Pastor John Talcott
Christ's Community Church
(9/1/2019)
Today, if
you’ve got a
job, work a
40-hour work
week, get a
lunch break
and have
weekends
off, not to
mention paid
vacation,
these are
all benefits
that can be
attributed
to years of
battles by
the labor
unions in
the late
1800s. The
resulting
legislation
brought
about
liberation
for a
working
class that
was groaning
under the
weight of 18
plus hour
workdays,
poor working
conditions
and low pay.
Now, for
most of us
today, Labor
Day is just
a day off,
summer’s
last fling,
but it began
in 1894 as a
good work
when Matthew
Maguire of
the Central
Labor Union
and Peter J.
McGuire of
the American
Federation
of Labor
were
burdened by
the plight
of the
American
worker. You
see, it
wasn’t until
after the
labor unions
brought
about many
of the most
basic
benefits
that we
enjoy today
that it was
designated
that the
first Monday
of September
would be a
day set
aside to pay
tribute to
all the
working men
and women
who have
made America
great.
And so,
Labor Day,
isn’t just a
celebration
of something
in the past,
it’s a
celebration
of the
working
class today
and there is
still a good
work to do.
In fact, we
can learn
from the
past and we
must, just
as Matthew
Maguire and
Peter J.
McGuire saw
an American
workforce
that was
struggling
through an
economic
depression
with little
hope that
things would
ever get any
better; it
broke their
hearts and
both men
knew that
something
needed to be
done. They
saw the hard
work of the
American
people and
recognizing
the abuses
and the
liberties
that were
taken by
many
employers,
they
realized it
was a cause
worth
fighting for
and they
did.
My question
for you is,
"What’s the
injustice in
the world
that burdens
you and is
actually
breaking
your heart?"
Maybe for
you it’s
those with
no voice,
the plight
of the
unborn, or
maybe it’s
those
children
with special
needs, those
who’ve been
bullied,
neglected,
or abused.
Today as you
look around
the
community,
for some of
you it’s
those who
are bound by
addiction,
the
homeless,
the elderly,
or those
who’ve been
trafficked
and abused
their whole
life. What
is it that
creates a
righteous
anger deep
inside of
you,
breaking
your heart,
and
burdening
your soul?
I’d like to
encourage
you to let
it move you
until you
can’t take
it anymore
and you’ve
got to do
something.
There’s an
incredible
story in the
Old
Testament
about a man
named
Nehemiah who
found
himself in a
similar
predicament.
He was just
an ordinary
guy, he
wasn’t a
priest or a
prophet, but
he was a man
who had a
divine
burden,
something
that
disturbed
him,
something
that upset
him on
behalf of
God and
moved him in
a
significant
way. This
burden
weighed upon
him so
heavily that
he was
compelled to
quit his job
and do
something
about it.
And so, to
give you a
little bit
of
background,
many years
before the
Babylonians
had attacked
the Jewish
people and
completely
destroyed
Jerusalem.
Not only
that, but
they took
Jewish
people
captive,
taking them
away from
their
homeland and
holding them
as exiles in
a foreign
land. Well,
now it’s
many decades
later and
thousands of
the Jews had
returned to
Jerusalem to
rebuild the
city, but
Nehemiah
remained in
Susa because
he had a
really good
job. In
fact, he was
working for
the king and
so life was
really good
for him; but
one day his
brother came
by and told
him about
the
conditions
at home in
Jerusalem.
He told
Nehemiah,
"Those who
survived the
exile and
are back in
the province
are in great
trouble and
disgrace.
The wall of
Jerusalem is
broken down
and its
gates have
been burned
with fire"
(Nehemiah
1:3).
Nehemiah had
hoped that
things were
going well,
that his
people had
been
successful
in
rebuilding,
but now to
hear that
they were
defenseless
and
discouraged,
he didn’t
just feel
sorry for
them, he
genuinely
cared,
because this
was his
heritage and
these were
his people.
And so, he
sincerely
cared about
the
traditions
of the past,
his
homeland,
the
ancestral
city, and
the glory of
his God. In
fact, he was
so moved in
his spirit
that it
became a
burden in
his soul
that he
couldn’t
ignore and
he
testified,
"When I
heard these
things, I
sat down and
wept. For
some days I
mourned and
fasted and
prayed
before the
God of
heaven"
(Nehemiah
1:4). And
for some of
you, this is
exactly
where you
are, you’re
bothered by
something,
you see a
need, an
injustice,
and you’re
wondering
what you can
do. You’re
thinking
about it,
you know
that you
should do
something,
but you
really have
no idea what
to do.
As
Nehemiah’s
burden
increased,
his first
response is
what our
first
response
should be
and he went
to God in
prayer. This
is so
important
and I hope
that you’ll
remember
that there’s
nothing too
small or too
big to take
to Him in
prayer. God
cares about
it all and
so you just
give all of
your worries
and cares to
Him in
prayer. This
is what
Nehemiah
did, he
prayed, and
God showed
him great
favor. He
went to his
boss, King
Artaxerxes
with this
burden on
his heart
and obtained
permission
to return to
Jerusalem
with an
escort and
the
authority to
rebuild its
walls. Upon
arriving in
Jerusalem,
Nehemiah
inspired the
people as he
told them
about the
gracious
hand of God
and what the
king had
said to him.
Encouraged,
they
replied,
"Let us
start
rebuilding."
And so, they
began this
good work"
(Nehemiah
2:18).
There are
some of you
today who
have a
burden, a
passion
about
something
that matters
to the heart
of God, and
so I want to
encourage
you to seek
God in
prayer and
begin the
good work
knowing that
God will
direct you
and that he
is always
with you.
Like
Nehemiah,
you can
inspire the
people
around you
to believe
that God is
for you,
that he’s
given you
favor, and
he’s
empowering
you to do a
good work.
In fact,
just before
Labor Day
seven years
ago, we
opened
Christ’s
Community
Church in
the
Up-County
Family
Center in
Emmitsburg
with nothing
but a
vision. We
dreamed of a
place where
people from
all walks of
life, the
broken, the
hurting, and
the
discouraged
could come
together and
find hope as
they
encountered
the power of
the Living
God. Today
Christ’s
Community
Church is a
spiritual
hospital
where people
are being
encouraged,
healed, and
saved by the
grace of our
loving God.
But I
believe God
still wants
to do a
greater
work; not
because we
care about
numbers, but
because God
cares about
people who
are lonely,
disconnected,
hurting and
discouraged.
Wherever you
are, would
you join us
in this good
work,
believing
that all
things are
possible
with God?
To learn
more about
Christ’s
Community
Church them
at
www.cccaog.org
or better
yet, join
them for
Sunday
service at
303 W.
Lincoln Ave,
Emmitsburg.
Read past sermons by Pastor John Talcott
Learn more about the Christ's Community Church