May 10, 2020 Rock of Salvation
A man was walking along the edge of a steep cliff when all of a sudden the ground gave way under him and he fell over the edge. As he plunged to certain death, he reached out and grabbed the branch of a tree that grew out a crack in wall of the precipice. His relief was short lived as he realized he couldn't hang on indefinitely and to let go meant certain death.
Therefore, he started shouting toward the top of the cliff for help. After yelling for some time, he finally heard a deep, booming voice (something like James Earl Jones) say, "I am here, what would you have me do?"
The man yelled, "I am down here hanging onto a tree for dear life … my arms are getting tired, please get a rope or do something to rescue me."
The voice responded, "I am God and I will rescue you."
”Well, thank God, er, I mean thank yourself!"
"All you need to do is let go and I will be there to catch you!"
The man thought about that proposition for a second or two and then shouted to the top of the cliff, "is there anyone else up there?"
This story, although silly is appropriate for today since our underlying theme is all about faith. What do we hold onto when we're falling?
"Do not let your hearts be troubled, have faith in God and faith in me," said Jesus. Our man-over-the cliff story proves that faith in practice is called trust. In other words, when faith is tested, it becomes a matter of trusting, of letting go. "Lord, let your mercy be on us who place their trust in you." The story is a dramatic illustration of what God asks of us quite often in our lives. Do we trust enough to let go or do we simply wish to look somewhere else for a more appealing solution to whatever problem we have or are about to face?
One of the sayings from Alcoholics Anonymous is "Let go and Let God!" You can't do everything by yourself. You can't solve the whole world's problems, not even your own without God. There are many situations, problems and crises in our life, in the lives of family and friends and certainly many which affect all of society for which we cannot alone be responsible. Can we trust God enough that God should be about God's business?
Today's lessons speak about letting go and trusting God. They speak about the consequences of being caught up in the saving significance of Jesus, who makes all things drastically different from what they have been. They also highlight the doubts, which we may have as we travel along his way.
Lord, how can we know the way, for we do not know where you are going?" No one can see clearly what lies beyond any particular day, any relationship, or any trial. Thomas, one whom I like to call the courageous one rather than the doubter, asks the very question which lingers in the hearts of most. Surely, it was the question that rolled around in the heads of all the disciples that day and many still. Lord, what on earth do you mean? You speak about houses, rooms, resting places, coming again, trust. What does it really mean?
When the pressure is on; when the gospel becomes so relevant that some feel threatened; fearing their positions of power and influence weakening or find their prejudices challenged and rejected by a growing number, it is no wonder that such a gospel, precipitated persecution. Like Stephen, the church is attacked, and ridiculed; but more often than not it is ignored from both within and without. Surely Lord, you did not mean this … the good life of which you spoke, the abundant life must be something else. I turned to you the rock of salvation, I didn't expect to be killed by the rocks thrown at me. It's been said that when the going gets tough, the tough get going, but when we feel pressured, personally threatened or overwhelmingly defeated, can we trust God enough to let go of the branches and keep going, or do we falter, fight or take flight. Like the man do we seek to know if anyone else is up there to help? Jesus said, "I am the way, the truth and the life!"
Stephen and the others had been appointed by the disciples to serve at the widows' table, a ministry that ended in his death at the hand of his fellow countrymen. I doubt that Stephen would have ever guessed just how dangerous the pathway was which he trod, when he was appointed to serve those forgotten women. His life is remembered as the first martyred for the Christian faith. And while his story serves to introduce us to Saul of Tarsus who takes the story of the saving significance of Jesus to the rest of the world, it is Stephen's story that stands as a remarkable testimony of faithful trust. He too, could have looked elsewhere for help, yelled for someone else to listen or he could simply have retreated to his table of serving and left the speaking, reflecting and challenging to others. "This is not quite what I had in mind Lord, are you still up there? Help me!"
"Trust me, let go; let not your hearts be troubled, in my Father's house are many rooms, believe in the rock of salvation, believe also in me.
Stephen is executed by the mob because he dared speak what we hold to be true, that Jesus came to save the whole world, not just some small part of it, but all of it. We like to think that Jesus' words were welcoming words but they were not. Many found his news to be bad news because he challenged the ways people related to one another. He showed that people were important not because of their wealth, their might nor their personality, but simply because God had created them and loved them. Jesus called his followers then and now to welcome those who are on the outside. To stand up for the disadvantaged, the despised and the unpopular often will place us at the centre of controversy at times.
We might wish to say that we are not a Stephen, nor a Paul, nor a Mary, nor a Martha and certainly not a messiah. We are ordinary flesh and blood people, with prejudices, faults, weaknesses, passions and fears; and yet, Jesus, the rock of our salvation entreats us to believe and to trust. I find like Thomas, my doubts often overpower that trust and like the man clinging to the tree, I fear letting go and letting God.
Faith is a declaration of confidence we make to God each day and at each moment of the day, by trying to see God in every event, in every person, in every feeling in our hearts.
Popular cartoon character, Ziggy portrays a common human fear as he looks in the mirror one morning and proclaims, "Well, it's you and me against the world. Personally I think we are going to get creamed."
It takes faith just to get out of the bed some mornings. We can greet each new day, either with "Good morning God: or "Good God, morning."
It takes faith to believe that the work we do is really of any value. It takes faith to believe that everything will eventually work out. And that is true for all of us. We all despair and fear, get depressed. The guy clinging to the tree on the side of the cliff believed there was a God but couldn't get himself to trust that this God he believed in really knew what was best. Do you believe that God knows what's best for you?
"Is there anyone else up there"? The answer is "the only one up there is sufficient," for God is the one who sent Jesus, to show us the way, the foundation of our living faith, to teach us the truth and to infuse our lives with a belief in God that is also a deep trust. Sadly, we fail to call out to God or trust God enough until we have fallen over the edge! At least that’s the way I see it!