Saturday 10 June 2017

Grace, Love, and Fellowship

I was listening to a lecture this week while folding laundry and the person speaking said something to the effect that when people come to church they are coming to hear the word of the Lord “for them”.  They want to hear God speak to them about the situations of their own lives.  They need, they expect a word from the Lord.  But then we rather foolish irrelevant preacher types stick to the theme of the day, and today it is Trinity Sunday.  How in the world could the Doctrine of the Trinity in any kind of way speak a word of the Lord that’s relevant to anybody’s life situation?
Well, it did for me.  In 2001 I began working on a Doctor of Ministry degree.  I was one of a group of students who were charged with the task of trying to teach a congregation that God is Trinity.  God is a communion of persons (the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit) who give themselves to one anther in mutual, unconditional love so perfectly that they are one.  The question we sought to answer was what difference would it make in the life of a congregation if the people understood God as Trinity rather than just simply a Unity – a singular being whom we regard as Santa Clause with a judgemental streak who will bless us if we’ve been nice or get us if we’ve been naughty, a predicament which we can magically avoid by believing the right things about Jesus.
In 2001 I also fell into the thralls of a divorce.  Oddly, studying the Doctrine of the Trinity in that D. Min. program proved remarkably helpful.  It kept my mind busy and gave me a new way of understanding God that kept me from throwing myself into the hands of an angry God and judgementally beating myself into a living Hell of self-condemnation.  Occupying my mind with the Trinity helped me to internalize the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ and the love, the agape love, the unconditional love of God the Father, the love that changes us. 
This new understanding of God was accompanied by the fact that everyday God did something that for me at that heart-breaking, gut-wrenching time of my life said; “’I the Lord of sea and sky’ have heard my child cry.’  He let me know he was with me and would work this tragedy into good.  Divorce is like the death of spouse.  Fortunately, they aren’t dead, but you still grieve the same.
God’s was for me, in my corner (my ex-wife’s too) through it all and he proved it doing things like showing me a Scripture or somebody being at the right place at the right time to say the right thing.  And then in time God brought about healing in me, healing of a good deal of the brokenness I had experienced in life as a child of divorced parents.  God used my own divorce to heal me of the effects my parent’s divorce had on me.  That may sound weird but God does work all things to the good for those who love him (cf. Rom. 8:28). 
When we talk about grace we need to talk about it in those terms:  God being with us, God being for us, and God working things to the good for us.  One of the most misunderstood words in the Christian faith is grace.  We tend to narrow our definition of grace down to it being God saving us from Hell when we don’t deserve it because of Jesus paying a penalty of death for us. 
Yet, if we take a trip through the Bible looking at the word grace and examples of it and also pull out a dictionary of New Testament Greek, we find that grace is the joyous beneficence of a king.  It involves being summonsed into the presence of the king, the king extending his favour to us, and the king acting benevolently on our behalf according to his will. The best example of grace I can think of is in the Book of Ester.  You W.M.S. ladies are likely to know the story of how Ester got summonsed into King Ashuerus’ chamber, and he showed her favour and promised to act on behalf of her people and he saved them from genocide.
The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ is being brought into his presence and experiencing his favour, which is also part of what the fellowship of the Holy Spirit means.  Encountering his presence in the Holy Spirit makes us to know the love of the Father, makes us to know ourselves to be beloved children of God the Father, loved by the Father as much as he loves his own Son Jesus and we know this because of the personal fellowship the Holy Spirit creates between us and the Father and the Son.
One last thing about the fellowship of the Holy Spirit – yes, he makes us to experience the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ and the love of the Father, he makes us to experience fellowship with God, but also, he makes us to experience fellowship with one another.  The fellowship of the Holy Spirit is embodied in the body of Christ, in the fellowship of believers.  As a minister going through a divorce in the Bible Belt in the States, I was overwhelmed by how my congregation loved and supported me.  I was expecting to be judged and to have a few people saying, “if he can’t manage his own house he shouldn’t be a minister.” – that old stigma that divorced people can’t be ministers because it’s a bad example to the church.  The people of the Marlinton Presbyterian Church loved me unconditionally, held me up, understood, kept me from being alone.  My relationships with so many in that church grew because of that divorce.  In the fellowship of the Holy Spirit is embodied the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ and, indeed, the love of God the Father.
We are gathering around the table of the Lord this morning to share his Supper.  I invite you this morning to ponder this meal and try to see in it a living picture of the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, the love of God, and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit.  The Trinity is with us in this meal, in us gathered around this table.  We are here because in God’s love the Trinity has called us, summonsed us to be in his presence to be assured that we have his favour, and to welcome his promise that he is working all things to the good for those who love him.  He did it for me.  He will do it for you.  Amen.