Luke 4:14-30 · Jesus Rejected at Nazareth
The Dachshund Dilemma
Luke 4:14-30
Sermon
by King Duncan
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Like most pastors I’m always looking for ways to improve our church. Recently I ran across a list by Pastor Grant MacDonald of what he calls the “Top Ten Ways to Promote Growth in Your Church.” These suggestions are offered with tongue firmly planted in cheek, but I thought you might enjoy some of them. These are ways we might grow our church:

  1. Offer free frequent flyer miles with every visit!
  2. Use “Big Gulp” communion cups!
  3. Issue “Get Out of Hell Free” cards!
  4. Or how about this one? reclining pews!
  5. Every fourth week raffle off the offering!
  6. Open a Starbucks franchise in our church lobby! (I understand that some churches have already tried something similar to this.)
  7. Become a hosting member of the WWFWE (World Wide Federation of Wrestling Elders)! (1)

How can we have a growing church? What does it take to revive a church? How can a church that is stumbling along recapture the joy and enthusiasm that once gripped its fellowship?

I am firmly convinced that the biggest barrier confronting many churches today is what I call the “Dachshund Dilemma.” The “Dachshund Dilemma” is derived from an old poem about dachshunds dogs that are long of body and short of legs. The poem goes like this:

There was a dachshund,
Once so long
He hadn’t any notion
How long it took to notify
His tail of his emotion;

And so it happened,
While his eyes
Were filled with woe and sadness,
His little tail went wagging on
Because of previous gladness.

This is a good description of the plight of many churches today. We are still wagging our tails, not because of what is going on in our church now, but because we remember 30-40 years ago when the congregation was made up primarily of young adults and the church was filled. “And so it happened, while his eyes were filled with woe and sadness, his little tail went wagging on because of previous gladness.”

How do we deal with the “Dachshund Dilemma”? How do we revive a church whose better days are in the past?

Our lessons for the day suggest three elements that must be present if a church is to be the vital body of Christ God calls us to be. If any of these three are missing, a church regardless of its size, the beauty of its building or the affluence of its congregation is in trouble.

The first of these elements is this the church must have a clear understanding of what it is about. When Jesus began his ministry, the first thing he did was to announce his mission:

“The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has chosen me to bring good news to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim liberty to the captives and recovery of sight to the blind, to set free the oppressed and announce the acceptable year of the Lord.”

From his baptism to his death upon the cross of Calvary, Jesus understood what he was here for. The question is, do we? What is our purpose as the church of Jesus Christ today?

John W. Meister once made this disturbing observation: “It seems to me that the church in our generation suffers its most shocking lack of power from the failure of particular churches to define their reason for being.” Meister went on to tell about a four-page “Church Information Form” that his denomination used to send out. The first three pages were concerned with statistical information. Usually churches have little difficulty with these, said Meister. The last page, however, led off with this question: “What is the particular mission of your particular church?” Meister said he sat in many of these sessions with church officers and never were they able to answer this question with intelligence and conviction. “Most . . . do not even know that there is such a thing as a mission for the local church,” he said. When his committee prodded the officers for an answer, about the most we could hope for was, “to minister to our people.” Meister concluded with frustration, “That much could be said for the Elks Lodge.”

What is the mission of our church?

In Rachel Carson’s book The Sea Around Us, she describes the microscopic vegetable life of the sea, which provides food for many of the ocean’s smallest creatures. She tells how these little plants drift thousands of miles wherever the currents carry them, with no power or will of their own to direct their own destiny. The plants are named plankton, a Greek word that means “wandering” or “drifting.” Plankton describes the wandering plant life of the ocean. (2)

Plankton may also be a good way to define the life of the church today. We are wandering adrift. What is our mission as a church? Why do we exist? From my studies of Jesus’ ministry and teachings, I believe we exist for two reasons: one is to reach individual people with the good news of God’s love as revealed in Jesus Christ; the second is to influence society to the point that the kingdoms of this earth more closely resemble the kingdom of God.

I was reading a sermon recently by Dr. Ray Pritchard in which he tells about “The 2% Rule.” I don’t know if you are familiar with the 2% concept or not, but it is based on the findings of sociologist and educator Robert Bellah, author of the best-selling book, Habits of the Heart (1985).

Bellah was for a long time a sociologist at the Institute for Advanced Studies at Princeton University. While there he came to this conclusion: “We should not underestimate the significance of the small group of people who have a vision of a just and gentle world . . . The governing values of a whole culture may be changed when 2% of its people have a new vision.”

Think of that! All you need is 2% of the people, according to Bellah, and you can change an entire culture. (3) I wonder if we realize just how powerful we potentially could be. But first we need to define our mission.

Jesus called his followers salt . . . he spoke of the kingdom as leaven. What he was saying is that we should be having an impact on our surrounding culture. A vital church understands its mission.

The second thing that a vital church must have is a sense of unity and fellowship. In our lesson from Corinthians, St. Paul writes, “The body is a unit, though it is made up of many parts; and though all its parts are many, they form one body. So it is with Christ . . .”

The church at Corinth was made up of people from both Jewish and Gentile backgrounds. Some had worshipped idols. Some were slaves, some free. Paul knew that they could not effectively serve Christ if they were torn into little cliques.

So it is with the church today. If we are to be effective in winning people and influencing society, we need unity. We need to think of ourselves as one family. One body.

There is fascinating story that comes out of the D-Day invasion of World War II. It involves our army’s 101st Airborne Division.

Shortly after midnight on June 6th, 1944, elements of the 101st parachuted into the darkness of France. Their mission was to link up with one another, then secure the key bridges and crossroads for the soldiers who would land on the beaches later that morning. As often happens in war, things didn’t go as planned. Heavy cloud cover and poor visibility forced planes to scatter before they reached their drop zones. As a result, soldiers were dropped miles from one another all over the French countryside.

In the early morning darkness and confusion, General Maxwell Taylor, commander of the 101st Airborne, found himself all alone in the pitch black. When he spotted another soldier groping his way through the darkness, he demanded the individual identify himself. It was one of his troops, just as lost and frightened as he.

The two were so overjoyed to find each other they put aside military protocol and hugged one another. “It was at that very moment I knew we were going to win the war,” said General Taylor. (4) When a general and a private understand that they are one, they are ready for battle.

It’s like a 97-year-old lady who says she learned the most important lesson in her life when she was only a child. When she was a young girl she and some friends hitched up their long skirts to climb Mount Washington in New Hampshire. They went too far and before they knew it a late afternoon fog set in so thick they couldn’t see their hands in front of their faces. No one knew the way down, so they agreed they would all hold hands and they would not, under any circumstances, let go of each other. And so they inched their way down one step at a time, all of them clinging to each other in one extended chain. Sometimes they had to stop to argue about which way to go, but the key thing was that none of them let go.

“Sometimes all I could see was the hand ahead of me and the one behind me,” this woman said. “Sometimes my arms ached so badly I thought I would cry out loud, but that is how we made it at last. We found our way home by holding on to one another.” (5)

That’s a good lesson for the church. We make it through life’s difficult times by holding on to one another. Even geese know that. Watch a large flock of Canadian geese winging their way in a V formation to the north or south. We’re told that when a goose gets sick, or perhaps is wounded by a shot, it never falls from formation by itself. Two other geese also fall out of formation with it and follow the ailing goose down to the ground. One of them is very often the mate of the wounded bird, since geese mate for life and are extremely loyal to their mates. Once on the ground, the healthy birds help protect the wounded bird and care for him as much as possible, even to the point of throwing themselves between the weakened bird and possible predators. They stay with him until he is either able to fly, or until he is dead. Then, and only then, do they launch out on their own. In most cases, they wait for another group of geese to fly overhead and they join them, adding to the safety and flying efficiency of their numbers. (6)

A vital church is one that understands its mission in the world, at the same time caring for the members of its flock.

This brings us to the final element in a growing church: in a growing church each person knows that he or she has a ministry to fulfill. As St. Paul tells us: “All of you are Christ’s body, and each one is part of it . . .” Some are the eye, some the ear, some the mouth, some are the feet . . . Paul speaks of the various gifts or vocations as parts of the body. But one thing is clear everyone has his or her role to play, and no part is more important than another.

Simon Peter was the rock of the church at Jerusalem. Yet there would have been no Simon Peter leading the church if there had been no humble Andrew to lead Simon to Christ. Some of you may never occupy an exalted leadership role in the church, but your life may touch the life of another whom God will use in a great and splendid way.

St. Paul was probably the second most influential person who ever lived, after Christ himself. Wonder how effective Paul would have been had it not been for Barnabas, who had that marvelous gift of encouragement. When Saul of Tarsus claimed Jesus Christ had turned him around, the disciples in Jerusalem refused to believe it, or accept him. They gave him the cold shoulder. You can understand their feelings. The Jerusalem disciples thought Saul had joined the spy business. They suspected their arch-persecutor of adopting a deceitful ploy. By becoming an undercover agent in Christian guise, he would discover the followers of the Way. They feared he would send them to prison or to death, but Barnabas believed the best about Saul. Taking him to the leaders of the Jerusalem church, Barnabas vouched for his conversion. He documented the validity of Saul’s transformation by reporting his public preaching of Christ in Damascus. Because the apostles knew Barnabas and trusted him, they accepted Saul. (7)

How grateful I am that there are persons in our church family with the spirit of Andrew the spirit of evangelism, and Barnabas the spirit of encouragement.

Each of us has a gift that Christ can use in the building of his kingdom. This is no dead shrine. This is the body of the living Christ. We are all parts of it. I am just one member of the body. My role is no greater than yours. When each of us feels that we have a calling to fulfill, we will see great things happen in this church.

In the great hymn “The Church’s One Foundation,” we sing that the gates of hell shall not prevail against the church of Jesus Christ. We can become that kind of church militant and triumphant when we recover our sense of mission and ministry, and when we realize that each of us has a part to play if we are to be God’s people in the world today.


1 Quoted in David J. Ernsberger, Reviving the Local Church (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1969).

2 Robert A. Raines, New Life in the Church (San Francisco: Harper & Row, Publishers, 1961).

3. http://www.keepbelieving.com/sermon/1996-05-26-A-Few-Good-Men/.

4. “Saving A Sinking Ship,” by Bob Moeller, Leadership, Spring 1996, p. 51.

5. Rev. Shelly White Wood, http://www.cedarheights.org/sermons/S060813.html.

6. God’s Little Devotional Book (Tulsa, OK: Honor Books, Inc., 1973), p. 17.

7. Charles Mylander, Secrets for Growing Churches (San Francisco: Harper& Row, Publishers, 1979).

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Dynamic Preaching First Quarter 2010 Sermons, by King Duncan