John 1:43-51 · Jesus Calls Philip and Nathanael
Bloom Where You Are Planted
John 1:43-51
Sermon
by Michael L. Sherer
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Wilhelm Loehe was a young pastor in Bavaria, the southeastern corner of Germany. He finished his theological studies in the early 1840s and began to think about where he might like to serve as a parish pastor.

Loehe had some characteristics that were viewed by some as virtues, by others as liabilities. He was idealistic, determined, courageous, outspoken, and — in the minds of his detractors — brash. While studying theology, he had come to the conclusion that his expression of Christianity, the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Bavaria, was too worldly. It was giving in to relativizing what he believed was a clear and pure gospel message, one not to be compromised.

Loehe was especially concerned about the confessional stance of the church in his generation. He wanted a clear, solid, straightforward approach to Christian doctrine to be lifted up. This did not sit well with the more accommodating leadership of the church in Bavaria. Even though he was a gifted preacher, one who appeared to have a great future awaiting him in what could have been one of the large, prestigious congregations in the city of Nuremberg, his superiors saw to it that he got no reward for what they saw to be his stubborn impertinence.

And so, when it came time for Loehe to be assigned to a congregation, he got the shock of his life. Instead of being added to the ministerial staff of a large city parish, he was assigned to a backwater — a village with an almost unspellable and unpronounceable name, one that many considered to be ‘a mudhole of a place.’

In the village of Neuendettelsau [a pronouncer for proclaimers: Noy-en-DETT-el-sow], the young clergyman could have fallen into despair and cursed his very bad luck. But he didn’t. He decided to put his considerable gifts for ministry to work and, to borrow a phrase, to “bloom where he was planted.”

Another phrase was probably in the back of his mind. It would have been a line from today’s gospel reading. “Can any good thing come out of [a dead-end village] Nazareth?” Can any good thing come out of a mud hole like Neuendettelsau?

Loehe spent his entire ministry there. Over time, the Lutheran congregation at Neuendettelsau, once considered to be on its last legs and ready to be shut down, became a thriving and rapidly growing faith community. Loehe was responsible for turning his ‘mudhole of a place’ into a thriving ministry center. His parish gave birth to schools for children and adults, training centers for deaconesses and missionary pastors, a hospital, and an orphanage.

One-hundred-fifty years later, tourists visiting in Saint Lorenz, the largest Lutheran congregation in Nuremberg, Germany, are greeted with displays describing the significant ministry and mission outreach work of the Bavarian Lutheran Church. An interesting, and highly ironic, sentence in that display declares, “If you want to see this ministry being carried out at its best, you need to visit the village of Neuendettelsau.”

Can any good thing come out of a mud-hole? Can any good thing come out of a dying inner-city congregation? Out of a tiny group in a suburban church trying to do something to improve the world in some small way? Out of a handful of committed church folk eager to change their neighborhood, their block, their town or city, when the group is only populated by pious nobodies?

The implied answer in today’s gospel is a resounding Yes! In fact, that’s where good things have almost always come from.

I doubt Jesus’ friends and relatives ever told him to “bloom where you’re planted.” That expression belongs to our age, not theirs. In fact, there’s every chance that the people who knew Jesus as a youth and a young adult may have entertained serious doubts about him ever amounting to anything much. Like Loehe, they may have found him to be pushy, overly-idealistic, rash, and totally unrealistic.

We can only be thankful he didn’t stay in Nazareth.

We can only be thankful ministry pioneers in our day don’t give up and quit.

We can only be thankful that many people in this congregation today, perhaps also you, have decided to bloom where they’re planted, and to become instruments of God. That’s hopeful for our shared future.

God always prospers the work of the faithful, even in ways we don’t anticipate.

Rejoice and be glad!

CSS Publishing Company, Inc., The World According to Jesus: Twelve Sermons for Advent, Christmas, and Epiphany, by Michael L. Sherer