John 8
Reformation
Sunday
October 26, 2025
Have you ever heard of this book,
“Who Moved My Cheese?”
Apparently everyone in the world read this book in 1998,
but I hadn’t read it until someone told me
about it a few years ago.
It’s technically about the changing
landscape of business
that was happening in the 1990’s
The whole book is
basically a fable or a parable,
with lessons sprinkled throughout the story.
And the basic story is this.
There are four little creatures living in a
laboratory cheese maze.
Two are mice and two are kind of little
humanoid,
I’m not sure why.
Their job was to find the cheese in the maze.
For a very long time, the cheese would always
show up
in Cheese Station C. They would find their way
there,
get their cheese, eat their fill,
and come back when they needed more.
The cheese was always there.
It went on for, it seemed like forever.
They got used to it.
Then
one day, they woke up and went to Cheese Station C,
and the cheese wasn’t there.
It just wasn’t there.
Then they went back the next day,
it wasn’t there again.
When it didn’t show up the second day,
the two mousy creatures decided
that they needed to go looking for more
cheese.
The
maze was big and scary and there were parts
they hadn’t been to in a long time since
they found the cheese in Cheese Station C,
and they hadn’t been anywhere else,
but they knew they needed to just needed to
leave.
But
the two humanoid creatures,
they just sat there. And they sat there.
They came back to Cheese Station C every day,
and they cried and they yelled and they
complained.
They
longed for the days
that they would just come to their place,
Cheese Station C and they would just find it.
They wished those days would come back.
The cheese never showed up again,
But they wouldn’t go anywhere else.
They just kept coming to Cheese station C.
They
said they had been used to Station C.
They had been going
there so long
that they deserved it, they were entitled to
it,
and how dare they (whoever “they” were)
not bring the cheese to Cheese Station C.
But they wouldn’t move
and they were getting more and more hungry
and weak and sad and depressed every day.
Just sitting around asking “Who moved my
cheese.”
Eventually,
one of the humanoids wises up
and decides to go and leave Cheese Station C.
While he’s looking for the cheese he learns a
lot
of valuable lessons, until he finally arrives
at
Cheese Station N and he finds that’s where the
cheese has been moved to.
He
found that the two mousy creatures were there
had found it a long time ago and had been
enjoying it.
We never find out what happened to the
last humanoid, he could have been looking,
or he could just still be sitting there
complaining, waiting and starving.
Who moved my cheese?
I
bring up this story, because it’s Reformation Day.
Obviously, you see the connection, right?
This is the day we celebrate change. Reformation.
Specifically change in the church.
Today we remember and celebrate the day that
Martin
Luther nailed his 95 theses to the Wittenberg
church
protesting the very bad theology the church
was teaching.
On that day, God moved the cheese on everyone.
And the so the church and then the whole world
changed.
We
could say that the Lutherans were the early adapters,
the ones who first figured out that God’s
spirit was moving
in another direction away from the bad
theology,
away from the strict hierarchy that made God
inaccessible and cruel. Lutherans were the first group
to stop sharing the idea that said our only
access to God
was through priests and bishops, Who rejected
The theology that said that God wanted your
money
or was going to leave you and your loved ones in
purgatory.
Lutherans were the ones who were out front.
Not the first ones who thought something was
wrong,
but he first ones who did something publicly
and led a movement to change the Christian
Church.
They followed the spirit of God and were the
first
to get to that other station and receive the
manna so to speak.
And ever since Lutherans have been
right there on the fore-front of
change, right. We are always Reforming.
Right?
Lutherans are known for our eagerness to
change!
Okay, maybe not.
Some of us do have the ability to change,
but the truth is we usually have to be
dragged over to the new station.
Or, even worse, some of our churches
end up starving at the original one,
just saying ‘who moved our cheese?’
I
mean we were used to the fact that
At one time the
church that had
unquestionable influence in modern western
society.
We just assumed for a long time that
every church would be filled every week,
As a denomination, we got use to the days
when you could build a church in a new
suburb and know that it would succeed in a few
months.
Just
a couple of generations ago,
It was assumed that most everyone you met
would
know the stories in the bible, know the story
of Jesus
and that most people in America would commit
their
Sunday morning to coming to church building
and worshipping.
And we assumed that the next generation would
just
do the same thing that we had been doing.
Those assumptions are dying, that church is
dying.
We’re watching it happen.
Fewer
people deciding to go to church.
More people identifying themselves with no
religion at all.
We’re seeing more people outside the
institution of the church
dismiss the church’s relevance to the rest of
society.
The church as we know it is dying.
And
a lot of faithful people in the Lutheran church and other
denominations are sitting around and saying
“Who moved my cheese?”
We’re complaining about other people,
“why don’t they come to church regularly like
they used to?
Why isn’t the church a priority in their
lives?
Why can’t it be like the old days?
Why don’t the young people like and value what
I like and value?
They have no right, Who moved my church?”
And this was all the stuff going on before
this year.
And
like the humanoids in the maze,
we’re also hoping, if we just sit here
and do the same thing that we’ve been doing
maybe do a little cosmetic work,
Get more comfortable lounge chairs,
Add a banjo and maracas on Sunday morning,
and update the worship service,
maybe it will all come back to be like it once
was.
Just stay constant and the world will catch up
again.
We
keep blaming society, and wishing that society
would change and go back to the way it was,
But society never “goes back.” Does it?
So
either all is lost, and we’ll never find the cheese again,
Or maybe this dying is the work of the Spirit.
Maybe everything is not working like it once
was,
so that we have to get off our keisters and
do something different.
Maybe
God wants us sniffing
around the maze again so that we can find
our purpose, find our meaning,
find our relevancy again,
be forced to listen to the people we’re hoping
to reach,
and find Jesus gospel again for the next
generation.
Maybe God wants a new Reformation.
I’m
re-reading this book by Brian McClaren,
called “Everything Must Change”
I mentioned it a couple of weeks ago where
he talks about the Suicide Machine we’re
living in.
I thought it came out 10 years ago, but it was
2007,
so that’s almost 20 years ago, so the alarm
has been sounding
for churches for a while, and it was sounding
way before him.
In the book, he talks about taking a
trip in 2004 to
Burundi and Rwanda in East Africa to talk to a
bunch of pastors.
This was just after the time of the time of
the terrible civil wars
between two warring tribes the Tutsi and Hutus
which had gone on for 4 decades.
Neighbors
and families were killing each other
with any weapon they had, garden tools,
knives, hammers.
in 1994, 800,000 people were killed in a 100
day period
and at the time he went, random fighting was
still happening.
They
brought about 50 church people from all
tribes together to talk about this.
And the host pastor said to the group,
“I’ve been part of the church here since I was
born,
my father was a pastor, so I would go to
church up to
5 times a week and in over 50 years,
I’ve heard one basic sermon:
You
are a sinner, you need to repent in this life
and
believe in Jesus or you’re going to hell after you die.”
Everyone
laughed in recognition that this was the only sermon
they ever heard either, it was all about
what would happen after death.
That’s all the missionaries ever taught them.
He said that his whole life had been
lived in the midst of
the realities of hatred, distrust,
poverty, suffering, corruption, injustice,
He knew Jesus had a lot to say about that,
but he had never heard a sermon that addressed
those realities.
He asked the crowd of church people,
“have you ever heard a sermon that told Tutsi people
to love and reconcile with Hutu people?
or
for Hutu people to love and reconcile with Tutsi?”
None of them raised their hands.
Jesus
does have a lot to say about enemies loving each other,
and about poverty, distrust, hatred,
suffering, and corruption.
And how much could the church have done in
those places
to change and alleviate the situation?
But they were stuck on that one message.
“Believe so you don’t go to hell.”
The
main idea of the Reformation,
that we are justified by God’s grace alone and
not our works
was an amazing and earth-shattering revelation
in 1500.
It literally changed the world when Luther
brought it out.
The
idea that God loves us no matter what we do or don’t do
is still astounding, it’s still good news, it
has freed us to take risks
and do great things for God and for others.
And I believe it with all my heart.
But we can’t just stop at what was amazing to
society 500 years ago.
That
was the Reformation the 1500’s needed.
In Luther’s times, most people were worried
about
whether they were going to hell and purgatory
after they died.
These days, hardly anyone is worried about
that,
but sometimes we’re still just responding with
the same answer,
and basically doing church the same way they
were then.
Have we clung to that and only that
too long?
Did we spend so much time talking about Hell
that we
forgot to talk about God’s kingdom on earth
which Jesus did all the time?
Should we have believed Justification
by grace,
and moved onto emphasize just as fervently
how Jesus wanted us to live our lives here on
earth
instead of just focusing on our life after
death?
If we did maybe then we wouldn’t have
so many Christians who
believe that empathy and compassion are bad
and,
who have abandoned the actual teachings of
Jesus in favor
of Christian Nationalism and other idols.
Maybe, like the Tutsi and Hutus, we
should be
addressing the hard things that Jesus has to
say to us
in this world in this time, before everyone
kills each other.
We need another Reformation where
pastors and people
who know about God’s love and inclusion are as
vocal about it
as those who use God for hate and violence.
It’s not too late now. And I think God is
getting it done.
Sometimes without us if necessary.
Here’s what I’m seeing regularly on
social media:
In posts about some of the outrageous and
hateful stances that
some Christians groups have taken on poverty,
immigration, and violence,
I see agnostics, atheists, people who left the
church,
or hadn’t stepped into the church for decades,
coming to Jesus defense against these stances.
They’re saying things like:
“In Exodus, it says to welcome the immigrant”
“Jesus said love your enemies”
“Jesus said he came to bring good news to the
poor.”
I’m hearing this kind of thing from
people
who I know are long time church avoiders and
even
They’re looking up passages in the bible.
They’re reaching back into their Sunday school
and youth group
teachings that they’ve buried for years, and
they’re using their
prophetic voices to teach Jesus message to
others.
It may just be because they’re angry,
but they’re still doing it.
I’m not even sure what to do with this yet.
But I think God is doing something.
We
have a world that is screaming out from
poverty and
violence, from disconnection and
isolation, lack
of meaning, fear, distrust, anger . . .
and we have a savior with a story
that speaks to all of these things.
Not just about going to heaven.
But
how will anyone know unless we tell them?
Like the title of
McClaren’s book says:
Everything must change.
Maybe
the best thing that could happen to us is that
Our cheese is moved, then we have realize
that the message we’ve been sending isn’t
resonating.
Maybe the best thing that can happen to us is
dying
so that we can rise again.
Today, we know how the Reformation
ended.
It changed the world in a good way.
The people weren’t under the thumb of
church hierarchy, they didn’t need to live in
fear
of a wrathful God any more.
And that change led to developments in
science,
art, politics, literature and so many things
we
hold dear today.
We can look back and say that overall it was
a great advancement for the world.
But by all accounts, being
in the middle of the Reformation in Luther’s
time
was a great unknown. Lots of good people did
some not very good things. it was
uncomfortable,
it was awful, it was violent, it was unsure,
it was deadly for some,
it was chaotic and messy.
It was a great upheaval of everything the
people
knew and depended on.
But in retrospect, overall the massive change
that it brought
was good for humanity.
Today
we are in the middle of another Reformation.
Things are changing in our world in so many
ways,
we can hardly keep up with it.
You can feel it.
God is doing something new in our world.
And it can feel terrible and unsure, messy and
chaotic.
But let’s not find ourselves moping
around
at station C complaining that the cheese hasn’t
come to us.
That things aren’t the same as they once were.
Let us be the part of Christianity
that tells the world
that God loves us all unconditionally,
that mercy, compassion, forgiveness,
and care for the poor and outcast are
essential elements of Jesus message for us.
Let us be part of the Reformation that
is at hand

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