“Recovering
Image-Bearers” was preached at First Presbyterian Church of Allentown, PA on September
15, 2019. This sermon was inspired by Scripture, commentaries, introductions &
testimonies, story-telling, youth ministry, celebrating identity, and a lecture by Craig Detweiler. You can watch this sermon at FPCA’s alternative
sermon here, starting at 17:00.
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Luke 15:3-7
3 So
Jesus told them this parable: 4 “Which one of you, having a hundred sheep and
losing one of them, does not leave the ninety-nine in the wilderness and go
after the one that is lost until he finds it? 5 When he has found it, he lays
it on his shoulders and rejoices. 6 And when he comes home, he calls together
his friends and neighbors, saying to them, ‘Rejoice with me, for I have found
my sheep that was lost.’ 7 Just so, I tell you, there will be more joy in
heaven over one sinner who repents than over ninety-nine righteous persons who
need no repentance.
--
Wait.
Just a moment. I need to do something first.
Let
me take a selfie. This photo is for us, to capture this moment, to remind of us this memory.
We’ll
look back on this picture and we’ll remember how great this day was. Or
hopefully how great this day was depending on the vote later. Either way, we’ll
have this selfie to document it.
But
this is more than just a selfie, right? It’s more than just a picture of all of
us. It’s a symbol of a united flock. Metaphorically speaking using our passage
from the Gospel of Luke, it is the symbol of God’s flock of sheep. You, me –
all of us, gathered together as one before our Shepherd the Christ. This
picture; this selfie – shows this! It shows our togetherness, strengthened and
supported by one another, smiling and laughing, possibly wondering where this
sermon illustration is headed… hey, you’re considering me as an Associate
Pastor for Youth and Faith Formation; this shows like the youth, I too know how
to take a selfie. But I promise this picture – this selfie – is also taken for
another reason
As I
said, this picture shows the flock that we are. But does it show who is
currently missing? Does it show those who were once was separated from the
flock? Does it show those who were once lost from their shepherd? Does it even
show those who have since been found and returned?
I
can look at this photo, and I see great things; great people! – united together
here on this day; but what I don’t see is your individual histories or pasts or
stories. I can’t look at a face here and say, this person felt separated from
the flock during this period of their life because of this reason. That’s what
this photo doesn’t reveal.
Instead,
our stories are revealed by the moments we do share together and in the
conversations that we have. I pray that one day I do get to hear your stories;
that we will get to sit down with one another and have those conversations and
that you would share your story with me; the good and the bad; whatever has led
you to this place and time. This is how we get to know one another; this is how
God’s flock stays together.
So
being the preacher that I am believing that sermons are intimate conversations we
have with one another and with God… and because as of this point, I am a
stranger to nearly all of you; I’m hoping I can use a part of this time to tell
you a small part of my story. I want to get to know you and I hope you want to
get to know me.
I grew
up in the church. This was important for my family. As a family, we would
probably be in church once or twice a month, as our schedules allowed. We were
a sports family; my brothers and I all competed in different sports so on the
Sundays we weren’t traveling for that, we would be in church, Sunday School,
etc. So we weren’t the perfect attenders but enough for the pastors and other
church goers to know us and for us to know them. And most importantly, we went
enough for us to know God. Now my family moved from North Dakota to Colorado
when I was entering into seventh grade, and when we moved, we joined the local
Presbyterian church in my small rural town, as they at the time had the most
active youth program. Sound familiar to any families out there?
Between
the summer of my eighth grade year and freshmen year, I along with the youth
group at my church went on a two-hour trip to a waterpark. During that trip,
while we were all on the bus, two of our youth leaders were having a
conversation about a same-sex couple they knew. This couple they were talking
about had been trying to have a baby for several years, but unfortunately, each
time one of them became pregnant, the pregnancy would end in a miscarriage.
I’ll never forget what one of my youth leaders said as to why this was the
case. The words are seared into my memory. She said, “Obviously this is God
punishing them for the lifestyle they live.”
I
always apologize when I tell this story, but it’s an important story for me to
tell as it started my journey to becoming pastor. I apologize when I when I
tell this story for how offensive this might be for those of you who are part
of the LGBTQ community or for those of you who have experienced any kind of
loss during pregnancy. As a youth, I wasn’t certain if I believed these words
for myself, but my youth leader’s words were the ones I believed the church
believed. You see, I came out as gay to my family and friends toward the end of
high school. And as someone who was incredibly insecure of my sexual orientation
when I first came out, I couldn’t be around people or communities, especially
communities of faith, that believed God would punish people for who they loved;
you know, punish people like me for being gay.
For
many years, I was deeply hurt by the church. I spent my years as a youth angry
at the church and angry at God. I spent the first couple of my college years totally
disconnected from the church, still so incredibly angry and wounded.
If
we think in terms of this parable that we read today, you could say that for a
while, I was a lost sheep who had left the flock. Maybe you can relate to this.
Maybe you have a story – a moment in time, whether for a few days or maybe a
couple of years – where for whatever reason, you felt lost from the flock. Maybe
it was a time of illness or maybe the time of a divorce. Maybe you felt lost
because the loss of a job or maybe the death of someone you love. Maybe you
felt separated because you heard a person in power or of faith proclaim a
message so harmful that it left a wound. Or maybe you felt lost because you see
some of the hurt around us every day, in deaths and tragedies, in hate and
brokenness. Maybe it’s someone you know and love who is going through a rough
patch right now. Maybe even right now, you’re the one feeling a little lost., I
get it; I really do!
This
parable, which let’s be honest, speaks directly to us, is simple but powerful.
Jesus tells those who are around him, the tax collectors and sinners, scribes
and Pharisees, this four-sentence story. He asks them if they would leave their
100-sheep flock if one of the one hundred was missing? If they would leave the
other 99 sheep in the wilderness to go find that one who was lost? Now Jesus
tells them that they would; a true shepherd would go searching for this one
sheep. But let’s think about.
This
one sheep that could be anywhere out there in the hills of Judaea, possibly
even in places where no human could reach. The sheep is alone, not protected
from any weather conditions or a multitude of predators. All of this would make
the sheep extremely vulnerable. This sheep could even be dead.
But
with little hope of finding the sheep or even finding it alive, the shepherd
would go to look for this one sheep. And then! When the shepherd does find this
sheep, the shepherd spares no expense celebrating the once lost-now found
sheep! With friends and family and neighbors all around; together they would rejoice
and sing and eat and dance with joy… for the one that was lost, against all
odds, was now found.
But
why? Why against all odds does the shepherd go looking for the one sheep who
was lost and why does the shepherd with more joy in heaven rejoice when that
lost sheep is found?
To
understand that, we must understand ourselves.. and who we are in the eyes of
God.
From
the very beginning, before any of us were formed in the womb, God knew each of
us. With the hands of a potter and the fingers of a knitter, God carefully and
considerably created each of us. And in God’s individual creation of each us,
God would call us good, for what God creates is good. Now God, in our creation,
knew that sin would be a part of our lives and would be a force that would try
to separate ourselves from God, but God, well aware of this, still called each
of us by name, defiantly proclaiming that each of God’s creation – each of
God’s children – are fearfully and wonderfully made.
So
that’s the first part of it; you know. In the eyes of God, in our relationship
with God, we are God’s creation, something that God who is all-powerful and
all-loving put work into, with intention and love. To have any of us believe
that God would separate us from God dismisses the intentional, loving work that
God put into each of us. After all, scripture reminds us that nothing in all of
creation could ever separate us from who God is and God’s love for us. That’s
why Christ goes out searching for us when we are lost; because this separation is
not meant to be.
But
it’s also more than that; more divine than each of us as God’s children and
God’s love for us. Which brings us back to the selfie.
About
nine months ago, I witnessed a lecture given by Craig Detweiler, an author,
theologian, and the former president of The Seattle School of Theology &
Psychology. His lecture, titled “Searching for the Image of God in a Digital Age,” was about finding self-love in the pictures we take of ourselves by
seeing the image of God in our faces and bodies. I mean, his lecture was
literally on why selfies can be good for the soul because they can remind us
that we too are made in the image of God. And this is important because we now
live in an age where images are so much more accessible and the pressure to be
a certain image is so much greater and therefore can be so much more influential
… possibly even damaging if we fail to see the image of God – the imago dei –
in these images of ourselves. This is especially relevant for our youth of
today.
What
leads us to being lost – to being separated from God – is losing faith in the
imago dei – the image of God – that is within each of us. To be lost means that
we believe that some part of us; some part of our identity is not also made in
the image of God. With this in mind, knowing that the person we are is made in
the image of God, for us to be lost means that even God is losing a part of
Godself. To find those who have been separated is not just the recovery of
people who were lost but actually the miraculous gift of recovering God’s
image-bearers. It is both the addition to and the completion of the body of
Christ.
Returning
to my own story, those years that I felt lost – separated from the church and
separated from God – was not because my identity as a gay man was something
that removed me from the flock. It was the idea in which I believed that this
part of my identity wasn’t also made in the image of God. And because God so
desperately, so critically, so lovingly wanted me to be found – in the same way
he wants all of us to be found, to be returned home to the flock – God did
everything – and I mean everything – through family and mentors and friends and
strangers and places and even things – God made sure I would be found. God made
sure I knew I would be a part of the body of Christ and that we would rejoice
together. And friends, I think this moment has now led me to you; to be a part
of your flock; to celebrate and rejoice with you. To be with you in your
moments of joy and in your moments of sorrow. To work with you to recover the
lost… and to remind you in moments where you might feel lost that you too –
your identity – the person you are – is an image-bearer of God and to have you
back with us and with God, surrounded by divine love and grace, is God’s
greatest priority. The image you carry – you as God’s image-bearer – is so
incredibly important to God.. and loved by God.
There’s
something I tell the youth at my current church every time I have the
opportunity; something I feel so deep in my bones and soul; if I haven’t see
them in a while, I remind them of this. “We are less without you. We are not
complete without you. You are a valued, gifted, much needed part of our
community.” And while I wish I could
take credit for this statement; I can’t. I was reminded of this when I started
seminary several years ago and when I first responded to the call of being a
pastor. And so now I say it you, and I want you to know that I am speaking the
Word of God to you, especially if this is the message you need to hear: “We are
less without you. We are not complete without you. You are a valued, gifted,
much needed part of our community.”
Friends,
thank you for this moment today; to share God’s Word with all of you and a part
of my story. I pray and I hope that I can sit down with all of you and hear
yours. Until then, I have this picture of us.
I
look back at this selfie. This image of all of us. And I see the image of God,
in each of your faces; in this community of faith. That’s what this holy moment
is; that’s what this picture has captured for us. An image to remind us that
Christ will do anything and everything to find those who lost and return them
home. Thanks be to God. Amen.
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