Thursday, July 31, 2008

Lectionary for 7/31/2008

Today's readings are 1 Samuel 16.1-23 ( http://www.gnpcb.org/esv/search/?q=1+Sam.+16.1-23 ) and Acts 25.13-27 ( http://www.gnpcb.org/esv/search/?q=Acts+25.13-27 ).
 

Acts 25.13-27

 

Did you ever wish things would follow the reason of your choice and not their own natural pattern?  The appliance breaks down and the company extends the warranty for you?  The city transit authority decides to change the bus routes so there is a free bus that picks you up at your doorstep and takes you to your workplace at the exact time you want to be there? Your elected officials call you up to ask you what they should do on policies about which you voted against them?  Life would be pleasant indeed.

We can all look at our lives, though, and realize that the majority of events don't turn out that way.  As a result of Adam's sin our lives, our relationships, our work – it's all cursed.  And not a day goes by when we are not reminded of this cursed life.  We wake up in the morning and can see and feel the curse immediately, or certainly as soon as we look in the mirror.  And we go through our day trying to dodge the effects of the curse.  Some days most of our events come off without major difficulties, but then there are other days. The day when the file we dread comes across the desk.  The day when we get to deal with the case we didn't want, didn't ask for, and with which we don't know what to do.

In Acts 25 we meet Festus and find that he is having a couple of days like this.  He has inherited a prisoner.  The prisoner has appealed to Caesar.  But part of Festus' job is to make sure that this is in fact the prisoner who appealed to Caesar, that he has had due process as a Roman citizen, and that when he arrives in front of Caesar that Caesar will know what to do with him.  It should be no problem.  Festus is a high ranking official.  He has disposed of hundreds, if not thousands, of similar cases.  Someone is accused or convicted of a crime. Our government needs to be sure it knows how to deal with him.  We put the facts in order and dispose of the case.  File closed, off my desk.  Murderers are executed.  Thieves are fined, sold, or banished.  Political revolutionaries get to suffer publicly.  We look at the case, we decide the case, we move on to the next issue. Lunch is on time.  We make it to the political networking at the bathhouse at the appropriate time of the afternoon.

This day, Festus is confronted with a prisoner who is a little different.  His name is Paul, though he is also known by his Hebrew name of Saul.  Seems an educated man.  He doesn't seem the violent revolutionary type.  But he was arrested forcibly, taken out of a riot, and wound up inciting the people who were accusing him to some sort of frenzy by which they planned to die if necessary in their attempts to kill him.  Strange.  He doesn't seem that dangerous.  What to do with him?  It would be nice  to say he is a violent and dangerous criminal, pass him on to Caesar, and be done with it.  But that simply isn't to happen.

Sometimes talking through the situation is exactly what enables us to think clearly.  So in an audience with Agrippa (a man of greater authority than Festus), Festus asks Agrippa to hear the prisoner.  The dispute was not about something familiar to Festus.  It was about some religious matter.  Something having to do with Paul's religion, which is akin to Agrippa's religion.  He's been talking about someone who was dead and whom Paul says to be alive, but his opponents insist is dead.  This really doesn't seem like a state matter.

As you know, Agrippa agrees to hear the testimony.  Paul will speak very boldly about Jesus.  Agrippa, Bernice, and Festus are not of a mind to believe at that time.  Paul remains a prisoner and is sent to Caesar with no better descriptor of his crime than he had before.

Some matters of life are simply perplexing.  Yet when we look at those events understanding Jesus' death and resurrection to be the focal point of our life, many of those matters make more sense.  Especially this seemingly irrelevant issue which doesn't appear to Festus to be an affair of state, this becomes an important state matter if we see the reality of Jesus' death for our sin.  If the death, burial, and resurrection of Christ is the mediation between God and man, if Christ's righteousness is imputed to his people, if Jesus calls people to take up their cross and follow him, if all this is true we have suddenly gained order and reason in our lives which would otherwise seem to be a smattering of irrelevant details.  If the way I manage my work today in the office is an expression of my loving my neighbor for Christ's sake, even the most menial detail of what I do is important.  It is all related to Jesus and his work on our behalf.

What is the charge against Paul?  He believes Christ.  What is the charge against us? 

 


 

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Lectionary for 7/30/08

Today's readings are 1 Samuel 15.10-35 ( http://www.gnpcb.org/esv/search/?q=1+Sam.+15.10-35 ) and Acts 24.24-25.12 ( http://www.gnpcb.org/esv/search/?q=Acts+24.24-25.12 ).
 

In 1 Samuel 15.10-35 we see the importance of obedience.  God has commanded Saul to crush the Amalekites and destroy them utterly.  Saul has crushed the Amalekites, taken some prisoners including the king, and has had his forces take the best of the Amalekites possessions to give as an offering to God.  While this may seem like an act of dedication and obedience to God, in fact it goes counter to God's specific commands.  Do we expect the Lord to be pleased with this type of obedience?  We should not.

Look closely at verses 22-23 (ESV). 

22 And Samuel said,

"Has the Lord as great delight in burnt offerings and sacrifices,
as in obeying the voice of the Lord?
Behold, to obey is better than sacrifice,
and to listen than the fat of rams.
23 For rebellion is as the sin of divination,
and presumption is as iniquity and idolatry.
Because you have rejected the word of the Lord,
he has also rejected you from being king."

God has spoken.  Let us obey.  God has made himself known.  Let us see and understand.  God has laid down a standard by his knowledge and wisdom.  Let us not exalt our knowledge and wisdom above God's.  What brings pleasure to God?  Obedience.  What happens when we reject the wisdom of God?  We are likewise rejected.  We are iniquitous idolaters who take God's sacrifices and make them our own sacrifices.

How many times have we done just what Saul did?  We come up with a plan and we execute it.  We say it is something we are doing for God.  And maybe it is.  But it is our plan.  Does it run counter to what the Lord has revealed in Scripture?  If that be the case, our "holy offering" is defiled.  When we are praying that the Lord will direct us in our career, in our family, in our local church, are we agonizing over things which the Lord has already placed before us and about which he has revealed his will?  Should we not rather actively pursue our legitimate moral desires, nurture our families, and support our local church while praying the Lord will show us how to minister through those media more effectively?  When we consider how to obey the commands of Christ in Scripture, do we add layer upon layer of our own interpretation rather than simply letting him be the Lord and Savior? 

But rather than take the time right now to apply example upon example of our human wisdom setting up plans which may be counter to God's wisdom, I will leave the topic with the words of God through Samuel.  "To obey is better than sacrifice, and to listen than the fat of rams."

 

 



 

Sunday, July 27, 2008

Sermon from 7/27/08

I was given the opportunity to preach in my local church again today.  Here's the text of that sermon.  May the Lord bring encouragement.
 

Matthew 13.1-23             Sermon prepared for Grace Fellowship Church July 27, 2008

 

Today we will look at the parable of the Seed, from Matthew 13.1-23.  In this, the foundational parable that Jesus tells, we'll see his most fundamental explanation of the Kingdom of God.  And we will see five aspects of God's Kingdom within this parable.  These five characteristics, by the way, can be very helpful at looking at all Jesus' parabolic statements and actions.  May the Lord enlighten our eyes and guide our understanding as we look at this parable's explanation of catholicity, mystery, actuality, hostility, and response.

First, let's read the parable together.  I'll intersperse a few comments that might help direct us.

 

See the context in which Jesus is speaking.  He's outside with a large crowd.  He's been telling them many things that we don't know about.  And he tells them the parable.

Matthew 13

The Parable of the Sower

 1That same day Jesus went out of the house and sat by the lake. 2Such large crowds gathered around him that he got into a boat and sat in it, while all the people stood on the shore. 3Then he told them many things in parables, saying: "A farmer went out to sow his seed. 4As he was scattering the seed, some fell along the path, and the birds came and ate it up. 5Some fell on rocky places, where it did not have much soil. It sprang up quickly, because the soil was shallow. 6But when the sun came up, the plants were scorched, and they withered because they had no root. 7Other seed fell among thorns, which grew up and choked the plants. 8Still other seed fell on good soil, where it produced a crop—a hundred, sixty or thirty times what was sown. 9He who has ears, let him hear."

Now notice that it would be difficult to interpret this parable.  We hear what Jesus said and we automatically say, "So what's the point?"  The hearers didn't have the rest of what we have.  This is why the disciples had to ask Jesus a question.

 

 

 

 10The disciples came to him and asked, "Why do you speak to the people in parables?"

 11He replied, "The knowledge of the secrets of the kingdom of heaven has been given to you, but not to them. 12Whoever has will be given more, and he will have an abundance. Whoever does not have, even what he has will be taken from him. 13This is why I speak to them in parables:
   "Though seeing, they do not see;
      though hearing, they do not hear or understand. 14In them is fulfilled the prophecy of Isaiah:
   " 'You will be ever hearing but never understanding;
      you will be ever seeing but never perceiving.
 15For this people's heart has become calloused;
      they hardly hear with their ears,
      and they have closed their eyes.
   Otherwise they might see with their eyes,
      hear with their ears,
      understand with their hearts
   and turn, and I would heal them.' 16But blessed are your eyes because they see, and your ears because they hear. 17For I tell you the truth, many prophets and righteous men longed to see what you see but did not see it, and to hear what you hear but did not hear it.

We read this last week.  Notice that Jesus is talking now just to his disciples, not the big crowd.  And while he encourages them about their asking and their hearing, he states the fact that most people just aren't going to receive the things of God.  Jesus' speaking in parables doesn't make matters easier for those who are listening.  It makes matters more difficult.  So while we don't want to hide anything from people, we want to realize that Jesus' teaching is mystery.  Mystery is difficult to understand.  That's what it is.

Now Jesus goes ahead and tells the disciples what the parable means.  Let's read on.

 

 18"Listen then to what the parable of the sower means: 19When anyone hears the message about the kingdom and does not understand it, the evil one comes and snatches away what was sown in his heart. This is the seed sown along the path. 20The one who received the seed that fell on rocky places is the man who hears the word and at once receives it with joy. 21But since he has no root, he lasts only a short time. When trouble or persecution comes because of the word, he quickly falls away. 22The one who received the seed that fell among the thorns is the man who hears the word, but the worries of this life and the deceitfulness of wealth choke it, making it unfruitful. 23But the one who received the seed that fell on good soil is the man who hears the word and understands it. He produces a crop, yielding a hundred, sixty or thirty times what was sown."

Now let's be sure we recognize the characters in this parable.  First off, there's someone who plants the Word of God all over the place.  He is not someone who is mentioned as receiving the Word, but the one who is sending the Word.  This can be none other than God the Father. 

Though Matthew is writing this down before John's Gospel was written, there can be no doubt that the Holy Spirit knew Jesus as the incarnate Word of God, who was before the foundation of the world, through whom all things are made, and who came to bring light to the world.  The seed, then, is the Word of God.  And when we talk about that, let us talk about the Word of God through the same eyes John used when writing the first chapter of his Gospel.  The Word of God isn't the Bible.  And it certainly isn't a tract that uses a few Bible verses to tell someone how to be a Christian.  The Word of God is bigger than that.  The Word of God is Jesus Christ himself.

 

Now let's begin looking at the five aspects of parabolic teaching in order.   The first one is catholicity.

Catholicity means "pertaining to the whole."   Many people have at one time or another memorized the Apostles' Creed or the Nicene Creed, both of which confess that there is "one holy catholic and apostolic Church."  The word "catholic" there doesn't refer to the specific Roman church which has taken that description as part of their name.  It refers to one "universal" church.    And in this parable we see catholicity.

To whom does the Father give the Son?  Let's look at the terrain.  He ends up on the road, among the thorns, among the rocks, and in good soil.  The Father plants the whole field.  There is no area in this parable that he does not plant.    Jesus is in fact the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world (John 1.29, 1.36) and who is the sufficient sacrifice not only for our sins but for the sins of the whole world (1 John 2.2).

Last week we looked at the idea of whether God was "enough God" for our salvation.  In this parable, there is certainly enough Jesus for salvation for anyone anywhere at any time.  The Father has planted the Son in the world.  And he is everywhere.

 

The second of our parabolic aspects is mystery. 

We're all familiar with the idea of a mystery.  If you know Nate the Great, you know that any mystery can be solved if there are enough pancakes.  Maybe your interest in mysteries runs deeper and you have watched Hercule Poirot solve mysteries using his little grey cells.  Or maybe you have dealt with the mystery of the missing keys this very morning before managing to turn on your car.  There are all sorts of mysteries in this world.  And in the parables of Jesus there are many mysteries.

Specifically, where is the Word of God?  Where is the seed?  I planted some seeds in my garden some time ago.  I would be very hard pressed to find them again.  Until they germinated, and maybe for a while afterward, it might be theoretically possible to find them.  But once they are in the ground, they are hidden and eventually they cease to be recognized as seeds, being replaced by plants. 

God's kingdom is mysterious by nature.  It doesn't arrive in the mailbox with a big notice saying "This is God's kingdom, sent to you by the Holy Spirit."  If you receive something like that, throw it into your paper shredder right away.  God's kingdom doesn't work that way.  It's more, well, left-handed.  It arrives often without our knowing it.  It uses means that are not the means we'd pick.   Think about that question.  "What must I do to be saved?"  Well, umm, Jesus already took care of that.  Do you believe?  Think about the way God seals salvation through baptism into his own name – this is a work of God, not of man.  Think about the way God feeds his people around his table – according to his plan, not our invention.  Think about God's use of the foolishness of preaching a substitutionary death, something that doesn't seem it would work, but is God's wisdom and God's power to salvation for everyone who believes (Rom. 1.15).

 This is a mystery.  The seed is in the ground.  We don't see it.  But it's there.  And it's doing its own work.

The third of our parabolic features, after catholicity and mystery is actuality.  This one is easy to understand, but a little harder to grasp when we think about it.

The farmer is actually planting the seed.  And it's actual seed.  He isn't thinking about planting seed.  And he isn't deciding to plant seed.  He's putting it in the ground.  And it's seed.  It isn't some fake representation of seed.  It isn't something which is potentially seed.  It is real.  If he's planting barley, it's barley seed.  If he's planting carrots, it is carrot seeds.  It doesn't matter.  It's real planting and real seeds.

The Word of God is actually planted in the world.  It doesn't depend on us.  It doesn't depend on our missionaries.  The living Word of God is already here.  God has planted the field.  We who are believers have some duties, but this parable is not about those duties.  Jesus Christ, the living Word of God, is already planted in our homes, in our families, in our communities, in our workplaces – he's there.  If we have a job to do it is to point him out, resolving some of the mystery.  But he's already there.

The earth belongs to the Lord.  All of it.  He's there.  There is no place in heaven or on earth that is not full of the presence of God.  The fact that he is rejected does not mean that he is not there.  Let me repeat that.  The fact that he is rejected does not mean he is not there.  The fact that his wrath will be poured out on a person or place does not mean he is not there.  Quite the contrary, it means he is there.

This brings us straight to our fourth parabolic element, hostility.  Who is hostile in this parable?  Let's start by asking who recognizes the seed, the Word, the Son?   In this parable, only the Father and Satan, who is represented by the birds, recognize the Son.  The Father, obviously, is not hostile to the Son.  But Satan is.

How does Satan's power in opposition to the Son work?  We can see it here in the birds.  They recognize the seed.  They attempt to devour the seed.  But as anyone who has ever had a bird feeder realizes, the birds manage to do a fair amount of planting of seeds.  They receive nourishment but they also scatter some of the seed and plant it near where they are feeding.  For that matter, birds will eat seeds and then manage to plant them in other places where they go.  This parable, then, may even picture Satan acting as an agent of God to redistribute the Word and make more fruitful soil.

Consider for a moment how Satan's "right-handed" power seems to work in this world.  He arouses opposition to Christians in Jerusalem which spreads them throughout the Mediterranean world proclaiming the Gospel.  He has Paul imprisoned and chained to guards who later end up on different assignments and take the Gospel throughout Europe and even to Britain.  And the crowning glory of how Satan's power works is when he arouses opposition to Jesus and gets people to decide it would be a good idea to put him to death in a way which, incidentally, fulfills all sorts of prophecies.

Is Satan evil?  Yes, no doubt about it.  But is he able to bring the Gospel to destruction?  Not in any way.  His attempts are foiled at almost every turn.

So, we've looked at catholicity, mystery, actuality, and hostility.  We have one remaining aspect of parabolic teaching to see, and that is response. 

At some point in this parable Jesus shifts gears.  Notice that he first talks about the seed, the Word, scattered everywhere.  But then all of a sudden he is talking about "those" on the rocks, in the weeds, in the good ground.  It would appear that Jesus has introduced another element to this parable, that of the germinated seed, and that this would be the Christian.

See how Jesus has given us every imaginable type of response to the Gospel?  Let's look at these in order.

Some people, confronted with the Gospel, never have a chance.  They are hard.  Could they be made soft?  Certainly, nothing is too difficult for God.  But they are hard and for whatever reason, God knows, they are not penetrated by the Gospel.  Satan recognizes the Gospel and steals it from their lives.  These people will not see Christ.  They will not hear and receive the Word.  Their end will be destruction.  They have been in the presence of Christ, since he is spread throughout this world, and they will be left according to their own desire, which is to reject Christ.  Since we do not know who is what type of soil, our job remains the same – to try to make this mystery of Christ known to them.

Some people, confronted with the Gospel, receive Christ.  They are in Christ.  But again, for the reason that we do not know but that God knows, the Gospel does not bear fruit in their life.  The Word works.  Jesus works.  The seed germinates.  But the plant does not have the opportunity to grow to maturity and to bear fruit.  Do I need to point out at this point that I'm not a Calvinist?  I haven't made a secret of that around GFC or anywhere, but people are still surprised when I tell them that.  I'm not a Calvinist.  But it's all right. Really.   As I understand it, Calvinists will make the assumption that these people were never believers.  But I think that is an unwarranted attempt to protect the doctrine of the perseverance of the saints at the expense of a fair and straightforward reading of this passage.  It is clear that these are living plants and that they die.  So what is our job as Christians?  First off, we do our normal job by seeking to reveal the mystery of Christ in this world.  How about those rocks?  If we see things which will cause young believers to stumble, will be harmful to them, if we are able, we should try to remove those hindrances.  Do we see someone who believes in Christ and is becoming trapped in unrealistic expectations about the nature of salvation?  We want to help that person as much as we are able.  We want to remove the rocks whenever we can.  Do we see our government and society doing things which can serve as stumbling blocks for Christians?  Maybe we can lobby our government officials, maybe we can be involved in the community, trying to make it safer for people to be nurtured in their faith.  Can we do it successfully all the time?  No.  Some rocks we won't recognize.  Some rocks are hidden.  Some people go seeking out the rocks so as to stumble over them.  We don't know why, but it probably has a lot to do with the sinful nature.  But we do what we can.

What's the next soil?  The ground with weeds.  Big nasty weeds that choke out faith.  Again, I'm still not a Calvinist.  These people in the weeds are real believers whose lives are choked by cares.  Can we help them?  Sure, sometimes.  Sometimes pulling up the weed uproots the plant we try to save.  Sometimes leaving the weed allows the plant to be choked.  We can try what we are able to do.  Probably the greatest thing when trying to minister to someone who is being choked by the cares of life is to remind the person of the nourishment of Christ.  Jesus has obtained life for us.  It is not of ourselves.  It is not dependent on our will or our decision, but according to God's will (John 1.12-13).  As we make known the mystery of Jesus Christ and salvation through belief on him, we encourage people.  We strengthen them in their faith.  We nourish that faith that God has given them.  We act as a means of grace.  They may end up choking out the weeds that were trying to choke them.

Now, maybe you have tried ministering to people, young Christians who are in trouble.  Maybe you have tried and want to say you have failed.  Maybe that person who was confessing Christ went and pulled the trigger.  Maybe the person you were nurturing in Christ has walked away from the faith and rejected any relationship with you.  Maybe you are wondering if you were acting rightly in what you tried to do to minister to this person.  Maybe you are discouraged and wonder if you were really serving Jesus.  Maybe you think it's better to do nothing.  Let me encourage you.  The Holy Spirit who lives in you will work through you.  He will take your weakness and make it into his strength.  He will take your failing and use it to accomplish his purpose.  And that purpose may be partially to drive you to repentance and partially to show the person you were trying to minister to that Christians are not really all the way like their great and mighty Lord.  God will not work in vain.  He will accomplish his purpose despite our weakness, despite our failure.  Pray, confess your sins, and receive God's forgivenss and grace.  He will continue to work in and through you as long as you are in this world He has created and redeemed to himself.

We turn to the last soil.  I wish everyone were good soil.  I wish the whole world were good soil.  I pray that God will plow up those rocks, eradicate those weeds, knock the hard packed path apart and make the whole world good, arable land.  But he hasn't done it.  We don't know why.  But that's just the way he works.  See how the Word sown in the good soil accomplishes its purpose, just like it did in all the other situations.  It is not wasted anywhere.  And it grows not because the soil is good, but because it is God's Word.  The plants – Christians – are fruitful because they happen to be good soil.  And they are good soil not because of anything inherently different from any other soil, certainly not because of their own effort, there is no room for boasting.  But they happen to be right for the Word when the Word comes upon them.  And the Word brings forth plants which bear fruit.  Are we all going to bear the same fruit at the same rate of production?  No.  See how some bears a 30, some a 60, and some a 100 fold crop.  None is condemned for producing a smaller crop.  None is praised for producing a bigger crop.  They are right there with each other.  And obedient believers, like plants, have really nothing to do with the kind of crop they produce.  They are just different from each other.

As we see our own fruit and look at other people's fruit, let us not be jealous.  Let us be thankful that the Lord is blessing us and our neighbors with fruit.

In closing, I'd like to remind us once again of the passage we read earlier in Galatians.  This may help us understand some of the characteristics of the believer on the rocks, in the weeds, and in the good ground.  Look at the works of the flesh.  See what happens when we work?  We bring forth our own kind of fruit.  And what kind of fruit is it?  It isn't the kind of fruit that glorifies God.  It eventually separates us from God and condemns us.  But what kind of fruit does the Spirit bring forth?  There we go.  It's of God, not of our own efforts.  The difference between the believer who is choked and the one who is fruitful for God is just this kind of difference.  If we try to use our right handed power and accomplish things for God, we will go astray.  But if we believe, trust in the Lord, and allow him to nourish us according to his plan and in his time, we will become fruitful, bringing forth the kind of character which is pleasing to God.  Isn't this a wonderful mystery?  The more we try to do the fruit of the Spirit, the less we will be able to do it.  The more we don't try to do the fruit of the Spirit but simply trust in the Lord, the more we will end up bringing forth fruit.

Lord, give us eyes to see, ears to hear, a heart to understand, so we may turn, repent of our ways, and simply believe the Gospel, the power of God to salvation.

Amen.

 



Sermon from 7/20/08

I had the opportunity to preach two Sundays in a row in my local church.  Here's the sermon from 7/20.  Hopefully it is a help and blessing to someone.  Of course, I always like seeing feedback.
 
Winning is losing - losing is winning

Sermon presented July 20, 2008 at Grace Fellowship Church.

Winning is losing - losing is winning. We see this in the life of Jesus. We see it in the life of the early believers. We may see it in our lives. Then again, maybe not. But in the final analysis that doesn't matter all that much. What do we see in the Scripture? What is in the life and ministry of our Lord and Savior? Winning is losing - losing is winning.

When I first make a statement like that, many Christians immediately go to a different pasage of Scripture than the one I intend today. Though we would affirm that Mark 9.35 is in the Bible and that if we wish to be first we should be last and servant of all, that isn't our main text today. So now that we know where we aren't going, let's see where we are going.

Two events serve as bookends for the temporal earthly ministry of Christ. Those two events frame nearly all that we know of Jesus' words and deeds. They are foundational to understanding this Christian life. They are the temptation and crucifixion of our Lord.

In the temptation and the crucifixion we see divine power and authority introduced and brought to fruition. My desire today is that we mght see and understand more of the way our Lord works in this world. How is his divine power shown to us? How does our Lord and savior show his authority in this world? I think sometimes we assume that God's ways are our ways and His thoughts are our thoughts. Time to change that thinking. I pray that my ways may be conformed to God's ways and my thoughts may be conformed to God's thoughts.

Many of the ideas I have for us today are not my own ideas. We should be very careful of people who bring their own ideas. Of course, we want to be careful of the people we borrow ideas from as well. But I think these are carefully borrowed ideas and that at least the parts I have borrowed are faithful to Scripture. I'll try to define things carefully and fairly, looking to Scripture as we move on.

Important ground rule: We don't generally understand what God is saying to us, at least not very well. So we need to listen carefully and accept what he is saying, not necessarily what we think he ought to say. In Matthew 13, where we will go next week, Jesus says something kind of cryptic to his disciples. He says (NIV):

"9He who has ears, let him hear."

10The disciples came to him and asked, "Why do you speak to the people in parables?"

11He replied, "The knowledge of the secrets of the kingdom of heaven has been given to you, but not to them. 12Whoever has will be given more, and he will have an abundance. Whoever does not have, even what he has will be taken from him. 13This is why I speak to them in parables:

"Though seeing, they do not see;

though hearing, they do not hear or understand. 14In them is fulfilled the prophecy of Isaiah:

" 'You will be ever hearing but never understanding;

you will be ever seeing but never perceiving.

15For this people's heart has become calloused;

they hardly hear with their ears,

and they have closed their eyes.

Otherwise they might see with their eyes,

hear with their ears,

understand with their hearts

and turn, and I would heal them.' 16But blessed are your eyes because they see, and your ears because they hear. 17For I tell you the truth, many prophets and righteous men longed to see what you see but did not see it, and to hear what you hear but did not hear it. "

 

See that people whose eyes are on themselves, who look to their own preconceived notions of what is right and wrong, strong and weak, wise and foolish - those people won't receive the things of God. They have turned themselves from the hearing of faith. I can picture them with their eyes closed as tightly as possible and their fingers in their ears trying not to see or hear. No surprise. In our sinful nature that's exactly what we do. Jesus has revealed himself to his people, though. He has given us eyes to see. He has given us ears to hear. He has given us a heart to understand, turn, and receive healing. At least I hope he has. We will know when we see, hear, understand, turn, and receive.

So there's our ground rule. We don't generally understand what God is saying to us. But he's saying it anyway and he will accomplish his purpose through what he says.

Now we need to make a couple of shorthand definitions. We often talk about power or authority. But we don't always define that power too well. For these concepts we need to get a fairly clear picture of two different types of power. And for a shorthand, I'll call them "right handed" and "left handed" power.

Let's try to get a working definition of right handed and left handed power. Those of you who have studied Luther's two kingdom theology need to forget what you know for a while. This isn't that. So leave those ideas behind. They are useful but not for this.

I'm right handed. Doctors who study the brain might say I process information in ways typical of right handed people. I tend toward linear thinking. Outlines work well for me. Pictures don't. That's generally more typical of righties than of lefties. Right handed power works more this way: Come up with a plan, execute the plan, no fuss, no muss, mission accomplished. As an example of right handed power, I want to break up a concrete sidewalk, so I take a sledge hammer and beat the daylights out of it until it comes apart.

Left handed power is different. I can't quite understand it. I'm a rightie. But I'll try to explain anyway. Left handed power looks a lot more like gentle influence or even inactivity. Think about "making" your garden plants grow and mature. That's what we'll call left handed power. As an example of left handed power, I want to break up a concrete sidewalk, so I plant a bunch of acorns right beside it and wait a dozen years. Or I find a crack in the sidewalk and pour some water into it every time there's a below-freezing day. The mission will be accomplished though I don't seem to be doing much.

Come with me now to Matthew 4 and the temptation of our Lord. We will look at the right hand and left hand power shown there. We'll keep praying for eyes to see, ears to hear, hearts to understand and turn. Of course, the fact that we are praying for those things does mean we already have them.

Let's read Matthew 4.1-4 together.

1Then Jesus was led up by the Spirit into the wilderness to be tempted by the devil. 2And after fasting forty days and forty nights, he was hungry. 3And the tempter came and said to him, "If you are the Son of God, command these stones to become loaves of bread." 4But he answered, "It is written,

"'Man shall not live by bread alone,

but by every word that comes from the mouth of God.'"

 

In the first temptation we see that God's power has nothing to do with food, drink, or other earthly sustenance.

Satan comes to Jesus with a plan to solve hunger. Jesus has been fasting and is hungry. Satan's proposal sounds good. "You can have all the food you want. For that matter, say the word and nobody in the world will ever be hungry again. Nice plan, right? You just need to cut loose and be God, Jesus! Make the plan, put it into operation, end of story. No more hunger for you or anyone else." That fits our right handed sesnsibilities just fine.

What is Jesus' response? He's decidedly left handed about the issue. There are more important issues than making sure suffering people have all they like at no personal cost.

Why does Jesus act this way?

The Bible doesn't say, I don't know, I refuse to speculate. That's just the way it is. Our Lord has spoken. He has not given us a limitless supply of rocks which turn to bread. He has not provided food for all the poor and hungry. Even when we try to distribute things to needy people, it's hard to identify people with real needs, it's hard to supply those needs, and people manage to become needy no matter what we do. Jesus says "the poor will always be with you." He's right. We don't know why.

 

We continue now to Matthew 4:5-7 (NIV).

5 "Then the devil took him to the holy city and set him on the pinnacle of the temple 6and said to him, "If you are the Son of God, throw yourself down, for it is written,

"'He will command his angels concerning you,'

and

"'On their hands they will bear you up,

lest you strike your foot against a stone.'"

7Jesus said to him, "Again it is written, 'You shall not put the Lord your God to the test.'"

 

In the second temptation we see that God's power is not shown by the preservation of this current bodily life or by our doing things that will look like a show of power.

Satan tells Jesus how great it would be for him to do a death defying public leap from the temple. "Wouldn't it be great? You could let people see that God really does care. You could get lots of attention stirred up. Maybe we could direct mail market the event, have balloons, a clown, a raffle, invite some NASCAR drivers and three generations of the Knievel family, and make everyone feel right at home while we show what God does when we are really radical. Sounds good, right? God really protects his people."

What is Jesus' response? "God doesn't work this way. He will show his hand of protection and mercy according to his own plan, in his own way, to whom he desires. It is not our place to doubt or test God." We fear, love and trust in God above all things. We do not put him to the test to see if he is enough God. He is decidedly enough God for everyone who is in danger of death. And that includes all of us.

We now turn our attention to Matthew 4.8-11.

8 "Again, the devil took him to a very high mountain and showed him all the kingdoms of the world and their glory. 9And he said to him, "All these I will give you, if you will fall down and worship me." 10Then Jesus said to him, "Be gone, Satan! For it is written,

"'You shall worship the Lord your God

and him only shall you serve.'"

11Then the devil left him, and behold, angels came and were ministering to him."

In the third temptation we see that God's power belongs to him and has not been given to anyone else. The Lord does not show his power and provision because of our claim to deserve it, our goodness, our faith, but because He is the great and mighty God.

Satan comes to Jesus and tells him he can have everything imaginable just by misplacing his worship. "Go on, I'm the prince of this world, after all. And you can have all that power you want."

To this absurd blasphemy Jesus restates the first commandment. "There is only one God. We serve only him." And all this that we see in the world? It doesn't belong to Satan. The whole world belongs to the Lord. He made it, he filled it, he sustains it, he will bring everything to its proper conclusion in the end.

Despite Satan's attempt to pull Jesus off-message, despite Satan's false claims to authority which is not his own, despite all the rambling theological arguments which can make us feel the need to trot out lots of evidence of the reality of God and use natural revelation to prove everything the Scripture asserts, despite all this Jesus does not come off-message. He asserts the truth, which has never changed, and brings the critical issue back to who God is and what He deserves.

Remember, just about every sin we can think of is somehow a violation of the First Commandment. Think about it. What is the first commandment? You shall have no other gods. What does this mean? We should fear, love, and trust in God above all things. Can you think of a way you can truly keep this command and enter into sin? I can't.

This moves us to the other bookend of Jesus' life. We've seen four things already:

1) We don't understand God's power or nature very well. We like things to be right-handed.

2) God's power doesn't have anything much to do with earthly sustenance.

3) God's power doesn't have much to do with preserving this present bodily life or bringing attention to himself through obvious signs.

4) God's power belongs to him and nobody else.

If you are like me, you are at least a little bit uncomfortable with God's idea of what real power is. You realize it doesn't match our ideals too well. You probably want to change your ways to be more like God's ways and see the futility in that attempt. So now it's my job to make you . . . less cofortable.

We are all familiar with the narrative of Jesus' crucifixion, death, and resurrection. We can all confess that Jesus, though sinless, was put to death, that he died in our place, and that the third day he rose again from the dead, showing that he is the firstfruits of the resurrection of the dead and that he has conquered sin and death. That's just plain basic Christian doctrine.

Does this seem like a powerful act on God's part? We picture Jesus beating death to death with the bloody crossbeam he was hung on. Yeah, power. But sometimes it is helpful to look at a familiar event through the lens of a less familiar parallel. So I'd like to tell you a brief story. This is also a borrowed story, at least in its basic concept. I'm not that creative.

It was a bright sunny summer day, much like today. A lot of people were on the beach that day, enjoying the sun, sand, and surf. There was a new lifeguard on duty, but, as normal, nobody really paid much attention to the lifeguard. He was a little out of it anyway. He had forgotten his whistle and was wearing a non-uniform pair of shorts. He looked kind of ragged and talked like a hick, frequently saying odd things. But everyone was having a good time despite him. The tide started to go out. Since there were fairly forceful undertows, all but the strongest swimmers got out of the water while the tide was going out. All of a sudden, one young girl realized she was too far out and was being dragged out to sea. Hearing her screams we all looked at the lifeguard stand, which was empty. Then we saw the lifeguard's head. He seemed to have forgotten the lifeboat provided for his use and was swimming out to help the girl. We all watched as he reached the girl, was attacked by a shark, and disappeared under the bloody water together with the girl. They did not reappear. We called the police, who came and scouted around, dragged around the bottom with a hook and a net, searched the surrounding shoreline and sent patrol boats out. Neither the girl's nor the lifeguard's remains were found in the next two days. The third day, the lifeguard came out of the water alone, assured us everything was all right, stayed around for a while telling us odd things, then flew off into the sky.

Is everything all right in the resurrection of Christ? What kind of power is this? I thought Jesus came to conquer sin and death. He doesn't look much like a winner in his poverty-stricken lif or death. How about now, after the resurrection? People don't fear, love, and trust in God above all things. People are hungry. People are dying. Every day around 155,000 people die in this world. That means that in the past 20 minutes we can expect that about 2000 people have died in this world. I thought Jesus conquered death.

He has conquered death, but he has not done it in the right-handed straight-line no fuss, no muss, no hassle mission accomplished manner that I would have chosen. You see, the one who seems like the loser is the winner.

Through this quiet victory, his death on the cross on our behalf, the winning of Christ which looks suspiciously like losing, our Lord and Savior has atoned for the sins of the world and has seated himself on the throne which belonged to him all along and which does not pass away. And he has proclaimed the message of forgiveness that I proclaim today. This is that Gospel which is the power of God to salvation for everyone who believes. Jesus has done what we couldn't and wouldn't do. What must we do to be saved? Would you ask that question if you didn't believe? Not in faith you wouldn't. Do you believe that Jesus has actually accomplished something? He has accomplished salvation on your behalf and on my behalf. He has atoned for sin. God's righteous requirement is satisfied. And that is the Gospel I proclaim to you today. Notice I proclaim the Gospel, I don't try to persuade you of it. That's right handed power. But the fact is that whether you and I believe or not, Jesus has atoned for sin and has procured forgiveness. That's a done deal. Do we believe? I pray that we might. Remember as we gather around the Lord's table the Lord's body broken for us and his blood shed for us. We don't earn it. We just believe it.

Lord, help my unbelief!

Amen.

 

Friday, July 25, 2008

Lectionary for 7/25/2008

Today's readings are 1 Samuel 9.1-27 ( http://www.gnpcb.org/esv/search/?q=1+Sam.+9.1-27 ) and Acts 21.37-22.16 ( http://www.gnpcb.org/esv/search/?q=Acts+21.37-22.16 ).
 
In today's readings we have two different Sauls.  We meet Saul the son of Kish, whom Samuel anointed king of Israel.  We also see Saul of Tarsus calming a riot.  In both instances we have a prophet of God (Samuel and Paul) speaking with a voice of reason to a situation which was not looking for or even desiring their message.
 
We speak the words of life, given us by Christ.  Let us speak them in a reasoned way, yet holding firm to the radically unexpected message our Lord has given us.  May our hearers not have personal reason to reject us though they reject the message of Christ crucified for their sins.  May we present Christ in such a way that there will be no hindrance to the message we bring through our own poor conduct.
 
 


 

Monday, July 21, 2008

Lectionary for 7/21/08

I've had some interruptions lately and am in the midst of dealing with a big computing crisis.  But I found a computer which is working so I thought I'd make a post.  Still hoping to post yesterday's sermon if I can ever retrieve it from the other computer.
 
 
The Philippian jailer asks the question which we are all inclined to ask at one time or another.  "What must I do to be saved?"  Paul and Silas respond in a way which makes some of us uncomfortable.  "Just believe."  They  tell the jailer what to believe, the Gospel, and apparently make an adequate explanation that he knows what they are calling him to believe.  Of course, God has just secured the jailer's attention through the miraculous prison opening and keeping the prisoners in the prison despite their ability to flee.  So we'd expect the jailer to be receptive to whatever Paul and Silas say.
 
Notice how he washes the wounds that Paul and Silas have and he and his household are then baptized?  Consider the symbolism inherent in baptism as a washing.  The bloodstains, the evil, the pain are being washed away from the person who is receiving baptism.  He is then clean and refreshed.
 
What a joy when God sends His Gospel of grace to someone who is in need.  Shortly before he had no hope for the future and was ready to end his life. Now he has new life.  What a God we have!
 


 

Friday, July 18, 2008

Lectionary for 7/18/2008

Today's readings are 1 Samuel 1.21-2.17 ( http://www.gnpcb.org/esv/search/?q=1+Sam.+1.21-2.17 ) and Galatians 6.1-18 ( http://www.gnpcb.org/esv/search/?q=Gal.+6.1-18 ).
 
The first two sentences in Galatians 6 should be at the forefront of any discussion of order in the church, discipline, discipleship, or biblical counseling.  Here's how they read (ESV): "Brothers, if anyone is caught in any transgression, you who are spiritual should restore him in a spirit of gentleness. Keep watch on yourself, lest you too be tempted."
 
Let's unpack these two quite simple sentences a little.
 
1) Brothers are those who are believers, those who are members of Christ's body by faith.  The care for God's people is administered by God's people.  We can trust that the Lord will raise up mature believers who can help other believers through in every need with biblical perspective.
 
2)  Anyone can become involved in sin.  Nobody escapes all temptation on this planet.  Nobody is above it.  And we minister God's hope and help to anyone who needs it, not just to those who appear repentant already, not just to those who are following all our little (and big) rules of conduct.  This aplies to anyone.
 
3) The picture of being caught in a transgression is the same picture of being caught in a hunting net.  We don't go there on purpose.  We may or may not know it is there.  In most cases, when an animal is caught in a net the animal didn't know the net was there.  The animal did not go to its location expecting to be caught.  It is taken by surprise.  It would have avoided the situation if it could.  We are caught in sin.  Very few of us get up in the morning with plans to sin.  But we manage to do it anyway.  And if we are caught in it we won't be able to escape by ourselves.  That's part of being caught.
 
4) What kind of transgressions do we help with?  Any kind.  Even with sinful patterns which are hard to break?  Yes.  How about sinful patterns that are really unacceptable socially?  The Bible says clearly, "any transgression."
 
5)  Who does the restorative work?  Those who are spiritual do it.  Does this mean people without sin?  No, if it meant that, nobody could help.  But believers who are not badly endangered by the sin someone is trapped in should come to help.  What does this say about support groups for people who struggle with sin?  While those are fine and good, you should not expect that one person with a drinking problem will be likely to help another person with a drinking problem in any serious and lasting manner.  When we are caught in sin we need people who are not like us to drag us out.
 
6)  What do we "spiritual" people do?  Kick the person out?  Administer penalties?  Make him prove himself?  None of the above.  We restore him, and we do it gently.  Is there anyone who can't become entrapped in sin?  Nobody.  Do we become entrapped in sin on purpose?  Rarely.  Especially the entrapment.  We will enter into sin on purpose but not if we think we can't retreat again when we want to.  We are all subject to our sinful nature, though we all have different strengths and weaknesses.  What we need is caring restoration.  We need to be shown the grace and mercy of Christ, who laid down his life so we could receive his live for ours.  We need to be reminded that Jesus was subject to every temptation which comes to us.  We need to be reminded that he lives a righteous life before God and that he dresses us in his righteousness.  We are all restored to fellowship with God in one and the same way, not by our works but by the grace of God.
 
7)  We who are spiritual need to watch out for ourselves as well.  There are dangerous sin nets all over the place just waiting to entangle us.  As we guard ourselves against temptation we are more able to help those God has put in our paths.
 
"Brothers, if anyone is caught in any transgression, you who are spiritual should restore him in a spirit of gentleness. Keep watch on yourself, lest you too be tempted."

Thursday, July 17, 2008

Lectionary for 7/17/08

Today's readings are 1 Samuel 1.1-20 ( http://www.gnpcb.org/esv/search/?q=1+Sam.+1.1-20 ) and Galatians 5.1-26 ( http://www.gnpcb.org/esv/search/?q=Gal.+5.1-26 ).
 
Our reading in Galatians has bookends in verses 1 and 26.  See the freedom we have?  See how we are to stand firm in that freedom?  Now look at all the things we are to do because of the freedom we have in Christ.  In the final analysis, the more we try to do things the more we will run into error.  The more we try to care for our salvation through our works, the more we will choke out the fruit the Spirit grows.  And notice, as we close this very brief post, that we have a contrast between the "works" of the flesh (that which we do) and the "fruit" of the Spirit (which grows according to the Spirit, not based on anything we do).  We can't do fruit.  Only God can grow fruit.  Best not to try to stand in his way.
 
 

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Lectionary for 7/16/2008

 
Consider the prevailing American view of ministry for a moment.  Develop a ministry plan, find a location in which we wish to promote the Gospel, do a demographic analysis to find out what kind of church people are looking for, what will thrive in the community.  Gather a leadership team of already committed Christians, a big enough leadership team that people in most parts of the world and through most of history would consider that to be an established church.  Start having exploratory services, then finally launch yourself as a church when you have enough interested people.
 
This is not what happened in Paul's time.  Why, we might not even think he had a "call" to proclaim the Gospel to the Galatians.  He ministered Christ to them because of his illness.  Apparently something happened, we don't know what, causing Paul to end up somewhere in Galatia needing some time to recover from a malady.  While recovering, Paul did what any Christian would be expected to do.  He talked about Jesus.  God used his illness and temporary detainment in Galatia to plant a church.
 
So what are we going to do next time we are somewhere and have opportunity to talk with people?  Maybe the Lord will use us to plant a church.  Maybe not.  But I pray that our talk and our actions will be talk and actions hat exalt Christ above all things.
 
 
 


 

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

Lectionary for 7/15/2008

Today's readings are Judges 15.1-16.3 ( http://www.gnpcb.org/esv/search/?q=Judges+15.1-16.3 ) and Galatians 3.23-4.11 ( http://www.gnpcb.org/esv/search/?q=Gal.+3.23-4.11 ).
 
In Galatians 3 we read more about the nature of our custody to the Law.  Think of it as protective custody.  Apart from Christ, God has given us his Law and held us captive by it.  We try to disobey and find at least some level of restraint because of the Law.  In Christ, the same Law applies but there are some fundamental changes.  First, we are given a desire to obey God.   I recall the difference between a city dog and a country dog.  The city dog needs a leash because otherwise it will run away and harm itself.  The country dog may have a leash but it doesn't matter since the dog spends all day lying on the porch.  In Christ we become the country dog who does not desire to bolt and run.  We are at home in God's household and wish to stay.  Second, we realize the implications of God's law.  He doesn't just condemn actions, but attitudes as well.  The prison bars can guard our actions but do nothing about our attitudes.  Only God's Spirit does something about our attitudes.  A third way that God uses his Law in us is by our distinctiveness in our culture.  What of the situation when we can openly tell our unbelieving neighbor that we choose to do something in a particular way because it's a way the Lord has revealed in Scripture?  What of the time when we point out that we are guarding our thought life because it matters to our Lord?  We are a peculiar people, set apart for God's praise.  Free from the Law, by the Gospel we are partakers of Christ's obedience to the Law.
 

Monday, July 14, 2008

Lectionary for 7/14/2008

Today's readings are Judges 14.1-20 ( http://www.gnpcb.org/esv/search/?q=Judges+14.1-20 ) and Galatians 3.1-22 ( http://www.gnpcb.org/esv/search/?q=Gal.+3.1-22 ).
 
Galatians 3 has been used to annul God's law.  People who are in grace are free from the law.  We are not saved by the law, it is a curse.  Yet this is not what Paul is saying.  Let's take just a brief moment to consider what Paul is really saying about God's law.  First, the one who is able to keep the law receives life.  It is a good thing and a blessing to those who keep God's law.  The problem is that we are not able to keep God's law.  Therefore, it becomes a curse to us.  How are we to be pleasing to God then?  We are pleasing to God only by receiving his Word in faith.  Then what of the law?  Is the Mosaic law part of God's word?  Indeed it is.  Are we to receive it by faith?  We most certainly are.  So what do we do?  We can't keep the law.  But Jesus has kept the law on our behalf.  As we believe this he imputes his righteousness to us so that God sees us dressed in Christ's righteousness, not by our faithfulness but by his faithfulness.  So what is God's law good for?  Without a doubt it convicts us of sin.  When applied to the broader community it restrains evil, at least helping to keep behaviors in check.  And God's law shows us what is pleasing to God.  Since Christ gives us a desire to be obedient to God, the law provides us with ways we can try to be obedient, though we will often fail.  So we establish the law and we rejoice in grace.
 


 

Saturday, July 12, 2008

Lectionary for 7/12/2008

 
Paul sums up the reading that we do in Judges very quickly and concisely.  In Galatians 1.6-9 (ESV) he says, "I am astonished that you are so quickly deserting him who called you in the grace of Christ and are turning to a different gospel — not that there is another one, but there are some who trouble you and want to distort the gospel of Christ. But even if we or an angel from heaven should preach to you a gospel contrary to the one we preached to you, let him be accursed. As we have said before, so now I say again: If anyone is preaching to you a gospel contrary to the one you received, let him be accursed."
 
How quick we are to turn from the God who loved us and gave his life to secure ours.  How quickly we seek some other gospel, which is not a gospel at all.  We see it in Gideon, we see it in national Israel, we see it in the Galatians, and we can see it in ourselves.  Are we people who fear, love and trust in God above all things? 
 
Lord, forgive us our sins and restore us to right fellowship and trust in you.
 
 


 

Friday, July 11, 2008

Lectionary for 7/11/2008

Today's readings are Judges 6.25-40 (
http://www.gnpcb.org/esv/search/?q=Judges+6.25-40 ) and Acts 15.6-21 (
http://www.gnpcb.org/esv/search/?q=Acts+15.6-21 ).

Our Lord works in amazing ways. He calls people like us to himself.
Look at the amazement of the apostles assembled in Acts 15. Can God
really save Gentiles without their conversion to Judaism? Based on
the testimony of Peter and Paul and the exegesis of James it would
seem that God can and does do this. How are we going to react? See
how the council at Jerusalem reacted by affirming that God indeed
saves Gentiles just like he saves Jews, apart from obedience to the
Mosaic Law. The apostles do tell the Gentile Christians to avoid some
practices which would be so offensive to every Jew in the world that
they would be immediately alienated. But they affirm for Jewish and
Gentile Christians alike that people from every nation can be
believers.

How are we going to react when God works in ways which make us
uncomfortable? How about our reaction when we see that the same Holy
Spirit is working in people who are in radically different church
traditions from ours? How about when we see the Lord saving the rich,
the poor, the educated, the uneducated, people outside of our cultural
group? How do we respond? Actually, that is an irrelevant question.
It doesn't matter so much how we do respond. How should we respond?
That's what matters. And Scripture is quite clear. We respond by
bringing glory and praise to the Lord who is able to do all things
according to his will by his spirit to reconcile the world to himself
in Christ.

Give thanks to the Lord, who works outside the boundaries we have
constructed for him.

Thursday, July 10, 2008

Lectionary for 7/10/2008

Today's readings are Judges 6.1-24 ( http://www.gnpcb.org/esv/search/?q=Judges+6.1-24 ) and Acts 14.19-15.5 ( http://www.gnpcb.org/esv/search/?q=Acts+14.19-15.5 ).
 
Think you're having a bad day?  Our culture seems obsessed with its bad fortune.  We're tired, too busy, nourished inappropriately, depressed, oppressed, repressed, and unpressed (in the sartorial line, that is).  We are overworked, underpaid, and get no respect whatever.
 
Look at the characters in our readings.  They are having a bad day indeed.  What is our Lord's response to the evil situations these people are in?  All is well.  God is on the throne.  He will bring all to rights in his good time.  All our present afflictions are but light.  Our suffering, however, is not trivial to our Lord.  He understands our pain.  He knows us.  And his mercy and grace are sufficient for us.  See how when the Lord visits Gideon he encourages him that all is well, then he disappears, not apparently accomplishing anything  But we have a promise.  God is good and he is on his throne.  All is well.
 
 

Wednesday, July 9, 2008

Lectionary for 7/9/2008

 
Look carefully at the activities of Paul and Barnabas in Iconium.  I'll just make a quick list of what I observed, then see if I find any application.
 
1)  They speak so as to be persuasive.
2)  Unbelievers seek to be persuasive as well.
3)  Paul and Barnabas  are committed to staying for a long time if need be.
4)  The Holy Spirit affirms their presence.
5)  Eventually the tide turns against Paul and Barnabas from all ethnic and political groups, resulting in death threats.
6)  Paul and Barnabas flee that area but continue to proclaim the Gospel.
 
Applications:
1)  God's Word is effective.  At the same time, God speaks through people who strive to be effective as well.  We are facing opposition so need to work as hard as we can to make the Gospel plain.
2)  It may take a while to accomplish the work the Lord has given us. 
3)  We can sometimes tell when the Holy Spirit is working through us.  Especially in difficult situations we may find some sort of signs of God's presence.
4)  Sometimes proclamation of the Gospel is life threatening.  Hostility is not necessarily a sign that we are doing something wrong.
5)  It is all right to strive to protect our lives in order to continue to spread the Gospel.
 
Go through your life for Christ today.  See what the Lord does through you.
 


 

Tuesday, July 8, 2008

Lectionary for 7/8/2008

Today's readings are Judges 3.7-31 ( http://www.gnpcb.org/esv/search/?q=Judges+3.7-31 ) and Acts 13.42-52 ( http://www.gnpcb.org/esv/search/?q=Acts+13.42-52 ).
 
Paul and Barnabas, speaking with Jews in Antioch, created quite a stir.  Notice that their message of the Gospel was something many people were ready to receive. It was, after all, good news.  The people demanded that Paul and Barnabas keep talking with them about the Gospel (at least on the next Sabbath).  Yet the Gospel, while it creates joy and delight also creates divsion.  Those who were not receptive stirred up crowds against Paul and Barnabas, eventually managing to throw them out of town.  Let's learn a few things from this incident.
 
First, the Gospel is, above all, good news.  Through the Gospel the Lord proclaims freedom from sin and deliverance into eternal life and blessedness.
 
Second, the Gospel divides.  Those who reject the Gospel often actively try to discourage others from belief.  If we have figured out how to earn merit with God we immediately reject others who say they don't have to earn merit with God.  But the Gospel is not something we earn, so it will always reap criticism.
 
Third, the Gospel spreads through circumstances.  Those God was calling to himself at that time in Antioch received the Word.  Those who were rejecting Christ and his apostles also accomplished the work of spreading the Gospel by driving the apostles out so they would spread the Gospel elsewhere.  Even seed sown along the path and eaten by birds is redistributed.


 

Monday, July 7, 2008

Lectionary for 7/7/08

Today's readings are Judges 2.6-23 ( http://www.gnpcb.org/esv/search/?q=Judges+2.6-23 ) and Acts 13.13-41 ( http://www.gnpcb.org/esv/search/?q=Acts+13.13-41 ).
 
See today the way that people who have heard the truth, God's revealed word of salvation, act.  Within a generation they walk away from their faith.  They quickly depart from what the Lord has revealed to them.  Swiftly we return to following the ways that seem right to us rather than the ways that are right before God.  We rush to our destruction.  And we who are in Christ are no different.  Though some of us are quicker to believe and more steadfast in looking to Jesus our hope of salvation, we are sinners all, ready to follow the path to death.
 
How important it is that we keep reminding ourselves and one another of the truth of the Gospel.  Exhort one another today.
 


 

Sunday, July 6, 2008

Lectionary for 7/6/08

 
How does the Lord communicate with his people?  We see three different readings today, all of which deal with God and people communicating with each other.  Many times today we are apprehensive about people's experiential statements about communication with the Lord.  Yet we need to confess that God does communicate with his people.  His final word, so to speak, is the living Word of God, Jesus.  Yet even after the resurrection, while the New Testament was being written, prophets received messages from God, people knew where to go and what to do, in short, they did receive communication from God.  And we still have no problem with the idea of praying that the Lord will guide us in what we should do.  Though some take it to extremes (Lord, should I put milk on my cereal this morning?), nobody would deny that we should address serious life events with prayerful discernment.  And we don't pray with the expectation that God will not communicate with us.  That would be tantamount to idolatry.  Rather, we pray with the expectation that God can and will make our path clear, give us assurance, help us find the right job, or better yet will show us the employer who really needs to be served and blessed by us.
 
But how does this happen?  We understand that the Lord has spoken in his written word, that he communicates with us through circumstances, and that he will act in our lives in accordance with the graces and gifts he has given us.  That's about the extent of what I can say.  But we need to be ready for God to work in us.  He is the living God.  He is the God who communicates with us.  If it appears that God is silent we should expect that it is actually we who are not listening.
 
Grace to you, and may the Lord bless you with peace, not silence.