Murree Christian School, Graduation 2013
Baccalaureate
It is a real privilege, and a delight, to have been
asked by our graduating class to give this message. We are here to give thanks
to God for them, to help consecrate their memories of their time here, and to
send them out in Jesus’ name. Jesus asks; “To what shall I compare this generation??” So, today, to what should
we compare this generation, this class of 2013? I finally settled on the image
of Abraham and Isaac, Isaac, a student at
MCS.
You see, your story at MCS starts not with you, but with
your parent’s faith in coming to these lands. Never underestimate the cost of
that obedience for your parents, to raise you here and to send you to boarding
school. We sometimes wonder at Job, and at his insistence that he has been
righteous. We need to remember his friends were demanding that his sufferings,
including the loss of his money, health and even the deaths of his own
children, were his own fault, whereas he insisted that he had been obeying God.
That why he needed so desperately to be vindicated by God. And so too, for us
today. I well remember a teacher at a Christian school in Jerusalem sharing
how, when he told his church he was taking his family to Israel, was met by a
member at the door who said; “I hope you have had your children measured for
coffins”, and then walked away. Friends here have shared how when they first
heard God’s call to Pakistan, close relatives said; “if you want to throw your
own lives away that’s your business, but spare your children, don’t take them
with you.” Speaking as a parent, placing our children in God’s hands can be one
of the hardest things we are ever called to do, even as we know He loves and
cares for them even more than we do. So how did Abraham do it? How did the
father of the faithful give his only child to God? When Abraham is questioned
by his companions about what he is doing, he says something amazing; “Stay here with the donkey while I
and the boy go over there. We will worship and then we will come back to you.”
This is the first time the word worship is used in the Bible, not of singing
songs in a church, but of placing your only child in God’s hands. As Hebrews 11
assures us, Abraham did not obey in despair, or in hopelessness, but rather it
was by faith that when tested, he offered Isaac as a sacrifice, and received
him back. God willing, your parents also placed you here as an act of faith, as
an act of worship.
And what of you, missionary children, sent away to
boarding school? You trusted your parents, you knew they loved you, yet it was
so hard to be sent away. Those first months sometimes seemed more than you
could bear. In a very real sense, you were Isaac, being sent to a place of
sacrifice, for a vision you had not seen, for a voice only your parents had
heard. So, how did Isaac feel about being sacrificed by his father for a voice he
had not heard? Well, firstly, we know that Isaac obeyed
his father. He trusted him. Not only that, but his father needed his help to do
God’s will in this. It was Isaac who carried the wood. God is not stupid, he
knows your parents have children, and if it is his will that they be here, then
it is his perfect will that you also be here. You are not excess baggage, or
collateral damage, rather you are here by the same calling God gave to your
parents; “Here am I and the children God has given me, signs and wonders to the
house of Israel”. We all affirm the necessity of prayer support to be here, yet
how many parents realise that their best prayers are often their own children?
When there was trouble up north last year, it was Havy and MinHa who were
continually praying for them in junior high girls. And it is not only prayer;
when the Sindh was flooded, Lizzy spent her holiday helping her parents care
for its victims, just as many others here have helped in their parents work. So
parents, let your children be part of your ministry here, share your prayer
needs with them. God’s calling on your family includes them, they need to understand
it and be part of it. Isaac asks questions of his father as they climb the
mount, and Abraham doesn’t shut him out or tell him to be quiet, but answers in
a way that centres on God, honours God and shares his trust in God. In the same
way, you parents need to listen to your children’s concerns. Hear them and help
them through them. Dont be angry if they have questions or needs. Hug them and
share with them your faith in our loving heavenly father.
During your years at MCS there have been hard times
for both you and your parents. You parents included and shared with your
children what you were doing, you glorified God in your words and deeds, your
children affirmed you and were so proud of you, yet still that moment came when
you had to say goodbye and then drive away from them. Having done all things
well, still you came to the place of sacrifice. Indeed, it was only because you
had done well that you arrived at that place! Had you not done well, had you or
your child just said I cant do this, lets go back to America, Korea or
wherever, only then would you have avoided that place. Not all sorrow is wrong,
Simeon tells Mary that a sword will pierce her heart also, a grief she could
have avoided only by staying away from Golgotha, from Jesus. And even here, it
was right and needed that you share even this with your children. They needed
your tears at parting to tell them how precious they were to you. Because Isaac
never was excess baggage or collateral damage. God says simply; “take your only
son, whom you love”. He was God’s gift, and in him all God’s promises to
Abraham rested. He was always needed and loved, and handing him to God was the
hardest thing Abraham ever did. You are and always have been a vital part of
your parents lives and ministry. Just by being here, safe happy and growing,
you were carrying wood for your parents and helping them in God’s will for your
family. As a direct result of Abraham’s trust, God blessed Abraham, Isaac and
all his offspring, and that blessing and promise are the anchor of our souls to
this day, for we likewise are children of Abraham. I am convinced that the
blessings which have flowed to the wider mission work as a result of faithful
parents and obedient children will only be truly known once we are in heaven.
By faith you endured the separation for the sake of the kingdom.
How does the story end? God indeed provided, when his
own dear son also carried wood on those very same hills. Through his own
sacrifice he turned yours into a blessing. Isaac means “he will laugh,” and for
us here, MCS is undeniably a place of much laughter, creativity, happiness and
deep friendships. Most of our students, like our staff, have grown to love
living at MCS. Its a great place! The extravagant farewells at the end of term,
and rapturous reunions after ten days apart witness this. God did not call your
family here to curse you, but because he loves you, and desires to bless you.
Isaac did not grow up hating his father and resenting his father’s God, but
rather, his father’s God became his God, and Jesus speaks of the God of
Abraham, the God of Isaac and the God of Jacob. God is no man’s debtor, and
your children have grown in their faith here. God has shown he can be trusted,
that he is real. I was speaking with a year 12 class some years ago about how
God draws people to himself, and a student shared how a man had a vision in
Afghanistan and walked overland from there to his dad’s bookshop, and asked
what must he do to be saved. Other students then shared similar stories, again
of people they knew, who had lived in their houses. I thought how in the West,
a really keen student might have said, “I read about some guy”, but here it was
someone they knew personally, who had lived with them for months. God has
indeed blessed these students, and they know the reality of him. Interestingly,
the God of Abraham also becomes the Fear of Isaac. Isaac’s own son will tell
Laban “If the God of my father, the God of Abraham and the Fear of Isaac, had not
been on my side, surely now you would have sent me away empty-handed. God saw
my affliction and the labor of my hands and rebuked you last night." Isaac
had learnt from an early age that God is truly some one to fear, but also, that
he is on his side. Jacob tells Laban that it is the Fear of Isaac who has protected him. Isaac had personally experienced
both the holiness and the mercy of God, had personally experienced God himself providing
the sacrifice that was demanded. He understood the power and supremacy of God in a way few
people have. He was indeed a living sacrifice. He loved and worshiped God and
he also feared him. As the beavers tell Lucy, he is
not a tame lion, but he is good. In Isaiah we read “and your heart shall fear, and be
enlarged;” not fear and as a result shriveled or embittered, but fear and be enlarged.
And the God whom you have obeyed in the hard things as well as the smooth has
not embittered but enlarged these young hearts before us now.
Ezekiel 14 speaks of “sons and daughters who will be brought out of it.
They will come to you, and when you see their conduct and their actions, you
will be consoled... 23 You will be consoled when you see their
conduct and their actions, for you will know that I have done nothing in it
without cause, declares the Sovereign LORD." I mentioned earlier Job’s
need for God to vindicate him. A very real part of God’s vindication of us are
sitting in the front row today, and indeed, in all of the rows. When we look at
these young people here, their conduct and their actions, we can affirm God’s
goodness and blessings. He indeed has done all things well and we praise him
for them. We are here today to thank him, and to give him all the glory. We
would also affirm the wisdom and courage of their parents in bringing them here.
You did not do wrong to obey God’s call and bring your children with you. Praise
him who is worthy to be feared and trusted with even those who are most
precious to us. This is true worship!
Turning to the simpler rhythms of our lives, MCS has
been more than schooling and training for our graduates, it has been their childhood.
For ten months a year, this is where they lived and grew up. Captain Torr and
the clones in the Blue Crystal, Lizzy crying because Laney was going to be with
the big kids in Junior high while she was stuck in elementary for another year
(we have known Lizzy since she was this tall!!), their childhood joys and
sorrows, memories and anecdotes, largely took place here. As they leave here on
Thursday, they leave their childhood, and step out as adults into an adult
world. And they will take from their time here both positives and negatives. We
have already touched upon some of the positives, the incredible experience of
the reality of God, knowing that he loves them, added to this, and contained
within it, close supportive friends and teachers, teachers God personally
called from the other side of the world to be a blessing to them and to their
parent’s ministries. What about the negatives? Here I will not dwell on the
small griefs and dramas of childhood, for as you graduate, these are already
largely forgotten, which shows how little most of them really mattered anyway.
No, the real negatives you might take away from here are in direct proportion
to the blessings God has showered upon you here.
What do I mean by that? Well, as my year 11 and 12 Christian
Studies students will tell you, God chose to have the descendants of Abraham
become a nation, to have their childhood if you will, not at MCS, but in
slavery in Egypt. This was not a punishment for sin. God meets with Jacob in
Beersheba to confirm that this is indeed his will for them, that it was God’s
choice for their childhood. Why would God want that?? Because while called to
be a blessing to others, in that very calling, room for pride and arrogance can
sneak in. “God called me, not you, therefore I must be better than you. I thank
you Lord, that I am not like this tax collector.” This possibility was so
serious that God was prepared to spend 400 years in grinding slavery, and to
commemorate this every year thereafter during Passover, so that it might be
curbed. We read in Proverbs of the 6 things that God hates, and the first is haughty
eyes. We see the fruits of that childhood in the Law; be kind to the stranger
for you were strangers in the Land of Egypt. Be kind to the widow and the
orphan, you know in your bones what it is to be a slave and a stranger, let
that knowledge express itself in compassion for others. Now, we don’t regret
not making MCS a slave camp, although Uncle Harry and Uncle Hans do have some
interesting ideas there, but as I said, the very blessings of your childhood
can be a snare to you back in your home countries if you are not careful.
You will have better stories - earthquakes, floods,
Afghanistan, as we said, people coming to Jesus through dreams and visions. Someone
starts sharing of God dealing with them this week, and you but in, “thats
nothing, listen to my story of what happened in Pakistan!!” There will be a
time to share, and also many times not to share, and that will be lonely.
Friendships – at MCS you have made some of the deepest
and most intense friendships you will ever make. Roommates often become very
close, so a close friend can be someone you wake up in the same room as, brush
your teeth together, have breakfast with, go to most of the same classes with,
have lunch and afternoon tea with, play together after school, have dinner
with, study hall with and then go to sleep chatting to, until Aunti Kosek tells
you to be quiet. On weekends likewise you do everything together, and so the
months and years go by. You may feel intensely lonely for some time after you
leave here. And even after that you may still think you have no close friends,
for in the west, if you see someone once or twice a week, they may well
consider you a close friend. Dont think you have no friends, rather realise
that friendship is different.
Laziness. You wont like this one, and it most
certainly doesn’t apply to all of you, but Mark Dalton once shared how, on
returning to America after growing up here, his non-Christian boss told him;
“if I had known you were a missionary kid, I never would have hired you. They
don’t know how to work, and they think the world owes them a living.” You
haven’t had to do dishes, mow lawns or do a host of other chores common to kids
back home, and every weekend special activities have been arranged for you that
you take for granted, except to complain about the AC. This is something you
will have to get over!
Spiritual pride and feelings of superiority are also
real dangers you will confront. You have been raised in an unnaturally Godly
environment, praise God!! Basically, every adult here would give up home,
friends and family for the Gospel (just by being here they already have), and
hopefully, every adult here is ready to die for Jesus. That is not and cannot
and should not be the case for churches back home. It is also not the situation
in the local Pakistani church, though yes, we wish and pray that it were! But we also want people who are just interested to feel welcome in our churches; we want
Christians who are struggling with their faith to be included. Isaiah says of
Jesus; A bruised reed he will not break, and a smoldering wick he will not snuff
out. In faithfulness he will bring forth justice; In Jeremiah he declares; See,
I will bring them from the land of the north and gather them from the ends of
the earth. Among them will be the blind and the lame, expectant mothers and
women in labor; a great throng will return. It is not just the strong and the
sleek that God calls, but also the blind and the lame, and those who need
special care. Such should find a home in our congregations. The weak and the
lame are not cursed by God for being so, rather in grace he commits himself to
helping them. Remember, weakness is not sin!! Paul writes to the strong and the
weak in faith. He doesn’t tell the weak to shape up and be like those great
strong in faith ones. Indeed, he has no word of censure for the weak, and only
words of censure for the strong, whom he criticizes for not helping the weak.
Two of my own children, Nathan and Naomi went to an MK
get together in Brisbane some time ago. Everyone sat around saying how great
worship in Africa was, how great the church in China was, how shallow and
materialistic and useless everyone in Australia was. The very blessings these
MKs had experienced as children had become a source of pride, of haughty eyes
as they looked down on those around them. What do we make of this? Firstly,
lets be honest, its probably true. A lot of churches in the west are not what
they should be. And that forces us to look again at why God called you here in
the first place. Why has God has blessed you? So that you can bless others,
bless and not curse. As Isaiah again says; Strengthen the feeble hands, steady
the knees that give way; say to those with fearful hearts,
"Be strong, do not fear.” You think that you are more spiritual that the
Christians back home? Then prove it through acts of servanthood, sacrificial
giving, encouragement and love!! Use your years here to
make you a better servant, not a bitter critic.
He has called you to strengthen and nurture, not to
attack and dismiss. May
your new church back home be able to say; “you know those new KM kids, all they
do is encourage others, do the dirty jobs without being asked, you hardly know
they are here, but they are such a blessing to us! They seem to have learned
what it really is to be a servant, and to fear God.” Jesus called them together and
said, "You know that those who are regarded as rulers of the Gentiles lord
it over them, and their high officials exercise authority over them. 43
Not so with you. Instead, whoever wants to become great among you must be your
servant, 44 and whoever wants to be first must be slave of all. 45
For even the Son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve, and to give
his life as a ransom for many." So don’t look down on the church back
home, but rather ask for the grace to serve Jesus as you serve his body. And that
grace is not condescension, it is the very grace you too have needed, when you
were down, or missing home and needed a hug, a kind word, parents to just hold
you close, because none of us are perfect, and we all need encouragement in
times of weakness. Equally, even parents, teachers and house parents do need to
be forgiven!
I began this talk with Jesus saying “to what shall I
compare this generation?” The word generations
in the Old Testament has a great message. You see, it can be spelled two ways,
perfect (תּוֹלֵדוֹת),
and imperfect/defective (תּוֹלְדֹ֣ת).
Now in its first occurrence, in Genesis 2:4, “these are the generations of the
heavens and the earth when they were created”, the word is spelled complete,
for everything God created was good. But from then on, after the fall, every
time we read this word, it is defective; the generations of Adam (defective),
of Noah (defective), Seth (defective), Abraham (defective), and yes, of Isaac, (defective),
they are all defective. Until at last, we come to its final usage, in Ruth 4:18;
“these are the generations of Perez”, and here it at last it is spelled
complete. The rabbis said yes, this speaks of the son of Perez, the son of
David. Here we see the messiah, who will restore to humanity everything which
Adam lost. Speaking of us and Jesus, Paul writes; “as is the man from heaven,
so also are those who are of heaven. And just as we have borne the likeness of
the earthly man, so we shall bear
the likeness of the man from heaven.”
You are indeed descendants of missionary parents, and graduates of MCS. But
remember, all generations, even Abrahams and Isaacs, even your parents and MCS,
like your friends and church back home, are defective. Build on the strengths
you have received from your parents and from MCS, be aware of their dangers,
and always remember that only in Jesus are you or any of us made perfect!!
Thank you.
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