Monday, February 29, 2016

"I Am The Light of The World-Knowing God's Guidance" Part 3 of a 7 Part Worship Series based on Rob Fuquay's "The God We Can Know."

The following sermon was preached on February 28, 2016 at Asbury Untied Methodist Church and Dryman's Chapel United Methodist Church.  The Scripture readings were from Leviticus 23:33-43 and John 8:12. 



            We are in the season of Lent, the time between Ash Wednesday when we are reminded of our mortality to Easter when we celebrate Jesus’ victory over death with his Resurrection.  Lent is a season to reexamine ourselves and to be intentional about going deeper in our relationship with God.  This Lenten season, each Sunday we are looking at the I AM sayings of Jesus in the gospel of John.  The first week we looked at the original I AM statement of God in God’s communication with Moses at the burning Bush. We discovered the promise of God to “be there as God will be there.”  God is infinitely with us.  Then, Last week we looked at Jesus as being the Bread of Life, the source of our satisfaction.  This week we look at what it means for Jesus to be the light of the world. 
            The way we are guided from point a to point b has evolved tremendously just in the last 25 years or so.  As a social worker I spent a lot of time in my car going from point A to point B.  When I first started out we had two or three ways of finding our way to our next destination.  The first thing you would do as a social worker is purchase a map of the county where you would be working.  It was a necessary staple in your briefcase.  If you couldn’t find your destination on that map, there was a big 911 map in our office that we shared.  We would have to go to the map, look up the coordinates and then write down the directions as we deciphered them to be from the map we were looking at.  If you weren’t looking at it right you could really find yourself in a predicament, turning right where you were supposed to turn left and so forth.  You could call the Sherrif’s department and they would give you directions.  Or, you called call the people you were going to see and you would typically get directions like this.  “Well you go down to the old hotspot and turn, you will pass where that big oak tree used to be and then go on down to George’s branch (assuming you know what George’s branch is because it isn’t the name of a road or a branch, it is a nickname that was developed 50 years ago for a certain area of the county.)  As a social worker going out into the filed Mapquest was the best invention ever.  I could type in my starting point and my destination and print out step by step directions to where I was going.  Next came the invention of GPS-Geographic Positioning System.  This was created by three men because we all know that men will not stop to ask for directions.  With this gadget you could type in your destination and a voice would give you step by step directions while displaying the map in front of you with the exact position of your car at that point in time.  The only problem with those is you had to keep purchasing updates as roads changed.  Now, now all you need is your phone and broadband service (and a good signal of course)  and your phone will speak your directions through blue tooth capabilities.  Well Rob Fuqay in his book The God We Can Know, which this worship series is based on, suggest we have an even better GPS system than that.  He calls it God’s Positioning System.  What we discover is that by understanding that Jesus is the Light of the World, We discover God’s guidance in our lives. 
            Before we jump straight to what it means that Jesus is the light of the world, I want to give you a bit of the backstory in order to put Jesus’ teaching in the proper context.  The first part of John chapter 7 tells us that Jesus is at the festival of booths.  The festival of booths was one of the pilgrimages Jewish people took (and still take today) to the central temple in Jerusalem.  This particular festival was to commemorate the time the Israelites spent on their journey through the wilderness on the way to the promised land of Canaan.  The festival of booths comes from the Hebrew word sukkot, meaning booths.  During this pilgrimage Jewish people are to build these booths or temporary shelters.  During the festival they both eat and sleep in these booths to remember the time in the wilderness when their shelters had to be temporary and easily moveable as they continued moving along the way to Caanan.
It’s important to note here that light was a very important feature in the wilderness story.  God provided light for the children of Israel to guide their way through the wilderness.  In fact light has been a very important feature of the Biblical story from the beginning.  Rob states that the whole biblical story is one of moving from darkness to light. 
I have been reading a series of books by a new author I have discovered, Vanessa Davis Griggs.  This series called Blessed Trinity is based on a fictional character by the name of George Landris.  In the story George Landris is a well known pastor at a fast growing church in Birmingham Alabama.  The series follows not only his story but the story of many of his parishoners as they face the strongholds of life such as addiction, relationship troubles, trauma, and matters of life and death.  In one of the first books his wife Johnny Mae asks him where evil comes from.  He doesn’t immediately answer her, the reader has to wait until the end of the book to get his take on the age old question of the origin of evil.  What he proposes is that evil is darkness.  Darkness existed before the creation of the world.  The Bible begins in Genesis with “The earth was a formless void and darkness covered the face of the deep….”  Pastor Landris might be onto something.  But, what is the first thing that God created.  God said “let their be light and there was light.”  (Genesis 1:2-3)  In its description of the new heaven and earth the book of Revelation states “There will be no more night; they need no light of lamp or son for the Lord God will be their light.”  “The Bible constantly affirms that when God comes on the scene, there is light.” (Fuquay, 40-41)
So too in the wilderness, light was an important feature.  There were two ways the Israelites knew when it was time to move and what direction to go in.  There was a pillar of cloud by night and fire by night.  They would know it was time to move when they saw either of these move and they would follow it.  Each place they stopped along the way was temporary, it was not their final destination.   In the darkness of night, God, in a pillar of fire, would direct the way.  They never stayed in the darkness.  They were moving toward the promised land of Caanan where they would no longer need the pillars, or the manna and the quail or the temporary shelters.  When they arrive in the promised land, it may even be tempting to forget their need for God.  Doesn’t that happen to us sometimes.  It is really easy to remember our need for God when we are absent from any source of light.  When we are mired in the darkness we remember that God is the only reliable, constant source of light that we have.  Perhaps it is for this reason that God instructed Moses to have the Israelites have this festival to commemorate their time in the wilderness, to remind them of their need for God's guidance. They were and are being reminded that life is not about a destination.  Life is a journey.  Our true destination should be to be with God.  That is an other worldly destination.
Rob states that when you find yourself in an unwanted place, you can know that place is not a destination it is just a stopping point on the journey.    He goes onto say that some would say that hell is the ultimate stopping point and eternal unwanted destination.  In the Old Testament the word for hell is sheol.  It means “place of darkness,” it keeps stopping places from becoming staying places.   In a really dark place you don’t see a future.  But when you know that life is a journey, it keeps stopping places from becoming staying places.  (Fuquay 42-43)  So, the Festival of Booths reminds the Jews that life is journey and God is the Guide. 
 The first night of the festival was called the Night of Grand Illumination.  Rob describes this night in this way: 
The night of Grand Illumination, the opening of the Festival of Tabernacles, was a huge celebration.  People would sing and dance until morning light. In that Context Jesus said, “I am the light of the world.” 

No longer are pillars needed, Jesus in the only guide we need.  Jesus is the one that breaks into the darkness and lights the way.   I know my share of dark places.  I know what it’s like to be in the pits of depression not able to eat, sleep or even leave the house.  Unable to gain weight and wasting away.  I know what it’s like to anticipate new life only to be delivered the news that life will not survive outside of the room and to sit and hold a lifeless newborn for hours before handing them over to the funeral home to be placed in a small box.  I know what it’s like to think a relationship is going to last a lifetime and to have that relationship yanked out from under you, causing you to fall.  I know what it’s like to pour all your energy, time and effort into a job and have it taken away.  I know what it is like to take care of a loved one as you watch their mind drift further and further away from reality.  This is what I also know.  I know that it was the light of Jesus that moved me away from those places and brought new life.  It was the light of Jesus that overcame the darkness of those moments.  It was the light of Jesus that let me know these places on the journey were just stopping points.  Oh, it is very tempting to stay in those dark places, to feel like you are in hell, in the eternal dark place where there is no future.  Praise God we serve a God who promises a way out of the darkness always.  We expect a quick fix.  We expect the light to be so bright that it illuminates the entire way of the journey.  We would like a crystal ball.  Look in the ball and let me see the final destination.  That kind of light might happen once in a very great while but more often then not our faith in Christ must be more like what Rob calls a flashlight kind of faith.  You see a flash light puts off enough light to illuminate the way for the next steps you are to take but generally a flash light will not show your final destination at the start of your journey.  We don’t have to know the final outcome of a journey we just have to discern what our next step is.  “When we trust Christ as our source of light, he gives directions one step at a time.”  (Fuquay pg. 46) Really this makes our decisions easier because all we need to discern is our next step, we don’t have to know the outcome.  We just have to put our faith in Christ to show us the right next step and it is Christ, not us, who determines what the destination is.  It may be a destination we would have never imagined. 
            Where do you find yourself in darkness, wondering how everything is going to turn out?  What is the next step you need to take to find your way out of that darkness?  Your next step may be that you are going to get out of the bed tomorrow morning and put on clothes.  Your next step may be to make a phone call or write a letter to a person with whom you have an estranged relationship.  Your next step might be to go take the liquor bottle out of its hiding place and pour it down the drain.  Your next step might be to unplug from technology for an hour a day.  Your next step might be to put in an application to a new job.  Friends you don’t have to stay in the darkness.  Jesus is there to light the way.  But, just like the Israelites had to put a toe in the water of the Jordon river before the waters would part allowing them passage into the promise land, we have to take that first step toward the light. 
            How do we know what that next step is?  One way that Rob suggests is a practice of contemplative prayer.  He suggests getting up about 20 minutes earlier than usual, go to a place that is quiet where you can be alone and light a candle.  Quiet yourself before God for a few minutes and then thank God for being present with you, as symbolized by that light.  Then give thanks for blessings in your life.  This practice builds confidence that no matter what the challenge you face, there are still blessings to celebrate.  Now, make your request known.  State your challenge and what you need.  After that ask, “Dear Lord, how can I honor you in this situation?  Pause. Be still.  See what comes to you.  Don’t process the thoughts.  Don’t contend with you you will carry out any idea that comes or what that idea might require.  Just let the thoughts come.  Write them down.  Keep a pad and pencil nearby. 
            Do this over several days and see what repeating themes or actions emerge.  Once you sense some direction, ask God to show you the next step.  Don’t make seeing the end of the path the goal, just knowing the next step.  Then, take that step. 
            Take out a piece of paper now.  This piece of paper is for your eyes only.  Write down the dark place you currently find yourself in.  If you have already discerned what your next step away from the darkness needs to be, write that down.  Perhaps you have no idea and your next step is to spend time in this contemplative practice discerning your next step.  If that is the case write that down.   Now at the bottom of the page write in all capital, big letters “I am the Light of the World.”  When you are at home I want you to place this piece of paper in a place where you are sure to see it daily to remind you that Jesus will overcome the darkness of your life and to remind you to take the next step.  In the name of the Father, The Son, and the Holy Spirit-Our source of light, our way out of the darkness, our guide.  Amen. 

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