Sermons
“The Mystery of God – A Personal Take” by…
I am
honored to take my place in this pulpit.
It has a reputation for allowing free expression, and I am sure that I
am not the only one who might have expressed views and opinions regarded as
outside the current dogmas of the Church.
This is not the first time I am asked to give a sermon in a Methodist
Church. I grew up in a Primitive
Methodist Church and my Father was a Lay Preacher for 50 years. You see in England in the 1940’s, the
Methodists did not have sufficient full-time ministers for one at every church
and chapel. The churches were organized
into 5 to 10 in a circuit with perhaps half the number of full-time ministers,
hence the need for Lay preachers to fill the vacant spots. So in my youth I was in training to be a Lay
preacher and occasionally was asked to conduct the services at small chapels in
the countryside of North-West England.
The one piece of advice I was given by an old gentleman at one of the
Chapels was “Be sure to include the Lord Jesus in every one of your sermons”. So here goes:
We each
one of us is aware that we have been endowed with both Reason and Heart. At
times we can be rational and at other times we act and behave
irrationally. We have been given such
amazing characteristics such as imagination, daring, patience, fortitude and
peace that we can envisage such spectacular feats as landing humans on the
Planet Mars; yet we also have within us characteristics such as jealousy, hate,
idleness and often a desire for War. So
this exploration of the Mystery of God is my attempt to try to understand the
concept of God as expressed in the Bible and use my personal rationality as far
as possible, recognizing that somewhere along, Faith and Belief are heavily
involved.
I’m
starting with three assumptions as a basis for my discourse:
First: That since we are here in this place at this time,
that we all believe in God, and we are here to worship him, or her, or it.
Second: That we can all agree in the concept of God the
Creator of all things, Omnipotent, God only Wise.
Third: That we are
each of us made in the Image of God.
Now,
each of us has a personal view of other characteristics that we may project and
I propose to relate some of my questions, truths and speculations that that I
have recently had pause to consider. Living in a Retirement Community with many
essential services provided, leaves time to remember the past and assess one’s
life journey.
The
Bible, particularly the Old Testament, cites many stories of a person’s,
usually a man’s, encounter with God, although God never shows himself. For instance in the Garden of Eden, Adam and
Eve were created with Free Will, the ability to choose, and they ate of the
Tree of Good and Evil; they encounter God who knows they have disobeyed his
commandment to eat only the Tree of Life, and for that they must leave the
Garden and henceforth their lives will involve toil and pain. In our first lesson, we are given the story
of Moses and his encounter with God and the burning bush on Mt. Horeb. Moses wants to be given a name so he can tell
the people in slavery who it was that sent him there. And God’s answer is “I AM that I AM” or an
alternative translation of the Hebrew is “I AM that I AM or What or Will BE”.
I
believe we can all agree in the belief of God the Creator of THE Universe,
though to me it seems there may not be one, but in fact, many parallel
universes that exist but which we are unable to see or experience. If you want an easy metaphor of such parallel
universes, just surf your cable TV and witness the separate existences that
occur that you only are aware of when you tune in to that particular channel.
If you
believe with me that each of us is made in the image of God, then the inverse
of that is that HE, SHE, or IT (or as modern theologians would call God – “The
Ground of our Being”) must possess all our characteristics in Spades & much
more. Since I was trained as a
Physicist, I must assume God is the Supreme Physicist, the most capable
Experimenter & the All-knowing Theoretician. So what if our Universe is a Grand
Experiment? As a physicist we are not
uncomfortable with parallel universes or with the concept of a Universe of
Opposites. Pythagorus (who you all know
from his famous Geometric Theorem) was also a philosopher & religious
teacher who lived some 500 years before the Christian Era, and he drew up a
Table of Ten Opposites describing our universe: (in those days the number 10
was a special number)
Limited Unlimited
Odd Even
Unity Plurality
Right Left
Male Female
at
Rest in Motion
Straight Curved
Light Darkness
Good Evil
Square Oblong
We can add many more – Physicists now know there is Matter
and Anti-matter, an electron & a
positron, while there is a neutrino, a friend of mine who heads a Govt. Lab in
Virginia has recently had an appeal before Congress to spend several hundred
million dollars of public’s money to fund an experiment to attempt to discover
the anti-neutrino. There is also Joy and Pain!
So I believe that God must in fact be a Duality – A God of both Positives
and Negatives, a God of both Good and Evil.
And that presents for me a Major Dilemma. How to understand the occurrence of Pain and
Suffering that appears to be inflicted on both good and bad people?
So, from
what I have said, might we infer What God’s Strategy for Mankind might be?
If you
follow me, I am suggesting that our Universe is an experiment in Free Will, and
God wants to see how humankind handles it, and the Bible indicates that God
wants us to walk this balance between Good and Evil and over time God has tried
several different techniques to send messages to attempt to make it clear as to
how humankind should conduct itself. The
early books of the Bible suggest to me that God chose “Judgement” initially to
let people know his ways; through Moses he attempted to send a list of
Commandments, still later he chose to send messages through the Prophets. In the case of David, he first called Samuel
to be his messenger who then much later used him to anoint David to be King. However
it was many years before David was actually installed as King of Israel. You can probably think of many other ways the
books of the Old Testament describe God’s action to convince his chosen people
to walk the straight path. Finally, as
John describes in his account of the coming of Jesus – God sent his only
begotten Son that we could be saved and St. Paul said that not only Jews, but
all people could be part of the Kingdom of Heaven.
Back of
all this is a personal awareness of God’s identity. The early Jews called God “Jaweh”, and later
David used the term “Adonai” and these have come down to us using the vowels of
one and the consonants of the other as “Jehovah”. We in First Methodist recently heard Gendis
Khan, a Moslem and the Iman from the Schenectady Mosque, describe God’s identity
as Justice. Pope Francis has recently
authored a book entitled “The name of God is Mercy”. I personally believe that “God is Love”, and
God expressed that Love in sending his only begotten Son to earth in order to
show us how to walk the balance between Good and Evil.
It is
my belief that God has a purpose for each of us. For sure, we can only do our
best in the present. As illustrated by
the story of Samuel and David, God’s timetable is completely different from our
own. As the philosopher Soren Kierkegaard
wrote – Life must be lived forward but can only be understood backward.
Therefore, go forward with courage and hope and obey Jesus’s Commandment
– Thou shall Love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul,
and with all thy mind and Thou shall love thy neighbor as thyself. AMEN.
Sermon March 6, 2016
�