This morning we are presented
with the basic equation for a growing and vibrant church.
It is repeated many times in
the book of Acts and the other letters that follow in our Bibles.
What, stands out from the
reading in Acts chapter 2? Let’s review:
vs 14: Peter, standing
with the eleven… addressed THEM, “MEN of Judea and ALL who live in
Jerusalem”;
vs. 36-37: Let the ENTIRE
house of Israel know … when THEY heard this THEY were cut to the heart and said
to Peter and to the other Apostles;
vs 39: For the promise is
for you, for your children, and for ALL who are far away, EVERYONE whom the
Lord our God calls;
vs 41: we hear That day
3000 persons were added, baptized into the body of Christ.
If we continue with vs. 42,
we read:
THEY devoted themselves to the
apostles’ teaching and fellowship, to the breaking of bread and prayers.
(v.42)
The basic equation has – Peter
and the Apostles (more than one person), + add,
Preaching and proclaiming
the gospel, + add, in a public setting, x multiplied by more than one listener =
equals the body of Christ. The body of Christ are the baptized, a community who
joins immediately in
fellowship and the breaking of bread and the prayers.
Notice that the teachers and
preachers are a group.
Notice that the language is
plural – they, the entire, men, all, everyone.
We will notice in coming
weeks that the collection of post-resurrection writings, have the body of
Christ working as community. We will notice the sharing of resources and
holding all in common.
There is no I. There is no
my.
There is no building. There
is no restriction on who can belong.
The church is the body of
Christ - a living community working to manifest God’s kindom; resurrection now.
Baptist Pastor James Bell speaks
about American Christianity, reflecting on how the culture of consumerism, the
ideal of the American dream, and individualism, has skewed Christian values and
been a detriment to the witness of the body of Christ. He writes:
We have millions of ‘saved’
individuals and no body. We have customers and no church. We have consumers and
no community. We have people who love Jesus and cannot stand each other.
Because we made self the
centre. And when self is the centre, the church becomes optional, community
becomes inconvenient, and discipleship becomes shallow. The New Testament vision
is far bigger than “me and Jesus.”
The 40th
Anniversary of the creation of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Canada recognizes
that the Canadian Lutheran church has structured itself and its weekly operations
in congregations, like this one, to be heavily invested in the “me and Jesus” movement.
We have practiced 40 years of this and are very good at it. Worship is for us.
Programming is for us. It is what we want. It is saving what we own. It is
controlling our space and our resources. It is deciding who belongs. We say all
are welcome, as long as they venture in the door on their own and subscribe to
the way we operate.
The 40th
Anniversary of the ELCIC is inviting the whole church, across the whole country,
to reset –
to resurrect as the body of
Christ. The idea of May 31st as a Day of Action focuses on the basic
equation for a growing and vibrant church. More than one person (a
congregation), preaches and proclaims the gospel in a public setting – that is
outside the building on the streets and in the neighbourhood. It is a return to
a vision where church is bigger than “me and Jesus;” It is a return to living
as a body – the body of Christ - in action in the world.
This week there has been a
lot of action in this neighbourhood. Long-term-care workers from St. Vincent’s,
the nursing home next door, are on strike. The church has been their rest stop.
Picketers come in to use the bathroom, help themselves to food and drink, make
signs, rest their feet and warm up and dry out.
Neighbours and organizations
have been in and out supplying coffee and treats. Neighbours have stood on the
picket line with them, encouraged them with honks and waves, and signed
petitions.
Regardless of what one
thinks of unions – as a group, a community, they have lived gospel outside of
these doors. They stand together for all their members. They are in the
community preaching their truth. They are working as one unit, one body in
solidarity.
Offering hospitality has
meant that the Tuesday Loneliness Café met surrounded by the hubbub of union
work and people coming-and-going. There was a flourish of listening and
conversation. For Pastor Kimber it has been the ministry of being present:
listening, offering hugs, being calm, answering questions; gifts of time and hospitality.
For church council -being the body of Christ- was sharing space; two meetings were
held in the sanctuary this week so the larger community could keep on doing
their work.
Regular groups who use the
hall have graciously accepted the bigger vision – setting up their meetings in
different configurations than their norm, to accommodate the extra items in the
kitchen and hall.
There is energy in the
building, on the corner, in the neighbourhood.
This week living as community – symbiotic with
another expression of community – together we have been manifesting God’s
kindom.
Consider for a moment – that
the union’s request to use the hall was denied.
We would have a nice quiet
space, to do our regular programming, where we could meet where we wanted.
We would be comfortable and able
to control the resources used. When entering the building everything would be
where we left it and how we like it. As customers we would be satisfied.
The union – the actual human
beings on the picket line – would see a church building with closed doors. The
closest space to their need, not offering comfort of bathroom, a cup of water, or
shelter; a congregation living for itself, oblivious to the world around them. The
neighbours would have nowhere to bring coffee and treats; seeing the closed
door they would wonder, “Of what use is the Church?” Not opening the door, would
signal to this part of HRM that we do not live what Christians preach and
profess: to love your neighbour, feed the hungry, do justice, show mercy, live
kindness, welcome the stranger, do unto others as you would have them do to
you.
This is but one immediate
example of applying what we read in the Bible to every day living. The post-resurrection
followers of Jesus and those baptized into the body of Christ were figuring out
how to be the church -faith community, in community, as community.
Returning to the words of
Pastor James Bell:
The New Testament vision is
far bigger than “me and Jesus.”
It is a people. A body. A
family. A living witness to the world that Christ is real.
Until we get back to that, we
will keep filling rooms while emptying the Church.
We will keep producing
consumers who know how to attend church but do not know how to be church.




