Sermon: They Were Noticed

June 1, 2025

Acts 16:16-34
Revelation 22:12-14, 16-17, 20-21

Two weeks ago the Sunday School made some presentations to the teachers who’ve worked with them during this school year. I was one of those honored. They were kind enough to say they were nuts about me, which really touched my heart. They gave me nuts, too.

They also gave me this insulated travel mug bearing these words: “Difference Maker: A dedicated individual who can make a big impact even with just a small action or few words. Someone who makes a difference in the lives of others.”

Difference maker.

That’s what I’ve wanted to be since I was a small child. I went through a number of ways to make a difference: I wanted to be a firefighter, a doctor, a scientist, a teacher, an actor, and some others before I followed a call to ministry. Which, you’ll notice, is a profession that seeks to make a difference.

Whether I have or not, whether I do or not, is something we can debate. I’ve got to tell you, there are days it feels like the world is going on without paying any attention to me at all. Sometimes that’s just fine. Other times, I desperately wish I could change the course of events.

The Apostle Paul along with Silas and some other companions had been in Philippi for a few days. We read of their work and welcome from the Jewish community in the city last week. Lydia, a leader among them, hosted them in her own home.

The woman described in this story came from much further down the social spectrum. She was a slave – Luke didn’t know or didn’t record her name – and she was a person afflicted by demonic possession. It doesn’t really matter whether the first century diagnosis or a twenty-first century diagnosis of severe mental illness was actually correct. She was doubly bound as an enslaved person and as someone who could not control her own speech and actions.

As Jaclyn P. Williams writes at Working Preacher, “One who needed freedom could clearly call out the source of salvation but could not so clearly embrace that salvation. The same spirit that oppressed her could see the presence of the way of redemption—the way that is Jesus Christ. It is also meaningful that she refers to Paul and Silas as ‘slaves of the most high God’ (verse 17) while she was enslaved by the spirit of divination and those who were taking advantage of her torment.”

She may have been doubly bound, but she made a difference. She made a difference to her owners, who sold her words as predictions of the future. She made a difference to those who purchased her words, or so we assume, because people kept paying for them. She made a difference to Paul, because when she followed and shouted at him over a few days he got annoyed.

You know, I really wish Paul had exorcised the demon for better reasons than pique, but that’s how Luke told the story, so what can I do?

Paul and Silas, up to this point, hadn’t made much of a ripple in Philippi. They’d made friends among the Jewish community, but that was a small group in a big city. The rest of the population didn’t notice them. Until…

Paul got annoyed, and healed a young woman, and cut off her owners’ source of income. That made a difference.

Suddenly they were noticed.

Eric Barreto writes at Working Preacher, “Gripped with avarice, the formerly profitable girl’s owners accuse Paul and Silas of profound treachery before the city’s ruling authorities. Notice, however, that their indictments fail to mention one key piece of evidence: the loss of the unnamed slave girl’s services in a lucrative endeavor! Instead, these rapacious merchants resort to the tried and true method of base ethnocentrism. They accuse Paul and Silas of drawing Philippi’s denizens away from the approved Roman way of life to Jewish customs incommensurate with the city’s ethnic values. Of course, the charges are false.”

The charges may have been false, but the magistrates found them guilty. They imposed the punishments given to people who were not citizens of Rome, which would have been most people at this time in the first century.

Jerusha Matsen Neal writes at Working Preacher, “Acts 16 narrates a leveraging of cultural superiority and social fear for the preservation of an economic system that grounds the status quo. The torture, beatings, and social isolation of prison are powerful technologies in that mechanism. Paul and Silas are not imprisoned because they break a law. They are imprisoned because they are imprisonable people—vulnerable people—who threaten the bottom line of the powerful.”

If you want to be noticed, if you want to make a difference, if you want to change the future: threaten the bottom line of the powerful.

You may not enjoy the attention. Paul and Silas didn’t. Is there a way of making a difference that does not incur the baleful attention of the wealthy, the powerful, the ones with intrenched interests? I’m not sure there is.

Greed is never satisfied. The author known simply as “The Preacher” wrote in Ecclesiastes 5: “The lover of money will not be satisfied with money, nor the lover of wealth with gain. This also is vanity.” Last week I shared some figures compiled by Robert Reich about the budget bill currently before the Senate. The richest .1%, said Dr. Reich, would receive a $390,000 tax cut on average. What I hadn’t checked was how much they earn in the first place.

According to James Royal of Bankrate, in 2022 average earnings for the top .1% were $2.8 million. So they’d be adding 1.3% to their income with the tax cut. Not shabby, I suppose, but hardly dramatic.

At the same time, those earning less than $17,000 will lose about $1,000, 5.8% of their income. They’ve got a lot less to lose.

I’m probably as annoyed as the Apostle Paul was two thousand years ago. I wish I had the power to heal these people double chained by poverty, illness, circumstance, or oppression. I wish I had the power to free people who are chained to their greed, because that’s a harsh bond as well.

Most of all, though, I hope I make a difference. I hope I make things difficult for the ones who exploit others. I hope I make things difficult for those who deprive people of their liberties. I hope I make things difficult for those who use lies and distortions to get their way.

Paul and Silas were noticed. May we be noticed, too.

Amen.

by Eric Anderson

Watch the Recorded Sermon

Pastor Eric prepares his sermon beforehand, but he tends to make changes while preaching. Sometimes he does it intentionally.

The image is Paul and Silas in Philippi, by an unknown artist (between 1591 and 1600). Photo by Rijksmuseum – http://hdl.handle.net/10934/RM0001.COLLECT.223502, CC0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=84114572.

Pastor’s Corner: Variety

July 31, 2024

As you read this, I will be near the shores of a different ocean.

I enjoy my trips to visit family on the East Coast, but I confess that they bring some disorientation. Even in summer, the water of the Atlantic Ocean on the shores of New England is cooler than that of the Pacific Ocean on the coast of Hawai’i. The roads are more crowded, and frankly they’re a lot longer. People wear different fashions, different colors and shapes, than we do here. Their speech follows different patterns.

In New England, I have to look west to see weather coming. In Hawai’i, I look east. Talk about turning your head around!

Variety, I think, is the way of God’s Creation. The oceans have similar current circles but their waters teem with different life forms in one ocean than in another. The birds of Connecticut are not the same as those of Hawai’i, and neither are the same as those of Louisiana, New Zealand, or the Himalayas. Our volcanoes are fed from the hot liquid rock of the planet, but they do not much resemble the jagged peaks of the Pacific Northwest.

God, in the wisdom of Creation, appears to have said, “Let’s have everything.” And so we do.

As I indulge in a little time with some of that variety, I hope you will consider the different blessings you have received in your life: of people, of growing things, of living creatures, of experiences, of scents, of love. How have they blessed you, helped you grow, given you joy?

God seems to have said, “Let’s have everything.” And so we do.

In peace,

Pastor Eric

Photo of New Haven, Connecticut, by Eric Anderson.

Pastor’s Corner: People are Different

July 24, 2024

People are different.

I doubt this statement surprises you at all. Parents, siblings, friends, children, all the people we’ve known in our lives: they’ve all been different. Personalities, tastes, the curve of an eyebrow or the crinkle at the eyes when they smile all testify to the variety of humanity.

I’m thinking of someone I knew once who was always open to reconsidering a decision.

We worked on a project together, and by and large we worked together pretty well. It required a lot of our time and a lot of our effort, and it required so many little decisions along the way.

Some people really enjoy the experience that comes before a decision. They like to review the possibilities, “taste” the variety of outcomes. Others find that an uncomfortable place to be. They like to come to a decision, make it, and move on – while those in the first group fret about missed opportunities.

Personally, I’m so much in the middle that I joke that I don’t care whether I’ve made a decision or not. My partner, however, was firmly among that first group of people. As much as I like to look at options, I also prefer to stick with a decision once made (unless it’s clearly not working out). At one point in our project, of course, my partner reopened the conversation about a choice we’d already made. “But we decided that,” I said. “All decisions are tentative,” he replied.

The ”moral” of this story is not that I was right, and he was wrong. Nor was he right and I wrong. We each worked according to our customs and comfort. It wasn’t always easy. Sometimes it rubbed one or the other the wrong way.

And we still managed to work together and produced something pretty amazing. People can do that, even when they’re very different.

In peace,

Pastor Eric