Luke 17:1-10 · Sin, Faith, Duty
When the Going Gets Tough ... the Tough Start Praying!
Luke 17:5-10
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Ever since the sign went up on our property that our church was coming I've gotten phone calls from people asking when we'll have a church. I can be a smart aleck as some of you will attest and so I'm often quick to respond that we already have a church, we just don't have a building. "Well," they usually say, "give me a call when you get the building done; I'm not going to worship in a high school cafeteria." Before I can give my canned speech about the difference between a church and the building I realize I'm talking to a dead phone. A friend of mine, who planted a church fifteen years ago told me not to be surprised if at our first service in our new building that some of these people will show up and say ei­ther, "I'm sure glad you finally got the church built" or "When are you going to build the real church building?" I'll bet he's telling the truth and I know that it won't be easy to keep a civil tongue. At least, it won't be for me. But, of course, we must.

I understand that way of thinking, I really do. Like most of you I have worshiped in buildings that looked, felt, and smelled like a church. I love that experience. I never imagined, as has been the case for us, that we would worship in so many unique settings, but what rich experiences those have been for us, even though the high school cafeteria with humming pop machines and sticky floors and the acoustics of a ball-bearing factory was difficult for many of us. Some guests never returned and when we asked them why we found that they just couldn't get their souls around worshiping in such settings. Oh, dear ... what's a church to do without a building?

And now, as I say to people who ask, we're in the middle of our first building program. Finally we're off and running. In some ways, that's true. But every time I say it, I feel like I'm lying. It seems most times that we're right at the very beginning of the project and since there have been so darn many stumbling blocks I often wonder whether we'll ever get on with the actual work of building the building. Every time we turn around there are red flags and roadblocks. I know that you and I don't have anything close to the patience of Job ... but here we are, trying to build a building while building the church. Or as I've often said, it's like trying to build a plane while flying it. Wherever it is that we are, it just feels lousy most of the time and our supply of hope and faith is sometimes running low.

It's probably a folktale, but I heard about a little church in Ten­nessee that went through something like we're going through. It seems that a wealthy friend of the congregation willed them a chunk of land and they proceeded to build their worship facility. They didn't find out until very close to the planned opening that the park­ing lot was too small and until they greatly increased the capacity of it, they wouldn't be allowed to use their new building. Unfortu­nately, they had used up every square inch of their land except, of course, for the hill behind the building site. If they were going to build a larger parking lot they would literally have to move a small mountain.

Undaunted, the pastor announced on the Sunday morning two weeks before the long-anticipated opening that he would meet that evening with all members who had "mountain-moving faith." They would ask God to move the mountain as well as provide the money to have the land paved and striped before the scheduled opening dedication service in two weeks.

Only a handful of the 300 members assembled for prayer. But, boy did they pray! For almost three hours they lifted their voices to God pleading with him to intercede. At last, huddled in the dark, cold and sore from standing in the cool evening air for so long, the pastor gave a hearty "Amen" and then, "We'll open in two weeks as scheduled." This pastor felt that God hadn't let them down be­fore and that he wouldn't start now.

The next morning (and here comes the part that's hard to be­lieve) there came a loud knock at his study door. Standing there was a construction superintendent who got right to the point. They were building a strip mall nearby and needed a "mountain's worth of fill dirt" before they could do anything else and wondered if the congregation had ever thought of leveling that hill behind them to give the church a little breathing room. If they would let him take the dirt, and it had to be right away, the construction company would level the land, tamp it down, and pave and stripe it. "How does that sound?" he asked. You know what happened, of course. The church opened as planned, in two weeks.

In our gospel passage today, Jesus is asked by the apostles to increase their faith. He replies that if they had faith even as little as the size of a mustard seed they could uproot a mulberry tree and plant it in the sea just by saying so. Well folks, it's time for those of us with mountain-moving faith or mulberry tree-tossing faith to start praying and not stop until we've moved a mountain or two, or a mulberry tree or two ourselves. This building is not going to be built on time until we get God involved in all this.

I was at a meeting with other church planters recently and came back to the office to the message that we had to file two more easements (in addition to the two we filed earlier in the week) be­cause someone had forgotten to tell so and so that it needed to be done. "Great!" I shouted to no one at all. "Another delay in an already long-delayed building project." I flipped. "Lord, how many more stumbling blocks would there be? How much more delay? Why is this happening?" I was ranting and raving until I suddenly realized that I was praying. Not the nice sedate prayers of my child­hood or seminary days, and certainly not the kind of prayers that were expected of me on Sunday mornings, but I was praying none­theless. I was praying as best I could with faith the size of a mus­tard seed hoping it was enough faith to move mountains.

I didn't know how I would tell the congregation that we were delayed yet again, that this building was really going to be built, honest it was. I knew your patience was stretched, so was mine, so was that of everyone working on the project. I finally settled down enough to realize that I needed to do something productive and that's when I read today's gospel again. It was clear as can be. Jesus was saying that we already have enough faith, that it was time to start praying, fasting, and pleading. It was time to start putting this faith (small as it might seem to us) into action. We had a mountain to move and prayer is what we needed to get it done. We needed to meet, strategize, and figure out a way through this mess, but the prayers of everyone needed to go with us so that we'd act with wisdom and grace. As we so often say in the prayers of the people, "pray for the church." Yes, please, pray for the church.

I once heard the story about a drought that threatened the crops in a small village. The priest told his flock to go home and to fast and pray and return to the church the following week for a special prayer service in which they would ask God for rain. The villagers went home and prayed and fasted and returned just as the good father had asked them but as soon as the priest saw them, he was furious. He yelled at them, "Go away, we will not do our prayers. You do not believe."

"But, father," they protested, "we fasted and we prayed and we believe."

"Believe? You believe? Then tell me, where are your umbrellas?"

I am asking you to pray and bring your umbrellas. Pray with whatever faith you have that obstacles will be removed, that what­ever is working against us will be cast aside, and that we'll be able to proceed quickly. Drive out to the property and stand on the spot and dream of the ministry that we'll be able to do in and through this building. Come and walk on the lot and ask God how we can use the time we have to prepare for the work that lies ahead in ministry and to prepare for those who have yet to come through our doors. Don't wait to start new ministries but rather get creative and ask God to give you an idea of how they might be started now. Ask our Lord to give us wisdom and courage in dealing with the powers that be. If you feel so moved, fast from a meal or two, or from your favorite television show, and offer that as prayer. We all must pray. You never know how God is going to work.

There is a story from an unknown source that I heard long ago about an old man named Sam who had three sons: Danny, Johnny, and Samuel. No one in the family ever set foot inside a church as far as anyone could remember. The pastor and the others in the church tried for years to interest the family in coming to church but to no avail. Then one day, as the story goes, a rattlesnake bit Sam. The doctor was called and he did everything he could to help him, but it looked certain that Sam would die from the bite. So, to the astonishment of everyone gathered at his bedside, Sam asked that the pastor be called.

The somewhat surprised pastor arrived, and after greeting everyone began to pray as follows: "O wise and gracious Father, we give you thanks that in your wisdom you sent this rattlesnake to bite Sam. He has never darkened the door of our church and we have no reason to believe that he has, in all his time on earth, ever prayed or even acknowledged that you exist. So now we pray that this experience will be a valuable lesson to him and will lead to his genuine repentance and his acceptance of your Son as his Savior.

"And now, O Father, we pray that you will send yet another rattlesnake to bite Danny, and still another to bite Johnny, and a third really nasty one to bite Samuel. For years we have done ev­erything we knew to get them to turn to you, but it was all in vain. It seems, therefore, that what all our work could not do, this lowly rattlesnake has done. Therefore it seems to us that the only thing that will accomplish your will for this family is rattlesnakes; so, Lord, send us bigger and better rattlesnakes. Amen."

By now you may be confused. I've asked you to pray and bring your umbrellas. I'm a little afraid that some of you might pray for rattlesnakes. I'm actually afraid that I might pray for rattlesnakes! But most of all ... most of all I'm asking all of us to please pray that we will remain in communion with each other.

We're going to be all right. We're going to move mountains and we're going to continue to learn what it means to be a part of the body of Christ — to learn what God wants us to do and be — and how to wisely use this extra time that's been given to us.

Pray this week, my brothers and sisters in Christ. Pray without ceasing. Pray for your leaders and for those working for us. And next week bring your umbrellas — and be sure to watch out for rattlesnakes! Amen.

CSS Publishing Company, Sermons for Sundays after Pentecost (Middle Third): Where Would You Go To Meet Jesus?