Exodus 24:1-18 · The Covenant Confirmed
With Your Head In The Clouds
Exodus 24:1-18
Sermon
by King Duncan
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John R. Aurelio in his book, COLORS!, tells a most intriguing story. At the birth of his son a certain king instructed his royal gardener to develop the most magnificent flower ever grown. This magnificent flower would one day be presented to the woman the king's son chose to be his bride.

The royal gardener began at once. He decided that he would focus his attention on the most regal of all the flowers ” the rose. His would be a rose of beauty beyond description. Over the months and years he experimented, blending his roses to create all manner of interesting blooms. The prince did not marry for a long time, so the gardener continued with his work, growing old and feeble in the process. At last, the good news came. The young king had chosen a bride and the date for the royal wedding was set. The gardener was an old man now but his life time of experimentation had paid off. He had produced the most beautiful rose ever grown. He named it the Rainbow Rose.

On the day of the wedding the newlyweds entered the royal garden. They made their way immediately to the regal bloom the old gardener had cultivated over so long a time. The new queen reached down and picked a blossom. Then she turned and faced the old gardener. But the rose she held to her face was not his magnificent Rainbow Rose at all but just a common, ordinary red rose. The old gardener was shocked, then angry, then humiliated. But wait! Suddenly he realized why the queen had passed over his rose. She had discovered the prize rose's only flaw. It had no scent. THE QUEEN WAS BLIND. (1) To her a rose without a scent was no rose at all.

Bear with me for a moment while I draw a parallel to the world of faith. TO SOME CHRISTIANS, FAITH THAT DOES NOT INCLUDE AN ELEMENT OF MYSTICAL EXPERIENCE IS NO FAITH AT ALL! It is like a rose that has no scent. Have you noticed that many people today seem to be hungry for some experience of the supernatural? The dramatic upswing of interest in the existence of angels, of witches, of near death experiences, etc. speak of a longing that people have to go beyond the merely rational.

Certainly this longing is reflected in the New Age movement. There was an interesting news report sometime back. It seems that a company called "Chi Pants" of Santa Cruz, CA, in keeping with the New Age belief in quartz crystals, is now marketing a line of pants. Each pair of the pants has a tiny crystal sewn into the back seam which will rest at the base of the spine when the pants are worn. The company advertises, "You won't feel the crystal; you'll just feel the energy." (2) Interesting.

There was another news story sometime back. New Ager Marybeth Strobel, an artist from Jersey City, NJ, explained why she wears a large chunk of quartz on a strap around her neck. "It puts a circle of power around you that keeps you feeling protected," she says. (3) Well, different strokes for different folks! You and I may scoff but such beliefs have a great appeal for many people.

The rapid growth of many independent Christian churches today is coming at the expense of mainline churches. The reason often given is that mainline churches are too cerebral and not celebrative ” too much emphasis on the head and not enough emphasis on the heart. For some Christians faith that does not include an element of what we might call mystical experience is no faith at all! It is a rose without a scent.

There is something else we ought to acknowledge. MYSTICAL EXPERIENCE IS VERY MUCH A PART OF OUR FAITH. Moses spends six days on a mountain and on the seventh day he hears God speak. Jesus and three of his disciples go up on a mountain and the disciples awaken to see Jesus arraigned in a dazzling white garment and they hear a voice from heaven, "This is My beloved Son with whom I am well-pleased." Later, in his epistle, Peter writes with deep feeling about this experience: "For we did not follow cleverly devised tales when we made known to you the power and coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, but we were eyewitnesses of His majesty. For when He received honor and glory from God the Father, such an utterance as this was made to Him by the Majestic Glory, This is My beloved Son with whom I am well- pleased' and we ourselves heard this utterance made from heaven. . . ." (2 Peter 1: 16-18) Something very strange happened on The Mount of Transfiguration ” something outside of ordinary experience. It had an amazing impact on Peter, James and John. Recalling this experience years later gave them unusual power, unusual confidence, unusual authority to proclaim the newly born Christian faith.

And such experiences are not isolated. Throughout history right until the present day many of the greatest Christians who ever lived have reported experiences that are outside the realm of rational experience.

It is said that a friend wandered into Handel's room just as he was finishing the last notes of the "Hallelujah Chorus." He found the composer with tears streaming down his cheeks. The magnificent work lay completed on the desk in front of him.

"I did think," Handel exclaimed to his friend, "I saw all heaven before me, and the great God Himself." What do you make of an experience such as Handel reported? Is he speaking metaphorically? Or did he really see heaven?

Frederick Buechner is a most respected pastor and writer. In one of his books he tells about a most unusual experience. A friend of his ” an Englishman ” had died very suddenly. A short time later Buechner and his wife were staying with the man's widow overnight. In the night Buechner had a short dream about his friend. He dreamed his friend was standing there in the dark guest room looking very much himself in the navy blue jersey and white slacks he often wore. In his dream Buechner told his friend how much he missed him and how glad he was to see him again. Then Buechner asked, "Are you really there, Dudley." Buechner wanted to know if this was just a dream or was it real. His friend answered that he was really there. "Can you prove it?" Buechner asked him. "Of course," his friend said. Then his friend plucked a strand of wool out of his jersey and tossed it to Buechner which Buechner caught between his thumb and forefinger. Then Buechner awoke.

The next morning at breakfast Buechner told the dream. He'd hardly finished when his wife spoke. She said that she'd seen the strand of wool on the carpet as she was getting dressed. She was sure it hadn't been there the night before. Buechner rushed upstairs to see for himself, and there it was ” a little tangle of navy blue wool.

What do you say about such an experience? Wishful dreaming or authentic experience? What should we say about the role of such experiences in our faith? Should we dismiss them as mere superstition? Or should we tell them to bolster our faith and the faith of others? Let me offer some thoughts for you to consider.

THE FIRST THING TO BE SAID ABOUT MYSTICAL EXPERIENCES IS BE CAREFUL. We like to think we are rational people, but the human brain is a tricky piece of machinery. It can see things that do not exist.

Francis Caponi, a Roman Catholic priest, was drawing parallels between Elvis Presley and Jesus Christ. He noted an interesting phenomenon. "Both of their figures," he said, "are discerned in billboards, refrigerator rust stains, [and] strangely shaped vegetables." (5) He was referring, of course, to those strange reports that pop up from time to time of apparitions of Mary, of Jesus, even of Elvis. Be careful. Our minds have a tendency to organize reality in a way that does not always fit the facts.

William James, the brilliant psychologist, once pointed out that you can toss a bag of marbles on the floor and by selectively ignoring certain marbles find any pattern you wish. Our eyes and our minds can play tricks on us. Be careful. We see that tendency displayed in some Christians' obsessions with numbers.

Chuck Swindoll tells about a lady in Kansas City who went to court to get her license plate changed because it ended with 666. She stated that her fellow church members were shunning her. As you may know, the mark of the beast in the book of the Revelation is 666. Swindoll goes on to note that the 666 scare stuff is getting downright ridiculous. The fact is that those three digits can be uncovered in almost anybody's name, if you're willing to work at it hard enough. Using the code A=100, B=101, and so on, Hitler adds up to 666, Swindoll notes. The same technique works on the word computer. ” a coincidence to which some of us might attach some validity.

By adopting the so-called "devil's code" (a favorite ploy of numerologists, whereby the alphabet is numbered backward from zero; Z=0, Y=1, X=2 . . . ) and multiplying each letter-value by 6 (whew!), fundamentalist leader Jerry Falwell's last name equals 666. Even Billy Graham's name is not exempt. His initials are WFG. (William Franklin Graham). Using the A=1 code, the letters add up to 36. The sum of the counting numbers from 1 through 36 is 666, and 36=6x6. When Ronald Wilson Reagan was elected president, mischievous Democrats pointed out that each of the President's names had six letters ” 666, etc. (6)

Maybe you find all this fascinating, maybe not. There are some people, though, who are very susceptible to such logic. And there are unscrupulous people who look for these susceptible people to manipulate to their own ends. Often they do it in the name of religion. Be careful. If you wonder why most Christian churches put more emphasis on being true to the historical faith than on any one particular subjective experience, this is it. We know feelings are subject to distortion and manipulation. It may make us seem somewhat dry and unexciting at times but we know that when we are faithful to Scripture, we cannot be misled by passing fads or sensations. Be careful.

BUT ALSO BE TOLERANT. We don't know how God may choose to work in individual lives. It is the height of arrogance for any of us to declare that God can only work in one way or another ” that God can only be found in one group or another. Most of us would be thrilled to have the kind of mountaintop experience that Peter, James and John had where they beheld Christ transfigured before them; we would love to go up on a Mountain as did Moses and hear God's voice, but we may live a lifetime and never experience any more than a lump in our throat and a calm assurance in our hearts. If that's all we experience, that is enough. God knows what we need. If other people discover a wider range of experiences, if they shout and dance and speak in tongues, then who's to say but that God knew their needs as well. Pray that none of us ” whatever our experience of faith ” will be judgmental toward those whose faith is not like our own.

REMEMBER THIS ” AND THIS IS THE CRUX OF THE MATTER ” THE TEST OF FAITH IS NOT EXPERIENCE BUT BEARING FRUIT. The fruit of the Spirit, says St. Paul, is love, joy, peace, longsuffering, gentleness, goodness, faith, meekness, temperance. (Gal 5:23) Does your religious experience make you more loving, more peaceful, more trusting, more humble? If it does, then no matter what that experience is, you are not far from the Kingdom.

There is a legend of a great teacher who had a strange experience while walking through an orchard on a windy day. Coming to a fence which divided the grove from an adjoining forest, he imagined hearing the different types of trees talking to each other. Boastfully a maple tree said to a nearby fruit tree, "Why don't your leaves rustle in the breeze like ours so that you can be heard from a distance?" The fruit tree replied, "We don't need such useless fluttering to draw attention to our presence; our fruit speaks for us!" (7) And that's our lesson for the day! People experience God in different ways. But the test is ” are we bearing fruit? If we are, our Christian faith is just as valid as Peter, James and John on the Mount of Transfiguration.


1. New York: The Crossroad Publishing Company, 1993), pp. 14-15.

2. "Pants with Power," AMERICAN DEMOGRAPHICS (Feb., 1989), p. 16.

3. Cornell, George W. "New Age Movement Is Having an Impact," The Knoxville NEWS-SENTINEL, Feb. 4, 1989, Section B, p.2.

4. Frederick Buechner, THE CLOWN IN THE BELFRY, (San Francisco: HarperSanFrancisco, 1992), pp. 7-8.

5. LIFE, January 1995, p. 6

6. Charles R. Swindoll, COME BEFORE WINTER AND SHARE MY HOPE, (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan Publishing House, 1985).

7. ILLUSAURUS.

Dynamic Preaching, Collected Sermons, by King Duncan