How to be Amazing
By Rev Jamie Green Klopotoski
Based on Luke 15: 1-7; 11-32
March 27, 2022
First Baptist Church, Gloucester, MA
Based on Luke 15: 1-7; 11-32
March 27, 2022
First Baptist Church, Gloucester, MA
Watch here: https://www.facebook.com/100000138252260/videos/2186826728139975/
“Amazing Grace, how sweet the sound. That saved a wretch like me. I once was lost but now am found. Was blind but now I see.” I want to tell you about the man who wrote these beautiful lyrics. His name was John Newton, and for almost a decade in the mid 1700s, he was actively involved in the slave trade, helping to transport people from Africa across the Altantic Ocean to the Americas to be sold as slaves. Newton was the first mate aboard the slave ship Brownlow and he made three voyages as captain of the slave ships Duke of Argyle and the African. After suffering a severe stroke in 1754, he gave up seafaring, but he continued to invest money in slaving operations.
Slowly over the years, though, Newton began an intense personal transformation, converting to Christianity, being called to ministry, getting ordained in 1764, being appointed rector of St Mary Woolnoth Church in London, and eventually becoming an abolitionist. In 1788, he published a forceful pamphlet called “Thoughts Upon the Slave Trade”, in which he described the horrific conditions of the slave ships on the Middle Passage. He confessed that he, quote: "was once an active instrument in a business at which my heart now shudders."
In the midst of these changes, he wrote the hymn, “Amazing Grace”, based on his experience of being redeemed by God after repenting of his sins of participating in the slave trade. He truly found it amazing that God could forgive even a sinner like him who profited off of selling people into slavery.
Part of John Newton’s story is portrayed in the 2006 film “Amazing Grace” (which I highly recommend; I brought my copy if anyone wants to borrow it!). The movie is based on the true story of the end of the slave trade in Britain and shows the influence John Newton had on one of his parishioners, parliament member William Wilberforce, who ended up being one of the most committed abolitionists in history. Before Wilberforce began his work leading protests, organizing petitions, and presenting abolitionist bills before parliament, Wilberforce himself felt called by God, and was torn between living a life of spiritual, meditative solitude and a life of political activism, so he visited his old pastor, John Newton, for advice. Newton helped convince him that living a spiritual and Godly life could most definitely include being a political activist, especially when it comes to doing the work of ending the slave trade and trying to make the world a better place. Newton shares that he is haunted by the ghosts of 20,000 slaves, men, women, and children; that he has blood on his hands for his sins, and admits, “I’m a great sinner, but Christ is a great savior”, echoing back to his “Amazing Grace” lyrics. Newton supported Wilberforce’s tireless efforts to abolish the slave trade, and lived to see it outlawed by the passage of the Slave Trade Act of 1807, just months before his death.
With the message that forgiveness and redemption are possible regardless of sins committed, John Newton’s "Amazing Grace" is one of the most recognizable songs in the world. It is estimated that the song is performed about 10 million times a year.
I’ve always loved this song, because it so beautifully portrays the grace that God has for us. God’s grace is utterly undeserved, unmerited, unearnable, and unexpected. Any time I have ever felt unworthy, unloved, unforgiveable, guilt-ridden with all the mistakes I have made in this life, I remember this amazing grace that God has for me.
In the parable I read today from the Gospel of Luke, the son makes several HUGE mistakes: he demands his inheritance before his father is dead, runs away from home and abandons all of his responsibilities, squanders all of his money on reckless things (probably indulging in food, women, gambling, and fine clothing) and ends up poor and crawling back home to daddy. But even after all of that, his father welcomed him home with open arms. Before an apology was even shared, the father forgave him and loved him, and then threw a party for him, for he once was lost, but now was found.
Often, the son is called the “Prodigal Son”. The first meaning of prodigal in the Oxford English Dictionary is "recklessly extravagant". And while, yes, that does seem to describe the son’s lavish lifestyle after he left home, it also seems to me to be an apt description of the father's welcome home party for his son. Reckless and extravagant! Even the father’s older son thinks so. It’s not fair that his little brother gets this big party thrown for him after he made every mistake in the book. The older brother did NOTHING wrong, and he never got a party. It’s not fair! To some people, that’s what God’s grace may feel like. Unfair. Some people do really really bad things. And others of us only do little bad things. But we all get the same grace bestowed upon us. God’s grace is recklessly extravagant. God gives us unconditional grace, all of us, me, you, our families, our neighbors, even our enemies.
One of the lessons of this parable that Jesus taught is definitely about the amazing grace God has for us that is just like parents have for their children. It is not too terribly difficult for parents to forgive their own flesh and blood children; at the end of the day parents still love their children even when they make mistakes. This is why the God as parent metaphor works so well. With few exceptions, parents will do anything for their own flesh and blood children. What is incredibly hard and sometimes even seemingly impossible to do is to forgive and to love other people out there in the world who are not related by blood to you.
So this is the other lesson I think Jesus is teaching us through this parable--- that we are ALL God’s children, we ARE all related, we are all a part of one big human family, and we ought to try to practice the same amazing grace that God bestows on us. Jesus even taught us to pray to God to forgive us of our debts, our trespasses, our sins, as we forgive those who sin against us! God gives recklessly extravagant and amazing grace to each and every one of us, and we should follow suit. Because we are family. Strangers are family, enemies are family, humanity is a family.
It may seem unfair and extravagantly reckless, but even people like Timothy McVeigh, the Oklahoma City bomber responsible for killing 168 people, are given God’s amazing grace. A name named Bud Welch gave him amazing grace, too. Bud lost his 23 year old daughter in the bombing. He first went through a period of rage when he wanted Timothy dead. But there was a moment when he remembered the words of his daughter, an advocate for reconciliation, who said “Execution teaches hatred.” Bud decided to stop the cycle of violence and arrange a visit with McVeigh’s dad and family. Bud grew to love them dearly, and spoke around the country against the death penalty because it teaches that some people are beyond redemption, while God does not teach that any people are beyond redemption. Bud pleaded for the Timothy’s life, because as he began to look into his eyes, the eyes of a murderer, he saw the image of God.
It may seem unfair and extravagantly reckless, but even people like Roy Bryant and J.W. Milam, the murderers of Emmitt Till, are given God’s amazing grace. A woman named Mamie Mobley, Emmett Till’s mother, gave them amazing grace, too. She was asked if she harbored bitterness toward the two white men or toward whites in general, for the brutal murder of her son in 1955. This is what she said: “It certainly would be unnatural not to hate them, yet I’d have to say I’m unnatural… The Lord gave me a shield, I don’t know how to describe it myself… I did not wish the white men dead. I did not wish them in jail. If I had to, I could take their four little children- they each had two- and I could raise those children as if they were my own and I could have loved them… I believe the Lord meant what he said about love, and I try to live according to the way I’ve been taught.”
Awhile back, I watched a great PBS special called “Race: The Power of an Illusion.” I will never forget this one fact shared by an evolutionary biologist, Joseph Graves. He said that “the measured amount of genetic variation in the human population is extremely small. Genetically, we really aren't very different. In fact, genetically, we are among the most similar of all species. Only one out of every thousand nucleotides that make up our genetic code is different from one individual from another.” Then they showed a picture of a group of penguins who look exactly alike. Turns out these penguins have twice the amount of genetic difference amongst each other than humans. That means there is more genetic diversity in this group of almost identical-looking penguins, then a group of very different looking people. Even science points to the fact that we are all closely related.
If we could somehow see each other as brothers and sisters, as family, as closely related, -- because we ARE – then maybe our actions would be different. Maybe we wouldn’t have traded African people as slaves. Maybe we wouldn’t ignore the plight of the homeless, the hungry, the refugee, the immigrant. Maybe we would offer amazing grace to all. That’s how we can be amazing. By sharing God’s recklessly extravagant and amazing grace with all of the world, all God’s children, all of our brothers and sisters on this planet. We once were blind, but now we see. Alleulia. Amen.
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