John 21:15-17
(NRSV)
When they had finished breakfast, Jesus said to Simon
Peter, “Simon son of John, do you love me more than these?” He said to him,
“Yes, Lord; you know that I love you.” Jesus said to him, “Feed my lambs.” A
second time he said to him, “Simon son of John, do you love me?” He said to
him, “Yes, Lord; you know that I love you.” Jesus said to him, “Tend my sheep.”
He said to him the third time, “Simon son of John, do you love me?” Peter felt
hurt because he said to him the third time, “Do you love me?” And he said to
him, “Lord, you know everything; you know that I love you.” Jesus said to him,
“Feed my sheep.
Of all the stories that our bible has that tell of the
resurrection of Jesus, by far my favorite is this one found in John’s Gospel.
The disciples have all headed home, no doubt disappointed
about at all that had take place in Jerusalem a short while earlier.
Jesus,
their leader, was dead
We find Simon Peter, Thomas, Nathanael, James and John
the sons of Zebedee, and two unnamed disciples have made their way back to the Sea
of Galilee near Capernaum.
Peter says: “I am going fishing” and the others decide to
join him.
They catch NOTHING
A stranger appears on the seashore and calls out to them
and suggest that maybe they should try fishing on the other side of the boat.
I don’t know about you, but when
I have been out for hours fishing and been skunked the last thing I was is some
smart aleck telling me how to fish.
But for whatever reason they give it a try
And the results --- well the results were unbelievable
--- more fish than they could even bring into the boat
It is at that moment that Peter comes to the conclusion
that it is Jesus --- How that can be he is not sure --- but he is sure it is
him and he jumps out of the boat and rushes to the shore.
When he gets there, he finds that this stranger/Jesus
(Obviously it did not LOOK like Jesus) has started a fire begun baking bread and
is waiting for them to bring fish to be cooked.
Jesus/ the stranger says to them:
“Come
and have breakfast.”
Jesus came and took the bread and gave it to
them, and did the same with the fish.
It was then, that they knew it was Jesus
I love this story --- and it is one of my favorite places
in all of the Holy Lands to visit.
It is at this moment that we get these transformational
words from Jesus.
When they had finished
breakfast, Jesus said to Simon Peter, “Simon son of John, do you love me more
than these?” He said to him, “Yes, Lord; you know that I love you.” Jesus said
to him, “Feed my lambs.” A second time he said to him, “Simon son of John, do
you love me?” He said to him, “Yes, Lord; you know that I love you.” Jesus said
to him, “Tend my sheep.” He said to him the third time, “Simon son of John, do
you love me?” Peter felt hurt because he said to him the third time, “Do you
love me?” And he said to him, “Lord, you know everything; you know that I love
you.” Jesus said to him, “Feed my sheep.
I have preached on this passage dozens of times over the
years --- And I have always interpreted it in a unique way --- suggesting that
in some Greek translations of this text that there is a significant play on
words.
Three times Jesus asks Peter a question --- but it is not
exactly the same question every time.
Jesus said to Simon Peter, “Simon son of John, do you
love me --- do you agape me (love me fully) more than these?”
Peter said to him, “Yes, Lord;
you know that I love (philos --- love you like a brother) you.”
Jesus said to him, “Feed my lambs.”
A second time Jesus said to him, “Simon son of John, do
you love (agape) me?”
Peter said to him, “Yes, Lord;
you know that I love (philos) you.”
Jesus said to him, “Tend my sheep.”
Jesus said to Peter the third time, “Simon son of John,
do you love (philos) me?”
Peter felt hurt because he said
to him the third time, “Do you love me?”
Peter said to him, “Lord, you
know everything; you know that I love (philos) you.”
Jesus said to him, “Feed my sheep.
What strikes me about this passage is that seems to
understand the limits on Peter’s ability to love Jesus
Peter is not able to offer Jesus Agape love --- only
philos love
Peter can’t offer absolute –
unconditional -- perfect love --- only love for a brother
And
Jesus says THAT IS SUFFICIENT --- I will take what you can offer
There is great power in this story. It says:
Jesus accepts us where we are
and doesn’t demand more than we can give.
I really believe this is what Jesus was trying to say to
Peter --- but the problem is, we often get comfortable and believe that giving
what we got right now is enough.
Becoming a disciple -- a follower of Jesus --- a
Christian --- means that we are willing to move beyond where we are today and
actually FOLLOW --- actually grow in our love of Jesus
It is moving out of our comforts
zone and moving beyond a philos love for Jesus to an agape love
So I want you to hold that understanding of this passage
in mind, but also try to look at it another way.
Jesus said, “Feed my sheep” to Peter, but if you think
about it for a minute ---- Peter would never have seen a shepherd feed a sheep.
Sheep were
pastured --- they were not domesticated
A shepherd
never actually FED their sheep
So what might this text mean to Peter?
Hearing this text as Peter would have heard it --- Jesus
seems to be showing what the role of the Shepherd is intended to be.
And he seems to be suggesting four roles for the shepherd.
·
To keep the sheep mobile and on the road to
mission with Jesus.
·
To insure that the sheep had plenty of good
pasture so they could mature and reproduce.
·
To keep them safe from the predators.
·
To go out and find any lost sheep. This couldn’t
be achieved if the sheep couldn’t take care of themselves in the shepherd’s
absence.
If we are to take this story and apply it to today ---
this passage seems to suggest that the role of the pastor and staff is to equip
the saints.
The role of the laity is to be the ministers.
It’s that
simple.
Laity are not complete saints until they have been
equipped.
As Bill Easum says: "Paid staff steal the essence of
sainthood from people when they “do” the work of ministry."
Clearly the biblical role of all of God’s people is to be
the priesthood of the believer. The author of 1st Peter writes:
You yourselves are being built
like living stones into a spiritual temple. You are being made into a holy
priesthood to offer up spiritual sacrifices that are acceptable to God through
Jesus Christ (1 Peter 2:4-5 CEB)
In most mainline churches, too much emphasis is placed on
the role of the paid staff to do most of the ministry.
Believe me, most staff are happy
to do it --- that is why we went into ministry --- we like doing ministry
Heck, I get it, it is much easier to pay somebody else to
do the ministry --- but that is not what it means to be a follower of Jesus ---
to be a Christian.
Christianity has one big over arching goal – to make
disciples.
And Jesus came and said to them, “All authority in
heaven and on earth has been given to me. Go therefore and make disciples
of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of
the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything that I have
commanded you. And remember, I am with you always, to the end of the age.”
Matthew 28:19-20
Go and make disciples.
The goal of
ministry is to grow people.
This means that making disciples is more important than sitting
on a committee making decisions.
Put another way:
The role of laity is not to hold
an office in the church, to make decisions, and to run the church.
If I were to ask you what ministries you have performed
over the years I am willing to bet that a majority of you would recite a litany
of positions that you have held within the church.
Ministry is not about the committees that you have served
on, ministry is all about reaching out to make disciples for Jesus.
We spend way too much time and effort on ourselves and
not enough building God's kingdom.
So if you want to be a Christian what does that mean?
Remember leadership Guru Stephen Covey --- he always talked
about beginning with the end in mind so here are nine things that come to my
mind
1. A
priority for a mature follower of Jesus is that they worship God, to worship
God.
They don't come to church to be “fed” spiritually or to
be inspired, but to give their hearts to God.
They don't argue over the time of service, or the color
of the carpeting.
They may have a worship preference, but they don’t hold
that out as the only way, because it’s ultimately not about style.
It’s about giving themselves over to God.
2. They
are constantly seeking God’s will.
Focus on God's kingdom and not our own personal agenda
3. A
mature disciple loves God and neighbor.
If there is anything I could say about a follower of
Jesus it is that they obey what you could call the Jesus Creed:
“Teacher, which commandment in the law is the
greatest?” He said to him, “‘You shall love the Lord your God with all
your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind.’ This is the
greatest and first commandment. And a second is like it: ‘You shall love
your neighbor as yourself.’ On these two commandments hang all the law and
the prophets.” Mathew 22:36-40
4. They
are non-judgmental.
This is the loving neighbor part. Mature disciples know
that they have been made whole by the grace of God. They know they don’t
deserve it, but God’s unconditional love is just that, unconditional. They know
they are not judged, so they don’t judge others. In other words, they desire all to be welcome
because they know all belong to God.
5. It’s
not about them. It’s about God and neighbor.
It is pretty easy to tell who is about themselves and who
is about God and others.
6. They
are intentional about connecting with the least among us.
People are called to different ministries, but mature
disciples are doing something that brings them face to face with Jesus which he
tells us is found in the least of these (Matthew 25:31-46).
It might be the homeless, poor, sick, imprisoned, hurting
or disenfranchised, but they get in the trenches in some way to connect with
someone who is in great need.
7. They
are generous with their time, talent and treasure.
Mature disciples always seem to have time for others.
They use what they do well for the sake of others. And they give of their
resources to help others.
8. They
push the church to be outward looking.
Mature disciples remind the church that it is organized
for the benefit of its non-members.
They are concerned about the visitor and the newer
attenders, wanting to ensure that they not only feel welcome, but that the
programs of the church are meaningful and accessible.
They favor making the building available for use by the
community.
They are willing to challenge church members who are only
thinking of themselves or about what’s good for the congregation.
9. Finally,
and most importantly --- Followers of
Jesus are actively trying to reproduce.
What is the goal of a Christian -- to make disciples!
So a mature Christian --- follower of Jesus --- sees
reproduction as their number 1 responsibility.
Sharing
the love and hope that is Jesus.
What is the goal of an apple tree?
To produce
fruit (apples)? NO
The goal
is to produce more apple trees.
The goal of Christianity is to make more disciples --- more
followers of Jesus.
I never said that this would be a warm and fuzzy sermon.
But this is the challenge that
we sign up for when we choose to be Christians.
And remember you chose to follow Jesus!
As Matt was preaching last week, challenging us to be
more hospitable what kept coming into my mind was how we often see church like
a sporting event.
We come to church to get excited and fired up --- but we
let someone else do all the work for us.
I think we can see church and draw some parallels with
sports, but the disconnect is we are not to be spectators, but we are to be participants.
And church is not the big game on Sunday; Church is the
locker room talk before the day --- church is the daily practice getting ready
for the event. It is where we get fired
up and go over the game plan on how we are going to go out and compete --- it
is where we get trained and empowered to go out and execute the game plan. The coaches don't go out and compete in the
game --- their job is to get you ready.
That's what church is
How we live our lives demonstrates how committed we are
to the mission and ministry to Jesus.
Your job --- my job --- isn't to grow the church (please
don't tell the superintendent I said that) my job, your job is to grow
disciples.
So --- do you want to be a Christian?
It is the greatest journey, and the most demanding
journey you will ever be on!
The good and wonderful news is God accepts you exactly
where you are.
If you can
only offer God philos love --- God says --- I will take it
BUT DON'T STOP THERE
God desires us to love with agape --- complete, full love
And we do that by becoming mature followers of Jesus
So get involved
Getting involved means interacting with God's children
We have had two funerals these past two days
Beautiful
services celebrating the lives of Tom Lugar, John and Carolyn Tucker
But we
couldn't have done it without some of you engaging in ministry
Michelle, Marilyn, Candice and
Debbie all actively engaging people in their grief with the love of God
Ministry is hands on --- seeing God's children --- and
lifting them with the love of God
Soup's On
Fletcher
Place
Neighbor
link
Martin
Luther King Center
School 43
Project
Transformation
Habitat
for Humanity
The person
who comes in off the street needing help
IHN/Family
Promise
But maybe you aren’t ready yet
You still
need practice and learning
Join a Bible Study or Sunday School Class
Re (Confirm)
New
Disciple
But my friends, a mature disciple knows that it is not in
the classroom where transformation takes place
There is a
time and place for learning
But the
goal of Bible Study is not another Bible Study
At some point we have to set our books down and get busy
doing the work of the kingdom
So you want to be a Christian
A follower
of Jesus
Come
on, let's go and change the world for God
No comments:
Post a Comment