John 14:15-31 · Jesus Promises the Holy Spirit
"Why Belong to Church?"
John 14:15-31
Sermon
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Text - John 14:31a ... "I do as the Father has commanded me, so that the world may know that I love the Father."

Billy Graham, preaching in Australia, told the story of a Baptist who wandered into an Episcopalian church for worship. He was amazed at all the standing up, kneeling, and sitting down that went on during the service. But he was so pleased that the sermon was the same joyful gospel. Through a portion of the service the Baptist shouted out, "Amen Brother!" The usher came down the aisle and tapped him on the shoulder and said, "We don’t shout ‘amen’ in here." "But I got religion," said the man. "You may have, but you didn’t get it here."

At a rotary club a man boasted that the firm he worked for had been founded in 1874. The president asked if anyone was representing a firm older than that. When a Christian Minister stood up they all smiled and they realized that he was correct.

That first Pentecost, when 3,000 were baptized into the church, was really something! The church was so alive, so vital - that the scripture says the men preached as if they had tongues of fire.

Two persons were talking together before a large church which was being destroyed by fire. The first man spoke in a voice which could be heard above the voice of the firemen: "This is the first time I ever saw you at church." To this the second responded: "This is the first time I ever saw the church on fire." There are many prophets of doom saying that the age of the Christian Church is over - that it has lost its zeal! We’re taking a beating right now in this country and around the world. Our theology is being questioned. Everyone is writing a critical book against the organized church. We have had to take some unpopular stands on social issues. Magazines are attacking the ministry, and it isn’t the thing to do anymore to join the church. John Kelman said, however, "God pity the nation or city whose factory smokestacks rise higher than her church spires."

One critic of the church, an Englishman, described the average congregation as "the uninspiring spectacle of a docile and mild-mannered gentleman trying to persuade a docile company of people to be still more docile."

Let me give you seven reasons I belong to the church and want you to join. Daniel Poling once listed them in the newspaper:

I. I should belong to the church because I ought to be better than I am. Henry Ward Beecher once said, "the church is not a gallery for the exhibition of eminent Christians, but a school for the education of imperfect ones." We Christians especially talk about this: the fact that we are sinners and we are not doing God a favor or the congregation when we join. We are very imperfect as individuals and as an institution. We are open to criticism, and that includes the Pastor! We never claim to be perfect in the first place. If someone asks you what the chief trouble with the church is - you tell them it is you and me. We are in it and we are sinners. And we need to do better and be better and this is where we can learn and get help.

When R. M. McCheyne, Saint of Scotland, lived in Dundee, his watch always showed the correct time. Whenever he left the city his watch did not tell the exact truth. In Dundee he passed by the church every day and unconsciously regulated his watch by the clock in the tower. Elsewhere he had no standard for telling the time. So the church gives me a standard - a measure - a regulator - something to set my morals and ethics by - and helps me to be better. So I joined the church cause I know I need to be better.

II. I should belong to the church because of what I can give to it and do through it, as well as what I may get out of it. The church is not a dormitory for sleepers despite what you see from time to time. It is an institution of workers. It is not only a rest camp; it is a front line trench. Here is an organization that provides the opportunity, the tools, the equipment for us to serve God and others. The New Testament knows nothing of Christians unattached. They got together and pooled their strength and "know how" and resources. In fact they had to have each other in order to survive. Then, organized, they could make their aggressive impact on the community. So I joined because of what I can give to it and contribute through it.

III. I should belong to the church because every man should pay his debts and do his share toward discharging the obligation of society. Not only has the church been the bearer of the Good News of personal salvation and the provider of the blessed sacraments, but it has been the supreme uplifting and conserving agency of the society. Here is the champion of "The Good" that I want to support. In a day when so many organizations tear down and tear apart and dismantle all that we call sacred and right, I want to belong to an organization that still champions the good. Here is an organization where mean people are taught to be kind, selfish to share, proud to humble themselves, sorrowful to become joyful. Here the unlovely are loved, and the undeserving are respected, and the gripers, complainers, haughty, arrogant, scared, are all listened to and comforted. Here, bridges are built instead of walls. Here, you belong despite your color and financial position or politics. So I joined the church in order to do my part and fulfil my obligation to contribute to a better community and a better world.

In Victorious Living we read, "I am quite sure that I should not have survived as a young Christian had I not had the corporate life of the church to hold me up. When I rejoiced, they rejoiced with me. When I was weak, they strengthened me, and once when I fell - a rather bad fall - they gathered around me by prayer and love, and without blame or censor they lovingly lifted me back to my feet again."

IV. I should belong to the church because of memories. Memories of high moments in my life and memories of those times when I was at my best and when God was the closest, such memories as these come from my church. Memories of things I can never forget and memories of faces that will never fade. Memories of promises that are the glory of my youth. It was here that I was baptized into God’s kingdom. It was here that I was confirmed and ordained. It was in the church I was comforted as I lay my father to rest. And it was here, that I have often communed with my family. It was here, in the church where I knew dreams and ideals that have a way of being dimmed later on.

A. S. M. Hutchinson’s novel reads: "I went to church with my mother as a kid, I shall be buried by the church; in between I am dashed if I scoff at the church."

Willard L. Sperry tells us that ... "the world seeks the church uncritically, habitually, at those times when life most matters. Parents who have drifted away from the church still bring their children back for baptism. Young people who profess to have outgrown religion still enter the church to be married." It is true also that often the very last grunts that come from those who are dying are not necessarily burdened with God’s name, but the church is always called upon to speak that name over those dead. It is true that there is some deep prompting within us that makes us seek out the church. Here life is really its most genuine.

So I belong because the church is the great keeper of those great high points of my life and the receptacle of my greatest days.

V. I should belong to the church because of hope. There is a hope in the church that lives when promises are dead and that paves the way for progress. It is a glorious hope and a lively hope that envisions peace and social justice: that men can still love each other as Jesus taught them too. It is a hope for all time to come and a hope for eternity. The great hope that cast its anchor behind Jesus Christ in a pessimistic, chaotic, dismal day - when men seem to be at each others throats and when hatred and violence and crime are running rampant, there comes from the Christ, the saved, and the churches hope. I want to belong to an organization that still has that kind of hope that hopes that we can be good stewards of the earth and survive pollution and that we can have peace among races and countries. I am sick of all the prophets of doom and making fun of everything and everybody and of tearing down all that has been held sacred or right. A philosopher, pleading for respect of the city of Athens, quotes Pericles: "think what she may become and be worthy of her." With equal enthusiasm we might say of the church, "think what the church has been and can become and be worthy of her."

So I join and support the church, its Pastors and programs, where we have the hope of peace and love and social justice and where we can see the possibility of a world community; where marriage and family and sex and possessions are put in a proper prospective.

In 1830 Benjamin Constant, the French philosopher, received a message at the hands of his friends in Paris who were overthrowing the Bourbons: "A terrible game is being played here - our heads are in danger; come and add yours." That is the appeal of Christ to his followers. It is because we need that kind of crusading spirit that we turn to the sixth reason I belong to the church.

VI. I should join the church because of the strong men in it who need reinforcing. It is true, that men are laying it on the line again in our day in order to support and minister in the Christian Church. There are strong men who need our support and weak men who need our encouragement. There are rascals and loafers who need scolding. If I say I am not good enough for membership, my humility recommends me. If I sit in the seat of the critical and scornful, inactivity and lack of compassion condemns me. Once when a neighboring minister was under fire a professor said: "It is time now for me to join his church. The cause of justice is at stake." It has been a national sport in recent years to critize the church and make it the favorite whipping boy of almost everyone. No industry could take the kind of flogging the church has been forced to take. If it had been General Motors, that corporation would have died long ago.

VII. So I belong to the church - but not until I am ready to join a going concern, not until I am willing to become an active partner with Jesus Christ. And let there be no mistake about it, it is His church and His spirit that this organization is all about. If that weren’t so - it would have died years ago! An African writer of the third century said, "He cannot have God for his Father who has not the church for his mother."

A country minister in preaching a funeral sermon said: "this corpse has been a member of this church for twenty years." That may be so of many of our members. But the church is not dead nor ready to be buried. We can live victoriously amidst the trouble and fear and crisis of this life and it is the church that can enable us to do it.

Let us remember that is our way, our heritage to be on fire, to commit ourselves to this cause called Jesus Christ and His Church.

When Henry Ward Becher was preaching at Park Street Church in Boston, someone ask him why it was that his church was so splendidly successful. His answer was that he preached on Sunday but he had 450 members who took up his message on Monday and preached it wherever they went.

Here is an invitation for you to join up with us in this kind of cause.

"I do as the Father has commanded me, so that the world may know I love the Father." Amen.

CSS Publishing Co., Inc., Why Belong To The Church?