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Righteousness of God1
by
Nick B. Fontanilla, Ph.D.
(Word Document)
The Mayonnaise Jar and the Wine
A professor in his philosophy class picked up a very large and
empty jar and filled it with golf balls. He asked the students if the
jar was full. The students agreed that it was.
The professor picked up a box of pebbles and poured the pebbles into the
jar. He shook the jar lightly. The pebbles rolled into the open areas
between the golf balls. He then asked the students again if the jar was
full. They agreed it was.
The professor next picked up a box of sand and poured it into the jar.
Of
course, the sand filled up everything else. He asked once more if the
jar
was full. The students responded with a unanimous "yes."
The professor then produced a glass of wine and
poured the entire contents into the jar, effectively filling the empty
space between the sand. The students laughed.
"Now," said the professor, "I want you to
recognize that this jar represents your life. The golf balls are the
important things - God, Church, family, your children, your health, your
friends, and
your other important things -- that if everything else was lost and only
they remained, your life would still be full.
The pebbles are the other
things that matter like your job, your house and your car. The sand is
everything else - the small stuff.
"If you put the sand into the jar first," he said, "there is no room
for the pebbles or the golf balls. The same goes for life. If you
spend
all your time and energy on the small stuff, you will never have room
for
the things that are important.
What this story tells us is that we should pay attention to the things
that are
critical to our life and that we should set our priorities. The rest is
just sand."
One of the students raised her hand and inquired what the wine
represented.
The professor smiled. "I'm glad you asked. It just goes to show you
that
no matter how full your life may seem, there's always room for a glass
of wine with a friend."
1 Sermon
delivered by Aniceto B. Fontanilla on Reformation Sunday at
UCCP-Ellinwood Malate Church, October 31, 2004.
Not for publication.
For distribution to UCCP-EMC members only.
Symbols of Protestant Reformation
In a way, this story captures what reformation of the 16th
century has done to Christianity.
Reformation opened our eyes so we can recognize what is big stuff
and what is small stuff. It
rejected rituals, practices, symbols, corruption, doctrines and all
those things that represent the small stuff such as the elaborate altar
that was common in the old church.

In place, it reformed the church so that Christians are able to
focus on things that represent the big stuff. Thus, we see the
sanctuary of the reformed church as a picture of simplicity with
the Bible at the center, symbolizing the Christ-centeredness of
the reformed faith.
Other reforms include Christian principles and doctrines, some
of which are shown below:

A Catholic scholar priest acknowledged the importance of the reformation
in his book A Biblical Defense of Catholicism that was written in
1991. In this book, he quoted Karl Adam who lamented the loss of Luther
whom Adam described to have
marvelous gifts of mind and heart, warm penetration of the essence of
Christianity, passionate defiance of all unholiness and ungodliness, and
the elemental fury of his religious experience.
He says, “Had Martin Luther brought all these magnificent qualities to
the removal of the abuses of the time . . . had he remained a faithful
member of his Church, humble and simple, sincere and pure, then indeed
we should today be his grateful debtors. He would be forever our great
Reformer . . . comparable to Thomas Aquinas and Francis of Assisi. He
would have been the greatest saint of the German people.
It was, however, not meant to be.
The Catholic hierarchy never gave Martin Luther the chance to
reform the church. Instead, it pushed him out of the church and gave him
the mandate to reform the church outside of the hierarchy.
The Protestant Reformation
The Reformation of the Roman Catholic Church was a major 16th-century
religious revolution that ended the ecclesiastical supremacy of the pope
and resulted in the establishment of the Protestant churches. The map
below shows how the reformation spread from Germany to various parts of
Europe:

With the Renaissance and the French Revolution that followed, the
Reformation completely altered the medieval way of life in Western
Europe and initiated the era of modern history. The UCCP-EMC traces its
roots from this reformation, as shown in the history chart below:

Reformation Sunday
Today is
Reformation Sunday. It is on
this occasion when we recognize the faith, courage, and perseverance of
those who risked and lost their lives in their effort to reform the
faith and life of the church.
There have been many great Reformers in the history of the church:
1
John Wycliffe and John Huss who initiated reforms even before Martin
Luther;
2
Ulrich Zwingli who began the Swiss Reformation;
3
John Calvin, who reformed the church in Geneva and had a profound impact
on what we believe as Presbyterians; and
4
John Knox who reformed the church in Scotland and is considered the
father of Presbyterianism.
But if was Martin
Luther who ignited the Reformation of the church. Martin Luther was an
Augustinian monk serving at the University of Wittenberg. Through the
years, he became miserable because of what he had been taught to
believe.
One night, he
reflected on Paul’s letter to the Romans, the very same words we read as
our scripture reading. Verse 17 says:
For the righteousness of God is revealed through faith for
faith; as it is written, the one who is righteous will live by faith.
When Luther
reflected on Paul’s words that the righteousness of God is revealed
through faith and that the righteous live by faith, he realized the
omissions of the church. For
Luther, this was a life changing revelation, a spiritual rebirth.
He learned that
God’s righteousness is the means by which God judges sinners.
In his reflection, Luther discovered that God’s righteousness was
more than just an attribute of God; it was a quality of God, a grace of
God that is given to sinners that makes sinners acceptable before God.
It was this
radical new perspective that changed everything for Martin Luther.
Through the power of the Holy Spirit and the words written by
Paul, he had been set free.
With this new
understanding of God’s righteousness and a hope of salvation, Martin
Luther composed his 95 Thesis against the practices and beliefs of the
Catholic Church. And on the
night of Halloween, the eve of All Saint’s Day, October 31, 1517,
exactly 487 years ago, Martin Luther walked out of the front doors of
the University of Wittenberg, to the front door of the Catholic Church,
and there he nailed to the door his 95 Thesis. With that move, the
history of the church changed forever.
For Luther, The
one who makes us right before God is not ourselves; it is God, the
righteousness of God through Jesus Christ. That understanding remains
central to our faith and should be one of the big stuffs that should
fill up our lives.
The reformation started a new culture, a new form of humanity. It
touched every aspect of life: work, economics, art, literature, music,
science, etc. The doctrine of justification by grace alone,
through faith alone based on scripture alone released energy
into a society that had previously been preoccupied with an
'other-world' piety.[2]
Reformation was so pervasive that some historians have blamed the
Reformation for the rise of capitalism. The 'Weber' thesis equated
Protestantism with material success. Weber claimed that Calvinism so
stressed predestination that anxious believers began to seek signs of
God's election in earthy prosperity, which is not true because Both
Luther and Calvin attacked capitalism as unrestrained greed and called
for government control of capitalism. Moreover, Zwingli and Calvin
contributed to the development of modern social welfare programs, urban
renewal and urban and state welfare programs. They forced governments to
accept responsibility for the prevention and alleviation of poverty.
The reformation enlightened our understanding of our mission to proclaim
the word. Paul, in his
letter to the Romans, tells us that we have been set apart for the
gospel in this generation.
In Romans 1: 8-17, Paul summarizes the reasons why
we have been set apart for the gospel in this generation, that is, we
should live from faith to faith. This means that as God’s righteousness
is revealed to us, we become his instruments to reveal God’s
righteousness to others.
Paul says that the gospel is the power of God for salvation to
everyone who BELIEVES.
God’s
righteousness is not revealed to us on the basis of our own merits. We
discern that righteousness "from faith to faith."
Faith is the beginning of our relationship with Christ. But
it does not stop there. It goes from faith to faith. And throughout this
whole cycle of faith, the righteousness of God is continually revealed –
to believers and non-believers.
This is why Martin Luther
wrote his famous statement Ecclesia semper reformanda, the Church
is always to be reformed. Christianity always needs to be reshaped –
that is to be cleansed and sharpened in terms of its theology,
reformulated in terms of its culture and reorganised in terms of its
practise, and to reveal God’s righteousness from faith to faith.
After all, the classic definition of theology is “faith seeking
understanding. Understanding
involves grasping clearly what our experience of God tells us about who
God is and what God has done for us.
It involves engaging in a quest to see our world in a special way
from the perspective of God who has created that world and sustains it
including all the stuff of theological reflection as we try to
understand those experiences from God’s perspective as well as our own.
Finally, it involves transformative action, calling us to be
prophets proclaiming the gospel.”[3]
Radiant Faith
In our Old Testament text, Moses came down from Mount Sinai with a
radiant face. Every time he
came down from the mountain, his face was radiant.
God’s righteousness was revealed to Moses which he discerned from
faith to faith. Every time he came down, he experienced the
transformative action of the righteousness of God.
And every time, he shared God’s message to his people,
proclaiming God’s word, and revealing God’s righteousness faith for
faith.
[4]
Like Luther,
Moses’ encounter with God was a life changing revelation that was
nothing short of a spiritual rebirth. Like Luther, he was set free.
Continuing Conversion
Today, on Reformation Sunday, let us reflect on Paul’s message to the
Romans -- “For the
righteousness of God is revealed through faith for faith; as it is
written, ‘The one who is righteous will live by faith’” and Moses’
encounter with God that made his face so radiant.
As we do that, let us contemplate on what it is that we have to become
as faithful followers of Christ and as a congregation to be faithful to
the mission and purpose of Reformation.
Many theologians believe that the critical challenge facing the church
today is not how to make Christianity credible to the modern world.
Rather, the crucial challenge is ecclesiological: the creation of a new
and more faithful church, the transformation of the church, not through
accommodation, but through conversion.
The key challenge involves thinking through the question, What kind of
community are we called to be in order to be faithful to the gospel of
Jesus Christ? and to be consistent with the purpose that the reformers
fought for and died for, that is to proclaim the gospel.[5]
I would like to
paraphrase the recommendations of Darell L. Guder of Princeton
Theological Seminary. He says,
“The church can effectively carry out its missionary calling by building
a new theology of evangelism that has its focus on the church itself.”[6]
Guder says that we must not succumb to gospel reductionism, and defines
Gospel reductionism as an action that reduces the gospel in all its
fullness and mission to a controllable, manageable, and comfortable
level. He says: "We are constantly tempted to assert that our way of
understanding the Christian faith is a final version of Christian
truth."
Reductionism as he defines it severely restricts church involvement as
it diminishes what for him is vital to become an "incarnational
witness." Here he refers to God's grace reaching out in a Christian's
call and vocation.
Many mainstream
churches are guilty of gospel reductionism. Our local congregations,
including the big churches in LCSMC, face this dilemma, one way or the
other. Cosmopolitan Church,
the bright star in the UCCP LCSMC, took all of 70 years before they
embarked on a program called 7x7, meaning seven daughter churches in
seven years.
In UCCP-EMC, we
are proud of our mission work, having produced many daughter churches in
97 years. But this
accomplishment pales in comparison with many young evangelical churches.
We now have a mission center that is energized by the many
volunteer workers. But it
took all of 10 years before it became a reality.
We struggled with the thought that it possibly could not be done.
Consistent with
the message of the Reformation, Guder recommends continual conversion.
By continual conversion, he refers to a rather liquid, dynamic movement
in Christianity without boundaries, yet constantly refining what
institution is already there.
When Christians become concerned about maintenance, he says, mission is
lost. Continual conversion refers to this movement back to mission.
As Martin Luther wrote, Ecclesia semper reformanda -- the Church
is always to be reformed. Christianity always needs to be reshaped –
that is to be cleansed and sharpened in terms of its theology,
reformulated in terms of its culture and reorganised in terms of its
practise. That is one important message of reformation.
[1]
Spiritual Rebirth
(http://www.finleypres.org/worship/sermons/20021027.htm)
[2] Mr.
Bill Meischke. Building an Economy of Care.
WWW.
[3]
Nancy Ammerman, et at. Studying Congregations: A New Handbook.
Abingdon Press. Nashville. 1998.
[4]
Barbara D. Fillette, North & Southampton Reformed Church, Date:
1/28/01, Title: "Living the Highs and Lows", Occasion:
Transfiguration Sunday
[5]
Raymond O. Bystrom.
On the Church and Our Culture. WWW.
[6]
Based on an essay regarding the book Continuing Conversion of
the Church written by Professor Darrell L. Guder of the
Princeton Theological Seminary.
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