Get the February 23, 2020 Order of Service and listen to the sermon
02/16/2020 | Jeremiah 11:18-12:6 | “Going the Distance”
Get the February 16, 2020 Order of Service and listen to “Going the Distance”
02/09/2020 | Jeremiah 11:1-23 | “Yes and Amen”
Get the February 9, 2020 Order of Service and listen to, “Yes and Amen.”
02/02/2020 | Jeremiah 10:1-16 | “The One and Only”
Get the February 2, 2020 Order of Service and listen to “The One and Only”
01.26.2020 | Jeremiah 8:18-9:24 | “A Time to Mourn”
Get the 01.26.2020 Order of Service or listen to “A Time to Mourn”
Real
The great irony of children’s literature is that the simplest stories often convey the most complex ideas. Without a doubt, the world’s most compelling philosophy is found, not on the professor’s bookshelf, but in the children’s section of the local library. As every adult quickly recognizes, Dr. Seuss is about more than mind-boggling rhythm and rhyme and Richard Scarry’s Busytown has its finger on the pulse of the human condition. Children’s books are not afraid to tackle existential angst. In The Velveteen Rabbit, nursery room toys ponder what it means to be “real.”
“Real isn’t how you are made,’ said the Skin Horse. ‘It’s a thing that happens to you. When a child loves you for a long, long time, not just to play with, but REALLY loves you, then you become Real.’
‘Does it hurt?’ asked the Rabbit.
‘Sometimes,’ said the Skin Horse, for he was always truthful. ‘When you are Real you don’t mind being hurt.’
‘Does it happen all at once, like being wound up,’ he asked, ‘or bit by bit?’
‘It doesn’t happen all at once,’ said the Skin Horse. ‘You become. It takes a long time. That’s why it doesn’t happen often to people who break easily, or have sharp edges, or who have to be carefully kept. Generally, by the time you are Real, most of your hair has been loved off, and your eyes drop out and you get loose in the joints and very shabby. But these things don’t matter at all, because once you are Real you can’t be ugly, except to people who don’t understand.”
In a world where masks are common and authenticity is rare, the wisdom of the Skin Horse is powerful. We often view our heroes and role models through idealized caricature. Yet, as they take on a mythic quality, they become more irrelevant and less real. The mythic figure may influence, but the one who is real makes us who we are.
This is especially true when it comes to the Bible. There is a subtle temptation to mythologize its stories, particularly the stories of Jesus. When we consider the stories of Jesus’ nativity only at the holidays, it is easy to conceive of Jesus as just another character in a seasonal story or as an ideal, allegorical man. But just as the Bible contends that Jesus was fully God, it contends that he was fully man – a real man, flesh and blood, body and soul. Real in every sense of the word. He passed through every experience and temptation of human life, except sin. That fact that He is real makes us who we are. The author of Hebrews writes.
Therefore, he had to be made like his brothers in every respect, so that he might become a merciful and faithful high priest in the service of God, to make propitiation for the sins of the people. For because he himself has suffered when tempted, he is able to help those who are being tempted. Hebrews 2:16-17
The Heidelberg Catechism, a time-tested set of questions and answers drawn from Scripture to teach the basics of the Christian faith, goes even further, pointing beyond the fact or Jesus’ humanity to the necessity of it.
Q16. Why must [Our Redeemer] be a true and sinless man?
Because the justice of God requires, that the same human nature which has sinned should make satisfaction for sin; but no man, being himself a sinner, could satisfy for others
Join us this Sunday, December 1 as we examine Hebrews 2:10-18 and consider the necessity of Jesus being a real man. We meet on the square in Pottsville, right next to historic Potts’ Inn at 10:45 am for worship. Get directions here or contact us for more info. We look forward to seeing you
Looking for Something More
My father delighted in drama. He was an avid story-teller who knew how to create suspense. He masterfully drew listeners to the precipice of a story’s climax. He was often called upon to speak publicly, especially at celebratory or ceremonial occasions. With carefully chosen words, he lent gravity and significance to every proceeding, no matter how small or common. The natural drama that surrounds the holiday season especially primed my father’s pump.
Christmas Eve brought convergence to my father’s love of suspense. Before bed, we set out chocolate pie for Santa. Then Daddy would pull out his giant reel-to-reel recorder and conduct interviews with my sisters and me. With a news reporter’s demeanor, he would conduct his man-on-the-street interview, probing our expectations for the day ahead. As we prepared for bed, he scanned across oceans of static on his transistor radio for reports from NORAD about an unidentified inbound object over the Bering Sea. We were never sure which was imminent – Santa Claus or nuclear holocaust? Every detail of the evening was calculated to create suspense by asking the same question. “When we wake in the morning, if we wake, will we encounter wonder or disappointment?”
My father knew this was never a settled question for me. He knew that sometime in the night, I would wake and slip, as noiselessly as an eight year-old can, into the living room where all things Christmas were contained. He knew I would investigate the pie plate then the wing-back chair which was the designated landing spot for the evidence of my goodness in the preceding year. The pie plate looked like a crime scene and in the chair were many good things, but not every good thing. Something was always missing. The big item on my list – that something more — was never there. Even as he slept, my father created suspense.
In the morning, after Santa’s gifts were examined and family gifts were exchanged, just as my mother was getting up to begin lunch preparations, my father would notice something out of place, stuck in an unused corner or fallen behind some furniture. With great fanfare and musings of “what is this” and “where did that come from,” he produced ‘something more.’
Christmas is often a season which leaves us looking for something more. Our expectations are high, but our celebrations rarely deliver everything we seek. And even when we take to heart Linus’ words to Charlie Brown that Christmas is about the birth of a Savior, we are left wondering what type of Savior He is. Is He a mere teacher, who increased the demands of the law from mere outward conformity, to the perfect obedience of heart, mind, soul and strength? Is He a mere example, come to demonstrate to us how to love and sacrifice for one another? Is He a revolutionary who incites us to throw off convention and tradition? Or should we look for something more?
The men of Jesus’ day were asking these same questions. As the popularity of John the Baptist grew, a delegation of religious leaders questioned him about his identity. While they were busy comparing John with their own expectations, John provoked them to look for something more — more than a political and religious radical, but one who was God and Man, the Coming King of Kings, and the Lamb of God who takes away sin. John pointed them not to one who could teach them about deliverance, but who alone could deliver them. What kind of Savior are you looking for?
The Heidelberg Catechism, a time-tested set of questions and answers designed to teach the basics of the Christian faith, prepares us to ask this question. By pointing out saviors who can’t save, it asks.
Q15. What manner of mediator and redeemer then must we seek? A: One who is a true and sinless man, and yet more powerful than all creatures, that is, one who is at the same time true God.
Join us this Sunday, November 24 as we examine John 1:19-34 and consider what type of Savior we are seeking and to what we are pointing others. We meet on the square in Pottsville, right next to historic Potts’ Inn at 10:45 am for worship. Get directions here or contact us for more info. We look forward to seeing you.
Count Down
Our vacation to Melbourne Beach, Florida was filled with expected and unexpected high points. The beach, the weather, the manatees, and our hosts’ phenomenal hospitality were all amazing. But among the unexpected high points were the nesting sea turtles, viewing the construction site for SpaceX’s Starship and visiting the American Space Museum and Space Walk of Fame. With its awkwardly long name and very small building, on a quiet side street in Titusville, Florida, the American Space Museum and Space Walk of Fame did not seem very promising at first glance. Oh, how wrong that assessment proved to be!
The museum’s collection of NASA artifacts and memorabilia is prodigious, but its greatest treasures are its volunteers, many of whom were career NASA employees. Their depth of knowledge, experience, and perspective about all things NASA was worth any price of admission. You quickly discover that these unassuming docents are retired rocket scientists and electrical engineers. Even some of the guests had remarkable stories. One woman we met designed and fabricated the heat tiles, as well as the heat resistant quilted lining, for the STS (Space Shuttle) vehicles.
An entire room was required to house the carefully restored computer used to synchronize the countdown for all the Saturn V and Atlas rocket launches. After all, nothing is more essential to a rocket launch than the countdown. But countdowns not only sequence the details of a rocket launch. They also conduct and heighten expectations surrounding the important events of our lives.
As a child, once Halloween had passed, I could give anyone who asked an accurate countdown to Christmas. Even now in our family, the beloved Advent calendar is an important part of our Christmas décor and observance. But in all the excitement of counting down the days to Christmas are we preparing ourselves as much for the reality of the Incarnation as we do for the remembrance of it?
It is easy to confuse the remembrance with the realities of the great mystery of Christ manifest in the flesh. Perhaps this is why so often when December 25 passes, a sense of unfulfillment and drear settles upon us. We vested confidence in the celebration and not the thing celebrated. Then predictably it fails to deliver. And our holiday peace, hope, and joy get stored away in the attic with the lights and greenery.
God spent thousands of years preparing mankind for the coming of Christ. The countdown begins in the book of Genesis. Even as God was pronouncing the curse of the Fall, He was also promising a redeemer. He gave the people sacrifices and law and ceremony, designed to teach them how salvation would be provided — ceremonies that painted a vivid picture of sins curse and its cure. Yet these ceremonies had no power to save through mere religious observance. So, scripture warns about the insufficiency of mere creatures to save.
For since the law has but a shadow of the good things to come instead of the true form of these realities, it can never, by the same sacrifices that are continually offered every year, make perfect those who draw near. Otherwise, would they not have ceased to be offered, since the worshipers, having once been cleansed, would no longer have any consciousness of sins? But in these sacrifices there is a reminder of sins every year. For it is impossible for the blood of bulls and goats to take away sins. Hebrews 10:1-4
And again,
… you were ransomed from the futile ways inherited from your forefathers, not with perishable things such as silver or gold, but with the precious blood of Christ. 1 Peter 1:18-19
Men predictably confused faith in the promise with faith in the practice. Just as we often confuse celebration with substance, and remembrances with realities, God’s ancient people put their hope for redemption in mere creatures rather than in the Redeemer, God had promised. Our Heidelberg Catechism warns us not to follow their ruinous example when it asks.
Can any mere creature make satisfaction for us? None: for first, God will not punish, in any other creature, that of which man has made himself guilty; and further, no mere creature can sustain the burden of God’s eternal wrath against sin, and redeem others therefrom. Heidelberg Catechism, Lord’s Day 5, Question 14.
The countdown is on. Christmas is a little more than 5 weeks away. What are you preparing for? Are you preparing for the reality of the Incarnation, or trusting merely in annual remembrance to provide peace, joy and hope? Join us this Sunday, November 17 as we examine Hebrews 10:1-18 and consider the danger of seeking redemption from created things, including our holidays, traditions, religious observance, celebrations or family. We meet on the square in Pottsville, right next to historic Potts’ Inn at 10:45 am for worship. Get directions here or contact us for more info. We look forward to seeing you.
04/14/2019 | “Making Arrangements” | Matthew 27:57-66
Jesus burial established a remarkable trajectory of hope for all who believe in him. Had Jesus been tossed into a Roman burial pit, many clear and compelling proofs of the resurrection would not have been possible. But in God’s advanced funeral planning for His Only Begotten Son, he is buried in a prominent place, in a grave secure from unseen access, in a new, unused tomb, wrapped in graveclothes that would be abandoned, and sealed and guarded tenaciously by his enemies. God works through the courage of Joseph of Arimathea and the cowardice of the religious leaders to assure us that Christ is risen indeed. Listen to “Making Arrangements” and get the Order of Service.
03/31/2019 | “Suffered Under Pontius Pilate” | Matthew 27:1-26
History’s greatest courtroom drama is recorded in the Bible in Matthew 27. Following an irregular grand jury indictment, Jesus is brought before the criminal court on charges trumped up religious rivals. In Pontius Pilate’s courtroom we see the greatest miscarriage of justice in human history. Everyone is guilty – the judge, the prosecutors, the jury – everyone that is except the one on trial. He alone is innocent. Listen to “Suffered Under Pontius Pilate” as we consider the greatest courtroom drama in history as it unfolds Christ’s innocence and condemnation for our guilt and pardon. Click here for the Order of Service.