January 7, 2001
Baptism of the Lord Asking for Directions
Luke 3:15-17; 21-22
During a recent renovation project at a major university, the following sign was noticed hanging over the main door of the library: “Due to our renovation project the basement will be on the second floor, one half of the second floor will be on the first floor, but one half will remain on the second. If you have trouble finding what you need, we suggest you ask for help.”
Have you ever noticed that life is often like that? Sometimes the pieces just don’t seem to fit together. It’s the wise person who knows the time has come to ask for direction. Fortunately for the people gathered at the river that day, the answer to their confusion was on the way. John the Baptizer was pointing to a new life to come. Thank God the One to deliver it was just about to appear!
I. The people at the river (v. 15)
By the time John the Baptizer was about to encounter Jesus at the Jordan River, countless people had begun to gather at the shoreline. Though we cannot know for sure how many were there, we can assume it was enough to warrant Luke describing them as a crowd. There were tax collectors, soldiers, people of the religious leadership in Jerusalem, rich and poor alike, all gathered there at the river. Suffice it to say, every one of them went to the river that day in search of a little help and a little direction for their lives.
Oh, but make no mistake about it, they were the sorts of people who usually have a hard time asking for help with their direction. Let’s remember that those who gathered were the children of Israel, the sons and daughters of father Abraham. They had grown up with the assumption that, since they were descendants of Abraham, they were already in a right relationship with God.
Like the proverbial man behind the wheel who refuses to pull into a gas station to ask directions, the people of Israel were lost and too proud to realize it. The time had come to be reoriented, to stop by the Jordan to find a little direction for their lives.
II. John straightens them out (vv. 16-17)
So John answered them. The One they sought was not him but another. The One who will come would not baptize with water but with the Holy Spirit of the living God and with fire. The One who was to come was going to be One who carried in His hand a winnowing fork to clear the threshing floor and separate the chaff from the wheat — the faithless from the faithful!
By preaching the need for baptism to the people who gathered there, John was telling them that their birthright as Jews would not assure them of a right relationship with God. As if he were speaking to a crowd of Gentiles, John insisted that they would need to be cleansed of their former way of living and begin again on the road to a deeper and more meaningful relationship with God.
III. A signpost amidst the confusion (vv. 21-22)
With the crowds coming to be baptized in the Jordan, few at first must have noticed that the answer to their prayers, the man from Nazareth, had come near. Like the name Emanuel implies, the Incarnate Son of God was with them that day. He was with them on the shoreline, He was with them in the water. But most of all, He had come to the world to show a sign of the wondrous unconditional love of God toward His people: “And the Holy Spirit descended upon Him in bodily form like a dove. And a voice came from heaven, ‘You are My Son, the Beloved; with You I am well pleased'” (v. 22).
It’s safe to say that plenty of people today are just as lost. While many foolishly search for meaning and direction in a thousand different places, God continues to call us to a genuine repentance and renewed commitment to live a life-style consistent with being a covenant people. The signs are still there. The Spirit of the Lord is everywhere to be seen, calling us to put aside our presumption of relationship with Him and to truly follow Christ.
Are you lost? Do you need a sign? Look to Jesus and listen for the voice of the Spirit to give you direction, and you’ll never be lost again. (William Lee Kinney)
January 14, 2001
Second Sunday after the Epiphany
I Just Don’t Get It, Do You?
John 2:1-11
One New Year’s Day, during the Tournament of Roses parade, a beautiful float suddenly sputtered, stuttered and quit moving. With countless millions of viewers watching on their television sets at home, the whole parade was stopped cold. While nervous commentators struggled to keep the viewers back home from figuring out what was happening, the float organizers scrambled to discover the root of the problem.
Finally, just as many viewers were rising to change the channel, the float began to move again, and the problem was resolved.
What was the problem that had stopped the seemingly unstoppable Tournament of Roses parade? Apparently the whole parade was held up because the float had run out of gas. What makes this story incredible is that the float had been designed and built to represent a major oil and gasoline company. In spite of its vast oil and gas resources, its truck was out of gas, and no one even realized it!
So it was when the Son of Man arrived on the scene. The people of God, living in the shadow of the law, had run out of gas, and no one even realized it!
I. Let the party begin! (vv. 1-2)
On the third day of a week-long wedding celebration in the village of Cana of Galilee, Jesus, His mother and His immediate disciples are present. By now the party has been in full swing for some time, but there looms a serious problem. The bridegroom has either invited too many guests or underestimated the amount the partygoers would consume, and they’ve run out of wine. Only a miracle will save the hosts from embarrassment. Enter the mother of Jesus.
Concerned that the wine had run out, Mary announces to Jesus that “They have no wine” (v. 3). The subtle implication? Jesus could and ought to do something about it. Surely the Son of the living God could work a little miracle here and make things right. Ironically, in spite of raising her special Son, like so many others then and today, she still didn’t get the point of His mission here on earth.
II. God Makes a Miracle (vv. 6-8)
The miracle itself begins with a description of the water jars. For the first time in John’s Gospel account, we see how the divine can be witnessed in the details. Six stone jars are selected; jars whose purpose it was to provide water for the Jewish purification rites of the time. The jars hold about twenty or thirty gallons each, providing a quantity of wine that would rival any crowd’s ability to consume it all.
Clearly the extravagant gift Jesus brings suggests the unlimited gifts that God makes available through the grace of His Son, Jesus Christ. Yet again we discover that nobody seemed to get what was happening. Like the prologue to John’s Gospel account declares, “He was in the world, and the world came into being through Him; yet the world did not know Him. He came to what was His own, and His own people did not accept Him” (John 1:10-11).
III. The Time is ripe to open our eyes (v. 11)
In the miracle at Cana, Jesus works an unprecedented act of transformation — the transformation of many gallons of the ordinary into a richly flavored abundance of the extraordinary. For those willing to open their eyes to it, the extravagance of God’s grace provides the believer with the promise of many more blessings in this life and beyond.
The challenge to any who open themselves to the possibilities of the blessings Jesus brings are the realities of the road we must travel. For the road Jesus and His followers walk is a road that leads to the glory of God by way of the lost, the least and the lonely — through sacrifice and suffering.
Perhaps the real miracle at the wedding in Cana wasn’t the replenishing of the exhausted wine, but rather the sign that God was and still is doing a new thing in the world. Perhaps the greatest miracle of all is that the disciples finally began to get it. Thus, the only thing left to ask today is this: “Do you?” (William Lee Kinney)
January 21, 2001
Third Sunday after Epiphany
A Matter of Interpretation
Nehemiah 8:1-3, 5-6, 8-10
In the year 1215 king John of England was compelled to sign an agreement with the barons, merchants and the Church of England. He undertook to obey certain rules for the country, some of which applied to himself.
The agreement, known as the Magna Carta, was simple and concrete. Many British liberties were later developed out of interpretations of the Magna Carta. The spirit of the document was translated into new time periods and social contexts. From new interpretations came new liberties for people living in new contexts.
I. Interpretation of Scripture involves a fusion of two horizons — then and now, text and context.
The written laws of God were interpreted for a new social context at the time of the prophet Ezra. During the reform of post-exilic Israel, Ezra brought forth an ancient scroll containing the laws of Israel and began reading to the people. The Levites interpreted the text so the people, who had been in exile and knew little about the law given at Sinai, could understand its meaning. Isn’t that what biblical interpretation is all about — understanding what God has to say to us in our day and context through texts originally addressed to a people in a different time and culture?
Interpretation involves making the text meaningful in a new context. Then and now, text and context come together and create new meaning. This insight has been examined by the preeminent scholar of textual interpretation, Hans-Georg Gadamer, who describes interpretation as a “fusion of horizons” in which horizons of a text and its context become fused creating new meaning. From the dialogue between then and now, text and context, new meaning emerges.
II. Interpretation of scripture calls for an interpretive community.
The Torah, the scripture of the ancient Hebrews, was read and interpreted within the setting of corporate worship. The description of the reading of the text by Ezra is highly ritualistic — the carrying of the scroll, the reader standing on a platform, the people standing as the text is read, the blessing of the people, the saying of the “amen” and the lifting up of the hands. These ritualistic acts indicate the text was interpreted within the context of the worship of the community. The believing community is the setting for biblical interpretation.
Interpreting scripture requires a particular interpretive community with the necessary language, practices and reading skills. The law, as read by Ezra, required the community of Israel to make sense of the text. To read and interpret the New Testament rightly requires a Christian reading community. The Church calls the Bible “scripture” because it has a normative and formative relationship to a particular community. The primary location for biblical interpretation is within the community of believers.
III. Interpretation of scripture calls for discipleship, a people ready and willing to follow the Word.
We may be able to understand a cookbook and yet never have so much as boiled water. But when it comes to the scriptures, we cannot adequately interpret its meaning without putting it into practice. We call it “discipleship.”
Right interpretation calls for right practice. Right interpretation calls for a community ready and willing to engage its liberating truths in the real world. Where there is practice, there is understanding. When Ezra read the scroll, the tears of his people were a sign of their deep desire to follow the Word of God in their lives together. What sign will we see in our faces, our bodies and our lives to indicate that we want to follow the truths we have heard and understood?
Writer Franz Kafka once said: “If the book we are reading does not wake us as with a fist hammering on the skull, why then do we read it? A book must be an ice-axe to break the sea frozen inside us….” If only the words of scripture would be interpreted with such meaning for the Church and world as to wake us and break up the icecap within us! “And when the people heard the words from the book, the ice cap in their hearts cracked and spilled out of their eyes. But they were admonished to rejoice, because they understood the words spoken to them.” (Leo Hartshorn)
January 28, 2001
Fourth Sunday after Epiphany
Some Things to Avoid Saying (if you know what’s good for you)
Luke 4:21-30
Jesus doesn’t provide here an example of a sermon that would be considered endearing or successful by the listeners. His sermon got Him a long walk off a short cliff! Still the sermon Jesus preached in His home town church is a model for faithfully communicating the gospel. His example offers insights for each of us to consider as we share the gospel.
People enjoy hearing a positive, affirming message
Jesus stood in the synagogue in Nazareth and read to His people from the scroll of Isaiah. The words sounded nice — good news to the poor, proclaiming release to captives, sight to the blind, the oppressed liberated, the coming of jubilee. Jesus then rolled up the scroll, sat down, and said the scripture was fulfilled in their hearing. The people smiled and said “Amen, doesn’t ol’ Joe’s boy speak wonderfully!”
Sometimes the words of biblical texts become so familiar, they slide smoothly into our ears, even when those words are radical and jagged in their truths. Words like liberation, release and healing can become so bland and generalized they receive our sleepy nod of approval. Sometimes sharing God’s Word may initially get us a graceful “Amen.”
When the rubber of the text hits the gospel road, there may come a “What?!”
Proclaiming the gospel is another story. The scripture text becomes gospel when it becomes transforming truth for the present. Jesus elaborated on His theme by giving the text teeth. He interpreted liberation, release and healing in such a way as to cause His own people to respond with a “What?!” Jesus pointed to many widows among God’s own people, but God sent Elijah to a foreign widow. There were many lepers in Israel, but God cleansed only Naaman, a Syrian. The theme of the gospel message according to Jesus is: God liberates, delivers and heals outsiders!
The gospel is not an in-group message. It is a liberating and healing word, particularly for those we consider outsiders, unclean, not-one-of-us. And who, pray tell, are those persons among us? If we started to name persons we label as outside our holy community, there might be a silent roar in the pews shouting, “What?!” When the liberating good news of Christ is proclaimed where the rubber hits the road, it may not receive such a ready audience.
Beware! Sharing the gospel can be risky business
In His preaching, Jesus connected the biblical text with the vulnerable, the outsider, the marginalized. After Jesus preached the gospel, the people were as mad as hornets from a nest someone whacked with a stick!
Getting people upset is not the goal of sharing the gospel. The purpose of proclaiming the gospel is to communicate the good news of liberation, healing and hope to those who most need it. And most often, those are persons who do not frequent the doors of the church. Neither are they people church goers find attractive, respectable or “one-of-us.”
Charles Campbell, a preaching professor at Columbia Theological Seminary, takes his preaching students to the mean streets of Atlanta to proclaim the gospel to the marginalized and forgotten. He recognizes that the location of the street is crucial for biblical interpretation. He says, “The context of the streets, our worship alongside people who live there, has generated a distinctive engagement with the Scriptures.”1
Jesus’ message produced a “distinctive engagement with the Scriptures” all right — and a lynch mob too! The reason? He proclaimed and lived the gospel among those who were considered outside respectable company. That’s risky business. That’s the gospel. (Leo Hartshorn)
1Charles Campbell and Stanley P. Saunders, The Word on the Street (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2000), 90.
February 4, 2001
Fifth Sunday after the Epiphany
Carpenter, Fisherman or Lord?
Luke 5:1-11
Many brothers and sisters in Christ from days past have gazed into the word of God and found the infinitely majestic Master graciousley willing to meet them. And they have left there with a deep conviction and desire to follow Him in humble obedience.
In his early twenties, John Calvin, the great Reformer, came to this realization. These are his words regarding that incident: “God, by a sudden conversion subdued and brought my mind to a teachable frame….. Having thus received some taste and knowledge of true godliness, I was immediately inflamed with [an] intense desire to make progress.”1
Another familiar servant of the Lord who came to realize the glory of his Master is Peter. He too marveled at the power of the Lord, and he left everything behind to follow the living Word.
I. Peter’s doubting obedience (vv. 1-5)
We enter the story with the crowds pressing in on Jesus to hear His teachings. He was standing by the lake of Gennesaret as Luke would call it. We know that this is another name for the sea of Galilee. When Jesus saw a couple of boats resting at shore, He stepped into Simon Peter’s and asked him to pull away. Jesus then sat down, as was customary of teachers, and spoke to the crowds.
When Jesus was done teaching the people, He made a most unusual request of Peter. Jesus asked him to take the boat out into the deep waters and let down his fishing nets for a catch. Peter, a fisherman by trade, questioned Jesus’ petition. He knew this wasn’t the best time, and they had just come from a bad night of fishing. As Leon Morris states in his commentary, “…when experts, fishing at the right time, had caught nothing, it was useless to try at the request of a carpenter.”2 But Peter obeyed.
My life is filled with instances where I doubted God’s providential care in a given situation. And few of those have been followed with Peter’s response — obedience. It’s comforting to know that our Lord doesn’t require complete understanding, and there is forgiveness where there is lack of faith. Yet we are still to follow in obedience as Peter did this day.
II. Peter’s fearful response (vv. 6-8)
And we can rest assure that our obedience to the Lord will bring results. We may not have a boat full of fish to show for it, but we will have pleased our heavenly Father and our hearts will be changed.
There will also be those times where God does the seemingly impossible. And in those situations, we will respond as Peter — on our face before the sovereign Lord wondering why we ever doubted.
III. Peter changes occupations (vv. 9-11)
The text says that “amazement had seized him and all his companions because of the catch of fish which they had taken” (v. 9). Peter heard the word of the Lord, responded in obedience, even though it was mixed with doubt, and Jesus performed with power and majesty. Peter and his friends stood there awe-struck. What was Jesus’ response to there amazement? “Do not fear, from now on you will be catching men” (v.10).
Morris says: “That catch was not as important as what it showed them about Jesus, so they followed Him. They became disciples in the fullest sense.” Have you seen the majesty of Jesus displayed in your life? Is your response one of wonder and awe? Are you a disciple of the Lord in the fullest sense? “If anyone wishes to come after Me, he must deny himself, and take up his cross and follow Me. For whoever wishes to save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for My sake and the gospel’s will save it” (Mark 8:34-35). (Jonathan Kever)
1John Dillenberger, John Calvin, Selections from His Writings. (Atlanta: Scholars Press, 1975), 26.
2Leon Morris, Tyndale New Testament Commentaries. (Leicester: Inter-Varsity Press, 1990), 124.
February 11, 2001
Sixth Sunday after the Epiphany
Cursed or Blessed?
Jeremiah 17:5-10
My wife recently set her mind to growing fresh herbs. She enjoys gardening very much, but had never experimented with growing herbs. So one afternoon we made our way to the local Super Walmart garden-center and looked through piles and piles of herb seed packets until she found just the ones she wanted. When we returned home, she took the seeds and planted them in a little pot and placed it in front of the window above our kitchen sink.
Every day she would take time and moisten the soil with a small spray bottle. Before long I heard a scream in the kitchen: “There’s a sprout!” And soon there was another and another until the pot was filled with tiny sprouts.
One weekend soon after, we left our home to visit family, and upon our return, we discovered that the herbs had turned from green flourishing sprouts to brown decaying waste. Such change! And in just one weekend! The plant didn’t have time to grow and deepen its roots before we left; so during a weekend “drought,” the plant couldn’t survive. It had the appearance of strength from above the ground, but below the ground it was weak and dependent.
In our passage today, we observe the importance of getting beyond mere external appearances of trust in order to develop a deep-rooted faith in the Lord.
I. The cursed place their trust in men {vv. 5-6)
Verse 5 opens with the prophet’s words to Judah who had been periodically turning to Egypt for help with Babylon instead of to God: “Cursed is the man who trusts in mankind and makes flesh his strength, and whose heart turns away from the Lord” (v. 5). This is a serious charge from the Lord and one not meant to be taken lightly. God desires His glory to be displayed in the faithful hearts of His people. In addition, trusting in God is the best possible solution to any of life’s troubles, for what is man’s strength in comparison to God’s?
In verse 6 the Lord, through Jeremiah, describes the curse of the unfaithful: “For he will be like a bush in the desert and will not see when prosperity comes, but will live in stony wastes in the wilderness…” (v. 6). In his commentary on these verses, Mathew Henry depicts it this way: “He who puts confidence in man, shall be like the heath in a desert, a naked tree, a sorry shrub, the product of barren ground, useless and worthless. Those who trust to their own righteousness and strength, and think they can do without Christ, make flesh their arm, and their souls cannot prosper in graces or comforts.”1
II. The blessed place their trust in the Lord (vv. 7-8)
How easy it is to place our trust in the people and things around us when calamity strikes. But to do so is to disregard the blessed state of a person who rests in the assurance of a Sovereign Lord to supply all his needs. For the one who trusts in the Lord “will be like a tree planted by the water, that extends its roots by a stream and will not fear when the heat comes; but its leaves will be green and it will be green, and it will not be anxious in a year of drought nor cease to yield fruit” (v. 8).
Why does the tree stray strong and green during drought? Why do the faithful remain strong and true to the Lord during times of blessing and tribulation? Because they stay close to the source, and their roots are deeply anchored.
Are your eyes fixed on Jesus both during the day of blessing and in the midst of suffering? Can you cry with David who, while being hunted by Saul, prayed these words: “O God You are my God; I shall seek You earnestly; my soul thirsts for You, my flesh yearns for You, in a dry and weary land where there is no water. Because Your lovingkindness is better than life, my lips will praise You. So I will bless You as long as I live…” (Ps. 63:1, 3-4)?
Do you simply appear to others to be deep-rooted in your commitment to Christ? Beware, for as verses 9-10 tell us, God sees your hearts. He knows that apart from your redemption your hearts are deceitful and desperately wicked.
Yet as sons and daughters of God, we have the great privilege to place our faith in Him. And if you don’t know Him, you have a great responsibility to see the error of your wicked ways and place your trust in Jesus. Will you turn and trust Him today? (Jonathan Kever)
1Matthew Henry, “Jeremiah,” in The Classic Bible Commentary, Ed. Owen Collins. (Wheaton: Crossway Books, 1999), 659.
February 18, 2001
Seventh Sunday after the Epiphany
A Different Kind of Love
Luke 6:27-38
Several years ago, Harrison Ford starred in a film called Witness. Set in Philadelphia, it’s about an eight year old boy who is the sole eye witness to a murder in a bus station. Ford plays the detective assigned to the case, and he soon realizes the killers might be police officers. Once he believes his conjecture to be true, he sets out to protect the witness and his mother.
Now the twist here is that this boy and his mother are Amish. So to protect them, Ford decides to take the boy home and is wounded by gunfire while trying to get out of town. When they finally arrive at the family’s home, Ford has lost a lot of blood from the wound and ends up unable to return to Philadelphia. The Amish family — the boy, his single mom and the mom’s elderly father — care for Ford and allow him to stay on for awhile. During this time, he helps with the chores, eats with them and dresses like them; he even takes part in an old-fashioned barn-raising.
One day, several families from the Amish community take a trip to town in their wagons and buggies. As they begin to leave, the lead wagon is stopped by some testosterone-filled young men who start taunting and mocking the wagon driver. Ford and the young boy’s grandfather, riding in the buggy directly behind the wagon, witness the taunting and no one acts.
Ford can’t just sit there and watch. He steps out of the buggy with fire in his eyes. The grandfather attempts to calm him saying, “No, it’s not our way.” To which Ford replies, “Yea, well it’s my way!” He walks over to the trouble makers, who mistakenly begin to taunt him as well. He warns them to stop — they don’t. So he hauls off and punches the guy, breaking his nose. While the first guy falls back holding his broken and bleeding nose, Ford takes out the other two guys as well.
I have to admit, that’s one of my favorite scenes in the film — for several reasons (not all of which are particularly godly in nature!) You see, amid the violence and retribution of the scene, a stark contrast between our way and God’s way emerges.
Now be honest, how many times have you approached the intersection of God’s instruction and human passion with that very same philosophy? “Yea, well it’s my way!” How many times have you been confronted with a situation or emotion and know what God’s teaches, yet choose the opposite?
A low budget BBC production entitled, Son of Man sets Jesus words, “Love your enemies… pray for those who mistreat you,” against the backdrop of chaos and violence in the first century Roman world. Soldiers have just invaded a Galilean village and, in an act of retribution, strung up Jewish men of fighting age, pushed their wives to the ground and speared their babies.
Soon after the raid, Jesus walks into the tumultuous scene, eyes ablaze with emotion, and says: “I tell you, love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you. It’s easy to love your own brother, to love those who love you. Even ‘sinners’ do that! Listen to me! Love your enemies! If a Roman soldier hits you on the left cheek, offer him the right one. If a man sues you for your coat, give him the shirt off your back. Listen! What I’m saying to you hasn’t been said since the world began!”
You can imagine the villagers response to such unwelcome, seemingly insane words. Jesus’ teaching didn’t puzzle them; it infuriated them.1 Such a backdrop removes Jesus’ teaching about loving one’s enemies from our nicely padded twentieth century pews, does it not? Indeed, when one thoughtfully considers the teaching of Jesus amid such a context, it seems a bit bizarre at best.
“Love your enemies… pray for those who mistreat you” is the call to loving restraint. To mirror God’s love-in-action toward us. It is the selfless love (ayaraw) of a person who, when mistreated, refuses to satisfy himself or herself by taking revenge and refuses even to cast judgment upon or toward another. But instead considers the highest welfare of the other person. It’s a different kind of love than we’re accustomed to. As Augustine once said, “Many have learned how to offer the other cheek, but do not know how to love the one who strikes.”
As is always the case with Jesus, He practices what He preaches. The Apostle Peter testifies to this fact: “Christ suffered for you and gave you an example, that you should follow in His steps. When they hurled insults at Him, He did not retaliate; when He suffered, He made no threats. Instead, He entrusted Himself to Him who judges justly” (1 Pet. 2:21). “What would Jesus do?” He would suffer and love, not retaliate.
In his book, The Cost of Discipleship, Dietrich Bohnhoeffer notes that Jesus calls His disciples to a “visible participation in His cross.” A way of life that seeks to return good for evil; a willingness to give without limit — in as much as love requires and only to the extent with which God demonstrates His love for us. (Craig Fraley)
1Philip Yancey, The Jesus I Never Knew, (Zondervan Publishing House) 131.
February 25, 2001
Transfiguration Sunday
Reflecting Glory
2 Corinthians 3:12-18
I’ve had the opportunity to do many weddings during my years in ministry. The overwhelming majority of these have been positive experiences. In some ways, weddings have changed over the years. One of those changes, as I’ve observed it, has to do with the bride’s veil. Rarely, if ever, do I see a veil that completely covers the bride’s face or head. No longer when it comes time for the bride and groom to exchange a kiss, do we see the groom lift his bride’s veil and, for the first time that day, see his bride in all her wedding day glory. I honestly miss that moment. It was, for me, one of the highlights of the entire wedding ceremony. The veil is lifted and radiant beauty released for all to see (though, perhaps no one sees it quite like the groom!).
Our text today speaks of another veil. Paul’s reference here is to the account (recorded in Exodus 34:29-35) of Moses returning from Sinai with a face so resplendent in the glory of God’s presence that it frightened the people. So he put a veil over his face to quiet their fears. It seems the Apostle Paul wants his readers to know that while Moses hid that glory, Jesus came to do the opposite. He came to reveal God’s glory for all to see. By coming to earth, Jesus was able to do what the law was unable to do, something even Moses could not adequately convey. He came to reveal God’s glory in such a way as to encourage and transform people and bring hope.
A little boy had just finished saying his bedtime prayers with his parents. As he climbed into bed and was being tucked in, he looked at them and said, “Jesus is the best picture God ever took, don’t ya think?” Indeed, Jesus is very much that and more. It is Jesus who shows us the heart of God. In Jesus we find a glory that has the power to transform lives.
The reality of the glory unveiled in Christ is that God chose the direct route to our heart and mind. Unsatisfied with merely showing His glory so to speak, God, in Jesus, chose to show us Himself. And in doing so, offered us a freedom the likes of which humankind had never before, or since, experienced. A freedom from law-keeping as a source of hope, a means to the heart of God. A freedom that releases us from the guilt which our inability to keep the law produces (“guilt, the gift that keeps on giving”).
While the law, scripture tells us, serves as our tutor, it is inadequate as a source of hope. Or, as William Barclay puts it, “As long as a person’s obedience to God is conditioned by law-keeping, [he or she] is in the position of an unwilling servant.”
Ultimately, as one of my seminary professors used to say, the law says to us one thing: “You’re a sinner, you’re a sinner, you’re a sinner!” It’s our inability to keep it which creates that tension, that sense of hopelessness. In Jesus, there is no guilt. Abundant hope replaces hopelessness, grace replaces guilt because liberty, not law, becomes the crux of our hope. We no longer keep the law strictly as a means to find favor with God; we keep the law because love for God compels us to do so.
This One who reveals God is also the One who redeems us; reconciles us to God. You see, Jesus didn’t merely speak about God; He displayed God’s love and grace all the way to Calvary. While Sinai is the story of Moses as redeemer of Israel and mediator between the people and God, Calvary is the story of Jesus — Redeemer, Savior, Mediator, Revealer, Liberator. Jesus shines the light of God’s glory into our hearts and our lives. It is not a glory which brings with it fear but freedom and hope. And it is a glory that will not fade.
The call of Jesus to those who would follow Him is to let that glory, that light shine through our unveiled lives. We who are called by His name are not to hide His glory behind veils — in whatever form they may exist — but to be “lights set on a hillside that cannot be hidden.” In doing so we reveal to the world around us, our community, neighbors, friends and family, the glory of God in us working through us.
Even though full veils no longer seem to be the norm for brides, to the best of my ability, I will always remember the look on the groom’s face when the veil is removed. And then, when the kiss is exchanged, the amazing reality that the glory of the unveiled bride literally spreads to her groom radiating from them both.
What is it that the old Sunday school song from our youth says? “This little light of mine, I’m gonna let it shine.” Only in Jesus can we live with our entire lives what we used to sing while extending one finger. (Craig Fraley).
Sermon Briefs to Help You Get Started
Easter 4 (C)
May 3, 1998
Waiting For a Miracle to Happen
Acts 9:34-41
What we need in today’s church is a miracle; a miracle of resurrection. During the Easter season it should be easy to talk about such miracles. Unfortunately talking about it and seeing it happen among us are two different things. We sit and cry and wonder if the church will ever experience the miracle of being raised to new life. We are always waiting for a miracle to happen.
I imagine if the Apostle Peter were around things would be different. We would all agree that Peter was a man that got things done. If a miracle needed to happen, people would run to Peter. That is what happens in today’s text. A tragedy happened in Joppa. Tabitha is dead. Thank God Peter is near by. “Hey let’s get Peter, he can do anything.”
They had good reason to get him. Who else do you know on his first sermon persuaded thousands to be converted? He also was nearby. He said to a man in Lydda, “Jesus Christ heals you,” and the man is healed! Well, Peter shows up. And sure enough, like everybody had hoped, Tabitha is raised back to life. What a wonderful miracle. When people hear the story, they put their faith in Jesus Christ.
There is only one problem. Peter is not around anymore.
Sure this nation has a Billy Graham and a Bill Hybels. But let’s get real. They are not going to show up at our church and fix what needs to be fixed. We cry out for a miracle, but we don’t even have a resume of one who can do the miraculous in our midst. It’s not like we don’t have faith or anything like that. We are just honest. Who among us is so bold to say, “If Peter can do that, then so can I.” We know our limitations. We would be like the lone choir member who would blurt the “Hal” when everyone else is pausing to sing the last Hallelujah of the Hallelujah Chorus. We would be the one who would forget the important Scriptures when sharing the Gospel with someone. Let’s face it. When it comes to working miracles in the church, we leave it to the experts.
For those of us who are willing to sit and wait for a miracle to happen let’s take a look at Tabitha. If Tabitha were not mentioned in the Bible, we would probably look at her life and see nothing special. The Scriptures say that she was always doing good and helping the poor, (v. 36) Thousands of Christians do that today without one mention. Most disciples of Jesus live and die in obscurity. What is so special about Tabitha that Peter would come and pray and God honor the situation so much that she was raised back to life? A clue is in her nickname: Dorcas.
Tabitha also probably felt she was not doing anything special. Scripture implies that she was quite the seamstress (v. 39); however, she probably didn’t think her talent warranted any space in sacred text. Nothing in the text suggests she did good and helped the poor to be noticed. Yet her life was noticed. Even the Gentiles gave her a nickname.
Imagine that. Tabitha helping the Gentiles. Christians who were Jewish didn’t do that sort of thing. Tabitha, however, saw a need and filled it. She followed Christ the only way she knew how: fully and without reservation. When we observe a person like us living that type of a life of discipleship, it gives us permission to do the same.
Just imagine if Tabitha did not minister without abandon. When her death came men would just shake their heads and say, “These things happen.” The widows wouldn’t have made such a fuss. But when Tabitha died two men hurried to get Peter. The widows make a case for her. “Peter you have to do something. Just look at all these clothes she has made to give away to the poor. See all the good she was doing.” Their total abandonment of intercession for Tabitha gave an occasion for the Holy Spirit to work a wonderful miracle. “This became known all over Joppa, and many people believed in the Lord,” (v. 42a).
Nelson Mandela in his inaugural speech says it well:
Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate. Our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure. It is our light, not our darkness that most frightens us. We ask ourselves, who am I to be brilliant, gorgeous, talented and fabulous? Actually, who are you not to be? You are a child of God. Your playing small doesn’t serve the world. There is nothing enlightened about shrinking so that other people won’t feel insecure around you. We were born to make manifest the glory of God that is within us. It’s not just in some of us, it’s in everyone. And as we let our light shine, we unconsciously give other people permission to do the same. As we are liberated from our own fear, our presence automatically liberates others.
Perhaps the miracle waiting to happen is you. (Michael A. Taylor)
Easter 5
May 10, 1998
Don’t Even Think of Getting Out of This One.
Acts 11:1-18
“I saw the whole thing, said the police officer. “Don’t even think about getting out of this one.” My heart sank. I didn’t think I did anything wrong. As I felt the blood trickle down my face, I could not possibly believe the car wreck was my fault. I thought to myself, “Officer, I was minding my own business. Then suddenly this car’s side was in front of me. I slammed on the brakes, but there wasn’t enough room to stop.” I knew I had the right of way. The other car darted out in front of me. He wasn’t even hurt, and here I am with a cut on my head. He even threatened to take me to court and sue me.
Peter was another person who thought he had the right of way. God had told him to do something and he did it. But the people who knew him the best and probably were his best supporters, criticized him the most. What is a person supposed to do in a situation like that?
I was just minding my own business. Peter could have said the same thing to his fellow Christians in Jerusalem. There he was in Joppa on the roof top of Simon the Tanner basking in the glory of the noonday sun. It was the perfect setting to give thanks for what the Lord had done in Peter’s life. The healing of Aeneas the paralytic and Dorcas being raised back to life were occasions for the Lord to be glorified. Many people followed the Lord. These were indeed good days for the church. God is in his heaven and all is right with the world.
Then God decided to do something unusual. Isn’t that just like God? He could have let Peter remain hungry and get fed in the usual way, but no. Here comes this sheet down from heaven with all these exotic things to eat. You know the story. God says, “Get up Peter, kill and eat … Do not call anything impure that God has made clean.” While Peter wondered why God wanted him to have a meal like that, a knock comes at the door. It is a Roman soldier and a couple of Gentiles. Peter probably thought peace time was over. I’m sure he was glad that he was still on the roof so he could hide. Amazingly the Holy Spirit told him to go with these people. “Lord, surely you are mistaken. But you have never led me in the wrong direction yet. Just in case though I will take six men with me. I like two to one odds.” In the midst of peace and accomplishment God leads his people into a new adventure.
And an adventure it was! I am glad Peter decided to go to Cornelius’ house. He knew people would not understand. It is something that happens when you go on an adventure. People will look at you and shake their heads. “Now what has gotten into that boy. I would have hoped him to be the sensible type. I’m not surprised. Always seemed a little weird to me. The church does not do things that way. I can’t wait to tell him that when he falls on his face. Yep, I’ll say, ‘You should have known better. The church just does not do things like that.’ Yep, that is what I’ll say.” Peter was taking a risk. You don’t pull on Superman’s cape. You don’t spit into the wind. You don’t pull the mask off the Lone Ranger. And you don’t mess around with Jewish customs.
Jews just don’t go to a Gentile’s house, let alone eat there. For a Jew these things just were not done. Word could get out that he went to Cornelius’ house. Fortunately for Peter, word did get out. And, as Peter had suspected, people criticized him for going to a Gentile’s house. Yes, I said fortunately for Peter, and in a little while I’ll tell you why.
I’m glad Peter went. Peter may have had some reservations about going on this journey. I would imagine it would be difficult traveling with a Roman soldier like we were buddies. That would be a hard thing for a Jew to do. Maybe that is why he took six “brothers” with him; three times the amount to make a good witness of the event. God, however, was leading him there. Christians go where God leads them to go. That is a truth you do not dispute. Peter did not dispute it.
I’m glad Peter went. The gospel was preached, the Holy Spirit came, and the Gentiles experienced Pentecost. A great miracle occurred. Some might say that if this trip were not such a success, Peter would not have gotten off the hook so easily. Can we really say that? Peter didn’t say, “You can’t argue with success.” He said, “You can’t argue with God. “Who was I to think that I could oppose God?” That is another truth you cannot dispute. Peter did not dispute it.
Are you still wondering about my car wreck story? Fortunately, I did get to tell my story. Did I get sued? No, things were settled out of court. I guess some people did believe I had the right of way. Fortunately for Peter word got out on his story. Sure, people got upset. Sure, people did not understand. Peter, however, had a chance to tell his story and God was glorified. When God gives the green light, others are going to put stop signs along your way. But don’t despair. See it as a chance to tell your story. Never pass up a chance to tell your story. Who knows? Instead of stopping you, they may decide to take the trip with you. (Michael A. Taylor)
Easter 6
May 17, 1998
What Do You Do When God Calls?
Acts 16:9-15
A man riding a mule was tossed over when the mule bucked him off at the edge of a cliff. As the man fell, he grabbed a small branch protruding from the cliff face. Holding on for dear life, he yelled to the heavens, “Help me! Is anybody up there?!” The branch was trembling; he was facing his death when a voice came from heaven, “Let go of the branch.” Again the man yelled, “Is anybody else up there?!”
Calling to God for help and guidance is not a new pastime, nor is it uncommon. The rub comes when we experience God’s leadership through voice or vision or impression and are at a loss for how to respond. Paul and his colleagues in the early missionary journeys provide for us a good model of response to God’s call.
I. Be Quick about It!
Paul experienced the vision of a man from Macedonia calling for help. The group concluded that the meaning of the vision was that they should go; they wasted no time! “We got ready at once to leave for Macedonia,” says the missionary record-keeper in verse 10. Two days’ straight sailing and a brisk walk got them to Philippi, Macedonia’s big city.
Contrast the route Jonah took when God called him to Ninevah. “I believe,” Jonah stammered, “that I’ll take the round-about way.” His extremely round-about route led him through a different colony, a sailing ship and a big fish before he got to Ninevah. As Jonah found, it is much more expedient and much less difficult to respond promptly when God leads out.
II. Do What You Already Know to Do
The vision said Macedonia; Philippi was the largest city in Macedonia. If God wanted them to take the gospel to Macedonians, here was the place to reach the largest possible number of listeners. So they went to Philippi “and we stayed there several days,” says verse 12.
Having gone to the obvious place, the missionaries did the obvious thing. They went on the Sabbath to the place where they expected a prayer meeting. Then they did what they did best. They sat down amongst the gathering and began to speak of their experience with God in Christ. It does us no good to follow God’s call promptly unless we have every intention of exercising our gifts, doing what we know to do, once we arrive at our destination.
III. Expect the Unexpected.
One can imagine that the prayer meeting took on a life of its own. Though perhaps she was not the specific type of community leader for whom they were searching, one business-woman responded in a significant way to the message of the missionaries. The Lord spoke to Lydia through the words of the speakers and she led her entire household into the baptismal waters. As the passage ends, Lydia, through her own persuasive power, is taking Paul’s group into her home.
When Paul saw in a vision a man from Macedonia, he surely did not envision Lydia as the strong leader of new disciples in that land. As we heed the guidance of the Holy Spirit it is easy for us, too, to have specific expectations for how a situation will unfold. But the Wind of God blows where it will. Elijah listened for God in the whirlwind, the earthquake, and the fire before he found God in the “gentle whisper.” Instead of attempting to regulate God’s movements, when we follow God’s call we learn to welcome surprise, to broaden our horizons, to expect the unexpected. And like Paul and his party, we become as blessed as those to whom we are sent. (Amy L. Mears)
Ascension of the Lord (C)
Sunday, May 24, 1998
A Prayer for Believers
Ephesians 1:15-23
Christians pray for many reasons and out of a multitude of motivations. We pray about difficult situations that arise in our lives and in the lives of other people. We pray for direction when we do not know which path to take. We pray for the salvation of those who are not believers in Jesus Christ. On the whole, however, Christians seem to be somewhat lax in praying for the on-going development of each other as believers. Paul gives us a strong example of such a prayer. Throughout the prayer in this passage Paul refers constantly to the astounding works of God, but the prayer itself is on behalf of his friends, the believers of the church at Ephesus.
I. Giving Thanks
Paul begins his prayer in thanksgiving for his Ephesian friends. One medical minister who works in a crisis field has reported feeling uncomfortable glibly replying “Yes, of course,” when asked to pray for the dozens of people with whom he comes in contact each day. Instead he now responds, “As God brings you to mind, I will certainly pray for you and your situation.” For him, there is more integrity in praying fervently for people who arise in his thoughts and memory than in making blanket declarations and promises.
For Paul, these Ephesian believers surely were brought to mind often by God’s Spirit. “I have not stopped giving thanks,” he says, and “I keep asking that….” His friends are frequently on his mind, so he frequently prays for them and their faith. And his prayers begin with thanksgiving.
II. For Wisdom and Revelation
Paul’s next topic of prayer is a request that the Ephesian Christians receive a very important gift from God: a spiritual ability to know and see God better. “A spirit of wisdom and revelation,” Paul calls it. Paul understands that being an active follower of Jesus means being on a treasure hunt. As we discover God and learn to see more of God, we understand more about ourselves and our world.
III. Their Hearts’ Eyes
Finally Paul asks for something poetic and beautiful. “I pray that the eyes of your heart may be enlightened,” he says. It must have been difficult for the Ephesians, as it is for us, to combine the efforts of thought and emotion. Eyes see; hearts feel. Paul knows that faithful discipleship involves seeing and feeling, logic and intuition.
One child, following a Sunday School lesson on faith, was asked by the teacher to summarize the day’s class. “Faith,” the little girl said, “is believing what you know ain’t so!” The Good News is something that has to be accepted through the mind, but also through the heart. By opening their hearts’ eyes, the Ephesians can come to know many things, several of which Paul lists: hope, riches, power.
IV. Paul’s Profession of Faith
As he ends the prayer for his fellow believers, Paul gets carried away. It is almost as though in listing the wonderful gifts that God is able to give to the Ephesians, Paul loses the ability to focus on the Ephesians at all. All he can see are the wonderful gifts. Instead of discussing with God what he wants for his friends, Paul’s thoughts and feelings are overcome by the greatness of God and the Gospel — the good news of Jesus the Christ. As Paul’s students today, we can learn about the importance of prayer on behalf of other believers as well as of the benefit of such praying on those who pray. (Amy L. Mears)
Pentecost (C)
Sunday, May 31, 1998
The Fruit of Pride
Genesis 11:1-9
Who is the worst sinner you can think of? Would it be someone like Adolph Hitler, or Timothy McVeigh. After all, they are responsible for the deaths of a lot of innocent people. When the Allied forces were closing in on Berlin, Hitler committed suicide. McVeigh, at his sentencing hearing, had an opportunity to come clean, show remorse and plead for mercy. Instead, he used an obscure quote from a long-since dead Supreme Court Justice to try to make a statement against the government. In so doing, he removed any doubt that he was indeed the Oklahoma City Bomber. It’s hard to top these two when it comes to sinners who have sinned heinously.
All sin is terrible in God’s eyes. All sin cost Him the blood of His Son. When I keep that fact in mind, it’s hard to say that someone’s sin is worse than someone else’s sin. We tend to have sins that we focus on as being worse than others. What do we do with the sin of pride?
Pride really lies at the root of all sin. Humanity fell because Adam and Eve, in their pride, wanted to be like God. David, in his pride, saw a woman and said, “I have to have her,” and then arranged for the murder of her husband. Yet he was the man after God’s own heart. Peter pridefully boasted that he would never deny the LORD, yet denied him three times. Ultimately, the only sin that cannot be forgiven is the sin of pride which says, “I don’t need Jesus Christ. I’ll take my chances in eternity without Him.”
The monument to pride in the Old Testament is the city of Babel. In this early stage of humanity’s development, the people of the earth all had a common speech and a common language. The allusion to eastward movement is an allusion to judgment. Adam and Eve were sentenced to wander “east of Eden.” In this place of judgment, the people of the earth, rather than filling and subduing the earth decided to remain in one place and build a monument to themselves. The writer uses tremendous irony and literary skill in telling the story.
The people wanted to build a tower in order to make a name for themselves. Their plan was to become significant apart from God’s intentions for them. It is possible that they were intentionally flouting the commandment which said, “Fill the earth,” by their desire to remain in one place.
It’s ironic to see God’s reaction to the tower that these social climbers were building. Although they wanted it to reach to the Heavens, the One who sees all knows all had to come down to see what these who were so proud of their accomplishments were attempting. Kind of deflating, isn’t it?
The tower of Babel is a story of the power of communication. Men and women who were united in their power to communicate would know few boundaries. That could be a good thing or a bad thing. Tongues and hearts united for noble purposes can produce untold benefit for humanity. Tongues and hearts united for baser purposes can wreak untold disaster. God graciously intervened and confused the speech and scattered the people before their pride could destroy them completely.
It was only after God’s plan of redemption was manifest in Christ that Babel’s effects were undone. A new humanity with a new heart was empowered to proclaim God’s message so that each one heard the gospel in their own language.
Through Christ, God gives us a new heart so that our energies can be united toward that which brings glory to Him — the good news of the gospel.
John Huffman has written the following prayer:
Help me, God, to know my measure, Forgive me for my self-centered pride and ambition. Redirect my ambition and pride to a new focus — to make not a name for myself but to live for you. In the name of Jesus Christ. Amen!” (Mark A. Johnson)
Trinity Sunday (C)
Sunday, June 7, 1998
Benefits of the Spirit
Romans 5:1-5
Dave Dravecky was living the dream of every young schoolboy by pitching in the Major Leagues for the San Francisco Giants. He had made the All-Star team one year, and while not a superstar, he was well on his way to becoming a solid major league pitcher. In the 1988 season, he felt a twinge in his shoulder and was told that it was probably nothing. When the arm didn’t get better, he went to the doctor and was told that he had a cancerous tumor in his throwing shoulder. Following surgery in which most of the deltoid muscle was removed, it appeared that Dravecky’s career was over.
In August of 1989, all eyes in the sports world were on Candlestick Park as Dravecky, in a miraculous comeback, pitched seven shut-out innings against the Cincinnati Reds. With the Giants on their way to what would come to be known as the Earthquake World Series, pundits began to ask, “Will Dravecky’s miraculous comeback be capped with an appearance in the World Series?” Alas, it was not to be. In Dravecky’s next outing, his pitching arm snapped with a sickening thud as he completed his pitching motion. Subsequent examinations showed a recurrence of the cancer, necessitating the removal of Dravecky’s left pitching arm.
Through it all, though, Dave Dravecky, a devout Christian, shows the truth of Romans 5 — a passage where Paul lists the benefits of knowing Jesus Christ.
I. We Have Peace with God
Peace with God comes as a gift through the grace of Jesus Christ. Because of what He has done — which Paul has spelled out in chapters 2 through 4 — we have peace with God. Of all the goals that humanity could strive to attain, is there any goal any more worthwhile or ultimately satisfying than to be at peace with our Creator? A lack of peace would come through some sort of estrangement.
Have you ever wronged someone or said something about them behind their back that you shouldn’t have said? That creates hard feelings and tension. Through the work of Jesus Christ, anything that could cause estrangement between us and God has been taken care of.
II. We Have Access to Grace.
Any good thing we have comes through the grace of God. Paul has spent the early portions of Romans out-lining the sinfulness of humanity. After grasping Paul’s case about our rebellion and the depths to which God went to save us, we realize anew how much we stand in need of God’s grace. In Ephesians, Paul says, “It is by grace we are saved through faith.
Through faith in Jesus Christ, we gain access to the grace that saves us.
III. We Have Hope of Glory.
Because we have received salvation through Christ, we have hope of glory. It recurs throughout Paul’s writings that at the end of this “vale of tears” there is a glory that awaits the redeemed children of God in Heaven. We can look through the adversity of this life knowing that we rejoice in spite of our circumstances because one day they will be nothing in the light of God’s glory. Because of this, Paul writes later, “Rejoice in the Lord always.”
IV. We Have “Transformed Adversity”
The adversity that we face in life — physical illness and pain, unemployment, family breakups — can all be used to produce the character that will prepare us for eternity. They produce perseverance and character that cause us to put all of our hope in God.
Dave Dravecky has faced more adversity than most of us would like to face but through it all, he has learned to hope in God. He has even said, in effect, “I wouldn’t give up all that God has taught me and worked in my life to have my healthy pitching arm back.”
Sounds to me like he’s experienced true peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ. (Mark A. Johnson)
Proper 6 (C)
June 14, 1998
Not an Imitation but an Animation
Galatians 2:15-21
One of the great stories of history is about the reformer Martin Luther. For several hundred years the story of God’s revelation to Luther about faith has sustained and liberated Christians. The story goes that Luther took pride in his self acquired salvation. He boasted, “If ever a man could be saved by monkery that man was I.”
As a Roman Catholic monk he went to Rome to perform an act of merit by climbing the sacred stairway known as the Scala Sancta on his hands and knees. As he toiled he heard God’s voice say, “The just shall live by faith.” The just, those who please God, shall live by faith. And from this profound understanding the Protestant Reformation sprung forth to change the shape of Christianity forever.
Saint Paul is writing to the Galatians this same profound truth.
I. We Are Animated to Life Eternal by Christ Living in Us.
To receive new life, the old sinful self must die.
Most Christians can tell you when they came to believe and understand that Christ removed their sins. But the removal of sins was only half of what Christ has done for us. He has also removed the sinful sinner and created a new person in his/her place.
It is as if the government declared all gambling shall cease and went through the land destroying gambling devices, cards, dice, gambling boats, slot machines and never prohibited the manufacture or ownership of such devices. When God destroyed sin on the cross, he also made provision for the manufacturer and owner of sin to be destroyed. He made provision for us to die, the sinful self, to die and be “born again” given a new heart, a new mind, the heart and mind of Christ in us, “the hope of glory.” (Col. 1:27)
Jesus said, “You must be born again.” (John 3:3) He also said “He who would save his life, must lose it.” (Matthew 16:25) How does one die? How is one co-crucified with Christ?
The same way one received forgiveness for one’s sin. Each of us must trust God for the removal of our sins and each must trust God that he has also provided for our death in the death of Jesus Christ.
Christ living in us is not a goal to be achieved. Christ living in us is a reality which already is and which we must pray to know.
II. We Are Alive.
Jesus said, “I am the vine, you are the branches.” He stated a fact. You are the branches. So often we condemn ourselves wishing we were stronger, or better, or more fruitful. We need not condemn ourselves, we need to recognize that the sinful person has died and believe that Christ in us provides the strength, the fruit. We don’t need more of any attribute; what we need is more of Christ. We don’t need legalism, as Paul calls it the “law.” We need the One to whom the law was meant to point. We must pray that God make us aware that we are dead, dead to sin, and alive to God.
You are fully and abundantly alive because Christ who died for your sins has been raised that you may live also. We know who we are because we see what God has done in Christ and through Christ for us. It is very much like being dressed and wondering where your clothes are. How bewildering to keep attempting to find that which you already have on. (Carolyn Volentine)
Proper 7 (C)
Sunday, June 21, 1998
Demoniac, Dysfunctional, or Delivered
Luke 8:26-39
It was time to meet with the community of faith, those men who had committed themselves to Christ who would come away from their daily routines and pray and encourage one another. They wore smiles; their clothes, though fairly inexpensive, were neat and tidy. The light of Christ bounced from one brother’s eyes to the others as stories of spiritual triumph and struggle were shared. Unlike most church members, however, these men were not the ordinary. These were the delivered demoniacs. They were child rapists, murderers, serial rapists, thieves … but they were like the fellow in the story today. They had all been “Legion” and now they were “Christian.” These demoniacs had met the Deliverer.
I. Evil Does Recognize Jesus’ Authority.
When people open the door to Satan, he is more than willing to come in and bring with him as much of his family as allowed. Obviously, from the biblical text Legion knows Jesus. The evil forces recognize they are about to be defeated. They cried out in recognition of Jesus’ authority.
Isn’t it interesting that some Christians pride themselves in recognizing Jesus but do not bow to his authority?
II. The Demoniac Recognized Jesus’ Authority.
“He whom the Son sets free is free indeed.” (John 8:36) My friends at the above mentioned prayer group know what it means to be set free, even though they continue to spend many years in a physical jail. Many a witness has said, “If it took prison for me to learn about Jesus, then I thank God I am in prison.”
III. The “Normal Folk” Rejected Jesus’ Authority.
When one member of a dysfunctional family gets well, the rest of the family often reacts with panic. The status quo of family relationships is upset. Often the one who gets well is now “scapegoated” as the source of everyone’s problem. And, perhaps in a sense, he or she is; because, it is the one who is getting well who is making everyone else so uncomfortable. Often people will challenge, “Why work with those prisoners?” One man’s answer was so simple, “One day they will get out of prison. Would you rather have them saved when they get out or continue the way they were when they went in?”
The question is who are we today? Are we the demoniac needing the presence of Jesus? Are we the dysfunctional because we would rather complain about someone else rather than come to the Lord ourselves? Or are we the delivered? (Carolyn Volentine)
Proper 8 (C)
Sunday June 28, 1998
The Cost of Discipleship
Luke 9:51-62
What does it cost to follow Jesus? That may seem like an odd question because we know in monetary terms, it doesn’t cost anything. Sure there are financial commitments that come with the territory of being a faithful disciple but there is no up-front “cover charge” or “initiation fee” to join the Jesus movement. Yet we’re familiar with the words of Dietrich Bonhoeffer in his classic The Cost of Discipleship, “When Jesus calls a man (or a woman) He bids that person come and die.” At the risk of sounding like a cliche, discipleship is free but it isn’t cheap. Jesus Himself said, “If you follow Me, you need to sit down and count the cost to see if you’re willing to pay it.
I. What It Cost Jesus
The demands which Jesus will set out in this passage are given greater poignancy because of the context in which Jesus said them. This text is a hinge in Luke’s gospel. Jesus makes the transition from His public ministry to His relentless march to the cross. Jesus knows that the time of His passion is near. He made a firm determination that He would go to Jerusalem to be crucified. To follow God’s call for Him meant enduring the hardship and rejection which would accompany His crucifixion.
Not only did He face the anguish of having the cross lying ahead of Him, He also had to contend with disciples who didn’t understand. While it is frustrating to have people see Jesus right before their very eyes and not recognize Him, calling fire down from Heaven is not exactly the prescribed solution to that problem. Incidental annoyances and aggravations could not keep Jesus from His task.
II. What It Costs His Followers
There is appeal to following Jesus. As Jesus makes up His mind that it is time for Him to go to the place of His crucifixion, there is an attraction in following someone who is resolutely going somewhere. There is no shortage of people who are drawn to Him. Some folks, perhaps intemperately, say that they’ll follow Jesus anywhere and do anything for Him.
One man said, “I’ll follow you wherever you go.” Another said, “I’ll follow you after I bury my father.” Another wanted to first say goodbye to his family. All of these seem to be reasonable requests on the surface. When we peer beneath the surface however, we see that a white-hot attraction fades when one realizes what that relationship might cost.
One man said, “I’ll follow you anywhere,” to which Jesus replied, “Foxes have holes and birds have nests but the Son of Man has nowhere to lay His head.” Jesus puts the brakes on those whose ardor runs ahead of their accounting. He says that to follow Him is more than just getting caught up in the heat of the moment and saying, “Yes, I’ll do whatever You want.” Such a confession is meaningful only after we weigh the cost of following Jesus and still are willing to make such commitments.
Someone else put Jesus off in their discipleship. They said let me wait for my father to die — whenever that will be — and then I’ll take up your cause. While there is no room for rash foolhardiness, neither is there time for delay. After deciding to pay the price to follow Jesus, make the decision and do it now.
A third man said, “Let me say goodbye to my family.” Jesus said, “Don’t put your hand to the plow and look back. If you do you’re unfit for Kingdom service.” Elisha was afforded the privilege of telling his parents goodbye. Jesus didn’t tell the man not to say good-by to his parents, either. Is it possible that Jesus allowed him to go ahead and tell them good-by so that when he walked away from that conversation there would be no unfinished business that would cause him to become sidetracked in his discipleship?
Regardless the call to follow Christ is not undertaken lightly. Are you willing to pay the price? (Mark Johnson)
Sermon Briefs in this issue are written by: Michael A. Taylor, Pastor, First Church of the Nazarene, Mayfield, KY; Amy L. Mears, Hospital Chaplain, Augusta, Georgia; Carolyn Volentine, Pastor, First United Methodist Church, Logansport, LA; Mark A. Johnson, Managing Editor, Preaching, Jackson,