July 10, 2022: Fifth Sunday of Pentecost

Speaker: Drew Brislin
Category: Weekly Sermons

Amos 7:7-17; Psalm 82; Colossians 1:1-14

Luke 10:25-37

The Rev. Drew Brislin

Some of my fondest memories growing up center around fishing trips I took with my dad and

Grandfather as a young boy. I remember my dad coming in and waking me up in the early

morning hours before daybreak to get ready. Now during the school week, the wake up from

my dad came in the form of the lights be flipped on and a hearty get up! This was juxtaposed to

the gentle nudging that our mom always deployed. On Saturday mornings though, with a

fishing trip as the bait, so to say, my dad didn’t need much in the way of motivation to get me

going. The boat was always gassed up and hitched to the car and loaded down with our fishing

rods and other gear. The coolers and snacks were carefully prepared and packed and while I

had not yet started drinking coffee, my dad and grandfather always had a thermos prepared as

well. All that was needed now was a quick trip to the bait shop on our way to the boat landing.

The trip to the bait shop was always fun as well. The person running it would often let me help

whether it was scooping minnows or worms or shaking crickets into our cricket basket

container thing made of chicken wire. With bait in tow, we were off, headed for destinations

with romantic names like Bogue Chitto Creek, Gee’s Bend, Little Miami, Beech Creek or some

other slough that emptied into the Alabama River that my dad or grandfather were familiar

with and that often-produced good beds of whatever particular fish we were going after that

day whether it was bream or crappie which they typically fished for with me. It would be

several years before my dad would start to teach me about bass fishing. The sun would just be

beginning to rise as we put the boat in the water. This usually put us at our fishing destination

in the early morning and at prime fishing time. We would get our hooks baited and lines in the

water and then the fun part began. You know that favorite part of fishing that involves the

really fun part of waiting and watching. That waiting and watching that is strengthened by the

hope of watching the cork dip below the water line or seeing the tip of your rod bend. But as

you can imagine in the midst of that hopeful waiting a little boy’s stomach starts to grumble.

In our reading from Colossians this morning we find a letter written to the young Christian

community that is growing in the town of Colosae which is located in modern day Turkey. It is

often claimed that this letter is written by Paul, however, scholars today think it was most likely

written by someone or a group of people, who may have been followers of Paul, writing as if

they were Paul. This letter is meant to be a letter of encouragement to a young community that

is in danger of being deceived by people they encountered who made plausible arguments and

employed false ideology most likely revering the elemental spirits of the universe revered by

the authorities that governed them. The writer deploys the element of hope at the beginning of

the letter. “In our prayers for you we always thank God, the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, for

we have heard of your faith in Christ Jesus and of the love that have for all the saints, because

of the hope laid up for you in heaven. You have heard of this hope before in the word of the

truth, the gospel that has come to you.” Like the little boy whose stomach begins to rumble as

he is waiting on that monster fish to take his bait, so too is this young community of Christ

followers seeking confirmation of their faithfulness. The writer confirms, “Just as it is bearing

fruit and growing in the whole world, so it has been bearing fruit and growing in the whole

world, so it has been bearing fruit among yourselves from the day you heard it and truly

comprehended the grace of God. This you learned from Epaphras, our beloved fellow servant.”

The author of this letter is confirming for the young community that what they have heard, that

the Gospel that has been proclaimed to them from Epaphras is the true Gospel because the

fruit of the community is good and therefore the fruit of the Holy Spirit at work. We also hear

Paul’s foundations of faith, hope and love mentioned in this reading, however, in this letter

faith and love are made dependent on hope and that hope is the content of salvation as

salvation is what is hoped for in this young Christian community. The prominence of hope in

this letter of thanksgiving is a reminder for us of the security that is found in a life centered on

Christ.

As a young boy, I was often impatient, but also would grow hungry. That hunger was often

satisfied with Vienna sausages and saltine crackers or a soggy tuna fish sandwich and a Chek

cola from Winn Dixie. That was the sustenance that I needed as I waited and when I saw the

cork move and go under the water or the tip of my pole bend in a u-shape, I knew it was all

worth it. Hope for that big fish was sustained in those not so healthy snacks. Those memories

today give me hope that one day I will be reunited with my dad and my grandfather. Those

memories often sustain me. These letters of hope sustained these young, growing Christian

communities in the early days of the church. Christian hope is defined as the anticipation of the

future as the fulfillment of God’s purposes based on God’s covenant faithfulness and the

resurrection of Jesus Christ as known by the work of the Holy Spirit in the Church. I am ever so

thankful that hope is grounded in God’s covenant with us and the assurance that God will keep

his promises to us even when I so often fall short of keeping my end of the deal. Even in

adulthood I too often find myself getting impatient. I need to remember that there is always a

soggy tuna sandwich to get me by.

   Amen

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