James 1:19-27 · Listening and Doing
Had-To
James 1:17-27
Sermon
by Leonard Sweet
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Think when you get to heaven you will experience "culture shock"? This text from James teaches that there shouldn't be any culture shock in heaven. "Had-To" people are persons who bring a little bit of heaven to Earth.

In the 1970s, futurist Alvin Toffler coined the phrase "culture shock" to describe the effect rapidly advancing technology was having on civilization. But in truth, what Toffler described wasn't so much a shock to our "culture" as it was the flowering of technological gee-whiz gadgetry that worked to change the face and pace of society. Basically, people are not "shocked" by technological advances as much as they are intrigued by them. People love to "play." Is there anything quite so enchanting as a new electronic "toy"?

Ever wonder why "science fiction" stories and movies are so wildly popular? It's not because the alien worlds our imaginations envision are so weirdly different or unexpected. The "Star Trek" genre thrives because they tell tales laced with all the culturally familiar values and notions we can identify with. The difference is they get to have lots more elaborate toys to play with than we do.

Adaptive human beings can easily deal with gadget changes. It's only when we begin to experience genuine cultural changes changes in moral codes, basic values and guiding principles that we finally begin to feel the tremors of a serious "culture shock."

It's a shock to our system when we hear about a group of 12-year-olds brutally gang raping and then murdering an 8-year- old girl.

It's a shock to our system when "protective" authorities return an abused child to her abusive mother where she is then suffocated at the hands of that parent.

It's a shock to our system when we see people living their whole lives birth to death on top of a garbage dump in Manila.

It's a shock to our system when we are told years later how AIDS-contaminated blood was allowed to continue as a part of the French national blood supply.

It's a shock to our system when a young, unmarried, college-student couple deal with an unplanned pregnancy by delivering the child in a Motel 6 and then dumping the baby out in the trash to die.

Those are the real culture shocks events still too far outside the realm of what our cultural psyche deems acceptable that they send tremors through our souls.

Each one of us has his or her own threshold of "shock-ability." Some changes roll right off your back. Other changes merely annoy you. Others disturb you down to the depths of your soul. But did you ever notice that those people who seem most sensitive to every little cultural change, every lifestyle blip are the same people who yearn the most for the long-awaited peace and stability of a future heavenly existence?

Hello! Talk about culture shock! You tell me why it is, when we have a terrible time adjusting to the whole notion of an automated teller giving us our cash, we are convinced that we will feel completely comfortable in a new existence where there is no such thing as a credit card! We blithely assume heaven will be so, well, "heavenly," that we never even consider what kinds of "culture shocks" we will encounter there:

where we turn the other cheek instead of getting even.

where gold is as dust while goodness is treasured.

where love is neither a full-body contact sport nor a winner-take-all competition, but is the atmosphere we breathe.

where instead of struggling to gouge out a niche for ourselves, we are enfolded by the unity of peace.

where the only designer label to be found reads "Graced by God" and it is found on everyone and everything.

If the truth be told, won't this place called "heaven" in actuality be utterly foreign to us and our experience? Won't we experience a form of "culture shock" greater than any we have ever known before?

But wait. Before you decide to be buried with a bottle of Extra-strength Tylenol by your side to help you cope consider today's epistle lesson.

The text from James declares that heaven should not be such a "shock" to our systems after all. (I want to thank Dr. Paul Jaw of Montclair, New Jersey, for helping me to understand this text over lunch one day.) First, the writer reminds us, that every "generous act" and "every perfect gift" we experience on Earth are in fact heaven-sent from God. Each moment of grace and goodness we experience during our lifetime is a tiny glimpse, a momentary preparation, a "prolepsis," for the heaven that awaits us. In stunning fashion, James' epistle counts our very existence as flawed and frail as it is as one of those heavenly glimpses, for God has created men and women to be an earnest of eternity, "a kind of first fruits of his creatures" (v.18).

Let's push the "Repeat" button: You and I were created as "first fruits" not scooped up from the bottom of some cosmic barrel. Heavenly ways and divine ordinances should not bring any great cultural shock to our spirits but should strike a resonance of familiarity and well-being within us. When we experience "heavenly moments" here on Earth, they should pluck a chord of response in our souls reminding us that this is the way God intends our lives to be experienced.

That is why James' text goes on so stringently, even stridently, to urge believers to act as God's first fruits not merely accept that designation as a static identity. "Be doers of the word, and not merely hearers," (v.22) insists the epistle writer. Once hearers become doers, we can play fragments of heavenly music throughout our earthly existence.

You haven't already heard today some strains of heavenly melodies? You expect you'll probably get through the day without any experience of heaven-on-earth? Then something's wrong with your soul.

You and I are gifted with the capacity to taste of "the powers of the age to come" (Hebrews 6:5).

NOW.

You and I can experience the foretaste of eternity.

NOW.

There is a new label being attached to people: "Had-To." When asked why they tried something unusual, difficult, challenging, strange, they can only respond: "Had-To." The whole thrust of James' epistle is to enable the church to produce "Had-To" people.

As God's "first fruits," "Had-To" Christians do everything they can to make heaven as present as possible here on Earth. "Had-To" Christians live out the meaning of these words when they pray: "Thy kingdom come, thy will be done on earth, as it is in heaven."

If you're serious about preparing for a future heavenly existence with God, you're a "Had-To" believer. "Had-To" Christians are laboring to construct here in their life on Earth as many roughed-out models of that heavenly home as possible. To be sure, every attempt will be incomplete; every model will lack scale and power; yet each and every genuine attempt truly brings a portion of heaven onto this earth.

James concludes with a simple, practical, straightforward directive: "care for orphans and widows in their distress."

"Why are you volunteering to clean up this vacant lot?" "Had-To."

"Why are you taking time off work to read to children at a nearby elementary school?" "Had-To."

"You don't have the time to organize a community day-care program." "Had-To."

"It's a waste of time to work at passing legislation." "Had-To."

"Are you feeling sick? Why did you clean up your own room?" "Had-To."

"Your Alzheimer's parent/ friend/ neighbor doesn't even know you're there. Why do you bother to spend so much time with him or her?" "Had-To."

"Do you really tell your children you love them every day?" "Had-To."

"If you think being kind to people at work who undercut you is going to get you anywhere, you're sucking on your own balloon juice." "Had-To."

"It's no use pushing this church into the 21st century. It'll never change." "Had-To."

"You know how much it costs to feed the birds in winter?" "Had-To."

"Why do you smile or say something nice to everyone you meet?" "Had-To."

"You never waste an opportunity to proclaim Christ's love to others." "Had-To."

You want to escape the real "culture shock"? Then bring heaven to Earth. Be a "Had-To" Christian.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Works, by Leonard Sweet