|
#67
I Am! I Can! I Will! I Believe!" - Part 4 (09/03/03)
The
Message
By Robert H. Schuller
My son and I had planned
very carefully the four messages in this series based on the four
chapters of the most recent book I have written, "If
You Can Dream It, You Can Do It!" It is the smallest
and shortest book I've ever put together, because I wanted to
offer it free to teens and young people. I wanted them to grab
hold of this central message: If you believe,
you can achieve ... go for your dreams!
But today I am as stunned
and shocked at the Columbia shuttle tragedy as each of you are,
and I asked the question, "Is my message, "If You can
Dream It You Can Do It" still relevant?
Yes, as you pursue
your dream there will be risk involved, but God will bless you
throughout. It doesn't mean He will protect you in from bloodshed,
but it does mean that God will have the last word. He will protect
your immortal soul, and He will proclaim His love to you forevermore.
The message of this
book is in four simple, but powerful action words:
1)
I am!
2) I can!
3) I will!
4) I believe!
I very carefully thought about how I would close the little book,
and I chose a true story, which I have shared with you maybe a
hundred times in my almost fifty years as your pastor.
My friend Dr. Dan Poling
had a son, Clark, who was a chaplain in the Armed Forces in World
War II. And then the day came when his ship, the Dorchester, was
torpedoed by the Germans and it sank. That headline was as shocking
as today's newspaper (February 2, 2003). Then, all of America
picked up their daily papers and they saw a picture of four chaplains,
Clark Poling, who was a Protestant, a Catholic, a Jew and another
Protestant. The four young chaplains, with arms around each other,
were bowing their heads and praying together as the bow of the
ship slipped between the waters and they were gone forever. They
had given their officers' lifejackets to four enlisted Navy boys.
They sacrificed their lives.
The headline that appeared
in the paper in World War II ... "Four
chaplains die with hundreds of sailors" ... was as
shocking as today's newspaper with the headline" "Columbia
is lost. The shuttle burns up over Texas, killing all seven crewmembers."
And beneath the headline are the pictures of the seven astronauts
in their space suits.
God
Calls Us To Dream
Read their stories
and you will see how these seven astronauts for years and years
had a dream that they could become astronauts. It was a choice
and they made it. Yes, and they succeeded. They went into the
astronaut program, knowing very well the risks involved. They
were doctors. They were educated intelligent people. They were
engineers who knew that machines could break down and there could
be problems. They all very intentionally made the decision to
carry out their lifelong dream knowing the risks. More than one
had a special word they wrote to their loved ones if they didn't
come back. They knew they were going into space ... that it was
dangerous, but they were truly alive because they believed in
their dream. They had faith. They were believers. Yes, you make
your dreams come true when you affirm: I
am! I can! I will! But ... if the ship goes down, those
who remain will have to go to the window like Clark's father,
Dr. Dan Poling and say, "I believe!
I believe! I believe!
What a wonderful faith
Christianity is! There is no other faith that can match it. There
is no other religion that has as its central character, Jesus
of Nazareth. At the age of thirty-three, two thousand years ago,
the wisdom that poured out of the mouth of Jesus Christ has never
been surpassed by any psychiatrist, psychologist or clergy. And
the text for my message this morning are His words,
"If
you can believe, all things are possible to those who believe."
(Mark 9:23)
We're called to dream
the dream, take the risk ... then what? What if there is
disaster down the road? Then it's time to say: "I believe!
I believe!" Dan Poling would never see his son, Clark, again.
But he said, "I believe!" Today many families and loved
ones will never see their beloved astronaut again. The seven brave
heroes, who on the way home fell to their deaths, knew there would
be risks.
So what does this say
about God Almighty? Does He inspire us to dream great dreams ...
make the commitment ... pay the price ... receive the laurels
... and then go down in a disaster? What does that say about God?
Read Psalm 121 ... the key line in this Psalm is ... "He
shall preserve your soul." (Psalm 121:7) That is the
last word. Read the Bible. Look at how God calls us to dream.
He'll equip us to succeed. He'll see us through to honorable success.
Then we pay the risks. And if, for whatever reason, sometime through
human errors, sometimes through our own sins, and sometimes through
reasons we will never understand or know, disaster strikes. Don't
blame God. He is not finished with you yet! When you enter the
death zone, God is ready for His last move. He will then move
in and preserve your soul forevermore. And that will not be the
end of the story. It is the beginning of eternity, with Him, for
you. Wow.
Believe
in Your Dream
What are your dreams?
You must have some dreams. I gave communion this morning to Neita
Armstrong. She is a Lt. Col. In the United States Marine Corps
and is being deployed this week to the danger zone in the Middle
East. Neita has been a member of this church for 17 years. I baptized
her. She was raised in a strong Christian family. Her mother is
still living and on December 17th, 2002 Neita's mother made the
news. Why? Because she had a dream since she was 21 years old.
Her dream was that someday she would fly an airplane, solo. She
always had her goals and her to-do lists. Most importantly was
her goal to raise her four children, three of whom received advance
laurels in the Marine Corps, including Neita.
But Neita's mother
did not give up on her goal to someday
fly an airplane, solo. So, 59 years later her dream came true
and she made the news only a few weeks ago. The newspaper showed
her picture with the airplane. The paper quoted her; "They
put me in the plane. Then they locked the door behind me and I
realized I was alone so I started the engine and took off."
The headline was: "Eighty year old
woman solos!"
We believe in dreams.
We believe they come from God Almighty who pours the passion into
our lives so that we will be motivated to do God's will and change
the world as His redeemed people.
We believe that our
dreams come from praying for God's plan for us to do something
that will bring glory to God and make this world better in the
one life we live. That's the heart of the Christian faith. Yes,
we must be prepared to take up our cross, follow Jesus Christ,
and pay the price. But always God promises
His ultimate reward.
God
will have the last word ... and it will be good.
Since we lost the shuttle
many of you, like myself, have been thinking of the time in 1986
when the Challenger exploded as it lifted up from its pad. Watching
that horrible tragedy was the wife of the commander, Dick Scobee.
June and the wives of the other six astronauts who died in that
tragedy. June Scobee felt that it was her responsibility to comfort,
encourage and build up the faith of all of these families who
together, watched the Challenger explode right in front of them.
Later I urged June, now June Scobee Rodgers, a dear friend, to
write a book to share her positive faith and turn her scar into
a star. June did and the book is entitled, "Silver Linings."
[1]
Today, this book will
be a comfort to the grieving families of the Columbia shuttle
tragedy. In the first pages June quotes the poetry of John Gillespie
Magee, Jr., who at 19 years of age, in the Canadian Air Force,
lost his life in World War II. Before he died he wrote these words:
High
Flight
Oh! I slipped the surly bonds of earth
And danced the skies on laughter-silver wings;
Sunward I've climbed, and joined the tumbling mirth
Of sun-split clouds-and done a hundred things
You have not dreamed of - wheeled and soared and swung.
High in the sunlit silence. Hov'ring there,
I've chased the shouting wind along, and flung
My eager craft through footless halls of air.
Up, up the long delirious, burning blue,
I've topped the windswept heights with easy grace
Where never lark or even eagle flew
And, while with silent, lifting mind I've trod
The high untrespassed sanctity of space
Put out my hand, and touched the face of God.
-John
Gillespie Magee, Jr. [2]
Dreamers
of great dreams take risks, but they have a belief!
Dreamers believe that
the dream is for them. They believe in the dream they have to
do. They believe the dream somehow was put before them by God,
that somehow it will be the meaning of their life and they believe
that somehow, whatever happens, God will
have the last word and it will be good.
Believers of the dream
will touch the face of God and be happy that they went for the
dream God planned just for them.
In the opening page
of her book, "Silver Linings,"
June Scobee Rodgers included this famous quote of Carl Sandberg:
"Nothing
happens unless there is first a dream."
So
make life happen.
Make things happen that will make our world more courageous ...
more loving ... more encouraging ... more peaceful. Dare to dream
a dream for God!
"When
there are no answers, there is Jesus."
That is a personal
message June penned to me in the inside cover of her book. That's
what got June Scobee Rodgers through the grief and shock of her
husband's tragic death. That is what enabled her to turn her scar
into a star when suddenly she was a widow of the commander
of the Challenger, and now surrounded by the widows of the other
six.
I believe in a God
who chooses a dream. Yes, there will be risks involved. God does
not promise us and guarantee that errors or sins or interventions
of human and other factors that accidents will never happen. But
God does promise us that when the accident happens, that's not
the last word!
"The
Lord shall preserve you from all evil; He shall preserve your
soul. The Lord shall preserve your going out and your coming in
from this time forth, and even forevermore."
(Psalm 121:7-8)
What kind of a God
do you believe in? I chose, and I still choose to believe in a
God who created heavens and the earth. I believe in this God who
created creatures called human beings and shares with human beings
the capacity to be imaginative, to dream of what they can do ...
what they can be ... how they can make a difference. And
then when they experience risks and dangers, in prayer they continue
on their pathway to glorify God.
"If
you can believe, all things are possible"
(Mark 9:23)
Even when you lose
your loved one, you can live again, somehow. All things are possible
to those who believe. Connect with Jesus. I believe in Him. I
believe that Jesus came to earth and through His life He showed
us the face of His Heavenly Father, the Creator of the heavens
and the earth and so I have chosen to believe in Him. I have chosen
to believe in the teachings of Christ. I have chosen to believe
that Jesus Christ is my Savior forevermore. I've chosen to believe
in the dreams He gives me and the courage He inspires within me.
I've chosen to believe that one day I will stand before Jesus
in that day in which there there is no sunrise and no sunset.
Look at Jesus ... that's
the kind of a God to believe in ... and He
shall preserve your soul. Hallelujah! Amen.
Prayer: O God, it doesn't
take any faith to live a safe life, but it takes a lot of faith
to live a real life. Thank You for giving me dreams that can make
the world better. Thank You for risks that make my character stronger.
Thank you for the guarantee that the last page will be Good News
to every believer as we hear the angels sing, "Well
done, good and faithful believer. Enter into the joy of the Lord."
Amen.
   
|