Jesus: He’s so “NICE”?

Posted by on June 7, 2007 under Articles

A legend in the field of Youth Ministry, Mike Yaconelli, once said something to the effect that our concepts of Jesus are “all messed up.” He talked about how often people referred to Jesus as “such a nice person.”

After examining the scriptures closely, exactly what do we find out about how the religious leaders felt about Jesus? Did they have wonderful things to say about him?

To be honest, many of his actions were just downright confusing to most of the religious people. They are still confusing to many religious people today. Do the following passages of scripture make sense to you? Matthew 11:16-19, Matthew 12:46-50, Matthew 21:31-32, Matthew 23, Mark 2:13-17, Mark 11:15-19, John 4, John 8, John 9:34-41.

Wow! Jesus was referred to by the religious people as a “glutton, a drunkard, and a friend of the worst sort of sinners!” He called the religious leaders “blind guides, hypocrites, whitewashed tombs, etc.” He spent his time with tax collectors, prostitutes and known sinners and had the nerve to even ask some of them to be in his “inner circle of leadership.” And there’s so much more … read the stories!

Does this sound nice to you? Does it make much sense to you? Does it sound like the best way to make friends and influence people? If it doesn’t, then try to wrap your mind around THE CROSS.

Is that the method you would have chosen to redeem the people who had turned their backs on you? Would you choose your child to be the recipient of the punishment for the sins of the entire world?

Isn’t it wonderful that we serve a God who doesn’t make sense? Thank GOD that He lives in the heavens and does whatever He pleases! (Psalm 115:3) Thank GOD He doesn’t ask for our permission or opinions about the way things should be done today!

May we continue to get out of His way and let Him do what He wants to do … when He wants to do it … in whatever way He chooses to do it!

Thank God OUR FATHER KNOWS BEST!

I hope you take the time to personally look up the scriptures that are listed and read the stories in full context. Just turn and read about the Jesus found in Matthew 11:16-19, Matthew 12:46-50, Matthew 21:31-32, Matthew 23, Mark 2:13-17, Mark 11:15-19, John 4, John 8 and John 9:34-41.

Do you find a “kind,” “sweet,” “soft-spoken,” “non-controversial,” and “easily understood” Jesus in these passages? Or did you have to go back and read them again to try and understand exactly what it was He was trying to say and do?

Have you ever questioned the way Jesus chose to approach things? Be honest! Some of His sayings are pretty hard to take. He was rather bold! At times He was plainly confrontational …even down right controversial. Surely, this wasn’t God’s plan!

Just look at what He said, “Don’t imagine that I came to bring peace to the earth! No, I came to bring a sword. I have come to set a man against his father, and a daughter against her mother, and a daughter-in-law against her mother-in-law. Your enemies will be right in your own household.” (Matthew 10:34-46)

And this wasn’t even the “toughest” or “most confusing” thing He ever said. In John 6:22-66, He completely dumbfounds His listeners with His words. At one point in the story, the scriptures say, “Even His disciples said, ‘This is very hard to understand. How can anyone accept it?’” And after He finished speaking, the scriptures say, “At this point MANY of His disciples turned away and deserted him.” Does Jesus ever cause a problem for you and your theology???

Wouldn’t it be great if we could make Jesus “fit” into a nice, neat little box that makes perfect sense? Wouldn’t it be great if He would do and say all of the things that fit perfectly with our concepts of God, religion, church, the world, etc.?

Be He doesn’t! And that causes us BIG problems! Just like it did the religious people of His day and time! And you know how they decided to handle that problem …

You don’t have to search the Gospels long before you are “knee deep” in the controversy that surrounded Jesus. The controversy followed Him His entire life.

Remember His birth? The virgin birth? Remember the problems that caused for Joseph, Mary, and their relationship? Can you imagine what everyone else must have been saying?

There was His famous “disappearing act” at age 12 that greatly distressed His parents. His selection of 12 “very ordinary” men with no religious education or heritage to speak of. Men who would lay the foundation and be the cornerstones of the church. His choice to heal people on the “Holy Day” which appeared to break the very laws He claimed to establish. His defense of His followers who did numerous things that also seemed against the Law of Moses. His disruption in the temple. Of course, who could forget His numerous public disputes with the religious leaders of His day?

Can you think of anyone like this from your world today? Do you call them a NICE GUY or a TROUBLEMAKER?

Mike Yaconelli, founder of Youth Specialties and minister for more than 40 years, put it like this: “God help us if the whole world looks at the church and says ‘aren’t they nice?'”

Jesus was accused of being a drunkard. His own parents thought He was crazy. The religious leaders thought He was a blasphemer. If you want to follow Jesus, you’re going to be called a lot of things, and NICE isn’t one of them.”

He goes on to say, “This culture loves nice people. They tolerate nice people. But what they don’t tolerate are people who are desperate for Jesus! When you and I get in touch with that desperateness for Jesus, then you better look out, because you never know where it’s going to take you.”

Have you ever been truly desperate for Jesus? What exactly would that mean? What would it look like? How would you be characterized by others if you were truly desperate for Jesus? Take the time to read about one person who was desperate for Jesus and make a list of her characteristics. (Mark 5:24-34)

In Mark 5:24-34, we read about a woman who was truly DESPERATE for Jesus. The Bible tells us she had been suffering from a terrible bleeding disease for 12 years. It was a disgusting and embarrassing problem.

It goes on to say that she had been to many doctors and she had spent everything she had to fix her problem, but she had not gotten any better. In fact, her problem was getting worse. Welcome to the land of desperation!

So she did what any desperate person would do … she broke the rules. Remember, she was a woman. She was a “ceremonially unclean” woman, and she approached Jesus PUBLICLY. She didn’t ask for anyone’s permission. She didn’t follow the proper procedures. She didn’t wait in line. She pushed and shoved her way through the crowd of people (who were headed to the RICH guy’s house to watch a little girl get healed) with no thought for anyone else. She did whatever it took to TOUCH Jesus.

The nerve of some people! How dare she! She has been described by some as rude, irresponsible, reckless, disrespectful, inconsiderate, impulsive, and uncivilized.

Surely Jesus would rebuke her for this. Surely he would remind her how important it is to be kind and considerate of others. Surely he would withhold his healing from her until she learned how to “be patient, follow the rules, and treat others as she would want to be treated.” Right?

Instead, just like he did in Mark 2:1-7 for the people who “destroyed someone’s house” in their desperate attempt to get to Jesus, he does the unthinkable. He turns to the irresponsible, reckless, disrespectful woman and says, “Daughter, your faith has made you well. Go in peace. You have been healed.” In Mark 2, he not only heals the “law-breaker” but he also “forgives his sins.”

Does this make sense to you? He scolds the religious law-keepers over and over again and then repeatedly heals and forgives the people who “go against the flow” and “break all the rules.”

What can this possibly mean?

Let’s be honest – to the average person, Jesus can be a little bit confusing! Especially when imperfect, sinful people are involved! Do you know how many different CONCEPTS of Jesus there are today?

So how do you make sense of it all? Who is Jesus? Really?

Is He the grace-filled, nice guy we read about in the Gospels who defends the prostitutes, tax collectors and sinners? Or is He the rebel who challenges the religious authorities and traditions of the past and present?

Have you taken the time get to know Him? I mean REALLY know Him?

I’m not asking if you know the Jesus “everyone else” has told you about. You know … the Jesus your friends, teachers, TV, radio, newspapers, media, movies, church members and preachers have told you about. Do you know the Jesus that God wants you to know?

Have you examined the scriptures with open eyes (II Kings 6:17) often enough to see and understand who Jesus really is? Have you spent time in sincere prayer talking to Him and developing an intimate relationship with Him? Have you spent just as much time listening for His reply? Do you walk in this relationship every day?

Do you know where Jesus would spend His time on this earth if He were here this Sunday morning at 9 a.m.? Where would He be Sundays at 6 p.m.? Wednesdays at 7 p.m.? Would He be sitting in a pew in a local church building?

How would He respond to the people that “the church” often avoids today? Would He treat the homosexual dying of AIDS, the meth addict and the porn-addicted, tattooed, body-pierced person the same way He treated the lepers, the adulterers, and the divorced people in His day? (Luke 17:11-19, John 8:1-11, John 4:1-42)

Would He respond to our religious modern-day Pharisees the same way He responded to the Pharisees of His day?

When you think about it, the “Just-So-Nice” Jesus had some very thought-provoking things to say to the religious teachers and leaders of His time. These have been recorded in God’s word for our benefit. As modern-day disciples, let’s pay close attention to what was said.

The religious people in Jesus’ day were eager to “get the word out” about their faith, just like religious people are today. They thought they were very clear about their understanding of the way GOD wanted things to be done and they even went on “mission trips” to share their faith with others.

In several places in the Gospels, we are given a snapshot of what Jesus thought about this. In Matthew 23:15, Jesus looked right at the religious leaders of His day and time, and said the following:
“What sorrow awaits you teachers of religious law and you Pharisees. Hypocrites! For you cross land and sea to make one convert, and then you turn that person into twice the child of hell you yourselves already are.” (Matt. 23:15) Just before that, He told them, “for you won’t let others into the Kingdom of Heaven, and you won’t go in yourselves.”

Why would Jesus say something like this to a religious leader who was out “sharing his faith” with the lost? Does this make sense to you? Perhaps a deeper question is, would He make comments like that to religious leaders today? Would He say something like that to you and to me? If so, why? What was it about their mission and their message that would cause the Savior to respond like that? After all, they knew God’s law better than anyone else. Right? And that should have been a good thing … unless …

They began to rely on “their” knowledge and “their” concepts “of” God, rather than relying on God. Scholars believe Jesus responded this way because their attempts to convert others focused on making others “more like them” rather than on making them “more like Christ.” It seems they were more comfortable with everyone doing things “just the way they did” instead of doing things God’s way.

And Jesus always had something to say about that …

When you get right down to it, all of these discussions about Jesus and who He really was and who He really IS, leave me with one major question.

I don’t know that I’ve ever heard anyone ask it, but I’ve been asking myself this question for quite some time now.

A year ago, I spent 52 weeks studying the Life of Christ with our teenagers. We walked through Matthew, Mark, Luke and John, taking an in-depth look at Christ from the perspective of all four Gospel writers. I realized that I didn’t know Him very well, and I have been a Christian for more than 20 years.

I learned that my concepts of Jesus had come from a combination of many different sources. I found that most of those sources, though they may have seemed “reliable” and “accurate” because they were steeped in religion and years of tradition, weren’t that reliable and accurate at all.

I found that most of my concepts about Jesus had been shaped by the opinions of men. Men often paint a very inaccurate picture of Jesus … you know … blond hair, blue eyes, perfect skin, flowing robes …

I found that NOTHING can replace opening your eyes and ears and listening to the voice of God and what He reveals to you through His Word and through His Spirit (I Corinthians 2:1-16).

This is what I realized: that the RELIGIOUS people who surrounded Jesus HATED Him. They thought He was a fraud and a troublemaker from day one. They attacked Him from every possible angle, and they did not stop until He was totally and completely humiliated, stripped of all human pride and hanging on a cross. They did not stop until He was DEAD! As a matter of fact, even that didn’t stop them.

I also learned that SINNERS absolutely LOVED Him. They were captivated by Him. They couldn’t get enough of Him. They were DESPERATE for Him. They did whatever it took to get closer to Him. They left everything behind, went without food, walked for miles, climbed trees, tore through rooftops, fought through the crowds, left jobs and families behind and risked everything they had … just to be with Him.

This leaves me with one MAJOR question …

… And the question is this, “What has changed?” What “used to be” isn’t the case any more, and I wonder what has caused it.

It’s obvious that in Jesus’ day the religious people truly hated him. They clearly made it their goal and mission in life to destroy him.

It’s also obvious that sinful people loved him. They did everything they could to spend more time with him. So, again I ask, “What has changed?”

One look at today’s world will reveal the EXACT OPPOSITE of this. In today’s world, the religious people claim to LOVE Jesus with all their heart. They promote Jesus in every way possible. Their buildings, banners, and marquees lift the name of Jesus to every person who passes by. Yet, non-religious people in today’s world seemed to be appalled by Jesus. Most of them cringe at the sound of his name. Why?

Has Jesus changed? Did he all of a sudden become NICE to the religious people and MEAN to the sinful people? Isn’t he still the same Jesus who is the only person capable of setting people free from their sins and struggles?

When did he become such a turn off to “sinful people?” What “changed” to make this happen? Have you ever SINCERELY thought about this? Since the Bible tells us that our Lord is the “same yesterday, today, and forever” what could possibly cause such a change in attitudes?

Without much thought, one might say that it’s due to the sinful state of today’s world. Yet one look at the CHURCH in Corinth will reveal Christians who were involved in adultery, divorce, hatred, envy, jealousy, etc. That sounds a lot like the world we live in today, doesn’t it?

Since Jesus hasn’t changed, it might be good for God’s people to think about what HAS caused this change in the “outsider’s” attitude toward Jesus??? Do religious people have anything to do with this change? (May God bless you as you think about this …)

It’s obvious that our world’s thoughts about Jesus have changed. The religious people of His day hated Him, now religious people love Him. The sinful people of His day loved Him, now sinful people hate Him??? What changed?

Could it be that our understanding and presentation of “who Jesus is” has changed?

Is it possible that religious people have introduced a Jesus to people who appears to be out of touch and unable or unwilling to meet people where they are?

When Jesus walked on this earth, people knew how He would respond to them. The religious people knew and the sinful people knew.

The sick, sinful people of the world wanted what He had to offer. They saw the way He responded to the lepers, the tax collectors, the woman caught in adultery, the woman at the well, the woman with the bleeding disease, the woman who wiped his feet with her tears, etc.

Sometimes they came to Him and sometimes HE WENT TO THEM. Either way, the result was always the same: He healed them … physically and spiritually and they were never the same!

Why don’t people in similar situations today run to Jesus the way they used to? Isn’t He the same Jesus? Isn’t He still willing to do what He has done in the past? (Hebrews 13:8)

Do religious people today present this same Jesus to the lost? Does our Jesus still meet people right where they are? Is He still willing to go to them, or do they have to come find Him at the church building and meet a long list of requirements before He can help them? (Titus 3:4-7)

What kind of Jesus do you present to those who need Him the most? (Mark 2:17)

Jesus always has been and always will be debated. In the past, in the present and in the future, people will try to “figure Him out.” They will always ask, “Who was He really?” Scholars will read His words, His stories, and His parables and they will have endless debates over “what He REALLY meant?” They will all think THEY are right.

Was He just a nice, gentle man who never ruffled anyone’s feathers and always sought to “pursue peace with all men” Or was He a renegade, a rebel and someone who was always shaking things up? After all, His actions and His teachings led Him to His own death on a cross at the hands of the religious leaders of His time.

So who is this man from Nazareth … this man who was “born of a virgin” … this man who never sinned, yet was referred to as a glutton, a drunkard and a sinner by all of the religious people?

No matter how long the debates continue and no matter how many different opinions there are about Him, some facts will NEVER change … and you can take it to the bank:

My Jesus is the King of Kings! He’s the Lord of Lords! He’s the Prince of Peace! He’s the Lamb of God! He’s the Great High Priest! He’s the Living Water! He’s the Bread of Life! He’s the Light of the World! He’s the Chief Cornerstone! He’s the Resurrection and the Life! He’s the Good Shepherd! He’s the Head of the Church! He’s the Author and Finisher of our faith! He’s the ROCK! He’s the Alpha and the Omega! He’s the Beginning and the End! He’s the Great I AM! He’s the Great Redeemer! He’s the Lion who is the Lamb!

HE IS THE WAY, THE TRUTH, AND THE LIFE!

AMEN!
(Revelation 3:14, 20-22)

Holy Manners: Honesty

Posted by on under Bulletin Articles

Spiritually, an honest heart is critical to a fruitful life. An honest heart grasps, receives, understands, and lives on the basis of God’s teaching.

One of Jesus’ earliest teachings according to Matthew was Jesus’ sermon on the mount. The people who heard Jesus were quite religious, but they missed the point of belonging to God. Their failure hinged on their confidence that God could be pleased and people be deceived at the same time. Their spiritual problem was dishonesty. Consider Matthew 5:21-48. May we let their problems make us shudder as we consider our lives!

(1) They would not dare take a physical life, but they would destroy with their words. In anger they would speak with contempt. They said things that would make them liable in their courts or liable before God eternally.

(2) They would not dare commit adultery, but they would lust without restraint.

(3) They deliberately deceived through their vows by declaring their vow was not binding. Thus they lied while appearing to tell the truth.

(4) They sought vengeance by excusing themselves from being compassionate.

(5) By tweaking their religious rules, they behaved like people who did not even know God. Jesus said God and God only was their standard.

These people were very religious by being consistent with what they heard. They believed how one did something was more important than what he or she did. They thought doing things the right way was what was important to God. Jesus told them the outcome of what they did was as important as the way they did it.

If we follow Jesus Christ, we need to be trustworthy. I need to know I can depend on you, and you need to know you can depend on me. We cherish each other and our relationship because we both understand something bigger than us is involved-people’s view of Jesus Christ and God.

Statue and Stone

Posted by on June 3, 2007 under Sermons

The narrative of Daniel 2 may be understood as Five Moves:

  1. The King’s Dream (1-12)
  2. Daniel’s Intervention (13-23)
  3. Mystery of the Dream Revealed (24-30)
  4. Statue and Stone (31-45)
  5. The King Honors Daniel’s God (46-49)

The King’s Court
      The king’s bad dreams are more than psychological torment. In Babylon they do easily divide the world into secular and spiritual as we too often want to do.

Ancient Astrology was commonplace in the Babylonian court. Magicians, enchanters, sorcerers, and Chaldeans would have been the king’s advisors and counsel. They paid close attention to the spiritual world. The stone pictured is an image of a Babylonian astrologer taking note of heavenly objects such as the moon and sun.This isn’t just “hocus-pocus” or trickery. The astrologers are the scientists and advisors of the day and their craft utilizes mathematics and astronomy.

Ancient Wisdom: Daniel is being distinguished as a unique man of wisdom. He is the wisest of the wise men. The source of Daniel’s wisdom is God. Notice what he says in v. 2:27.
Like Joseph in Egypt, Daniel attains to a high position in the royal court through his God-given gift for reading the signs and showing wisdom.

The Statue and the Stone: What is the meaning of the dream?

I will show three very popular scenarios and then explain why deciding on one doesn’t actually matter too much …

In the first scenario, the head of gold equals Babylon (this is really never under dispute).The silver torso is the empire of the Medeans. The bronze waist is the empire of the Persians and the legs of iron is the Macedonian empire of Alexander the Great, including the feet mixed with clay which represent the divided Greek empire. (See next graphic.)

The major problem with this scenario is that there is no historical evidence that the Medeans were ever a separate empire from the Persians, at least not on this timeline.

The second scenario that is widely connected to the statue is as follows: Babylon is the head of gold, the Persians are the silver torso, the Greeks are the bronze waist, and the Roman Empire would be the iron legs. The iron-clay mix of the feet represent the division of the Holy Roman Empire into West and East. The ten toes are even regarded as ten nations that will form an empire in the latter times.

The major problem with this scheme is that the age of the Roman Empire is outside the historical scope of Daniel. Daniel is a Tale of Two Ages – the 6th century and 2nd century B.C. Furthermore, equating the legs, feet, and toes with Rome and the ecclesiastical divisions that follow is an attempt to make Daniel fit with Revelation. This reads Revelation back into Daniel. Daniel does not make any distinction about the toes.

The third scenario does the best job of interpreting the iron legs and the mixed iron-clay feet. The head is Babylon, the torso is Persian, the bronze waist is Alexander the Great’s Macedonian Empire. (This fits well with 2:39 which describes this empire as a large world empire). The iron legs and feet then are the warring empires of the Ptolemies and Seleucids. History notes that these empire did try to establish peace through intermarriage.

Whichever scenario one deems best, the final message is the same: God’s eternal kingdom will break down and outlast any and every human kingdom. This is the meaning of the rock that crushes the statue.

So What?

  1. The Sovereignty of God – The sovereignty of God is not dependent on any political power. God establishes the rule of all nations as he chooses. Those who do rule, rule by his grace – they are subject to his judgment.
  2. God’s people bless the nations – Daniel demonstrates the promise of Abraham. God’s people are to be a blessing to all nations. Because Daniel uses his gift for the king of Babylon, others are spared.
  3. God cares about and redeems Nebuchadnezzar. – He has conquered God’s people, but God cares about him and wants him to rule as he is supposed to do.

Anger Management

Posted by on under Sermons

Spider-Man 3 – When Spider-Man dons his black suit made of the mysterious black ooze from outer space, it makes him feel strong and powerful, but it also brings out the worst in him. It feeds on his anger and hatred and causes him to act in rage. He hurts the people he cares about because of his uncontrolled anger.

The black suit is a poisonous force. It is a consuming power. It is a parasite that seeks a willing host. What gives it the open door to infect someone is anger.

Watching the movie this week I thought: “This is our text played out as a comic book parable.” READ Ephesians 4:25-5:2.

The destructive power of anger and hatred isn’t limited to the imaginary world of Spider-Man and the movies. On every level of human society, whether it is two friends or nations, anger will open the door to sin and brokenness when we do not control the anger. It “gives place to the devil.”

  1. Anger is going to happen. We shouldn’t be na?ve. Anger will be there. Certain things trigger our anger. And it wouldn’t hurt for us to pay attention to what “pushes our buttons” and start doing something to control it. Why don’t we defuse the dynamite before it goes off? That’s much better than walking around with a chip on our shoulder. (This phrase actually originates in the practice of young men in the 19th century who would make an excuse to start a fight by placing a chip of wood on their shoulders and daring another to knock it off.)
  2. We always have a choice about the way we deal with our anger. Anger is going to be there. Even if we take the chip off our shoulder or unhook the wires to the “button.” Anger is a real and valid human emotion, but we always have a choice as to what are we going to do with it. “If you do get angry, do not sin.” (Note: that the text isn’t licensing sin. It should not be read in such a way that it says anger is just fine as long as you don’t sin. That’s like an unmarried couple saying “making out is fine as long we don’t go all the way.” It’s a justification of something dangerous.) Long before the black-suited Spider-Man, God described sin as a force waiting for a willing host. In Genesis 4, God spoke to Cain. He knew how angry Cain was getting with his brother (and with God). God urged him to be careful because sin was crouching outside the door waiting to consume him. God urged Cain to make the right choice and dispel the anger before it opened the door to sin. But Cain did not and he set off a chain of event that led to the death of his brother and God’s response to Cain’s sin.
  3. Someone says, “But I just go into an immediate rage when I get angry.” (i.e. I become the Hulk) – If that’s true, then 1. You may need medical or psychological attention if it is truly that severe, or 2. You are letting the anger go too far before you act. I suspect that most of us we know when we are getting angry. This is why the text uses proverbial wisdom. “Do not let the sun go down on your rage.” Whether anger is creeping up on us or right on us, we recognize it. It is at this point that we have the choice to do something about it. We can dispel it or convert it. If we are being offended by another we can work to resolve the matter peacefully and without condemnation. But if we allow the “sun go down” on our anger, it will grow into a grudge or a hatred or contempt. Like an untreated wound it festers. Anger takes on a less benign form such as rage and fighting, or more subtle but equally destructive forms like bitterness, slander, and malice. The original matter that made us angry may even go away, but the damage done by the festering is remains.
  4. And do not give the devil a foothold. The devil seeks to infect our community in this way. If the biblical writers had known about microbiology, they would certainly have describe the devil as a virus that infects a church seeking to replicate his “DNA” even as he wrecks the health of the church body. All that is needed is a foothold. When you and I refuse to manage the anger we feel in healthy, godly ways, we become the foothold that the devil uses to tear up our life together. This alone should be motivation to deal with our anger and to make the right choices when we are angry.
  5. Verse 32 – “Be kind and compassionate to one another, forgiving each other, just as in Christ God forgave you.” Anger has this dangerous to turn inward. We get angry at others then angry at ourselves for getting angry. And that often causes us to avoid reconciling. We think it’s too far gone. It’s never too late. It’s never too far gone. That’s one of the lies that the enemy uses to prevent reconciliation. Forgiveness brings about healing. (It’s an important theme in the Spider-Man movie. The heroes win not simply by applying brute force, but they win through forgiveness and a new day dawns for all of them.) Kindness and compassion are not idealistic sugary sentiments. They are the virtues of God that we may imitate. They are virtues that are developed as we mature spiritually.

God has forgiven us. How shall we imitate him? Is there someone you should forgive, even if doing so means letting go of anger? Why not? Let’s get rid of all bitterness, rage, anger, slander, and malice. Such negative forces really hurt us the most. And it injures the Holy Spirit of God with you.
Do you need to forgive yourself? Sometimes that is the source of anger.