Proper 6B Sermon (2024) (2024)

Girardian Lectionary > Reflections > Year B > Proper 6B Sermon (2024)

Proper 6 (June 12-18)
Texts: Mark 4:26-34;
2 Cor 5:6-19; Ez 17:22-24

Facebook Live (sermon begins at 25:50): https://www.facebook.com/share/v/AVjGyz97cYpE2B2z/

SOWING MUSTARD SEEDS OF “GOOD TROUBLE”

On May 4, 1961 a dozen or so “Freedom Riders” left Washington D.C. on Greyhound and Trailways buses, sitting in integrated pairs, Black and White. They were testing a Supreme Court ruling from six months before that gave the right to African Americans to travel anywhere on interstate buses without being segregated from other passengers, both on the buses and in the terminals. Their journey took them through the heart of the segregated South, from Washington to New Orleans. John Lewis, the honored congressman from Georgia who died several years ago, was among these Freedom Riders. Their travel proceeded without incident through Virginia and North Carolina; but then on Tuesday, May 9, they arrived in Rock Hill, SC, a long-time stronghold of the Ku Klux Klan.

Sure enough, a gang of young Klansmen was waiting for them in the bus terminal, and Lewis recalled that they “beat us and hit us.” Repeatedly struck in the face and kicked in his sides as he fell to the ground, Lewis remembered the taste of blood in his mouth. Lewis and his white Freedom Rider partner, Albert Bigelow, never hit back. They absorbed the blows — blows in part inflicted by Klansman Elwin Wilson. It was an elemental attack. Asked what he’d used in the assault, Wilson replied, “My fists. I sure remember I didn’t shake hands.”

A Rock Hill policeman watched the beating and then finally stepped over. “All right, boys,” he told Wilson and the other whites. “Y’all’ve done about enough now. Get on home.”

Lewis struggled to his feet, “woozy and feeling stabs of sharp pain above both eyes and in my ribs. My lower lip was bleeding pretty heavily.” He and Bigelow declined to press charges. “We’re not here to cause trouble,” Lewis told the police. “We’re here so that people will love each other.”1

There were more beatings along the way, a dangerous journey. But I mention one of those Rock Hill Klansman’s names, Elwin Wilson, because he’s an important part to the rest of the story. Nearly forty-eight years later, it was Wilson who made the trip from South Carolina to Washington D.C. during the week of Barack Obama’s first inauguration. He sought out the office of Rep. John Lewis and gave a tearful, heartfelt apology for having beaten him all those years ago. Lewis, putting his principles into practice, freely granted him forgiveness. The two men met on a number of occasions afterward to bear witness to the power of reconciliation.2

Brothers and Sisters in Christ, I believe that stories like this one are what today’s parables point to — a small seed of kindness and love and forgiveness that grows into something bigger. In our time, for example, the task of reconciling the races, as we work to dismantle five hundred years of white supremacist racism, is a daunting task. Moments like the one between John Lewis and Elwin Wilson can feel like a tiny mustard seed. Racism still looms so large in our world that the work of following Jesus in reconciling all peoples seems like barely a large shrub among the trees of a dark forest. Yet the point of these parables is to encourage our work, calling us to soldier on because the coming of the harvest is assured. The parables of Jesus in Mark 4 have the same kind of impact when civil rights leaders like Martin Luther King, Jr. tell us, “The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice.” Keep fighting the nonviolent fight because it is bearing fruit and will continue to bear fruit. Someday we will see the harvest. We will realize Dr. King’s dream.

In Jesus’s time the dark forest overshadowing the mustard bush of God’s kingdom was the Roman Empire. Jesus did his best to call his Jewish people to their task of being a blessing to all the families of the earth, as had been promised to Abraham and Sarah (Gen 12:1-3). In recent week’s, from both John’s Gospel (3:1-17 on Trinity) and John’s First Letter (5:1 on Easter 6), we’ve heard from Jesus that we must be born from above, born of God. In other words, on this Father’s Day, with God as our heavenly Father, we need to see ourselves as children of God — so that we can see every other person in this world as a brother or sister.

Last week, Jesus responded to tension within his biological family to say that his true family is comprised of all those who do God’s will — namely, to love all people as Jesus himself has loved us. But last week we also heard the first parable. Do you remember? A strange one about Satan casting out Satan. It wasn’t a parable of encouragement about the coming of God’s kingdom. No, the first parable was about Satan’s kingdom, about Satan’s household being forever divided against itself. The implication is that Satan’s kingdom is really all our human kingdom’s divided against each other. So the exchange between Jesus and his family is essentially about the mission of reconciling the broken human family. Jesus’ true family are those who take up this mission of reconciliation to the human family.

As we look around us two thousand years later, the human family seems as divided as ever, doesn’t it? That’s why we need to take heart with this morning’s parables, which assure us that the harvest will someday come, even if the growth seems invisible or small right now. It has grown into a might bush so that birds are beginning to find a home in its branches. People like John Lewis and his white friend Albert Bigelow helped lead the Civil Rights Movement decades ago. People like Rev. William Barber today lead the Poor People’s Campaign, a continuation of the ministry begun by Martin Luther King, Jr., in the last year before his death.

Just in case we need confirmation of what the mission is, we have it in the soaring message of St. Paul this morning (including 2 Cor 5:18-19).3 We are called to a ministry of reconciling the human family. The grace of New Creation is chiefly about this ministry of reconciliation. Paul has his own way of saying what John has been saying in recent weeks. Instead of language that we are born from above, born from God, Paul talks about dying to our old human way of seeing things so that everything is new. We are coming to no longer see things in the ordinary human way of division. We die like seeds in the ground and rise anew to a whole new way of seeing everyone and everything. No more of the old divisiveness of being set against each other in countless ways of Us-vs-Them. The human family is a new creation in Jesus Christ. How do we know? Because Christ has been reconciling the whole world unto himself and now calls us to the ministry of reconciliation.

Next month (Proper 10 / Proper 11), we will begin to read through Paul’s Letter to the Ephesians, and there Paul will put it even more dramatically. We highlighted it already last week; I intend for it to ring out a theme for the rest of this year. Paul writes:

For Christ is our peace; in his flesh he has made both groups [Jew and Gentile] into one and has broken down the dividing wall, that is, the hostility between us . . . that he might create in himself one new humanity in place of the two, thus making peace. (Eph 2:14-16)

Creating one new humanity in place of the two. In other words, all the ways in which we play the satanic games of Us vs Them, all the ways in which we have fallen into Satan’s game of being a human household divided against it, all that is being reconciled through Jesus’ willingness to let himself be cast out by Satan — by us! — in a way that exposes the futility of our brokenness.

And we, forgiven, inherit that work of reconciliation. In Galatians 3, Paul puts it yet another way: we who are baptized in Christ Jesus now find all our Us-vs-Them schemes melting away: we are no longer Jew or Greek, slave or free, male or female, Paul says. What other binaries do we need to add to the list? Black or white? Straight or gay? Democrat or Republican? Catholic or Protestant? Christian or Muslim? Professional or working class? We could go on and on. All these divisions expose how we are trapped in a human way of thinking that Christ and the Spirit are helping us to leave behind. God is creating one new humanity in place of all those twos.

Brothers and sisters, we are called to the ministry of reconciliation in a very broken world. As John Lewis said, “We’re not here to cause trouble. We’re here so that people will love each other.” You and I are here to sow seeds of what Rep. Lewis called “good trouble.” What can we do this week to sow the seeds of that love, even if they are the tiniest of all seeds? Because Our Lord took that love to the cross, was buried in the ground for three days, and arose again, everything is new. There is a new creation growing in this world. Do you see it? Can you and I be part of it? Amen

Paul J. Nuechterlein
Bethania Lutheran Church,
Racine, WI, June 16, 2024

Facebook Live (sermon begins at 25:50): https://www.facebook.com/share/v/AVjGyz97cYpE2B2z/

Notes

1. This account of the incident is drawn from Jon Meacham, His Truth Is Marching On: John Lewis and the Power of Hope, 87-91.

2. The account of Lewis’s and Wilson’s reconciliation in 2009 is not only mentioned in the above reference from Meacham but also in this brief video clip from MSNBC Headliners celebrating Lewis’s life: https://www.msnbc.com/msnbc-originals/watch/-headliners-john-lewis-the-power-of-non-violence-1426818115578

3. I extended the RCL reading by two verses, making sure to include what for me is the main point: “All this is from God, who reconciled us to himself through Christ, and has given us the ministry of reconciliation; that is, in Christ God was reconciling the world to himself, not counting their trespasses against them, and entrusting the message of reconciliation to us” (2 Cor 5:18-19).

Proper 6B Sermon (2024) (2024)

FAQs

What are the seven marks of a good sermon? ›

In brief, a good sermon engages the biblical text, proclaims the gospel, connects God's word to the lives of God's people, is well organized and easy to understand, captures the imagination of the hearers, is delivered well, and orients people toward life in God's world.

Is there anything too difficult for the Lord sermon? ›

Jeremiah 32:17 answers this question beautifully: “...Thou hast made the heaven and the earth by thy great power and stretched out arm. There is nothing too hard for thee.” Consider the majesty of God's limitless power: There is no promise too hard for God to fulfill.

What is the prayer before preaching a sermon? ›

A Short Prayer before preparing a Sermon

Dear Lord, I want to serve You by the power of the Holy Spirit today. Please help me to look to You for the knowledge and wisdom I need to prepare this message. In Jesus' Name, Amen.

What is the three point sermon on prayer? ›

[1] Point one: there is a great future ahead of us, so be joyful in hope. Point two: there are great difficulties surrounding us, so be patient in affliction. And point three: there is a great God above us, so be faithful in prayer.

What are the 4 C's of a sermon? ›

For me, effective preaching adheres to the principles of being clear, concise, compact, and compelling. Clear – Clarity in preaching comes before one word of the sermon is ever composed.

What makes a bad sermon? ›

For the average Christian, a “bad” sermon usually means one that was boring or that went ten minutes too long. However, those of us who preach God's Word every week need to have a more developed understanding than that. We need to know the aim of a sermon so we can know when we have missed the mark.

Do preachers memorize their sermons? ›

I might commit a key sentence or two to memory, but I don't memorize my sermon word-for-word. I internalize my outline, which for me is focused on one point. Besides, the biblical text gives me most of my outline already. As long as I know my outline and where I'm going next, I can preach confidently without notes.

How long should a sermon be at church? ›

Churchgoers' Perspective

According to a Lifeway study, the majority of churchgoers prefer a sermon between 20-40 minutes.

What should I say before I start my sermon? ›

You want to start your introduction with a similar level of tension, mystery, and even shock. This doesn't have to be a story. It could be a question. For instance, if you're preaching a message on forgiveness you can immediately introduce tension into the room by asking, “Have you ever been hurt by a close friend?

What is a good first sermon to preach? ›

Perhaps preach a story—Acts 12:1-19 is a great place to begin, or the parable of the lost sheep, or Jesus freeing the Garasene Demoniac. As much as possible, find a text that does not demand that you explain a lot of context before you can exposit it. Make sure you preach the text not an idea within the text.

What do you say before starting preaching? ›

It originates from Psalm 19 as nearly a full quote of verse 14: “Let the words of my mouth and the meditation of my heart be acceptable in Your sight, O Lord. Amen.” In North American contexts, this prayer is often employed before preaching, but it is neither an ancient custom, nor a universal one.

What are the 3 P's of prayer? ›

The three P's are pause, presence and prayer. I think if we take some time out to look deeper at the power of recommitting ourselves to stop to pause to be present and be a compassionate presence to others and to deepen our habit of prayer we will be strengthened.

What is the most important part of a sermon? ›

The introduction of the message is what helps listeners know where you are going and whether or not they want to go with you. In this regard, the first five minutes of your message may be the most important of all of them.

What are the three words of prayer? ›

  • Three Word Prayer Exercise.
  • Help me, God, I need your power to forgive someone who has hurt me.
  • Thanks God, for the way you love me in spite of my sins.
  • Wow, God! Your grace is deeper and wider than I will ever be able to grasp!

What are the seven marks of an effective church? ›

In this series, Alistair Begg walks us through these seven marks: the apostles' teaching, fellowship, the sacraments, prayer, mutual care, worship, and continuous evangelism.

What are the qualities of a good sermon? ›

Sermons should be clear, coherent, and well-delivered. Culture-Engaging – We should be neither cultural warriors nor cultural wimps, but we should encounter the stories of the culture with the story of the Gospel. Life-Challenging – Never leave the message in the realm of the theoretical, theological or esoteric.

What is the structure of a good sermon? ›

The structures are divided into three categories: thematic structures, textual structures, and dynamic structures. Thematic structures arise from the teaching of the sermon. The preacher identifies a main teaching and then divides that teaching into points for the hearers that follow one another in a logical order.

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