Any
child of the 80s remembers this famous ad campaign which got its start in 1987,
when the New York Giants won the Super Bowl and Phil Simms, the MVP quarterback
was asked, “Phil Simms, you just won the Super Bowl. What are you doing next?”
“I’m going to Disney World!,” he says. And the ad took off with a slew of
famous athletes saying the same thing when they won any match or game.
Well, as
surprising as the original ad with Phil Simms was it was not near as surprising
as what the Apostle Paul would do and say in Acts 20 after his experience in
Acts.
Paul,
you almost died amidst a great uproar and riot in Ephesians. What would you
like to do now? Paul would say, “I’m going to parakaleo.” (vss. 1-2)
Now, that’s not some ancient theme park in Thebes. But it
does mean it’s time for The Greek of the Week! Our Greek of the Week hails as
one of the more important words in our passage. Not because it’s odd or unique
but because it’s critical for the Christian life and Paul’s ministry:
encouragement. The word is παρακαλέω [parakaleō]
which is a smashing together of two words: para which means from, near
or alongside (e.g. think parallel) and καλέω [kaleō]
which means to call aloud or invite. So it literally means to call out to
someone to come alongside. It’s what Paul will do immediate after riots where
he almost died (Acts 19), it’s what he will do from prison when he can’t travel
(in fact a great deal of Paul’s letter come from a time of confinement!), it’s
what believers do for each other (Acts 15:32; 1 Thess. 4:18, 5:11, 14), it’s
what the Scriptures are for (Rom. 15:4), and it is the very activity of God
(Rom. 15:5). It’s also what happens when believers tell each other how they are
doing (Eph. 6:22; Col. 4:8, Is it your activity? Or, is it something you need.
You have a bonus. The Greek of the Week is also the Stevie
Wonder Christian Quarantine Activity Plan of the Week.
Parakeleo is what
Stevie Wonder admonishes us to do amidst sadness and pain:
I
just called to say I love you
I just called to say how much I care
I just called to say I love you
And I mean it from the bottom of my heart
I just called to say how much I care
I just called to say I love you
And I mean it from the bottom of my heart
So
yeah, there may be No Easter Sunday / No eating out / No hiking in a State Park
on a Saturday / But what it is, is something true / Made up of these three
words that I must say to you. Okay, I’m being a little silly but encouragement
is no joke.
Let me be clear: The most Christ-like, encouraging thing you
can do right now. The thing that will most bless your loved ones, your
neighbors, your church family, is for you to do that from home. But if Paul can
encourage hundreds of believers from prison, then surely you can do so from
house arrest. If Paul needed encouragement (Philemon 1:7), surely you can ask
for it, participate in it. So what are creative ways to encourage one another,
to call others alongside? Maybe you can write a letter? Text a goofy picture.
Or play a game together over Zoom? Maybe it’s to pray for someone and let them
know through an email. Take a moment and share some prayer requests now.
We will also be taking these requests and creating a beautiful prayer wall so
that we can encourage one another. We will never be able to fully encourage if
we also don’t practice vulnerability.
Trinity – the Covid-19 virus is threatening our world. What
are you going to do? Parakeleo and prayer.
Paul,
you almost died at the hands of angry Ephesians. What do you want to do now? Paul
would say, “I want to gather and discuss.” (vs. 7)
Encouragers
aren’t simply people who call out love to others. They are also gatherers and
discussers. They recognize that we need to hear from each other. I love the
fact, that Paul just comes off of a harrowing experience in which he’s almost
lynched in Ephesus and grabs 6 guys to go on an encouragement tour!
First,
they gathered intentionally and sacramentally. This is the first example in the
New Testament of the church gathering on Sunday and not the traditional Jewish
Sabbath, which was Saturday. That practice has become one of the most bedrock
elements of Christian identity and worship. Gathering together wasn’t an
optional aspect of this community’s encouragement but ordered their week,
defined their purpose, set them apart. It’s been interesting that as I have
spoken with many of you that one of the earliest victims of the coronavirus was
our sense of time. Many have told me that they don’t know what day it is. Now,
more than ever it’s important to establish a rhythm of encouragement for our
life. I want to encourage you to a practice what the church has had for almost
2,000 years – something that’s tried and true – gathering together on the first
day of the week. I also want us to be creative. The early church used normal,
everyday homes for their worship. Now, we are using zoom chat rooms.
Second,
they discussed. The faith that we hold so dear, that message that we wish to
proclaim is not a monologue. Our text is both challenging and funny on this
point. The word used in vs. 7 for what Paul is doing is not simply “talking”
but the word for “holding a discussion.” Luke is being a bit funny because Paul
is trying to hold a dialogue but appears to be a bit too excited and tends to
talk too much (no comments, please). And in doing so, it gets a little boring.
But his intent was a good one and one that we should emulate – let’s talk about
faith. Let’s talk about how to worship, pray, share the gospel, at this time,
where we are at. Let’s all contribute. The best talking about faith is always a
discussion, always stone soup. You remember the story of stone soup, right? The
prophet Amos talked about a famine in the land for the word of God (Amos 8:11).
If we are going to weather this current storm without starving to death, then
we must work on cooking and eating the soup of the word together. I want to
encourage us with new technology like Zoom to use chat rooms as places where we
can gather together, face-to-face. I’m looking for people who are willing to
lead these gatherings. We have it all ready? Are you being called to be an
encourager in this way? You can tell us right now in the comment section below
or reach out to me and we will help set up room so that you can gather with
others to read Scripture, talk about it and pray. Take a moment: In this
time of isolation, what are you spiritually hungry for? Are you willing to help
facilitate a Zoom group?
Trinity
– the coronavirus is threatening our ability to be together and around the word.
What are you going to do? Gather and discuss to worship, study and pray.
Paul
you survived a riot in Ephesus, took an encouragement tour, preached a little
too long, experienced tragedy and death once again. Now what are going to do? Paul
says, “I’m going to embrace death with affection.”
As sometimes happen, when the church gathers together, the
preacher for the day goes a bit too long. In fact, Luke tells us, Young
Eutychus “was sinking into a deep sleep as Paul talked on and on” (vs. 9). The
humor suddenly turns to tragedy when the young man fell to this death.
Tragedy tends to come upon us like that. We are at church,
things are going along as usual, then someone slumps forward or a cry goes up,
there is the shock, and tragedy engulfs the flow of the ordinary. A once
vibrant young disciple is dead – the verse is sudden and final - a door banging
shut. We are suddenly rendered speechless, immobilized. Tragedy does that to
people.
Now, I want to read vs. 10 carefully and closely. 10 Paul went down, threw himself
on the young man and put his arms around him. “Don’t be alarmed,” he said.
“He’s alive!” Notice that Paul embraces before he knows the end. He moves and
affectionately embraces before announcing the outcome. Paul isn’t the healer,
we discussed last week. Paul doesn’t know what’s going to happen but the gospel
has trained him in his response.
We
can embrace death not because we aren’t afraid, not because we’re bulletproof,
not because we believe in miraculous power. We can embrace it because that is
what the God of the universe did in Jesus Christ. We can comfort stricken
people, embrace our confinement, lay hold of our powerlessness, with a
prophetic gesture of defiance. Death does not determine our end. God does. And
that means that every death can be a growing place, a redeeming place, and
fruitful place. A place where we need not be alarmed. Death was defeated by a
loving embrace and until Jesus comes again death will die a thousand deaths as
we refuse to let it determine our destiny. Let not your hearts be
troubled. You are not your own. You don’t belong to death. You have been
embraced God. Now embrace others with the gospel.
Trinity Covenant – Covid-19 is keeping you from worshiping
in your regular space, confines you at home, wants to smother you with boredom
or worry. You don’t have to fight it – embrace the deadly place you find
yourself with great affection and believe this – here too you can find life and
“not a little comfort”. I want to invite you to comment your own places of
struggle and death, your own need for encouragement, and to pray for another.
This is how we will encourage one another, gather and discuss, and embrace one
another. And will turn these into a prayer wall.
No comments:
Post a Comment