Text: John 21:1-22
TWO WEEKS AGO in the twenty-first chapter of the Gospel according to St. John we began to see how the risen Christ works in us, from the perspective of the Apostle Peter. We saw how Jesus meets us in the ordinary activities of our daily lives, even when we not be looking for Him. We were reminded how He transforms us by the saving power of His cross, so we can run to Him and His holiness in spite of our sin. And we saw again how Jesus, our Lord and God, provides us with everything we have and need, and though He doesn't need our help, still He calls us to participate in His work in the world until He comes again.
This morning we're going to go deeper into this last truth as we examine the second part of this passage. We left Peter, James and John the sons of Zebedee, Thomas, Nathaniel, and a couple of the other disciples on the western shore of the Sea of Tiberias (the Sea of Galilee) gathered around a charcoal fire eating breakfast with the risen Jesus. Imagine the mixed emotions Peter might be feeling. You know how it is when there's something wrong between you and a good friend; when you've offended or hurt him in some way. He's treating you like everything's all right, but you know, you just know that the two of you have unfinished business.
And there certainly was unfinished business between Simon Peter and his Lord. Back in John chapter 18, in the hours before Jesus was crucified, there'd been another charcoal fire with Peter standing near, that time in the courtyard of the high priest. Some distance away Jesus was standing His farce of a trial. Peter had already denied knowing Jesus when he was let in at the courtyard gate. And by the flickering fire Simon Peter had denied his Lord the second and third times. In a few hours Jesus was dead and now it was too late, the offense could never be put right. But now here was Jesus, risen from the dead and sitting there with them! But for Peter, the joy had to be mixed with the nagging feeling that Jesus must still be terribly, terribly disappointed in him. Would it be worse if the Lord left the unfinished business unfinished? Or if He openly called Peter out on his sin? Either way, could their relationship ever again be the same?
Then it happened. After they'd all finished eating, Jesus said to Simon Peter, "Simon, son of John, do you truly love me more than these?"
Notice how Jesus calls Peter by his birth name, Simon, and not by "Peter," the name He gave him? "Peter" means, well, not quite "rock" like the Rock of Gibraltar, but more "rocklike" or "rocky." It signifies strength and steadiness, but Simon had been anything but strong and steady the night Jesus stood His trial.
Then see how Jesus asks him if he "truly loves" Him, "more than these." It bears repeating that the Greek word the NIV translates "truly love" is "agapas," the second person singular of the verb related to "agape," which means selfless, deathless, Godlike love, the love that for the sake of righteousness would cause a man to die even for His enemies. "Simon", Jesus is gently asking, "what about all those grandiose professions of unbending loyalty you spouted in the Upper Room?" "I will lay down my life for you," Peter had said. "Lord, I am ready to go with you to prison and to death!" Peter had said. "Simon," Jesus says now, "do you truly love Me, agapas me , more than these?" The night our Lord was arrested Peter had sworn, "Even if all fall away, I will not." Peter had been so sure he loved Jesus with unshakeable, deathless love, that his love for Jesus exceeded the love of any of the other disciples. That had been his fervent boast. So, "Simon, do you truly love Me like that?" Jesus asks. "More than these others do?"
What can he say? Peter tries to get round his shame by replying, "Yes, Lord, you know that I love you." But what's this? Peter isn't using the verb form of "agape" that Jesus used, but the verb form of "philia," or brotherly love.
Now, let's not sell philia love short. It's far more than just liking. It's the kind of love that would cause a sister to spend her last dime to bail her sister out of jail, or a soldier to fall on a grenade for a comrade in his regiment. But it tends to focus on people you're in a mutual relationship with, those you know would do the same for you. It doesn't have the same self-abandoning quality as agape. Peter has to step it down and profess to a love that is not so high.
Once more, in verse 16, Jesus asks Peter, "Do you truly love Me, agapas me?" Why does He ask this again? Because the Lord bears true agape love towards Peter, and He wants to make sure Peter learns what he needs to learn. Peter needs to really hear and respond to Jesus and not just say what he hopes he can get away with or what he thinks Jesus wants to hear. Their unfinished business needs to be finished, not glossed over.
And again Peter can only say, "Yes, Lord, you know that I love you-- philo se." "Yes, Lord, I love you like a comrade-at-arms or a brother." Peter can no longer claim that his love for Jesus is unlimited and Godlike. It is, he decides, a good, solid, devoted human love.
But then, in verse 17, once more Jesus asks Peter, "Simon, son of John, do you love me?" That is, in the Greek, "Do you phileis me?" The Evangelist tells us that Peter was hurt at this. Not because Jesus had asked him about his love for Him a third time, but because the third time Jesus had changed the word for love He was using. He switched to the term Peter was trying to accommodate himself with. "So, Simon, do you really love Me with philia love?" How the reminder must have probed the depth of his betrayal! Fall on a grenade for Jesus? Back there in the high priest's courtyard he couldn't even admit to knowing Him!
But still, this philia love is what Peter intends towards Jesus and it's the least that Jesus deserves. So he appeals to Jesus' deepest knowledge of his heart: "Lord, you know all things; you know I love you-- philo se!"
What is was our Lord trying to accomplish with all this? Just this: It was still His intention that Peter should be the leader of the Apostles and the chief evangelist to the Jews throughout the Roman world. But Simon Peter couldn't be all that as long as he was depending upon his own strength and good intentions. He had to be-- not humiliated--but humbled, so he would depend wholly on the strength and resurrection power of Jesus Christ instead.
Brothers and sisters, our Lord hasn't called us to be the Prince of the Apostles like Simon Peter. But He does call us to love and serve Him with a right appreciation of our intentions and abilities. He wants us to walk humbly in His presence, depending on Him alone. It's bad enough when we hang back from serving Him because we think it's all up to us and we feel inadequate and scared. It's worse when we pull the "Stand back, Lord, I'll defend You!" act, as if we were St. George and Jesus were the helpless maiden who needed to be rescued from the dragon. Because fear may cause us to cry out for Christ's help, but when we boast in our own strength, we forget our need of Him altogether. Then He can do nothing with us until by the Holy Spirit we are moved to repent.
But what does Jesus command Peter each time the apostle confesses, "Lord, you know I love you, that I philo se"? "Feed my lambs," says Jesus. "Take care of my sheep. Feed my sheep." Peter is the model and prototype of all the pastors and elders Christ has put into His Church to build her members up in the Christian faith and ministry. All right, Peter loves the Lord with philia love. How can he show it? How can any leader in the church show it? By bringing the people of God, young and old, to a deeper, richer, truer, heart, mind, and spirit knowledge of and relationship with the Lord who died to save them from their sins and rose to give them eternal life.
From the Holy Spirit's work as recorded in the Acts of the Apostles we know this feeding and care taking primarily means preaching the Good News of Jesus Christ and His saving work. Not just to bring in new converts, the lambs, but also, always, to sustain the sheep, the more mature saints. For we who have been in Christ's Church longer also need to be comforted and corrected by repeated reminders of who Jesus is and what He has done for us. Otherwise we forget and wander off on our own imaginings about Jesus and what He's about. We go astray.
Brothers and sisters, we live in dangerous times when pastors and elders especially need to adhere faithfully and firmly to these commands of Jesus. And I'm not now talking about bombs set by American citizen terrorists or infringements on our liberties by our own government. No, I'm referring to a trend that's set in in some parts of the evangelical wing of the Church, that would reject totally what Jesus commands Peter and all pastors to do.
This danger starts with the insistence that we should stop using the word "sheep" for God's people. It's demeaning, some Christian leaders say, and it implies that we're all stupid and helpless. And yes, it isn't exactly a compliment to be called a sheep. They do tend to wander off. They eat stuff they shouldn't. They refuse to drink unless the water is still and not running. They get dirty and diseased and smelly. But God in His wisdom chose to incorporate this term for us in His Word because that is exactly what we are like when we're left to ourselves in our sin. Helpless. Wandering. Consuming poisonous weeds. And not very clever, and the most intelligent among us can sometimes be the stupidest of all. He chose this word moreover because it exalts Jesus Christ as the Good Shepherd who keeps us safe and healthy, who laid down His life to rescue us from Satan, that old wolf. Without His loving favor we are prey to every false religion and wild beast of lying worldly ideas that comes along. But Jesus does save and preserve us, and He does so by the hand of faithful undershepherds like the man He was making Peter to be.
Along with this, there are also those in our time who'll admit that God's people are His sheep, but they say it's up to the sheep to feed themselves. That's the only way, they insist, for the church to be "seeker sensitive" and "missional." Pastors like Bill Hybels of Willow Creek Church in Chicago and Steven Furtick of Elevation Church of Charlotte, South Carolina, have said openly that members must become "self-feeders"; that those who want to hear more about the doctrines of grace on Sunday morning are on the way to becoming "spiritually obese"; that it's not their job as pastors to take care of the already-saved, they have to focus on the lost. These men are right that the local church should be as outward-looking and concerned for unsaved sinners as Jesus is. We must not be a private club where we care only for ourselves. But they seem to forget that without pastors and elders continually building the membership up by the Word and sacraments of Jesus Christ we have nothing to take into the world. If we sheep (and that includes all of us) are left without the shepherds God has appointed for us, if the shepherds refuse to do their Christ-given jobs, we will be walking pieces of unfinished business, with nothing to offer anybody but our own failing, faulty human efforts.
It would be bad enough if this "self-feeding sheep" mentality were a problem only in nondenominational churches, but some evangelical Presbyterian leaders are also beginning to suggest that that's what it takes to be missional. Brothers and sisters, whatever you do, make sure that the person in your pulpit feeds constantly with the sincere milk and the strong meat of the Word of God, not only in preaching, but in care and visitation. For only then will you be strong enough to reach out to those who do not know our great Shepherd and the only Lord.
Jesus in this episode in John led Simon Peter into a new knowledge of himself and of Jesus' will for him, and closed the unfinished business they had between them after Peter's denial. But Peter is not exactly comforted when Jesus goes on to indicate how Peter will finish his life on this earth, in a martyr's death. He no longer boasts proudly about facing it without fear, but he can't help wondering if John will experience the same. But the command of Jesus to him and to us is immovable: Never mind my will for him (or anybody else), you follow Me.
For Jesus' business with us is never finished, at least, not until He comes in glory and we are perfected in Him. We love imperfectly but are to go on loving, not depending on our love but on His; we serve in and with and through the gospel Word, not boasting in our own strength but humbly relying on His. And the strength and love of Jesus are perfect and sure, for He who died has risen from the dead, and He is with us now and forever more.
Showing posts with label humility. Show all posts
Showing posts with label humility. Show all posts
Sunday, April 28, 2013
Sunday, February 3, 2013
Where Weakness Wins
Text: 1 Corinthians 1:18 - 2:5
WELL, TONIGHT'S THE SUPER BOWL, AND it's too bad the Steelers aren't in it. They just weren't strong enough or smart enough or healthy enough to make it to New Orleans. It's a real disappointment, but that's the way it works in this world. To get to the big game you have to be smart and fast and accomplished, and that doesn't go just for football, but for all areas of life. To really succeed, it takes smarts-- or, shall we say, wisdom-- and it takes strength. Weaklings and fools need not apply
But in our Scripture reading for today, we have the Apostle Paul extolling the virtues of weakness and foolishness. What's going on? Have we been wrong all along about how the world runs? Does he want us to see that in this life it's the weak fools who really win?
Not at all. But St. Paul isn't talking about the game of this earthly life. He's talking about a game that's much, much, bigger than that.
When it comes to understanding the Scriptures, the first rule is "Context, context, context". That means first of all how the verse or passage works in the book its in and in the Bible as a whole. Then it means understanding the historical and cultural context of the passage, what it would have meant to its first readers. After that, we can begin to apply God's eternal Word to ourselves.
So even though you have the Scripture readings projected up on the screen, I hope you won't stop opening the Bible in the pew or bringing your own Bible to church and having it open during the sermon. It will help you understand the context of what's being preached.
So what's the context of our reading from 1 Corinthians? First and foremost, its context is the entire Bible, and entire Bible is the record of how God the Father brought salvation to a lost world through His Son Jesus Christ and how the Holy Spirit applies that salvation to the ones He has chosen. As Jesus taught the disciples on the road to Emmaus, all of Scripture is about Him. The first letter to the Corinthians is in the New Testament, which deals with how God brought the good news of Christ's salvation to the world and how His church worked through what that would mean in their lives. In this letter the Apostle Paul responds to some misunderstandings that had come up in the church at Corinth, so they could live before God and with each other in a way that glorified the Lord who had saved them. And the immediate context for what we read today starts at verse 10 of chapter 1 and goes all the way to the end of Chapter 4. It has to do with wisdom and foolishness, weakness and strength, and being united in Christ instead of divided like those in this fallen world.
So if you do have your Bibles with you, I ask you to look over at verses 11 and 12 of chapter 1. There Paul writes,
My brothers, some from Chloe's household have informed me that there are quarrels among you. What I mean is this: One of you says, "I follow Paul"; another, "I follow Apollos"; another, "I follow Cephas [that is, Peter]"; still another, "I follow Christ."
Over in chapter 3, verse 5, the Apostle writes,
What, after all, is Apollos? And what is Paul? Only servants, though whom you were called to believe-- as the Lord has assigned to each his task.
All right, what does this have to do with strength and weakness? Just this: In the 1st century Grecian world, the teams (you might call them) that were the most looked up to and admired were not always the wrestlers and runners and chariot racers. They were the schools of the philosophers. The philosophers were the wise ones who could teach enlightenment and help you gain the ideal life in this world and in the next. Now, these schools weren't like a college classroom with a professor up front lecturing. Rather, think of a group of men (and a woman or two) gathered in a shady colonnade in the market place discussing and debating the latest ideas on wisdom and the ideal life. The different schools of philosophy didn't agree on this, and so of course there were divisions between them. Which one was the wisest? Which one made the strongest, most noble case? It was important to the Greeks. Even the lower classes looked up with envy and admiration to the philosophers.
Before they were saved, the Corinthians might have said, "I admire the Stoics"; or, "I favor the Epicureans"; or "I follow Pythagoras." But now, listen to them: "I follow Paul!" and "I follow Apollos!" They were treating the Good News of Jesus Christ like just another worldly philosophy and seeing the apostles as leaders of different, opposing schools. They were quarrelling about who was the wisest, the strongest, the best!
We don't have that exact problem in our day. But sadly, we do have Christian leaders who will take their stand on some secondary point of doctrine, like social justice or worship styles or women in ministry, and insinuate that those who don't feel the way they do on it probably aren't saved. We have everyday ordinary people-- maybe ourselves, God help us!-- breaking up into factions of one, each picking and choosing what bits of Scripture we'll emphasize and worshipping a Jesus of our own making. As we can tell from verse 17, this partisan spirit threatens to empty the cross of Christ of its power.
Why is that? Because, as we read in 1:18, "[T]he message of the cross is foolishness to those who are perishing but to us who are being saved it is the power of God."
Again, is Paul getting ready to tell us that weakness and foolishness is the real, true way to triumph in this earthly life? Not at all! Rather, he's telling us that what God has done for us in Christ has nothing to do with the world or its strength or wisdom at all! He quotes from Isaiah 29:
"I will destroy the wisdom of the wise;
the intelligence of the intelligent I will frustrate."
The wise ones of the Jews said the way to salvation-- that is, the way to power and glory with God-- was by making an effort and perfectly keeping the Law of Moses. The wise Gentiles, especially the Greeks, said it was through philosophy and enlightenment. But God confounds them all with the fact of the cross, with a stripped and beaten Man hanging in agony on a shameful instrument of execution. How foolish that seems to the unbelieving world? Who could ever believe that one Man's death as a low, despised criminal could be the one and only way to divine fulfillment, happiness, and peace? Through its wisdom the world could never know it. If we thought about it ourselves for a thousand years we could never imagine it. Even today, we have people in the church, in our denomination, who say the Cross of Christ is foolishness and we should forget all about it if we want to bring in the kingdom of God. If you read news articles online or watch YouTube videos, you'll see how many people make fun of the idea that salvation from sin comes only through Christ and Him crucified. The idea that we need to be saved in the first place makes them laugh even more. Not only is the cross not obvious, it goes against everything the world knows is true.
But, as Paul says in 1:25, "[T]he foolishness of God is wiser than man's wisdom, and the weakness of God is stronger than man's strength." By the weakness and foolishness of the preaching of the gospel of Christ dead and risen again for our sins, God the Holy Spirit brings into our lives eternal wisdom and never-ending strength that we could never have imagined before He came and transforms our hearts and minds.
But how can we know this is true? Well, Paul says to the Corinthians, look what has happened to you:
Brothers, think of what you were when you were called. Not many of you were wise by human standards; not many were influential; not many were of noble birth. But God chose the foolish things of the world to shame the wise; God chose the weak things of the world to shame the strong. He chose the lowly things of this world and the despised things--and the things that are not--to nullify the things that are . . .
Does Paul want them to start feeling proud of their lowliness? Does he want them to compete for the title of Most Humble the way they've been competing over whose party is the greatest? Certainly not! Besides, the slaves and laborers of the Corinthian church knew there was nothing grand or glorious about their lot in life. It was a dead-end, miserable existence. Rather, if they should ever doubt the greatness of the cross, he wants them to think like this: "Hey, you know, that's right. I'm only a slave. I could never go near those groups of philosophers in the marketplace, except maybe to wash their feet. I could never learn the path to enlightenment. But here I am and I know the truth of Jesus Christ, the Lord of the universe! To me, a mere slave, the eternal Creator has given the gift of speaking in tongues! My fellow-slaves and I can prophesy in His name! We can heal people and cast out demons! We can do all these amazing things the greatest philosophers never dreamed of doing, and it's all because of what Jesus Christ did for me when He died on that cross over outside Jerusalem." If God can transform our lives like that by the cross, don't you think He could cause the cross to become the means of transformation in the first place? Or to put it the other way around, since God was able by the out-of-this-world foolishness of the cross to raise up His church in power and wisdom, can't we see how able He is to transform and glorify you and me?
Why did God do it this way? Why go so opposite to what the world desires and expects? The answer is in verse 29. God wants to make sure that no one on earth can boast before Him. He wants to make sure that none of us can say, "Here I am, Lord, standing in blessedness before Your throne, because I made the effort and earned it!" or "Sure, that was all my idea, how to get myself saved." No, Christ and Christ crucified alone is our wisdom from God, our righteousness, our holiness, and our redemption. If we're going to talk big about anyone's greatness, let us magnify the amazing greatness of the Lord.
It was to forestall any human boasting that, when Paul came to preach the gospel in Corinth, he made every effort not to sound like one of their hero philosophers. He didn't claim to have special, hidden, higher wisdom and he didn't use the eloquent rhetorical devices the great lecturers would use. Paul knew the Corinthians' yen for human strength and wisdom, and he wanted to distinguish the gospel from all that, so the transforming power would be that of the Holy Spirit alone. So, he says, "I resolved to know nothing while I was with you except Jesus Christ and him crucified . . . so that your faith might not rest on man's wisdom, but on God's power."
"I resolved to know nothing while I was with you except Jesus Christ and him crucified." That is the message of the gospel. That is the message of all the Scriptures. Of course there are other things we need to know about God's dealing with us. We need to know about God's righteousness and our sin. We need to understand our need for a Savior. We need to learn how to live our lives in thankful service to the Lord who has saved us. We need to know about His return and how His righteousness and justice will prevail over all creation. But the central thing is and must remain the cross, that foolish, weak, and shameful thing Jesus Christ submitted to one day outside Jerusalem.
Before all else, we need to realize how through it He has given us God's nobility, wisdom, and strength. Whatever you do, especially whatever you as a church, be it the most routine meeting or fellowship dinner, do not ignore the cross, or depart from it, or forget its power. For if you do, you'll wander blind in your human weakness and you're bound to lose. If the preaching you hear from this pulpit gives you the idea that the Christian life is something you live by your own wisdom or strength of character, it is leading you to failure. If any so-called Christian author would lead you away from the cross by reducing Christ's death to a mere good example, reject his or her false wisdom and return to the wisdom of God recorded in Holy Scripture. Keep your eyes focussed on Him who in foolishness and weakness died for you. He is Christ, for you the wisdom of God and the power of God. And when it comes to a contest between the strength of man and the weakness of God, the weakness of God always wins.
WELL, TONIGHT'S THE SUPER BOWL, AND it's too bad the Steelers aren't in it. They just weren't strong enough or smart enough or healthy enough to make it to New Orleans. It's a real disappointment, but that's the way it works in this world. To get to the big game you have to be smart and fast and accomplished, and that doesn't go just for football, but for all areas of life. To really succeed, it takes smarts-- or, shall we say, wisdom-- and it takes strength. Weaklings and fools need not apply
But in our Scripture reading for today, we have the Apostle Paul extolling the virtues of weakness and foolishness. What's going on? Have we been wrong all along about how the world runs? Does he want us to see that in this life it's the weak fools who really win?
Not at all. But St. Paul isn't talking about the game of this earthly life. He's talking about a game that's much, much, bigger than that.
When it comes to understanding the Scriptures, the first rule is "Context, context, context". That means first of all how the verse or passage works in the book its in and in the Bible as a whole. Then it means understanding the historical and cultural context of the passage, what it would have meant to its first readers. After that, we can begin to apply God's eternal Word to ourselves.
So even though you have the Scripture readings projected up on the screen, I hope you won't stop opening the Bible in the pew or bringing your own Bible to church and having it open during the sermon. It will help you understand the context of what's being preached.
So what's the context of our reading from 1 Corinthians? First and foremost, its context is the entire Bible, and entire Bible is the record of how God the Father brought salvation to a lost world through His Son Jesus Christ and how the Holy Spirit applies that salvation to the ones He has chosen. As Jesus taught the disciples on the road to Emmaus, all of Scripture is about Him. The first letter to the Corinthians is in the New Testament, which deals with how God brought the good news of Christ's salvation to the world and how His church worked through what that would mean in their lives. In this letter the Apostle Paul responds to some misunderstandings that had come up in the church at Corinth, so they could live before God and with each other in a way that glorified the Lord who had saved them. And the immediate context for what we read today starts at verse 10 of chapter 1 and goes all the way to the end of Chapter 4. It has to do with wisdom and foolishness, weakness and strength, and being united in Christ instead of divided like those in this fallen world.
So if you do have your Bibles with you, I ask you to look over at verses 11 and 12 of chapter 1. There Paul writes,
My brothers, some from Chloe's household have informed me that there are quarrels among you. What I mean is this: One of you says, "I follow Paul"; another, "I follow Apollos"; another, "I follow Cephas [that is, Peter]"; still another, "I follow Christ."
Over in chapter 3, verse 5, the Apostle writes,
What, after all, is Apollos? And what is Paul? Only servants, though whom you were called to believe-- as the Lord has assigned to each his task.
All right, what does this have to do with strength and weakness? Just this: In the 1st century Grecian world, the teams (you might call them) that were the most looked up to and admired were not always the wrestlers and runners and chariot racers. They were the schools of the philosophers. The philosophers were the wise ones who could teach enlightenment and help you gain the ideal life in this world and in the next. Now, these schools weren't like a college classroom with a professor up front lecturing. Rather, think of a group of men (and a woman or two) gathered in a shady colonnade in the market place discussing and debating the latest ideas on wisdom and the ideal life. The different schools of philosophy didn't agree on this, and so of course there were divisions between them. Which one was the wisest? Which one made the strongest, most noble case? It was important to the Greeks. Even the lower classes looked up with envy and admiration to the philosophers.
Before they were saved, the Corinthians might have said, "I admire the Stoics"; or, "I favor the Epicureans"; or "I follow Pythagoras." But now, listen to them: "I follow Paul!" and "I follow Apollos!" They were treating the Good News of Jesus Christ like just another worldly philosophy and seeing the apostles as leaders of different, opposing schools. They were quarrelling about who was the wisest, the strongest, the best!
We don't have that exact problem in our day. But sadly, we do have Christian leaders who will take their stand on some secondary point of doctrine, like social justice or worship styles or women in ministry, and insinuate that those who don't feel the way they do on it probably aren't saved. We have everyday ordinary people-- maybe ourselves, God help us!-- breaking up into factions of one, each picking and choosing what bits of Scripture we'll emphasize and worshipping a Jesus of our own making. As we can tell from verse 17, this partisan spirit threatens to empty the cross of Christ of its power.
Why is that? Because, as we read in 1:18, "[T]he message of the cross is foolishness to those who are perishing but to us who are being saved it is the power of God."
Again, is Paul getting ready to tell us that weakness and foolishness is the real, true way to triumph in this earthly life? Not at all! Rather, he's telling us that what God has done for us in Christ has nothing to do with the world or its strength or wisdom at all! He quotes from Isaiah 29:
"I will destroy the wisdom of the wise;
the intelligence of the intelligent I will frustrate."
The wise ones of the Jews said the way to salvation-- that is, the way to power and glory with God-- was by making an effort and perfectly keeping the Law of Moses. The wise Gentiles, especially the Greeks, said it was through philosophy and enlightenment. But God confounds them all with the fact of the cross, with a stripped and beaten Man hanging in agony on a shameful instrument of execution. How foolish that seems to the unbelieving world? Who could ever believe that one Man's death as a low, despised criminal could be the one and only way to divine fulfillment, happiness, and peace? Through its wisdom the world could never know it. If we thought about it ourselves for a thousand years we could never imagine it. Even today, we have people in the church, in our denomination, who say the Cross of Christ is foolishness and we should forget all about it if we want to bring in the kingdom of God. If you read news articles online or watch YouTube videos, you'll see how many people make fun of the idea that salvation from sin comes only through Christ and Him crucified. The idea that we need to be saved in the first place makes them laugh even more. Not only is the cross not obvious, it goes against everything the world knows is true.
But, as Paul says in 1:25, "[T]he foolishness of God is wiser than man's wisdom, and the weakness of God is stronger than man's strength." By the weakness and foolishness of the preaching of the gospel of Christ dead and risen again for our sins, God the Holy Spirit brings into our lives eternal wisdom and never-ending strength that we could never have imagined before He came and transforms our hearts and minds.
But how can we know this is true? Well, Paul says to the Corinthians, look what has happened to you:
Brothers, think of what you were when you were called. Not many of you were wise by human standards; not many were influential; not many were of noble birth. But God chose the foolish things of the world to shame the wise; God chose the weak things of the world to shame the strong. He chose the lowly things of this world and the despised things--and the things that are not--to nullify the things that are . . .
Does Paul want them to start feeling proud of their lowliness? Does he want them to compete for the title of Most Humble the way they've been competing over whose party is the greatest? Certainly not! Besides, the slaves and laborers of the Corinthian church knew there was nothing grand or glorious about their lot in life. It was a dead-end, miserable existence. Rather, if they should ever doubt the greatness of the cross, he wants them to think like this: "Hey, you know, that's right. I'm only a slave. I could never go near those groups of philosophers in the marketplace, except maybe to wash their feet. I could never learn the path to enlightenment. But here I am and I know the truth of Jesus Christ, the Lord of the universe! To me, a mere slave, the eternal Creator has given the gift of speaking in tongues! My fellow-slaves and I can prophesy in His name! We can heal people and cast out demons! We can do all these amazing things the greatest philosophers never dreamed of doing, and it's all because of what Jesus Christ did for me when He died on that cross over outside Jerusalem." If God can transform our lives like that by the cross, don't you think He could cause the cross to become the means of transformation in the first place? Or to put it the other way around, since God was able by the out-of-this-world foolishness of the cross to raise up His church in power and wisdom, can't we see how able He is to transform and glorify you and me?
Why did God do it this way? Why go so opposite to what the world desires and expects? The answer is in verse 29. God wants to make sure that no one on earth can boast before Him. He wants to make sure that none of us can say, "Here I am, Lord, standing in blessedness before Your throne, because I made the effort and earned it!" or "Sure, that was all my idea, how to get myself saved." No, Christ and Christ crucified alone is our wisdom from God, our righteousness, our holiness, and our redemption. If we're going to talk big about anyone's greatness, let us magnify the amazing greatness of the Lord.
It was to forestall any human boasting that, when Paul came to preach the gospel in Corinth, he made every effort not to sound like one of their hero philosophers. He didn't claim to have special, hidden, higher wisdom and he didn't use the eloquent rhetorical devices the great lecturers would use. Paul knew the Corinthians' yen for human strength and wisdom, and he wanted to distinguish the gospel from all that, so the transforming power would be that of the Holy Spirit alone. So, he says, "I resolved to know nothing while I was with you except Jesus Christ and him crucified . . . so that your faith might not rest on man's wisdom, but on God's power."
"I resolved to know nothing while I was with you except Jesus Christ and him crucified." That is the message of the gospel. That is the message of all the Scriptures. Of course there are other things we need to know about God's dealing with us. We need to know about God's righteousness and our sin. We need to understand our need for a Savior. We need to learn how to live our lives in thankful service to the Lord who has saved us. We need to know about His return and how His righteousness and justice will prevail over all creation. But the central thing is and must remain the cross, that foolish, weak, and shameful thing Jesus Christ submitted to one day outside Jerusalem.
Before all else, we need to realize how through it He has given us God's nobility, wisdom, and strength. Whatever you do, especially whatever you as a church, be it the most routine meeting or fellowship dinner, do not ignore the cross, or depart from it, or forget its power. For if you do, you'll wander blind in your human weakness and you're bound to lose. If the preaching you hear from this pulpit gives you the idea that the Christian life is something you live by your own wisdom or strength of character, it is leading you to failure. If any so-called Christian author would lead you away from the cross by reducing Christ's death to a mere good example, reject his or her false wisdom and return to the wisdom of God recorded in Holy Scripture. Keep your eyes focussed on Him who in foolishness and weakness died for you. He is Christ, for you the wisdom of God and the power of God. And when it comes to a contest between the strength of man and the weakness of God, the weakness of God always wins.
Sunday, November 25, 2012
A Kingdom Not of This World
Texts: 2 Samuel 23:1-7; Romans 1:1-6; John 18:33-37
WHAT KIND OF KING DO we want?
As good Americans, of course we will reply we don't want a king. That's why we fought a revolution.
All right, then, what kind of president do we want? What kind of leader do we want at our head to guide us and guard us and make decisions in our behalf?
Well, taking it from history and recent events, typically we want rulers with the common touch. We want someone who can sympathize with our needs, aspirations, and desires-- and help fulfill them. Someone who can identify with us as his fellow human beings. He should be down here and present with us. We want his kingdom to be a kingdom of this world.
At the same time, we want our leader to be a little better than we are, just like us but more so. Accomplished and superior enough so we can look up to him, but not so high that he's totally detached. We want him to symbolize our own aspirations for power and greatness, because we want to think of ourselves as great.
We want our leader to be accountable to us. Even the most powerful of emperors could be taken down by a vote of his nobles, or by a palace coup. We want him to bear in mind that with all his power and riches and fame, he's only our ruler as long as we allow him to be. We want him to reign over a kingdom of this world and answer to us, because we're very much of this world. That's the kind of king we want.
So how does Jesus Christ fit into this? Today is Christ the King Sunday, the day when the Church has traditionally celebrated our Lord's exalted status as king of heaven and earth. Is He the kind of king we traditionally want?
In some ways, yes. In 2 Samuel 23 we have a valedictory psalm of David, his official last words. In it, among other things, he celebrates that God has made with his house and family an everlasting covenant. This refers to the fact that the Lord God promised that there would never fail to be a descendant of David sitting on the throne of Israel. And who was David? He was the despised shepherd boy whom God had raised up to shepherd His people Israel. And who is Jesus? As St. Paul reminds us in Romans chapter 1, Jesus is the descendant or son of David. Jesus has humble family origins. We can identify with Him.
And also in Romans 1, the apostle speaks of Jesus' human nature. Jesus as He walked this earth and proclaimed His coming kingdom was a human being just like we are. He was subject to the physical laws of this earth. He needed food and sleep. The rain wet Him and the dust of the road dirtied His feet. Jesus shares our humanity. Very good, He's like us.
In His ministry we see how Jesus definitely had the common touch. He gently and tenderly dealt with those who were sick and hungry and hurting. Mothers eagerly brought their children to Him to be blessed. He stood up for the poor and oppressed and defended them against the powerful. His heart was with the people and their needs, and His actions were, too.
In all these ways and more, Jesus seemed to be the kind of king people traditionally want. A king of a kingdom of this world, taking care of our worldly needs and desires. Think of what St. John tells us about the crowd after Jesus fed the 5,000, how they wanted to take Jesus and make Him king by force. They knew a good candidate when they saw Him!
But even in His time, people knew that if Jesus was a king, He wasn't the ordinary kind. He was also fulfilling the expectations for the great king who would be the special Anointed One, the Messiah of Israel. Through Him God would work in a unique way. It was only to be expected that Jesus should identify with the people by performing signs and wonders and miracles for their sake. At least, they figured it was all for their sake. What else? The crowds were filled with admiration at how the powers of nature took a back seat to this Man whenever He spoke a word. They were thrilled at the authority with which He taught. And they delighted in how He overturned the pretensions of the religious leaders who opposed Him. Jesus was that ruler who could be looked up to and admired. As David sang long ago in his farewell psalm, Jesus the Son of David was One through whom the Spirit of the Lord spoke. He ruled over men in righteousness, and in His day He was like the light of the morning sunrise to those who labored under oppression of every kind.
So far, Jesus was and is the kind of king we humans naturally want. But there's a problem. Jesus refused to be bound by our desires and expectations. Yes, He fulfills our need for a king who is like us and from among us, One who sympathizes with our weaknesses because He has known them Himself. But Jesus came to be a far greater king than that, and His kingdom is not a kingdom of this world.
We see this starkly in our reading from John 18. Here we have Jesus standing His trial before Pilate, the Roman governor. "Are you the king of the Jews?" Pilate asks Him. Is he asking a serious question? Of course not. The idea that this beaten and battered Man before him could be the king of anything is absurd. Something else must be going on. So Pilate asks, "What it is you have done?" And Jesus replies, "My kingdom is not of this world." And just in those words we have the basis of the religious authorities' charges against Him. He refused to be the king of a mere earthly kingdom; He asserted ultimate divine power. His kingdom is not of this world, and as such He and it were an offense not only to the Jewish leaders, He is an offense to what we are in our natural sinful state.
For now Jesus is really claiming to have control and authority even over the terrible situation He finds Himself in. Pilate has pointed out that the Jewish people and chief priests have handed Him over to him. Jesus replies that the very fact that His servants didn't fight to prevent His arrest is proof that His kingdom is from another place, and doesn't follow the rules of kingdoms here. Maybe Jesus was including the disciples among His "servants" in this verse, but much more likely He's referring to the holy angels. As He reminded Peter in Matthew 26:52-53, when the apostle drew his sword to try to protect Jesus from arrest, "Do you think I cannot call on my Father, and he will at once put at my disposal more than twelve legions of angels?" But He did not put in the call, because like a good king and general He was working out His plan to bring in His kingdom which is not of this world. If an ordinary man made this kind of divine claim we'd laugh at him. And it's true, people laugh at Jesus and His royal talk, too. But they're forgetting the innumerable displays of power over nature, sickness, Satan, and sin He displayed throughout His ministry. They're ignoring all the times the authorities tried to seize Him and He miraculously eluded their grasp. No, the very fact that Jesus allowed Himself to be arrested showed that He was in charge of a plan that went beyond simply bringing in a new earthly kingdom.
Pilate, in his worldly cynicism, responds, "You are a king, then!" Like, "Sure, right, tell me a new one." Jesus, however, takes the governor's bare words and confirms the truth of them. "You are right in saying I am a king." I'm a substitute teacher, and sometimes a kid will say something to be funny or sarcastic that is more true than they know. You have to latch onto that and confirm it to snap them out of their silliness and bring them face to face with true knowledge. Yes, Pilate, it's true. I, Jesus of Nazareth, am a king. As king my first duty is to testify to the truth. Those who are on the side of truth listen to me and are my natural subjects.
Our gospel passage leaves out Pilate's flippant reply, "What is truth?" But it's worth answering. According to the Scriptures, truth first and foremost is God Himself, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Truth is all God says and all God does. Truth is His word communicated to us in Holy Scripture. And truth supremely is the testimony that, as John records in chapter 3, that "Light has come into the world, but men loved darkness instead of light because their deeds were evil," but "whoever by the truth comes into the light, so that it may be seen plainly that what he has done has been done through God." And how do we come into the light? As Peter writes in his first epistle, it is God Himself (and God alone) who has called us out of darkness into his marvellous light. We need to be ruled by something or someone outside of this world for us to be part of Christ's kingdom, and His divine power reaches in and conquers our souls for our own good.
Pilate made a flippant reply about truth because he was the mighty Roman governor dealing with a prisoner who was totally at his mercy. But when we in our sin make belittling comments about Jesus and His truth, we show our discomfort that with the fact that Jesus' kingdom is not of this world. His kingdom of Truth shows up all our dishonesty and lies. Jesus the King of Truth convicts us of our sins and calls us to repent and believe in Him, who is the Truth. As heavenly King He has the ultimate right to judge, for He answers to no earthly constitution and is accountable to no earthly court.
This is not like the kings and kingdoms of this world! And see how Jesus the King ascends to His throne-- through the cross! The servants of an earthly king would fight to protect His person and His realm. But Jesus the Son of God goes forward to fight and die alone to win for Himself a kingdom that is not of this world. As Jesus says in John 12, "But I, when I am lifted up from the earth, will draw all men to myself." Some He will draw for salvation, some for condemnation, but by His death Jesus won the right to be the eternal ruler and King.
In our natural sinful way of thinking, Jesus is not the kind of king we want. He claims to be in control of the forces of history-- and in control over us. He claims to personify Truth-- and His truth judges not only our sin, but also our goodness, and finds it wanting. Jesus claims that His kingdom is not of this world-- and refuses to let us co-opt Him and it for our own earthly purposes. In short, He asserts that in all His humanity, in all His status as the Son of David, in all His sympathy with us and our needs,.He is more than that and beyond all that. He was, as Paul says in Romans, "through the Spirit of holiness . . . declared with power to be the Son of God by his resurrection from the dead." But the glorious and comforting thing is that on His cross Jesus won the victory over sin and death, and that included our sin and our death. Jesus our King has removed the blindness from our eyes and the stubbornness from our hearts, so that we can recognise Him and long for Him as our true and only King, whose kingdom is not of this world.
What does this mean for our every day lives? For one thing, it would keep us from confusing our own government or any other earthly system with the kingdom of Christ. Bad earthly rulership does not tear God's kingdom down, neither does good human government cause God's kingdom to come. All is in the Father's control, and His kingdom will prevail when every human administration has passed away.
And since we are not merely subjects, but also children and heirs of Christ's kingdom, we know that whatever happens to us in this world we belong to a heavenly commonwealth that will never be destroyed. This world is a wonderful place to travel through, but it's even better to know that one day we're going home.
And because Jesus' kingdom is not of this world, we know that He will definitely succeed in His ultimate purpose, to call us with all His saints to the perfect obedience that comes by faith. We have been called to belong to Jesus Christ, and King Jesus will not fail to transform you into His image, no matter how guilty and sinful you feel you are. He is the King whose kingdom is not of this world, and He can and will do it.
So let us depend on Him for all things and honor Him in all we think and do and say. He is your Lord and King-- mighty, powerful, high and lifted up-- but also humble, gracious, and able to sympathize with your every sorrow and need. Give Him praise and glory, for Jesus Christ is just the King we truly want and truly need. Amen.
As good Americans, of course we will reply we don't want a king. That's why we fought a revolution.
All right, then, what kind of president do we want? What kind of leader do we want at our head to guide us and guard us and make decisions in our behalf?
Well, taking it from history and recent events, typically we want rulers with the common touch. We want someone who can sympathize with our needs, aspirations, and desires-- and help fulfill them. Someone who can identify with us as his fellow human beings. He should be down here and present with us. We want his kingdom to be a kingdom of this world.
At the same time, we want our leader to be a little better than we are, just like us but more so. Accomplished and superior enough so we can look up to him, but not so high that he's totally detached. We want him to symbolize our own aspirations for power and greatness, because we want to think of ourselves as great.
We want our leader to be accountable to us. Even the most powerful of emperors could be taken down by a vote of his nobles, or by a palace coup. We want him to bear in mind that with all his power and riches and fame, he's only our ruler as long as we allow him to be. We want him to reign over a kingdom of this world and answer to us, because we're very much of this world. That's the kind of king we want.
So how does Jesus Christ fit into this? Today is Christ the King Sunday, the day when the Church has traditionally celebrated our Lord's exalted status as king of heaven and earth. Is He the kind of king we traditionally want?
In some ways, yes. In 2 Samuel 23 we have a valedictory psalm of David, his official last words. In it, among other things, he celebrates that God has made with his house and family an everlasting covenant. This refers to the fact that the Lord God promised that there would never fail to be a descendant of David sitting on the throne of Israel. And who was David? He was the despised shepherd boy whom God had raised up to shepherd His people Israel. And who is Jesus? As St. Paul reminds us in Romans chapter 1, Jesus is the descendant or son of David. Jesus has humble family origins. We can identify with Him.
And also in Romans 1, the apostle speaks of Jesus' human nature. Jesus as He walked this earth and proclaimed His coming kingdom was a human being just like we are. He was subject to the physical laws of this earth. He needed food and sleep. The rain wet Him and the dust of the road dirtied His feet. Jesus shares our humanity. Very good, He's like us.
In His ministry we see how Jesus definitely had the common touch. He gently and tenderly dealt with those who were sick and hungry and hurting. Mothers eagerly brought their children to Him to be blessed. He stood up for the poor and oppressed and defended them against the powerful. His heart was with the people and their needs, and His actions were, too.
In all these ways and more, Jesus seemed to be the kind of king people traditionally want. A king of a kingdom of this world, taking care of our worldly needs and desires. Think of what St. John tells us about the crowd after Jesus fed the 5,000, how they wanted to take Jesus and make Him king by force. They knew a good candidate when they saw Him!
But even in His time, people knew that if Jesus was a king, He wasn't the ordinary kind. He was also fulfilling the expectations for the great king who would be the special Anointed One, the Messiah of Israel. Through Him God would work in a unique way. It was only to be expected that Jesus should identify with the people by performing signs and wonders and miracles for their sake. At least, they figured it was all for their sake. What else? The crowds were filled with admiration at how the powers of nature took a back seat to this Man whenever He spoke a word. They were thrilled at the authority with which He taught. And they delighted in how He overturned the pretensions of the religious leaders who opposed Him. Jesus was that ruler who could be looked up to and admired. As David sang long ago in his farewell psalm, Jesus the Son of David was One through whom the Spirit of the Lord spoke. He ruled over men in righteousness, and in His day He was like the light of the morning sunrise to those who labored under oppression of every kind.
So far, Jesus was and is the kind of king we humans naturally want. But there's a problem. Jesus refused to be bound by our desires and expectations. Yes, He fulfills our need for a king who is like us and from among us, One who sympathizes with our weaknesses because He has known them Himself. But Jesus came to be a far greater king than that, and His kingdom is not a kingdom of this world.
We see this starkly in our reading from John 18. Here we have Jesus standing His trial before Pilate, the Roman governor. "Are you the king of the Jews?" Pilate asks Him. Is he asking a serious question? Of course not. The idea that this beaten and battered Man before him could be the king of anything is absurd. Something else must be going on. So Pilate asks, "What it is you have done?" And Jesus replies, "My kingdom is not of this world." And just in those words we have the basis of the religious authorities' charges against Him. He refused to be the king of a mere earthly kingdom; He asserted ultimate divine power. His kingdom is not of this world, and as such He and it were an offense not only to the Jewish leaders, He is an offense to what we are in our natural sinful state.
For now Jesus is really claiming to have control and authority even over the terrible situation He finds Himself in. Pilate has pointed out that the Jewish people and chief priests have handed Him over to him. Jesus replies that the very fact that His servants didn't fight to prevent His arrest is proof that His kingdom is from another place, and doesn't follow the rules of kingdoms here. Maybe Jesus was including the disciples among His "servants" in this verse, but much more likely He's referring to the holy angels. As He reminded Peter in Matthew 26:52-53, when the apostle drew his sword to try to protect Jesus from arrest, "Do you think I cannot call on my Father, and he will at once put at my disposal more than twelve legions of angels?" But He did not put in the call, because like a good king and general He was working out His plan to bring in His kingdom which is not of this world. If an ordinary man made this kind of divine claim we'd laugh at him. And it's true, people laugh at Jesus and His royal talk, too. But they're forgetting the innumerable displays of power over nature, sickness, Satan, and sin He displayed throughout His ministry. They're ignoring all the times the authorities tried to seize Him and He miraculously eluded their grasp. No, the very fact that Jesus allowed Himself to be arrested showed that He was in charge of a plan that went beyond simply bringing in a new earthly kingdom.
Pilate, in his worldly cynicism, responds, "You are a king, then!" Like, "Sure, right, tell me a new one." Jesus, however, takes the governor's bare words and confirms the truth of them. "You are right in saying I am a king." I'm a substitute teacher, and sometimes a kid will say something to be funny or sarcastic that is more true than they know. You have to latch onto that and confirm it to snap them out of their silliness and bring them face to face with true knowledge. Yes, Pilate, it's true. I, Jesus of Nazareth, am a king. As king my first duty is to testify to the truth. Those who are on the side of truth listen to me and are my natural subjects.
Our gospel passage leaves out Pilate's flippant reply, "What is truth?" But it's worth answering. According to the Scriptures, truth first and foremost is God Himself, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Truth is all God says and all God does. Truth is His word communicated to us in Holy Scripture. And truth supremely is the testimony that, as John records in chapter 3, that "Light has come into the world, but men loved darkness instead of light because their deeds were evil," but "whoever by the truth comes into the light, so that it may be seen plainly that what he has done has been done through God." And how do we come into the light? As Peter writes in his first epistle, it is God Himself (and God alone) who has called us out of darkness into his marvellous light. We need to be ruled by something or someone outside of this world for us to be part of Christ's kingdom, and His divine power reaches in and conquers our souls for our own good.
Pilate made a flippant reply about truth because he was the mighty Roman governor dealing with a prisoner who was totally at his mercy. But when we in our sin make belittling comments about Jesus and His truth, we show our discomfort that with the fact that Jesus' kingdom is not of this world. His kingdom of Truth shows up all our dishonesty and lies. Jesus the King of Truth convicts us of our sins and calls us to repent and believe in Him, who is the Truth. As heavenly King He has the ultimate right to judge, for He answers to no earthly constitution and is accountable to no earthly court.
This is not like the kings and kingdoms of this world! And see how Jesus the King ascends to His throne-- through the cross! The servants of an earthly king would fight to protect His person and His realm. But Jesus the Son of God goes forward to fight and die alone to win for Himself a kingdom that is not of this world. As Jesus says in John 12, "But I, when I am lifted up from the earth, will draw all men to myself." Some He will draw for salvation, some for condemnation, but by His death Jesus won the right to be the eternal ruler and King.
In our natural sinful way of thinking, Jesus is not the kind of king we want. He claims to be in control of the forces of history-- and in control over us. He claims to personify Truth-- and His truth judges not only our sin, but also our goodness, and finds it wanting. Jesus claims that His kingdom is not of this world-- and refuses to let us co-opt Him and it for our own earthly purposes. In short, He asserts that in all His humanity, in all His status as the Son of David, in all His sympathy with us and our needs,.He is more than that and beyond all that. He was, as Paul says in Romans, "through the Spirit of holiness . . . declared with power to be the Son of God by his resurrection from the dead." But the glorious and comforting thing is that on His cross Jesus won the victory over sin and death, and that included our sin and our death. Jesus our King has removed the blindness from our eyes and the stubbornness from our hearts, so that we can recognise Him and long for Him as our true and only King, whose kingdom is not of this world.
What does this mean for our every day lives? For one thing, it would keep us from confusing our own government or any other earthly system with the kingdom of Christ. Bad earthly rulership does not tear God's kingdom down, neither does good human government cause God's kingdom to come. All is in the Father's control, and His kingdom will prevail when every human administration has passed away.
And since we are not merely subjects, but also children and heirs of Christ's kingdom, we know that whatever happens to us in this world we belong to a heavenly commonwealth that will never be destroyed. This world is a wonderful place to travel through, but it's even better to know that one day we're going home.
And because Jesus' kingdom is not of this world, we know that He will definitely succeed in His ultimate purpose, to call us with all His saints to the perfect obedience that comes by faith. We have been called to belong to Jesus Christ, and King Jesus will not fail to transform you into His image, no matter how guilty and sinful you feel you are. He is the King whose kingdom is not of this world, and He can and will do it.
So let us depend on Him for all things and honor Him in all we think and do and say. He is your Lord and King-- mighty, powerful, high and lifted up-- but also humble, gracious, and able to sympathize with your every sorrow and need. Give Him praise and glory, for Jesus Christ is just the King we truly want and truly need. Amen.
Sunday, October 21, 2012
What Kind of King, What Kind of Kingdom?
Texts: Psalm 75; Mark 10:32-45
HAS THIS EVER HAPPENED to you? There's a person you admire, a family member, a teacher, a political figure, anybody. You know his character, his opinions, the principles he bases his actions on. You're sure you know what to expect from him as he lives his life. But one day, you think you hear him say something that doesn't fit with what you know about him. He'll say something is not a certain way when you'd expect him to say it is. Well, maybe you misheard. Forget about it.
But then he says something else along the same lines. What? Well, maybe he just misspoke. And you let it go. But then he says or does it again, and it wasn't a slip. You admire him, you respect him-- gosh darn it, you know him! So automatically your mind works to make this new, contradictory information harmonize with your image of him. And you go on like that, until the time comes when you have to face facts: These new, disturbing things really reflect who your hero is, and the image you had of him or her up to now is false, or at least inadequate. Something has to give: Your allegiance to that person-- or the deficient idea about him you previously held.
Psychologists call this cognitive dissonance. That's when two things you think you know are out of tune with one another, but you do your best to make them harmonize because you don't want to give up what you basically believe on the matter. We've all experienced it at some time or the other. In our passage from Mark chapter 10, this lack of harmony engulfs the disciples, the Twelve, and especially the brothers James and John. They think they know all about Jesus and His role and mission on this earth and they want to keep on relating to Him according to that knowledge. But Jesus knows they don't have the whole story about Who He is and what He came to do. The entire gospel according to St. Mark records how Jesus worked to make them-- and us-- give up our inadequate image of Him and embrace the real Jesus and His real kingdom, so we can turn to Him and be saved.
Humanly-speaking, we can't blame the disciples for their deficient ideas. After all, hear what it says in Mark 1:14-15:
After John was put on prison, Jesus went into Galilee, proclaiming the good news of God. "The time has come," he said. "The kingdom of God is near. Repent and believe the good news."
Jesus' basic message was about the kingdom of God: the blessed time when the righteous would be rewarded and the wicked punished and the Lord God Himself would reign in the person of His promised Messiah. By His proclamation Jesus made it clear that He was the One who was bringing the kingdom in.
And hear what the Scriptures say in the seventh chapter of the book of the prophet Daniel:
As I looked, thrones were set in place, and the Ancient of Days took his seat. His clothing was as white as snow; the hair of his head was white like wool. His throne was flaming with fire, and its wheels were all ablaze. . . .
In my vision at night I looked, and there before me was one like a son of man, coming with the clouds of heaven. He approached the Ancient of Days and was led into his presence. He was given authority, glory and sovereign power; all peoples, nations and men of every language worshiped him. His dominion is an everlasting dominion that will not pass away, and his kingdom is one that will never be destroyed.
Here we see the glorious Son of Man, and by that title the promised Messiah would be known. The eternal kingdom, that is, the kingdom of God, would be given to Him to rule over, and it would never be destroyed.
So what do we hear Jesus of Nazareth calling Himself? In Mark 2:10 He says: "That you may know that the Son of Man has authority on earth to forgive sins . . . " And in Mark 2:28: "The Son of Man is Lord even of the Sabbath." And so on through the Gospel of Mark, not to mention many other times Jesus takes that title to Himself in Matthew, Luke, and John. So Jesus without apology steps into the role of the Son of Man Daniel spoke about, and His miracles and teaching proved He deserved it. This Jesus was the One who would reign as King over the indestructible divine kingdom, and His reign would have no end.
That's how the disciples, including the Twelve, saw Him. And they were right to see the Lord Jesus that way, as far as their perception went. But their ideas didn't include what had to happen before the Son of Man could be awarded "all authority, glory, and sovereign power." And when Jesus tried to teach His followers the whole truth, they didn't want to hear it, in a very real way they couldn't hear it, and they went on acting as if He'd never said anything on the subject at all.
Though they couldn't ignore Him on it altogether. At the beginning of our target passage in Mark, we read that "they were on their way up to Jerusalem, with Jesus leading the way, and the disciples were astonished, while those who followed were afraid." From the ordinary point of view, they were just heading for Jerusalem as they would every year to celebrate the Passover. But even the half-committed crowds that went along with Jesus just to see what miracles He'd perform next knew that Jerusalem wasn't a safe place for the Rabbi to be. And His behavior was so odd! He wasn't strolling along with them, singing the customary Psalms and anticipating a glorious time in the holy city. No, as another translation puts it, He was "forging ahead," His head down like a charging bull, a Man on a mission determined to get that mission done. What could it all mean?
The disciples were astonished, the ordinary disciples and the Twelve as well. From their point of view, Jerusalem was the last place Jesus should go at the moment, Passover or no Passover. How did this seemingly self-destructive behavior fit, how could it fit with His identity as God's elect King and Ruler of the heavenly kingdom?
And then Jesus turns up the dissonance. He takes the twelve apostles aside and says,
"We are going up to Jerusalem, and the Son of Man will be betrayed to the chief priests and teachers of the law. They will condemn him to death and will hand him over to the Gentiles, who will mock him and spit on him, flog him and kill him. Three days later he will rise."
The Son of Man? Betrayed, flogged, and killed? Preposterous! Impossible! Jesus can't possibly mean it. Never mind that this is the third time Mark records Jesus making this prediction. It just didn't fit. And as for His statement that three days later he will rise, what could that possibly mean? As we see from what happens on Resurrection Day, that didn't register with the apostles at all.
No, the disciples' idea of the Son of Man had nothing to do with disgrace, suffering, and death, it was all about ruling and glory. Right after this, James and John, the sons of Zebedee, approach Jesus. How have they explained their Master's strange behavior to themselves?
Well, maybe He was going up to Jerusalem to declare Himself Messiah and King. Yes, that would be it. By the word of His mouth, with mighty signs and wonders, Jesus would overwhelm the Romans and the Jewish religious establishment. He would take His stand in the Temple, the Holy Spirit would come down in power, and everyone would fall at His feet and crown Him Lord of all. Definitely something to be astonished at, but it would fit.
So since the kingdom must be coming in its fullness very, very soon, the brothers ask Him to grant them the seats at His right hand and His left when He sits enthroned in His glory. As good Jews they're visualizing the thrones set in place in Daniel's vision. It wouldn't be mere pomp and ceremony. What they had in mind was the ruling power and authority and might the Son of Man would wield. James and John want to share it when King Jesus sits triumphant in His everlasting kingdom. Co-prime ministers of Christ the King, that's what they want to be. The kingdom, the power, and the glory may belong to our Father in heaven, but they're looking forward to a time in the very near future when a good chunk of it is delegated to them. Talk of death, suffering, and disgrace is out of tune here; let's keep hold of eternal power and splendor.
They don't know what they're asking, Jesus replies. "Can you drink the cup I drink and be baptised with the baptism I am baptised with?"
Oh, yes, certainly they can!
Did our Lord look at those two with loving pity when they gave that eager reply? What did they think He meant? Yes, there was a cup of the king: It was the cup of joy, the cup of salvation, the cup of overflowing provision. And though the Bible doesn't tell us a lot about the preparations a king-elect would undergo before he was crowned, we do know from Exodus 29 that before a high priest was consecrated, he was to be thoroughly washed-- baptised, really-- to purify himself for his office. And certainly the prophets say that the Messiah was to be the great High Priest as well as Israel's everlasting King. Likely there other rites before a coronation, like fasting and prayer and seeking the face of the Lord. Yes, certainly, James and John could handle that!
But James and John don't know that Jesus will have to drink the cup of God's wrath, as we read about in Psalm 75. He will drink it down to the dregs, so that the wicked of this earth, including you and me, might be transformed through Him into children of God. That cup of wrath was drunk by Christ alone, but the sons of Zebedee and all of us who belong to Jesus must be prepared to suffer for the sake of His name, before we can expect to reign with Him in glory.
And James and John don't understand that the baptism Jesus will undergo will be the baptism of death. He will be plunged into it fully for our sake on the cross, and after three days emerge living and glorious as the risen Son of Man. Only Jesus could die that death for our sins, but all of us who bear His name must put to death our selfishness, our pride, our wills, even our physical lives; all we think we know and all we think we are. All must be submerged and drowned to death in the blood of His cross. Only then can we rise with Him to eternal life and kingdom glory.
Yes, James and John will certainly share in Jesus' baptism and cup, and so will you and I who are baptised in His name. But as to rewards and places of authority, the humble Son of Man declares that they are the Father's alone to give. As we read in Psalm 75,
No one from the east or the west
or from the desert can exalt a man.
But it is God who judges:
He brings one down, he exalts another.
The sons of Zebedee were looking to the main chance and working for their own advantage. But in their indignation the other ten disciples were just as far off the mark, and in their situation we'd probably do the same. Why shouldn't one of them get the best place? Why not you, why not me? But Jesus frankly, even ruthlessly destroys their false idea about the workings of the kingdom of God, both now and in the world to come. He says,
"You know that those who are regarded as rulers of the Gentiles lord it over them, and their high officials exercise authority over them. Not so with you. Instead, whoever wants to become great among you must be your servant, and whoever wants to be first must be slave of all. For even the Son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many."
This is the truth about the kind of king Christ is and the kind of kingdom He came to establish. He's not an earthly ruler and His rulership doesn't follow earthly rules. "Long live the king!" is the traditional cry. But Jesus came to be put to death. Many in the Church today can accept the idea that Jesus came to be a model of service to our fellow man. But this idea that the wrath of God was upon us all, and only the shed blood of the sinless Son of Man can turn it away, that doesn't fit. They explain it away by saying the cross was only symbolic, or just a supreme example of love. But Christ our King was enthroned upon that cross, and without it there would be no kingdom for Him and none for you and me. We must accept our need for His death, for only then can we truly be His disciples.
It's not for us on this earth to be coveting glory for ourselves in God's kingdom to come. Rather, let us receive the aid of the Holy Spirit as we humbly walk in the way of the cross. Jesus has reconciled us to God through His suffering so we who belong to His kingdom can follow Him in humility, patience, service, mutual submission, and love. It is our glory here on earth to suffer for the name of Christ: sometimes directly in times of persecution; sometimes simply by praising and trusting Him in the ordinary troubles and pains of this life. There will be transcendent glory to come, but for now, He calls us to drink His cup and undergo His baptism.
Brothers and sisters, what will you do? Will you try to minimize your need for the cross? Will you attempt to explain away Christ's command to be the slave of all, so you can keep your deficient idea of Who He is and what He came to do? Or will you accept that the Son of Man came not to be served, but to serve, and to give up His life as a ransom for many? Worship Him as He is, your broken and bleeding Savior. Follow daily in the path of His sacrifice, serving others for His sake. And know that by His faithfulness and His atoning death, you will stand before Him in His kingdom, praising the Father in the glory of His resurrection. Amen.
HAS THIS EVER HAPPENED to you? There's a person you admire, a family member, a teacher, a political figure, anybody. You know his character, his opinions, the principles he bases his actions on. You're sure you know what to expect from him as he lives his life. But one day, you think you hear him say something that doesn't fit with what you know about him. He'll say something is not a certain way when you'd expect him to say it is. Well, maybe you misheard. Forget about it.
But then he says something else along the same lines. What? Well, maybe he just misspoke. And you let it go. But then he says or does it again, and it wasn't a slip. You admire him, you respect him-- gosh darn it, you know him! So automatically your mind works to make this new, contradictory information harmonize with your image of him. And you go on like that, until the time comes when you have to face facts: These new, disturbing things really reflect who your hero is, and the image you had of him or her up to now is false, or at least inadequate. Something has to give: Your allegiance to that person-- or the deficient idea about him you previously held.
Psychologists call this cognitive dissonance. That's when two things you think you know are out of tune with one another, but you do your best to make them harmonize because you don't want to give up what you basically believe on the matter. We've all experienced it at some time or the other. In our passage from Mark chapter 10, this lack of harmony engulfs the disciples, the Twelve, and especially the brothers James and John. They think they know all about Jesus and His role and mission on this earth and they want to keep on relating to Him according to that knowledge. But Jesus knows they don't have the whole story about Who He is and what He came to do. The entire gospel according to St. Mark records how Jesus worked to make them-- and us-- give up our inadequate image of Him and embrace the real Jesus and His real kingdom, so we can turn to Him and be saved.
Humanly-speaking, we can't blame the disciples for their deficient ideas. After all, hear what it says in Mark 1:14-15:
After John was put on prison, Jesus went into Galilee, proclaiming the good news of God. "The time has come," he said. "The kingdom of God is near. Repent and believe the good news."
Jesus' basic message was about the kingdom of God: the blessed time when the righteous would be rewarded and the wicked punished and the Lord God Himself would reign in the person of His promised Messiah. By His proclamation Jesus made it clear that He was the One who was bringing the kingdom in.
And hear what the Scriptures say in the seventh chapter of the book of the prophet Daniel:
As I looked, thrones were set in place, and the Ancient of Days took his seat. His clothing was as white as snow; the hair of his head was white like wool. His throne was flaming with fire, and its wheels were all ablaze. . . .
In my vision at night I looked, and there before me was one like a son of man, coming with the clouds of heaven. He approached the Ancient of Days and was led into his presence. He was given authority, glory and sovereign power; all peoples, nations and men of every language worshiped him. His dominion is an everlasting dominion that will not pass away, and his kingdom is one that will never be destroyed.
Here we see the glorious Son of Man, and by that title the promised Messiah would be known. The eternal kingdom, that is, the kingdom of God, would be given to Him to rule over, and it would never be destroyed.
So what do we hear Jesus of Nazareth calling Himself? In Mark 2:10 He says: "That you may know that the Son of Man has authority on earth to forgive sins . . . " And in Mark 2:28: "The Son of Man is Lord even of the Sabbath." And so on through the Gospel of Mark, not to mention many other times Jesus takes that title to Himself in Matthew, Luke, and John. So Jesus without apology steps into the role of the Son of Man Daniel spoke about, and His miracles and teaching proved He deserved it. This Jesus was the One who would reign as King over the indestructible divine kingdom, and His reign would have no end.
That's how the disciples, including the Twelve, saw Him. And they were right to see the Lord Jesus that way, as far as their perception went. But their ideas didn't include what had to happen before the Son of Man could be awarded "all authority, glory, and sovereign power." And when Jesus tried to teach His followers the whole truth, they didn't want to hear it, in a very real way they couldn't hear it, and they went on acting as if He'd never said anything on the subject at all.
Though they couldn't ignore Him on it altogether. At the beginning of our target passage in Mark, we read that "they were on their way up to Jerusalem, with Jesus leading the way, and the disciples were astonished, while those who followed were afraid." From the ordinary point of view, they were just heading for Jerusalem as they would every year to celebrate the Passover. But even the half-committed crowds that went along with Jesus just to see what miracles He'd perform next knew that Jerusalem wasn't a safe place for the Rabbi to be. And His behavior was so odd! He wasn't strolling along with them, singing the customary Psalms and anticipating a glorious time in the holy city. No, as another translation puts it, He was "forging ahead," His head down like a charging bull, a Man on a mission determined to get that mission done. What could it all mean?
The disciples were astonished, the ordinary disciples and the Twelve as well. From their point of view, Jerusalem was the last place Jesus should go at the moment, Passover or no Passover. How did this seemingly self-destructive behavior fit, how could it fit with His identity as God's elect King and Ruler of the heavenly kingdom?
And then Jesus turns up the dissonance. He takes the twelve apostles aside and says,
"We are going up to Jerusalem, and the Son of Man will be betrayed to the chief priests and teachers of the law. They will condemn him to death and will hand him over to the Gentiles, who will mock him and spit on him, flog him and kill him. Three days later he will rise."
The Son of Man? Betrayed, flogged, and killed? Preposterous! Impossible! Jesus can't possibly mean it. Never mind that this is the third time Mark records Jesus making this prediction. It just didn't fit. And as for His statement that three days later he will rise, what could that possibly mean? As we see from what happens on Resurrection Day, that didn't register with the apostles at all.
No, the disciples' idea of the Son of Man had nothing to do with disgrace, suffering, and death, it was all about ruling and glory. Right after this, James and John, the sons of Zebedee, approach Jesus. How have they explained their Master's strange behavior to themselves?
Well, maybe He was going up to Jerusalem to declare Himself Messiah and King. Yes, that would be it. By the word of His mouth, with mighty signs and wonders, Jesus would overwhelm the Romans and the Jewish religious establishment. He would take His stand in the Temple, the Holy Spirit would come down in power, and everyone would fall at His feet and crown Him Lord of all. Definitely something to be astonished at, but it would fit.
So since the kingdom must be coming in its fullness very, very soon, the brothers ask Him to grant them the seats at His right hand and His left when He sits enthroned in His glory. As good Jews they're visualizing the thrones set in place in Daniel's vision. It wouldn't be mere pomp and ceremony. What they had in mind was the ruling power and authority and might the Son of Man would wield. James and John want to share it when King Jesus sits triumphant in His everlasting kingdom. Co-prime ministers of Christ the King, that's what they want to be. The kingdom, the power, and the glory may belong to our Father in heaven, but they're looking forward to a time in the very near future when a good chunk of it is delegated to them. Talk of death, suffering, and disgrace is out of tune here; let's keep hold of eternal power and splendor.
They don't know what they're asking, Jesus replies. "Can you drink the cup I drink and be baptised with the baptism I am baptised with?"
Oh, yes, certainly they can!
Did our Lord look at those two with loving pity when they gave that eager reply? What did they think He meant? Yes, there was a cup of the king: It was the cup of joy, the cup of salvation, the cup of overflowing provision. And though the Bible doesn't tell us a lot about the preparations a king-elect would undergo before he was crowned, we do know from Exodus 29 that before a high priest was consecrated, he was to be thoroughly washed-- baptised, really-- to purify himself for his office. And certainly the prophets say that the Messiah was to be the great High Priest as well as Israel's everlasting King. Likely there other rites before a coronation, like fasting and prayer and seeking the face of the Lord. Yes, certainly, James and John could handle that!
But James and John don't know that Jesus will have to drink the cup of God's wrath, as we read about in Psalm 75. He will drink it down to the dregs, so that the wicked of this earth, including you and me, might be transformed through Him into children of God. That cup of wrath was drunk by Christ alone, but the sons of Zebedee and all of us who belong to Jesus must be prepared to suffer for the sake of His name, before we can expect to reign with Him in glory.
And James and John don't understand that the baptism Jesus will undergo will be the baptism of death. He will be plunged into it fully for our sake on the cross, and after three days emerge living and glorious as the risen Son of Man. Only Jesus could die that death for our sins, but all of us who bear His name must put to death our selfishness, our pride, our wills, even our physical lives; all we think we know and all we think we are. All must be submerged and drowned to death in the blood of His cross. Only then can we rise with Him to eternal life and kingdom glory.
Yes, James and John will certainly share in Jesus' baptism and cup, and so will you and I who are baptised in His name. But as to rewards and places of authority, the humble Son of Man declares that they are the Father's alone to give. As we read in Psalm 75,
No one from the east or the west
or from the desert can exalt a man.
But it is God who judges:
He brings one down, he exalts another.
The sons of Zebedee were looking to the main chance and working for their own advantage. But in their indignation the other ten disciples were just as far off the mark, and in their situation we'd probably do the same. Why shouldn't one of them get the best place? Why not you, why not me? But Jesus frankly, even ruthlessly destroys their false idea about the workings of the kingdom of God, both now and in the world to come. He says,
"You know that those who are regarded as rulers of the Gentiles lord it over them, and their high officials exercise authority over them. Not so with you. Instead, whoever wants to become great among you must be your servant, and whoever wants to be first must be slave of all. For even the Son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many."
This is the truth about the kind of king Christ is and the kind of kingdom He came to establish. He's not an earthly ruler and His rulership doesn't follow earthly rules. "Long live the king!" is the traditional cry. But Jesus came to be put to death. Many in the Church today can accept the idea that Jesus came to be a model of service to our fellow man. But this idea that the wrath of God was upon us all, and only the shed blood of the sinless Son of Man can turn it away, that doesn't fit. They explain it away by saying the cross was only symbolic, or just a supreme example of love. But Christ our King was enthroned upon that cross, and without it there would be no kingdom for Him and none for you and me. We must accept our need for His death, for only then can we truly be His disciples.
It's not for us on this earth to be coveting glory for ourselves in God's kingdom to come. Rather, let us receive the aid of the Holy Spirit as we humbly walk in the way of the cross. Jesus has reconciled us to God through His suffering so we who belong to His kingdom can follow Him in humility, patience, service, mutual submission, and love. It is our glory here on earth to suffer for the name of Christ: sometimes directly in times of persecution; sometimes simply by praising and trusting Him in the ordinary troubles and pains of this life. There will be transcendent glory to come, but for now, He calls us to drink His cup and undergo His baptism.
Brothers and sisters, what will you do? Will you try to minimize your need for the cross? Will you attempt to explain away Christ's command to be the slave of all, so you can keep your deficient idea of Who He is and what He came to do? Or will you accept that the Son of Man came not to be served, but to serve, and to give up His life as a ransom for many? Worship Him as He is, your broken and bleeding Savior. Follow daily in the path of His sacrifice, serving others for His sake. And know that by His faithfulness and His atoning death, you will stand before Him in His kingdom, praising the Father in the glory of His resurrection. Amen.
Labels:
atonement,
baptism,
Christian life,
Daniel,
disciples,
glory,
humility,
Jesus Christ,
kingdom of God,
Mark,
Psalms,
suffering,
the Cross
Sunday, July 1, 2012
"But They Laughed at Him"
Texts: 1 Corinthians 1:18-25; Mark 5:21-43
PEOPLE LAUGH AT GOD THESE days. How absurd that anyone should believe in a Deity we've probably "just made up in our own heads." We reply that our God could be seen and heard and felt when He lived on earth as the Man Jesus Christ, but the unbelieving world thinks that's a terrific joke. How could a man be God in human flesh?! How could one Man's death deal with the problem of our sins?! Most hilarious of all, where do we Christians get off saying that people have any sin problem in the first place? People laugh at Jesus, and they laugh at us.
Maybe if we could go back in time and walk with Jesus in Roman-occupied Israel, we'd find that nobody laughed at God like that. Everyone would respect Jesus and take Him seriously. After all, Jesus was the Messiah, the Holy One of God. And as His disciples, people would respect us take us seriously, too. No one would dare to laugh, or say that Jesus-- or we ourselves-- was a fool.
But we know that's not true. We know it from our Scripture readings this morning. Just as now, people in the 1st century had no trouble laughing at Jesus and laughing at Christians. Why? Because from this fallen world's point of view, Jesus seemed to go about His work in a very foolish way. He didn't do things the way that was prescribed or expected. Not even the religious people approved of what He did and why He did it. Jesus deliberately went around turning things upside down.
Now, not always. In our reading from St. Mark's gospel, we see Jesus surrounded by a large crowd. That's the way it was supposed to be--the famous rabbi, with the crowds hanging onto His every word. And suddenly through the throng comes the respected Jairus, a ruler of the local synagogue, beseeching Jesus' help. The man's little daughter is dying-- please, Rabbi, come and heal her. Ah, yes, the high and respected ones look up to Jesus. That's right. And Jesus goes with the man to heal his daughter. That's the way it's supposed to be, too. And the pressing crowds enthusiastically come along.
But what's this? Suddenly Jesus stops dead, looks around, and asks, "Who touched my clothes?" Even His disciples think this is an odd thing for Him to say. Good grief, Lord, the people are all crowding against You! Why ask who in particular touched Your clothes? Jesus' modern detractors would say this proves He wasn't really God, because God knows everything, so Jesus should have known who had touched Him. They fail to comprehend what God gave up to become a Man, and so they laugh.
But that day in the crowd by the Sea of Galilee, nobody was laughing. They waited, and out of the crowd crept a woman who fell at Jesus' feet. You can imagine the whispers that would have flown from ear to ear. "Heavens! Isn't that Hannah bat Itzak? Doesn't she have some sort of bleeding trouble?" "How dare she appear in public?" "How dare she touch the Rabbi, even His clothes!" Then, "Blood! Blood! Unclean blood!" Nobody's pressing around Jesus anymore. They've all drawn themselves and their garments back, lest they be rendered ceremonially unclean, just like this afflicted woman.
And under the Old Covenant law they were right. Back then our worthiness to approach God in worship depended upon our following certain rules of ritual cleanliness. Why isn't Jesus following the Law and avoiding this woman? Doesn't He know her history? And even if He didn't before, He does now, because she tells Him of her twelve years of bleeding and suffering and isolation. Does He draw back in horror? No! Jesus looks on her with compassion and says, "Daughter, your faith has healed you. Go in peace and be freed from your suffering." Sorry, Jesus, it doesn't make sense!
Besides, Jesus, what about poor Jairus and his dying child? Even while Jesus was still talking to the woman, men from the synagogue ruler's house came and reported that his daughter was dead. No call for Jesus to come now. Maybe if He'd ignored that unclean creature He would have been on time, but now, forget it.
But Jesus won't forget it. He tells the grieving father, "Don't be afraid; just believe." What an odd thing to say! But Jairus doesn't laugh. He goes with Jesus, along with Peter, James, and John, back to his home where his daughter lies dead. Already at the door the hired mourners are at work, weeping and wailing in honor of the dead child. Jesus, really, isn't it too late?
But our Lord says, "Why all this commotion and wailing? The child is not dead but asleep."
But they laughed at Him. From every reasonable point of view, they had a right to laugh at Him. You didn't need to be a professional mourner in that day to know what a dead body looked like. The girl was dead. Enough with the sick jokes, Rabbi. You make us laugh.
But Jesus isn't working from human reason. He's working from the wisdom of God. He isn't bound by the limitations of human strength, He's filled with the strength of God. Jesus isn't controlled by the powers of death, He Himself is the everlasting Life of God. He can confound all human expectations. Taking the child by the hand, He commands, "Talitha, koum!" or, in English, "Little girl, I say to you, get up!" And this twelve-year-old child gets up, walks around fully alive, and ready for something to eat.
What? Who is this who by the speaking of His word can restore life in what was dead?
It is Jesus Christ, the Son of God and Son of Man. He is the Savior of Israel and hope of the nations, great David's greater Son. He came in fulfillment of all the ancient prophecies, but even those who claimed to be waiting for Him didn't recognize Him when He came and laughed at Him as a fool.
In Jesus' day, good religious Jews were expecting God to act to save them, through a human Messiah. But God chose to come to earth Himself, as the Man Jesus Christ, fully human and fully God. Can our human minds get around how this can be? No, but the mind of God can and did make it happen. And so Jesus lived and served among us, and demonstrated His full humanity by accepting our limitations. He was willing to be like us, getting hungry, thirsty, and tired. He accepted that at times His Father would hide some things from Him, such as the identity of the woman who deliberately touched Him in the crowd. But He was also eternal God, with power over life and death, whose very clothes carried the power to heal those who reached out in faith.
But then Jesus was hung on a cross and killed. Now where was the glorious divine kingdom He was supposed to bring? The Romans mocked and the Jewish authorities scoffed. They laughed at Him as He hung there. Where were all His godlike pretensions now?
But we know what happened on the third day. God the Father vindicated His Son by raising Him from the dead. God had the last laugh. What a reversal! See all the wisdom and disdain of the world turned upside down!
But amazing as the resurrection is, as much as it upsets everything we assume about the way things are supposed to be, the cross of Christ challenges our worldly assumptions even more. For as St. Paul says in his first letter to the Corinthians, to those who are perishing-- that is, to all who do not believe in Jesus Christ-- the message of the cross is foolishness. For what was a Roman cross but a mark of defeat, death, and shame? To be hung on a cross meant disgrace and weakness, the end of everything you stood for and the end of you. But God in Christ took that shameful instrument and made it the only sign of the world's hope, glory, and life. The only sign, I say, because God in His wisdom and power has ordained that only through the cross of Christ can anyone anywhere gain access to Him and enjoy life everlasting.
The unbelieving world laughs at this. It laughed in Paul's day and it laughs in ours. Everybody knows you're in charge of your own salvation, say those who are perishing. First century Greeks insisted that intellectual enlightenment was the way to union with God. The Jews of that day were waiting for Jesus to do a miraculous sign that would come up to their standards. Make all the Romans suddenly drop dead in the streets, perhaps. And in our time, it's common wisdom that if there is a God you please Him by obeying the rules and making sure your good deeds outweigh your bad! You're laughed at if you say otherwise.
But God our Father steadfastly points all mankind to Christ and Him crucified. All the derision, all the disdain of the world cannot change the eternal fact that it's only through the broken body and blood of Christ that anyone at all can be saved. Just as Jesus took the corpse of Jairus' daughter by the hand and called her spirit back into her, so the Holy Spirit of Christ entered into us while we were dead in trespasses and sins. He raised us up in God's strength and enlightens our minds with God's wisdom.
And so, brothers and sisters, the world may laugh at Jesus and it may laugh at you, but let the cross of Christ be your unchanging message and your eternal hope. On this good news we take our stand unshaken, even when so much that is good is being torn down and denigrated, even when laughter at the crucified Christ comes from the heart of the church.
But what if those who laugh and scorn are those we love? What if our friends and family call us fools and worse for trusting a dead and risen God? We do them no favors by compromising God's truth to make them feel better about their worldly wisdom. Stand firm in Christ; love them, pray for them, be always ready to give a reason for the divine hope that is in you. Remember, there was a time when you, too, couldn't believe that Christ's death was enough to save you, maybe a time when you didn't think you needed to be saved. The Holy Spirit made you wise with the wisdom of God; He can raise and enlighten and enliven those you care for, too.
Jesus Christ came to earth as God in human flesh, to die and rise again that we might be raised by the power of God. The Supper here spread confirms this reality to and in us. Come to our Lord's Table and eat and drink unto eternal life. And laugh, brothers and sisters, laugh, no longer in derision, but in holy, exalted, and overflowing joy. Amen.
PEOPLE LAUGH AT GOD THESE days. How absurd that anyone should believe in a Deity we've probably "just made up in our own heads." We reply that our God could be seen and heard and felt when He lived on earth as the Man Jesus Christ, but the unbelieving world thinks that's a terrific joke. How could a man be God in human flesh?! How could one Man's death deal with the problem of our sins?! Most hilarious of all, where do we Christians get off saying that people have any sin problem in the first place? People laugh at Jesus, and they laugh at us.
Maybe if we could go back in time and walk with Jesus in Roman-occupied Israel, we'd find that nobody laughed at God like that. Everyone would respect Jesus and take Him seriously. After all, Jesus was the Messiah, the Holy One of God. And as His disciples, people would respect us take us seriously, too. No one would dare to laugh, or say that Jesus-- or we ourselves-- was a fool.
But we know that's not true. We know it from our Scripture readings this morning. Just as now, people in the 1st century had no trouble laughing at Jesus and laughing at Christians. Why? Because from this fallen world's point of view, Jesus seemed to go about His work in a very foolish way. He didn't do things the way that was prescribed or expected. Not even the religious people approved of what He did and why He did it. Jesus deliberately went around turning things upside down.
Now, not always. In our reading from St. Mark's gospel, we see Jesus surrounded by a large crowd. That's the way it was supposed to be--the famous rabbi, with the crowds hanging onto His every word. And suddenly through the throng comes the respected Jairus, a ruler of the local synagogue, beseeching Jesus' help. The man's little daughter is dying-- please, Rabbi, come and heal her. Ah, yes, the high and respected ones look up to Jesus. That's right. And Jesus goes with the man to heal his daughter. That's the way it's supposed to be, too. And the pressing crowds enthusiastically come along.
But what's this? Suddenly Jesus stops dead, looks around, and asks, "Who touched my clothes?" Even His disciples think this is an odd thing for Him to say. Good grief, Lord, the people are all crowding against You! Why ask who in particular touched Your clothes? Jesus' modern detractors would say this proves He wasn't really God, because God knows everything, so Jesus should have known who had touched Him. They fail to comprehend what God gave up to become a Man, and so they laugh.
But that day in the crowd by the Sea of Galilee, nobody was laughing. They waited, and out of the crowd crept a woman who fell at Jesus' feet. You can imagine the whispers that would have flown from ear to ear. "Heavens! Isn't that Hannah bat Itzak? Doesn't she have some sort of bleeding trouble?" "How dare she appear in public?" "How dare she touch the Rabbi, even His clothes!" Then, "Blood! Blood! Unclean blood!" Nobody's pressing around Jesus anymore. They've all drawn themselves and their garments back, lest they be rendered ceremonially unclean, just like this afflicted woman.
And under the Old Covenant law they were right. Back then our worthiness to approach God in worship depended upon our following certain rules of ritual cleanliness. Why isn't Jesus following the Law and avoiding this woman? Doesn't He know her history? And even if He didn't before, He does now, because she tells Him of her twelve years of bleeding and suffering and isolation. Does He draw back in horror? No! Jesus looks on her with compassion and says, "Daughter, your faith has healed you. Go in peace and be freed from your suffering." Sorry, Jesus, it doesn't make sense!
Besides, Jesus, what about poor Jairus and his dying child? Even while Jesus was still talking to the woman, men from the synagogue ruler's house came and reported that his daughter was dead. No call for Jesus to come now. Maybe if He'd ignored that unclean creature He would have been on time, but now, forget it.
But Jesus won't forget it. He tells the grieving father, "Don't be afraid; just believe." What an odd thing to say! But Jairus doesn't laugh. He goes with Jesus, along with Peter, James, and John, back to his home where his daughter lies dead. Already at the door the hired mourners are at work, weeping and wailing in honor of the dead child. Jesus, really, isn't it too late?
But our Lord says, "Why all this commotion and wailing? The child is not dead but asleep."
But they laughed at Him. From every reasonable point of view, they had a right to laugh at Him. You didn't need to be a professional mourner in that day to know what a dead body looked like. The girl was dead. Enough with the sick jokes, Rabbi. You make us laugh.
But Jesus isn't working from human reason. He's working from the wisdom of God. He isn't bound by the limitations of human strength, He's filled with the strength of God. Jesus isn't controlled by the powers of death, He Himself is the everlasting Life of God. He can confound all human expectations. Taking the child by the hand, He commands, "Talitha, koum!" or, in English, "Little girl, I say to you, get up!" And this twelve-year-old child gets up, walks around fully alive, and ready for something to eat.
What? Who is this who by the speaking of His word can restore life in what was dead?
It is Jesus Christ, the Son of God and Son of Man. He is the Savior of Israel and hope of the nations, great David's greater Son. He came in fulfillment of all the ancient prophecies, but even those who claimed to be waiting for Him didn't recognize Him when He came and laughed at Him as a fool.
In Jesus' day, good religious Jews were expecting God to act to save them, through a human Messiah. But God chose to come to earth Himself, as the Man Jesus Christ, fully human and fully God. Can our human minds get around how this can be? No, but the mind of God can and did make it happen. And so Jesus lived and served among us, and demonstrated His full humanity by accepting our limitations. He was willing to be like us, getting hungry, thirsty, and tired. He accepted that at times His Father would hide some things from Him, such as the identity of the woman who deliberately touched Him in the crowd. But He was also eternal God, with power over life and death, whose very clothes carried the power to heal those who reached out in faith.
But then Jesus was hung on a cross and killed. Now where was the glorious divine kingdom He was supposed to bring? The Romans mocked and the Jewish authorities scoffed. They laughed at Him as He hung there. Where were all His godlike pretensions now?
But we know what happened on the third day. God the Father vindicated His Son by raising Him from the dead. God had the last laugh. What a reversal! See all the wisdom and disdain of the world turned upside down!
But amazing as the resurrection is, as much as it upsets everything we assume about the way things are supposed to be, the cross of Christ challenges our worldly assumptions even more. For as St. Paul says in his first letter to the Corinthians, to those who are perishing-- that is, to all who do not believe in Jesus Christ-- the message of the cross is foolishness. For what was a Roman cross but a mark of defeat, death, and shame? To be hung on a cross meant disgrace and weakness, the end of everything you stood for and the end of you. But God in Christ took that shameful instrument and made it the only sign of the world's hope, glory, and life. The only sign, I say, because God in His wisdom and power has ordained that only through the cross of Christ can anyone anywhere gain access to Him and enjoy life everlasting.
The unbelieving world laughs at this. It laughed in Paul's day and it laughs in ours. Everybody knows you're in charge of your own salvation, say those who are perishing. First century Greeks insisted that intellectual enlightenment was the way to union with God. The Jews of that day were waiting for Jesus to do a miraculous sign that would come up to their standards. Make all the Romans suddenly drop dead in the streets, perhaps. And in our time, it's common wisdom that if there is a God you please Him by obeying the rules and making sure your good deeds outweigh your bad! You're laughed at if you say otherwise.
But God our Father steadfastly points all mankind to Christ and Him crucified. All the derision, all the disdain of the world cannot change the eternal fact that it's only through the broken body and blood of Christ that anyone at all can be saved. Just as Jesus took the corpse of Jairus' daughter by the hand and called her spirit back into her, so the Holy Spirit of Christ entered into us while we were dead in trespasses and sins. He raised us up in God's strength and enlightens our minds with God's wisdom.
And so, brothers and sisters, the world may laugh at Jesus and it may laugh at you, but let the cross of Christ be your unchanging message and your eternal hope. On this good news we take our stand unshaken, even when so much that is good is being torn down and denigrated, even when laughter at the crucified Christ comes from the heart of the church.
But what if those who laugh and scorn are those we love? What if our friends and family call us fools and worse for trusting a dead and risen God? We do them no favors by compromising God's truth to make them feel better about their worldly wisdom. Stand firm in Christ; love them, pray for them, be always ready to give a reason for the divine hope that is in you. Remember, there was a time when you, too, couldn't believe that Christ's death was enough to save you, maybe a time when you didn't think you needed to be saved. The Holy Spirit made you wise with the wisdom of God; He can raise and enlighten and enliven those you care for, too.
Jesus Christ came to earth as God in human flesh, to die and rise again that we might be raised by the power of God. The Supper here spread confirms this reality to and in us. Come to our Lord's Table and eat and drink unto eternal life. And laugh, brothers and sisters, laugh, no longer in derision, but in holy, exalted, and overflowing joy. Amen.
Sunday, September 4, 2011
The Greatness of Humility
Texts: Exodus 32:7-14 Matthew 18:1-10
IT'S GREAT TO BE GREAT. ABOUT ten years ago BBC television in the UK and PBS here in America produced several programs, all testing the question, "How well could modern people cope if they had to go back in time and live as their ancestors did?" Ordinary people were selected to live for months in an historically-authentic, isolated environment where the only modern things were the film cameras. Barring emergencies, the participants had to survive with only the tools, clothes, diet, and social relations used by the people of the long-ago time.
Recently I found these programs posted on YouTube, and I started watching a series called Edwardian Manor House. But before I'd even gotten through the first episode, I couldn't help but feel upset. As a 21st century American I found it hard to stomach the idea of everyone being kept strictly in their place and the people at the bottom having to be humble whether they wanted to be or not. On the BBC website they interviewed the participants after the filming was over, and as you can imagine, those who'd been the "servants" were glad to get back to the freedom of 21st century Britain. But the family who got to act as the family of an Edwardian baronet? Not surprisingly, most of them wished they could have stayed in 1905 forever. After all, it's great to be great.
In our reading from the Gospel according to St. Matthew, the disciples come to Jesus "at that time" and asked, "Who is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven?" At what time? Well, at the end of chapter 17 the collectors of the temple tax came to Peter on the street in Capernaum and asked whether Jesus paid it. Peter said Jesus did, but when he came into the house where Jesus was, our Lord spoke first and taught him that by rights, He and His disciples didn't have to pay. After all, they were sons of the kingdom, sons of God the heavenly King, and in those days, kings never collected taxes from their own families.
So here are the disciples, and Jesus has just included them as sons of the kingdom of heaven. Well! It was also the custom, even up to a century or two ago, for kings to give the best jobs in the kingdom to members of their families. So the disciples are thinking, "Hey, we're sons of the kingdom: Jesus must have some really high positions waiting for us when He comes into His own. But who's going to be His prime minister? Who will be the greatest?" If you were one of them, wouldn't you want to know?
In response, Jesus gives them a visual parable. He calls in a little child and has the boy stand where they all could see him. And he says, "I tell you the truth, unless you change and become like little children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven. Therefore, whoever humbles himself like this child is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven."
It's popular these days for us to impose our modern view of children on this episode and miss what Jesus is saying. We're all guilty of it, including me. We say, "Oh, Jesus is saying we have to be innocent like a little child." But a 1st century Jew, especially a Jew who was also the Son of God, would never imply that children were born innocent. All of us are born in trespasses and sins, all of us stand guilty before God. And in case you don't believe me, watch a two-year-old having a temper tantrum. Or we say, "Children don't care about position and advancement." Oh really? Just observe a toddler who's been supplanted by a new brother or sister, and you'll see just how heedless of position kids are. (Not hardly!) Or we think Jesus is referring to how teachable children are. Well, I substitute teach, and some kids take in knowledge readily, but a lot of them rebel and don't want to hear about it. And absolutely, Jesus doesn't expect any one of us to go around talking ourselves down and talking about being "A worthless worm." What normal child ever did that? No, Jesus was telling His disciples and us that in the kingdom of heaven; that is, in the sight of God in His church, we must take a position like that of an insignificant little child.
Maybe if you come from an old-school family where children were seen and not heard, you might be able to conceive of the radical upheaval this statement of Jesus must have produced. It was like telling the lady of the house to take the role of the scullery maid, or the master of the house to do the job of the slave who washed everyone's feet. Children, especially little children, simply had no say or authority in 1st century Jewish society. In a great household even the adult slaves bossed them around. And Jesus says we must humble ourselves to that extent, if we want to be great in the kingdom of heaven.
And not only do we have to be humble like little children to have any greatness in the kingdom of heaven, Jesus says we have to change-- to deny ourselves-- and become like children even to enter God's kingdom in the first place.
We can fight against it all we want, but it's true: We cannot believe in Jesus for salvation until we admit that we have nothing to offer God in return for His mercy, there's nothing in us that could attract God's favor; that as we are in our sins, to God we are obligations and not assets. As with children, we have to realize that everything we have from our heavenly Father is a gift that we did not and could not earn. We are helpless in our sins, we can't even be properly humble! until Jesus Christ reaches down to us in love and adopts us and makes us great in Him.
This need for childlike humility applies to all believers, to the disciples, to you, to me. But what about those who actually are children? Does Jesus just use the kid as an illustration then send him away? Can we? No! In verse 5 He goes on to say, "And whoever welcomes a little child like this in my name welcomes me."
Did you get that? Jesus Christ the Son of God identifies with the child, the low, the insignificant, the humble. This was not just cheap talk from our divine Master. In Philippians chapter 2 we see how He put His words to work. There it says that He was
. . . in very nature God, [but he]
did not consider equality with God something to be grasped,
but made himself nothing,
taking the very nature of a servant,
being made in human likeness.
And being found in appearance as a man,
he humbled himself
and became obedient to death—
even death on a cross!
"Even death on a cross." When we receive a little child in His name we welcome our crucified and risen Lord, and when we welcome our crucified and risen Lord, His humility for us should remind us to welcome and look out not only for young children, but for all who are the humblest of the humble and the lowest of the low, the little ones of His kingdom. Because it's not about us anymore. It's about Jesus Christ and each other in Him. If you and I will focus on seeing and honoring Him in one another, Jesus knows that will go a long way towards keeping us from hurting and harming one another.
For our Lord knows what's in us. He knows that even in His church it's hard for us to keep on finding our greatness in Christian humility. It's difficult to keep on weighing our actions and words in light of the good or bad effect they might have on the little ones of the body, whether they're children in years or those who are young in the faith. Even in God's congregation there will be people and actions that put stumbling blocks in the way of the humble.
The phrase in verse 6 that the New International Version translates "cause . . . to sin" is the Greek word σκανδαλίση [skandaliseh]-- the word we get "scandalize" from-- and it literally means to trip someone up by putting a stumbling block in their way. To quote R. T. France, one of my teachers in theological college, "One can be ‘tripped up' as much by a disparaging attitude, a lack of concern and pastoral care, or a refusal to forgive, as by a ‘temptation to sin.'" The ultimate evil in "scandalizing" a fellow-member would be that it turned him or her away from Christ and His salvation, or at least to made his or her Christian journey a trial rather than a joy.
But what can we say? All of us do or say insensitive or unhelpful things to one another out of sheer carelessness, and here Jesus says that anyone who trips up the young and humble in the church may as well have a humongous millstone hung around his neck and be drowned in the depths of the sea. How can we avoid such sin and its condemnation?
We must return to what Jesus has already said: Whoever wants to be greatest in the kingdom of heaven must humble himself and become like a little child. When we're looking out for others' welfare we'll have a lot less time to be asserting ourselves and putting stumbling blocks in each others' way!
And it isn't like we can watch out for the spiritual welfare of children and new converts, but go ahead and hurt and harm those who are older or who have been believers longer. Jesus shows us in verse 7 that He wants us to be careful for all the members of the church. In this fallen world it's inevitable, Jesus says, that skandalon-- stumbling blocks-- should come, but woe to the one through whom they come! The way of the world must not be the way of the Church of Jesus Christ. No, we who are His disciples should be so anxious for our mutual growth in Christ that if our hand or foot causes us or anyone else to stumble-- same word skandalizei again-- we should cut it off.
Jesus is speaking in hyperbole, but does that mean we can disregard what He says? No. He intends to convince us of how deeply we must humble and deny ourselves for His sake and for the sake of our salvation. There's nothing more important on earth than to persevere in faith in Jesus Christ and at last through Him to attain to the resurrection of the dead. So if there's anything in your life, any sin, any habit, any ungodly relationship that harms others and separates you from Him, end it, cut it off. If there is any attitude in you or me, any way of thinking or being that says, "I'm the greatest, I'm going to do things my way, and God and everybody else had better just give me room," end it, cut it off. Even if you had to go through eternity maimed, that would be better than to depart from the way of Christ and go into the fires of hell with your self-image and pride intact.
So does humbling ourselves means exercising no power or authority at all? The story of Moses disproves that idea. In Numbers 12:3 it says, "Now Moses was a very humble man, more humble than anyone else on the face of the earth." We see Moses' humility in our reading from Exodus 32. When the Israelites sinned by making and worshipping the golden calf, God offered to destroy them and make of Moses a great nation, a replacement chosen people. But in his humility Moses sought the Lord's mercy for the Israelites. He admitted their sin and appealed to the Lord's promise to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. Moses was the leader of the Israelites, but he claimed nothing for himself. Rather, he sought the good of the people, even in the depth of their sin.
Whether we have major responsibilities in the church or simply faithfully attend, Jesus calls you and me to carry out our duties for the good of one another and to the glory of God. As Paul writes, again in Philippians 2, we should "do nothing out of selfish ambition or vain conceit, but in humility consider others better than yourselves." In the end, if all of us strive to outdo one another in humility, encouragement, tender-heartedness, and love, none of us should ever have cause to complain that we're being oppressed or that others in the church are lording it over us.
And if we ever should think that Jesus doesn't understand how difficult being humble can be, let us look again to the cross where He died to take the penalty for our sins. When Jesus calls us to find our greatness in humility, He is calling us to find our greatness in Him, the One who came not to be served, but to serve and to give His life as a ransom for many. Jesus says, "Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls." It's great to be great, and in the kingdom of heaven, true greatness is found only in the humility of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, to whom by all wisdom, honor, and glory. Amen.
IT'S GREAT TO BE GREAT. ABOUT ten years ago BBC television in the UK and PBS here in America produced several programs, all testing the question, "How well could modern people cope if they had to go back in time and live as their ancestors did?" Ordinary people were selected to live for months in an historically-authentic, isolated environment where the only modern things were the film cameras. Barring emergencies, the participants had to survive with only the tools, clothes, diet, and social relations used by the people of the long-ago time.
Recently I found these programs posted on YouTube, and I started watching a series called Edwardian Manor House. But before I'd even gotten through the first episode, I couldn't help but feel upset. As a 21st century American I found it hard to stomach the idea of everyone being kept strictly in their place and the people at the bottom having to be humble whether they wanted to be or not. On the BBC website they interviewed the participants after the filming was over, and as you can imagine, those who'd been the "servants" were glad to get back to the freedom of 21st century Britain. But the family who got to act as the family of an Edwardian baronet? Not surprisingly, most of them wished they could have stayed in 1905 forever. After all, it's great to be great.
In our reading from the Gospel according to St. Matthew, the disciples come to Jesus "at that time" and asked, "Who is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven?" At what time? Well, at the end of chapter 17 the collectors of the temple tax came to Peter on the street in Capernaum and asked whether Jesus paid it. Peter said Jesus did, but when he came into the house where Jesus was, our Lord spoke first and taught him that by rights, He and His disciples didn't have to pay. After all, they were sons of the kingdom, sons of God the heavenly King, and in those days, kings never collected taxes from their own families.
So here are the disciples, and Jesus has just included them as sons of the kingdom of heaven. Well! It was also the custom, even up to a century or two ago, for kings to give the best jobs in the kingdom to members of their families. So the disciples are thinking, "Hey, we're sons of the kingdom: Jesus must have some really high positions waiting for us when He comes into His own. But who's going to be His prime minister? Who will be the greatest?" If you were one of them, wouldn't you want to know?
In response, Jesus gives them a visual parable. He calls in a little child and has the boy stand where they all could see him. And he says, "I tell you the truth, unless you change and become like little children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven. Therefore, whoever humbles himself like this child is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven."
It's popular these days for us to impose our modern view of children on this episode and miss what Jesus is saying. We're all guilty of it, including me. We say, "Oh, Jesus is saying we have to be innocent like a little child." But a 1st century Jew, especially a Jew who was also the Son of God, would never imply that children were born innocent. All of us are born in trespasses and sins, all of us stand guilty before God. And in case you don't believe me, watch a two-year-old having a temper tantrum. Or we say, "Children don't care about position and advancement." Oh really? Just observe a toddler who's been supplanted by a new brother or sister, and you'll see just how heedless of position kids are. (Not hardly!) Or we think Jesus is referring to how teachable children are. Well, I substitute teach, and some kids take in knowledge readily, but a lot of them rebel and don't want to hear about it. And absolutely, Jesus doesn't expect any one of us to go around talking ourselves down and talking about being "A worthless worm." What normal child ever did that? No, Jesus was telling His disciples and us that in the kingdom of heaven; that is, in the sight of God in His church, we must take a position like that of an insignificant little child.
Maybe if you come from an old-school family where children were seen and not heard, you might be able to conceive of the radical upheaval this statement of Jesus must have produced. It was like telling the lady of the house to take the role of the scullery maid, or the master of the house to do the job of the slave who washed everyone's feet. Children, especially little children, simply had no say or authority in 1st century Jewish society. In a great household even the adult slaves bossed them around. And Jesus says we must humble ourselves to that extent, if we want to be great in the kingdom of heaven.
And not only do we have to be humble like little children to have any greatness in the kingdom of heaven, Jesus says we have to change-- to deny ourselves-- and become like children even to enter God's kingdom in the first place.
We can fight against it all we want, but it's true: We cannot believe in Jesus for salvation until we admit that we have nothing to offer God in return for His mercy, there's nothing in us that could attract God's favor; that as we are in our sins, to God we are obligations and not assets. As with children, we have to realize that everything we have from our heavenly Father is a gift that we did not and could not earn. We are helpless in our sins, we can't even be properly humble! until Jesus Christ reaches down to us in love and adopts us and makes us great in Him.
This need for childlike humility applies to all believers, to the disciples, to you, to me. But what about those who actually are children? Does Jesus just use the kid as an illustration then send him away? Can we? No! In verse 5 He goes on to say, "And whoever welcomes a little child like this in my name welcomes me."
Did you get that? Jesus Christ the Son of God identifies with the child, the low, the insignificant, the humble. This was not just cheap talk from our divine Master. In Philippians chapter 2 we see how He put His words to work. There it says that He was
. . . in very nature God, [but he]
did not consider equality with God something to be grasped,
but made himself nothing,
taking the very nature of a servant,
being made in human likeness.
And being found in appearance as a man,
he humbled himself
and became obedient to death—
even death on a cross!
"Even death on a cross." When we receive a little child in His name we welcome our crucified and risen Lord, and when we welcome our crucified and risen Lord, His humility for us should remind us to welcome and look out not only for young children, but for all who are the humblest of the humble and the lowest of the low, the little ones of His kingdom. Because it's not about us anymore. It's about Jesus Christ and each other in Him. If you and I will focus on seeing and honoring Him in one another, Jesus knows that will go a long way towards keeping us from hurting and harming one another.
For our Lord knows what's in us. He knows that even in His church it's hard for us to keep on finding our greatness in Christian humility. It's difficult to keep on weighing our actions and words in light of the good or bad effect they might have on the little ones of the body, whether they're children in years or those who are young in the faith. Even in God's congregation there will be people and actions that put stumbling blocks in the way of the humble.
The phrase in verse 6 that the New International Version translates "cause . . . to sin" is the Greek word σκανδαλίση [skandaliseh]-- the word we get "scandalize" from-- and it literally means to trip someone up by putting a stumbling block in their way. To quote R. T. France, one of my teachers in theological college, "One can be ‘tripped up' as much by a disparaging attitude, a lack of concern and pastoral care, or a refusal to forgive, as by a ‘temptation to sin.'" The ultimate evil in "scandalizing" a fellow-member would be that it turned him or her away from Christ and His salvation, or at least to made his or her Christian journey a trial rather than a joy.
But what can we say? All of us do or say insensitive or unhelpful things to one another out of sheer carelessness, and here Jesus says that anyone who trips up the young and humble in the church may as well have a humongous millstone hung around his neck and be drowned in the depths of the sea. How can we avoid such sin and its condemnation?
We must return to what Jesus has already said: Whoever wants to be greatest in the kingdom of heaven must humble himself and become like a little child. When we're looking out for others' welfare we'll have a lot less time to be asserting ourselves and putting stumbling blocks in each others' way!
And it isn't like we can watch out for the spiritual welfare of children and new converts, but go ahead and hurt and harm those who are older or who have been believers longer. Jesus shows us in verse 7 that He wants us to be careful for all the members of the church. In this fallen world it's inevitable, Jesus says, that skandalon-- stumbling blocks-- should come, but woe to the one through whom they come! The way of the world must not be the way of the Church of Jesus Christ. No, we who are His disciples should be so anxious for our mutual growth in Christ that if our hand or foot causes us or anyone else to stumble-- same word skandalizei again-- we should cut it off.
Jesus is speaking in hyperbole, but does that mean we can disregard what He says? No. He intends to convince us of how deeply we must humble and deny ourselves for His sake and for the sake of our salvation. There's nothing more important on earth than to persevere in faith in Jesus Christ and at last through Him to attain to the resurrection of the dead. So if there's anything in your life, any sin, any habit, any ungodly relationship that harms others and separates you from Him, end it, cut it off. If there is any attitude in you or me, any way of thinking or being that says, "I'm the greatest, I'm going to do things my way, and God and everybody else had better just give me room," end it, cut it off. Even if you had to go through eternity maimed, that would be better than to depart from the way of Christ and go into the fires of hell with your self-image and pride intact.
So does humbling ourselves means exercising no power or authority at all? The story of Moses disproves that idea. In Numbers 12:3 it says, "Now Moses was a very humble man, more humble than anyone else on the face of the earth." We see Moses' humility in our reading from Exodus 32. When the Israelites sinned by making and worshipping the golden calf, God offered to destroy them and make of Moses a great nation, a replacement chosen people. But in his humility Moses sought the Lord's mercy for the Israelites. He admitted their sin and appealed to the Lord's promise to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. Moses was the leader of the Israelites, but he claimed nothing for himself. Rather, he sought the good of the people, even in the depth of their sin.
Whether we have major responsibilities in the church or simply faithfully attend, Jesus calls you and me to carry out our duties for the good of one another and to the glory of God. As Paul writes, again in Philippians 2, we should "do nothing out of selfish ambition or vain conceit, but in humility consider others better than yourselves." In the end, if all of us strive to outdo one another in humility, encouragement, tender-heartedness, and love, none of us should ever have cause to complain that we're being oppressed or that others in the church are lording it over us.
And if we ever should think that Jesus doesn't understand how difficult being humble can be, let us look again to the cross where He died to take the penalty for our sins. When Jesus calls us to find our greatness in humility, He is calling us to find our greatness in Him, the One who came not to be served, but to serve and to give His life as a ransom for many. Jesus says, "Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls." It's great to be great, and in the kingdom of heaven, true greatness is found only in the humility of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, to whom by all wisdom, honor, and glory. Amen.
Labels:
Christian life,
Christian love,
disciples,
Exodus,
humility,
Jesus Christ,
Matthew,
monergism,
Moses,
service,
sin,
the Church
Sunday, November 15, 2009
What God Does with Small and Broken Things
Texts: Haggai 2:1-9; 2 Corinthians 6:3 - 7:1
LET’S IMAGINE a scene from long ago. It’s 519 years before the birth of our Lord Jesus Christ, within the ruins of the city of Jerusalem, in the days after some of the exiles have returned from Babylon to rebuild the city . . . .
The old couple struggled up the way from city below. Painfully, they reached the summit of Mount Moriah and stood silently, watching.
"Look, Tzipora," said the old man, pointing with his stick. "There they are, at it."
"Yes, Eliezar," his wife answered. "They’ve been working for almost a month."
"Yes, and where has it gotten us?" Eliezar replied bitterly. "Beginning of last month, that prophet Haggai comes telling Zerubbabel the governor and Joshua the high priest that it’s past time for us to be rebuilding the Lord’s temple. He says the reason the harvest has been so bad is because we’ve been building ourselves nice houses and neglecting the house of the Lord. But how can we build the Lord the kind of temple He deserves?"
"But Eliezar," Tzipora replied, "the prophet speaks in the name of the Lord Almighty! We have to listen to him. The governor and the high priest listened to him. We all did. Remember how our spirits rose when Haggai said, ‘"I am with you," declares the Lord’? Remember how we feared the Lord our God and came and began to work to rebuild His house?"
"Yes, yes, I remember all that!" said her husband, wearily. "It was only a few weeks ago; I haven’t lost my memory yet! . . . Though it might be better for me if I had." He stopped, and regarded the ragtag gang of amateur builders laboring on the temple’s framework. "Look at that," he resumed. "Timber, not stone! Tzipora, you remember our temple before the Babylonians burned it! We were both children then, but you remember those massive stones King Solomon brought from Lebanon! You remember how glorious our Temple was!"
"Yes, Eliezar, I remember."
"Well, look at that," he said again. "Look at it! Do we have any hope of matching Solomon’s temple now? Even if we had the strength to build it, even if we were numerous enough, where could we poor Jews find the money? Where is the silver and gold it would take to erect such a temple in our day? And the nations around us! They’d never let us build what we should! We’ve been trying to rebuild this temple the past nineteen years, and every time we begin, those Gentiles write off to the king in Persia and get him to make us stop! Now King Darius says we can go ahead, but what’s the use?"
"But the Lord’s command, Eliezar!"
"Yes, Tzipora, the Lord commanded us to return to the work. But how can He be pleased with what we can give? Don’t you remember that day when the prophet Ezekiel spoke to us when we were still in Babylon? Such a new temple he described! How glorious with its walls and courts and gates and altar! That’s what the Lord expects us to build! And we can’t do it! We can’t do it! This new temple is nothing. Nothing."
"Nothing," his wife echoed, and sighed.
Eliezar and Tzipora watched the workmen struggle on. And almost as if the laborers had overheard the old man’s bitter words, the shouts over the work seemed subdued, flattened, discouraged.
Around the corner of the shell of the building appeared two men in fine robes and turbans, obviously high officials. "Look, Eliezar! There’s Zerubbabel the governor and Joshua the high priest!"
"Inspecting the work, I suppose," he replied. "I wonder what they think of it."
The old couple saw the governor say something to the high priest, who shook his head. Both men seemed weary, their shoulders drooping, their heads low.
Suddenly, a firm step sounded on the pavement behind Tzipora and Eliezar. Startled, they turned, the woman’s hand to her heart. "Oh! My lord Haggai!" she gasped. The prophet’s eyes seemed to burn into her soul.
"My lord, the governor and the high priest are there, just above," faltered Eliezar. "You have business with them?"
"Yes," said the prophet, "and with you, Eliezar son of Berekiah. And with you, Tzipora wife of Eliezar." He smiled. "Come. Hear what the Lord has to say to you and to all the remnant of His people. Come."
. . . People of the Presbyterian Church of N---, I don't think you have to reach far to identify with Eliezar and Tzipora. Going by what I heard when I preached here in August, there are many of you who remember how it used to be, back in the glory days of this congregation. I’m guessing that someplace you have an anniversary photo showing so many members you could never get them inside the doors at once. There was a time when the Sunday School swarmed with children; when church societies and organizations flourished; when acts of charity and service flowed out of this place with many willing hands to help them along. You remember when this congregation and its pastor and officers were leaders in this community, and the light of Jesus Christ shone out from this place like a beacon of peace and hope.
And now? Let the prophet Haggai speaking in the name of the Lord tell us how things are now. Just as he asked the Jews of Jerusalem in 519 BC, he asks you, "Who of you is left who saw this house in its former glory? How does it look to you now? Does it not seem like nothing?"
But hear now what the Lord has to say to you. Be encouraged, people of the Presbyterian Church of N---. The words of Haggai to the remnant of Israel are God’s words to you and to all God’s struggling people around this fallen world. The Scripture says to you, "'But now be strong, you elders. Be strong, you deacons and musicians and teachers. Be strong, all you people of the church. Be strong, and work. For I am with you,' declares the Lord Almighty.
"‘Be strong, and work. For I am with you,’ declares the Lord Almighty." Our downfall in our brokenness is that so often we think it’s all up to us to fix it. And either we try really, really hard and maybe we come up with something and are pumped up with pride in ourselves, or we get discouraged and give up because we can’t make things happen the way they used to or the way we think they should. We act as if God were busy up in heaven doing whatever and leaving it all to us, or maybe He’s on the sidelines, cheering us on, but in the end it’s our work to rebuild the church, not His.
But no! "‘I am with you,’ declares the Lord Almighty." Whatever He asks us to do in His name, He is the prime mover. He is the one who takes the lead and makes sure the job gets done. For us to think and act otherwise isn’t merely counterproductive, it’s sin.
In 519 BC God promised to help His people because of the covenant He made with Israel when He brought them out of Egypt. But you can claim His power on the basis of a better covenant, the one our Sovereign Lord made with you on Calvary through the blood of His only Son Jesus Christ.
For hear what the Lord says to all His chosen people, from Israel of old to us His new Israel today. He says,
"‘In a little while I will once more shake the heavens and the earth, the sea and the dry land. I will shake all nations, and the desired of all nations will come, and I will fill this house with glory,’ says the LORD Almighty."
Our Lord shook the heavens and the earth when He brought His people out of Egypt. But much more did He shake all creation when He Himself became incarnate in Jesus Christ, eternal God in human flesh! He shook all creation when God the Son of Man hung on a cross to take His own righteous wrath against our sin. He shook all creation when Jesus our Saviour rose triumphant from the dead to give new and unending life to all who are called in His name. Jesus Christ is the desired of all nations, and it is in Him and Him alone that God’s church is filled with glory.
The peoples of this earth don’t realize that Jesus crucified and risen is their desire. All of us-- all of us-- manufacture messiahs of our own imagining to fulfill our hopes and dreams, and we keep on doing it until God by His Holy Spirit opens our eyes to see His glory in Jesus Christ. It is the glory of Christ’s church, the glory of this congregation, to display to the world the true Messiah, to show the lost where their true longing lies. In this very town you are surrounded by unbelievers and people who claim to be Christian but know nothing whatever of the free grace of Jesus Christ who died to save them from their sins. This house is needed here. You are needed here. The Lord says to you, "Build!" No, not the physical building of the church, necessarily, but build your ministry in this place! Serve Him where He has put you; be a witness to the nations right where you are and right as you are!
But how can you do that? Does this church not seem small and broken? Just keeping the doors open is a struggle. And as for having the power and resources to rebuild the ministry of this church, who here feels the power in him or herself to do that? Ministry takes money, doesn’t it? Where is it to come from, especially in this rotten economy?
Remember what the Lord said through Haggai:
"‘The silver is mine and the gold is mine,’ declares the LORD Almighty."
If money is needed, the Lord can provide it. He owns the cattle on a thousand hills! All creation is His! If money is the answer here, our Lord will shower it down.
But maybe God has something greater in mind, something money can’t buy. For,
"‘The glory of this present house will be greater than the glory of the former house,’ says the LORD Almighty."
Was Haggai the prophet referring to the literal temple the Jews were trying to rebuild? No! Compared to Solomon’s temple, that building truly was nothing. No, the glory prophesied was that of the coming Messiah, Jesus Christ. Though they didn’t know it, the temple of God being built there was the people of God themselves. As they trusted and worked and worshipped, they were being made into a fit vessel from which the Messiah would come. As they trusted God and obeyed Him even in their smallness and brokenness, they became a channel through which the Lord would demonstrate His creation-shaking glory. And as He did it through them, so He can do it through you.
I know of a church over in Oxford, England. It was down to so few members, the diocese was about to close it. But six elderly women covenanted together to pray for the ministry of St. Matthew’s church and the Lord in His power answered their prayer. A couple of years later that church was filled to the windows with people of all ages and had a thriving ministry.
There may not be that many people in this area for that to happen here. But even in its smallness and brokenness, this house can be filled with the glory of God. This congregation can be made strong to do His will.
Isn’t that always the way of our Lord? Time and again He takes the littlest, the least, the youngest, the broken, the despised in the eyes of this world and uses it to show His almighty power. St. Paul in our New Testament reading declares that his own ministry is commended in his hardships, afflictions, dishonor, insignificance, poverty, and poor reputation. All the things that the world would look down upon, God turns into badges of honor. Not that these things are virtues in themselves, but because in Paul’s weakness, the gifts of God’s Spirit and His divine power more clearly shine forth. God uses Paul’s very smallness and brokenness to demonstrate the glory of Jesus Christ to the world.
For what could be more small and broken and despised than our Lord Himself, on that dark Friday on Calvary? The religious authorities mocked Him, the civil authorities considered Him a problem to be swept out of the way, the devil of Hell probably roared in premature triumph. Hung as a criminal on a cross! Rejected, scorned, bruised, and broken, Jesus was not the glorious Messiah the people expected to see. How could this Nazarene be the desired of all nations? Did He not look to all the world like nothing?
But in the very nothingness of the crucified Jesus, our God brought everything to this blind and broken world. He exalted this Lord Jesus to His right hand in glory and appointed that in Him and Him alone all men must meet with God. Jesus Christ is our Temple. He is the one place where the Almighty grants His peace. And as He dwells in you His church and as you His church dwell in Him, you are His temple here on earth.
And so, as St. Paul says, we must stop being unequally yoked with unbelievers. There are all sorts of ideas about what that means, but at the very least it must mean, Do not use the ways of this world to promote the goals of God. The world demands strength and power, but we preach Christ crucified in weakness. The world says church growth comes from high-tech glamor and the latest sure-fire marketing methods and appeals to sinners’ felt needs, but we preach repentance and forgiveness of sins in Jesus’ name. The world says success is judged by size and numbers and the bigger the better, but we preach faithfulness to our God and trust in Him to fill this house with His glory, however large or small the membership may be.
People of God, trust in His power, not in your own. Rejoice in your smallness and brokenness, for God is with you and will do great things in you. There is ministry here for you to do and He has given you gifts by the Holy Spirit for you to do it. So be strong, and work. Build the church in this place, not in your own strength, but in the strength of Jesus Christ, your Temple and your glory. Consecrate yourselves to Him in holiness, for in Him, you are all the temple of the living God.
To close, let us pray a prayer that John Calvin wrote in response to this passage in Haggai:
Grant, Almighty God, that as we are not only alienated in mind from thee, but also often relapse after having been once stirred up by thee, either into perverseness, or into our own vanity, or are led astray by various things, so that nothing is more difficult than to pursue our course until we reach the end of our race- - O grant that we may not confide in our own strength, nor claim for ourselves more than what is right, but, with our hearts raised above, depend on thee alone, and constantly call on thee to supply us with new strength, and so to confirm us that we may persevere to the end in the discharge of our duty, until we shall at length attain the true and perfect form of that temple which thou commandest us to build, in which thy perfect glory shines forth, and into which we are to be transformed by Christ our Lord. Amen.

The old couple struggled up the way from city below. Painfully, they reached the summit of Mount Moriah and stood silently, watching.
"Look, Tzipora," said the old man, pointing with his stick. "There they are, at it."
"Yes, Eliezar," his wife answered. "They’ve been working for almost a month."
"Yes, and where has it gotten us?" Eliezar replied bitterly. "Beginning of last month, that prophet Haggai comes telling Zerubbabel the governor and Joshua the high priest that it’s past time for us to be rebuilding the Lord’s temple. He says the reason the harvest has been so bad is because we’ve been building ourselves nice houses and neglecting the house of the Lord. But how can we build the Lord the kind of temple He deserves?"
"But Eliezar," Tzipora replied, "the prophet speaks in the name of the Lord Almighty! We have to listen to him. The governor and the high priest listened to him. We all did. Remember how our spirits rose when Haggai said, ‘"I am with you," declares the Lord’? Remember how we feared the Lord our God and came and began to work to rebuild His house?"
"Yes, yes, I remember all that!" said her husband, wearily. "It was only a few weeks ago; I haven’t lost my memory yet! . . . Though it might be better for me if I had." He stopped, and regarded the ragtag gang of amateur builders laboring on the temple’s framework. "Look at that," he resumed. "Timber, not stone! Tzipora, you remember our temple before the Babylonians burned it! We were both children then, but you remember those massive stones King Solomon brought from Lebanon! You remember how glorious our Temple was!"
"Yes, Eliezar, I remember."
"Well, look at that," he said again. "Look at it! Do we have any hope of matching Solomon’s temple now? Even if we had the strength to build it, even if we were numerous enough, where could we poor Jews find the money? Where is the silver and gold it would take to erect such a temple in our day? And the nations around us! They’d never let us build what we should! We’ve been trying to rebuild this temple the past nineteen years, and every time we begin, those Gentiles write off to the king in Persia and get him to make us stop! Now King Darius says we can go ahead, but what’s the use?"
"But the Lord’s command, Eliezar!"
"Yes, Tzipora, the Lord commanded us to return to the work. But how can He be pleased with what we can give? Don’t you remember that day when the prophet Ezekiel spoke to us when we were still in Babylon? Such a new temple he described! How glorious with its walls and courts and gates and altar! That’s what the Lord expects us to build! And we can’t do it! We can’t do it! This new temple is nothing. Nothing."
"Nothing," his wife echoed, and sighed.
Eliezar and Tzipora watched the workmen struggle on. And almost as if the laborers had overheard the old man’s bitter words, the shouts over the work seemed subdued, flattened, discouraged.
Around the corner of the shell of the building appeared two men in fine robes and turbans, obviously high officials. "Look, Eliezar! There’s Zerubbabel the governor and Joshua the high priest!"
"Inspecting the work, I suppose," he replied. "I wonder what they think of it."
The old couple saw the governor say something to the high priest, who shook his head. Both men seemed weary, their shoulders drooping, their heads low.
Suddenly, a firm step sounded on the pavement behind Tzipora and Eliezar. Startled, they turned, the woman’s hand to her heart. "Oh! My lord Haggai!" she gasped. The prophet’s eyes seemed to burn into her soul.
"My lord, the governor and the high priest are there, just above," faltered Eliezar. "You have business with them?"
"Yes," said the prophet, "and with you, Eliezar son of Berekiah. And with you, Tzipora wife of Eliezar." He smiled. "Come. Hear what the Lord has to say to you and to all the remnant of His people. Come."
. . . People of the Presbyterian Church of N---, I don't think you have to reach far to identify with Eliezar and Tzipora. Going by what I heard when I preached here in August, there are many of you who remember how it used to be, back in the glory days of this congregation. I’m guessing that someplace you have an anniversary photo showing so many members you could never get them inside the doors at once. There was a time when the Sunday School swarmed with children; when church societies and organizations flourished; when acts of charity and service flowed out of this place with many willing hands to help them along. You remember when this congregation and its pastor and officers were leaders in this community, and the light of Jesus Christ shone out from this place like a beacon of peace and hope.
And now? Let the prophet Haggai speaking in the name of the Lord tell us how things are now. Just as he asked the Jews of Jerusalem in 519 BC, he asks you, "Who of you is left who saw this house in its former glory? How does it look to you now? Does it not seem like nothing?"
But hear now what the Lord has to say to you. Be encouraged, people of the Presbyterian Church of N---. The words of Haggai to the remnant of Israel are God’s words to you and to all God’s struggling people around this fallen world. The Scripture says to you, "'But now be strong, you elders. Be strong, you deacons and musicians and teachers. Be strong, all you people of the church. Be strong, and work. For I am with you,' declares the Lord Almighty.
"‘Be strong, and work. For I am with you,’ declares the Lord Almighty." Our downfall in our brokenness is that so often we think it’s all up to us to fix it. And either we try really, really hard and maybe we come up with something and are pumped up with pride in ourselves, or we get discouraged and give up because we can’t make things happen the way they used to or the way we think they should. We act as if God were busy up in heaven doing whatever and leaving it all to us, or maybe He’s on the sidelines, cheering us on, but in the end it’s our work to rebuild the church, not His.
But no! "‘I am with you,’ declares the Lord Almighty." Whatever He asks us to do in His name, He is the prime mover. He is the one who takes the lead and makes sure the job gets done. For us to think and act otherwise isn’t merely counterproductive, it’s sin.
In 519 BC God promised to help His people because of the covenant He made with Israel when He brought them out of Egypt. But you can claim His power on the basis of a better covenant, the one our Sovereign Lord made with you on Calvary through the blood of His only Son Jesus Christ.
For hear what the Lord says to all His chosen people, from Israel of old to us His new Israel today. He says,
"‘In a little while I will once more shake the heavens and the earth, the sea and the dry land. I will shake all nations, and the desired of all nations will come, and I will fill this house with glory,’ says the LORD Almighty."
Our Lord shook the heavens and the earth when He brought His people out of Egypt. But much more did He shake all creation when He Himself became incarnate in Jesus Christ, eternal God in human flesh! He shook all creation when God the Son of Man hung on a cross to take His own righteous wrath against our sin. He shook all creation when Jesus our Saviour rose triumphant from the dead to give new and unending life to all who are called in His name. Jesus Christ is the desired of all nations, and it is in Him and Him alone that God’s church is filled with glory.
The peoples of this earth don’t realize that Jesus crucified and risen is their desire. All of us-- all of us-- manufacture messiahs of our own imagining to fulfill our hopes and dreams, and we keep on doing it until God by His Holy Spirit opens our eyes to see His glory in Jesus Christ. It is the glory of Christ’s church, the glory of this congregation, to display to the world the true Messiah, to show the lost where their true longing lies. In this very town you are surrounded by unbelievers and people who claim to be Christian but know nothing whatever of the free grace of Jesus Christ who died to save them from their sins. This house is needed here. You are needed here. The Lord says to you, "Build!" No, not the physical building of the church, necessarily, but build your ministry in this place! Serve Him where He has put you; be a witness to the nations right where you are and right as you are!
But how can you do that? Does this church not seem small and broken? Just keeping the doors open is a struggle. And as for having the power and resources to rebuild the ministry of this church, who here feels the power in him or herself to do that? Ministry takes money, doesn’t it? Where is it to come from, especially in this rotten economy?
Remember what the Lord said through Haggai:
"‘The silver is mine and the gold is mine,’ declares the LORD Almighty."
If money is needed, the Lord can provide it. He owns the cattle on a thousand hills! All creation is His! If money is the answer here, our Lord will shower it down.
But maybe God has something greater in mind, something money can’t buy. For,
"‘The glory of this present house will be greater than the glory of the former house,’ says the LORD Almighty."
Was Haggai the prophet referring to the literal temple the Jews were trying to rebuild? No! Compared to Solomon’s temple, that building truly was nothing. No, the glory prophesied was that of the coming Messiah, Jesus Christ. Though they didn’t know it, the temple of God being built there was the people of God themselves. As they trusted and worked and worshipped, they were being made into a fit vessel from which the Messiah would come. As they trusted God and obeyed Him even in their smallness and brokenness, they became a channel through which the Lord would demonstrate His creation-shaking glory. And as He did it through them, so He can do it through you.
I know of a church over in Oxford, England. It was down to so few members, the diocese was about to close it. But six elderly women covenanted together to pray for the ministry of St. Matthew’s church and the Lord in His power answered their prayer. A couple of years later that church was filled to the windows with people of all ages and had a thriving ministry.
There may not be that many people in this area for that to happen here. But even in its smallness and brokenness, this house can be filled with the glory of God. This congregation can be made strong to do His will.
Isn’t that always the way of our Lord? Time and again He takes the littlest, the least, the youngest, the broken, the despised in the eyes of this world and uses it to show His almighty power. St. Paul in our New Testament reading declares that his own ministry is commended in his hardships, afflictions, dishonor, insignificance, poverty, and poor reputation. All the things that the world would look down upon, God turns into badges of honor. Not that these things are virtues in themselves, but because in Paul’s weakness, the gifts of God’s Spirit and His divine power more clearly shine forth. God uses Paul’s very smallness and brokenness to demonstrate the glory of Jesus Christ to the world.
For what could be more small and broken and despised than our Lord Himself, on that dark Friday on Calvary? The religious authorities mocked Him, the civil authorities considered Him a problem to be swept out of the way, the devil of Hell probably roared in premature triumph. Hung as a criminal on a cross! Rejected, scorned, bruised, and broken, Jesus was not the glorious Messiah the people expected to see. How could this Nazarene be the desired of all nations? Did He not look to all the world like nothing?
But in the very nothingness of the crucified Jesus, our God brought everything to this blind and broken world. He exalted this Lord Jesus to His right hand in glory and appointed that in Him and Him alone all men must meet with God. Jesus Christ is our Temple. He is the one place where the Almighty grants His peace. And as He dwells in you His church and as you His church dwell in Him, you are His temple here on earth.
And so, as St. Paul says, we must stop being unequally yoked with unbelievers. There are all sorts of ideas about what that means, but at the very least it must mean, Do not use the ways of this world to promote the goals of God. The world demands strength and power, but we preach Christ crucified in weakness. The world says church growth comes from high-tech glamor and the latest sure-fire marketing methods and appeals to sinners’ felt needs, but we preach repentance and forgiveness of sins in Jesus’ name. The world says success is judged by size and numbers and the bigger the better, but we preach faithfulness to our God and trust in Him to fill this house with His glory, however large or small the membership may be.
People of God, trust in His power, not in your own. Rejoice in your smallness and brokenness, for God is with you and will do great things in you. There is ministry here for you to do and He has given you gifts by the Holy Spirit for you to do it. So be strong, and work. Build the church in this place, not in your own strength, but in the strength of Jesus Christ, your Temple and your glory. Consecrate yourselves to Him in holiness, for in Him, you are all the temple of the living God.
To close, let us pray a prayer that John Calvin wrote in response to this passage in Haggai:
Grant, Almighty God, that as we are not only alienated in mind from thee, but also often relapse after having been once stirred up by thee, either into perverseness, or into our own vanity, or are led astray by various things, so that nothing is more difficult than to pursue our course until we reach the end of our race- - O grant that we may not confide in our own strength, nor claim for ourselves more than what is right, but, with our hearts raised above, depend on thee alone, and constantly call on thee to supply us with new strength, and so to confirm us that we may persevere to the end in the discharge of our duty, until we shall at length attain the true and perfect form of that temple which thou commandest us to build, in which thy perfect glory shines forth, and into which we are to be transformed by Christ our Lord. Amen.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)