Christian Fellowship is Not an Ideal But a Divine Reality: A Homily for the Fourth Sunday of Easter 2020
Acts 2.42-47
Psalm 23
1 Peter 2.19-25
John 10.1-10
Christian Fellowship Is Not an Ideal but a Divine Reality
It’s hard to imagine a
more beautiful scene than the one described for us at the end of Acts 2:
Spirit-birthed togetherness, harmony, devotion to the Scriptures, awe and
wonder; gratitude, radical generosity, hospitality, prayer, the breaking of
bread, and heart-felt worship. For almost two thousand years, this scene
has inspired churches throughout the ages to “get back to its roots”. Is this not
ultimately what we all long for, to be in a community like this?
It feels strange to read
this passage today in our time of social distancing and isolation, and in our
age of increasing tribalism.
As you may
remember, we flash this passage up on the big screen each Sunday before the Prayers
of the People as a reminder of why we structure our corporate gathering the
way we do. We gather in devotion to the apostles teachings (Scripture reading
and sermon), we share fellowship and break bread (Panera and the Lord’s
Supper); we make ourselves and our resources available for one another and for
those in need; we receive one another in our homes, especially in the summer
Missio Dei season; we praise God and give thanks with glad and generous hearts;
and the Lord has given us favor and added to our numbers in ways that He has
seen fit. We are not perfect, we still have room to grow, but I am encouraged
by the life that God has birthed in our midst and the way in which we He has
used our gathering, our togetherness, to encourage us and to bless our
community--even those outside of our congregation.
Our texts this morning
remind us that the gifts that we enjoy, the life that we share together, the
good that comes from our gathering together is not the result of us
implementing some ideal, some vision or mission statement that we have come up
with. Rather, it is all generated, it all has its source in the life and work
of God.
Here I am reminded of
Dietrich Bonhoeffer’s insightful essay “Community” in Life Together.
He adamantly reminds us that Christian community is not an ideal that we try to
live out or implement, rather it is a divine reality that we experience and
that we are called to participate in. I think it is vital to think about
this when we read a text like Acts 2.42-47. It is easy to turn this text into a
“wish dream”, a vision or an ideal of what we are supposed to look like. When
this happens, the community that God is forming and shaping in and through us
is in grave danger of being destroyed.
Why? Because, as
Bonhoeffer reminds us, we become demanders and accusers. We enter the community
as demanders, requiring that others live up to the ideal; and we accuse
others when they do not; we act as if we, and our vision of community, are that
which binds a community together and gives it life. We act as if the vision or
ideal itself is what gives us life. And when the community fails to look the
way we think it should, when it fails to uphold the vision, we not only accuse
our brothers and sisters, we also accuse God.
This is particularly
problematic for pastors and elders, who can often be found complaining about a
congregation who doesn’t seem to live up to the ideal. A congregation has not
been entrusted to the elders of the church in order that they should become its
accuser. It’s here that elders should realize that the “wish dream” has become
an idol; they should repent; and daily receive the gift of fellowship that God
has provided. Gratitude is our foundational posture.
Christian community,
Bonhoeffer argues, is threatened most when we confuse falling in love with the
idea or vision of community (such as what can be seen in Acts 2.42-47) with the
God-enabled task of loving the people God has called to our gathering in
all its particularities and challenges. “He who loves his dream of community
more than the Christian community itself becomes a destroyer of the latter,
even though his personal intentions may be ever so honest and sacrificial (pg.
27)”.
We enter our fellowship,
then, not as demanders but as thankful recipients. For “Christian community is
not an ideal which we must realize; it is rather a reality created by God in
Christ in which we may participate (p.30)”.
Jesus reminds of this in
our gospel reading this morning from John 10.1-10. Beware of those who
do not enter the sheepfold through the gate, Jesus warns. They are thieves and
robbers. They kill and destroy. Jesus is the door, the gate, the way into
community, into true fellowship. Anyone, whether it is a pastor, an elder, a
deacon, or a well-meaning, zealous church member, who seeks to enter into
the community and does not do so through the gate, through Jesus, ultimately
steals and destroys.
A true, authentic
community is not made of those who get the vision and seek to implement it;
rather it is made of sheep who know and hear the voice of the Shepherd. They
follow His lead. The follow behind Him. They have a foundational posture
of hearing and obeying. They also recognize the voice of a stranger. And when
they follow Jesus, He leads them to find pasture, rest and refreshment,
provision and sustenance. For this Shepherd has come to give life abundantly.
But that life is only found in listening and following, it is only found
by entering through the gate of Jesus.
And what does it look
like to hear the Shepherd’s voice, to follow Him to the pasture He has prepared
for us? Our epistle reading from 1 Peter 2.19-25 outlines what this
looks like. It is a life of faithful obedience that can often look like
suffering and failure in this world characterized by rebellion, darkness, and
unbelief. Jesus, Peter says, left us an example to follow, footsteps to walk
in: when he was reviled, he did not revile in return; when he suffered, he did
not threaten. Instead, he continually entrusted himself to the one who judges
justly. Jesus modeled for us a life characterized by constant listening,
attentiveness to God’s will in all its particularities and circumstances. To
follow Jesus is to participate in His life of faithfulness, a life that looks
like what He taught on the Sermon on the Mount--a life of enemy love, turning
the other cheek, a life of entrusting God with retribution and justice when we
are wronged because of our allegiance to God and His ways.
But how are we enabled
to live such a life? In and through Jesus, the gate. For he bore our sins in
his body on a tree; he absorbed our wrong-doing, our evil, taking it out of
circulation. He has healed us, and returned us to His fold, we who were
straying. We have been liberated from the futile ways of life we have
inherited, and are now freed to live a life of righteousness, a life that looks
like the faithfulness of Jesus by the sanctifying work of the Spirit (1 Pet
1.2).
This is and will always
be the only foundation of our community. Jesus has not given us a vision to
follow. Rather, he has created, generated a new reality that we share in. By
the regenerating power of the Spirit and through the life, death, and
resurrection of Jesus, we are incorporated into the life of God. God, Father,
Son, and Holy Spirit, is intimately engaged in sharing with us His life as we
share it with others. When we share in this koinonia with God, this
divine reality, we experience hospitality, generosity, grace, forgiveness. We
receive the benefits of the Good Shepherd’s provision, guidance, and protection
, His green pastures, his still waters, His leading that shows His name to be
great, His restoration and correction, even in the midst of our valleys
the shadow of death (Psalm 23). And we bring all of this to our
corporate gathering--this life that we have experienced in God. And we find
this kind of life from others in our gathering. This life that we receive from
divine hospitality and generosity is what generates something that looks like
Acts 2.42-47. We are devoted, generous, hospitabile, faithful, grateful--not of
our own doing, not because we are implementing a vision--but because this is
what we have experienced as we entered through the gate, Jesus.
And so, when we gather,
Jesus, the Good Shepherd, stands between each of us, the lover and those
that he loves. We do not know in advance what love of others means on the basis
of some generic idea of love; rather Christ, the Shepherd, whose voice we
recognize and follow, tells us who to love, and how to love (adapted from p.
35).
As we ready ourselves
for being back together, let us remember that we are not gathering to implement
an ideal. We gather to share in a reality that is created in and through our
Shepherd, Jesus. Let’s enter through the gate, that we may have and share life
to the full.
As we ready ourselves
for being back together, let’s take advantage of this time of self isolation to
embrace and absorb God’s hospitality and generosity in our lives--so that we
can share that with others; so that we can experience God’s love from one
another. For, every act of solitude before God, every act of listening to and
hearing God’s voice, every act of experiencing and receiving God’s hospitality
and generosity, His love, is also an act of service to the community. We
are the body of Christ. Every member serves the body by being alone in
meditation, listening to the Word and responding accordingly. Aloneness brings
blessings, strength, clarity, peace, and healing to the community.
For this we have been
called together; for this reason we must continue to diligently seek ways of
gathering together. God loves us by means of us sharing with one another what
we have received from God. God loves us by means of us loving one another as we
are directed to do so. So, let us reap a harvest for which we did not labor.
Let us enter into the labor of God (John 4.38).
“Wish dreaming, makes us doubters and accusers.” You are filling in the blanks to questions I have pondered for many years.
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