Summary: Post-revival sermon, calling us to see in our midst the possibilities of the new Jerusalem -- a church/community built on the basis of the old one, where all persons of all backgrounds are invited by our people and where those with challenges are given he

My mother had the habit of walking with her eyes fixed on

the ground. Wherever we would go, my father and my

brother and I would be looking all around, enjoying what

there was to see, but mother would be plodding along behind

us, looking at the ground. We used to tell her, “You’re

missing it all. You cannot see the beauty of nature or the

majesty of the city just by concentrating on the sidewalks.”

She said that was the only way she could be sure she

wouldn’t stumble and fall. If she watched where she put her

feet, she wouldn’t stumble over anything or fall and hurt

herself. We went to New York once. Like you would expect

hillbilly Kentuckians to do, the three of us walked around

gazing up at all the tall buildings. Mother kept her eyes on

the ground. When we went home, the rest of us said, “New

York sure has tall buildings!” Mother said, “New York sure

has crowded sidewalks!”

Well, you can look down at the ground and be safe. Or you

can look up and see something wonderful, and run the risk of

a stumble. Which will it be? Which is it in your life? Are you

going to look down, watch your step, be safe, but miss the

glory of the sunset and the grandeur of the dawn? Or are

you going to stare at the stars and wonder what might be out

there, even if it means a misstep here and a tumble there?

The Bible counsels us to “look unto the hills, from whence

cometh our help.” Look up and live! It does not tell us to

turn our eyes downward or to focus our attention on the past.

Now I am well aware that some of us don’t have much

tolerance for novelty. We like the tried and true, not so much

because it really is true, but because it’s been tried, and we

know what it’s like. When you go to a restaurant, do you

read over the list of exotic dishes, some of which you cannot

even pronounce, and end up ordering meat and potatoes?

You like the tried and true. When you go to the library to

pick out a book, do you pick up one on a subject you know

nothing about, or do you just read one more from your

favorite author? You live here in the Washington area; when

you have free time, do you try a new exhibit at the art gallery,

do you find your way to a museum you’ve never seen before,

do you explore some out-of-the-way corner you don’t know?

Or do you just go back to the same old same old? When our

children were small, we were eager to expose them to all

there was to see and do. But the only thing they ever

wanted to do was to go up the Washington Monument! Let’s

go to the zoo today; no, daddy, we want to go up the

Washington Monument. Let’s see what’s in the Air and

Space Museum. Not unless we first go up the Washington

Monument. Always the same, no adventure in those kids!

Just like their grandmother, looking down, always looking

down. It’s safer that way. No risk, no fall, no stumble.

If that at all describes your life, you need revisioning. You

need to be led to look up and live. You need to see

something more than you’ve ever seen before. You need

new horizons, new vistas, new possibilities. Some people at

a certain age get their face lifted. Well, you and I need to

have our faith lifted. We need, in a word, to see heaven.

We need to see heaven! I don’t mean we need to hurry up

and die. I mean that we need a vision. You and I need to

catch a glimpse of heaven, so we know where we could be

headed. Now there’ll be some risks to take on the way. You

might stumble and fall. But oh, the destination! Oh, the

possibilities. I think it was Browning who said, “A man’s

reach should exceed his grasp, or what’s a heaven for?”

The great visionary John, at the very end of his Revelation,

looked up from this earthbound life and saw what is to be,

saw what God wills to be. John saw a vision of something

he’d never seen before. A place whose streets he had not

walked. A town whose towers he had never scaled and

whose gates he had never entered. John painted an

extraordinary picture for us. A scene more graphic than any

artist can imagine. A landscape more awesome than any

architect can design. It was the new Jerusalem. A vision for

us to set our sights on. A revisioning. This is what we ought

to go for. This is what we need to look for, not the ground

beneath our feet, but the wind beneath our wings. Heaven.

I

I want you to see, first, that when we start to revision, we are

going to see something old and familiar, but we are going to

see it with new eyes. When you lift up your sights and see

what might be instead of just what is, you do start with the

what is. But you see it in a different way.

John says that he saw the new Jerusalem. Well, if he

recognized what he saw as Jerusalem, it must have borne

some similarity to the old Jerusalem. If I see a map of

Washington in the 1850’s, it’s not like Washington is now,

but there is enough similarity that I can recognize where I

am. I can find Capitol Hill and the White House, I can trace

Pennsylvania Avenue and the Potomac River, I can follow

L’Enfant’s lines and Banneker’s boundaries and can figure

out where I am, even though much has changed. So when

John saw the new city coming down from heaven, he saw it

as Jerusalem, the old, familiar, dirty, crowded, mud-clogged,

sin-stained Jerusalem. But the city in John’s vision was new.

He could recognize it, but he saw it with new eyes. He what

God could bring out of what is now.

You know, there’s an intriguing introductory word to this

vision of the new Jerusalem. It says that the angel who

showed John the new Jerusalem was the same angel who

had in his possession the seven bowls full of the seven last

plagues. Seven plagues! Think about that: the messenger

of God who was given the assignment of announcing all of

the disaster, all of the heartache, and all of the wrong of the

city was also charged with showing John what could be.

What does that mean?

Might it just mean that you and I are called on to look at who

we are, both in the cold light of reality and in the warm light

of possibility? Might it just mean that you and I are called,

like John, to see and to understand what is really going on

around us, terrible as it is; and at the very same time to

envision what God wants to do?

Oh, look at it. The seven plagues. We can’t do justice to

this today, but if you were to go back to the and 16th chapter

of Revelation, you would see what the plagues are. They

include such things as painful sores, polluted waters, blood

flowing in the rivers, scorching heat, dark ignorance,

terrorism, and violence. Any of that sound familiar? But

consider this possibility: that as John sees the new

Jerusalem, with all of its perfection and grandeur, he sees it

against the backdrop of all the accumulated human misery

that lay behind him in the real world. Consider this

possibility: that when we catch a glimpse of heaven and we

really discover what God wants to happen, it is always set in

the context of the terrible realities that are happening now, all

around us. But we are not to get stuck looking only down at

the mess; we are also to look up and live.

Let me get to something practical. We need to revision our

own lives, our church’s life, and our community’s life. Just

as John saw the new Jerusalem as a place born out of the

old, stinking, dismal, messy, cruel Jerusalem, we ought to

envision the new Washington as a city born out of the old,

stinking politics and the dismal, messy violence of the old

Washington. Just as John saw the new Jerusalem as God’s

creation, built out of the crumbling and decrepit old

Jerusalem, isn’t it time for us to lift our sights off the ground

and imagine the new Takoma as a church and a community

made gleaming, but because we take the mess that we are

and submit it to God’s recreating power?

Think about our community. Think about what is really here.

The name of the community is Takoma; that is an American

Indian word that means “high up near heaven”. I submit to

you that we are a long way from heaven. We are stuck in

the seven plagues. For we live in a community where few

feel safe walking to and from the Metro station at night. We

live in a neighborhood that is hardly neighborly for those who

can look out their apartment windows and watch drug sales.

We live in a place where children are not always cared for

and where young people head down the wrong trail because

nobody has put up any trailblazers for them to follow. Seven

plagues? We’ve got them.

And the mess is not all out there, either. A good deal of it is

in here. Do I need to repeat my sermon of two weeks ago?

The one in which I spoke of brothers and sisters exploding in

anger at each other and slicing each other to shreds?

Maybe we ought to put sermon up for a rerun? The old

messy Jerusalem is among us as well as in the community

and the city.

But that means that when God gives birth to the new

Jerusalem, it will come out of the ashes of the old Jerusalem.

God’s new community is going to come when you and I really

see what is going on among us and decide to get on to

God’s new agenda and not our same old same old. A new

vision of what could be rising out of the mess of what is.

Look up and live!

Envision, fi you will, a city where people are brought together

as neighbors instead of as competitors. Envision a city

where people are so full of life’s joys that the buzz of drug

use isn’t even tempting. Re-vision, please, what we do for

children and for youth; it needs to be a lot more than running

a few Sunday School classes and a modest after-school

program and a Friday night youth group. All these things are

good, but my soul! Look what is out there! Lift up your

sights! See the needs and the problems, yes, but see them

as John did – see them as the raw material out of which God

will build the new Jerusalem.

I have never felt more charged up about the future. I know

people say the economy is collapsing and the old values are

gone. I know people are pessimistic about lots of things.

But I believe that our future is as bright as the promises of

God. I believe that in this old, tired, worn out, bedraggled

and besieged part of town, God will do a new thing, and will

do it at Takoma Park Baptist Church!

II

So what is this new thing that God wants to do? What really

is God about as He gives this new Jerusalem? I am

intrigued by John’s re-visioning of the population of the new

Jerusalem. And I am mesmerized by how that population got

there.

John says that the nations of the world and the kings of the

earth will bring their glory into this new Jerusalem. The

nations – plural – and the kings – more than one – will bring

their gifts and their glory to this new Jerusalem. Not just

John’s people, the Jews. Not just the Roman rulers. Not

just the cultured Greeks, not just the ancient Africans, not

just the accomplished Asians, but the nations of the world,

the kings of the earth. All peoples. Diversity.

May I be very abrupt, very precise? If it is not open to all

people, of every tribe and race and background, it isn’t

heaven. It isn’t the Kingdom of God. You can have a “just

us” club, but it will not be justice. You can have a “No blacks

need apply” attitude, but you have forfeited your right to be

called Christian. You can take a “black like me” posture, but

the new Jerusalem needs all nations, all peoples, without

exception.

What is it that God wants to do in this new Jerusalem? Who

is invited? Who may come? Is it based on race? Surely

not. Frankly, I have a lot of trouble with churches that invite

only one brand of folks to come in. It may be a club, but it

isn’t church. It isn’t the new Jerusalem.

Or is it based on education and scholarship? Let me see,

can I find in this text something about that – the Ph.D.’s will

come into it, and the lawyers will bring their glory in, along

with their billable hours? No, don’t see that here!

This new thing that God wants to do is to create a reconciled

community, a new Jerusalem where those who once

competed with one another will come and deal with their

differences. They are still different, mind you. They are not

homogenized. They are not all the same. Let us admit it:

black folks are not just white people with a permanent

suntan! My daughter went through the grocery store

checkout line with our granddaughter this summer, and the

clerk said, “Well, I see you’ve been out in the sun!” Just

couldn’t think about a biracial child. But in real time, there is

a different culture, there is a different history. But if we can

give our gifts to each other, how we are enriched! How we

are more like the new Jerusalem! And let’s face it: people

from other lands are not just sorta kinda Americans with

funny accents and unpronounceable names. They have

their own unique customs and cultures. But, I tell you, and

we have experienced this right here -- Christians from other

cultures bring us so many gifts! Their faith and their fervor is

something sorely needed in tired old American churches.

Oh, brothers and sisters, let each one of us bring our own

glories and contribute our own gifts to the new Jerusalem.

“The nations of the world will bring their glory.”

I need to help you see what I am talking about. I need to

make this concrete. Four score and three years ago our

fathers and mothers brought forth in this community a

church, dedicated to the proposition that all men are created

equal. The very first sermon preached in this house was

preached on the text, “My house shall be a house of prayer

for all peoples.” It was easy enough to do in 1919, when the

whole community was white and when it was clear that those

who wore the trousers ruled the world. But things changed.

The community changed. And the church changed. Praise

God, the church of the 1960’s decided to stay and to serve

and to proclaim that whosoever will may come. The first

African-American members came in 1964. I do not know

when the first international members came, but what a joy it

is today to embrace in our membership people from a score

of nations and from several continents! All nations, all

peoples, whosoever will! There is no other way to be the

new Jerusalem than to be a reconciled community.

A little more history. Later we became a church that

embraced the full participation of women in the life of the

body of Christ. We took seriously that word that in Jesus

Christ there is neither Jew nor Greek, male and female.

More than that, we became a church that could embrace

people from the upper reaches of our world to the most

challenged places in life. I take great joy in looking out over

a congregation that holds together homeless people and

people with several homes; that holds together people whose

physical needs are overwhelming and people whose health is

robust! I take great joy in how God has worked among us.

But – we are not finished. We are a long way from complete.

There are plenty of people out there who have not been

reached. There are young people who need to be guided.

There are older people who need to be comforted. There

are professional people who feel uneasy about their success.

There are struggling people who need help to get on their

feet. The new Jerusalem has not yet received its full

population. How will it be done? How will they get here?

John says it. John saw it. How simply he said it!

“People will bring into it the glory and the honor of the nations.”

People will bring in the nations. People, you and I. Wait a

minute, now, how does this work? I thought you had to have

contemporary music to bring them in. Cymbals and high

sounding cymbals. Doesn’t that do it? How about stirring

preaching? How about preachers who charge you up and

turn cartwheels on the platform? Won’t that bring them in?

How about a comfortable building? One where it is warm

when you need it to be and cool when you need that, and the

pew cushions feel so good? No. No, I’m sorry, folks, but

God has ordained it that the only way the Kingdom is built is

if and when you and I build it. We are to bring people. The

Kingdom grows, the new Jerusalem is populated only when

“people bring in the nations.”

Bring in whom? The nations. Have you said, about your

neighbors, they’re Hispanics? They would be almost the

only ones at our church. Won’t invite them. Shame on you!

The Kingdom is about all the nations. Have you said, about

your friend, “He’s poor. He wouldn’t have the clothes for

Takoma. He really ought to go to one of those little

storefront churches.” Double shame on you! If you think

your friend would be uncomfortable, put on your own

grubbies and bring him along! Have you said, about your

family member, “Well, our pastor is white. I don’t know if

they’ll accept that.” Shame, double shame, thrice shame

upon this pastor if he does not work at making everyone

welcome. The gospel can come through any vessel! I read

in the Old Testament we that once God spoke through an

ass, and I guess He can do it again!

The new Jerusalem is going to be. It is going to be

populated by every race and condition and class and nation.

Lift up your sights from where we are now, and see what a

rich future our God has in store for us! The new Jerusalem.

III

The new Jerusalem. That shining city that God is waiting to

create. It’s for whosoever will may come. But, sadly, some

don’t stay. Some don’t make it. Some don’t take up

residence in the city. Some fall away. Some drop by the

wayside. Some get caught in things that destroy. Some get

trapped in things that corrode. And so John, sadly,

concludes his revisioning with a somber note:

But nothing unclean will enter it, nor anyone who practices

abomination or falsehood, but only those who are written in the

Lamb’s book of life.

Nothing unclean, no one who practices abomination or

falsehood. You know, we cannot speak about heaven

without also speaking about hell. You cannot toss the coin

and look at heads without also seeing tails. God’s word

declares that His holy city will not admit to its precincts those

who practice abomination or falsehood. What does that

mean? Does it mean that if you have sinned, you are shut

out forever? By no means! That would be a mighty empty

heaven, wouldn’t it, since all have sinned and come short of

the glory of God!

No, it says, no one who practices abomination; that means

no one who just keeps right on willfully contradicting God’s

will. No one who presumes on God. Do not expect to tell

Him you’ve been baptized and He’s got to let you in. If you

presume on God and practice falsehood, holding up holy

hands on Sunday but plunging them into mire and muck the

rest of the time, do not expect to show God your church

attendance records and your tithes and offerings report as if

it were a ticket to His heaven. That won’t wash.

But for me that is not something to cheer about. That is

something to weep over. One of my very first preaching

opportunities came in a little storefront church in Louisville.

The pastor was the elevator operator in the government

office building where I had a little job. He asked me to his

church -- just a dinky little place with one light bulb dangling

down right in front of my nose. But just before I stood to

preach, Brother James said to me, “I don’t know what you

are going to preach, but just remember: never speak about

hell unless there is a tear in your eye.”

Some are not going to make it. That is nothing to cheer

about. That is something to weep about. What will heaven

be if my brother, my wife, my children, my grandchildren are

not there with me? How can I enjoy the new Jerusalem if I

have allowed somebody who has been in trouble just to

languish and fall back into mess.

Our court system often sets up ex-offenders to fail; here in

the old Jerusalem we need to help them so that they will not

fail to get to the new Jerusalem. Our entertainment system

seduces people into sexual offense; here in the old

Jerusalem we need to show them what love feels like in the

new Jerusalem. Our financial system traps people into

crushing debt and allures them into fraud and failure; here in

the old Jerusalem we need to teach honest finances and the

value of genuine work, so that they’ll know there’s more to do

in the new Jerusalem than sitting on a cloud twanging on a

harp!

We need to lift up our sights and stop doing church the way

we’ve always done it. We need a new and fresh and wide

vision of what it means to follow Christ. We need a vision of

a church that just plain helps people. Doesn’t judge them,

doesn’t crush them, doesn’t write them off. Helps them.

Oh, “Last night I lay asleeping; there came a dream so fair, I

stood in old Takoma beside the church right here. I heard

the children singing And ever as they sang, Methought the

voice of potential angels from heaven in answer rang,

“Takoma church, Takoma church, Lift up your gates and

sing, Hosanna in the highest, Hosanna to your king.”

And then methought my dream was changed, The streets no

longer rang, Hushed were the glad Hosannas, The little

children sang. The homes grew dark with child abuse, Their

lives were lonely and hard, they hurt, they struggled, they

fought, they argued – But – but, right there in the old

Jerusalem, the shadow of a cross arose upon a lonely hill.

“Takoma church, Takoma church, hark how the angels sing,

hosanna in the highest, hosanna to your king.”

And once again the scene was changed; new earth there

seemed to be. I saw the Holy City beside the tideless sea.

The light of God was on its streets, the gates were open

wide, and all -- ALL -- who would night enter, and no one –

no one – black or white, young or old, rich or poor, learned or

ignorant – no one was denied. No need of moon or stars by

night, or sun to shine by day. It was the new Takoma

church, that would not pass away. It was – by the grace of

God, as we lift up our sights and look and live, it will not pass

away.