Easter is the season of
miracle and resurrection.
Acts tells us the miracle
story how Peter raised Tabitha from the dead.
Do we believe such a
thing could happen?
Some people refuse to
believe in miracles
because they are unscientific.
They think science says
miracles are impossible.
But since the early 20th
Century, science has not been so arrogant.
Science today tells us
that hardly anything is impossible.
Some things are just
extraordinarily unlikely.
Miracles are unlikely but
can we still believe in them?
It is extraordinarily
unlikely that an explosion like the Big Bang
would sort itself into an orderly cosmos.
It is super unlikely that
such a cosmos would generate life.
That such life should
evolve to become sentient, aware, self-aware,
intelligent, creative, and spiritual is beyond belief.
The fact that we are here
this morning is so amazing
we should not raise an eyebrow at the miracles on
scripture.
A miracle is – an
extraordinarily unlikely moment of grace.
Unlikely, yes, but I have
experienced such moments – not often, but sometimes.
You may have experienced
them too.
When all hope seems lost,
things miraculously come round right.
We may call it luck.
We may just shake our
heads and think the situation was not
as grim as we had thought.
Or we may say, “thanks be
to God.”
Whether we call those
extraordinary moments of grace
gifts from a loving God
or just the luck of the Irish is up to us.
The real problem with
miracles isn’t science.
It’s theological.
If miracles happen
sometimes,
then why don’t they happen all the time?
I did my pastoral
internship one summer at a hospital in Boise.
Every summer there,
a child will drown while playing in an irrigation ditch.
My greatest fear was
being on call
for the emergency room when that happened.
In August, it did.
I sat with the young
father while the doctors tried
to resuscitate his 12 year old daughter.
It seemed like forever.
I went with him to see
her body.
I held him as he cried.
And all I could think of
was the words of Jesus,
“Talitha cum. Little girl, rise up.”
But she did not rise up.
There was no miracle.
Robert Schuler, the television
preacher of positive thinking
used to say, “Expect a miracle.”
But the very nature of a
miracle is that it is unexpected.
It’s what usually doesn’t
happen.
He thought we could make
our own miracles
by having an optimistic attitude,
that we could conjure up the power of God
to do our bidding if we just think happy thoughts.
But that is a shallow way
to think about God,
it isn’t psychologically healthy to live in that kind of
denial,
and it usually doesn’t work
because miracles usually don’t
happen
–
except when they do – and that’s the problem.
If we could say God
doesn’t get involved in our lives
or there is nothing God can do about sickness, death, and
disaster,
then we could just write God off and get on
with it.
We might believe God
exists.
We might even go to
church.
But
we wouldn’t expect God to actually do anything.
God
might be God but he wouldn’t be good for much.
Problem
solved.
Then
in desperation we pray anyway -- or someone prays for us --
and grace breaks into our lives in
some unforeseen way
at some
unforeseen time.
What
are we to do with that?//
The
Bible does not try to make the world simpler than it really is.
It
does not say that whatever happens is God’s will.
If we assume everything that
happens is God’s will,
we
are not talking about the God of the Bible.
Throughout Scripture, we hear over
and over
that
God is not at all pleased
with
the way things are going on earth.
If
God’s will is already happening,
how come Jesus teaches us to pray
“thy will be done”?
If
this is already God’s kingdom where things are God’s way,
then why do we pray “thy kingdom
come”?
Isn’t
God’s kingdom, God’s will what we are waiting for in the final act?
So
as C. S. Lewis says, for now our world is “in enemy hands.”
How
it came to be this way is another story,
but what matters is that’s the way
it is now.
God
is not yet making the decisions in this world.
A
lot that happens is painful, tragic, and wrong.
But
the Bible also says God is involved in our lives.
God
is always present, always caring, always tugging things
in the direction of the good.
It’s
a lot like being the parent of a teenager or a young adult.
Do
you as a parent have influence? Yes, some.
Are
you in control? No you are not.
We
are involved – hopefully in a good way
– but that is not the same as being in charge.
God
is involved now.
And
we can open the door to let God be even more involved.
We
can open the door to allow God into our lives
to do more of the good things God
already longs to do.
That’
s what prayer is for.
That’s
what hope is for.
That’s
what faith and trust and working for God’s cause
are all for.
We
can align our lives with God’s will
and that helps.
We
can be God’s agents behind enemy lines.
We
can give God more of an opportunity to work.
But
we cannot turn over the whole world to God.
We
don’t have that much authority.
So
God’s grace breaking into the world remains a miracle.
It
remains what we don’t expect.
It
surprises us.
But
it happens sometimes
and because it happens sometimes,
there is always hope.
But any expectation that God will do a specific good thing
at a specific time isn’t something
we can count on.
We
have a bigger hope than the kind of miracle
that happened when Peter prayed for
Tabitha.
We
have the hope of resurrection in our lesson from Revelation.
That
is more than hope. It is you can take it the bank assurance
because of one simple fact.
God
alone is eternal.
Only
God and the things that are of God last forever.
We
are of God. All that is good and beautiful and true is of God.
But
pain, suffering, injustice, and evil are not of God
so they do not last forever.
Death
does not last forever.
Death
itself will die.
Then
comes the resurrection.
All
that is of God comes back from the grave like Jesus
and with Jesus.
All
that is beautiful, good, and decent comes back.
God
who made it to begin with can raise it up.
That
little girl in the Boise hospital will live
and her father’s grief will end.
And
so will yours and so will mine.
We
will not be raised back to this life like Tabitha in Acts
– not to this life with its endless
frustrations and disappointments.
We
will be raised into the presence of God
where we “will hunger no more and
thirst no more
and the sun will not
strike (us) or any scorching heat
. . . He will guide us to the waters of life
and
. . . wipe away every tear . . . .”