“There was a man of the Pharisees named Nicodemus, a ruler of the Jews. This man came to Jesus by night and said to Him, "Rabbi, we know that You are a teacher come from God; for no one can do these signs that You do unless God is with him." Jesus answered and said to him, "Most assuredly, I say to you, unless one is born again, he cannot see the kingdom of God."
Nicodemus said to Him, "How can a man be born when he is old? Can he enter a second time into his mother's womb and be born?" Jesus answered, "Most assuredly, I say to you, unless one is born of water and the Spirit, he cannot enter the kingdom of God. "That which is born of the flesh is flesh, and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit.
"If I have told you earthly things and you do not believe, how will you believe if I tell you heavenly things? "No one has ascended to heaven but He who came down from heaven, that is, the Son of Man who is in heaven.
John 3:1-13
Indeed, how will we believe?
The Aaker family is overdosing on World Cup soccer these days. Every four years we
get involved as spectators of this world-wide event - of a sport that is even
catching on in the US as millions of fans get on this roller coaster of high
hopes and gut wrenching endings of matches.
Hoping to go on to the next round...
The mantra tweeted around the internet on social
media and chanted at the matches is: I BELIEVE. I BELIEVE THAT WE. I BELIEVE THAT WE WILL WIN!
As the camera scans over the enthusiastic US fans in Brazil we see large
signs that say BELIEVE!!.
The team, the coaches and the fans are convinced
that if their belief is strong it will help bring about the desired
outcome. Bob Green would tell us, I
suspect, that a coach has to believe in the team, and help them believe in
themselves... The idea is that Believing helps make it come true. This is one use of the word believe..
Now, the verb
believe and the noun faith are
used extensively in all forms of Christianity.. I believe and We believe stand at the beginning of
the creeds used by most Christians in worship.
If I were to ask you this morning about your
associations with the word believe, ask what that word brings to mind, I
believe there would be quite a variety of responses... though since this is
church, we would perhaps tend to talk about our belief in God, and what that
means to us.
But outside on the street maybe it would be more
like the soccer fans or others who would say things like these:
o
Seeing is believing", or
o
"When I say, I believe you, it
means that I believe you're telling the truth" or
o
"There
are some things you can know, and other things you can only believe."
o
"Well, I believe the capitol of New
Mexico is Albuquerque" - but of course it isn't.
"I believe there is an energy in
the universe that..."
or,
"I believe all people are basically good at
heart" - which flies in the face of reality - those people haven't been
reading the news papers
In his book, "Speaking Christian", Marcus Borg writes that the "modern meaning of the word believe is very
different from its meanings in early Christianity" until the seventeenth
century. In early times the verb believe always had a person as its direct
object, not a statement. It didn't mean
believing that a statement is true, but more like what we mean when we say to
somebody, "I believe in you"
This implies a relationship.
The meaning in Old English was be loef, which means to hold dear, or to belove another person.
So it is more than believing that a set of
statements about God are true, or somehow believing that God exists but doing nothing in response to
that belief.
Thinking about it this way, then, to believe in
Jesus does not mean that we believe that a set of statements about him are
true, or that he indeed once walked the earth, but it means to belove Jesus. It means to be in
relationship with Him.
Remember! when Jesus spoke about the great
commandment he did not say,
"You shall believe that these statements about
God are true".. What did he
say?
"You shall love the Lord your God with all your
heart, and with all your soul, and with all you mind and with all your
strength" (Matt. 22:37. That means
all of me.
I want to introduce you to our newest grandchild,
Colin Silliman Aaker. He’s three months
old. I’m sorry that you in the back
probably can’t see very clearly this little picture I’m holding up. (But, believe me, he is beautiful ...just like your children, grandchildren or nieces and nephews!)
After the service this morning there will be a
special time for us, since Bret and Rachel his parents, together with Janel
Morgan, as sponsor, and us grandparents are bringing Colin up front to present
him to Pastor Tim Christianson for the sacrament of baptism .
In the Gospels the words believe and be baptized are marks of the Christian. In the baptismal
service we will sing the hymn "All who believe and are baptized, shall see
the Lord's salvation".
I don't know for sure, but that may well have been
the hymn that was sung at my baptism some 75 years ago.
Baptism is the
key event in the life of a Christian, although I concede that it might not
feel that way to most of you here today.
Maybe some of you were baptized in one of the churches that require you
to be old enough to make your own decision about baptism. Or maybe you were baptized in the Lutheran
Church, but as an adult rather than as a child.
If so, you will remember all
about your baptism and about what it meant to you.
But the rest
of you who – like me – were baptized in infancy may be asking, “How could
baptism have been the big moment in
my life, since I was a little baby and I don’t remember anything about it at
all?”
What does believing and having a relationship with God have to do with Colin
now... he is really not capable of holding any beliefs yet...
But certainly
he is beginning to know in some deep and mysterious way the love of his mother
and father.
And consider this: you don’t remember anything about
being born either, yet it was a key event in your human life.
And the DNA we inherit from parents determines much
about the persons we are today (your body type, your hair and eye color,
whether you are right or left-handed, and a lot more) – even though you didn’t
have any choice in the matter whatsoever.
You didn’t pick your parents, and you didn’t decide to be born. It just “happened,” and you’ve been dealing with
the consequences ever since.
For
Christians, baptism is regarded as somehow analogous to physical birth. That is to say, it’s not optional. If you’re to have a human life, you must be
conceived and go out into the world nine months later through the waters of the
womb.
If you’re to have a life in Christ, at some
time you have to pass through the waters of baptism... which early Christians
called “the womb of the church.” Jesus
said to Nicodemus, No one can
enter the kingdom of God without being born of water and Spirit.” Certainly Nicodemus had difficulty
understanding that, as we probably would have to admit that we do too.
We
take it on faith, that is, we believe that Baptism is the Sacrament of New Life
in Christ.
Babies enter this new life in Christ because someone
decided to bring them to be baptized, a gift given by the Grace of God.. but the children – as they grow older – will
work out the consequences of life in
Christ for themselves in exactly the same way that they will make decisions
about things in their natural life.
Those who have been given a new life in Christ
through baptism ultimately have to figure out what this new life will mean for
them about relationships, education, work, leisure activities, and their spiritual lives ...in short, everything.
While baptism
is mystical, it isn’t magic. It’s a new beginning, just as being born is a
new beginning, in a new context of relationships – with Christ and with the
Church. (The emphasis here is on beginning.)
Just as the birth of a baby makes that little human
being the member of a biological family, baptism makes us members of a family
of which God is Father, the Holy Spirit is the life-giver, and Jesus Christ is
the first-born elder brother, always ready to show us the path to follow.
Nothing can change the facts of our human
heredity. We’re always our parents’
offspring.
Likewise, something equally real on the spiritual
plane happens in baptism. Nothing can
ever dissolve the relationship created by our passage through the sacramental
water.
In the baptism ritual, the pastor anoints the newly
baptized person with holy oil and says,
“You are sealed by the Holy Spirit in
baptism and marked as Christ’s own forever.”
Forever!!
Pastor Tim with Colin |
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