The Gospel of Our Lord Jesus Christ According to Luke.
After this the Lord appointed seventy-two[a] others and sent them on ahead of him in pairs to every town and place where he himself intended to go. 2
He said to them, “The harvest is plentiful, but the laborers are few; therefore ask the Lord of the harvest to send out laborers into his harvest. 3 Go on your way; I am sending you out like lambs into the midst of wolves. 4 Carry no purse, no bag, no sandals, and greet no one on the road. 5 Whatever house you enter, first say, ‘Peace to this house!’ 6 And if a person of peace is there, your peace will rest on that person, but if not, it will return to you. 7 Remain in the same house, eating and drinking whatever they provide, for the laborer deserves to be paid. Do not move about from house to house. 8 Whenever you enter a town and its people welcome you, eat what is set before you; 9 cure the sick who are there, and say to them, ‘The kingdom of God has come near to you.’[b] 1
But whenever you enter a town and they do not welcome you, go out into its streets and say, 11 ‘Even the dust of your town that clings to our feet, we wipe off in protest against you. Yet know this: the kingdom of God has come near.’[c]( (Luke 10:1-11, 16-20)
The Kingdom of God has come near to you.
I wonder if you have ever had the experience of starting at a new job, showing up, all eager and excited the first day, ready to dig in and show the new boss how well you can do, and then, when you get there, have one of the other employees tell you the company is going bankrupt?
Well something like that happened to me.
I was in my first year of seminary, eager to learn all I could, and to become a minister in the church.
We had a guest speaker from the States at our Wednesday evening Eucharist. We all liked to hear good preaching, and we were looking forward to this speaker.
Big mistake!
He didn’t talk about the Gospel. He didn’t give us any encouragement about the Church or about our role in it. Instead, his theme was, “The crumbling walls of the Church.”
He told us about declining attendances, about financial problems, and so on, and he told it in such a doleful way that it seemed there was no hope.
As he spoke, you could see people sinking into their seats, as if each statement he made, hammered them further and further into the ground.
That sort of talk would make you wonder what you were doing there. After all, if the place is going bankrupt, then job security is out of the window, isn’t it?
Well in my own experience I have seen things differently.
I am not going to tell you that churches are full and that people are fighting to get in. Some are, of course.
I am not going to tell you that Sunday shopping has been cancelled because so many people are coming to church that the stores are empty.
I am not going to tell you that you had better reserve your seat in the pew for next Sunday I wish that were true.
But the fact is, the people who attend church these days do so because they really want to be here, and that is a wonderful improvement on the way it used to be. Praise God.
And the Church is more active in more areas, is involved in more ministries, than it has even been.
And actually, in a lot of places the church is really growing. There is evidence of a gathering impetus, a dynamic, that will really shape this century.
The church in Singapore is going through a fantastic renewal.
The church in Africa is growing in leaps and bounds. Some churches are reporting growth of twenty to fifty per cent a year. I read somewhere that there are more Swahili -speaking Anglicans than English speaking.
The church, our church, the church of Christ, the Anglican church, is growing and reaching out to all sorts of people.
Those new churches, I just saw, are sending missionaries over to America!
If you look around you, you see love of God and dedication everywhere.
There are dedicated Sunday School teachers and hospital visitors.
There are many important ministries that go on, some we see, and others go on unseen, right in our own church, all of which tell me that we are alive and well and far from being a church with crumbling walls.
And this congregation, and other, similar congregations throughout this communion can take credit for that.
You have kept the faith.
Now if we can bring ourselves to see that Heaven, is not the only place you can call the Kingdom of God, then maybe we can accept that the Kingdom of God is right here among us………… in fact……… is us!
That’s right, us! You and me, and all our brothers and sisters worldwide, form the Kingdom of God here on earth. In a wonderful way, the kingdom is here, and is yet still to come in its fullness.
That man who traveled all the way from the states to talk to us at Wycliffe was wrong. He could have told us” The kingdom is God is near to you.”
Instead, he looked at the Church and was discouraged, because he thought it was comprised of mere people. And he thought that mere people couldn’t possibly put right all that was wrong.
But when we talk about the church being the body of Christ, we are not talking about a dead body. We are talking about something that is alive.
It is alive because of the Spirit within it. And if it has the Spirit within it then it cannot fail.
We sometimes get discouraged in our own lives, don’t we? We look at our lives, and all our problems, and we despair of ever being right again.
But we go wrong when we think we have to handle everything by ourselves.
That is where that guest preacher went wrong. He thought that no human being could put things right.
He was right, but he was also wrong.
No human being can make things right in the church, and human beings can’t put things right in their lives……….. without God.
Jesus gently rebuked his followers when they came back full of excitement. He told them, ” Nevertheless, do not rejoice at this, that the spirits submit to you, but rejoice that your names are written in heaven.”
You can’t do it without God. Don’t try it by yourself.
In fact trying to do things in the Church of Christ without His help is denying God.
Thinking that we have to rely on our own efforts to handle things in our lives without asking His help, is denying God.
And denying God, is a sin.
We are commanded to love God with all our heart, with all our soul, with all our mind and with all our strength.
Now, love and trust, love and faith if you like, go together. If I love God then I trust Him. I have faith in Him.
And I cannot deny Him.
Our preacher, that Wednesday night was, in effect, denying God.
Yes, nothing would be put right in the church without God… outside of His will……… without His sanction…….. without His blessing…….. without His Spirit!
And such a church, a church that has forgotten God, will die.
But if we want it to live, then we have to make sure He is part of our life.
Attendance in North America may be down. That is God’s problem, not ours. Leave it with Him.
Jesus’ story about the farmer who sowed the seed tells us that we can do our best, and then leave the rest to Him.
You might say, Now, what could I do? How could one person possibly help?
I mean, how can my visiting a couple of people in hospital help? How can my prayers help? How can being warden help? How can being a member of the altar guild, or singing in the choir, or cooking dinner for the men’s’ group, or sitting on Parish Council – how can my little effort help the Church?
We don’t have to worry about the effectiveness of what we do, we just have to do it. And God will take the seed we plant and multiply it a hundred-fold.
History is full of people undertaking seemingly ordinary actions, but which changed the course of history.
On 1st July, 1857, a quiet businessman, a man alive for God, named Jeremiah Lanphier was appointed City Missionary to downtown New York, by the North Church of the Dutch Reformed denomination. People had moved away, the demographics had changed, and the church was suffering from a shortage of members.
Jeremiah may have wondered just where to start, how to reach people, in that downtown area. He hit on the idea of inviting people to join him in noonday prayer, once a week. He had handbills prepared and distributed them to anyone who would take one.
The handbill said, “A day Prayer Meeting is held every Wednesday, from 12 to 1 o’clock, in the Consistory building in the rear of the North Dutch Church, corner of Fulton and William Streets (entrance from Fulton and Ann Streets). This meeting is intended to give merchants, mechanics, clerks, strangers, and businessmen generally an opportunity to stop and call upon God amid the perplexities incident to their respective avocations. It will continue for one hour; but it is also designed for those who may find it inconvenient to remain more than five or ten minutes, as well as for those who can spare the whole hour.”
The first Wednesday, Jeremiah opened the doors and anxiously waited. Minutes went by and it appeared as if no-one would come. But then at 12.30 p.m., the first person arrived, to be followed by five more.
The following week forty people came to pray. So it was decided to hold the meeting every day rather than once a week.
Within six months in the city of New York, ten thousand businessmen gathered daily for prayer, and within two years, a million people became new members of American churches .
Jeremiah Lanphier’s first prayer meeting was the beginning of the greatest revival in New York’s history, perhaps in all of America..
One man. With God.
Another man, known only in a distant province of the ancient Roman Empire, died a criminal’s death on a cross and two thousand years later His Spirit still lives and millions upon millions praise His name.
God’s action in one man, Jesus of Nazareth changed the world for ever.
The Church which came about after the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ came about not because of human effort alone, but because of the Spirit of Christ working in men and women.
Contrary to what I heard that preacher say, seven years ago, the Church will survive. Through storm, and tumult, division and strife, through whatever Satan can throw against it, the Church of Christ will endure.
Therefore we will not fear, though the earth be moved and though the mountains be toppled into the depths of the sea; though its waters rage and foam, and though the mountains tremble at its tumult. The Lord of hosts is with us, The God of Jacob is our stronghold.
Praise His name.