Sermons

Summary: A sermon for Reformation Sunday

  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • Next

October 27, 2024

Reformation Sunday

Rev. Mary Erickson

Hope Lutheran Church

Romans 3:19-28; John 8:31-36

The Truth Will Make You Free

Friends, may grace and peace be yours in abundance in the knowledge of God and Christ Jesus our Lord.

Our director of youth and family ministries, Grace, is currently enrolled at UW-Stout. She’s working towards a master’s degree in their counseling department. The two of us huddle on Monday afternoons to go over the week. I like to ask her what she’s been studying. Each week in her classes they learn about a different therapy technique. I’d been a psychology major in college, so I kind of live vicariously through hearing what she’s studying!

This past Monday, Grace told me they’d reviewed Narrative Therapy. That was a new one on me; I hadn’t heard of it. But what Grace told me about it really captivated me. In Narrative Therapy, the counselor tries to guide their client in changing how they view their identified problem by reframing their life story.

What does that mean? We all have a story that we tell about ourselves. It’s how we’ve come to understand how all the pieces and winding pathways have come together to form us into the people we are. But perhaps we’ve shaped that story along some unhealthy narratives. Like, maybe we’ve experienced a lot of hard luck and abuse. And we’ve come to perceive ourselves as a victim of these circumstances. So maybe we could reframe all the hardship that’s come our way by focusing instead on the fact that we’ve prevailed. This would mean that we’re not victims, we’re survivors. One narrative frames us within powerlessness while the other points to strength and resolve and inner character.

Or maybe there are aspects to you that are quite different than other people. And through persistent teasing and criticisms, you’ve come to believe that you’re a freak. Well, maybe a new self-narrative can lift up the very thing that makes you so different – not condemn you for it but lift it up. After all, this characteristic is part of what makes you you! It’s your unique gift, it’s your “special sauce.” So rather than shaping your narrative around shaming, you understand that you’re exactly the unique creation God intended you to be. You have a gift to share with the world.

The hit movie “The Help,” is based on the book of the same name. The main character, Aibileen Clark, is an African American housekeeper working for a white family in Jackson, Mississippi. The year is 1962. Besides cleaning their house and cooking, Aibileen also takes care of the family’s little daughter, Mae. She’s devoted to Mae, and Aibileen has a phrase – a mantra – that she repeatedly tells Mae: “You is kind, you is smart, you is important.” In a world of negativity and mixed messages, Aibileen wants to plant this blessing seed in little Mae’s heart. She wants to shape the self-narrative of this little girl on this positive message. “You is kind, you is smart, you is important.”

There are so very many false narratives in this world. Especially in election season, we’re not sure what to believe with so many half-truths and outright lies. You’ll see one ad on television that completely skewers a certain candidate. And then you’ll see their opponent’s ad that sounds like the reverse. Frequently you’ll see these ads back to back! What are we to believe? What news feed do we watch? What narrative do they tell? It’s just dizzying.

Society tells us false narratives about ourselves, too. They tell us how we are judged and ranked. They tell us if we’re winners or losers, important or invisible. And if we hear them frequently enough, we come to believe them.

Political narratives and social narratives aren’t the only ones out there. There are religious narratives, too. What story do we tell about God? What does that story reveal about how God relates to us? Does our narrative tell of an angry God who judges us harshly? Or is God aloof and so high above us that we’re like an insignificant speck in the wide universe?

This Bible that we ponder holds many stories in it. And if you search its pages, you can find passages to validate your particular narrative. You can proof text just about anything with the Bible.

But there is a greater, overarching narrative in, with, and under our Bible. It stretches from cover to cover. And it tells a definitive story, a story about God and about ourselves. This is the story that Jesus was trying to explain to his listeners in our reading from John. He tells them that his word, the message he proclaims to them, stands within this foundational narrative of the scriptures.

Copy Sermon to Clipboard with PRO Download Sermon with PRO
Talk about it...

Nobody has commented yet. Be the first!

Join the discussion
;