Posted by David on April 11, 2004 under Sermons
To function in the American culture of 2004, it is absolutely essential to know how to heal relationships. In our current culture, rare is the adult [man or woman] who has not experienced a broken relationship.
It may be a divorce involving parents. It may be alienation from a parent. It may be alienation from a brother or sister. It may be losing a meaningful friendship. It may be experiencing your own divorce. It may be problems with your boss or fellow employees. It may be hostility with a neighbor. It may be a conflict in the congregation. It may be struggle with a church leader. Whatever it is, a relationship is ruptured and in desperate need of repair.
The work of repairing a relationship is called reconciliation. Whether it is repairing a human relationship or relationship with God, we are talking about reconciliation.
The core fact about salvation is centered in healing our relationship with God. Put in terms used in scripture, salvation is about reconciliation. If relationship with God is not healed, there is no salvation. If salvation exists, relationship with God is healed.
Let me be clear and specific about my objective. I am going to do all within my power to make each of us think by going to scripture. I want you to allow God to speak to you from His word. Agreeing with David Chadwell is never the issue. Hearing God is always the issue.
- Let’s begin by listening to God.
- Consider these scriptures.
- Ephesians 2:13-16 But now in Christ Jesus you who formerly were far off have been brought near by the blood of Christ. For He Himself is our peace, who made both groups into one and broke down the barrier of the dividing wall, by abolishing in His flesh the enmity, which is the Law of commandments contained in ordinances, so that in Himself He might make the two into one new man, thus establishing peace, and might reconcile them both in one body to God through the cross, by it having put to death the enmity.
- Colossians 1:19,20 For it was the Father’s good pleasure for all the fullness to dwell in Him [Jesus], and through Him [Jesus] to reconcile all things to Himself, having made peace through the blood of His [Jesus] cross; through Him [Jesus], I say, whether things on earth or things in heaven.
- Romans 5:8-11 But God demonstrates His own love toward us, in that while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us. Much more then, having now been justified by His blood, we shall be saved from the wrath of God through Him [Jesus]. For if while we were enemies we were reconciled to God through the death of His Son, much more, having been reconciled, we shall be saved by His life. And not only this, but we also exult in God through our Lord Jesus Christ, through whom we have now received the reconciliation.
- 2 Corinthians 5:18,19 Now all these things are from God, who reconciled us to Himself through Christ and gave us the ministry of reconciliation, namely, that God was in Christ reconciling the world to Himself, not counting their trespasses against them, and He has committed to us the word of reconciliation.
- In these readings about God’s act of making reconciliation with people possible, I want to call something to your attention.
- For God, reconciliation is an act, a specific event.
- That divine act or event is centered in God’s action in Jesus’ cross when Jesus became His promised Christ.
- For God, reconciliation involved Jesus’ blood, Jesus’ sacrificial death, and Jesus’ resurrection.
- When God offered Jesus, that offering was the reconciliation event for God–from that moment a perfectly healed relationship between God and sinful humans was possible.
- The point I want you to keep clearly in mind is this: for God, reconciliation with sinful people is an event that involved sacrificing Jesus.
- Let’s continue to let God speak to us.
- Consider these scriptures:
- 1 Corinthians 1:1-3 Paul, called as an apostle of Jesus Christ by the will of God, and Sosthenes our brother, To the church of God which is at Corinth, to those who have been sanctified in Christ Jesus, saints by calling, with all who in every place call on the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, their Lord and ours: Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ.
- 2 Corinthians 1:1,2 Paul, an apostle of Christ Jesus by the will of God, and Timothy our brother, To the church of God which is at Corinth with all the saints who are throughout Achaia: Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ.
- 2 Corinthians 5:18-21 Now all these things are from God, who reconciled us to Himself through Christ and gave us the ministry of reconciliation, namely, that God was in Christ reconciling the world to Himself, not counting their trespasses against them, and He has committed to us the word of reconciliation. Therefore, we are ambassadors for Christ, as though God were making an appeal through us; we beg you on behalf of Christ, be reconciled to God. He made Him who knew no sin to be sin on our behalf, so that we might become the righteousness of God in Him.
- Is anything obvious to you?
- The letter is addressed to God’s church in Corinth.
- These people are believers, penitent ones, baptized ones whom God had added to the church.
- Paul, as God’s ambassador to Gentiles, is making an appeal to these Christians in Corinth.
- It is an earnest appeal–“we beg you.”
- What is the appeal? “We beg you on Christ’s behalf, be reconciled to God.”
- Relevant question: how can it be that these baptized believers are in need of being reconciled to God?
- Why was reconciliation not “a done deal” when they were baptized into Christ?
- If they were baptized, why do they still need to be reconciled to Christ?
- Too often we have either taught or created the impression that all that was necessary was baptism.
- We have not emphasized faith in God’s act in the cross and Jesus’ resurrection much.
- We have not emphasized repentance, the redirecting of life, much.
- We have emphasized baptism a lot.
- I am fearful we have created the impression that “if I have been baptized, immersed in water, for the remission of sins, everything is A-OK (cool) between God and me.”
- If we are not quite careful, we become guilty of encouraging people to place their faith in an immersion instead of in Jesus’ cross.
- May I call something obvious to your attention?
- For God, reconciliation is an event, an act.
- For us, reconciliation is a journey.
- Consider this chart.
- Under consideration is a sincere, thoughtful response to Jesus Christ because of faith in Jesus’ crucifixion and a desire to redirect life.
- If we were to ask this person at baptism into Jesus Christ if he/she understood reconciliation, he/she likely would say, “Yes!”
- After this serious Christian grows for a couple of years, we ask again, “Do you understand reconciliation?” He/she likely responds, “I think so.”
- After this serious Christian grows for ten years, we ask the same question again, “Do you understand reconciliation?” He/she likely responds, “Maybe.”
- After this serious Christian grows for fifteen years, we ask again, “Do you understand reconciliation?” He/she likely responds, “I wonder.”
- After this serious Christian grows for thirty years, again we ask, “Do you understand reconciliation?” He/she likely says, “I have more questions than answers.”
- Why? Why is it that the more we grow toward God the more we are humbled by the concept of reconciliation?
- We grow in understanding to be awed by the vastness, the hugeness of reconciliation.
- When sin first entered this creation, so much more happened than just the perversion of physical creation.
- Something happened to affect God’s sovereignty; something happened in heaven; something happened in the war between good and evil.
- Listen to God speak to us.
- Luke 10:17,18 The seventy returned with joy, saying, “Lord, even the demons are subject to us in Your name.” And He said to them, “I was watching Satan fall from heaven like lightning.”
- Ephesians 6:12 For our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the powers, against the world forces of this darkness, against the spiritual forces of wickedness in the heavenly places.
- 1 Corinthians 15:28 When all things are subjected to Him [Jesus Christ], then the Son Himself also will be subjected to the One who subjected all things to Him, so that God may be all in all.
- Sin caused something huge to happen; reconciliation caused something huge to happen.
- Question: when is a person 100% reconciled to God?
- By the grace and mercy of God, throughout the entire journey toward God.
- If because I believe in what God did in the cross, I want to redirect my life, and I am baptized into Christ, am I 100% reconciled to God? Yes! Because of what I did in baptism? No! Because of what God did in Jesus’ death and resurrection!
- After two years of living in Christ, am I 100% reconciled to God? Yes! Because of what I achieve? No! Because of what God achieved in Jesus’ death and resurrection!
- And so it is all the years a person lives in Christ. At every point he/she is 100% reconciled to God because of God’s grace and mercy as shown in Jesus’ death and resurrection.
- In every culture, in every corner of the world, in every degree of education, in every degree of poverty, in the face of every form of injustice and repression, in every degree of being deprived, the man or woman who is in Christ is, by the mercy and grace of God, 100% reconciled to God at every point on his/her journey toward God.
- It is never a matter of how we compare to each other.
- It is always a matter of having confidence in Jesus’ death and resurrection.
Have you begun the journey?
Posted by Chris on under Sermons
- We anticipate many visitors this Easter Sunday. So please greet everyone you see – especially new faces!
- The theme of worship and the sermon is a transition from the sermons responding to The Passion of the Christ and anticipating a series from April 18 – May 16 focusing on what it means to be Christ’s church. We have focused on the cross, now what does it mean to be a Community Beneath the Cross?
- Remember in your prayers those on our published prayer lists.
- Read the following Scriptures as you pray and prepare for worship: Psalm 118:15-24; Revelation 3:19-21; John 20-21; Luke 24; Mark 16; Matthew 28; 1 Corinthians 15.
Order of Worship and Discipleship:
Welcome and Prayer
Scripture for Call to Worship (Psalm 118:15-24)
Song – “This is the Day That the Lord Has Made”
Song #587 – “Sing and Be Happy”
Song #162 – “All Hail the Power”
Song #166 – “He’s My King”
Scripture Reading (Revelation 3:20-21)
Song #364 – “Come, Share the Lord”
Communion
Offering (with a song)
Song #828 – “Instruments of Peace”
TWENTY SECONDS THAT MAKE ALL THE DIFFERENCE
(John 20:19-23)

Critics of The Passion of the Christ have complained that the movie only gives 20 seconds to the resurrection …
- Without the 20 seconds of the resurrection the movie is an empty, meaningless tragedy. There is no hope, no justice, and very little meaning to Christ’s death on a cross.
- With the 20 seconds everything is changed. As Jesus says to Mary in the film, "Behold, I make all things new!"
- It is fitting that the titles do not roll until after the scene of the resurrection, for this truly is the beginning!
It makes a difference whether we regard someone as dead or alive
- We can revere, imitate, remember, memorialize a historical figure.
- We can learn about them, we can discover new things about them that we did not know before
- We can discuss their life and teaching.
- But we cannot interact with them. We cannot learn from them. [Hillary Clinton was criticized for conversing with Eleanor Roosevelt – Mrs. Roosevelt really cannot say anything to Mrs. Clinton that she doesn’t imagine for herself.]
- But if a person is alive, we can talk to them and learn from them.
If Jesus is dead …
- Then he is at best a revered figure from the past. A just man and noble teacher who died for his principles. He lives on in the memory of his followers and through his teaching. His immortality is not any different that that of Buddha or Socrates or Eleanor Roosevelt.
- And that means that the Lord’s Supper is nothing more than a memorial and the Bible is a collection of writings about Jesus.
- He cannot be Lord in any real authoritative sense
If Jesus is alive …
- The he’s still around. Perhaps his existence is different than what it was in a way I will not even attempt to explain here, but if he is alive then he is present. And he can interact with us.
In what sense is Jesus alive?
Not simply immortalized in his teaching
Not simply the endurance of his spiritual force
Not simply his memory and his legacy
He is the Living One
He is the new humanity, the firstborn from the dead.
It Makes a Difference for the Church …
The last image before the final 20 seconds in The Passion of the Christ seems to be of a group people gathered around the dead Jesus … It is a community beneath the cross and a worthy symbol of what it means to be “church.”
The community of faith – the church – is formed only because Jesus lives. Once again, those 20 seconds make all the difference. The resurrection of Jesus Makes a Difference not only for Jesus, but also for us. John 20 is case in point.
[Read John 20:19-23]
Consider the state of the disciples when they regard Jesus as dead . . .
- Locked away in fear of punishment and retaliation.
- Purposeless, giving up on their dreams. (They are ready to go back to business as usual when they once had enough courage and faith to leave everything – John 21.)
- They are riddled with guilt and suspicion. (One of their own that they trusted betrayed Jesus and he is now dead. They are painfully aware of their own weaknesses and emptiness.)
The memory of Jesus, the strength of his teaching, his noble example are not enough to make an adequate difference for this group. Not until they encounter the living Jesus.
- The Living Jesus gives Peace and the Holy Spirit.
- The spirit enables the disciples, the church to carry out their witness in a hostile world. They are instruments of his peace. What else explains the change we see in this community of believers? On the night of Christ’s arrest they are filled with fear but when they are brought before the Sanhedrin for preaching in his name they are filled with the Holy Spirit.
- They are given new life. That is the gift of God’s Spirit (Genesis 2:7, Ezekiel 37:9-10).
- Consider what this means for us:
How shall we make disciples for Jesus? How shall we know peace and overcome the anxiety and discontent we feel as the world around us seems hostile and unsettling? We need the Holy Spirit if we want to live. We need to be "inspired."
- Christ lives, he gives the Spirit. Those 20 seconds make all the difference
- The Living Jesus sends the church.
- He is not turning it over to them. "As the Father has sent me" implies a past sending that continues. This sending has permanence. Christ has a continuing mission – though the form of that mission has changed after the cross and tomb.
- See John 14:12-14.
- He is re-commissioning them to share in his work. They are allowed to be participants in the mission of Jesus that continues. [Peter is restored – John 21]
- Think of what this means to us:
In all our efforts we are never alone. Christ is with us. That ought to humble us and embolden us. Christ is not a CEO at some office far away who signs the checks so we can do the work. His presence surrounds every event. He is there before us, he is there behind us, he is always over us. We are not members who participate in the mission of the church – we are the church that participates in the mission of Christ.
- Christ lives, he sends the church. Those 20 seconds make all the difference.
- The Living Jesus forgives – and so also may we forgive.
- The risen Christ forgives them and gives them they authority to forgive, thus giving them the key to truthful community [fellowship – eating together].
- This is no subjective rule that gives us the authority to accept or reject whomever we please. It is an invitation to participate in the grace of God that endures sinfulness and offers hope of reconciliation. Christ’s mission was not to condemn the world, but to save it. Our mission cannot be to condemn. We proclaim the power that gave Jesus life, the mercy that made us his friends; those who reject this condemn themselves, those who accept it receive the kingdom of God.
- If Jesus is dead then we can only work to achieve a sense of forgiveness and reconciliation. Like a child who harbors anger at a deceased parent. Often ministers and friends counsel people to reconcile with others while they are still alive. Why? So that one might hear the words "I forgive you" from a living person. Christ is alive. And his forgiveness is not the last will and testament of a dead teacher. It is a present voice and an active expression of love. He has chosen to express that forgiveness in his church.
- So, when we forgive one another it is not our forgiveness that is most important. Rather the mercy that we have received from Jesus Christ compels us to be forgiving and merciful.
- Think of what this means for us:
When we struggle to forgive others (and let’s admit we do sometimes) we need to focus on Jesus forgiving us – for without that we have no right to even consider forgiving anyone else – much less hold a grudge! When we extend forgiveness and when we work to reconcile people – we are not just reconciling them to us, but to more importantly to Christ who reconciles all of us to God.
- Christ lives, he forgives – and so must we. Those 20 seconds make all the difference.

This spectacular photo was taken in Lower Galilee in 1998 by Julie Martinez.
Used with permission.
The day that Christ rose is the first day of a new age. Jesus is the first of the new humanity – the new life. We get to sample it through the Holy Spirit.
The community beneath the cross does not gather around a dead savior. In his resurrected body he bears the marks of the crucifixion – affirming that his death had meaning. The crucified one is also the living one. The living one is Lord. This is our confession that makes us his church.
In baptism, we enact and participate in the gospel event: the death, burial, and resurrection of Jesus. With great conviction we have proclaimed what Peter did – that belief, repentance and baptism are essentials of salvation. Those who’ve experienced this can be sure that God has added them to the church.
But keep in mind that Peter and every evangelist worth his salt thereafter has proclaimed with equal conviction that the Jesus who was crucified is now the risen Lord. That proclamation makes all the difference. Without that conviction, the rest of it is meaningless.
If Jesus is not resurrected, then he is not Lord. But something happened that Sunday long ago that changed a timid group of believers into a cross-carrying community sent out in the name of Jesus. We believe it was the presence of the risen Lord. He still lives. His presence and Holy Spirit is no less powerful now than it was then.
Song for Responses – #853 – “When We All Get to Heaven”
Sending Out Prayer
Posted by David on under Bulletin Articles
Luke 13:14-16, But the synagogue official, indignant because Jesus had healed on the Sabbath, began saying to the crowd in response, “There are six days in which work should be done; so come during them and get healed, and not on the Sabbath day.” But the Lord answered him and said, “You hypocrites, does not each of you on the Sabbath untie his ox or his donkey from the stall and lead him away to water him? And this woman, a daughter of Abraham as she is, whom Satan has bound for eighteen long years, should she not have been released from this bond on the Sabbath day?”
Poor man! If anyone can sympathize with him, we should! Jesus healed a woman in the synagogue on a Sabbath. The man was a synagogue official (a “leader,” not an “attender”; not uninformed but knowledgeable). Was he upset! “Jesus cannot heal people in this synagogue on the Sabbath! Not here! Not now! How inappropriate!”
Inappropriate? God’s power is inappropriate in God’s assembly among people who supposedly know God? The issue was not: (1) Jesus’ power to heal; (2) “What is the origin of Jesus’ power to do good things?” (3) the suffering woman; or (4) giving God glory for incredible happenings. The issue was, “Not here and now!”
Surely we understand the man’s feelings. Had not God’s law plainly declared, “Keep the Sabbath holy” (Exodus 20:8)? Had not it clearly declared one keeps the Sabbath holy by refraining from work (Exodus 20:9,10)? Had they not defined work? Had not those definitions regulated activities among devout Israelites for generations? How dare Jesus defile the Sabbath by performing a work of healing on the Sabbath in this synagogue!
So in devotion to scripture he condemned God’s Son for doing a godly thing! He was indignant! This upset official told the audience, “If you want Jesus to heal you, come on one of the other six days; not on a Sabbath!” Interesting! Do not benefit from God’s power on the day set aside to remember God’s creation power. The poor man knew more about scripture than he knew about God. The result: he used scripture to oppose God’s purposes and values.
Jesus declared him to be hypocritical. This representative of God did more for animals on the Sabbath than for a suffering human. He championed his views, not God’s priorities.
I do not condemn the man. I sympathize with him. May God’s grace forgive me when I have the same attitude! May His mercy cover my ignorance (which I consider “on-target” scriptural defenses) when I use God’s word to oppose God’s priorities!
It is so easy to (1) view scripture as an end in itself rather than a road map to God; (2) to hold scripture in higher regard than God; (3) to miss God’s priorities revealed in scripture. It is so easy to react instead of think–even if it means we oppose God’s purposes in His Son.
Posted by Chris on April 4, 2004 under Sermons
You may want to study the following Scriptures in advance:John 1:29, John 8:1-11; Romans 3-8; 1 John 3
Order of Worship and Discipleship:
Welcome and Prayer
Song #902 – “Nothing But the Blood”
Song #903 – “There’s Power in the Blood”
Song #904 – “Have You Been to Jesus”
Song #176 – “Lamb of God”
Communion
Offering
Song #202 – “Joyful, Joyful We Adore Thee”
“CAN ONE MAN BEAR THE SINS
OF THE WHOLE WORLD?”
In the opening scene of The Passion of the Christ , Satan is attempting to persuade Jesus to abandon his mission. Satan’s strategy is to cause Jesus to doubt. Two weeks ago we looked at Satan’s attempt to cause Jesus to doubt himself (Whose Son Are You? – 3/21/2004). Satan also tries to make Jesus doubt the possibility of salvation. "Saving them is too costly," Satan muses. "Can one man really bear the sins of the whole world?"
Of course this scene is not presented in the gospels. It is the director’s artistic license. But those do seem like the sort of questions Satan would ask. Jesus, as God in the flesh, knows sin from heaven’s perspective and from the human perspective. Certainly he, more than anyone, would know how costly it would be to bear the burden of sin. Christ witnessed first hand the evil, immorality, and corruption that infect us. Even before the crucifixion Jesus experienced the cruelty of sin.
One such experience is recorded in John 8:1-11.
Sin oozes out of every corner of this event: A woman probably married or perhaps a prostitute has been caught in the act. Families have been betrayed by this act. Not only the marital partners are shamed by this offense – the community that honors marriage is also shamed. It is a horrible, scandalous event.
But there’s also the sin of her accusers. Their motives are not pure. This is not some neighborhood watch or good citizen’s brigade. The very set-up of this little scandal hints at their guilt. As my mother used to say, "Where’s the man involved and how did the rest of them know about this?"
The crowd is no better than a frenzied Jerry Springer audience who demonstrate their own wickedness by getting carried away in judgment. And the engineers of this little trap are even more devious. This whole scenario, for them, is not about righteousness – it is an attempt to discredit Jesus.
Let’s take a closer look at their trap – and more importantly Jesus’ response – so we can understand how Jesus, through his ministry and sacrifice, does indeed bear the sin of the world. Here’s how their trap works:
- If Jesus condemns the woman, then he discredits his teaching and ministry. Jesus has been proclaiming good news to the poor and sinners. He has been demonstrating the love and compassion of God by receiving them. He has proclaimed that his mission is one of love and salvation – not condemnation (John 3:16-18). Very well then, here’s a test for Jesus. A very real sinner caught in the act. If Jesus is going to be true to him message and ministry then let him accept her.
- If Jesus excuses the woman or shows compassion, then he is unjust and lawless. How can Jesus give this woman a pass? Actions like hers strike at the Ten Commandments. But it’s not simply "against the law." This isn’t just a legal problem or a result of unfortunate circumstances. This is a moral and personal offense against others and society. Jesus cannot make light of the insult and injury brought about by this woman’s sin, for if he does then his teaching is also discredited.
We’ll get to Jesus’ response in a moment, but to understand his response we need to understand some important points about sacrifice and how sacrifice is involved in bearing the sins of the world.
After all, if we think about Satan’s question "Can one man bear the sins of the whole world?" – Doesn’t it seem a bit unfair and perhaps simplistic that Jesus can take the punishment for my crimes?
If some decent soul came forward to accept the punishment for the crimes of Saddam Hussein, and if the courts actually allowed this decent person to take on this punishment – would we call that grace? Would we really feel as if justice had been satisfied if another person suffered the punishment the Hussein deserved. Wouldn’t we rather feel that something is wrong with the system and wouldn’t we sympathize with those whom Hussein oppressed knowing that their oppressor gets away scot-free? I hope you feel there’s something wrong with that situation. If Jesus is just sacrificing himself so we can avoid the due penalty for our crimes then yes, there would be something wrong with the whole thing.
But sacrifice involves much more than that because the problem is not simply "legal." And our sins are not simply "crimes." Our sin involves personal, moral offense. The problem is more than legal – it is human. Our sin is rebellion and our "crime" is that of a child who insults decent parents. Our corruption hurts others and we have wounded one another – sometimes because we have been wounded. Jesus’ sacrifice is not merely a "legal" transaction or a sentence declared by a judge.
The purpose of sacrifice (even in the history of Israel) was not about changing God so he can live with us. God is not the problem in the relationship. We need to be careful that we don’t make pagan assumptions about sacrifice. In paganism, the sacrifice appeases or persuades the deity. Sacrifice is not giving God his pound of flesh so he can settle down. It’s not the ritual that allows Holy God to tolerate sinful us.
The purpose of sacrifice (in Israel’s history and in Jesus) is about God revealing his mercy and gracious initiative and that changes us. Confronted by the grace that God offers and the confession of our weakness we are called to holiness. Sacrifice isn’t holding off God so we won’t die – it is God arousing us to the problem so that we might live!
Consider that God chose Israel long before they sacrificed to him. Their frequent error was that they thought they could pursue life their way as long as they made the right sacrifices. And even we think that as long as we appeal to Jesus’ sacrifice the right way then we can pursue our own projects and our own desires. God himself said "I desire mercy, not sacrifice." (Hosea 6:6). Jesus, the one who sacrificed himself for us, indicated this same thing. He said it was something that we needed to learn.
We can say this about sacrifice:
- The focus of sacrifice is on God’s gracious action. He takes the initiative. He is merciful. While we were still sinners, Christ died for us! (Romans 3:23) The sacrifice of Jesus reveals God’s justice (Romans 3:26). Although he is the offended one, he takes the initiative in reconciliation (2 Corinthians 5:18-19).
- Sacrifice is connected to a change in how we live. The sacrifice of parents who love their children demands an appropriate response. The sacrifice of soldiers who liberate others demands an appropriate response. But these examples cannot be mistaken to suggest that manipulation is involved in sacrifice. If someone sacrifices to manipulate a response, then it is not sacrifice.
The sacrifice of Jesus Christ is a kingdom of God approach to taking away the sins of the world. Considering these two observations about sacrifice, let’s see how both of these are involved in Jesus’ response to the accusers in John 8
If any one of you is without sin …
To the crowd (the accusers) Jesus reveals that the problem is not simply the sinful woman. It is sinful humanity. Her sinfulness is part of the human condition. Jesus is saying to the crowd – Who among you is pure enough to throw the need for mercy out the window. If you want to start the blame game, then who among you will be blameless. Jesus gets the crowd to see their need for mercy by recognizing their sinfulness. As the people (oldest to youngest) turn and walk away, they are making a confession. They are admitting their sinfulness. Ironically, its our sinfulness that causes us to construct systems of punishment and judgment. We exclude others and we judge others. We look for people to blame. In the political world those who succeed by the scandal and blame game will die by it. For all are guilty of something. Jesus’ question to the crowd is not a bold stance for tolerance that rules out judgment. He’s not trying to save the woman, rather he is trying to save the crowd from its own cruelty and self-righteousness. Jesus’ sacrificial way of living and dying reminds us that each of us is damnable and we have need of mercy.

Go and Sin No More.
To the woman caught in sin Jesus offers mercy instead of condemnation. Why? Condemnation leads only to death. There is no hope, but it is easy. Mercy isn’t easy. It means forgiving and forgiving usually costs – but it does offer the hope of change. Some who want to excuse their behavior by repeating Jesus’ word that "He without sin should cast the first stone" should also hear this word: "Go and sin no more." When we cry out against the judgment of others (or even our self-judgment) we are trying to bear the burden of our own sin. We don’t want to let go or admit our weakness and sin. So we throw the blame on others. We justify our action. For new life to begin we have to confront our own sinfulness, but even that’s not enough, we have to confront the one who can take our sin away and replace it with his spirit.
Here’s the good news: Jesus mercifully takes up all our sin – he removes it and cleanses us so that we might be changed. And in being changed we have the possibility of living for him. "The one who was not sin became sin for us, so that we might become his righteousness." (2 Corinthians 5:21).
Like the woman caught in the act, you are not saved because you have a good lawyer, or because Jesus is soft and tender-hearted. You’re not saved because you know all the Scriptures and can find a loophole. You’re not saved because you have claim on God and know the proper rituals and prayers to appease his wrath.
You are saved because of the Lamb of God who takes away the sins of the world. (John 1:29).
- God took the initiative in saving us. The sacrifice shows the extent of his mercy – he is willing to bear the offense.
- So, will we let go of our sins? (Whether we hold them out of shame, denial, or pride). Will we go and sin no more?
Posted by David on under Bulletin Articles
“But to what shall I compare this generation? It is like children sitting in the market places, who call out to the other children, and say, ‘We played the flute for you, and you did not dance; we sang a dirge, and you did not mourn.’ For John came neither eating nor drinking, and they say, ‘He has a demon!’ The Son of Man came eating and drinking, and they say, ‘Behold, a gluttonous man and a drunkard, a friend of tax collectors and sinners!’ Yet wisdom is vindicated by her deeds” (Matthew 11:16-19).
Often God is in a “no win” situation. We simply do not look at situations as does God. Compare John the baptizer’s ministry [through which God worked] and Jesus’ ministry [through which God also worked].
Without question God sent John for a specific ministry. He was born by God’s special act (Luke 1:5-20). The Lord’s hand was with him (Luke 1:66). As soon as he was old enough, he lived in the desert (Luke 1:80). He wore strange clothing and ate a strange diet (Mark 1:6). He did not go into the towns with his message. People came into the wilderness to hear him (Matthew 3:5,6).
Without question God sent Jesus for a specific ministry. He, too, was born by God’s special act (Matthew 1:18-25). The Lord’s hand also was with him (Luke 2:40). However, Jesus dressed as common people dressed. He lived in towns. His diet was common people’s diet. He took his message to the people.
Most of the religious leadership refused to take John or his message seriously. He was weird! He was a recluse! God would not work through a weird man like John!
Most of the religious leadership refused to take Jesus or his message seriously. He was common! He lacked proper academic credentials! He associated with the wrong kind of people! Obviously God would not work through someone who ate instead of fasting and drank like Jesus drank! Besides, Jesus associated with the wrong kind of people!
Jesus’ observation: “You people are incredibly fickle! No matter what God did to inform you, you say He was wrong! Though God sent both John and me to achieve the same purpose, you say we are from the devil–John because he is weird; me because I am common. The time will come when God’s wisdom is recognized in both of us! The time will come when you will recognize people are the fickle ones–not God!”
The irony: people supposedly belonging to God could not see God at work in John or Jesus. God’s ways are not our ways. His values are not our values. His purposes are not our purposes. His priorities are not our priorities.
Our goal: (1) never force God to conform to our expectations [that is idolatry]; (2) always let God form our expectations [that is revelation in Jesus].
Questions: Do your expectations keep you from seeing God at work? Are God’s ways, values, purposes, and priorities obvious in your daily life because it is dedicated to reflecting who God is and what God is about? Do you declare God’s work a work of the devil because your expectations are more important than God’s priorities?
Posted by Chris on March 28, 2004 under Sermons
Continue to demonstrate the welcoming spirit of Christ as we gather on Sunday morning.
Prepare yourself spiritually for worship by praying for an open heart, open mind, and the strength to serve. Read the following: Matthew 27, Psalm 22, Romans 8.
Order of Worship and Discipleship:
Welcome and Prayer
Song #112 – “Wonderful Grace of Jesus”
Song #316 – “Jesus Paid It All”
Song #351 – “He Bore It All”
Song #318 – “O Sacred Head”
Communion
Offering
Song #69 – “Give Thanks” (during the offering)
Song #315 – “When I Survey the Cross”
“WHY DO YOU EMBRACE YOUR CROSS?”
This question is asked by one of the thieves who will be crucified beside Jesus.
He is amazed that Jesus does not resist but actually takes up the cross with resolve and a prayer of acceptance to God.
Can’t we appreciate the thief’s amazement?
Why not fight? Why not resist? Why not protest in the face of such injustice and tragedy?
Matthew 27
Why God? If any of the statements from the cross trouble us, it is probably this one. Why would Jesus say this? It seems the opposite of the attitude that "embraces" the cross. When Jesus says this he seems too human. He seems to doubt. He seems upset with God. Theological rationales don’t remove the emotional impact of this verse. Even the crowds aren’t sure of what they’re hearing and suppose that this is some cry to Elijah.
Maybe this word from the cross shocks and offends because in this statement, more than any others, we come closest to the suffering Jesus.
And there is a tendency in our world to deny suffering. Some protested the Passion of the Christ saying that it was too agonizing.
But we dare not ignore the suffering (the Passion) for if we do we lose a very important dimension of the gospel. We also deny good news to those of us who do suffer and grieve …
Jesus’ cry to God is the first line of an ancient song, Psalm 22. Why would Jesus recite from this Psalm. It will become clear as we read these excerpts from the Psalm.
Psalm 22
Knowing this Psalm and knowing that it would have been in the heart as well as on the lips of Jesus as he embraced the cross speaks to us about the realities of suffering and God’s response when we suffer …
- God With Us
Suffering is not always the result of bad choices and sin. To ask, "Who sinned?" or "Who’s fault is this?" is not a always the right approach.
- Jesus’ disciples tried to do this with a blind man.
- Job’s friends tried to do this with Job. "Who being innocent, has ever perished? Where were the upright ever destroyed?" they said. What if Job had listened to his friends? What if he had listened to his wife, lost his integrity and cursed God?
God offers no polished answer for "Why?" But he does answer. He does arrive and shares in the conversation.
- Job sees things, in the end, from God’s perspective (Job 42:2-6).
- But what if God could see things from our perspective?
If God were to experience creation as we do, from within, could that change the way we endure the suffering?
Now God is not an outsider looking in on us, he is within. He participates and shares. Jesus is God who has come to dwell with us. He identifies with us so that we may outlast the suffering.
Psalm 22: O LORD, do not stay away! You are my strength; come quickly to my aid!
When we suffer, we can know that God is not far away – he participates in our suffering with us. He is Immanuel – even when life is difficult.
- All Gain, No Pain
By embracing the cross, by choosing to suffer with us, Jesus challenges a false motto of our age – "All Gain, No Pain."
- Our culture affirms gain, not loss.
- Our culture denies pain and suffering – even by trying to fix it.
Those who suffer in our culture are made to feel worse when no medicine, no prayer, no counseling, no program, no ministry can alleviate their suffering. Eventually we tend to think that people bring about their own suffering.
There has been much effort put into ignoring and denying pain in our society.
- The tragedy of September 11, 2001, was especially difficult for America not only in magnitude, but also because of our refusal to accept suffering.
- Dr. Kevorkian’s method of eradicating all pain could only happen in America (well, maybe Europe too – but that’s no consolation!). Why not apply his reasoning to third world countries where the majority of the people, including children, suffer and let millions commit suicide.
“Well, let’s take what people think is a dignified death. Christ, was that a dignified death? Do you think it’s dignified to hang from wood with nails through your hands and feet bleeding, hang for three or four days slowly dying, with people jabbing spears into your side, and people jeering you? Do you think that’s dignified? Not by a long shot. Had Christ died in my van with people around Him who loved Him, the way it was, it would be far more dignified. In my rusty van.” – Jack Kevorkian – National Press Club – July 29, 1996
Maybe Kevorkian is an extreme, but lest we judge the "world" too quickly, we ought to also realize that this is true of the church. Browse any Christian bookstore or catalogue and it is obvious that "gospels" of health, wealth, happiness, and success have often distracted the church from the reality of suffering.
This is why the Passion of the Christ has been such a scandal and phenomenon. It has made a culture in denial accept the fact that real suffering does exist in the world. [The media hypocrisy of decrying this movie – when they report daily on suffering and tragedy.]
We try to gloss over the reality of pain and suffering – but the cross breaks through to show us that God will not ignore it – he cares, he cries, he grieves!
"For he has not ignored the suffering of the weak. He has not turned and walked away. He has listened to their cries for help."– Ps. 22:24
If it has accomplished anything, it has served as a message to awaken the CHURCH to the reality of suffering. And if we realize the suffering of Christ, let us also recognize the suffering of others.
- Entrust and Endure
Matthew says that after Jesus said My God, My God he shouted then gave up his spirit. What did he shout?
Luke says that these were his final words – Then Jesus shouted, "Father, I entrust my spirit into your hands!" And with those words he breathed his last. – Luke 23:46
It certainly fits with the spirit of Psalm 22 – You heard their cries for help and saved them.
They put their trust in you and were never disappointed.
The Good News
At the heart of the gospel response is God’s solidarity with the suffering.
Christ is a sympathetic priest who was tested and suffered – just like us. (Heb. 4:14-5:7).
The apostle Peter reminded the suffering Christians of his day that they could cast all their anxiety on God "because he cares." (1 Pet. 5:6-10).
We are not alienated from God when we suffer, rather we are drawn closer to his love. No suffering can separate us from the love of God. (Rom. 8:38-39).
- Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? Shall tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or danger, or sword? No, in all these things we are more than conquerors through him who loved us. For I am sure that neither death nor life, nor angels nor rulers, nor things present nor things to come, nor powers, nor height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord.
God’s faithful love is transforming. Love and suffering are part of being human. Paul, Peter and James all agree that the experience of suffering can lead to maturity – Jesus embraced human suffering so that we might embrace his love. (See Rom. 5:3-5; 1 Peter 5:6-10; 2 Peter 1:5-11; James 1:2-7).
The Church of the Suffering Servant
Though we know very little about Simon from Cyrene in the gospels, his role in the event is a powerful symbol. Here is a man who is forced to carry the cross of Jesus. The portrayal of Simon in the movie is comment on the church and our culture. At first Simon wants nothing to do with the cross. He wants to deny it and refuse to accept it. But he is forced to carry it by the brutish Romans who insist on the way of violence. Simon is changed as he finds that Jesus even cares for him. Jesus could have let Simon carry the cross – his own cross – alone, but Jesus steps in and the image of Simon and Jesus bearing a cross side by side is an image for the church. Jesus and us bearing one another’s burdens!
Like Jesus, we must be a friend to others in the midst of suffering. The church must refuse to ignore suffering. We are called to provide a place where suffering, especially unmerited suffering, is met with unmerited grace extended by the Suffering Servant who invites us into the suffering of others and promises to meet us there.
Such a church is the embodiment of good news.
When my wife suffered unexplained seizures in the summer of 1999 I also suffered from the anxiety of uncertainty. I felt our love threatened by forces beyond our control. I shared my concern with my brothers and sisters in the church everywhere. I was blessed by the testimony of a woman who had also suffered with unexplained illness. Rather than ignore our suffering, she shared her story and her gospel. Her word of good news however was not simply that God healed her, but also that God gave her strength to endure.
I understood that the gospel response is not just the elimination of suffering, but the sufficient love and grace not to be destroyed by it. Our suffering would have been magnified if it had been denied. If we had no place in the community to share this burden. If we had been told to shelve our pain and anxiety.
Jesus does not ignore the suffering. He embraces the cross. He expresses the faith that God’s love can transform the suffering. We share that faith and say to all – We have a friend in Jesus who does not deny pain and suffering. We pledge ourselves to the hurting as a community formed beneath the cross of Jesus and sharing in His strength to endure.
Posted by David on under Bulletin Articles
Acts 2:46,47 Day by day continuing with one mind in the temple, and breaking bread from house to house, they were taking their meals together with gladness and sincerity of heart, praising God and having favor with all the people. And the Lord was adding to their number day by day those who were being saved.
Acts 8:1-3 And on that day a great persecution began against the church in Jerusalem, and they were all scattered throughout the regions of Judea and Samaria, except the apostles. Some devout men buried Stephen, and made loud lamentation over him. But Saul began ravaging the church, entering house after house, and dragging off men and women, he would put them in prison.
Acts 11:22 The news about them reached the ears of the church at Jerusalem, and they sent Barnabas off to Antioch.
One of the things I stress to us is this fact: the New Testament church was a community. Christians depended on each other, formed deep relationships with each other, identified through Christ with each other, rejoiced together, and supported each other in times of pain and suffering. They were not perfect or ideal. Yet, because of Christ, they had an incredible bond that was (1) real and (2) sustained by the resurrected Jesus Christ. Because they were devoted to God, they were devoted to each other.
I want personally to thank all of you for continuing to move us in the direction of a personal community of believers rather than an impersonal institution. Are we perfect? No. Do we have lots of flaws? Yes. Are we growing in the ability to care and bond? Yes–in so many ways!
Thank you, ladies, for your example as you often lead the way in closeness and caring! I frequently am amazed at the outreach and closeness in WINGS classes. The spirit of unselfish caring is obvious among the quilting ladies. So many ladies are unselfishly active in the education program. Ladies do so much to make Care Groups and Life Groups possible.
When I hear young ladies affirm in troubling moments that help “is there for them”; when I see how responsive our ladies are to special needs; when I know how much studying ladies do on a weekly basis; when I hear about how much praying ladies do for specific needs and situations, I am deeply encouraged. Why? These are expressions of community! They exist because the concern and bonding are genuine!
I am encouraged by many of the men as well. So much happens to express caring, to address needs, to extend helpfulness to people, and to encourage those with struggles.
We live in an evil world and an uncertain society. Common values seem to stress money, pleasure, success, exploiting the dependent, and selfishness. May it be increasingly obvious that we are a people guided by God, and God’s influence centers us on people. Faith in God results in caring about people! “By this all men will know that you are My disciples, if you have love for one another” (John 13:35).
Posted by David on March 21, 2004 under Sermons
For about two months we have focused on the concept of worship. These were our emphases in our lessons:
Lesson #1 asked you to focus on Cain’s attitude and note how his attitude affected his worship.
Lesson #2 continued our examination of the relationship between a person’s heart and worship God accepted as honoring Him. We examined Isaiah 1.
Lesson #3 examined the basic characteristics of worship of the holy God.
Lessons #4 and #5 focused on the truth that God first acts, and then asks us to respond to his acts. Worship is one form of our response.
Lesson #6 examined the relationship between seeing God as our Creator and giving Him worship.
Lesson #7 examined the moods of worship in Israel and noted those moods ranged from joyous celebration to intense mourning.
Lesson #8 focused on the fact that a Christian subscribes to two forms of worship: collective worship where we as a community praise God, and daily lifestyle where we as an individual honor God each day of physical existence.
Lesson #9 noted that Israel depended on the same person, place, and acts Christians depend on: a high priest, a tabernacle, blood, and a sacrifice for sins.
In these lessons I hope you took note of something frequently appearing in our readings: acceptable worship depends on who we are as a person. There has always been a powerful bond between worshipping God and personal behavior. Take careful note of that bond as read together Amos 5:14-27.
Seek good and not evil, that you may live; And thus may the Lord God of hosts be with you, Just as you have said! Hate evil, love good, And establish justice in the gate! Perhaps the Lord God of hosts May be gracious to the remnant of Joseph.
Therefore thus says the Lord God of hosts, the Lord, “There is wailing in all the plazas, And in all the streets they say, ‘Alas! Alas!’ They also call the farmer to mourning And professional mourners to lamentation. “And in all the vineyards there is wailing, Because I will pass through the midst of you,” says the Lord.
Alas, you who are longing for the day of the Lord, For what purpose will the day of the Lord be to you? It will be darkness and not light; As when a man flees from a lion And a bear meets him, Or goes home, leans his hand against the wall And a snake bites him. Will not the day of the Lord be darkness instead of light, Even gloom with no brightness in it?
“I hate, I reject your festivals, Nor do I delight in your solemn assemblies. “Even though you offer up to Me burnt offerings and your grain offerings, I will not accept them; And I will not even look at the peace offerings of your fatlings. “Take away from Me the noise of your songs; I will not even listen to the sound of your harps. “But let justice roll down like waters And righteousness like an ever-flowing stream.
Did you present Me with sacrifices and grain offerings in the wilderness for forty years, O house of Israel? You also carried along Sikkuth your king and Kiyyun, your images, the star of your gods which you made for yourselves. Therefore, I will make you go into exile beyond Damascus,” says the Lord, whose name is the God of hosts.
According to Israel, things were wonderful! Prosperity was everywhere! Luxurious living was common among the wealthy! They were so secure in their lifestyle that Amos’ prediction of an exile was unthinkable! In their circumstances, there was no way they could experience an exile! They were on top of things! Life was good and secure! They had “a handle” on everything!
They thought if they could go through the proper ceremonies in worship, God did not care how they lived. That was idolatry at its worst!
Oh, but God cared deeply how they lived! Basically God made two observations. (1) You live very wickedly as you take advantage of others. (2) Your “correct” worship deeply offends Me.
Their “correct” worship offended God because of their evil behavior.
Now I would like for you to read with me Matthew 23:25,26.
“Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! For you clean the outside of the cup and of the dish, but inside they are full of robbery and self-indulgence. You blind Pharisee, first clean the inside of the cup and of the dish, so that the outside of it may become clean also.”
- What we do in our daily behavior must arise from who and what we are.
- There are not two separate issues in life.
- Worshipping and how we worship is not separated from who we are as persons.
- No one, not even the person who has been baptized into Christ, can separate how he/she lives as a matter of daily behavior from worshipping God.
- Worship cannot be separated from behavior.
- Behavior cannot be separated from who and what we are inwardly
- Any attempt to separate those two realties [the lifestyle we live and our worship] is merely a human, artificial, meaningless separation.
- We cannot rebel against God in our lifestyles and honor God in our worship.
- To attempt to do so is to insult God!
- God knows what is on the inside of a person.
- If the lifestyle of person does not match his/her heart, God is not deceived.
- God is truly honored in a person’s worship only if that person honors God in his/her life.
- Think about Jesus’ statement in Matthew 23:25,26.
- The context:
- The time of Jesus’ death is very near.
- Jesus has spent his entire ministry trying to “get through” to Israel as a nation and to Israel’s leadership.
- From early in Jesus’ ministry, the religious leaders known as the Pharisees were committed to trying to discredit and destroy Jesus.
- Jesus was committed to teaching them.
- They would attack Jesus; he would ask them to think about specific scriptures.
- They would attack Jesus; he would perform a miracle to verify that God sent him.
- Every time he tried to open their eyes, they simply became more angry.
- Why did they hate him so much?
- His knowledge of scripture and knowledge of God led him to completely different values and conclusions.
- He repeatedly told them that God’s number one priority was people.
- They concluded that God’s number one priority was “correctness.”
- And they defined “correctness” as being their conclusions.
- As Jesus nears the end of his physical life, he declares the Pharisees failures.
- Remember who the Pharisees are.
- They have an earned reputation for beings experts in the details of scripture, the Law, and approved custom.
- Jesus himself said in the beginning of this passage:
Matthew 23:2,3 “The scribes and the Pharisees have seated themselves in the chair of Moses; therefore all that they tell you, do and observe, but do not do according to their deeds; for they say things and do not do them.”
- “They know scripture.”
- “They do not know God.”
- “Listen to them when they speak from scripture, but do not follow their lifestyle.”
- They had lots of knowledge, but their motives were horrible.
- These people were obsessed with religious appearance.
- They were not concerned about who and what they were, but how they appeared to others.
- As a result, it was “what showed on the outside to others” that got all their attention.
- They were concerned about being “correct” outwardly.
- “You must not eat anything but kosher food.”
- “You must go through the proper ceremony and ritual of washing your hands prior to eating.”
- “You must wear tassels on the hem of your garment.”
- “You must wear phylacteries on your forehead and arm.”
- Thus people could see them doing all these “correct” externals and say, “My, how religious they are!”
- Yet, they could do all these externals to appear very religious in others’ eyes, and be rotten on the inside.
- They could be filled with motives of greed and lust, but that did not matter.
- They could be controlled by hate and malice, but that did not matter.
- They could take advantage of defenseless widows, but that did not matter.
- They could take bribes, but that did not matter.
- People could see the food they ate, see them wash their hands, see their tassels, see their phylacteries; but they could not see their greed, their lust, their taking advantage of the helpless, or the bribing.
- They thought what people could not see was unimportant.
- However, they were deceived.
- God saw, and God is as concerned with internals and with externals–in fact, externals are meaningless if they do not reflect internals.
- Listen to the words of Jesus:
Matthew 6:1-6 “Beware of practicing your righteousness before men to be noticed by them; otherwise you have no reward with your Father who is in heaven. So when you give to the poor, do not sound a trumpet before you, as the hypocrites do in the synagogues and in the streets, so that they may be honored by men. Truly I say to you, they have their reward in full. But when you give to the poor, do not let your left hand know what your right hand is doing, so that your giving will be in secret; and your Father who sees what is done in secret will reward you. When you pray, you are not to be like the hypocrites; for they love to stand and pray in the synagogues and on the street corners so that they may be seen by men. Truly I say to you, they have their reward in full. But you, when you pray, go into your inner room, close your door and pray to your Father who is in secret, and your Father who sees what is done in secret will reward you.”
Focus yourself on being, and the doing will honestly reflect who you are.
Posted by Chris on under Sermons
Order of Worship and Discipleship:
Prayer
Song #4 – “To God Be The Glory”
Song #147 – “I Stand Amazed”
Song #287 – “There Is A Redeemer”
Song #176 – “Lamb of God”
Communion – I John 5:9-11
Offering
Song #679 – “Tis So Sweet To Trust In Jesus”
Song #162 – “All Hail The Power Of Jesus Name”
“WHOSE SON ARE YOU?”
Scene from the Passion of the Christ – Whose son are you?
- Mel Gibson uses artistic license when portraying Jesus’ prayer in the Garden of Gethsemane.
- He adds the presence of Satan, who tests Jesus with questions that make him doubt his purpose and identity. They are questions aimed at making him feel alone, abandoned, a failure. In response to Jesus’ "Abba, Father" prayer, the evil one asks "Who is your Father? Whose son are you?"
- In interviews, Gibson has said that this opening scene sets the stage for the battle about to take place. "This is the coin toss before the game." Gibson has caught the drama of the Garden very well; for it is there that Jesus goes through anguish, but it is also there that he shows great resolve because he knows who he is! He knows that he is the son of God.
The questions that Satan asks are consistent with Satan’s tempting of Jesus when he fasted and prayed in the wilderness before his ministry …
Read Matthew 3 – 4
- At his baptism, Jesus was affirmed by God – "This is my son, in whom I am pleased!" In the wilderness, Jesus is tempted to define "Son of God" in his own way. (When’s the last time you were tempted to turn stone to bread?) Jesus is being tempted to use his power for self-fulfillment and to establish his own identity rather than rely on God. This is the struggle between the things of men and the things of God.
- Even good friends and disciples suggest ways that Jesus can fulfill his sense of self. And this too must have been a temptation for him – because Jesus calls Peter "Satan" when Peter suggests that Jesus should be who he wants him to be.
Read Matthew 16 and note three points …
1. Who Do You Say That I am? When Jesus asked his disciples "But who do you say that I am?" Peter must have thought, "I know this one." He spoke up – "You’re the Christ! The Son of the living God." Peter was right – wasn’t he? Well of course he was. Jesus was the Son of God. Peter understood that Jesus was who he said he was. But he didn’t understand what that meant – for Jesus and for him.
After his testing, Jesus knows what it means to be the Son of God. It means God defines him and fulfills him – not others and not even himself. And being the Son of God means being tested and opposed by those who are threatened by God. It means a path of suffering, rejection, execution and then – and only then – resurrection.
2. Thinking the things of men, not the things of God This defeatist talk doesn’t seem right to Peter, so he attempts to debate Jesus on the meaning of Son of God. And Peter gets quite a rebuke. Jesus has asked Peter "Who Do You Say that I am?" Not, "Tell me who I am." Because Jesus listens to God for the answer to that. Peter is not qualified to tell Jesus who he is, because he is thinking the things of men, not God.
3. Whoever tries to save his life will lose it … Jesus asked his disciples the question (Who do you say that I am?), not for his benefit, but for theirs – because their answer to that question will determine who they are. And they will be fulfilled by following the Son of God and learning from his example. They will not be fulfilled by saving their own lives – or even trying to save Jesus’ life. This is the paradoxical nature of the way of the cross. Emptiness is the result of attempts at self-fulfillment, but fulfillment is found by emptying ourselves and following Christ …
Who Do You Say that I Am?
I remember that Sunday night at Winslow we were singing "Just As I Am – without one plea, but that thy blood was shed for me." It was August almost 25 years ago and I had decided to be baptized. Of course I waited until the second verse – not that I was shy, I just thought it good form – the first verse is just warm-up – the thinker verse. But I had been thinking about this for some time. So I would step out into the aisle when we sang . . ."Just As I am and waiting not . . ." well that wasn’t quite true. I had waited all through the sermon for this moment. I knew before the sermon that I would be doing this, but I thought it good form to listen. I thought the preacher might like to think someone responded to his sermon. So in the second stanza I stepped out into the aisle. After our song, the minister and I stood before the congregation. He talked a bit and then placed his hand and my shoulder and asked "Do you believe that Jesus is the Son of God?" I know my response was positive, but I don’t remember my exact words, whether I just said "yes," or "I do" or if I got fancy and said "I do believe Jesus is the Son of God." But after I answered I heard an Amen and we went off behind the baptistery to put on our baptism clothes as someone started singing "Trust and Obey."
Do you remember your "good confession?" However your baptism took place – at camp, at church, in a river – at some point someone asked you "Do you believe Jesus is the Son of God?" And because of that confession of faith you were baptized. That’s a common point that most of us share. And I wonder if any of us really understood the gravity of that confession? Did we grasp the full significance of what we were affirming? Did we realize that when we agreed that Jesus was who he said he was, we also agreed that we were who he said we were? When we gave our good confession, we weren’t just making statement about who Jesus was – we were making a statement about who we were, and whose we were?
I remember back at Winslow how one of our ministers used to respond to the confession of Jesus made by those wanting to be baptized. (He used to call it the "good confession." – How wonderful) And he always blessed the one who made that confession and would say "They crucified Jesus for saying that, but you say it that you may receive eternal life." Not that I disagreed with the statement, but I always wondered "Why does Jesus get crucified for saying that, but not us?" Well, I was probably thinking too hard about something very beautiful and poetic that our minister was saying for the moment – but in time I learned that Jesus indicates that in a sense we do get crucified for confessing that Jesus is the Son of God – because he says we have to take up a cross!
Who Does He Say You Are?
Whoever wants to save his life will lose it. Whoever loses his life for me and for the gospel will save it. When I hear this verse I often wonder if I am doing enough to lose my life. I wonder if I need to sell my possessions or leave my comfort and go to the mission fields. Do you ever think about that? I admit I’m not sure I understand this burden of losing my life. But I do know the burden of trying to save my life. It’s the burden of trying to make my life meaningful to me and affirmed by others … We all know something about the burden of trying to save our lives –
- In his ABC interview with Diane Sawyer, Mel Gibson had this to say on the emptiness of self-gratification: He spoke of his fame, wealth, success, and pleasure and his struggle with addiction and self-destructive behavior – "I have been to the pinnacle of what secular utopia has to offer . . . it leaves you empty – the more you eat, the emptier you get." He represents those who try to find meaning and fulfillment in wealth, fame, and excess.
But it’s not just those who live the wild life who find self-gratification less than fulfilling. … Some of us feel the emptiness of trying to find fulfillment with more socially acceptable pleasures and achievements. But these are just as unsatisfying – maybe even more so because we don’t intuitively recognize that our noble efforts to "save" our own lives through work, health, reputation, family and even church can leave us just as empty.
From our earliest years we are trained to provide for our future. We must obtain the best education and opportunities. We should invest what we have wisely. Like a precise chemical formula, we must be careful to add the appropriate amount of risk to the appropriate amount of stability to achieve maximum benefit. The years we spend in school and business are our only opportunity to provide for our future as well as the future for our family. The prize is retirement. But even in retirement we know something about the burden of saving our lives. Health becomes more of a concern. Are we eating right? Do we exercise like we should? Did we elect the right people to secure our benefits? Are we seeing the right doctors? We strive to stack up accomplishments to gain identity and affirmation. We join a civic club, serve on city council, the school board, coach little league, teach Sunday School, serve in a soup kitchen. We save ourselves with a makeover. We wonder if we are too fat or too thin? Are we taking care of our skin? Are we wearing the right clothes? Do we have the right hairstyle for our body type? Did we buy the right house? Are we in the right neighborhood? Are we in the right school district? And if we can’t save our lives, maybe our children can? Maybe we can save our lives through them? Are we doing all we can to ensure the health and education of our children? Are they safe? Are they being taught right? If the children are our future, then are they capable of saving it? Even if we give our lives in service to others – our spouse, our children, the church, the needy, we may discover that the emptiness and remains. For others can fail and disappoint us. Here is a most horrible emptiness, for we thought that the emptying of ourselves would result in fulfillment through the lives of others, but we may find we just feel sucked dry. Indeed, we know something about trying to save our lives – we know it doesn’t ultimately work.
The emptiness we feel is that we know that all of our good deeds and efforts to make something of ourselves are a mask for the inner-self that we fear no one will accept or love.
When the human spirit seeks a self in any created thing and makes that thing the ultimate source of life and meaning, then the spirit is trapped and suffocated – cut off from the source of life. The way of the cross is not just a religious twist on self-fulfillment – because the problem with self-fulfillment is "self" part. If you’re empty, you need something greater than you to get filled up. This is why the love of God is good news. He knows the inner-self and can see through our false self-image. His love fulfills to overflowing. He loves us enough to give us a name, to tell us who we are and to show us, in Jesus, what it means to shed the false self-image we are constantly making over and instead reflect the image of God we have as humans he created.
1 Corinthians 4 (MSG) –All of our successes and failures do not get the last word about who we are – not from anyone else or even ourselves. God does. Believing in the Son of God is the real life, because he loves you and believes in you.
God knows who we are – and he shows us in Jesus what we can be. Believing in something greater than ourselves is the way to fulfillment, but we must be willing to set aside that which distracts and deceives and imitate Christ. That can be tough because we are so conditioned to "save" our lives. The way of the cross is difficult for a people who are constantly being told in our self-satisfying secular utopia that we can name a star after ourselves or patent our own personalized cell-phone ring. But if we really want to be fulfilled we have to be willing to learn from the teacher …
- I remember as a child trying to work in my Father’s workshop and he would try to show me how to paint and saw and do other things. But I was there just to have fun, so I would get ahead of him and start doing my own thing. My father said, "How can I show you the right way if you want to do things your way?" My father could have given up on me if he knew that 1) I just wasn’t able to learn and 2) if he didn’t love me. But he knew what I was capable of doing and he loved me. Learning and growing meant putting aside "my way" and learning "the right way" so that the "right way" would become "my way."
When Jesus was baptized he heard a voice from heaven, "This is my son, whom I love, and with him I am pleased." We hear those words from heaven and they are the words that call us to be baptized. "You are my son, my daughter – I love you." How can we not respond to that love and set aside the name we are trying to make for ourselves and receive the name of our heavenly Father who loves us and believes in us enough that he risks his life so that we might have life.
Invitation Song #538 – “My Hope Is Built On Nothing Less”
Closing Prayer
Posted by David on under Bulletin Articles
Matthew 8:19, Then a scribe came and said to Him, “Teacher, I will follow You wherever You go.”
Matthew 12:14, But the Pharisees went out and conspired against Him, as to how they might destroy Him.
Israel reacted to Jesus. We react to Jesus. You react to Jesus. At issue is not, “Will we react to Jesus?” At issue is, “How will we react to Jesus?”
Assume the Jewish scribe heard Jesus’ sermon and witnessed his acts prior to declaring a desire to follow Jesus anywhere. Remember, this educated, specialized, informed man was knowledgeable. Perhaps he was inspired by Jesus’ sermon in Matthew 5, 6, and 7. Perhaps he was in the multitude who witnessed the leper cleansed, the paralyzed man restored, the sick healed, and demons cast out. He was impressed! Boldly he announced to Jesus his willingness to follow Jesus anywhere!
There are no assumptions about what the Pharisees witnessed–they heard Jesus and witnessed his miracle. However, they focused on the wrong thing. They did not see Jesus’ miracle because they were blinded by when he did it. Blinded is too weak a word–they were obsessed with when Jesus healed the man with a withered hand.
They were absolutely certain Jesus was wrong! He could not possibly be right! These genuine experts in scripture knew Jesus could not be right! Devotion to God’s will demanded they expose Jesus for the “masquerading fraud” he was! Were not the Ten Commandments explicit about keeping the Sabbath day holy? How could someone speak for God and dishonor the Sabbath?
In an attempt to expose this “fraud,” they asked Jesus if it was in agreement with the Law to heal on the Sabbath. Their conviction: healing on the Sabbath was in violation of God’s Law if the healed person’s life was not in immediate jeopardy.
Jesus answered by restoring the man’s withered hand to a functioning, healthy hand. After healing the man, Jesus said, “It is lawful to do good on the Sabbath day.”
The scribe heard and saw Jesus and wished to follow him. These Pharisees heard and saw Jesus and wished to destroy him. Both heard, both saw, and both reacted. Yet, the reactions were opposite. The scribe was attracted. The Pharisees were repulsed.
Jesus does not specialize in telling us what we want to hear or in “performing” for us. Jesus tells us what we need to hear and does what is in our eternal best interest. If you are around Jesus long enough to hear and observe, you will react.
You will react because Jesus will (1) tell you how to be the human God envisions and (2) how to surrender to God’s purposes. Not only does he tell us, but he also shows us. Being the human God wished cost Jesus his life as he surrendered to God’s purposes. However, that was fine. He focused on the eternal, not this world. Where is your focus?