Introduction
I’m so very proud
of the graduating class of 2020. Our church recognizes graduating students
every year and we are always proud of each one.
But I can honestly say, we have never had a year like this one. Each graduating class is unique and has its
own struggles, but your class—2020—has faced a pandemic that has shut down the entire
world. Humanity has faced plagues
before—some far deadlier than COVID 19.
However, nothing has ever shutdown the entire globe, all at the same
time—from Asia to Europe to Africa to America.
Class of 2020, your year will go down in history as one of the most
challenging of all times. Perhaps one
day, when you are old and gray, you will take your grandchildren of great grandchildren in your arms and you will say, “I was in the
graduating class of 2020. They canceled
the last 2 months of school, along with proms and sports and all our
extracurricular activities. But we
endured and we graduated.” And I hope,
after having some time to reflect upon your experience, you will also be able to say, “We learned
more during that crazy time about what really matters in life than we could
have ever learned in our classrooms.”
I hope we
have all been reflecting and learning a lot more these day—about life, about death, about
the meaning of it all and what’s really important. I know many pastors and Christians have been
reflecting on what church is all about.
It has now been nine weeks since we had a regular onsite worship service
at Pleasant Grove. All our services
since March 15th have been “online only”. In fact, the graduates and their families that joined us for worship in the sanctuary on May 17 (about 60 people spread out for social distancing) were the first “congregation” we’ve had on site in over two months (other than a
small worship team that’s helped us lead our LIVE stream service on Facebook).
And so, many
pastors and Christians have been pausing to reflect on what “Church” is really
all about. What is the purpose of
Church? If we can’t meet in person, are
we really still a church? Pleasant Grove
Methodist is a very active church; our calendar is normally full of
activities. But for the last two months,
all of those activities have been canceled. We've tried to limit our work to only what we've felt had to be done--online worship, managing essential administrative tasks, and some vital mission work that needed tp be done.
High school
seniors from this year’s class know what it’s like to have activities
canceled. Your senior year is supposed
to be full of special activities. Yet
many of those activities have been canceled.
Does that mean you are not a senior?
Does that mean you won’t be a graduate?
Does the cancellation of these extracurricular activities nullify all the
work you’ve done for over a decade in your academic career? No. Of
course not. They will still graduate.
Here’s why. It all goes back to the purpose of your education. I’m not an expert in public education so I don’t know if I can perfectly distill down the essence of public education. However, I’m certain what is most central to a high school education is not marching band or football games or prom or baseball or even the graduation ceremony itself. All of these (and more) have become beloved traditions of high school education and it hurts your heart when they are taken away. But the cancellation of all these activities does not nullify in any way whatsoever the fact that you are high school educated graduates.
Here’s why. It all goes back to the purpose of your education. I’m not an expert in public education so I don’t know if I can perfectly distill down the essence of public education. However, I’m certain what is most central to a high school education is not marching band or football games or prom or baseball or even the graduation ceremony itself. All of these (and more) have become beloved traditions of high school education and it hurts your heart when they are taken away. But the cancellation of all these activities does not nullify in any way whatsoever the fact that you are high school educated graduates.
Therefore,
the purpose of a high school education must be something greater than our
beloved traditions—something that you have attained. Again, I’m not a public educator, but I would
speculate that the core purposes of a high school education is to teach you the
knowledge you need to succeed in life.
To this you might add, the skills you need to succeed in life. Perhaps, even more important, maybe, is that a
proper education teaches you to be a good person who will be a good citizen.
(That’s something that’s important to all of us, because the last thing we need
is a bunch of smart, skillful people running around doing evil things!)
As I said,
I’m not an educator. I’m a pastor. So the big questions on my mind through all
this craziness has been: “What is essential about church?” It’s a question I’ve thought about many times
over the years throughout my ministry—it’s not totally new. However, this question—what is essential
about Church—has become especially pressing for me during this time when so
many of the traditional things the American Church does have been called
off. Does that make sense?
So today,
I’m beginning a new series titled “Ekklesia,” because Ekklesia is
the Greek word Bible originally used for “church”. My purpose today is not to give answers. Today, I want to give questions. I will spend more
time in the next two Sundays sharing some answers about the essence of the
Church from Scripture. But today, I want
to get everyone asking the question. And
maybe, as part of that, the graduates of the class of 2020 can ask some deep
questions about their own lives as well.
Maybe we can all ask ourselves some core questions that get to the heart
of our individual lives.
Jesus always
had a way of asking the right questions.
13 When Jesus came to the region of Caesarea Philippi, he
asked his disciples, “Who do people say that the Son of Man is?”
14 “Well,”
they replied, “some say John the Baptist, some say Elijah, and others say
Jeremiah or one of the other prophets.”
15 Then he
asked them, “But
who do you say I am?”
16 Simon
Peter answered, “You are the Messiah, the Son of the living God.”
17 Jesus
replied, “You are
blessed, Simon son of John, because my Father in heaven has revealed this
to you. You did not learn this from any human being. 18 Now I say to you that you are Peter (which means ‘rock’), and
upon this rock I will build my church, and all the powers of hell will not
conquer it.
Jesus reveals some very important information in this short conversation. First of all, he reveals that he is the Messiah (Chosen One), the Son of the living God. These were actually Simon (Peter's) words, but Jesus did not dispute them. Jesus affirms Peter's statement. Everyone has an opinion about the identity of Jesus--both today and in Jesus day. Some say he is a prophet, a religious leader, a revolutionary, or even a fiction character. But Jesus asks, who do you say I am and Peter replies he is the Chosen One, the Son of the Living God.
Jesus also reveals that God inspired Peter to believe this. Peter didn't get that idea from any person, but directly from God. It was divinely inspired. We ought to pay careful attention to this revelation then.
Lastly, Jesus reveals that the Church (Ekklesia) will be founded on Peter’s kind of faith in Jesus. This is huge. For any church to stand and remain legitimate, it must be built upon the affirmation that Jesus is the Chosen One, the Son of the Living God. Otherwise, it is not really a church and will crumble.
The
foundation is the most important part of any structure. Last Saturday morning, a group of men from my church went to another member's house to help build a porch. We worked for about 8 hours, but nearly half that time was spent laying the foundation. We needed to take our time and make sure everything in the foundation was right. Was it level? Was it square? Was it firm? It was very important to make sure the foundation was firm, because otherwise the structure--no matter how pretty--would not last or be reliable. Once the foundation was laid, we moved very quickly and the rest of the porch was assembled very fast because it was built on a firm foundation.
Foundations
are not just for buildings. Your high school education is the foundation you need to succeed in life. It is only a foundation. You still need more. Maybe you go on to get a college
education or job training or you go to work. But you wouldn’t be prepared to begin those
things without the foundation you built over the first 18 or so years of your
life. And a faulty foundation will give
you trouble with everything else you try to build in your life as an adult.
Your
foundation is built from far more than just your education. Here’s where the questions come in. Who are you?
What is your essence? Remember,
Jesus asked his disciples, “Who do people say I am?” Well, who do people say you are?
What you
family and closest friends say may be some indication as to what’s most
essential about you. They know you well and may see things you don't However, if you really
want to know the core of who you are, I would recommend looking to God. God is the One who designed and created you. He is the One who brought you into
this world and has been guiding you all along the way (even if you didn’t know
it). He was there all along.
This is a
message especially applicable to graduates as you enter a new phase in life
(but it’s also a message we all need to consider during this time when our normal
lives have been turned upside down). Who
are you? What is your purpose? What kind of life do you want to build? I would think this is the time for schools and educators to be asking the same things. What is school all about? What is the purpose of eduaction? Now that all the extra stuff has had to be canceled, what is it about school that is essential and cannot be canceled?
Graduates,
as you start a new phase of life, you have so much potential and a great amount
of freedom to build whatever kind of life you want. What do you want to build? More importantly, What do you think God wants
you to build? Because, here’s the thing,
what God wants you to build will be so much more fulfilling than anything
else. Believe it or not, God knows you
better than you have ever known yourself and His way will always be the better
way.
This is a
message for everyone, not just graduates.
The COVID 19 pandemic has been awful, but it has given us all a unique
opportunity. Since our normal
lives have been so severely disrupted, don’t miss the opportunity to take a
good, hard look at what’s most essential in your life. Now that so much of the fluff is stripped
away, ask the question: Who are
you? What’s your purpose? What kind of life do you want to build going
forward? Many of us in so many ways will be building something new in our lives in the coming days. What will it be?
I pray you
won’t just opt for the easy, comfortable thing, which is to just go back to the
way things were before COVID. (That may not even be possible. The world has changed.)
I am looking
at my own life. I am also looking at the
Church to see what needs to change. I
think that’s what God wants us all to do.
After all, I believe this life is not my own anyway—it belongs to
God. And this church is not ours
either—it belongs to God. So, I want
both my life and our church to be what God wants it to be. How about you?
I invite you all to meditate on
the questions God has put on your heart.