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Jan 12 / Chuck Smith, Jr.

The Sermon OTM – 01/12/2025

Welcome and Prayer: Jim Calhoun

Come Lord join us here this morning
In the back of our minds we know that all of our work can go down the drain
or up in smoke.
It can happen in the blink of an eye
or with a moment’s notice
or with no notice at all.
We know this can happen,
but live,
most of the time denying it is so.
We hold our lives,
our work and our dreams as given,
immutable, rock solid until they aren’t.
And just now they aren’t.

So many chased out of their homes
By winds and flames
And so many,
With only ashes and smoke
Where there was once a home
And so many now numb
Dumbstruck
Beat down
Overwhelmed
Angry
Resentful
Broken
Afraid of drowning in it all
Afraid to let it out
Or to hold it in
Afraid it is a very bad dream
A bad joke
And devastated, that it is all too real

We know in time
the winds will die down
Every cinder will stop glowing
And the long hard work of putting lives back together will begin
We pray for our family and friends
We pray for our neighbors who just by happenstance live in a different neighborhood
On different streets than we do
Who have lost it all.
We pray they have safe housing, food, and clothing
We pray they remained employed through all of this
We pray they receive kindness, patience, and understanding
from family, friends and strangers
We pray that they get the mental health help they need in the wake of this trauma
We pray they find guides to help them navigate the systems meant to help them
The governmental, the bureaucratic and the maze of insurance
We pray each community, each church, each family, each person will be able to rebuild their lives and thrive

We are thankful for the fortitude and determination
and training of those fighting the fires
And thankful for those attending to the needs of those out of their homes
We ask every blessing be granted to them

For those of us who are safe
out of destruction’s path
we ask that our gratitude be deepened
That our generosity be expanded to a fault
that we treat each moment of life as a gift
An opportunity for loving

And we know
Somewhere in the back of our minds that
All shall be well
And even in life’s catastrophes
Even in our overwhelm
Even in our deepest sorrows
You are with us
Bringing us along
Our rock
Our fortress
Our hope
Amen

Morning Talk: chuck smith, jr.

“You have heard that it was said to those of old, ‘You shall not murder; and whoever murders will be liable to judgment.’ But I say to you that everyone who is angry with his brother will be liable to judgment; whoever insults his brother will be liable to the council; and whoever says, ‘You fool!’ will be liable to the [fiery Gehenna]” Matthew 5:21-22

Intro: You know the directory in the mall, with the little star that reads, “You are here”?

Well, let’s figure out where we are in Jesus’ Sermon
– we’ve been through the Beatitudes
• we’ve made the transition from Jesus’ closing remarks to his declaration that he had not come
“to abolish the Law or the Prophets,”
• but to empower them so they do in our lives what they’re meant to do;
◦ and that is to turn human hearts toward God

Then he made that terrifying demand:
“For I tell you, unless your righteousness exceeds that of the scribes and Pharisees, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven”
– rigid obedience to minute details of the Law was the trademark of the scribes and Pharisees
• but Jesus didn’t mean we must be more rigid or rule-based than they were
– Jesus is teaching us a new way to read the Law – his correct way
• following Jesus, Paul made a radical statement regarding circumcision
(a badge of God’s covenant with Abraham that confirmed the identity of his offspring)
“For no one is a Jew who is merely one outwardly, nor is circumcision outward and physical. But a Jew is one inwardly and circumcision is a matter of the heart, by the Spirit, not by the letter [of the Law]” (Ro. 2:28-29)
(this idea was appeared first in Deuteronomy [the Law] and Jeremiah [the Prophets]; De. 30:6 and Jer. 4:4)
◦ a little later Paul writes:
“But now the righteousness of God has been manifested apart from the law, although the Law and the Prophets bear witness to it–the righteousness of God through faith in Jesus Christ for all who believe (Ro. 3:21-22)
• Jesus was not teaching a greater religiosity,
◦ but what Jonathan Pennington refers to as “a greater righteousness”
◦ and Amy-Jill Levine, “a higher righteousness”

I see three important characteristics of Jesus’ “true righteousness”
First of all, it is relational – every command is rooted in love
Second, it doesn’t focuses on the surface of the Law, but the spirit of the Law
Third, the work it does is not on surface of our lives, but in our hearts
• what the Law and Prophets produce is a whole person–undivided–,
• where our external behavior matches our hearts’ commitments

As we move into the passage we’re covering this morning, we could begin, “For example”

Six times, Jesus shows us how he interprets the spirit of the Law
– he arranged all of these according to the same design
• Jesus begins, “You have heard that it was said” or “that it was written”
• next, he says, “But I say to you”
• then he provides at least one practical application
◦ the only example that lacks an application is the one on divorce
◦ there the application is obvious

Jesus’ first example, “You shall not murder”

What usually happens when we read these verses,
– is we immediately react to specific words and miss the point
• so let’s look closely at the big picture
◦ if all we have to do is obey the letter of the law,
◦ then it doesn’t matter what is in our hearts
• that’s the mistake Jesus wants to correct
◦ my heart matters, because it determines the kind of person I am
– having never murdered anyone does not make me a good person
• Jesus gives a good deal of space to clear up this issue
◦ it was a concern and goal of the Law and the Prophets
• the Law isn’t about setting boundaries and punishing bad behavior
◦ it’s about making us good people, inside and out
◦ righteous people, who love God and love others

Jesus takes us into what the Law says on the surface to its deeper message
– it’s clear the Law prohibits murder – it’s a “punishable offense”
• but Jesus says that anger is also a punishable offense
• then it seems like he is stepping up degrees of anger,
◦ and also stepping up the punishment:
◦ from being cited, to taken to court (Sanhedrin), to fires of Gehenna

(Gehenna was a valley outside the walls of Jerusalem where rubbish was burned and always smoldering – obviously an “unclean” place that became a symbol of extreme punishment)

– what I think Jesus is saying us that unresolved anger intensifies
• if you hold onto anger it mutates and increases
• murder is just one expression of it
◦ but you can do a lot of damage to another person before it comes to murder
Amy-Jill Levine, “Jesus sees connections between murder and insult, death and name-calling. He’s right. We’ve heard that ‘Sticks and stones can break my bones, but names can never hurt me,” but the saying is wrong. Names hurt. Names kill. In our call-out culture, children are cyberbullied to death; people take their lives because of the barrage of insults. Names kill. Jesus was right: if we would only listen to him.”

Anger is a normal, natural, and automatic emotion (everyone gets angry)
– at times, and in specific instances, anger is appropriate
And [Jesus] looked around at them with anger, grieved at their hardness of heart . . . (Mk. 3:5)
• of course, not all anger is appropriate
◦ in fact, it is almost always the wrong response to frustration, noisy neighbors (or children), and traffic
• like other negative reactions and emotions,
◦ anger has to be managed or controlled
◦ it’s energy can be useful, but we can’t hold onto it
– anger is always wrong if it settles into a permanent state
• if it becomes habitual or a personality trait
◦ if anger settles in our hearts as resentment, it festers
• some people choose to live with compromised health,
◦ physically and mentally, rather than let go of resentment
◦ remember, Jesus is trying to clean out our hearts

We cannot always forgive – or let go of our anger by ourselves
– but we can always turn to God for assistance
• what Jesus wants to emphasize, is what we carry inside
– in Matthew chapter 15, Jesus is asked a question regarding hand washing
• in answering, he moves from the hands to the heart,
◦ from the external to the internal,
• then he dives deep into the heart, exploring what’s there
◦ Jesus’ diagnosis of the human condition is that,
◦ all of us have heart problems

Jesus presents a case that shows how to diffuse anger
“So if you are offering you gift at the altar and there remember that your brother has something against you, leave your gift before the altar and go. First be reconciled to your brother, and then come and offer your gift” Matthew 5:23-24

The assumption is that you have wronged someone
– if that’s the case, Jesus says you can fix it (or at least take a first step)
• you can go to that person and offer to repair the relationship
• it may be up to you to begin the process of reconciliation
◦ it may be within your power to make things right
◦ however, you’re not responsible for other person’s response
– there may be other times when you have been wronged
• if another person comes to us seeking reconciliation,
◦ we have the opportunity and obligation to forgive
Then Peter came up and said to him, “Lord, how often will my brother sin against me, and I forgive him? As many as seven times?” Jesus said to him, “I do not say seven times, but seventy-seven times” (Mt 18:21-22)
• there Jesus emphasizes forgiving others “from your heart” (Mt. 18:35)
◦ which is the whole point
◦ this is the path to spiritual wholeness and healthiness

Jesus presents a second case where this applies
“Come to terms quickly with your accuser while you are going with him to court, lest your accuser hand you over to the judge, and the judge to the guard, and you be put in prison. Truly, I say to you, you will never get out until you have paid the last penny” Matthew 5:25-26

This instance is very different from the first one and more difficult!
– this time the problem is not with a brother, but your “accuser”
• this could be with anyone, even a stranger
• Jesus isn’t giving us legal advice,
◦ but he’s telling us to quickly resolve interpersonal conflicts
◦ he’s saying, “Don’t escalate the disagreement. Don’t let it go all the way to court”

Conclusion: Going through these verses, it occurred to me,

If the Sermon On the Mount were all we had of Jesus’ teaching;
– if there were no Gospel of Matthew, or the other gospels, or the New Testament,
• the Sermon would be enough
◦ enough to know God, his kingdom, and his will for us
Amy-Jill Levine, “It is impossible to sustain the sense of the kingdom’s presence. Stuff gets in the way. Life gets in the way. Failing bodies get in the way. We can’t be perfect all the time. These moments of doubt, frustration, jealousy, greed, or despair are not failures or disappointments; they are opportunities.”

Taking Jesus’ sermon into our hearts,
brings us closer to what’s in God’s heart
If more people,
if more Christians,
actually lived the Sermon,
it would change the world

Jan 5 / Chuck Smith, Jr.

Making Our Way Through 2025

Welcome and Prayer: Jim Calhoun

Come Lord and join us here today.
Gather us together.

When justice fades along with our hopes
Gather us together

When mercy seems distant and foreign and lost and forgotten
Gather us together

When kindness and respect Gentleness and civility
Retreat and feel like old worn memories
Gather us together

When arrogance and pride overwhelm us
And schemes of disregard win the day
Gather us together

When love is focused on things and money
And people are used and misused and torn
Gather us together

Gather us together, Lord
Where you are
Where we can hear your voice
Where our hearts can be healed
Where you make things whole again

Gather us together, Lord, and restore our hope
Reignite our love Rekindle our imaginations
Repair our relationships
Gather us together Lord and give us a song to sing
Fill us with praise for all you do
In our lives day after day
Bring us to worship
In word and deed
Body and soul
Hearts full to overflowing
Amen

Morning Talk: Scotty Smith

Approaching 2025, I found myself struggling with hope for the new year
– I think of myself as an optimist
• for instance, Divorce equals two Christmases and two birthdays
– but today’s world looks grim
• vicious election cycle, out of control inflation, wars, many tragedies, etc.
• I have been searching for hope

Reading through the Scriptures, I came across Paul’s letter to the Romans
– he wrote to a start-up church that he had never visited
• it was a church divided–not unlike our nation and even churches in our nation today
• what caught my attention, was his message to them about a future glory

I consider that our present sufferings are not worth comparing with the glory that will be revealed in us. For the creation waits in eager expectation for the children of God to be revealed. For the creation was subjected to frustration, not by its own choice, but by the will of the one who subjected it, in hope that the creation itself will be liberated from its bondage to decay and brought into the freedom and glory of the children of God.

We know that the whole creation has been groaning as in the pains of childbirth right up to the present time. Not only so, but we ourselves, who have the firstfruits of the Spirit, groan inwardly as we wait eagerly for our adoption to sonship, the redemption of our bodies. For in this hope we were saved. But hope that is seen is no hope at all. Who hopes for what they already have? But if we hope for what we do not yet have, we wait for it patiently.

In the same way, the Spirit helps us in our weakness. We do not know what we ought to pray for, but the Spirit himself intercedes for us through wordless groans Romans 8:18-26

Paul acknowledges our present suffering, our frustration, and bondage to decay
– these are related to our material situations and circumstances
• that is always where hopelessness is rooted
◦ and there is no denying them
◦ consider the person writing this letter; he experienced a great deal of real suffering
◦ that fact adds power to his words
• our hope lies in liberation from these material concerns
– Paul writes about a hope that is unique to believers
• our salvation in Jesus sets us apart
• he points out, that even though we already have the fruit of the Spirit,
◦ inwardly, we groan as we wait for the fulfillment of God’s work

Really? Even with love, patience, kindness, we still groan inwardly?

Paul explains, “Who hopes for what they already have?”
– when children see their wrapped gifts under the Christmas tree, they have hope
• hope for the special surprise that is hidden from them
• but as soon as the gift is opened, the hope is gone — it is fulfilled
– to me, the fruit of the Spirit is like a sneak peek of heaven
• the fulfillment of our hope
• if life were without challenges or suffering, if it were all ease and fun,
◦ there would be no need or purpose for hope
◦ in fact, that kind of life sounds a lot like heaven

Hope is built into our Christian character

C. S. Lewis described hope as a “theological virtue” that is “not a form of escapism or wishful thinking, but one of the things a Christian life is meant to do.”
Verse 26 has become one of the most comforting promises for me
– there are times I certainly do not know what I “ought to pray for”
• this verse is like giving a hug to someone who is grieving when words cannot bring comfort
◦ it reminds me of the “Footprints In the Sand Poem”
(There are several different versions of this, but the one that speaks to me is when walking with Jesus along a shore, I look back and see two sets of footprints, but in some places there’s only one set. I turn and complain to Jesus, “Why weren’t You there for me?!” His reply, “Those were the times when I carried you.”)
Henry Alford, “. . . the Spirit also helps our weakness; not helps us to bear our weakness, as if the weakness were the burden, which the Spirt lifts for us and with us, but helps our weakness, us who are weak, to bear the burden.”
• the Spirit bolsters our hope
◦ I believe the next section of scripture can have a similar effect

And we know that in all things God works for the good of those who love him, who have been called according to his purpose. For those God foreknew he also predestined to be conformed to the image of his Son, that he might be the firstborn among many brothers and sisters. And those he predestined, he also called; those he called, he also justified; those he justified, he also glorified.

What, then, shall we say in response to these things? If God is for us, who can be against us? He who did not spare his own Son, but gave him up for us all—how will he not also, along with him, graciously give us all things? Who will bring any charge against those whom God has chosen? It is God who justifies. Who then is the one who condemns? No one. Christ Jesus who died—more than that, who was raised to life—is at the right hand of God and is also interceding for us. Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? Shall trouble or hardship or persecution or famine or nakedness or danger or sword? As it is written:
“For your sake we face death all day long;
    we are considered as sheep to be slaughtered”
Romans 8:28-36

Paul faced those very threats he lists
– but he knew was it was to receive from God through Jesus “all things”
William Barclay, “That, to Paul . . . life was an eager anticipation of a liberation, a renovation, and a re-creation wrought by the glory and the power of God.”
• I see this hope also as a fuel for Paul in his ministry of spreading the good news

Story time

When my daughters, Addison and Adrianna, were very small we enjoyed a day at Disneyland. I borrowed a friend’s car to make the trip to Anaheim, but before leaving his house he warned me, “The gas gage doesn’t work, so you might want to fuel up before you get on the Freeway.” Being excited to get to the park right away, I skipped his advice. We went on every ride we could fit into the time available to us, so we did not get back on the road until midnight.

Anaheim boasts being home to “the happiest place on earth,” but Southern Californians know there is a dark side to the city where gangs roam and thugs threaten the safety and lives of others. We were driving through one of those dark areas when we ran out of gas. Fortunately, I could see a gas station down the road. I left the girls in the car with their mom, and walked to the gas station, then headed back with a can of gas in my hand.

I came to an intersection where I had to cross to the other side of the street. I could see two guys on the opposite corner, waiting for the “walk” sign to cross to my side. We would cross paths in the middle of the street. I kept my eyes on them as they came toward me, expecting them to look up. Both were wearing hoodies that covered their faces, kept their heads down, and had their hands in their pockets. I was beginning to feel like this was a weird situation. Now I was looking at them closely, and as they passed by me they began to pull their hands out of their pockets, and they were both wearing latex gloves and in their hands was something metallic–like maybe a metal club or bat. Immediately, I turned and ran. Then they began running after me.

I stayed in the street, running against traffic hoping that one of the drivers would stop and help me. No one did. The two men were also swerving between cars, trying to close the distance between us. I ran faster when there was a lull in the traffic until I was dodging cars once again. When I looked back, they had given up the chase and were running in the opposite direction.

Returning to the car, I quickly refueled, and we were back on the road safe and sound. As soon as my heart slowed enough for me to think semi-clearly, I asked God, “What was that about?” It was one of those times when God was not quiet. What he said to me was, “I’m not finished with you yet.” All I could say was, “Okay.”

Running out of fuel can be dangerous

– running out of hope can also be dangerous
– our sense of hope can be challenged by tragic events, disappointments, loss, confusion, and so on
• by the time Paul wrote the Romans, he was no stranger to suffering and persecution
◦ the very things that can cause our level of hope fuel to run low
◦ but Paul saw his suffering as an opportunity to bring glory to God

No, in all these things we are more than conquerors through him who loved us. For I am convinced that neither death nor life, neither angels nor demons, neither the present nor the future, nor any powers, neither height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord Romans 8:37-39 (through HIM who loved US)

Oswald Chambers, “These things can and do come in between the devotional exercises of the soul and God, and separate individual life from God; but none of them is able to wedge in between the love of God and the soul of the saint.”

This raises the question, “Why do we suffer if God loves us?”

Is it to glorify God?
To create a contrast between the blessings of heaven and hardness of life on earth now?
To test our faith?

Tribulation is difficult, and I always want to understand the “why” of my suffering
– turning to the Bible’s Wisdom Literature (Job, Proverbs, and Ecclesiastes) I learn:
From Proverbs: God is just. He rewards the righteous and punishes the wicked
From Ecclesiastes: Good is not always rewarded and evil is not always punishment. Everything is meaningless
From Job: The most blameless man gets the worst treatment imaginable
• naturally, Job demands answers from God
◦ God presented him with many of the wonders of his creation and all the operations he oversees
• Job’s response is truly inspired:

“I know that you can do all things;
    no purpose of yours can be thwarted.
You asked, ‘Who is this that obscures my plans without knowledge?’
    Surely I spoke of things I did not understand,
    things too wonderful for me to know.

“You said, ‘Listen now, and I will speak;
    I will question you,
    and you shall answer me.’
My ears had heard of you
    but now my eyes have seen you.
Therefore I despise myself
    and repent in dust and ashes”
Job 42:2-6

We won’t always understand what is going on
– some things are “too wonderful for us” (above our pay grade)
• I did not understand why God told me he was not finished with me yet
◦ and it didn’t matter
◦ like Job, the encounter with God was enough to satisfy my soul

And the peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus Philippians 4:7

Conclusion: How are you going to walk in hope in 2025?

How are you going to refuel your hope?
Through sharing the good news with others, like Paul?
Is there something you need to surrender?
Will you bask in eager expectation of heaven, the fulfillment of all hope and joy?

When I look back on my life from here,
I can see where God was present–during my trials and tribulations
So that’s my plan for this year;
to be more aware of God’s presence,
and to pay more attention to the glimmer of heaven sprinkled throughout each day

I will leave you with this Benediction, again from Romans:

“May the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace as you trust in him,
so that you may overflow with hope by the power of the Holy Spirit.
Amen





Dec 29 / Chuck Smith, Jr.

Sermon OTM Mt. 5:17-20 – 12/29/2024

Welcome and Prayer: Jim Calhoun

Come Lord join us here today.
Thank you Lord
Thank you
Thank you

Thank you for a year of goodness
For a year of tender care
For a year of abiding patience

Thank you for your unending love
Your constant presence (as a simple matter of fact)
Whether we could perceive it or not
And for the drips and drops
The nudges and pokes
To help us know you are near

Thank you for the stumbles on the path
The false starts
The brick walls
That had us calling out your name
First in frustration or fear
But in time with affection

It is more difficult to thank you for
Our disappointments
Our losses
Our failures
Our loneliness and isolation

And even more so for
Our need to grow
To step into the next thing you have for us
To take full advantage of an unexpected opportunity
To heal our deepest wounds
Because we are afraid
Afraid we will lose who we are today
Afraid that we won’t be able to rise to the challenge
Afraid that everything we know will collapse
Afraid that we will be judged and discarded
Again

But Lord, even for our need to grow and our need to heal we thank you
Trusting you will hold us
Lift us up
Carry us along
And take us through
Even if we freeze
Even when we turn back
Even if we fight you
Even if we must start again again

So we thank you for all the fresh starts and second chances
For the third chances
And all the times we get to try again
For the grace of living life in you
For the seven times seventy you grant us
Because this is what we need as humans
Frail, flawed and finite
Dependent upon you
Wholly
Gladly
Thankfully
Amen

Morning Talk: chuck smith, jr.

Do not think that I have come to abolish the Law or the Prophets; I have not come to abolish them but to fulfill them Matthew 5:17

Intro: We need to know where we are in Jesus’ Sermon

Verses 17-20 are the heart of the Sermon (perhaps the heart of the entire Bible)
– these verses hold the key to interpreting the rest of Sermon
• unfortunately, many Christians read this passage, but don’t understand it
– speculations have resulted in some big errors:
• one, is that Jesus and St. Paul were not on the same page
◦ i.e., Jesus taught we’re made righteous by the Law
◦ Paul insisted we’re righteous by faith, and not works of the Law
• another error: the Sermon was meant for a Jewish audience not for Christian disciples
◦ because of this kind of misreading and faulty interpretation, it’s really important that we get this right

I want to give you a layout of the terrain we’re going to cover

Jesus reveals two big ideas in verses 17 and 20
– in between those verses, Jesus drives home the first big idea
• his emphasis is so strong, it sounds like he’s exaggerating
◦ v. 18 stresses the permanence of the smallest details of Law
◦ v. 19 addresses the way people treat Law–and the consequences of their actions
• then, in verse 20, Jesus drives home his second big idea
◦ it would have sounded to his disciples even more preposterous than the first
– after these big ideas, Jesus illustrates them with six examples

V. 17, Jesus begins with a caveat and a shocking surprise

A surprise, because we’ve heard that Christians aren’t under the Old Testament Law
– Paul, writing to the Romans (and to the Galatians, who had disappointed him in this regard)
For by works of the law no human being will be [made righteous] in [God’s] sight (Ro. 3:20)
For Christ is the end of the law for righteousness to everyone who believes (Ro. 10:4)
• ever since the Reformation, this has been stressed so strongly
◦ that it has become the key doctrine of salvation for many believers
– being grounded in this belief, we’re shocked by what Jesus says
“Do not think I have come to abolish the law”
◦ Do not suppose or imagine – Do not draw this conclusion
• this does make sense when you consider that Jesus is Son of the Father, who delivered his Law to humankind
◦ he also ties the Law in with “the Prophets”
(which between the two of them often stand for the entire Old Testament)
◦ after his resurrection, Jesus told his disciples
“. . . everything written about me in the Law of Moses and the Prophets and the Psalms must be fulfilled” (Lk. 24:44)
– “fulfill” is same word he used here in Matthew 5:17
Amy-Jill Levine, “When Jesus speaks of ‘fulfilling’ the Torah, he signals that he is drawing out its full implications.”
• Matthew is fond of this word “fulfill” and its significance
“All this took place to fulfill what the Lord had spoken by the prophet” (Mt. 1:22; the same, or a similar phrase appears also in Mt. 2:15, 17, 23; & 4:14)

What “fulfills” the Law and Prophets?
Something we’ll come to later in the Sermon gives us a clue
“So whatever you wish that others would do to you, do also to them, for this is the Law and the Prophets” (Mt. 7:12)
◦ then Jesus totally gives it away in the last week of his public ministry (Mt. 22:34-40!)
• how I understand the fulfillment of the Law and the Prophets:
◦ it has to do with the power of God’s word (demonstrated on Mt. Sinai and in the visions and oracles of the prophets)
◦ there’ a spiritual potential in all God commands and promises
◦ Jesus actualizes, or releases that potential
he brings God’s word to its fullness in the lives of his disciples

Even though Paul was correct regarding the Law; i.e., that it can’t make us right with God,
– the Law is still is a vital and valuable revelation and also a connection with God
• but even more important is it’s fundamental significance
◦ it was never about making people perfectly obedient slaves,
◦ but it represented the formation of a bond with God
• in normal course of human affairs, people made agreements
◦ relationships were built on those agreements
◦ this involved a formal process in which they swore loyalty to each other
– the most intimate bond was the marriage covenant
• that is the significance of the Law
◦ it was Israel’s sworn covenant with God
“Now therefore, if you will indeed obey my voice and keep my covenant, you shall be my treasured possession among all peoples (Ex. 19:5)
And [Moses] wrote on the tablets the words of the covenant, the Ten Commandments (Ex. 34:28)
• this is the first indication that the Law is primarily relational
Jonathan Pennington, “This [view of the Law] is a far cry from the images of dusty old law books, large marble-filled rooms, and powerful judges standing coldly and objectively over us as we sit fearful in a box awaiting sentencing. Tora is covenantal and relational.”

Vv. 18-19, Jesus takes us deeper into the surprise

First (v. 18), the Law is here for the entire duration of the universe
– reading through the Law, some of it is obviously irrelevant
(when was the last time you saw your enemy’s ox stuck in a ditch?)
• but though the particular situations don’t fit our context,
◦ there are general principles behind them that do
◦ so we can still find relevant applications
• to make certain we do not shrug off chunks of the Law, Jesus adds,
“not an iota, not a dot will pass from the Law until all is accomplished”
◦ we would say, every ‘t’ is crossed and ‘I’ is dotted
“until all is accomplished” – or all his come into being
• “accomplished” signifies the same thing as “fulfilled,” simply from a different point of view
• honing in on the smallest details of the Law adds force to the point Jesus is making

Secondly (v. 19), there is no tension between the Law and the kingdom of God
– God’s faithful teacher will not avoid or disrespect the Law
• one thing is certain: the Law was adored by spiritual souls we encounter in the Hebrew Scriptures
“O how I love your law!
It is my meditation all the day”
(Ps. 119:97)
• we don’t have time to look into their great affection for it, but many instances occur in the Psalms

V. 20 provides the key to interpreting these four verses

This would have struck terror into hearts of those who heard it
Jonathan Pennington, “On the one hand this is shockingly bad news, because in Jesus’ day the scribes and the Pharisees were the righteous untouchables who were obviously far superior in righteousness to the mere masses.”
– but we have to immediately discard this reaction
• Jesus is not putting us in a piety competition of with the scribes and Pharisees
◦ he is not saying we must work harder to obey the letter of law
• it is not a matter of volume (how many commandments are you faithfully obeying) but of essence
◦ Jesus is not saying, “You must be more religious, more devout, more intense or passionate than the scribes and Pharisees”
◦ He is saying, “You must go about this differently from how they observe the Law”
– what was the problem with righteousness of the scribes and Pharisees?
• we find out all through Matthew in Jesus’ conflict with them,
and then Jesus provides us list of their failures in chapter 23; for instance,
“Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! For you tithe mint and dill and cumin, and have neglected the weightier matters of the law: justice and mercy and faithfulness” (Mt. 23:23)
(a significant contrast between law keeping in minutia, while neglecting the truly important broad strokes of the law)
• the Scribes and Pharisees missed the spirit of the Law, the true heart of the Law, and the heart of the Law is everything
◦ they missed the forest for the trees
– what Jesus illustrates is that the law is relational
• the scribes and Pharisees treated it as if it were moral
• what happens when we treat the Law as a moral code?
◦ we become fixated on ourselves!
“How am I doing? Have I broken a commandment recently?”
◦ we have less love or concern for others
◦ and we tend to become judgmental and treat others as being inferior to ourselves
– Mark gives us an insight into the Pharisee’s type of righteous
“For the Pharisees . . . do not eat unless they wash their hands properly, holding to the tradition of the elders, and when they come from the marketplace, the do not eat unless they wash. And there are many other traditions that they observe . . . .” (Mk. 7:3-4)
• these are all add-ons that are not found in the law, but in the tradition embraced by the Pharisees

My med: A few weeks ago, while reading Mt. 12:1-8, I had this thought: “Whatever a righteousness that exceeds that of the scribes and Pharisees means, it is not a more meticulous adherence to the letter of the law. This is proven when Jesus argues from the case of human need and compassion, demonstrating that specific stipulations of the law can be overridden in certain cases. It seems the question that determines the case, is this: What action best fulfills the spirit of the law, which is love for God and love for others. AND, it is here in verse 14 that the Pharisees show their true colors in conspiring to destroy Jesus for healing a man on the Sabbath. That is why (and in what way) their concept and practice of righteousness must be surpassed.”
• Paul cuts to the chase by declaring, “love is the fulfilling of the law” (Ro. 13:8-11)
• this is the essence of the “new covenant” (cf. Hebrews chapters 8-9)
◦ God gets his Law written inside of us and not merely to us
“Behold, the days are coming, declares the LORD, when I will make a new covenant with the house of Israel and the house of Judah, not like the covenant that I made with their fathers on the day when I took them by the hand to bring them out of the land of Egypt, my covenant that they broke, though I was their husband, declares the LORD. For this is the covenant that I will make with the house of Israel after those days, declares the LORD: I will put my law within them, and I will write it on their hearts. And I will be their God, and they shall be my people” (Jer. 31:31-33)
◦ the Law is fulfilled in our lives, when the spirit of it is written in our hearts

Conclusion: Many Christians practice the righteousness of the scribes and Pharisees

They go to church, pray, read their Bibles (infrequently), tithe, and they may attempt to live virtuous lives and convert others
The law of love, however, is much more challenging
(We will see this when we get to verse 44, where Jesus says, love your enemies! )

We might want to begin this way of fulfilling the Law by admitting that we’re broken
The world is hard on people – but then, so is the Church – and so are many families
We love imperfectly – sparingly – prejudicially
We are broken, but there is healing – in the love of Jesus
Receiving his love, love for God is birthed in our hearts,
and love for our neighbor as well
And THAT is what fulfills the Law!

Dec 22 / Chuck Smith, Jr.

Sermon OTM (Mt. 5:13-16) – 12/22/2024

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Welcome and Prayer: Jim Calhoun

Come Lord join us here today
This week we will be consumed with giving and receiving
With tokens, symbols, expressions of our affection
For our circle of family and friends
Large or small
According to our means
All of this to celebrate your coming,
Emmanuel, God with us
Our hope
Our salvation
And anticipating your coming again, to set things right

And we and our gifts are like echoes of the Magi
The wise men
Bringing gifts to you, when first born.
Deepen our impulse to bring gifts in your honor
And round them out with more kindness
More gentleness
More patience
For those we hold in our affections
And for those we are called to love
Who we hold no natural ties or bonds
Deepen our love with courage
Humility
Reverence
And steadfastness

And help us to live in this moment
Fully giving ourselves to you
In your presence
Just now
Full of joy
Taking another step forward into
The mystery of your coming
Becoming, each of us, in the flesh, peace in this world
Becoming the embodiment of goodwill for all
In our loving becoming Shalom
Amen

Morning Talk: chuck smith, jr.

You are the salt of the earth, but if salt has lost its taste, how shall its saltiness be restored It is no longer good for anything except to be thrown out and trampled under people’s feet.
You are the light of the world. A city set on a hill cannot be hidden. Nor do people light a lamp to put it under a basket, but on a stand, and it gives light to all in the house. In the same way, let your light shine before others, so that they may see your good works and give glory to your Father who is in heaven Matthew 5:13-16

Intro: Back in the days, when I was the pastor of a sizeable church,

We would celebrate Christmas with big productions. One year, when the stage was crowded with props and children, the music still ringing in our ears, I went to the microphone with my Bible in hand. As I began to speak, a girl six or seven years old, who had been sitting on a step right in front of me, stood up. She turned around, and with hands on her hips looked up at me and said, “Boring!”

– Christmas is a challenge – we run through the same story every year
• but here’s a twist:
◦ we’ve heard (plenty of times ) that Jesus is God’s Christmas gift to world
◦ but coming to Christmas through the Sermon, we hear something new
• Jesus announces that he is not God’s only Christmas gift
◦ we are also God’s gift to the world–we’re not the big one;
◦ we’re more like stocking stuffers – but still, we’re salt and light

The Big Idea
Jesus’ positive influence in your life
makes you a positive influence in the world

Jesus has shown us a portrait of his “Beatitude people”

The Beatitudes describe character traits, alien to human nature
– they won’t help you achieve success in any human culture
• they appear as weaknesses, not strengths; deficits, not assets
◦ so there must be some secret behind them that makes sense
◦ and there is! Later in Matthew, Jesus explains it to his disciples,
“To you it has been given to know the secrets of the kingdom of heaven, but to them it has not been given” (Mt. 13:11); “secrets” translates the Greek musterion – mystery
• everyone in the Jewish culture of Jesus’ time knew about the kingdom
◦ it was in the prophecies of Isaiah, especially – the coming Messiah and restoration of the Davidic dynasty
◦ they were waiting for the kingdom to come, praying for it, longing for it
◦ but the mystery was that the kingdom had arrived
George Ladd, “The most distinctive fact in Jesus’ proclamation of the Kingdom was its present inbreaking in history in his own person and mission. . . . There are several texts that speak of entering the Kingdom as a present reality.”
– in the next chapter, Jesus will teach his disciples to pray,
“Your kingdom come,
your will be done,
on earth as it is in heaven”
(Mt 6:10)
• God’s kingdom is where everything runs according to his will
◦ that’s heaven – everything perfect, good, beautiful; everything done in, through, and around love
• so Jesus’ “Beatitude people” live in two realms:
◦ the present, natural world and also a present, yet heavenly, realm
◦ in his letter to the Colossians, Paul wrote:
“He has delivered us from the domain of darkness and transferred us to the kingdom of his beloved Son” (Col. 1:13)

We need this insight regarding God’s realm to understand Jesus
– to appreciate where he is taking us and we need to be willing to embrace it
• but most of all, we need to experience the mystery
• the more we move our lives toward Jesus,
◦ the more real the presentness of God’s realm becomes

In these verses of the Sermon, Jesus uses two metaphors

They are obviously connected, because they have same pattern
– both begin with “You are”; both locate us on earth/in world;
• and both emphasize the importance that we be what we are
– when Jesus says, “You,” it’s the same you as in the last Beatitude
“You who are poor in spirit, who are meek, who mourn,” and so on
• the point of the metaphors is, Jesus’ “Beatitude people” have an influence in the world

“You are the salt of the earth”

What can this mean?
– salt is a necessity for both physical and mental health
– salt is used to purify water
– salt is a preservative
– salt adds flavor to foods
– salt was added to Israel’s sacrifices, to sanctify them

Jesus doesn’t designate a specific interpretation of “salt”
– biblical examples of the above possibilities include families and cultures that were:
• “preserved” by the presence of God’s people
• “cleansed or purified” because a servant of God was present
• “made healthier” by habits they shared with God’s people
– but I also like to think, that when Christians are at their very best,
• they add flavor to the life of a community
• I wish we were all as lively and confident as Paul, who wrote:
“But thanks be to God, who in Christ always leads us in triumphal procession, and through us spreads the fragrance of the knowledge of him everywhere” (2 Cor. 2:14)

Jesus raises the possibility that salt might not do its job
– he doesn’t describe what is lost in the environment–e.g., without salt meat stored at room temperature would go bad–
• but he tells us what happens to the useless salt–it’s “tossed out”
• technically, salt can’t lose its taste (any more than light can lose its visibility)
◦ but “lose its taste” translates the Greek word is moraino; it’s root is moron and is translated “foolishness” elsewhere
◦ through foolishness, disciples can forfeit their influence in the world
– useless salt is tossed out and trampled
• trampled, perhaps, because they don’t stand out and so no one sees them
• or maybe they’re so beneath others that no one bothers to look out for them
– the value of salt is in what it IS
• not what it has to try to be or must be trained to do
◦ salt is its essence, its nature
• I think it’s beautiful to think of our new nature in Jesus in this way
◦ we don’t have to try to be anything we are not
◦ we only need to be our true selves (e.g., Ep. 4:20-24)

“You are the light of the world”

Like salt, there are different meanings that light can have
– obviously, to illuminate a dark environment
• but also as a beacon – like a lighthouse, where we look at the light
• for centuries, we’ve known the healing properties of sunlight
◦ some internal lesions are now treated with light’s energy by way of fiber optics
• also recently, crime scenes can turn up evidence through the help of forensic light
– again, Jesus does not identify a specific quality of light, other than it is useful in dark environments

Jesus says something so obvious, that we may pass right over it
– you don’t light a lamp or flip a switch just to cover the light that is emitted
• why would Jesus even bother to make this point?
◦ I would say it’s because he knows us so well
◦ sometimes we do want to hide our spiritual life
• we’re with people whose reaction to us being disciples would embarrass us
◦ or we want to cross a line, without being held accountable to Christian beliefs
◦ or we don’t want to be identified with all the nonsense and ugliness
– whenever someone asks my wife Barb if she’s a Christian, she asks them, “Tell me what that word means to you?”
• their answer may not match hers or the life she wants to life

“let your light shine before others . . .”

Jesus does not say, “Get out there be my sales force”
– or “Be my police in the world, passing and enforcing religious laws”
• what he says is, “Just live truth in you define who you are, and let that be your witness to the world”

“so that they may see your good works . . .”

There are Christians who have a totally wrong idea regarding “good works”
(one Bible commentator wrote, “Good works are good for nothing”)
• Paul’s criticism of “works righteousness” is related specifically to works of the law with the intention of earning salvation
• but when it comes to good deeds, or “random acts of kindness,” Paul is all over that
“For we are his workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand, that we should walk in them” (Ep. 2:10)
◦ and he makes similar comments in at least eight other places in his letters

“and give glory to your Father in heaven”

Christians doing good in the world reflects well on God
– here is the first time in the Sermon that Jesus refers to God as Father
• and when he does, he says God is your Father in heaven
◦ which is also how he taught us to pray: “Our Father”

Eddie Piorek began teaching and demonstrating “The Father’s Love” after he discovered it for himself in a profound encounter, that was both healing and enlightening. Since his initial experience, he has been asked to share what receiving the Father’s love can release, heal, and empower in God’s children here and around the world.
• “The Father’s love” is a new vision of a true Father–our heavenly Father

Conclusion: I want to stress on last thought

There are “good works” that come naturally for you
Ways that you assist others, meet needs, provide care, and so on
Those good works are not like chores for you–you may not even think of them as a big deal
It doesn’t feel like you are going out of your way,
nor do you groan when the opportunity comes for you to share what you have to give
You don’t have to mimic others.
You have your own brand of good works
And . . .
Christmas is the perfect opportunity to go wild with good works

Dec 16 / Chuck Smith, Jr.

The Miracle of the Incarnation – 12/15/2024

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Welcome and Prayer: Jim Calhoun

Come Lord, join us here this morning.
Every breath is a gift.
And so is everyday.
The moment by moment
Connection with you
The life abiding
Our lives abundant
With you
In you
Have us crying out in joy

Yes, there are challenges
And sometimes we feel our joy being taken from us
By circumstance
By the grind of financial pressure
By the pain of physical or mental illness
By the challenge of relationships
By a world gone wrong
And they pull us away and we lose focus
And our joy fizzles
And we turn aside
As if, somehow, we know better.
Let our focus be you
Your coming
And your coming again
Your presence just now
Your long considered care
Your tender affection
Your good great love
Knowing every raindrop is a gift
Every morning sun
Every gentle breeze
Every shining star.

Knowing nothing can separate us from your love
That you are with us always
Redeeming us
Healing us
Making us whole
And it is enough
More than enough
to fill our hearts
With joy
Amen

Morning Talk: Eddie Pioreck

THE MIRACLE OF THE INCARNATION
The central miracle asserted by Christians is the Incarnation. They say that God
became Man. Every other miracle prepares for this, or exhibits this, or results from this.
C. S. Lewis, “. . . In the Christian story God descends to re-ascend. He comes down; down from the
heights of absolute being into time and space, down into humanity . . . down to the very
roots and sea-bed of the Nature He has created.” (C S Lewis)

Incarnation literally means “embodied in flesh…or taking on flesh”
The union of the Divine Nature with human nature…as the Son of God assumed our
flesh, body and soul.

Anticipation of the Incarnation

The fortress will be abandoned,
the noisy city deserted;
citadel and watchtower will become a wasteland forever,
the delight of donkeys, a pasture for flocks,
till the Spirit is poured on us from on high,
and the desert becomes a fertile field,
and the fertile field seems like a forest.
Isaiah 32:15

The words, “to come upon” is an idiom used in the Septuagint (a translation of the Old Testament into the Greek language). This same idiom recurs in the famous prophecy of Joel:
And it shall come to pass afterword,
that I will pour out my Spirit upon all flesh . . . .
(Joel 2:28-29)
You might remember that Peter quoted this verse on the Day of Pentecost to explain what was happening to Jesus’ disciples in the temple (Acts 2:14-18)
Word Bible Commentary, “This is the eschatological coming of the Spirit that will cause the wilderness to become a fruitful field.” (WBC)
This prophesied coming of the Spirit looks forward to the transformation of all
things through the Incarnation of the Son of God. All of Creation eagerly awaits
His Coming.

Announcement of the Incarnation

In the sixth month the angel Gabriel was sent from God to a city of Galilee named Nazareth, to a virgin betrothed to a man whose name was Joseph, of the house of David. And the virgin’s name was Mary. And he came to her and said, “Greetings, O favored one, the Lord is with you!” But she was greatly troubled at the saying, and tried to discern what sort of greeting this might be. And the angel said to her, “Do not be afraid, Mary, for you have found favor with God. And behold, you will conceive in your womb and bear a son, and you shall call his name Jesus. He will be great and will be called the Son of the Most High. And the Lord God will give to him the throne of his father David, and he will reign over the house of Jacob forever, and of his kingdom there will be no end.”
And Mary said to the angel, “How will this be, since I am a virgin?” 
And the angel answered her, “The Holy Spirit will come upon you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you; therefore the child to be born will be called holy—the Son of God. And behold, your relative Elizabeth in her old age has also conceived a son, and this is the sixth month with her who was called barren. For nothing will be impossible with God.” 
And Mary said, “Behold, I am the servant of the Lord; let it be to me according to your word.” And the angel departed from her Luke 1:26-38

Prior to Gabriel’s announcement to Mary, Israel lived in expectation of the fulfillment of God’s promise that he gave through the prophets. This is now the unfolding of his promise. So this is a big moment when Gabriel delivers the message.
The angelic announcement to Mary, that she had been chosen to conceive the Son of God while
still a virgin, is understandably a bit overwhelming, eliciting her question of “How?”

The answer, in the same language as Isaiah 32:15, is that, the Spirit will come upon you
and the Glorious Power of God will bring about the Great Incarnation that will change
everything.
Word Biblical Commentary, “By the sheer power of God a child will be born whose origin is not that of normal human generation.

The moment of the miraculous conception is hidden in the silence of Scripture while John
makes clear the result:
And the Word became flesh and dwelt among us, and we have seen his glory, glory as of the only Son from the Father, full of grace and truth (John 1:14)
The Greek New Testament has two words for “flesh”; soma refers the physical body, but sarx, though it is related to the body with is needs, drives, and desires, is used (especially by Paul) in reference to the human condition, which by nature resists God (Romans 8:3-8).
That the “Word became flesh” tells us that Jesus entered fully into the depths of what it means to be human.
Paul comments on the Mystery of it all:
“Great indeed, we confess, is the mystery of godliness:
He was manifested in the flesh,
vindicated by the Spirit, seen by angels,
proclaimed among the nations,
believed on in the world, taken up in glory
(1 Tim. 3:16)

Apprehension of Incarnational Presence
(My Franciscan tendencies will become obvious in this next section)

What has happened, is that God has come to us, entered into the heart of our humanness, and what is left for us it to become aware of this miracle. We apprehend the Incarnation on three levels.

Personal Level

Jesus promised his disciple that the Holy Spirit would “come upon them” and they would “receive power”
(Acts 1:8)
Jesus was using the same “come upon” idiom we found in Luke 1:35. On Pentecost they are filled to the
depths of their personal being. Paul’s description of the result of God’s Spirit dwelling in us and coming upon us is, “Christ in you, the hope of glory” (Col 1:27)
Richard Rohr suggests that the Spirit fills us to a “cellular level.”

When I began to experience the Spirit of God in this way, it opened my eyes to a whole new reality. A whole new way of being in the world. The Spirit works in the depths of our being, bringing to life the peace, mercy, love, goodness, and all the other spiritual virtues and fruits.

Panoramic Level

In Colossians, Paul speaks of Christ as being “before all things, and in him all things hold together” (Col. 1:17). Jesus does not exist outside of our lived experience of reality.
The way I imagine this, is that Jesus is sort of the “Cosmic Glue” that, to a subatomic state, holds the material universe together.

A few of the Psalms express the wonder, the goodness, the faithfulness, even the joy of God in the natural world. Paul picked up this revelation, and though less poetic, but every bit as profound, he wrote:
“For his invisible attributes, namely, his eternal power and divine nature, have been clearly perceived, ever since the creation of the world in the things that have been made” (Romans 1:20). When we know this to be true, the world around us opens in new ways.

During a period of uncertainty, I walked the beach near our home to clear my mind. I know that asking for a sign from God can seem silly, but I did it anyway. Suddenly this osprey, with wings spread wide, was gliding over my head. Right then I understood that God not only speaks to me through the Scriptures and quietly within my heart and mind, but through the natural world around me. He assures me of his presence, his faithfulness, and his love. Since then, there have been other times when, not a dove but an osprey has brought the goodness of God to me. I am now trying to make as many of those connections as possible.

The Presence of Christ in creation is a mystery, but his Presence can manifest itself in wondrous ways to the contemplatively aware.
Bishop Kallistos Ware, “The creation in its entirety is God’s handiwork; in their inner essence all created
things are ‘exceedingly good.’”

People Level

Humankind bears the “imago Dei,” the image of God, and as such each person has intrinsic value
and a spiritual inscape. (Gen 1:27) When we see persons at that divine depth it is
possible for the miraculous to happen! It could be “blurred,” but it’s there.

When we see others in this way, we are seeing them through the eyes of Jesus–family as well as strangers, enemies as well as friends. Everyone unique, everyone valuable, everyone reflecting something of the God who created each one of them.

Thomas Merton describes such a moment:
“In Louisville…in the center of the shopping district, I was suddenly overwhelmed
with the realization that I loved all these people…There is no way of telling these
people that they are all shining like the sun.
“It is like a pure diamond, blazing with the invisible light of heaven. It is in
everybody, and if we could see these billions of points of light coming together in
the face and blaze of a sun that would make all the darkness and cruelty of life
vanish. I have no program for this seeing. It is only given.”

Benediction

Blessed be your name, our Lord and Christ,
May your Glorious Presence within us, warm our hearts,
and open our eyes to see the wonders of your love
permeating the beauty of Creation,
and mankind created in your image.
Amen

Dec 9 / Chuck Smith, Jr.

The Sermon OTM – 12/08/2024

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Welcome and Prayer: Jim Calhoun

Come Lord join us today
You have come to bring us peace
And yet we are consumed with turmoil.
Needs unmet
Desires left dangling
Expectations real and imagined
Spoken and unspoken
fair or unfair
unfulfilled.
Relationships stressed and strained
Tattered, broken
And instead of peace we have anxiety and worry
Instead of peace we carry resentments
Instead of peace we hold judgements, harshness, bitterness
Save us from this path Lord
Help us reset
Help us realign
Help us start fresh

With every twinkling light help us
With every worn out Christmas song.
With every Santa clause
With every glint of tinsel
With every gift we buy or receive
Help us remember that you came to bring peace to the whole world.
For each of us
For all of us

And then remembering
For every bad driver
Let us pray for peace
For their peace and ours
For every annoying interaction
Let us pray for peace.
For their peace and for ours.
For every resentment,
for every wrong remembered
Let us pray for peace.
For their peace and ours.
For every enemy we confront
Let us pray for peace.
For their peace and ours.
For you are our peace
And the peace of the world
And we are overjoyed that we
Can live into our life
abiding with the Prince of Peace
And in turn
become peace embodied for our neighbor
Amen

Morning Talk: chuck smith, jr.

Blessed are those who are persecuted for righteousness’ sake, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.

Blessed are you when others revile you and persecute you and utter all kinds of evil against you falsely on my account. Rejoice and be glad, for your reward is great in heaven, for so they persecuted the prophets who were before you Matthew 5:10-12

Intro: These last two Beatitudes on Jesus’ list are not easy to digest

Jesus envisions a grim future for us – and if so,
– we’re expected not only to survive it, but to rejoice and be glad
• John Chapman was the Abbot of a monastery in Britain
• he was also a spiritual director to others, especially through letter writing
◦ one man who wrote to him, wanted his insight as to
◦ how he could extricate himself from a painful situation
Chapman, “I cannot possibly show you a way out . . . . [what you have is] the simple experience that suffering is really suffering and that the chief feeling it causes is rebellion against it, and even against Providence for allowing it. ¶ It is all a nasty medicine, but works wonders.”
– we agree it’s a nasty medicine, but doubt it works wonders
• we’re more of the opinion expressed by Helmut Thielicke,
Thielicke, “What a ghastly prospect! It makes one ask in all seriousness how Jesus could ever have gained disciples with an appeal like that.”
• so I think what we need to do first, is back away from these verses
◦ and get an aerial view of the entire Sermon

The backdrop for the Sermon’s central theme is in chapter 4
From that time Jesus began to preach, saying, “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand” (Mt. 4:17)

This tells us what Jesus is doing with his Sermon:
– he is preparing us to enter and live in God’s heavenly realm (“kingdom”)
• our experience of his realm begins in this life, though does not come to its fullness here
◦ that is the main thrust of Jesus’ message: our spiritual formation to live as residents of the realm here and now
• there is a second theme that is just important: “Repent”
Jonathan Pennington, “. . . the whole of the Sermon relates to the call to repentance in [Matthew] 4:17.”
– I grew up thinking repentance was a dramatic ordeal
• we learned how evil the smallest misdeeds were in God’s eyes
◦ by seven years old, we had already earned the punishment of eternal hell

Growing up, my parents were so sensitive and opposed to profanity that they would discipline us if we said words that sounded anything like a “dirty word”; for instance, we could not say dang, heck, shoot, crude, or fudge.
I did not carry on that tradition with my children. So one year when Christmas came around, we were to meet up with my parents with along with Aunts and Uncles in the home of one of my cousins. On the way there, I warned my kids not to say any of the substitute cussing words we permitted them to use. At one time in the evening all the guys were in the garage, and my cousin Bob was demonstrating his skill with darts. He nicely grouped three darts near the bullseye, and my son Will, who was seven years old, blurted out, “Oh my gosh!” Then he looked over at me and I was giving him the stink eye. He quickly corrected himself and said, “I mean, praise the Lord, praise the Lord, praise the Lord.”

• anyway, to repent we had to feel immense guilt, regret, and remorse
◦ then confess our sins and beg God for forgiveness — adding tears with our confession was a nice touch
◦ but that is not the biblical meaning of repentance
– a few years ago we spent several weeks studying this word
metanoia, translated literally, is a change of mind or thought
• and I believe this is what literally happens in our brains when we repent
◦ old habits are hard-wired between neurons, and those habits must be ended to break the neural connections
◦ repentance is a process of re-wiring the brain with new connections
– changing our “minds” in this way, changes our thoughts, words, and actions

In the Sermon, Jesus is redefining reality–and it is different from the world’s view of reality
(which, while growing up, was programmed into us through family, school, and culture)
– Jesus is reshaping our beliefs, values, and behavior through the lens of God’s realm
• the previous Beatitudes reveal this upside-down worldview of our Lord
• those who are poor in spirit, mourn, and hunger . . . are blessed
– this is the way of repentance — a transformed worldview and a transformed life
• the Sermon is meant to adjust our perception to the realm of heaven
◦ and in the process, reshape our lives accordingly
• I realize this can sound rather mystical,
◦ but the goal of Christianity is to live in world as Jesus lived in the world
◦ our total transformation is yet to come, but this is preparation for it
But our citizenship is in heaven, and from it we await a Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ, who will transform our lowly body to be like his glorious body, by the power that enables him even to subject all things to himself (Php. 3:20-21)

“Blessed are those who are persecuted for righteousness’ sake,
for theirs is the kingdom of heaven”

The first line of each Beatitude has been a challenge, but this one is the topper
– historically, persecutors have been very creative
• they have devised the most ingenious ways to inflict pain and death
• persecution has been ongoing throughout church history
◦ down to the present day–i.e., in China, Iran, and Sudan and forty-seven other nations,
◦ Christians are suffering and dying for their faith
– I don’t want to minimize the experience of Christians in the US,
• some, because of their faith in Jesus have been passed over for promotion, lost a career or clients,
◦ or were perhaps verbally or physically abused by a parent or other family member
• but for most of us, what the writer of Hebrews told his readers applies to us
“. . . let us also lay aside every weight, and sin which clings so closely, and let us run with endurance the race that is set before us, looking to Jesus, the founder and perfecter of our faith, who for the joy that was set before him endured the cross, despising the shame, and is seated at the right hand of God. Consider him who endured from sinners such hostility against himself, so that you may not grow weary or faint hearted. In your struggle against sin you have not yet resisted to the point of shedding your blood.”
◦ all things considered, we have it pretty easy
Abbot John Chapman, “I think it an excellent thing to laugh at one’s self a little whenever one feels [like] a martyr.”

I think it’s critical to focus attention on Jesus’ qualifier in this verse, which is,
“for righteousness sake”
– if you’re being annoying, starting arguments, constantly raising your voice,
• or if you’re behaving like an aggressive salesperson for Jesus,
• it’s not persecution when people shut you down

The previous Beatitudes describe a person’s character;
– poor in spirit, meek, merciful, and pure in heart
– or point out what they are feeling or doing; mourning, hungering, making peace
• but in this instance, Jesus is telling us what others are doing to them – they’re persecuted
◦ and it is not rare at all for a peacemaker to die by assassination
◦ Gandhi, Martin Luther King, Anwar Sadat, Yitzhak Rabin

“Blessed are you when others revile you and persecute you and utter all kinds of evil against you falsely on my account. Rejoice and be glad, for your reward is great in heaven, for so they persecuted the prophets who were before you”

The final Beatitude is an obvious reiteration of what Jesus just said
– so we want to pay attention to the alterations from verse 10 to verses 11-12
first we notice that with a slight shift, Jesus personalizes the Beatitude
◦ from “Blessed are those” to “Blessed are you” – for the first time addressing his disciples directly
• like Jesus, St. Paul took for granted, persecution would be a normal Christian experience
◦ writing to Timothy, he recounted his ministry, emphasizing his “persecutions and sufferings”
◦ and then:
“Indeed, all who desire to live a godly life in Christ Jesus will be persecuted . . .” (2 Tim. 3:12)
– with a second shift: Jesus identifies the underlying reason for persecution from “righteousness sake” to “on my account”
• for me, this produces a dynamic change in my attitude; that is, if there is a good reason or purpose for my suffering
◦ of course, if there is a good reason, it is often hidden from us

As a prisoner and doctor in Nazi concentration camps, Viktor Frankl noticed some people died who were in better health than others who in poorer health survived. This piqued his curiosity, so he began an informal study comparing the survivors to those who did not survive. Eventually he concluded that the men and women whose death had no apparent cause had lost hope and gave up. But the ones who survived believed that in spite of all the hardship, their lives still had meaning. For “righteousness sake” and for Christ’s sake, gives our live a meaning worth living for through suffering and persecution.

• suffering for Jesus is also a suffering with Jesus
“Remember the word I said to you: ‘A servant is not greater than his master.’ If they persecuted me, they will also persecute you” (Jn. 15:20)
there’s a third difference: where, in verses 11-12, Jesus adds a list of abuses as examples of persecution
– in a fourth difference, he tells (us) to rejoice and be glad when persecuted (!)
a fifth difference is his promise of a reward (more on rewards when we get to chapter 6)
a sixth difference, is that here Jesus connects our experience with the fate of the prophets

Perhaps persecution has a unique function we have yet to discover

Anyway, Jesus knew what persecution could do to half-Christians
– that is, people who go to church, enjoy the preaching, and love the music,
• but never gave God’s word enough space in their hearts and minds to sink deep roots
“As for what was sown on rocky ground, this is the one who hears the word and immediately receives it with joy, yet he has no root in himself, but endures for a while, and when tribulation or persecution arises on account of the word, immediately he falls away.” (Mt. 13:20-21)
• Jesus wants our faith to survive every sort of challenge and suffering
– so Jesus gives us this warning:
• persecution is not a sign of a breakdown in the system
◦ it isn’t an anomaly, as if it weren’t supposed to happen
• this Beatitude reveals the heresy of the “health and wealth,” “Prosperity Gospel,” and “Name It and Claim It” doctrines
– Jesus experienced the sharp edge of persecution
• he confessed that his soul was troubled over what lay ahead of him (Jn. 12:27)
• he begged the Father to spare him the bitter cup
◦ so he understands our hesitation to embrace this Beatitude
Abbot John Chapman, “It is not an imperfection to find it painful to submit to God’s will. Our Lord showed us that, by His Agony in the garden.”

Conclusion: Personally, I want my life to count for something

And if my death can count for something too, that’s even better

Dec 1 / Chuck Smith, Jr.

Sermon OTM – 12/01/2024

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Welcome and Prayer: Jim Calhoun

Come Lord join us here today.

Help us lord when things go well
Our plans fulfilled
Our expectations met
Our dreams made real
Our appetites satisfied
And our hearts begin to whisper to us that
We did it ourselves
In our power
On our own with no need of others
And no need of you

Help us lord when everything falls apart
Our disappoints solidify
Our histories repeat
Our dread becomes our companion
Our fears multiply
And our hearts begin to whisper to us that
All is lost
Nothing will help
No one will stand with us
And You no longer care

We come to you today bare-faced
Empty handed,
Naked in spirit before you knowing
Certain
That our hope is not us

Lead us Lord
Teach us
Persuade us
Gently please
Gently
Because we are listening
Willing
That our hope is you
That is our expectation is in you
That our healing and the healing of the world is in you
That our transformation and the transformation of the world is in you
That our joy and the joy of the world is in you
And for this we are filled with gratitude
Witnesses of all you do

Thank you Lord
Thank you
Thank you
Amen

Morning Talk: chuck smith, jr.

Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God.
Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called sons of God
Matthew 5:8-9

Intro: Jesus is sitting on a mountain overlooking Sea of Galilee

He is teaching a course on “Christian Spirituality”
– we are now five weeks into his introduction: The Beatitudes
• prior to teaching this course, Jesus had been announcing, “the kingdom of heaven is at hand”
◦ the course he teaches is meant to prepare us for that kingdom
◦ the Beatitudes reveal characteristics of the abundant life–the truly “good life”
• Jesus is not giving us a new list of rules
◦ he isn’t telling us what we should be doing, but describing what his followers are becoming
• all through this course, Jesus is working from the inside-out
◦ this is obvious in the next Beatitude we’re going to probe

“Blessed are the pure in heart”

If you ever look at all the ways the word “heart” appears in the Scriptures,
– you discover it is a complex and comprehensive word
• heart sometimes represents the entire inner life of a person, but it is also:
a physical organ: the center of biological life
a category of psychological phenomena: knowledge and wisdom, thought and reflection
a center of emotional experiences: joy and sorrow; the heart becomes troubled and suffers anguish
a capacity for spiritual potential: it can be desperately wicked, but God can also write his covenant law on it
• so the book of Proverbs counsels us to:
Keep you heart with all vigilance,
for from it flow the springs of life
(Pr. 4:23)
Jonathan Pennington, “Matthew puts great emphasis on the heart as the true inner person.”
– your heart has a significant influence in making you who you are
• in it are the internal roots of your external behavior

I think everyone here knows what the word “pure” means
– the Scriptures translate the same Hebrew word “pure” and “clean” — the same for the Greek words
• in one of Matthew’s stories, Pharisees came from Jerusalem
◦ you can tell they were on a mission to find fault with Jesus
◦ while observing him and his disciples, they identified a specific violation
“Why do your disciples break the tradition of the elders? For they do not wash their hands when they eat” (Mt. 15:1-2)
• Jesus answered their accusation, then used it to clarify something to the others gathered around him
“Hear and understand: it is not what goes into the mouth that defiles a person, but what comes out of the mouth; this defiles a person” (Mt. 15:10-11)
◦ when Peter asked Jesus to explain that, Jesus said,
“Are you also still without understanding? . . . what comes out of the mouth proceeds from the heart, and this defiles a person. For out of the heart comes evil thoughts, murder, adultery, sexual immorality, theft, false witness, slander. These are what defile a person (Mt. 15:15-20)
◦ so a pure heart is a clean heart
– but that is looking at purity from just one angle — another way to look at it is its “perfection”
• in pure gold, there is no other alloy; pure water is free of pollutants
◦ there is a wholeness, a completeness to purity
(see Mt. 6:22, where the “single,” undivided, whole and healthy eye fills the whole body with light)
◦ Jesus emphasizes this in the Sermon and other places — for instance:
to the Rich young man he said, “If you would be complete, go, sell what you possess and give to the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven” (Mark has, “You lack one thing” which suggests his purity was incomplete Mt. 19:21; Mk. 10:21)
to Martha he said, “Martha, Martha, you are anxious and troubled about many things, but one thing is necessary. Mary has chosen the good portion, which will not be taken away from her” (Lk. 10:41-42)
• a pure heart has one devotion, because,
No one can serve two masters . . . (Mt. 6:24)
◦ this is why David prayed,
“Teach me your way, O LORD,
that I may walk in your truth;
unite my heart to fear your name (Ps. 86:11)
◦ and why James wrote,
“a double-minded man [is] unstable in all his ways” (Jas. 1:8)

Compare what Abraham Maslow said regarding separating our spiritual activities from our normal daily routines. It is basically the same as James statement about double-minded instability: “As always, dichotomizing pathologizes (and pathology dichotomizes). Isolating two interrelated parts from each other, parts that need each other, parts that are truly ‘parts’ and now wholes, distorts them both, sickens and contaminates them.”

Jesus will tell his disciples not to be like the hypocrites
– he doesn’t mean people who say one thing and do something else,
• but people who are two things at once
◦ on the outside they’re pious, but on inside they’re devious (cf. Mt. 23:25-28)
• in the Sermon, Jesus is going after our hearts
◦ he wants our hearts all for himself and the Father

“for they shall see God”

Can you imagine anything more wonderful than this?
– it is with our hearts that we see God now, by faith
• but something far more wonderful is coming
• it will be worth whatever sacrifices we must make now
– the remainder of this chapter will continue to enlighten our hearts

“Blessed are the peacemakers”

I think it is very odd that most churches tend to build barriers
– people visit them or look up their website,
• and the first thing they encounter is a doctrinal statement
◦ that tells the visitor,
“Here’s who we are and what we’re about. So you can join us if you believe what we believe, think like us, look like us, and agree with us.”
◦ that can be a barrier even to an open-minded unbeliever
• the sermons of many preachers are filled with us/them jargon
– peacemakers don’t build barriers, they build bridges
• one of the peacemaker’s role is that of a mediator
◦ mediators bring people together, and help them work out their differences
◦ or, if they cannot work out their differences, they will still be able to enjoy a relationship with each other
• another role is that of a reconciler
◦ someone who sees another person as their enemy and refuses to even speak to them
◦ the peacemaker works to reconcile the breach between them

The first time I read all the way through New Testament, it was in The Good News Bible
– I still love the way the word reconcile is interpreted there:
“When anyone is joined to Christ, he is a new being; the old is gone, the new has come. All this is done by God, who through Christ [here is where the word reconcile is not used, but its meaning is clear] who through Christ changed us from enemies into his friends and gave us the task of making others his friends. Our message is that God was making all mankind his friends through Christ. God did not keep an account of their sins, and he has given us the message which tells how he makes them his friends. Here we are, then, speaking for Christ, as though God himself were making his appeal through us. We plead on Christ’s behalf: let God change you from enemies into his friends!” (2 Cor. 5:17-20)
– so, “Blessed are the peacemakers

“for they shall be called sons of God”

“Sons and daughters” would be as true a translation as “sons”
– Matthew tells the story of Jesus’ baptism in chapter 3
“And when Jesus was baptized, immediately he went up from the water, and behold, the heavens were opened to him, and he saw the Spirit of God descending like a dove and coming to rest on him; and behold, a voice from heaven said, ‘This is my beloved son, with whom I am well pleased’” (Mt. 3:16-17)
• Jesus shares his relationship to the Father with his peacemakers
– after two years of the pandemic, someone told me,
“I lost lots of friends to COVID–and not because they died”
• I don’t remember another election being as contentious as this year’s
• there’s a lot of bridge-building to be done
◦ a lot of mediation and reconciliation
◦ will we be able to make peace with others or between others if we do not know peace within ourselves?

Two great privileges: to see God and to be his children along with his Son Jesus
– this is the abundant life, the truly “good life”
• anyone with a pure heart and who is a peacemaker, already has this blessed status
• like the kingdom of heaven, it is “at hand”
(for an idea of what sort of time marker “at hand” is, see Matthew 26:46-47!)

Conclusion: Through the rest of this chapter, Jesus is going to open our eyes to purity of heart and to peacemaking

But if in the mean time, you don’t have a plan to start working on purity and peace,
I’ll share with you what I have found to be helpful
It can take awhile doing this until it becomes automatic, but it’s worth it

I try to build a habit of running my thoughts through a filter
First, I have to bring awareness to what I am thinking
The filter is this:
I ask, “Is this thought purity of heart?”
If I ask the question with a strong awareness of God’s presence here and now,
the answer usually comes immediately (and often, it’s a NO)
We can also ask, “Will this make for peace?”
Most the time, simply asking the question, it answers itself
Try it

Nov 24 / Chuck Smith, Jr.

Sermon OTM – 11/24/2024

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Welcome and Prayer: Jim Calhoun

Come Lord join us here this morning

We have no way to tell of our gratitude
Our words are little even as our hearts are full
Still we try
To speak our heart
In our affection for all you do

In our vulnerability
In our blindness
We trust you for your care and consideration
Your great goodness surrounds us
Envelopes us
Holds us together

Your steady hand guides us
Pushing us forward
Pulling is back
Just as needed and
Just when needed

We offer our thanks for the times
We feel you near
Sparrows are gathered
Mountains move

And we offer our thanks for the days we felt alone
The universe echoing, rattling
Our world crumbling
Only to find you were at hand All along

You have set us free
To rejoice in our lives as given
Not sugar-coated
Not turning our backs on injustice
And human suffering
But to rejoice and praise you
Full of gratitude
For who you are
And who you are making us
And for our work together
With you
To repair this world
With kindness
And patience
And joy
Amen

Morning Talk: chuck smith, jr.

Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they shall be satisfied.
Blessed are the merciful, for they shall receive mercy Matthew 5:6-7

Intro: When I began preparing today’s talk, there was a sudden moment when I felt very small

The spiritual wisdom of Jesus rivals every other enlightened text
– even gurus, like Gandhi, who rejected Christianity have admired the Sermon
• reading the words of Jesus, and trying to explain them to you,
◦ leaves me feeling inadequate and foolish
◦ like a four-year old who is told, “Explain quantum physics
– what I know about these two Beatitudes, I learned on the job,
• not from other Bible teachers or commentaries,
◦ but in my own ministry of applying the words of God to the lived experience of people on this journey
• what we’ll go over today may be challenging, but it will be practical and liveable,
◦ and what I believe Jesus wants us to learn
– we will discover that the message of these two Beatitudes, is richer and healthier than what we’ve ever known

Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness

Righteous is a key theme in the Sermon, and perhaps even the central theme
– if it’s that important to Jesus, it must be important to us
• for years, I thought “righteous” meant: pious, religious, ultra-strict
◦ someone who kept all the rules, obeyed all the commandments
• then twenty years ago a spiritual mentor explained to me,
Fr. Romuald, “We have made the Law [of Moses] moral; it’s not, it’s relational.”
– for the Pharisees, the Law was moral – all about right and wrong
• their task was to learn it and obey it, and they found they could do that in a way:
◦ that made them feel superior to others
◦ that cut them off from others rather than connect with others
◦ that empowered them to judge and condemn others
◦ that made them believe they were more righteous than others
• they reduced religion to the bare minimum
◦ this was Jesus’ criticism of Pharisee piety
For you tithe mind and dill and cumin, and have neglected the weightier matters of the law: justice and mercy and faithfulness (Mt. 23:23)
– living by the rules is like “painting by numbers”
• it is not authentic art – and it has no life of its own
• this is what Christianity has become to many people
◦ but it is not what God had in mind or what Jesus taught

I immediately felt the truth and power of Romuald’s words
“God’s Law is not moral it is relational”
– I don’t think I’ll ever feel like I’ve emphasized this point enough
– the purpose of the Law was to seal a covenant relationship
• the Ten Commandments begin with Israel’s exclusive relationship with Yahweh
◦ then they reveal how we show love to God and to others
• I will take you to two passages that clearly illustrate the relational nature of the Law
1. Jesus was asked, “Which is the greatest commandment in the Law?” He answered,
“You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul ad with all your mind. This is the great and first commandment. And a second is like it: You shall love your neighbor as yourself. On these two commandments depend all the Law and the Prophets” (Mt. 22:36-40)
2. Paul wrote, “Owe no one anything, except to love each other, for the one who loves another has fulfilled the law. For the commandments, ‘You shall not commit adultery, You shall not murder, You shall not steal, You shall not covet,’ and any other commandment are summed up in this word: ‘You shall love your neighbor as yourself.’ Love does not wrong to a neighbor; therefore love is the fulfilling of the law (Ro. 13:8-10)

Jesus says that those who hunger for righteousness are blessed

Hunger is a state of deprivation – we know it by how it feels
– it is an unpleasant feeling, a discomfort, a void that demands attention
• when Jesus applies this need, this craving, to righteousness, he gives it a new application
◦ in this instance, it is not the body that hungers, but the soul
• I can think of three ways this hunger for righteousness works in us:
◦ we long to be in a right relationship with God
◦ we long to be in right relationships with others
◦ we long to see the entire world in right relationships (nationally, socially, and personally)
– when we look at nations, cities, and human society in general, and our hearts break over hatred and war, crime and cruelty, suffering and starvation, we are hungering for righteousness
• sometimes so deeply, that it feels like we’re starving for righteousness
• we even hunger to be better people than what we are
◦ but with our best plans and efforts, we still screw up
◦ we hunger for a completeness, a wholeness, that we lack

Jesus sees this hunger as a “blessed” state
– it means we desire the right things:
• people who love – show kindness – give assistance – and support others
• we long to see humankind motivated by goodness
◦ not all of the self-centered, worldly-centered values, that have us at odds with each other, scrambling over each other to get there first, or get the most, or get the best, leaving the crumbs for the poor
– Jesus see our hungering souls as blessed, because we shall be satisfied
• a new age will bring a new world that will be just like the one we dream of and wish for
◦ in the meantime, Jesus will teach us to pray:
Your kingdom come,
your will be done,
on earth as it is in heaven
– it should now be easy to see how this hunger leads to the next Beatitude

Blessed are the merciful

Two times, quoting the same verse, Jesus will criticize the Pharisees for their failure to show mercy
Go and learn what this means: “I desire mercy, and not sacrifice” (Mt. 9:13)
If you had known what this means, “I desire mercy, and not sacrifice,” you would not have condemned the guiltless (Mt. 12:7)
– I’m not sure what woke me up to mercy, but one day I was overwhelmed with the realization, of how unmerciful I was, and what a terrible thing that is
• to get to the heart of mercy, we can jump ahead in the Sermon
Judge not, that you be not judged. For with the judgment you pronounce you will be judged, and with the measure you use it will be measured to you (Mt. 7:1-2)
– here’s the question:
How much mercy do you want God to show you?
• I would have to be crazy to say, “I want God to be hyper-critical of my every thought and action”
• however, that is precisely how I would be judged, if I use a very fine criteria in the way I judge others

Our nation has become overwhelmingly judgmental and hyper-critical
– and it will be 100 times worse if Project 2025 has any role in the new administration
• it’s very easy to judge others for sins that are not our own
• easy for me to judge the woman contemplating abortion, or the gay person, or the trans-gender person
◦ at the very least, we need to try to understand those we want to condemn
◦ I do not live inside their heads, nor can I see them through the eyes of Jesus

Almost everyone is familiar with John 3:16, but fewer know that verse’s less famous twin, John 3:17,
For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but in order that the world might be saved through him.
Jesus would not be much of a Savior if he came to condemn every sinner.

– but even still, it’s almost impossible not to judge others
• God designed our nervous system to detect danger, and we do it and make judgments based on it unconsciously
• so I think the point of mercy, is to catch ourselves when we judge someone else
◦ I feel God’s blessing when I do catch myself
◦ when I catch myself, or God alerts me to a snap judgment I’ve made on another person,
I say, “Thank You, God! I don’t know anything about that person, I am in no position to make a judgment, much less a condemnation. Bring them to Yourself and bless their day.”
– one side of mercy is suspending judgment
• the other side is suspending forgiving
• Paul argued, that no one knows what’s in another person’s heart,
Therefore do not pronounce judgment before the time, before the Lord comes, who will bring to light the things now hidden in darkness and will disclose the purposes of the heart (1 Cor. 4:5)

For they shall receive mercy

If ever you were pulled over for a traffic infraction, and you were able to drive away with only a warning, then you know the blessed state of receiving mercy
– we can only know this blessedness–abundant life–blessing if we are merciful

When I first began attending John Wimber’s Vineyard church in its early (when it was still a Calvary Chapel), I discovered that worship could create a perfect environment in which to become aware of the presence of God. There was another discovery I made. When John spoke, I felt God’s mercy for me–that he knew my struggles, my intentions, my hopes–that he knew me and received me to himself. He received me, not because I was good enough, but because he was merciful enough. I remember leaving one of John’s services thinking, “If I had spent the last hour in conversation with Jesus, this is how I would feel. I would know the mercy I experienced from him.” This realization alerted me to the importance of receiving and showing mercy.

I want to show you now how righteousness and mercy are intertwined (from Matthew 25:36-44)
“Come, you who are blessed by my Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you . . . .” Then the righteous will answer him saying, “Lord, when did we see you hungry and feed you, or thirsty and give you drink . . . .?” “Truly, I say to you, as you did it to one of the least of these my brothers, you did it to me” (Mt. 25:31-40)

Conclusion: Christian spirituality isn’t about working miracles

It isn’t about transcendence, ecstatic moments, seeing angels
(though I would never say no to any of those experiences)
Christian spirituality is about the changes that take place within us
Those that we make, and those we must allow God to make, because we cannot do it all ourselves
And as those changes occur in our lives,
they have us hungering and thirsting for righteousness and showing mercy

Nov 21 / Chuck Smith, Jr.

The Novi Community – 11/17/2024

Welcome and Prayer: Jim Calhoun

Come Lord, join us here today.
Sometimes we get it all wrong
Sometimes we ask the wrong questions
Focus on the wrong things.
Sometimes we are confronted by a situation
A problem
A disaster
And we ask ourselves
If we are clever enough
Or strong enough
Or rich enough
To handle it, manage it,
beat it back
Or make it go away.
Or maybe we try to ride the wave of circumstance hoping,
hoping everything will be okay,
at least for us.

Acting like this is a solo project
And we are on our own
The beginners and finishers
The ones in control
Like we are some kind of super hero
Or just folk lost and forgotten,
alone.

And this is our mistake
And we ask your forgiveness
For in truth we know you are with us.
We feel it in the cool breeze
We feel it in the warmth of the sun
We see it in the warmth of a smile
You are with us in all the ambiguity of life
In all of its complexity
In all of its brokenness

And Lord, we are with you
Willing
Remembering just who you are
And who you have been to us
Knowing you are steady in ways we can never be
Trustworthy in ways we can never be
Concerned and considered and loving in ways we can never be

And we are with you
Partners by your invitation
Made family by your invitation
No longer slaves but friends
Working together for the things your hold dear

Come close today Lord
Hold us dear
Fill us with your concerns
And fill us with your joy
And send us out
Together
To do as you ask
Full of expectation
Full of your peace
Knowing all shall be well
Because You are You
Amen

Morning Talk: Steve Gumaer

Steve and his wife Oddny founded The Novi Community, an non-profit organization devoted to the care of children in war-torn parts of the world. With the help of a clinical psychologist whose passion and mission has been to help children process the traumatic experience of living in a war zone. Without the loving support, close attention, and interaction with care givers who understand their needs, children are left to deal with the cruelty and chaos on their own. Novi provides much needed training to teachers, therapists, and parents to meet these needs. The majority of the training they provide is hands-on, showing care givers how to make use of play, games, personal interactions, and other projects to regulate the hearts, minds, and bodies of these young souls.

The first big question we ask in life is, “Who am I?”
– at first, our sense of identity is derived from our parents
• later on, it is society that is telling us who we are
◦ besides these influences, we are also affected by how we fit in at school and are treated by other kids
• having some idea of who we are, we try to settle into our place in the world
– then life throws us a curve and we get a shock
• perhaps a divorce, or the death of someone we hold dear, or the loss of a job
◦ then we realize we’re not who we thought we were
• at this point, we begin our adult search, “Who am I now?”
◦ we peel back the layers of a self defined by others
◦ we want to get down to the essence of our true self

When I began this adult quest for a sense of self, I read books
– at first I read the Bible
• I assumed that if I did what it said, I would become my true self
◦ I was dutiful in my reading and compliance to scripture,
◦ but I discovered that it’s not that simple
– I read other books as well
• high on my list were books on psychology
◦ from them I learned:
The true self is often hidden by what happened to you as a child
• I realized that was what had kept me from finding the answer to who I am
◦ my early trauma did not result from living in a war zone, but from my childhood home

[It turns out that following Jesus requires us to lose our self in order to find our self (Mt. 16:24-25). We need to see that our “perceived self,” defined as it is by the world (parents, culture, and other influences) is not our true self, which we find in following Jesus. Paul makes a similar contrast between the old self and the new self (Eph. 4:20-24).]

Early in our marriage, my wife Oddny and I found ourselves in Thailand
– we were visiting refugee camps, providing desperately needed supplies to survivors of the ethnic in Myanmar
• during one of our visits, we met Rose, who was a well-known figure in the camps
◦ she had a reputation for the many ways she had assisted others
◦ she launched a program to assist children who were being overlooked in the refugee camps, because they came without parents or older siblings, and had no one to look after their welfare
• Rose had created a “library” for the women refugees
◦ the library consisted of stories the women shared with each other in small groups
◦ Rose’s compassionate leadership allowed them to feel safe enough to tell their stories of being violated by Myanmar soldiers
– in spite of all that she had suffered personally,
• we witnessed within Rose a power, an inexhaustible energy to do good for others
• as I observed Rose, it seemed to me that she had more of Jesus in her than I

A research crew came to Myanmar

They were there to document the plight of the ethnic peoples who were being driven from their villages, and either killed or enslaved
– the crew visited one burned out village, where at first they found no survivors
• but a soft cry led them to one little girl
◦ either her parents hid her and their own bodies were among the dead around the village
◦ or she was separated from them when others fled for their lives
• the crew brought the little girl to Rose
◦ fortunately, the little girl had heard of Rose, and trusted her
◦ Rose became her foster parent
– Rose needed financial support to care for the child
• when asked how much money she would need annually,
◦ she sat down and began calculating what it would cost for food, clothing, and education
◦ she determined the amount necessary to meet the girl’s needs would be $30.00

This, and other experiences like it, sent me back to the Bible

In all my previous study of the Scriptures, what had I missed?
– what I found was a beautiful thread that began in the first five books and ran all the way through to the end
• again and again, God emphasized his concern for the widow, the orphan, the stranger, and the poor
◦ and again and again, he revealed to his people that it was their job to care for the widow, the orphan, the stranger, and the poor
– when Jesus was asked what one must do to “inherit eternal life,”
• he affirmed the two greatest commandments:
You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your strength and with all your mind,
and love your neighbor as yourself
• when asked, “And who is my neighbor?” Jesus told the parable of the “Good Samaritan”
◦ the parable illustrates what Jesus taught elsewhere,
◦ and the message is anti-racism, showing love to the enemy, caring for the stranger
But if anyone has the world’s goods and sees his brother in need, yet closes his heart against him, how does God’s love abide in him? Little children, let us not love in word or talk but in deed and in truth (1 Jn. 3:17-18)

Today’s news is filled with sights and sounds of the devastation and atrocities of wars around the world
– the suffering and heartache of it is so distressing that we can’t handle it and turn away
• that’s okay to turn away, but it doesn’t mean that we do nothing
• we return to the greatest commandments for instructions as to how we must respond

When Rose took that little girl in and become a mother to her,
– she wasn’t just being a “good Christian”
• she wasn’t just obeying a commandment
• she was love in action
– Rose did not have to advertise her ministry
• people simply knew that they could come to her
• the great commandment is not about doing our duty
◦ it’s about pulling back a curtain and revealing love
◦ to reveal love, is to reveal God to others, for “God is love”

Who am I?
– when we discover the truth, it becomes a whole new source of life and energy in us

Why is The Novi Community in Ukraine?

Why are we in other war zones?
My wife, Oddny, was in Iraq during the United States conflict with Isis
– one night she and her team had to take shelter from a wave of missle strikes
• in the morning they exited from their shelter to a mass of human bodies
◦ out of the rubble, a father came to her with his twelve year old daughter
◦ one arm was bound because it had been severely damaged by shrapnel
• Oddny told the father, “We have to get her to the medic right away”
◦ but he waved her off and speaking English he said,
“Her arm is not her biggest problem. No, her biggest problem is that she is not talking, she is not eating, she is not sleeping, she is not responding to anyone or anything.”
◦ his next words will ring in our ears forever
“It is nice to heal her body, but who will heal her heart?”
– that question has become our challenge
• how can we heal the hearts of children that have been broken by war?

With that goal in mind, we found a clinical psychologist whose research and work has been helping children traumatized by war
– he has been going into Ukraine with us, training teachers, therapists, parents, and other care givers
• they are learning how to work with children to help the process the enormous challenge of living through the nightmare of warfare

Conclusion: The Novi Community is about healing a child’s heart
If their hearts are not healed properly, they’ll be incapacitated to ever live a normal life,
or they’ll be reactive and neurologically dysregulated, unable to control their actions,
or they will be forced to adopt other ways of coping, which may include crime and violence
We have learned from the research of qualified specialists,
that the most reliable to predict a child’s potential healing is
“One adult that the child can trust”
So we go
to war zones
to be with the children there, and walk with them through the nightmare
The person who goes out to love, becomes the embodiment of love
And that is what we strive to be
But the work before us is massive, and we can’t do it alone

We are told that humans are social creatures, that we belong in communities
And it is true; we are all connected
Reflexion–your spiritual community here in Orange County–is a part of The Novi Community
We are one
We are grateful for your love, prayers, and support
You are alongside us and assisting us to have boots on the ground,
providing resources that are helping and healing a generation
Thank you

Nov 14 / Chuck Smith, Jr.

Helping Hands Exhibit

Sunday, November 17 The Novi Community will host an art exhibit, featuring hand drawn portraits made by children living in several of war-torn cities of Ukraine. Their work will be on display at the
La Ventura Event Center
2316 South El Camino Real
San Clemente, California
The doors will open at 4:00 pm and will run for four hours. There is no admission fee.

Children living in warzones are deprived of basic needs such as safety, education, and nutrition that are required for positive development. They are also exposed to violence, loss, displacement, and all the disturbances created by war. These factors often lead to severe emotional trauma, mental development, social disorders, and skills necessary to thrive throughout their lives and into adulthood.

In the chaos of violence, where young lives are fractured and isolated, Novi reconnects, heals, and uplifts. Supported by care and compassion, these children don’t just survive—they learn, grow, and rediscover joy. Novi equips them to form and maintain friendships and build their futures. We provide specialized training and tools to volunteers, social workers, teachers, therapists, and others who work with children in these high-stress environments. All Novi interventions are based on regional needs and are initiated through local professionals and caregivers. We cooperate with community organizations and institutions, obligating ourselves to the highest ethical standards.

Helping Hands is a play-oriented group activity that helps young children develop emotional awareness and healthy ways to cope with their feelings. Children begin by drawing a life-sized self-portrait and then are led to identify strong emotions, where they are felt on their bodies, and what helps them to cope with these feelings. These impressions are expressed artistically in their drawings. The intervention is adaptable for special needs and can be used in multiple sessions, with a focus on regulation, triggers, coping, and processing. In brief, we are working to preserve the normal childhood life experiences. This activity is just one part of a program that includes play, games, and lots of fun.

We invite you to visit the exhibit and witness the effectiveness of Helping Hands in the lives of the children whose artwork will be on display.

For more information on The Novi Community, please visit novi.ngo