Love Urges Us On - Fourth Sunday after Pentecost

Love Urges Us On - Fourth Sunday after Pentecost

Author: Pastor Carolyn Hetrick
June 16, 2024

When our daughter and son in law moved overseas to Finland for Alex to pursue her master’s degree, Landry’s family in Texas thought that was just about the wildest thing they could ever imagine. Not only were they not moving to Texas which was a sore spot, but jumping across the pond of the Atlantic. And to think he would “up and leave all this behind.” He as the husband would do this for his wife? What you do for love. Can you think of something you have done for love, that was maybe out of your comfort zone, or something that felt wildly illogical at the time, or seemingly out of step with the world around you?  I’ve been asking that question a lot lately and have heard about people who married young, sure they knew everything they needed to, only to realize later looking back they didn’t know so much but look how good it turned out anyway. Or maybe it’s been an adventure in parenting, or an adventure you said “yes” to because of what it meant to someone else you loved and love urged you on.

Maybe you can understand in one sense what Paul writes about to followers of Jesus and what they should do because love, the love of God, urges them on. Paul will go on to say that we are given a ministry of reconciliation. Because that’s what urged Jesus on. We are to be ambassadors for Christ as though God were making God’s plea to the world through us. We can be a reflection and a witness in the world for Christ, not for ourselves. We can be a witness to the love God in Christ has for others who may not see God as a loving God.

You know, our world is so loud these days. “Loud” and “love” are each four letter words, but my, what a difference. There’s a lot going on in our popular culture, media, the news swirling around us, where loud people say and do a lot of things claiming to be followers of Jesus Christ. From the person with the Christian bumper sticker on the back of their car who gives you the “one finger salute” in the construction zone when you have to merge, to the words and deeds that people engage in that heap judgment on others. It sure is hard to then to see that it is rooted in love.

And yet, 2nd Corinthians clearly says that it is love that urges us on. The love that so loved the world Jesus came, not to condemn but to save. The love from which nothing can separate us from God, we hear in Romans. The love that Jesus says is the way everyone will know we are Jesus’ disciples. Now I don’t want to encourage us to stop the story here and just get loud about what others are getting wrong.

Yes, people can be loudly engaged in things that sure don’t seem like Jesus’ love, both in small but harmful and large and destructive ways. If we get stuck there, the only story we are telling is our own.

That was true in the city of Corinth who boldly had a statue of unity, while they were all pocking at each other constantly, and it is true in a country calling itself united. God’s words tell us what love is urging US to do-to tell God’s story. Because love is not found in mere critique, love is found in how we choose to act, not how we react.

I wonder, what love is urging us to do as followers of Jesus Christ? How are you being “evangelical”? Maybe from our human point of view we hear that word and we think we know what it means. But from God’s point of view, that word, “evangelical” means “to be a messenger of the good news of Christ.” Our life’s grounding and purpose, the thing love urges us on to do, is to go into the world to witness to the love of God in Christ and its power to reconcile. So let’s reclaim this word “evangelical.” We are, after all, the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. Let’s stop using our human point of view that has developed. Love urges us to use God’s point of view- the lens of love, reconciliation, and a new life to reclaim, restore, and redeem.

When in the face of “loud,” we do not “love,” we can suggest that we’re OK with the human point of view of discord and deception, and even destruction. Love is urging us on. I know many of you live this love. Some of you here give out food with love, not judgment. Others of you quilt and make fleeces giving comfort to others, no matter who they are or how they came to be in a place of struggle. There are more ways than time allows and to speak of tangible ways of loving that point people to God. But I also want to talk about another way to love that is less tangible, and more about presence. This past weekend at the Pride Festival, we had a table with a Grace Lutheran banner and we were in the parade wearing bright blue shirts that said, “Grace for Every Body.” We had this table with stickers, fuzzy yarn balls that are like mini hugs, and candy and a photo station for selfies. Small tokens of joy and love in the world, but also of connecting, having conversations with people we did not know who sought us there as a church, even as much of the world claims our time is “post- Christian.” Where maybe their own friends would say “I don’t know if I would approach that group.

One woman saw me wearing a pastor collar with my blue shirt and all of us around and she said,  “My friends were asking if I knew a church where we would feel loved. And I was looking for them (and for me). I wasn’t sure but the answer was to open my eyes and here you are! Can I take a picture of all of you wearing your shirts? I want to tell my friends, ‘I think I found that church!’” Out of comfort zones, wildly illogical things, seemingly out of step with your world goes both ways, you see.
Another person wants to deepen their faith life, but they’ve been hurt and they’re skeptical. But they hovered around us for awhile and I finally learned it was one of their friends goes here. That one small caring relationship mattered to them and love urges us on.

You see, the ways that most people get here, in the room and on livestream and the radio, are not often because they saw an ad for Grace in the newspaper although that does sometimes happen. It’s often small conversations, where love urges us on to be ambassadors for Christ. Love urges us on, changing not only our viewpoint but that of others. Not by force, but by being witnesses to the love that builds bridges, heals wounds and knits the fabric of the world back together. It matters that we help others see there is more capacity int his world for “love” than there is for “loud.” It can be asking someone having a rough time, “Can I pray for you? Can I pray with you?” It can be asking them if there is a community of support, maybe because it will remind them that they do, or it will show  them that this does matter and that maybe that community is this one right here at the corner of Beaver and Garner.

It can be telling people that God loves them. You’d be amazed how many people don’t hear that.

We don’t do this to be seen or even to draw people to Grace Lutheran Church. We do it because true love settles for nothing less than everyone being drawn to God, the God who loves them. Our world needs this love. Our times may look different from those of Paul and of Jesus, but the heart of the message is still the same. And our foundation is love.

So, now since I talked about getting out of our comfort zone, I’m going to ask you to join in singing. Many of you who are my age or older are familiar with the song, “How Firm a Foundation.” This is new words written by a hymnwriter, Carolyn Winfrey Gillette and we’re going to sing it a cappella, meaning on our own steam. Please join me:

The love of Christ Jesus is urging us on,
For we find our life in what Jesus has done.
He died and is risen; now we're dead to sin!
No longer our own, we have new life in him.
The love of Christ Jesus is changing our view;
In valleys of death, we see God's reign break through.
Where others seek vengeance, Christ calls us to live
Forgiven in him — able, then, to forgive.
The love of Christ Jesus leads Christians to care;
When people are hungry, he calls us to share.
He gives us a job — to get out of our pews,
To work for God's justice and live the good news.
The love of Christ Jesus is urging us on
When others grow weary or say hope is gone.
He calls us to serve him again and again;
No longer our own, all our life is in him.

May it be so- Amen!

“The Love of Christ Jesus is Urging Us On,” Text: Copyright © 2012 by Carolyn Winfrey Gillette. All rights reserved. Used with permission.  www.carolynshymns.com/


Sermon Text: 2 Corinthians 5:6-10, 14-17
6So we are always confident; even though we know that while we are at home in the body we are away from the Lord—7for we walk by faith, not by sight. 8Yes, we do have confidence, and we would rather be away from the body and at home with the Lord. 9So whether we are at home or away, we make it our aim to please him. 10For all of us must appear before the judgment seat of Christ, so that each may receive recompense for what has been done in the body, whether good or evil.

14For the love of Christ urges us on, because we are convinced that one has died for all; therefore all have died. 15And he died for all, so that those who live might live no longer for themselves, but for him who died and was raised for them.
16From now on, therefore, we regard no one from a human point of view; even though we once knew Christ from a human point of view, we know him no longer in that way. 17So if anyone is in Christ, there is a new creation: everything old has passed away; see, everything has become new!

Copyright Rev. Carolyn K. Hetrick, 2024 All rights reserved. May not be reproduced in whole or in part without written permission.


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205 South Garner Street, State College, PA 16801
(814) 238-2478




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