Summary: A banner was posted with a misprint: owesome instead of awesome. But it is nonetheless true: we owe some love to one another, we owe some urgency to ourselves, and we owe some loyalty to Christ.

As some of our youth discovered last week, it is not as easy

as it looks to preside over a worship service. It is not as

easy as it looks, because you have to read signals. You

start to do something, and someone in the back waves at

you. Meanwhile, someone else on the front pew is mouthing

hints, and the printed bulletin says something else. That’s

called “mixed signals”. You get mixed signals because there

are several people out there with agendas they want

honored: one wants to deliver Father’s Day carnations to the

men, another wants to gather the scholarship offering, and

still another is concerned about someone who did not speak

his piece. So pity the poor presider, who must make sense

of all these mixed signals!

But mixed signals in the conduct of a worship service is one

thing; mixed signals in being the church is quite another.

Being unsure what comes next during the hour of gathering

is one issue; being unsure of what it means to be the church

of the Lord Jesus Christ is a much larger issue. This

morning I want to think with you about mixed signals –

whether we have been watching the Lord, or whether we

have instead been pursuing our own agendas. Mixed

signals.

Now mixed signals can be the result of hearing the directions

wrong. Sometimes it’s not what we actually hear, but what

we think we hear, and so that sends us off in the wrong

direction. They tell the story about the little boy who was in a

wedding, and as he came down the aisle, he would take two

steps, stop, cup his hands as if they were claws, and roar!

All the way down the aisle: two steps, claws, roar; two steps,

claws, roar. When he got to the front, the best man asked

what in the world he was doing. His answer made perfect

sense; he said, “I am supposed to be the Ring Bear.” Hey,

there’s not much difference between “bear” and “bearer”, is

there? Enough for a mixed signal!

Or consider the four-year-old who prayed the Lord’s Prayer:

“Forgive us our trash baskets as we forgive those who put

trash in our baskets.” That’s not bad, is it? Or the other

child, in this computer-literate age, who can be forgiven the

way she heard the Lord’s Prayer: “Lead us not into

temptation, but deliver us some E-mail.”

Now, just a moment. This is church. You need to stop all

this laughter. You need to be quiet. Do you know what will

happen to you if you don’t quiet down? One little girl told her

younger brother, who was much too noisy in church, about

the men standing at the back. “See those men? They’re

hushers.”

Mixed signals. Sometimes they are the result of our just not

hearing, clearly. We hear what we think we hear. More

likely, we hear what we want to hear. Sometimes, on the

other hand, mixed signals result from bringing two things

together that make it feel as though something unloving is

intended. Sometimes we send mixed signals as a church

because we don’t see that what we do feels like a putdown.

Like the church bulletin that announced, “Weight Watchers

group meets after worship; please exit through the double

doors.” Or the pastor who intoned, “There will be a meeting

of the low self-esteem support group down in the basement

at the rear of the sanctuary.” Or my personal favorite, since

it actually happened here, several years ago, when the

Christmas bulletin said, “Today the children of the church will

offer a Christmas pageant; everyone is cautiously invited to

attend.”

Great day, if enough of that happens, you just want to close

the service and send everybody home. Brother Hart, maybe

we should stop right now and sing a closing song – probably

that one about the visually challenged forest animal? You

know it, don’t you? “Gladly, the cross-eyed bear”!

Mixed signals. Some of them result from not hearing the

Word of the Lord. And some of them come about because

we get crossways of one another and end up hurting one

another.

Two weeks ago, our Anniversary committee selected as the

theme, “Our God Is An Awesome God”. A wonderful theme.

Except that up here on the organ chamber they posted a

banner, which reads, big as life, “Our God Is An Owesome

God.” Owesome instead of awesome! My first reaction was

to scream and worry about what could be done, at the last

moment. The answer, of course, was that nothing could be

done. There was no time to make a substitute. I decided to

make some light comment about it and let it go. But Edgar

Sheppard, Jr. said, “I think you have a sermon there. Preach

about ‘mixed signals.’” Out of the mouths of babes – mighty

big babe you are, Edgar – that’s what I am doing. Preaching

about mixed signals – and how indeed it is easy for us to mix

our signals, as a church, because we do not hear the Word,

and because we send a message that is less than loving,

and is a putdown.

As a result of a banner that said “owesome” where we

intended it to say “awesome”, I offer this word from the Letter

to the Romans:

“Owe no one anything, except to love one another”

Owe no one anything, except to love one another. Brothers

and sisters, the word on our banner is owesome. And we do

owe some things. We owe some love to one another; we

owe some urgency to ourselves; and, most of all, we owe

some uncompromising loyalty to Jesus Christ.

I

First, we owe some love to one another. That’s where this

text begins. “Owe no one anything, except to love one

another.” If church means anything at all, it means a

fellowship of love. In fact, we have said that our mission as

a congregation is the ministry of reconciliation. That’s a

fancy word for love. Reconciliation.

That mission statement comes from Second Corinthians,

where it says that God was in Christ reconciling the world to

Himself, and has given to us the ministry of reconciliation.

That means we are to be witnesses to a basic truth about

human nature, that we have broken fellowship with God, and

that through Jesus Christ there is a way to reconcile that

brokenness. That’s what the Scripture means, at bottom.

But I am also aware that when that mission statement was

first used, it was during the 1960’s, when racism was the

principal issue, both in the nation and in the church. Those

who selected this as the watchword for our church did so

intending it to mean that we are to be a ministry of

reconciliation across the racial divide.

All of that is good. All of that is right. All of that still applies.

We still have as our principal task the proclamation of the

good news, that God is in Christ reconciling us to Himself.

And we still have as our flagship identity the breadth of the

gospel, that whosoever will may come – not just white folks,

nor just black folks; not just Americans, not just middle class

or educated folks – but whosoever will. None of that has

changed. All of that is important.

But I have come to feel recently that our greatest challenge

is to love one another, right here in the household of God. I

have come to see that the toughest task we have is caring

for one another. If we do not get that right, we send a mixed

signal. The world cannot hear us, because instead it hears

our conflict. The world cannot see our savior, because

instead it perceives our pettiness. The banner says our God

is an owesome God. Yes, we owe some love to other

another.

Not long ago I sat down for a farewell visit with a member

who was moving away. She had invested many years in the

life of this church. I asked her to evaluate for me what had

happened in her spiritual life during those years. She spoke

about how much she had learned and what she had gained

from opportunities for service. But then tears came to her

eyes, as she spoke about painful conflicts that had occurred

some twenty years ago, and how she had never really gotten

past what she had felt during those days. That may sound

extreme to you; it may sound foolish to be holding on to

feelings for twenty years. But I tell you it happens all the

time. The human heart is a delicate thing, and once it is

crushed, it never quite recovers.

Owesome? Yes. We owe some love to one another. We

owe some respect to one another’s views. We owe some

latitude to one another’s failings. We owe some room to one

another, so that there can be growth. We owe something to

one another if we are going to be the church. “Owe no one

anything, except to love one another.”

Not long ago I received a letter, and, among other things, the

writer said that I had failed to visit him while he was in the

hospital. He wondered, not only because of that but also

because of some other things he felt I ought to have done,

whether he even mattered to his pastor. My first instinct was

to be defensive; but my second was to be grateful. The fact

is that I had not known of his hospital stay. But I had to

thank this brother for calling attention to my shortcoming.

Obviously I had sent a mixed signal. And yet, he knew that

he owed me something, didn’t he? He owed me some love,

for it is an act of love to complain when you feel you are

being put down. It is far more an act of love to speak your

mind and open your heart than it is to sulk in the corner and

send out a negative signal.

Brothers and sisters, if we are to be the church, we owe

some love to one another. Our God is an owesome God!

II

But it is also true, that we owe some urgency to ourselves.

The banner says owesome? We owe some urgency to

ourselves. We need to get a healthy anxiety about what we

are doing, and get a move on. Paul says to the Roman

Christians:

“You know what time it is, how it is now the moment for you to

wake from sleep. For salvation is nearer to us now than when we

became believers; the night is far gone, the day is near.”

You know what time it is. If Yolanda Sampson were

preaching this morning, she would shout out the name of her

first PuppeTainment video: “What time is it?” There is no

more important question for anyone to ask. What time is it in

your life?

This week in the Vacation Bible School adult class we are

going to study life stages. We are going to follow the

thinking of some theorists in order to arrive at a clearer

understanding of ourselves and of what time it is in our lives.

Consider that a shameless plug for you to participate in

these nightly sessions! You may know how old you are in

years, but you may not know what time it is in your life!

So if we did know what time it is in our lives, what might that

do for us? It might make us get up from our blessed

assurances and accomplish the urgent tasks that are before

us. Brothers and sisters, if we are to be the church of God,

the time is now for us to do what we have been called to do.

The time is now for to achieve what the Lord wants us to do,

without waiting for somebody else to do it.

What do you feel urgent about? One of our members feels

its urgent to do more for our children, and has started a new

project to help our children grow through reading and writing.

She didn’t complain, “Why doesn’t somebody do

something?” She owed some urgency to the children of the

church, and put this project together.

Another of our members has seen the need to reinforce our

scholarship program, and shortly we will have an

announcement to make about that. She thinks she owes

some action now to the young people of our church, and she

is going to make it happen.

Still another person has discovered in himself an urgent call

to move forward to reshape this building and all our

properties. His pen has been busy drawing proposals. We

owe some urgency to the Kingdom; we owe some urgency

to ourselves.

I am convinced, you see, that the Kingdom moves forward

only when Christians feel deep down in their own hearts a

very personal, powerful, direct to get on with their own lives.

They owe something to themselves! Oh, yes, of course,

effective Christians owe something to God. But they also

owe something to themselves, and feel that if they do not

accomplish something significant for the Kingdom, they will

not have been true to themselves.

On Monday of this week an era came to an end. Dr. T. J.

Baltimore, founder and pastor of the People’s Community

Baptist Church, passed away. Many of you heard him

preach, some of you knew him personally. For several of

you, he was your pastor. I remember when he first came to

this area, commissioned to begin a new church in

Montgomery County. T.J. began with a very personal vision

of what this new church ought to be like. You can say it was

a vision from the Lord, and that would be true. You can say

that it was a mandate from American Baptists, and that too

would be correct. But People’s Community Baptist Church

was also the intensely personal, uniquely special vision of

T.J. Baltimore, a vision which he pursued for twenty-five

years with every fiber of his being. He knew who he was, he

knew what time it was in his life, and he owed something to

himself! I believe that this past Monday, Pastor Baltimore

died with not only the Lord’s “well done” in his heart, but with

his own “well done” also. Owesome! He owed some

urgency to himself.

What time is it in your life? Is there something burning down

deep in your heart that must be done for the Kingdom? And

it must be done soon, or else you will wither unfulfilled, the

promise dried up, like a raisin in the sun? “You know what

time it is, how it is now the moment for you to wake from

sleep .. the night is far gone.”

Our God is an owesome God. Yes, indeed. We owe some

urgency to ourselves.

III

But most of all, we owe some uncompromising loyalty to

Jesus Christ, who is Lord of the church, and who has paid

the price for us and our salvation. Our God is an owesome

God. To Him we owe a debt that can never be paid. The

hymn writer says it, “Jesus paid it all; all to Him I owe. Sin

had left a crimson stain; He washed it white as snow.”

And Paul says it too:

“Put on the Lord Jesus Christ, and make no provision for the flesh,

to gratify its desires.”

Oh, today, let us become a church whose signals are not

mixed, but are clear. A church whose leaders and members

know where we are going, and why; who have heard this

lively Word in all its richness. A church whose members are

careful that all that we say and do is shaped by love for one

another. A church where we are able to stand up to one

another and confront one another, in love, to make certain

that there be no mixed signals, no confusion, no uncertainty.

Let us, most of all, capture a vision of a church which is

uncompromisingly committed to Jesus Christ as Lord. Let

us love Him with all that we are. Let us bore down deep into

our values and worship Him in spirit and in truth, no longer

worrying about peripheral things. Let’s not focus on when a

worship service gets a little long or a little loud, as long as

somebody is meeting the Lord. Let’s not fret when the

preacher fails to ascend an oratorical Mount Olympus or the

choir owes more to Mozart than to Motown. Let’s be

concerned only that throughout this place, Christ is

preached, and the Bible is taught honestly, and Christian

living is presented lovingly, and we are trained for effective

service out in the world. Let’s not worry about side issues;

let’s forget about ourselves, and concentrate on Him, and

worship Him. For our God is an owesome God; we owe

some loyalty to Christ.

Brothers and sisters, we are not here for ourselves alone.

Mixed signals come when each of us has our own agenda

and we do not know where we are going. We are not

having church just for us to enjoy. We are not giving a tenth

of our incomes just to build up reserves. We are not

investing untold hours in planning and teaching and meeting

just to maintain an organization. We do what we are do

because of Jesus Christ, His cross, His sacrifice, and

because the love of Christ constrains us. We owe some

loyalty to the Lord Jesus Christ. For there is no other name

under heaven whereby we must be saved.

My message today is for every one here, without exception.

If you lead a committee, commit! If you coordinate a

ministry, pursue it! If you are a teacher, teach with all your

heart. If you are a deacon, deac! If you have a desire to

move forward, then move. Make that call. Ring that

doorbell. Organize that ministry. Join that group. Give that

gift. Don’t wait for “them” to do it. Don’t wait until you have

to say to the Lord, “I’m sorry I didn’t .” For, “ ... drops of grief

can ne’er repay the debt of love I owe; here Lord, I give

myself away. ‘Tis all that I can do.”

The banner is right. Our God is an owesome God. Yes, we

owe some all right. We owe some love to one another. We

owe some urgency to ourselves. And we owe some loyalty

to the Lord Jesus Christ. And I will tell you, with no worry

about mixed signals – that when you live that way, you will

find out, clearly, that our God is also an AWESOME God.

[Pull thread to reveal “Awe” panel at banner].