The title of
my sermon is Spiritual Buoyancy, or What is Your Density? before I get
started, let's pray together
God, thank
you for making us in Your image and for creating us to not just know You but to
have Your Spirit live in and through us. Help us to throw off everything that
hinders and the sin that so easily
entangles and make room in our
hearts for You.
In the 3rd
chapter of Toward God by Michael Casey, there is an illustration that caught
my eye. "A rubber
ball under water submits. Once released, it springs to the surface; and
the deeper it is held, the more it strains to rise. The human spirit
possesses natural buoyancy. It can be held down by enslavement to the
senses, by acquisitiveness and ambition, by anger and violence, or by what the
New Testament calls “cares.” It can be held down, but its natural
tendency remains dramatically oriented toward God. It can never be satisfied
until this upward impulse is allowed freedom." Daniel Rossi made a video to illustrate this point: show video http://youtu.be/11a6VQe1Yms
This
illustration made me think about buoyancy. The ball floats because it is less
dense than the water. If we took that same ball and deflated it, it most likely
would sink or, at the very least, it would not float as well or for as long. If
we deflated it by puncturing it, it would not be long before all of the air was
gone and it began to take on water and then as it filled with water, it would
be pulled deeper and deeper below the surface. To explore density a little
more, let's look at these bowling balls:
Every
bowling ball is the same size, but not every bowling ball has the same mass. So
the heavier the bowling ball, the denser it is. A ball that is 12 lbs. will just
be suspended in the water not really floating or sinking – heavier than that,
it will sink; lighter than that it will float. To take the illustration even
farther, it is the space, or air, inside the ball that forces it up towards the
air above the water. show YouTube clip https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FeKb_xfr608 from 2:22 til 2:47 without sound
I think we are
often satisfied to live like the 12 lb. bowling ball. Not sinking, but not
really floating. Under the surface of the water, the voices above the water are
dulled or inaudible, and the pull on us is not making us feel burdened or
weighed down. It feels safe. But as Casey says, the things that are holding us
down are our own lusts, our drive for power and recognition, anger and
resentment – the cares and worries of this world. The things that we think we need and want and
our own agenda are weighing us down and keeping us from fellowship with God and
one another.
Casey talks
about the things that we naturally long for – validation, intimacy, wholeness,
safety, adventure – as things that can only be met fully in God, but we often
find cheap substitutes.
Pascal
described it this way: “What else does this craving, and this helplessness,
proclaim but that there was once in man a true happiness, of which all that now
remains is the empty print and trace? This he tries in vain to fill with
everything around him …"
balloon
illustration
Covetous or
lustful fantasies, talking about others, judgmental thoughts, escaping into the
world of the internet or television, isolating, worrying what others think, sarcasm - habits that are "not that
bad" "could be worse" "not hurting anyone" at the very
least, keep our spiritual senses dulled and at the very worse pave the way for
serious departures into destructive behaviors– a slippery slope that leads us
ever so slowly to places we never intended to go. Genesis 4:7 "You will be accepted if you do what is right. But if you refuse to
do what is right, then watch out! Sin is crouching at the door, eager to
control you. But you must subdue it and be its master.”
There is no neutral ground. All we have to offer God is our choice. And each moment offers us small choices – to
love or not love our neighbor, to forgive or not forgive, to bless or curse our
enemy, to surrender to God or to fight against Him, to judge or judge not, to
be patient & kind or to envy & keep records of wrongs. so on and so on
– choices to move towards God or away from Him.
as C.S. Lewis puts it “…the real problem of the Christian life comes
where people do not usually look for it. It comes the very moment you wake up
each morning. All your wishes and hopes for the day rush at you like wild
animals. And the first job each morning consists simply in shoving them all
back; in listening to that other voice, taking that other point of view,
letting that other, larger, stronger life come flowing in. And so on, all day.
We can only do it for moments at first. But from those moments a new sort of
life will be spreading through our system because we are now letting him work
at the right part of us."
Prayer is
the way to let that other life come flowing in. We ask God to show us what is
getting in the way of our relationship with Him and we ask Him to fill us anew
with His Holy Spirit.
Luke
9:23-24 Then he said to them all:
“Whoever wants to be my disciple must deny themselves and take up their cross
daily and follow me. For whoever wants to save their life will lose it, but
whoever loses their life for me will save it."
Prayer is
really just as simple as talking and listening to God, and the more we do it,
the more buoyant our spirit becomes. How can we stay in touch with God?
lakehouse
story
what objects
did Jesus use to compare Himself, the kingdom, man, etc. shout em out. sheep,
coins, grass, lilies, city on a hill, a wayward son, treasure, fig, mustard and
fruit trees, vine, seeds, farmer, fisherman, nets, wheat, weather, wind, yeast,
bread, water, wine, lamps, children, doctor, bride, judge, workers, door, salt,
neighbor, widow, tax collector, building houses, money, banquet, unlikely hero
of the story, rocks, pearl
do you ever
see a tree? or bread? or the wind? salt?, a house being built on a foundation?
God wants us to find Him – Jeremiah
29:13-14 You will seek me and find me when you seek me with all your heart. I
will be found by you,” declares the Lord, and as we seek first His kingdom and
His righteousness, He will give us everything we need.
Ask God to
help you stay in touch with Him throughout your day and you will be amazed at
the way He breaks into your reality over and over. Then you will say with
Jacob: “Surely the LORD is in this place, and I wasn’t even aware of it!”
Genesis 28:16
C.S. Lewis Every
time you make a choice you are turning the central part of you, the part of you
that chooses, into something a little different from what it was before. And
taking your life as a whole, with all your innumerable choices, all your life
long you are slowly turning this central thing either into a heavenly creature
or into a hellish creature: either into a creature that is in harmony with God,
and with other creatures, and with itself, or else into one that is in a state
of war and hatred with God, and with its fellow-creatures, and with itself.
Once we have
said yes to God, the relationship is started and our true life is hidden with
God in Christ. Prayer is the way we tap into that life. As Casey says “Prayer
is an attempt to realize the love that unites us with God, allow it to become
more present to us, and give it greater scope to act upon us and change us. We
do not produce prayer. We allow prayer to act.”
Casey goes
on to say that sometimes events or temptations; pain of our own making or pain
inflicted on us act as a wake-up call. Like the ball plunged underwater, our
impulse is to spring towards God gasping for breath. as C.S. Lewis says “…pain
insists upon being attended to. God whispers to us in our pleasures, speaks in
our conscience, but shouts in our pains: it is his megaphone to rouse a deaf
world.” Casey calls these moments “triggers of prayer” – we see this over and
over again in the story of Israel as they cry out to God in times of oppression
and distress.
God wants to
be in a constant conversation with you and He will try to get (and keep) your
attention in whatever ways He can. Look for Him –God is our refuge and
strength, a help in distresses, very readily found.
When
Jesus disciples asked Him how to pray He gave them what we now call “the Lord’s
Prayer” this prayer is so beautiful and profound, but I am afraid that its
significance can be drowned out by familiarity. So to close today, in the rev
rag is the Lord’s Prayer with a space for you to write it out in your own
words. As you do this, think about what Jesus trying to say about how to pray?
When the disciples heard it from Jesus it was new to them. How can you hear it
in a new way today?