October 5, 2024

I Believe – The Holy Spirit

I Believe

I Believe – The Holy Spirit
Sycamore
Creek Church
Tom Arthur
March 20, 2011

Peace, Friends!

I came across a blog this past week that is by an aspiring writer.  She tells the story of picking up a book on a slow day at work and realizing it was someone’s journal.  The journal had been lying on the counter for years, so she decided to read it.  She says:

They’d listed presents for kids, feelings and thoughts, shopping lists. It was like a car wreck: I knew I shouldn’t read it but I couldn’t stop. She pondered whether her son thought she was a push-over. She thought buying an x-box and six games plus other stuff was too expensive for her son’s birthday – yet she bought it anyway. She needed to work on her ‘inner core.’ It was really fascinating actually, getting this inside-view of someone’s life – someone who I didn’t even know.

As we finish up this three-week series on the Apostles’ Creed, we’ve been doing the same thing.  We’ve been reading through the journal of the early church.  We’re seeing things they saw that we might not have noticed.  Not only that but we’re also seeing some things that we did notice, but this time we’re seeing them in a whole new way.

The Apostles’ Creed has been used over the last two-thousand years as a baptismal confession.  When you wanted to be baptized, this is what you had to say you believed in.  When we say “believe” we mean not just acknowledge intellectually but also trust.

Not so much the words but the reality behind the words.  What is that reality?

Trinity

The basic fundamental belief of the Apostles’ Creed is in its three-part structure.  I believe in the Father…I believe in the Son…I believe in the Holy Spirit.  This is what Christians have called the Trinity.  The word “Trinity” doesn’t show up in the Bible, but the idea is all over the place.  Consider this passage from Matthew:

And when Jesus had been baptized, just as he came up from the water, suddenly the heavens were opened to him and he saw the Spirit of God descending like a dove and alighting on him. And a voice from heaven said, “This is my Son, the Beloved, with whom I am well pleased” (Matthew 3:16-17, NRSV).

Here we see Jesus being baptized and all three persons of the Trinity show up.  God the Father is the voice from heaven.  Jesus the Son is “the Beloved.”  The Spirit proceeds from the Father and descends like a dove on the Son.

Are we talking about three gods here?  No way.  When Christians say they believe or trust in the Trinity they mean that God is eternally one God in three Persons.  The word “person” trips us up a bit, but language always fails us when we trying to describe ultimately reality.

Each week I’ve been giving you a weak and strong metaphor to help your imagination grasp how something can be one and three at the same time.    All metaphors break down at some point, but some break down quicker than others.  A weak metaphor that is sometimes used to describe the Trinity is an egg.  An egg has a shell, a yolk, and a white.  On the surface this makes sense to compare an egg to the Trinity, but like last week’s weak metaphor, an apple, each part of the egg is just that, a part.  You can more or less take away one of these parts and still have a recognizable egg.  When Christians say that the Trinity is one God eternally in three persons, we don’t mean that the Father is part of God and the Son is another part of God and the Spirit is a third part.  Or that you can take away one of those parts and still have the Trinity recognizable.

The last two weeks I introduced you to two stronger metaphors.  The first was a triangle.  A triangle is eternally three angles and one object.  You take away one of those angles and you’ve no longer got a triangle.  Or last week we looked at speech.  Speech has three “parts” that must always be there: the speaker (the Father), the word (the Son), and the breath (the Spirit).  You take away one “part” and you no longer have speech.

A third metaphor that I want to share with you today is fire.  Fire is made up of three things that are always there.  First, fire has a flame.  Second, fire also gives off light.  Third, fire has heat.  Fire is three and one at the same time.  Yes, for those of you who are chemists, you can catch some chemicals on fire that burn at a particular temperature that gives no heat or visible flame.  All metaphors break down at some point.  But the fire that most of us encounter on any given day always has these three things: flame, light, heat.  You take away one of them and you no longer have fire.  Fire is eternally three and one, just like the Trinity.

Holy Spirit

On the first week we explored what it means to confess that “I believe in the Father.”  Last week we looked at believing in the Son.  Today we move on to the third person of the Trinity: the Holy Spirit.  I believe in the Holy Spirit.

It is a little hard to wrap our minds around what the Holy Spirit is, exactly, but Christian theologians have talked about the Holy Spirit as the friendship or love that the Son and Father share together.  The Holy Spirit is then God’s presence in our lives inviting us into that community that the Father and Son share.  It’s like the ultimate anti-clique.

When I was a teenager I so wanted to be included in the popular group in school and even in church.  I was kind of academic, nerdy and pimply, so I didn’t fit in very well with the cool kids.  I was also a Christian so I wasn’t into parties happening at kids’ houses when their parents were gone for the weekend and where there was a lot of alcohol being passed around.  These things tended to put up some pretty significant obstacles to me being accepted into that clique, but I still longed to be accepted and to be popular.

The friendship that the Father and Son share is nothing like this clique I wanted to be a part of growing up.  It is rather an unconditional love that seeks to invite as many people into the love-fest as possible.  It isn’t exclusive in anyway.  In fact, the Son became like us so that we might become like him: friends with God.  The Spirit is God’s presence and grace continually inviting us into that friendship and love even when we don’t recognize that it’s God who’s doing the inviting.  The rest of the Apostles’ Creed flows from this basic idea that God is at work in each of our lives through the Holy Spirit inviting us to be friends with God.

Holy Catholic Church?

Um…Did we just become Catholic?  I thought we were Protestants.  We don’t believe in that whole pope thing do we?  Well, not exactly.  Although I don’t think the Pope is someone we can ignore.  But that’s for another sermon on another day.

Rather, when we confess that we believe or trust in the Holy catholic church what we mean isn’t that we’re pledging allegiance to the Roman Catholic Church.  “Catholic” simply means “universal.”  The Roman Catholic Church is just part of that universal Christian church which exists across time and across place.  The universal church includes Roman Catholic, Eastern Orthodox, and all the bigillion varieties of Protestants.  There are probably some other branches of the Christian church that belong in that list too, but those are at least the big ones.

So if we don’t mean that we believe in the Roman Catholic Church, what are we saying we do believe in when we confess, “I believe in the holy catholic church”?  I think what we’re saying is that our life as Christians is basically like the life that the Father and Son share through the Spirit.  It is a life that is communal, not an individualistic life.  We don’t run this race alone.  We do it with others.

Jesus asked Peter who he believes he is and Peter responds that Jesus is the Christ.  Jesus then says, “And I tell you, you are Peter, and on this rock I will build my church, and the gates of Hades will not prevail against it” (Matthew 16:18, NRSV).  That’s a pretty impressive statement.  My imagination runs to the gates of Mordor in Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings trilogy.  This community that Jesus set up first in the twelve disciples and extending on to us is a pretty powerful community not easily destroyed.

Later on in the book of Hebrews, the author of Hebrews says, “And let us consider how to provoke one another to love and good deeds, not neglecting to meet together, as is the habit of some, but encouraging one another, and all the more as you see the Day approaching” (Hebrews 10:24-25, NRSV).  Here we are encouraged to not fall into the individualist traps of “my own spirituality.”  When we’re a community of one, we have no one to check and balance us.  We have no one to notice and point out our blind spots.  We need a much bigger community.  A community that reflects more the community that the Spirit has with the Father and the Son.

Communion of Saints = Church over Time

We continue then to confess that “I believe in the communion of saints.”  Are we praying to saints now too?  No.  That’s not what I mean.  Although I think that it’s not a bad idea to study the saints and even to learn how they prayed.

Rather the communion of saints means at least two things.  It means that this community of the church extends over time.  There are those who have gone before us and faithfully followed Jesus.  They have often blazed a trail for us.  It would be silly to ignore that trail.

Have you ever been cross country skiing?  I know, spring is upon us and you don’t want to hear about anything that has to do with snow.  Bear with me a moment.  If you’ve been cross country skiing before, you know that it’s much easier and more fun to ski in the groomed trails.  But occasionally Sarah and I will get off trail.  If you’re going off trail and you’re breaking trail for the person behind you, it is exhausting.  The person behind you is having all the fun because they’re getting the benefits of the fruit of your work.  Why not get the benefits of the fruit of the work of those who have gone before us?

The writer of Hebrews says, “Therefore, since we are surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses, let us also lay aside every weight and the sin that clings so closely, and let us run with perseverance the race that is set before us” (Hebrews 12:1, NRSV).  That chapter goes on to describe all those witnesses: Abraham and Sarah.  Isaac and Rebecca.   Jacob and Rachel and Leah.  Joseph.  Moses.  Joshua.  Samson.  Deborah.  Samuel.  Ruth.  David.  Solomon.  Daniel.  Esther.  Nehemiah.  Isaiah.  Ezekiel.  Amos.  Jesus.  Paul.  And if Hebrews was written 2000 years later surely Sycamore Creek Church would be included somewhere in that list.  We follow people who have broken trail before us.  We don’t do it alone.

Communion of saints = Lord’s Supper

The “communion of saints” can also be understood as Communion or the Lord’s Supper or the “Eucharist.”  It’s the act of worship when we gather around a table and eat bread that is Jesus’ body and drink from a cup that is Jesus’ blood.  We read that the early church “devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching and fellowship, to the breaking of bread and the prayers” (Acts 2:42, NRSV).  This community of saints gathers together so that they’re not alone, and then they come to the table to meet Jesus through the power and presence of the Spirit so that we’re not just doing it alone as humans, but we’re living this life by the power of God.

Forgiveness of Sins

When we come to that table and we confess our sins we are forgiven.  And so we confess that “I believe in the forgiveness of sins.”  This idea of being forgiven of your sins is usually called “atonement.”  It is what makes us right with God.  Sometimes atonement is described as “at-one-ment” with God.

Paul says in his first letter to the Corinthians, “For I handed on to you as of first importance what I in turn had received: that Christ died for our sins in accordance with the scriptures, and that he was buried, and that he was raised on the third day in accordance with the scriptures…” (1 Corinthians 15:3-4, NRSV).  Christ died for our sins; for the ways that we miss the mark, either intentionally or unintentionally, of what God desires of and for us.  Through Christ’s life, death, resurrection, and community we are reconciled and at peace with God, but how exactly does this work?

I could spend a whole six-week series walking through these “atonement theories,” but right now I just want you to be aware that in the history of Christianity there is more than one idea about how Jesus’ work makes us right with God.

Debt Theory: One theory says that we owe God a huge debt for our sins.  Our sin is a debt to God, so big that we can’t pay it.  The only one who could was Jesus.  Jesus’ death paid that debt.

Substitution Theory: A second theory says that our sin was an affront to God’s holiness and God’s justice.  God’s holiness and justice had to be met, so Jesus took our place and paid for a crime that he did not commit.

Satisfaction Theory: A third theory says that God was dishonored by our sin.  Thus, God’s honor must be paid back and paid back with interest.  Jesus’ perfect life restores God’s honor and his death pays the interest.

Ransom Theory: In this fourth theory we are held hostage by Satan, and Jesus pays the ransom by his death.

Rescue Theory: In this fifth theory we are held hostage by Satan, and Jesus came on a rescue mission to break us free from Satan.

Theosis/Divinization Theory: Jesus’ entire life (teaching, death, and resurrection) actually changes us.  Think of it this way: we usually say that one rotten apple spoils the bunch, but what if you threw one God-apple into a bunch of rotten ones?  This theory says that the one God-apple would absorb the rottenness of the rest of them.

All of these theories have biblical warrant.  I personally like the last one because it isn’t just focused on Jesus’ death which saves us but his whole life.  I also like it because it includes the work of the Holy Spirit in our lives right now!  It intrigues me that in the Apostles’ Creed “the forgiveness of sins” line is not under “I believe in Jesus” but under “I believe in the Holy Spirit.”  Through what Jesus did, the Holy Spirit continues to transform all the rottenness in our lives so that we become more and more like Jesus.  St. Basil, a fourth century church leader summed it up this way, “The goal of our calling is to become like God, as far as this is possible for human nature.”

Resurrection of the dead = The General Resurrection

This transformation continues to the point of our death.  The Apostles’ Creed continues when we confess that “I believe in the resurrection of the dead.”  Through the work of the Spirit in our lives, when we are baptized we participate in Jesus’ death and also in his resurrection.  Paul says, “Therefore we have been buried with him by baptism into death, so that, just as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father, so we too might walk in newness of life. For if we have been united with him in a death like his, we will certainly be united with him in a resurrection like his” (Romans 6:4-5, NRSV).

This brings up a question of debate that comes up from time to time in the church and even in the Bible itself.  Is our hope in heaven instantaneous or something else?  On the instantaneous side of things, we read something like Jesus’ statement to the thief who was crucified on the cross next to him, “Truly I tell you, today you will be with me in Paradise” (Luke 23:43, NRSV), and we see a kind of you’ll-be-in-heaven-right-after-you-die kind of idea.

But when we read Paul we get a different kind of idea.  This idea has more to do with a general resurrection.  When we die we will “sleep” until that day when we are all resurrected.  Paul says in his letter to the Corinthians, “When this perishable body puts on imperishability, and this mortal body puts on immortality, then the saying that is written will be fulfilled: ‘Death has been swallowed up in victory’” (1 Corinthians 15:54, NRSV).  Here is the image of a seed being planted in the ground and dying and raising up into something new later on.  I don’t know what the right answer is to this question, or if there is some synthesis of the two (“sleep” often feels instantaneous), but in the end we can trust in the resurrection of our bodies as the ultimate fulfillment of the Spirit’s work in our lives.

This belief in the resurrection means that the material word matters.  God created and said, “It is good.”  We confess a belief and trust in the resurrection, we too are saying, “It is good.”  The body isn’t something to be escaped, but it is a gift to be embraced, and we look forward to the day when we will no longer suffer in our bodies, but our bodies will be in perfect alignment with God’s work in our lives.

Life Everlasting = Eternal Life

So we come to the last line of the Apostles’ Creed: I believe in life everlasting.  What does that mean?  I think it means eternal life.  In that most famous passage John says, “For God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, so that everyone who believes in him may not perish but may have eternal life” (John 3:16, NRSV).  This doesn’t just mean after death.  Faith and trust aren’t just fire insurance for life after death.  This ignores the work of the Spirit in our lives right now.  Eternal life begins right now, today!  The Spirit is working in your life today whether you recognize it or not.  Join in.  Participate with the Spirit and you’re participating in the community of love that the Father and Son share.

So What?

So why does a confession of trust in the Holy Spirit matter?  It matters because the Spirit of God invites us into the community of love that the Father and the Son share.  You may be excluded in every other area of your life—your work, your family, your school, even your church—but you cannot be excluded by God’s community.  The Spirit is the person of God continually inviting you into friendship with God.

That friendship of the Spirit heals.  The Spirit brings eternal life right now!  Are you hurting, wounded, and broken?  Have you not even lived up to your own standards let alone God’s standards?  If so, there is good news for you.  You need not stay stuck.  The Holy Spirit renews, redeems, and heals.

The last reason that this part of the Apostles’ Creed matters is because it shows that the work of the Spirit isn’t just something that happens to you and you alone.  Rather, the Holy Spirit’s usual manner of working is in the community of the church: through the communion of saints in the holy catholic church over time and place.  Do you want to know where the Spirit of God usually shows up?  If so, you’ll join the church as the community of people who are seeking to deepen their friendship with God.

Will you join me confessing our faith through the words of the Apostles’ Creed?

I believe in God, the Father almighty, Creator of heaven and earth.

I believe in Jesus Christ, His only Son, our Lord.
He was conceived by the power of the Holy Spirit and born of the Virgin Mary.
He suffered under Pontius Pilate, was crucified, died, and was buried.
He descended to the dead.
On the third day He rose again.|
He ascended into heaven, and is seated at the right hand of the Father.
He will come again to judge the living and the dead.

I believe in the Holy Spirit,
the holy Catholic Church,
the communion of saints,
the forgiveness of sins,
the resurrection of the body,
and life everlasting.

Amen.

I Believe – The Son

I Believe

I Believe – The Son (The Apostles’ Creed)
Sycamore
Creek Church
March 13, 2011
Tom Arthur

Peace, Friends!

I’ve been finding my journal particularly helpful this past week.  It is a great place to write down what’s on my mind, and how I see the world.  If I gave it to you to read, you’d see the world differently than you see it now.  You’d see it through my eyes.  You’d see things you hadn’t seen before.  And you’d see the same things you see but in a different light.  The Apostles’ Creed is like the journal of the early church.  It is a description of how they saw the world.  When we read the Apostles’ Creed we see the world differently.  We see it through the eyes and experience of so many Christians before us.

C.S. Lewis had this kind of an understanding of Christian beliefs, theology, and creeds like the Apostles’ Creed.  In his book, Mere Christianity, he says:

In a way I quite under­stand why some peo­ple are put off by The­ol­ogy. I remem­ber once when I had been giv­ing a talk to the R.A.F., an old, hard-bitten offi­cer got up and said, ‘I’ve no use for all that stuff. But, mind you, I’m a reli­gious man too. I know there’s a God. I’ve felt Him out alone in the desert at night: the tremen­dous mys­tery. And that’s just why I don’t believe all your neat lit­tle dog­mas and for­mu­las about Him. To any­one who’s met the real thing they all seem so petty and pedan­tic and unreal!’

Now in a sense I quite agreed with that man. I think he had prob­a­bly had a real expe­ri­ence of God in the desert. And when he turned from that expe­ri­ence to the Chris­t­ian creeds, I think he really was turn­ing from some­thing real to some­thing less real. In the same way, if a man has once looked at the Atlantic from the beach, and then goes and looks at a map of the Atlantic, he also will be turn­ing from some­thing real to some­thing less real: turn­ing from real waves to a bit of coloured paper. But here comes the point. The map is admit­tedly only coloured paper, but there are two things you have to remem­ber about it. In the first place, it is based on what hun­dreds and thou­sands of peo­ple have found out by sail­ing the real Atlantic. In that way it has behind it masses of expe­ri­ence just as real as the one you could have from the beach; only, while yours would be a sin­gle glimpse, the map fits all those dif­fer­ent expe­ri­ences together. In the sec­ond place, if you want to go any­where, the map is absolutely nec­es­sary. As long as you are con­tent with walks on the beach, your own glimpses are far more fun than look­ing at a map. But the map is going to be more use than walks on the beach if you want to get to America.

I asked on Facebook this past week about when or how the Apostles’ Creed was meaningful to you.  One friend wrote, “When he was killed by the Russian, Ivan Drago, in Rocky IV, it was the first time I recall crying as a young man. I was with my father.”  Umm…That’s Apollo Creed.  Not the Apostles’ Creed.  Krissy Brokenshire from our church said, “I like being able to vocalize exactly what I believe in. People ask me ‘what does it mean to be a Christian?’ or ‘what makes Christians different from people of other religions?’  I like that I don’t have to resort to vague descriptions or long references to verses.”  Marilyn Mannino wrote, “When I prayed it with my Dad & Father-in-law this afternoon at Sparrow Hospital CICU. My Dad does not have long to live.”  Another friend wrote, “I can tell you that what hasn’t been helpful is listening to it ritually repeated by a congregation in dead, passionless voices.”

So as we continue exploring the Apostles’ Creed this week, let’s begin by praying it together and not doing so with “dead, passionless voices.”

I believe in God, the Father almighty, Creator of heaven and earth.

I believe in Jesus Christ, His only Son, our Lord.
He was conceived by the power of the Holy Spirit and born of the Virgin Mary.
He suffered under Pontius Pilate, was crucified, died, and was buried.
He descended to the dead.
On the third day He rose again.
He ascended into heaven, and is seated at the right hand of the Father.
He will come again to judge the living and the dead.

I believe in the Holy Spirit,
the holy Catholic Church,
the communion of saints,
the forgiveness of sins,
the resurrection of the body,
and life everlasting.
Amen.

Trinity

Once again we begin by noting the three-fold structure of the creed.  I believe in the Father…I believe in the Son…I believe in the Holy Spirit.  This is what Christians have called the Trinity.  The word “Trinity” does not show up in the Bible, but the idea of the Trinity is found in many places.  One such place is Jesus’ last words to his disciples in the book of Matthew.  He says, “Therefore, go and make disciples of all the nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit” (Matthew 28:19, NRSV).  Here we see Jesus equating the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit together as one.  When Christians say we worship the Trinitarian God, we mean that we worship the God who is eternally one God in three persons.  A commUNITY exists within God, Godself, a community of love.

It is hard to wrap our minds around how something can be three and one at the same time.  There have been over the years weak and strong metaphors for describing the Trinity.  One weak metaphor is an apple.  Sometimes you will hear it said that the Trinity is like an apple.  An apple is made up of seeds, flesh, and skin and yet it is one apple.  Well, this may get us going in the right direction, but its more like seeds, flesh, and skin are just three different parts of an apple.  Whereas the Son is not just part of God and the Father is another part and the Holy Spirit another part still.  Not to mention that you can take away one of the parts of the apple and still have a pretty functional apple.

A stronger metaphor for the Trinity is speech.  Speech always includes at least three things: the speaker, wind/breath, and words.  If you take away one of those three you no longer have speech.  Speech is eternally three and one.  Maybe with the metaphor we can even connect each of those “persons” of speech with a person of the Trinity.  The speaker is God the Father.  The words are God the Son.  And the wind or breath is God the Spirit.  Of course, all analogies break down at some point and this one does too.  That’s why I’m saying there are weaker and stronger metaphors.  Some metaphors for God break down quicker than others!

Fully God and Fully Human

Last week we discovered that when we say “I believe” in the Apostles’ Creed, we aren’t just making a statement about knowledge or fact.  We are saying “I trust…”  Last week we looked at what it means to believe and/or trust in “the Father” and today we look at believing and trusting in “the Son.”

When we look closely at the Apostles’ Creed we realize that this Son, Jesus Christ, is an odd kind of fellow.  He is a unique kind of person.  He is fully God and fully human.  The Bible makes a lot of claims like this about Jesus.

Jesus says: The Father and I are one. John 10:30 (NRSV)
Paul says: Christ is the visible image of the invisible God. Colossians 1:15 (NRSV)
John says: In the beginning the Word already existed. He was with God, and he was God.  John 1:1 (NRSV)

The Bible regularly equates Jesus with God.  The creed points to both Jesus’ divinity and his humanity.  He is both fully God and fully human.  In the Apostles’ Creed we confess that Jesus was “conceived by the power of the Holy Spirit born of the Virgin Mary.”  We read this same claim in the Bible.  Mary asked the angel, “But how can I have a baby? I am a virgin” (Luke 1:34, NRSV).  Christians believe and trust that Jesus is fully God.

We also confess a belief and trust that Jesus is fully human saying, “He suffered under Pontius Pilate, was crucified, died, and was buried.”  Hmmm…He was fully God but we don’t usually think of God as suffering and dying.  So we’re claiming a paradox here.  Jesus was fully God but also fully human.  He suffered like any of the rest of us.  We read in Mark that as Jesus hung on the cross he “uttered another loud cry and breathed his last” (Mark 15:37, NRSV).  He really died.  We tend to have a hard time today believing that Jesus was fully God.  But many early Christians had a hard time believing that Jesus was fully human.  So this confession that Jesus really did suffer and die was scandalous.  How can God be like us?!

Paul puts these two things together in a very early Creed-like statement.  He says, “I passed on to you what was most important and what had also been passed on to me — that Christ died for our sins, just as the Scriptures said. He was buried, and he was raised from the dead on the third day, as the Scriptures said” (1 Corinthians 15:3-4, NRSV).

How are we to understand that Jesus had two natures?  How can he be fully human and fully God at the same time?  This is kind of like the Trinity.  How can God be three and one at the same time?  In the same way that metaphors help us wrap our imaginations around God, so too can we use a metaphor to help us understand Jesus’ two natures.  If you take a piece of iron and put it in the fire, it will become hot.  The heat will fully penetrate the iron.  You can even take the hot iron out and pound it into the shape you want to pound it into.  In that way you change the iron, but you do not touch the heat.  The iron “suffers” but the heat does not.  Jesus’ two natures are like heated iron.  His human nature is like the iron.  It can suffer and change.  Jesus’ divine nature is like the heat.  It permeates all throughout the iron, but it cannot suffer or change.

Rescue Mission

As we continue on in the creed we read that Jesus descended to the dead.  In one sense this can simply be an extension of our confession that Jesus really did die.  He really was human.  The old way of saying this in the Apostles’ Creed was to say that “he descended into hell.”  The early Christians believed that this meant more than just that Jesus died.  Rather, their imaginations guided by the Bible understood this as a brief description of an amazing rescue mission that Jesus staged.  He descended into hell, the place of the dead, and preached to all those who were there, past, present, and future, so that anyone who wanted to be rescued from hell had the chance to do so.

This idea of rescue mission shows up several places in the Bible.  Paul says, “Indeed, we felt that we had received the sentence of death so that we would rely not on ourselves but on God who raises the dead. He who rescued us from so deadly a peril will continue to rescue us; on him we have set our hope that he will rescue us again” (2 Corinthians 1:9-10, NRSV).

I imagine a kind of Chilean mining rescue scene where Jesus goes down in the rescue pod to save those who are buried under ground.  He cares so much for these trapped miners that he even dies in the process of rescuing them.  He gives up his own life so that they might be given Life!

Defeated Death

Ah…but this whole rescue mission and death thing is not the end of the story.  For we also confess that “on the third day he rose again.”  I’ve been to a lot of funerals in my work at churches.  One thing I know with about as much certainty as I know anything: once you’re dead and in the coffin you don’t get back out.  People who are dead don’t come back to life.  But Jesus did!  Jesus conquered death.

We read in Paul’s letter to the Romans that in our baptism we participate in this death and resurrection of Jesus: “For we died and were buried with Christ by baptism. And just as Christ was raised from the dead by the glorious power of the Father, now we also may live new lives. Since we have been united with him in his death, we will also be raised as he was” (Romans 6:4-5, NLT).  Jesus conquered death and we confess and trust that in Jesus’ death and resurrection we too will conquer death!

Jesus is King!

Jesus didn’t just rise from the dead, but we also confess that he “ascended into heaven where he is seated at the right hand of the Father.”  This seems so strange.  One part of me is always a little skeptical about the Christian story at this point.  Isn’t it convenient that this resurrected person ascended into heaven so that the rest of us couldn’t actually see him?!  Yes…but.  The early church understood this ascension very differently than we do now.  For us we think it is strange that Jesus isn’t around any more if he resurrected from the dead, but they would have understood that Jesus’ resurrection meant he was king and the rightful place for the king would have been reigning from the throne room of heaven.  It would have been weird for them had Jesus the king  not ascended into heaven!  It is hard for us Americans to fully grasp the rightful place of a king.

Recently an improv group in New York called Improv Everywhere set a prank at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.  They had a 400 year-old king show up to sign autographs next to his portrait.  The Americans didn’t quite know what to do.  We’re not used to interacting with kings.

In Jesus the kingdom of heaven has radically broken into our world.  We read John the Baptist making this claim about Jesus, “Turn from your sins and turn to God, because the Kingdom of Heaven is near” (Matthew 3:2, NLT).  In Jesus, God’s kingdom breaks into this world in a totally radical and unique way.  The kingdom is not yet full, but it is already present.

Second Coming

As we continue in the Apostles’ Creed we confess that Jesus “will come again to judge the living and the dead” or some of you may have grown up saying “the quick and the dead.”  This is a reference to the time when Jesus will come back and while the kingdom of God is already present but not yet fully present, at that time, Christians claim, it will be made fully present.  What exactly will this look like?  We catch a glimpse of it in Revelation: He will remove all of their sorrows, and there will be no more death or sorrow or crying or pain. For the old world and its evils are gone forever.  And the one sitting on the throne said, ‘Look, I am making all things new!’”  (Revelation 21:4-5, NLT).  There will be a new heaven and a new earth, but I don’t want to go fully into that, because later this fall we’ll be diving into a series on the book of Revelation.

So What?

So this is all grand and everything to write this stuff down and say it out loud, but what does it mean for me today?  Why should I care about belief and trust in the Son?  The question at stake here is salvation.  In Jesus, the kingdom of God has radically broken into the world.  The brokenness and sin that currently exists in this world has been dealt a mortal blow.  In the person of Jesus we see what this looks like.  He is the first fruit of your garden in the spring season.  You see what is yet to come for you and me.

I’d like to unpack this idea of salvation a bit more.  Because we confess that Jesus was both fully God and fully human we trust that in Jesus, God took on the character of flesh that flesh might take on the character of God.  Gregory of Nazianzus, a 4th century church leader said, “That which Christ did not assume he did not redeem.”  In other words, if Christ had not been fully human, then he would not have been able to redeem fully our flesh.  As C.S. Lewis liked to say, “The Son of God became man so that men might become sons of God.”

St. Anselm, an 11th century church leader, wrote a book titled Why God Became Man.  He said that only humanity needed to be saved, but only God could save; therefore, a God-human needed to save.  When we say that Jesus was fully human and fully God we are saying that he was the only one who could build a bridge that would extend to both ends of the chasm that existed between God and humanity.

Jesus’ two natures mean both salvation now and salvation later.  It means that we are transformed now and that we have hope for a good and meaningful life after death in the presence of God.  Jesus said, “I am the resurrection and the life. Those who believe in me, even though they die like everyone else, will live again.  They are given eternal life for believing in me and will never perish. Do you believe this?”  (John 11:25-26, NLT).  The question is still posed to you today.  You need not do anything first to earn this salvation.  You need only trust right now.  Jesus = salvation.  Salvation = eternal life.  Eternal life begins right now.

Join me in the Apostles’ Creed but let us insert the word “trust” in the place of “believe.”

I trust in God, the Father almighty, Creator of heaven and earth.

I trust in Jesus Christ, His only Son, our Lord.
He was conceived by the power of the Holy Spirit and born of the Virgin Mary.
He suffered under Pontius Pilate, was crucified, died, and was buried.
He descended to the dead.
On the third day He rose again.
He ascended into heaven, and is seated at the right hand of the Father.
He will come again to judge the living and the dead.

I trust in the Holy Spirit,
the holy Catholic Church,
the communion of saints,
the forgiveness of sins,
the resurrection of the body,
and life everlasting.
Amen.