1 Peter 1:1-12 · Praise to God for a Living Hope
Are You Turned On to Christ?
1 Peter 1:1-12
Sermon
by Leonard Sweet
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Last Sunday, Easter Sunday, was crowded. Crowded with friends. Crowded with newcomers. Crowded with guests and families of members. Crowded with those who come to church twice-a-year. Crowded with those who never-miss-a-Sunday.

This week . . . the Sunday after Easter...maybe not so crowded?

No wonder it's dubbed "Low Sunday." There is time and elbow room enough to look up and down the pews and see old friends and maybe even ask, "Did you have a nice Easter?"

But that question is wrong.

Easter isn't over. It's still Easter. Easter isn't just one Sunday. Easter is a season of the church which lasts for fifty days. That's ten days longer than Lent, and Lent always seems to go on forever. But somehow over the centuries the church seems to have gotten better at keeping Lent, than it has at keeping Easter."

We can't seem to keep the spirit of celebration and joy that is Easter going for fifty days! The Lenten tradition, keeping forty days of solemnity and seriousness, of preparing our spirits for the great events that roll in like waves throughout Easter week – Maundy Thursday, Good Friday, No-Name Saturday – the church still does well. It seems important to make special efforts at being spiritual (attending some Lenten study group) and even making little deprivations (giving up meat or sweets or TV) during the somber season of Lent.

But after a one-day blowout celebration on Easter Sunday, it seems Christians can't maintain a partying mood for another forty-nine days. Why is it so hard for the church to keep Easter, to fill our lives with joy, love, and celebration, to see everyday miracles, to enjoy life itself, to be amazed that "with God all things are possible?"

A while back I was preaching at a large church and wearing one of those portable microphones so I could wander about and yet everyone could still hear. As I started speaking, however, it became clear that the microphone wasn't working. After a few futile adjustment attempts, the pastor finally stood up and shouted to the back of the church, "Will someone please turn on Dr. Sweet?!"

As potentially embarrassing as was that request, even more humiliating was the fact that not one hand went up, not one person moved, to fulfill the pastor's plea.

What does it take to turn you on? What gets you going, what keeps you going, what pulls you onward every day?

Studies show that American are working more and more hours at their jobs, but that we are also spending more time participating in leisure-time activities. There are more community baseball, soccer, basketball teams than there have ever been. We flock to fancy, state-of-the-art, workout equipment gyms.

In my home wet Washington state, people wait for the opening day of boating season like nineteenth-century millennialists used to wait on mountain-tops for the Second Coming. Not-so-active activities turn some people on. Malls are full of window-shoppers, stadiums are full of screaming fans, movie theaters are full of people looking for new stories.

But it is hard to stay turned on, totally fulfilled, on-fire-for-life, by a baseball game or a new boat. Looking for that long-range, never-lets-you-down turn-on is what leads some of us to abuse alcohol, to turn-on with drugs, to keep moving from lover to lover, to get lost in the dream of a big score at the gambling casinos.

Sooner or later each of these turn-ons loses its power and leaves us financially reeling, physically careening, and frantically searching for some new auxiliary switch.

In today's epistle text 1 Peter acknowledges that there will be times in the lives of all Christians when they will experience trials. The reality of a hostile world was never far from that writer's mind. But despite setbacks, persecutions, times when the lights of success seem to grow increasingly dim, 1 Peter proclaims that for those live resurrection it is always time to rejoice.

Filled with the conviction that Christ is risen, Christians are eternally filled with a living hope (verse 3) for salvation. What is the ultimate turn-on for disciples, for those who have faith even though they were not present to see the risen Lord?

1 Peter states it simply: "You love him" (verse 8). This love brings with it an indescribable and glorious joy.

For the Christian . . .

· Love turns you on.

· Forgiveness turns you on.

· Hope turns you on.

· Compassion turns you on.

· Faith turns you on.

Each new Easter Sunday, Christians should be fully charged up, turned-on by the miracle of Christ's resurrection, of God's grace and love. And not for just the fifty days of the Easter season, but for the whole church year!

After the resurrection the New Testament records that Christ appeared to a number of people. First there were the women at the tomb (John 20:11-18; Matthew 28:1-10). Christ appeared to his disciples in the Upper Room (John 20:19-21a). He walked with Cleopas and others on the road to Emmaus (Luke 24:13-35). Christ visited the disciples a second time at the water (John 21:1-14), and a third time on the mountain (Matthew 28:16-20). All those who witnessed the risen Jesus characteristically responded with either worship and awe, or expressions of pure joy.

· The Emmaus road companions realized, "Were not our hearts burning within us while he was talking?" (Luke 24:32)Their hearts were turned-on.

· Mary Magdelene turned and said to him in Hebrew, "Rabbouni", which means Teacher (John 20:16). Mary's hope was turned on.

· "Then the disciples rejoiced when they saw the Lord." (John 20:20) For these ten, their joy was turned on.

· "While in their joy they were disbelieving and still wondering." (Luke 24:41). The disciples' minds were turned on.

· "Thomas answered him, My Lord and my God!" (John 20:28) Thomas' soul was turned on.

For those of us who do not have the risen Jesus physically standing in front of us this Easter season we can know we are yet in the presence of the Lord when we experience these same turn-ons.

· When you miss the big Saturday after noon game on TV because you are helping spring clean an elderly neighbors home, is your heart turned on?

· When you listen to and work with the youth in your church, is your hope turned on?

· When you look around your church and see your brothers and sisters surrounding you with their faith, is your joy turned on?

· When you long to communicate to the twenty-first century world the saving grace that was brought to us by our first-century Savior, is your mind turned on?

· When feel the power of the resurrection miracle, is your soul turned on?

For those of your congregations used to contemporary music, consider ending the sermon with a selection from Santana's "Turn Your Lights On."

Or conclude with this fifteenth century poem that lifts up the holy harmony of the resurrection power:

Thou shalt know him when he comes
not by any din of drums –
nor the vantage of airs –
nor by anything he wears.

Neither by his crown –
nor his gown.
For his presence known shall be by the holy harmony
that his coming makes in you.

– Fifteenth century, anonymous

ChristianGlobe Networks, Collected Sermons, by Leonard Sweet