Prepared For
the Defense
1 Peter 3: 13-16
Memorial Day used to be just a holiday to me. Mostly, it
was the last holiday before school let out, the day we used for makeup day if
it snowed too much that winter. I knew, of course, that it was a patriotic
day. It was a day we always recognized
veterans and the mothers of veterans. Later, when I was serving in the Navy, it
came to mean more to me. Now, when I have a Naval Aviator for a son and a Coast
Guard non-commissioned officer in Guam for a son in law, it means a lot more to
me. In recent years, people have begun saying nice things about veterans, like
“Thank you for your service.” Coming from the Vietnam era, that still sounds
strange, but it sounds absolutely wonderful when they say it about my son and
son in law. I always add to that a silent thank you for the service my baby
daughter renders those young men and women when she works abroad in base
recreation activities.
Memorial Day is a day to remember. While we thank those whom we can for
their service, we remember those whom we can no longer thank for their
sacrifice. Remembering is a good thing. It helps us to keep from revisiting bad
places, whether they are places on a map or places in the heart.
In America, we talk a lot about God and country. As America has grown, it
has come to be home to the practice of many religions by many subcultures
represented in this land of religious freedom. For Christians, we sometimes
look around and wonder what has happened to our Christian nation. The answer is
remarkably simple. In our desire to be ethical and our ambition to be great, in
our yearning to be fair and our mantle of world protector, we have opened the
door to all faiths and creeds. Have we forsaken our God? Of course not. Can we
still worship in a nation of plurality where no one religion dominates? Absolutely!
But how do we remember? How do we find our way in a land with so many
choices? We follow the example of Peter, Peter who had to find Christ in the middle
of a Greco-Roman culture which not only tolerated but even encouraged the
worship of many pagan gods. Our society is not unique in its challenges to find
God’s path.
Peter had this to say: Be zealous for what is good. If you do, if you
occupy yourself with this task, who can hurt you? Who can really impact your
thoughts if they are full of goodness? The goodness itself will pervade your
mind and you will be blessed. Peter sounds like a Motocross commercial. “No Fear!” This from the guy who betrayed his Lord
three times in a matter of minutes when he let the fear overtake him. But Peter
learned from his mistakes. He went on to become one of the great leaders of the
early church. How, we ask, and Peter answers: Honor Christ in your heart and
always be prepared to make a defense to anyone who challenges your belief.
The first dozen years of my legal career were largely devoted to trial
practice. I saw and worked against all kinds of lawyers. Some were incredibly
talented. Some were brilliant. I was probably neither, but I was one thing, and
that thing won a lot of cases. I was prepared. I don’t think I ever got beaten
based on my lack of preparation and I’m sure that a lot of cases went my way
for the simple reason that I came to court knowing my case. I knew the facts. I
knew the law. I knew my client.
Christian preparation is a lot like trial preparation. You don’t just
wander in to Christianity. Once you accept Christ, there is a lot of
preparation to get ready for what will come. There is prayer. There is Bible
study. There is fellowship and worship and witness as you grow in the faith.
And there is challenge. Oh yes, there is plenty of challenge. Along with
challenge will eventually come suffering. Peter reminds us of that. He says
that we will suffer for righteousness’ sake, but he adds that we will be
blessed. Peter came to know exactly what suffering for Christ could ultimately
mean. When his time came to be martyred for Christ, legend has it that he
requested that he be crucified upside down, in order not to even pretend that
he could suffer the same fate as did his Lord.
Peter has some more advice for his followers and for us. He says that
being prepared is a number of things. It is an “always” thing. In other words,
being prepared doesn’t last for a season or a year. It lasts a lifetime. Being
prepared involves knowing the facts and being able to reason them to another.
It involves tact and gentleness. No one ever paid much attention to a bully.
And being prepared involves respect, respect in a couple of ways. Not only do
we respect the ways of people who come from another place and another way of
looking at things; we also respect the ability of our Almighty God to use us as
tools and messengers to carry the word. If we will honor him and plant the seeds,
he will show us his harvest.
Peter is talking about witness. If we do not spend time in preparation,
then what will be our witness? We will be given the time necessary for
preparation. Of that, you may rest assured. The question is not whether God will
provide for our preparation, but whether we will exercise the discipline to
prepare. The soldiers and sailors we remember today spent much of their time in
preparation. Many soldiers spend years preparing for what may be only one life
defining event. They want to be ready to defend.
Many of us worry about what we will say if confronted with questions
about our faith. And yet, so much of the
time, we will need no words. I saw plenty of Christian witness this past
Wednesday as Johnny Clark, a career soldier himself, planted new flags in our
cemetery to commemorate the veterans buried here. Johnny didn’t say a word. His
actions spoke for him. A couple hours later, a baker’s dozen more gathered to
assemble playground equipment for children to play on for years to come. They
didn’t need to witness with words. Their Christianity was speaking volumes in
the care to which they came to their task. The church narthex always seems to
contain a signup sheet for something or another and miraculously, it always
seems to get filled in by folks whose simple witness through food or clothing
or meals or some other anonymous offering sends that witness forward with or
without words.
Sometimes it will take words. That’s why we read and pray and have
fellowship with one another. That’s why we gather to worship our Lord. That’s
why we sing praises to him. We are in relationship with our Lord Jesus. So when
someone asks us why, we have answers. The God of all that ever was or ever will
be sent him, his only son, down to us. God became a man and lived with us. He
faced our temptation, bled our blood, ate and drank with us and voluntarily
died for us. He told us he would do what
he did and then he did what he told us he would do. And he did it because he
loved us that much! He promised that if we believe in him that we will be
joining him for eternity.
Why do we believe? Why do any Christians believe? Because the Holy Spirit
that he sent to us, that lives within us, enables us to see him, to feel him,
to be in relationship with him. We defend that which is real! Jesus is the
reason for our hope. He lives! He lives just as much now as he did when he
walked among us. When we tell that good news to those who do not know, when we
suffer for the righteousness that God gives to us, we defend that which knows
no boundary and transcends all time and space.
He is the reason for our hope. Nations will fall. Civilizations will pass
away, but Jesus lives. Defend him and all else will fall away. Do as Peter says: “Let your hearts honor Christ the Lord.”