Transformed in Christ - Resume revisited
If you are like me then you have had a few jobs in your day.
Especially if you look back on the whole of your life…
· My first job at 12 - was as a paperboy for the Toronto Star
· I was a farm hand on weekends and babysitter in the evening
· a dishwasher
· a cook
· I have mowed a lot of grass
· loaded boxes
· worked in a daycare
· was a janitor
· Then a highlight, my longest job ever - 6 years - at the Beer store…
· I worked in sales - first selling trash compactors
· Then inside sales for a couple of distributors
· then in outside sales for - not one - but three computer dealers
· and finally here as your Assistant Curate
Bet you didn’t know it was “get to know your clergy day”…
All these jobs have shaped me
Have helped to form me - to who I am
And in many ways, to what I know
For nearly all of these Jobs I had to apply and submit a resume
In applications and resumes we tell the story of who we are and what we are
We look into our own personal history and present a picture based on the past
Sure we pick the high lights
Take our accomplishments and make them look as pretty as we can
I heard once that 30% people write completely false information on resumes - not merely creative license but complete lies - they do this because they know that people often don’t check up on them
Many of you are employers and I know at least two of you here today are in human resources
You are on the other end of the story - you read and review other people’s histories
You are faced with the task of determining what in one person past will be suitable for the position that you need to fill
Much of how we start out in jobs and roles is proving our past is a suitable fit for our future
In today’s job market most people will change careers or at least employers - multiple times
And we keep needing to prove ourselves
Or justify ourselves worthy…
And that is precisely where we meet up with our New Testament reading today
Our passage from Philippians 3 is a memorable passage where we hear all about St. Paul
Paul addressing one of the reoccurring problems that he had as an evangelist for this new movement - this movement of followers of Jesus
Paul was addressing the Philippians people - who were being influenced by the Judiazers
The Judiazers were those that made claims that people needed to first practice Jewish traditions before becoming a disciple of Jesus Christ
So St. Paul lays it all out
Tells us about all his credentials
Circumcised on the eighth day,
A member of the people of Israel,
Of the tribe of Benjamin no less
A Hebrew born of Hebrews;
As to the law,
A Pharisee;
As to zeal,
A persecutor of the church;
As to righteousness under the law,
Blameless
As an Aside - I know that this is a helpful rhetorical device - a technique of speech to proving his case - but I have always found Paul to be bragging a bit
I mean it’s hard to boast about your own humility
But this boasting builds up the moment
Paul looks at the claims of the Judiazers and ups the auntie
And takes the wind out of their sails
- By seeing their claims and raising them
- placing his credentials out and presenting himself as Super Jew
Like our own resumes - prettied up to make us look as good possible
To make us as worthy as possible
To justify our cause…
Then comes the incredible flip flop,
The inside out and upside down, twist in St. Paul’s life
And the twist in our passage today
Paul is called by the very one in whom he is persecuting
And he is transformed
His zeal is converted from one direction to another
And he realizes that all his efforts towards self-made righteousness are -…nothing
All his credentials are nothing towards true righteousness
And he sees and shows the Philippian people ‘and us today’ that his self-made righteousness - his efforts can only be viewed as loss
Loss - which is worse then nothing
Loss … a detriment
In the end to be justified to the ways of the world or the standards of humanity is not true righteousness
These privileges have no saving power…
It’s facing the wrong way
That is why it is …Loss
He realized that God is the one that justifies
His eyes were opened to the truth
And he recognized Jesus of Nazareth - as the Christ
Emmanuel - God amongst us - God in the Flesh
And he changed directions and faced God instead of trying to justify himself
We modern day followers of Christ need to take a page out of our apostolic fathers and mothers
We consider ourselves Christians
And the term ‘Christians’ has a certain connotation
Like, we have arrived - that we are already complete
The first ‘Christians’ were know as ‘people of the way’
People on a journey - or - if you like ‘a pilgrimage’
Being discipled - taught - following - learning
And this is the final point that Paul drives home in our reading today
A point that is made with two elements
Forgetting what lies behind and straining forward to what lies ahead, I press on toward the goal for the prize of the heavenly call of God in Christ Jesus.
God provides us with a ‘reset button’
We forget the past
When our resumes show the pretty parts of our life - we know that there are unmentioned failures there too
And we are to forget
Turn from facing back to straining forward
Toward the goal
The prize of the heavenly call of God in Christ Jesus
Pulsing through these verses are the ideas of growth and progress in Christ
Jesus was victor over death.
That power of the resurrection both energizes the life and sets its hope
This the 5th Sunday in Lent
And the first Sunday in Spring with the promises of new life - shedding the coat of winter
Has the prophet Isaiah telling of God’s promise ‘to do a new thing’ - ‘springing forth’ - that God ‘will make a way in the wildernesses’
Referring both to the triumphant return from Egypt and the return from exile
The ‘way’
Is in the midst of - the ‘wilderness’
We have our Psalmist telling us that “those who sow in tears reap with shouts of joy”
And finally we have our Gospel story
Of Mary’s costly exuberance for Jesus
A year’s salary spread on his feet
Foreshadowing his death with an embalming oil
This Lenten time of reflection and preparation for the suffering of Good Friday and the hope that is Easter
This reoccurring message of the Bible
Found not only in the New Testament with the teaching of Christ
But the prime message of all scriptures
The consistent - reoccurring - heartbeat
God makes new
God transforms
God turns us from our ways - to him
Don’t store up earthly treasures or tell God about your ‘spiritual resume’
…let the Power of the resurrection of Christ - God defeating sin and death for us Energize your life and feed your hope
Let God Turn you from facing back - forgetting
And May peace of God, which passes all understanding, keep your hearts and minds in the knowledge and love of God, and of his Son, Jesus Christ our Lord - Amen