Sermons

Summary: Love is a fruit of an experience with the Holy Spirit

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Three weeks ago, we began a new series entitled: Batteries Not Included. There is nothing more frustrating than wanting play with your new toys and finding out the package had this hidden line - batteries not included.

We started this series by talking about the Hope, given in the understanding we are all created in God’s image and therefore worthy of his love, peace and joy so when your batteries run low this season, remember Jesus in breaking into our reality was the beginning of hope for us all. Then we talked about peace and shalom. The big idea was peace is not possible without an indwelling of the Holy Spirit. Finally, last week, we talked about joy and more directly, the idea joy comes as a fruit of the spirit and is not possible without first acknowledging what God has done for each of us through the sending of his Spirit to guide us all.

With that being said, today, I would like to open another gift of the Holy Spirit this holiday season: Love

Robert Fulghum in his book True Love, tells the story of George & Maggie. The staff and patients at the nursing home all felt sorry for George. His family had left him at the home, and they rarely ever visited. He became depressed and withdrawn, refusing to talk to anyone. He spent his days in silence. After a while, everyone gave up on trying to change George, and so they left him alone. (slide blank)

But one patient at the nursing home didn’t give up on George. Her name was Maggie. Maggie was a warm and vibrant person, a former vaudeville performer who loved to tell stories. Maggie visited George every day. She would sit in his room and talk all the while piecing together a lovely quilt. George never acknowledged her presence, but she kept up her visits anyway. Sadly, George never got to see Maggie’s finished quilt. As she was stitching the final pieces together, George passed away.

A member of the staff found an envelope from George, with instructions that it should be read after his death. Inside the envelope was a short note, reading – “Tell Maggie I love her.” If only George could have expressed this to Maggie sooner, for the quilt Maggie had been working on was a gift for George, because Maggie had fallen in love with him. Neither person had ever shared their true feelings with the other, missing out on an opportunity to experience each other’s love. And so the quilt Maggie had intended to give as a gift while George was alive, served as his burial shroud.

The sad story of George & Maggie, helps us to realize that though love was present and available and in some ways extended, it really remained hidden, and therefore, never personally experienced, becoming what it could have been.

In a similar way, God’s love must be experienced. Every year, we celebrate advent and Christmas with the dream that people will experience the love of Christ through the sharing of gifts, dinners, gatherings and the performing of rituals. And every year, we wonder if anyone experienced anything close to the love of Jesus. You see, you can hear about God’s love, know about it intellectually, talk about it, read about it, watch sermons on TV about it, understand it is available and present, but if it’s never personally experienced, it never becomes what God had intended for each of us.

Joseph Aldrich wrote in Gentle Persuasion, about the ministry of a husband and wife team he met from India, who were leading scores of international students, made up of Hindus and Moslems, to Christ. Aldrich could not understand how this couple were so effective reaching members of radically different cultural and religious traditions, but they were. So Joseph Aldrich asked them how they did it.

Each Sunday, the couple would host somewhere between 30 to 50 students for dinner. Meal time became a part of the strategy to break down barriers, and create an atmosphere of camaraderie and building friendships. So you talk about Christ at these meals?” asked Joseph Aldrich. “No, it is impossible to talk openly of Jesus Christ.” “So how, asked Aldrich, are you able to see so many find Christ?”

“We love them,” they replied, “until they ask us why.”

That’s the power of the unconditional love of God. It can cross barriers we never thought possible.

For there is a vast difference between being religious and having a personal relationship with Jesus Christ. There is a vast difference between being a church-going person and a disciple of the Lord. Tertullian, who lived shortly after the Apostle Paul, said – “A man becomes a Christian; he is not born one.” That’s the difference between religion and Christianity. To become a Christian you need to decide to emulate God by jumping in and experiencing life as a Christian.

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