Last
week we began a sermon series on spiritual renewal. I said that spiritual
renewal is not simply continuing something, like when I renew my Entertainment Weekly subscription. We looked
at several verses of scripture that talk about renewal. Those scriptures tell
us that renewal is a transformation, it is a change in our thoughts and
attitudes. It is also a rebirth, a re-creation. Spiritual renewal means
something new. We talked about spiritual renewal as a renovation. When you
renovate a house you go in and tear out the old to replace it with the new.
We
looked at the story of the disciples just before and following Jesus’ ascension
to heaven. From that scripture, along with the story of Pentecost, we
established two precursors for spiritual renewal.
Before
he ascended, Jesus gave the disciples a mission. Go, make disciples of all
nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, and
teach them everything I taught you. And then he told them to wait. To wait for
the Holy Spirit. So the disciples went to Jerusalem and waited by devoting
themselves to prayer. Then they experienced the renewing power of the Holy
Spirit.
First,
the disciples prayed. And if we expect spiritual renewal, we need to do the
same. The second thing necessary for spiritual renewal is the Holy Spirit.
The
Holy Spirit is the continuing, continuous presence of Christ on earth. It is
only through the Holy Spirit that the disciples could find success in their
mission. It is only through the Holy Spirit that we are empowered to continue
that mission. The Apostles experienced the power of the Holy Spirit and allowed
the Spirit to renew them and then to work through them as they preached to the
crowds gathered in Jerusalem for Pentecost.
The
story of Pentecost shows us that there is a progression to spiritual renewal.
It begins with individuals. The disciples experienced the renewal of the Holy
Spirit and were empowered to fulfill their mission of making disciples. That
renewal spread to the church. These earliest believers, on that day, became the
church and they committed themselves to worshipping and praying together. Then
from the church the renewal and revival spread to the community. Acts tells us that
the church grew daily following Pentecost. “The Lord added to their numbers
day-by-day.”
Today
we’re going to talk about that first stage. Personal renewal. The Holy Spirit
first worked in the Apostles, empowering them to preach the good news. The disciples
experienced personal renewal in a very obvious, visual way. The Holy Spirit
rested on each of them like a tongue of fire and they were filled with the
Spirit. The Spirit transformed these confused, dormant people into focused and
effective preachers of the Gospel. They underwent a spiritual renewal that
empowered them to fulfill God’s call for their lives.
A few weeks
ago, I asked the question on Facebook, “What does spiritual renewal’ mean?” I
got a few responses, but I wanted to share one with you. “Spiritual renewal is
being refilled with the Holy Spirit for a new or renewed fruitful work.” God
calls each one of us to minister to the world – to share the good news of Jesus
Christ and the redemptive love of God. Spiritual renewal is the Holy Spirit
filling us, preparing us, and empowering us to fulfill that call.
This morning
we’re going to look at a familiar story and what it tells us about spiritual
renewal. Most of you are probably familiar with the story of Jonah – at least
the “belly of a whale” part of the story.
Jonah is a prophet of God. God calls Jonah to
go to Nineveh to preach to the Ninevites. God tells him, “Go there and tell
them they’re wicked and they’d better repent!” But Jonah, for whatever reason,
doesn’t want to go to Nineveh. We learn later that he didn’t want Nineveh to be
spared. So Jonah gets on a boat headed for Tarshish (the opposite direction).
God calls Jonah and he runs away. By the way, this story hits a little close to
home for me. But that’s another sermon.
As Jonah is in the boat on the run, a great
storm comes up and tosses the boat. The entire crew is fearing for their life.
They begin throwing things overboard to lighten the boat and prevent it from
sinking. Finally Jonah tells them it’s his fault. The storm is there to prevent
him from running away from what God called him to do. He asks the crew to throw
him overboard, and they do. Jonah is swallowed by a huge fish. He spends 3 days
and 3 nights in the fish until finally he prays. He prays a prayer of Thanksgiving.
Jonah 2
New
Living Translation (NLT)
2 Then Jonah prayed to the Lord his God from inside the fish. 2 He said,
“I
cried out to the Lord in my great trouble,
and he answered me.
I called to you from the land of the dead,
and Lord, you heard me!
3 You threw me into the ocean depths,
and I sank down to the heart of the sea.
The mighty waters engulfed me;
I was buried beneath your wild and stormy waves.
4 Then I said, ‘O Lord, you have driven me from your presence.
Yet I will look once more toward your holy Temple.’
and he answered me.
I called to you from the land of the dead,
and Lord, you heard me!
3 You threw me into the ocean depths,
and I sank down to the heart of the sea.
The mighty waters engulfed me;
I was buried beneath your wild and stormy waves.
4 Then I said, ‘O Lord, you have driven me from your presence.
Yet I will look once more toward your holy Temple.’
5 “I sank beneath the waves,
and the waters closed over me.
Seaweed wrapped itself around my head.
6 I sank down to the very roots of the mountains.
I was imprisoned in the earth,
whose gates lock shut forever.
But you, O Lord my God,
snatched me from the jaws of death!
7 As my life was slipping away,
I remembered the Lord.
And my earnest prayer went out to you
in your holy Temple.
8 Those who worship false gods
turn their backs on all God’s mercies.
9 But I will offer sacrifices to you with songs of praise,
and I will fulfill all my vows.
For my salvation comes from the Lord alone.”
and the waters closed over me.
Seaweed wrapped itself around my head.
6 I sank down to the very roots of the mountains.
I was imprisoned in the earth,
whose gates lock shut forever.
But you, O Lord my God,
snatched me from the jaws of death!
7 As my life was slipping away,
I remembered the Lord.
And my earnest prayer went out to you
in your holy Temple.
8 Those who worship false gods
turn their backs on all God’s mercies.
9 But I will offer sacrifices to you with songs of praise,
and I will fulfill all my vows.
For my salvation comes from the Lord alone.”
10 Then the Lord ordered the fish to spit Jonah out onto the beach.
When Jonah asked the crew of the boat to
throw him overboard, he expected to die. He ran from God and expected to lose his life because of his
disobedience. God, though, provided the gift of a fish to save him. I’m not
sure that’s such a great gift, but in this case I guess it is. Talk about a
salvation story!
Jonah knows from whom his salvation comes. Look how he ends
his prayer: “Salvation comes from the Lord!” Jonah realizes he has disobeyed
God. Here we get to witness Jonah’s personal revival. He realizes that he has
let his own fears and prejudices turn him away from God’s call. Now, he cries
out in faith. He is ready to accept the call. Ready to obey God.
Jonah tries to run, but God pursues him.
Finally Jonah realizes he has turned from God’s will and he repents. And in
doing so he experiences a spiritual renewal. A personal revival. But don’t
think that Jonah renewed his own spirit. He agreed to let God work in his life.
He agreed to answer God’s call. God took care of the spiritual renewal.
Just like we talked about last week with
Jesus’ first followers at Pentecost, spiritual renewal, or revival, is not
something that can be manufactured or manipulated into being. It can only come
from God and often it comes when we least expect it.
John Wesley, many of you know, was the
founder of the Methodist movement, or the Methodist Revival as some called it.
That movement eventually became the Methodist church. We look back at Wesley
today as this great pillar of faith, a theological dynamo.
But that wasn’t always the case in his life.
Just to give you a little background, Wesley was born in 1703 in Epworth,
England. In 1725 he was ordained as a Deacon in the Anglican Church, and then
in 1728 Wesley was ordained as an Anglican priest. But over the next 10 years or so, Wesley life
was a spiritual roller coaster. It was filled with ups and downs, highs and
lows. At times he was unsure of his own salvation. In 1736, he was sent to the
Georgia colony as a missionary. He had high hopes for the trip. High hopes of
converting Native Americans. He returned to England 2 years later discouraged and
depressed. A couple of months after his return to England Wesley attended a
prayer meeting at Aldersgate Street. There he had a transformative experience.
I’ll let John Wesley tell it in his own
words. This is from Wesley’s journals: “In
the evening I went very unwillingly to a society in Aldersgate Street, where
one was reading Luther’s preface to the Epistle to the Romans. About a quarter
before nine, while he was describing the change which God works in the heart
through faith in Christ, I felt my heart strangely warmed. I felt I did trust
in Christ, Christ alone, for salvation; and an assurance was given me that He
had taken away my sins, even mine, and saved me from the law of sin and death.”
From
that experience, John and his brother Charles, began a movement of renewal in
the Church of England. I’d call it, as many do, a revival. John Wesley, like
Jonah, felt far from God. Maybe it wasn’t of his own choosing as it was with
Jonah, but it seems the feelings were similar. And in the case of John Wesley,
just as in Jonah’s story, God pursues him. And God works with transformative
power in his life to revive his faith and bring a spiritual renewal that spread
through the Church of England and eventually into the Americas. But that’s next
week’s subject matter.
Today
we focus on revival within our own hearts. Each of us stands in need of
revival. Each of us has a faith that needs to be renewed. Each of us is called
just as Jonah was; just as John Wesley. We are all called to be ministers of
the Gospel. We need to experience this same sort of spiritual renewal as we
answer God’s call to fruitful works.
This
is an interesting time of year to talk about spiritual renewal. Lent begins
this week. This Wednesday is Ash Wednesday, which marks the beginning of Lent.
Lent consists of the 40 days leading up to Easter. All
throughout Lent, we look forward to Easter and the celebration of Jesus’
resurrection. We cannot, however, get to the resurrection without the
crucifixion. So we look to the cross. In the
cross, we see our brokenness. We see our sinfulness. We also see redemption. We
see salvation displayed in Christ crucified. But only because we view the cross
in the context of the resurrection.
Lent is a season of reflection and repentance. It is a time when
we examine the cross and the cross examines us. A time to reflect on our own
sinfulness. A time to reflect on the death and resurrection of Jesus. A time to
repent and prepare to celebrate resurrection and the victory over sin and death
that Jesus’ resurrection won for all of us.
So
Lent is a time of spiritual renewal. Traditionally people give things up for
Lent. The idea is that you give something up and the absence of that thing is
almost an act of penitence. It is as if we are removing something from the space
between us and God in order to make that space smaller.
Well,
that’s essentially what spiritual renewal is. Growing closer to God.
Unfortunately
Lent has become a sort of 2nd New Year’s resolution. People like to
give up things that are bad for them and hope the behavior sticks.
I
want to encourage you to look at Lent as a time for spiritual renewal. A time
for rebirth, for transformation. A time to grow closer to God and in doing so,
to truly live by the Spirit.
I
think the prayer that Pride read this morning gives us an excellent blueprint
for seeking spiritual renewal. It gives us a map for replacing the worldly
things in our lives with things of the Spirit. Love instead of hate. Pardon
instead of injury. Hope for despair. Light for darkness. And puts into
perspective where our efforts should be spent. Help me to seek to love others
instead of seeking love.
To
achieve the things St. Francis prayed, that’s what spiritual renewal looks
like.
As we
move toward Lent this week, what can you do to experience spiritual renewal? I
want to give you a few steps.
1) Realize the need for renewal. God calls each
of us. Sometimes we run, like Jonah – sometimes we just feel like we’ve drifted
away, like John Wesley. But we all stand in need of renewal.
2) Offer yourself to God. God has a call for each
and every one of us. No one is too old or too young for God to use. God is
calling you. Invite the Holy Spirit to speak to you to help as you discern what
you are called to do.
3) Get closer to God. Let Lent be a time where
instead of giving something up, you take something on. Spend time in prayer
every day. Pray the Prayer of St. Francis. Read the scriptures. Put together a
study group. Believe it or not, listening to others’ stories and experiences
with God is a great way to know God better. We can prepare our lives for renewal
by praying and reading scriptures and more importantly by spending time with
other Christians in worship and study and prayer.
4) Be
ready! If you offer yourself to God ready to be renewed, ready to accept
God’s call for your life, expect God to work and be ready. Allow the Spirit to guide you. Listen for the
God’s call, hear God’s call, and answer God’s call.
I want to close with an altered version of the prayer of St.
Francis that Pride prayed earlier. This version was prayed by Mother Teresa at
the UN in 1985.
Make
us worthy Lord to serve our fellow men throughout the world,
who
live and die in poverty and hunger.
Give
them through our hands, this day, their daily bread
and by
our understanding love give peace and joy.
Lord,
make me a channel of thy peace.
That
where there is hatred I may bring love,
That
where there is wrong, I may bring the spirit of forgiveness,
That
where there is discord, I may bring harmony,
That
where there is error I may bring truth,
That
where there is doubt I may bring faith,
That
where there is despair I may bring hope,
That
where there are shadows I may bring light,
That
where there is sadness I may bring joy.
Lord,
grant that I may seek rather to comfort than to be comforted,
To
understand than to be understood,
To
love than to be loved.
For it
is by forgetting self that one finds.
It is
by forgiving that one is forgiven,
it is
by dying that one awakens to eternal life.
Amen.