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Choose this Day and Every Day
A
sermon by Dr. Jim Somerville
Pastor, Richmond’s First Baptist Church
Richmond, Virginia
November 9, 2008
The Twenty Sixth Sunday after Pentecost
Matthew 25:1-13
In our Old Testament lesson for today Joshua, the son of Nun, the
successor of Moses, the weary warrior who has emptied the Promised Land with the
edge of his sword, stands before the people at Shechem to speak a word from the
Lord. He clears his throat, cups his hands to his mouth, and says in a voice
loud enough for all to hear:
"Thus says the Lord, the God of Israel!"
Joshua reminds the people of all that God has done for them, how he
promised Abraham a multitude of descendants, and how he brought the same up out
of Egypt; how he gave them a land on which they had not labored, and towns that
they had not built; and how they now live in those towns, eating the fruit of
vineyards and oliveyards that they did not plant. In other words, they have
been richly blessed, and now they have a choice. From this mountainside in the
land of promise Joshua challenges the people: "Choose this day whom you will
serve, whether the gods your ancestors served in the region beyond the River or
the gods of the Amorites in whose land you are living; but as for me and my
house, we will serve the Lord."
Unlike so many of the choices we make, this is a choice that matters.
It’s not like choosing one flavor of ice cream over another, or one cable TV
channel out of a hundred. This is a choice that will determine the course and
kind of life God’s people will lead from that moment on. "Make up your minds
about where the center is," Joshua seems to say, "about what direction you will
travel, about where your loyalties will lie. Everything is at stake here." In
this one question Joshua calls Israel and us to decide what is true, what is
ultimate, what really matters.
"Choose," he says, "whom you will serve."
Somewhere in your life someone has surely presented you with that kind
of choice. The old-fashioned revival-meeting evangelists were famous for it.
"What will it be?" they thundered. "Will you live for God or not? Will you
start on the road to Heaven or stay on the road to Hell? You decide, but you
better decide now, before it's too late." And then they always tell one of
those stories, about the revival they preached the week before, where a young
man was almost persuaded—almost persuaded—to follow Jesus, but left
before he did and then got hit by a train crossing the railroad tracks. Or the
young woman from a few weeks before who hadn’t come down the aisle because her
boyfriend was with her and she didn’t want to embarrass herself in front of
him. Well! You know what happened to her. That same night, she and her
boyfriend had a head on collision with a cattle truck and died. Or the old man
who thought maybe he would make a decision the next night, but had a heart
attack that same night on his way out the back door of the church, and who’s
sorry now?
You know how they go on. You’ve been to those revivals. You may
remember it like it was yesterday. There’s the preacher up there, with his hair
slicked back and a skinny tie knotted around his neck and a big, floppy Bible in
his hand. He’s preaching like there’s no tomorrow, sweat beading on his brow,
spit flying from his mouth. And there you are, at eleven years old, gripping
the pew in front of you till your knuckles turn white and sensing, even at that
tender age, that this is one of those choices that makes a difference, that it
will be something you live with not only for the next few minutes but for the
rest of your life. "Choose this day whom you will serve!" the preacher bellows,
and in the heat of the moment you let go of the pew and stumble down the aisle
on rubbery legs as the congregation sings, "I have decided to follow Jesus. No
turning back. No turning back."
But here you are, sixty years later, and the only reason you grip a
church pew now is to get yourself into a standing position for the closing
hymn. The choice that seemed to matter so much once doesn't seem to matter so
much now, and as you stand there you realize that you haven't even made the
choice to come to church today: it was habit, sheer habit, that got you out of
bed and into your church clothes this morning, and it is habit, stubborn habit,
that will bring you back again next week. It's not that you mind coming. You
always leave feeling better than you came. But in your more honest moments you
might admit that the enthusiasm of your youth has burned low, the flame of that
old decision now sputters on its wick.
This is what had happened to the people Matthew’s Gospel was written
for. They had come to faith in Christ thinking that he would return at any
moment, with the blast of a trumpet, with a host of angels. Some early
evangelist—maybe it was Paul—had challenged them to make a choice and they had,
but that had been how long ago? Thirty years? Forty? He had told them Jesus
was coming back soon and they believed him. For a while they watched the skies
every day. But then the days turned into weeks, the weeks into months, the
months into years, and now the thought rarely entered their minds. When they
came to church they came out of habit, and perhaps little else. Matthew writes
this Gospel to urge them, among other things, toward a fresh sense of
expectancy. Hadn't Jesus said that no one knew the day or the hour when he
would come again? Hadn't he implied that it would be when everyone least
expected it? And in a flash of inspiration Matthew remembers a story Jesus once
told and shares it with his readers.
It's a story about choices.
"Once upon a time there were ten bridesmaids," Jesus said. "They made
a choice to meet the bridegroom, and to accompany him to the wedding feast.
Five of them were wise, and the other five were foolish." As Jesus tells the
story it becomes clear that their wisdom or their folly was measured by how long
they were prepared to wait. Picture the scene: ten giggling bridesmaids
waiting for the groom to come from wherever he was, each of them holding a lamp
but five of them carrying flasks of oil as well. The night drags on, the lamps
and the bridesmaids begin to fade, until at last they are all asleep. Suddenly,
from the darkness, there is a shout: "Here he comes!" And the bridesmaids leap
to their feet, trim their wicks and light their lamps. But some have added oil
first, and while their lanterns blaze like beacons the others sputter and die.
"Lend us some of your oil," the others beg, but alas! The extra oil is gone and
there isn't enough to share. "You'll have to go to the dealers and buy some,"
the wise ones say. But where can you buy oil at midnight? By the time they
have found what they are looking for the party is well underway. "Let us in,"
the foolish shout, banging on the door, but when the bridegroom looks out at
them he says, "Do I know you? I don’t think I know you." And the door is
slammed shut.
"And that is how it will be in the Kingdom," Jesus says.
He drops the broad hint in this story that if you're going to make a
choice for him, you had better be prepared to see it through to the end. Those
whose commitment and enthusiasm wanes will have no place at the party. But what
Jesus describes here is true for many of us, isn't it? In his comments on this
passage Anthony B. Robinson says that the theme of an "oil shortage" suggests
the present plight of many Christians—we're running low. I hope that’s not true
for all of us. I hope that some of you are finding your lamps filled with fresh
oil day by day, especially these days. But for some of you the opposite is
true, your flame is sputtering on the wick. You need oil for your lamp, but
where do you get it?
I think about the couple who, after fifty years of marriage, decide to
celebrate by renewing their wedding vows. It isn't really a mutual decision.
She's the one who pushes the idea. But it's their fiftieth anniversary. What
can he do but go along? She drags out their wedding album and her
fifty-year-old veil (the dress is just a little too snug). She invites their
children and a few of the neighbors. And on a Thursday afternoon there they
are, all dressed up and standing in front of a minister in their living room.
"Sheesh," the old man thinks. "How'd I get myself talked into this?" But as
the minister turns to him and begins to ask if he will take this woman to be his
lawfully wedded wife, it is as if time slows to a standstill. He thinks about
those times that have been better for them, and those times that have been
worse. He thinks about their poorer days, and now their somewhat richer ones.
He remembers her in sickness—Oh, how he remembers!—and in health. Like watching
an old home movie the memories come spooling off the reel, sunlit and silent,
flickering across the screen in his mind until he is surprised to find tears in
his eyes, and the minister asking him, "Well?"
"Well, what?" he asks, embarrassed.
"Do you take this woman to be your wife?"
And he turns to look at her, as if he had only just noticed that she
was standing there. It's not the face of his wife he looks at—not "the old
lady"—but his bride, her face fresh and lovely beneath the veil, her eyes
brimming over with emotion. And as he looks from her face to the faces of his
beaming children and grandchildren he is overcome by love and gratitude, for all
that he has, and for all that they have had together. He feels it then—the dry
lamp of his marriage being filled with fresh oil, the charred wick being trimmed
and lit, the flame blazing in the darkness. And in the soft light that shines
from his face and from hers in that moment he whispers,
"I do. I certainly do."
Decisions made long ago have a tendency to lose their fire over time:
even our most important decisions. But what we need to do when we find the wick
sputtering, the flame burning low, is not to abandon the lamp or look for
another, but to fill that familiar vessel with the oil of fresh commitment. And
to remember: we’re not talking about renewing our commitment to a religious
institution, or a set of propositions, or a political party, but renewing our
commitment to a person, to Jesus. What about it? You who decided to follow him
long, long ago, you who are deciding to follow him even now, you who have yet to
decide: Can you see that of all the choices you might make this one is the most
important? And can you understand the need to renew your commitment to him not
once every fifty years, but once every day? Because the truth is, as Bob Dylan
sings, “you’re gonna have to serve somebody.” And the truth is, also, that our
deepest commitments, our “core values,” are revealed by what or whom we choose
to serve.
You can make the decision in a moment of madness to get married, but
your commitment to that decision is revealed in a life of loving service to your
spouse. You can make the decision in a moment of passion to become parents, but
your commitment to that decision is revealed in a life of loving service to your
children. You can make the decision in a moment of fervor to follow Jesus, but
your commitment to that decision is revealed in a life of loving service to your
Lord. It is a commitment lived out in the many small choices we make day after
day after day. It is an understanding that no matter how long ago it was, you
have decided to follow Jesus, and from that decision there can be no turning
back. No turning back.
—Jim Somerville
© 2008
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