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Biography
Bruce W. Thielemann, a native of
Pennsylvania, is preacher, teacher, and counselor to the Grove City
College community, Grove City, Pennsylvania. He is a former pastor of
the Glendale (California) Presbyterian Church, which under his
leadership became "One of the alivest churches in the Southland." (Los
Angeles Times) [Biographical information is correct as of the broadcast date noted
above.]
"A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to
Heaven"
I'd like to think with you tonight
about some of those funny things that happen on the way to heaven. I
don't mean funny “ha, ha.” I mean those strange and unusual
circumstances which God weaves into the fabric of our lives as we move
toward him. It seems to me that God makes his will known to us in three
different ways.
First, he speaks to us in response to our prayers. Now most of us do not
hear an audible voice from God when we pray. In fact I will confess to
you that I'm a bit leery about people who claim to hear God speak to
them. It seems to me that what God says to them always suits their own
prejudices too perfectly.
We had a young lady on our campus this last semester who broke all of
the college rules and her parents' hearts, and did it all she said
because God had told her so to do. Now I don't think that God speaks to
us in that way, but he does suggest his will to us, gently and subtly,
and we confirm that will when we move to the second way in which he
shows himself.
And that is through the study of scripture. Now the operative word in
that sentence is the word "study." The Bible is not a magic book, though
some people treat it that way. Did you hear about the fellow whose way
of discovering God's will was to simply turn the pages of the Bible and
stick in his finger and whatever verse came up he assumed to be God's
will for him? One day he was doing that and he stuck in his finger, and
the verse read, "And Judas went out and hanged himself." So he thought
he better try again. He turned a few more pages, stuck in his finger,
and the verse read, "Go, and do thou likewise." He didn't like that
either so he tried one more time, pushing a few more pages and then
sticking in his finger and the verse read,
"What you are about to do, do quickly."
The Bible is not to be treated like a magic book. It is to be studied.
When we are concerned about knowing God's will in some particular
regard, we should study passages which are germaine to such concern. And
when we add to that our prayers, and then the third way of knowing God's
will, I think his will becomes clear.
That third way, well, it's those funny things that happen on the way to
heaven.
Now I know there are those who say that God cannot be so involved with
each individual life that his will is made known in these little events.
But I beg to differ with such ones. It seems they come from either one
of two perspectives. They suggest on the one hand that God is too great
to be concerned about little lives like ours. I think these people need
to remember that great things are usually the result of the sum total of
little things. Significant events in history don't happen most often out
of the blue but rather they come as the result of many small things
which preceded them.
We are very proud, as a people, of the successful flights of the
Columbia space shuttle, and we have right to be. But do you remember how
many times in the testing of that spaceship that we had to postpone the
first shot. Why? Because of some small tiles on the outside of the
spaceship which fell off when they were heated in the process of
reentry. A little thing stopped the great thing from occurring. Great
things are made up of little things. Therefore, the great God is
concerned about our little lives, if you will, because it is the
movement of those lives together that cause history to come to pass.
Now, other people say that God cannot be involved in our lives, because
he's just not big enough to handle all of our problems. I can't imagine
that either. You know as you sit and listen to me now, you have more
cells in your brain than there are people living on the face of the
earth. And you are able to control those cells in a very remarkable way.
Just so the great God, the maker and the sustainer of everything that
is, can move in the lives of every one of us for we are part of that
which he has made.
So I believe God does involve himself in our experiences and gives us
these funny little things that happen on the way to heaven. And I think
there is Biblical evidence for this.
Abraham is concerned about finding a wife for his son, Isaac. He sends
him on a journey, and funny thing: Isaac meets Rebecca at a well.
Saul is very concerned about the future of his little nation of Israel
and he goes off hunting some lost donkeys one day, and funny thing: he
meets Samuel, who anoints him the first king of Israel.
Matthew was sitting one day in his tax table. Now Matthew was an
interesting man. He was always able to balance his accounts, but somehow
he was never able to balance his life. And Jesus came by and stacked up
all Matthew's coins and then with one finger knocked them over and said,
"Follow me." And funny thing: at just that moment Matthew was ready to
follow.
Well, here is Jesus' concern with the news that his cousin, John the
Baptist, has been arrested, and he is walking by the Sea of Galilee,
thinking of this, and funny thing: he meets two men, Peter and Andrew,
who had first been introduced to him by John the Baptist sometime
before. I suppose those two young fishermen were thinking about John
also for he was their friend. And Jesus comes up to Peter and Andrew and
he says to them, "Follow me, and I will make you fishers of men." And
funny thing: at just that moment they were prepared to follow him.
See, I think that God is moving in the events of our lives. No event is
too small to be outside of his concern, and we need to be alert to his
movement. You see, it doesn't happen with a blare of trumpets, and a
roll of drums, and surging violins, and spotlights. Not at all. It often
comes silently, subtly, almost secretly, and we must be intent in order
to see it when it comes.
Robert Hillyer has a little short story about a man who was paralyzed
from his waist down. He spent his life in a wheelchair. And he filled
his days with the keeping of journals. Little items were recorded in the
journals. How far the forsythia was out today when compared with
yesterday. What Mrs. Kranz gave to her son when he returned from the
armed services. Things of that kind. And someone asked him once why it
was that he kept these journals, and he replied, "It's just to let God
know that I'm paying attention."
That's what we need to do, to pay attention to these things that God
weaves into the course of our days. For example, have you learned to
discover the sacramental in the incidental?
It was back in 1754 that Horace Walpole, the English scholar, coined the
word "serendipity." There was an old Arabic legend about The Three
Princes of Serendip. Serendip is the Arabic word for Ceylon. We call it
Sri Lanka today. This story concerned three princes who set off on a
journey. They never got where they were going. But on the way they
discovered many remarkable things. So Walpole came up with the word
"serendipity," which means finding valuable or remarkable things not
sought for.
We should be looking for those kinds of things. I think, for example, of
a man I know who was riding in an airplane, and leafing through the
pages of a magazine, he came across an article on the world's hungry. At
that moment he was ready to read that article, and on reading it, his
whole life's perspective was changed. He gave himself to a ministry to
the world's hungry. And I don't know of a single human being who is
doing more for the world's hungry today than that man.
Or I think of a woman who was driving home in Pittsburgh one night. Her
car radio was on, and she heard a sermon. It touched her so much that
she pulled over to the side of the road in order to listen to it with
total concentration. When the broadcast was over, and she was driving
home, she thought to herself, radio ministry is terribly important. I
don't know of a single person in America today who is doing more to
support and encourage radio ministry than this woman.
These were individuals, you see, who had their wings spread, ready to
catch the winds of God. That's the mark of a Christian: going through
life with your wings spread.
There is a novel called Samson's Choice, about a man who died and goes
to hell and it is so much like earth that he doesn't believe it is hell.
And the devil was trying to convince him of this, and the devil said,
"No one here wants to climb. No friend of mine has ever asked for
wings."
God's people keep their wings spread, alert, intent, looking for the
movement of the spirit in their experience.
Those of you who are fans of country music will recognize the name of
Lonzo Green, a great country singer of a few years ago. Once Lonzo Green
was visiting some of his family in Tennessee and his little nephew,
Jimmy, was there and when he went to school the next day, he told all of
his school friends that his famous Uncle Lonzo was in town. One of the
boys in Jimmy's class came up and said, "Do you think your Uncle Lonzo
would be willing to teach me how to tune my guitar?"
So Jimmy went home and asked his Uncle Lonzo if he would do it, and
Uncle Lonzo said, "Certainly, bring him over to the house and I will
teach him."
Jimmy said, "Well, Uncle Lonzo, my parents won't allow me to bring him
into the house. You see, he's white trash." That phrase and attitude was
quite common then.
So Uncle Lonzo said, "If you can't bring him into the house, at least
bring him to the sidewalk in front of the house, and I will meet with
the boy there."
During the day Lonzo Green tried to change the family's mind without
success, and so at five o'clock that afternoon, he met the boy on the
sidewalk. He was a nice looking young man, brown hair, very soft drawl
to his voice. He had an old guitar fashioned with a string around his
neck. Lonzo Green taught him how to adjust the frets and tune the
instrument, and then the boy said, "Thank you, sir," and turned to go.
Lonzo said, "No, come sit, and let's sing together." And they made good
music there on the curb. For a long time.
And then the boy, recognizing what time it was, jumped up and said, "Oh,
thank you so very much, but I promised my mother I'd be home, and I
always keep my promises to my mother." And he was gone.
The boy was never welcomed into the house. But since that time, more
than thirty years now, he has been welcomed into many homes. He has made
more than thirty-three films, and sold over 400,000,000 phonograph
records.
His name, of course, was Elvis Presley. And in the course of his life,
Elvis Presley said on many occasions that one of the places he learned
generosity and grace was from Lonzo Green.
Green, you see, was open to the movement of God's spirit. A young man
had a need. He responded to that need.
We don't always know those moments. But I believe there are times when
the very stars skip in their courses because they understand the
greatness of what we do not understand.
If I may be very personal for a moment, I think there may be a time my
friend when you will be reading a paragraph in a book or you'll hear a
word spoken from the pulpit of your church or from this very desk.
Perhaps it will be the question of a child. Maybe a job opportunity will
come to you which is different than any you ever expected. Maybe it will
be a face you see in a crowded room. But it will change your life if you
will be sensitive to it. Watch for it. This is what the Japanese call
Shibui, the art of discovering beauty in the unexpected.
I wonder also if you have ever thought about discovering the sacramental
in the accidental, in the bard things, the difficult moments, the pains
and the frustrations, the storms that come in life. You know, when a
storm breaks upon you, there are really only two things you can do. You
can pretend you're a rooster. That is, pull your wings in about you and
try to hold on for dear life. Or you can be an eagle. An eagle spreads
his wings and lets the winds carry him to heights he had never known
before.
Arnold Toynbee, the most distinguished historian of our century, has
said that civilization progresses because of the stimulus of blows. In
other words, it is as we are battered and knocked about in life that we
ofttimes make our greatest gains.
I don't understand much of the suffering and hardship of life. As you
can see, I have a weight problem. I don't understand, for example, how
it is that God puts calories in ice cream when he could just as well
have put them in spinach. And he could have put vitamins, not in
spinach, but in ice cream. I don't pretend to understand that. And I
don't understand much of the suffering, and the evil, and the hardship
that is part of life. But I have discovered this: that many times it is
these moments of pain and difficulty which challenge us to do better
than we have ever done before.
I was in a camp in Michigan last July, and the director of the camp was
taking us for a stroll around the camp one day, and he took us into
every nook and cranny. At one point we were climbing up a very steep
slope and the path was full of rocks and bumps, and one of the people in
the group said, "Good heavens, man, why don't you take away these rocks
and these bumps?"
And the guide, the director, said, "It's the rocks and the bumps that
you climb on."
So it is. Many times the bumps in life are what we find help us in our
climbing.
Thomas Edison set up his first laboratory when he was an attendant on a
railroad. It was in a freight car. The car lurched one day, chemicals
were thrown on the floor, the car caught fire, and Edison was fired from
his job. But, it was after he lost that job that he went on to begin his
career as an inventor, the greatest inventor in the history of our
country.
Or, one thinks of Abraham Lincoln. He failed at just about everything he
started out with. He failed as a postmaster. He failed as a storekeeper.
Went into the military as a colonel and came out a lieutenant. He failed
at just about everything. Even his first few political campaigns were
not successes. But out of those bumps, those hardships, came a tenacity,
a compassion and understanding that made him just the man necessary to
hold this country together when it had to be held together.
Or one thinks of the great English surgeon whose work as a physician was
world-renowned, A. J. Cronin. Then he developed heart disease, and as a
result of that heart disease could not practice medicine any more. And
in despair and frustration, he sat down and began to write. You perhaps
have read some of the marvelous works that have come from his pen: The
Keys of the Kingdom, The Citadel, and other masterpieces.
What about James Whistler? James Whistler wanted to be a military man;
went to West Point. He often said that if silicone had been a gas, he
would have been a major general. Silicone is not a gas and he flunked
out of West Point and went on to take up a career in painting. And no
one who has ever painted has matched his skill with blacks and grays. Do
you remember his famous work entitled "Study in Black and Gray?" Perhaps
you know it by its more common name, "Whistler's Mother." It came forth
you see out of a time of storm and failure and despair.
I guess what I am saying can be summed like this. If some night an angel
were to visit you and ask you what things in your life have taught you
the most, if you were honest, and of course you would have to be honest
with an angel, I think you'd have to admit that some of the moments of
greatest trauma and difficulty bad been your best teachers. Those funny
things that happen on the way to heaven.
Please bear in mind, I am not saying that all events are God's will. And
I am not saying that every event has some kind of secret meaning. And I
am not saying that we are to blindly accept all of the events of our
lives and the circumstances of our days. What I am suggesting is that we
need to be alert to, sensitive to, God's will in our experience,
examining the events of our days, to discover what God is saying to us
in them, This means that we must never resent life. There must never be
rigidity or inflexibility in us.
If the Sears Tower did not move in the wind, if it were not flexible, it
would fall. Just so we must have in us always a flexibility. And there
must be in us as well nothing of the attitude commonly called stoicism.
We are not just to endure life or to tolerate it, to go through life
like a turtle.
James Conant, the president of Harvard, said, "Even a turtle wouldn't
make any progress until he is ready to stick his neck out."
So we've got to be ready to involve ourselves and risk ourselves to
creatively use the things that God brings into our lives.
I was in Cody, Wyoming, two summers ago, and on the front page of the
newspaper were two stories. They both started the same, but they both
ended quite differently. The first story concerned a man whose girl had
jilted him, and he committed suicide. The second story concerned a man
whose girl had jilted him and he wrote a song about it and sold it for
$20,000. That's the difference that being sensitive to God's opportunity
can make.
They called Jesus a drunkard, and he took the story of a young drunkard
and made out of it the beauty of the parable of the prodigal son.
They nailed him to a cross, and he turned that terrible instrument of
death into a beautiful thing that we hang around little children's
necks.
Many Christians turn courthouses into churches and prisons into pulpits.
This was not a matter of luck. It was a matter of being sensitive to the
winds of God. There is uncertainty, there is hardship and difficulty,
there is insecurity in life, but God is in life also. There is mystery,
there is suffering, there is chance, and there is uncontrollable change,
but there is God also. And we must be sensitive to his will to know the
beauty of his power.
One day, three husky young guys by the side of Galilee were approached
by Jesus. Their muscles bulged as they pulled in those wet nets full of
their flippy, finny catch. And Jesus said, "Follow me."
And they followed him, and things were never the same for them or for
the world. And I think there were times around the campfire in the
coming years when they said one to another, "Do you remember that day
the Master came and called us? Funny thing that just at that moment we
were ready to go."
I believe those kinds of funny things are still happening to all of us
on the way to heaven.
Pray with me: Oh, God, help us discover your will in our lives to the
glory of your name. Amen.
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