Acts 2:14-41 · Peter Addresses the Crowd
Taking Aim
Acts 2:14-41
Sermon
by Leonard Sweet
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In 1221 the young Dominican order took on a new member who would ultimately be known as Peter Martyr. Young Peter's parents had been members of the Cathari sect, but Peter was drawn to the Dominicans while a student at the University of Bologna.

A gifted and zealous speaker, Friar Peter became known for his preaching throughout Lombardy. But his notoriety begat jealousy and suspicion. He was accused of immorality (letting women into his monk's cell) and he argued with far too much success and conviction against his old alliance, the Cathari. He was so gifted at attacking this sect that they decided to send a "holy hit squad" to eliminate him.

Friar Peter and his companion Friar Dominic, were attacked and killed by two Cathari assassins in the wood while on their way from Como to Milan. Tradition proclaims that while he lay bleeding and mortally wounded, yet still conscious, Peter prayed for his murderers out loud, while tracing in the ground with his blood-dripped fingers, "Credo" or "Believe."

On Palm Sunday of 1252, when word reached him that his enemies were plotting his death, the forty-six year old brother said from the pulpit: "Let them do their worst. I shall be more powerful dead than alive."

Pope Innocent IV canonized St. Peter of Verona the year after his death. Peter Martyr is still celebrated as the first martyr of the Dominican Order, on his feast day of April 29 – two weeks from today.

His murderer, Carino, later repented and became a Dominican lay-brother.

Of course, today Christians look at such a story with abhorrence, almost incapable of believing how Christians could murder a fellow Christian in such a despicable manner. Surely these Cathari were primitives, somehow essentially different from postmodern pilgrims like ourselves.

Think again.

(I am presenting this as a story you can tell. But best of all would be for you to make this into an activity and actually do it. Have a target up front with a blank sheet of paper for a bulls-eye, and invite people to come up, and draw a quick picture of someone they're angry at – or have sheets in the pews for people to draw on which they can pin to the target up front; or have people come forward, imagine in their mind's eye the person's picture on their target), and then take aim with some darts.)

A young theologian named Sally relates an experience she had in a seminary class, given by her teacher, who we'll call Brother Len. She says Brother Len was known for his elaborate object lessons.

One particular day, Sally walked into seminary and knew they were in for another fun day. On the wall was a big target and on a nearby table were many darts. Brother Len told the students to draw a picture of someone that they disliked or someone who had made them angry . . . and he would allow them to throw darts at the person's picture.

Sally's girlfriend (on her right) drew a stick-figure picture of a girl who had stolen her boyfriend in high school. Another friend (on her left) drew a more elaborate picture of his little brother. Sally drew a picture of Brother Len, putting a great deal of detail into her drawing, even drawing pimples on his face. Sally was pleased at the overall effect she'd achieved.

The class lined up and began throwing darts, with much laughter and hilarity. Some of the students threw their darts with such force that their targets were ripping apart. Sally looked forward to her turn, and was filled with disappointment when Brother Len, because of time limits, asked the students to return to their seats.

As Sally sat thinking about how angry she was at Brother Len because she didn't have a chance to throw darts at her target, Brother Len began removing the target from the wall.

Underneath the target was a picture of Jesus.

A complete hush fell over the room as each student viewed the mangled picture of Jesus; holes and jagged marks covered his face and his eyes were pierced out.

Brother Len said only these words, "In as much as you have done it unto the least of these my brothers and sisters, you have done it unto me."

The students remained in their seats, even after the class was dismissed, their eyes focused on the picture of Christ. Only slowly did they leave the classroom, tears streaming down many of their faces.

Matthew 25:40 And the King will answer and say to them, "Truly I say to you, to the extent that you did it to one of these brothers of Mine, even the least of them, you did it to Me."

Christ's bloody, brutal crucifixion and death is a shocking, slaughterous event. Its sheer brutality sums up the unspeakable horrors and unnamable capabilities of the human condition quite succinctly. The one in all of history who was wholly innocent – that one was unjustly accused, horribly abused, and intentionally sacrificed out of fear of the future and hope of personal gain, a death perpetrated for reasons of political convenience and religious self-righteousness.

The final words of Peter's first public sermon confront his listeners with a stark reality: The Lord, the very Messiah, the Savior of the world, is the one "whom you crucified."

Their fears, their flaws, their frailties, nailed Jesus to the cross. But Peter's word goes far beyond that crowd gathered at his feet. Even as he declared his message was for the people before him, he noted that it was also "for your children and for all who are far away, everyone whom the Lord calls to him" (verse 39).

In other words, the sentence of conviction was for all. But, thankfully, so was the message of forgiveness and salvation. Just as the sins of each new generation find new ways to crucify, so each new generation stands eligible for Gods grace, for the gifts of salvation and new life in the Holy Spirit made possible through Jesus' death and resurrection.

God's offer of grace and forgiveness is open this morning to all who repent: God's offer is open to Jew, Gentile, weak, strong, rich, poor. We might add today that it is an offer open to Al Qaeda terrorists, pedophile priests, Palestinian suicide-bombers, Israeli bigots, vengeance-seeking Americans, frightened, hurt, confused, hate-filled men and women all throughout the world.

In God's eyes ALL of humanity has fallen short, not just certain bad people. Our shortcomings condemn us all equally. The height and breadth of the cross of Christ's atoning death is that we are all offered the same complete rescue by God's decision to save, not condemn, humanity.

God's offer of forgiveness and freedom is there. It's been on the table since Jesus' death. But it requires a human first step in order to be activated in our lives. That first step is called repentance.

"Repent" is what Peter counseled first and foremost to his panicked, guilt-ridden crowd of listeners.

"Repent" (metanoia) means turn around – look at the other side of life. Repentance is an act of human will that we must take, that we must make, in order to open the door to salvation, forgiveness, love, and fulfillment that lies only just before us, waiting to be discovered.

And discover it we must. You don't think we need to repent?

There's an old Russian anecdote about a mountain climber, Mikhail, who falls off a steep cliff. His fellow climber, Ivan, still holding on, yells down: "Are you all right?"

"Yes," comes back the answer.

"I'll throw you a rope and you can climb back up," yells Ivan.

"Won't help," shouts Mikhail. "I'm still falling."

The world is in free-fall.

Don't believe me? You and I live in a American culture where there are two credit cards for every person. A culture where . . .

· A culture that spends as much annually on chewing gum as on missions.

· A culture that gives as much to foreign missions as it spends on a 52-day supply of pet food.

· A culture where bombers (e.g. the B-2 bomber) are literally worth their weight in gold. Actually, they're worth three times their weight in gold: $800,000,000 in gold; 2.3 billion in construction materials.

· A culture where young males in Harlem are less likely to reach the age of 40 than young males in Bangladesh.

· A culture that can make DC-10 airplane engines that last for millions of miles, and Dodge car engines that last less than 100,000 miles.

· A culture where consumer confidence is defined as "the willingness of citizens to go deeper into debt."

· A culture where success is defined as spending most of one's life at the office.

· A culture where well over 4 million children under age 18 live in their grandparents' household, a number that has increased 79 percent since 1970.

· A culture where the most dangerous place is – right after war zones and rioting streets – the home (spousal abuse, child abuse, sexual abuse, drug abuse, domestic violence, etc.).

· A culture where we cut down old-growth forests in the Olympic Peninsula for apple crates.

· A culture where $300 and a coded, e-mail message on the Internet will get a top Russian scientist to tell you how to build a nuclear warhead.

· A culture that is in the midst of an epidemic of clinical depression. Each one of us is more likely to suffer clinical depression at some point in our life than at any time in the past 100 years. People born after 1945 are 3 times more likely to suffer clinical depression than those born before 1945.

· A culture where one in seven Christians (14%) believes that horoscopes generally provide an accurate prediction of the future.

· A culture where Christians can identify more readily the brand of sneakers they're wearing, or the brand of cereal they had for breakfast, than they can identify the version of the Bible they read.

· A culture where only 9% of Americans know what the Great Commission is, only 35% have ever heard of John 3:16, where only 37% can explain the "gospel;" . . . a church where only 25% of self-avowed "born-again" Christians could explain the Great Commission, only 50% could recite John 3:16, and only 84% know what the "gospel" is about.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Collected Sermons, by Leonard Sweet