October 13, 2013—75th Anniversary
Luke 17:11-19
In the name of Jesus. Amen.
Have you noticed how much unfocused pain and anger
there is out there—floating around in today’s world?
It’s unsettling, how accustomed we’ve become to news
reports about terrorist bombings or mass shootings that seem to pop up almost
weekly. Angst over the mess in
Washington DC—a paralyzed, gridlocked Congress, a government shutdown—our national
frustration with that has “settled in” like so much background noise. And there are always multiple, personal
versions of this unfocused pain….our prayer lists always brimming with new
sufferers, fresh grief, the latest “situation” that makes us wonder if hope is
still alive.
There always is lots of unfocused pain, unfocused
anger, unfocused frustration in this world….
….and that’s exactly where this story of the Ten
Lepers begins.
Jesus happens upon a scene that was all too common
in the ancient world: a small leper
colony, pitiable souls afflicted by a disfiguring skin disease that carried
with it extreme social ostracism. Lepers
in Jesus’ day were treated like “the walking dead.”
I picture these wretched men constantly voicing their
unfocused heartache, their unfocused longing for healing and restoration. Day in, day out, whoever passed by could
hear their distant moaning, pleading, imploring anyone who might come within
earshot.
Wherever
Jesus traveled he brought focus to such unfocused suffering.
For Jesus, voices of sufferers never get lost in the
crowd….the cries of the injured and the sick never, for Jesus, fade away into
so much “background noise.”
Jesus heard, Jesus noticed, Jesus saw
with laser-like clarity each of these ten sorrowful men….Jesus allowed them to come into sharp focus…not merely to pity
them, but to transform their situation…to dispatch them on a new journey from
despair to healing.
And as that happened….as the ten lepers daringly
took Jesus at this word and began making their way to the local holy man who
could certify them as healthy….on the way to their restoration they
were healed.
…so that, suddenly, the unfocused pain of these ten lepers was transformed into equally unfocused joy.. Ten men about as down on their luck as men
could be—suddenly thanking their lucky stars!
But one of these men, for some odd reason, believed
that more than luck was in play here.
This tenth leper—a despised ethnic outsider, no less—this Samaritan focused
his rejoicing, realized this was not all happenstance, returned to Jesus, and gave thanks—focused thanks where thanks
was due.
My dear friends, as we celebrate the 75th
Anniversary of Breckenridge Lutheran Church, I invite us to ponder all the ways
in which this congregation, and indeed every living congregation, brings focus
to all the experiences of our lives.
Congregations
are communities of Christ where all that is unfocused in our daily lives
becomes focused, properly focused, on the God who forgives, heals,
restores, indeed resurrects us in
Jesus.
Whether you’ve always realized it, Breckenridge
Lutheran has functioned like a lens for your lives for three quarters of a
century. This congregation has offered
focus to all that has come your way.
So
children are born or adopted…wanderers, lost souls are found by God…and
the natural rejoicing that accompanies such new life finds focus—time and
again—when we gather around this baptismal font where hundreds of persons have
been born again to a living hope in Jesus Christ.
· Think
back--how many baptisms have you witnessed here at Breckenridge Lutheran?
· And
as you embark on a mission planning process, how will the people of Breckenridge
Lutheran move out even more imaginatively, more energetically to be God’s
seeking, saving voice, hands and feet in this community?
But
those who’ve been found by God and
baptized into Christ don’t just stay frozen in time. We grow, we unfold, we learn in the
community of Christ. We’re more like
rushing rivers than stagnant pools, thank God!
And all that growing and learning has found focus here as the scriptures
have been opened, to add color and texture to the fabric of faith.
· How
many Sunday school lessons, catechism classes, Bible studies, confirmation
Sundays have you been part of here at Breckenridge Lutheran?
· And
as you launch into the next leg of your journey together, what new paths of
discipleship will you embrace as God brings focus to your lives by passing on
the clarifying, vivifying “lens” of faith in Jesus Christ?
As
this life of daring faith unfolds, though, we will continually encounter challenges
and opportunities, roadblocks and open doors…..and
all of that finds focus here as this community of faith tackles issues, jumpstarts
new ministries, takes on risks and obligations for the sake of serving God’s
mission.
I’m struck by the fact that this congregation was
born in the decade of the Great Depression, during FDR’s second term as
president, on the eve of World War II. Breckenridge
Luthearn was birthed in hard times…and through the years you’ve weathered
more hard times. I still remember my
brother-in-law Roger Johnson’s video footage from the flood of 1997, as Roger
and Linda paddled a canoe from their old home on 8th Street down to
where Krebs Motors used to be!
Hard times didn’t prevent the founders of your
congregation from taking the risk of starting a church. They found focus in the Good News of Jesus
Christ—focus that gave them courage.
During the flood of 1997, your congregation showed how Christians view hard
times—as the raw materials for ministries of caring and hope, service that
matters in the midst of a natural disaster.
· So,
how many brainstorming or planning meetings have you been part of here at
Breckenridge Lutheran—generative conversations aimed at finding ways to respond
to the challenges and opportunities plopped down in your laps?
· And
as you step forward from this anniversary year into God’s future, how will your
congregation continue to make a difference in God’s name here in Wilkin County?
Death
has also crept into our lives, time and again, as
fellow travelers have been snatched away from us whether by disease or accident….and
all that grief and loss and wondering has found focus here where hundreds of
baptized children of God have been commended to the arms of their Savior.
· So
please ponder: how many funerals have
you attended here at Breckenridge Lutheran over these past 75 years?
· And
how will your congregation continue to be one of those few places in the world
where people are honest about death and even more honest about the Resurrection
that God has in store for all of us, in Jesus Christ?
All
along the way I’ve been describing….all along the
way life throws both its best and its worst at us….and we respond constantly,
in delight or despair. All of that
finds focus here in this house of prayer, because like the Samaritan, like the
Tenth Leper we know Whom to turn to in the ups and downs of life.
· How
many times have you prayed here in this place, bringing into sharp focus all
the thanksgivings and intercessions you had within you?
· And
pondering the decades to come how will your prayers take you to the new places,
the promised future that God has in store for us all?
So much of life that might otherwise pass by us in a
blur or a haze becomes, focused, sharpened, clarified, “tuned up” here in
congregations like this. In a few
moments we’ll sing about that in these words:
“Come, thou Fount of ev’ry blessing, tune my heart to sing they
grace…” (ELW #807)
Thanks be to God for Breckenridge Lutheran
Church! Thanks be to God for this
community of faith, gathered in this place week in and week out so that our
eyes might be focused and our hearts tuned to sing God’s grace in Jesus Christ
our strong Savior, compassionate Healer, loyal Friend and daring Guide.
In the name of Jesus. Amen.
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