The Gospel and Baptism

The Gospel and Baptism
Chet Phillips

Transcript

We doing well this morning? Grab your Bibles, go to Mark chapter 1. We are doing a couple of exciting things today. We're having baptisms and we are starting a new series that we'll be walking through for the next five weeks. So we'll be in Mark chapter 1 today and we're going to spend a little bit of time for the next five weeks in Mark.

Just walking through what it looks like to follow Jesus. So we're going to be studying Jesus and his disciples. The Gospel of Mark was written by a close associate of the Apostle Peter, the disciple Peter. And so we are just looking at what Mark wrote and what it looked like to follow Jesus for them. And then we're trying to spend some time asking, what does that look like for us? Because I know when Jesus walked up to Peter and he said, follow me, and then he started walking, Peter could see Jesus.

So following him was pretty simple. It was like, I'm just going to walk behind him and then go from there, see what happens. For us, it's a little bit different. We've got to figure out what does it actually look like for us in Columbia in 2016 to follow Jesus. What does that mean with my job? What does that mean with school?

What does that mean with how I relate? And how does this work? And so that's what we're going to spend the next several weeks walking through and talking about. But we're kind of jumping that off today in Mark chapter 1. And we're going to look at one verse. But if we miss this, we'll misunderstand everything.

And so we're just going to study the beginning of the Gospel of Mark for just a few minutes this morning. And then we're going to celebrate in baptism. So I'm going to pray and we'll jump in. God, we thank you for your grace. We thank you for your love towards us. And we pray that we would grow today in our ability to joyously celebrate your active work on earth.

And we pray that we would grow in our understanding of what it means to follow you. In Jesus' name, amen. Mark chapter 1, verse 1. The beginning of the Gospel of Jesus Christ, the Son of God. Okay, so Mark starts off and he's not playing around. Like he doesn't take his time.

It's the beginning of the Gospel of Jesus Christ, the Son of God. So other Gospels, we have four of them. There's Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John. Matthew gives a genealogy of Jesus. He's kind of telling us his family history. Luke starts off telling us about how John the Baptist was born and how Jesus was born.

And that's where, if you've ever been to a Christmas play, we read the nativity stuff from Luke. That's the one they read in the Peanuts Christmas special. Charlie Brown's Christmas or whatever. That's Luke. Luke starts off with this big theological treatise on Jesus is the Word who becomes flesh and he lives among us. And it gets really kind of confusing.

He inserts John the Baptist in the middle of it for the heck of it. Like he just kind of takes his time. Mark is just, this is the beginning of the Gospel of Jesus Christ, the Son of God. It's like you went on a first date with Mark. You sat down at the table. The waitress comes up to see what you want to eat or what you want to order to drink.

And he's like, hold on a second. Do you want to get married? And it's like, what? And he's like, well, that's the point of dating, isn't it? Let's do this thing.

Like he's like straight up at the very beginning is like, this is the point of my book. Jesus is the Son of God. Like this is the Gospel of Jesus Christ, the Son of God. And so what we're going to do is take just a second to understand that sentence. What the Gospel of Jesus Christ, the Son of God means. Because Gospel means something.

Christ means something. And him saying he's the Son of God means something. So I just want to, when he says Jesus Christ, Christ is not his last name. Christ is a title. It means Jesus, the promised Messiah. Jesus, the promised one of God.

Like he's the one that the Old Testament has been telling us. He's the one that the prophets have been telling us. He's the one we've been waiting for this whole time. Jesus is the promised one. And then he says he's the Son of God. So he starts off by saying, you know Jesus, you know that guy that everybody's heard about?

I want you to know that he's the Son of God. I want you to know that God came down. I want you to know that God joined us. That's how he starts off this Gospel. Okay. I don't know about y'all.

When I hear that, God came to earth. My immediate thought is, uh-oh. Like that doesn't sound great. Like I look around earth. I live here. I'm from here.

I look around earth and I think, we're not doing so hot. Like there's a lot that we have done poorly. And if God made earth, when he comes down, it seems like he's not coming down to give out high fives or participation awards. Or like just to congratulate us. Like it doesn't seem like he's going to show up and be like, hey guys, I just couldn't stay in heaven. I had to come talk to y'all.

Genocide? Brilliant. Racism. You guys are crushing it. Like he's not, like I'm immediately hesitant when I hear that God came down. And I know for a lot of us, our response is, I would like for God to come down.

I'm going to give him a piece of my mind. I'd like to, I want to talk to him about some of this stuff. Like I'm upset with him. But let me tell you a little story and how I kind of don't think that's true. When I was little, we used to go stay at my grandparents' house. And I had like 13 cousins or 12 cousins.

I guess I was one of them. So there's like 13 of us. And the way my grandmother's house was, she had a big house. Everybody would stay there. All the families would stay there. And then there was a basement.

And the basement was just covered in little like mats and pallets and sleeping bags and stuff for all the kids to stay. And the kids were aged from like 4 to 15 or something. And so then they would come tell us, y'all need to go to bed. And then they would close the basement door. And they would leave us alone. And we didn't go to bed.

But we, like there was always shenanigans and nonsense. Like there was, we were making noises. We were messing with stuff. We were doing things they had explicitly told us not to do. We were doing things that they hadn't explicitly told us not to do. But we were pretty sure they would have had they thought of it.

Like we were down there. I mean it was chaos. And then here's what would happen. At some point, we don't know quite when they were going to sleep. You know, we were younger, we had to go to bed early. But at some point, the door to the basement would open.

And at my grandmother's house, there was, the basement door was hidden. And then there was like this half partial wall with some posts holding it up. And there were steps coming down. And so you always got to see the feet of whoever was coming down the stairs before you got to see the face. And so when the door opened, it was everybody immediately pretending like you sleep. Like we all, like you just tried to, you just dove somewhere.

Sometimes like three of y'all in the same sleeping bag. Like it's super weird looking, but like everybody just got to act like they were asleep. And then you would try to peek as best you could to see whose feet it was. And what, because like if I saw my uncle's feet, he can yell at me. He ain't hitting me though. Like I'm not getting beat by my uncle.

His kids are in trouble. Like he's going to beat them in front of us. We'll all be scared. But like the best time, but if I saw my dad's feet, it's like that's a one and third chance I'm getting beaten. And depending on how, you know, how much energy he had, it might just be all three of us just line us up or whatever. If you saw my granddad's feet, that's equal opportunity beatings.

Like he can hit whoever he wants. He made everybody. And so there was this moment when the door opened that immediately you were like, like, oh, them coming down here, this isn't good. They're not coming down here to tell us well done. And that's the same when I hear that God came to earth. My immediate thought is not, well, good.

My immediate thought is, oh, I've got sin. I've got brokenness. We're not doing well. And if he takes us to task, if he makes us give an account, this is a problem. But there's a word that Mark sticks at the very beginning of this that fixes that.

He says the beginning of the gospel of Jesus Christ, the son of God. And that word gospel, maybe some of y'all are familiar with it. Maybe you've, you grew up around church and you just know, well, gospel, you know, that's talking about Jesus. Maybe some of you didn't. And you're thinking gospel in that like a type of music. Or like, don't people say like, this is the gospel truth.

Doesn't that mean just like the truth of your truth? Like, I don't really know. I'm not heard that word a lot. When Mark used that word, it actually was a word that they used culturally at that time. There's actually an inscription that says the beginning of the gospel of Tiberius Caesar. Like, this was a term they used for a very specific type of message.

What it meant was good news. The word gospel is actually two Greek words stuck together that just mean news and joyful. It's like, this is joyful news. And here's how they used it. It meant life-changing, history-altering. You're never going to be the same again news.

I've got a piece of information for you that is going to radically change everything. It's that type of news. That's what gospel meant. So the way they would use this sum is they would have after battles. So when an invading force was coming, the king would, or the leader, the military leaders, the generals would take the army and they would lead away from the city.

And there would be a certain amount of people left in the city to defend the city. But they would go out to fight against the enemy. And if they won or if they lost, either way, they were sending people back to the city. Either way, whether they won or lost, they were sending people back to the city. But they had very different jobs.

If they lost, they sent military advisors. They sent some people hightailing as best they could, retreating, to come to the city and say, If you do this, you might live. If you put the military here, if you garrison this way, here's what's coming. And if we do this, if we hold on well, we might make it. There's a lot of things we got to do and not do in order to maybe make it. But if they won, they sent a good newser.

They sent a gospeler who was just going to come proclaim, we won. It was actually in history, in this story, we're not sure if it's true at this point, but there's a guy named Pheidippides. And after the Battle of Marathon, he ran 26.2 miles to the city to tell them, Joy to you, these are his last words, joy to you, we've won. And then as the story goes, Pheidippides dies. And for some reason, we heard this story. Some guy heard this story and was like, Huh, he ran 26.2 miles and died.

Do y'all want to run 26.2 miles and call that a marathon? After the Battle of Marathon? And it's like, why? To see if we die? No. What happens if we don't die?

You can put a sticker on your Xterra. Like, I don't know what the point is, but I believe in safety first, so I'll never run a marathon. But the point, like, they sent good newsers to go proclaim, We've won. The battle is won. And all you have to do at this point is live in light of that. The battle's won.

Get out the finest meats and cheeses. Like, we're just going to celebrate. The victory's been won. We're okay. You don't have to do anything other than just know this news is to be celebrated. And that's what Mark says.

He says, the story of the promised one, Jesus, the Son of God coming to earth, is earth-shattering, history-changing news. And that is the fundamental difference between Christianity and every other religion and every other philosophy and every other thought process, is that we have news and everybody else has advice. Every other religion, every other philosophy is sending out, here's what you have to do and you might survive. Here's what you have to do and God will love you. Here's what you have to do to have the good life now. Here's what you have to do to enjoy earth to the fullest.

Here's what you have to do in order to reach nirvana. And Christianity is saying, here's what's already been done. Here's the good news of Jesus. You were sinful. You deserved wrath. You deserved punishment.

You were guilty. And Jesus Christ, the Son of God, came and lived on earth perfectly on your behalf and died gruesomely on a cross. And he was buried. And three days later, he rose again from the grave. He conquered death. He conquered sin.

He conquered all the enemies that had surrounded you. I have joy to you. We've won. The victory has been won. Jesus has won. He is no longer in the grave.

And if you place your faith in Jesus, you can be forgiven. If you place your faith in Jesus, you can be free. That's the gospel. The church is not a gathering of perfect, cleaned up people. The church is a gathering of the first people in the room to raise their hand and say, I'm so messed up. If somebody else doesn't do something, I'm in trouble.

We celebrate baptism today. There's going to be people over and over again getting to tell you, I'm so messed up. If Jesus didn't do something, I'm in trouble. Here's how Jesus rescued me. Here's how he paid for my sin. The point of this is not, I'm going to go do my good church thing.

I'm going to get baptized because you're supposed to. And then God will love me. That's not the gospel. The gospel is that Jesus Christ died for our sins so that we could be free and that everything we've ever done to fall short has been wiped away because Jesus paid for it. And that's what we celebrate today. And that's what we'll be talking about for the next four weeks is how that news affects every aspect of our lives.

How it changes everything for us. So in just a minute, we're going to show some videos. People are going to get in here and be baptized to celebrate that Jesus Christ saves sinners and that we get to live our lives in light of some good news. Not trying to work really hard, to be really moral, to clean ourselves up, to make ourselves special. That Jesus was awesome on our behalf and we get to rest in the freedom that he's offered to us. Let's pray.

God, we thank you today that we get to gather to celebrate good news. God, that the entrance to being baptized is not, let me behave well, let me work hard, let me promise to do better. But the entrance is that you died, you were buried, you rose again, and you paid for our sin. And so as Christians, we get to be buried with you in baptism. We get to rise again out of the water, free from our sin because you paid for it. God, we thank you for the good news.

We love you. We praise you. In Jesus' name, amen.

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