| “If
there had been two skunks in the room . . . .”
I
was talking with my pastor-husband about my sermon on
this past Sunday. I described it as one so bad that
even I couldn't listen to it again and had refused to
post it on the church website. I have a faithful following
of all of five people who download my sermons weekly
and didn't want to inflict this one on them. My beloved
husband reminded me of our drive back to Krum Saturday
night through the smell of skunk and suggested this
description , “If there had been two skunks in
the room to perfume the air, I'm sure my sermon stank
more.”
OK,
we all get a strike out every once in a while. Or actually,
we get them pretty often. Saturday night, we had watched
the SMU Mustangs take a terrible beating at the hands
of the TCU Horned Frogs. By the beginning of the third
quarter, most of the SMU students in attendance had
already left the stadium. We managed to stay until early
in the fourth quarter, and then we jumped ship as well.
What had been almost a sell-out crowd at the beginning
of the game had shrunk to a handful of SMU loyalists
and a fair number of exuberant TCU fans.
So
what did the Mustang team do on Monday? Did they all
quit? Did they declare the glass half-empty and then
see no place for hope or improvement? After all, they
lost. We could even say they “failed.” Or,
did they see the glass as half full? Did they show up
at practice, watch the game films in all their painful
honesty, evaluate their mistakes, and then get back
to work? I'm guessing they went back to work.
We
live in a world that shuns failure. We see it as the
worst thing that can happen rather than something that
may open up to us a whole new world of possibilities.
We think we should avoid failure at all costs, and see
success as the only thing that counts.
But
in the Kingdom of Heaven, we've already all failed.
The Bible makes this quite clear: we've all sinned and
fall short of the glory of God. Everyone one of us.
Then we learn three words that transform failure into
something very different: grace, forgiveness and reconciliation.
By appreciating grace, receiving and giving forgiveness,
and engaging in processes that lead to reconciliation,
success is birthed through failure. By taking those
three words fully into our lives, ordinary people do
extraordinary things. Ordinary people, you and me: we
are the ones who do these extraordinary things: we love
our enemies, we do good to those who harm us, we forgive
those who hurt us, we turn the other cheek, we go the
second mile.
I
work hard at my sermons. People who attend worship deserve
to hear the best that I can offer. Sometimes I do manage
the home run—and sometimes, despite determined
efforts, much time, disciplined study and prep time,
it just doesn't come together. I strike out. A failure.
Either an opportunity to wallow in failure or to celebrate
grace.
Each
of us has significant failures in our lives. Each of
of us has blown it multiple times. That's the nature
of life in a broken world. The real issue is not the
failure itself. It is what we will do with the failure.
Will we beat ourselves up and label ourselves “failed”?
Or will we get back in the game again, by the means
of grace, forgiveness and reconciliation?
The
invitation from God says, “Try the kingdom of
heaven way. Here, and only here, does the half-empty
glass turn into the place of promise and possibility.”
See
you in church!
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