Texts: Acts 4:1-31; 3 John 5-10
HAVE YOU EVER DAYDREAMED ABOUT the glories of the ancient church? Oh, if we could've lived back then, when everyone faithfully drank up the apostles' teaching and the Spirit had His way in every heart and all believers worked together in love and unity to spread the gospel of Christ!
But you and I all know that's nonsense. Only people who haven't actually read the New Testament can get all dreamy and romantic about the early church. They had troubles and conflicts just like we do. Which works out well for us. Really. Because if they'd had no problems, we wouldn't have the Apostles' words written down for us to help us work out our difficulties. Because like our 1st century brethren, we too are called to keep on working together for the truth.
As we continue our study of the Third Letter from John, today we'll be looking at verses 5-10. As we noted last week, this is a personal pastoral letter to a Christian named Gaius. So John the writer, elder, and apostle, doesn't go into a lot of detail. I'll try to flesh out the situation from what I've gleaned from the commentaries, and if the Holy Spirit commends my explanation to your mind and soul, good. Take the best and leave what isn't accurate or helpful behind. But this letter is in the Bible for God's good reasons, and when it comes to what is plain and open in the text, let's accept it gratefully so we may work together for the truth, as Christ's own church.
In verse 5 John writes to Gaius, "Dear friend, you are faithful in what you are doing for the brothers, even though they are strangers to you." Who are these brothers? We see from later in the passage that they were sent from John. As I mentioned last week, John acted as a kind of presbytery executive, or, as Pittsburgh Presbytery is arranged, he was like the Pastor to Presbytery. These days, it's only in times of trouble or transition that a congregation has much to do with representatives coming from presbytery. But in Gaius' day the New Testament was not yet concluded. The apostles-- who were eyewitnesses of Jesus and His works-- were still speaking to the church in the authority of Christ, and still teaching men (and yes, possibly, women) to carry on after them. The brothers John sent would be his personal students in Ephesus, where he lived before he was arrested and exiled to Patmos. They'd go out to the local churches as missionaries and evangelists, to build up the believers in the faith and help them settle disputes in the peace of Christ. These brothers from John were not personally known to Gaius; they were strangers to him, as John says. But Gaius was faithful in serving them, because they came with the Apostle's authority.
What might Gaius have done for the brothers? First and foremost, he probably provided them room in his home, or made sure someone else in the church took them in. He made sure they were fed, that their worn-out sandals were mended or replaced. He might arrange a time and place for them to speak to the members of the church-- not necessarily an easy matter, as we'll see pretty soon. Whatever he did, we know he did it lovingly and graciously, because as we see in verse 6, the missionary brothers had come back from previous trips and told the church in Ephesus all about his love. Now John writes that Gaius will do well to send them on their way in a manner worthy of God. This tells us that a fresh team of missionaries is presently staying with Gaius, and brought this very letter to him. When they finished their work in Gaius' town, with his help they'd go on to the next town or village on their itinerary, to preach the Word and strengthen the church.
As Christians we should always do what we do for the church and its ministers in a manner worthy of God. Remember that our God and Savior Jesus bought the church with His own precious blood, she is His, and when we serve the church, we serve Christ. And keep in mind always the service God deserves in Himself. His name is to be honored and feared, and, as John writes in verse 7, it is for the sake of the Name that these evangelist brothers went out.
In our reading from Acts 4 we see how weighty it is to invoke the name of God in Christ, in the church and in the world. Peter and John healed a crippled beggar and consequently preached Jesus as the only Christ and Saviour. For this the Jewish authorities threw them into prison and are now trying them before the Council.
Peter and John aren't daunted. They declare that it is by the name of Jesus that the man was healed. Friends, the name of Jesus has power. Peter maintains that there is no other name under heaven besides that of Jesus by which anyone can be saved. The name of Jesus brings salvation. The Council consult together and decide to order the apostles never again to speak to anyone in this name. But Peter and John assert that to preach the name of Jesus is to declare the truth of what they had seen and heard of Christ and to obey what God has commanded them to do. To speak in the name of Jesus is to declare what He has done.
The Sanhedrin don't know what to do, and release the apostles. When Peter and John return to the church, do they say, "Oh, guys, please tone it down about Jesus, you're going to get us all into trouble!" No! They recognise that the persecution the apostles have faced is just one more example of the unbelieving world's resistance to God and His Messiah, Jesus Christ. And they pray that the Lord God will "Stretch out your hand to heal and perform miraculous signs and wonders through the name of your holy servant Jesus."
The name of Jesus carries His power and authority in this world, whether the world likes it or not. For the brothers to go out from John for the sake of the Name is for them to speak the healing and salvation of Christ. It's to command obedience to His Word. So it's only right for the church in each town to house and feed and worthily send on evangelists and missionaries who come in Jesus' name.
There was a time during our Lord's ministry, before He died and rose again, when it was appropriate for His disciples to find lodging for Him with friendly folk who didn't yet understand who He was. But now wherever Christ's church has been planted, it's not up to the pagans to support our travelling preachers and teachers; in fact, they might well refuse to do so. No, it's the church's privilege and duty to receive and entertain those who come to us in the name of the Lord, whether they drive over from Pittsburgh or arrive from the other side of the world. As John writes in verse 8, "We ought therefore to show hospitality to such men so we may work together for the truth."
Think of that! You don't have to be a missionary or evangelist to work together for the truth that is Jesus Christ. Simply opening your home or helping at a church supper in support of a preacher or teacher is pleasing and profitable in God's sight!
But even in the early church, not all hearts were willing to be hospitable. John says, "I wrote to the church, but-- "
Wait a minute. In verse 6 John said the brothers had told the church about Gaius' love, but here he talks about writing to the church. Which church, where? From the context, the verse 6 church is the congregation in Ephesus, and here in verse 9, it's the congregation in Gaius's town. But I think it's on purpose that John doesn't make the distinction. For the Apostle, the church is everywhere that Christ is faithfully preached and believed, all one body united in His love. There are local manifestations of the body, but one church, one apostolate, one saving Word; one Spirit and one Christ, to the glory of God the Father.
But too often there are brothers and sisters in the local church who want to make it their private kingdom. Men like Diotrephes, who loved to be first. We've all known some Diotrepheses, and Diotrephas, too, in our time. Judging from the power he wielded, Diotrephes was one of the pastoral team or a ruling elder, but a Diotrephes doesn't have to be ordained. He-- or she-- is distinguished by his attitude. Your typical Diotrephes would never say, "Yes, I want to cause disruption and disunity in the church and destroy the faith of many, because it feeds my ego." No. He'd plead, "I'm only doing it for the sake of the church! I work so hard around here, if I stepped back nothing would get done!"
John says Diotrephes will have nothing to do with him and his apostolic circle. Diotrephes would answer, "Apostles? We don't need no stinkin' apostles! We know everything about Jesus Christ right here, we're doing just fine!" Jesus sent out His apostles in His authority to be heeded and obeyed, but Diotrephes refuses. He doesn't merely ignore John and his emissaries, he says nasty things about him, not openly in the church as official charges, but as gossip behind the scenes.
Friends, it's shocking the malicious stories people will spread about pastors and church leaders. I'm sorry to say I had a Diotrephes once who falsely accused me of everything short of murder and child sexual abuse. We can conclude that for John it's bad enough for himself to be slandered at a distance, but Diotrephes willfully extends that evil personally to the brothers John sends. He refused to welcome them-- by which we know he prevented them from speaking to the church in the Lord's Day services--and he wouldn't even permit other church members to extend hospitality to them. Members who did, he put out of the church.
Which brings us back to Gaius. It really appears that he himself has been excommunicated for welcoming the brothers from John. Notice that John doesn't make a victim out of him. There's no "Poor you, that mean Diotrephes has treated you so badly." No. He commends and supports Gaius as he does the right and godly thing for the brothers, as they and the other wrongly excommunicated members work together for the truth, despite the in-house persecution. But because of Diotrephes' attitude, this indictment of his behaviour can't come to the church, it has to be addressed to faithful Gaius.
For surely Gaius knows from experience what this bull elder-- as my EP calls them-- has done! John doesn't need to tell him!
Yes. Surely Gaius knows. But unlike a lot of modern church authorities, John will not leave Diotrephes in the dark as to the charges to be levelled when the Apostle arrives to exercise church discipline. No fake niceness. None of this vague "Well, you're not a good fit for this church" or "oh, the dynamics here are just bad." No, Diotrephes will know exactly what he has to answer for. And if he will wake up out of his self-deluded blindness and humble himself to hear, he'll know what he needs to repent of. For even Christians like Diotrephes are called to work together for the truth, who is Jesus Christ our Lord and the church's only Head.
One thing more, then I'll close. Don't be too quick to assume someone in the church is a Diotrephes. Sometimes people genuinely believe what they're doing is for the best. You do the church no good by gossiping about them or keeping your mouth shut as you drop your membership. If someone in the church is pursuing a policy that's unhelpful or even harmful, go to him openly and honorably and let him know. Most of the time you'll come to a deeper understanding of one another and be able to work together better than ever.
In his Letter to the Ephesians, St. Paul writes that we are all
. . . fellow citizens with God's people and members of God's household, built on the foundation of the apostles and prophets, with Christ Jesus himself as the chief cornerstone.
To work together for the truth is to support and uphold and proclaim the message that John and the rest of the apostles preached, that Jesus Christ is Lord to the glory of God the Father, for there is no other Name under heaven by which every human being must or can be saved. As we come to one another with this message, as we work to promote this true word, let us humble ourselves to serve and support one another. May we welcome and be gracious to our brothers and sisters in the faith, whether they're sitting in the pew next to us or come from afar. This is how we demonstrate the love of Christ that overcomes the world. This is how we work together for the truth.
Showing posts with label Acts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Acts. Show all posts
Sunday, July 29, 2012
Sunday, November 20, 2011
The Word of the Shepherd King
Texts: Acts 9:1-6; Galatians 6:7-10; Matthew 25:31-46
IT'S BEGINNING TO LOOK A lot like Christmas! At least, the merchants have had the decorations up for the past three weeks or more. And up where I live in B--, some people already have their wreaths up in their windows. However you feel about rushing things like this, in five weeks Christmas will be here.
But there may be signs something else is coming soon, too. A lot of people are asking, "Could we be getting closer to the end of the world?" It's not just false prophets like Harold Camping and chatter about the Mayan calendar and December 2012. We've got natural disasters coming so thick and heavy. Civil unrest all over the world, especially in our own streets. Our whole economic system seems to be headed for collapse, with greed and selfishness championed all the way up and down the economic ladder. Our moral standards are getting worse and worse, faith is growing cold in many hearts, and even those who call themselves Christians proudly follow their own devices and desires instead of clinging to Jesus their Lord.
Could these all be signs of the end?
Maybe, maybe not. As Christians, we need to be ready for our Lord's return as King and Judge no matter when it occurs. In Matthew chapter 24 Jesus' disciples asked Him what will be the sign of His coming and of the end of the age. He told them, and us, that no one knows that day or hour, and that He, the Son of Man, would come as a thief in the night. Therefore, we must be prepared. But prepared for what? Beginning in the 31st verse of Matthew 25, Jesus our coming King tells us what will happen when He returns.
First of all, Jesus will come as King, King of kings and Lord of lords. And He will come as the Son of Man. He will sit on the throne of the universe as a glorified Human Being, in the same flesh He brought with Him resurrected from the tomb. In Christ, for our sakes, God has become Man forever! He will sit on His throne as King in heavenly glory, and all the nations will be gathered before Him. All the nations. Not just the so-called Christian nations, but all of them, regardless of what religions they professed here on earth. All people will learn that Christ is King, and Christ alone.
But what does Jesus mean by "the nations"? Remember, God ordained that Jesus should be born a Jew. Jesus was speaking to Jewish disciples in a Jewish context. For a Jew, the word "nations" (ethne in Greek and goyim in Hebrew) meant the Gentiles. That is, everyone who wasn't a part of God's chosen people Israel. The disciples would assume-- and assume rightly-- that God's faithful remnant would find blessedness when Israel's Messiah and King came as Judge. But what was going to happen to all those other people Out There?
Something the disciples would not have suspected. Jesus says He will take the people of the nations and separate them from one another, and some He will put on the right as sheep, and some on His left as goats. That tells us first that all mankind are under His staff as the universal Shepherd, whether they ever confess faith in Him or not. In verses 37 and 44 we see that all the dead acknowledge that, they all call Him "Lord." When Christ sits on His glorious throne, all nations will bow the knee and every tongue will confess that He is King and Lord, to the glory of God the Father. But on that day He will sort out some who did not visibly belong to His chosen Israel, and He will put them with His chosen ones, with the sheep He loves.
These days, we often assume that almost anyone can be saved, if only they're nice enough. For good 1st century Jews like Jesus' disciples, it would have shocked them to think any Gentiles who didn't convert to Judaism could get into the kingdom at all!
To these unexpected sheep Jesus the King will say, "Come, you who are blessed by my Father; take your inheritance, the kingdom prepared for you since the creation of the world." Who could have thought it? Ever since the world began God had included these sheep from the nations in His glorious kingdom, along with His chosen people Israel!
But why? On what basis? Because He was hungry and they fed Him; He was thirsty and they gave Him something to drink; He was a stranger and they invited Him in; He needed clothes and they clothed Him; He was sick and they tended to Him; He was in prison and they came to visit Him.
These righteous from the nations are amazed. They don't understand how they could have rendered all these good services to Him, the Lord of glory. And the King will reply, "I tell you the truth, whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers of mine, you did for me."
We think we understand this. But again, Jesus is out to undermine our modern understanding of how things will be at the Judgement, just as much as much as His word subverted the ideas of the typical 1st century Jew. Here's the question: Who are Jesus' brothers? Who are His sisters? Who are this family with whom He identifies so closely?
Two thousand years ago, the assumption would be that since He was the Jewish Messiah, His brothers and sisters would be the nation of Israel, people who were born Jews by blood. But over and over again in His teaching Jesus kept letting everyone know that the true Israel was not those who attempted to keep the law in their own righteousness; rather, His brothers and sisters are those who do the will of His Father in heaven, as we read in Matthew 12. And what is the will of the Father? St. John tells us that the Father's will is that we believe in the One He has sent, the Man Jesus Christ.
The consistent teaching of the New Testament is this: that Christ's brothers and sisters are His believers, the Church. They-- or rather, we-- are His Body, the New Israel made up of ethnic Jews and ethnic Gentiles alike, formed by the new covenant in His blood, shed on the cross.
So in Acts 9 the risen Christ casts Saul of Tarsus down on the road to Damascus and demands, "Why are you persecuting Me?" Like the righteous from the nations at the Judgement, Saul can't understand. He'd been attacking a rabble of Nazarene heretics, not this heavenly Being he now had to call Lord! But Jesus identifies with His Church and says, "I am Jesus, whom you are persecuting." To do evil to His disciples is to do evil to Him; to do good to His disciples is to do good to Him.
And who are "the least of these"? Please note that this doesn't mean "only the least of these." No, Jesus is saying that the surprised righteous have done good to Christians even when those believers were so humble no earthly credit could possibly come from it. Jesus taught us in Matthew 18 that the greatest in the kingdom of heaven are those who humbly repent and become like little children and follow Him. In Luke 12 Jesus calls His disciples His "little flock" and says that the Father has been pleased to give them the kingdom. Jesus exalts the humble in His kingdom, and at the judgement the nations will share in their exaltation.
I realize that this goes against much popular thought on what this passage in Matthew means. The usual interpretation is that some people will enter the kingdom by believing in Christ, while others can get in by doing good to the financially poor. But nowhere does the Scripture hold out any possibility of any man or woman entering eternal life on the strength of his or her own good works. It is only through the blood of Christ shed for us that we can inherit blessedness forever with Him.
Yes, you might say, but if "the nations" in this passage are those who didn't identify with Christ's Church in their lifetimes, doesn't it sound like they can earn their way in by good deeds done to those who belong to Him?
Well, think of it this way: When are Jesus' disciples most likely to be hungry, thirsty, refugees, naked, sick, or in prison? In times of persecution for the faith. Today, particularly in Muslim and Hindu countries, Christians are being harried, arrested, burned out of their homes, put to death-- all because they dare to confess Jesus Christ as Lord. Now think of yourself as a Muslim neighbor of one of these despised Christians. Everyone else is pouring on the violence. But something moves you to step out and help the followers of Christ. Even though your friends will shun you for it; even though you could be arrested yourself as a Christian sympathizer, you go ahead and open your home to the refugees. You visit the tortured pastor in prison and work for his release. You make sure those orphan Christian children are fed and clothed, and you don't pressure them to convert to Islam. Whether you realize it or not, you're identifying with the believers and identifying with Christ.
In Matthew 10 Jesus sends His disciples out with the good news of the kingdom, warning them they'll face danger and hardship for His sake. But in all this, He says, "He who receives you receives me," and "anyone who receives a righteous man because he is a righteous man will receive a righteous man's reward," and "if anyone gives even a cup of cold water to one of these little ones because he is my disciple, I tell you the truth, he will certainly not lose his reward."
At the Judgement there will be many who never considered themselves to be part of Christ's flock the Church, but they sympathized so strongly and actively with Christians because they were Christians that Jesus will recognise them as His sheep themselves. To their surprise they will receive eternal life, the righteous man's reward.
But what about those on the left, the "goats" who did not minister to Christ's faithful in their need? To say they didn't identify Christians with Christ will be no excuse. When they see the King enthroned in glory it's too late to say, "Oh, my Lord, I'd do anything for you!" What about that insignificant Christian they saw beaten, tortured, starving, or simply slandered out of a job, and they did nothing to intervene? The King will reply, "If you did it not for the least of these my brothers, you didn't do it for Me."
So. Here we are, and we belong to Christ's church on earth. Can we sit satisfied and sure we'll go to the King's right hand in the Judgement? Not necessarily. This passage is a warning to us, too. A lot of people are members of Jesus' New Israel on paper, but actually they belong to the unbelieving nations.
We have to examine ourselves! How do we treat our fellow members in the Church? The truly committed disciple will feed and clothe and help and heal their fellow Christian precisely because he or she is a fellow Christian. A true believer in our Shepherd King will strive in the Spirit to see and serve Christ in everyone in the congregation, no matter how humble or struggling that other believer may be.
In the course of my life I've seen too many churches and church people focus all their ministry on those outside the church. And yes, like Christ Himself we do extend the love and grace of God to all. But sitting all around you are brothers and sisters who are hurting. They're struggling with troubles of body, mind, and spirit. They need someone to help them repair their house, to watch their kids for an afternoon, to sit for awhile and just listen. But there's this assumption in the Church today that as soon as someone becomes a believer, they're set up for life and have all they need. No! Jesus calls us into His little flock because we do need each other, and He expects us to minister to one another for His sake. As St. Paul says in his letter to the Galatians, "Therefore, as we have opportunity, let us do good to all people, especially those who belong to the family of believers."
Remember, Paul puts the command for Christians to do good in the context of judgement. If we take one another for granted, if we live to please our sinful natures, we will reap destruction. Goats all along we will show ourselves to be, and as Jesus says, we'll go into eternal punishment. But if we follow the Spirit of Christ who has saved us and do good to one another, we will show that we are His sheep. We will reap eternal life and enter into the blessed inheritance prepared for us by our heavenly Father before the creation of the world.
As baptised believers, we no longer belong to the nations; we are citizens of Christ's new chosen people and sheep of His little flock. Since this is true, let us strive in the Spirit to do the things that belong to Christ. Do good to all, but especially to your brothers and sisters in the faith, from the greatest to the least. Care for, help, and build up one another because you belong to Christ. And so by His grace, His judgment at the end of the age will bring no fear for you, but only exultation, blessedness, and joy as together with all the saints you enter the realm of your Shepherd King.
IT'S BEGINNING TO LOOK A lot like Christmas! At least, the merchants have had the decorations up for the past three weeks or more. And up where I live in B--, some people already have their wreaths up in their windows. However you feel about rushing things like this, in five weeks Christmas will be here.
But there may be signs something else is coming soon, too. A lot of people are asking, "Could we be getting closer to the end of the world?" It's not just false prophets like Harold Camping and chatter about the Mayan calendar and December 2012. We've got natural disasters coming so thick and heavy. Civil unrest all over the world, especially in our own streets. Our whole economic system seems to be headed for collapse, with greed and selfishness championed all the way up and down the economic ladder. Our moral standards are getting worse and worse, faith is growing cold in many hearts, and even those who call themselves Christians proudly follow their own devices and desires instead of clinging to Jesus their Lord.
Could these all be signs of the end?
Maybe, maybe not. As Christians, we need to be ready for our Lord's return as King and Judge no matter when it occurs. In Matthew chapter 24 Jesus' disciples asked Him what will be the sign of His coming and of the end of the age. He told them, and us, that no one knows that day or hour, and that He, the Son of Man, would come as a thief in the night. Therefore, we must be prepared. But prepared for what? Beginning in the 31st verse of Matthew 25, Jesus our coming King tells us what will happen when He returns.
First of all, Jesus will come as King, King of kings and Lord of lords. And He will come as the Son of Man. He will sit on the throne of the universe as a glorified Human Being, in the same flesh He brought with Him resurrected from the tomb. In Christ, for our sakes, God has become Man forever! He will sit on His throne as King in heavenly glory, and all the nations will be gathered before Him. All the nations. Not just the so-called Christian nations, but all of them, regardless of what religions they professed here on earth. All people will learn that Christ is King, and Christ alone.
But what does Jesus mean by "the nations"? Remember, God ordained that Jesus should be born a Jew. Jesus was speaking to Jewish disciples in a Jewish context. For a Jew, the word "nations" (ethne in Greek and goyim in Hebrew) meant the Gentiles. That is, everyone who wasn't a part of God's chosen people Israel. The disciples would assume-- and assume rightly-- that God's faithful remnant would find blessedness when Israel's Messiah and King came as Judge. But what was going to happen to all those other people Out There?
Something the disciples would not have suspected. Jesus says He will take the people of the nations and separate them from one another, and some He will put on the right as sheep, and some on His left as goats. That tells us first that all mankind are under His staff as the universal Shepherd, whether they ever confess faith in Him or not. In verses 37 and 44 we see that all the dead acknowledge that, they all call Him "Lord." When Christ sits on His glorious throne, all nations will bow the knee and every tongue will confess that He is King and Lord, to the glory of God the Father. But on that day He will sort out some who did not visibly belong to His chosen Israel, and He will put them with His chosen ones, with the sheep He loves.
These days, we often assume that almost anyone can be saved, if only they're nice enough. For good 1st century Jews like Jesus' disciples, it would have shocked them to think any Gentiles who didn't convert to Judaism could get into the kingdom at all!
To these unexpected sheep Jesus the King will say, "Come, you who are blessed by my Father; take your inheritance, the kingdom prepared for you since the creation of the world." Who could have thought it? Ever since the world began God had included these sheep from the nations in His glorious kingdom, along with His chosen people Israel!
But why? On what basis? Because He was hungry and they fed Him; He was thirsty and they gave Him something to drink; He was a stranger and they invited Him in; He needed clothes and they clothed Him; He was sick and they tended to Him; He was in prison and they came to visit Him.
These righteous from the nations are amazed. They don't understand how they could have rendered all these good services to Him, the Lord of glory. And the King will reply, "I tell you the truth, whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers of mine, you did for me."
We think we understand this. But again, Jesus is out to undermine our modern understanding of how things will be at the Judgement, just as much as much as His word subverted the ideas of the typical 1st century Jew. Here's the question: Who are Jesus' brothers? Who are His sisters? Who are this family with whom He identifies so closely?
Two thousand years ago, the assumption would be that since He was the Jewish Messiah, His brothers and sisters would be the nation of Israel, people who were born Jews by blood. But over and over again in His teaching Jesus kept letting everyone know that the true Israel was not those who attempted to keep the law in their own righteousness; rather, His brothers and sisters are those who do the will of His Father in heaven, as we read in Matthew 12. And what is the will of the Father? St. John tells us that the Father's will is that we believe in the One He has sent, the Man Jesus Christ.
The consistent teaching of the New Testament is this: that Christ's brothers and sisters are His believers, the Church. They-- or rather, we-- are His Body, the New Israel made up of ethnic Jews and ethnic Gentiles alike, formed by the new covenant in His blood, shed on the cross.
So in Acts 9 the risen Christ casts Saul of Tarsus down on the road to Damascus and demands, "Why are you persecuting Me?" Like the righteous from the nations at the Judgement, Saul can't understand. He'd been attacking a rabble of Nazarene heretics, not this heavenly Being he now had to call Lord! But Jesus identifies with His Church and says, "I am Jesus, whom you are persecuting." To do evil to His disciples is to do evil to Him; to do good to His disciples is to do good to Him.
And who are "the least of these"? Please note that this doesn't mean "only the least of these." No, Jesus is saying that the surprised righteous have done good to Christians even when those believers were so humble no earthly credit could possibly come from it. Jesus taught us in Matthew 18 that the greatest in the kingdom of heaven are those who humbly repent and become like little children and follow Him. In Luke 12 Jesus calls His disciples His "little flock" and says that the Father has been pleased to give them the kingdom. Jesus exalts the humble in His kingdom, and at the judgement the nations will share in their exaltation.
I realize that this goes against much popular thought on what this passage in Matthew means. The usual interpretation is that some people will enter the kingdom by believing in Christ, while others can get in by doing good to the financially poor. But nowhere does the Scripture hold out any possibility of any man or woman entering eternal life on the strength of his or her own good works. It is only through the blood of Christ shed for us that we can inherit blessedness forever with Him.
Yes, you might say, but if "the nations" in this passage are those who didn't identify with Christ's Church in their lifetimes, doesn't it sound like they can earn their way in by good deeds done to those who belong to Him?
Well, think of it this way: When are Jesus' disciples most likely to be hungry, thirsty, refugees, naked, sick, or in prison? In times of persecution for the faith. Today, particularly in Muslim and Hindu countries, Christians are being harried, arrested, burned out of their homes, put to death-- all because they dare to confess Jesus Christ as Lord. Now think of yourself as a Muslim neighbor of one of these despised Christians. Everyone else is pouring on the violence. But something moves you to step out and help the followers of Christ. Even though your friends will shun you for it; even though you could be arrested yourself as a Christian sympathizer, you go ahead and open your home to the refugees. You visit the tortured pastor in prison and work for his release. You make sure those orphan Christian children are fed and clothed, and you don't pressure them to convert to Islam. Whether you realize it or not, you're identifying with the believers and identifying with Christ.
In Matthew 10 Jesus sends His disciples out with the good news of the kingdom, warning them they'll face danger and hardship for His sake. But in all this, He says, "He who receives you receives me," and "anyone who receives a righteous man because he is a righteous man will receive a righteous man's reward," and "if anyone gives even a cup of cold water to one of these little ones because he is my disciple, I tell you the truth, he will certainly not lose his reward."
At the Judgement there will be many who never considered themselves to be part of Christ's flock the Church, but they sympathized so strongly and actively with Christians because they were Christians that Jesus will recognise them as His sheep themselves. To their surprise they will receive eternal life, the righteous man's reward.
But what about those on the left, the "goats" who did not minister to Christ's faithful in their need? To say they didn't identify Christians with Christ will be no excuse. When they see the King enthroned in glory it's too late to say, "Oh, my Lord, I'd do anything for you!" What about that insignificant Christian they saw beaten, tortured, starving, or simply slandered out of a job, and they did nothing to intervene? The King will reply, "If you did it not for the least of these my brothers, you didn't do it for Me."
So. Here we are, and we belong to Christ's church on earth. Can we sit satisfied and sure we'll go to the King's right hand in the Judgement? Not necessarily. This passage is a warning to us, too. A lot of people are members of Jesus' New Israel on paper, but actually they belong to the unbelieving nations.
We have to examine ourselves! How do we treat our fellow members in the Church? The truly committed disciple will feed and clothe and help and heal their fellow Christian precisely because he or she is a fellow Christian. A true believer in our Shepherd King will strive in the Spirit to see and serve Christ in everyone in the congregation, no matter how humble or struggling that other believer may be.
In the course of my life I've seen too many churches and church people focus all their ministry on those outside the church. And yes, like Christ Himself we do extend the love and grace of God to all. But sitting all around you are brothers and sisters who are hurting. They're struggling with troubles of body, mind, and spirit. They need someone to help them repair their house, to watch their kids for an afternoon, to sit for awhile and just listen. But there's this assumption in the Church today that as soon as someone becomes a believer, they're set up for life and have all they need. No! Jesus calls us into His little flock because we do need each other, and He expects us to minister to one another for His sake. As St. Paul says in his letter to the Galatians, "Therefore, as we have opportunity, let us do good to all people, especially those who belong to the family of believers."
Remember, Paul puts the command for Christians to do good in the context of judgement. If we take one another for granted, if we live to please our sinful natures, we will reap destruction. Goats all along we will show ourselves to be, and as Jesus says, we'll go into eternal punishment. But if we follow the Spirit of Christ who has saved us and do good to one another, we will show that we are His sheep. We will reap eternal life and enter into the blessed inheritance prepared for us by our heavenly Father before the creation of the world.
As baptised believers, we no longer belong to the nations; we are citizens of Christ's new chosen people and sheep of His little flock. Since this is true, let us strive in the Spirit to do the things that belong to Christ. Do good to all, but especially to your brothers and sisters in the faith, from the greatest to the least. Care for, help, and build up one another because you belong to Christ. And so by His grace, His judgment at the end of the age will bring no fear for you, but only exultation, blessedness, and joy as together with all the saints you enter the realm of your Shepherd King.
Sunday, June 12, 2011
Taking and Giving
Texts: John 16:5-15; Acts 2:1-41
I MADE A MISTAKE THE other day at work. I ran my nose into the sidelight of a door.
I substitute teach, and last Wednesday I was in for a Special Ed. teacher. I was told to report to the cafeteria to supervise a particular child at lunch. Only, this past Wednesday the school had a patio cookout for the students. I approached the doors to the patio and looked out, seeing if I could see the child I was in charge of. It was sunny out there, the outer doors were open, and I looked and looked but couldn't see the student or her homeroom teacher. But I saw another teacher for the same grade. All right, I'll go on out and ask her where my kid was. Very purposefully, I headed out the door.
Only it wasn't a door. It was a sidelight, which the custodial staff had cleaned all the marks off. Remember the old Windex slogan, "Glass so clean, it seems to disappear"? It was like that. I flattened my nose against that window, left a giant oil smudge on the glass, cut and bruised my nose, stunned myself, and blew the rest of the period sitting with a compress in the nurse's office.
That was a mistake. But we can make a bigger mistake in our thinking about God's Holy Spirit, Whose coming we celebrate on this day of Pentecost. We can focus on Him and His gifts too much, as I should have with that sidelight, so we never see Jesus through Him. Or we can see Jesus through Him, but forget that unlike that sidelight at school, He is an open door and He calls us to go through.
What is the Holy Spirit's job? Jesus says it simply in John 16:14: "He will bring glory to me by taking from what is mine and making it known to you." The Spirit takes everything about Jesus, from the first prophecies in the Garden of Eden to His ascension into heaven, and says to us, "All this your Saviour did for you." He helps us understand why Jesus did what He did and said what He said. He shows us who Jesus Christ really is and stops us from believing in false Christs of our own imagining. His whole purpose on this earth is to lead us through Himself into the salvation and fellowship of our Lord Jesus Christ. As Jesus says, the Spirit does not speak on His own. His purpose is not to attract attention and glory to Himself, but to give glory to the crucified and risen Son of God, and to God the Father through Him.
This is why it's important that we don't stop our Pentecost reading at Acts 2:13. We need Peter's sermon to shows us the Spirit in all His taking and giving power. Stop at verse 13, and we treat the Holy Spirit as the goal in Himself. We bruise our noses on Him and never get through to what He wants us to experience and know.
In Acts 2 we read that on the day of Pentecost, in the year that Jesus was crucified and rose again, the disciples, men and women, were all together in one place. Suddenly, with rushing wind and flaming fire they were filled with the Holy Spirit and spilled out into the street, speaking in other languages as the Spirit enabled them. They were all Galileans, but Jews and converts to Judaism from all over the Roman world heard them speaking to them in their own native languages, from east and west and north and south. Speaking to them about the excitement they, too, could feel once the Holy Spirit fell upon them? No. In the power of the Spirit, these formerly-frightened souls were proclaiming the wonders of God.
The Spirit is always about proclaiming the wonders of God. He does not speak on His own, He does not draw attention to Himself; He speaks of what He hears from the Father. He brings glory to Christ by taking what is Christ's and making it known to the world, that lost humanity might believe and be saved.
We see the work of the Spirit in the sermon Peter preaches there in the street in Jerusalem. Immediately he quotes from the book of the prophet Joel, how the days would come when God would pour out His Spirit on all people. God has spoken in Old Testament prophecy by the power of the Holy Spirit, and the Spirit keeps on showing us the truth of those words today. The last days spoken of by Joel had begun that Pentecost morning in Jerusalem, and we are still living in those last days. The Spirit is God's life-giving communication with His people, in prophecy and holy visions and divine dreams. He entrusts the saving message to all kinds of people, regardless of sex or age or economic class. The coming of the Spirit at Pentecost showed that a new age was dawning, and it will not end until the great and glorious day of the Lord will come. God is speaking to us by His Spirit in these last days, and His message is this: That everyone who calls on the name of the Lord might be saved.
But who is this Lord we must call upon? Speaking in the Spirit, Peter declares that this is none other than Jesus of Nazareth. Jesus proved He was the Messiah by His public miracles, wonders, and signs. The people standing there either had seen Him do all this themselves, or they had it from reliable witnesses. Jesus was accredited by God to be the Holy One promised by the prophets, the Lord and King who would deliver Israel and reconcile them to God. The Spirit says, Call on Jesus' name and be saved!
Yes, but what about the crucifixion? Wasn't Jesus condemned for blasphemy? Didn't He die like a common criminal?
In the strength of the Spirit, Peter is able to announce clearly and boldly: "This man was handed over to you by God's set purpose and foreknowledge." The crucifixion of Jesus Christ wasn't a sad accident, or just desserts, or yet another example of the absurd indifference of the universe. It was part of God's plan for the exaltation of His Son and the redemption of our souls. And so God raised Jesus from the dead, "because it was impossible for death to keep its hold on him."
We see here how the Spirit is taking what is Christ's-- His life, His death, and His resurrection-- and bringing glory to Him through it. Especially, the Spirit animates Peter to demonstrate the truth of Jesus' resurrection. If there's going to be Holy Spirit preaching, it has to glorify Christ risen from the dead. Look at Psalm 16! Peter urges the crowd. King David was a prophet, and he foresaw that God's Holy One would not decay in the grave. David speaks in the first person, but he cannot be speaking about himself, for as everyone knew, David's tomb was right outside Jerusalem. Rather, he was speaking of the resurrection of the Christ Who was to come. Peter and the other disciples could confidently testify that Jesus of Nazareth was the Christ and He indeed had been raised from the dead. They were all witnesses of this fact.
Not just in Peter's sermon but in all faithful preaching, the Spirit witnesses to the fact of Christ's ascension into heaven. Jesus now is exalted to the right hand of the Father in majesty. There in glory the Jesus receives the Holy Spirit as a gift to Him from the Father, and from His throne in heaven the Son sends the Spirit to us. This is the same Spirit that enabled David to testify about Jesus, saying,
The Lord said to my Lord:
"Sit at my right hand
until I make your enemies
a footstool for your feet."
The crowds in Jerusalem didn't witness Jesus' ascension into heaven. Neither did we. For that matter, the disciples themselves could not see what happened to Jesus after the cloud hid Him from their sight. But the power and the testimony of the Holy Spirit in the lives of God's people prove that Jesus indeed is exalted on high. Only One who was God Himself could promise to send the Spirit upon us and keep it. Our ascended and glorified Lord has sent the promised Holy Spirit, and by His revelation we can be assured that God has made this Jesus, Whom our sins crucified, both Lord and Christ. The Spirit brings our rebellious souls into submission to Him. The Spirit opens our eyes to worship Christ as our God and heavenly King. And the Spirit changes our hearts to accept Jesus as the one Saviour and Redeemer of our souls.
The Holy Spirit spoke on that day nearly two thousand years ago. He spoke in the words of Scripture written and by the word faithfully preaching. This is still how He speaks today. Churches think they have make things exciting and new if people are to believe in Christ. No. It is still through the Word that the Holy Spirit takes what belongs to Jesus and gives it to us, that men and women might repent and be saved.
The people that day were cut to the heart by what Peter had said. The Spirit convicted them of their sin, and they cried out, "Brothers, what shall we do?"
The Holy Spirit's answer to them is the same for as for us: "Repent and be baptised, every one of you, in the name of Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of your sins." Baptism is God's holy sign given to us in the Spirit that shows that we now belong to Him. The Holy Spirit Himself is the seal of our baptism into Christ, come to live in us, to guide us into all truth, to bind us to God in Christ forever. He is God's gift to us, for all who receive Jesus Christ by faith.
Peter says, "The promise is for you and for your children and for all who are far off-- for all whom the Lord our God will call." The gift of the Holy Spirit transcends Israel. He is not just for the old, the wise, and the learned. He descends and dwells in everyone in all times and in all places, all whom God has elected to be joined to His people.
On that day of Pentecost, the Spirit took what was Christ's and He gave it to the citizens and visitors of Jerusalem. Luke records that about three thousand accepted Peter's message about Jesus that day and were added to "their number"-- that is, the number of God's Church. Brothers and sisters, one of the Spirit's greatest roles is to incorporate us into the body of the Church through Christian baptism. Paul's Letter to the Ephesians returns again and again to the truth that in the Spirit we are built up together to be God's dwelling place. It is the Spirit who gives gifts to the members of the Church for the good of the Church. We are to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace-- one Lord, one faith, one baptism; one God and Father of all. On that Pentecost morning the Holy Spirit gave birth to the Church of Jesus Christ, and to this day He is her life, her unity, and her power.
Brothers and sisters, this same Holy Spirit is at work in the Church today. He is still taking what is Christ's and giving it to us, that Jesus might be glorified in heaven above and on the earth below. He is still opening minds to the meaning and power of the Scriptures. He is still entrusting men and women with the good news of salvation in Jesus Christ. Even when we go astray, the Spirit is still convicting the Church and the world of our sins and calling us out of darkness into the light of the grace of God.
The Holy Spirit is our open door into this grace. I invite you now, accept His ministry in you. Go through the door into the joy found only in Jesus, the Son of God. The Spirit declares: Jesus died for you, He rose for you, He ascended into heaven for you, He sent the Holy Spirit for you. Accept the truth the Spirit brings, for He does not speak on His own, He speaks only what He hears, and His message is forgiveness, salvation, and joy in Jesus Christ, now and forever more. Amen.
I MADE A MISTAKE THE other day at work. I ran my nose into the sidelight of a door.
I substitute teach, and last Wednesday I was in for a Special Ed. teacher. I was told to report to the cafeteria to supervise a particular child at lunch. Only, this past Wednesday the school had a patio cookout for the students. I approached the doors to the patio and looked out, seeing if I could see the child I was in charge of. It was sunny out there, the outer doors were open, and I looked and looked but couldn't see the student or her homeroom teacher. But I saw another teacher for the same grade. All right, I'll go on out and ask her where my kid was. Very purposefully, I headed out the door.
Only it wasn't a door. It was a sidelight, which the custodial staff had cleaned all the marks off. Remember the old Windex slogan, "Glass so clean, it seems to disappear"? It was like that. I flattened my nose against that window, left a giant oil smudge on the glass, cut and bruised my nose, stunned myself, and blew the rest of the period sitting with a compress in the nurse's office.
That was a mistake. But we can make a bigger mistake in our thinking about God's Holy Spirit, Whose coming we celebrate on this day of Pentecost. We can focus on Him and His gifts too much, as I should have with that sidelight, so we never see Jesus through Him. Or we can see Jesus through Him, but forget that unlike that sidelight at school, He is an open door and He calls us to go through.
What is the Holy Spirit's job? Jesus says it simply in John 16:14: "He will bring glory to me by taking from what is mine and making it known to you." The Spirit takes everything about Jesus, from the first prophecies in the Garden of Eden to His ascension into heaven, and says to us, "All this your Saviour did for you." He helps us understand why Jesus did what He did and said what He said. He shows us who Jesus Christ really is and stops us from believing in false Christs of our own imagining. His whole purpose on this earth is to lead us through Himself into the salvation and fellowship of our Lord Jesus Christ. As Jesus says, the Spirit does not speak on His own. His purpose is not to attract attention and glory to Himself, but to give glory to the crucified and risen Son of God, and to God the Father through Him.
This is why it's important that we don't stop our Pentecost reading at Acts 2:13. We need Peter's sermon to shows us the Spirit in all His taking and giving power. Stop at verse 13, and we treat the Holy Spirit as the goal in Himself. We bruise our noses on Him and never get through to what He wants us to experience and know.
In Acts 2 we read that on the day of Pentecost, in the year that Jesus was crucified and rose again, the disciples, men and women, were all together in one place. Suddenly, with rushing wind and flaming fire they were filled with the Holy Spirit and spilled out into the street, speaking in other languages as the Spirit enabled them. They were all Galileans, but Jews and converts to Judaism from all over the Roman world heard them speaking to them in their own native languages, from east and west and north and south. Speaking to them about the excitement they, too, could feel once the Holy Spirit fell upon them? No. In the power of the Spirit, these formerly-frightened souls were proclaiming the wonders of God.
The Spirit is always about proclaiming the wonders of God. He does not speak on His own, He does not draw attention to Himself; He speaks of what He hears from the Father. He brings glory to Christ by taking what is Christ's and making it known to the world, that lost humanity might believe and be saved.
We see the work of the Spirit in the sermon Peter preaches there in the street in Jerusalem. Immediately he quotes from the book of the prophet Joel, how the days would come when God would pour out His Spirit on all people. God has spoken in Old Testament prophecy by the power of the Holy Spirit, and the Spirit keeps on showing us the truth of those words today. The last days spoken of by Joel had begun that Pentecost morning in Jerusalem, and we are still living in those last days. The Spirit is God's life-giving communication with His people, in prophecy and holy visions and divine dreams. He entrusts the saving message to all kinds of people, regardless of sex or age or economic class. The coming of the Spirit at Pentecost showed that a new age was dawning, and it will not end until the great and glorious day of the Lord will come. God is speaking to us by His Spirit in these last days, and His message is this: That everyone who calls on the name of the Lord might be saved.
But who is this Lord we must call upon? Speaking in the Spirit, Peter declares that this is none other than Jesus of Nazareth. Jesus proved He was the Messiah by His public miracles, wonders, and signs. The people standing there either had seen Him do all this themselves, or they had it from reliable witnesses. Jesus was accredited by God to be the Holy One promised by the prophets, the Lord and King who would deliver Israel and reconcile them to God. The Spirit says, Call on Jesus' name and be saved!
Yes, but what about the crucifixion? Wasn't Jesus condemned for blasphemy? Didn't He die like a common criminal?
In the strength of the Spirit, Peter is able to announce clearly and boldly: "This man was handed over to you by God's set purpose and foreknowledge." The crucifixion of Jesus Christ wasn't a sad accident, or just desserts, or yet another example of the absurd indifference of the universe. It was part of God's plan for the exaltation of His Son and the redemption of our souls. And so God raised Jesus from the dead, "because it was impossible for death to keep its hold on him."
We see here how the Spirit is taking what is Christ's-- His life, His death, and His resurrection-- and bringing glory to Him through it. Especially, the Spirit animates Peter to demonstrate the truth of Jesus' resurrection. If there's going to be Holy Spirit preaching, it has to glorify Christ risen from the dead. Look at Psalm 16! Peter urges the crowd. King David was a prophet, and he foresaw that God's Holy One would not decay in the grave. David speaks in the first person, but he cannot be speaking about himself, for as everyone knew, David's tomb was right outside Jerusalem. Rather, he was speaking of the resurrection of the Christ Who was to come. Peter and the other disciples could confidently testify that Jesus of Nazareth was the Christ and He indeed had been raised from the dead. They were all witnesses of this fact.
Not just in Peter's sermon but in all faithful preaching, the Spirit witnesses to the fact of Christ's ascension into heaven. Jesus now is exalted to the right hand of the Father in majesty. There in glory the Jesus receives the Holy Spirit as a gift to Him from the Father, and from His throne in heaven the Son sends the Spirit to us. This is the same Spirit that enabled David to testify about Jesus, saying,
The Lord said to my Lord:
"Sit at my right hand
until I make your enemies
a footstool for your feet."
The crowds in Jerusalem didn't witness Jesus' ascension into heaven. Neither did we. For that matter, the disciples themselves could not see what happened to Jesus after the cloud hid Him from their sight. But the power and the testimony of the Holy Spirit in the lives of God's people prove that Jesus indeed is exalted on high. Only One who was God Himself could promise to send the Spirit upon us and keep it. Our ascended and glorified Lord has sent the promised Holy Spirit, and by His revelation we can be assured that God has made this Jesus, Whom our sins crucified, both Lord and Christ. The Spirit brings our rebellious souls into submission to Him. The Spirit opens our eyes to worship Christ as our God and heavenly King. And the Spirit changes our hearts to accept Jesus as the one Saviour and Redeemer of our souls.
The Holy Spirit spoke on that day nearly two thousand years ago. He spoke in the words of Scripture written and by the word faithfully preaching. This is still how He speaks today. Churches think they have make things exciting and new if people are to believe in Christ. No. It is still through the Word that the Holy Spirit takes what belongs to Jesus and gives it to us, that men and women might repent and be saved.
The people that day were cut to the heart by what Peter had said. The Spirit convicted them of their sin, and they cried out, "Brothers, what shall we do?"
The Holy Spirit's answer to them is the same for as for us: "Repent and be baptised, every one of you, in the name of Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of your sins." Baptism is God's holy sign given to us in the Spirit that shows that we now belong to Him. The Holy Spirit Himself is the seal of our baptism into Christ, come to live in us, to guide us into all truth, to bind us to God in Christ forever. He is God's gift to us, for all who receive Jesus Christ by faith.
Peter says, "The promise is for you and for your children and for all who are far off-- for all whom the Lord our God will call." The gift of the Holy Spirit transcends Israel. He is not just for the old, the wise, and the learned. He descends and dwells in everyone in all times and in all places, all whom God has elected to be joined to His people.
On that day of Pentecost, the Spirit took what was Christ's and He gave it to the citizens and visitors of Jerusalem. Luke records that about three thousand accepted Peter's message about Jesus that day and were added to "their number"-- that is, the number of God's Church. Brothers and sisters, one of the Spirit's greatest roles is to incorporate us into the body of the Church through Christian baptism. Paul's Letter to the Ephesians returns again and again to the truth that in the Spirit we are built up together to be God's dwelling place. It is the Spirit who gives gifts to the members of the Church for the good of the Church. We are to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace-- one Lord, one faith, one baptism; one God and Father of all. On that Pentecost morning the Holy Spirit gave birth to the Church of Jesus Christ, and to this day He is her life, her unity, and her power.
Brothers and sisters, this same Holy Spirit is at work in the Church today. He is still taking what is Christ's and giving it to us, that Jesus might be glorified in heaven above and on the earth below. He is still opening minds to the meaning and power of the Scriptures. He is still entrusting men and women with the good news of salvation in Jesus Christ. Even when we go astray, the Spirit is still convicting the Church and the world of our sins and calling us out of darkness into the light of the grace of God.
The Holy Spirit is our open door into this grace. I invite you now, accept His ministry in you. Go through the door into the joy found only in Jesus, the Son of God. The Spirit declares: Jesus died for you, He rose for you, He ascended into heaven for you, He sent the Holy Spirit for you. Accept the truth the Spirit brings, for He does not speak on His own, He speaks only what He hears, and His message is forgiveness, salvation, and joy in Jesus Christ, now and forever more. Amen.
Sunday, June 5, 2011
Christ's Resurrection and You: Where Is He Now?
Texts: Hebrews 4:14 - 5:10; 7:23 - 8:2; Acts 1:1-11
SHORTLY AFTER EASTER, I GOT a message on Facebook from my oldest niece. She said she and some of her friends were discussing Jesus' resurrection, and they found that there was a question that stumped them all. That is, where had Jesus gone after that? When did He die the second time? Where was He really buried? And where could she look in the Bible for answers about this? She wanted to know for herself, and she wanted to tell her girlfriends, too.
Immediately I shared with her the good news of our Lord's ascension that we are celebrating today, and pointed her to some verses that would assure her that Jesus had never died again. I felt bad that I couldn't do more at the moment, since I was in the middle of something, but I hoped I'd given her even to start on.
But I felt worse-- shocked and saddened, actually-- that my 40-year-old niece and her friends would have the need to questions like that at all. She attends church regularly. From what I know of him, her pastor seems to have his head screwed on straight when it comes to doctrine. How could she even imagine that Jesus could have died a second time and not understand that He's in heaven even now in His glorified human body? How terrible for her to be thinking that Christ's victory over death wasn't final and absolute!
But then I had to think: How much do any of us, even us Christians, think and know about the Ascension of our Lord Jesus Christ? This past Thursday was Ascension Day. How many of us commemorated it then? We have the big celebration of Easter, then next thing we know, it's Pentecost Sunday and the Holy Spirit's coming. And sometime in between, Jesus just seems to have slipped away. Where did He go? Where is He now? I had to be glad my niece was asking the question in any form at all.
Our reading from Acts shows us that Jesus did not merely slip away: He departed, and He did it openly. Remember how in the Upper Room before His crucifixion, Jesus told His disciples that it was needful that He go away, so He could send the Holy Spirit to them. But for forty days after He rose they'd been seeing Him in that very physical resurrection body of His-- physical, except that in it He could transcend physical limitations like distance and solid walls and locked doors. And it seems that the disciples were getting used to that. It was just like old times, almost, having Jesus around eating with them and teaching them. The disciples had to be shown that that time was coming to an end, that now a new order was to begin when Jesus would send the gift His Father promised, even the Holy Spirit.
Moreover, the disciples had to understand where Jesus had gone. He couldn't just fail to show up one day, and never return. St. Luke leaves no room for any theories about Jesus quietly retiring to the countryside like I heard somebody or other theorize recently, or going off to India to become a guru, like the New Agers believe. Jesus made sure the disciples saw Him physically taken up before their very eyes. A cloud enveloped Him until both He and it were no longer visible. This was no ordinary cloud of water vapor. The disciples were Jews and knew their history. They would certainly realize that this was the cloud of God's presence that led the children of Israel in the wilderness, the cloud of glory surrounded Jesus, Moses, and Elijah on the Mount of Transfiguration. This cloud was a visible manifestation of the presence of God Himself, and in it Jesus stepped directly from the realm of this world into the heaven of God His Father.
But you can't blame the disciples for standing there looking "intently into the sky as he was going." Or for keeping on looking after He had disappeared. We'd do the same. It took two men in white--angels-- who suddenly stood there with them to tell them that Jesus had been taken from them into heaven. The angels promised, too, that He would come back in the same way they'd seen Him go-- riding on the clouds of heaven.
And between the time of His ascension, and the time of His return in glory, where is our Lord Jesus? He indeed is in heaven, at the right hand of the Father in glory.
So what is He doing now? Has He finished with us, now that He is high and exalted? Is He simply back to enjoying the rights and privileges of being the Son of God, with never a thought for His people here on earth? Never think it! There's a 19th century Welsh hymn whose chorus is a dialogue between the men and the women of the congregation. It begins with the question, "Who saved us from eternal loss?" ("Who but God's Son upon the cross?") and it ends with the women asking, "Where is He now?" and both men and women sing together, "In heaven interceding."
That's exactly where He is, and exactly what He's doing there. This is the meaning of Christ's ascension, and the wonderful truth our verses from the Letter to the Hebrews reveal to us. Jesus is indeed the One who intercedes for us before the Father. He is our great High Priest who even now represents us to God, Who even now can point to His one, perfect, and everlasting sacrifice that forever will atone for our sins.
In Hebrews 4:14 Jesus is described as our great high priest who has gone through the heavens. The ancient Jews understood that there were ranks of angels and other heavenly beings, and ranks of the heavens in which they dwelt. Paul speaks of this in 2 Corinthians 12, when he tells about a man in Christ-- himself, actually-- who was somehow caught up into the third heaven, the paradise of God. By saying that Jesus had gone "through the heavens," the writer makes it clear that our Lord has gone all the way into the divine Holy of Holies, all the way into the presence chamber of almighty God. Nothing stopped Him, nothing disqualified Him; Jesus is right there sharing His Father's throne.
Therefore we have every reason to hold firmly to the faith we possess. So we trust and believe that Jesus Christ died for our sins, and that His blood atones for all our unrighteousness, redeems us from death, and makes us holy before God. We have faith in Jesus, our great High Priest.
I think we Christians, especially we Protestants, have gotten so used to the idea of Jesus as our Intercessor that we forget it means He is our High Priest and that we need one just as much as ancient Israel did. They needed a high because they were in themselves unholy in God's sight, under His wrath, and they needed sacrifice offered for them so they could be accepted by God. So do we. Not just anyone could make this offering. The high priest represented all the people, especially on the Day of Atonement when he took the blood of the sacrifices into the Holy of Holies. He was one of them, a Jew like they were, but he had a special appointment from God. The priest was to be God's chosen man, who could identify with the people and he with them. That's what we need as well.
The Jewish system found its fulfillment in Jesus Christ, incarnate by the Holy Spirit through the Virgin Mary. He is definitely is a high priest who can sympathize with our weaknesses. In Hebrews chapter 1 we read that Jesus the Son of God took on true flesh and blood and shared in our humanity. He wasn't an angel or a mere divine appearance, He was a man like us. Like us, on this earth Jesus was tempted in every way we are. But unlike Aaron and his descendants, Jesus did not fall into sin. Unlike them, He did not have to first sacrifice a bull for His own sin-offering before He could make atonement for the people. Jesus our sympathetic High Priest was holy and without sin. Therefore, He can represent us in heaven as an Intercessor who is totally acceptable to our holy God.
With Jesus as our high priest, we can approach the heavenly throne of grace with confidence, knowing we'll receive mercy there for His sake. Verse 2 of chapter 5 says that the high priest "is able to deal gently with those who are ignorant and going astray, since he himself is subject to weakness." Jesus knows what it's like to be in this mortal flesh. Again, He does not have to offer sacrifices for His own sins, but in verses 7 and 8 we can see how in His heart and in His flesh He suffered for us, how as a Man He truly had to go through the ache and agony of sorrow over our sins, how finally He had to submit to the torture and death of the cross. Jesus the Son of God earned His high priesthood as the Son of Man, and so, even now, He is in heaven sympathizing with our weaknesses, dealing gently with us when we go astray, and representing us in matters relating to God.
But we see in 4:4 that it wouldn't have been enough for Jesus to be our fellow-human, if God had not personally chosen Him. God called Him to the honor of the high priesthood, just like He called Aaron in the early days of Israel, so long ago. In the words of Psalm 22, the Lord God has said,
"You are my Son;
today I have become your Father."
And in Psalm 110 God says to Him,
"You are a priest forever,
in the order of Melchizedek."
Jesus Christ has been appointed by the Father to be our representative forever. He's not like the priests of the line of Aaron of the house of Levi. The Aaronic priests could not continue in office forever; they were mortal and one after another, they all died. In contrast, God says that Christ is a priest forever, in the order of Melchizedek. Melchizedek, king of Salem and priest of God Most High, is referred to in Hebrews 7:3 as being "without father or mother, without genealogy, without beginning of days or end of life." Figuratively-speaking, he is deathless, and so he is a walking prophecy of the Son of God who lives forever and exercises the same kind of priesthood that never ends and never can be destroyed.
We don't have to worry about Jesus our High Priest dying a second time and leaving us with some inadequate or unsympathetic successor. No, because He lives forever He is able to save completely everyone who comes to God through Him, because He ever lives to make intercession for us.
Let us take comfort in these words. I know my sin, and I know I need a lot of interceding for. And I think you realize the same thing about yourself. There will never come a time when Jesus our ascended Lord stops pleading for us before the Father. He always lives, and because of that, Jesus can keep on interceding for us. At the same time, interceding for us is what Jesus always lives for!
Jesus meets our every need. He has ascended to the Father: as verse 7:26 puts it, He is exalted above the heavens. So while He has experienced human weakness and can sympathize with us, at the same time He is holy, blameless, pure, and set apart from sinners. That's the kind of high priest we need. Jesus is acceptable in God's presence and so His prayers on our behalf are acceptable to God.
Jesus is qualified to be our eternal high priest by His merciful humanity, by His divine appointment, by His suffering and intercession for us here on this earth, by His deathlessness, by His purity and holiness, and by His ascension to the throne of God. All these qualities were required in the One who was to be our Intercessor and Advocate before God the Father. As Hebrews 8:1 states, "We do have such a high priest, who sat down at the right hand of the throne of the Majesty in heaven." This is a sanctuary much holier than the Most Holy Place of the tabernacle or the Temple could ever be. Jesus serves in our behalf in the very presence of God; this is what He ascended into heaven to do, and what He now lives and enjoys living to do.
So now, whenever you are in trouble, whenever you are tempted, whenever you think the world, the universe, and God Himself are all turned against you, think. Remember. You have a great High Priest, Jesus the great High Priest, Who for you has gone through the heavens to the holy heart of God, and even now He sympathizes with your weakness and deals gently with you. No sin that you can repent of is beyond His power to forgive, for He sacrificed Himself for sins once for all when He offered Himself. When you're convinced that you can never be good enough for God, think. Remember. Jesus is your holy and blameless High Priest, and He credits His perfect obedience to you. When you don't know how or what to pray, think. Remember. Jesus is there, even now, representing you to His Father and yours. He is able to save you completely, for He always lives to intercede for you.
So let us hold firmly to the faith we profess. Christ our crucified and risen Lord has gone through the heavens and has sat down at the right hand of the Majesty on high. "Where is He now?"
"In heaven interceding!"
SHORTLY AFTER EASTER, I GOT a message on Facebook from my oldest niece. She said she and some of her friends were discussing Jesus' resurrection, and they found that there was a question that stumped them all. That is, where had Jesus gone after that? When did He die the second time? Where was He really buried? And where could she look in the Bible for answers about this? She wanted to know for herself, and she wanted to tell her girlfriends, too.
Immediately I shared with her the good news of our Lord's ascension that we are celebrating today, and pointed her to some verses that would assure her that Jesus had never died again. I felt bad that I couldn't do more at the moment, since I was in the middle of something, but I hoped I'd given her even to start on.
But I felt worse-- shocked and saddened, actually-- that my 40-year-old niece and her friends would have the need to questions like that at all. She attends church regularly. From what I know of him, her pastor seems to have his head screwed on straight when it comes to doctrine. How could she even imagine that Jesus could have died a second time and not understand that He's in heaven even now in His glorified human body? How terrible for her to be thinking that Christ's victory over death wasn't final and absolute!
But then I had to think: How much do any of us, even us Christians, think and know about the Ascension of our Lord Jesus Christ? This past Thursday was Ascension Day. How many of us commemorated it then? We have the big celebration of Easter, then next thing we know, it's Pentecost Sunday and the Holy Spirit's coming. And sometime in between, Jesus just seems to have slipped away. Where did He go? Where is He now? I had to be glad my niece was asking the question in any form at all.
Our reading from Acts shows us that Jesus did not merely slip away: He departed, and He did it openly. Remember how in the Upper Room before His crucifixion, Jesus told His disciples that it was needful that He go away, so He could send the Holy Spirit to them. But for forty days after He rose they'd been seeing Him in that very physical resurrection body of His-- physical, except that in it He could transcend physical limitations like distance and solid walls and locked doors. And it seems that the disciples were getting used to that. It was just like old times, almost, having Jesus around eating with them and teaching them. The disciples had to be shown that that time was coming to an end, that now a new order was to begin when Jesus would send the gift His Father promised, even the Holy Spirit.
Moreover, the disciples had to understand where Jesus had gone. He couldn't just fail to show up one day, and never return. St. Luke leaves no room for any theories about Jesus quietly retiring to the countryside like I heard somebody or other theorize recently, or going off to India to become a guru, like the New Agers believe. Jesus made sure the disciples saw Him physically taken up before their very eyes. A cloud enveloped Him until both He and it were no longer visible. This was no ordinary cloud of water vapor. The disciples were Jews and knew their history. They would certainly realize that this was the cloud of God's presence that led the children of Israel in the wilderness, the cloud of glory surrounded Jesus, Moses, and Elijah on the Mount of Transfiguration. This cloud was a visible manifestation of the presence of God Himself, and in it Jesus stepped directly from the realm of this world into the heaven of God His Father.
But you can't blame the disciples for standing there looking "intently into the sky as he was going." Or for keeping on looking after He had disappeared. We'd do the same. It took two men in white--angels-- who suddenly stood there with them to tell them that Jesus had been taken from them into heaven. The angels promised, too, that He would come back in the same way they'd seen Him go-- riding on the clouds of heaven.
And between the time of His ascension, and the time of His return in glory, where is our Lord Jesus? He indeed is in heaven, at the right hand of the Father in glory.
So what is He doing now? Has He finished with us, now that He is high and exalted? Is He simply back to enjoying the rights and privileges of being the Son of God, with never a thought for His people here on earth? Never think it! There's a 19th century Welsh hymn whose chorus is a dialogue between the men and the women of the congregation. It begins with the question, "Who saved us from eternal loss?" ("Who but God's Son upon the cross?") and it ends with the women asking, "Where is He now?" and both men and women sing together, "In heaven interceding."
That's exactly where He is, and exactly what He's doing there. This is the meaning of Christ's ascension, and the wonderful truth our verses from the Letter to the Hebrews reveal to us. Jesus is indeed the One who intercedes for us before the Father. He is our great High Priest who even now represents us to God, Who even now can point to His one, perfect, and everlasting sacrifice that forever will atone for our sins.
In Hebrews 4:14 Jesus is described as our great high priest who has gone through the heavens. The ancient Jews understood that there were ranks of angels and other heavenly beings, and ranks of the heavens in which they dwelt. Paul speaks of this in 2 Corinthians 12, when he tells about a man in Christ-- himself, actually-- who was somehow caught up into the third heaven, the paradise of God. By saying that Jesus had gone "through the heavens," the writer makes it clear that our Lord has gone all the way into the divine Holy of Holies, all the way into the presence chamber of almighty God. Nothing stopped Him, nothing disqualified Him; Jesus is right there sharing His Father's throne.
Therefore we have every reason to hold firmly to the faith we possess. So we trust and believe that Jesus Christ died for our sins, and that His blood atones for all our unrighteousness, redeems us from death, and makes us holy before God. We have faith in Jesus, our great High Priest.
I think we Christians, especially we Protestants, have gotten so used to the idea of Jesus as our Intercessor that we forget it means He is our High Priest and that we need one just as much as ancient Israel did. They needed a high because they were in themselves unholy in God's sight, under His wrath, and they needed sacrifice offered for them so they could be accepted by God. So do we. Not just anyone could make this offering. The high priest represented all the people, especially on the Day of Atonement when he took the blood of the sacrifices into the Holy of Holies. He was one of them, a Jew like they were, but he had a special appointment from God. The priest was to be God's chosen man, who could identify with the people and he with them. That's what we need as well.
The Jewish system found its fulfillment in Jesus Christ, incarnate by the Holy Spirit through the Virgin Mary. He is definitely is a high priest who can sympathize with our weaknesses. In Hebrews chapter 1 we read that Jesus the Son of God took on true flesh and blood and shared in our humanity. He wasn't an angel or a mere divine appearance, He was a man like us. Like us, on this earth Jesus was tempted in every way we are. But unlike Aaron and his descendants, Jesus did not fall into sin. Unlike them, He did not have to first sacrifice a bull for His own sin-offering before He could make atonement for the people. Jesus our sympathetic High Priest was holy and without sin. Therefore, He can represent us in heaven as an Intercessor who is totally acceptable to our holy God.
With Jesus as our high priest, we can approach the heavenly throne of grace with confidence, knowing we'll receive mercy there for His sake. Verse 2 of chapter 5 says that the high priest "is able to deal gently with those who are ignorant and going astray, since he himself is subject to weakness." Jesus knows what it's like to be in this mortal flesh. Again, He does not have to offer sacrifices for His own sins, but in verses 7 and 8 we can see how in His heart and in His flesh He suffered for us, how as a Man He truly had to go through the ache and agony of sorrow over our sins, how finally He had to submit to the torture and death of the cross. Jesus the Son of God earned His high priesthood as the Son of Man, and so, even now, He is in heaven sympathizing with our weaknesses, dealing gently with us when we go astray, and representing us in matters relating to God.
But we see in 4:4 that it wouldn't have been enough for Jesus to be our fellow-human, if God had not personally chosen Him. God called Him to the honor of the high priesthood, just like He called Aaron in the early days of Israel, so long ago. In the words of Psalm 22, the Lord God has said,
"You are my Son;
today I have become your Father."
And in Psalm 110 God says to Him,
"You are a priest forever,
in the order of Melchizedek."
Jesus Christ has been appointed by the Father to be our representative forever. He's not like the priests of the line of Aaron of the house of Levi. The Aaronic priests could not continue in office forever; they were mortal and one after another, they all died. In contrast, God says that Christ is a priest forever, in the order of Melchizedek. Melchizedek, king of Salem and priest of God Most High, is referred to in Hebrews 7:3 as being "without father or mother, without genealogy, without beginning of days or end of life." Figuratively-speaking, he is deathless, and so he is a walking prophecy of the Son of God who lives forever and exercises the same kind of priesthood that never ends and never can be destroyed.
We don't have to worry about Jesus our High Priest dying a second time and leaving us with some inadequate or unsympathetic successor. No, because He lives forever He is able to save completely everyone who comes to God through Him, because He ever lives to make intercession for us.
Let us take comfort in these words. I know my sin, and I know I need a lot of interceding for. And I think you realize the same thing about yourself. There will never come a time when Jesus our ascended Lord stops pleading for us before the Father. He always lives, and because of that, Jesus can keep on interceding for us. At the same time, interceding for us is what Jesus always lives for!
Jesus meets our every need. He has ascended to the Father: as verse 7:26 puts it, He is exalted above the heavens. So while He has experienced human weakness and can sympathize with us, at the same time He is holy, blameless, pure, and set apart from sinners. That's the kind of high priest we need. Jesus is acceptable in God's presence and so His prayers on our behalf are acceptable to God.
Jesus is qualified to be our eternal high priest by His merciful humanity, by His divine appointment, by His suffering and intercession for us here on this earth, by His deathlessness, by His purity and holiness, and by His ascension to the throne of God. All these qualities were required in the One who was to be our Intercessor and Advocate before God the Father. As Hebrews 8:1 states, "We do have such a high priest, who sat down at the right hand of the throne of the Majesty in heaven." This is a sanctuary much holier than the Most Holy Place of the tabernacle or the Temple could ever be. Jesus serves in our behalf in the very presence of God; this is what He ascended into heaven to do, and what He now lives and enjoys living to do.
So now, whenever you are in trouble, whenever you are tempted, whenever you think the world, the universe, and God Himself are all turned against you, think. Remember. You have a great High Priest, Jesus the great High Priest, Who for you has gone through the heavens to the holy heart of God, and even now He sympathizes with your weakness and deals gently with you. No sin that you can repent of is beyond His power to forgive, for He sacrificed Himself for sins once for all when He offered Himself. When you're convinced that you can never be good enough for God, think. Remember. Jesus is your holy and blameless High Priest, and He credits His perfect obedience to you. When you don't know how or what to pray, think. Remember. Jesus is there, even now, representing you to His Father and yours. He is able to save you completely, for He always lives to intercede for you.
So let us hold firmly to the faith we profess. Christ our crucified and risen Lord has gone through the heavens and has sat down at the right hand of the Majesty on high. "Where is He now?"
"In heaven interceding!"
Sunday, May 10, 2009
Fear, Love, and the Salvation of God
Texts: Acts 8:26-40; 1 John 4:7-21
THERE'S A LOT TO BE fearful about these days. The economy's going down the sewer. There's a strange new kind of flu going around. The Middle East is blowing up worse than ever. And the politicians in Washington seem to spend all their time thinking up new ways to take away our rights and liberties, not to mention our money.
The world is filled with Fear, and to paraphrase a certain poem, "If you can keep your head when all about you are losing theirs, maybe you haven't grasped the situation!"
With all this, the Apostle John comes along with His First Letter and says, "Perfect love drives out fear." He commands us to love one another, and that will prove whether we have perfect love, as in, "The one who does not love does not know God."
That's putting a big burden on Love! Maybe you remember the hippie days of the late 1960s, early '70s. A lot of us were running around babbling about Love, Peace, and Flower Power. It was all "Make love, not war." The idea was that if we would all just bliss out and love everybody, all the nasty, scary things in the world could be magically overcome or ignored into oblivion. I was just young enough during that time to be skeptical about how that was going to work. And in the end, it didn't. My Baby Boomer generation turned out to be just as greedy, hateful, and rapacious as any other, we were just more sneaky and sanctimonious about it.
Is this the kind of love the Apostle John is talking? The warm-fuzzy, head-in-the-sand, self-seeking human love that fades out when the situation gets scary or just inconvenient?
No, John is speaking of the tough-as-nails, purifying, self-giving, fear-defying, eternal agape love of Almighty God. He begins our passage with this command: "Dear friends, let us love one another, for love comes from God." This love of God is what we're to do our loving with, not some feeling we've imagined or felt or come up with on our own.
In the Greek this passage actually begins with "agapetoi ," which means "Beloved," or, "You who are loved with the love of God." So verse 7 could well read, "You who are right now already loved with the purifying, selfless, fear-defying love of God, love one another with the purifying, selfless, fear-defying love of God, for purifying, selfless, fear-defying love comes only from God." In other words, you've already got what you need right now to obey this command and stand up to fear, because you've received it from God Himself.
In the same vein, verse 8 would read, "Whoever does not love with this purifying, selfless, fear-defying love of God does not know God." Obviously not, because God Himself is this sort of love, and only those who know Him can love this way.
Moreover, the love of God will certainly show itself in anyone who has it. Not all at once, but if someone claims to know God and never, ever shows any sign of Christian love, you have every right to doubt his or her salvation.
But this agape love of God: how do we know it can face down all our fears and make it possible for us to love one another?
We know it, as John writes in verse 9, because God sent His only-begotten Son into the world that through Jesus Christ we might have-- not just bios-- physical life-- but zoe-- the eternal life of God. Think of what Jesus Christ did for you and me on the cross! He faced down all the terrors of sin, death, and hell. He defeated every last thing that we should ever be afraid of.
Verse 10 gives us a true picture of God's purifying, selfless, fear-defying love: It's not that we came up with this kind of love towards God and He rewarded us by loving us back. That's putting it the wrong way around. No, God initiated this love. He embodied it in His Son and His sacrifice for us. When Jesus shed His blood, beyond all else He dealt with the most fearsome thing you or I would ever have to face. Not disease, not death, not even all the devils of hell: Jesus turned aside or propitiated the wrath of God. He, the innocent Lamb of God, died in the place of us guilty sinners. And why? Because God so loved the world, as John writes in his Gospel. Because, as Paul writes in Romans, God was demonstrating His love for us, even while we were still rebellious sinners.
So, John continues in verse 11, "Beloved, since this is how God loved us, we also ought to love one another."
Let that sink in for a moment . . . God loved us when we were wretched, wrong, and undeserving. In response, we are to love one another with purifying, selfless, fear-defying love . . . even when the other person is wretched, wrong, and undeserving.
Oh. So we're supposed to let others walk all over us? After all, Jesus put up with cruel insults and dehumanizing treatment! Is that the love God demands that we show others?
But look at Jesus. No one victimized Him, not even when they nailed Him to the cross. The Scripture clearly teaches that Jesus humbled Himself and laid down His life willingly. When He submitted to humanity's scorn and cruelty, He did it on purpose so humanity might be redeemed from sins like scorn and cruelty. The love of God demonstrated in Jesus Christ always triumphs over the evils thrown against it, and raises us up to new life. The love of God can never condone sin, or promote it, or give up against it. The love of God wants nothing but the best for the object of His love, and that best is Jesus Christ and everything He gives.
Make no mistake: The purifying, selfless, fear-defying love of God working in us will call us to endure pain and insult from the unredeemed world. If you are persecuted for Jesus' sake, you follow in His steps. You exhibit Jesus Christ and His salvation to the world, that more and more people might be saved.
John says in verse 12, "No one has beheld God at any time"-- not with the physical eyes, that is. But as we love others as God loves us, with the same purifying, selfless, fear-defying love, the world will see in us an image of God working in love. As we grow more and more like His Son, that image is being perfected in us. How can you know if you're really saved? You know it by the presence of the Holy Spirit in you, bringing you along, conforming you to the image of Jesus Christ, assuring you of God's gracious love for you, encouraging you to show His love, helping you to repent when you fall short, and never, ever giving up on you.
Again, what's the primary way we show the purifying, selfless, fear-defying love of God? As verse 14 says, it's by bearing witness that the Father has sent the Son to be the Saviour of the world.
Notice what John says. For many years, "Christian witnessing" has meant "telling people how Jesus has improved my life/made me a better mother/made me a nicer person," etc. What I'm about to say may go against everything you've ever heard on the subject, but hear me: That is not Christian witnessing. Yes, Jesus may well have done all that for you. But our true witness to Christ is telling the old, old story of how God's only Son came in love to take on our flesh and hung on a cross to take away our sins and rose from the dead to bring us new life. We testify with John in verse 15, that if anyone confesses that this risen Jesus is the Son of God, God will make His home in that person and that person will forever be at home in God. That wouldn't be possible without the cross. And the cross was possible only through the purifying, selfless, fear-defying love of God that we have come to believe.
This is the loving witness we see in Acts, in the account of Philip and the Ethiopian eunuch. Philip the deacon could have had every reason to be afraid in this situation. An angel speaks to you, that's frightening enough. But then the Spirit directed Philip to speak to a total stranger who by his clothes and jewelry and the style of his carriage was obviously a high government official. Philip's fellow-deacon, Stephen, had been martyred not long before. How could he know this official wouldn't turn him over to the Jewish authorities? And then, the man was a foreigner. And he was a eunuch-- pretty much all courtiers were in those days-- and the Law of Moses forbade any man with damaged genitals to be admitted to full fellowship with the people of God. What if Philip were doing something, well, unkosher in offering the Gospel to him?
The striking thing is, fear is the last emotion you'd attribute to Philip. There's simply no question of it. He's so full of the love of Jesus Christ that he comes right up to that man in his chariot and strikes up a conversation. He preaches Jesus Christ to him out of the Scriptures, just as we are commanded to do, and the Holy Spirit confirms the love of God towards that Ethiopian and moves him to believe and be baptised and go on his way with joy.
That is what our attitude will be when we love with the love of God. John says it again in verse 16: God is love. The world says, "Love is god," by which they mean unbridled sex and selfishness and emotional highs that don't last. That kind of love is cheap and shabby compared to the everlasting love that God is. God gives us His glorious, strong, fear-defying love to live in. It's like a castle He builds for us. It's fortified against all assault, and that castle of love is God Himself. He keeps us and defends us and perfects us in His love. He shields us from everything that could make us afraid.
Especially, His love for us in Jesus Christ shields us from the fear we would otherwise have on the Day of Judgement. We don't think much about the wrath of God against our sins. We don't spend time fearing it. But in the end-- literally-- it's the only thing we should really, truly be afraid of. Financial hardship, illness, starvation, grief, frightening as they are, they all come and go. Even if they end in death, people will say, "Well, now he (or she) is at peace." But the righteous wrath of God says No, for after this comes the judgement. His verdict will be final and those who have rejected Christ and His love will bear the horror and fear of their decision into eternity.
But if truly we have received the love of God shown us in Jesus Christ, we have no need to fear the Day of Judgement. We can be confident in that dreadful day, because already in this world God is working out His love in us, making us into models of Himself. There is no fear in love, for perfect love casts out fear.
Yes, but how do we get this perfect love? I used to think it was up to me, and knew I would never succeed. But the Holy Spirit helped me understand what John is saying here. You and I cannot gin up this perfect love. Rather, this perfect love is the purifying, selfless, fear-defying agape love of Almighty God. It's the love He puts in us by faith in the death and resurrection of His Son our Lord Jesus Christ.
In verse 18 it says that "fear has to do with punishment." Wait a minute: Aren't we afraid for a lot of other reasons as well? But when you think about it, the root of fear really is dread of punishment or retribution. Have you ever noticed how physical pain or sadness or uncertainty is worse when it's tied up with the feeling that you're alienated from other people and from God? Suffering is more fearful and harder to bear when you feel it might somehow be your fault.
I'm thinking of a situation in my own life. I won't go into detail, but members of my family and I find ourselves deeply concerned about a certain relative of ours. I've been very afraid and worried for her. And I find myself saying to myself, "Of course I'm afraid and worried for her! I love her, don't I?" But I have to admit that what I'm encouraging in myself really isn't love. Love is warm and expansive and open, even when it's full of sadness and pity. What I'm feeling over my relative is tight and cramped and closed. It has to do with me trying to atone for my own guilt in not doing more to prevent the situation. It's about me not quite trusting God to take care of her when I can't, so I make myself sick over the situation and imagine that means I'm in control.
I admit it: I am not yet perfected in love. And, I'm willing to guess, neither are you. We still fear. We still wallow in our guilt instead of giving it up and accepting the forgiveness Jesus won for us on the cross. We still try to make our faulty human love do when we could love with the saving love of God. Nevertheless, bit by bit, more and more, we love, because He first loved us.
And in case we should think this is all just a bunch of nice-sounding religious philosophy, John brings us down to everyday specifics in verses 20 and 21. Church member, do you consider yourself to be a lover of God? All right, how do you treat your brothers and sisters in Christ? How do you treat your pastor? Do you encourage them, build them up, support them, work in harmony with them, and always seek their highest good? Or are you always looking out for that juicy bit of gossip to spread? Does it give you a charge whenever you can undermine your opponent, so he or she won't look good? Do you keep a list of grievances and refuse to forgive, especially people in the church?
The Holy Spirit has a word for people who behave like that, and it is "Liar." For how can anyone love the unseen God as his Father if he hates someone who is his brother in Jesus Christ, whom he sees face to face?
No, the end and object of God's love for us is very practical. We must obey the command of our Lord Jesus Christ and love one another, as He has loved us.
And let us rejoice in that! God has loved us and does love us, with a love that is pure, selfless, and fear-defying. He proves it to us by the salvation He gives us in His Son Jesus Christ. Down with fear and let us stand firm in His love. This world throws many fearsome things at us, but what's the worst it can do? We and those we love could die, true. But for us who are God's beloved, to die is gain, for it means forever being with our loving Lord. In this encouragement, beloved, let us love one another with a purifying, selfless, fear-defying love, for purifying, selfless, fear-defying love is from God.
Alleluia, amen!

The world is filled with Fear, and to paraphrase a certain poem, "If you can keep your head when all about you are losing theirs, maybe you haven't grasped the situation!"
With all this, the Apostle John comes along with His First Letter and says, "Perfect love drives out fear." He commands us to love one another, and that will prove whether we have perfect love, as in, "The one who does not love does not know God."
That's putting a big burden on Love! Maybe you remember the hippie days of the late 1960s, early '70s. A lot of us were running around babbling about Love, Peace, and Flower Power. It was all "Make love, not war." The idea was that if we would all just bliss out and love everybody, all the nasty, scary things in the world could be magically overcome or ignored into oblivion. I was just young enough during that time to be skeptical about how that was going to work. And in the end, it didn't. My Baby Boomer generation turned out to be just as greedy, hateful, and rapacious as any other, we were just more sneaky and sanctimonious about it.
Is this the kind of love the Apostle John is talking? The warm-fuzzy, head-in-the-sand, self-seeking human love that fades out when the situation gets scary or just inconvenient?
No, John is speaking of the tough-as-nails, purifying, self-giving, fear-defying, eternal agape love of Almighty God. He begins our passage with this command: "Dear friends, let us love one another, for love comes from God." This love of God is what we're to do our loving with, not some feeling we've imagined or felt or come up with on our own.
In the Greek this passage actually begins with "agapetoi ," which means "Beloved," or, "You who are loved with the love of God." So verse 7 could well read, "You who are right now already loved with the purifying, selfless, fear-defying love of God, love one another with the purifying, selfless, fear-defying love of God, for purifying, selfless, fear-defying love comes only from God." In other words, you've already got what you need right now to obey this command and stand up to fear, because you've received it from God Himself.
In the same vein, verse 8 would read, "Whoever does not love with this purifying, selfless, fear-defying love of God does not know God." Obviously not, because God Himself is this sort of love, and only those who know Him can love this way.
Moreover, the love of God will certainly show itself in anyone who has it. Not all at once, but if someone claims to know God and never, ever shows any sign of Christian love, you have every right to doubt his or her salvation.
But this agape love of God: how do we know it can face down all our fears and make it possible for us to love one another?
We know it, as John writes in verse 9, because God sent His only-begotten Son into the world that through Jesus Christ we might have-- not just bios-- physical life-- but zoe-- the eternal life of God. Think of what Jesus Christ did for you and me on the cross! He faced down all the terrors of sin, death, and hell. He defeated every last thing that we should ever be afraid of.
Verse 10 gives us a true picture of God's purifying, selfless, fear-defying love: It's not that we came up with this kind of love towards God and He rewarded us by loving us back. That's putting it the wrong way around. No, God initiated this love. He embodied it in His Son and His sacrifice for us. When Jesus shed His blood, beyond all else He dealt with the most fearsome thing you or I would ever have to face. Not disease, not death, not even all the devils of hell: Jesus turned aside or propitiated the wrath of God. He, the innocent Lamb of God, died in the place of us guilty sinners. And why? Because God so loved the world, as John writes in his Gospel. Because, as Paul writes in Romans, God was demonstrating His love for us, even while we were still rebellious sinners.
So, John continues in verse 11, "Beloved, since this is how God loved us, we also ought to love one another."
Let that sink in for a moment . . . God loved us when we were wretched, wrong, and undeserving. In response, we are to love one another with purifying, selfless, fear-defying love . . . even when the other person is wretched, wrong, and undeserving.
Oh. So we're supposed to let others walk all over us? After all, Jesus put up with cruel insults and dehumanizing treatment! Is that the love God demands that we show others?
But look at Jesus. No one victimized Him, not even when they nailed Him to the cross. The Scripture clearly teaches that Jesus humbled Himself and laid down His life willingly. When He submitted to humanity's scorn and cruelty, He did it on purpose so humanity might be redeemed from sins like scorn and cruelty. The love of God demonstrated in Jesus Christ always triumphs over the evils thrown against it, and raises us up to new life. The love of God can never condone sin, or promote it, or give up against it. The love of God wants nothing but the best for the object of His love, and that best is Jesus Christ and everything He gives.
Make no mistake: The purifying, selfless, fear-defying love of God working in us will call us to endure pain and insult from the unredeemed world. If you are persecuted for Jesus' sake, you follow in His steps. You exhibit Jesus Christ and His salvation to the world, that more and more people might be saved.
John says in verse 12, "No one has beheld God at any time"-- not with the physical eyes, that is. But as we love others as God loves us, with the same purifying, selfless, fear-defying love, the world will see in us an image of God working in love. As we grow more and more like His Son, that image is being perfected in us. How can you know if you're really saved? You know it by the presence of the Holy Spirit in you, bringing you along, conforming you to the image of Jesus Christ, assuring you of God's gracious love for you, encouraging you to show His love, helping you to repent when you fall short, and never, ever giving up on you.
Again, what's the primary way we show the purifying, selfless, fear-defying love of God? As verse 14 says, it's by bearing witness that the Father has sent the Son to be the Saviour of the world.
Notice what John says. For many years, "Christian witnessing" has meant "telling people how Jesus has improved my life/made me a better mother/made me a nicer person," etc. What I'm about to say may go against everything you've ever heard on the subject, but hear me: That is not Christian witnessing. Yes, Jesus may well have done all that for you. But our true witness to Christ is telling the old, old story of how God's only Son came in love to take on our flesh and hung on a cross to take away our sins and rose from the dead to bring us new life. We testify with John in verse 15, that if anyone confesses that this risen Jesus is the Son of God, God will make His home in that person and that person will forever be at home in God. That wouldn't be possible without the cross. And the cross was possible only through the purifying, selfless, fear-defying love of God that we have come to believe.
This is the loving witness we see in Acts, in the account of Philip and the Ethiopian eunuch. Philip the deacon could have had every reason to be afraid in this situation. An angel speaks to you, that's frightening enough. But then the Spirit directed Philip to speak to a total stranger who by his clothes and jewelry and the style of his carriage was obviously a high government official. Philip's fellow-deacon, Stephen, had been martyred not long before. How could he know this official wouldn't turn him over to the Jewish authorities? And then, the man was a foreigner. And he was a eunuch-- pretty much all courtiers were in those days-- and the Law of Moses forbade any man with damaged genitals to be admitted to full fellowship with the people of God. What if Philip were doing something, well, unkosher in offering the Gospel to him?
The striking thing is, fear is the last emotion you'd attribute to Philip. There's simply no question of it. He's so full of the love of Jesus Christ that he comes right up to that man in his chariot and strikes up a conversation. He preaches Jesus Christ to him out of the Scriptures, just as we are commanded to do, and the Holy Spirit confirms the love of God towards that Ethiopian and moves him to believe and be baptised and go on his way with joy.
That is what our attitude will be when we love with the love of God. John says it again in verse 16: God is love. The world says, "Love is god," by which they mean unbridled sex and selfishness and emotional highs that don't last. That kind of love is cheap and shabby compared to the everlasting love that God is. God gives us His glorious, strong, fear-defying love to live in. It's like a castle He builds for us. It's fortified against all assault, and that castle of love is God Himself. He keeps us and defends us and perfects us in His love. He shields us from everything that could make us afraid.
Especially, His love for us in Jesus Christ shields us from the fear we would otherwise have on the Day of Judgement. We don't think much about the wrath of God against our sins. We don't spend time fearing it. But in the end-- literally-- it's the only thing we should really, truly be afraid of. Financial hardship, illness, starvation, grief, frightening as they are, they all come and go. Even if they end in death, people will say, "Well, now he (or she) is at peace." But the righteous wrath of God says No, for after this comes the judgement. His verdict will be final and those who have rejected Christ and His love will bear the horror and fear of their decision into eternity.
But if truly we have received the love of God shown us in Jesus Christ, we have no need to fear the Day of Judgement. We can be confident in that dreadful day, because already in this world God is working out His love in us, making us into models of Himself. There is no fear in love, for perfect love casts out fear.
Yes, but how do we get this perfect love? I used to think it was up to me, and knew I would never succeed. But the Holy Spirit helped me understand what John is saying here. You and I cannot gin up this perfect love. Rather, this perfect love is the purifying, selfless, fear-defying agape love of Almighty God. It's the love He puts in us by faith in the death and resurrection of His Son our Lord Jesus Christ.
In verse 18 it says that "fear has to do with punishment." Wait a minute: Aren't we afraid for a lot of other reasons as well? But when you think about it, the root of fear really is dread of punishment or retribution. Have you ever noticed how physical pain or sadness or uncertainty is worse when it's tied up with the feeling that you're alienated from other people and from God? Suffering is more fearful and harder to bear when you feel it might somehow be your fault.
I'm thinking of a situation in my own life. I won't go into detail, but members of my family and I find ourselves deeply concerned about a certain relative of ours. I've been very afraid and worried for her. And I find myself saying to myself, "Of course I'm afraid and worried for her! I love her, don't I?" But I have to admit that what I'm encouraging in myself really isn't love. Love is warm and expansive and open, even when it's full of sadness and pity. What I'm feeling over my relative is tight and cramped and closed. It has to do with me trying to atone for my own guilt in not doing more to prevent the situation. It's about me not quite trusting God to take care of her when I can't, so I make myself sick over the situation and imagine that means I'm in control.
I admit it: I am not yet perfected in love. And, I'm willing to guess, neither are you. We still fear. We still wallow in our guilt instead of giving it up and accepting the forgiveness Jesus won for us on the cross. We still try to make our faulty human love do when we could love with the saving love of God. Nevertheless, bit by bit, more and more, we love, because He first loved us.
And in case we should think this is all just a bunch of nice-sounding religious philosophy, John brings us down to everyday specifics in verses 20 and 21. Church member, do you consider yourself to be a lover of God? All right, how do you treat your brothers and sisters in Christ? How do you treat your pastor? Do you encourage them, build them up, support them, work in harmony with them, and always seek their highest good? Or are you always looking out for that juicy bit of gossip to spread? Does it give you a charge whenever you can undermine your opponent, so he or she won't look good? Do you keep a list of grievances and refuse to forgive, especially people in the church?
The Holy Spirit has a word for people who behave like that, and it is "Liar." For how can anyone love the unseen God as his Father if he hates someone who is his brother in Jesus Christ, whom he sees face to face?
No, the end and object of God's love for us is very practical. We must obey the command of our Lord Jesus Christ and love one another, as He has loved us.
And let us rejoice in that! God has loved us and does love us, with a love that is pure, selfless, and fear-defying. He proves it to us by the salvation He gives us in His Son Jesus Christ. Down with fear and let us stand firm in His love. This world throws many fearsome things at us, but what's the worst it can do? We and those we love could die, true. But for us who are God's beloved, to die is gain, for it means forever being with our loving Lord. In this encouragement, beloved, let us love one another with a purifying, selfless, fear-defying love, for purifying, selfless, fear-defying love is from God.
Alleluia, amen!
Sunday, May 4, 2008
Who Can Accept It?
Oh! Do I mean May Day, when labor unions in other countries and people of a certain political persuasion like to march in parades and celebrate their power and ideology?
Noooo . . . !
Maybe I’m talking about the old-fashioned May Day, when young men and maidens dance around the Maypole and you leave baskets of flowers secretly at your neighbors’ doors?
Noooo . . . !
Well, last Thursday was the National Day of Prayer. Am I asking how you celebrated that?
Closer, but still, no.
I’d like to know how you celebrated this past Thursday, which was Ascension Day.
Or did you miss it altogether? If you did, you’re not alone. A lot of Christians, maybe most of us, especially we Protestants, tend to overlook celebrating the Ascension of our Lord Jesus Christ.
It’s not just that Ascension Day always comes on a Thursday. It’s also that the Ascension of our Lord itself is a hard idea to grab hold of, hard to get our minds around. We’re like the disciples out there on the Mount of Olives, gaping up into heaven where our Lord has gone, totally unable to understand what has happened and what it all means.
But it’s not God’s will that we should be left wondering what the Ascension of Christ means, or what it means for us. He has given us His Word that it means more for us than we can ever know.
Here again is what the Scripture says in the Acts of the Apostles:
‘So when they met together, they asked him, "Lord, are you at this time going to restore the kingdom to Israel?"
‘He said to them: "It is not for you to know the times or dates the Father has set by his own authority. But you will receive power when the Holy Spirit comes on you; and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem, and in all Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the earth."
After he said this, he was taken up before their very eyes, and a cloud hid him from their sight.’
Some skeptics claim the Ascension was just a plot device made up by the early Christians to get Jesus "off the stage," so to speak. I’d like to boldly assert to you today that "getting Jesus off the stage" of this earth in such a manner was entirely necessary. And that it was according to God's plan for our salvation.
For the physical Ascension of Christ shows that Jesus was a real Human Being with real flesh. He wasn’t a ghost, He wasn’t a phantom, He wasn’t an idealized figment of the disciples’ imagination. Even after He rose again, Jesus was a Man you could see and touch and sit down and enjoy a meal of bread and fish with. He wasn’t going to fade away, or peter out, or dematerialize, He physically had to leave.
His ascension also assures us that Jesus remains a human being, and He remains so for us.
A few years ago I was sitting in a college dining hall eating lunch, and we got to talking about theology. A younger student asked me, "What did Jesus do with His human body when He went back to heaven?"
And by the Holy Spirit-- it had to be the Holy Spirit--it hit me like a ton of bricks: He took it with Him! Our Lord Jesus Christ was taken up to His Father the way the disciples saw it happen, because the human body He took on when He was conceived in the womb of the Virgin Mary, the body that hung on the cross, the body that was raised and glorified on the third day, Jesus keeps forever! What’s more, He keeps that body for our sake, so that He can always be our Mediator with God. Right now there is a glorious Being of human flesh and blood, a deathless Man sitting on the throne of the universe!
What's more, Jesus taking His physical glorified body into heaven means that human flesh is acceptable in the sight, in the presence of almighty God! One day we, too, will be raised with bodies like the glorified body Jesus now has. And we will be able to stand in the presence of God in those resurrected physical bodies, acceptable to Him!
How Jesus took His human body with Him is something we cannot know. But God allowed the disciples to witness enough to know that it was true. God sent His angels, the two men dressed in white Luke speaks of, to confirm to them that just as Jesus went bodily into heaven, He will return bodily as well.
The Ascension of our Lord is a fitting close to His earthly ministry. But it isn’t merely that. It’s also the final sign and miracle of that ministry. It puts the seal on Who He is and His love and grace towards us all.
A man who’d merely been reanimated, like in some TV show, would have to remain on this earth. The Son of God who has been raised from the dead, He has the right and ability to return in the flesh to heaven.
In John’s gospel, we read part of a sermon Jesus preached in the synagogue in Capernaum, shortly after He’d fed the 5,000 on the other side of the Sea of Galilee. The true bread of life, He tells the people, was not the loaves he’d broken for them on the hillside. It wasn’t the manna that God gave the people of Israel in the wilderness centuries before. The true bread of life is Jesus’ own flesh.
"Very truly I tell you," Jesus says to us, "unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink his blood, you have no life in you. Whoever eats my flesh and drinks my blood has eternal life, and I will raise them up at the last day."
St. John records that many of the disciples were offended by this. They said, "This is a hard teaching. Who can accept it?" They knew Jesus wasn’t advocating cannibalism-- heaven forbid! What bothered them was His claim that His human flesh was the means, the conduit of eternal life. They rebelled at the idea that this ordinary-looking Man claimed, as He said in verse 57, to have been sent by the Father in heaven. Jesus asserted that He participated in the eternal, undying life of God, and He promised to give that eternal life to anyone who participated in His flesh.
These disciples, the ones who turned back from following Him, couldn’t believe it. They refused to believe it. The Rabbi Jesus of Nazareth? Sent directly from heaven by Almighty God? Preposterous! Him? The Giver and channel of eternal life? Unthinkable!
Jesus didn’t back down. He brought their grumbling into the open and said, "Does this offend you? Then what if you see the Son of Man ascend to where he was before!"
Jesus promises the sign of His Ascension as proof that He is who He says He is. It’s a guarantee that He can do what He says He can do, when He claims that His flesh will give us eternal life.
Who is He?
He is the eternally-begotten Son of the Father, co-creator of all that is, eternal Wisdom from on high, almighty God. Jesus came from heaven and had every right to go back there.
Jesus Christ the Son of Man returned bodily to His Father in heaven, and by doing that, He proved that all He did was done in the power of God, the power He shared with the Father before anything was made.
What has He promised He can do?
He’s promised to give us eternal life through His flesh, in the power of the Holy Spirit.
We might think Jesus is speaking of Holy Communion in this sixth chapter of John. Not quite. Actually, Holy Communion and Jesus’ words here in John 6 are both speaking about the same reality: the life-giving power of the body and blood of our Lord Jesus Christ, broken on the cross for our sins and risen for our restoration. Jesus says that if we want eternal life, we have to feast on Him, even-- as the Greek words say-- munch on Him, chew on Him, take Him into us totally. There’s no other way to have eternal life.
But how can we feed on Christ? Well, St. Augustine was one of the great Church fathers. Centuries and centuries ago he came up with a phrase that’s hard to improve upon. He said, "Believe, and you have eaten."
"Believe, and you have eaten." Believe that Christ’s body was broken for you, to turn aside the wrath of God that you deserved. Believe that His blood was poured out like wine to refresh your soul and make you new and clean in the sight of God. Believe, and feast upon the gift of Himself that He gives.
Jesus ascended into heaven to make these great and precious gifts available to you, right now. On earth, even as a resurrected Man, Jesus could only be local. He could only be with one group of his disciples at a time. But as He tells us later on in John’s gospel, "It is for your good that I am going away. Unless I go, the Counselor [that is, the Holy Spirit] will not come to you; but if I go, I will send him to you."
As long as Jesus remained physically on this earth, the power and presence of the Holy Spirit remained focussed in Him. But we need His Spirit in us, working in our bodies, our minds, our souls! As Jesus says in verse 63 of our text, "The Spirit gives life; the flesh [that is, mere human effort on our part] counts for nothing." Jesus had to ascend to where He was before to make the life-giving power of His crucified and glorified flesh available to all people everywhere.
This is the will of God the Father in heaven. For as Jesus says in verse 65, no one can come to [Him] unless the Father has enabled him. When the Holy Spirit brings us to feast on our Lord Jesus Christ, God the Father is glorified in His Son.
Which for you and me means that God wants you to receive the food that is His Son’s crucified body. He wants you to drink your fill of the wine that is Jesus’ blood. He is eager for you to receive the eternal life that comes from the God-Man Jesus Christ, alone. God wants to lift you up to the throne of grace, where Jesus sits even now interceding for you. God wants you to participate in the community of joy and fulfilment that is the one holy, blessed, and undivided Trinity, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. God gives you all these gifts and brings you into His love by Jesus Christ, His ascended Son, true God and true Man forever more.
Your ascended Lord is your food and drink, and He will never be taken away from you. Whatever happens in your life, whatever hardship or suffering you may go through; even if you should experience physical hunger, you will never lack what you truly need; you will never be famished or forsaken. Jesus says to you, "Whoever eats my flesh and drinks my blood has eternal life, and I will raise them up at the last day."
The sad thing is, even today people reject Jesus, the Bread of heaven. They say, "This teaching about Jesus being the only way to eternal life, it’s too hard. It’s narrow and intolerant. Who can accept it?"
The truth is, unless the Father changes our hearts and draws us to Himself, none of us can accept it. In our own sinfulness, acting from our own corrupt flesh, we turn our backs on the Lord who would save us. But Jesus Christ Himself nourishes and revives us by the death and resurrection of His human body. He raises us to heaven by His glorious ascension. He enables us to accept His word and feed on Him in Spirit and truth.
Accept His word of life now, by the power of the Holy Spirit, working in you, giving you life. Accept it by the mercy of God the Father, who calls you to Himself. Accept it in the strength of your Lord Jesus Christ who died, rose, and ascended into heaven for you. Feed on Him with thanksgiving, for He offers you His flesh as real food and His blood as real drink.
Simon Peter said, "Lord, to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal life! We believe and know that you are the Holy One of God!"
No other Lord. No other Bread. No other Life. Christ alone is the Son of God and Son of Man who has ascended where He was before! Believe in Him and eat. Be raised up with Him and live. And give Him praise and glory, with God the Father in the unity of the Holy Spirit, now and forever. Amen.
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Preached for Ascension Sunday, 2008
Preached for Ascension Sunday, 2008
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