Salvation: Psalm 121; John 3: 1-17
Life is a journey. Several years ago, I learned how bumpy a journey can be. After a short vacation, my mother, Nanna, and I were flying home. We had one final leg of the trip—Atlanta to Knoxville—on what had to be the tiniest little tinker toy plane I had ever seen. There was one seat per row on the left side, and two seats per row on the right. About ten minutes into the flight, and horrendous storm descended out of nowhere. The plane began to rock back and forth, bounce and sway, and careen up and down.
Cabin service was discontinued after the turbulence cause Nanna to wear the ginger ale being served. And audible praying could be heard in the rear of the plane. We finally landed. The guy next to me, however, had managed to sleep through it all, slumped over, snoring in my ear. Oh, to be that unbothered about things. Life is a journey, and our walk with Jesus, our process of salvation is much of that journey.
Our Psalm, Psalm 121, talks about being on this journey. These ideas of looking to the hills, being guarded while we slumber, being given a gentle shade, all of these are indicators of a person travelling. For the Psalmist, it probably was a literal journey. For us it is a bit more figurative. On our journey of life, God will help us, keep us from stumbling, and watch over us while we sleep. Indeed, the Psalmist is adamant about this, “The Lord…watches over you!” with exclamation point included. The Psalm is a reminder that in times of trouble God will literally save us. God’s salvation goes beyond just the theological concept.
The Lord watches over you and keeps you from harm—from the burning sun and the terrors we feel at night. God stands ready to save us literally from the trouble of this world. Now that doesn’t mean trouble won’t sometimes find its way into our lives. Remember we are promised God’s presence, not absolute perfection. That has to wait for a bit.
A friend and I gave thanks for God’s protection back when I was in college. As you know I grew up rural. So, taking an ATV in the mountains to ramble around and maybe pick berries was not a problem. My city-dwelling friend came to visit, and I took him out to show him the beauty of God’s nature instead of perfectly manicured HOA managed sod. He asked to drive for a bit to see how he did. Unfortunately, he went a little too fast up a steep hill and flipped us both off of the ATV. I fully expected the thing to come crashing down on both of us and needing to call an ambulance. However when I dared to open my eyes, I was laying down in the grass, he was sitting a couple of feet away, and the ATV was sitting next to us, right side up, like nothing had happened.
Sometimes, when life is very hard on us, we must remember those words of the Psalm, “The Lord keeps you from all harm and watches over your life. The Lord keeps watch over you as you come and go, both now and forever.” I know that it sometimes feels like God has forgotten us, but that is not the truth. God is always close by and ready to save us when we call out for help in faith. God will save us, literally, from the dangers and troubles that can come in life. We simply have to trust in God to be there for us.
The Gospel talks about salvation in a much more theological sense. The story of Nicodemus is one of the most famous of the Gospels. It gives us the most widely known scripture, “For God so loved the world…” It is also the scripture that the theology of salvation is most attributed to. Time and again, we have heard the phrase “born-again Christian.” Nicodemus comes to Jesus in the night. He acknowledges Jesus as being of God. Then Jesus throws him a curve ball. Jesus says, “Unless you are born again, you cannot see the kingdom of God.”
Nicodemus is confused by this, and Jesus does nothing to clear it up. Jesus adds the greater mystery of being born of water and of spirit. As Jesus talks, he also adds in later verses that God calls on us to sacrifice our judgments and take up our belief in Jesus to guide us and in his redemptive work which saved us. Now, sometimes the work of a preacher is to simplify tough concepts. Today, I want to do the opposite. We have so watered down the idea of being born again, that it has lost the meaning, the complexity, and the mystery Jesus intended it to have.
The Gospel of John uses the Greek word anõthen. There is no good translation of this word. Jesus is saying we must be born of time and place. We are born anew but also from above, or in a spiritual way. The words used here mean far more than just a personal conversion moment. Anõthen is in response to belief, not belief itself. It also doesn’t refer to any work we do in having belief. It refers to the redemptive work that Jesus does within our heart and soul. To reduce this idea merely to just believing in Jesus and having a personal conversion moment, makes it all about us, when in fact salvation is about Jesus and his love and grace for us.
Nicodemus was a scholar, very well educated, and generally wise. Yet he couldn’t fully grasp the mystery of what Jesus meant. He fully believed and acknowledged that God had sent Jesus. But there was still this stumbling block to the work that Jesus wanted to do in and through his life and his life of faith. When we believe, we must also be prepared to have our lives changed and follow Jesus. The work Jesus does is redemptive and saving. The work we do is somewhat ordinary. We believe and we follow. Inherent in both of those is the idea that we trust in God to lead us, guide us, and save us from troubles.
When Jesus talks about salvation, it is a complex, mystery-filled work of faith. It’s hard to understand. It’s an easy thing to follow, “Love thy neighbor.” But in an evidence-hungry society, talk of spiritual and unknowable things is uncomfortable. We want to explain. We want to comprehend. But Jesus gives us a holy mystery. Too many churches, too many of the faithful have taken this complex mystery of faith and reduced it to a slogan—being a “born-again Christian.” It’s become both a slogan and a litmus test. Reducing this to just a slogan and single-issue test ruins the meaning Jesus was conveying. Do you believe, but also, do you surrender enough to allow Jesus to work in and through you both in your physical body and in your soul and spirit? Being born again encompasses both. And it is fully about the work of God, not our own doing.
Jesus doesn’t necessarily change what our physical body is. Instead, he helps us to understand the fullness and love of God in us and with us. Part of the struggle of life is always our ability to understand. But here we simply have to trust that God revealed in Jesus is one whose love knows no bounds, and we are asked to receive just one gift—God’s grace. Sometimes sermons and services call on us to act and to do. Go out, make a difference, serve, love, help. And sometimes we are called to be still, to reflect, and pray. All the good in the world is for nothing if our hearts and minds are not in the right place—resting safely in the love of Jesus.
On my journey from Atlanta to Knoxville, when the flight got bumpy and terrifying, the human nature kicked in—do something, react, help, act in some way! But the truth is we were all strapped in and helpless, trusting in the pilot to guide us safely through. The guy next to me was totally unbothered, fully asleep. I think his sleep was probably assisted by a few choice beverages, but even foolishness can teach us lesson. In a journey of life where we have very little control sometimes, we must trust in God to save us and to have saving grace for us. The hardest thing for us to do, but also the most powerful thing for us to do is to be still and say to God, “I need you.”
Worship Service Video https://www.facebook.com/fccmacon/videos/957137280139748/
