This scripture about king
David dancing in the streets seems like kind of a strange story for
Confirmation Sunday except for one thing: David was king because that is the
role God called him to. He lived to serve God. Serving God is basically what
Confirmation day is all about. Now, you’re probably not chosen to be a king (honestly,
we don’t have much use for any more of those). The truth is that most of you
are going to end up doing work that the outside world undervalues. Most people
in our church have fairly normal lives, by which I mean nobody is going to
write a book about you. Having a family? Normal. Working a job for somebody
else? Normal. Sitting down for coffee with friends? Normal.
None of us are Iron Man. That would be exciting. Probably
you are just going to shop at the Farmer’s Store, or another similar place
somewhere else in the world, and you’ll go home to supper and your favorite TV
shows. If you compare yourselves to king David we’re going to come up looking
seriously under-productive.
But, here’s the thing: God doesn’t really care about
that. God calls us to serve in different ways, but he calls all of us. More than
that, the person serving in a perfectly normal role—who is actually living this
life that looks so un-exceptional to the outside world—often finds exceptional
joy and fulfillment in it. As much as we remember David, most of the good
things we recall happen before he was king—when he was a normal shepherd boy.
That’s when he defeated Goliath with a sling and a lion with a staff. When
David does well it is because he is a servant, and when he does poorly it’s
because he fails to be a servant. This is all God is ever calling us to be—to enter
into servitude for the sake of a world that needs it.
So your perfectly normal life to somebody on the outside
might be exactly the kind of life that God would look at and say, “Well done.
Well done.”
In 2 Samuel 6, David is at his best, showing his love of
God with abandon, dancing in the streets, making a complete fool of himself. In
those moments, David demonstrates that being a servant doesn’t always mean
being sour or pained; sometimes it means being joyous. God calls us all to
different roles at different times.
Last week I preached on Mark 10 at Confirmation in
Pembina (and it’s been a long week, so forgive me for reusing some material),
but this is all well and good because Mark 10 lays out the fundamental
commitment of our faith that applies any day. Jesus says, “Whoever wishes to
become great among you must be your servant.” To be a Jesus-follower is not to
be set above earthly concerns. Instead, to follow Jesus is to get your hands
and your feet dirty for the sake of sharing the good news. Today, Confirmation
Day, is celebrating not the completion of your classes but the beginning of a
life of servitude to Jesus. That’s maybe not what you signed up for, but it is
exactly what it is. Sure, it seemed like the last couple years were the part
where you were expected to be somewhere, to do something, and to complete more
sermon notes than you’d probably like, and having done that it feels like you
should be able to relax and coast for awhile. But it’s exactly the opposite.
You might not be old enough to go off to college or a get a full-time job, you
might not be mature enough to care for a family on your own or make financial
decisions for those you love, but today you are nevertheless being called to an
even-more challenging vocation: You are called to stick up for the lowly and
the downtrodden, to live your faith out-loud not just by saying, “Yes, I
believe in Jesus” but by living your life as if that matters. Confirmation was
not the test; life is. Confirmation is just the launching pad.
David served by being called as king, but it is no less
holy a vocation to be called to clean sewers, change light bulbs or mow lawns;
let alone the calling of servitude it takes to have a family. As long as David ruled
by way of service he was OK. I realize David was before Jesus, but the rules
were exactly the same: service is the key to a life of discipleship. To follow
Jesus is to serve how Jesus served. If Jesus knelt and washed feet, then we
wash feet. If Jesus went to the abused and the hurting and the rejected and the
poor and the criminals, then those are the people we go to. If Jesus rejected
violence and hatred, then so do we. If Jesus walked the road of the cross, then
that’s the path we walk—dying daily to sin and rising as a new creation. We are
called as Christians to be servants of the needy, to go to the littlest, the
lost, the lowly, the losers, and the dead, and to give them back the humanity
that’s been taken from them. We are called to be servants who bring the gift of
Jesus—both in words and actions—to be the hands and feet of Jesus to a world
that needs it.
It is a big job. In fact, it’s an overwhelming job, an
impossible job. But, as one ancient Jewish maxim says, “You are not obligated
to complete the work, but neither are you free to walk away from it” (Pirkei Avot 2:21). Jesus will complete
your work. Your job is to simply stick with it. You are to be servants, and the
difference between a servant and a free-person is that a servant cannot walk
away. You are servants to the good news that Jesus Christ came, died, and rose
again so that you would have eternal life. It’s the best kind of servitude
there is. But it is a kind of slavery, because you cannot get away from that
promise. You may drift away from the church. You may rarely, if ever, talk
about your faith. It does not matter. You are still a servant of the gospel,
and the harder you run away from it the tighter God will hold you. And you will
be reminded of it, perhaps even hate it, in the moments where you are more
desperate and most in need of a Savior.
So, it’s just better if you embrace the life you have
been called to. Otherwise you end up like David with Bathsheba. It seemed like
fun at the time. Attractive woman, all the power in the world to make her his,
and the opportunity to do it. This is what we call temptation. And it’s tough
sometimes to remember that there is a reason not to give in to temptation beyond
“My parents or my pastor or my community thinks I shouldn’t.” There is a
reason, and it has everything to do with service. You were created to serve;
not to take the biggest slice of the pie you can manage, but to figure out how
to give away the greatest portion of pie that you can.
If
you reach for that temptation you become enslaved to something other than God—a
different God, a God who promises you nothing in the end. That attractive
Bathsheba? She’s going to get old and wither. Those drugs that take the edge
off your life? They’re going to make you forget to care for those you love. We
could run down the list of vices in this world, and that’s not what today is
about, but it is all tied in with a life of service to the things that matter.
God
knit you together before you were born, and most of you were baptized before
you had any control over your bowels—let alone the capacity to understand what
it was that was happening there—and now you are confirmed into this faith by
virtue of being here today. You didn’t really have a lot of control over that
path that led you here, which is why today is in one way a dangerous day. It’s
dangerous if you think that today you are free to do whatever you please. Instead,
Confirmation is just the beginning of a life of service. If we imagine that
what matters today is your ability to confess a few words of faith in front of
the congregation, if we think that it’s our convictions and our good hearts
that make us good, Christian people, then we misunderstand what it means to be
a servant. We are God’s property, and so our little confessions to that effect
are only the difference between a slave that knows she’s a slave and a slave
that doesn’t.
Today,
you are members of the church, which means that you are bound to something that
matters. It is a great paradox of the life of faith that it is through
servitude that we find freedom. Martin Luther, who should probably be quoted at
every Confirmation, said that “A Christian is a perfectly free lord of all,
subject to none,” and “A Christian is a perfectly dutiful servant of all,
subject of all, subject to all.”
So, in my best impression of Luther’s Small Catechism,
let me ask you that all-too-familiar question: “What does this mean?”
It means you have a ton of responsibility. You are not
just the future of the church but also its present. You are the living hands
and feet of Jesus in the world. Big-time pressure. But you are also free
through the love of Jesus and today you confess that even though you are not
perfect people nevertheless we have a God who satisfies you, calls you his own,
and redeems you as the perfect creatures you were made to be. This is what it
is to be a follower of Jesus. It seems backwards. It is not graduation. It’s servitude. Today you are servants. But, here’s
the important thing to remember: I, a pastor called by the gospel, am just as
much a servant as you. So, today, I will serve you communion. Tomorrow, you
serve the world. That’s how this works. And it’s the same thing every week.
Today, you and I and everybody else here are reminded that we are in this
together. All servants. That’s what being a Jesus-follower is all about.
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