Acts 1:1-11 · Jesus Taken Up Into Heaven
WaterFire Disciples
Acts 1:1-11
Sermon
by Leonard Sweet
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Does your church have a mission statement? There are very few now that don't. Remind your congregation what it is. Can they recite it by heart?

Does your church have an image statement? There are very few now that do. But in an image culture, it's more important to have an image statement than a mission statement.

The city of Chicago came up with an image statement for itself in 1999 and it brought into the city hundreds of millions of dollars. The image that best captured their history and heritage was the "Cow." Since Borden's seemed to abandon Bessie the Cow, Chicago decided to embrace her and use her to highlight the city's pride of ancestry, both as a slaughterhouse city and as a city that prides itself in its art and architecture. So they commissioned 300 artists to design unique cows, and placed these "artworks" in various architectural locations throughout the city. At the end of the year they auctioned off the 300 "original" cows.

The result? A tourist bonanza and a shot of self esteem into the citizenry of Chicago. The plastering of this image of the cow (by the way, they're still slaughtering Bulls in Chicago) all over the city had the exact reverse effect of what Cincinnati predicted when years ago it laughed out of town an artist who wanted to do the same thing for that city except this time with pigs. Now this year it's trying to do what it was encouraged to do a decade ago.

Providence, Rhodes Island also has an image statement. Providence is called by some the WaterFire City, and its WaterFire Festival has done more to revitalize downtown Providence (and bring to the city a major network show called "Providence") than almost anything else.

Providence has just been named the best city on the east coast in which to live. But it didn't always have that reputation. In fact, fifty years ago, Providence was going the "rust-belt" way of other industrial cities unable to make the transition to an information economy. An "urban revitalization" consultant was hired to recommend new approaches to reversing the downward spiral that Providence found itself in. After extensive study, he made his proposals. Chief among which was the suggestion that the city blow up its perfectly good downtown bridge in order to give people "water experiences" like Providence offered its citizens in earlier days. Much to everyone's surprise, Providence was in the Guinness Book of World Records for having the world's widest bridge - two miles wide at one point. The consultant reasoned that if people once again could connect with the water through small pedestrian bridges, period lighting and water pathways that riddled the downtown, Providence would come alive once again.

The beheading wisdom of "if it ain't bust, break it" laughed the consultant straight out of town. But Providence kept tanking until the gurgle gurgle sounds were deafening, and the urban blight and flight as plain as a dumpster. In desperation the money was raised to take down the bridge that covered the downtown in concrete and give people water experiences again. To the chorus of a lot of "told - you - so's," the city's downward drift proceeded apace.

That's when some art students at RISDE (Rhode Island School of Design) got involved. Remember: what is the native language of artists? Images and metaphors. These students asked for permission and funding to try their hand at creating a festival that would bring people back to downtown Providence, make citizens feel safe about their city once again, and reverse the hemorrhaging of talent and money from the city into the surrounding suburbs and villages.

The first thing these RISDE students did with their grant money was to become deconstructionists. For Rhode Islanders to return to their water city, the water experience first had to be deconstructed and defamiliarized (getting rid of the "been there, done that" syndrome). So the art students commissioned the construction of a couple dozen huge cast iron cauldrons that they permanently anchored in the middle of the rivers and waterways riddling the downtown. Special gondolas were designed and dedicated for filling these giant buckets with firewood to create huge bonfires in the middle of the river.

But in the estimations of these RISDE students, a river coming alive in fountains of fire wasn't enough for the people of Providence to "come to their senses." the original meaning of that phrase was, "bring all the senses into play," and a waterfire festival that only offered something to see wasn't "sensible" enough. What about taste and smell? Food venders who would offer people experiences of the world's cuisine were solicited and contracted. Decentralized food kiosks (not one centralized food court) along the riverfront walkways provided the tastes and smells that helped make the WaterFire festival "make sense." But what about sound? Using the decorative street lights on the bridges and walking paths, surround-sound speakers were installed and hooked up to one turntable with a DJ who created sound experiences to match the interplay of light, dark, and shadows. That left only one more sense touch. What to do? The RISDE students figured that touch was the one sense they didn't need to worry about. Bring that many people together and touch would take care of itself.

Who used to bring the community together? Who used to sponsor the celebrations on the village green that brought everyone together for common experiences? Who used to conduct the festivals that kept communities united and focused on common goals? Can we say the church? Now it's the artists and community planners. And they're stealing our images right out from under our noses because we're clueless about their power and resonance.

If you had to come up with an image statement for Christianity, what would it be?

Can you imagine a better one than "WaterFire?" Just as the Hebrew people were led through the wilderness by WaterFire - a cloud of water by day, a pillar of fire by night: Just as the Hebrew people were given the Ten Commandments from the words of God spoken out of the fire and rain (Deuteronomy 5:22): So Christians are baptized by water and baptized by fire. What did John say? "I have baptized you with water, but he who is to come will baptize you with fire."

From the moment we throw water on a baby's head, water marks us and fire molds us. God's grace is a cleansing stream; God's grace is a consuming fire. Jesus calls us to a waterfire discipleship.

We're more familiar with the water component of waterfire than the fire component. We're more comfortable talking about a soul awash than a soul aroused and on fire.

In their study of people who are making a difference in the world, one hundred moral mentors whose lives are committed to human betterment and justice, the Lilly Endowment funded research team discovered something surprising. Can you guess the one common ingredient, one "common fire" in these people who are exercising the spiritual practices of peace, justice and hope? According to Laurent A. Parks Daloz, Cheryl H. Keen, James P. Keen, Sharon Daloz Parks (Common Fire: Lives of Commitment in a Complex World [Boston: Beacon Press, 1996], 177-80) the one common fire is "anger." Not knowing what to do with this startling finding, the research team calls it a "taboo motivation" that propels people to give their lives to others.

The church has a language for this phenomenon that skirts calling it anger. I grew up with the Baptist language of "burden" and the Methodist lingo of "burning desire." "I have a burden that I need to talk to you about." "There is this burning desire in my soul that you . . ." My parents were always announcing a new burden or burning desire that required we as a family do something or give something to lessen that burden or feed that burning desire.

Do you have a burden? Is your soul burdened? Is there a burning desire at the heart of your soul?

Our kids don't talk of burden or burning desire. They talk of being "freaky." The Christian rock group DC Talk and the organization The Voice of the Martyrs have published a book Jesus Freaks: Stories of Those Who Stood for Jesus: The Ultimate Jesus Freaks (Tulsa, OK: Albury Publishing, 1999) in which they ask this question: what are you willing to die for? Have you counted the cost of your faith? Or as they put it, "what are you freaky" about? They are announcing in no uncertain terms, "I'm a Jesus Freak." We're all freaky about something. What are you freaky about?

Earlier theologians didn't feel the need to mask that word anger with all sorts of lingo and euphemisms. St. Augustine put it like this: "Hope has two daughters, Anger and Courage. Anger at the way things are, and Courage to make things other than they are."

Myles Horton was the founder of the Highlander Center. This was the training center for dozens of the nation's most influential civil rights workers. This is the place where Martin Luther King Jr. heard Pete Seeger sing the song "We Will Overcome," and came away resolving to adopt and adapt the song with one significant change - "We Shall Overcome" - as the theme song of the civil rights movement. In his autobiography, Horton has this to say about his mission:

I had to turn my anger into a slow - burning fire, instead of a consuming fire. You don't want the fire to go out - you never let it go out - and if it ever gets weak, you stoke it. But you don't want it to burn you up. It keeps you going, but you subdue it because you don't want to be destroyed by it. (Myles Horton, The Long Haul: An Autobiography (New York: Doubleday, 1990, 80.)

This is what we often forget about the story of the burning bush in Exodus 3:2. A bush on fire is no big deal in the desert. Lots of bushes spontaneously combust all the time. The big deal here is that the bush was on fire but wasn't consumed.

We're called to burn without burning up to burn without being consumed by the fire. An inflammable faith isn't a biblical faith. Jeremiah didn't really want to be a prophet to Judah. But he found that "If I say, 'I will not mention him, or speak any more in his name', there is in my heart as it were a burning fire shut up in my bones, and I am weary with holding it in, and I cannot" (Jeremiah 20:9). In another place Jeremiah records God saying, "Is not my word like fire, says the Lord, and like a hammer that breaks a rock in pieces?" (Jeremiah 23:29).

Christians are people with hammers pounding in their hearts, with fires burning in their bones, souls on fire that aren't consumed. In fact, the Byzantine liturgy of the Eastern Church praises Mary - the "Godbearer" - as the "burning bush that's not consumed."

Jesus said (Luke 12:49 REV) "I have come to set fire to the earth, and how I wish it were already kindled! I have a baptism to undergo, and what constraint I am under until it [the ordeal] is over."

In Revelation 2:18-29 Jesus is described as the one "who has eyes like a flame of fire." When did Jesus' eyes flame forth? What did Jesus get freaky about? Whited sepulchers, brood of vipers, Satan, dogs, foxes, hypocrites, dirty pots. Jesus even threw a "Temple Tantrum." Sometimes Jesus wasn't what we would call "nice."

In Mark 1:40-45 is the story of a man who has leprosy. Leprosy is a disease which got one rated unclean by the official Hebrew purity code of the day.

This leper breaks the law, approaches Jesus, and says, "If you choose

  • you can make me clean." Mark goes on: "Moved with pity, Jesus stretched out his hand and touched him, and said, 'I do choose. Be made clean.'"

Actually, most scholars today agree and argue that the best translation of the Greek here is not "Moved with Pity" but "moved to anger" (REB).

Why angry? Maybe angry that these people were banished from their family and friends; maybe angry that these people had to wear torn clothing, and wear their hair hanging loose and long so that people could see them coming; maybe angry that these people had to cover their upper lip and cry out, "Unclean, Unclean" whenever a human being came close. Maybe angry at a religious system that declares some people dead, and offers no hope much less no help.

Play Billy Joel's song: "We Didn't Start the Fire" Play The Doors song: "Light My Fire"

Writer Doris Lessing refers to a voltage with each person, a thousand volts of energy for love or hate, for life or death. Psychologist James Hillman talks of a "blue fire" within us that haunts and hounds us.

Canadian theologian Ron Rolheiser, a member of a religious congregation called the Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate, refers to a "holy longing" within each person that shapes our dreams and desires.

"If you want to get warm you must stand near the fire: if you want to be wet you must get into the water." C.S. Lewis, Mere Christianity, rev. and enl. ed. [New York: MacMillan, 1960], 137.)

Conclusion: Do you burn?

Julia "Butterfly" Hill so burned for an ancient, 600 year-old redwood in the rainy Northern California forests that she lived in the tree for two years, never leaving it until Pacific Lumber Company promised not to cut it down.

Do you burn?

John Barnett, of Charlotte, North Carolina, burned with compassion for people in prison after the Million Man March in Washington, but he knew it had to start with him. So he wrote the man who murdered his brother in 1994 and said "I've forgiven you," starting a prison ministry called THUG (True Healing Under God) that pairs up Christians with prisoners for letter - writing and prayers.

Do you burn?

Even a slow burn at the way the bad guys seem to be always winning?

Do you burn?

At the way evil has its way and works its way in our world?

Do you burn?

Has the world ever needed the message of the cross more than now?

Do you burn?

How do you tell that girl with a ring in her navel that God loves her?

Do you burn?

How do you tell the poor that God loves them?

Do you burn?

That millions are fiddling while billions are burning?

Do you burn?

For the things that break God's heart.

Leadership doesn't put out fires. It starts fires. All too often, however, those who start fires in the church are seen as arsonists.

But the fires that Christians start don't consume the people that are set ablaze.

Not too long ago I watched on television some people whose fire was consuming them. In the "Battle for Seattle," I watched as kids in Nike sneakers were breaking Nike store windows to protest the World Trade Organization. A good percentage of the 1000 ngos (non-governmental organizations) worldwide showed up in Seattle, and more than a few latte sipping protestors were seen chanting refrains against Starbucks and smashing Starbucks' windows.

"Known and loved by many for his songs of nonviolence and world peace, Pete Seeger used to jolt his audiences by telling them that inside his guitar case, he kept a rock. He would then explain: 'I get real angry sometimes when I see what's going on in the world, and I like to wrap my fingers around that rock and hold it for a while before I put it back.' Then, pausing for effect, he would add, 'But someday if the music stops working, I might have to use that rock.'"

ChristianGlobe Networks, Collected Sermons, by Leonard Sweet