Sunday, May 28, 2023

E Pluribus Unum

May 28, 2023
St. John’s United Church of Christ, Union, Illinois

Acts 2:1-21[1]

E Pluribus Unum is Latin for “Out of many, one.” You’re familiar with the phrase, of course, from the Great Seal of the United States, which appears on the back of the One-Dollar Bill, among other places. It was considered a de-facto motto of the U.S. until 1956 when the United States Congress passed an act, adopting “In God We Trust” as the official motto.

At the time of the American Revolution, the phrase appeared prominently on the title page of a popular periodical, The Gentleman’s Magazine,[2] which collected articles from many sources into one “magazine,” an old-fashioned news aggregate website, if you will.

The meaning of the phrase was that out of many states (or colonies) emerged a single nation. It has also come to mean that out of many peoples, races, religions, languages, and ancestries has emerged a single people and nation—the “melting pot.”

Now, I think the melting pot concept has a flaw, in that it suggests that, when we come together, we turn into a uniform material, that we all conform to one common culture. While this sounds nice, it’s not what really happens. I suggest that we – as a nation made of many different peoples – are more like a stew. The chunks of beef, carrots, potatoes, and other ingredients remain distinct while making one dish.

Most people adopt English as the language of interaction, while retaining their first language at home and in gatherings such as churches. For example, several years ago my wife, Felicia, led worship in Spanish at the First Presbyterian Church of Marengo. This church, like many of our sister congregations in the United Church of Christ, was formed by German immigrants, and worship services were, until the 1940’s, conducted in German.

In 2001, following the September 11 attacks, the Ad Council launched a public service announcement in which ethnically diverse people say “I am an American.”[3] Near the end, the phrase E Pluribus Unum is seen with the English translation underneath. This is who we are today, a people made of many peoples, yet one nation. As the musician David Wilcox wrote, “We are children of slavery, children of immigrants, remnants of tribes and of tired refugees. As the walls tumble down, we are stronger together.”[4]

As Christians, this concept of many becoming one takes us back to that moment, Pentecost, fifty days after the resurrection of Jesus when God’s Holy Spirit came like the rush of the wind. The church was born as the Holy Spirit entered in and rested like a tongue of fire on each of them. Though they, the disciples at least, were all Galilean Jews, the crowd that gathered were from every nation. The people heard them speaking in many languages, and each person understood, no matter where they were from.

Jerusalem is a crossroads of the ancient near-east. Travelers, merchants, and armies have long crossed through this region. And Jerusalem bears the scars of many invasions, as empire after empire conquered the land and ruled over the people. So, the crowd that gathered probably represented much of the region around Jerusalem, at least, and possibly from much further away. And within just a few generations, the Holy Spirit would be poured out, if not on all flesh, at least in nearly every nation in the Eastern Hemisphere.

The rush of wind, tongues of fire, and humble Galileans speaking persuasively in many tongues were dramatic signs that God was doing something new, something that would transform the lives of all those present, and far beyond, in time and place. Though the disciples, I’m sure, had no idea what was to come, in hindsight we can see that the church was destined from the beginning to circle the globe.

Now, it makes me sad that Sunday morning at 10:00 a.m. is the most segregated hour in this nation. Though we Christians share the same bible, are baptized, and share The Lord’s Supper, we have fractured into thousands of pieces. It is estimated that there are some 43,000 different denominations of Christians.

Now, it depends on how you count, of course. These “denominations” are defined in terms of being separate organizations, not necessarily separate belief systems. The largest component (something like two thirds to three quarters) are “independent” churches, mostly in Africa, which are not necessarily different in doctrine, but are simply independent. The estimate includes national branches of the same denomination, such as the Lutheran Church of Germany and the Lutheran Church of Australia, as separate organizations. And there are many so-called “non-Denominational” churches which have effectively the same teachings, just different locations, different leaders, etc.

Some sources suggest Christian denominations can be divided into 6 major groups: Roman Catholics, Orthodox, Anglicans, Protestants, Independents, and “Marginals”. Wikipedia[5] lists about 40 major divisions, each of whom have some variation in belief. And there are serious disagreements between our various churches. Is this a bad thing? Not necessarily.

The differences among us, just as the differences among the members of the crowd that heard Peter preach that Pentecost morning, reveal the diversity of humanity united as followers of Jesus. Instead of dividing us, that diversity can provide a startling illustration of just how great the power of God is. Rather than dressing us each in a white robe and erasing our individual identities, God enters into relationship with us just as we are, wherever we have come from, no matter the languages we speak, and despite all that might cause us to turn away from one another.

Today, on the birthday of a church called to spread to the ends of the earth, the love of God is given for everyone. Not just the disciples, gathered in a room, trying to figure out what to do now that Jesus has gone. Not just the holiest or the most faithful or the most learned, not just the believers, not just those who were with Jesus on the road or who witnessed him resurrected. No, at this moment, “all flesh,” male and female, old and young, slave and free, all are invited and included—all of us members of one body, indispensable.

The same Spirit of God that inspired the tongues of those gathered in Jerusalem is looking to inspire a rebirth within us. It is the same Spirit that led Isaiah to envision a holy mountain for all people, and gave the vision to John of Patmos of a city with no walls and no temple, where God dwells among us. It is the same Spirit that is breaking in to our cloudy consciousness renewing us.

The differences between us don’t matter to God. You’ve heard it said: “There is no longer Jew or Greek, there is no longer slave or free, there is no longer male and female; for all of you are one in Christ Jesus.”[6] The rules that are designed to keep us apart have been broken by this God who loves all people. God is bigger than one group or another. There is no longer Catholic or Protestant, there is no longer Presbyterian or Methodist, there is no longer Congregational or Evangelical. God is bigger than any denomination. God is the Creator of the entire universe and all that is within it. God’s love is not limited to this people or that; God’s love is for all people, no exceptions.

Though this day marks an end to my time with you, this can be a time of renewal for this church, an opportunity to re-examine the essential question of how to be the church, a United Church in a town named for our Union as a nation. This is a time to re-commit to the idea that “If one member suffers, all suffer together with it; if one member is honored, all rejoice together with it”[7]. This is a time for our children to prophesy, for young people to dream dreams and older folk to see visions, a time to welcome the outpouring of Spirit that calls us into tomorrow.

Today’s story is not an ending, but a beginning. The celebration of Pentecost, which began as a remembrance of God giving the Law to Moses at Sinai, now marks the giving of new life and the gift of the church, a new way of living for those who would follow Jesus in every land and in every age. Not just some kinds of people, but all different kinds of people, in all different places, different languages and customs, different cultures and backgrounds and experiences, different abilities and genders and races and orientations. All different kinds of people, no matter where they are on life’s journey, are welcome here, loved by God, and filled with God’s Spirit, a new creation just as it could and ought to be.

May you experience the fire of God’s Holy Spirit, give in to it with love, and let it sustain you in the days to come and in all that comes your way. Out of many, may we be one in living the gospel, bringing good news to the world that God loves.  Amen.



[1] The scripture quotations contained herein are from the New Revised Standard Version Bible, copyright © 1989 by the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the U.S.A.  Used by permission.  All rights reserved.

[4] David Wilcox, “City of Dreams” on Into the Mystery © 2003.

[6] Galatians 3:28.

[7] 1 Corinthians 12:26.

Sunday, May 21, 2023

A Prayer for the People

May 21, 2023
St. John’s United Church of Christ, Union, Illinois

Psalm 1:1-3; John 17:4-21a[1]

I wonder how the disciples felt, after supper, listening as Jesus prayed for them. He had washed their feet, a surprising thing for their master to do, demonstrating through this act that they were to live as servants to one another. Judas had left, though they did not yet know why. They had to understand that something big was about to happen; Jesus had told them he was leaving the world and going to God. He had given them a new commandment, that they love one another as he had loved them. And he had warned them that the world would hate them, and told them that they do not belong to the world.

It was a lot to take in. They may have felt like their world was being upended, and I’m sure they were afraid of what was to come. “Do not let your hearts be troubled,” Jesus tells them, and he prays for them. “While I was with them, I protected them,” Jesus prays, “I guarded them… But now I am coming to you… I ask you to protect them from the evil one.” Jesus entrusts them to the care of God, and asks that they be sanctified, that they be made holy. They will be sent out into the world, a world that will hate them, and they will need one another like they never have before. Jesus prays for their unity, “that they may be one,” as Jesus and God are one, and that they may be included in that oneness. And Jesus prays that they may have joy.

This is what Jesus prays for them, and also for us. “I ask not only on behalf of these, but also on behalf of those who will believe in me through their word, that they may all be one.” The prayer of Jesus for the disciples, a prayer for the people of God through all the ages, is a prayer that all of us need to hear. And in that prayer, we begin to understand what Jesus meant by “abide in me.” To abide in Christ is to trust, to love, to be one, to be holy, and to know joy.

Jesus began by turning the tables of the disciples’ lives upside down, and nothing would ever be the same. But after that supper, after all Jesus did and said in that moment, they must have felt that everything was about to change again, but this time they would lose the one for whom they had left everything behind. The disciples were facing what is known as a liminal time, a time of change and transition between one way of being and the next. They were uncertain of their future and the changes that would come.

I find it encouraging that the disciples experienced that liminal time. We, too, are facing change and uncertainty, a time when what has been is not what will be. This congregation will have new leadership, a new servant of Christ who will pray, teach, and guide you in the days to come. I am sure that they will come to love you as I have loved you.

It is natural to long for what has been, even as we realize that things are no longer what they were before. It is only human to be anxious when we are going through change. But we can take heart that other faithful people have been here before us. We can be encouraged when we remember that we abide in Christ, and we are the people for whom Jesus prays.

“Holy Father, protect them in your name that you have given me, so that they may be one, as we are one” (v. 11). Jesus prays that God will protect us and lead us to unity. Jesus prays that we will love our neighbors as ourselves, serving the world as teachers of love, grace, and hope.

“I am not asking you to take them out of the world, but I ask you to protect them from the evil one” (v. 15). We can’t just leave, jet off to some safer place where nothing ever changes, but Jesus prays that we will be protected from the evil one. When some people fill their pockets and secure their power while millions of others lose their jobs, their homes, or even their hope, evil is on the loose. Protect your people from evil, O God of goodness and love.

Jesus prayed for the disciples, and prays for us. Jesus prays that we will know that God loves us, God is with us, and we are one with God. This prayer assures us that even when the world around us seems to fall apart, even when our anxiety is justified and the future will be difficult and dangerous, God is with us. God is pulling us onward, asking us to trust that we will not be alone, we are in Christ and Christ is with us.

“I will not leave you orphaned,”[2] Jesus tells them, and promises that the Holy Spirit will be with them. Next Sunday we celebrate Pentecost, remembering that day when the Holy Spirit came like the rush of the wind, resting on each of the disciples like tongues of fire, and they were filled with the Spirit. That same Spirit fills us as well, sanctifying us, empowering us, and making us one.

As a people not of the world, but sent into the world, we are called live a life dedicated to God, loving God with all that we are, showing love and compassion for others, making hard choices and trusting that we are not alone.

God watches over us. We are like trees planted by streams of water, which yield fruit in its season, and our leaves do not wither. God watches over us, so that in all that we do, in love and in service, we prosper. We are the people that Jesus prays for, a community even when we are apart, uncertain of our future, but moving ahead as one, one with each other, and one with God.  Amen.



[1] The scripture quotations contained herein are from the New Revised Standard Version Bible, copyright © 1989 by the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the U.S.A.  Used by permission.  All rights reserved.

[2] John 14:18.

Sunday, May 14, 2023

By What Power?

May 14, 2023
St. John’s United Church of Christ, Union, Illinois

Acts 4:1-11; John 14:8-24[1]

Have you ever been challenged to defend yourself, what you believe, what you have done, or what you have said? It can come as a shock, startling us into defensiveness. Sometimes we know what to say, but when we’re caught off-guard, we often draw a blank. How could the other person not understand things the way I do? How could my intentions not be clear?

A musician I know, Ron Berg, once wrote:

Why do you ask? Must I explain?
Is it wrong to believe; is my faith a crime?
Where will it end? Do you understand?
I am just being me, with God by my side.[2]

In the scripture passages for today, Peter is challenged by the high priests of Israel, and Jesus is challenged by Philip. Peter has healed a man, and the priests are threatened. They are the ones who are supposed to hold the power. People are supposed to come to the temple to be healed. But this Peter person has side-stepped all of that. “Who do you think you are?” they seem to ask. “By what power or by what name did you do this?” (v. 7) We’re the authorities here, and we didn’t give you authorization. Peter answers, “I have done a good thing! This man has been healed by the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth.” But the priests don’t see it that way. Jesus and his followers are a threat to their power.

Philip challenges Jesus in a similar way. He seems to ask, “Where does your power come from? If it is from God, then show us God and we’ll believe.” Jesus answers, “Have I been with you all this time, Philip, and you still do not know me?” (v. 9) “The words that I say to you I do not speak on my own; but the Father who dwells in me does his works.” (v. 10) Power, real power, comes from God.

Power is often measured by control over others. It is control based on money, fear, and ignorance. Peter and Jesus have a different understanding of power. Power is love, healing, truth-telling, moral clarity, and love of God above all else. Power belongs to God alone, and we are merely the instruments of God’s power.

Most of us do not truly understand the power of God that resides in us. Jesus understood. He said, “I am in the Father and the Father is in me.” (v. 11) Philip did not understand, even though Jesus did many things to show him the power of God within him. Peter didn’t get it then, either. It was only after the death and resurrection of Jesus, after the Pentecost, when Peter was filled with the Holy Spirit, that he understood the power that was within him.

If Peter and Philip didn’t get it, and they walked around with the living, breathing, Jesus, it’s no wonder we struggle too. But the power is there. The power of God is within each of us. And if we believe and trust in God, that power will be revealed. Jesus said, “Very truly, I tell you, the one who believes in me will also do the works that I do and, in fact, will do greater works than these, because I am going to the Father.” (v. 12) By the power of God, Peter stood up to the powerful and brought healing. What works of love, justice, and peace might we accomplish if we believe in the power of God, and trust God to use us well?

Now, we can’t expect to become miracle workers like Jesus. Faith healers that put on a show for the TV cameras are doing just that – putting on a show. No one has ever been able to move a mountain just by having faith and praying for it to move. The thunderstorm that woke my children in the night didn’t stop when I said “Peace, be still,” and I’m an ordained minister! However, by connecting to God, praying for God to increase my courage and strength, I have been able to calm the storm in myself, and help others move metaphorical mountains. With the help of God, I have helped others to connect to the love and grace of God in moments of joy and pain. And when others have shown their love and care for me in my time of need, I too have experienced the power of God’s love.

The greatest power Jesus possessed was love. As he nears the end of his earthly ministry, Jesus makes plain to the disciples the most important aspect of his mission: “I give you a new commandment, that you love one another. Just as I have loved you, you also should love one another.”[3] This commandment, so simple and yet so hard at times to follow. This is the core of all the teaching, the motivation for all the miracles, the source of the Savior’s power.

The Gospel of John was written in a time when the empire of Rome dominated the world of this budding faith, when violence ruled, and rebels might have raised a call to arms. In a striking contrast, the Gospel makes a different claim about power. Real power, the power to transform lives and relationships, is the power of God’s love, love that endured the cross, and even death, and will not abandon the disciples. As Jesus prepares to leave them, his parting message is that love abides. “They who have my commandments and keep them are those who love me; and those who love me will be loved by my Father, and I will love them and reveal myself to them” (v. 21).

If this were simply the love of greeting cards and romance movies, the disciples would have been lost. This was not sunshine and roses but the lived reality of Jesus, a person they knew from Nazareth, who looked and talked like them, and lived as one of them. Revealed in that life of healing the sick, feeding the hungry, touching the lepers, and treating each person with compassion, was the powerful love of God. In challenging the ethics of legal scholars, and lifting up the value of each person, even sinners, even outcasts, Jesus made the powerful claim that each one of them, and each one of us, is worthy of love, respect, and peace.

In the command to love one another, to love our neighbor, to love God, is the call to recognize the image of God that lives in every other. Love requires that we see them, those people, the “other” as people whom God also loves and wants us to love. It is not a love that is hierarchical, superior, or condescending but mutual, understood in serving one another, sharing in common what is needed for life to thrive. Jesus poured water into a basin and washed the disciples’ feet, telling them, “If I, your Lord and Teacher, have washed your feet, you also ought to wash one another’s feet.”[4] As the early church was formed, “All who believed were together and had all things in common; they would sell their possessions and goods and distribute the proceeds to all, as any had need.”[5] With love as the source and rule of life, the Christian community became known for their love.

My friends, you may not have magical healing powers, but you are connected to the power of God. Jesus said, “If you love me, you will keep my commandments” (v. 15). Love God, and love your neighbor as yourself. Love one another as I have loved you. Ideas that seem so simple, and yet require of us all our heart and mind and strength. But if you love Jesus, if you love God, the Spirit of God abides with you.

In every act of compassion, in every work of kindness, we encounter the power of God. In every age, sharing what we have with others as they have need, listening as the broken-hearted pour out their grief, challenging the power of those who would use violence and hatred to dominate others, we carry on the mission of Jesus to reveal the powerful love of God to the world.  Amen.



[1] The scripture quotations contained herein are from the New Revised Standard Version Bible, copyright © 1989 by the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the U.S.A.  Used by permission.  All rights reserved.

[2] “A Question of Faith” by MADD Camp 1984 © 1984 Ron Berg.

[3] John 13:34.

[4] John 13:14.

[5] Acts 2:44-45.

Sunday, May 7, 2023

God's Dwelling

May 7, 2023
St. John’s United Church of Christ, Union, Illinois

John 14:1-14[1]

If you have been to a funeral, you have probably heard this passage. It is one that I have used many times. In this passage from John, Jesus is talking about leaving the disciples. He is trying to prepare them for what is coming. Jesus gives them this vision of heaven. When Jesus tried to describe heaven, he used words that meant home: love, and peace, and family. “In my Father’s house there are many dwelling places… I go to prepare a place for you” (v. 2). There is a place prepared for each of us. We have a home that is beyond this world. A home filled with love and peace. A home where God welcomes us like a father or a mother.

When Jesus spoke of God, he used the word “Father.” Joseph, the human father of Jesus, must have been a wonderful father. His family must have been his true passion. Joseph loved his family so much, that when Jesus had to choose one word to describe God, he chose “Father.”

Jesus might have used the word “Mother.” After all, it was his mother who outlived Joseph, raised Jesus on her own for at least part of his life, and stuck by her son as he became a traveling preacher and healer. She even tried to get him to come home when she feared the authorities might come to take him away. Mary was even there at the cross, despite all the horror, pain, and loss. Mother was always there.

God’s love for us is unconditional, like the love of our mothers and fathers. Jesus assures us that we have a home with God, a home where we will be welcomed like a devoted child. There are many dwelling places in the house of God. There is room for everyone. There is a place for you.

These words of encouragement were part of the farewell message that Jesus gave the disciples in order to prepare them for what was to come. Their hearts were troubled, as Jesus told them he was leaving. What they had been expecting was not working out the way they thought. They had been following Jesus for so long, yet still they weren’t truly understanding his message, vision, and mission. They found the Messiah in Jesus, yet he was not what they expected.

They may have expected the Messiah to be immortal, but he was about to be crucified. They may have thought that he would lead them to liberation from the Roman occupation and restore the kingdom of David, but their defeat seemed assured. Jesus wasn’t rallying the troops, but saying goodbye. His death would mean the death of their hopes and dreams. Their understanding of who he was will be transformed. In that moment, they begin to grieve the loss of what they had known and believed.

And yet, this goodbye is not only an ending. In the upper room, death and birth are revealed. Rev. Shannon Pater, a minister in Atlanta, describes this moment: “In both the maternity wing and the hospice room, the family is changed—all things are being made new.”[2] What is old – who they have been, plans and dreams now shattered – is dying. Their sense of self, built over years of following Jesus, passes away. In that moment, what is new – the hope of the resurrection, the church, the mission of the apostles – is being born. In that in between moment, Jesus is the hospice chaplain and the midwife, guiding the transition.

Jesus introduces them to a new vocation: no longer followers of a teacher, they are to become followers of the Way. Jesus refers to “the way” several times in this passage. He does not name a specific road to take or a destination to reach. Jesus declares himself as “The Way.” The early Christian communities, fearing persecution, referred to themselves as “followers of The Way.”

It is important to note how this passage, especially the phrase “No one comes to the Father except through me” (v. 6), has been used to advance anti-Semitic ideology. Jesus did not renounce or denigrate Judaism. His critique was centered on religious leaders who create their own impossible standards for others to follow, who choose rigid adherence to established norms over the needs of real human beings, and who sought monetary gain from those seeking God’s grace. That critique should caution us all to beware of religious traditions and leaders that seek power and control rather than mercy and love.

The Way is a Person, not a path or a place. The Way of Jesus is the way of abundant and flourishing life in relationship with the Holy One and with creation. It is the way of living on earth as though we already live in heaven. The Way is Truth. The Way is Life. The Way is an invitation to new life in Christ, a way of being in the world like Christ.

As the world changes, and we change with it, leaving behind an old way that is dying, not yet knowing what is to come, we need the presence of one who reassures us as we transition. Just as Thomas asks “How can we know the way?” (v. 5), we too are unsure what the future holds for us. Like Phillip, if we could just see what lies ahead, that would be enough.

In the upper room, Jesus assured the disciples that no matter what happened, no matter the horror and loss to come, the most important thing would remain unchanged. There is a place prepared for you, with many dwelling places. I will come and take you there. The relationship you have with me, the relationship you have with God who is in me, will continue, even through all the change that is to come.

The change in the relationship the disciples had with God was a movement from outward seeking to inward dwelling. For all the time they had spent with Jesus, the still looked outward: who do we follow, where do we go, how do we find God? What they did not know, what they needed to be pointed out to them, was that God was always with them. Jesus begins with himself, “Do you not believe that I am in the Father and the Father is in me?” I haven’t done all these things on my own. “The Father who dwells in me does his works” (v. 10). Are you looking for God? Look right here! “I am the way, and the truth, and the life” (v. 6). You know God, and you know the way, because you know me.

In the days to come the disciples would lose much that they had known and understood. But they would witness the new birth of the God of resurrection. They would know the God of life that could not be extinguished. They would know the Holy Spirit, the presence of God dwelling within them. If we seek to know where God is, and how we get to the house of God, we need only look within. The Holy Spirit of God dwells within each of us. No matter what comes next, our relationship with God remains. Let the Comforter heal your hearts and strengthen you to stand firm in the coming transformation.  Amen.



[1] The scripture quotations contained herein are from the New Revised Standard Version Bible, copyright © 1989 by the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the U.S.A.  Used by permission.  All rights reserved.

[2] Shannon Michael Pater, Pastoral Perspective on John 14:1-14 in Feasting on the Word: Preaching the Revised Common Lectionary, Year A, Vol. 2, David L. Bartlett and Barbara Brown Taylor, General Editors (Louisville: Westminster John Knox Press, 2010), p. 468.