Daily Focusing on Jesus and the Cross – Part 1.5
Posted by Chris on September 19, 2004 under Sermons
- Once Upon a Time in America:
- My father’s first sermon mentioned a different sort of culture …
- Doors left unlocked, children played in safety. …
- Neighbors were close and trusted, people trusted and respected their leaders
- God and church were held in high esteem. (Attend the church of your choice).
- It is decaying:
- Definitions of right & wrong have been changed
- The Index of Cultural Indicators:
- Long-held beliefs are giving way to a plethora of views.
- Self-expression, individualism & personal choice valued above all else
- Every viewpoint, no matter how bizarre or destructive, is accepted.
- “The lunatics are running the asylum.”
- The props are being kicked out:
- Once the church and Christian values were propped up by American society
- We fear what will happen when the last of the props is kicked out
- … what will happen when the lunatics finally take over.
- But what were we doing in an asylum in the firstplace?
- Christianity has been around a lot longer than America.
- Christianity began without the props that we rested on so comfortably, once upona time in America.
- My father’s first sermon mentioned a different sort of culture …
- Living Outside the Camp (Read Hebrews13:1-14):
- We must go to Jesus outside thecamp.
- Like the unclean carcasses of the sacrifice that were discarded outside thecamp,Jesus suffered outside the gate of the holy city.
- No special funeral. No eternal flame in the National Cemetery
- [George McDonald, Only One Way Left]: “… Jesus was not crucified ina cathedral between two candles, but on a cross between two thieves, onthe town garbage heap … at the kind of place where cynics talk smut,and thieves curse, and soldiers gamble … Because that is where he diedand that is what he died about. And that is where churchman should beand what churchmanship is about.”
- If Jesus died outside “the city,” its absurd to think that we are can somehowremain in “the city.”
- Jesus did minister in the Temple, but he also ministered in the barrios &ghettos among the drunks and the prostitutes.
- The love of God is not restricted to the “acceptable” parts of town. Itgoes out to the places where good folk do not go after dark.
- Our place is by Jesus’ side, even if that takes us outside safety of the citygate
- Are we called to defend the city (American culture) or are we called to go out ofthe city and call others to join us?
- The latter. There is no “city” in this world worth defending becausenone of them are eternal.
- Let us lament the decay of American society, but let us not be tricked intothinking the church requires it to survive and thrive.
- Christianity has thrived in hostile environments inthe past andin many parts of the world.
- Sincere, faithful Christians remain true to their Lord incountries like the Sudan where they are persecuted.
- The danger of living in the city is that it makes us nearsighted instead offarsighted.
- Our values are reversed.
- Like the unclean carcasses of the sacrifice that were discarded outside thecamp,Jesus suffered outside the gate of the holy city.
- We must bear His shame.
- The Apostles rejoiced not because they won favor with society or advancedtheirreligious/political agenda, but because they suffered shame for the Name.
- God was not ashamed of them, and they were not ashamed of him …
- Faith shines brightest in the darkness:
- Some of our brethren are meeting today in secret in peril of their lives.
- Are they less faithful than we because God has not blessed them with theprops of social acceptability?
- The Apostles rejoiced not because they won favor with society or advancedtheirreligious/political agenda, but because they suffered shame for the Name.
- We must go to Jesus outside thecamp.
- Once Upon a Time in America [Conclusion]:
- We may have been propped up. (And it may have been a blessing of God.)
- But God does not promise it will always be so.
- In fact he says it will more often be the opposite
- Maybe it will actually be good for us when the last prop is finally kicked out.
- Maybe we will once and for all
- go outside the city,
- bearing His shame,
- looking ahead to the Eternal City,
- and letting God be our only prop!
- Maybe we will once and for all
- The Challenge:
- From the word of God.
- This goes beyond a personal acceptance.
- We must accept this challenge as a church – together!
- Let us all stand – and in so doing accept the challenge ofScripture to go liveoutside the camp!