Friday, September 21, 2018

Were You Afraid?


The sermon uses scripture Genesis 1:1-2:3.  It was prepared for September 23, 2018 at Vespers Service at Presbyterian Communities in Florence, SC.  However, because of possible rising of Lynches River, travel to Florence was not recommended.
This is an off-lectionary sermon which I felt called to write after Hurricane Florence passed through our area.  I used my theology essay The Providence of God in Natural Disasters as a starting point for the sermon.



Were You Afraid?

 I was.

As Hurricane Florence approached the Carolina coast,

I was afraid.

What was going to happen?

Would there be flooding?

            Would a tree fall on the house?

            How sturdy is the carport?

These seem like self-centered questions, I know;

            that comes from our human frailty.

I was also concerned about others…

            my neighbor, who decided to go to Virginia

 to be with her daughter,

            my friends who live in Myrtle Beach,

            a few friends who were in the path of Matthew,

a couple of years ago and looked like they

were going to be hit again.

The 24/7 news weather coverage was good,

to be kept up to date,

yet, added to the fear of what was coming.

To be afraid was only logical.

Wasn’t it?

~~~~~

Where is faith?

You and I know

God is with us and even in our worst experience,

God provides hope for renewal.

Even when those many questions come up

when something bad happens. 

You know those questions:

Why is this happening to me? 

Is this punishment? 

How could God let this happen? 

These questions once again seem very self-centered;

as if God is taking personal retribution

against the individual;

either it is a test of faith or a punishment for sin,

but either way it appears there is intentional suffering

being done by God. 

No,

a loving Creator God does not take pleasure

in causing suffering. 

God is good. 

And what God created is good;

as seen throughout the first chapter of Genesis:

And God saw that it was good.  

Creation is inseparably joined with God’s providence.

Providence is God’s acting and ongoing involvement

in our lives. 

God is not the watchmaker who sets things up to run on its own.

Being the Creator does not mean creating and being done,

there is more as theologian Jean Calvin states that God:

“sustains, nourishes, and cares for, everything he has made, even to the least sparrow.”[1]

Jesus reminds his disciples:

            “Do not be afraid; you are of more value than many sparrows.”

God cares for all creation from the small sparrow to you and me.

God’s providence means there is a plan for how things happen,

So the question becomes:

how is God good in midst of bad things happening? 

how may we view God’s providence in the face of

natural disasters that cause death or suffering? 

~~~~~

The Doctrine of Providence is defined as

“the Christian understanding of God’s continuing action by which all creation is preserved, supported, and governed by God’s purposes and plans for human history and for human lives.”[2]

God did not set up creation and sit back and watch it go;

God is with us and continues to act in the world. 

Good and bad are all part of God’s providence, God’s power,

and God’s interaction with the world. 

There are fruitful years and lean years,

there is health and sickness;

if you and I do not have the bad then

how can we understand the good? 

We do not know the mind of God and

cannot see what the plan may be;

we must have faith in God’s wisdom. 

In some circumstance you and I may feel out of control,

but there is order underneath because God is in control. 

What does God being in control say about acts of nature?

Throughout the Bible and especially in

the Old Testament we see God’s power in nature. 

The flood story of Noah and the ark can be viewed not only

as a story of destruction,

but a story of renewal; God re-creating. 

The Israelites escaped Egypt by the parting of the Red Sea,

but why did God have the sea cover the Egyptians

and not just stop them from crossing?

In the Psalms there is praise for God’s creation and

            God’s power in control of creation.

            A few verses from Psalm 29:

            The voice of the Lord is over the waters;  

the God of glory thunders,

the Lord, over mighty waters.

The voice of the Lord flashes forth flames of fire.

 The voice of the Lord shakes the wilderness;

            The voice of the Lord causes the oaks to whirl
                        and strips the forest bare;”

Those verses sound a little scary:

thundering,

flames of fire,

stripping the forest bare.

Yet, amongst the chaos, there is assurance;

            Psalm 29 concludes with these words:

“The Lord sits enthroned over the flood;
                        the Lord sits enthroned as king forever.

May the Lord give strength to his people!
            May the Lord bless his people with peace!”

God is in control.

The prophet Isaiah reminds us of God’s presence

in Isaiah 43:2:

When you pass through the waters, I will be with you; and through the rivers, they shall not overwhelm you; when you walk through fire you shall not be burned, and the flame shall not consume you.” 

~~~~~

The question that persists is ‘when bad things happen,

how do the individuals that are experiencing

a natural disaster feel and react?’

Whether it is hurricane Hugo or Katrina or Matthew or Florence,

there is always loss, fear, and uncertainty.  

How can hope be found in these situations? 

How can something good be seen amongst the tragedy? 

How do we get to re-creation and renewal from here? 

God.

~~~~~

God does not intend for suffering to happen in a disaster. 

God is with us through the disasters and can guide us

with hope and faith onto a new path. 

God walks with us through these situations. 

God’s providence helps us in all adversities.

The lesson in the providence of God is once again

not the self-centered questions of

why me or why did God allow this to happen,

it is the reactions we have and

the actions we take in the aftermath of tragedy. 

Remembering always that God is in control,

even in the chaos, there is hope.

God created the world from chaos,

“…the earth was a formless void and darkness covered the face of the deep, while a wind from God swept over the face of the waters.

 Then God said, “Let there be light”; and there was light.  And God saw that the light was good; and God separated the light from the darkness.”

God separates light from darkness.

As the Gospel of John begins with a similar theme…

            The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness did not overcome it.”

God is our light when things turn dark;

            our faith is the light amongst our fears.

When we as individuals are in the midst of tragedy,

you and I cannot know what good may come,

what the bigger picture is, and

in what direction God will lead. 

Yet God is there,

walking with us,

working in ways of hope, and

guiding us to what is next in God’s plan. 

You and I can face the storms in life that come our way.

Good can come from bad.

            Neighbors reach out to each other.

            You realize what really matters in life.

            Faith is strengthened.

We do not know why these things happen.

You and I do know that the

Holy Spirit is there in the aftermath:

            it empowers God’s people to do good,

to spread joy,

            to show kindness,

 to touch another’s life,

to grow in faith, strength, and grace

and to proclaim love. 

From devastation comes hope and renewal.

God’s actions continue in our lives. 

The storm does not just happen and

then God leaves the picture saying, ‘oh well’. 

The good that comes out of the disaster is

the true example of God’s providence in the world. 

 




[1] Institutes p.197-198
[2] McKim p. 256