Preached January 17, 1993, evening service First Baptist Church Garrett, Indiana
Dr. Arthur G. Ferry, Jr., Pastor
Bill Bryson traveled to Hannibal, Missouri, to visit the boyhood home of author, Mark Twain. The house was a "trim, white-washed house with green shutters, set incongruously in the middle of downtown." It cost $2 to walk around the site. Bryson found the house a disappointment. "It purported to be a faithful reproduction of the original interiors," he writes, "but there were wires and water sprinklers clumsily evident in every room. I also very much doubt that young Samuel Clemens' bedroom had Armstrong vinyl on the floor or that his sister's bedroom had a plywood partition in it."
The house is owned by the city of Hannibal and attracts 135,000 visitors each year. Bryson was disappointed that he wasn't able to actually go inside the house. "You look thru the windows," he says. At each window there is a recorded message telling about each room. As he proceeded from window to window he asked another tourist. "What do you think of it?" The friendly stranger replied, "Oh, I think it's great. I come here whenever I'm in Hannibal--2, 3 times a year. Sometimes I go out of my way to come here." Dumbfounded, Bryson replied, "Really?" "Yeah," answered the stranger. "I must have been here 20, 30 times by now. This is a real shrine, you know."
They walked and talked some more. Bryson's last question to the man was, "Would you say the house is just like Twain described it in his books?" "I don't know," the stranger said. "I've never read one of his books."
Visiting his shrine--but ignoring his books. Doubtless there are many followers of Jesus who are satisfied with that same superficial approach. They visit his shrine, but never read his teachings. Some of us, though, want to go farther. Some of us want to know Jesus, not just as an interesting historical figure, but as the living Son of God. How do we find Jesus? That is the question for the morning. How do we find him? Let me suggest some ways.
Sometimes we find him thru a dramatic act of revelation. It doesn't happen that way to many of us, but sometimes God breaks into people's lives in a clear, unmistakable act of disclosure. That's what happened to John the Baptist.
At first, John did not recognize Jesus. Even though they were cousins, he did not really know who Jesus was until the day Jesus came to the Jordan to be baptized. It was then that the heavens opened and the Spirit descended like a dove and rested on Jesus. Sometimes it happens that way. Something dramatic happens and our lives are transformed.
Working in a small town in Latin America, a woman felt despair. She was experiencing marital problems, as well as conflicts with people she worked with. Without warning, an earthquake struck one day. In those moments of panic and fear she ran with other people to the relative safety of a garden plaza as buildings shattered and dust billowed.
"For those moments I saw everything so clearly," she recalls, "how I could become so much kinder to my husband, how other relationships could work out. In an instant--and with such gratitude--I saw how it would be so easy for me to turn things around." In that dramatic moment this woman had glimpsed how the brokenness in her life could be mended. At that moment she saw clearly how she could bring about healing in her life. At that moment it was as if God had spoken to her in a most dramatic way.
God had told John in a personal epiphany, "He on whom you see the spirit descend and remain is the one who baptizes with the Holy Spirit." When John saw the Spirit descend upon Jesus in the form of a dove, he knew without a doubt that Jesus was the Messiah. John believed that day because of a personal act of revelation.
Sometimes that happens to people.
The truth of God comes into their lives in such a dramatic fashion that they can scarcely deny that they have been in His presence. That's one way of finding Jesus.
Another way of finding him is thru the witness of others. A day later, John the Baptist sees Jesus approaching and exclaims, "Here is the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world!" Two of John's followers hear John's witness, and they begin to follow Jesus--not because of any dramatic vision they had, but because they trusted John.
My guess is that this is the way most of us came to Christ--thru the witness of others. It may have been our parents or our spouse or a strong personality who made an indelible impression on us, but somewhere along the way the witness of someone else made the critical difference in our lives.
In Peggy Payne's novel, Revelation, Reverend Swain Hammond has a vision which he describes to his congregation. Later on, he decides it would be best if he left the church. He announces his decision to leave on Sunday morning in the worship service.
That afternoon one of his parishioners named Gladys comes to visit him. "You must not leave the church," Gladys tells her pastor. Taken by her good will, Dr. Hammond replies, "That's kind of you. I appreciate your--" Gladys interrupts him, "I'm not trying to say something nice to you, Dr. Hammond. It's very important," she said. Earlier the pastor had spent some time with Gladys' invalid mother-in-law.
"I know what you said in your sermon," Gladys tells him. "You think you can't tell anybody about God. Well..." There was one of those awkward moments when no one said anything. "You came over and sat with my mother-in-law. I was surprised at myself that I would let you do any such thing, but I did. I was glad to get away." The simple act of her pastor caring enough about her made all the difference in the world to Gladys. "When you did that," she tells her pastor, "it seemed like all at once there might be things I could still hope for. The way I had been feeling, everything was over for me." Her voice began to tremble a little, then she got herself under control. "I don't know the Scriptures like you do, Dr. Hammond, but I was raised on it. The Bible commands that we love one another." Tears welled up in her eyes. "It was a very loving thing you did. I can't just keep silent and let you go away." Gladys, in a passionate plea says, "Dr. Hammond, you are a good disciple. You mustn't stop now."
It is clear that this pastor's witness of love had a profound effect on the faith of this woman. That has been true for many of us. We have found Christ thru the witness of others --Sunday School teachers, kindly neighbors, most importantly, devout parents. Their witness made the critical difference in our Christian pilgrimage.
Finally, there are others of us who have discovered Christ while living the Christian life. Because of John's witness, the 2 men who were with him wanted to find out more about Jesus. Notice up to this point that Jesus has not said a word. He has not preached a sermon, nor told a parable. These two men begin to follow him simply because of the witness of John the Baptist.
Jesus noticed them following him, and asked them what they were seeking. They replied that they wanted to know more about him. Jesus issued the personal invitation, "Come and see." And they did. They stayed with him all day. They became his disciples. Today, Jesus Christ issues the same invitation to other would-be followers, "Come and see."
Two months before his assassination, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., spoke to his congregation at Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta about his death in what would oddly enough become his eulogy.
"Every now and then I think about my own death, and I think about my own funeral," Dr. King told his congregation.
"If any of you are around when I have to meet my day, I don't want a long funeral. And if you get somebody to deliver the eulogy, tell them not to talk too long. Every now and then I wonder what I want them to say. Tell them not to mention that I have a Nobel Peace Prize, that isn't important. Tell them not to mention that I have 3 or 400 hundred other awards, that's not important. I'd like someone to mention that day that Martin Luther King, Jr., tried to give his life serving others. I'd like someone to say that day that Martin Luther King, Jr., tried to love somebody.
I want you to be able to say that day that I did try to feed the hungry. I want you to be able to say that day that I did try, in my life, to clothe those who were naked. I want you to be able to say that I did try to visit those in prison. I want you to say that I tried to love and serve humanity." Dr. King concluded with these words: "I won't have any money left behind. I won't have the fine and luxurious things of life to leave behind. But I just want to leave a committed life behind."
Did Martin King have that level of commitment when he first began his ministry? It's doubtful. He had youthful enthusiasm to be sure. He had strong convictions. He was well brought up, with an outstanding Baptist preacher as a father. But people who are truly captured by the spirit of Christ do so generally after years of walking in Christ's footsteps. Our faith is validated and grows as we "come and see."
Most of us have been raised in the church. There never has been that one moment when the heavens opened and we saw the spirit descend. Yet we have walked with Jesus almost since we took our first tiny steps as small children. Our faith is just as real as those who have more dramatic stories to tell. We are those who have a "come and see" faith.
Regardless of how we found Christ, our task is to provide the kind of witness that others may find him too. One of the 2 men who followed Jesus that day was a fisherman named Andrew. The day Andrew spent with Jesus changed his life. He went to find his brother Simon who was also a fisherman. Andrew told his brother, "We have found the Messiah." Perhaps Andrew had never been so excited about anything in his life as he was that day. Simon looked into his brother's eyes and knew he was sincere. Simon wanted to meet this teacher that his brother was so excited about. Andrew took his brother to meet Jesus.
When they found him, Jesus looked at Simon and said, "You are Simon, son of John. You are to be called Cephas." We know Simon or Cephas as Peter, leader of the early church. Peter became a disciple of Jesus thanks to the witness of his brother, Andrew. History would never again be the same.
William Willimon, professor at Duke Divinity School, remembers when a friend of his visited the Soviet Union in the 1970s. Upon his return he announced that the church behind the Iron Curtain was mostly "irrelevant because the only people there are little old ladies." Dr. Willimon writes, "Looking back now at the collapse of communism, the difficulties of rebuilding the Soviet Union after a long period of spiritual bankruptcy, I hope my friend would now say, `Thank God for the little old ladies.' Their existence provided a continuing, visible, political rebuke to the Soviets."
It would be wonderful if our witness was as effective as that of those little old ladies. It would be wonderful if our witness, like Andrew's, was effective enough to challenge another Simon Peter. That is our task, and what a joyous, challenging task it is. Having found Christ, or more correctly having been found by Christ, we find others--that they, too, may come and see.