There is a part of me that would hope that you recognize that I’m an old Boy Scout, you know, Boy Scout Law - A Scout is:
Globalization 2011, Share my snapshots of life, with travel & sharing as the spirit moves. "...Daily we change, and the snapshots that others have of us mark the periods in our lives,,,"
Monday, August 31, 2015
Sermon for Sunday, August 30, 2015 at St. David's, Manayunk and St. John's Bala. The audio can be found at: https://soundcloud.com/…/pentecost-14-b-st-davids-and-st-jo… The Text was not followed exactly, but it follows:
There is a part of me that would hope that you recognize that I’m an old Boy Scout, you know, Boy Scout Law - A Scout is:
I’m an old Boy Scout and church camper, we were almost
always taught that cleanliness was next to Godliness. I remember going to the well on the property
of the camps and using the handle to pump up water into a bucket to take back
to the cabin so that we could fill the five basins that hung on the outside
wall of each cabin to begin our morning wash up. A swirl of the water and a toss into the
nearby woods meant that we had washed our face and hands and under our arm, we
were ready for the day. And if we tossed
a cup of creamy water we had not forgotten to brush our teeth. Hanging the metal basin back on the side of
the cabin meant that the morning ritual of cleanliness was now complete and we
were ready for a day of getting dirty again. Secondly,
until people are convinced that their “insides” are the problem, they will not
seek the proper cure. We are concerned
with what is outside of us, and we work hard to protect our bodies from bad
things going inside. If one’s “insides”
(conscience, heart, free will, etc.) are seen as good; people then sometimes
look there [that is on their inside] for their salvation. When we become aware
of our own personal errors, there is a problem because we tend to look for a
cure against our sin from the core of our own being, internally. Yet way too often we are dealing with deeply
entrenched attitudes and beliefs. If we
keep turning to the same sources to address the evils we encounter – then there
is no cure. If
and When one realizes that one’s “insides” are at the heart of the problem and
that no cure can be found within, then one needs to be cured by a power outside
of one’s self – a power that can change the insides.It is clear in our text from Mark 7:14-23, that• “inside” things defile us, which leads me to
conclude• “inside” things can’t purify us, because they
are the cause of the defilement and• “outside” things going in can’t defile
us, so can we conclude• “outside” things going in can purify us,
because they are not the source of our defilement? This is not simple logic. Whether or not this simple logic stands up, I
think that it is true theologically and spiritually. When
one goes on a spiritual walk with Jesus and with God, it can offer new ways of
not only viewing life, but living life. A similar saying is attributed to Jesse
Jackson: “It is easier to walk your way into a new way of thinking – than to
think your way into a new way of walking.”
More simply stated: I’ve heard it suggested that intentionally smiling
helps make one’s inner disposition “happier.” It
would seems that after reading the Gospel lesson for today, as an 8-12 year old
I would not be meeting the standards that the leaders of the synagogue seem to
be setting as the standard for the disciples of Jesus. While not addressing the specific lessons we
have heard over the past few weeks of: miraculously feeding the 5000 people (from John6:30-44), or walking on
water and calming the sea (from John 6:45-52). Jesus and his disciples had been
in places where water for cleanliness would have been hard to find or in an
overabundance, but not easily consumed.
There is a part of me that would hope that you recognize that I’m an old Boy Scout, you know, Boy Scout Law - A Scout is:
I’m an old Boy Scout and church camper, we were almost
always taught that cleanliness was next to Godliness. I remember going to the well on the property
of the camps and using the handle to pump up water into a bucket to take back
to the cabin so that we could fill the five basins that hung on the outside
wall of each cabin to begin our morning wash up. A swirl of the water and a toss into the
nearby woods meant that we had washed our face and hands and under our arm, we
were ready for the day. And if we tossed
a cup of creamy water we had not forgotten to brush our teeth. Hanging the metal basin back on the side of
the cabin meant that the morning ritual of cleanliness was now complete and we
were ready for a day of getting dirty again. Secondly,
until people are convinced that their “insides” are the problem, they will not
seek the proper cure. We are concerned
with what is outside of us, and we work hard to protect our bodies from bad
things going inside. If one’s “insides”
(conscience, heart, free will, etc.) are seen as good; people then sometimes
look there [that is on their inside] for their salvation. When we become aware
of our own personal errors, there is a problem because we tend to look for a
cure against our sin from the core of our own being, internally. Yet way too often we are dealing with deeply
entrenched attitudes and beliefs. If we
keep turning to the same sources to address the evils we encounter – then there
is no cure. If
and When one realizes that one’s “insides” are at the heart of the problem and
that no cure can be found within, then one needs to be cured by a power outside
of one’s self – a power that can change the insides.It is clear in our text from Mark 7:14-23, that• “inside” things defile us, which leads me to
conclude• “inside” things can’t purify us, because they
are the cause of the defilement and• “outside” things going in can’t defile
us, so can we conclude• “outside” things going in can purify us,
because they are not the source of our defilement? This is not simple logic. Whether or not this simple logic stands up, I
think that it is true theologically and spiritually. When
one goes on a spiritual walk with Jesus and with God, it can offer new ways of
not only viewing life, but living life. A similar saying is attributed to Jesse
Jackson: “It is easier to walk your way into a new way of thinking – than to
think your way into a new way of walking.”
More simply stated: I’ve heard it suggested that intentionally smiling
helps make one’s inner disposition “happier.” It
would seems that after reading the Gospel lesson for today, as an 8-12 year old
I would not be meeting the standards that the leaders of the synagogue seem to
be setting as the standard for the disciples of Jesus. While not addressing the specific lessons we
have heard over the past few weeks of: miraculously feeding the 5000 people (from John6:30-44), or walking on
water and calming the sea (from John 6:45-52). Jesus and his disciples had been
in places where water for cleanliness would have been hard to find or in an
overabundance, but not easily consumed.
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