Showing posts with label John 3. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John 3. Show all posts

Friday, April 17, 2020

Life and Death


Read John 3

After Jesus came to John at the Jordan, John did not stop baptizing.  You might think that his job was done.  It was not, but it was lessening.

You might wonder why John didn’t follow Jesus.  John had his assignment and he would not become a distraction for the very One for whom he prepared the way.

People still needed to repent of their sins.  Not all of the people who needed to do this would make their way to see John.  John kept doing what he was called to do, but he had perspective.

In the course of a discussion that began with ceremonial washing, the context turned to the fact that people were following Jesus more than John.  Even some of John’s own disciples had left to follow him.

John explained that he was not the Christ.  He had explained this before but did it again.

The Christ is from heaven. He is the only one who has seen and known heaven.  He is on a mission from his Father.  That’s why he is with us.

John was of the earth.  He had surely been given gifts by the Father, but he originated of a father’s desire.  He had a heavenly mission but was a man with a God-given mission.

That mission was to prepare the way for the Christ.  That was a big deal at first but had lessened somewhat since the arrival of Jesus at the Jordan.  There would come a point—in this case imprisonment—when John’s work at the Jordan and other places would come to an end.

John was not upset about this.  In fact, this is what he thought being the forerunner called him to do.  He prepared the way for the One who was coming after him.  Now that One had surpassed him in his earthly ministry.

Have you ever watched a relay race?  Runners don’t just run their leg and stop and then pass the baton.  The runner of the first leg runs as fast as he can and passes the baton to the next runner at full speed.  That first runner keeps on running.  It would be unnatural to slam on the breaks.  Once the baton is passed, he gradually slows down.

The race is in the hands of the next runner, but the first runner still runs for a bit.

Jesus had the baton.  Jesus was the reason for John’s mission.  Jesus was the One that brought life and life eternal.  The Father had placed everything into the hands of Jesus.

John had preached repentance but now he preached life and death.

Whoever receives the Son has life but those who don’t remain dead.  The wrath of the Father is still upon them.

John proclaimed repentance and turning away from a sinful world.  He prepared the world that was under the wrath of God for the Christ.

Jesus proclaimed deliverance because his Father desired mercy and forgiveness over wrath, but belief in the one and only Son of God was essential.  It is essential.

In the middle of his explanation, John appeared to be a little exasperated.  He said the One who comes from above has testified to the truth but no one has believed him.  John was not concerned that his part has lessened.  He wondered why everyone was not responding to the One who came after him.

Surely, no one does not mean every single person on the planet for we have already noted some who did believe and follow Jesus.  John was wondering how so many had come to see him and partake of this earthly baptism, yet were not yet ready to believe in the One who came after him.

These people who had come to see John had only known repentance and forgiveness for a time.  Whatever they had done in accordance with God’s law, they would do again next year.  Maybe they grew closer to God for a time, then the relationship would atrophy.

I can’t imagine a Hebrew feeling any better than he could on or just after the Day of Atonement. But a few months later, the slavery of sin would rattle its chains more and more each day.

David had said that his sin was always before him.  All the blood of goats and bulls could not make him clean.  Only God could create in him a pure heart.

We are temporal beings made from the dust of the earth.  We don’t comprehend eternity, but God placed eternity in our hearts.  We can’t know it in the world, only in God.

Eternity had come in the man we know as Jesus.  He brought life and life eternal, but so many did not want to receive what he brought.  The darkness of the world was too appealing.

From the beginning of this gospel, the state of the world has been compared to darkness.  The light came but people did not recognize him.
The darkness cannot overcome him but somehow people chose darkness.  It’s comfortable.

Hello darkness my old friend.
 I’ve come to talk with you again.

 Paul Simon’s words sometimes hit close to home.

How could people not receive the testimony of the One who came from heaven?  People were comfortable with their condemned state. 

How can people today reject the truth that we know in Jesus Christ?  

Condemnation is comfortable.  You have heard me talk about the twin gods of Apathy and Ambivalence before.  Their companions are bitterness, vitriol, and acrimony.  They are alive and well in modern American and they have taken the life out of life for so many.

So many people are checking on their stimulus check every hour and don’t check in with God once a month.

So many people who watch part of this broadcast as a program and are not participating in worship, won’t be here when we start to gather again.  Not because of health concerns or geography but comfort.

So many people love their comfort and darkness so much that they won’t hear the testimony of the one true God that we know in Christ Jesus.

Most of the time when we gather together, I preach to disciples.  I challenge those who already have professed Jesus not just as Savior but as Lord.  Jesus is Lord.  He reigns.  My comfort zone is continually being changed by him.

Most of my messages are for those people, people who are following the Lord and growing in his grace.  Most are not about salvation for in your profession of faith you have been saved from sin and death and in your discipleship, you are stepping into abundant life.

In this new format, I know that we are reaching some who just want to check the God block on their to-do list just in case this pandemic thing gets really bad.

I know some are just running this broadcast in the background of something else that they are doing.

Some just post their like or heart emojis and then get back to binge-watching Netflix. 

Some are worshiping because the Spirit of God that lives inside of you compels you to worship.  If that’s you, pardon me for a moment while I speak to everyone else.

This message of life and death is for real.  It’s not theory or philosophy.  It’s not something to be considered only in your old age. 

This is here and now life and death. 

We see the pandemic deaths posted on the news every day.  You will grow comfortable with the numbers.  You’re still breathing.  Those are just numbers.  Death is not near you, is it?

That’s a cold thing to say.  How can you say that?

Talk with someone who is old enough to remember the Vietnam War but was not sent to Vietnam.  What do they remember?  The numbers and sometimes the names of those lost that day would be published on the evening news.  Yes, there was a time where half an hour of local news and half an hour of national news was enough.

People grew accustomed to the daily accounts of American casualties.
Men and women still die in battle all around the globe.  We seldom hear about them.  Many more die when they come home and take their own lives.  Little attention is given to them.

We have grown accustomed to and comfortable with death.  Death counts grow every day from war, disease, starvation, and even the contagion of the year.

What we are missing is that we are already dead.  We are already dead until we believe in Jesus.  Jesus brings life and life eternal.

If you are comfortable in your present existence but don’t know life, eternal life may not be appealing to you.  You may be comfortable in your present darkness and think that it’s good enough.

You may think that you don’t want to give up what you have for what you believe life as a disciple of Jesus Christ is.  What you need to understand is that all that you have, all your worldly belongings and pleasure and treasures of many kinds are just decorations on your casket because you are already dead.

Some of those who are here every Sunday are thinking, “What got into Tom?  He is always preaching about love and growing in God’s grace.  What’s the deal?”

You would be correct if I were talking to those who know the Lord and desire to follow him, but right now I am talking to those who are dead and don’t even know it.

If that’s you, stop listening to me and confess your sins to the Lord, profess your belief in him, and affirm that you believe that God raised Jesus from the dead and sent his Spirit—his own Holy Spirit to live within us.

Then I want you to do one more thing.  Call someone that you know who is a believer and begin learning about following Jesus.


Learn about life abundant and life eternal.

Learn about growing in the grace of God.

Understand that professing Jesus as Lord is not something to be saved when you think death is near.  Death is here and you are under the wrath of God.  It’s a wrath that God does not want you to bear so he made a way for you to receive his love and forgiveness and grace.

Your profession of faith in Jesus Christ is not the finish line.  It’s the starting blocks for you can now live as God designed you to live.

For those who have professed their faith in this moment, know there is a celebration in heaven over you that’s just beginning.

For those who have been faithful disciples for some time, be ready to receive our new brothers and sisters as they reach out to you for help.
Let them know this God who is love by our love. 

Celebrate that their names are in the Lamb’s Book of Life and that God has entrusted them to you to help them grow in his grace.

Amen.

Tuesday, April 14, 2020

Jesus and Nicodemus


Read John 3

Who thinks that we are going to need to vote some people out of office before we see the Kingdom of God at work in our country?

Who thinks that we are going to have to put prayer back in school before we see the Kingdom of God in the here and now?

Who thinks that this quarantine business has to come to an end to see the Kingdom of God?

Who thinks that America will never see the Kingdom of God in a year with no baseball season?

Will we ever see the Kingdom of God?

A Pharisee named Nicodemus came to see Jesus at night.  I am required by an unidentified source to refer to this as Nic @ Nite.

Nicodemus begins by praising Jesus, acknowledging that he surely is a man of God.  The evidence is overwhelming.

Jesus doesn’t respond in polite conversation.  He gets down to business.  You think a little chit-chat between a Pharisee and a Rabbi whom the Pharisee deemed worthy of a personal visit would be in order.

Jesus tells him—and we need to be listening—that you can’t see the Kingdom of God unless you are born again.

Later, Jesus would say the same about entering the Kingdom of God, but he begins with seeing it.  To see the Kingdom of God you must be born again. 

He was talking to a Pharisee who knew much more than the average Torah-abiding Jew.  Pharisees knew the scripture inside-out.  Their daily lives were given to commenting on the finer points of the Law of Moses.  If anyone could see the Kingdom of God, it should have been the Pharisees.

Jesus sometimes referred to the Pharisees as the blind.  How could he do that?  They were experts in the written code, but missed the heart of God within it.  They were blind.  They could not see the Kingdom of God.

More study would not help.  Stricter obedience would not help.  Only being born again would help.

Nicodemus only comprehended birth into this world.  He struggled with birth into the Kingdom of God.  Not only could he not see it, he could not enter into it. 

To be fair to Nicodemus, I’m sure there would be very few people at that time who could comprehend being born again.  We would have likely thought like Nicodemus.  How can a man enter his mother’s womb again?

Jesus explained that flesh gives birth to flesh.  That’s the no-brainer and the stumbling block for Nicodemus.  But Spirit gives birth to spirit.

Jesus chastised Nicodemus a little.  He told him that he could recognize Jesus for who he was in spite of the physical evidence, which this Pharisee had acknowledged early in the conversation.  How could he ever comprehend the very Spirit of God. 

Only the Son of Man has been in heaven, but if we are born again, we can see and enter the Kingdom of God while we live in these temples of flesh.

People as a whole would struggle with this until Jesus was lifted up on the cross and died for our sins. He would rise from the dead and the Spirit would come to all who believed in him.

We have never lived on the other side of the cross.  We can’t really emphasize with a scholar such as Nicodemus or even the common person whose education was mainly the Torah.  We have never lived on that side of the cross.

But can we who know the whole story of God’s gift to us in Christ Jesus, see the Kingdom of God?  Have we entered the Kingdom of God?

Paul would say that it’s as if we are looking into a dark glass.  Our vision is not a keen as we would like it to be.  He would also say that eye has not seen and ear has not heard what the Lord God has in store for us.

But we do have the good deposit of God’s own Spirit.  So can we see this kingdom and enter into it?

I say that we can.

When the world sees someone as broken and damaged, we see the image of God.

When the world demands restitution or reparations, we long for reconciliation.

When the world sees worthless, we still see God’s masterpiece.

When people are hungry, we feed them.

When people are ignorant, we teach them.

When people don’t like us, we love them.

When people are lonely, we don’t leave them alone.

When people have lost hope, we pray for them and with them and share our hope.

When the world seems dark, we bring light as Christ ordained us to be.

When the days seem mundane, we bring salt for we are this world’s seasoning.

When the world becomes so carnal, we invade it with God’s own Spirit.

Having been born again, we see and enter this Kingdom of God not by changing our geography, but by exchanging our heart of flesh for one of his Spirit.

The Kingdom is less of a destination on a cosmic map as it is having his eyes to see and ears to hear.

It’s less of a gated community and more of one where love crosses all boundaries.

You who are born again, see the Kingdom of God.

You who have been born of the Spirit, enter the Kingdom of God.

You who have received his testimony, declare him to be Lord and live in his kingdom.

Amen.

Thursday, November 7, 2019

Sprinkles on a Cupcake



The world took hold of us and conformed us to its model.  We were lost but God had mercy upon us and sent his Son into the world not to condemn the world but to save it through him.  The Law and the Prophets pointed us to Jesus. 

At some point, we rejected the world and walked away from it.  We repented and believed the good news of life in Jesus Christ.  We were—we are saved!  That should rate a chorus of hallelujahs.

But how have we lived since then? Is loving God and loving one another chief among our core values and redeemed character or is responding to God’s mercy and grace by being his love just something we work in when we can?

Is he our all in all or just sprinkles on a cupcake?  How can we answer that?  Please consider two very direct commands from Jesus.  The first you know well.  Love one another.  The second is more than a command, it is a commission.  Go into the world with the good news of life in Jesus Christ.

There is much more to living in response to God’s grace, but take some time this week to see where you stand in relation to these two very direct commands from our Savior.  Then, ask yourself, If I was accused of following Jesus, would there be enough evidence to convict me?

Are we known by our love?  Do we trust in the Lord with all of our heart?  Are we on the sidelines criticizing other believers when we should be sharing God’s love in our every encounter?

There is a line in the Casting Crowns song Courageous that reads:

May the watchers become warriors
Let the men of God arise

Isn’t it time that our Christian life was more than sprinkles on a cupcake?  Isn’t it time that we get off the sidelines and become known by our love?   Isn’t it time to be known by our love?   Isn’t it time?