2 Corinthians 5:11--6:2 · The Ministry of Reconciliation
What It Takes to Do the Job
2 Corinthians 5:11--6:2
Sermon
by Paul E. Robinson
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What is Job #1 in your life? We know what it is for Ford, right? At least they say it's Quality.   What is Job #1 in your life? That's not all that bad a question to be asking at the beginning of Lent.  Of course we get a lot of answers from our parents, from our teachers, from our politicians, and even from our pastors. Job #1 is  being home on time, keeping your room clean, not talking back, doing your homework, getting an A, paying your bills, being successful, supporting the party, staying off drugs, knowing your Bible, loving your neighbor, keeping your nose and all other parts clean. 

The list is long. Of course when you get inside the heads of individuals and move away from the “ought” of authority figures to the real desires of a person, things change a bit, don't they? Job #1 for a child may be keeping her distance from that bossy Erin or finding a way to convince Mom and Dad to buy her that new Pokeman or Game Boy. Job #1 for a sixteen-year-old may be dressing right at school, not narking on a friend, or landing a boyfriend. Job #1 for an adult may be getting that advancement or surviving a boss or caring for an elderly parent or dealing with a troubled marriage or a chronically sick or retarded child.

What is Job #1 for you. For me? Lent, that time leading up to Easter, has always been a time of reflection and learning, a time to make some adjustments in our lives. Ah, but what kind of adjustments?

We're getting into the baseball season a bit. My son and I went to the pre-season doubleheader between the Blue Jays and the Indians last Saturday. It got the juices going again. In baseball, the word adjustment is used all the time. You hear the radio announcers talking about it and you hear the hitters and the pitchers talking about. "I need to make an adjustment in the way I release the ball." "He is working on adjusting the position of his elbow as he brings the bat around." You've heard it, right? 

But imagine if my batting coach told me, "You know, Paul, you need to make an adjustment in your swing ..." but never told me what I need to adjust! The coach might come up to me game after game, angry with me for not making the needed adjustment, while I'm trying this and that and the other, not knowing what I'm doing wrong. How much more helpful if I had a skilled batting instructor who would be able to tell me, "Now, Paul, you need to keep your elbow higher and your stance a little more open ..." There, now I could try to do something constructive to improve my hitting. 

I think we sometimes enter Lent with a general idea that there is probably something wrong with us and we probably should find out what it is and then try to change it -- and we've got forty days to complete the job! 

The scripture we're looking at this evening is in the middle of a letter Saint Paul, the first Christian missionary, wrote to a small, new, fledgling Christian house church he got started when he was there. The letter, the second letter to this church that has been saved, was meant to encourage and correct this group of Christians. He first of all explains why he was unable to come to visit them as soon as he had promised them he would. Then he instructs them about the importance of forgiving people within the church who have sinned, and then nails down as clearly as he could what his and their job was as followers of Jesus Christ, what their Job #1 was. 

In chapter 5 he says clearly that the job of the Christian, the job given to all disciples of Jesus Christ, the job description that defines their task is this: to be representatives of Christ, doing what Christ did. And what is that? Was Christ known primarily for being moral and following all the rules? I don't think so. Not according to the religious folks. He broke the Sabbath, talked with women, ate with blatant sinners, and rubbed elbows with dreaded lepers. No, he was crucified for breaking what would be known clearly as moral and religious laws. 

So what was Job #1 for Jesus? He was always breaking down any barrier that had been erected by human beings or by the religious establishment which kept people from God or from one another. No, writes Saint Paul, his quill pen going as fast as he could on that rough scroll paper, 

Anyone who belongs to Christ is a new person. The past is forgotten, and everything is new. God has done it all! He sent Christ to make peace between himself and us, and he has given us the work of making peace between himself and others. -- 2 Corinthians 5:17-18 (NCV)

Lest the Corinth church not get it, he says it again, in a different way:

What we mean is that God was in Christ, offering peace and forgiveness to the people of this world. And he has given us the work of sharing his message about peace. We were sent to speak for Christ, and God is begging you to listen to our message. We speak for Christ and sincerely ask you to make peace with God. -- 2 Corinthians 5:19-20 (NCV) 

If our Job #1 in our walk with God is the work of sharing God's message of peace, of being "ambassadors for Christ," doing what he did then, here and now in our time, what then might that mean in the way we think about what adjustments need to be made in our lives this Lent? 

Does this put a new perspective on our proud striving to drop a pound or two this Lent by limiting ourselves to only two helpings at dinner and dropping our chocolate intake to only two Hershey bars a day? 

Does this even give us pause in our proud goal to read a chapter of the Bible a day, if the purpose is simply to know more about the Bible so we can have more ammunition for those arguments about the Bible at work? 

Saint Paul goes on in the sixth chapter to say this: "We don't want anyone to find fault with our work, and so we try hard not to cause problems. But in everything and in every way we show that we truly are God's servants" (2 Corinthians 6:3-4a CEV). 

What does that mean? What does it mean to be truly God's servants? Never to swear? To keep your room clean? Never to talk back to your parents or your teachers? To know lots of Bible verses by heart? Well, each of these could be important, if they were means to accomplish Job #1, which is helping to break down barriers between God and people and between people and people. 

Saint Paul goes on in the succeeding verses to tell about all the trials and hassles he and his compatriots had gone through, and that how they dealt with those crises was vital in their effectiveness in being a valid, powerful witness to the kind of God they serve, the kind of God they had come to know in Jesus. 

So, today, it might be that during Lent we might look at the way we deal with the major and minor crises in our lives. Does the way we handle them in front of our children and our spouse and our co-workers and our playmates at school and on the playground reflect a closeness with a God others might like finally to come to know? Or do our lives look just as up-tight and our responses to life's traumas just as hopeless and cynical as the next guy's? What might we need to change in our insides, in our relationship with God, that might have an impact on how we relate to the trials we face in the world? That could put a new spin on our Lenten journey, don't you think? 

Just a couple of days ago my wife and I were touched by a story in The Upper Room. It was written by John W. Warner from Texas. The scripture sentence he took as his text was 1 Timothy 4:12: "Set an example for the believers in speech, in life, in love, in faith and in purity."  This is what he wrote: 

When I was in high school, I had the only air pump on the block, so I pumped up all the basketballs in the neighborhood. One day, John, who was in grade school, brought me his basketball I pumped it up and handed it back to him. He tossed it up and down on his hand and gave me an inquisitive look. 

"Scooter," he asked, "why do you spit on the needle?" 

"It makes the needle go into the ball a little easier and keeps it from bending," I replied. 

Then he said, "I always spit on the needle too, because you do it, but I always wondered why." 

His response startled me! What else would he do simply because I did it? 

We all have a person like John in our lives. Somebody, a friend, a family member, a person we don't even know is influenced by our example. If we live as an example to others by following the example of Jesus Christ, then those who imitate us will be led to the light of Christ. 

Job #1. What is your Job #1? Oh, we know that we can't just try to put on a happy face to make a great witness for the Lord. People see through that. But if whatever we do this Lent to improve our health, our faith, our self esteem -- whatever -- is not just for ourselves alone, but also for the purpose of witnessing to the Gospel of Jesus Christ, if what we do this Lent has this double purpose, then perhaps it will also draw from us a double effort, and we and those who come in contact with us will be doubly blessed.       

CSS Publishing Company, Sermons for Sundays in Lent and Easter, by Paul E. Robinson