There’s an age-old truth
about folks in the South.
We have no idea how to handle the snow.
A forecast of even flurries
sends folks scrambling
for milk, bread, and eggs.
Many have tried
to make sense of this phenomenon.
You’d think there was an old wives’ tale
that said if you just make enough French toast
you’ll survive the snowstorm.
Now,
we southerners know
that what separates us from our Yankee siblings
when it comes to snow
is the state and local infrastructure
to handle the clearing of roads,
and the social infrastructure
to equip every home and business
with a snowblower and deicer.
And being stuck at home
without staple food items
seems unwise.
Much of the way I learned the Christian faith
operated by the same mentality.
There was a coming catastrophe
and you’d better make the necessary transactions
to weather the impending storm.
“Get right,
or get left”
the saying went.
Make peace with God while there’s still time
or you’ll be left behind in the Rapture,
and condemned in the judgment.
The majority of the theology
the hymnody,
and the sermons
sounded like crazed meteorologists
warning of impending doom
and pleading with you to take cover
by accepting Jesus Christ as your personal savior.
Sermons on today’s gospel
would have focused
on the pruning of branches
and the burning of branches,
a dire warning
for those who refused to abide,
that is those who did not accept Jesus as their personal savior.
Those are the ones
God will cut off,
gather up,
and throw in the fire.
So,
you’d better turn
or burn.
In college,
I joined an evangelical movement on campus
where this fear was more underground,
becoming the subtext for evangelism
and not the pretext.
We didn’t lead with fear,
we led with love.
“God loves you
and has a wonderful plan for your life”
was the beginning of our pitch.
You catch more flies with honey,
after all.
But.
God loves you
and has a wonderful plan for your life,
but…
you are sinful,
damned by a righteous God
to an eternity of conscious torment
as punishment for a state of being
you inherited from great-grandparents so distant
we only know them by myth and legend.
We told folks,
“God loves you,
but you are sinful
and cannot know God’s love
or plan for your life
unless you accept Jesus as your personal savior,
and remember,
if you don’t,
God has a second plan
for conscious eternal punishment.”
We would have read our first reading from Acts
as a blueprint of sorts,
studying it after the fact,
like a football coach
analyzing a winning game
for clues on how to replicate the experience.
I went to training after training,
year after year,
long after I was a student at the college,
trying to understand how to follow the Spirit’s leading,
how to help “unbelievers”
understand the scripture,
how to explain the “plan of salvation”
and why folks needed Jesus to save them.
All of my theology
was based on fear,
fear that time was running out,
that some would die without knowing Jesus,
that I might be responsible for their unknowing
if I didn’t work harder,
wasn’t bolder,
didn’t take advantage of every opportunity
to share God’s love
and God’s wrath.
But,
then I found Luther.
Once I started reading Luther,
and his explanation of the scriptures,
it was our second reading
that became the frame of my theology.
God is love.
That’s it.
From this simple
yet universal principle,
I could reread John 15,
and know that we already are branches,
and what God prunes from us
are the already dead,
unhelpful,
unfruitful pieces of our lives
that keep us from knowing that we are loved
and that keep us from loving each other.
Jesus’ exhortation to “abide”
is an exhortation to give up our fear,
the fear for ourselves before God
and the fear for others before God,
for God IS love,
and there is no fear in love
because perfect love casts out fear,
and God abides in us
and we abide in God.
Further,
we can see that Philip’s obedience to the Spirit
didn’t so much win a convert
as help someone on the margins of God’s people
find a place in the center.
This man was a eunach,
a third gender in Hebrew thinking and theology,
excluded from ritual participation in Jewish life.
This man is Black,
a Gentile from Ethiopia,
not a Hebrew descendant from Judea.
Yet,
this man had traveled from Ethiopia,
to Jerusalem
to worship at Passover.
This gentile
traveled some 1600 miles by chariot,
knowing he was not allowed in the temple,
happy even to stand outside the gates
to worship the God of Abraham.
And here he is reading the scroll of Isaiah.
the very prophet
who promises in chapter 56
that eunuchs and foreigners
who hold fast to God’s covenant
would be given a name and an inheritance
in the house of God.
From the frame of Love,
this gender-non-conforming Black man,
who loved God enough to ride 1600 miles
just to be able tailgate at the temple
during passover,
became the fulfillment of prophesy himself.
He couldn’t receive circumcision,
for obvious reasons—
and if they’re not obvious,
ask me after worship and I’ll explain it to you privately—
so, despite being a believer in the God of Israel,
he could never really be Jewish.
But when he sees water
and asks Phillip,
“What is to prevent me from being baptized?”
the obvious answer is,
nothing.
Nothing would prevent him from being baptized!
This African man
from a sexual minority
who had been excluded from temple worship
and full participation the Jewish life,
was already included in the heart and mind of God.
He returned home
to became the father of the Ethiopian Church,
and we still retell his story in ‘the house of God’
to this very day.
God is love.
We do not have to worry
about whether we are abiding in God,
because God is abiding in us.
We do not have to be afraid
because God is love
and perfect love casts out fear.
We do not have to “accept Jesus as our personal savior”
because there is not such thing
as a “personal savior”
and, as I John tells us,
“in this is love,
not that we loved God
but that God loved us
and sent God’s Son
to be the atoning sacrifice for our sins.”
We aren’t saved by accepting,
believing,
trusting
that God loves us.
Rather,
because God is love,
we are already included in God’s work of salvation,
and all God asks of us
is to accept,
believe,
trust that this is true.
In other words,
we are to abide.
to rest,
to relax into the good news
that God is love.
A love we can give away
without proposition
without transaction.
Beloved,
since God loved us so much,
we also ought to love one another.
We are freed to share the good news
of the Love God is,
with no ifs, ands, of buts.
We are free to find those folks
still on the margins of God’s people
and love them right into the center
because God first loved us.
And Love has been perfected among us
in this:
that we may have boldness
on the day of judgment,
because as Jesus is,
so are we in this world.
You are already
branches of the true vine.
You are already loved,
because God is love.
We can rest assured
that there is no coming storm,
for which we had better be prepared.
We don’t have to get right or get left.
All that is left to do
is abide,
to relax into the Love God is
until we become love too.
Amen.