This is a sermon I will give tomorrow morning at Prospect United Church of Christ in Seattle, Washington.
The Moral Compass of Hope
for
Prospect United Church of Christ
Seattle, Washington
July 3, 2022
Scripture:
Psalm 30
Let
us pray: May the words of my mouth and the meditations of all of our hearts be
acceptable to your O God, our rock and our redeemer. Amen.
I
must begin by admitting that it is a bit of a challenge to preach on a theme
that will be used over several weeks that someone else has established,
especially perhaps when you’re giving the first sermon in that series like I’m
doing here today. Meighan has told me that your theme for July is “what is our
moral compass?” It seems appropriate to me then to start this sermon series on
that theme with some definitions. I mean, if you’re going to be talking about the
theme of “moral compass,” it would be good to know just what that theme means.
Perhaps Meighan will define it for you differently, but I’ll start with a
definition of “moral.” According to one online dictionary “moral” means “concerned
with the principles of right and wrong behavior.” That sounds about right,
doesn’t it? Morals or morality in the sense relevant here are about right and
wrong. They are about not just what it is permissible to do or not do in a
particular situation. They are about what it is right and what it is wrong to
do in that situation. And I think we all know what a compass is. It’s a device
that tells us which way north is, or at least which way magnetic north is. It “orients”
us, which means shows us where east is. A moral compass then is something that
points us toward what is right and away from what is wrong.
Now,
as I was thinking about what to say to you this morning, I did what I always do
when I have a sermon to write, or even when I don’t. I looked in the Revised
Common Lectionary for the scripture readings it designates for today. We just
heard one of them, Psalm 30. I frankly am not sure I’ve ever preached on a
Psalm before. Maybe the Psalm 23, and maybe most if not quite all of Psalm 139.
I probably haven’t preached on any others. But this past week as I read Psalm
30 there arose for me what I think can actually be a moral compass of sorts for
us. There are of course lots of things than can be a moral compass—Jesus, the
Bible, tradition, our family, philosophy, and I suppose many others. The theme
that arose for me out of Psalm 30, however, is hope. I find the theme of hope
especially in verses 4 and 5 of that psalm: “Sing praises to the Lord, O you his faithful ones, and give
thanks to his holy name. For his anger is but for a moment, his favor is for a
lifetime. Weeping may linger for the night, but joy comes in the morning.” Let
me explain first how I see hope in these verses.
It
certainly seems to me, and perhaps it seems to you too, that we are living
today in a time of the darkness of night and of weeping over the condition of
our nation. As tomorrow we mark the anniversary of the beginnings of our nation,
there certainly seems to be little to celebrate. I won’t go down the entire
list of today’s horribles. I don’t want to keep you here all afternoon, and you
know them as well as I do. I’ll just mention a few. A rogue Supreme Court is
hurling us backward in time not forward and constitutes a real threat to our
freedom. A climate crisis we are unwilling to address in a truly meaningful way
threatens life on the only planet we have. Racism still rots the core of our
culture and our society. We face a crisis of homelessness we want just to go
where we can’t see it. We lack the will to address it in any truly constructive
way. But enough. Facing these and all the others can seem simply overwhelming.
That’s
where hope comes in. What is hope? It is the desire for something good to
happen combined with the expectation that it will someday even if we know not
when. The psalmist of Psalm 30 knew a time of darkness in his life—all of the
psalmists were certainly men, unfortunately. He faced danger from what he calls
his “foes.” He has been near death, which he calls going down to “the Pit.” He
has felt God hide God’s face from him, or so he thought. Like all ancient
people he attributed his ills directly to God in a way most of us today do not.
He attributed them to God’s anger and saw that anger and the ills it produced as
grounds for weeping. He attributed his mourning and his sackcloth, a symbol of woe,
to God. He surely knew trouble in his life, just as we do.
But
he also knew hope. He knew that things had gotten better for him, or maybe he
just anticipated that they would. He sings—the psalms were meant to be sung—that
God’s anger is but for a moment. We can understand him to mean that there is
hope that our woes will not last. We may weep through the night, but we can
hope that we will come out on the other side of that night and find joy, or I’d
say find joy at least that things are getting better not necessarily that they
are already good..
How
can we have that hope, a hope that can get us through the night both literally
and figuratively? Because God. That’s why. God is where we find hope. God is,
it seems to me, the only place we can find hope these days. Trusting in our
fellow human beings seems a mere vanity, but with trust in God we can hope for
a better tomorrow. Without God, to me at least, all would seem hopeless. If
there is to be joy in the morning, if our troubles are to be only for a moment,
it must be because God wills that it be so. We can at least hope for a better
tomorrow because we know that our God of hope is with us and never deserts us,
not even in the worst of times.
So
OK. If there is hope we must ground it in our trust in God. But how is hope a moral
compass? I find it to be a moral compass because it points us forward not
backward. It keeps us moving in the right direction. See, hope is not just a
state of mind. It is a way of being. It is a way of action. People Francis says
“You pray for those who are hungry. Then you feed them. That’s how prayer
works.” Hope works the same way. You hope and pray for a better future, then you
act to bring that better future about. Whatever our hope for the future is, it
is the hope itself that points the way. The way forward. The way toward the
world of justice and peace that Jesus called the realm of God.
It
is true of course that hope as a moral compass is only a beginning. We need
something that can direct us in deciding what is right for the future for which
we hope and work. Perhaps in future sermons Meighan will
discuss with you what that something else might be. In any event, in our
present national darkness let us cling to the hope that comes from God and that
can come from nowhere else. Trust in God. Cement your hope in that trust. If we
can do that we will have a moral compass. We will keep moving in the right
direction. May it be so. Amen.
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