Advent Conspiracy: Worship Fully

November 30, 2009

Preached by Michael Cheuk
November 29, 2009
First Sunday in Advent
Matthew 2:1-12

Today is the first Sunday of the Advent season, a time when Christians prepare for the coming of Jesus Christ as the Savior of the world.  This Advent, I will be preaching a series called “Advent Conspiracy,” which is an idea that three pastors, Rick McKinley, Chris Seay and Greg Holder, came up with in trying to help their families and their congregations celebrate the true meaning of Christmas.  Several years back, these three friends were lamenting about how much they dreaded pastoring during Advent.  They felt the tension of trying to prepare, proclaim, celebrate and worship Jesus, while at the same time, their families and their congregations were lost in crowded malls, mired in financial debt, tired of buying gifts people didn’t want and in receiving presents they didn’t need.  They were afraid that on Christmas day, God would come near, but they would miss it in the midst of their busyness, their exhaustion and their material consumption.  So they decided to try an experiment.  What if, they asked themselves, instead of acting like bystanders to the nativity, what if they led their congregations into the nativity story as participants?  What if they entered the story of Christmas by seeing the birth of Christ from inside the stable instead of inside the mall?  What if people entered the story of Christ’s birth by focusing less on consumerism, and focusing more on giving relational gifts to their loved ones and using a little of the money they didn’t spend to support organizations that are helping people in need both locally and globally?  It was out of those questions that Advent Conspiracy was birthed.  When I heard about this, I knew I wanted to learn more about it and then share it with you.  So, my messages during these Sundays in Advent will be heavily borrowed from Advent Conspiracy.

I’ve got a question for you this morning.  What or Who do we worship during Advent?  Of course, for long-time Christian churchgoers, the right answer is “Jesus.”  But is it the truthful answer?  Does the way we spend our time, our money, and our energy testify that we worship Jesus, God in human flesh?  It is easy to say the right answer, but do we know how to live that right answer out in our lives, in our families and in our church?  I must admit, this is a hard question for me to grapple with, because I am scared to look into my own life to see what my check book, my credit card bills and my calendar have to say about what I truly value and desire. Read the rest of this entry »


The Good Life: In the Checkout Line But Not of It

November 23, 2009

Preached by Michael Cheuk
November 22, 2009
Christ the King Sunday
John 17:13-19

Today, I’m concluding my sermon series on “The Good Life – At Least According to Walmart.”  In this series, we examined the check-out line at Walmart—or really any grocery store—to observe and reflect on what the check-out line is trying to teach and sell as the good life.[1] Throughout this series, we examined how things such as physical health, beauty and sex, wealth, celebrity and convenience can become false gods that can take us away from the worship of the one true God.  As I was working on this series of sermons, nagging tensions kept resurfacing again and again.  It’s easy for me to preach and warn about those false gods, but how can God help me and others in the congregation live the good life that God has intended for us to live and not fall into the idolatries that the checkout line offers?  I know that in my own life, it is so easy to be sucked into living a lifestyle promoted by the checkout line magazines and by other media outlets like television and the internet.  So is God calling us to totally boycott the checkout line just as certain Baptist groups have boycotted Disney?  But it’s not like we can totally avoid going to Walmart and the grocery stores; nor can we avoid the checkout lines once we get there.  Is it possible to participate in our economic system without falling victim to its power to take over the values of God’s kingdom in our lives and in our churches?  In other words, can we as followers of Jesus Christ be “in the checkout line, but not of it,” so to speak?

“In the checkout line, but not of it.”  This is really not a new challenge for followers of Jesus Christ.  I just happen to rephrase it for the purpose of this sermon series.  Any of you are familiar with the phrase, “being in the world, but not of it”?   How do we live in this world and within its structures and systems without being totally sucked into the values, beliefs and behaviors that those structures and systems demand from its subjects?  How do we live first as faithful subjects of the Kingdom of God and Christ the King, and then live as subjects of the present world order – whether it is the Roman Empire or the American Empire?  Followers of Christ have struggled with this challenge from the very beginning.  As a matter of fact, in our Gospel lesson from John this morning, Jesus addressed this very issue in his prayer for his disciples hours before he was betrayed, arrested and questioned by both the high priest and by Pontius Pilate. Read the rest of this entry »


The Good Life: Convenience

November 9, 2009

Preached by Michael Cheuk
November 8, 2009
Luke 14:25-33

Today, I am continuing my sermon series on “The Good Life – At Least According to Walmart.”  In this series, we will examine the check-out line at Walmart—or really any grocery store—to observe and reflect on what the check-out line is trying to teach and sell as the good life.[1] The past several Sundays, I addressed the issue of health, beauty and sex, wealth and celebrity.  Today, I want to talk about convenience, which is a very important value in contemporary America.  If we look at the magazine racks at the check-out line, we see headlines such as “Jump Start Your Weight Loss” and “Speed through Your To-Do List.”  Most of the magazines themselves are convenient in that they are easily accessible, offer quick tips, and give instant access to “life-transforming” information.  In addition to magazines, the checkout line also stacks all kinds of candy and soft drinks, all within easy reach—especially for children.  The sheer volume of choices encourages impulse spending and the instant gratification of our desires.  Seeing our checkout line, a visitor from Mars might assume that Snickers bars are a major food group.  Also, the sheer ubiquity of breath mints at the checkout line might also lead a Martian to think that bad breath runs rampant among humans!

We as a society value convenience. We have drive-through restaurants, banks, pharmacies and even wedding chapels.  We own cell phones to contact anyone, anywhere.  We use computers that allow us to shop, to do our banking, our shopping and to communicate with others online.  We have all these time-saving devices like dishwashers, washers and dryers, and microwave ovens.  In a world of movies-on-demand, five-minute meals, and even instant Starbucks coffee, we are trained to expect instant gratification.  A good life by this definition is having things quick and easy, when and how we want it, with a minimum of work, fuss and cost.

Our expectation of convenience sometimes spills over to our Christian faith.  Read the rest of this entry »


The Good Life: Celebrity

November 1, 2009

Preached by Michael Cheuk
October 25, 2009
Matthew 6:1-6

Today, I am continuing my sermon series on “The Good Life – At Least According to Walmart.”  In this series, we will examine the check-out line at Walmart—or really any grocery store—to observe and reflect on what the check-out line is trying to teach and sell as the good life.[1] The past several Sundays, I addressed the issue of health, beauty and sex, and wealth.  Today, I will examine an area of the good life that the checkout line particularly worships: celebrities.  The majority of magazines portray celebrities as the “saints” of the checkout line.  They embody the “good life” because they are often portrayed as healthy, beautiful, sexually fulfilled and, of course, wealthy.  They wear stylish clothes, drive new convertibles and look, even their pets are beautiful!  Because of all these qualities, they are often venerated, if not outright worshipped.

People reach the status of a “celebrity” when their lives are constantly on center stage in the theater of life, their every move watched, photographed and filmed.  It’s almost as if their lives have become a product for people like us to consume by purchasing magazines at the checkout line, and by watching Entertainment Tonight and “reality” TV shows.  They allow themselves to be placed on a high pedestal as models—or dare I say, idols—of the “good life,” where they are admired, desired and glorified from a distance.  While celebrities certainly benefit from all this adulation, there is a huge price to be paid in the form of the loss of privacy.  Their lives are no longer their own, and the same media that anoints celebrities into the pantheon of cultural gods is the same media that relishes in knocking them off that pedestal.  That’s why the checkout line is lined with tabloid magazines and newspapers that relish exposing celebrities of every foible, examining every pound of weight gained or lost, and every romantic relationship blossoming or blown up.  They play into our morbid curiosity over the tragedy of others.  The same lives that were charmed with the stuff of dreams can quickly become charred with a horror worthy of a Halloween nightmare.  All of that gets played out in a public theater generated by our media. Read the rest of this entry »