Ephesians 2:11-22 · One in Christ
Four Cornerstones
Ephesians 2:11-22
Sermon
by Leonard Sweet
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Both Elizabeth and I hail from paper-mill towns. A few years ago the blue collar-redneck-good-old-boy logging town Elizabeth grew up in (Springfield, Oregon) found itself very interested all of a sudden in building sushi bars and trendy, high-tech fitness centers. Why? Sony Corporation seriously considered the town as a new factory headquarters site. Like every other economically struggling small town, the prospect of a large employer coming to town with deep pockets and wide wants encouraged the community to vigorously court this big corporation.

This same courtship dance has been going on all over the world for millennia. During those culturally and physically harsh centuries known as the Middle Ages or medieval period, small villages and even large towns could be wiped off the map by a few bad crops or a frightening plague. Town leaders, landed aristocracy, and church authorities knew that the best way to ensure the continued existence, growth, and good fortune of their community was to somehow become a "cathedral town." Vying for the attention of influential church and court members in order to be selected as the location for a new cathedral was serious and often high-intrigue business.

A new cathedral took decades, even lifetimes, to build. Generations would be assured steady work, both for skilled craftsmen (stone masons, architects, glass blowers, carvers, carpenters, etc.) and common laborers. To feed, cloth, entertain, and house this permanent population of workers, a merchant class, an agricultural base, and a steady supply of servants were necessary. The economic, commercial, and cultural boon that the cathedral building industry brought to numerous struggling communities throughout Europe created new urban centers and made possible the birth of those new intellectual capitals that would usher in the Renaissance.

Today when we think of these great European cathedrals we visualize soaring structures with lofty towers and flying buttresses. Cathedrals were the skyscrapers of the medieval landscape. But like their modern descendants that defined the skyline of the 20th century, all that altitude depended as much upon an artistry and architectural genius located below ground as above.

How many of you here this morning have ever visited a medieval cathedral? The tours start with us staring up to the sky. But the tour often ends with what is to me the most awe-inspiring part of the visit. Guides take their guests down into the deep crypts that lie beneath all these ancient architectural giants.

Descending the damp, dark stairs of each cathedral, one begins to see stone roots that reach down fifty feet, a hundred feet, or even more. At the very bottom of these cavernous depths, the dirty and unadorned walls are made of the most massive stone blocks imaginable. There's no delicate carving, no play of light and shadow, and no stained glass splendor. Only row upon row of mammoth rocks holding the full weight of the cathedral on their backs. As one tour guide explained this dark, stark view to her cowed crowd: "You have to see this to understand the beauty and power of what is above. The church cannot soar toward heaven without a foundation this deep and this strong."

With this new vision of a foundation it's easy to see why Jesus compared himself to a cornerstone (not, as it is sometimes erroneously translated, as a capstone). With Jesus as cornerstone any kind of structure can rise up from the foundation. But if a cornerstone gets its identity from its strength, it gets its name from its proximity to the other foundational stones. If Jesus is to be our "cornerstone," then we should think of his role as four-fold, providing strength for us in each of the four directions our own spiritual cathedral may face.

To the north we have the cornerstone that is Jesus as Birthstone. To the south we have the cornerstone that is Jesus as Grindstone. To the east we have the cornerstone that is Jesus as Livingstone. To the west we have the cornerstone that is Jesus as ‘Rolled Stone’.

North: Jesus as Birthstone

Your birth certificate has the divine written all over it.

Son of . . . God.

Daughter of . . . God.

Native State . . . Heaven.

"Your nest is set in the rock."

Quaker author Phillip Gulley writes about his children in Front Porch Tales (Sisters, OR: Multnomah Press, 1997): "When we were expecting our first child, we decided we wanted to have five children. Then our first child was born and we thought two children had a nice ring to it. . . . Then we became pregnant with our second child . . . When our first pregnancy test came up positive, I called a hundred of my closest friends. When our second pregnancy test turned pink, I called my therapist."

"When a first child drops his pacifier, we boil it for ten minutes. When the second child drops her pacifier, we tell the dog to fetch."

But: "When I pray for my children at night, my affection for each is the same. I suspect that's how God must feel, too. For God, every child is a first born." (As quoted in John M. Buchanan, "Orphans No More," sermon preached May 9, 1999, Fourth Presbyterian Church, Chicago, IL.)

In the Deuteronomy 32:18, we're instructed to "remember the Rock from when you were hewn." Or "You were unmindful of the Rock that bore you; you forgot the God who gave you birth."

So let's remember for a moment: From God we came. To God we return. Say that with me. "From God we came. To God we return."

Where did you come from? . . . "From God we came."

Where are you going? . . . . "To God we return."

Your name is written in the Lamb's book of life.

Do you believe that? Then all this is true. When I nod my head, say your name. Let's give this a try:

Genesis 1:27 And God created (nod – say your name) in God's own image.

Let's try again.

Psalm 29:11 The Lord shall give strength to [your name]; the Lord shall give (your name) blessings." Or "The Lord gives strength to (your name); the Lord blesses (your name) with peace.

Proverbs 3:26 For the Lord will be (your name) confidence.

1 Corinthians 12:7 But to each one (insert name here) is given the manifestation of the Spirit for the common good." Or "To each one (insert name here) the manifestation of the Spirit is given for the common good.

1 Corinthians 12:18 But in fact God has arranged the parts (insert name here) every one of them, just as he wanted them to be.

We're birthed in the image of God. There is no higher compliment on earth than that. Never forget who birthed us – from whence we came, and to whom we return.

Where did you come from? Where are you going?

South: Jesus as Grindstone or Fire and Brimstone

A grindstone is an abrasive that grinds away the dross and grime. Jesus isn't just lovey-dovey. Jesus is fire and brimstone that refines us in the fire and polishes us up to reflect the image of Christ in our lives.

What in your life needs the grindstone? jealousy? rage? greed?

In this consumer culture it seems we need more grinding than ever. That word "consumer" comes from the word "consumption." Consumption used to be a sickness in which the body wasted away to nothing. People often died of consumption. Just the word "consumption" sent shivers up people's spines. To say of someone that "She has consumption" was not unlike saying of people earlier in history, "He has leprosy."

Consumption is still a sickness people are dying of. We're a consumptive culture. But it's not our bodies that are wasting away so much as our souls and spirits that are wasting away to nothing. We're a consumptive culture. We are dying of consumption. Each of us is being turned into a "consumer" as our chief identity. The dictionary defines a "consumer" as "a person who buys goods or services for his own needs" and not for the needs of others or for "use in the production of other goods for resale."

One of the great novelists of western literature, Theodore Dreiser, talked about the rocks crying out as the voice of materialism. It's Dreiser's argument that we've developed a listening ear for the voice of materialism, and can hear the "voice of the so-called inanimate." Dreiser does this through his heroine in Sister Carrie:

"When she came within an earshot of their pleading, desire in her bent a willing ear. Ah, ah! The voice of the so-called inanimate. Who shall translate for us the language of the stones?

'My dear,' said the lace collar she secured from Partridge's, 'I fit you beautifully; don't give me up.'

'Ah such little feet,' said the leather of the soft new shoes, 'how effectively I cover them; what a pity they should ever want my aid.' " Sister Carrie. New York: Doubleday, Page, 1900, 111.

Are we "hearing" the cries of goods and gadgets ("buy me!" "Come to me!") more than the cries of the needy and hurting? Jesus the Grindstone hones our ears to hear the cries of truth and love. NORTH

Life is mostly froth and bubble, Two things stand like stone, Kindness in another's trouble, Courage in your own."

– Australian poet Adam Lindsay Gordon (1833-1870), "Ye Wearie Wayfarer," fytte 8: "Finis Exoptatus," in The Poems of Adam Lindsay, ed. Frank Maldon Robb. London: Oxford University Press, 1912, 35.

A grindstone can also pulverize problems into usefulness. Corn kernels are crushed into corn meal. Wheat is ground into flour. Our 3-year-old has medication he must take every day, but he doesn't understand about swallowing bitter pills whole – and he certainly wouldn't even if he could. However, by means of a small, self-contained mortar and pestle, a portable grindstone, we're able to pulverize his pills and stir them surreptitiously into his twice-daily applesauce. Likewise Jesus the grindstone works in our lives to transform bitter lessons into new wisdom.

East: Jesus as Living Stone

The sun rises in the east. Facing the east is Jesus as our Rock and Redeemer – our Savior and our Shelter in the time of storm. Christians don't need worry stones, because we have the Livingstone.

No Christian buildings before 313 A.D. have survived, although we know that specific spaces were being built for worship by 300 A.D. The early Christians met in "house-churches," where they painted biblical images on the walls. The only "house-church" to survive is in Syria at Dura-Europos, and the earliest image we have that served as a backdrop for worship is in a small room that served as a baptistery. Here was the image of a shepherd draping a sheep over his shoulders and his flock in front of him.

The earliest worship image is of Jesus as redeemer, as savior, as the Good Shepherd who saves his sheep and calls his sheep by name. (John 10:11).

The earliest Christians first knew Jesus as savior of the world and shepherd of their souls.

"You can never be sure in the long run what's success or failure. Stumbling blocks have an uncanny habit of turning into stepping-stones. The young man who loses a leg thinks it's a disaster until a war breaks out, then he's pleased because he isn't enlisted. When the enemy reaches his village it's a disaster because he can't run away. Then he's fortunate because only the able-bodied are put to forced labor. He may well end up with a pension so that he has the leisure to become a great artist or thinker, or better still, decide to become a simple ferryman.

Who knows what's good or bad, success or failure in the long term? It may be that there's no success like failure and no failure like success. The break up of a relationship can seem like a disaster at the time, but a few years later one can look back and see it as a liberation, the beginning of a new way of life with unimagined possibilities of fulfillment." – British Philosopher Peter Marshall, Riding the Wind: A New Philosophy for a New Era. New York: Cassell, 1998, 232.

It's unlikely that Peter and John had expected to be thrown into prison and then hauled before the Sanhedrin court at what's virtually their first outing as apostles of Christ. Their new-found eloquence and evangelical fervor had filled them with optimism for the cause of Christ. Despite Jesus' own dire predictions and ultimate experience their immediate incarceration must have been quite a surprise. Yet it was when they were called before their enemies that Jesus' followers became their most ardent and articulate. And each time they came before a notable entity or enemy the name of Jesus spread ever more widely and wondrously.

West: The sun sets in the west; Jesus as ‘Rolled stone.’

Jesus never attended a funeral. He loved weddings. But he never attended funerals. He rolls every stone away, even the stones of disease and death.

The annual children's Easter play was being planned. Each child was given an opportunity to make a request for what part they wanted to play. Of course, the parts that went the quickest were the parts that had the biggest speaking part.

But one lad specifically requested a non-speaking part: he wanted to play the role of the stone guarding the entrance to Jesus' tomb.

The play went off with all the usual faux pas and bumbles. Just before everyone was about to leave the church, the director asked the boy if he'd been happy in his role as a stone. "Why did you want to play the stone?" she asked.

With a big smile, the boy replied, "It felt so good to let Jesus out of the tomb!"

The rolled stone lets you out of your every tomb. We have to do battle with evil forces, but we don't have to defeat them. The victory has already been won. Christ's conquest over sin and death is complete. It doesn't need our completion. So while we wrestle against flesh and blood, we wrestle against a force that has already been defeated.

In every city of the world, in every age, you come across or read about people who have looked suffering right in the eye and refused to buckle under.

· Yvonne and Yvette are 32 years old and permanently joined at the head. They have two independent brains, but share one bloodstream. They get on with living.

· Mark Hicks could turn his head only thirty degrees. That's all the control he had of his body. But he became a brilliant painter, and the movie about his life, Gravity Is My Enemy, won an Oscar in 1981.

· Terry Fox, a 22-year-old Canadian who contracted bone cancer, ran the 1800 hundred miles between Saint John's and Thunder Bay with one artificial leg to raise money for cancer research.

· Then there was Helen Keller and Annie Sullivan.

· And there was David Livingstone, the famous explorer of Africa, who at 10 years of age, studied from six in the morning to eight at night. By the time he was 18, he had so mastered Latin that he could read Horace and Virgil with ease.

· The atheist Sigmund Freud lived in constant pain the last 16 years of his life and endured 33 operations. But he stuck to his work to the very end.

· A friend of U.S. Senate Chaplain Lloyd Ogilvie had lost all vitality and enthusiasm and had become boringly negative. Ogilvie confronted him about it and assured him that he now had a choice between degenerating into the grave or living. Weeks later he received a letter of six words: "Dear Lloyd, I've decided to live."

– Jim McGuiggan, Jesus, Hero of Thy Soul: Impressions Left by the Savior's Touch. West Monroe, LA: Howard Press, 1998, 56.

The jail time logged by Peter and John in today's text was only the tiniest earnest of what obstacles, incarcerations, physical abuses, and ridiculing that lay ahead of them. But the gift of the Holy Spirit which had blown into their lives, into their hearts, and into their souls, kept the new apostles unwaveringly fixed on preaching Christ. Ultimately every one of the original twelve disciples met a martyr's death. But no one of them was ever defeated. All had already received the victory of Christ.

Underlying all the foundational walls – to the north, the south, the east, and the west is a rock that's known by one name. Peter boldly declared before the Sanhedrin that the name of this rock was "Jesus Christ of Nazareth." This is a particularly all-inclusive announcement for in it Peter gives his master's personal name (Jesus), his divine mission (Christ or Messiah), and his own foundational roots (Nazareth). The name of Jesus is carved in the cornerstone of a faithful, spirit-filled life.

Revelation 2:17 reads, "Let anyone who has an ear listen to what the Spirit is saying to the churches. To everyone who conquers I will give some of the hidden manna, and I will give a white stone, and on the white stone is written a new name that no one knows except the one who receives it."

Where Peter Drucker is the U.S.'s favorite business thinker, Charles Handy is perhaps the most respected management theorist in the world today. Handy tells of being "haunted" by the passage in Revelation 2:17 where it says, "To anyone who prevails, the Spirit says, I will give a white stone, on which is written a new name which no one knows except he who receives it."

Because of this passage, Handy keeps a white stone on his desk as a reminder of his uniqueness and divine naming. (The Age of Paradox [1994], 245.)

And Gen-Xers take note: In Isaiah 49:1 the prophet proclaims, "Your name is inscribed in the hand of God." The Hebrew word here is "tattoo."

You matter to God. You're unique.Your soul is unlike anyone else's in the universe.

"You are a letter of Christ, prepared by us, written not with ink but with the Spirit of the living God, not on tablets of stone but on tablets of human hearts" (2 Corinthians 3:3).

ChristianGlobe Networks, Collected Sermons, by Leonard Sweet