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Category Archives: Sermons

Deus Ex Machina, Luke 20:1-8

Aug

31

2014

thebeachfellowship

Preaching through Luke has been a journey which began almost two years ago, and many of you have made that journey with me. I hope that for those of you who have been able to attend regularly, that this study has provided you with insights into the gospel that you had never realized before. Perhaps some of you may have really come to understand for the first time the truth of the gospel, the specificity of the way of salvation, and the necessity of sanctification. My hope is that you have not just added some historical knowledge concerning the life of Christ on merely an intellectual level, but that the applications learned through studying Jesus’ teachings have radically changed your life – changing the way you actually live life. Changing the way you see the world. I hope it’s changed the purpose of your life from being self centered to being God centered.

And it is also my hope that through this study of Luke it has helped to flesh out the full personality of Christ for you. I’m afraid that so many people have a one dimensional perspective of Jesus Christ that isn’t really true to the Bible. But it’s important to know and worship Christ for who He is, not who we want Him to be.

Some of you know that I recently purchased an old Kawasaki motorcycle that I have been trying to restore. For some reason, there is a connection between surfing and motorcycles. They would seem to not really all that compatible, but they both appeal to the same kind of personality I guess. So anyhow, I ran across this company that started in Bali but now has stores around the world that restores café racer type motorcycles and sells surfboards and surf related stuff. For me it’s like the best of both worlds. But they had this weird name which is Deus Ex Machina. And so I wanted to know what that meant. Turns out it is an old Latin expression which means god in the machine. It was used to describe a device in Greek poetry by which the author of the poem or play brought about a successful ending to his plot by the introduction of a god let down by a machine, or something like a crane, which solved a problem of a plot that didn’t seem to have a logical ending. The god of the machine then is a contrivance of the author by which he is able to insert a god and artificially provide a solution to a dilemma.

Now I was reminded of that phrase as I was considering how we look at the nature of God. Is God merely a contrivance, a device of our own engineering, that we somehow manipulate in order to extract us from a difficult situation? Is the God of Christendom really that small as to be manipulated by the machinations of man? Can we just create God to be whatever we want Him to be, to solve our particular dilemma in just the way we want? Can God be defined by mere mortals? Is God really just the god of the machine, something manipulated for our benefit? How can we know the God of the Bible?

To answer those questions, to truly understand God, we must understand first of all that Jesus was fully man and fully God. Jesus said to Philip in John 14:9, that “if you have seen Me, you have seen the Father.”   That is an incredible statement. And that statement means that it is essential that we fully understand the true nature of Jesus Christ, His complete personality, because He reflects the nature and character of God exactly. Hebrews 1:3 says that “[Jesus] is the radiance of [God’s] glory and the exact representation of [God’s] nature, and upholds all things by the word of His power.” So it’s important that we see Jesus for who He really is, and that we worship God for who He really is. Because Jesus said in John 4:24 that “God is spirit, and those who worship Him must worship in spirit and truth.” It does us no good whatsoever to worship a God of our own design. We must worship God in truth. As He really is, all that He is, even if He does not conform to our expectations, even when He doesn’t solve our personal dilemma.

So as we enter chapter 20, I would just remind you of the different characteristics or attitudes or personality attributes of Jesus that we have seen presented here in just the last couple of chapters of Luke, because it has direct correlation to the passage we are looking at today. At the end of chapter 18 we saw the compassion of Jesus at the healing of a desperate blind beggar. We saw the joy of Jesus in the opening story of chapter 19 about Zaccheus. Joy at a lost sheep of Israel that was found, that was saved. We saw the judgment of Jesus in the parable about the evaluation of the 10 slaves and the ten minas. Uncompromising judgment that took away the mina from the worthless slave and gave it to another. We saw the justice and wrath of Jesus when He called for His enemies to be slain before Him in His presence.

Then we saw humbleness of Jesus in the story of Christ entering Jerusalem on a donkey. Then we saw the sorrow of Jesus as He saw the city laid out beneath Him and He wept over the city because He foresaw the terrible consequences of their rejection of Him as the Messiah. Then we saw the righteous anger of Jesus as He entered the temple and chased out the merchandisers who had made the temple into a den of thieves.

All of those attributes collectively should help us to recognize a more complete picture of who Jesus really is; and ultimately, what God is really like. And folks, that is so very important today in light of the common misconceptions about God and the gospel that is prevalent in the teaching of TV evangelists and many liberal churches. Jesus said God must be worshipped in Spirit and in truth. And so we must recognize God for who He is, who He says He is in His word, and then bow our knee to Him as Lord. Any effort on our part to limit God, to redefine God, or to characterize God as anything less than who He really is, is simply idolatry. You can say you are worshipping God and yet be worshipping an idol, a god devised by your contrivance, after your preferences, and after your prejudices. We must worship God in truth.

Let me be absolutely clear. God can not be defined only as love. That word has become the catchall of the modern church. The Bible does say that God is love.  But the Bible also says God is a God of wrath, God is Holy, God is Righteous. God is the ultimate Judge of the Earth.   But many modern church leaders want to say that God is only a God of love, and therefore love cancels out all the other characteristics of God’s nature. That is a dangerous thing. That false doctrine causes someone like Rob Bell, former pastor of Mars Hill Church and creator of the Nooma films, to write a book called “Love Wins”, which denies the doctrine of hell and consequently a host of other essential doctrines. According to his and many other modern theologian’s warped view of God, God cannot be a God of love and send anyone to hell. And so His view of God conveniently overrides the scriptures, and wipes out the Bibical doctrine of hell, because in His mind they are incompatible.

Such a contemporary lopsided view of God causes someone like Joel Olsteen to stammer and stutter and sidestep the question of whether or not Jesus is the only way to get to heaven. Because his distorted view of God as love does not allow for a God who would not accept someone who was sincerely seeking God through Buddha, or in Islam or through any other false religion out there. As long as you’re sincere, he believes there is a good chance that the God of love will not be able to say no and will accept you into heaven irregardless of one’s faith .

The whole question then comes down to who or what is your authority? Is our eternal destiny determined by our individual preferences or beliefs, or is there a God in heaven who has the right, the absolute authority, to establish the parameters of His kingdom, and to govern the affairs of His kingdom and His citizens?

The root of the problem is that man by his nature hates authority. Man by his nature is rebellious. It started with Adam and Eve in the Garden. Their sin was not that they ate a piece of fruit that was off limits. Their sin was a sin of rebellion. They believed that they were a better judge of what was right and wrong, of what was good or bad for them than God was. And so they acted in rebellion against God and did what they thought was good, when in fact it was evil. Consequently rebellion is the source of all evil. 1Samuel 15:23 says, “For rebellion is as the sin of witchcraft, and insubordination is as iniquity and idolatry.”

The problem with the world today is that it is rebellious, it hates authority. The world hates any authority that tells them that what they want to do is sin. And unfortunately, it is not limited just to the world. The modern church as well hates authority. That is why there is an all out attack on the authority of God’s word from within the church. The modern church as an institution hates absolute authority. It rejects the authority of God’s word, and exchanges it for a doctrine of relativity.

The modern church today says that we have to accommodate the mores of the world. And so today society says that women should be able to be in a place of leadership in the church. Only a chauvinist would deny a woman the position of a minister of the church. Yet the Bible clearly says in 1Tim. 2:12 in regards to the church, “But I do not allow a woman to teach or exercise authority over a man, but to remain quiet.” It says the same thing in 1 Cor. 14. Yet the modern church doesn’t want to be told that, so they exchange the truth of God for a lie.

The church today says that sin in no longer sin. It doesn’t matter if the Bible says that homosexuality is an abomination before God. Society says that it is acceptable. And so liberal church leaders say that God is love and therefore God accepts all forms of love. They reject the authority of God’s word and instead say that they are capable of deciding what is right and what is wrong. The church today winks at divorce. But the Bible says that the person that divorces and marries another is guilty of adultery. The Bible says that God hates divorce. But the church says it’s not a big deal if you don’t love them anymore. The Bible says that all fornication is sin. But the modern church says it’s ok if you love the person. They reject the authority of God’s word.

But Paul warns in Romans 1:18 that there is a greater dimension to God than simply that of love. It says, “For the wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men who suppress the truth in unrighteousness.”

So at the heart of the gospel is the authority of the word of God. If you take that out, if you start to tamper with it, question it, subjugate it to man’s ideas of relevance and importance, then you take the heart right out of the gospel. You take the power to save out of the gospel. The truth can only set you free when it is actually the truth.

Now this problem with authority started with Adam and Eve like I said, and it has reached epidemic proportions today in the modern church, but it also was around in Jesus day. In fact, you could say that it was even worse in Jesus’ day, because that rebellion culminated in the crucifixion of God Himself in the person of Jesus Christ.

And as we look at our text today we see this question of authority being enunciated by the religious leaders of that day. In fact, it is a pretty serious delegation of religious leaders. No less than the high priests were part of the delegation as well as the elders of the Sanhedrin, which was the religious ruling class of Judaism. This was the highest levels of the Jewish religious orders coming to accost Jesus.

And what they ask Him is found in vs. 2, ““Tell us by what authority You are doing these things, or who is the one who gave You this authority?” Now the question that raises is what are “these things” that Christ was doing? And the answer is found in the end of the last chapter. Jesus had come into the temple and started cleaning house. He overturned the tables of the money changers and the seats of those who were selling doves and He drove out those who were buying and selling. It says in Mark that He wouldn’t allow them to carry their merchandise through the temple either.

I hope you get the full picture here. Jesus grabs up a bullwhip, and He goes into the temple courtyard and starts driving these vendors out of the temple. This is not a lovey dovey Jesus pictured here. He is exercising the divine wrath of God. These merchants had set up in the temple grounds with all kinds of animals for sale. And so you’ve got this effect of something like cattle pens in the temple where people could purchase an animal for sacrifice. And they operated in conjunction with the priests who were making outrageous profits from selling these “approved” animals.

Then on top of that are the money changers. The priests had the racket set up so that in order to pay your temple tax or even to buy a sacrificial animal, you had to pay in the currency of the temple. They wouldn’t accept Roman money. So they of course would charge you a hefty commission to change your currency into temple currency. It was yet another form of extortion.

So Jesus sees all this going on. In John’s gospel, there is a record of Him cleansing the temple in just this same way at an earlier time in His ministry. So after all that time, Jesus has come back and the temple vendors and priests are right back at it again, and so He does the same thing that He did before, He grabs a whip and weighs into the middle of the whole mess, cracking the bullwhip and kicking over tables and chairs and driving the men out of the temple. And He doesn’t even let them carry out their merchandise. He drives them out and leaves their stuff scattered all over the grounds.

And as He is doing all of that, He says, “It is written, ‘AND MY HOUSE SHALL BE A HOUSE OF PRAYER,’ but you have made it a ROBBERS’ DEN.”  He is quoting scripture to them. I love that. All these crooked priests and the vendors running for the exits and Jesus is chasing behind them cracking a bullwhip and quoting scripture. Furthermore, He is saying it is His house. It’s not their house, it’s His house.

Now the next morning, the temple is cleaned out, the money changers are gone, the animals are gone, and Jesus comes back in there and sits down in the middle of the temple and begins to preach. And people are hanging on to His every word. Why? Because He spoke with authority. The people said about Him that never a man spoke as He spoke.

But the religious leaders don’t recognize that authority. And so they come to Him in force and ask Him by what authority is He doing these things, who gave Him this authority? Basically they are saying, “Hey Jesus, who do you think you are? What right have you to come into the temple, our territory, and drive out the vendors? What authority do you have to make a claim on the temple that it is your house?

Here is the thing. As far as they were concerned, Jesus had no credentials. He wasn’t a priest. He wasn’t a graduate from some established rabbinical school. He wasn’t of the tribe of Levi. He wasn’t part of the Sanhedrin. He had none of the credentials that they thought that He should have.

You know, I experience a similar kind of problem sometimes. I don’t have a degree from some big established seminary.   I don’t have the backing of some denomination. I don’t wear the prescribed uniform of the typical religious leader. I don’t even have a church building. And so I sometimes get a little bit of that same criticism. What authority do you have? Who gave you the authority to preach about sin and hell and the judgment to come? Who do you think you are?

And my response is the same as John the Baptist when he was asked a similar question. I am the voice of one crying in the wilderness, “repent for the kingdom of heaven is at hand!” My answer is to quote the apostle Paul who said in 1Cor. 9:16 that I am constrained to preach the gospel out of compulsion. Woe is me if I do not preach the gospel. My authority is only that God has called me to preach the word of God without apology, to preach the word in season and out of season, to reprove, rebuke and exhort with all longsuffering and patience. I can say “Thus says the Lord” without hesitation because I speak from the word of God. I don’t add the machinations and scheming of man’s wisdom. I preach the word of God chapter by chapter, verse by verse. And I believe that the word of God is the absolute truth. The word of God is the breath of God that gives life. It is the absolute rule of life and practice and everyman will be judged by it according to how they responded to it. My job is not to build a church building, or draw a crowd, or entertain people, my job is to preach the full counsel of God’s word without compromise.

Well, Jesus uses a question to answer their question. Because He knows that they have framed their question in order to try to trap Him. To try to find a way to convict Him of blasphemy. They have been planning and plotting to kill Him for a while now and this last episode in the temple on their own turf has pushed them over the brink. They will in fact kill Him in just three days or so. But for now, Jesus turns the tables on them and asks them a question. Vs. 3 Jesus answered and said to them, “I will also ask you a question, and you tell Me: 4 “Was the baptism of John from heaven or from men?”

Now what is Jesus talking about when He says the baptism of John? Well, four times in scripture, Mark, Luke and twice in Acts, the baptism of John is called the baptism of repentance. That was the significance of John’s baptism. It wasn’t just a ritual. In fact, it had been a ritual conducted by the temple for non Jewish believers to go through so that they could worship the God of the Jews. It was a Gentile ritual. So when John preached a baptism of repentance, he was saying in essence that a Jew had to repent just like a Gentile in order to receive Christ. But the real significance of baptism was saying that you must confess and repent of your sins because the Messiah is coming. You must get ready for the coming of the Messiah. And the way to be accepted by Him into His kingdom is to repent of your sins. That is the message of the baptism. But the actual act of baptism is just a symbolic, outward sign that you are repenting of your sins. That you bury the old man, the old ways, the old flesh in the water of repentance. You die to that old man there in the water, and you rise up to a newness of life in Jesus Christ leaving behind the old man.

Now that baptism of repentance is the framework for the question Jesus asks of the priests. Was that message of John from God or of men? Well, the Bible very clearly teaches the doctrine of repentance. There are so many OT references to repentance that I cannot take the time to spell them all out here. But David the Psalmist speaks often of the need for repentance. It is a common theme in the OT. David repented of his sin with Bathsheba and God forgave him. He said in Ps. 51, “a broken and contrite heart O Lord you will not despise.” He said in Psalm 32:3, 5 “When I kept silent about my sin, my body wasted away through my groaning all day long. … I acknowledged my sin to You, and my iniquity I did not hide; I said, “I will confess my transgressions to the LORD”; And You forgave the guilt of my sin.”

So the priests should have understood the doctrine of repentance. But they did not want to accept it. They weren’t about to humble themselves in repentance. They weren’t about to acknowledge that they had any sin. They had explained away their sin by creative Biblical interpretation. They had redefined the law so that they could say that they had no sin. In fact, they thought they were righteous.

Listen, the most dangerous thing you can do, whether you are a Christian or a not, is to say that your sin is not sin. That is the most dangerous thing you can do. To redefine sin so that it is not sin. To say that you don’t sin, or that there is no need to confess sin anymore is a dangerous thing. I spoke a little last week about the false doctrine called antinomianism which is sweeping through the modern church. It is a basically the doctrine that says that as a Christian you no longer sin. There is no more need to confess your sins anymore. That grace has absolved you from all responsibility to live righteously and holy before God. That is a very dangerous doctrine, folks. If there is no sin, then there is no need for the discipline of the Lord upon His children. And so once again a false doctrine counters the authority of the word of God, because Heb. 12 tells us that we should strive against sin, but when we sin the Lord reproves us. Vs. 6 FOR THOSE WHOM THE LORD LOVES HE DISCIPLINES, AND HE SCOURGES EVERY SON WHOM HE RECEIVES.” … 8 But if you are without discipline, of which all have become partakers, then you are illegitimate children and not sons.” If God doesn’t discipline you for your sin, then you are not a son of God, you are illegitimate.

So rather than acknowledge that the baptism of John was from God, the priests confer together to try to find a way out of the question. They are afraid of the people, because the people thought that John was a prophet. So they are not going to speak against John, even though they obviously did not believe John. Because John presented Jesus as the Messiah, didn’t he? If they believed John, then they would have to believe Jesus. Because John made it clear that he was the forerunner for the Messiah, and Jesus was the Messiah. That’s another clue to a false prophet, by the way. They don’t want to say anything that will offend people. A false prophet wants to please people, to appeal to people, to flatter people for the sake of taking advantage of them. And that is what these priests were doing.

So they confer together and decide to say, “we don’t know.” That’s yet another clue to a false prophet. They refuse to be dogmatic. They consider the animosity of the culture, and the authority of God’s word that clearly states something as sin and consequently the need for repentance, and they say, “Well, we aren’t really sure that that is what the Bible is really saying. After all, in that culture things were different. But we live in a different culture and so we can’t say exactly what the truth is about certain things.” They undermine the authority of scripture by saying it can’t be known, or it can’t be trusted, or there are errors in the translations which leaves the door open to other possibilities. They don’t know the truth, or won’t say.

But here is the real dilemma of what these priests were facing. The real crux of the matter is that if they accepted the ministry of John as having the authority of God, then they would have to accept the ministry of Jesus as having the authority of God. They would have to accept that Jesus had every right to come into the temple because it was His house. Psalm 110 says that the Messiah was the great high priest forever according to the order of Melchizedek . He surpassed all their authority. In fact, He was the one who gave them their authority. So He had every right to come into His house and clean out the robbers and cheats.

If they accepted the ministry of John, then they would have to accept that Jesus was the Messiah. They knew that Ps. 45 says the Messiah was to sit on the throne of David, the king who was to rule over the nations, whose kingdom would never end. And so they would have to bow before Jesus as their king and submit to His rule.

If they accepted the ministry of John, then they would have to accept that Jesus was that prophet like unto Moses, of whom Moses said in Duet. 18, “GOD WILL RAISE UP FOR YOU A PROPHET LIKE ME FROM YOUR BRETHREN.” They would have to accept that He not only spoke the word of God like Moses did, but He was the Word of God incarnate, the Word made flesh and dwelling among them. And yet they did not accept Him. They rejected Him.

So they would not say. They would not see the truth. They would not bow their knee. These were the ones of whom He said in chapter 19, “We do not want this man to reign over us.” They would not accept His authority. They would rebel and continue in their insubordination to the very God of the universe until one day God would destroy them in His presence along with all His enemies.   So Jesus responded to them in vs.8 by saying, “Nor will I tell you by what authority I do these things.” Jesus would leave them to their rebellion. He would not answer them anymore. From this time on, they were hardened in their rebellion and He would not answer them a word. He had exhausted His patience with them. It was as Romans 1:28 says, “And just as they did not see fit to acknowledge God any longer, God gave them over to a reprobate mind, to do those things which are not proper.”

Listen, I don’t know where you are at today spiritually. Some of you may be really irritated right now because I had the gall to call your pet sin, sin. Some of you may have your feathers ruffled and find yourself thinking, “who does this man think that He is? What kind of authority does he have? How can he know anything?” My only answer is to say that the only authority I have is the word of God. If God said it in His word, then I believe it and I will preach it. John chapter one describes Jesus as the Word of God made flesh. The Word of God is true and authoritative. But you can choose to accept it or not. You can reject it and leave here today and continue in your rebellion and think that the god of your imagination is going to accept you just the way you are. You can continue to worship Deus Ex Machina, the god of your machinations. And if that is the case, then you will have to face the consequences one day for trampling underfoot the Spirit of grace and the precious blood of Jesus Christ which was shed on behalf of sinners. If you refuse to repent of your sins, then the blood of Christ avails nothing for you, and you will face the wrath and judgment of God, whether or not you choose to believe in it.

Some of you here today may be in the same situation as the priests and the elders were. This may be the last time that God speaks to you. The last opportunity for you to repent. The summer season is coming to a close. You may never come to this service again. God may have given you His last warning before giving you over to a reprobate mind to do those things that aren’t proper. I hope that is not the case for anyone here today. I pray that today is the day of your salvation. Today is the day of repentance. Don’t presume upon the grace of God.

Or some of you today can do like David did, and acknowledge and confess your sin to God and ask Him to renew a right spirit within you. Today you can be right with God. But please understand something. Jesus is not just your Savior. He is also your Lord and King. To come to Christ you must do what those priests and elders of Judaism could not do; that is bow your knee to the will of Christ. Allow Christ to sit on the throne of your heart, and live for Him. Live no longer for your glory, but for His. If Jesus is the Son of God, then He has every right to rule and reign over your life. And if you are not willing to let Him rule, then you cannot be a citizen of the Kingdom of God. You must submit to the authority of His word. For those that come to Him in repentance, God has promised to give us the Spirit of Christ as our Helper, to empower us to live according to His word. To help us to be obedient to His word from the heart.

Are you willing to let Christ take His seat on the throne of your heart today? Is your body the temple of the Holy Spirit? Is Christ reigning and ruling in His temple? He has every right to the throne of our heart and our obedience. Let’s pray.

Posted in Sermons | Tags: church on the beach, surfers church, worship at the beach, worship on the beach |

The danger of superficial worship; Luke 19: 28-48

Aug

24

2014

thebeachfellowship

Whether or not you realize it, there has been a monumental shift within the modern church in the last century or so. Particularly in the last half of the last century, events and attitudes that perhaps seemed almost imperceptible at first have quickly gained a momentum and coalesced into a movement that has brought about sweeping changes throughout the church.

I would like to say that all these changes have been good. After all, there were some movements in the past such as the Reformation that swept through Europe and into America that changed the church for the better. But I’m afraid that is not the case with this movement. It’s difficult to put a name on it that encompasses everything that is going on. Some people have suggested that the movement should be called the New Emergent Church. But I don’t know if that is too limiting and in definitive .

Whatever it is that you want to call it, it is the most dangerous movement that Christianity has encountered since the Dark Ages.   It literally threatens to destroy not only the church as we know it, but it is also demonically designed to ultimately destroy souls by deluding them as to the true nature of the church, and specifically the true nature of the gospel.

Regardless of what you call this movement, regardless of the great diversity of denominations that are being sucked into it, it’s got one characteristic which is common to all. This great demonic delusion is focused on undermining the supreme authority of God’s word.   There really is no other greater purpose of the church other than to protect, to preserve, to proclaim and publish the word of God that men might be saved.   And yet today the word of God is almost nonexistent in many main line churches. And even when it is found, it’s importance, it’s prominence is diminished and relegated to an ancillary component of what is called worship. The scripture, which is the very essence of Christ, the Word of God, the voice of God, is subjugated to the whims of fashion, trends, technology, translations that emasculate the Word, teachers that downplay the authority of the Word, and so called spiritual experiences which trump the Word.

The incredible thing is that the greatest adversary of the church is not the atheists, nor the Islamists or any of the world’s agents in the media or government. But the greatest danger to the church is coming from within the church itself. The authority and supremacy of the Word of God is being attacked on so many different levels within the church in a varieties of ways and yet the average person is completely unaware of it. One of the primary ways this is happening has been through a shift in emphasis from the preaching of the Word of God with authority to an emphasis on what is called worship, or praise and worship.

Worship leaders today are often given a form of leadership found in the church that circumvents being vetted by the credentials for pastors or deacons found in 1 and 2 Timothy and yet they have more influence in the church many times than the pastor himself. People decide church associations today not based on what kind of preacher the pastor is, or even if he is preaching the word accurately, but they pick churches based on musical styles and often the worship leader’s talent.

Worship is often presented as a time of spiritual awareness, evoking an emotional response, a euphoric feeling that comes through music, sometimes an ecstatic outburst of emotion that is attributed to the Spirit. Worship has become a catch all for a multimedia presentation that encompasses, music, lights, images and sounds that coalesce in an experience that is loosely based on an even looser theology. The problem is that very often that theology,   if it’s not in outright error, is so lopsided in it’s perspective that it rarely presents the full gospel. It’s very often a partial gospel, encompassing a lopsided view of God as a one dimensional being who is limited in scope to only an emotional quotient called love, and which consequently sacrifices all the weightier issues of salvation such as sanctification and holiness as being archaic and out of touch or even legalistic.

Now as I alluded to earlier, there is nothing new under the sun. Technology may be newer, musical styles may have changed, but false theology has been around forever. The devil just keeps repackaging it, reformatting it for the next generation. Even in Jesus day, even with Jesus present, there are elements of false worship and errant theology that He has to deal with. So in this passage we are looking at today, in addition to looking at the historical account of Jesus’ entry into Jerusalem, we will see a contrast of true worship and errant worship.

First of all though, let’s consider the context of this passage. It is obviously divinely connected to the passage preceding it. In that parable, Jesus told a story about a king who came to receive his kingdom in a far away country. And he put his servants in charge of the kingdom until he returned. But there were people in that country, his citizens, that said “we will not let this man reign over us.” Jesus says in the story that when the king returns, he first addresses those faithful slaves who were good stewards of what he entrusted to them. He rewards the faithful. But those that were unfaithful with their stewardship he takes away even what they have and gives it to the faithful. And those that rebelled against his kingship, he says he will slay in his presence.

Now that is the immediate context of this passage we are looking at today. Jesus is the King who is coming to receive His kingdom. He came preaching “repent, for the kingdom of God is at hand.” He was the King come to receive a far away kingdom. And while He was on earth, He entrusts His servants with a stewardship. They are given the responsibility of managing the kingdom and utilizing it’s resources in a way that will benefit the kingdom.

And that is exactly what Jesus had been doing. He had called 12 disciples to follow Him, to learn from Him. They had been entrusted with His Word. They sat under His teaching. One day, they will transcribe those words under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit and compile the Holy Scriptures, the Word of God. So in the time of His incarnation, Jesus delivers the Word of God, the gospel, to the disciples, not only the 12, but all those that truly leave all to follow Him and accept Him as Lord and King.

Now on this day, Jesus begins the final part of His journey to Jerusalem. He leaves Jericho, and approaches two small villages on the outskirts of Jerusalem and sends two of His disciples ahead into the village. He tells them that they will find there a donkey and her colt tied up there. And He tells the disciples that they are to bring Him the colt and if anyone asks what they are doing, they are to say that the Lord has need of it. So they go on ahead and they find everything exactly as He said.

So they bring back the colt to Jesus and put their robes on it for a saddle and then put Jesus on it. Now this is the first part of their worship. Notice first of all that worship involves obedience. These disciples are given a set of instructions that probably seemed kind of ridiculous to them at first. Go into the next village and you will find a colt tied there. Untie it and bring it here. And if someone asks you what you’re doing, then say the Lord has need of it. They probably were saying, “Right?!” This is a good way to get arrested. It didn’t make sense. Jesus hadn’t yet been to that village, so how could He know there was a colt tied there? And yet they unquestionably obeyed His world. They didn’t argue. They didn’t question. They did what He said, and the results were exactly like Jesus said they would be.

You know, the greatest detriment to true worship of God is our own intellect sometimes. We think we know better than God how to design a church, or how to relate to people. We think we know better than God how to attract a crowd, how to keep people’s interest. So we circumvent the preaching of the word and engineer some type of human program that we think will accomplish the end result that we want. But then at some point in the future, we discover that it didn’t really accomplish what we thought it would. 1Cor. 1:21 says that “since in the wisdom of God the world through its wisdom did not come to know God, God was well-pleased through the foolishness of preaching to save those who believe.”

What those disciples didn’t realize, is that by being obedient to the word, they were also fulfilling Biblical prophecy. In Zechariah 9:9, written 500 years earlier, it was written, “Rejoice greatly, O daughter of Zion! Shout in triumph, O daughter of Jerusalem! Behold, your king is coming to you; He is just and endowed with salvation, humble, and mounted on a donkey, Even on a colt, the foal of a donkey.”

And that is another key to true worship. True worship in accordance with the word of God accomplishes the will of God. See, even though they did not initially understand what they were doing, or why they were doing it in this way, the word of God explained it. The disciples were more than willing to celebrate Jesus as the coming Messiah, as the conquering King who would deliver their nation from the iron fist of Rome. But if they had studied the scriptures, they would have discovered that Zechariah says that yes, He was coming as a King, but that His purpose was salvation, not to conquer Rome. Zechariah says, “He is just and endowed with salvation, humble and mounted on a donkey.” A donkey was not a war horse, but a beast of burden. Jesus came to bear our burdens, to bear the burden of sin to the cross and be offered there as a sacrifice for our sins so that we might have salvation. And salvation is the only way to enter His kingdom.

Jesus’ purpose in entering Jerusalem was completely contrary to the disciples expectations. Christ entered Jerusalem not to conquer Israel’s political enemies, but to conquer sin. To defeat sin, by dying on the cross, being buried in the grave, descending into hell, and then raised by the power of God after three days. He defeated sin by robbing sin of it’s penalty; spiritual death. That is another element of worship that is missing in so many modern churches today. There is no preaching about sin, no emphasis on the need for confession and repentance from sin. Listen, there is no salvation without repentance from sin. Salvation by it’s definition is deliverance from the penalty of sin which is death. But there is hardly any mention of sin in modern worship today. It’s all about relationship. It’s all about love. It’s all about grace. And yet the Bible is clear that there is no salvation without repentance of sin. Jesus said twice in Luke 13, that unless you repent you will perish.

I believe that repentance is pictured in the disciples laying down their garments in the road for Him to ride on. The robe was a man’s covering. It was his dignity, it signified his status. We have the same thing today. Our status is printed on our clothes. We put little horses and polo players on our clothes so that people will know our status. It tells people something about us. Clothes are our first line of defense. These disciples laid down their defenses. Jesus says in another place that a man’s robe was used to keep himself warm at night. And so I don’t want to belabor the illustration too much, but I believe that laying down your robe symbolized a laying down of your dignity, your status, it was humbling one’s self before God. It was acknowledging your submission to the Lordship of the King. It was recognizing that your covering was ineffective, and you needed to be clothed in the robe of righteousness that Jesus provided for us at the foot of the cross.

I find very often in modern worship, almost the exact opposite of humiliation. Instead of humbling oneself to worship, there is very often an exaltation of the musicians, an exaltation of the entertainers whereby they are receiving the adoration that belongs to God. That is a dangerous thing ladies and gentlemen. That’s why I said last week that natural talent is not synonymous with spiritual gifts. In fact, many times I think a natural talent can be a detriment to being used by God because it draws attention away from God to you. That’s why Paul said he was given a thorn in the flesh, to keep him from exalting himself. He was a brilliant man. That was well known even to the Governor Festus and King Agrippa which prompted Festus to say, “Your great learning is driving you mad.” So God gave Paul a thorn in his flesh to keep from exalting himself, so that the glory might be to God. God alone deserves our adoration.

Now look at vs. 37-38 “As soon as He was approaching, near the descent of the Mount of Olives, the whole crowd of the disciples began to praise God joyfully with a loud voice for all the miracles which they had seen, shouting: “BLESSED IS THE KING WHO COMES IN THE NAME OF THE LORD; Peace in heaven and glory in the highest!”

So as the procession leaves Bethpage and ascends the Mount of Olives the disciples start to praise God with a loud voice for all the powerful works that they had seen. Now this sounds more like what we think of when we think of praise. But let’s look at the characteristics of their praise. First they recognized Him as King, and secondly they recognized him as Lord. So they acknowledge and praise Him as the rightful King of His creation, but they also submit to Him as Lord. You may remember last week I referenced that depending on the politics of the president, I may or may not care for the guy currently in office in the White House. But regardless, he is the president and I am a citizen of the United States. There are times when that is a grudging acceptance on my part. But my attitude is something else entirely when my guy gets in the White House. Then I proudly say that he is my President. Not just the president of the country that I happen to be living in, but my President. There is a difference, because I am in agreement with his politics, his platform.

That’s a poor illustration perhaps of what it means to acknowledge Jesus as King, and Jesus as Lord. Jesus as King is acknowledging His domain, His right to rule. Jesus as Lord is gladly submitting to His rule in my life. Listen, true worship is submission to the Lordship of Jesus Christ in my life. It’s not singing a couple of songs and continuing in my sin. It’s not clapping my hands on Sunday morning and sleeping with my boyfriend or girlfriend on Sunday night. That’s why I started off by saying that true worship is obedience and then repentance. You can’t worship God and continue in sin. Nor can you refuse to acknowledge your sin as sin. That is a big one today. In the new worship mentality they first undermine the authority of scripture so that they can no longer say with certainty what constitutes sin. Then they take away the onus of sin by an aberrant doctrine of grace, and then they eventually try to redefine sin as not sin after all. And once the devil gets you to the point where you no longer think your sin is sin then he has you in the place that he can destroy you. And that’s his goal all along.

 

Another important element of their praise was peace in heaven. They are not talking about peace on earth – the absence of war or strife which is the social gospel that a lot of churches are buying into. But the peace that heaven gives is peace with God. And peace with God only is possible when the justice of God and the wrath of God against sin is satisfied. Paul says in Romans that we were enemies of God and that through Jesus we have peace with God. Rom. 5:10 “For if while we were enemies we were reconciled to God through the death of His Son, much more, having been reconciled, we shall be saved by His life.” Rom. 5:1 “Therefore, having been justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ.”

And secondly, having made peace, we now glorify God in heaven. How do we do that? Do we do that by simply saying it, by praising God in song, by repeating “glory to God?” No, not just singing praise, but living lives that bring praise to God. We glorify God not just with our mouths, but by the testimony of a transformed life. We saw that in Zaccheus. His transformation brought glory to God. Bartimaeus, his transformation brought glory to God. You want to worship God? Then let your transformation bring glory to God. Jesus said in Matt. 5:16 “Let your light shine before men in such a way that they may see your good works, and glorify your Father who is in heaven.” Your good works done as a result of your transformed heart will bring glory to God as people observe your behavior in your daily life.

Now when the Pharisees and the religious leaders heard the disciples praising Jesus as the Messiah King, these men revealed that they were in fact the very ones that said, “we will not have this man to rule over us.” And so they said to Jesus in vs. 39, “Teacher, rebuke Your disciples.” But Jesus answered, “I tell you, if these become silent, the stones will cry out!” Now this is an interesting thing for Jesus to say. It actually has a dual meaning. First and most obviously, Jesus is saying that God isn’t dependent upon our praise, but He can cause even inanimate objects to erupt in His praise if He so desires. There is a notion out there that God is this pitiful, narcissistic kind of God that sits in heaven almost in a fit of despondency, waiting and wishing that someone would call, someone would tell him how wonderful He is. That somehow God just needs people to tell Him how great He is in order for Him to be happy. And if you just do that on a regular basis, God will bless you in return.

I would just remind such people of what Paul said to the philosophers on Mars Hill, that “God is not served by human hands, as though He needed anything, since He Himself gives to all people life and breath and all things.” God’s happiness is not dependent upon our praise.

But this statement about the stones is also a reference to judgment. In Habakkuk 2:11-12 the prophet writes about the judgment of God upon the city and says “Surely the stone will cry out from the wall, And the rafter will answer it from the framework. Woe to him who builds a city with bloodshed And founds a town with violence!” What Jesus is referencing here is that these men who are the rulers of Jerusalem that said “we will not have this man rule over us,” in denying Jesus the praise and recognition that He deserves are actually bringing upon their city the judgment of God for their rejection of His Son. That is exactly what the parable indicated in the previous chapter. That God would bring destruction upon those men that reject His Christ. And that is exactly what would happen to Jerusalem. God would bring judgment upon it just 40 years later because it rejected the Savior, God’s only Son. So what Jesus in essence is saying, is that even if these people were to fall silent, the stones of your city will cry out as a testament to the foolishness and the consequences of your rebellion.

Now that explains Jesus reaction and statement in the next few verses. Vs. 41 “When He approached Jerusalem, He saw the city and wept over it, saying, “If you had known in this day, even you, the things which make for peace! But now they have been hidden from your eyes. For the days will come upon you when your enemies will throw up a barricade against you, and surround you and hem you in on every side, and they will level you to the ground and your children within you, and they will not leave in you one stone upon another, because you did not recognize the time of your visitation.”

Jesus wept over the city because He knew that their worship of Him was superficial. The crowds were following Him now, but they would be calling for His crucifixion in less than a week. They had a man centered theology rather than a God centered theology. In their version, God would bring the Messiah to deliver them from their enemies, to bring prosperity to their nation, to bring peace from their oppressors. It was a social kingdom, a political kingdom, that was solely for their benefit. And so Jesus is weeping over the city because He knows that in the plan of God there must be suffering before exaltation. He must first be their sacrifice in order to be their Savior, and only then can He be their King and they His citizens.

But the crowds aren’t interested in sacrifice. They don’t want to hear about suffering. They want a solution to their immediate problems. There are a lot of people today that are drawn to God, are drawn to a superficial kind of worship that is man-centric, that appeals to their emotions, appeals to their particular crisis. And the new worship template promises them an easy solution to their problem. God is love, and He just loves to love you, and because He loves you He will give you everything you want if you just believe that He loves you. What they fail to teach you though is the full counsel of God’s Word that requires that you must love the Lord your God with all your heart, all your soul, all your strength and all your might. And that if you truly love God like that, then God’s will must be paramount, it must take precedence over everything and every one. That means you cannot love God and the world, you cannot love God and money. You cannot love your family member or your girlfriend or your boyfriend more that God. God must have preeminence. There is a cost to loving God, and the cost is the love of the world.

Well, Jerusalem would within the week reject Jesus Christ as their Savior, as their Sacrifice. They would call for His crucifixion. And just 40 years later the historian Josephus would record that Titus would encircle Jerusalem, he would erect a wall, he would bring a siege upon the city, and then after 6 months in 70 AD he would break through the walls of Jerusalem and massacre every man, woman and child. Some would estimate that over 200,000 Jews would be killed inside the city. And then Titus set fire to the city. They believed that the walls of the Temple had gold in them and to get at the gold they burned the city and then tore apart the walls to get at the gold.  Today there is only one fragment of the city of Jerusalem still standing, the Wailing Wall. It’s where the Jews go to pray for the Messiah to come. They still refuse to recognize that He already came and they did not recognize the time of His visitation. Some of you here today, I wonder if you recognize that today is the day of Christ’s visitation? Today salvation has been presented to you. The question is whether or not you will accept Jesus as Lord and follow Him or reject Him.

Immediately after entering the city, Jesus entered the temple and began to drive out those that were selling. In vs. 46 Jesus says to them, “It is written, ‘AND MY HOUSE SHALL BE A HOUSE OF PRAYER,’ but you have made it a ROBBERS’ DEN.” What an indictment against their house of worship! They had prostituted the temple of God. They had prostituted the sacrificial service. They had set up money changers and animal brokers and so forth within the temple walls to supposedly accommodate those that were coming to worship God. But instead they had corrupted the system to the point that instead of helping people worship God they were robbing people.

Ladies and gentlemen I am afraid that many churches today are prostituting the gospel of God. The house of God has been turned into a carnival. The church has bookstores and coffee shops and bazaars and dinners and marathons and car shows and flea markets and every possible entertainment and event going on. Yet as Proverbs says the people perish for lack of vision. The church has lost it’s vision, lost it’s purpose. The church isn’t a community center. It’s not a social hall. It’s not a concert hall. The church is a place where God’s people come together to worship God in Spirit and in truth. It’s the place where the water of life is given freely and without charge. It’s the place where people’s souls are fed, hearts are encouraged, and sinners are convicted. It’s not a place where we try to make sinners feel good about themselves. But where sinners repent and are delivered and set free. But unfortunately many churches today are robbing people of the gospel of salvation.

In the earliest church in Jerusalem during the time of the apostles, they were feeding the widows and the apostles said let us set aside certain men for that task. But as for us, the apostles said, “we will devote ourselves to prayer and to the ministry of the word.” (Acts 6:4) That’s the priority of the church. And that’s the priority of worship as well.

So Jesus cleaned house. You know, I wish all these people that only believe that God is love could have been there that day when Jesus got a bull whip and overturned all the stalls and tables and drove out all the animals and vendors and money changers out of the temple. I don’t think most of those people would recognize Jesus nor would they worship Him. This was the second time by the way that Jesus cleaned out the temple. In John’s account it says the disciples remembered the proverb that said, “the zeal for your house has consumed me.”

Folks, we need some old fashioned zeal for the house of God. We need some zeal for the word of God and the preaching of the word of God. We need to put an end to the prostitution of Christianity, the business of the church and get back to being about the business of the kingdom of God.

That’s what we see Jesus bringing the people back to in vs. 47, 48. It says, after that “He was teaching daily in the temple; but the chief priests and the scribes and the leading men among the people were trying to destroy Him, and they could not find anything that they might do, for all the people were hanging on to every word He said.” You see that? Jesus was teaching daily in the temple. He was preaching every day and the people were hanging on to His every word. That’s zeal for God. I long to see people with a zeal for the word of God, that don’t want to miss a service, don’t want to miss a message. That are willing to sacrifice the enticements of the world for the sake of knowing Jesus Christ and becoming conformed to His image.

Jesus said in John 6:63 “the words that I have spoken to you are spirit and are life.” Listen folks, Paul reminded Timothy to hold onto the scripture which he had learned from childhood “which are able to give you the wisdom that leads to salvation through faith which is in Christ Jesus.” Let’s not lose sight of the priority and preeminence of the word of God in our worship. And then let us be obedient to the word of God. And if we are obedient to the word of God then we will have no problem submitting to the Lordship of Jesus Christ. And when the Lordship of Christ is evident in our lives then our lives will be a living testimony to the glory of God. People will see our transformation, our good works and glorify God.

I pray that starting today you will renounce superficial worship. But diligently commit to living out Romans 12:1,2. “Therefore I urge you, brethren, by the mercies of God, to present your bodies a living and holy sacrifice, acceptable to God, which is your spiritual service of worship. And do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, so that you may prove what the will of God is, that which is good and acceptable and perfect.”

Posted in Sermons | Tags: church on the beach, surfers church, worship on the beach |

The stewardship of the kingdom, Luke 19:11-27

Aug

17

2014

thebeachfellowship

If you were here last week then you will remember that we looked at the conversion of Zaccheus in the beginning of this chapter. Zaccheus was a man of small stature, but great faith. Although he had been a man that employed wicked, evil business practices before his conversion, after he met Jesus he was transformed into a man that used his unrighteous wealth for the kingdom of God.

Jesus said about Zaccheus that salvation had come to his house, because he too was a son of Abraham. Now last week I explained that Jesus used the phrase “son of Abraham” not to indicate that he was Jew. Practically everyone there was a Jew, including Zaccheus, but what Jesus is indicating that Zaccheus’ salvation was the result of something that was associated with Abraham in particular.

The Apostle Paul makes it clear that faith was the defining characteristic of Abraham. Gal. 3:6-7 says “Even so Abraham BELIEVED GOD, AND IT WAS RECKONED TO HIM AS RIGHTEOUSNESS. Therefore, be sure that it is those who are of faith who are sons of Abraham.” So saving faith is the characteristic associated with Abraham. Paul is quoting from Genesis when he says that Abraham believed God and it was reckoned to him as righteousness. So righteousness and salvation, comes as a result of faith. I would hope most of us would accept that doctrine.

But what exactly is faith? Listen, faith is believing the promises of God and then acting upon them. Let me say that again. Faith is believing the promises of God and then acting upon them. Saving faith is not just believing that God exists. The Bible says that the devils believe in God and tremble, yet they are not saved. Faith is not an emotional desire, it is not wishful thinking. Faith is not the power of positive thinking. Saving faith is acting upon the promises of God. Listen to what Heb. 11: 8 says, “By faith Abraham, when he was called, obeyed by going out to a place which he was to receive for an inheritance; and he went out, not knowing where he was going.” See, his faith was characterized by action. Abraham believed God and he acted upon that belief, trusting that what God promised He was able to provide.

So Zaccheus was a child of Abraham because he was saved by faith. And how was his faith evidenced? How was his faith acted out? By the fact that he was willing to give half his money to the poor and pay back everyone he had defrauded with four times as much. Zaccheus showed true faith by his willingness to do from his heart what Jesus never told him to do. That is in direct contrast to the rich young ruler of the last chapter, that thought he was a child of Abraham by birth, thought that he was righteous, and yet his unwillingness to divest himself of his riches in order to follow Christ revealed that his heart was selfish and unrepentant. The rich young ruler went away sad, because he went away unsaved. Oh, he believed in God. But he did not have faith in God to do what Jesus asked him to do. That’s what James is talking about in James 1 when he says, I’ll show you my faith by my works. Zaccheus’ actions were the evidence of his faith.

Now all of that is by means of introduction and is very important to understanding our text today. Because as you can see in vs. 11, Jesus is still in Zaccheus’ house. So after declaring Zaccheus a son of Abraham, declaring that he was saved, Jesus is going to illustrate that principle of obedient faith with a parable. Now there is another purpose to the parable that is stated by Luke; that is, that Jesus used this to refute the common thinking that existed among the disciples, who supposed that the kingdom of God was going to appear immediately because He was going to Jerusalem. Now that is the obvious purpose to the parable. But as I have just pointed out, there is another very important lesson contained in this parable as well, which is how obedient faith is to be worked out in the meantime.

So let’s consider the stated purpose first; that the kingdom of God is going to be delayed. Jesus uses a story about a nobleman that receives a kingdom in a distant country. Now this would have been a familiar scenario for the crowd assembled there. Jesus made the parable up, but He may have used an actual historical situation to base it on that they would have undoubtedly been familiar with. History tells us that just before this time, there was a nobleman named Archelaus, who was one of three sons of King Herod, who had inherited kingship of the area surrounding Jericho where Zaccheus lived.   After his father’s death Archelaus went to Rome to receive the sovereignty from Caesar over this part of his father’s kingdom. Confirmation by the Roman emperor was necessary, because though Israel was Herod’s empire, in reality it was part of the Roman Empire. However, Archelaus was hated by the Jewish population. And so the Jews sent a delegation to Rome to dispute Archelaus’s claim to kingship. But nevertheless the emperor decided to appoint him as ruler over half of his father’s kingdom.

Now that is the historical context. The people would have very easily identified with the story. But the obvious point that Luke says that Jesus is making is that the king first receives the kingdom in a distant country, and then he goes back to be officially appointed as king.   In other words, there is going to be an extended time when the king is absent. He comes to his kingdom, and then he goes back to receive the kingdom which might have been like an official public ceremony and then one day in the future he comes back again to take his kingdom and demands a reckoning with those he left in charge and those that had opposed his kingship.

But this idea of the kingdom being delayed would have been a foreign concept to the disciples and whatever religious leaders were in attendance that day. Both Jesus and John the Baptist before Him had been going around the country preaching “repent for the kingdom of God is at hand.” That was the Messianic message that everyone had been wanting to hear for thousands of years. The followers of Jesus believed that Jesus was in fact the Messiah.   The rabbis and Pharisees and the religious leaders of Israel were speculating whether or not Jesus could be the Messiah. Most of them tended to believe that He was not. But the massive crowds that were following Him largely because of His miracles wanted to believe that He was the Messiah. In just a few days they would congregate in Jerusalem as He rode into town on a donkey during Passover week, and they would greet Him and celebrate Him as the Messiah.

The problem was that their Messianic theology did not match the reality of the scripture’s prophecies. Their theology centered on a literal kingship, the physical reinstatement of the throne of David that the Messiah would sit on. And they believed that He would overthrow the Roman yoke, defeat all their enemies, and Israel would become the greatest, most favored nation on the earth. They believed they would enjoy unrivaled peace and prosperity in this kingdom as God would rule and reign through the Messiah sitting on the throne in Jerusalem.

That’s why they did not understand all the talk about dying and crucifixion and that the Son of Man would suffer and be delivered up in Jerusalem. Even the disciples did not understand it. They would be arguing right up to the point of entering the Garden of Gethsemane about who was going to get to sit on Jesus right and left hands on thrones when Jesus received His kingdom. And that is why both the disciples and the crowd would all fall away from Him in His moment of suffering. Suffering did not fit into their theology.

And you know what? Suffering doesn’t fit into most modern evangelical’s theology either. Modern evangelical theology has distanced itself from many doctrines so clearly presented in the Bible like judgment, hell, suffering, tribulation and sacrifice. I believe that is why when in the end of the ages, just before Christ returns in the clouds which Jesus spoke about in Mark 12, that there will be a great falling away, which is going to be so deceitful that if it were possible it would deceive even the very elect. I don’t want to start an eschatological debate with anyone, but I believe that the church is going to go through the refiner’s fire of tribulation. If you follow the news, then you should understand that that fire is already kindled. So you better make sure that your theology is founded on the truth of God’s word and not some book you read or some movie you watched.

So Jesus tells them this parable to illustrate the correct eschatology. And that eschatology has not changed in two thousand years by the way. We are still living in the “in betweens,” the time between His first coming and His second coming. So let’s consider then what our responsibility is in this time in between. That is I think the real point to this illustration. Zaccheus’s utter transformation was the catalyst for this parable. His willingness to respond from the heart with even more than the law required him to do revealed that he had been truly saved. The law required that he give his tithe to the temple which would have been about 23 percent if you added everything up, and he said I’ll give half; 50% of all that I have. The law said if you defrauded someone you were to repay them twice as much, and Zaccheus said I’ll even double that. That was illustrative of the faith of Abraham. It’s illustrative of saving faith. It’s proof that his heart has been transformed from greedy to giving. From selfish and prideful to loving and humble. Those are the characteristics of someone who has been saved.

Jesus illustrates that kind of saving faith with this story. Now before the nobleman goes back to officially receive the kingdom, he calls 10 servants and gives them a mina each. Now a mina is equal to 100 days wages. And he says to them, “Do business with this until I come back.” Now there are three types of people that are represented in this parable. Three types but only two categories. And I believe every one of us here today are represented by one of these three types of people. The first group is the faithful slaves. That is the guy that made 10 minas and the guy that made 5 minas. They both are in the faithful category. They were obedient to the king and give him a return on their stewardship. The second category is the citizens that hated the king and said “we will not have this man rule over us.” These are the ones in flagrant rebellion. But the third category is the guy who did nothing with his mina. He is not any different from the second category actually. He isn’t in open, flagrant rebellion, but he reveals in his unfaithfulness that he was not willing to have the king rule over him either. Now as I said, I believe the Bible makes it clear that there are really only two categories of people in the world. Those that are saved, and those that are lost. There is no almost saved, no sort of saved, you cannot serve God and mammon. You are either in the kingdom or you are not. So even though there are three categories in this parable, there are really only two types of people.

And this is verified in scripture by the way. The most obvious parallel to this is an almost identical parable known as the parable of the talents found in Matthew 25 vs. 14. The parables are very similar. But the scripture is clear that they are in fact different parables given at different times in different places, even though a lot of the verbiage is the same. A talent by the way is a unit of money. It amazes me how people interpret that parable as God giving them talents like singing, or art, or acting or whatever. And then pastors will give seminars on how to discover your talents. Then they make the mistake of equating some natural or physical talent to a spiritual gift. And the next thing you know, the church looks like a version of American Idol.

Let me digress here for just a minute and say that your natural talent and your spiritual gift are not always interchangeable. In fact, I’ve found that God may give you a spiritual gift that is not something that you are naturally talented in. Your natural talent may actually hinder you from doing the work of God. It’s too easy for pride to get involved when you have a natural talent.   A spiritual gift is when God equips you to do something by the power of the Holy Spirit that you could not do in the flesh. Got that? It has nothing to do with whether or not you think you are talented in a particular area. It has something to do with being obedient to do what God wants you to do when you can’t do it in your flesh, when it doesn’t come easy for you.

Paul is a great example of that. This was an extremely talented, intelligent man. But Paul said all those things that had been gain for him, he now counted them but rubbish. And God gave him a thorn in the flesh, he said, to keep him from exalting himself.   It’s commonly believed that the thorn in the flesh was a condition of near blindness, marked by a running infection in his eyes. And so it was said by the churches that in physical appearance Paul was contemptible, but his letters were weighty and strong. Now that characterizes a man that did not rely on natural talent, or charisma, or good looks, or great physical abilities, but relied on the wisdom and the power of God and was able to do amazing things.

But back to Matthew 25, in the parable of the talents you see an almost identical situation to the parable in Luke. Three men, each of them given a unit of money. And at the reckoning two are rewarded by their master, but one hid his talent. So when the slave tells his master that he hid his talent in the ground, the master’s response is to say, “You wicked, lazy slave, you knew that I reap where I did not sow and gather where I scattered no seed. ‘Then you ought to have put my money in the bank, and on my arrival I would have received my money back with interest. ‘Therefore take away the talent from him, and give it to the one who has the ten talents.” But here is where the text is different. Jesus says in Matthews parable, “Throw out the worthless slave into the outer darkness; in that place there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth.” See, Jesus reveals in Matthew’s parable that this unfaithful slave is considered as an unsaved person. He shows by his actions that he is not really saved. So in the parable of the talent there are only two possible categories; either saved or unsaved. Either of the faith, or of the faithless.

Now let’s go back to our text in Luke and look at the first type of person that Jesus mentions. And that is the flagrantly rebellious found in vs.14. These are the ones who send out a delegation saying, “We do not want this man to reign over us.” First of all, note that they are citizens of his kingdom. The fact that they do not like their king, or want to serve their king, or respect their king, does not invalidate the fact that he is still their king. You know, I may not like whoever happens to be in the White House from time to time. I may not agree with them, or even respect them, but that doesn’t change the fact that they are the President of the United States, and I am a citizen of the United States. And as such I am subject to the laws of the United States. In fact, Peter tells us this is the Lord’s will. 1Pet. 2:13-14 “Submit yourselves for the Lord’s sake to every human institution, whether to a king as the one in authority, or to governors as sent by him for the punishment of evildoers and the praise of those who do right.” We are told to pray for those that are in authority over us. We are not told to rebel against authority. We are told to pay our taxes. Now that is even to an ungodly king or ungodly president.

But the point Jesus is making here is that even people that hate God and rebel against His rule are a part of His kingdom in the sense that they belong to Him.  I find it ironic that the very breath with which these God haters rail and rant against God is given to them by Christ. Col. 1:16-17 says, “For by Him all things were created, both in the heavens and on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or dominions or rulers or authorities–all things have been created through Him and for Him. He is before all things, and in Him all things hold together.”

Yet Jesus says in this parable that even though they were part of His kingdom, they rebelled against Him and did not want to submit to His rule over them. John 1:10-12 “He was in the world, and the world was made through Him, and the world did not know Him. He came to His own, and those who were His own did not receive Him. But as many as received Him, to them He gave the right to become children of God, even to those who believe in His name.”

So even though they do not accept Him as God, nor worship Him as God, yet they will still give an account to Him one day. The Bible says that one day every knee will bow and every tongue will confess that Jesus Christ is Lord. But for that confession to be effective, it must be a confession of faith. That which is seen is not faith. When they are brought before the Great White Throne judgment, and they see the Lamb of God who was slain, the Savior that they rejected, they will believe then. But it will be too late.

Jesus says as much in the last verse of the parable in vs. 27 “But these enemies of mine, who did not want me to reign over them, bring them here and slay them in my presence.” This is correlated in Rev. 20:12, 14-15 “And I saw the dead,(that is the unsaved, spiritually dead) the great and the small, standing before the throne, and books were opened; and another book was opened, which is the book of life; and the dead were judged from the things which were written in the books, according to their deeds. … Then death and Hades were thrown into the lake of fire. This is the second death, the lake of fire. And if anyone’s name was not found written in the book of life, he was thrown into the lake of fire.”

Now the second type of person in the parable is that of the faithful. Jesus says that the slaves were each given mina. I believe that what the mina represents is not money or talents or even necessarily time, but the gospel – the full counsel of the word of God. In John chapter one Jesus is referred to as the Word. It says the Word was with God, and the Word was God. The same was in the beginning with God. And all things were made by Him. And then skipping down it says, “and the Word became flesh and dwelt among us and we beheld His glory, glory as of the only begotten from the Father, full of grace and truth.” So the gospel is nothing less than all the scripture, all the Word of God. Jesus said in John 6:63, the words that I have spoken unto you, they are spirit and they are life. The Word of God is the greatest treasure, the gospel, the power of God unto salvation. It is the means by which the Holy Spirit teaches us and guides us. It is the Word of Life.

So these faithful slaves then represent those that are faithful to the Word of God. They have accepted it by faith, they are obedient to the Word by faith, and they bring about fruit in keeping to their measure of obedience. Now to prove that I remind you of the parable of the sower. I’m sure you are all familiar with that parable found in Matthew 13. Jesus says a farmer went out to sow seed. And some seed fell on good ground, some on rocky ground, some by the hard packed road, and some fell among thorns. You know the story, I hope. I won’t go through it all. But Jesus gives an explanation, because the disciples didn’t know what it meant. And Jesus explains that the seed was the Word of God. And the seed which fell on good soil produced a crop, some one hundred fold, some sixty and some thirty.   See, the crop is the evidence of their salvation. The Word of God enters into an obedient, faithful heart and produces fruit.

And then look at the reward. The king says to the one who returned ten minas, “Well done, good slave, because you have been faithful in a very little thing, you are to be in authority over ten cities.” And to the one who returned five minas, he said, “And you are to be over five cities.” Listen, do you realize that in the eternal glory we will rule and reign with Christ? That those who shared with Him in the fellowship of His sufferings here will also share with Him in His glory? The point here is to be laying up treasures in heaven, where moth and rust does not corrupt. God has promised to reward those who are faithful. So it behooves us to remember what Paul says in 2Cor. 9:6 “Now this I say, he who sows sparingly will also reap sparingly, and he who sows bountifully will also reap bountifully.” Listen, there will be varying degrees of reward in heaven. Eternity lasts a long, long time folks. I hope that you are investing in heaven. Jesus’ last words to the church is found in Rev. 3: 21 “He who overcomes, I will grant to him to sit down with Me on My throne, as I also overcame and sat down with My Father on His throne.”

Finally, let’s look at the unfaithful slave. He said, “Master, here is your mina, which I kept put away in a handkerchief; for I was afraid of you, because you are an exacting man; you take up what you did not lay down and reap what you did not sow.” The Greek word that is translated as exacting there is actually the word that we get austere from. It means harsh, severe, stern. This guy is revealing what he really thinks of his Master. He doesn’t like Him. He doesn’t want to submit to Him. He doesn’t really want this man to rule over him. He thinks he is too strict, too harsh.

The unfaithful slave says, you collect what you did not deposit, you reap what you did not sow. In other words, he thinks that God is over reaching his authority. God doesn’t really own everything. It’s kind of like the man who thinks that God can have my ten percent tithe, but the 90 % belongs to me. God can have an hour or so on Sunday mornings, but the rest of the week belongs to me.

There is even a bit of licentiousness in there. There is a hint of antinomianism couched in this rebuttal by the unfaithful slave. He says, you know, grace means that I don’t have to be concerned about works. You do the works with or without my help. You reap where you didn’t sow. You have the power that is supposed to be doing everything, and so I can do nothing. He excuses his disobedience by claiming that his master is so powerful that he doesn’t need his help.

I think that every generation has it’s pet heresy. There may be no new heresy under the sun, the devil just keeps repackaging them for each subsequent generation. But I think that one of the pet heresy’s of the 21st century is that of antinomianism. It’s the belief that the grace of God is so overpowering, so encompassing, that it eliminates every human responsibility. And so there is no sin, there is no need to confess your sins, and there is no human responsibility. And though very few people are brash enough to come out and say it quite that frankly, the modern day false prophets are all teaching a version of it. Joel Olsteen, Joseph Prince, Joyce Meyer, they all have taken the prosperity gospel to it’s obvious, inevitable conclusion, and that is that God only wants you to be happy and prosperous and successful and healthy and all you have to do is have some form of faith and God removes all sin from you forever, and puts all the resources of heaven at your personal disposal and you never have to suffer, you never have to sacrifice your personal happiness, you never have to repent, or ever have anything bad happen, it’s all good, all the time. And people buying into that false doctrine by the thousands and they are being deceived that salvation doesn’t require surrender of this world, salvation doesn’t require repentance, salvation doesn’t require obedience, salvation doesn’t require sacrifice, salvation doesn’t require morality, and salvation doesn’t require righteousness.

Jesus uses this parable to teach that salvation is marked by obedience from the heart, and obedience is evidenced by your deeds. I could give you dozens of scriptures that emphasize that. But let me just quote a few quickly. James 1: 22 “But prove yourselves doers of the word, and not merely hearers who delude themselves.” James 4:17 “Therefore, to one who knows the right thing to do and does not do it, to him it is sin.” Matt. 12:50 “For whoever does the will of My Father who is in heaven, he is My brother and sister and mother.” Rom. 2:13 “for it is not the hearers of the Law who are just before God, but the doers of the Law will be justified.” James 2:17 “Even so faith, if it has no works, is dead, being by itself.” 1John 2:3 “By this we know that we have come to know Him, if we keep His commandments.” And 1John 3:7 “Little children, make sure no one deceives you; the one who practices righteousness is righteous, just as He is righteous.”

Don’t be deceived folks. We can’t always tell the wheat from the tares. But the Lord of the harvest will be able to tell the wheat from the tares, because it will be obvious by their fruit. I don’t know how many people are deceived into thinking that they can be right with God and not have to be obedient to what He commands. But I’m afraid that many people today fall into that camp. Jesus said in Matthew 7, “many people will say to Me in that day, “Lord, Lord, did we not do all these things in your name?” And He will say unto them, “’I never knew you; DEPART FROM ME, YOU WHO PRACTICE LAWLESSNESS.”

Listen, I think that this unfaithful steward thought that he would be ok when the king came back. He was presuming upon the grace of God. He didn’t think faith was much more than a feeling. He thought God was supposed to serve him, he didn’t think it was necessary for him to serve God. But he failed to realize that obedience is the means to sanctification. And Hebrews 12: 4 says that without sanctification, no one will see the Lord. Sanctification is the fruit of your salvation. It is the working out of your salvation with fear and trembling. It is what Zaccheus was doing when he promised to make restitution to all he had wronged. It was a zeal for righteousness that came out of a transformed heart.

Jesus says about that unfaithful slave, that they will take away what he has and give it to him that had 10 minas. And when they questioned the wisdom of that, Jesus gave them the principle; “I tell you that to everyone who has, more shall be given, but from the one who does not have, even what he does have shall be taken away.” This is the principle of spiritual life. The one who has real life, abundant life in Christ, life through the Spirit, new life, the life that brings forth fruit, that produces growth, the one who has that kind of life, more shall be given to him. At the Bema seat judgment, when God rewards the faithful, he will give those that were faithful more responsibility. He will give those faithful in little things, great things. Oh, the value of being faithful in little things. Zech. 4:10 says, “For who has despised the day of small things?” Be faithful in little things, ladies and gentlemen, if you want to be found faithful at the judgment.

But for the one who does not have that kind of life that produces fruit, that evidences new life, that is born of the Spirit and by the power of the Spirit works the works of God, that is obedient to the Word of God, to that person that does not have spiritual life, even the life that he has will be taken away. His physical life will end and all that he has worked for here on this earth will not serve him in the next. And his spiritual life will be forever destroyed. He will be forever separated from God because he said “I will not allow this Man to rule over me.” He placed himself on a higher pedestal than God. Everything that he worked for will be taken from him and he will be cast into the Lake of Fire.

Well, the question I would ask you in closing is; if your spiritual life was to be judged by the evidence, would you be counted among the faithful or the unfaithful? Are you gladly responding to the rule of God over your life, being about the business of the kingdom until Christ returns, looking forward to your reward? Or are you rejecting the absolute rule of Christ? Have you tucked away a bit of religion that you hope is enough, presuming upon the grace of God, while indulging in your sin? I hope that you are in the first group. But if you honestly examine yourself in the light of God’s word and you recognize by the conviction of the Holy Spirit that you are not living a life of surrender to Christ’s rule, then I beg of you, surrender yourself to Him today.   Call upon Him while He may be found. Today is the acceptable day of salvation. Today Jesus is calling you. I pray you will answer that call by repenting of your sins, and faith in Jesus Christ as Lord, resulting in obedience.

Posted in Sermons | Tags: church on the beach, surfers church, worship on the beach |

Short in stature, but long on repentance, Luke 19:1-10

Aug

10

2014

thebeachfellowship

If you have been with us very often during these last two years that we have been preaching through the book of Luke, then you will recall that the reoccurring theme of Jesus’ ministry was the preaching of the kingdom of God; what it means, what are the requirements and how to enter it. And one of the major components of entering the kingdom of God is that a person must be desperate. They must have reached the point of being sick of their sin, the point of mourning over their sin, and desperately hungering and thirsting for righteousness. They have to have come to the realization that they are absolutely lost and without hope in this world. These principles were clearly presented in one of Jesus first recorded messages; the Sermon on the Mount.

Jesus says in the Sermon on the Mount; blessed are the poor in spirit; that is those that recognize that they are spiritually bankrupt, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. Blessed are they that mourn over their sin, for they shall be comforted. Blessed are the humble, for they shall inherit the earth. Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they shall be satisfied. All of those statements speak of the requirements of entering or being accepted in the kingdom of God. You have to humble yourselves, realize your spiritual bankruptcy, that you have no claim on the kingdom of God, mourn over your sin, that’s true repentance, and then hunger and thirst after the righteousness that only the grace of God can provide, by transference of your sins to Jesus, and His righteousness to you. That is salvation in a nutshell.

For three years Jesus has been preaching this message of repentance, that the kingdom of God is at hand. For 3 years God’s invitation to enter the kingdom was extended to all who would come. “Whosoever will may come.” But now Jesus is reaching the end goal of His earthly ministry. He is almost at Jerusalem. It is the Passover season, and in the providence of God Jesus Himself will be offered as the Passover Lamb for the sins of the world. The Passover symbolically represented that Jesus’ shed blood each person must put on the doorposts of their house, so that they might escape death. He is resolutely going to offer Himself at Calvary’s cross as a sacrifice for sins. And this will happen in just a few days.

And so it is in that context that we come across this story today. One more story illustrating how to enter the kingdom of God before Jesus enters Jerusalem and submits Himself to the crucifixion. Jesus takes a slight detour on his way to Jerusalem because He has a divine appointment with a sinner in the town of Jericho. Actually, He had two appointments. He had an appointment on the outskirts of Jericho with a blind beggar named Bartimaeus who exemplified the desperation necessary for salvation. We looked at that story last week as Jesus healed Bartimaeus, who Jesus declared was saved because of his faith.

Now coming into Jericho, great crowds are pressing around Him. Jesus’ fame has reached it’s climax and thousands are following Him into Jerusalem where they will throw down palm branches and cheer Him as the Messiah King. So it says in vs. 1 that Jesus was passing through Jericho. At least that was how it would seem to the casual observer. That this was all just chance, circumstance. Jesus just happened to be passing by. It says the same thing in the previous chapter about Jesus’ encounter with the blind beggar Bartimeaus. It would seem as though Jesus was just passing by and Bartimeaus happened to be in the vicinity. But Jesus doesn’t do anything haphazardly. God knows what is going to happen before it happens. He knows who is going to be there before they themselves know. Some of you here today may think that it’s just happenstance that you happen to be here today. You just happened to see a sign. You didn’t really plan on being here. But let me assure you, God knew you would be here today.   Today, Jesus is passing by. The kingdom of God is coming near. The question is how will you respond?

Well, there was a man in Jericho that responded in a dramatic way to the news that Christ passing by. The man’s name was Zaccheus. He was a chief tax collector and was very rich according to vs. 2. Now we should all be familiar with tax collectors by now. They were hated by everyone as traitors to their country. But they were also hated not only because of their politics but because they were unscrupulous. They extracted more taxes than really were required because the system allowed them to charge a commission. And so they would charge much more than they should and pocket the overage, and they could get away with this because the Roman government backed them up. But Zaccheus wasn’t just a normal tax collector, that was bad enough, but he was the chief tax collector. That means he was the regional manager of the tax collectors that worked in that area. So he was a very rich man, and everyone knew that he made his money by taking advantage of his own people. He would have been well known, and hated by all.

But though Zaccheus was very rich, yet implied in this account is the fact that he was very unsatisfied with his life. His name Zaccheus meant “pure.” And yet he knew that he was anything but pure. His name must have been the brunt of many a joke in the town as people would have said his name with derision. It says in vs. 3 that he wanted to see who Jesus was. Obviously, the fame of Jesus had reached this town. He had probably already heard about many of Jesus’ miracles long before He healed the blind beggar outside of town. Chances are he heard of Jesus raising Lazarus from the dead just a few months before in Bethany which was just down the road a ways. People were saying that never a man spoke like this Man spoke. People were wondering aloud if Jesus was indeed the Messiah.

So the implication in this passage is that Zaccheus was miserable in his sin. His riches had not made him happy. He was the chief of sinners, and he knew it. And he was miserable. But somehow he understood that Jesus offered more than just physical healing, Jesus offered spiritual healing; hope of reconciliation with God. And Zaccheus knew that he needed spiritual healing. Under the system of Judaism, tax collectors were not even allowed in the synagogue or the temple. They basically were unredeemable people in the eyes of the religious establishment. And so he had no recourse for his sinfulness. But when he hears Jesus is passing through his town, he is desperate to see him.

Now there was one other characteristic of Zaccheus that we are all familiar with. Zaccheus was very short in stature. He was vertically impaired. That probably was a point of considerable suffering for him. The abuse that he must have suffered from being short may have contributed to him choosing a career path such as he had. I heard somebody describe Zaccheus once as looking kind of like Danny Devito, the actor. And I’ve had that image stuck inside my head ever since. Now you have it too. But I don’t know if he really looked like that. But I’m sure that his stature only added to the derision that people felt towards him. But though he might have overcome his stature in the business field, yet amongst the crowd that day he was unable to see Jesus over the shoulders of the townspeople.

Vs. 4 “So he ran on ahead and climbed up into a sycamore tree in order to see Him, for He was about to pass through that way.” Now this reveals the desperation that Zaccheus felt. He was a man that occupied a pretty exalted position in the community. He was well known. And he was already the object of derision. But this man must have been so desperate to see Jesus that he could care less what people thought about him. He could care less that climbing a tree would make him the laughing stock of the town. He just wanted to see Jesus.

You know, I was thinking the other day about the world’s version of beauty. There is more money spent by the average woman today on makeup and beauty products and treatments in one year than is probably spent on an entire family’s groceries in many third world countries. My daughter was telling me the other day about a mascara that is very popular right now that costs $60. And yet people will pay almost any price if something promises to help you achieve beauty. But the standard of beauty that the media puts out there is so distorted and unrealistic. Unfortunately a lot of us buy into it, and if we don’t see ourselves as measuring up to that standard, then we become disillusioned, we feel disenfranchised from society.

Thankfully, God doesn’t see us that way. We are all precious in His sight. As we have been studying Genesis on Wednesday nights we have heard repeatedly that God created us in His image, in His likeness. David said in Psalm 139 that “I am fearfully and wonderfully made.” Listen, I have news for you. None of us are perfect. Not even the airbrushed models in the magazines are perfect. But God is not concerned about our outward appearance. God is concerned about our hearts. And God loves us regardless of how we may appear to the world. He loves us in spite of our deficiencies. God made you for a purpose. He knew you when you were still in your mother’s womb. He loved you even before you were born. Jesus didn’t look at Zaccheus the way his neighbors did. Jesus saw his heart, and he saw a heart that was mourning over his sin, and seeking after righteousness. Jesus saw a soul worth saving. And Jesus says in vs. 10 that He came to earth to seek and to save those that are lost. Jesus came to seek and to save those that are disillusioned, that are disenfranchised.

So Jesus comes directly under the tree that Zaccheus is sitting in and He looks up at him and says, “Zaccheus, hurry and come down, for today I must stay at your house.” I think it is amazing that upon hearing Jesus call out his name, that Zaccheus didn’t fall right out of the tree. Here’s this guy that is hated by everyone, despised, and literally looked down upon as a despicable human being, and yet Jesus not only stops and talks to him, but He knows his name. And not only does He know his name, Jesus says He must come to stay at his house.

Listen, if you met a stranger walking down the street, and they came up to you and called you by name, wouldn’t you be amazed? Wouldn’t you wonder what else they knew about you? Zaccheus must have realized that if Jesus knew his name, then he knew everything else about him too. For he had never met Jesus. And yet Jesus knew his name. I’m sure that when Jesus looked Zaccheus in the eye and called out his name, he knew that Jesus could see right through him and knew all about him.

Did you know that God knows your name? Do you know that God knows where you live, what you do inside your house, what you do and say and think when you are alone? Do you know that God knows your innermost thoughts? And yet even though God knows you, He knows every sin that you have done, yet He still desires you to be reconciled to Him. He still wants your company, your fellowship, your love. What an amazing thing! That the Holy, Righteous Creator of the Universe wants you, to love you, and to have your love be for Him. Did you know that is why God created you? God created mankind to be the bride of Christ. To be like Him, in His likeness, made in His image, to be a helpmate to Him as Eve was to Adam. And to make it possible for sinful man to be united with Him, God made Jesus a sacrifice for our sins, that we might be made righteous and holy too, so that we would be a suitable mate to His Son.

I don’t know about you, but if Jesus said to me that I was to come down from the tree because He was coming to stay at my house, I would want to make a quick phone call home and see if I couldn’t get the place straightened up real quick first. I would want to run ahead and hide a few things in the closet before Jesus got there. Wouldn’t you? If Jesus were to follow you home from church today, would you be ashamed of what He might see there? How about if He decided to spend the night?

Yet Vs. 6 says that Zaccheus climbed down from the tree and received Him gladly. Listen, the difference for Zaccheus was that he wasn’t hiding anything. He realized that Jesus already knew everything about him. And Zaccheus was willing to have Jesus come home, he was glad to have Jesus come home with him, because Zaccheus was sick and tired of being sinful and wicked. He knew that Jesus had already seen his sinfulness and wickedness. He had nothing to hide. He had already opened his heart to Jesus. Now he gladly opened his house to Jesus. He was ready to receive Jesus as Lord, and that meant that he was ready to clean house.

How about you? Are you ready to clean house? Are you ready to empty out the closets that are hiding your secret sins? Have you ever really opened your heart, realizing that God sees the secrets of men’s hearts? If you really believe that, if you are truly mourning over your sin and hungering for righteousness, then you should be glad to receive Jesus into your house. Let Him cleanse you from every sin and stain, from every impure thing. Listen, there is great joy in knowing forgiveness. Of confessing and repenting of your sins and knowing God forgives you. Zaccheus meant pure. But up to now he had been impure, unholy, unrighteous. But when Jesus came in to his heart, Zaccheus was finally pure. And when a person really gets their heart right, then their house gets right too.

By the way, I came across an interesting historical note attributed to Clement of Alexandria, one of the church fathers. Clement said that Zaccheus became a very prominent Christian leader and ended up a pastor of the church in Caesarea, later to be succeeded by none other than Cornelius, the centurion. That may be the reason that Zaccheus is named by Luke. By the time that Luke writes this gospel, Zaccheus may have already been well known as a church leader.

Now as an interesting side note Luke reveals in vs. 7 the fickleness of the crowd. When they saw Jesus go off with Zaccheus, they all began to grumble, saying, “He has gone to be the guest of a man who is a sinner.” Like I said, the same crowd that is fawning after Jesus in Jericho ends up throwing palm branches and calling out “Hosanna!” in Jerusalem a few days later. But then a few days after that it’s the same crowd that calls out “crucify Him!” Popular opinion is fickle, it’s temperamental. Jesus doesn’t ever go out of His way to please a crowd or to attempt to draw a crowd. In fact, He often seems to go out of His way to show that the crowd is drawn to the broad way that leads to destruction, but few are they that find the narrow way that leads to eternal life. Popularity and great crowds are never a barometer of spiritual truth, ladies and gentlemen.

Now I’m sure you can’t help but notice that there seems to be a lot of information missing between vs. 6 and vs. 8. Obviously, vs. 8 illustrates that Zaccheus was converted. But the details are missing. Under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit, Luke seems to jump from Jesus announcing that He is coming to spend the night with Zaccheus to Zaccheus’s statement of how he will right the wrongs he has committed.

And yet I think that this is purposely written this way to provoke the reader to ask a very important question. The question is this: How do we validate salvation? I have been a pastor of this church now for 8 years, and I have been in Christian ministry many years before that. But even though I spend my life trying to tell people what it means to be saved, sometimes I feel like I am completely inadequate to even lead someone to Christ. I can tell them all the things that they need to understand, all the elements, all the doctrines, and yet I cannot ensure that they are really, truly saved. Sometimes I don’t really know whether they have truly been transformed or not.

And so I ask myself this same question; how do we evaluate salvation? Is it by some emotional response to the gospel? If someone cries and has an emotional response, is that an indication that they are saved? Or is it like the charismatics claim? Does one tell a Christian by the fact that they had a charismatic, ecstatic experience? How is real salvation to be evaluated?

Well I think that the answer is found right here in the example of Zaccheus. The validation of salvation is found in the evidence of true repentance. I think the Holy Spirit deliberately leaves out all the details of what Jesus must have said to Zaccheus. He deliberately leaves out the details of what kind of prayer that Zaccheus might have prayed, or what his emotional state might have been. Instead, the Holy Spirit focuses our attention on Zaccheus’ contrition. See repentance is so much more than simply saying I’m sorry, or even feeling sorry. Repentance is doing a 180 degree turn and going the other direction. Repentance is not just being forgiven for your sins, but turning from your sins, and as we see in the case of Zaccheus, even making restitution for your sins. Now that is a novel concept in 21st century evangelical Christianity, I know. But that is the result of salvation that we see in this passage, and I think it is at the heart of the gospel.

You see, Jesus went into the house of a sinner, but He came out of the house of a saint. That is the transformation of salvation. Salvation is conversion, from the heart of a sinner, to the heart of a saint. From a son of the devil, to a son of God. From a worker of evil, to a worker of righteousness. That is the result of transformation and the mark or evidence of salvation. That is what James 2 is talking about when he says, “I will show you my faith by my works.”

See, Zaccheus is presented here in stark contrast to the rich young ruler of the last chapter. The rich young ruler thought he was righteous, he did good deeds, but Jesus revealed that his heart was evil because he had made money his idol. But this man who knew he was a sinner, was desperate to be converted, Jesus reveals his heart is evil and he repents. And then he shows his repentance by his works; he makes restitution for his sins to the point of becoming bankrupt.

Listen to vs. 8, “Zaccheus stopped and said to the Lord, “Behold, Lord, half of my possessions I will give to the poor, and if I have defrauded anyone of anything, I will give back four times as much.” I mean, I’m not very good at math, but I can figure out that if you give half of your money to the poor, and with the other half you give all the people that you defrauded in your life 4 times what you took from them, the end result is going to be bankruptcy. Especially in the case of the chief of tax collectors. This guy made his money defrauding people. And so the only reason he doesn’t do what Jesus told the rich young ruler to do in the last chapter – that is, sell everything and give it to the poor- the only reason he doesn’t do that is that he knows that he needs to make right the people that he defrauded first and that is going to take half of his money. Then the other half he will give to the poor. Then he is going to be broke. But though he may be broke, he is going to be right with God and right with his fellow man. Listen, you can’t say you are right with God and yet hate your husband, or your neighbor, or cheat someone in business. So the scripture indicates that Zaccheus gladly exchanged his sordid life for righteousness from God, even if it meant that he had to lose everything to gain it. That’s a good definition of a citizen of the kingdom of God, by the way. Someone who gladly gives up self rule to submission to the rule of Christ in their lives.

Some of you, if you are paying attention, are saying to yourself right about now, “boy, this is starting to sound just like all of Roy’s other sermons. You have to give everything up to enter the kingdom. You have to forsake everything to be a disciple of Christ. Doesn’t Roy know any other sermon? Isn’t there any other way to be a Christian?” Well, if that is your attitude then I am afraid that I am going to disappoint you once more. You can have no other god before our God. Money can’t be your god. Career can’t be your god. Your wife or husband or boyfriend can’t be your god. Anything that you put ahead of God is an idol. A false god. And the first commandment is that you shall have no other gods before Me.

You may say, but wait a minute Roy, you just quoted the law. And we’re under grace now, we’re not under the law. Really? Well I would like to point out to you the effect of grace. Zaccheus was saved by grace through faith, the same way we all are, the same way Abraham was, by the way. The same way Moses was and everyone that has been saved in human history. All are saved by grace through faith. But grace doesn’t eliminate the law, it satisfies it. It even goes beyond it. That’s illustrated by the fact that Zaccheus doesn’t just come up with this figure of repaying four times what he defrauded out of his imagination. No, Zaccheus, sinner though he was, knew the law. Zaccheus knew that in Exodus 22 the law required that if you robbed someone by a breach of trust, then double restitution was required. Zaccheus doubles that. Grace doesn’t permit him to forget about the law, but grace provokes him to go twice as far as the law required. Grace doesn’t exempt you from doing what is right. Grace just exempts you from the penalty for doing wrong.

The law not only convicted Zaccheus of his sin, but it revealed the requirement of repentance and restitution. It revealed the attitude of a heart that desired to be right with God. Paul said that the law was good, if one used it lawfully. But the law was given to show us our sinfulness, and to show us our need for a Savior. The law shows us the standard of God’s righteousness. The difference under grace is that we now have the penalty of the law removed, so that we do not die for our sins, but we are forgiven our sins and cleansed of all unrighteousness. The difference under grace is that having been credited with Christ’s righteousness, we are now given the Spirit of Christ to live in us that we might do the works of righteousness by the strength that He provides. God describes that process of salvation in Ezek. 36:26-27 “Moreover, I will give you a new heart and put a new spirit within you; and I will remove the heart of stone from your flesh and give you a heart of flesh. 27 “I will put My Spirit within you and cause you to walk in My statutes, and you will be careful to observe My ordinances.”

That is the power of a transformed life, by the way. It is the power of the testimony that you who were a sinner, a dirty rotten scoundrel, have been made into a new creature, old things are passed away. But your testimony to the world of God’s saving power is that you now give where you once took, share instead of being greedy, love instead of hate, do good instead of evil. That’s the testimony of the saved. That’s the evidence of a transformed heart.

Now Zaccheus’ statement of repentance elicits an amazing response from Jesus. Vs. 9 And Jesus said to him, “Today salvation has come to this house, because he, too, is a son of Abraham.” Zaccheus is saved. Why? Because he is a son of Abraham. What does that mean? Well, I alluded to it just a minute ago. Abraham is the father of faith. Saving faith. Paul says in Gal. 3:6-7 “Even so Abraham BELIEVED GOD, AND IT WAS RECKONED TO HIM AS RIGHTEOUSNESS. 7 Therefore, be sure that it is those who are of faith who are sons of Abraham.”

Listen, what does it mean to have faith, to believe? What does it mean to have saving faith? I will tell you. It doesn’t mean that you merely believe that God exists, or even that Jesus exists. The Bible says that the demons also believe and they are not saved. Faith means trusting in Christ as your Lord. As the Lord of your life. Trusting Him enough to surrender everything to follow Him. To discard every treasure for the sake of knowing the greatest treasure; to know that you are forgiven. Trust Him enough to forsake your sins. Trusting that God has justified you by the blood of Jesus Christ shed as the Passover Lamb upon a cross as your substitute. The kind of faith that will turn away from everything that the world says is valuable, for the sake of knowing Jesus as Lord.

Do you have that kind of faith? If you do, then your conversion ought to resemble that of Zaccheus. Your repentance should stir you to make things right with those you have wronged, and give up everything that hinders you from following Christ every day, with all your heart, all your soul, all your strength and all your might. No more idols. No more hidden closets. Everything laid out for His inspection.

Listen, today Jesus is passing by. You happened to be here. But it is not by chance. Jesus wants you to come down off your ivory tower of respectability, and invite Him into your house, welcome Him to stay with you, not just for the night, but for the rest of your life. Jesus said in Rev. 3:20 ‘Behold, I stand at the door and knock; if anyone hears My voice and opens the door, I will come in to him and will dine with him, and he with Me.” What is your response to Jesus? He is passing by. Do not let Him leave without seeing Him today, without surrendering to Him today.

Jesus said in vs. 10 in our text, “For the Son of Man has come to seek and to save that which was lost.” Jesus is passing by today. He came seeking you, the lost. Will you invite Him to come home with you today? He is here now. Don’t miss this opportunity. You don’t know when He might come this way again. Today is the day of salvation. Let’s pray.

 

Posted in Sermons | Tags: church on the beach, surfers church, worship on the beach |

The ultimate sacrifice, Luke 18: 31-43

Aug

3

2014

thebeachfellowship

On the 17th of March, 2010, a SEAL team 6 squadron of special operators were attempting to take out an enemy that was barricaded inside a compound in Afghanistan. Among the special operators involved in the mission was Adam Brown, a man that had overcome tremendous obstacles in his life such as drug addiction as the result of accepting Jesus as his Savior. In the years following his conversion, he had continued an uphill battle against all sorts of difficulties and physical impairments in order to eventually be accepted as a member of one of the most elite fighting forces in the world.  And he did so while maintaining his testimony as one who had been redeemed by the power of Christ to save.  On this particular night, the U.S. Forces mission was in grave danger of being compromised.  They were engaging the enemy in a fire fight, and a number of their team had become pinned down by very heavy fire from the enemy compound. In an effort to protect his men, Adam Brown left the safety of his position and  charged the enemy to gain a better vantage point, drawing fire away from his pinned down comrades and placing himself in the direct line of fire. His selfless action relieved the attack on his men, but unfortunately the action resulted in Adam being struck by enemy fire. One other member of  his team was  also wounded, but Adam’s heroic action saved the rest of his team.   However, tragically, Adam Brown paid the ultimate sacrifice as the result of his wounds.  He left behind a wife and two young children.  There is a book written about Adam called Fearless, that will be coming out in the near future as a movie.  The producers say that they will not diminish the Christian testimony that Adam had.  I hope that it will be a way to expand Adam’s impact for the Lord to millions of people as the Lord continues to use his life as a witness for the gospel.

We rightly hold up such men as Adam Brown as the finest examples of heroism.  Jesus Himself said that “greater love has no man than this, than a man lays down his life for his friends.”  We often talk about our Christianity in terms of God loving us, and our love for God.  But I wonder how far are we willing to take that kind of love?  Christ loved us so much that He was willing to become the ultimate sacrifice for us.  But the question I put to you today is are you willing to lay down your life because of your love for Christ?

So I have entitled today’s message as The Ultimate Sacrifice.  And this message should be viewed in the context of the passage immediately before in which the rich young ruler was unwilling to sacrifice his riches and possessions which defined his life in order to follow Christ and enter into eternal life.  And in response to that tragic response to the gospel, in  vs. 28  Peter says, “Behold, we have left everything and followed You.” And Matthew records that Peter adds to that statement, “what then shall there be for us?”

Jesus answers in vs. 29 that “Truly I say to you, there is no one who has left house or wife or brothers or parents or children, for the sake of the kingdom of God, who will not receive many times as much at this time and in the age to come, eternal life.”  In other words, there will be an eternal reward for those that are willing to make earthly sacrifices for the sake of the kingdom of God.

Now in that context of sacrifice, Jesus takes the 12 disciples apart from the crowd and tells them that He is going to give Himself as the ultimate sacrifice.  He says in vs. 31, “Behold, we are going up to Jerusalem, and all things which are written through the prophets about the Son of Man will be accomplished.  For He will be handed over to the Gentiles, and will be mocked and mistreated and spit upon,  and after they have scourged Him, they will kill Him; and the third day He will rise again.”

But the disciples don’t understand what He is talking about.  Vs. 34 “But the disciples understood none of these things, and the meaning of this statement was hidden from them, and they did not comprehend the things that were said.”  Luke says the same thing three different ways I think to emphasize the utter lack of comprehension concerning the purpose and plan of the Messiah.  He says they couldn’t understand it, they couldn’t see it, and they couldn’t comprehend it.  In other words, they didn’t have a clue what He was talking about.

Now the problem wasn’t that Jesus wasn’t making Himself clear, the problem was that what Jesus was saying didn’t mesh with their theology.  They had their Messianic theology all worked out.  All Jews knew what the rabbis taught concerning the coming of the Messiah.  Their theology taught that when the Messiah comes, He would be a king in the line of David, and He would take back the throne of Israel.  He was going to conquer all the enemies of Israel.  He would bring prosperity and blessing back to the Jews.  They believed that Israel would then take it’s place as the reigning nation of the world and all the other nations would come bow down to them.

The thing is, they had so many scriptures that seemed to back up that theology that I cannot even begin to show them to you this morning.  We don’t have time.  But practically half of the Psalms speak of this King who will crush all their enemies and rule over the world and bring peace to Israel.  I’ll just give you an example from Isaiah and you can follow this on your own if you are so inclined. Isaiah 9:6-7 “For a child will be born to us, a son will be given to us; And the government will rest on His shoulders; And His name will be called Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Eternal Father, Prince of Peace. 7 There will be no end to the increase of His government or of peace, On the throne of David and over his kingdom, To establish it and to uphold it with justice and righteousness from then on and forevermore. The zeal of the LORD of hosts will accomplish this.”

So the disciples have a big problem with what Jesus is saying.  That’s why Luke says it three different ways that they couldn’t understand it.  Their theology didn’t allow for a suffering Savior.  They believed in a conquering king.  And so Jesus announcing that He was going to be arrested and killed must mean that He is not really the Messiah.  And that is a real problem for them, because they have left their homes, their families and their jobs in order to follow Him, in hope that when He comes into His kingdom, they will sit on thrones on his right hand and left hand and judge the nations with Him.  They think that they have too much invested in this guy to see Him get killed off.

The problem is that they don’t include all the scriptural prophecies in their theology, because they have a theology that they particularly like and they don’t fit the template.  They like their prosperity and blessing theology just fine.  But no one likes the suffering and dying theology.  So all the scriptures that talked about suffering and dying they somehow had spiritualized or just out right ignored for the sake of their theology.

Folks, I hope you are getting the picture here.  I hope you are catching the analogy.  Because the modern church today has it’s own pet theology as well.  And the God of the Bible doesn’t really always mesh with our theology.  The Christian experience that we like to promote and believe in is often at odds with the Christian experience that is taught in the Bible.  I’m sorry to be the bearer of bad news.  But I’m just telling you what the Bible says.  I’m telling you what Jesus says.  And I’m afraid that the truth of the gospel has run afoul of a lot of so called evangelical Christian’s theology.  So the dilemma that a lot of people have is do we continue to worship our pet view of God, the God that we think is going to work everything out for us so that we never have to get sick, we never have to suffer, we never lose our possessions, we never go bankrupt, we never get persecuted… or do we pick up our cross and follow Jesus Christ to the cross?

Do I need to remind you of the words of Jesus in Luke 9:23-24  “And He was saying to them all, “If anyone wishes to come after Me, he must deny himself, and take up his cross daily and follow Me. 24 “For whoever wishes to save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for My sake, he is the one who will save it.”

Now Jesus references that the prophets spoke of the sufferings that were prescribed for Him.  And I just want to share a couple of them with you, just so you know what He was talking about.  I told you while ago that many references are found in the Psalms that speak of the Messiah being a conquering King.  But we have to be careful not to cherry pick our way through the scriptures, claiming the ones we like and discarding the ones we don’t.  The Jews should have considered for instance Psalm 22 which speaks of the sufferings of Christ. Psalm  22:1-2 “My God, my God, why have You forsaken me? Far from my deliverance are the words of my groaning.  O my God, I cry by day, but You do not answer; And by night, but I have no rest.”  It goes on to say in vs. 14 “I am poured out like water, And all my bones are out of joint; My heart is like wax; It is melted within me.  My strength is dried up like a potsherd, And my tongue cleaves to my jaws; And You lay me in the dust of death. For dogs have surrounded me; A band of evildoers has encompassed me; They pierced my hands and my feet.  I can count all my bones. They look, they stare at me;  They divide my garments among them, And for my clothing they cast lots.”  All of that would be fulfilled at the cross.

Or perhaps they should have not only considered Isaiah 9, but also Isaiah 53; 3, “He was despised and forsaken of men, A man of sorrows and acquainted with grief; And like one from whom men hide their face He was despised, and we did not esteem Him. Surely our griefs He Himself bore, And our sorrows He carried; Yet we ourselves esteemed Him stricken, Smitten of God, and afflicted. But He was pierced through for our transgressions, He was crushed for our iniquities; The chastening for our well-being fell upon Him, And by His scourging we are healed.”

Now why was Jesus taking them aside to tell them that He must suffer and die?  I believe it was because Jesus was on His way to the cross.  He was deliberately, methodically going according to the plan predetermined in eternity past, that He would offer Himself as a sacrifice for the sins of the world.  He would be the substitute for those that would trust in Him for the forgiveness of their sins.  This was the plan of God from eternity past.   On the day of Pentecost after Jesus’ resurrection, Peter would make that exact point in his message.  In Acts 2:23 he says,  “this Man, delivered over by the predetermined plan and foreknowledge of God, you nailed to a cross by the hands of godless men and put Him to death.”

Perhaps what the disciples fail to realize is that the earthly ministry of Jesus Christ is coming to a close.  He is on His way to Jerusalem.  It is the Passover season and people are joining them from the various regions and there is this huge entourage of the multitude that will sweep into Jerusalem with Jesus riding on a donkey’s colt and they will call out “Hosanna, to the Son of David; BLESSED IS HE WHO COMES IN THE NAME OF THE LORD; Hosanna in the highest!”  It’s going to seem like to the disciples that Jesus is on His way to receiving the kingdom, He is about to be coronated, and yet within a few days that very crowd that called out “Hosanna!” will cry out, “away with Him, crucify Him!”

They do not realize that He is about to hand over the dispensation of His kingdom, the stewardship of His kingdom to them.  That He will be crucified and buried, and in three days He will rise from the grave and a few weeks from then He will ascend to His Father in Heaven.  They don’t understand that He will entrust the kingdom to them, and that they will have to suffer the same hardships that He suffered.  As the apostle Paul said in Phil. 3:10 “that I may know Him and the power of His resurrection and the fellowship of His sufferings, being conformed to His death.”

Jesus knew that they would indeed join with Him in the fellowship of His sufferings.  Peter would be hanged upside down on a cross.  James would die at Passover as well just 11 years later than Jesus.  Andrew would be crucified.  Matthew was killed by the sword.  James the son of Alpheus was thrown from the temple and then clubbed until he died. Thomas was killed with a spear.  Matthias, who took the place of Judas was beheaded as was the apostle Paul.

I’m sure that some of you sitting here today are thinking, yeah, but that was the apostles.  They were specially picked out by Christ for that role and they will get special recognition in heaven.  But that is not for us.  They did that so that we could live the victorious life of blessing and health and wealth. I’m afraid that this false thinking has overtaken even the elect.  I’m afraid that we have forgotten that we are all called to be disciples.  And that we are called in the great commission to make disciples.  I’m afraid that we are short selling Christianity today as a pie in the sky and eat it here too type of religion that requires no sacrifice on our part, no suffering. We are told it’s all supposed to be joy and peace here on earth.

I would just like to briefly remind you of what Jesus had to say about discipleship.  He said in Matt. 10:24 “A disciple is not above his teacher, nor a slave above his master.”  In Matt. 10:34-38  “Do not think that I came to bring peace on the earth; I did not come to bring peace, but a sword. 35 “For I came to SET A MAN AGAINST HIS FATHER, AND A DAUGHTER AGAINST HER MOTHER, AND A DAUGHTER-IN-LAW AGAINST HER MOTHER-IN-LAW; 36 and A MAN’S ENEMIES WILL BE THE MEMBERS OF HIS HOUSEHOLD. 37 “He who loves father or mother more than Me is not worthy of Me; and he who loves son or daughter more than Me is not worthy of Me. 38 “And he who does not take his cross and follow after Me is not worthy of Me.”

He taught His disciples in Luke 14 that must count the cost if they were to enter the kingdom of God.  He said in Luke 14:33 “So then, none of you can be My disciple who does not give up all his own possessions.”  He said in Matt. 10:22 “You will be hated by all because of My name, but it is the one who has endured to the end who will be saved.”

Listen, I am afraid that we have short sold the gospel of Jesus Christ.  We have told everyone that it doesn’t cost us anything to come to Christ when Jesus Himself says that it will cost you your life.  It will cost you your family.  It may cost you your home.  It may cost you your possessions, your riches.  I will guarantee you one thing it will cost;  it will cost you your idols.  Whatever it is that you are holding onto.  Whatever it is that you are not willing to renounce for the sake of the kingdom.

But you say, wait a minute!  What I am holding onto isn’t a sin.  It’s not something that the Bible says is a sin.  Well, there is no law against being rich is there?  Yet, because the rich young ruler was not willing to obey Christ and sell everything and follow Him, he revealed it was an idol.  He put his riches above following Christ.  And he went away sad because he knew that because he made his possessions his god that disqualified him from the kingdom of heaven.

Listen, Jesus made the ultimate sacrifice for us that we might make the ultimate sacrifice for Him.  What is that, you ask?  It is surrendering your soul, your life, your ambitions, everything surrendered to the authority, the Lordship of Jesus Christ.  That is what discipleship requires.  Everything.

Jesus makes it clear in Mark 8 that salvation requires complete trust and faith in Christ.  Not just a feeling, but acting on that faith by surrendering everything to follow Him.  Surrendering your will, your life, your all for Him.  That is the only way to receive eternal life and become a disciple.  And discipleship is a daily process of crucifixion, of crucifying your life for His life lived in you. [Mar 8:34-37 NASB] 34 And He summoned the crowd with His disciples, and said to them, “If anyone wishes to come after Me, he must deny himself, and take up his cross and follow Me. 35 “For whoever wishes to save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for My sake and the gospel’s will save it. 36 “For what does it profit a man to gain the whole world, and forfeit his soul? 37 “For what will a man give in exchange for his soul?”

Now let’s look in closing at a simple illustration that Luke gives of a person who exemplifies leaving everything to become a disciple and gain eternal life.  As Jesus is heading towards Jericho on His way to Jerusalem, there is a blind beggar sitting by the road.  Mark tells us this man was named Bartimeaus.  Undoubtedly he was a fixture in the community.  He probably had his spot by the gate that he sat at and begged everyday.  A blind man in that day had very little other resources, there would have been no welfare system.  He was helpless, living on the street and begging.  All he had would have been the cloak on his back that served as his coat and his bed.  And the blind man heard the commotion, he heard the crowd following Jesus and he asked someone what was going on.  And they told him that Jesus of Nazareth was passing by.  And this blind man hearing that springs into action.  He begins crying out to Jesus in a loud voice.

Now this blind beggar illustrates the exemplary components of what it means to become a disciple of Christ.   First of all, notice that this man is desperate.  He realizes that he has no other hope. There is no possible cure for his blindness.  Jesus is the only hope he has.  So he yells as loudly as he can.  And when they tell him to shut up he just screams all the louder.  He is absolutely desperate.  That marks the kind of desperation that is required for those seeking eternal life.

Secondly, he is a beggar.  That is a direct illustration of the principle Jesus presented in the Sermon on the Mount;  He said blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of God.  The word used there actually references the act of begging.  Of being helpless, hopeless, totally dependent on the kindness and mercy of someone else.  So desperation and recognizing that you are spiritually bankrupt, a beggar.

Thirdly, He says, “Jesus, Son of David.”  He has his theology right.  They told him it was Jesus of Nazareth, but he calls out “Jesus Son of David.”  It’s a Messianic title.  He calls Jesus his  King. And then He calls Him “Lord.”  Kyrios.  It is a word for deity, but it also means Master, Sovereign, Possessor of All Things.   This guy knows that Jesus is the Son of God and is willing to surrender everything to Him.

Fourthly, he says, “have mercy on me.”  This is an indication that he comes in repentance. He comes asking for mercy.  Mercy is not getting what you deserve.  He is asking Christ to be merciful.  To not give him what he deserves as a result of his sinfulness.

And fifthly, he recognizes that he was blind.  When Jesus asks him what do you want Me to do for you?  He answers, “I want to regain my sight.”  He knows he is blind.  Now that may seem obvious, but the fact is that most people are not saved because they don’t recognize that they are lost.  I said last week that though it was sad that the rich young ruler went away from Jesus without being saved, yet at least it was good that he went away having been confronted with the fact that he was a sinner.  Listen, you have to realize that you are a sinner before you can be saved.  You have to know that you are lost.  And when you come to that realization and in desperation come to Jesus as your only hope of salvation, and call on Him in faith and repentance than He will save you.  This man not only recognizes that he  is blind, but he recognizes that Jesus is the source of life.

So when Jesus hears him calling to Him He calls Bartimaeus to be brought to him.  And the blind beggar throws off his cloak, gets up from the gate where he has been sitting for years and comes to Jesus.

Jesus says to him in vs. 42, “Receive your sight; your faith has made you well.”  Actually, the translators don’t do this justice.  Literally it is your faith has saved you.  The Greek word is sozo, it means saved.  Listen, Jesus didn’t need people’s faith to heal them.  Jesus healed demoniacs, dead people (He brought them back to life).  He healed people with faith and without faith.  He says that your faith has saved you.  You may not need faith to be healed but you need faith to be saved, don’t you? Eph. 2:8  “For by grace you have been saved through faith; and that not of yourselves, it is the gift of God.” [Heb 11:6 NASB] 6 And without faith it is impossible to please Him, for he who comes to God must believe that He is and that He is a rewarder of those who seek Him.

And then look quickly at the conclusion of this man’s salvation. Luke 18:43 “Immediately he regained his sight and began following Him, glorifying God; and when all the people saw it, they gave praise to God.”  This blind beggar becomes saved, and then immediately he becomes a disciple.  He leaves everything and begins to follow Jesus. He has no interest in going back to the squalor of the beggar’s corner by the gate.  He doesn’t put back on the filthy rag that was his cloak.  He is given sight and wants nothing more to do with the kind of life that he had before.  He knows there is nothing of value there. He realizes that Jesus is the source of life and therefore follows Him completely, leaving behind everything that once defined his existence.  And what was done in his life by the transforming power of Jesus Christ causes people to glorify God.  That’s the power of discipleship.  That’s the result of following Christ.

Maybe you are asking, Well, Roy, what does it mean to follow Christ?  How is that done on a practical level? The purpose of our salvation is to make us like Christ.  To be molded in His image. [Rom 8:29 NASB] 29 “For those whom He foreknew, He also predestined to become conformed to the image of His Son, so that He would be the firstborn among many brethren.”  God gives us the Spirit of Christ to live in our redeemed earthly bodies, that we might have the power to become conformed to His image, that Christ may live in us.  It is dying to ourselves, so that the Holy Spirit may live through our bodies.

On a practical level that means being obedient to His word; walking in accordance with the Holy Spirit who leads us by the word of God.  What He tells us to do in His word we do. Eph 2:10 “For we are His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand so that we would walk in them.”  And Romans 12: reminds us that even as Christ laid down His life for the kingdom, so God requires of disciples that we also lay down our lives for the kingdom.  Rom 12:1  “Therefore I urge you, brethren, by the mercies of God, to present your bodies a living and holy sacrifice, acceptable to God, which is your spiritual service of worship.”  And that process can be painful as we join in the fellowship of His sufferings.  Paul goes on to say in 2Tim. 2:3-5  “Suffer hardship with me, as a good soldier of Christ Jesus. 4 No soldier in active service entangles himself in the affairs of everyday life, so that he may please the one who enlisted him as a soldier. 5 Also if anyone competes as an athlete, he does not win the prize unless he competes according to the rules.”

Listen, there is a prize, a reward for those that suffer with Christ, that leave everything to follow Him.  Jesus told the disciples back in our text in Luke 18, “Truly I say to you, there is no one who has left house or wife or brothers or parents or children, for the sake of the kingdom of God, who will not receive many times as much at this time and in the age to come, eternal life.”  I hope that you will seek the eternal reward that God has prepared for those that love him above all else.  I pray that your eyes may receive sight, so that having seen Jesus, you realize that He is the prize worth surrendering everything to follow.

Posted in Sermons | Tags: church on the beach, surfers church, worship on the beach |

Blessed are the children, Luke 18: 15-17

Jul

20

2014

thebeachfellowship

There are two ways of looking at this incident which we are studying today.  There is the literal interpretation of how the kingdom of God relates to children which is expressed in vs. 16.  And there is the metaphorical application of how becoming like a child relates to entrance in the kingdom of God which is expressed in vs. 17.  Both are appropriate perspectives revealed through the text.  Jesus is obviously expressing both principles in this passage.  So we will look at them in that order; first how the kingdom of God relates to children, and secondly, how becoming like a child relates to entrance in the kingdom.

Now before we get into those two principles, vs. 16 sets it up for us.  Remember, this is a literal, actual event in the life of Christ, and so we must always approach a passage of scripture from the vantage point of it’s historical context first and foremost.

So first in the context of the chapter, let us consider why Luke positions this event in just this way.  As we remember the previous parable that Jesus gave in vs. 9-14, Jesus was teaching a parable of contrasts between the type of person that trusts in their own self righteousness, and that of the person typified by the tax collector that comes to God in humility, recognizing their unworthiness and their sinfulness.  The over arching principle taught in that parable is that humbleness is necessary to be accepted by God.  Jesus said that the tax collector went away justified whereas the self righteous Pharisee was not justified.  Justified means to be declared righteous.  And for God to accept a person into the kingdom of God, a man or woman must be righteous, even as God is righteous.

Now the Pharisee thought that his good deeds would be enough to make him justified before God.  But Jesus said that they were not.  The Bible says that all our own righteousness is as filthy rags before God, because we do our good deeds to be seen of men.  We do them with wrong motives.  Selfish motives.  But the tax collector was so ashamed of his sinfulness, of his unworthiness that he would not even lift up his eyes to heaven, but beat his breast and called upon God to be merciful to him, a sinner.  That attitude of humility was what precipitated his repentance.  And that is what God accepted.  David said in Psalm 51:17, “The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit; A broken and a contrite heart, O God, You will not despise.”  Humility then is the prerequisite for the repentant heart that God will accept, that God will justifiy. The principle God resists the proud, but gives grace to the humble is so important God repeats it three times in the Scriptures (Proverbs 3:34, James 4:6, 1 Peter 5:5).

So now to further illustrate this characteristic of humility that is so essential to salvation, Luke includes this incident where mothers and fathers are bringing their babies to Jesus to bless them.  Now first of all, please note that the Greek word translated as babies is “brephos”, which means a new born child, an infant.  Now that distinction is important.

What is happening here is typical of parents even today who wish to dedicate their new born babies to the Lord, to ask God’s blessing upon the child and to present the baby to the Lord.  We see that happening throughout Biblical history as well.  There was the time honored tradition of the father laying his hands upon his sons and blessing them such as in the case of Isaac and Jacob.  There is a prescription in the law that required bringing a new baby boy to the priest.  And there was the tradition of bringing a child to the synagogue to receive a blessing, to dedicate them to the Lord.

But the disciples see this as an unnecessary intrusion.  They think that it’s not going to be a good thing if people start lining up to see Jesus and present their babies to Him.  It was going to trouble Him unnecessarily and even hinder His work.  And so the disciples start turning them away.  And Jesus sees this and becomes indignant with  the disciples.  He says to them, ““Permit the children to come to Me, and do not hinder them, for the kingdom of God belongs to such as these.”

Now as I said, we are going to look first at the literal, historical context of what Jesus said.  He is literally saying let the children come to Me, do not hinder them, for to such belongs the kingdom of God.  If we are going to take that at face value, which I think is clearly the primary interpretation of this statement, then that means that children, these babies belong to the kingdom of heaven.  God has a special place for babies, for children who have not yet reached the age of accountability.

Babies and young children who have not reached the age of accountability are not able to make moral, spiritually responsible choices.  Are they sinful?  Yes, there is an innate sinful nature that is born into every man.  David said in Psalm 51:5  “Behold, I was brought forth in iniquity, And in sin my mother conceived me.” Rom. 5:12, Paul makes it clear that the sin nature is inherited through Adam.  “Therefore, just as through one man sin entered into the world, and death through sin, and so death spread to all men, because all sinned.” And Ephesians 2:3 makes it clear that we were born with the sin nature, which destined us for wrath, the judgment of God upon sinners.

So it’s important to realize that children, babies are born with a sinful nature that they have inherited from their parents, traceable all the way back to Adam.  But there is a time during which they have not reached the age of accountability, that they really don’t know the difference between right and wrong, when they are considered innocent before God.  They receive a special grace before God.

Now this principle is proven in this very teaching of Jesus.  He is saying in the previous parable that humility is the necessary ingredient of the man whom God will justify.  The man was not justified by what he did or did not do.  The man was justified by grace, given to Him by God who accepted the humility and repentance of his heart.  Now then if a man who was a self confessed sinner, who had willfully acted in rebellion against the law of God, had willfully committed sin against his neighbor, if this man was justified on the basis of his humility and repentance as an act of God’s grace, then how much more then would an innocent child, who did not know his right hand from his left, who does not know good from evil, and is the perfect picture of humility and total dependence upon grace, not be justified before God? That is how salvation is qualified by Paul in Eph. 2:8 “For by grace you have been saved through faith; and that not of yourselves, it is the gift of God.”  It is not something that you do, it is a gift of God.  And Jesus is making it clear here that babies are accepted in the kingdom of God by grace.  They haven’t done anything to deserve it, but God extends it to them on the basis of grace until the age of accountability.  Now the Bible doesn’t establish a set age at which a child is considered accountable.  I think it differs according to each child.  But we can be sure that there is an age where they are not considered accountable, and that is the very early years following birth.

This principle is illustrated for us in 2 Samuel 12.  There we find the familiar story of David and his sin with Bathsheba.  And as you recall, David sinned by taking Bathsheba who was another man’s wife and committing adultery with her and she became pregnant.  And to cover up his sin, David arranged to have Uriah her husband sent into battle and then abandoned there in order to have him killed.  This was a terrible sin which Nathan the prophet confronted David about.  And when David repented, God forgave him, but Nathan said, “”However, because of this deed you have given occasion to the enemies of the Lord to blaspheme, the child that is born to you shall surely die.”  So when Nathan went back to his house the baby became ill.   And if you recall the story then you will remember that David fasted and prayed on his face for 7 days for the health of the baby.  But the baby died.  And his servants were afraid to tell David that the baby had died, because of the grief that he had shown while he was sick.  But when David saw them whispering among themselves he knew that the baby had died and made them confirm it.  After they told him, David  arose from the ground, washed, anointed himself, changed his clothes, came into the house of the Lord and worshiped.

He goes to his house, they set food before him and he ate. And his servants said to him, “What is this thing that you have done? While the child was alive, you fasted and wept, when the child died you rose and ate food?” And he said, “While the child was still alive, I fasted and wept for I said…Who knows, the Lord may be gracious to me that the child may live. Now he’s died, why should I fast, can I bring him back again?” And then this confident statement, “I shall go to him, but he will not return to me.”  David knew that one day he too would die and go to heaven, and that he would see this child who had gone on before him.  That was David’s confidence.  That was one of many Old Testament examples.  And now in the New Testament, Jesus Christ the Son of David confirms that hope.  That unto these babies is given the kingdom of heaven.  If they die before the age of accountability, God in His grace will accept them into the kingdom.

Now in Mark’s account in Mark 10:16, he adds that after this Jesus “took them in His arms and began blessing them, laying His hands on them.”  Jesus blesses them because they are considered part of the kingdom of God.  He is praying over them.  That’s what it means to bless someone.  To ask God’s blessing upon them.  It’s not saying some special incantation that imparts some mystical power upon a person.  We say the blessing upon our food, don’t we?  But just because we bless our Big Mac, it isn’t going to make it a prime rib.  We bless it, we thank God for it, we ask God to use it for His purposes, but we don’t change it’s nature.  It’s still a Big Mac.

These babies in our care we should bring to the Lord to dedicate, to consecrate, to bless, to use for His purposes, but there will still come a day when they will reach the age of accountability where they will be able to determine right from wrong, to make moral decisions, to deliberately rebel against God.  And at that time they need to confess their sins, repent of their sins, and in faith and humility surrender their hearts and wills to God to serve him as Lord of their lives.  There must be a day when they personally take responsibility for their response to the gospel and be saved.

But this principle certainly should be of great assurance for those of us that have small children.  There is a special dispensation of grace that God affords babies and small children if they should die prematurely.  We can trust, like David, that we will go to them and join them one day in heaven if we are saved ourselves.

But that should also serve as a reminder of the tremendous responsibility that we have as parents.  There is only a few short years where there is that innocent spirit in the life of our children where we have this tremendous opportunity to reach them.  They will reach a point where they will begin to make their own decisions, and go their own way.  That is why Proverbs 22:6 says that we should “Train up a child in the way he should go, Even when he is old he will not depart from it.”

When our children are young that is the optimum time to instruct them in the way of the Lord.  That is the optimal time to bring your children to faith in Christ.  I just want to emphasize that the training and instruction of a child is the parent’s responsibility.  It’s augmented by the church, it may be supplemented by a Christian school, but it is primarily the parent’s responsibility to live out a godly example of faith to your children, and to teach your children the Word of God and ultimately lead them to Christ.  This is not a responsibility that you want to delegate to someone else.  God has given you a stewardship of your children.

Paul recognized that in the life of a young godly man named Timothy.  Timothy had been raised by his mother and grandmother.  And he says in 2Tim. 3:15 “that from childhood you have known the sacred writings which are able to give you the wisdom that leads to salvation through faith which is in Christ Jesus.” That’s the same word, “breathos”, from infancy his mother and grandmother taught him the word of God which was able to give him the wisdom that leads to salvation by faith.  How important it is to teach your children the Word of God from the time that they are babies.  That’s your first responsibility as parents.

The second responsibility is to model that kind of faith.  You know, it does no good to tell them that they need to surrender their hearts to God and then you live as though you are enslaved to your career.  Our kids are going to emulate what they see lived out in our lives, not necessarily what they hear.  I can’t help but be reminded of the song by Harry Chapin, “Cat’s in the Cradle.”  He starts by singing of his child being born.  “My child arrived just the other day, He came to the world in the usual way, But there were planes to catch, and bills to pay, He learned to walk while I was away. And he was talking before I knew it and as he grew He said, “I’m gonna be like you, Dad, You know I’m gonna be like you”  But then the child grows up, and the things the dad meant to do never really got done.  He was too busy.  And so at the conclusion of the song the young man is now grown and has a family of his own, and he too is too busy to do the things he should do.  And so the last verse says, “I’ve long since retired, my son’s moved away, I called him up just the other day. I said “I’d like to see you if you don’t mind”, He said ‘I’d love to Dad, if I could find the time. You see my new jobs a hassle, and the kids have the flu. But It’s sure nice talking to you, Dad, it’s been sure nice talking to you.’ And as I hung up the phone it occurred to me, He’d grown up just like me, My boy was just like me.”  We have a responsibility to raise our children, and our children are going to follow our example.

Thirdly, let me suggest that you love your children. What do I mean by that? Let them know your heart is for them. Be affectionate, tender, compassionate, sensitive, sacrificial, generous. Like Jesus did with the babies they brought to Him, take them in your lap.  Touch them.  I think the majority of psychological problems that children have today is that they don’t feel loved.  They feel abandoned, isolated.  They warm up their own dinners.  Let themselves into an empty house.  They isolate themselves behind headphones and behind laptops.  We need to do as Jesus did and touch our children.  Lavish love on them.  Sacrifice for them.  That may mean sacrificing that extra income that you could have got by working late or taking that extra job, or moving up the corporate ladder.  They don’t need an iphone so they can keep in touch with you.  They need to feel your touch.  Show them they matter.  Especially you Dads.  Take your little daughters on your lap and tell them how beautiful they are to you.  Kiss them everyday.  Real men kiss their daughters.  Ephesians 6:4 says Dad’s don’t provoke your children. Don’t exasperate them. Be utterly unselfish. Serve your children. Reward them when they do well. Make your home a joyful place. Do fun things with them. Love them.  Make them want to become the type of Christian that you model for them.  Model to them the sort of love God has for sinners. Sacrificial love.  Model that kind of love.

Now then the Lord moves from this principle of children’s acceptance into the kingdom to the metaphorical application.  He says in vs. 17, “Truly I say to you, whoever does not receive the Kingdom of God like a child shall not enter it at all.” Notice He does not say one must enter as a child.  But like a child.  Child likeness. There is a quality that children have that is essential to salvation. These little babies provide an illustration of how a person is saved. You are saved by an act of  divine sovereign grace.  You are saved as a result of your humility, your total dependence upon God for His grace, and His provision.  Not because of any good works that you have done.  You have achieved nothing morally. You have achieved nothing spiritually. You have achieved nothing  that can merit your salvation. And like a child, humble, trusting, unpretentious, dependent, weak, lacking any achievement, you come to the Kingdom. Jesus says if you don’t come to God like an infant, you will not enter the kingdom.

Ultimately, becoming like an infant means we need to be born again. In John 3 there is the story of Nicodemus who was a ruler of the Pharisees, and he came to Jesus one night to ask Him about the kingdom of God.  And Jesus said to him,  “Truly, truly, I say to you, unless one is born again he cannot see the kingdom of God.”  Just as a man is born in the flesh, so a man must be born again in the spirit to enter the kingdom of heaven.  We must become a new creation. Rom 8:8 says that “those who are in the flesh cannot please God.”

Jesus continues in John 3 to Nicodemus; “That which is born of the flesh is flesh, and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit. Do not be amazed that I said to you, ‘You must be born again.’”  So Jesus is saying that the way into the kingdom of God is by being born again.  It is by new birth.  Becoming a new creation.  Being born again in our spirit, by the Holy Spirit.
Now how does this new birth happen? It happens by humbling yourself like a little child.  Coming to God totally dependent upon His grace and mercy.  Surrendering your life into His care, to do His will.  It means coming like the tax collector in the previous parable, mourning over your sin, realizing that you are lost, that you are hopeless and helpless and in need of forgiveness.  The tax collector prayed a very simple, childlike prayer.  Any child could pray this prayer.  “God, be merciful to me, the sinner.”  That prayer of humility, of child like trust and faith, is the prayer that God justifies.  That is the prayer that God responds to.  It’s like the cry of an infant in the dark of the night.  And the mother hears the cry and  swoops the baby up in her arms and comforts him.  God is waiting to forgive, to comfort, to give life to those who recognize that they are lost and come to Him like a child, like an infant, helpless, dependent upon his love and grace.  Those that come like that God will justify, He will impart unto them the holiness and righteousness of Jesus Christ in exchange for their sins.  And then having been declared holy, God will give you the Holy Spirit to give new life to your spirit, to make you a new creation.  The Holy Spirit living in you gives life to your old body, so that you may do the works of Christ.

We are going to close out our service today by singing the old hymn “Rock of Ages.”  And I would just point out that third verse which I think exemplifies the type of child like faith which God accepts as we come to Him.   It says, “Nothing in my hand I bring, simply to the cross I cling; naked, come to thee for dress; helpless, look to thee for grace; foul, I to the fountain fly; wash me, Savior, or I die.” Jesus said, Permit the little children to come to Me.  Will you humble yourselves today as a child and come? Simply pray, “God, be merciful to me a sinner.”

 

Posted in Sermons | Tags: church on the beach, worship at the beach |

Two men, two prayers, two outcomes; Luke 18:9-14

Jul

13

2014

thebeachfellowship

As we look at this parable of Jesus today, we should remember that it comes in the context of Jesus’ teaching about the characteristics of the coming of the kingdom of God.  This is what Jesus is presenting here in chapter 18.   As I said last week, it’s not a couple of stories about how to get more results from our prayers.  Many people have taught this section that way.

But this whole chapter must be looked at in the context of chapter 17 vs. 20, when Jesus responds to a question about the coming of the kingdom of God.  So even though vs.1-8 mentions prayer, and this parable starting in vs.9 mentions prayer, that is not the main thrust of this teaching.  The main thrust is the coming of the kingdom of God and being prepared for it.  In last weeks parable, the teaching was that when the consummation of the kingdom is delayed, we are not to become disillusioned or discouraged, but we are to continue to keep praying for the return of the Lord.  In spite of all that is going on in the world, in spite of the fact that it looks like God isn’t paying attention, Jesus is encouraging us to not lose heart, but keep focused in prayer on the glory which is yet to be revealed.  Don’t give up.  Don’t lose heart. God is going to act in judgment, and we need to be looking for His return.

Now in today’s parable, the emphasis changes somewhat.  Jesus is still talking about the kingdom of God and will continue to do so through the end of the chapter.  But specifically in this parable He is indicating that righteousness is required to enter the kingdom, and  contrasting those who think they are righteous, with those that God declares are righteous.

Now that is a pretty significant distinction. What this parable is teaching is that it is entirely possible to be self satisfied in your definition of righteousness, and yet not satisfy God’s standard of righteousness.  And that would be a tragedy, would it not?  To go to the end of your life thinking you have obtained righteousness,  only to have the King of Heaven declare you unfit for the kingdom.

Now this is a very simple parable.  There are only two people in this illustration.  Two men come to worship God, and yet only one is justified.  The first person that Jesus talks about is a Pharisee.  I don’t want to take for granted that everyone here is familiar with a Pharisee.  So let me give you a quick definition.  A Pharisee literally means “separated ones”.  They were a sect of Judaism that strictly observed the law of God and consequently served as something of a public barometer of religious  fervor.  Jesus said about them at the beginning of the Sermon on the Mount that unless your righteousness exceeded the righteousness of the Pharisees you could not enter the kingdom of heaven.  To borrow a quote from Ferris Bueller’s Day Off, “they were pretty righteous dudes.”  They were known for a fastidious approach to keeping the law.   And that brings up another important aspect of the Pharisees.  They loved to be known for their religious fervor.  They paraded their righteousness in public and made sure that everyone knew just how religious they were.  Jesus called them hypocrites.  The word hypocrite literally means an actor on a stage.  They did their works for the applause of men.

In Matthew 6 Jesus says three times that the Pharisees did their good deeds to be seen of men. [Mat 6:2, 5, 16] 2 “So when you give to the poor, do not sound a trumpet before you, as the hypocrites do in the synagogues and in the streets, so that they may be honored by men. Truly I say to you, they have their reward in full. … 5 “When you pray, you are not to be like the hypocrites; for they love to stand and pray in the synagogues and on the street corners so that they may be seen by men. Truly I say to you, they have their reward in full. … 16 “Whenever you fast, do not put on a gloomy face as the hypocrites do, for they neglect their appearance so that they will be noticed by men when they are fasting. Truly I say to you, they have their reward in full.”

Now that is the negative aspects of the Pharisees, but to be fair let’s also consider the positives.  After all, no one is perfect, are they?  The good attributes of Pharisees were that first of all they worshipped the one true God.  They recognized and had faith in Jehovah God.  They revered Him.   Secondly, they believed the Scriptures.  They studied the Scriptures and memorized large portions of them.  Thirdly, they prayed regularly.  Fourthly, they were zealous for good works.  And fifthly, they were faithful in attending the religious festivals and Sabbaths associated with worship.

Now none of those things are bad in and of themselves.  It’s all good stuff; they believed in the one true God, they studied the Scriptures, they prayed a lot,  were zealous for good works, and were faithful in worship.  Sounds like they would have made a good Baptist, or a good Methodist, for that matter.  The point is, it sounds like your typical committed church member, doesn’t it?  Basically good people, church going, God fearing people.  In fact, I would go so far as to say that compared with the average church member today, they actually went much further.  The Pharisees were fastidious about worshipping God.  They took it to another level.  They were the kind of people that if you knew them, you would say “if anyone was going to get to heaven, then the Pharisees were.”

I can’t say that without remembering this lady in the church where I grew up down in eastern N.C.  Her name was Mrs. Brown.  She was the quintessential church lady.  She wore those cat eye glasses that they wore back in the 60’s, and she had a bee bonnet hairdo.  She kind of had a bad overbite too, which she was self conscious about so she kept her lips pursed all the time.  To a little 11 year old boy, Mrs. Brown seemed like the picture of what holiness was supposed to look like.

Back in those days, my dad who was the pastor, loved to preach on the rapture.  And I had developed a morbid fear that somehow Christ was going to come back and everyone was going to be taken, except for me.  Well, one day I thought it actually happened.  We lived next door to the church in the parsonage.  And I remember one summer afternoon, I couldn’t find my mother or my brother.  So I went over to the church to look for them.  And I didn’t see anyone at the church.  My dad’s study was empty.  My mother and brother were nowhere around.  And the really scary thing was there was a day care center in the back of the church.  And that was empty too.

Well, when I found the day care empty it was the last straw. I started running around the church crying, sobbing, calling out for my mother, thinking that somehow God had decided that I wasn’t really saved and had left me behind.  I was so upset at the thought of having to go through the tribulation and see the anti Christ and all that, that I didn’t know what to do.  And then I thought of Mrs. Brown.  I said to myself that if anyone was saved, it would have to be Mrs. Brown.  And so in desperation I ran home and called her house.  And the phone rang and rang.  And just before I hung up the phone someone picked up the other end.  It was Mrs. Brown.  I was so relieved I couldn’t stop crying.  When I told her what had happened she said she had been leaving the house and forgotten something and came back inside just as the phone was ringing.  Thank God for Mrs. Brown.  I probably wouldn’t be here today if she didn’t answer that phone.

Now that doesn’t have much to do with my message, but the Pharisees were kind of like Mrs. Brown.  If anyone was saved, you would have to think it was the Pharisees. From all outward appearances these were good people, the best of people.  And yet Jesus says that they were not justified before God.  So as we look at this parable we need to figure out what was wrong about their worship. Something was missing. So Jesus reveals what the Pharisee is missing  by means of his prayer. Prayer is one element of worship. And so Jesus examines his prayer, because his prayer reveals his heart.  Now in the parable Jesus says that this Pharisee comes to the temple to pray.  There were morning and evening prayers that were offered at the times of daily sacrifices.  And I am sure that as a good Pharisee regular attendance at the temple sacrifices was his daily practice.

Now it’s interesting how Jesus describes his prayer.  He says in vs. 11, “The Pharisee stood and was praying this to himself: ‘God, I thank You that I am not like other people: swindlers, unjust, adulterers, or even like this tax collector.  I fast twice a week; I pay tithes of all that I get.’”

Now let’s examine his prayer.  First of all, notice that he is standing.  We have already looked at Matthew 6:5 where Jesus describes a Pharisee praying and standing in a synagogue or on a street corner.   Now there was nothing wrong about standing to pray, in and of itself.  You can stand, you can sit, you can kneel, or you can fall down prostrate; all of those may be appropriate postures of prayer.  But the implication here and in Matt. 6:5 is that the Pharisee was standing in a place and in such a way so as to be seen of men.  So that is the first indication of something wrong.  This person loves the spotlight. They have to be up front, on stage.  Their attitude reveals a lack of humility.

You know, I always feel uncomfortable when some one wants to pray over me in public.  Maybe it’s a lack of humility on my part, I don’t know.  I try to be accommodating.  But sometimes I have to be just a little suspicious of these people that will pray over you in a public place, laying one hand on your shoulder and raising the other hand in the air.  And they go off on this long prayer, supposedly for your benefit.  Maybe I’m too cynical, but I can’t help but wonder sometimes if it is because they want to be seen to be praying over you, to be in the position of the one doing the blessing, and you end up feeling like you’re being used for their benefit.

Jesus says in Matt. 6:5 that they pray standing in synagogues or on the street to be seen of men, and consequently they have their reward right here on earth.  Jesus gave instruction in Matt. 6:6 how to pray; He said pray in your closet, pray in secret, and your Father who sees the secret things will reward you.  The point is not whether you are standing or sitting or in private or public, the point is your attitude and your motivation for praying.  The point is that you reveal your secrets to God, knowing that God knows the secrets of your heart.

Secondly, notice Jesus says this Pharisee was praying to himself.  That almost seems like Jesus misspoke.  And yet I think it is deliberate.  The Pharisee may have been addressing God, but he was speaking to himself.  He was praying for everyone else’s benefit, but not God’s.  He was not praying for God’s will to be done, for God’s kingdom to come, but he was praying to be heard by men, to be seen by men.

I often have people say that they don’t know how to pray in public.  Listen, the way to pray in public is not to rehearse, not to listen to how others do it and then try to mimic their style or way of delivery.  It’s not to show how great you are at oratory or prose.  The way to pray is to humble yourself before God.  Open your heart to God and just talk to Him in sincerity and humbleness as if you were the only person in the world.  Empty yourself of your pride.  I’d rather listen to 20 seconds of prayer like that than 30 minutes of prayer from someone that wants to show everyone all the scripture that he knows and all the doctrine that he thinks he knows.  God doesn’t like to be used either.  He won’t accept worship which uses Him to show off.

Thirdly, his prayer reveals his pride and self righteousness.  He prayed, “God, I thank You that I am not like other people: swindlers, unjust, adulterers, or even like this tax collector.”  Notice that this guy manages to mention himself five times in two sentences.  That is an indication of where his heart is at.  He is prideful.  He is comparing himself to others, and those that do so tend to magnify others shortfalls while minimizing there own.

Paul said in 2Cor. 10:12 about such people that “when they measure themselves by themselves and compare themselves with themselves, they are without understanding.”  Such people measure themselves by others, compare themselves to others, and think that they are more righteous, more zealous, and view others with contempt.  But the problem is that they are using the wrong standard of measure.  They are measuring fallen men against fallen men, and not against the standard of holiness that God requires.

God’s standard of holiness is found in the OT and the NT, and it is the same standard in both.  It says in Leviticus chapter 11 and 19 and in 1 Peter 1, “You shall be holy, for I am holy.”  I quoted RC Sproul a couple of weeks ago as saying that the holiness of God is the only attribute of God that is repeated in triplicate.  Both Isaiah and Revelation declare that God is holy, holy, holy.   The scriptures do not say God is love, love, love.  But it does say that God is holy, holy, holy.  And when you measure yourself by the standard of God’s holiness, then everyone comes short of the kingdom of God.  There is none righteous, no not one.  The Pharisee only measures himself against other men. He measures outward manifestations, and doesn’t examine his heart.

So the Pharisee’s prayer reveals that he is self righteous.  Not holy in the sight of God, but only appearing holy to himself and to men.  And to bolster that self righteousness, he gives a list of what he does which he think constitutes righteousness.  He says, “I fast twice a week.”  The law only required that one fast once a year, and that was on the day of atonement.  There were other times someone could fast if they wished, but there was only one day required.

The problem though isn’t his fasting, it’s that he did so to be seen of men.  That’s what Jesus said in Matt. 6.  Jesus said that rather when you fast, you should wash your face and put on normal clothes so that people won’t notice that you’re fasting.  And your Father who sees in secret will reward you.  Jesus says if you’re noticed fasting by men, then you already have your reward.  I can’t help but wonder if those people that fast at Lent and mark a cross on their forehead in ashes, I can’t help but wonder if they take these instructions by Jesus seriously.  They must not.

And the other thing this guy offers as an indication of his righteousness is that he tithes of everything that he receives.  Under the old covenant, they had a theocratic style of government that required ten percent of what you got went to fund the national government, ten percent went to fund the national festivals and feasts on high holy days, and ten percent every third year for the poor. So altogether there was about a 23 and a third percent tax, that’s what funded the theocratic kingdom of Israel.

But again in Matt. 6, Jesus says the problem with the Pharisees tithing was that they sounded a trumpet before they gave to draw attention to themselves.  And so Jesus said that rather than tithing producing righteousness, they received an earthly reward, they got the praise of men.  Jesus said in Matt. 6 that the way to give alms was not to let your right hand know what your left hand was doing.  Now I think that had a double meaning.  It meant don’t broadcast to your neighbor know what you are giving, first of all.  But I think secondly it meant don’t calculate your giving.  There was a sort of ancient calculator that was called a abacus.  It required two hands to use it.  And so I think that Jesus means don’t worry about figuring out exactly what your ten percent would be.  But the Lord loves a cheerful giver.  Give according to need, recognizing that Jesus is Lord even of your pocketbook.

Now remember, this is a parable. It’s fictitious account designed to illustrate a spiritual principle.  So this isn’t an exhaustive list of what kinds of things contributed to this Pharisee’s self righteousness.  But these would have been exemplary things of a self righteous, prideful spirit that was not justified before God.

The second character in the story was called a tax collector.  And there really aren’t too many positive things you could say about a tax collector.  They were on the bottom of the social ladder.  These guys had sold out to the Roman government in order to get a tax collection franchise.  So in the eyes of the Jews, they were traitors of the lowest order.  But not only were they traitors, they were looked at as crooks.  Because they had the authority of the Roman government to charge any amount that they deemed obtainable as long as the government got their share.  So the tax collector would add exorbitant fees on top of the taxes and everything over and above the tax he would pocket.  And he had the government to help him extract these taxes by use of force if necessary.  So pretty much everything the Pharisee said he was glad he was not in the earlier prayer was attributed to tax collectors.  The Pharisee said I’m glad I’m not a swindler, unjust or an adulterer, like this tax collector over here.  See, the only people that would hang out with tax collectors was prostitutes who were also outcasts from proper society.

But for some reason, this tax collector has come under conviction.  He knows that he is a sinner of the worst order.  He knows that technically they could run him out of the temple.  But he comes to the temple, under conviction of his sins, and he too offers a prayer.  So let’s look at his prayer and what it reveals about this man.

Vs. 13, “But the tax collector, standing some distance away, was even unwilling to lift up his eyes to heaven, but was beating his breast, saying, ‘God, be merciful to me, the sinner!’  This guy is standing as well.  So there is nothing wrong with standing to pray.  But this guy’s attitude is completely different.  He is not standing up front, hoping to be noticed by everyone.  But he is in the back, unwilling to even lift his eyes to heaven.  And Jesus says he is beating his breast.  Now that was something that was associated with mourning.  Mourners, especially women, would wail and beat their fists upon their breasts as they cried out in anguish over the dead.

You get the picture?  This guy is mourning over his sin.  He is in anguish over his sin.  He has been confronted with the holiness and righteousness that God requires and he knows that he is far, far from righteous.  He knows he is a sinner.  He cries out, “God, be merciful to me, a sinner.”

This guy is exemplifying the kind of attitude that Jesus spoke of in the Sermon on the Mount; the attitude of mourning over your sin.  That’s what Jesus was talking about in Matt. 5:4 when He said, “Blessed are those who mourn, for they shall be comforted.”   Listen, folks, mourning over your sin is what is required in repentance.  Repentance is not just saying I’m sorry.  Repentance is not just wishing it hadn’t happened.  Repentance is not just having a relationship to God.  Repentance is considering your sin as dead.  Mourning.  Repentance is a desire to turn from your sin.  To renounce your sin.  To run from your sin.  To hate your sin.  That is repentance.  And repentance is absolutely necessary for salvation, for justification, for righteousness.

There are a lot of people trying to force their way into the kingdom of heaven today on the basis of their self righteousness.  “God is my friend, Jesus loves me and I’m special so I’m in the kingdom of heaven.  I worship God.  I do this and I do that.  I’m a good person. I turned over a new leaf.”  But they have never repented of their sin.  And that is a problem.  That was the difference between the Pharisee and the tax collector.  Romans 3:23 says that all have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God. There is none righteous, no not one.  The Pharisee was a sinner.  And the tax collector was a sinner.  Both were excluded from the kingdom of God.  But Jesus says only one left that day that was justified before God.  Two people go to worship God.  Two people pray to God.  Yet only one is justified before God. Justified means made righteous, declared not guilty before God.  Only one.  And that was the sinner.  Those that come to Christ must come as a sinner, confessing their sins, repenting of their sins, turning away from their sins.  And for that person, God will justify them.  He will declare them righteous on behalf of what Jesus Christ did for us on the cross.

The word for merciful that the tax collector uses there is significant.  He says, “God, be merciful to me, the sinner.”  The word merciful comes from the Greek word  “hilaskomai” which  means propitious.  That word is used only one other time in the NT, in Heb. 2:17  which says, “Therefore,  [Jesus] had to be made like His brethren in all things, so that He might become a merciful and faithful high priest in things pertaining to God, to make propitiation for the sins of the people.”  Propitious means to make atonement.

See, this tax collector knew something that the Pharisee should have known but did not; that is he could never achieve the righteous standard of God.  But he knew that the sacrificial system taught that the lamb was slain as a substitute for his sins.  That was why he came there to worship at the time of the evening sacrifice.  He came asking for God to make propitiation for his sins.  That God would in His grace and mercy provide a substitute like He did for Isaac on the altar, when God provided a ram caught in a thicket.  And we know that Jesus Himself was the sacrificial lamb that was offered for the sins of the world.  Jesus was the substitute that could and did live the perfect sinless life that we can never live.

David the Psalmist said, “A broken and contrite heart, O Lord, you will not despise.”  David knew repentance even after he sinned with Bathsheba.  He mourned over his sin, and God restored him and forgave him.  On Wednesday night we are studying Genesis and we saw last week how the Word says that Noah found grace with God.  He found it.  In other words, he didn’t earn it.  God granted to him righteousness on the basis of faith.  And we are saved the same way today that Noah and Abraham and David and all the saints were saved, through faith and repentance.

Jesus declares in vs. 14, “I tell you, this man went to his house justified rather than the other; for everyone who exalts himself will be humbled, but he who humbles himself will be exalted.”

Listen, pride is the reason this Pharisee left still in his sins.  And repentance, resulting in humility, was the reason that the tax collector was forgiven for his sins.  There are a lot of people today that want to be religious, that want the recognition that comes from being religious, they like the attention that self righteousness brings, they like the way it feels, but they have refused to acknowledge they are a sinner.  They refuse to repent, to turn away from their sins.  They want to continue in their secret sins while keeping an exterior façade of righteousness for everyone else to see.  I hope and pray that no one here today is like that Pharisee.  Justification, righteousness, holiness according to God’s standard can’t be earned, it can’t be faked.  Because God knows the heart.  There is only one way to justification, and that is through the grace of God extended to repentant sinners.

The tax collector went away justified.  Now there is a lot implied in that statement that isn’t stated outright.  And I don’t have time to go into all of it today.  But let me say this much;  if that man truly repented as Jesus said he did, then it drastically changed his way of life.  He would have had to change the way he did business, wouldn’t he?  He couldn’t claim repentance and continue to cheat people, to rob from people, could he?  He might even have had to quit his job.

Listen folks, let’s be honest with ourselves first of all.  If we truly mourn over our sin, then we must consider our bodies as dead to sin.  We must die to sin.  If you haven’t really done that, you can say you’re sorry all you want.  You can do religious things.  But it won’t produce justification.  God knows your heart.  I urge you to truly examine yourself today in the light of God’s word and ask yourself if you have ever repented of your sins and asked for God’s forgiveness.  He is willing to forgive you.  He will justify you through the righteousness of Jesus Christ’s atonement for your sins if you will just humble yourselves today.  Let’s pray.

 

Posted in Sermons | Tags: church on the beach, worship on the beach |

Four hallmarks of discipleship; Luke 17:1-10

Jun

15

2014

thebeachfellowship

As we continue in the gospel of Luke we look now at a continuation of a message that Jesus was giving to a mixed multitude that included three types of people in attendance.  There was the self righteous, haughty Pharisees who practiced their religion  to be seen of men but whose motives were known by God to be self serving and done for men’s approval.  But they were not counted righteous by God.  And there was a second group of people who were present which was largely made up of the curious.  They were there because it was something different, they were curious, they were perhaps hoping to see some miracle, but they were in a state of flux; they listened to the message of Jesus, but they had not become followers of Christ.  And then there is the third category, which were the disciples; not just the 12, but a group of men and women that were following Him as He went from place to place.  They were actively pursuing the gospel as Jesus presented the message of the kingdom of God.  And as I have said repeatedly as we have been studying Luke, Jesus does not boil His message down to a simple formula which by doing these 3 steps in this particular order you become a member of the kingdom.  But rather Jesus continues to add perspective and layers of truth to the message as He moves from place to place preaching.  And so there is a sense that if you want to be a disciple of Christ, you must follow Him and persevere in listening and obeying the truth as He parcels it out, if you truly want to be a disciple.

So I have titled today’s message the “four hallmarks of discipleship.”  This is not an exhaustive list.  This is what Jesus gave on that day, at that time.  It is another layer, another level of truth that He is disclosing.  He is adding more detail as He goes.  And so today we are looking at this portion of the message which is addressed to the disciples in attendance in particular.  He has been previously speaking a lot about faith and repentance as requirements to enter the kingdom.  Now today Jesus expands on those subjects by saying how faith and repentance will be employed in the kingdom.  It’s not all that needs to be said about discipleship or all that He will say about it.  But it is another step in their journey, their walk of sanctification, in their walk of discipleship.  And so these four hallmarks should also be true of us; if we call ourselves Christians, then that means that we are modern day disciples or followers of Christ.  We cannot in good conscience call ourselves Christians and not follow His teaching.  Jesus said if you love Me, you will keep My commandments.  So these four principles should provide a sort of check list for us as well, if we have truly decided to follow Christ.

Now the first principle that Jesus gives is that a true disciple will not put a stumbling block before others.  Vs. 1, “Jesus said to His disciples, “It is inevitable that stumbling blocks come, but woe to him through whom they come!  It would be better for him if a millstone were hung around his neck and he were thrown into the sea, than that he would cause one of these little ones to stumble.”

Perhaps there is someone here today that doesn’t know what a millstone is.  I’m sure that you have all seen pictures or paintings of some of the old mills that used to be built in this country along side of streams or rivers.  Various types of grain mills would use the power of the rushing water to turn a great huge paddle wheel which  turned a large, heavy round grindstone.  Or it could be powered by windmills or even by oxen. But whatever the power source this extremely heavy millstone would be turned over grain to produce flour.  If you travel N. on 113 as you enter the town of Millsboro you can see a large example of a millstone at the town limits.

And what Jesus says is that people are inevitably going to fall into sin.  There are going to be temptations that cause people to stumble and sin.  Temptations are unavoidable while we are in this world.  But woe to that person who causes someone to stumble.  Who leads someone into sin, or teaches someone a false doctrine which leads them to sin, or who by their lifestyle encourages someone to sin.  Woe to that person.  A woe is a promise from God that He will bring divine retribution upon that person that causes someone to stumble.

So to emphasize how God views this terrible tragedy of causing someone to stumble, Jesus says it would be better to have a millstone hung around the offending person’s neck and thrown into the sea.  Well obviously having a millstone around your neck would plunge you to the ocean’s floor and hold you there until you were  drowned.  Jesus is dramatizing the nature of God’s wrath and retribution against those that put a stumbling block before others.  But the point is that we should be willing to lose our own life if necessary to keep from causing another to stumble.

Now this is a concept that is very hard for 21st century Christians in America to understand.  We have been so indoctrinated with the idea that we have been given certain rights as individuals.  We think that our rights are inalienable.  That they are God given rights.  And nobody better step on my rights, or they will be sorry.  We have all kinds of special interest groups out there today that are clamoring for their rights to be recognized.  They say their rights are being neglected.  And yet the message of Jesus Christ says that as disciples our rights are to be subjugated to the priorities of the kingdom of God.  Our individual bodies are not as important as the body of Christ.

Folks, I can tell you right now that if we really got hold of that principle, if we practiced that principle, then the divorce rate in the church would drop from 50% where it is today to about 5%.  We are too busy living as the unsaved are living; preoccupied with self fulfillment, with protecting our right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness, living for the moment, living for our pleasure as if there is no eternity.

This is the point of the parable of the rich man we looked at last week.  He lived for himself. He had a paraplegic beggar living on his doorstep but he was too busy tending to his own needs to be concerned about his neighbors.  He invested in the present.  He was rich in the world’s goods but poor in the kingdom of God.  And when he died he found himself destitute.  He found himself in hell.  That isn’t supposed to be the attitude of a Christian.  We are to be like Christ.  If we call ourselves disciples then we are to show the love of Christ who was willing to lay down His life for sinners.  That is what we are to be like.  Dying to self, serving the kingdom and it’s citizens.  It’s not about defending my rights, but about expanding the kingdom.  That is why Jesus reminds the Pharisees about the commandment regarding divorce in chapter 16:18.  They said they were in the kingdom of God, but they ignored the commandment against divorce in order to act out their lusts and as such they caused others to suffer, they caused people to fall into sin.  They caused their wives and those that married them to sin by adultery.  They caused people to stumble by their self interest.

Listen, a true disciple is characterized by humility; he will consider the needs of others before he champions his own freedom.  There are a lot of so called Christians out there that believe they can do whatever they want in the name of Christian liberty.  They like to have their alcohol when they feel like it and they don’t care if it causes someone who is weaker to fall.  They like to use profanity when they feel like it, and they don’t care if it causes a brother to fall.  I’m suggest something radical; some people would do the kingdom of God a better service if they didn’t tell others that they were a Christian.  They give Christians a bad name.  If you’re going to cuss out your employees on a regular basis, then please take the Christian bumper sticker off your truck.  If you’re going to lose your temper and act like the devil, then please do God a favor and take any reference to Christianity off the sign in front of your business.  I’m sorry if that makes some of you mad, but it needs to be said.  God doesn’t need your help.  God wants your obedience.  He wants us to act like Jesus Christ in all we do.  That’s what it means to be a disciple of Jesus Christ.

And ladies, if you call yourself Christians, then you need to protect those weak men who might fall into sin because of the way you are dressed.  Yes, they need to practice self control.  Yes they need to stop thinking like sex perverts.  But you also have a responsibility to God to not be a stumbling block to men who find you sexually appealing.  You can still be fashionable and attractive and not be a stumbling block.  I have a suggestion, the next time you are looking in your closet for what to wear, ask God what he thinks of that outfit. And then decide whether or not you should wear it based on what He thinks, rather than based on your liberty.

Paul says in 1Cor. 10:23, “All things are lawful, but not all things are profitable. All things are lawful, but not all things edify.”  Bottom line is, your rights, even your life is not as important as the protection of others who you might cause to stumble.  A true disciple will lay down his life, lay down his rights for the sake of his brothers or sisters in Christ or to lead someone to Christ.

The second hallmark of a true disciple is that they will forgive even as God forgives us.  Vs. 3, “Be on your guard! If your brother sins, rebuke him; and if he repents, forgive him.  And if he sins against you seven times a day, and returns to you seven times, saying, ‘I repent,’ forgive him.”

Now this principle has two parts to it.  The first is, if he stumbles, if he sins, then we are told to rebuke them.  This principle of rebuking is explicitly stated in 2 Timothy as a job description of pastors.  It says in  2Tim. 4:2, “preach the word; be ready in season and out of season; reprove, rebuke, exhort, with great patience and instruction.”   But all of us as Christians, as Christ followers have a responsibility to rebuke those that are in sin.  Ephesians 4:15 says we are to speak the truth in love.  We are required to be compassionate, but not weak.

But at the same time, notice that we are required to go to that person.  The tendency is when someone sins against you, or offends you, is to go to everyone else but that person.  We tell everyone else what a miserable cretin such and such is because of what they did.  But we fail to have the courage to go straight to the person and confront them, and them alone.  But that is what Jesus is requiring of us.  We confront them in compassion, desiring their repentance.  We desire to see them get things right.  But this also requires that we first examine ourselves.  It’s tough to go to your brother or your wife or your friend and confront them over their sin, if you are guilty of the same thing.  You first have to get the log out of your own eye before you can see clearly to get the splinter out of another’s.  So there is an element of self purification here.  In order to confront someone over their sin, you have to first deal with your own.

In Matt.18:15 Jesus lays this principle out in more detail.  He says, “If your brother sins, go and show him his fault in private; if he listens to you, you have won your brother.  But if he does not listen to you, take one or two more with you, so that BY THE MOUTH OF TWO OR THREE WITNESSES EVERY FACT MAY BE CONFIRMED.  If he refuses to listen to them, tell it to the church; and if he refuses to listen even to the church, let him be to you as a Gentile and a tax collector.”  This passage is one of the texts upon which we base church discipline.  It’s a difficult thing sometimes to do.  But we are commanded to do it.  We don’t have time to get into it in detail today, but notice that the first step is to confront him in private.  In private.  Don’t broadcast it.

Back in our text of Luke 17, Jesus says if that person repents you are to forgive.  In Matthew He says if he repents then you have won your brother.  That’s the goal.  And then Jesus adds that if he sins against you 7 times in a day and each time he repents, then you continue to forgive him.  The point isn’t to keep score and say, “ok, he’s got one more chance and then I’ll get him.”  Jesus tells Peter back in Matthew 18 again that you are to forgive him seventy times seven.  In other words, don’t keep score.  Forgive others even as you have been forgiven.

And by the way, since it’s father’s day let me say this; us fathers need to practice forgiveness towards our kids the way our heavenly Father practices forgiveness towards us.  As men we sometimes think that our job is to crack the whip, to apply discipline.  To lay down the law.   And maybe it is.  God does all that as well.  But thankfully for our sakes, God is a merciful, compassionate God.  The Bible says that the kindness of God leads us to repentance.  We think it’s the judgment of God that brings repentance.  But God prefers to be compassionate and merciful first and foremost.  Only when He has satisfied His compassion and mercy does He apply justice.  So I would just encourage you fathers to practice the compassion of God towards your children and strive for a balance with your family. James 2:13 “For judgment will be merciless to one who has shown no mercy; mercy triumphs over judgment.”

Thirdly, a true disciple will have faith unto obedience.  As the disciples consider the weight of what Jesus is saying, and how difficult it is to do what He is commanding, they rightly say unto Jesus in vs. 5, “Lord, increase our faith.”  They recognize the difficulty of doing it in their own strength.  But I’m afraid that these two verses and others like it have sprung up a false doctrine that is called the word of faith movement.  But this is not what the disciples are asking for nor what Jesus is offering.  They are recognizing that in their strength, in their flesh, they will have difficulty in doing the things that Jesus is asking of them.  And they are right in that.  So they ask Jesus to increase their faith.  Help them to have the faith to do what Jesus is asking them to do.

And that is exactly what faith is.  Faith is not a monkey wrench by which you can manipulate God to get Him to do what you want Him to do.  That attitude makes you Master and God your personal genie.  Faith is not a name it and claim it attitude whereby whatever you want to happen God will do if you just want it bad enough, or believe that He will do it hard enough.  Faith is not wishful thinking, or wishing really, really hard.  Faith, quite simply, is believing what God says to do, and then doing it.  I’m going to say that again.  Faith is believing what God says to do, and then doing it.  Faith is believing in the promises of God which He has written down and then being obedient to that word.  Faith is not listening to some voice in your head that you ascribe to God who told you to buy that dress at Macy’s even though you don’t have enough money to buy it .  That’s not God’s voice in your head.  God speaks through His word. Lam. 3:37, “Who is there who speaks and it comes to pass, unless the Lord has commanded it?”  You can’t speak things into existence unless God has first ordained it.

Vs. 6 is not a blank check to command anything we want to happen in the name of faith.  The Lord said, “If you had faith like a mustard seed, you would say to this mulberry tree, ‘Be uprooted and be planted in the sea’; and it would obey you.”  This statement is not meant to make it easier for Christians to do their yard work, but it is a picture, an illustration that if something seems impossible from a human standpoint, if you are obedient in faith to what God has told you to do He will make it possible. Mulberry trees were noted for their immense root system which is said to be able to stay alive for 600 years.  So this unrootable tree can be uprooted by faith and tossed in the sea.  Something that God has commanded, but which I find almost impossible to do in the flesh, Jesus says can be done by faith in God’s strength. Faith is obedience to what God has commanded, even when I don’t feel like it.  Faith is obedience to what God has commanded even when it  is going to be difficult.  Faith is obedience to what God has commanded even if it costs me my liberty, even if it costs me my life.  Remember that Jesus in the Garden of Gethsemane cried out to God to deliver Him from the cup of suffering that He was going through.  But He qualified that by saying “Not my will but your will be done.” When someone has sinned against me, offended me, hurt me so bad I think I can never get over it, never forgive them, Jesus says in faith that root of bitterness can be uprooted, so that we might be like Christ and forgive those who sin against us.

Finally, the fourth hallmark of a  true disciple is that he will do his duty no matter how great the cost.  Vs. 7 “Which of you, having a slave plowing or tending sheep, will say to him when he has come in from the field, ‘Come immediately and sit down to eat’? 8 “But will he not say to him, ‘Prepare something for me to eat, and properly clothe yourself and serve me while I eat and drink; and afterward you may eat and drink’? 9 “He does not thank the slave because he did the things which were commanded, does he? 10 “So you too, when you do all the things which are commanded you, say, ‘We are unworthy slaves; we have done only that which we ought to have done.'”

Here is the gist of what Jesus is teaching.  He has already made it clear that you don’t do your deeds to be seen of men.  Now He’s teaching that you don’t do your deeds to manipulate God into doing something special for you.  This is the other side of the word of faith movement that I was speaking of a moment ago.  They teach that if you really have faith then you will send them some money, even if you don’t really have it.  They say that is seed faith.  Then God will honor the seed faith that you planted by sending them money and God will refund that to you 10 times over.  It’s a very convenient doctrine for the false teachers.  They get rich but you get swindled.

But I’m afraid this false doctrine has found it’s way into a lot of Christian thinking.  If we do this or that for God, then we think that somehow that obligates God to do something for us – usually our definition of blessing.  But Jesus says that God isn’t obligated to do something special for us because we have fulfilled our responsibility.

The blessing is that God has chosen to use you in spite of your flaws, in spite of your unworthiness, in spite of how many times you may have proven yourself unfaithful.  There is a reward for a faithful servant of God.  Eye has not seen and ear has not heard the marvelous things that God has prepared that for those that love Him.  But that reward is in heaven and will be awarded to us in eternity.  But all you need to do is look at the lives of the apostles and the early disciples and see what kind of earthly rewards they got for preaching the gospel and following Christ.  Jesus said no servant is greater than His master.  And consequently all the apostles save John suffered martyrdom.  They were imprisoned.  They lived as outcasts from society.  They were flogged.  They were publicly scorned and ridiculed.  They left jobs, families and everything for the sake of following Christ.

Listen, Jesus made it clear in chapter 14 at the beginning of this message that a disciple must first count the cost of following Him.  He said in Luke 14:27, “Whoever does not carry his own cross and come after Me cannot be My disciple.”  There is a cost in following Christ.  And there is great reward in following Christ.  But the suffering comes before the glory.  Romans 8:17 says that we are fellow heirs of Christ if we suffer with Him, then we shall also be glorified with Him.

Jesus is making it clear that if a true disciple is going to do the will of God, then he will be called upon to suffer, he must bear his cross, he must deny himself, he must serve God before he serves himself.  That is our duty as Christians.  To serve the Master as a faithful servant.

I read recently the story of Vice Admiral Lord Nelson who commanded the English Royal Navy in the Battle of Trafalgar in 1805.  This battle was considered one of England’s greatest victories, in which they defeated the French and Spanish navies.  Lord Nelson lost his life in that battle after being shot by a sniper.  But prior to that, he had lost an arm in another battle, and then after recovering from that lost the sight in an eye during another battle.  So the fact that he was even still in the fight at that point, still serving his country is remarkable and shows his courage and perseverance.  But as the battle of Trafalgar was about to be engaged, just before his death, he sent a message by signal flags out to all the ships.  The message was; “England expects that every man will do his duty.”  As the message circulated by flags throughout the Royal fleet, it is said that a cheer went up from each of the various ships.  And though the Royal Navy won the battle, Lord Nelson himself did his duty to England to the hilt, he paid the ultimate sacrifice.

Such patriotism and reverence for country and king seems quite heroic, that men are willing to suffer and even die for their country.  But as Christians, what higher calling have we been given?  Citizenship in the kingdom of heaven expects no less.  The Lord Jesus Christ sends out his message today to all that are within His kingdom.  He says, “The kingdom of God expects that every man will do his duty.”  I pray that God will increase your faith so that you might do His will, no matter what the cost.  Let us pray.

 

 

Posted in Sermons | Tags: church on the beach, worship at the beach |

The lost sheep, Luke 15: 1-7

May

4

2014

thebeachfellowship

Many years ago, when my daughter Melissa had just learned to walk, we moved to the house that we are presently living in.  And not long after we moved in, some friends dropped by in the middle of the day to see the house and give us a house warming gift.  We gave them a brief tour of the property and were talking for a while, when suddenly I became aware that Melissa wasn’t around.   I called out her name, expecting her to be right around the corner, but there was no answer.

Immediately, all of us started looking for her.  We live on an old chicken farm, and so we were going all around the property calling out her name.  No Melissa.  That’s when I suddenly moved into panic mode.  I began running, praying and yelling at the top of my lungs.  It seemed impossible that she would have gone but so far.  It couldn’t have been but a few moments that she could have wandered away.  I remember running along a deep irrigation ditch that ran alongside one  of the fields, thinking that maybe she had fallen in.   Every horrible scenario I could imagine played out in my mind.

When I got near the end of the ditch, I noticed an older woman across the highway probably 150 yards away from our house, and she was waving at me.  And holding her hand was little Melissa.  And Melissa was holding onto our dog Goldie.  Turns out, Goldie our dog wandered across the field and across the highway and Melissa followed Goldie.  Then two men driving a work van stopped and picked up Melissa from the middle of the road and knocked on the lady’s house, thinking that she may have been her grandchild.

To this day, 12 years later, I can still recall the horror of knowing that Melissa was lost.  There must be no greater fear or nightmare on the part of a parent than losing your child.

Now, I could have made the focus of my story about losing my dog.  But I wasn’t concerned about Goldie. She would have eventually come home.  But I was terrified about my daughter, because she was my child and she was helpless. She couldn’t find her way home by herself.  And so I tell you my story to help set the context for this parable that Jesus tells about a lost sheep.  Jesus isn’t concerned about sheep, He is using sheep as a metaphor for people.  People who are lost and helpless.  And Jesus tells this story about sheep because sheep characterize the nature of people.

Isaiah 53 says, “All of us like sheep have gone astray, each of us has turned to his own way.”  And the Apostle Peter says in 1Peter 2:25 that we all were continually straying like sheep.  This is the natural disposition of man.  After the fall, man was blinded by sin, and the Bible says his heart was deceitful and desperately wicked.  Romans 3:23 says that all of us have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God.  And Paul quoting David from the Psalms in Romans 3:12 says, “ALL HAVE TURNED ASIDE, TOGETHER THEY HAVE BECOME USELESS; THERE IS NONE WHO DOES GOOD, THERE IS NOT EVEN ONE.”

But the scribes and the Pharisees didn’t see themselves as lost or in need of repentance.  They were very religious.  I’m sure they voted conservative.  They kept the law.  They worshipped the one true God.  And so they viewed themselves as righteous.  They saw themselves as being the good people, and tax collectors and sinners were the bad people.  Now tax collectors were at the bottom of the barrel in their estimation.  These guys were much worse than the IRS.  These people were considered traitors to the Jewish nation.  They had gone over to the Romans, their enemies, and purchased a tax collection franchise from the Roman government whereby they levied taxes against their own people for profit.  They were the worst.  And the second worst people were what they called sinners.  Sinners wasn’t a term applied to everyone.  It was reserved for people that had given themselves over to a sinful lifestyle without apology.  They were the outcasts from decent Jewish society.  They were made up of prostitutes and low level criminals.

So when these tax collectors and sinners started to come to Jesus and listen to Him preach, the Pharisees saw an opportunity to try to discredit Jesus by proving Him guilty by association.  The Pharisees and scribes were jealous of the attention that Jesus was getting.  And because they were jealous, they had been trying to discredit Him for some time now.   For the last three chapters Jesus has been having a running dialogue with those guys who were constantly trying  to catch Him in something so that they could use to dishonor Him or shame Him in the sight of the common people.  And so in vs. 2 it says they began to grumble and said, “this man receives sinners and eats with them.”

So Jesus answers them with a parable.  He tells a story to illustrate why He would associate with these sinners.  But don’t misunderstand something folks.  Some people have used this passage as a pretext to say that there is nothing wrong with hanging out at bars because Jesus hung out with tax collectors and sinners.  But that isn’t what the Bible says.  It says they were coming to Him and listening to Him.  They were coming to be saved.  Jesus wasn’t having a few drinks down at the pub so that people would think He was just one of the boys.   He wasn’t stooping to their level of debauchery in order to relate to sinners.  No, Jesus makes it clear in this parable and the next two, that the key to His acceptance is repentance.

And repentance isn’t just saying you’re sorry, or to try to do better, but it’s being sick of your sin, mourning over your sin, and being desperate to have your sins forgiven and be delivered from the power and enslavement of sin.  That is repentance, and that is why these tax collectors and sinners were coming to Jesus.

Now there are three aspects to being a sheep that I would like to bring your attention to today in light of this parable;  the lost sheep as a sinner, the wandering sheep as a saint, and the lost sheep in need of a Savior.

First of all, the lost sheep as a sinner.  Jesus paints a picture of the sheep which is lost.  We can imagine that it was evening time, and the shepherd brings his sheep down from the pasture in the hills to the sheepfold down in the valley.  And as he herds them one at a time through the gate he counts them off.  But he comes up one short.  Perhaps he counts again, thinking that maybe he missed one.  But once again he comes up one short.  Maybe he realizes that it’s that one particular spotted lamb that is missing.  And as evening sets in, he can imagine it bleating on the mountain side, afraid and lost and in danger from predators.

They say that a sheep is one of the most defenseless animals in the world.  It can become lost after just straying a few dozen yards from the flock.  If it is frightened, it can literally become frightened to death.  If it falls over on it’s side, it is practically unable to get back up.  It has no defensive mechanisms.  Almost any predator can kill a sheep.  So in compassion for this lamb that was lost, the shepherd sets out with his staff in the growing dusk, to search for the lost lamb.

Jesus said that eventually the shepherd found the sheep, and he put it upon his shoulders and carried it home.  And when he arrived home, he called together his friends and neighbors saying, “Rejoice with me, for I have found my sheep which was lost!”

Listen, some of you here today are lost.  Maybe you have come to the point of realizing that you  are a sinner.  If you have, then that’s a good thing.  The good thing about the tax collectors and sinners of Jesus’ day was that there was no denying that they were outcasts.  They had given up on religion.  They had become brazen in their sin.  They didn’t try to hide it.  But they had come to a place where they were sick of it.  They found out that it didn’t satisfy.  They had been trying to fill a hole in their hearts that couldn’t be filled with sex, or alcohol or drugs or money.  And they were sick of being that way.  They longed for real fulfillment.  They longed for real joy.  They longed for forgiveness and restoration with God.

And they heard some good news that day.  They heard that Jesus had come to seek and to save those that were lost.  They heard the good news that if they were willing to repent of their sins and trust in Jesus Christ as their Savior, then they would be restored with God, they would attain righteousness before God, and they would gain eternal life.

I quoted Isaiah 53 while ago which says that all of us are like lost sheep. Vs. 6 says, “All of us like sheep have gone astray, each of us has turned to his own way.”  That’s the bad news.  But it continues with the good news;  “But the LORD has caused the iniquity of us all to fall on Him.”  Did you hear that?  Our sins were put on Jesus. 2Corinthians 5:21 says it like this; “God made Jesus who knew no sin to be sin on our behalf, so that we might become the righteousness of God in Him.”

That’s the picture Jesus was sharing in this parable.  The Shepherd went searching for us, He found us lying wretched and miserable in the enslavement of our sin, and picking us up, He laid us upon His shoulders and carried us to His home, rejoicing.

Isaiah 53 describes Jesus bearing our sins in vs. 4, “Surely our griefs He Himself bore, And our sorrows He carried; Yet we ourselves esteemed Him stricken, smitten of God, and afflicted. But He was pierced through for our transgressions, He was crushed for our iniquities; the chastening for our well-being fell upon Him, and by His scourging we are healed.”

See, we were lost sheep, continually straying, sinners, deserving of sin and punishment.  But God sent His Son, Jesus, the spotless Lamb of God, to take away the sins of the world.  This spotless Lamb of God offered Himself as a guilt offering in our place upon a cross, as Isaiah continues; “the LORD was pleased To crush Him, putting Him to grief; If He would render Himself as a guilt offering, He will see His offspring, He will prolong His days, and the good pleasure of the LORD will prosper in His hand. As a result of the anguish of His soul, He will see it and be satisfied; By His knowledge the Righteous One, My Servant, will justify the many, as He will bear their iniquities.”

This is what Christ came to earth to do; to make it possible for sinners to be forgiven and accepted by God because the punishment that was due to us fell upon Jesus.  I hope that if you’re here today and you know that you’re lost, you will call upon Jesus to save you and repent of your sins and be saved.

Now there is another application of this parable, and it’s not just to lost sinners, but to wandering saints.  A saint, according to the Biblical definition, is anyone that has repented of their sins and been born again by faith in Jesus Christ.  But it’s possible that having become saved, at some point you have found yourself back in a place of waywardness.  You have left your first love.  Maybe your heart has become cold.

That possibility is born out in this parable in vs. 4 and 6.  Jesus says the lost sheep belongs to the shepherd.  They are His sheep.  He had 100 sheep and one wandered astray.  Jesus uses this same parable in Matthew 18 but with a different twist on it than here in Luke.  In Matthew 18, Jesus is talking about how terrible it will be for the person who puts a stumbling block in front of one of His children.  That it would be better to be cast into the depths of the sea with a millstone around your neck than to face the judgment of God upon the person that causes a child of God to stumble.

And then immediately in that context, Jesus gave this parable again about the lost sheep.  In this context, the lost sheep isn’t an unsaved person, but someone that has been saved and has fallen away, or wandered away from the fold.

In the case of Matthew 18, I think Jesus is speaking primarily of a child of God that has wandered astray.  Someone or something has caused the child to stumble.  Remember He said that there were going to be stumbling blocks in the world.  And He warned of the consequences to those that caused a child to stumble.  So in that context, I think we see that child of God that is described in I Tim. 6:10 which says they “have wandered away from the faith and pierced themselves with many griefs.” They are one of the shepherds flock that has somehow strayed.  He’s gotten off track.  Whether it was the world’s influence or perhaps even another Christian’s influence, this child of God is in trouble.

There has been a few times in my life when I’ve fallen away.  I was following the Lord pretty good for a while, then something happened and I took my eyes off Jesus.  Maybe it was a girl that came along that I was attracted to.  Or maybe it was a friend who influenced me to go in the wrong direction.  Or maybe it was the allure of climbing the corporate ladder of success.  I thought I was ok spiritually, I thought I was standing, and the next thing I know I’m off in the ditch.   Spiritually, I wandered a little further and a little further over time.  First I stopped reading my Bible. Then  I stopped praying. Eventually I stopped going to church. It started as a little thing, a little bit off track, but before I knew it I was completely messed up. It can happen to all of us.  And it probably has at some point in your life.  Lost means that somehow you’ve lost your way.  Somehow, another Christian has disappointed you.  Somehow, the church has failed you.  Somehow, you’ve lost the joy of your salvation.  Maybe you thought God should have done something and He didn’t do what you thought He should. Your faith was shaken.  And so you’ve fallen or you’ve lost your way and can’t seem to get back the Lord.

Jesus is showing through this parable His compassion for this person at this point in their life.  God is a God of reconciliation.  God wants you to be restored.  He isn’t willing for any to perish as Jesus says in Matt. 18:14.  He doesn’t want you to ruin your life or the life of others that you may be connected to.  He doesn’t want to see you ruin your testimony by making wrong decisions or being despondent.  He loved you when you were dead in your trespasses and sins, and He loved you when you were living for him, and He still loves you and pursues you when you stray.

I quoted part of 1 Peter 2:25 while ago, but let me quote the whole verse; “For you were continually straying like sheep, but now you have returned to the Shepherd and Guardian of your souls.”  Listen, God is willing and ready to forgive you and restore you if you are willing to repent of your sins.  Nobody knew that better than Simon Peter himself.  Before the crucifixion He denied Christ three times.  But afterwards he was heartbroken over his sin. So after His resurrection, Jesus sought out Peter when he was fishing and used that as an opportunity to bring him back into the fold.  Jesus said to Peter three times, once for each denial, “Feed my sheep.”

David, the Psalmist also knew what it was like to backslide into grievous sin.  He committed adultery with Bathsheba, and then effectively murdered her husband to try to cover up his sin.  Earlier God had described David as a man after His own heart.  He was even a writer of scripture!  How does someone like that fall?  Just the same as we do.  A little bit here, and a little bit there, and before you know it you have wandered far away from God.

But David repented of his sin.  He said in Psalm 32:3, “When I kept silent about my sin, my body wasted away through my groaning all day long. For day and night Your hand was heavy upon me. My vitality was drained away as with the fever heat of summer. I acknowledged my sin to You,  and my iniquity I did not hide; I said, “I will confess my transgressions to the LORD”; and You forgave the guilt of my sin. Therefore, let everyone who is godly pray to You in a time when You may be found.” If you are here today as a Christian and have fallen into sin like David, then you can know as he did the forgiveness and reconciliation of God.  David said that a broken and contrite heart God will not despise.

But that brings me to another aspect of a wandering sheep.  And that is the sheep who belongs to God and has wandered away from the Lord and yet will not come back. And because God loves His sheep, He will discipline them to bring them back into conformity with the image of His Son.  Jesus said in  Rev. 3:19 ‘Those whom I love, I reprove and discipline; therefore be zealous and repent.”

Roy Gustafson, who was a close friend and coworker with Billy Graham and led many parties to Israel, told a story in his book “In His Hand” (p.46).  He said that on one of his visits, on the road down from Jerusalem through the Judean wilderness to Jericho, they met a shepherd carrying one of his sheep with a splint and a bandage on its leg. Their guide, who’d lived nearly fifty years in that area said, “The shepherd broke that sheep’s leg himself.”

Mr. Gustafson asked why he would do such a thing.  It was explained that this was a sheep that was always wandering off, and in the process leading other sheep astray. Membership in the flock carries certain responsibilities, and even though the shepherd feels a real love for his animals, it’s sometimes necessary to discipline them, as they must be kept together for their well-being and their safety.

So to cure this sheep of its self-willed ways, the shepherd had broken its leg, and then hand fed and carried it till the bone was mended.  The process of being dependent upon the shepherd and being close to him would teach the sheep stay near him and not stray when he was well.

A lot of people today don’t like to hear that God is a jealous God. They don’t want to believe that God will actually punish sin.  Or that God will chastise His children.  But the fact of whether or not they want to believe it doesn’t change the nature of God.  Jesus said just before the parable of the lost sheep in Matthew 18’s version, “If your hand or your foot causes you to stumble, cut it off and throw it from you; it is better for you to enter life crippled or lame, than to have two hands or two feet and be cast into the eternal fire.”  The point is clear from Jesus’ teaching, God would rather you be lame than wander astray.  In my own life, I know that God had to break me before He could remake me.

The writer of Hebrews puts it this way in chapter 12; “MY SON, DO NOT REGARD LIGHTLY THE DISCIPLINE OF THE LORD, NOR FAINT WHEN YOU ARE REPROVED BY HIM; FOR THOSE WHOM THE LORD LOVES HE DISCIPLINES, AND HE SCOURGES EVERY SON WHOM HE RECEIVES.”  It is for discipline that you endure; God deals with you as with sons; for what son is there whom his father does not discipline? But if you are without discipline, of which all have become partakers, then you are illegitimate children and not sons. Furthermore, we had earthly fathers to discipline us, and we respected them; shall we not much rather be subject to the Father of spirits, and live? For they disciplined us for a short time as seemed best to them, but He disciplines us for our good, so that we may share His holiness. All discipline for the moment seems not to be joyful, but sorrowful; yet to those who have been trained by it, afterwards it yields the peaceful fruit of righteousness. Therefore, strengthen the hands that are weak and the knees that are feeble, and make straight paths for your feet, so that the limb which is lame may not be put out of joint, but rather be healed.”

Did you get that?  Make straight paths for your feet so that the limb which is lame may not be put out of joint.  That’s a reference to God breaking the leg of the sheep, to keep it from going astray.  But if you repent, then God promises healing. Psalm 51:8, “Make me to hear joy and gladness, let the bones which You have broken rejoice.” Hosea 6:1“Come, let us return to the LORD. For He has torn us, but He will heal us; He has wounded us, but He will bandage us.”

Listen, if you’re here today and you have wandered away from the Lord, and you deliberately continue to walk away from the path of His word, then if you’re a child of God He will pursue you.  You are His.  You are not your own, you are bought with a great price, the price of the blood of the Son of God.  Don’t trample His grace under your feet. If you’re God’s child and you are rebelling then one day He will discipline you to bring you back.  And if He doesn’t, then you’re not His child.

One last application.  The sheep in need of a Savior. If we are to follow Jesus as His disciples, then we must be willing to go after the lost as He did.  As Jesus said in the last chapter of Luke we looked at a couple of weeks ago, the master sent his servants to go out into the highways and byways and compel them to go in.

We have a commission from Jesus Himself to go out into all areas of the world, starting in our neighborhoods, to our cities, country and then to the uttermost parts of the world and make disciples.  Telling people that there is good news for sinners who are willing to repent and be saved.  That Jesus the Savior has offered Himself as a sacrifice for our sins that we might be made righteous before God.

James 5:19 says “My brethren, if any among you strays from the truth and one turns him back,  let him know that he who turns a sinner from the error of his way will save his soul from death and will cover a multitude of sins.”  You want to do God’s will?  You want to make a difference for the kingdom of heaven?  Then devote some time to reaching the child of God who has strayed.  Go to that child in love and compassion and reach him with the truth and in his need.

Jude 1:22 says, “And have mercy on some, who are doubting;  save others, snatching them out of the fire; and on some have mercy with fear, hating even the garment polluted by the flesh.”

This is our calling.  It’s a noble calling.  A great commission.  Jesus said to Peter if you love Me, you will tend my flock.  Feed my sheep.  Feed my lambs.  Jesus has called us as Christians to shepherd the flock of God. Jesus uses people to serve his people.  Jesus wants to use you to reach his sheep.  That is what it means to be part of a church.  We don’t go to church just to watch a performance or hear a message.  Ephesians 4 tells us that we go to church to become equipped to do the work of service of building up the body.  In other words, you become the church.  You begin to serve.  You begin to witness.  You begin to pray for others.

I think so many people fall short of usefulness because they underestimate the power of prayer in the church.  They think because they can’t preach or lead singing then there isn’t anything for them to do.  But if they just understood the power of prayer then they could have a mighty impact for the kingdom of God.  Pray for those that are lost.  Pray for those that are in rebellion.  Pray for God to send someone to search for that lost sheep and bring them back to God.  Pray that God will send you.

So many people say “well I want to do the will of God, but I just haven’t figured out what that is yet.”  Well, in Matthew 18:14 at the conclusion of the parable of the lost sheep the will of God is written right there so you won’t get confused. “So it is not the will of your Father who is in heaven that one of these little ones perish.” That’s His will.  Now let’s get to it. Go search out and bring in the lost sheep that they will not perish.

In closing then, it should be apparent that we are all like sheep.  And like sheep, we have all gone astray.  If you confess that you are a sinner and are willing to repent of your sins, willing to forsake your sins, then Jesus is teaching here that there is a place for you in heaven if you trust in His atonement. Jesus said heaven is waiting with bated breath for you to repent.  The angels are standing on the parapets of heaven ready to break out in joyous celebration for one sinner that repents.  That is why Jesus came, to save sinners.  All that stopping you from being saved today is your rebellion.  I hope that today is the day of your salvation.

And if you are a sheep that belongs to Christ but have wandered away from the path of God, then I urge you today to repent. A contrite and broken heart God will not despise.  But if you continue in your rebellion, then know for certain that a good and loving God will not let you stray forever.  He is calling you to come home in repentance right now.  I hope that you answer His call.  And finally, let us follow the Great Shepherd’s example.  Let’s go out into the world and compel sinners to come to repentance.  Let’s tell them the good news, that Christ has come to bind up the broken hearted, to heal broken hearts to forgive us our sins and provide reconciliation with God.  That is our mission, our purpose, so let us be about the Father’s business of bringing the lost to salvation.

Posted in Sermons |

The cost of discipleship, Luke 14: 25-

Apr

28

2014

thebeachfellowship

For the last couple of chapters or so, we have been looking at a running message that Jesus has been preaching concerning the characteristics of the kingdom of God. And perhaps the key to that entire sermon was His pronouncement in chapter 13 vs. 24 that the way into the kingdom of God was by a narrow gate, and few there were that would enter it. Jesus gives a variety of illustrations and examples that show that simply a form of religion, or nationality, or good intentions did not qualify one to enter the kingdom of heaven.

The summation of that principle was found in our last study in chapter 14, vs. 16-24 in which Jesus presented a parable which likened the kingdom of God to a great dinner banquet. And if you will remember, the thrust of this story was that the invited guests found themselves preoccupied with their own commitments on the day of the feast, and so the master invited the lame, blind and crippled, the people of the streets to come in and enjoy his hospitality. But he said about those first invitees, “none of those men who were invited shall taste of my dinner.’”

The moral of the story was that those that were initially invited valued their own agenda more than the invitation to the great banquet. They valued their possessions more than the kingdom, they valued their work more than the kingdom and they valued their relationships more than the kingdom. And Jesus is saying that because of their priorities, they were disqualified from entering the kingdom of God. So contrary to the popular idea that the kingdom of God is a great big open door and all you have to do to enter is believe in God, Jesus uses one example after another to divide, to subtract, and to reveal that only a few are really going to be accepted into the kingdom of God. And what Jesus makes clear here is that true discipleship is synonymous with the kingdom of God. You can’t be in the kingdom and not a disciple. It is the same thing.

Now after saying all that, Jesus leaves the Pharisee’s house where He had been eating dinner and He begins traveling again towards Jerusalem. And it says in vs. 25 that great crowds are following Him. Now for most Christians, that would be perceived as a good thing, would it not? I mean, there can be no greater testimony to a work of God than to see a great crowd, or so we’re led to believe. But Jesus consistently goes against the Christian church planter stereotype here. He obviously didn’t read the best selling book “The Purpose Driven Church.” But all jesting aside, Jesus is not interested in building a great church simply on the basis of numbers. Without question, He was the greatest evangelist, the greatest preacher, the greatest shepherd that ever lived. If anyone should have been filling a football stadium every weekend He should have. But Jesus doesn’t seem to be interested in that. Jesus isn’t interested in building a big church – He is interested in building disciples. He knows that most of the people following Him were not committed enough to become disciples. In fact, they weren’t really interested in becoming disciples. They were following Him because for the moment He was a popular figure. He was a novelty. There was occasionally free food that miraculously appeared. There were people that were being healed, even dead people raised from the grave. He was by far the greatest thing to happen in their community in their life times. Jesus was a sensation. And people poured out of the towns to see Him. But Jesus isn’t interested in popularity. He knows that popularity is a fickle thing. The crowd that swelled after Him today would be calling for His crucifixion tomorrow.

We see the same thing in our society today. What’s wildly popular today is old hat tomorrow. My daughter and I were having one of our frequent talks about fashion just the other day and I said virtually the same thing. I warned her not to be a slave of fashion. By the time you get your wardrobe fashionable, the fashion has changed and you are out of style again. I can’t wait for some of our current fashions to change. Unfortunately, they just keep recycling themselves again every few years. I think I’ve lived through at least 3 separate 60’s revivals. It’s starting to feel like groundhog day.

So Jesus isn’t interested in furthering His own popularity. If He lived on earth in our day I seriously doubt that He would have a facebook page with thousands of friends. But He is interested in making disciples. However, He isn’t interested in fair weather disciples, He wants a total commitment. He isn’t interested in superficial followers but He wants them to know what it will cost them. This is not a call to come to Christ so that you can have your best life now. This is not a call to come to Christ so that all your problems can be solved, or so that you can be successful, or so that you can realize your full potential, or even to come to Christ to get out of hell. To borrow a quote from John McArthur, Jesus is not calling for a makeover; He’s calling for a takeover. He is calling to become sovereign Lord, divine dictator, ruler, controller and king of your life. Never did Jesus call for a short, easy prayer to receive eternal life. Never did He call on people to make an emotional decision induced by some pleadings by someone or some music or some moving environment. Never did Jesus offer an easy believism or an easy way to Heaven. What Jesus is saying in these verses is that becoming a disciple of Christ requires a complete capitulation and real discipleship has a real cost involved. And He is warning them that unless they are willing to pay the price, they will never be His disciples.

You know, I’m going to go against my wife’s advice here and make a statement regarding the cost of true discipleship. And that is that I will predict that there are some who are sitting here today that will no longer be here three or four months from now. There undoubtedly are some here today who want to be in the kingdom, may even think they are disciples of Jesus Christ, and yet they have never fully surrendered, they have never fully counted the cost. And one day they will find themselves in a position where they have to choose between a relationship or a complete commitment to Christ, and they will choose the relationship to have first place. Or one day they will find themselves facing a choice between their career or their allegiance to Christ first, and they will choose the career. Or maybe one day they will face the choice between riches and possessions or between putting Christ first, and they will choose what Jesus calls mammon, the riches of the world.

Please understand, I don’t want to see people leave our church. I’m not encouraging someone to fall away. But I am warning you that it regularly happens and that history shows that most people fall away because they are not really, truly committed to put Christ first in their lives, no matter what the cost. The landscape of modern Christianity is littered with half started, desolate houses of those people that abandoned their commitment to Christ for the sake of the things of the world.

And so as Jesus concludes His message He gives them three costs to discipleship. Three separate times Jesus says you cannot be my disciple unless you bear the cost. The first cost is the cost of relationships. He turns around to the crowd that is following Him and says in vs. 26, “If anyone comes to Me, and does not hate his own father and mother and wife and children and brothers and sisters, yes, and even his own life, he cannot be My disciple.” Now I believe that Jesus says this in just this way in order to be deliberately confrontational. He deliberately wants to be shocking. There is no other way to understand this statement. This is not a soft spoken, music playing in the background sort of emotional appeal to come to Jesus. This is an extreme challenge to their motivation to follow Christ.

Now how are we to understand this statement? Are we really supposed to hate our family members? Doesn’t the Bible tell husbands to love their wives as their own selves? Didn’t Jesus tell us to love our neighbors? Doesn’t the Bible teach us to even love our enemies? So how do we reconcile this statement with what we know to be true in other scriptures? Well, we understand scripture by comparing it with scripture. And so if those other statements are true, then we must recognize that Jesus isn’t telling us to hate our families. But rather it is a Hebrew idiom. It’s a way of saying that my love for Christ is so great, that my love for my wife is like hate in comparison. That is what it means. He is speaking of the kind of love required in the great commandment, which says you shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, all your soul, all your mind and all your strength. When you love God like that, then everything else is subjugated to that love. The love of a wife is nothing in comparison. The love of a boyfriend or girlfriend is nothing in comparison.

That’s why when I give marriage counseling I always use a triangle for illustration. And I point out that their allegiance to God must be first, at the top, their love for God must be paramount. And if that is right, then their love for each other will be right. If you will be a disciple of Jesus Christ, then you must subjugate every familial relationship to the Lordship of Jesus Christ. He must have preeminence. He will not settle for second place in your life.

Not only are we to put Christ ahead of our relationships, but we must put Him even above our own lives. And so in vs. 27 Jesus says that not only are we to hate our family relationships, but that we must even hate our own lives. And that principle is fleshed out in vs. 27; “Whoever does not carry his own cross and come after Me cannot be My disciple.” I think there is enough of Walter Mitty in most of us that we can imagine ourselves in some dire circumstance where we would be told to deny Christ or die. And if you’re like me, you can imagine sacrificing your life as a martyr for Christ, if it came to that. But if you are like me, then secretly you are relieved to think that the likelihood of that happening is slim to none living in America in this day and age. Though how much longer we can take that for granted is a matter of some concern.

But I think what Jesus was referring to in vs. 27 is not so much a martyr’s death, though many of His disciples would indeed suffer that fate in the near future. But what is of a more immediate concern is that we are willing to sacrifice our lives in the sense of our day to day lives. Our priorities. Our goals, our dreams, our ambitions for the sake of knowing Jesus. He isn’t calling for some morbid, suicidal notion on our part, He isn’t calling for the kind of fanaticism that the terrorists practice where they blow themselves up in the name of God.

What Jesus means is that you consider your life; your will and your ambition and your desire and your purposes as minor, insignificant, unimportant compared to your desire to do what honors your Lord. You’re not just adding Jesus as another ingredient to your personal recipe for success. But you live your life in such a way that each day begins with the assessment that what I do today is for the glory of God. My will is not important, but His will be done in my life.

And there is yet a third cost of discipleship outlined in vs. 33; “So then, none of you can be My disciple who does not give up all his own possessions.” Now how are we to understand this? Are we really supposed to give up everything and live on the street? Are we not supposed to have cars or houses? We have to be careful not to take the teeth out of what Jesus is saying, and yet at the same time carefully figure out how this is to be done practically. God may indeed call you to give up all your possessions. That may be part of your discipleship. That may be the refining fire which God uses to purge away the impurities and make you useful to Him.

I can speak to that reality personally. There was a time in my life when God took everything I owned away. I’m still coming to grips with the difficulty of that sometimes. Especially us men are oftentimes defined by what kind of job we do, what kind of house we live in and what kind of car we drive. They say the only difference between men and boys is the price of their toys. Men like their toys. And I liked mine. Furthermore, I viewed them as some sort of proof of God’s blessing on my life. I even thought they were a testimony for God, sort of an example that I could offer others that would induce them to become disciples as well. But God had other plans. He wanted me to become a true disciple. And to do that He first took away everything I counted on, everything I defined myself by. He had to break me before He could remake me. So I can attest to the fact that Christ does in fact many times demands of His disciples that they give it all up.

But that is my story. It may not be the way God deals with you. However I will tell you what it means for all of us. What it means is this. You become a steward of everything and an owner of nothing. You give everything to God and He gives back to you what He wants you to use for Him. Everything that I have belongs to Christ and I become just a caretaker of His stuff. It’s not my money, it is given to me to use for His glory. It’s not my house or my car, it’s loaned me by God to use for His glory. You are a steward. And it’s required of stewards that they are found faithful and that they use it for the purposes of the kingdom of God. Being a disciple means coming to the point where I hate, or despise any possession that comes between me and the Lord. That like Paul we can say, “More than that, I count all things to be loss in view of the surpassing value of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord, for whom I have suffered the loss of all things, and count them but rubbish so that I may gain Christ.” Phil. 3:8

Now in Jesus’ preaching, He always presents only two possible choices or two possible outcomes for our lives. Going back to what I said was the key to this message in chapter 13, Jesus said you were either in the kingdom or you were outside the door of the kingdom. There is no middle ground. There is no neutral corner. Jesus said elsewhere that you are either for Me or against Me. There is not a spiritual no man’s land. And the scary thing is that He makes it clear in both chapter 13 and 14 that there will be many who think that they are for God and yet they are not. They think that they are in the kingdom and yet they are not. In 13:25 Jesus says they will bang on the door saying, “Lord, open up to us!’ then He will answer and say to you, ‘I do not know where you are from.’ Then you will begin to say, ‘We ate and drank in Your presence, and You taught in our streets’; and He will say, ‘I tell you, I do not know where you are from; DEPART FROM ME, ALL YOU EVILDOERS.’ Only two outcomes, you are either in or you’re out.

And so in our text Jesus illustrates again this terrible tragedy of thinking you are a disciple, thinking that you are a follower of Christ, but in fact finding yourself outside of the kingdom. And He illustrates this by means of two short parables that are closely related. They are both speaking of the outcome of a life lived without full capitulation to Christ as Lord. Of a person that thought that they could hang on to some of the affectations of the world, that they could have their cake and eat it too. But at the end of their life, at the completion, find that though they had gained the world, they had lost their own soul. Jesus says in vs.28, “For which one of you, when he wants to build a tower, does not first sit down and calculate the cost to see if he has enough to complete it? Otherwise, when he has laid a foundation and is not able to finish, all who observe it begin to ridicule him, saying, ‘This man began to build and was not able to finish.’

Notice three times the idea of finishing or completing is mentioned in this parable. The principle is simply this; it’s possible to have good intentions to follow the Lord, but it is also possible to fall short, to not persevere unto the end. To not be able to finish. It’s possible to have a reverence for God, to go to church now and then, to even pray and worship God, and yet fall short in your commitment to true discipleship. To one day find yourself at the end of your life and yet not be found in the kingdom of God. This has been the warning that Christ has been giving all along in this sermon. That narrow is the gate and few there be that find it. That not everyone who says “Lord, Lord” will enter the kingdom of God, but they that do the will of God. That God looks at the heart, and examines our motives and God will not accept our hypocrisy. That God will not accept second place in our lives. God demands first place.

Oh ladies and gentlemen, this is why I rail against a soft, easy believism, come as you are-stay as you are style of Christianity that is being taught in so many churches today. I don’t want to see people with good intentions misled into thinking that the way of the cross doesn’t demand that you also carry your cross. That you must die to self and die to the world. I hate to see people duped into thinking that you can add God into your life and improve your life and that is somehow Christianity. I can assure you that by Christ’s standard, that is not discipleship.

Discipleship has a cost and if you don’t consider that at the outset, then the tragedy is that at the end of your life you won’t be counted as a disciple. Jesus will say, I never knew you. What a tragedy to sell short the gospel and peddle a form of religion that only serves to make you the popular church. I have given up on being popular. I just want to make disciples.

There is a solution to this dilemma though, thank God. Jesus gives the second parable to illustrate the solution. Vs. 31; “Or what king, when he sets out to meet another king in battle, will not first sit down and consider whether he is strong enough with ten thousand men to encounter the one coming against him with twenty thousand? Or else, while the other is still far away, he sends a delegation and asks for terms of peace.” Listen, the solution for this king was to surrender. He asks for terms of peace. And that is exactly our solution. We were told by the devil and this world that our life would be fulfilling, it would be fun, exciting and rewarding. But we failed to realize that their was a judgment coming against us. That there would be a day when every thought, every word, every action and even the secrets of our heart would be judged by the Almighty God.

There is only one possible solution; to raise the white flag and surrender. To say I give up my priorities, I give up my life of pleasure, my life of self fulfillment and I will do whatever it is you ask of me. I surrender all. Every relationship, every possession, every career decision is subjected to the Lordship of Christ. That is how we have peace with God. When we submit by faith to Christ we have peace with God because He paid the price of our penalty that we might be reconciled to God. Christ is our peace. Listen to how Colossians explains that peace found in Christ. Col 1:13 says, “that Christ has rescued us from the domain of darkness, and transferred us to the kingdom of His beloved Son, in whom we have redemption, the forgiveness of sins. He is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn of all creation. For by Him all things were created, both in the heavens and on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or dominions or rulers or authorities—all things have been created through Him and for Him. He is before all things, and in Him all things hold together. He is also head of the body, the church; and He is the beginning, the firstborn from the dead, so that He Himself will come to have first place in everything. For it was the Father’s good pleasure for all the fullness to dwell in Him, and through Him to reconcile all things to Himself, having made peace through the blood of His cross; through Him, I say, whether things on earth or things in heaven.”

Listen folks, is it not proper that such a One as Christ demands our all? Demands every allegiance. He who gave up all the glories of heaven to become crucified for us, should He not deserve our complete allegiance? Thank God that He has provided a way that we can have peace with God. It is the only way that we might be found in Him complete when the day of judgment comes. That we might stand boldly before the throne on that day, holy and blameless and without reproach because of His sacrifice for us.That is our solution if we are willing to accept it. If we are willing to recognize that in our own efforts we fall short, and ask for forgiveness and reconciliation.

Jesus gives us one final warning in regards to the cost of discipleship. It is related to the cost of possessions found in vs.33, “So then, none of you can be My disciple who does not give up all his own possessions. Therefore, salt is good; but if even salt has become tasteless, with what will it be seasoned? It is useless either for the soil or for the manure pile; it is thrown out. He who has ears to hear, let him hear.” First of all note that the principle of salt is related to the principle of possessions by the word therefore. It ties them together. Now in Matthew 5:13 Jesus says almost the same thing concerning salt, except that He prefaces it by saying that “you are the salt of the earth.” In the next verse He says that “you are the light of the earth.” So we can understand then that this is a reference to those who would be disciples.

But the warning is that defilement from the world makes the salt worthless. Salt in those days was highly prized as a preservative. It was also used as a means of payment, especially for soldiers. That is where the expression “worth your salt” comes from. It meant worth your pay. But the primary purpose of salt was as a preservative against corruption in a arid or Mediterranean climate before the days of refrigeration. And the warning is simply that a true disciple cannot be corrupted by possessions or any of the things that once contaminated them.

Peter said virtually the same thing in 2Pet. 2:20, “For if, after they have escaped the defilements of the world by the knowledge of the Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, they are again entangled in them and are overcome, the last state has become worse for them than the first. For it would be better for them not to have known the way of righteousness, than having known it, to turn away from the holy commandment handed on to them. It has happened to them according to the true proverb, “A DOG RETURNS TO ITS OWN VOMIT,” and, “A sow, after washing, returns to wallowing in the mire.”

He isn’t talking about losing your salvation here. But he is talking about a person that comes to a point of hearing the call to discipleship, maybe having the good intention of becoming a disciple, maybe even making a profession of being a disciple, and yet because they did not fully consider the cost of discipleship they fell back into the contamination of sin. And the last state becomes worse than the first. There are going to be degrees of punishment in hell. I don’t know exactly how it will work. But Jesus said in Luke 12:47, “And that slave who knew his master’s will and did not get ready or act in accord with his will, will receive many lashes, but the one who did not know it, and committed deeds worthy of a flogging, will receive but few. From everyone who has been given much, much will be required; and to whom they entrusted much, of him they will ask all the more.”

Listen, Christ is calling all of us to a true, committed discipleship. The call is as wide as the ocean, it goes out to everyone. But the way of entry is very narrow and there will only be a few that are willing to give up everything to enter it. I hope and pray that all of you here today have made peace with God. That you have counted the cost and realized that you cannot come into the kingdom of God on your own merit. That the only way to enter is by way of the narrow door, who is Jesus Christ. Call on Him today while there is still time and make peace with God. If anyone has ears to hear, let him hear. Let him take action. The call is to you, to everyone who will take up his cross and follow Christ.

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