Saturday, June 29, 2013

June 16, 2013 Our Heart & Soul: The Vision - Welcome


Good morning! I am Tim Roberts, the pastor here at Sunrise Church. I want to take just a moment to welcome you and especially to all the dads out there. Happy Father's Day!  I hope that you have the opportunity to spend some time with your father today, but if not, please honor him in some way.

For me, I am remembering and honoring my father this morning by wearing one of his stoles that he wore as he preached. So, I believe this stole is probably a little older than me. But for me, it is just a small way that I am still able to connect back with my father.

This morning, we are continuing with this series we're calling, Our Heart & Soul, in which we are looking at all the various pieces of our Mission, Vision and Values statements. These statements serve as a reminder for us as to who we are and what our purpose is.

Today, we are looking at the second element to our Vision Statement, which in its concise form is, "Welcome." I've been told by some of the founding members of Sunrise that this concept has been a foundational principle since the inception of the church. It originally began as this phrase "Come As You Are!" Twenty-three years ago, when Sunrise was founded, that was pretty much a radical idea. While it was mainly about the standard of dress, being casual and not needing to "dress up" for church, it has become more than that over time.

Now the idea of a church proclaiming the word "Welcome," is not a new idea, nor one that originated here, I sometimes wonder, "Do they really mean it?"

Maybe to answer that question, we need to get a good, usable definition for it. Here's how one particular dictionary defines it:


Welcome - verb - To receive or accept with pleasure; regard as pleasant or good.

Maybe I am a bit cynical, but sometimes I think that people misuse, or maybe overuse the word "Welcome." We say it because it has become more of a habitual remark rather than a term of endearment.

I am reminded of the words that are inscribed in the tablet held by Lady Liberty, that serve as a welcoming invitation to the rest world, “Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free.” But again, do we mean it?

Not long ago, I read the story of a family who was traveling along one of the highways when the baby started crying out because it was hungry. The man pulled the car to the side of the road so his wife could nurse the infant. The stopped car sparked the interest of the local police who then called for backup and surrounded the car and began interrogating the man and then took the whole family down to the station where they were questioned about their affiliation with known terrorist groups. All of this came about because one police officer noticed that the man appeared to be Muslim.

Of course, in the wake of the various terrorist attacks here in the US and the knowledge of several thwarted attacks, many believe that profiling is justified. A significant amount of the population agrees that it is okay to organize people into groups and categories - just separate "them" from "us."

Classification is not a new concept though. Nor is it something that just government officials engage in. Take for an instance, a story out of the Gospel of Luke, chapter 19.1-10:

Luke 19.1-4 (The Message)
1 Then Jesus entered and walked through Jericho. 2 There was a man there, his name Zacchaeus, the head tax man and quite rich. 3 He wanted desperately to see Jesus, but the crowd was in his way - he was a short man and couldn't see over the crowd. 4 So he ran on ahead and climbed up in a sycamore tree so he could see Jesus when he came by.

Many of us know the story of Zacchaeus from learning the song about him when we were little: "Zacchaues was a wee, little man and a wee. little man was he..."

I remember learning this song in Sunday School and coloring pictures about him smiling as he sat up in the tree - and everybody was smiling - seemed friendly. But in real life, that was not the case.

Zacchaeus was not popular by any stretch of the imagination. As much as most people loathe the IRS, it would not begin to compare to the disdain that people felt towards Zacchaeus. He was not just a tax collector, he was the chief collector - in other words, he didn't even do most of the work, he contracted that job out. At that time, there was not any income tax, no reporting of your earnings to give some idea of your fair share of taxes. The Romans simply said that they expected a certain amount of tax revenue from a region and then hired tax collectors to collect and remit that amount. Whatever the collectors took in in excess of that amount, they got to keep.

We know by story, Zacchaeus was wealthy. We do not know how he came about his wealth, whether it was from his job or from his family. But just because he was a wealthy AND a tax collector, people assumed that he became rich from other people's money. They thought since he was wealthy, somebody else must have lost their wealth.

Luke 19.15-6 (The Message)
5 When Jesus got to the tree, he looked up and said, "Zacchaeus, hurry down. Today is my day to be a guest in your home." 6 Zacchaeus scrambled out of the tree, hardly believing his good luck, delighted to take Jesus home with him.

Here we see Jesus doing something very odd; he notices Zacchaeus, this loathsome little pestilence of a man, who had just degraded himself even further by foolishly climbing up a tree, and honors him by announcing to all who could hear him, that he would eat with Zacchaeus at his home that evening.

Of course, Zacchaeus is ecstatic with this sign of social approval. But not everyone is so happy about this turn of events.

Luke 19.7-8 (The Message)
7 Everyone who saw the incident was indignant and grumped, "What business does he have getting cozy with this crook?"

Why did the crowd become so upset? Was it jealousy or envy? Was it sheer disgust? I believe it may have struck deep much deeper than that. I believe that all of a sudden, the crowd is faced with a tough choice - which was going to win - their disdain for Zacchaeus of the high regard for Jesus? They felt justified for their lack of approval for Zacchaeus, but Jesus, they highly respect him, so if they are going to continue to revere him, they have to accept his favorable opinion, even about Zacchaeus.

Luke 19.8 (The Message)
8 Zacchaeus just stood there, a little stunned. He stammered apologetically, "Master, I give away half my income to the poor - and if I'm caught cheating, I pay four times the damages."

Zacchaeus, sensing the crowd's disapproval, begins to worry that maybe Jesus will think he made a mistake and will not want anything to do with him. So he responds by pointing out what he already does.

Luke 19.9 (The Message)
9 Jesus said, "Today is salvation day in this home! Here he is: Zacchaeus, son of Abraham!

Now if Jesus' self-invitation wasn't enough to completely flabbergast  the crowd, this statement does as it forces them to see Zacchaeus with new eyes. He is not the outcast that they have always considered him to be - he is their brother, "one of us"! With that one simple statement, Jesus restore Zacchaeus back into the right relationship within him community and healing of this broken relationship begins within the whole community.

I chose to read this passage this morning from The Message because I believe it is the closest to the original Greek text. The reason I say this is because of the way it translates verse 8. In most modern translations, Zacchaeus' response is in a future tense "I will give" and "I will pay." But in the original Greek, it is in present tense, relating what he already does.

So, why the discrepancy? It may be because of our modern evangelical slant that repentance must precede forgiveness. It assumes that Zacchaeus must be a dishonest tax collector, so in order for Jesus to forgive him, he has to repent!

But you  know friends, that's not what the text says. It also causes me to wonder a bit about this sense of justice that many seem to have - What if God doesn't care as much about justice as we do?

Is it possible that maybe our sense of justice is just our way of defining each other, or a way of tracking "who's in" and "who's out"? I wonder.

You know, if that is so, then that must mean that God's grace regularly trumps God's justice. That makes sense, because as I have read the Bible, I have come to see that the Good News isn't about justice, it's about relationship - God's inexplicably and audacious desire to be in relationship with each of us.

And that sentiment is summed up in the last verse of our passage this morning:

Luke 19.10 (The Message)
10 For the Son of Man came to find and restore the lost."

You see friends, Jesus refuses to be bound by our labels. He looks beyond all of the masks and cloaks that we cast on others. Where we see an outsider, Jesus sees "one of the family." Where we proclaim one as hopelessly lost, Jesus declares undeniably found. Where we chide, Jesus welcomes. 

What we can take from this story today is that issue a call of Welcome doesn't come predicated with the intent that someone has to get everything ready first and make everything neat and pretty - it truly implies "Come As You Are."

So, let's take a look at this element of our Vision, to Welcome, with new eyes and heart as we read it together

Welcome - No one is a stranger in God's House and Sunrise is God's House, therefore all are wanted and longed for. It does not matter what the circumstances are, God invites you to Come As You Are.

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