Thursday, March 7, 2024

Even when I don't want to...

 Read Mark 10:17-31

At last, we get to a person of status in the world coming to Jesus and falling down before him. How do we know the man had status.? If you read the full pericope, we find that the man had great wealth.

And here he was before Jesus, giving proper reverence. Finally!

The man begins the conversation with the words good teacher. It sounds like an appropriate greeting. It least acknowledges that Jesus was a teacher—a rabbi.

But Jesus focused on the word good. Why do you call me good? Only God is good.

Now Jesus had told many that he and his Father were one. Did this man know that talking with Jesus was the same as talking with God?

Jesus did not send the man packing because he called him good. In fact, he heard the man’s question and answered it. What was the question?

It was “What must I do to inherit eternal life?”

That question bears some exploration. Let’s consider the infinitive in the sentence: to inherit. He didn’t say earn. It didn’t say win. He didn’t say achieve. He didn’t say to discover.

He said, “What must I do to inherit eternal life?”

What must I do to inherit eternal life? Inherit is different from earning or winning or achieving. Typically, the inheritance goes to an heir.

Was this man asking to be an heir in God’s kingdom? It is an interesting question, which Jesus goes on to answer.

Don’t murder. No side chicks If it’s not yours, don’t take it. Don’t lie or defraud. Treat your parents right. The list sounded very familiar to this young man.

He said, probably with a mix of relief and excitement, “I’ve done all of those!”

 Yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, I’m in for sure! Yes!

Compliance is good. Obedience is good. Following directions is good and they all put you on a good path to having a relationship with God, but they are not everything.

Jesus said to go sell everything you have and give the proceeds to the poor.  Jesus said that following the rules is good. It is important, but it is not everything.

In Mark’s gospel, we find these words before Jesus told this rich young man—some say ruler—to go sell all that he had, we are told that Jesus looked at the man and loved him.

Ouch! What kind of love is that?

It’s the kind that says you are playing by the rules but missing the relationship.

It’s the kind of love that says God is a jealous God and you can’t have another god on the side. Your wealth is your god.  My Father in Heaven is coming in second place or lower in your life and that dog don’t hunt.

You need to value your relationship with my Father in heaven over the rules for good living. They are not in conflict with each other. In fact, you can’t really understand most of what they are all about if you are not in good relationship with the one true God.

If you want to understand what God is telling you in his word, you need the Sprit of God to guide you.

The rich young man verified the assessment of the Lord. The young man went away sad because he had a big stake in this world. He had much wealth. He had a lot of stuff.

The young man went away sad.  We don’t know if he did what he was told or not. Put that on the list of things to find out in the age to come.

I’ve been working on a proposal for an orientation package in heaven. It would include excursions. One to them would be to talk with this young man to see if he did what he was told.

Did he put the words of his Master into practice? It sounds like he knew that Jesus was from God. He may not have known he was the Messiah, maybe he did, but he knew this man was from God.

And Jesus had told him to do something that he really didn’t want to do. God told him to do something that he really didn’t want to do.

We don’t all need to sell everything we have. This is not a universal call to poverty. We are not taking a vow of poverty in lieu of the hymn of invitation this morning.

We don’t all need to sell everything, but you can bet we all need to do some things that Jesus told us to do that we don’t really want to do.

Such as?

Forgive. How many of us have a person or people that we have not forgiven. Why? Because we don’t want to! Forgive.

Don’t let your left hand know what your right hand is doing when we give.  Sometimes, we want a little acknowledgment when we give or give something extra. God says, that’s something personal between us.

God tells us to keep this between us. You want a personal relationship, this is personal.

How about love your enemy? That one is always going to be tough. It’s easier if you pray for your enemies while you are at it.

I don’t know what it is for you, but God is likely calling you to do something outside of your comfort zone. He is calling you to do something that you don’t want to do.

Do you know what it’s called when you do something outside of your comfort zone? It’s called growth, at least 95% of the time.

What about the other 5%?  Those are hold-my-beer moments that usually come with their own lessons learned.

If we are to truly grow, we need to put the words of our Master into practice, and that includes the things that we really don’t want to do.

Let me put it this way. Are you a Christian or a Christian Tourist?

What?

Do you live the words of Jesus or do you just know what he said and like to observe what people do without being on the playing field? The tourist is free to comment and advise but never gets any dirt under his fingernails from being a Christian.

Let me try it this way.  If you were accused of being a Christian would there be enough evidence to convict you?

What sort of evidence?  The kind that affirms you have put the words of your Master into practice—that evidence.  It’s hard evidence if it includes you doing what Jesus told you to do even if you don’t like it.

The disciples focused on the money and wealth part of this story which we discussed in the first service.  Today, I ask you to focus on doing those things that God told us to do with a special emphasis on those that we don’t like or don’t want to do or just those things we have been able to ignore before.

Maybe a false god is taking a prominent place in our lives and we need to kick him to the curb in favor of the one true God.

Your charge is to do the things that Jesus told you to do and don’t skip the hard ones. Don’t ignore his commands because you just don’t want to do that.

Your challenge is to put the words of our Master into practice, even those that we have been fighting hard for some time.  We must even do those things where our own understanding says, you get an exemption on that one.

No, we don’t!

The man went away sad because he had great wealth and it had taken the place of the one true God. The man still followed the rules but he was short on relationship with his Creator. He went through his Live the Good Life Checklist but missed the get to know the One who spoke it all into existence experience.

The man was only cheating himself out of abundant life. You have heard the quotes that the good keeps us from our best. There's a variation on this that works both ways, but for now, consider this.

This young man had it good—very good but he was missing out on abundant life in Christ—life in good relationship with God.

The question today is not so much what this rich young man did when he left, maybe he did what Jesus told him, and maybe not. The question is will we walk away sad when God calls us to do something that we don’t want to do?

The question is what will we do when Jesus calls us to do something that we just don’t want to do. Will we too be sad?

I have hated that person for a year now or is it two or ten. I can’t forgive them now.

I give what I give. Don’t be asking me for more, Jesus.

And this whole love your enemy business, that’s just too out there for me.

Let’s go back to the young man just for a moment. Before Jesus commanded him to sell everything, we read: Jesus looked at him and loved him.

Jesus told him to sell everything not as a test or evaluation but out of love.

The man wanted eternal life when he died. Jesus offered eternal life now.  Trade in your god of this world for the real God and follow me.  You have to kick the false god to the curb first—in your case that is your wealth—but then come follow me.

Do we not understand that God has good plans for us?  God has the very best in mind for us and in store for us. When will we let go of our own understanding and take on the yoke of our Master?

God has good plans for you.

God loves you.

If God tells you to do it and you don’t want to, you are fighting against your own best outcomes.  Father really does know best.

And when God calls us to something that we don’t like, we don’t go away sad. We do it with a smile on our faces knowing that God loves us and God has good plans for us.

We don’t go away sad. We step into whatever God has called us to do and we do it knowing it is for our own good and that the God who told us to do this thing also loves us very much.

Jesus looked at him and loved him, and then told him the thing he needed to hear and do the most—get rid of your false god and get to know the real God.

We will all have those moments when Jesus looks at us and loves us and tells us exactly what we need to hear and what we need to do.

Can we say these words with joy in our hearts and a smile on our faces?

Thy will be done!

God desires a wholesale exchange of everything that we seek before him for seeking him first. We can have no other gods that approach the one true God.

Do we not understand that God has good plans for us?  God has the very best in mind for us and in store for us. When will we let go of our own understanding and take on the yoke of our Master?

God has good plans for you.

God loves you.

Let us put his words into practice even when we don’t want to, with joy in our hearts and smiles on our faces for God loves us and has good plans for us.

Amen.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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