Before beginning today’s sermon, it is my joy to announce
publicly a most royal two-part gift that offers to us an
outstanding example of the kind of cheerful giving Paul speaks
of in today’s lesson. This two-part gift will afford our
community of faith, for a full century to come, the
opportunity to express our love for God through a greatly
enhanced beauty in our music.
Part of the design for our restored organ is the installation
in the balcony of a regal trumpet stop, called trompette en
chamade. And Edward Alley—an elder, former trustee and
treasurer, and oft-time conductor of special musical offerings
in this congregation—Ed Alley has generously pledged the full
cost of that stop in honor of The Rutgers Quartet, the singing
group that for decades, under the guidance of Marshall
Williamson, provided leadership for the musical ministry of this
congregation. The members of the quartet to be named on the
dedicatory plaque are: Nancy Williams, Bronwyn Thomas, Joseph
Sopher, Edmond Karlsrud, and Duncan Hartman.
Another part of the new organ design calls for the
installation of an antiphonal organ in the chamber off our balcony.
So the second part of the gift I’m announcing is the underwriting
of half the cost of this antiphonal organ by Edward Alley and
Nancy Williams. This part of the gift is dependent upon our
raising the other half through contributions made above and beyond
the amount that has already been pledged toward the organ. This
element of the restored organ will be named in honor of our
Minister of Music emeritus, Marshall Williamson. It will
formally be known as the Marshall Williamson Antiphonal Organ.
We are counting on the generosity of all those who have
worked and sung with Marshall Williamson and have otherwise
benefited from the Christ-like beauty of his spirit over the
more than three decades of his ministry in this congregation—we
are counting on your added generosity to match this gift
from Ed and Nancy. Also to be applied toward the matching of
this gift will be all proceeds from the series of concerts to
benefit the organ that we will be mounting over the course of
the next year. And the first of these concerts will be held
this afternoon, so every contribution you make toward today’s
concert given by our very own divas Faith Esham and Sherry
Zannoth—every dollar you contribute this afternoon will be
applied toward matching this gift for creating the new Marshall
Williamson Antiphonal Organ. So that’s yet another reason why
you absolutely must come this afternoon at 4:00 pm—or why,
in lieu of that, you absolutely must hand me a $20 bill as
you go out the door this morning.
And now after all this thrilling news, it’s on to today’s
sermon.
This is Reign of Christ Sunday, the day that concludes the
current liturgical year, during which our services of worship
have focused, for the most part, on the testimony to Christ borne
by the Gospel of Mark.
And next week we will observe the First Sunday of Advent,
which marks the beginning of our new liturgical year, when the
services of worship will focus, for the most part, on the
testimony to Christ borne by the Gospel of Luke.
Now, over the years, we’ve learned pretty well what Advent is
all about. We’ve learned it's a penitential season, a time for
reflecting on the sorry state of our weary old world and for
preparing ourselves to receive once again from God the gift of
renewed hope and renewed energy for a better world, the gift
that comes to us from God each Christmas Eve as we hear afresh
the glad tidings of Jesus’s birth.
But what is Reign of Christ Sunday all about? Well, if
most of us find ourselves scratching our heads when we ponder
that question, there’s a good reason. For our Protestant
observance of such a Sunday is really quite a recent innovation.
When throughout the 1960s we Protestants became more attuned to
the observance of liturgical seasons and to seeing Advent as the
beginning of a new liturgical cycle, a need was felt for some
way to mark climactically the end of the old cycle.
So Reign of Christ Sunday was adopted by us Protestants in
1969 as a day for renewing our commitment to the lordship of
Christ. On this day, each of us is asked to reaffirm the
promise we made when we first joined a Christian church—the
vow to accept Jesus Christ as our Lord and Savior, the pledge
to put Christ first and foremost in our hearts and lives.
This is the Sunday when God asks us to recommit ourselves
to making that which reigns within our hearts be Christ, to
making that which sets the priorities in our lives be Christ,
to making that which serves as our measure of all truth be
Christ.
So today as we are poised for the lead-up to celebrating
Jesus’s birth, our First Lesson flashes us back to the ending
of Jesus’s ministry, to the scene of the trial and crucifixion
of Jesus on Good Friday.
We find Jesus standing trial before the executor of Rome’s
power over the Jewish people—the Roman Procurator, Pontius
Pilate. The charge against Jesus is sedition—that he is a
pretender to the title “King of the Jews,” and, thus, a
subverter of the authority of the people’s rightful monarch, the
Emperor, Tiberius Caesar. And to Pilate’s question, “Are you
the king of the Jews?” (John 18:33) Jesus responds, “My reign is
not from this world.” (18:36) Pilate retorts, “So you are a
king?” and Jesus replies, “For this I was born, and for
this I came into the world, to testify to the truth. Everyone
who belongs to the truth listens to my voice” (18:37), which is
to say, “everyone who belongs to the truth accepts my
sovereignty.”
John tells us that Jesus was born in order to bring to
humankind a gift, a royal gift, a gift from the Sovereign of
the Universe—the gift of truth, the gift of the truth embodied
in Jesus himself, the gift of the truth that human existence
is meant to focus on love for God and neighbor rather than on
desire for anyone or anything else. It is this truth that has
the power to set us free from our bondage to the world, free
from our alienation from God and neighbor, free from that which
John calls “sin” (cf. John 8:31–36).
In Jesus, we see embodied God’s truth—God’s truth that we
are to love one another as Jesus has loved us, loving one
another with that same fullness of joy and gladness. (cf.
John 13:34–35; 15:9–11; 17:13, 16–19)
And as the apostle Paul understood quite practically, and
as he states quite pragmatically in this morning’s Second
Lesson, expressing such fullness of love toward God and
neighbor means that we must share our talents, our time, and
our money—we must share them joyfully, gladly, cheerfully,
unstintingly, to the end that others, too, may have
well-being.
Paul knows that the Jewish-Christian community in Jerusalem
is impoverished, so he exhorts the comparatively well-off
Gentile-Christian communities established by him in Greece to
assemble a love-offering that he can take with him to Jerusalem
in order to help relieve that community’s distress and redress
the imbalance between one group’s need and another group’s
abundance (cf. II Corinthians 8:13–15).
Well, in today’s world, there’s nothing quite like a trip
to India first to remind a couple of American Christians like
Margaret and me about other communities’ level of impoverishment
relative to our own communities’ level of abundance and then to
prompt within us a cheerful generosity of heart.
We found in Calcutta a seminary community of over 100
persons striving to study effectively while their health was
being affected by their limited access to so basic a need as
safe drinking water; we found in Bangalore five bright young
girls living in a slum who had no access to free public
education and whose only hope for escaping from abject poverty
was somehow to earn or to receive the seemingly unattainable
sum of $25 each for tuition fees; we found in Batala a
Christian college so strapped for funds that it cannot see its
way clear to provide from its own resources a $500 full
scholarship for even one out of the thousands of “untouchable
caste” Christian youths in the Punjab, a $500 scholarship that
could cover the full costs for a year’s tuition, board, and
room.
Paul urges us all, whenever we are confronted by such need,
to recall the royal gift that has been given to us, the gift
of the truth made known in Christ, the truth of God’s great
love for us and of God’s manifest graciousness toward us. For
as we recall God’s royal gift to us and as we give to Christ
sovereignty over our hearts and lives, we will be moved to
cheerful and generous giving.
Now one does not have to go so far as India to behold such
need. There are plenty of examples of great need right here at
home, as Mark Young made clear to us this morning in his Moment
for Mission about the programs sponsored by our Board of Deacons.
There is great need right here for our offering of a cheerful
generosity of time and talent, both to our shelter program and
to our Thursday night meal program.
The pledge that God is inviting us all to make today is
nothing less than the promise to accept Jesus Christ as our
Sovereign Savior, the vow to put Christ first and foremost in
our hearts and lives, the promise to serve the One who founded
his reign upon love, the pledge to model our lives on the life
of the One who cheerfully offered the fullness of his love to
both God and his every neighbor.
As I’ve recounted to you on several previous Stewardship
Sundays, a Christian preacher named John Chrysostom told his
congregation some 1,600 years ago, long before Stewardship
Sundays had ever been invented—Chrysostom told his congregation:
“Wealth is by its very nature … meant to go out from you, like a
light that dispels darkness.”
Yes, the time has now come for each of us to pledge a share
of the riches of talent, time, and money that Christ has entrusted
to our stewardship, so that these riches may go out from us,
so that their light may help dispel the deep shadows overspreading
our world.
Please spend a few moments right now reflecting quietly on God’s
gift to you through Christ of the embodied truth that love and
compassion are what’s meant to lie at the heart of human existence.
Please spend a few moments reflecting quietly on what this community
of faith, its sacraments, its fellowship, and its ministries of
outreach mean both to you as an individual and to our community and
world at large.
I invite you during this time of silence first to pray that
God’s Spirit will prompt you to make Christ the Sovereign of your
life, and then to pray that God's Spirit will kindle within you the
same cheerful generosity of time, talent, and money that Jesus
himself possessed. For when Christ is truly made the Sovereign in
our lives, it is then that we are led to share cheerfully and fully
the riches of Christ’s love entrusted to our stewardship.
I invite you during these next few minutes to reflect on your
income, whether that be $200 a week, or $2,000 a week. And then I
invite you to pledge a fixed percentage of that amount to the work
of Christ for the year 2004 through the Rutgers Church, whether that
comes to $10 a week, or to $200 a week. If you cannot manage a full
tithe of your gross income, that is, 10%, then please consider
pledging 3 or 4 or 5% of your income. Or consider increasing your
pledge for 2004 over your pledge for 2003 by at least 1% of your
total income. Then fill in your pledge card and experience the joy
that comes in Christ, the blessing that comes through cheerful
giving.
I invite you also during these next few minutes to reflect on
your available spare time, whether that be two hours per week, or
forty hours per month. And then I invite you to pledge a percentage
of that time to the work of Christ for the year 2004 through the
Rutgers Church, whether that be volunteering in our shelter or meal
program, serving on a board or committee, working in the Sunday
School, or volunteering in some other capacity.
Again, I invite you during the silence to speak with God in prayer
as you consider your pledge and fill in all parts of your card. Then
after a time, I will call us together for a closing prayer.
Finally, during the offertory anthem, please, as a sign of your
resolve and commitment, come forward from your pew to the table of
Christ to place in the plates that you will find there both your
regular offering for this morning and your pledge of time, talent,
and money for the year 2004.
It is the custom of our brothers and sisters at the newest
congregation in our presbytery, the Ghanaian Presbyterian and
Reformed Church of Flatbush to dance down the aisles each
and every Sunday as they come forward to the offering plate. Today,
as cheerful givers, feel free, if you wish, to dance down the aisle
here yourselves!
Now let us begin our period of silence and prayer as we
individually pledge our stewardship of Christ’s royal gift to us of
truth and love.
...
Let us close with prayer:
O God, we thank You for enthroning Christ in our hearts and for
granting us the royal gift of Christ’s truth and love. Make us
faithful stewards as we seek throughout our lives to carry on and
fulfill Christ’s ministry of sovereign love and compassion—giving
food to the hungry, water to the thirsty, medicine to the sick,
housing to the homeless, and appropriate assistance to other persons
in need. Through the name of Christ our Lord, we pray this.
Amen.