Sermon for Synod
Day--June 30, 2018
“God's Grace Changes
Everything”
ELCA Youth
Gathering, Houston, Texas
Acts 8:26-40
In
the name of Jesus. Amen.
What have been some of the most significant
days in your life thus far?
I’m not asking you to recall the day that was most fun
or exciting or unforgettable.
But rather: what
are the moments that have had the biggest impact on your life?
I can think of three of them in my own life…
There’s August 6, 1977 when I married Joy.
There’s April
8, 1982 when I became a father
And then there’s June 15, 2003—when I was NOT elected
bishop of the SW MN Synod…a "defeat" that opened me up to ask, “So where’s God
calling me now?” [I include this day, because our most significant days are not always
our happiest days…]
What have been your most significant days…your “this
changes everything” moments?
Here in Acts 8 we meet a fellow who’s having the most
significant day of HIS life.
We aren’t told his name.
All we’re told is that
he was from the East African nation of Ethiopia; he was a eunuch (whatever that means); he was his
queen’s treasurer; and he was traveling between Jerusalem and his homeland.
Just a few scraps of information—that speak volumes about this man:
· He
was a foreigner of a different race from a different country…
· He
was a eunuch—a slave who (like other slaves in the ancient world) had been
castrated early in life so he could be completely devoted to his owner….
· And
he was his queen’s slave, in charge of all her money: a lowly slave with lofty responsibilities.
But why was this black man from East Africa traveling
between Jerusalem and his homeland?
I think it’s because he was a spiritual seeker like so many folks nowadays—especially youth
and young adults. Though presumably
raised in the religion of his homeland, somewhere along the line he was drawn to
the Jewish faith…he honored the God of the Jews, traveled to Jerusalem for
Jewish festivals and read the Jewish scriptures, our Old Testament.
…which is exactly what he was doing, as he rode in his
chariot through the desert, from Jerusalem back home to Ethiopia.
And fortunately, the eunuch wasn’t alone on that
desert road. A Christian named Philip
was there, too, encountering the eunuch just as he was reading from the prophet
Isaiah about a mysterious “Suffering Servant” who faced humiliation,
barrenness, and death.
This Bible passage was getting under the eunuch’s
skin….causing him to wonder: “Who in the world was Isaiah writing about?”
I wonder why this question bugged him so much. Was
it because the eunuch saw something of himself in this passage?
After all--like Isaiah’s “Suffering Servant”—the
eunuch had been “sheared”—shorn of his manhood.
He had tasted the bitterness of humiliation. He had been cut off from having a family of
his own.
“Who’s the prophet writing about?” the eunuch pleads
with Philip….and Philip responds by telling him “the good news about Jesus”
Just exactly what Philip said next, we aren’t
told. But maybe it went something like
this:
This mystery person, this
suffering servant who experienced all the crummy things you’ve experienced…he
has a name and it’s Jesus. He was born,
taking the form of a slave. He spent his
whole life serving others in the lowliest of ways. When his enemies hoisted him up on a cross, his
life was cut off. His body was thrown
away, discarded like so much garbage, buried in a borrowed grave….
…a grave that could not
hold him! After three days Jesus burst
out of his grave—alive again, nevermore to die again!
And Jesus went through all
of that so that he might now live his unending life through you. As a fellow Christian friend of mine likes to
say: “I have been crucified with Christ, and it is
no longer I who live, but it is Christ who lives in me.” (Gal.2:19b-20)
As surely as Philip shared with the eunuch “the good
news about Jesus”…God’s grace, God’s undeserved riches in Christ were poured over
the eunuch when he was baptized.
That was his “this changes everything” turnaround
moment.
Nothing that people were always noticing about him—his
skin color, his status as a sexual minority, his “foreignness,” his lowly status as a slave, his lofty responsibilities
as the Queen’s chief financial officer—nothing that people might have known
about him held this man back from going
on his way rejoicing….
…and, as an ancient church tradition suggests, when the eunuch reached home, he too (like
Philip!) told others “good news about Jesus” and thus helped plant Christianity
in Ethiopia.
My young friends, you
belong here--even though you might think there are 101 reasons why God could
never choose you to love and embrace and forgive and send into his service.
But when God thinks of you, God comes up with 101
reasons why you are JUST the kind of person God needs, a beloved child through whom
Jesus chooses to live and move and have his being.
None of the ways we get all hung up on “sorting
ourselves out” in this world matters, none of it matters one little bit to God.
God’s grace calls dibs on you and everyone else who
has ears to hear.
God’s grace in Jesus Christ changes everything.
God’s grace send you to tell others “the good news
about Jesus.”
God’s grace calls you is as surely and as certainly as
anything could ever be.
In the name of Jesus.
Amen.
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