Three Simple Rules #2: Do Good - 19 Nov Worship at South Meriden Trinity UMC
What Makes a Methodist? Three Simple Rules • Sermon • Submitted • Presented • 28:12
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Do Good - John Blossom - 19 November 2017 1 of 3
[PRAYER] [BLANK] I pray that all of your families and loved ones will be
blessed this coming Thanksgiving, and I hope that your celebrations will be joyful and
peaceful. We do have much to be thankful for, and I pray that Thanksgiving will be a day
when you reflect on all the good that God gives us, and on all the good that God calls us to
do, as we express our living faith.
I hope that you got some good from my first sermon on the “Three Simple Rules”
of Methodism, our General Rules that have been a part of the Methodist movement since its
earliest days. [BOOK] Reuben Job’s book helps us to remember that these simple rules are
still so important to our faith. After all, we can use some encouragement to do the things
that are simple, but hard.
I have developed a habit in recent years. [STOP SIGN] One day, I got a warning
ticket for not coming to a complete stop at a stop sign. I had been becoming more spiritual,
and that ticket helped me to see that I needed to make some changes in my attitudes and
actions. So, I decided to make it a habit to come to a full and complete stop every time that
I came to one. A simple rule, but at first it was hard to follow it all the time! I was so used
to making exceptions for myself. Pretty quickly I began to see that I had made a habit of
making exceptions for myself in many areas of my life. It turns out that this simple traffic
rule was reminding me about my need for spiritual discipline. So now, when I am tempted
to almost-kinda-sorta stop at a stop sign, that temptation gently reminds me who God wants
me to be. [BLANK]
It’s a simple habit, but it’s not always easy to do it every single time. Our three
simple rules of Methodism remind us that it’s in repeating the simple things of our faith,
again and again, consciously, persistently, insistently, that we find living, life-saving faith.
Faith isn’t just a belief. It’s a habit. Do no harm. Do good. Stay in love with God. These are
the habits that we need, day in and day out, to live in Jesus, so that when we need God the
most, we’ll be in God already. [SECOND RULE]
Do good. Wow, what could we want to do more than that! This church, like many
United Methodist churches, is filled with people who love to do good. [BAZAAR] When I
saw the amazing joy that people brought to our church bazaar this month, or making apple
pies or chili earlier this fall, I saw people who know how to do good, again and again!
When I see the warmth that everyone expresses to people during our passing of the peace, I
see people who know how to do good. [MISSION] When I look at the faces from this
church that lit up with joy on their mission trips to Nicaragua, or helping to renovate our
Unity House home for refugee families, I see people who love to do good.
We “get” doing good. That’s simple enough. But where are limits of doing good as
a Christian? When is doing good...good enough? The Methodist answer to this question is
simple, but not easy. [QUOTE] While it’s not clear that John Wesley said all of these exact
words at one single time, he certainly made it clear many times that he believed every word
of them: “Do all the good you can. By all the means you can. In all the ways you can. In all
the places you can. At all the times you can. To all the people you can. As long as ever you
can.” [BLANK]
Do Good - John Blossom - 19 November 2017 2 of 3
Wow. How’s that for boundaries? That’s not just a now-and-again kind of good.
That’s not just a “when I feel up to it” kind of good. That’s an all-in, all the time,
everywhere, for everyone kind of good. Do good. Full stop. Period. Because that’s what
God does. If we really believe in our salvation from sin and death through faith in Jesus
Christ, if we really believe that our acceptance of Jesus Christ as our savior invites us to
become new creations in Christ, true children of God, this is what our Christian faith really
means! We are really, REALLY to be like Jesus!
But before we start heading for the exits in panic, thinking that we’ll be exhausted
for the rest of our lives, let’s remember what it is to be like Jesus. Jesus knew how to take
care of himself. He fasted in a desert for forty days after his baptism, not to go on a diet, or
to prove something to himself, but to take care of himself. He needed to purify his soul and
his body with God’s love, so that when Satan came to tempt him, with everything that evil
and worldly power could offer, doing the simple good that God wants in the world would
be a no-brainer. He prayed alone quietly when he needed to. He went to weddings, to
rejoice with people! He surrounded himself with disciples, and taught them how to be good
together, so that the world would be filled with people being good like Jesus. Jesus knew
that the habit of doing good was his best self-care!
In other words, Jesus did good, and taught others to do good, because it was his
passion. It was who he was. More than really stopping at stop signs, being good was not
even a second nature for Jesus, but a first nature; his way of life. Doing good isn’t so much
about the doing: it’s really about the being. When we choose to be a Methodist Christian,
we choose to commit ourselves not just to activities, or causes, or fellowships, but to a way
of life that is about becoming who we’re meant to be, together, a people who are really like
Jesus, with Jesus, in Jesus, for the sake of God’s world.
[EPHESIANS] The New Testament letter to the Ephesians explains this
“becoming” part of our faith walk very well. Ephesians 2 says, “For by grace we have
been saved through faith, and this is not our own doing; not the result of works, so that no
one may boast. For we are God’s good workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good
works, which God prepared beforehand to be our way of life.”
Through our faith, God’s grace, God’s undeserved gift of everlasting love, saves us
from doing harm through sin; we can never save ourselves from it. We can’t “do” our way
to salvation. But salvation through faith in God’s grace is just the beginning of becoming
who we are meant to be. God’s good workmanship makes us a new creation in Christ, a
new kind of person, a person who was meant to rejoice in doing good works as our way of
life, forever.
Notice those words “our” and “we.” To do good as a new creation in Christ is to be
someone whose way of life will never be a solo shot. To do good is to be one of God’s
very good creations who God has invited into God’s family since the beginning of time. If
doing the good that God wants us to do sounds scary at times, remember this: it’s the only
thing that makes us really alive, and it’s the only thing that will ever last into eternity.
Everything else goes out the window. To do good is to be who you were meant to be, now,
Do Good - John Blossom - 19 November 2017 3 of 3
and forever. [BLANK]
Being good to do good, like Jesus, is powerful. It changes people. It changes the
world. It makes people fearless, not hopeless; it makes people joyful, not bitter. It fills
people with wonder, not envy. And, because doing real, godly good is so powerful, so
transformative, so courageous, so joyful, so wonder-filled, because it calls us to be who we
are, doing good has consequences.
Jesus understood the consequences of doing good more than anyone else. In
today’s reading from Mark’s gospel, Jesus is asked to heal a man’s withered hand on the
Jewish Sabbath day. The Pharisees didn’t want Jesus healing people on the Sabbath. The
Pharisees wanted to put boundaries on God’s power. so that they could have power. Jesus
confronted the Pharisees with a simple question: is it right to do good, life-giving things on
God’s sabbath day, or not? Are there boundaries to doing God‘s good, or not? Jesus
destroyed the artificial boundaries that the Pharisees had set, and healed the man’s hand.
Right away, the Pharisees began a plot to kill Jesus. Doing good does have consequences.
But it makes us who God meant us to be. And that’s always good. It is, in fact, the best.
Perhaps it’s the consequences that scare us the most about doing good. Perhaps
we’re just not that into good as we thought we were. Sometimes doing good means that we
leave unhealthy relationships behind, relationships that we relied on to get you through the
day, as negative as they might have been. Sometimes the path that God has prepared to be
our way of life leads us to places and people that are way beyond our everyday comfort
zone, like the bedside of a dying relative who we feel has let us down, neighbors and
strangers who we really don’t like but who need the healing touch of God, people
thousands of miles away, in cultures radically different from our own, who need to feel the
living presence of Jesus making a difference in their lives. Doing good makes us who we
are meant to be, and it will take us where we never thought that we’d ever go. And that’s
good.
Who are you meant to be? What are the limits that you, your family, your culture,
have put in your way, that prevent you from being who you were meant to be in Christ?
What fears keep you from being that person who does nothing but good that God has
prepared you to be? What doubts keep you from accepting Jesus as the way of life that you
were meant to live in?
Jesus calls to you now, in God’s Holy Spirit, to make being who you were meant to
be in Christ your new habit, your best habit, and, through God’s grace, your only habit, for
the rest of your life. Blow right past the Pharisees that live in your heart and in your life.
Let God touch the withered hand that is your incompleteness, the world’s incompleteness,
and allow the healing and saving power of Jesus Christ to begin the process of restoring
God’s way of life to you, and to everyone. Be a Christian who makes doing good, and
nothing but good, all the time, together, everywhere, for everyone, with no limits, through
God’s grace and God’s grace alone, your only and eternal way of life! Do good! Do good!
Do good! Do good! Do good! AMEN!