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The Three Basic Questions
A sermon preached by Dr. Peter James
Flamming, Pastor
First Baptist Church, Richmond, Virginia
May 31, 1998
Text: Genesis 3
Often on sports broadcasts they ask a question to test your
knowledge of the sport. Let me ask you a question to test your
knowledge of the Bible? What are the first three questions God
asks in the Bible? The longer I live the more I believe these
three questions are basic to life. Even though they are found
within the first four chapters of the Bible, all three questions
are as current as today's newspaper. For those with an analytical
eye, around each basic question are supporting questions. But the
three basic questions are clear.
The first is addressed to Adam after he sinned. God asks,
"Where are you?" (Gen. 3:8,9)
The second is addressed to Adam's son Cain: "Why are you so
angry?" (Gen. 4:6)
The third is also addressed to Cain: "Where is your
brother?"Cain answered, "Am I my brother's
keeper?"
Friends, these are basic. For instance, you could use them to
begin developing a spiritual life.
Where am I, really? Am I willing to share my emotions, like
anger, with God? What responsibility do I have for those I hate?
Or, would you like to develop a sense of balance in life?
Consider the balance you get from these basic three.
Where are you? forces you to look within yourself.Why are you
so angry? forces you to deal with your emotions.Where is your
brother? forces us to admit others are important too.
Or, would you like to learn how to pray?
I have discovered that these three questions allow me to
handle my life in the presence of God.
1. Lord, this is where I am right now.
2. Lord, help me look honestly at my anger.
3. Lord, who should I pray for?
So, lets look at the three questions in turn.
1. Where are you, Adam?
Let's start with Adam. In Hebrew, Adam is a generic
word, a generic word for man. In other words, we too are included
in the question God addresses to Adam. God asks, "Where are
you, Jim?" Often the first step to salvation is to honestly
answer God's question, "Where are you?" What are you
building your life around? What are your values? What do you
believe? Where are you headed? What do you really worship?
Those are tough questions, too tough for me to handle by
myself. That is one reason I ask Jesus, who I believe lives
within me and knows exactly where I am, to help me face these
questions. Without the Lord Jesus within I would despair. But the
Lord says simply, "Follow me, and we'll figure this
out."
Some years ago while on a mission trip to the interior of
Brazil we came upon an intriguing nutritional tradition. Young
mothers, after they became pregnant, were not allowed to eat any
fruits or vegetables. It is an area of Brazil where fruits and
vegetables abound, growing almost wild. The people who live there
grow them, sell them in the market place, and eat them readily.
But for young mothers, it was a taboo to eat either fruit or
vegetables while they were carrying their child. Taboo means,
"a prohibition caused by local custom."
We have our own taboos. One of the most powerful is this: don't
look within for your answers.
Our culture says, "All the important answers can be
supplied by science, or technology, or government, or more
money." All of those are out there. All can be put on a
graph, or studied in a lab, or statistically measured. We have,
in virtually every part of our society, separated the head from
the heart, or as I would prefer to put it, we have worshiped the
analytical mind and ignored the relational and spiritual mind.
Parker Palmer summarizes what this has done to us:
We have minds that do not know how to feel and hearts that do
not know how to think.
We have separated facts from feelings with the result that
bloodless facts rule the world from a distance while ignorant
emotions destroy us close at hand.
See, God gave us wonderfully complex minds. We do have and
need the mind that analyzes, plans, monitors, and judges.
But we also have a physical mind that runs our body; an
emotional mind that feels; a relational mind that needs love and
friendship; and a spiritual mind that asks, what is the meaning
of all this?
When God asks, "Where are you," God is asking a very
modern question.
Some years ago at a youth camp we had a campfire when the
youth were free to share with one another what had happened to
them that week. Toward the end a young fellow got up and stood
before the others. I was surprised. I had never heard him speak
to anyone. Withdrawn, he was the brain among the students. A
nerd. A bookworm. Incidentally, some of our members were in he
same church as Bill Gates when he was a teenager. He was a nerd.
Now the richest man in the world, nerd can't be all bad. Well, at
that youth camp a young man got up to speak who almost never
spoke. As he began he opened up as if a can opener had hold of
him. Unlike some of us, he knew where he was and didn't like it.
He said, "I'm a good student. Some of you have called me a
nerd and I guess I am. But I don't need another A. What I need is
a friend. The most important thing that ever happened to me may
have happened this week: I made some friends with you guys. I
think I have even become a friend with God. I have no trouble
making A-s or understanding computers. I have trouble making
friends. You have no idea how much I needed all of you in my
life."
God has a wonderful sense of humor. At the end of our lives we
can't take our technology, graphs and statistics, and grade point
averages with us. But our friends of faith - these go with us
even into eternity. Three things remain says Paul: faith, hope,
and love.
Where am I? is a wonderful question for the age of technology.
God says, " know all about your computers, but where are
you?"
2. The second question God asks is abruptly modern
and rudely relevant. God asks: "Why are you so angry?"
When I read about the most recent shooting on a
school campus by an angry student with an automatic gun, I just
sagged. I thought of the parents and what they are going through.
I thought of what the students feel, especially the close
friends.
Those who demand the freedom for everyone to carry a gun, deal
with this out there, as a matter of principle, a human right.
What they forget is that we live in an angry world that has no
skill in handling anger. Typical of our age, objective principle
becomes more important than how it affects people.
Consistent with the taboo of never turning inward for answers,
we treat anger as if its solution is out there. What we do, of
course, is deal with anger by blaming someone out there for our
problems. Like Adam and Eve. Adam blamed Eve: the woman she made
me do it. Eve blamed the serpent, that rascal made me do it. Now
all these millennia later we follow the same pattern. But never
before have we had the firepower and the nuclear power to turn
truly destructive.
God comes to Cain and asks, "Why are you so angry?"
God hopes Cain will look himself in the mirror and say, "I'm
at fault here. I'm the one who took some shortcuts with my
offering. I'm the one who prefers being jealous of Abel to
finding my own strengths and developing them." But rather
than face his own weaknesses and explore his own strengths, he
projected his anger on Abel and killed him.
Anger is like Cholesterol. There is a good kind and a killing
kind. The killing kind of anger is when you blame someone else
for the frustrations in your life. Like the kid on the school
ground who pulled the trigger. The killing kind of anger not only
affects us but hurts lots of innocent people. We need a strategy
for handling our killing anger. A good place to begin is to ask,
Why am I so angry?
But there is good anger also, anger that is brutally honest
within, and uses anger to motivate us to achieve our goals. Good
kind of anger is never blame placing and always able to ask God's
question.
3. But God doesn't stop with anger - he pushes out
the boundaries and asks, "Where is your brother?"
The brother here is the hated brother, the unliked brother, the
rejected brother, the dead brother. Sooner or later Christ comes
to us and asks what we are going to do with those we can't stand
and often frankly hate?
Scott Walker grew up the son of missionary parents in the
Philippines. There he came across a Christian leader whose name
was Zachariah Dayot. Zachs remarkable story included the
bitter experience during World War II when the Japanese invaded
the Philippines. In the little village Zach lived, the elders met
and decided that the best way to protect the women and children
was for the men to take to the hills and have the Japanese chase
them. Surely they would not harm the women and children! It
worked just the opposite. The Japanese decided to strike fear
into all the other villages by destroying the village and
everyone in it. Zach returned to find his family gone, his wife
and children destroyed. In his anger he returned to the hills to
fight with the guerillas against the Japanese. Caught in an
ambush, he was beaten and left for dead.
Miraculously Zach survived the war and decided to use his life
for God. Zack became a minister, and a good one. He was, in fact,
President of the Philippine Baptist Convention when the Japanese
Baptists decided to send a delegation to formally restore
relationships with Filipino Baptists. Zach was the obvious one to
meet them at the airport and welcome them. He had thought his
inner wounds were healing. But his simmering anger and bitterness
boiled over as he thought of meeting the Japanese. He remembered
the burned villages. He remembered burying his own family. Rage
consumed him. He wouldn't go. He couldn't go. He kept asking,
what would Jesus do? But he knew what Jesus would do and it just
made him the more angry. Soon a haunting realization broke in on
him. His hate was burning out all of the love and compassion
within him. It made him shudder. The night before the arrival of
the Japanese delegation he could not sleep. He tried to pray but
mostly he just felt bitter. But sometime in that night the
thought occurred to him, what if Christ had treated me like I am
treating those Japanese. The next morning, the day of their
arrival, he caught a Taxi and was the first to meet the Christian
brothers and sisters from Japan. He bowed as Orientals do in a
gesture of welcome. Something changed within him as he bowed. I
suppose it was like Jesus washing the disciples feet. On
that day he turned the corner he was able to say, "The
Japanese are my brothers and my sisters in Christ."
Three questions to take along and make camp with. Where are
you? Why are you so angry? Where is your brother? Give thanks to
God for not treating us like we treat other people. His grace has
abounded. His forgiveness is real. His presence is with us right
now. But where are you? Is it time to change course? Why not let
God love the hostility out of you. It's God time.
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