Romans 8:28-39 · More Than Conquerors
The Simplicity of God's Call
Romans 8:28-39
Sermon
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This sermon is purposely laid out in prose format.

The young man looked up from the ground.

Tears filled his eyes.

The funeral procession had come to a halt,

but standing there beside him was a figure of compassion.

The young man's voice was choked with tears:

"What do I do now," he said.

"He's gone."

And as if asking a question to which he expected no answer, he said this:

"What sense does life make?"

And at that moment, the voice of the figure whispers down to him,

his voice filled with the utmost compassion and understanding:

"Let the dead bury the dead.

Follow me."

The young man reaches out for his hand,

and arises.

Following Our Lord,

he finds life.

Is it really that simple?

- to accept Christ's invitation, and in that way to find life?

"What's the catch?" we ask.

"What do we have to do first?"

"Don't we have to know something before we begin?"

No, it really is that simple:

to get up from wherever we are,

at the edge of a graveside,

in the middle of our doubts,

in the middle of our questions and our probings,

in the depth of our unhappiness or our suffering,

and follow Him.

It really is that simple:

to follow Him, and find life.

But there's a feeling about the Christian life

that before we begin, we have to do a lot of other things first:

that we have to understand everything,

or we're unbelievers;

that we have to believe everything,

or we're hypocrites;

or that we have to be perfect,

or we're not worthy.

And because of these things,

many people never accept Our Lord's invitation.

But this is like saying

that we have to arrive on our journey before we start;

or that we have to know everything before we've begun;

or that we have to be master painters

before we've even taken a lesson.

This is not what Our Lord tells us:

He says,

"Begin with me where you are,

but begin,

simply begin."

"Start where you are,

wherever you are;

believe what you can for now;

reach out for my hand."

"And I will lead you to those answers

to that life,

to that joy and happiness,

to that fulness of life you are seeking."

If you're an atheist,

if you're an agnostic,

if you're searching,

if you're questioning,

if you're hungry and thirsty,

if you're mourning,

if you're tired,

if you're empty,

then how simple Our Lord's invitation is:

"Begin with me where you are,

but begin,

simply begin,

and I will lead you to all things."

In the end, the journey that all of us are on

is really a search for God.

We may think it's success,

but after we've arrived at our goals, what's the big deal?

It's like the popular song that's sung:

"Is that all there is?"

We may think it's sexual excitement,

but one affair after the other cannot satisfy.

There's no such thing as a happy adulterer.

We may think it's a philosophy,

but all philosophies are really searches for God,

and in the end, they drive us beyond themselves to seek Him.

We may think it's fame

money

pleasure

prestige

or a thousand other things,

but in the end, all of these glut us,

and sear us,

and become burdens like mountains.

The journey that all of us are on

is really a search for God.

Because in the end

the things that all of us want from life are these:

the fulness of life,

the life that only God can give:

peace, happiness, inner joy,

hope, purpose, meaning,

a life beyond this one,

heaven, eternity.

And only these things God can give.

And in the end,

the only thing that can satisfy us is God.

How God Himself makes this clear:

"I have come that you may have life,

and have it more abundantly."

And the life that God is talking about

is precisely this:

It's the life that we long for,

the life He offered the young man in mourning,

the life He offers to all of us.

How the psalmist expresses it so well:

"For with thee is the fountain of life,

in thy light, do we see light."

As someone has said,

"We are a God-shaped hole."

And as St. Augustine has said,

"O God, thou hast made us for Thyself,

and our hearts are restless until they find rest in Thee."

The only thing that can satisfy us is God.

This very moment,

Our Lord stands beside each one of us

just as He did by the young man in mourning.

Right now, we may have a lot of questions,

and a lot of different feelings:

we may wonder if something or Someone could touch our lives;

we may wonder if something so simple and so marvelous could be true;

we may have a deep sense of longing inside of us;

we may feel a deep emptiness that longs to be filled;

we may feel afraid of dying,

or be wracked with suffering,

or be lonely,

or be afraid,

or be fed up,

or lost;

we may wonder if anything is worth it;

we may wonder if we are worth anything;

we may wonder if anyone cares;

we may need some answer to a problem,

or strength to face the day,

or peace in the midst of our turmoil,

or a sense of direction,

or even a miracle.

But Our Lord stands beside us this moment.

And His call to us,

in His love for us,

is simple:

"Come to me,

I am with you,

wherever you are,

whatever you feel.

"Don't question now,

don't wonder now,

don't try to figure it out now;

"For I am with you now,

come to me,

and I will lead you to all things."

It really is that simple.

As we begin with Him,

wherever we are,

whatever we think,

whatever we feel,

He fills the deepest longings of our heart.

His call to us is simple,

because His love for us is simple:

He would share His life with us

for which He came into the world.

As we begin with Him,

we will know that Life,

as the young man in mourning did,

as His disciples did,

as all who have followed Him have known,

and as St. Paul did,

who describes His love in this way:

"No, in all these things

we are more than conquerors

through Him who loved us.

"For I am sure

that neither death, nor life,

nor angels, nor principalities,

nor things present, nor things to come,

nor powers, nor height, nor depth,

nor anything else in all creation,

will be able to separate us

from the love of God in Christ Jesus

Our Lord."

A Life that is ever with us,

His life,

both now,

and forever.

Amen.

PRAYER OF ST. AUGUSTINE

You are great, O Lord, and greatly to be praised: great is your power and to your wisdom there is no limit ... For you have made us for yourself, and our heart is restless until it rests in you.

FROM PSALM 42

As a hart longs for flowing streams,

so longs my soul for Thee, O God.

My soul thirsts for God,

for the Living God.

Why are you cast down, O my soul,

and why are you disquieted within me?

Hope in God; for I shall again praise Him,

my help and my God.

PRAYER OF ST. IGNATIUS LOYOLA

Take, O Lord, and receive my entire liberty, my memory, my understanding and my whole will. All that I am and all that I possess You have given me: I surrender it all to You to be disposed of according to Your will. Give me only Your love and Your grace; with these I will be rich enough, and will desire nothing more. Amen.

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