Before going to seminary,
my wife, Pastor Jennifer, was a teacher.
So, when our son’s class
went on class field trips
Pastor Jennifer had a whole class of her own
and I was usually the parent
who went with Zion.
One year,
the class field trip
was to the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame
in nearby Knoxville, TN.
I had never been
to the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame
but all I had ever heard about it
from those who had been
was how inspiring,
how fascinating,
how truly amazing the experience was.
Not being a sports fan myself
I was dubious
about spending the day in a sports museum of any kind
and even more skeptical
that the experience would capture
the abbreviated attention spans of second graders.
As the kids spilled off the bus
and shuffled into the museum
we were ushered first into a small theater
where we were shown a one-hour documentary
about the history of women’s basketball.
Then we were herded like cattle
through a tour of the museum,
exhibit by exhibit,
all while trying to keep tiny hands off the glass
and tiny bodies on this side of the velvet ropes.
The tour ended
in an area filled with basketball goals,
various basketball related games,
and basketball themed playground equipment,
televisions blaring old footage of basketball games,
and nearly 100 screaming second graders.
The whole experience left me
underwhelmed
and overstimulated.
I hadn’t found the inspiration,
the fascination,
or the amazement
that I had been so universally promised.
I left the experience
with a nagging question:
“So what?”
(Timeout:
I feel it is necessary
at this point
to assure you that these are my feelings
about sports generally,
and not because this was
the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame.)
I mean no disparagement
to anyone who likes sports,
Women’s or Men’s,
I just don’t get it.
I never have.
I’ve really tried.
Soccer,
golf,
hockey,
football,
baseball,
tennis,
softball,
even the Olympics;
I just cannot muster
any amount of interest
whatsoever.
After this field trip,
my wife and I
were having dinner with our pastor,
an avid basketball fan.
As I relayed to her my general indifference
toward the whole experience
she sat slack-jawed,
almost personally offended,
that I found such apathy
for something from which
she derived so much pleasure
and meaning.
This is one of those Sundays
where the lectionary is doing us few favors.
The Gospel reading is truncated;
skipping the events leading to this conversation
with the disciples,
and ending before we get to hear the rest of the story.
Today,
we hear Jesus ask the disciples
what people are saying about him.
They give a smattering of answers,
mostly that Jesus is the reincarnation
of one of the prophets,
or some amalgamation of the them all.
The Jesus asks,
“Who do you say that I am?”
And Simon Peter says,
“You are the Messiah,
the Son of the Living God.”
Jesus affirms this answer
and that Simon could only know this
if it were revealed to him by God.
Jesus tells Simon Peter
“you are Peter”—
which means ‘rock’—
“and on this rock I will build my church
and the gates of Hades shall not prevail against it.
I will give you
the keys of the kingdom of heaven,
and whatever you bind on earth
will be bound in heaven,
and whatever you loose on earth
will be loosed in heaven.
Now don’t tell anyone any of this.”
Whether you believe that
Jesus will found his Church on Peter’s confession
that he is the Christ,
or whether you believe that
Jesus will found his Church on Peter
because he confessed that Jesus is the Christ,
It is Peter’s confession
and Jesus’ confirmation
that are the big news in this text.
But because the story stops here
I have to make a confession of my own;
Confessing that Jesus is the Christ
Leaves me just as underwhelmed,
indifferent,
and apathetic
as a whole museum about basketball.
Now,
before you call the bishop
or assume I’ve lost the faith,
Let me assure you,
I too believe that Jesus is the Christ,
and that is good news all by itself.
But I still have that nagging question:
“So what?”
Thankfully,
despite abbreviating the Gospel lesson for the day,
the lectionary also gives us Romans 12:1-8.
“Therefore,”
says Paul.
A mentor of mine
used to say,
“Anytime you see ‘therefore’ in the scriptures,
ask what it’s there for.”
In the book of Romans,
Paul has spent the previous 11 chapters
explaining,
expounding,
and exhorting
that Jesus is the Christ,
that in Christ
“there is therefore now no condemnation,”
despite our inability to follow the law,
to save ourselves,
or even meaningfully participate in saving ourselves
apart from Jesus the Christ.
In chapter 11,
just before today’s “therefore,”
Paul has promised
that God’s mercy
has been extended to all people
because Jesus is the Christ.
Paul has spent these 11 chapters
proving his case
that in Christ,
by Christ,
through Christ
God has and is
saving all people.
In chapter 11,
verse 33,
Paul virtually breaks into song:
“Oh, the depth
of the riches
and wisdom
and knowledge of God!
How unsearchable are [God’s] judgments
and how inscrutable [God’s] ways!
‘For who has known the mind of the Lord
or who has been his counselor?
Or who has given a gift to him
to receive a gift in return?’
For from [God]
and through [God]
and to [God]
are all things!
To [God] be the glory forever!
Amen!”
Then,
as though Paul anticipates our “so what?”
Paul says
Therefore…
Since God is saving the world,
since we have been buried with Christ
in a death like his,
Since there is now no condemnation,
since there is nothing in all creation
that will ever be able to separate us
from the love of God in Christ Jesus,
Since God is saving both the Jews
and the Gentiles,
THEREFORE,
present your bodies as a living sacrifice,
be transformed by the renewing of you mind,
be humble,
be faithful,
you are individually members of the body of Christ,
but you are also members of one another.
So, find your gift
and use it.
We Lutherans,
in proclaiming a Gospel
that required no works,
eventually proclaimed a good news
that left the rest of the world
underwhelmed,
indifferent,
and apathetic.
Our churches
became museums
filled with old scores,
untouchable exhibitions of former glory,
and a host of bored parents
trying to keep the kids quiet and in line
until the whole thing was over.
Richard Rohr put it this way:
“We worshipped Jesus
instead of following him
on his same path.”
That is,
we worried far more about the confession
that Jesus is the Christ
than we did about what our lives should look like
if that confession is true.
Beloved,
Jesus IS the Christ.
THEREFORE,
worship Jesus as the Christ,
present your bodies as a living sacrifice,
be transformed by the renewing of your mind,
be humble,
be faithful,
you are individually members of the body of Christ,
AND you are also members of one another.
So, find your gift
and use it.
The world doesn’t need another museum
to extol the virtues of a bygone age.
The world does need Jesus’ followers
to act like Jesus is the Christ,
to act like the gospel story is true,
and to make this story true
by living lives of transformation and faithfulness
that will answer the world’s “So what?”
before they even ask it.
Amen.