Text: Exodus 20:1-17 I Corinthians 1:18-25 (Series B, 3rd Sunday in Lent) Ps. 19 John 12:13-22
(Jesus said,) "You did not choose me. I chose you and sent you out to produce fruit, the kind of fruit that will last."
When Sandie Black died, she was mourned by hundreds of people who didn't even know her name. As word spread that Sandie had died at the age of 67, many of those she had befriended returned to the neighbourhood cafe to talk about the way she had helped them. Men and women, many of them now middle aged, told how Sandie had helped them - to find a place to live, to find a job, even which bus to catch.
One successful businessman told of the day he had arrived in town with only a dollar in his pocket. He was just 19. Sandie was in the cafe when he came to spend his last dollar for a hot meal. She offered to buy him dinner.
A man who owned a cafe remembered the time Sandie filled in as a waitress when his regular staff failed to show. A man who owned a construction company remembered how Sandie befriended him when he first arrived from Greece.
A now prominent attorney remembered how she helped him find a place to live.
The pastor of the local church recalled how Sandie turned up Sunday after Sunday to teach her Sunday School class even though on many occasions she had been up all Saturday night helping a sick mother or sitting at the hospital.
Sandie Black who spent a large part of her life ministering in a modest way to people with needs, would probably have been surprised at how many people still remembered the little favours she had done. A humble sincere Christian, Sandie Black ministered in the name of Christ.
That’s a great story but it’s the kind of story that you only hear about in sermons. A story about a person who gives in such a selfless way, in almost reckless disregard for herself, but in total concern for others, is something so unreal and so far away from what is happening in our world today.
Sandie Black was an exceptional person – her compassion, her generosity, her willingness to help, her self-sacrifice were special gifts and she used them to the best of her ability. By all accounts she was an exceptional person.
Every now and then we hear of others in our community who are recklessly generous with their love – Mother Theresa, Albert Schweitzer, brother John or perhaps you know someone who is ready to help using whatever skills they have – maybe a parent, a special friend, a grandparent, your spouse, a member of this congregation or perhaps someone who belongs to another church.
Nothing is too much trouble for them. You can always rely on them to do whatever they can to help you in your situation. Yes! We do have some right here in St. Ansgar.
For such people a life of service is no "flash in the pan", here today and gone tomorrow. They relentlessly pursue a life of service, going from one thing to the next. It’s almost as if they can’t help it. Where there is a need, they do something about it without complain. And the amazing thing is this – they aren’t even aware that they are doing something extraordinary.
There is one I haven’t mentioned yet who was so reckless with his love and so unselfish in his giving to those who needed his help – he gave himself so sacrificially, selflessly, recklessly and generously. That’s Jesus of course.
Then we hear Jesus say, "You did not choose me. I chose you and sent you out to produce fruit". He has appointed us to bear the fruit of love, not an airy fairy kind of love, not just nice words of love, but a love that is demonstrated in all kinds of practical ways; a love that leads us to use the gifts and abilities that God has given us to meet the needs of others.
A love that reaches out to others in practical ways not just when we feel like it or when we feel in the mood, but the kind of love that is ready at any time to use whatever resources we have at our disposal to bear fruit in such a way that what we do will leave a permanent mark on the lives of those who are helped. It may even lead that person to a closer relationship with Jesus Christ.
When were we chosen? At our baptism, God brought us into his kingdom. He has joined us together as the church and made us important parts of the body of Christ. When Jesus said, "You did not choose me. I chose you and sent you out to produce fruit, the kind of fruit that will last" he was not just talking to us as individuals but also to the church. Remember the church is people like you and I who have been called by the Spirit of God to be his "chosen and special people" (1Peter 2:9).
There is something worth saying here. We are not only "chosen" people but we are also "sent" people. Sometimes we forget that. We focus a lot on our "chosen-ness" and forget that Jesus said, "I chose you and sent you out". He has sent us out to "produce fruit, the kind of fruit that will last." God can only ask us to produce fruit if he has first given us the ability to produce fruit.
God has given each of us as individuals and as a congregation gifts that will enable us to carry out his work and "produce the kind of fruit that will last". To some he has given the gift of helping people who are hurting; to others to say just the right words that sooth and comfort.
To some God has given the gift of patience to help or minister to the elderly and the sick. To some God has given the gift of business skills, others the gift to teach children and lead them closer to Jesus, others the ability to relate in a meaningful way to teenagers. And so we could go on.
What are the gifts that God has given you as an individual? If we believe that God has chosen us then we can be sure that God has given us gifts to enable us to be sent out to produce the kind of fruit that will last.
God has not chosen us to sit back and enjoy the ride. God has chosen us, given us gifts and now sends us out to make a difference in people’s lives. But maybe you feel, like you are one of those people who believes, that they were behind the door when God handed out gifts. Be assured that’s not true. What gifts has God given to this congregation? How will we use those gifts to produce fruit at St. Ansgar, this community of faith?
As Christians, yes we do struggle in finding our place in God service. I think at times we suffer from memory lose. I mean at time we forget that we have not only been chosen, but also sent out to use our gifts to produce fruit in the lives of not just the members of this congregation but also to produce lasting fruit in the lives of the people of our community.
The story is told of a young boy in the ghetto being teased by someone who said, "If God loves you, why doesn’t he take care of you? Why doesn’t God tell someone to bring you shoes and a warm coat and better food?" The young boy thought for a moment, and then with tears in his eyes, said, "I guess God does tell somebody, but somebody forgets."
What is the primary existence of this congregation? Just reflect on it for a moment. Do we exist merely to fill these pews with warm bodies which would in fact translate into cash to pay the bills? Or do we exist as God’ people called and sent to meet the total need needs of people?
In the Winter of 1995 I led a community Bible Study group in Prince George, during one evening of sharing about this very topic ‘chosen and sent’, a couple by the name of Uwe & Zenadia Finger shared a very interested story about the time they spent and worshipped here at St. Ansgar in 1974.
The love and acceptance they felt in this congregation as new immigrants from Germany had a great impact on their lives. I guess somebody didn’t forget to minister to them. Their first child Gisela was baptized in St. Ansgar.
The point I want to make is that God places many individuals along our paths who need help. I believe that he has chosen us, not to forget, but to be the answer and produce fruit that will last in the lives of others.
Like the priest and Levite in the Good Samaritan story at times we don’t want to get involved, don’t want to waste our time, don’t want to risk our safety, don’t want to spend our money, don’t want to use our talents and leave it to somebody else. Because of the cross and our faith, the Holy Spirit reassures us that we are God's children, that we are forgiven and chosen. He then reminds us again that as his chosen people we have been sent out.
It may overwhelm you and I to realize that God is depending on us to do certain tasks. God is depending on us to use the gifts he has given us to touch the lives of those people around us.
God is relying on us to be his hands to do acts of kindness,
We are his angels, foot messengers of God:
We are angels of God in fresh, and it may be overwhelming but God has given us as individual and as a congregation, the gifts to do his work. In the final analysis, it doesn’t really matter what we think know or believe. What matters is what we do with what has been given to us!"
"Chosen and Sent out to produce fruit, the kind of fruit that will last."
Amen.
Rev. Samuel King-Kabu
March 11, 2012