A Bit About Me -- with thanks to my stepson, Devin Servis

Tuesday, October 28, 2014

Reformation on Pennsylvania Drive!

Text:  Psalm 90:1-6, 13-17
Theme:  “Reformation on Pennsylvania Dr.”
Reformation Sunday
October 26, 2014
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Denton, Texas
Rev. Paul R. Dunklau

+In the Name of Jesus+

Lord, you have been our dwelling place
throughout all generations.
2
Before the mountains were born
or you brought forth the whole world,
from everlasting to everlasting you are God.
3
You turn people back to dust,
saying, “Return to dust, you mortals.”
4
A thousand years in your sight
are like a day that has just gone by,
or like a watch in the night.
5
Yet you sweep people away in the sleep of death—
they are like the new grass of the morning:
6
In the morning it springs up new,
but by evening it is dry and withered.
Relent, Lord! How long will it be?
Have compassion on your servants.
14
Satisfy us in the morning with your unfailing love,
that we may sing for joy and be glad all our days.
15
Make us glad for as many days as you have afflicted us,
for as many years as we have seen trouble.
16
May your deeds be shown to your servants,
your splendor to their children.
17
May the favor[a] of the Lord our God rest on us;
establish the work of our hands for us—
yes, establish the work of our hands.

Today, on this Reformation Sunday, the Lord’s Table is adorned with its red parament and so is this pulpit.  Red is the traditional color of the Holy Spirit, the third person of the Holy Trinity.  It also symbolizes the church.   In the background are placards that represent the confessional statements that are in the Presbyterian Book of Confessions.  These statements demonstrate that the church, inspired by the Spirit, has confessed the faith it has been given.  For all of this, we can be joyful and sing with that great reformer, Martin Luther:  Ein Feste Burg ist Unser Gott. (“A Mighty Fortress is Our God”).  Even better, we can listen to King David in the 90th Psalm:  “Lord, You have been our dwelling place throughout all generations.”

Reformation means change.  One popular phrase about the Presbyterian Church I learned when studying for ordination was as follows:  “Reformed, and always reforming.”  It seeks to convey that the church has changed, and it will keep changing.

Change makes a good number of us uncomfortable.    If anything needs to be done in the life of the church, it’s nothing more than a little tweaking here and a little fine-tuning there that won’t hurt that much if at all; this, in turn, will lead to what some church observers call “explosive” or “dynamic” growth.  But wholesale change – reform on a large scale -- is a big “No, No”.  Those resistant to change – to modern reformation -- are often content with the status quo.   But meanwhile, outside the church’s doors, the status quo is marching right on by.  Inside the church’s doors, folks start to wonder what happened – as they see older members pass on to their great reward and younger generations stay away. 

What happened?  The church hunkered down.  President Kennedy was assassinated; the Vietnam War gripped our attention in the 1960s.  In the 1970s, we sat shocked at the emergence of the “Jesus Generation”.  We kind of liked that, but shuddered at the rock and roll, free love, and drug use that came with it.  Some, in the 1980s, jumped full-bore on the Reagan bandwagon, and the thought gained traction that latching on to political coattails might be the way to go.  That was the case among Presbyterian conservatives.  The more liberal or progressive believers latched on to the agenda of the World Council of Churches and the National Council of Churches and steered the church toward what they called “social justice” Conservatives called that socialism; liberals called that “what Jesus taught”.  (These lines of argumentation are still current to this day.)  Then came the 1990s and the technological revolution.  It marched right on by while the church was trying to get its thinking clear on the previous decades.  The advent of the microchip marched right on by the advent of our Lord.  Information was knowledge, and knowledge is power.  We can unite the world with invisible beams and satellites, but we also can unite terrorist cells.  Now, mid-way through the second decade of the new millennium, we have the children of the baby-boomers – represented today by all these empty pews.  It should surprise no one that they believe that life is all about looking out for themselves.  Yet, they desperately crave community – and that little cellphone is nothing short of the cultural sacrament that binds them together. 

And what about our Protestant/Reformed/Presbyterian tradition?  We’re still figuring out how to text and tweet.  Again, we hunkered down.   We turned in on ourselves.  We became a club and, therefore, very particular about who we let in and kept out.   Spiritually, church became our dwelling place. Somehow, through the decades, we forgot what King David said:  The “Lord is our dwelling place.”

One road that leads in and out of the neighborhood where I live is Pennsylvania Drive.  I turn left on Pennsylvania Drive, and I come to Teasley Lane.  There at the stop sign, I look left and I see the Southmont Baptist Church.  I look to the right, and there before me is St. Mark Catholic Church.  If you want to get technical about it, those two congregations are separate today because of the Reformation of the 16th century.  Historically, that’s an undeniable fact.   More often than not, I think of this when I come to the intersection.  I think of this breach that theologians have debated for hundreds of years – as the world marches right on by!

Of late, however, I learned about a faster route out of my neighborhood.  I’m still on Pennsylvania Drive for a bit, but I avoid clashing with those churches, so to speak. 

I was at LA Fitness recently and was talking with a new friend there.  He asked me:  “What exactly IS a Presbyterian?”  Just as I was about to share something of an answer, another guy in the locker piped up:  “A Presbyterian is just a Baptist that knows how to read.”  Fascinating.

Speaking of that gym, two and half years ago, I really hadn’t planned on going.  I felt reasonably well, and in fairly good shape.  But then came an annual physical:  cholesterol was at 306; blood pressure was over 150.  I checked in at 219 lbs.  The doctor said:  “You can afford to lose twenty pounds” – as he handed me prescriptions for the blood pressure and cholesterol.  He talked about going to the gym and being proactive about my health.

You know, sometimes I hear people say “I’m too old to change.”  Jerry Jeff Walker even wrote a song by that title.  Then there’s this:  “Leopards can’t change their spots.”  I don’t buy it.  Today, my cholesterol is 169.  My blood pressure is 120.  I’m off those meds.  I’m 175 lbs.  My bodyfat is twelve percent.  I’m in better shape than I was when I was in 8th grade playing football and dreaming of playing for Nebraska. 

All it took was an ounce of willingness – to change.

Christ has died.  Christ has risen.  Christ will come again.  The changes that He brought to the world, the changes the reformers brought to the world, were not in vain.  They will never be in vain as long as they point to the Lord alone who is our dwelling place and who has given so much and done so much, in Christ, for us all.

When these truths are renewed in us, we can find that ounce of willingness to make change.  We can be reformed, and always reforming. 

Amen.








No comments:

Post a Comment