Summary: As a nation we are being blindsided by things that destroy us. Yet if we were to look more carefully and see Jesus at work in all things, we would learn to be wholistic, we would identify with the needy, and we would deal with both the physical and the s

Have you ever been blindsided? Something happened, but

you never even saw it coming?

The snow, for instance. After several mild winters, did you

think we would be hit by repeated snowstorms? Did you see

that coming? I didn’t. I laid out seven super Sundays of

sermons on the churches of Revelation. But you only got

six! I didn’t see coming a snowstorm that would force us to

cancel worship.

Has something ever happened, and you never saw it

coming? Sometimes, it’s just a mild disruption. I went to the

dentist the other day, and was riding down the elevator

looking at the card they gave me about the next

appointment. I walked out of the elevator and right into

someone coming around the door. Just a mild bump and a

mumbled, “Excuse me”. But I never saw that coming.

Sometimes it’s more than a mild disruption. Sometimes it is

a catastrophe when you don’t see something coming.

Several of you have been in auto accidents lately. Nobody

badly hurt, but it is a financial catastrophe when your car is

damaged beyond driving. And just about every time you’ve

told me about these accidents, you’ve said, “This guy came

out of nowhere. The idiot, I never saw that coming!” (I will

not mention, of course, that the idiot has also told HIS pastor

about the moron that HE never saw coming!). Disaster

strikes; we never saw it coming.

But then there is something even deeper. When we don’t

see something coming, it can be more than a mild disruption,

and more than a catastrophe. It can be long, slow decline. It

can be deterioration and decay over weeks and months.

That may be the most dangerous thing not to see. A long,

slow deterioration. A few weeks ago I went into my study,

and noticed that part of the carpet was wet. I didn’t pay much

attention. I thought maybe I had spilled something. But I

went back to the same area the next day and found it even

more damp. I discovered that a valve had been leaking

behind the paneling and behind some bookshelves. As I

began to investigate, I found that I not only had damp carpet,

but also warped paneling, loose floor tiles, mildew on the

bookshelves, and, worst of all, some of my books were

soggy. Now you know me. Take my wallet if you wish.

Abduct one of my children if you must. But leave my books

alone! My precious books had been deteriorating from water

damage a long time, and I never even saw that coming!

But I could have! Had I looked more carefully, I could have

seen that coming. If we had read the Farmer’s Almanac,

which correctly predicted the snowstorm, we could have

seen that coming. If I had put the dental appointment card in

my pocket, I would have seen that lady approaching the

elevator door. If you who have had accidents had been

focused on your driving and not your cell phones or your CD

players, you might have seen the accident coming. And if I

had done some housekeeping, I would have seen the water

damage before it ruined my books. We could have seen

things coming, had we really been attentive. I never saw that

coming – but I could have.

I

America is being blindsided. As a nation, things are

happening that we never saw coming. But we could have.

A

We never saw 9/11 coming, but we could have. Certain

voices were warning us about the growing tide of terrorism.

It should have been no real surprise.

We never saw the stock market’s steep decline coming,

probably because we didn’t want to. We wanted to ride that

bubble as high as it would fly. I used to go to the Baptist

Annuity Board website and let it calculate how much my

retirement pay would be. I fantasized about how good it

would be to retire and get more money than what I get for

working! Well, that was then; this is now. I didn’t see the

stock market fall coming, but I could have. Lots of people

predicted the bubble could not last.

B

America is being blindsided. As a nation, things are

happening to us that we never saw coming. But we could

have.

1

We never saw massive illiteracy coming. We are astonished

that huge numbers of our children cannot read or write. We

never saw that coming, but we could have. We didn’t turn

off the TV and offer them books to read. We didn’t make

sure that they heard correct English. We didn’t sit insist that

they write something as simple as a thank-you note.

Massive illiteracy – where did that come from? We never

saw it coming. But we could have.

2

We never saw urban poverty coming. We thought that if we

would move to Washington from the countryside, we could

leave behind sharecropping and labor, we could work for the

government, maybe run our own businesses. We thought

we had left poverty behind. We were not prepared to

discover that in the nation’s capital, in the very shadow of the

places where bureaucrats spend billions for warheads and

space shuttles, people die of starvation and beg for dimes.

We never saw that coming; but we could have.

3

We never saw illiteracy coming, we never saw poverty

coming, and we never saw abused children coming. We

were taken care of when we were young, and we hope we

have taken care of our own children. But if we have not

looked carefully, we have not seen children who have been

beaten, teenage girls who have been pushed into

prostitution, or young men for whom violence is a way of life.

I talked with a man this week who told me that his earliest

childhood memories include carrying a gun – not a water

pistols or a cap gun, mind you, but the real thing was used to

settle things on his street. We didn’t see that coming, did

we? But we could have.

4

And, brothers and sisters in Christ, we never saw lostness

coming, either, did we? We never saw, and maybe still do

not see, what it means for someone to spend eternity without

Christ. It is not only that in this present life you are stripped

of meaning if you are not in Christ. It is also that out there in

the not yet there is hell if you are not in Christ. But some of

us are walking along our merry way and are not seeing that

either. We never saw lostness coming. But we could have.

It’s in the book!

II

America is being blindsided. We are experiencing things that

we never saw coming. Interesting that the Bible anticipates

this. In Jesus’ powerful passage about the last judgment, He

says that we didn’t see reality around us. He speaks of

those on His right hand, who fed the hungry, clothed the

naked, visited the sick and the imprisoned, but they didn’t

see something. What did they not see? They didn’t see

Jesus Himself in all those situations. And then He speaks of

those on His left hand, who failed to feed the hungry, who

brushed off clothing the naked, who never got around to

visiting the sick and the imprisoned, but, guess what? They

didn’t see either! They didn’t see Jesus in any of those

situations. Neither one saw deeply enough into what was

coming! Some did what they could to help, and that’s good.

Simple human compassion is a great thing. But they didn’t

see all there was to see. They didn’t Jesus in those they

were serving. Others did nothing, and I’m afraid that’s just

the way human sin operates. Doing nothing is our favorite

sin. But the issue is that whether they helped or whether

they did not help, everybody failed to see Jesus! Nobody

saw reality! Nobody really saw the whole issue!

Let me suggest a few things we might see if we look deeper

and see Jesus in those I like to call the last, the least, the

lost, and the lonely.

A

If we look carefully, and see Jesus in America’s needs, we

will learn that there is something more than spirituality AND

that there is something more than religiosity. We will learn to

be whole persons.

Stay with me now. This is important to understand. I meet

two kinds of people who fail to see Jesus in the needs of

others. Some of them are very spiritual; and some of them

are very religious. Those are not the same things. But

whether you be spiritual or whether you be religious you may

be missing the truth!

Some folks are very spiritual. They speak of being spiritual

without being religious. They mean that they are interested

in feelings. They get a buzz from singing or from hearing

uplifting music. They appreciate the beauty of a sunset.

They read inspiring meditations. They get all warm and

fuzzy. They say they are spiritual. But don’t give me that

“church” stuff. Don’t want to get involved in church politics,

can’t deal with committees, not about to fuss with

procedures, don’t want to give money – oh, that’s what

churches always want, money – so just let me be spiritual

without being religious. But that misses reality. You won’t

see real people if you are just spiritual, out there in the ether

somewhere.

However, other folks are religious without being spiritual!

Other folks give themselves to committees and policies,

budgets and buildings, all the hardware that goes into

running an institution. They show up like clockwork on

Sundays and sit through worship dutifully. They read the

rule books to figure out why not to do something new. They

are religious to a fault. But ask them to pray? Ask them to

study the Bible? Take on a ministry? Sit with a lonely

person? Hear the heartbeat of a desperate soul? No way!

That’s for the pastor, isn’t it? Some of us are religious but

not spiritual. But if that’s you, you won’t see reality, any

more than the guy who is spiritual without being religious.

Jesus taught us that we need to serve human needs, and we

need to see Him in all things. We need to be practical and

we need to be spiritual. If you look at Jesus in others, you

will become a whole person.

B

Second, if we look deeper and see Jesus in the last, the

least, the lost, and the lonely, it will teach us to identify with

people in need and not to distance ourselves. If we learn to

see Jesus in those who are struggling, it will teach us that if

we expect to make a difference, we need to be where they

are, we need to feel what they feel.

I am persuaded that much that is wrong with America is that

we are still practicing segregation. You know about

segregation. But I am not talking about the old thing of legal

segregation. I’m speaking of everyday life segregation. And

not so much racial segregation, although that is still with us,

but social segregation. We separate ourselves into ghettoes

where we can live without seeing others who are not like us.

Some of us don’t know any poor people. We don’t live

where they live, and, even if we do, we avoid dealing with

them. We segregate ourselves from harsh human needs.

We ride the subway to work, and it goes underground! You

won’t see poor people there! We hunt for freeways that will

whisk us to our destinations without our driving through

desperate communities where young angry people hang out

or tired, old-before-their-time men stand around. We pull our

children out of the public schools because we want them to

have superior opportunities, but it means that other children

don’t have the benefit of learning from our children. It is

segregation, and we have chosen it!

Why, we even have churches now that are pulling out of the

District and carving out lovely campuses in the green fields

of Prince George’s County, where, if you don’t have a car to

get you there, Lord help you if you want to go to the church!

We are resegregating.

But looking at people and seeing Jesus at work in them will

teach us to identify, to be there with them. I listened to one

of the missionaries whose work we are asked to support

through our missions offering. She said that she and her

husband had decided to live, with their children, on the

Lower East Side of New York, where their mission center is,

so that they would have to see the prostitutes plying their

trade, so that they would have to hear the police sirens all

night long, so that they would be there when somebody got

shot. They identified. They saw Jesus in that suffering.

Maybe that’s not for you. But I tell you, if you at least get to

know somebody on the edge, and see Jesus in the last, the

least, the lost, and the lonely, you will never be caught not

seeing it coming.

C

In fact, if we look deeper and see Jesus in the last, the least,

the lost, and the lonely, it will not only teach us to become

whole persons. It will not only teach us to understand that

they are just like us and we like them. But seeing the needs

of America and seeing Jesus there will also teach us that if

we are going to deal with needy people, we have to deal with

them both physically and spiritually. We have to recognize

the whole range of their needs and be there for them where it

counts the most.

What do you hear when I use my pet phrase, the last, the

least, the LOST, and the lonely? That word, the LOST. Do

you think I am talking about some child who can’t find his

way through the streets? Do you think I mean some

Alzheimer’s patient who no longer knows his address? No, I

am talking about spiritual lostness. I am talking about what it

means to be outside of Christ. I am saying that if you really

want to help somebody, help everything about that

somebody. If you want to see them as Jesus sees them,

then see not only their physical condition. See their spiritual

condition. Fundamentally men and women are spiritual

beings, and their brokenness traces back to being alienated

from God. If you do not see that, you do not see the whole

truth. If you do not deal with that, you will never solve their

problems. You will only be blindsided. You will never see

their real destiny.

Raise a child, give that child food and shelter, education and

attention, but never speak a word about the Lord, never pray

for and with that child? Are we really surprised when he

turns out to be a spoiled brat who indulges himself with every

plaything that money can buy?

Support with our silence a media culture that is obsessed

with sexiness – can you believe that the same company that

gave us Mickey Mouse is now giving us “Who’s Hot in

America?” Support with our silence that sex-obsessed

media, but never show our young people the joy of Christian

relationships? And then we don’t see it coming when

sexually-transmitted diseases threaten to take away an

entire generation?

Permit Maryland’s new governor to ignore the state’s sordid

history and pay for legitimate needs with thousands of slot

machines? Can we not see coming the plague of

racketeering, to say nothing of money being wasted by those

who can least afford it?

Brothers and sisters, I am saying that unless we start seeing

things spiritually, we will be blindsided and will never even

see coming some of the deterioration that America is facing.

It is our task to see Jesus, see what He wants to do, and

witness to that. Fail to do that, and we will have forfeited this

nation. And it will decline and decay, slowly but surely.

III

So what do we do? What is the answer? How do we keep

from being blindsided? How do we avoid never seeing what

is coming?

We get involved. We get involved with hurting people. We

plunge in feet first with the whole gospel. We feed people’s

bodies, and we feed their souls. We cloth people’s

nakedness, and we offer them the robes of righteousness.

We do whatever we find we can do to make a difference in

what a man needs today, but we do not forget about

tomorrow and most of all, we do not forget about eternity.

Our church has made a start. We have seen a few things. I

am sure we have not seen them all. Likely there are some

things coming that we have not yet seen. But, by the grace

of God, we have seen a few things, and we have responded.

Today you can get involved. Yes, next week we are going to

receive a missions offering, and you can give some dollars to

support missionaries. I hope you will, and I hope it will be

generous. That’s important. But it is also the easiest thing

to do, and as such, it’s not enough.

Today you can get involved by signing on to one of our

ongoing ministries. Or you can tell us that you have seen

Jesus in some other need that we haven’t thought of yet.

Today you can begin to make a difference with somebody

who is last or least; today you can focus on somebody who is

lonely; today, and for eternity, you can reclaim somebody

who is lost. All it takes is for you to see this community, this

city, this nation, and see Jesus, with all He has to offer.

Otherwise, things will happen, and you will never see them

coming.

Maybe, in fact, that is the meaning of this Table. Hidden

under this bread is the bread of life, and you may not see

that. Obscured in this cup of wine is the elixir of life eternal,

and you may not have discerned that. But He says we are to

eat this bread and drink this cup “until He comes”. Until He

comes -- maybe the point is that until we learn to see Him in

the needs of people we will never see Him coming.