Synod Women’s Organization Convention
Bethlehem, Fergus FallsSeptember 7, 2013
John 1:35-51
Years
ago, when I served on a synod staff in southern Minnesota, I traveled out to a
country church for a monthly conference pastors’ gathering.
I arrived
early so I could connect with my pastor-colleagues as they arrived for morning
coffee.
To
my dismay, though, when I arrived there were already a dozen cars in the church’s
parking lot. I guess I wasn’t “early”
after all!
When
I entered the church building, I couldn’t find anyone at first….not in the
sanctuary, not in the social hall….no one!
Despite
the twelve cars outside, the building seemed abandoned. I thought I could hear the faint sound of voices
in the church kitchen, though.
So I
gently opened the kitchen door—only to be greeted by twelve lovely women whose
average age appeared to be about 74. They
stopped talking right away and greeted me shyly.
Now
I can’t say for sure, but I don’t think these women were discussing how to make
coffee or frost cinnamon rolls.
What
I horned in on was an information-sharing session. Some of what was being
shared might even have come under the category of “gossip.”
Gossip
gets a bad name, because a lot of it is untrue or hurtful to others. And yet we all do a little passing on of juicy
tidbits we’ve picked up and just have to share.
There
is, in fact, something we might call “good gossip”—news that cheers us up,
encourages us, maybe even calls us to prayer.
A friend of mine once suggested that the Gospel itself is the most
life-changing gossip we’ll ever hear.
You’re
all here this morning because you’re been grabbed by the good gossip of
the gospel. Having heard this gossip, you
want to share it with others, as happens here in our gospel lesson from John,
chapter 1.
This
story is a gossipy text. Someone’s
always talking about Someone Else. And
this good gossip is so juicy that it keeps gathering steam, keeps drawing
others in, keeps “hooking” them!
It
starts with John the Baptist and his startling announcement that Jesus is “the
Lamb of God.” Now there’s an
attention-grabber. What could that
possibly mean—Jesus “the Lamb of God?”
That
very phrase, “the Lamb of God,” illustrates how it is in the very nature of
gossip to be interesting.
No one wastes time with boring news or dull gossip.
But
John the Baptist created so much interest in Jesus that persons around him
immediately wondered: “What’s up with
that? How can we find out more about
this ‘lamb of God’?”
My dear friends, what makes the good gossip about Jesus so
interesting to you? What about Jesus has gotten under your skin,
deep in your bones? What could you say
about Jesus that might stir up a godly curiosity in others?
Gossip
worth its name is always interesting….so interesting that it
attracts others.
The
good gossip of the gospel draws people in. It
fosters community. It creates a new set
of relationships.
My dear friends—how are you passing on the good gossip about Jesus
in such a way that you not only impart information—but you invite persons into
relationships—relationships with Jesus and therefore also relationships with
others who are following Jesus?
John’s
two followers spend the better part of a day with Jesus. I’d give an arm and a leg to know what
they talked about—to have a transcript of that visit.
All
we know is that that conversation produced a conversion, a turning, a newness
of life for these two men. Because by
four o’clock in the afternoon, these gossip-receivers had become
confirmed gossip-sharers!
One
of them—we finally learn a name—Andrew, has a specific plan of
action.
Just as John the Baptist got the ball rolling by sharing
the good gossip of the gospel with those nearest and dearest to him, so now
Andrew turns (quite naturally!) to his own brother Simon.
Andrew
does two things. He speaks to
Simon (“We have found the Messiah—God’s Anointed One!”) and then he hustles Simon
over to have a look for himself.
This
little “two-step” is worth noting. Words
are crucial—to be sure. Andrew speaks
the news to Simon. So far so good!
We
Lutheran followers of Jesus aren’t half bad at that. In fact we like words so much that we invest
ourselves in them. We believe that
words—especially words about God in Jesus Christ—create a new reality.
But
notice, please, that Andrew doesn’t stop with words. He grabs his brother by the arm and brings
him to Jesus.
The
good gossip of the gospel isn’t merely spoken.
It becomes incarnate, it puts on flesh-and-blood in the action of
a gossip-sharer. Andrew brings
Simon to Jesus, draws his brother into a conversation with the
potential for producing conversion.
Which
it does! Simon meets Jesus, and just
like that Jesus renames him!
In the Middle East of the first century, such an action spoke
volumes. For to change someone’s name
was like giving them a whole new identity.
“You are Simon son of John.
You are to be called Cephas—Peter—The Rock!”
You’d think that might be the end of it here in
John, chapter 1. But, no, the good
gossip about Jesus is just starting to “go viral.” Because the next day the whole thing starts
all over again.
Jesus goes to Galilee, finds a fellow named Philip,
invites Philip to follow him—and Philip right away figures that he has to
spread the gossip about Jesus to his friend Nathanael.
Except that Nathanael is a harder nut to
crack. He doesn’t just take gossip at
face value—he probes, he expresses skepticism….but that doesn’t deter
Philip. Philip does what Andrew did the
day before: he hustles Nathanael over to
meet Jesus, who graciously responds to Nathanael’s doubts and calls forth from
him a sterling confession of faith.
Like Simon, Nathanael receives a new identity and purpose—all because
Philip couldn’t keep the good gossip of the Gospel to himself.
We
can bring people to Jesus—confident that when someone meets Jesus they will
never be the same again. Jesus draws
persons—Jesus draws the likes of you and me—into conversations that produce
conversion. Jesus is bold—whenever he
gets the chance—to meet us in our doubts, to name and rename us, to claim and
reclaim us.
And
we end up with a new identity. Like
Simon-turned-Peter the Rock….like Nathanael the skeptic-turned-confessor!
Hearing
the good gossip of the gospel makes you and me new people, pure and simple. And hearing this gossip, we
start bearing this gossip into a world just dying to hear it.
That,
dear friends, is why you came here this morning.
I
invite you to ponder your convention theme, “Pass it On,” not in terms of some
grim business or a heavy obligation that’s been laid upon you--but to think of
it as if it were good gossip—gossip that’s interesting, gossip that can’t be
kept to yourself, gossip that moves us from words to deeds, gossip that creates
new people and fresh relationships, gossip that simply has to be shared.
In
the name of Jesus. Amen.
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