Christ who is always the same, but who will meet us where we need to be met. Amen.
There was a fascinating story in Time magazine sometime back about Melissa Deal Forth, 40, a film maker in Atlanta. It was about the day her husband Chris Deal died. It was exactly one year after he had been diagnosed with acute lymphocytic leukemia. The last months had been gruesome: treatments that could not save him, nights when she could not sleep. But Melissa was sleeping soundly at his hospital bedside on the morning of Jan. 4 when Chris managed, somehow, without being seen or heard, to maneuver himself and his portable IV pole around her, out of the room and past the nurse's station with its 360-degrees view of the ward. All Melissa remembers is being shaken awake at 3:00 a.m. by a frantic nurse who was saying something about not being able to find Chris.
Melissa hit the floor running. As she approached the elevator she happened to glance toward the chapel, where she glimpsed Chris sitting with a man she had never seen before. Frightened and furious, she burst through the door, firing off questions. “Where have you been? Are you okay?"
Chris just smiled. “It's fine," he told her, “I'm all right." His companion remained quiet, his eyes on the floor as though not wanting to be noticed. He was tall, dressed rather like Chris usually did, in a flannel shirt, new Levis and lace-up work boots that appeared as if they, too, had just been taken off the shelf. “There was no real age to him," Melissa says. “No wrinkles. Just this perfectly smooth and pale, white, white skin and ice blue eyes. I mean I've never seen that color blue on any human before. They were more the blue like some of those Husky dogs have. I'll never forget the eyes."
Chris seemed to want to be left alone, and so she reluctantly agreed to leave. When he came back to his room, she says, “He was lit up, just vibrant. Smiling. I could see his big dimples. I hadn't seen them in so long. He didn't have the air of a terminally ill and very weak man anymore."
“Who was that guy?" she asked.
“You're not going to believe me," Chris said.
“Yes, I will," she answered.
“He was an angel," Chris said. “My guardian angel."
Melissa did believe him. “All I had to do was to look at him," she says now, “to know something extraordinary, something supernatural had happened."
She searched the hospital to find the man. There was no one around, and the security guards hadn't seen anyone come or go. “After the visit, Chris told me his prayers had been answered," she says. “I worried for a while that he thought the angel had cured his cancer. I realize now it wasn't the cure, it was the blessing he brought with him. It was the peace of mind." Chris died two days later.
In the 11 years since Chris's death, Melissa says not a day has gone by when she has not thought about the angel and what he did for her husband. “Chris' life could not be saved, but the fear and pain were taken from him," she says. “I know what I saw, and I know it changes lives. Never, never, never will anyone be able to convince me that angels don't exist." (1)
Not everyone feels like that, of course. In the movie Red River, tough guy Walter Brennan looks out across the horizon and sees a stranger approaching. He has no idea what the man's intentions are, but he's not looking forward to the meeting. He explains his reasoning to John Wayne, “No stranger," he says, “ever good-newsed me." (3)
Well, I've been “good-newsed" by many strangers. And so have you. One of the reasons that we ought always to be kind to strangers is that some of these strangers will bless us mightily. You see, angels come to us in many forms.
It was a rainy night in New Orleans; At a bus station in the town,
I watched a young girl weeping As her baggage was taken down.
It seems she'd lost her ticket Changing buses in the night. She begged them not to leave her there With no sign of help in sight. The bus driver had a face of stone And his heart was surely the same. “Losing your ticket's like losing cash money," He said, and left her in the rain.
Then an old Indian man stood up And blocked the driver's way
And would not let him pass before He said what he had to say.
“How can you leave that girl out there? Have you no God to fear?
You know she had a ticket. You can't just leave her here.
You can't put her out in a city Where she doesn't have a friend.
You will meet your schedule, But she might meet her end."
The driver showed no sign That he'd heard or even cared
About the young girl's problem Or how her travels fared.
So the old gentleman said, “For her fare I'll pay.
I'll give her a little money To help her on her way."
He went and bought the ticket And helped her to her place
And helped her put her baggage In the overhead luggage space.
“How can I repay," she said, “the kindness you've shown tonight? We're strangers who won't meet again A mere "˜ 'thank you "˜doesn't seem right." He said, “What goes around comes around. This I've learned with time - -What
you give, you always get back; What you sow, you reap in kind. Always be helpful to others And give what you can spare; For by being kind to strangers, We help angels unaware.
Maybe it won't be the kind of angel Melissa Deal Forth felt she met the night her husband died. Some experiences are beyond our understanding. But there are flesh-and-blood angels who can bring good things into our lives if we will give them the opportunity. Kindness to strangers is how we open ourselves and others to that opportunity. “Be not forgetful to entertain strangers . . ."
If you could win an Olympic medal, which would you prefer the silver or the bronze? The answer appears obvious, doesn’t it? The silver is for second place; the bronze is for third. Or is it as simple as it sounds? Kent Crockett, in his book I Once Was Blind but Now I Squinttells about a surprising study of Olympic medal winners.
You would assume that the silver medal winners would be happier than the bronze medalists since they received a higher honor, but that isn’t always the case. The bronze medalists, who came in third place, were actually found to be happier with their performance than the silver medalists, who finished in second place.
The former Olympians explained why they felt this way. The third-place winners were thrilled just to have won a medal. The silver medalists, on the other hand, felt like losers because they didn’t come in first.
“This just goes to show,” says Crockett, “that what happens to you isn’t nearly as important as how you perceive what happens to you.” (1)
Here is the first part of the formula: keep on loving. Now you may ask, love whom? And the answer is, of course, everybody. Love people you go to church with, people you live with, people you work with. But also love people you don’t even know. More than that, love people you normally wouldn’t even associate with.
Jack was an insurance salesman, but he cared about his clients in a very real way. He was a leader in his community, a man of integrity, but also a man of humility. He treated everyone the same, the clerk in the convenience store and the CEO of the large corporation. He treated everyone with respect and dignity.
Jack found time in his busy schedule to be involved in ministries to the homeless. He never judged them, never looked down on them. He only wanted to help them turn their lives around.
Jack also took time to mentor young people not only in his industry, but also those who were struggling to get started in other areas of life. He was a positive, cheerful man who never said a mean word about anyone. He was a leader in the large Episcopal Church in his community, and when he died a couple of years ago, in his late seventies, his funeral attracted one of the largest crowds in the history of that church, for he had touched many lives. Jack was a man who kept on loving regardless of the circumstances.
Friends, such people are not fictitious. They are real people, and they embody the kind of life that the writer of Hebrews is commending. Keep on loving. Love everybody family members, friends, co-workers everybody.
In the most famous portion of our lesson the writer says, “Do not forget to entertain strangers, for by so doing some people have entertained angels without knowing it.” The phrase “entertaining angels” refers to that memorable scene in Genesis when Abraham was sitting at the door of his tent. Legend has it that the flaps of Abraham’s tent were lifted on all four sides so that he might discern the approach of any stranger and hasten to meet him. On this particular day he saw three men apparently needing help. This was not unusual. There were no motels, no fancy restaurants, no places for weary travelers to turn for hospitality. So people in the Middle East often prided themselves on their hospitality.
Abraham did not turn away those in need of help. So, at the appearance of these three strangers, he sprang to his feet, called to Sarah for help, and the two of them quickly ministered to these men. It was fortunate that they did. Abraham discovered that he was host to three messengers of God in disguise. When he was the gracious host, God was an even more gracious God. God blessed Abraham and Sarah with a child.
The message of Hebrews is clear: love everybody, those you know and those you don’t. In fact, make a special attempt to be kind to strangers.
The second is, keep on living by God’s law.
Singer/songwriter Jack Johnson gives voice to a common lament when he asks, “Where’d all the good people go?/ I’ve been changing channels/ and I don’t see them on the TV shows./ Where’d all the good people go?” (5)
Well. There are many good people in the world. They come of every race and creed. But we are drifting . . .
Keep on trusting. Listen as the writer continues, “Keep your lives free from the love of money and be content with what you have, because God has said, ‘Never will I leave you; never will I forsake you.’ So we say with confidence, ‘The Lord is my helper; I will not be afraid . . .’”
Successful living is a package and you cannot pick and choose among the core principles. You cannot live a successful life without these first two principles, “Keep on loving” and “Keep on living according to God’s law.” And the reason we are able to fulfill these two demanding challenges is that we trust God.
In April 1988 a tragic event took place. A photographer who was a skydiver jumped from a plane along with a group of other skydivers in order to film the group as they fell.
On the film shown on the evening network news, as this skydiving photographer opened his chute, the picture went berserk. Here’s why. He had absent-mindedly jumped out of the plane without his parachute. It wasn’t until he reached for the absent ripcord that he realized he was freefalling without any means of slowing his descent. (8)
Faith in Jesus Christ is our parachute. It allows us to live triumphantly in a world that would beat us down. It allows us to love with great passion. It allows us to live according to our best values, whether or not our way of living finds favor with our peers. And when all is said and done, we discover this is living at its best. How do we know that’s true? Some of us are fortunate enough to see it lived out in those who were role models for us. Our parents, leaders in our community, Sunday School teachers, perhaps even employers people we know like Jack whom we mentioned earlier who lived successfully because they followed these principles. The writer closes this passage with these words, “Remember your leaders, who spoke the word of God to you. Consider the outcome of their way of life and imitate their faith. Jesus Christ is the same yesterday and today and forever.”
That’s what we want to know, isn’t it? Our parachute is secure. “Jesus Christ is the same yesterday and today and forever.” Keep on loving, keep on living by God’s commands, and remember in every circumstance, God says to you, “Never will I leave you; never will I forsake you.” Such an approach to life is a winner every time.
I remember a story about Charlie Chaplain. He once read that there was to be a Charlie Chaplain look-alike contest. He thought it would be fun to enter anonymously, which he did. He came in sixth! He was right in front of them, but they didn't know him. Angels can bring us the word of God through human beings who appear to be anything but angelic. Our task is to be open, and offer hospitality to those who come seeking. They may have a message for us. And we might change their lives.
B. There's on old movie, 1940, starring Edward G. Robinson, Humphrey Bogard and Ann Southern. Brother Orchid is about Little Johnny Sarto, a big time racketeer who grows tired of the gangland activities. He tries to quit and pursue his quest for real class and refinement. After a not so successful trip to Europe Johnny finds his old haunts and colleagues not so welcoming.
Johnny finds himself a marked man and narrowly escapes being murdered after the Humphrey Bogard character Jack and his boys take him out into the woods to finish him off. Johnny escapes, wounded, and finds his way to a secluded Monastery where he is taken in by the kindly monks and brought back to health. Along the way Johnny learns a few things about life. And what he regarded as initially an ideal hideout until he could plot his revenge against Jack, turns into a life changing experience and the one time hood becomes the placid, life appreciating "Brother Orchid."
Despite the chance of reclaiming his turf, Johnny returns to the monastery where he at last finds the real "class" in life, not in possessions or money but in the company of decent, honest men who have their own class simply by who and what they are, not what they can get.
It's not a great movie but it's got great ending. And points to the whole concept of "Hospitality" and how Christian love and care can effect those who receive it. Radiate Love. "Do not neglect to show hospitality to strangers."
You and I are called to Sow Love, or to Radiate Love wherever we go. We're called to a life of "Mutual Love that reaches out to both the Stranger and those outside our doors."
Radiate the Love of Christ in all you do.
• For love to be mutual- it must happen in community
o Church is the community of mutual love
o Mutual love is the foundation of “doing good and sharing what you have”
o Mutual love is the foundation of being in relationship with God that we can confidently confess: The Lord is my helper; I will not be afraid. What can anyone do to me?"
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