Posted by Chris on December 11, 2011 under Front Page Posts, Sermons
It is good and right that we should take the time to celebrate the commitment of our new campus minister, Travis Campbell, and our commitment to him as a fellow servant. It is good and right because when we do such things, we speak of ideas that are too often not spoken: joy, hope, promise, courage, sacrifice, commitment.
It is good and right for us to focus these grand notions on something tangible. So that we can say with the Psalm – “The The LORD has done great things for us, and we are filled with joy.”
It is good and right for us to name anything that the Lord has done. It is good and right to admit to the hardships and sacrifices that paved the way to our joy. It is good right to stir up our spirits and embolden one another, because our enemy is threatened when we develop the sort of passion to do God’s work despite the cost.
The enemy’s scheme is subtle . . . Read more of this article »
Posted by Chris on November 28, 2011 under Sermons
Restore us, God Almighty; make your face shine on us, that we may be saved. – Psalm 80
This tribal hymn of old Israel comes from the Joseph and Benjamin clans. We could fit this prayer-song into a few different historical contexts: A plea of the people when they found themselves in exile because of the Babylonian army makes the most sense.
The story of the vine that God planted and nurtured, but then was ravaged and attacked by wild beasts certainly reaches back to the exodus and then the exile. One phrase becomes a chorus or refrain throughout the psalm: Restore us, God Almighty; make your face shine on us, that we may be saved.
We might talk about what that refrain meant to them – and we may at another time – but this morning let us ask what this phrase means to us. For this is a psalm “of the people” – not simply an individual’s quiet talk with God, but a song of God’s people who cry out for restoration, favor, and salvation. I think we find ourselves in that same need as a people whether we care to admit it or not. Read more of this article »
Posted by Chris on September 12, 2010 under Sermons
Listen to “The Lord’s Supper”
In the congregation north of here where I sometimes attended as a teenager, I recall an on-going debate between two of the brothers over the Lord’s Supper. These men were both regarded as leaders and bible students, so before a class or a men’s business meeting, or the pre-worship huddle where we figured out how to get the trays into the end zone, these two brothers had their friendly debate, and everyone else listened in. (Of course it may also have been that the rest of didn’t want anything to do with it or didn’t know what they were talking about.)
One brother would take the position that the bread and the fruit of the vine really was the body and blood of Christ. That’s why he would pray for the bread “We thank you for this bread which is your Body, O Lord.”
The other brother had no problem with that prayer but pointed out that logically the bread and the fruit of the vine only symbolized the body and blood of Christ. That’s why he would pray, “We thank you for this bread which represents your body, O Lord.”
And so it would go and they would make good points until the leader in the pre-worship huddle would say something like: “Let’s figure out who prays which prayers and then you can pray what you like as long as we start worship on time.” Read more of this article »
Posted by Chris on September 5, 2010 under Front Page Posts, Sermons
A quick survey of history or current events informs us that when there is no faith in responsibility, a increase in laws follows. Here’s one of the sillier examples:
Convinced that Happy Meals and other food promotions aimed at children could make kids fat as well as happy, county officials in Silicon Valley are poised to outlaw the little toys that often come with high-calorie offerings. The proposed ban is the latest in a growing string of efforts to change the types of foods aimed at youngsters and the way they are cooked and sold. (Source: Los Angeles Times)
Let’s not limit this illustration or any other we can imagine to the realm of politics. The lack of personal responsibility can take place in any area of human interaction – including the church, and including our own soul. When a community of people are burdened with laws, rules, and policies personal and communal responsibility are no longer encouraged. All that is emphasized is following the rule or conforming to the decision.
Grace may seem like an absence of responsibility. Freedom in Christ may seem like a catch-phrase to say “Do As You Like.” In reality, God’s grace encourages personal responsibility. How? Because the action of God’s grace gives us a new spirit and changes our heart. Graces makes it truly possible to mature in Christ.
Read Galatians 6:1-10
Carry Your Own Load [Individual Responsibility]
- Do Good (v. 10)
- Test your actions – Notice that the individual is encouraged to check his or her own behavior. That may involve turning to others for accountability. It certainly involves going to God’s will – not as a legal code, but as a vision from God for the “new humanity.”
- Notice that Paul said that circumcision or uncircumcision is not what matter – What matters is the new creation.
- Don’t compare – Nothing distracts us from growing in God’s grace like comparing ourselves to others.
- Looking down on others because we are more righteous than some [Jesus told a parable of a Pharisee and publican who went to pray …]
- Looking down on ourselves because we are not as righteous as some [Jesus told a parable about a man with one talent who hid what he had been given …]
- Carry your own load – You are accountable to God first and he is not pleased by your ability to compare yourself to another.
- Avoid Sin (v. 7-8) – I am amazed that a people of the book can still subscribe to the idea that God is not a fair judge. For some reason the notion lingers among us that God is rather a tricky bureaucrat who will find the spiritual equivalent of a forgotten parking ticket on our record and damn us to hell for not following proper procedure. [Maybe we are the spiritual bureaucrats?] The problem with such views is that sin is not something to be avoided; rather we just have to have all sins properly stamped and processed.An important question for a church that trusts in the grace of God is “How do we deal with sin?”
- What will you reap? Our actions have consequences. Our actions also have motivations. Are we sowing to please the Spirit or to please ourselves?
- The consequences of pleasing the sinful nature are destruction. Not simply damnation to hell, but destruction in this life. There may indeed be some pleasure, but it comes with a high price.
- The source of some pain and suffering in this world is sin – and there’s a direct link to it.
- The works of the sinful nature come with a high price. Can we remain envious, selfish, jealous, and self-indulgent without there being some sort of negative result?
- If a man or woman is constantly angry with his/her family and does nothing to manage that anger, is it any wonder that the family is in turmoil?
- If one has a problem with substance abuse that goes on unanswered is it any wonder that there is brokenness and sorrow in that person’s life and relationships?
- Even in our church – if we start judging people according to how their righteousness meets up with our standards – do we think that this will not reap destruction?
- Some sins are more obvious, others are intangible. We can be in denial when it comes to drunkenness, sexual immorality, idolatry even though others may recognize it. But we can be in denial about selfish ambition, envy, rage, hatred, and discord and hide it from others while we are at it.
- Be the “New Creation” – To reap the fruit of the spirit, let us sow the seed of the spirit. That eternal harvest not only is a source of strength for us, but also our community – our church family too.
Carry One Another’s Burden’s [Communal Responsibility = Our Own Responsibility as Part of a Body]
- Restore the Sinner (v. 1-3)
- Punishment is not the goal, that’s God’s work. Christ has made sure that the guilty pay for their sins – this includes us.
- Gently – The Law of Christ is to love on another. Gently also suggests that the work of accountability and restoration takes time. There are burdens that must be endured.
- The Bartender who “confessed” his sins …
- Watch yourself; no moral superiority
- Moral superiority is not appropriate – Can we claim the power or responsibility for saving another? Are we anyone’s mediator to God?
- Moral sloppiness is not appropriate either – Sloppy Agape does nothing to restore one who is sowing destruction. Love must be tough sometimes. Otherwise we participate in the sin too.
- Restoration is observed as one begins growing in the new creation
- No matter what sin was committed: Once I was, but now I am – by the grace of God
- Share All Good Things (v. 6)
- What will you reap? Support those who teach you how to live and do good. Support the ministries that do good. We reap what we sow.
- Do good to others – especially the church family because it sets an example – do good even if they are not so good to you! (The Law of Christ)
- (Let Us) Be the “New Creation” – If we demonstrate a grace-based way to help ourselves and others avoid sin and also do good, then we will reflect the new creation. Otherwise we are just another organization with by-laws. We are just another sub-culture with unwritten expectations.
Posted by Chris on under Front Page Posts, Sermons
Matthew 9, Mark 2, Luke 5
Context of the Parable:
- Calling of Levi: Jesus calls the tax collector to follow him. The gracious, joyous response of the tax collector is to host a feast in celebration of Christ. The Pharisees and scribes are scandalized because Jesus eats and drinks with sinners
- Question: Why don’t Jesus’ disciples fast? Isn’t fasting a good thing? Isn’t it godly and pious? Didn’t John the Baptist’s disciples fast?
- Parable of the Wineskin
What the parable means …
- Pharisees fasted twice a week (Luke 18:12). Sources indicate that it was Monday and Thursday to commemorate the days that Moses went up to Sinai and when he came down.
- In the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus instructs his disciples not to fast in order to win approval with others. Don’t put it on display, but keep it between you and God.
- Is Jesus against fasting? No, but according to Christ’s teaching (Sermon on Mount and this parable) the call to fasting should not be a prescribed ritual, but the appropriateness of the situation. It is not fitting that the guests of the bridegroom should fast. Fast rather when they are grieved. Grief and joy cannot be manufactured
Process of wine fermentation
- Fermenting wine gives off CO2 which would expand the wineskin.
- A fresh, stretchable wineskin that can contain the expanding wine should be used.
- Putting it into an old, cracked wineskin would make no sense. The bag would burst and the wine would be lost.
Wine = Spirit
Wineskin = Form
Old Wineskins = That’s how we’ve always done it. Old Wine – traditions
Why don’t we do this anymore?
New Wineskins = The Way of Christ (It’s always new)
- Could this be a comment by the gospel writers taking an episode from Jesus’ history and responding to possible criticism of the first century’s church communion with outsiders? (See Galatians 2.) Every communion is a feast in Christ’s honor. And such feasting could be seen as irreverent when fasting might be seen as more pious. After all, first century communion was in fact a meal, not a ritual.
Posted by Chris on August 29, 2010 under Front Page Posts, Sermons
Reading from Galatians 5:13-26
The most recent issue of The Christian Chronicle reports on the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. The article recalls that there were amazing opportunities that God’s people responded to in the aftermath of Category 5 storm. In the first year following the storm Christians and churches bonded together to help strangers. I was also on the phone this week with a friend who spent a good amount of time in New Orleans during that first year working with the relief efforts. He recalls seeing a banner on the a neighborhood church from a different denomination that read “Thank you Churches of Christ.” He told me that the reputation of God’s people to help and serve was well known.
But returning to the article, even though some efforts continue, there is the unfortunate reality that many of the congregations that responded quickly have split. The leader of one relief effort is quoted: “I am aware of several churches that experienced [church] splits and more because of differences of ministry and direction.” How does it happen that churches that give themselves to Christ-like sacrifice in the name of love, suddenly divide and disintegrate over problems like mattresses and canned goods stored in the worship center? The stress and pressure of relief certainly intensified disagreements and tensions that were already present. And then there’s the work of the enemy – Satan’s role is not to be underestimated.
Unfortunately, stories like these are not unique to the national tragedy of Hurricane Katrina.
[Second Illustration – Failed Outreach Ministry]
[Third Illustration – Bus Ministry Conflict]
I do not mention these stories to shame the sincere Christians who have been so wounded, rather to engage us to consider how such things happen and how do we guard against it. Once again, the ancient wisdom of God’s word speaks to us as powerfully as it did thousands of years in the past.
13You, my brothers, were called to be free. But do not use your freedom to indulge the sinful nature; rather, serve one another in love. 14The entire law is summed up in a single command: “Love your neighbor as yourself.” 15If you keep on biting and devouring each other, watch out or you will be destroyed by each other.
This is Paul’s first statement about loving one another. We are free and the proper exercise of that freedom is to love one another and not to demand privilege. Furthermore, there is a sort of danger of “spiritual cannibalism” that results in the sort of spiritual death and wounding described in the recent examples.
Paul is doing what the best teachers and philosophers of his day did – comparing bad behavior to the behavior of animals. Here wild beasts are biting each other and they end up killing themselves in the frenzy. The Galatian church was dangerously close to tearing itself apart because of their turmoil over rules, external religion, and the expectations of others. Of course they thought that they were just trying to be especially righteous and please God.
This is the sad truth of legalism – a slavish obedience not to God but to what we assume are his rules – instead of developing a character and spirit of holiness, it actually breeds jealousy, arrogance and judgment. It may look very disciplined on the outside, but inside there’s no love and no control against sins that work in the heart and the attitude. This is why Paul makes his second statement about the way we treat each other: Let us not become conceited, provoking and envying each other.
Could that happen to us? Could it happen to me and you? Why would that happen? It would happen if we fail to live by the spirit and keep in step with the spirit.
Between these two statements that Paul mentions is a description of two ways of life. Two sets of attitudes, actions, virtues and vices. One way is the acts of the sinful nature – a religion of law/rules is not able to overcome these acts. It just hides them behind ritual, piety, the right language, and even good works. But beneath the surface these vices can multiply.
Notice how toxic they are to one another fellowship and worship:
- Some are obvious: hatred, discord, jealousy, fits of rage, selfish ambition, dissensions, factions and envy;
Unfortunately, it is possible to get a “pass” on these if we claim that we are defending the truth or just voicing our opinion or standing up for our rights.
- Some of the other acts of the sinful nature: sexual immorality, impurity and debauchery; idolatry and witchcraft; drunkenness, orgies, and the like.
These destroy us and our relationships. Even something like witchcraft, which if you understand it in context it was often about invoking spiritual powers to place a curse on those one hates.
Legalism and “hard religion” is powerless against this sinful nature. It is just “will worship.” What is needed to cultivate love is a different Spirit. That’s the Spirit of Christ that God has placed in our hearts.
22But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, 23gentleness and self-control. Against such things there is no law.
Imagine what those virtues put into action would do among us.
What would happen to “hatred, discord, jealousy, fits of rage, selfish ambition, dissensions, factions and envy” if we had more of the fruit of the Spirit?
What would happen to immorality of every sort if we had more of the fruit of the spirit?
What would happen to biting and devouring? What would happen to conceit, envy and provoking one another if we had more of the fruit of the spirit?
We cannot legalistically try to acquire the fruit of the spirit. Turning these into a list by which we judge others and ourselves based on a quotient for patience or joy or self-control is not going to work. That’s just a twist on legalism that turns the fruit of the spirit into the law of the spirit. Paul says there’s no law in regard to these. They are fruit. Fruit means that they are the result of something.
- You had better believe that there is a Holy Spirit. The spirit is a seed within us and what comes from it are virtues like love.
- That seed is planted when Christ places his spirit in our hearts in baptism. And at the same time, the sinful nature is crucified along with its passions and desires.
- If you have been baptized – then keep in step with the Spirit. Live by the spirit. Love your neighbor as yourself.
- If you haven’t been baptized into Christ, then hear what it means: Freedom to live in the spirit and to do away with the passions and desires that cause so much pain.
Posted by Chris on August 1, 2010 under Front Page Posts, Sermons
Galatians 3:1-5
1You foolish Galatians! Who has bewitched you? Before your very eyes Jesus Christ was clearly portrayed as crucified. 2I would like to learn just one thing from you: Did you receive the Spirit by observing the law, or by believing what you heard? 3Are you so foolish? After beginning with the Spirit, are you now trying to attain your goal by human effort? 4Have you suffered so much for nothing-if it really was for nothing? 5Does God give you his Spirit and work miracles among you because you observe the law, or because you believe what you heard?
Paul’s First Question: Who has bewitched you?
- Has someone put the evil eye on them? Meaing: Are you under the influence?
- It’s a rhetorical question. It represents his surprise …
- Christ crucified was not only preached to them, it was displayed through Paul’s actions and behavior and their own.
- Christ was at work among them
- That should have been enough – but its like they are under a spell and obeying the spellcaster
- But as had happened before … (2:4) some false brothers had infiltrated our ranks to spy on the freedom we have in Christ Jesus and to make us slaves.5We did not give in to them for a moment, so that the truth of the gospel might remain with you
- Paul is concerned about their spiritual growth. They are adopting the ritual system of rules and laws that he himself once practiced. His concern is that “if you let yourselves be circumcised, Christ will be of no value to you at all.” (5:2)
Paul’s Second Question: Did you receive the Spirit by observing the law, or by believing what you heard?
- This question gets to the crux of the matter
- Does spiritually involve observation and practice of rules and laws or is it ultimately something much deeper?
- Human effort or change of heart?
- Paul follows up by asking them about the source of real spiritual power: His Spirit or their own ability to follow the rules.
O You Foolish Americans!
- The Spirit –
- One of the first words that children learn is “Don’t” – Don’t touch that, don’t stick that up your nose, don’t scream while I am driving, don’t spit your gum out, don’t grab the dog by the ears …
- They get a little older and learn “Do” and “Did” – Did you brush your teeth? Do that. Did you do your homework? Did you eat your vegetables? Do that. Did you put gas in the car? Go do that. Did you set your alarm? Do this.
- Parents wait for the day when suddenly there is no don’t or do. Like a butterfly emerging from a cocoon, there is one day a new creature – beautiful – he or she seems to know what is right and does it and avoids doing wrong. Not because of rules, but because of “want to.”
- This day hardly ever comes – what tends to happen, especially in our culture (O You Foolish Americans) is that we just get more sophisticated about the system of do and don’t
- Example: Texting and driving. Is it illegal? Even if it isn’t, it’s not a good idea. One who chooses to be a safe driver understands this.
- Now Oprah says don’t do it – and that ought to be enough.
- But we have to make a law so that people won’t. The threat of a fine may help some people put down the distraction, but they haven’t internalized it – so when the next distracting device comes along that isn’t illegal – they hop on it.
- You Foolish Americans? Who put a spell on us? There is an intoxicating attraction to signing off on laws and rules that we can control and that we only have to apply externally
- It’s easy to look at others and realize how they have only externalized good behavior: government is an obvious target. But what do we expect? They are all about legislation. We pick on the Pharisees and point out how the Old Covenant created their system – but we never realize that it is possible to be New Covenant Pharisees. You Foolish Christians!
- Who has bewitched us so that we assume that more rules and following procedures will make us all get along?
- Who put the evil eye on us so that we assume that God is more concerned with minor details of practice rather than the heart and mind?
- Who has hypnotized us into thinking that unwritten creeds are better than written creeds and if we all accept certain conditions then unity will spring up automatically?
- Who hexed us so that we read the Bible like a constitution or law code?
- What magic spell induced us to think that we could reduce life with God and salvation down to a few quick easy steps and then be done with it – Salvation is not lather, rinse, repeat.
- Maybe we cannot name the magic or the power but we can say that it’s not the Holy Spirit – God’s spirit doesn’t work like that
- The Spirit – Again
- It changes us within. It changes our desires. It rearranges our priorities. It matures us. It may not happen all at once, but it has to begin and it begins within and works out …
- The spirit is “In You.” Countless scriptures testify to this. This isn’t spiritual possession or speaking in tongues, it is God’s nature at work with us – body, mind, heart, soul
- We believe that God can reach into our bodies and heal – do we believe that he can work on our inner person? Do we pray for the changing of minds and hearts also?
Final Question: Did you receive the Spirit by observing the law, or by believing what you heard?
- Did you even know that you could receive the spirit?
- We are so concerned about “getting saved” that we have no idea what we are being saved for.
- Who bewitched us into thinking that God’s power has run out? Who cast the spell that made miracles cease? We did.
- Let’s be honest, we think it would be easier to have two or three or twenty simple rules that we should never break than to be caught up in the spirit of God
Posted by Chris on July 25, 2010 under Front Page Posts, Sermons
Matthew 12:43-45
“When an evil spirit leaves a person, it goes into the desert, seeking rest but finding none. Then it says, ‘I will return to the person I came from.’ So it returns and finds its former home empty, swept, and in order. Then the spirit finds seven other spirits more evil than itself, and they all enter the person and live there. And so that person is worse off than before. That will be the experience of this evil generation.”
Luke 11:24-26
“When an evil spirit leaves a person, it goes into the desert, searching for rest. But when it finds none, it says, ‘I will return to the person I came from.’ So it returns and finds that its former home is all swept and in order. Then the spirit finds seven other spirits more evil than itself, and they all enter the person and live there. And so that person is worse off than before.”
- Here is a parable taken from the realm of spirits. The references to spirits and their activities would be understood by the hearers. Unfortunately, it is lost on scientific, modernists like us
- The point of this parable is not to give insights into the operations and habits of unclean spirits and demon possession. No more so than farming parables give us insight into agriculture nor do business parables lay out sound economic advice. The world/symbols referenced are connections to teach us about the kingdom and the work of God.
Can we understand a little about unclean spirits?
- Like termites, mold and disease, we don’t have to understand spirits to be rid of them and the harm they can do.
- Spirits are weak in “arid places” – Jesus was tempted in the desert.
In a story well known to the hearers of Matthew and Luke, a particularly nasty demon was defeated in Egypt. Let’s take a look at this.
Tobit:
Tobit was a righteous Israelite who lived during the time of the Assyrian invasion. He did what was right, but suffered for it. He prayed for God to bring him death. He had a son named Tobias who becomes our hero.
Over in Media (i.e., Medes and Persians) there was a girl named Sarah. Sarah was also praying for death. She had been married seven times and each time her husband was killed before the consummation. Why? She was tormented by an unclean spirit named Asmodeus who killed any man who wanted Sarah. She was unhappy and praying for death.
God sends the angel Raphael to help these people. He appears as a mentor to Tobias. He and Tobias set off on a journey to Media and along the way, Tobias catches a special fish. Raphael gives him advice on the fish.
Tobias falls in love with Sarah and marries her. He weakens the demon and drives it off to Egypt where Raphael captures it.By placing a fish’s heart and liver on red-hot cinders, Tobias produces a smoky vapor that causes the demon to flee to Egypt, where Raphael binds him (viii. 2, 3).
Tobias and Sarah marry and Tobit’s eyesight is cured. Raphael is revealed and they live happily ever after. |
Back to the Parable:
In both parable versions, this text is found: “He who is not with me is against me, and he who does not gather with me scatters.” (Matthew 12:30; Luke 11:23)
In Matthew, the context is the rejection of Jesus by those who claim to be righteous. They witness the obvious power of God’s spirit to cast out evil and disease and they attribute it to the power of Satan. Jesus is surprised at how illogical this conclusion is. (“I don’t care what the Bible says …”)
Jesus charges the hearers (this generation) with being empty houses. They have cast out the evil and put everything into order, but the house is empty. The demon they cast out will return and bring others. It would be better if they remained demon possessed because at least they would have an excuse.
- “This generation” may know how to resist evil, but they do not know how to embrace good.
- They are an empty house! And they are going to end up worse than they started
In Luke, the context is similar. There is an additional story about robbing the house of a strong man. You have to get someone bigger to rob the strong man and take his possessions.
“He who is not with me is against me, and he who does not gather with me scatters.”
We need power on the inside – the good spirit – in addition to cleanliness and order on the outside.
What does it mean?
- It isn’t enough to simply “cast out evil” or to oppose sin.
- We can do this, but it is no good if we refuse to be filled with the good spirit (The Holy Spirit). [Ephesians 5:18]
- We need the help of the “stronger man.”
Posted by Chris on under Sermons
We have received a letter that we all need to hear. It’s a very personal message. So I want to ask you to give your attention to what it says. The messenger is here with the letter … I would like him to read it to us. By the way, the letter is from one of God’s messengers, one of his apostles – an evangelist called Paul from Tarsus. Now let’s give our attention to the messenger as he shares what Paul has written to us …
Dramatic reading of Galatians 1:13-2:21 by Shane Bocksnick.
Can you imagine what it would have been like to be in that Galatian assembly when these words were spoken for the first time? After all, that’s how God’s word got started – living words spoken to people in an active assembly. Sometimes, in our experience that favors reading, we forget the impact that these words have had.
It is of course just a part of the whole text of Paul’s letter to the Galatians. Did you notice how personal the message was? That’s not an accident. Paul intends for this to be personal and if he could have been there in person one more time he would have told his story just like he did in the letter.
Because it was written, the message retains its impact when we hear it like we just did. This message to the Galatians is a message for all of God’s people then and now. We need to pay close attention to what Paul is saying in his personal story and why he wants it heard. Why? Because in his own story he communicates the power of the gospel for all of us. Additionally, we should be concerned that we are making the same mistake as the Galatians when we trade the grace of the gospel for the expectations of others …
Once I Was …
When Paul encountered the revelation of Christ – the good news of Jesus – it made a serious change in his life.
“The man who formerly persecuted us is now preaching the faith he once tried to destroy.”
Once Paul was … [persecutor, destroyer, enemy]
Now Paul is … [proclaimer, living example, apostle to Gentiles]
Once I was … Now I am
- God called Paul by his grace [God’s grace makes a serious change]
- God revealed his Son in Paul (in the one who persecuted Christ!)
- When others recognize this, God is praised [living example] – “They praised God because of me”
- [Trans.] — Who praises God because of you?
The Importance of The Change (Conversion)
- Paul is troubled that spies have infiltrated God’s people. Their objective is to require the Gentiles who have encountered the grace of the gospel to conform to Jewish expectations. In a more subtle way, these “Christians” are doing what Paul was doing – destroying the gospel.
- It’s a matter of giving up the freedom of gospel for slavery to rule-keeping and traditions.
- Paul will even go so far as to oppose Peter without hesitation – not because it is Peter vs Paul, but because the gospel is at stake.
- There is no power of conversion when the expectation of others and legalistic rule-keeping are added to the gospel. “Once we were” – but now we must be.
- There’s no powerful change in identity.
- There’s no hope of becoming anything more.
- There’s no cause for others to praise God because of us
- There’s only a checklist and external expectations – an anxious concern over what others think.
The power of the gospel is too often frustrated among us because of our obsession with what others think. For too long we have asked the youngest and newest believers/converts to conform to expectations that some of us aren’t even sure about.
Are we afraid of the freedom that comes from the gospel? The freedom that comes from God’s grace?
That’s the power that changes lives and without it …
- Faith becomes a matter of appearances and gaining the approval of others
- Sin is allowed to fester because we do not dare name it. We are dishonest with self and others
- No one really has a testimony about how God changed our lives. We just have certificates of perfect attendance and reputations of causing no problems.
20“I have been crucified with Christ and I no longer live, but Christ lives in me. The life I live in the body, I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me. 21I do not set aside the grace of God, for if righteousness could be gained through the law, Christ died for nothing!”
Posted by Chris on July 18, 2010 under Sermons
How can we proclaim the good news when it seems like we are so often surrounded by the misery and ruin of life?
Lamentations
- It’s unlikely we’ve heard many sermons from this book.
- We are not even sure about the name. Is this a type of floor covering?
- Like those late night infomercials for hungry children, we turn away because we are looking for something much lighter and happier to cure our 3 am depression.
- This book is not familiar to us because it isn’t a happy book of devotionals
- It isn’t a book of positive affirmations or seven steps to super success
- The lamentations are the voice of one who stands in the midst of ruin
- The City of David, God’s city – Jerusalem, is fallen and ruined. The citizens are suffering
- The once great city is like a grieving widow who has lost her future
- Her treasures are gone
- Her children are starving, the children die of thirst – described quite graphically
Why is it like this? It isn’t supposed to be like this – is it?
- The answer surprises us (maybe another reason we avoid this text): The LORD did it!
- He allowed her enemies to invade
- He rejected his sanctuary
- He has removed her leaders
- He has shamed Jerusalem before other nations
- Is God supposed to be like this?
Why did God do this? Does he really do it or is it just circumstances?
- There are times when bad things happen to good people and it isn’t fair to attribute that to the LORD
- We may rightly ask why but we cannot always hold God responsible
- But in the case of Jerusalem here, God was acting out of justice (Lamentations 4) – Not a petty anger or retribution, but divine justice
- 4:13 – The prophets and priests shed the blood of innocents. Jerusalem sinned.
- God acted in justice because of the innocents
God’s Justice is not a principle that tames God and makes him “play fair.”
- This is a serious thing: We cannot dress up in our Sunday finery and talk about fair is fair
- It isn’t an academic or theological dilemma that we discuss without some relationship to the problem
- It isn’t about how God treats others – It is about God making us walk righteously
- We speak of our expectations of God – what about his expectations of us?
The LORD has torn down the stronghold of Jerusalem and humiliated her kings and priests because of his justice (his righteousness and holiness)
- A God without justice is not a good God. Such a God ignores the cries of the innocent and the oppressed. He does not demand righteousness for those who are wronged
- Such a God is not fair and trustworthy
But what about the one who stands in the midst of the ruins caused by God’s wrath? Is God’s justice and wrath the last word? (See 3:19-36)
- The song: The Steadfast Love of the Lord
- God is just but also merciful and loving – He does not have to switch of mercy to be just
- We tend to run in one extreme or another. God is balanced
- His compassion does not end. And so we are not consumed [See 3:32-33 – Not willingly]
- Every morning is a new opportunity to experience God’s faithfulness
- Even if we’ve sinned
- Even if we are suffering
- Even if we are among ruin
If the voice of Lamentations can say this about God’s love in the midst of ruin, how much more can we say it in the shadow of the cross?
- The cross is a statement of God’s justice
- It shouts loudly and plainly against the injustices in this world – for the cross is the ultimate injustice.
- God puts our unrighteousness on display – that we in our arrogance and self-righteousness would create a system that would crucify the innocent one for the sake of our own interests.
- The cross rouses us from our illusions that everything is okay. It stands in the way of our attempts to whitewash the ruin that sin makes of our lives and our world
- The cross is the ultimate antidote to the poison of “spin control” and euphemisms.
- Are we opposed to a cross because it doesn’t fit our idea of a nicely groomed Sunday morning?
Our response to the cross should be Lamentations 3:39-40
- Sin: The cross calls us to repent – that is, to change
- Sin is actually growth: The moment we can name it, the healing begins
- The worst things are not the last things in Christ
- The worst things will end one day, but the steadfast love of the LORD never ceases
True happiness comes to us when we look to the cross and in that story (death, burial, resurrection) we encounter the justice, love, and mercy of God.
- That we could experience healing even as we feel the pain of sin is good news
- That God’s love and mercy wins out is good news (it is good and it is news)