Give Us A King

Posted by on May 3, 2009 under Sermons

Transition of Power

  • Samuel’s sons – unjust
  • The elders of Israel
  • A king like the other nations (v. 20)

Shifts in Succession

Exodus and Empire

  • Samuel’s warning about kings
    – Military conscription
    – Land redistribution and taxation
    – Class distinction, luxury of palace
  • You will becomes slaves
    – King = Pharaoh
    – Israel = Egypt

God’s Reply

  • Give them what they want
    – Not approving of the monarchy
    – Not denying them the monarchy
  • God’s grace and wrath
    – Grace to work with their mistakes
    – Wrath – Romans 1:24

    Grace: compare 8:7 with 9:16.
    Is God really giving them a king and refusing to protect them, or is He going to use the monarchy to preserve them from enemies? God is sovereign, not petty.

God’s Ruling

Destiny and Donkeys

Saul’s Paradox

      9:1 – Saul is son of Kish from an important family
      9:21 – Who Am I?
      10:22 & 23 – tall and reluctant

Let’s Be Honest

Posted by on under Sermons

Read John 18:28 – 19:16.

So here’s Pilate on his way to work. It’s a day like any other for him. He’s a bit tired because his wife has been tormented by bad dreams lately and he is growing weary of her anxiety and religious superstition. Pilate and his wife are staying in Jerusalem during the Passover festival. Certainly not for religious reasons. No, it’s what his job demands. It serves the empire for Pilate to maintain the government and military presence during this high religious festival. This is the time of year when the zealots get stirred up – Jerusalem is on high alert for terrorist activity. For Pilate, a return to his home in Caesarea cannot come soon enough.

Pilate begins the day in meetings dealing with administrative matters. As the governor of Judea he has the usual docket of mediating disputes, awarding contracts, and meeting with representatives of various interest groups.

First up this morning is a case involving the Chief Priest Caiaphas and an alleged zealot from Galilee. Pilate looks over the case and notices that the Chief Priest and his entourage aren’t even in the palace – it’s their religious piety again, Pilate finds it so pretentious but it isn’t good form for him to say anything. Yet, there’s something about the case that doesn’t seem right to Pilate, so he approaches the Chief Priest and begins asking questions …

  • What did he do? Pilate doesn’t get a straight answer: “If he hadn’t done something really bad, do you think we would be bothering you?” They ask with contempt.
  • It’s an internal matter, none of my concern
  • We cannot impose the death penalty – great, they are using the Roman authority to their own advantage. Fine, Pilate can play that game too.
  • He goes straight to the accused: “Are you King of the Jews?”
  • Jesus: “Do you want to know the answer to that yourself, or are you acting for others?”
  • Pilate: “I’m not a Jew. Your people brought you here, now what did you do?”
  • Jesus: “My kingdom isn’t earthly.”
  • Pilate: “Fine, are you a king or not?”
  • Jesus: YOU TELL ME … everyone who cares about the truth listens to my voice.
  • Pilate: What is truth?

What is Truth? — I noticed something in the Apostles’ Creed.

I believe in God, the Father Almighty,
        the Maker of heaven and earth,
        and in Jesus Christ, His only Son, our Lord:
Who was conceived by the Holy Ghost,
        born of the virgin Mary,
        suffered under Pontius Pilate,
        was crucified, dead, and buried; …

Why add this line? Is it a shorthand way of describing what happened? What does it mean to suffer under Pontius Pilate? Is this just a reference to his beating and punishment?
I suspect the writes affirm that Jesus is the suffering servant. He did suffer. He suffered at the hands of an empire that had ignored truth. He suffered at the hands of powers and principalities that were more interested in imposing their rights and dealing out death than the truth.

Pontius Pilate represents an empire of pretense and lies. As a representative of that empire, he cannot hear the truth.

When you consider how we say things like let’s be honest, and I’m going to tell you the truth. It’s interesting that we have to ask permission to tell the truth. I think that’s because we realize that we live in the empire of Pontius Pilate. An empire of pretense, denial, and self-censorship.

We suffer under Pontius Pilate. We suffer under the rule of denial and pretense that ruins lives and leads to death. The religious hypocrisy that kills the spirit and dilutes Christianity, tries to tame it, flattens it into a cardboard cutout, and makes it membership in a club of nice folk.

Let’s be honest … truth is risky.

  • It means risking being right. We really love to be right. There’s a confidence in being right. A security. A safety. A sense of pride.
  • Pilate did everything he could to be right. Being right means having truth on our side but when the choice is between being right and the truth – truth wins out. And sometimes, let’s be honest, we sacrifice the truth just to be right.
    • The awkward moment of watching someone who is certain they are right. They might even deny the truth – in order to be right!
  • To be truthful we may have to risk being right. What prejudices and hatreds and injustices what denials have I believed because I would rather be right than submit to the truth.

Let’s be honest … truth hurts.

  • It’s one thing to tell someone else the truth and say, “the truth hurts.” It’s another thing to be confronted by it and accept it.
  • I think we all want the truth, we say we do, but we sometimes make it difficult for truth to prevail. We are good at denial. We are good at pretense. We avoid conflict. The truth is hard work. The truth makes all of us accountable. And even though we want others to be truthful and honest and accountable – if truth is really going to win out, then it means we have to be truthful as well. It means we submit even ourselves to something bigger than us.

Let’s be honest … the truth is life. Why is Pilate so concerned to get it right? Because Pilate is managing death. Someone is going to die on Pilate’s watch. It’s going to be Barabbas or Jesus. Or it’s going to be the crowd or himself and his empire. All Pilate and his empire can do is manage, distribute, and dispense death. Pilate cannot give life. Despite all of his symbols and position and power, he doesn’t have authority to give true life. The man in shackles, the man who was beaten and suffered. Jesus Christ has that authority.

That why the Kingdom of Christ is different. The truth brings life. People are looking for a way out of the empire of deception. They want to be a part of a truthful community. Want to get away to the country of truth. Children in a burn ward.

Jesus suffered under Pontius Pilate so that we don’t have to. May the truth set us free!

The Need for Commitment

Posted by on under Bulletin Articles

Today’s need for commitment is overwhelming! The failure to grasp the meaning of commitment provides many false concepts of loyalty! It seems selfish attitudes control more of our actions and behaviors than does the concept of commitment. Today people seem more concerned about personal pleasure, freedom from difficulty, or convenience than in being a person God or others can trust. “Is it fun?” or, “What’s in it for me?” seem to be the important questions, not, “Do I keep my promises?” or, “Is my word valuable?”

In the concept of marriage, in the bond of the parent-child relationships, in employment, in being friends, or in being caring neighbors, are human-to-human relationships based on commitment or selfishness? In matters of faith in God, is the human-divine relationship sustained by commitment or by selfishness?

Discipleship to Jesus Christ is based on service. Service is based on unselfishness. Paul wrote the Christians at Philippi, “Do nothing from selfishness or empty conceit, but with humility of mind let each of you regard one another as more important than himself; do not merely look out for your own personal interests, but also for the interests of others” (Philippians 2:3, 4). Service to God means less of me and more of others-just as it did in Jesus!

Think of this in another way. If God used my concept of commitment to forgive me, to redeem me, to sanctify me, to provide me grace, or to show me mercy, would I be blessed or cursed? Look at Jesus’ cross and justify your behavior. Look at Jesus’ tomb and explain a selfish attitude. An unselfish God does not lead a band of selfish disciples!

Even the incredible apostle Paul knew times of fear, yet he never forgot his commitment. Read 2 Timothy 2:1-13. Remember that Paul, while facing certain death, wrote this to encourage Timothy. Serving Jesus killed Paul, but he knew it was worth it!

You are a Christian? Wonderful! Serve God in a spirit of commitment, not a spirit of selfishness. Be a servant, not a watchdog! While the world barks, Christians serve.