Before I formed you in the womb, I knew you; and before you were, I set you apart (Jeremiah 1:5)

Monday, April 9, 2018

Together is Beautiful


“Together is Beautiful” was preached at Sunnyside Presbyterian Church on Sunday, April 8, 2018. Inspirations for this sermon include Scripture, commentaries, fellowship with one another, and a Coca-Cola commercial.  There is no audio recording of this sermon.

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1 John 1:1-2:2

1.1 We declare to you what was from the beginning, what we have heard, what we have seen with our eyes, what we have looked at and touched with our hands, concerning the word of life— 2 this life was revealed, and we have seen it and testify to it, and declare to you the eternal life that was with the Father and was revealed to us— 3 we declare to you what we have seen and heard so that you also may have fellowship with us; and truly our fellowship is with the Father and with his Son Jesus Christ. 4 We are writing these things so that our joy may be complete.

5 This is the message we have heard from him and proclaim to you, that God is light and in him there is no darkness at all. 6 If we say that we have fellowship with him while we are walking in darkness, we lie and do not do what is true; 7 but if we walk in the light as he himself is in the light, we have fellowship with one another, and the blood of Jesus his Son cleanses us from all sin. 8 If we say that we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us. 9 If we confess our sins, he who is faithful and just will forgive us our sins and cleanse us from all unrighteousness. 10 If we say that we have not sinned, we make him a liar, and his word is not in us.

2.1 My little children, I am writing these things to you so that you may not sin. But if anyone does sin, we have an advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous; 2 and he is the atoning sacrifice for our sins, and not for ours only but also for the sins of the whole world.

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Did you know after every Super Bowl Time magazine keeps a scorecard for every commercial that was aired during the game? Every single year, they make a list. You can actually google “Best Super Bowl commercials of ________ year” and Time Magazine’s list of rankings will be one of the very first links. Now, on average, companies pay about $5 million for a 30 second commercial at the Super Bowl. Time Magazine then gives these commercials a grade, usually based on their creativity, humor, and effectiveness. Once they have received a grade, Time Magazine then ranks them from worst commercials to best commercials. Can you imagine paying $5 million for a thirty second commercial just for it receive a D or even worse, an F, and be considered one of the worst commercials at the Super Bowl that year?

But then you imagine the commercials that actually do well. The ones that get the A ranking and are listed as one of the best commercials of that year. Over 100 million watch the Super Bowl each year, and some people watch the Super Bowl not for the football but for the commercials alone. One hundred million people watching a commercial during the game, and then if the commercial gets a good score, people watch it again and again, increasing that number even higher. Talk about some good advertising… even if it does cost $5 milliom…

And then you have those commercials that are so good they are played multiple years.

Coca-Cola has one of those commercials. In 2014, during Super Bowl 48, Seattle Seahawks vs the Denver Broncos, Coca-Cola released a commercial that Time Magazine gave an A score (the highest score a commercial can receive) and was listed as one of the best commercials that year. But it wasn’t like the other commercials. It wasn’t funny; it didn’t have any spoken words. It was just a commercials full of clips of family and fun and love while “America, the Beautiful” was sang in the background.

Now mind you, what made it special, was the diversity and the inclusion the commercial featured; the unity and togetherness of people. The families that were shown were families of all different races, backgrounds, and orientations. The song itself, “America, the Beautiful” was sang in seven languages: English, Spanish, (KEE-resh) Keres, (TAH-GAH-log) Tagalog, Hindi, (SEN-NAH-GAH-leez) Senegalese French, and Hebrew. Of course, everyone in the video was sipping on a bottle of Coca-Cola, and at the end of the commercial, the words “Together is Beautiful” flashed across the screen. The end. The commercial was simple, but it was powerful.

When the commercial aired, Coca-Cola released a statement on their website:

The premise of ‘It’s Beautiful’ can be simply stated: America is beautiful and Coca-Cola is for everyone. It celebrates Coca-Cola moments among all Americans and features snapshots of American families. We believe it’s a powerful ad that promotes optimism, inclusion and celebrates humanity – values that are core to Coca-Cola. “It’s Beautiful” shows just a few of the ways Americans enjoy our brand and how Coca-Cola brings families and friends together every day.

Now I believe that commercial was successful because it reminded the viewers what was important in their lives. Whether they are black or white, rich or poor, conservative or liberal, whether they even like coke or not; that commercial showed that being together will provide life-long happiness. Whatever may divide us, all we need is love and apparently a bottle of coke to bring us back together. They just had to be reminded.

Which is exactly what the author of 1 John is saying in his letter.

The first century was mistakenly thought as the “honeymoon” of the Christian Church. Because the church was growing so quickly, people assumed everything must have been going well. But that is far from the truth. Because the church was growing so quickly, people began disagreeing what was the most important doctrines and beliefs to follow. In fact, one of the greatest divisive issues, was on who Christ was. Was Christ God? Was Christ human? Was Christ neither? Was Christ both? Think about that: the early Christian church—the early followers of Christ—disagreed on the person and the God who had them establish the church in the first place.

So as the early Christian Church grew, it soon began splitting into several different communities. There were more differences than similarities, and it was a time of strife. All these churches were far from the Church they were supposed to be. They lived in a divided community.

So 1 John was written. In the opening address, John calls the audience to remember why the Christian Church was established in the first place. He calls them to go back to the beginning: what have they all heard, what have they all seen; what have they all looked at; what have they all touched with their hands. John tells them to testify to this and the life that was revealed in Christ Jesus. If they remember this, they will have fellowship with the Father and with the Son. If they have true fellowship with the Father and the Son, they will have fellowship with one another. If they have fellowship with one another, then their joy will be complete as they will be a united community once again.

1 John is a letter of love, knowledge, and truth. There is an urge for unity in the community. This unity comes from three characteristics of God that form the heart and soul of God’s children: light, justice, and love. Our passage today only focuses on the first characteristic, so we will do the same.

In our passage, we have the proclamation that God is Light. Now we know from the creation story that God created light, but 1 John says that God not only created light but now serves the people as the True Light. If they walk with God, they walk in the light. If they forget who God is, they walk in the darkness. Now 1 John admits that because of their sin they all have walked in the darkness at some point, which makes them lost and separated from one another. But even in the darkness, he reminds them that they have all seen glimpses of the light. Since everyone has experienced the light, it’s something that they have in common with one another, and it draws them together.

1 John says if the people gather in the Light who is God, then they gather together as a united community.

This is also true for us. If we gather in the name of God, then we gather as one community. If we have fellowship with God, we have fellowship with one another.

If we think about the two commandments Jesus gave us: to love God and to love one another; 1 John teaches us that they go hand-in-hand. Our own faith in Christ Jesus is what summons us to be in relationship with one another.  Our relationships with one another are what help us live in an often-difficult world. We’re not meant to face life alone.

I often consider why I believe fellowship is important in my call to ministry, and I keep going back to the answer that we are stronger together. You know the saying? It takes a village. It’s true! It does take a village. Yesterday, Sunnyside hosted a wedding, and in addition to me serving as the pastor, Rachel was there playing the organ and Seng Ly came to help reset our sanctuary for this morning’s worship, and four of our members came to serve as hosts, helping the wedding party and the family and the guests. It was a beautiful service but not because of the work of one person. No, it was because several people gathered together in the name of God to celebrate the love of God that was revealed between two people as they made their vows to one another.

Our church follows the call of God because of the relationships that happen here. It is strengthened by the bonds we create with one another. I often say this at youth group: our group would be less if one of them were not a part of it. If one of our youth goes missing for a while due to sports or school, their presence is missed because a vital part of our community isn’t with us. They are separated from us. This is true for all of you. If you decided that your relationships here at Sunnyside weren’t important and you decided to leave our Christian fellowship, our community of faith would be less without you.

And we need to be honest. We are a diverse church. We have all sorts of backgrounds that could divide us; that sometimes do divide us. But if remember who God is to us; who Christ is to us—then we will not be divided. We will instead be united together as one community in Christ, through Christ, with Christ.

And who is Christ to us, Sunnyside? Christ is our guide, our light, our advocate; our Savior. And Christ’s work is shown at weddings and at youth group; at Bible studies and at committee meetings. It is shown here in worship and upstairs with our children; it is shown in the ministry of our staff and in the ministry of our volunteers. Every person here walks in Light of Christ; therefore, we walk together.

And if it’s true here, then it must be true all across the world. Let us all be reminded how fellowship with Christ draws us to be in fellowship with another.

There are many reasons that may divide us, but fellowship with Christ is a much more powerful way to unite us. Christ gather us to be together… and together is beautiful.  

Thanks be to God. Amen.

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