God Fulfills His Promises
Transcript
Good morning. Grab your Bibles. Go to Genesis chapter 23. We'll be in Genesis chapter 23 and 24. My name is Chet. I am one of the pastors here.
Matt's going to stay up here and play music to make everything seem more dramatic and special. So we are walking through the book of Genesis. And we are today going to kind of close the book on Abraham and Sarah. We're going to end their lives. And, well, we're not. We're just going to read about it.
And we're going to see how the blessing and the promise shifts from them to Isaac and Rebecca. So, if you'll look, we're going to pick up in the beginning of chapter 23. I want to read this and then we'll kind of set the stage for what we're going to be doing today. But I think this helps us understand what we're looking at. Chapter 23, verse 1. Sarah lived 127 years.
These were the years of the life of Sarah. And Sarah died at Kiriath Arba, that is, Hebron, in the land of Canaan. And Abraham went in to mourn for Sarah and to weep for her. Okay. So Abraham is about 10 years older than her.
So he is, at this point, about 137. She is 127. And we don't have a good mental grasp as to how old that is and what that looks like. Because if we picture someone who's 127 or 137, the best I could come up with is the guy who used to do the Tales from the Crypt stories. And it's not a good representation. Because what happens with the ages in the book of Genesis is God creates the world new, fresh, perfect.
And then humanity sins. And when we sin, death enters the world. But it seems as if it kind of takes a while for it to fully begin to decay humanity and infiltrate humanity. And so the ages in the Old Testament, in the book of Genesis, start off extremely high. 400, 500, 900 years. And then they work their way down to by the end of the book of Genesis, we're kind of where we are.
In 80 is a good, right age. It's almost like the humanity kind of drops off the healthiness, the vivaciousness. And then eventually it kind of settles out and we hit kind of a homeostasis. We kind of hit an even path. And so at 127, we would say, goodness. Like that, that is extremely old.
But he ends up living to 175. So he lives for 40 years after this. And so she was old. The Bible treats her that way, speaks of her that way. But she wasn't what 127 would be for us.
So, but here's what happens. She passes. And this is the only female in the Bible that we are given her age at passing. This is showing her great honor. That Sarah, the mother of Isaac, the mother of Israel, is honored here. And here's what we're going to look at.
We're going to read chapter 23 and 24. And I want you to jump to the end of chapter 24 so that we can understand what's going on here. Because they seem, in some ways, like two separate stories. But at the end of chapter 24, in verse 66, verse 67, it says, Then Isaac brought her, that's Rebekah. We'll read about her in a minute. Into the tent of Sarah, his mother.
And took Rebekah. And she became his wife. And he loved her. So Isaac was comforted after his mother's death. So the beginning of chapter 23 starts off with the death of Sarah.
And the end of chapter 24 kind of bookends with the death of Sarah. And how Isaac moved on. That Sarah's tent was still there. But Sarah didn't live there any longer. But it stood as this vacant.
Maybe Isaac lived in it. But it was still considered Sarah's tent. It stands as this vacancy. And this cloud of grief is over these two chapters. And the chapter 23 and the end of chapter 24 are about three years apart. So that this season of Isaac missing his mother.
And this season of the noticeable lack of Sarah is a long time. And so what we want to, as we study this chapter, the question we're going to ask and what we're going to try to learn from this is, How do we move forward in grief? When we have buried a loved one. When we have stood, prayed, wept by a graveside. When we go back and it feels like this is still Sarah's house. But Sarah's not here.
How do we move forward? How do we walk in that? And if you'll see, as this is in life, There are things that business kind of things that have to be taken care of. There are seasons of weeping. There are seasons of longing. There are seasons of good things as we look through these two chapters.
But that's the question we're asking, Is how do we learn from them and how to move forward in grief? So let's pray and then we'll read this together. God, we thank you for how good you are. And we pray that we would honor you as we study your word. And that we might worship Jesus this morning. As we see him revealed to us in your word.
And revealed to us through how you interacted with the first people that you called. To begin to fulfill this promise. In Jesus' name, amen. So in the book of Genesis, it starts off good. Humanity rebels and God comes in and he promises right at the beginning that Satan's not going to win. Sin's not going to win.
Death's not going to win. That there's going to be an offspring that comes from Eve. That's going to right this wrong. And then everything gets worse. And then there's a flood. And God resets it with Noah.
And then everything gets worse again. And then he goes to Abraham and he basically says, Come, I'm going to make you into a people. I'm going to give you a land. And eventually this promised offspring is going to come through you. And that promise would not be carried out through anyone other than Sarah. So Sarah is this promised mother to this promised offspring, to this promised blessing.
And so Sarah passes. It says, Abraham went in to mourn for Sarah and to weep for her. So it's not just mourning, but he's also weeping. Meaning that mourning is a practice that you would do to honor the dead. But he actually weeps as well.
Meaning that he loved her. This hurt him. I don't think he was shaken by this as far as his faith. I don't think that he was crushed by this as far as how could God let this happen. She was older. That God had already provided the promise through her for Isaac.
But he was hurt. He was sad. It says, he went in to mourn for her and to weep for her. And Abraham rose up from before his dead and said to the Hittites, I am a sojourner and foreigner among you. Give me property among you for a burying place that I may bury my dead out of my sight. The Hittites answered, Abraham, hear us, my Lord.
You are a prince of God among us. Bury your dead in the choicest of tombs. None of us will withhold from you his tomb to hinder you from burying your dead. Abraham rose and bowed to the Hittites, the people of the land. The next part of this chapter, really most of this chapter, is given over to this transaction that takes place. So it says he rises up from his dead and he goes to the Hittites.
And it calls them repeatedly the people of the land. And his intro to them is, I am a sojourner and a foreigner among you. I have no land that is my own. He's nomadic. They travel around, but none of it really belongs to him. And he says, I need a place to bury my dead.
What he's asking for is a permanent place. Not a temporary place, but a permanent place to bury his dead. Now, it's interesting because you would usually bury your dead among their ancestors. This is actually a prime time for Abraham to just say, let's go home. Let's wrap it up.
Let's head back. Let's go bury her among our people. But he doesn't do that. He actually says she'll be the first buried among future people. Not the most recent buried among past people. He is leaning into the promise that God has given that they are the beginning of a nation.
And so he says that she needs a place that's a permanent place for her to be buried. And so she goes to the Hittites. And he says, I'm a foreigner among you, meaning they don't really have to sell him anything. He's coming humbly. He's also telling us how he understands himself. He's lived here for 60 years.
He still does not feel at home here. This is not his place. He is a nomad. And it calls the Hittites, the people of the land, the people of the land, the people of the land. Now, we're a pretty mobile society. One of the things we ask people when you first meet them is, oh, where are you from?
Because we just assume, not Colombia. And if they say, then we're like, oh, wow. Neat. What's that like? Like we just kind of assume a lot of times, and that's fine. It's not wrong to be from here, but it's just assumed that people travel around.
Now, for me, I don't know if y'all can tell this, I am white. And when I travel around in the U.S., most everything kind of feels at home to me. But there are certain people that come from minority groups or minority groups in the U.S. And maybe you understand a little more, can feel a little more what he's talking about here, what he feels. Because it's actually when you are the minority in a situation, you notice your minority status way more than the people of a majority status notice their majority status. Does that make sense?
So when I would hang out with only the African-American guys on my football team, I never noticed how white I was until those moments. And then it was like my whiteness felt like it was like I felt like I stood out. Because I wasn't catching all the references. I wasn't getting all the jokes. There were things they were saying and I was like, yeah, what? And so that's what he's saying is that he feels his I'm not of this people.
He feels it. And so he goes to the people of the land and he says, well, y'all sell me some land. And they say very graciously, no one will withhold from you a place to bury your death. But he doesn't want a borrowed tomb. He wants a purchased tomb. So what it says he does is he stands up and he bows down and he stands back up and he says.
Oh, and now I guess he sits back down because this is how business was done. And he says, please ask Ephraim, the son of Zohar, to sell me his cave that's at the back end of a field in Machpelah. Ephraim is there. So Ephraim says, I give you the cave. You can just have it. Abraham stands up.
He bows down. There's actually some interesting things in the Hebrew here where they consistently say, hear me, hear me, hear me. That's how they start things. Abraham doesn't start things that way until halfway through. He starts realizing this is how you're supposed to say it. So he'll start with his way and then he'll go and also hear me because he's trying to learn how you're supposed to do this.
It seems he's trying to incorporate what they're doing. But he stands back up, bows back down and says, thank you. I'll pay you for it. Now, we don't exactly know. So here's why it matters.
If he doesn't pay for it, it's borrowed. Eventually, after decomposition happens, after some number of some amount of time, some number of years, they can just take the cave back. They can move Sarah. They can use the cave for their own purposes. It won't be his. They would honor him by letting him use it, but it wouldn't be his forever.
And he wants something that's his forever. It's also possible Ephraim was just doing what they normally do, which is pretend to give it, but really have the intent of selling it. We don't really know, but that is still common today. I was asking Ben Johnson, who lived in Lebanon. I asked him, is that a thing they do? And he said, yes.
He said he actually, a couple of things he told me was, one, and he had to learn this, they will invite you to dinner, but they have to invite you three times for it to be real. So if you go visit someone, they'll say, oh, please stay for dinner. And you're supposed to say, no, no, no, I'm not hungry. I don't want to, or something, some nice response. Your house doesn't seem like I'd want to eat the food here, something like that. And then they say, please stay for dinner.
And then you say, no, no, no, no. And then they say, please stay for dinner. And on the third one, that means I'd really actually like for you to stay for dinner. Now, Ben is from Georgia, the Georgia in the U.S., not the Georgia over there. And so he did not know this. And so he would show up to someone's house and they would say, would you please stay for dinner?
And he'd go, all right, I will. And they were like, super, super rude guy. It just took me over there. I had no plans on him staying. He had to learn. He also said that they would still do the, oh, oh, don't worry.
I'll just give it to you for free. What happens is Abraham says, thank you for giving me this for free. And he says, but I'll pay you for it. And Ephraim responds, listen, what is a little field worth 400 shekels between me and you? And it says that Abraham listened to him and he weighs out the weight and he pays for it. So that Ephraim slides in there, oh, money between us, what's 400 shekels?
Like he just slides it in there like this isn't how this would work at a car dealership here. I'd like to buy this truck. I'll give you the truck. No, no, no. Let me pay for it. What's a truck worth $19,999 between us?
It was 0% financing for five years. Like we wouldn't do this, but he's been said they still do this in Lebanon that he actually left a restaurant one time, forgot to pay, came back and said, I forgot to pay. And they said, oh, I give it to you. It's free. And he said, no, no, no. I want to pay.
And he said, what's $15 between friends like us? So he was like, oh, okay, $15. Here you go. Which I, you know, when I, if I ever get to go visit, I'm just gonna be like, thanks. That's so nice. And just walk off.
I'm not gonna be there for that long, you know? So he buys the land. And then in verse 17, it says this. So the field of Ephron in Machpelah, which was in, which was to the east of Mamre, the field with the cave that was in it and all the trees that were in the field throughout its whole area was made over to Abraham as a possession in the presence of the Hittites before all who went in at the gate of his city. After this, Abraham buried Sarah, his wife, in the cave of the field of Machpelah, east of Mamre, that is, Hebron, in the land of Canaan. The field and the cave that is in it were made over to Abraham as property for a burying place by the Hittites.
Now that overdoes and overemphasizes where the field is, who it was sold from, where it was sold, who were the witnesses, who bought it, who's definitely bought. It's his. Which field? The field that used to belong to Ephron, son of Zohar in Machpelah. The field and all the trees and the cave is east of Mamre. Like it overdoes this.
And every time it brings it up, it does it again. And what is happening here is it is showing us that for the first time, Abraham and his descendants own a piece of the promised land. It's not a big piece of the promised land, but they own a piece of the promise. That Abraham, when Sarah died, did not say, let's go back. He said, let's go forward. Let's lean into the promise that God has made.
And let's see some of this begin to be fulfilled. And that's what happens. And so they bury Sarah. Now. Sorry, that was my now, but the first word is now. Now Abraham was old, well advanced in years.
And the Lord had blessed Abraham in all things. And Abraham said to his servant, the oldest of his household, who had charge of all that he had. So this isn't Isaac, although Isaac's 37 ish, 40 years old, right around now, he's not in charge of everything. The servant is. He brings him in and he says, put your hand under my thigh. That I may make you swear by the Lord, the God of heaven and the God of earth, that you will not take a wife for my son from the daughters of the Canaanites among whom I dwell, but you will go to my country and to my kindred and take a wife for my son, Isaac.
Like the servant said to him, perhaps the woman will may not be willing to follow me to this land. Must I then take your son back to the land from which he came from which you came? So Abraham's getting older and he's setting his affairs in order and we're seeing how he's leaning into the promises that God has given. So the first thing that he does is he acquires land to honor his wife, to bury his wife and to have a place for her forever in this land that God promised them. And now he's trying to work out getting a wife for Isaac. It's a little bit interesting that Isaac is not a part of this, but at the end of chapter 24, we find out that he needed to still be comforted at the loss of his mother.
And it's possible that Isaac was sad and wasn't handling things very well right now. It's possible. I'm reading that bit into the text. We know that he was still three years later. It was only after he marries Rebecca that it says that he's comforted. And he's the only guy that we have in the Bible that is not kind of immediately connected to the finding of his own wife.
So there are females whose dads kind of hand them over, but everywhere else we have a male, he's involved in some form or fashion. And Isaac is just hanging out and then gets a wife. Some of you think that's what will happen for you and best of luck to you. Sorry, that was mean. I shouldn't have said that. So we see, though, the servant has a very particular question.
It's a helpful question. He says, hold on. If she won't come, is Isaac to leave? That's an interesting question. It's a helpful question because he's saying, you know, I kind of understand the promises. I kind of understand the blessing.
Are we retreating on that to get Isaac a wife? If she won't come because it's far away, he says, does Isaac leave? We should all hold our breath for a second. And he says in verse 6, Abraham said to him, See to it that you do not take my son back there, the Lord, the God of heaven, who took me from my father's house and from the land of my kiddred and who spoke to me and swore to me to your offspring, I will give this land. He will send his angel before you and you shall take a wife for my son from there. But if the woman is not willing to follow you, then you will be free from this oath of mine.
Only you must not take my son back there. So the servant put his hand under the thigh of Abraham, his master, and swore to him concerning this matter. There's been some research done on why he had to put his hand under his thigh. The general consensus is just it was very intimate and it meant a solemn oath. That Abraham makes him promise in that way that he wouldn't forget and that it was a very solemn oath. But he says if she won't come, you're not in trouble.
You can come back. You're just not allowed to take Isaac there. But we see what Abraham is doing is he's leaning into the promises that God already gave him. He says the God of heaven told me that I'm going to give you this land to your descendants forever. And so Abraham says, I'm getting old. I've got a piece of the land.
We're in the land. We're not leaving the land. But we're going to have to have descendants here. And Isaac isn't married, so we need to find Isaac a wife. And the Canaanites are not a part of that. As best Abraham can tell, the Canaanites are going to be pushed out later because God tells him that in chapter 13 that they're going to be in chapter 15 that his descendants are going to be slaves in Egypt, but they're going to come back and they're going to push out all the people that live in this region.
And Abraham says, no, you've got to go find a wife from our people. That's how the bloodline continues. That's how the promise continues. And that's how we have a people to possess this land. So Abraham's just leaning into what God already told him.
The servant took 10 of his master's camels and departed, taking all sorts of choice gifts from his master. And he arose and went to Mesopotamia to the city of Nahor. Now that was about 500 miles away. It's one of the reasons why he takes camels because they travel a little better. It would have taken 21 days to a month or so to get there. He takes 10 camels, which is to show us something.
Well, it shows us something. He actually took them. It wasn't just written in there to show us something, but it shows us something, which is that Abraham was wealthy because camels weren't that common. And to have 10 of them and a bunch of people to send with a bunch of choice gifts, he looked like Aladdin rolling up in the Disney movie to Agrabah. He had a lot going on with him when he went. So, and he made the camels, this is verse 11, he made the camels kneel down outside the city by the well of water at the time of evening, the time when women go out to draw water.
And he said, Oh Lord, God of my master Abraham, please grant me success today and show steadfast love to my master Abraham. Behold, I am standing by the spring of water and the daughters of the men of the city are coming out to draw water. Let the young woman to whom I shall say, please let down your jar that I may drink. And who shall say, drink and I will water your camels. Let her be the one whom you have appointed for your servant, Isaac. By this I shall know that you have shown steadfast love to my master.
So here's what he does. He shows up, he gets to the city, but it's a city. Now it says it's the city of Nahor, which means this is where the guy lives. We're not necessarily sure it was named after him. It's just like he made it to where he lives. And so he shows up where he used to live and where Abraham's descendants were.
Nahor was his Abraham's brother. And he just sits out by the well where all of the women of the city, the unmarried women of the city would come out in the evening to draw water. And he just prays, Lord, please be good to my master. And I'm going to go over and I'm going to ask one of the ladies to give me some water. And if she gives me some water and then she offers on her own to water my camels, let that be the one that's supposed to marry Isaac. Now I do periodically have people ask me, does the Bible give helpful dating advice?
It doesn't give a lot, but if you want some from this passage, get your dad to send one of his friends to a well at one of your family reunions and pick up one of your cousins for you. Now what he was doing, I'll give you a second to write that down. What he was doing was he was going to the place where the type of woman who would be marriable for Isaac was. And he was seeking the Lord's wisdom in it. So if you want to steal a little bit, take that part.
Seek to actually find someone who is genuinely godly and marriable and pray for the Lord's wisdom and help and do it in an honorable way. Before he had finished speaking, Behold, Rebekah, who was born to Bethuel, the son of Milcah, the wife of Nahor. So Abraham and Nahor are brothers. This is Abraham's grandniece. Great niece. Yeah, grandniece.
Abraham's brother came out with her water jar on her shoulder. The young woman was very attractive in appearance. A maiden, that means she's young, whom no man had known. That means she was never married, has never slept with anybody. She went down to the spring. The author's telling us that.
He wouldn't have been able to pick up all of that from just seeing her. What he saw, I guess, was that she was very attractive. Then the servant went to meet her, ran to meet her and said, Please give me a little water to drink from your jar. And she said, Drink, my Lord. And she quickly let down her jar upon her hand and gave him a drink. When she had finished giving him a drink, she said, I will draw water for your camels also until they have finished drinking.
So she quickly emptied her jar into the trough and ran again to the well to draw water. And she drew for all his camels. The man gazed at her in silence to learn whether the Lord had prospered his journey or not. Okay. If we lived in this time frame, we would be so blown away right now. Camels can drink about 40 gallons of water if they're running on empty.
There were 10 camels, which means that it's up to possible that she drew 400 gallons of water. Which, if this is a 5-gallon bucket, that's 80 trips, y'all. That'd be like if I said, I'm moving into a new neighborhood, and I'm praying that the Lord would send someone, my neighbors, to come over and ask me when they see the moving truck if they can help me move. And this will be my new best friend in the neighborhood. And then I told you, they showed up. And you know what they said to me?
Back up. I'll get that piano by myself. And then they carried it up the stairs by themselves. We'd all go, all right, I know some things about this person now. Or you have a small piano. Or this person is humongous.
Like, that's what I learned. And what we just learned from her by her being, not her volunteering. It would be kind and nice for her to give him a drink. But for her volunteering, I'm going to water all your camels until they're done drinking. And she does it. He watched her for a long time.
And she diligently, over and above in generosity, served him and his men. We should be just like, oh, wow. Like, we just learned some things about Rebecca if you knew things about camels. So, he watches. Then it says, When the camels had finished drinking, the man took a gold ring, weighing a half shekel and two bracelets for her arms, weighing ten gold shekels, and said, Please tell me whose daughter you are.
Is there room in your father's house for us to spend the night? She said to him, I am the daughter of Bethuel, the son of Milcah, whom she bore to Nahor. She added, We have plenty of both straw and fodder and room to spend the night. And the man bowed his head and worshipped the Lord and said, Blessed be the Lord, the God of my master Abraham, who has not forsaken his steadfast love and his faithfulness toward my master. As for me, the Lord has led me in the way to the house of my master's kinsmen. Then the young woman ran and told her mother's household about these things.
In their mindset, most gods don't travel well. You have gods of locations. Abraham consistently says, the God, the God of heaven and the God of earth. Not the God of this land. Not the God of that land. Not the God of the river.
Not the God of this particular thing, grain and wine. No, he says the God of heaven and the God of earth. And he travels 500 miles and he prays, God, continue to be steadfast to my master. Not quite sure. I don't know how devout this guy was. We know that he's praying in his heart.
But I'm sure there's a little bit of like, are you here? It turns out he is. Abraham's description was good. Heaven and earth. All of it. And so Rebecca goes and it says, verse 29.
Rebecca had a brother whose name was Laban. Laban ran out toward the man to the spring. As soon as he saw the ring and the bracelets on his sister's arms and heard the words of Rebecca, her sister. Thus the man spoke to me. So she has a brother named Laban.
Laban runs out there when he sees the gold. Now, this would have been, I think, a bit if they were paying attention to how long she was gone, I think it took a little while to water the camels. So they're like, man, she's taking a long time. She rolls back up, blinged out with things that I don't know if they can afford or not, but she wasn't wearing them when she left. It's an odd trip to them. And then she says, I just watered a guy who has 10 camels.
And they said, 10 what now? And Laban looked at the rings and stuff and said, I'm going to meet this guy. And he just trots on outside. So he goes over and he says, come on in, come on in. Like, you know, they're welcoming him. They're being hospitable and generous.
But it's also like, who is this guy? What is happening here? So they bring him inside and they say, come, sit, eat. And he says, he actually kind of breaks protocol. He says, no, I'm not eating anything until I say all the stuff I have to say. And they say, say it.
And so he retells the entire story we just read. The chapter is basically written out in duplicate. He highlights some different things. He points out some different things. But he retells the whole story.
He says, my master Abraham called me into him and he told me to promise. Oh, first he starts off with who Abraham is. I'm his servant. I'm following him. And he is very wealthy. He says, he has camels and donkeys, gold and silver, maidservants, menservants.
God has blessed him richly. And he has a son whom Sarah bore to him in her old age. I think he's gassing Isaac up a little bit. He says, God's, he said, Abraham's going to leave everything to him. So he says, I'm here representing Abraham who's super blessed, very rich, who has one son.
And he highlights that Sarah bore him in his old age. And that's very helpful because Nahor is Bethuel's father. Which would mean that if Isaac was born about the same time as Bethuel, he would be saying to Sarah, to Rebecca, I know a guy who's as old as your dad. And given the age gaps here, that could be a big gap. So he's like, he was born when Sarah was really, really old.
So he's saying closer in age to you. He's just highlighting that out and he's saying, and God and Abraham's going to bless him with everything that he has. And Abraham made me swear to come here and find him a wife. So at this point, I'm sure the story was like, oh. And then it gets deeper because he says, and so I showed up and I prayed that the lady I asked to give me a drink of water would not only give me a drink, but would offer to water my camels. At that point, they were all like, oh, she's going to, oh, no, that just happened.
That's what I did. And then he says, he ends with this. He tells the whole story. And then he says. He tells him, before I'd finished speaking, she showed up. We did this.
She did this exactly. And then he goes to verse 49. Now then, if you are going to show steadfast love and faithfulness to my master, tell me. And if not, tell me that I may turn to the right hand or to the left. He tells his whole story. He says, it seems as if God's at work here.
It seems as if this was planned. He tells him specifically. Abraham told me if she didn't come with me, I'm not in trouble. So he's like, this is on y'all. You don't have to feel bad for me. He lays this all out.
And he says, now tell me, are you going to show steadfast love to my master or not? Because I've got to go one way or the other. And I don't think he's necessarily meaning I've got to go home. I think he's also meaning I'm here to find someone who belongs here who's willing to go with me back. So if you don't want to marry him, although it seems like maybe you should, I'm just throwing that in there.
If you don't want to, I'm going to go somewhere else. Then Laban and Bethuel answered and said, the thing has come from the Lord. We cannot speak to you bad or good. What they're saying there is it's not up to us. We're not going to do a pros and cons list if God's leading in this. Behold, Rebecca is before you.
Take her and go. Let her be the wife of your master's son as the Lord has spoken. When Abraham's servant heard these words, he bowed himself to the earth before the Lord. You see how much this guy loves the Lord. He's constantly praying to him. And every moment when he gets a chance, he's just thanking him.
And finally, it just works. It worked out. And he just lays down on the earth just before the Lord. And it says, the servant brought out jewelry of silver and gold and garments and gave them to Rebecca. He also gave to her brother and to her mother costly ornaments. And he and the men who were with him ate and drank and spent the night there.
When they rose in the morning, he said to them, send me away to my master. Her brother and her mother said, let the young woman remain with us for a while, at least 10 days. After that, she may go. They basically just said, at least 10 days, maybe longer. She needs to stay for a little while. We can't like he just showed up that night.
She just fed your camels last night. We're not. She's not leaving right now. But he said to them, do not delay me since the Lord has prospered my way. Send me away that I may go to my master. And they said, let us call the young woman and ask her.
They called Rebecca and said to her, will you go with this man? And she said, I will go. This also shows us some things about Rebecca here. First of all, they said, let's ask her. That doesn't always happen in this culture. You saw that her dad and brother got to pick whether or not she would marry him.
But now they're saying, hey, come here. Are you willing to do this? And she, like Sarah before her and like Mary after her, is willing to step out in faith where she feels like the Lord is moving. And so she says, I will go. So they sent away Rebecca, their sister and her nurse and Abraham's servant and his men.
And they blessed Rebecca and said to her, our sister, may you become thousands of ten thousands. And may your offspring possess the gate of those who hate him. They bless her before she leaves. And we know that that blessing comes true because God's already promised to bless this family and to bless the seed of Isaac. And so they leave. And what we see in these two chapters are two beautiful pictures of this promise stepping forward.
That God says, I'm going to bless you with people to possess this land. And both of those step forward in that Abraham, in his waning moments, leans into what God has promised. Believes and trusts what God has promised. And it's taken us a while to get here for Abraham. I believe fully as he was going to sacrifice Isaac, he was trusting the Lord fully. And we see after that, he doesn't waver.
He knows this is what's happening. He says, you don't take Isaac back. He stays here. We're going to own this land. We're going to lean into this. And he trusts the promise.
Now, Isaac had returned from Be'er, Laha, Roy, and was dwelling in the Negev. And Isaac went out to meditate in the field toward evening. He didn't have a wife and kids at this point. He had a lot of free time on his hands. So he's just getting to sit out there by himself and think.
And he lifted up his eyes and saw, and behold, there were camels coming. And Rebecca lifted up her eyes. And when she saw Isaac, she dismounted from the camel. It's a sign of respect. And she said to the servant, who is that man walking in the field to meet us? And the servant said, it is my master.
So she took her veil and covered herself. And the servant told Isaac all the things that he had done. Then Isaac brought her into the tent of Sarah, his mother, and took Rebecca. And she became his wife. And he loved her. So Isaac was comforted after his mother's death.
And so what we learn, Isaac was 40 when he married her. So this is about two to three years after his mother passed. He takes her into Sarah's tent. It was still Sarah's tent. And what we see is the transition of matriarchy from Sarah to Rebecca. And the story shifts from Abraham and Sarah to Isaac and Rebecca.
Because God's promise is going to continue. And we see this beautiful transition and handoff. In this time of grieving, in this time of sorrow, and in this time of pain, Abraham, and through his leadership, Isaac, lean into the promises that God had already laid out. They trust him that they can move forward. Rather than retreating, Hebrews 11 says that if they had been looking for an opportunity to return, they would have found one. They had been looking to go back home.
They could have found an opportunity. There was plenty before them. But they trusted and walked out in faith, even though they only saw the promises from afar. And so that's what we see. I want to tell you something beautiful that happens here as we carry this story out. First, Isaac and Rebecca have children, and the promise continues.
They give birth to Jacob, who's renamed Israel, who gives parentage to all the tribes of Israel, and out of them directly comes this entire people. We actually begin to see in Genesis some of the promises fulfilled, where they're going to be a blessing to the nations, and ultimately a blessing to all the nations through Christ. And Sarah's tomb becomes the first flag planted in the ground in the promised land that they all look to. Moses is the one who's writing this, and he's writing it to a people out of the Exodus, wandering in the wilderness, headed to the promised land. And do you know why he overemphasizes this field, why he overemphasizes this cave?
He's pointing out to the people of Israel as they read this, at the very first readers of this text, that we still own land that was never sold back. That there's a cave that houses the bones of our ancestors that was claimed by the death of Sarah. Chapter 25, verse 7 says that Abraham died, and he was buried there. We're told later that Isaac and Rebecca die, and they're buried there. That Leah dies, she's buried there. That Jacob dies, he dies in Egypt.
And he says, don't you bury me here. He says, cart me on back. I'm getting buried at the field. And he says, Ephron, son of Zohar, who Abraham bought from the Hittite. He lays it all out again. He says, you bury me there.
And the people of Israel had this tomb that they looked to for their hope and for the beginning of the fulfillment of the promises, that this people of this bloodline could look at that tomb forever. Remember, that by her death, Sarah moves the covenant forward and that through the suffering, we see that there was purpose. And church, we have a better tomb to look to. Not filled with the bones of ancestors, scandalously, outrageously empty. That there is a tomb that in the midst of our grief and in the midst of our cloudy, tear-filled eyes that we can gaze upon when we can't see an inch in front of our faces, we can look backwards to a tomb where the God of the universe walked out in a hope-filled resurrection to assure for us that the promises are forever ours, claimed by him through his suffering and his death, and that we know as Christians that there is purpose and hope in the midst of suffering.
That death does not win. That grief does not conquer. That as the people of Israel looked to this tomb as a stake in the ground, as the place where the flag was planted, that they knew that they could hold on to, that God would fulfill these promises, that their bloodline would continue, we of a new bloodline given to us through the blood of Christ have a better tomb to look to in the midst of heartache and pain. So that our faith can move forward when we can't see anything else. We can trust that he's good, that he loves us, that what has rocked us and changed the nature of our lives won't ultimately win, and won't ultimately conquer us.
Matt's going to come back up here. As we close out our time, I want to show you where 1 Peter talks about this. Peter talking about this says, Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. According to his great mercy, he has caused us to be born again. Meaning that we have a new bloodline through the blood of Christ, that we are in this lineage. Not just sons of Abraham through faith, but sons of God through the blood of Christ, through the adoption given to us through the atonement.
Born again to a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead. to an inheritance that is imperishable, undefiled, and unfading, kept in heaven for you. So that when we don't know what tomorrow will look like, and we don't know whether we'll be able to get out of bed, and we don't know if we'll be able to make it to work, and we don't know if we'll be able to utter a word without our face distorting and tears running down our face, we know what the ultimate tomorrow will look like. We know that we have an inheritance that is more beautiful than this promised land, that is more eternally secured, a tomb that is empty, that marks forever our hope, because Jesus rose from the grave will rise. And so we look to Him in hope and in longing, and we know that in the midst of everything, we can move forward.
That we can put one foot in front of the other, holding on to the fact that eventually grief doesn't win. We won't be swallowed up in death, but we'll be swallowed up in the victory of the resurrection of Christ. For those of us who have repented and placed our faith in Jesus, this is imperishably, undeniably, irrevocably true. And if you're in here this morning, and you are in the midst of a season of grief, I would encourage you to look at Jesus walking out of the tomb. to stare as best you can into that truth, so that you might be reminded that this won't win, that He's good and He loves you.
And if you're in here today and you don't know Christ, you do not know what I'm talking about. And you do not have this as a reality, but you can. If you'll run to Him and place your faith in Him and say, I want that and I need that, and I need you to change my heart, I need you to save my soul, He will because He saves us based off of His good work, not ours. And I would encourage you to do that today. In a minute, Matt's going to begin to sing. We can sing with him.
We're also going to take communion together as a church, which is where we take bread and the cup, and we remind ourselves of Jesus' broken body and His blood shed on our behalf, that we might have life and freedom and hope, that He conquered death for us so that we don't have to die in hopelessness, but that we get to be buried in hope of a resurrection and a life with Him. If you're a Christian, I would encourage you to spend some time praying, repenting where you need to repent, reminding yourself of His goodness, and then taking communion. And if you're not a believer, this is for believers, it's not for you, so we'd encourage you to pray and to sing and place your faith in Jesus if you never have. Let's pray.
God, we thank You for Your grace. Thank You for the hope that we have through the cross and the resurrection, that we are brothers and sisters in a new bloodline, that we are brothers and sisters of an empty tomb, and that our hope is forever secure because it's a living hope through the power of the resurrection of Christ. In Jesus' name, Amen.
The Sacrifice of Isaac
Transcript
Good morning. All right, so we just got done walking through a series on multiplier. We spent five weeks walking through the calling to make and to multiply disciples. And then we, before that, were our gift series. And we spent December walking through our gift series. But before that, we were doing Genesis.
We made it halfway through. And we are jumping back in. We're going to finish Genesis, this half of Genesis, over the rest of winter into spring. So we're going to be in Genesis 22 today. You can go ahead and open there. It's on page 10 of your blue Bibles.
It'll also be on the screen as we follow along. But before we jump in, I want to catch us up to where we have been in Genesis and follow a storyline that we've been following. So in Genesis 1 and 2, God creates the earth. It is cosmic. It is big. It reflects his glory as he intentionally crafts different parts of creation.
And then in Genesis 2, we focused in on the creation of Adam and Eve. The guy creates Adam and Eve. He creates humanity different than any other aspect of creation, that we bear his image and his likeness. And that we have the unique ability to have a relationship with God. So Adam and Eve have a perfect relationship with God.
It is beautiful and it is good. And then in Genesis 3, they are in the Garden of Eden. And Satan, in the form of a serpent, comes into the garden. Causes them to question God and his goodness and his word. And they listen to Satan. They don't listen to God.
And they eat of the tree of knowledge of good and evil. And in that moment, they sin. They rebel against God. And they bring sin and rebellion into this world. And it brings in death. And it affects every aspect of creation.
And when this happens, God comes down into the garden. And he makes a couple declarations. But one of the things that he says is that one day, Eve, you will have an offspring. And this offspring will come and she will come, or he will come and crush the head of the serpent. He will crush the head of Satan. And that is the declaration that Jesus one day is going to come.
That's the first declaring of the gospel that we have in the Bible. So we've been following this line that through Adam and Eve, the offspring is coming. And we see they populate the earth. Eventually, the earth gets so corrupted with sin, with violence, with hate, that God wants to start new. We followed the story of Noah, that God calls Noah. Noah builds an ark.
And his family is saved. And the line is preserved. And then we followed from Noah all the way to the character we've been following going into our gift series, which is Abraham. Abraham has a unique relationship with God. God comes to Abraham in his old age. Him and his wife Sarah do not have kids.
And he comes to Abraham and he says, I'm going to give you a son. I'm going to bless you. I'm going to make a great nation through you. And from that point forward, Abraham and Sarah are waiting for God to give him this blessing, to give him this son. And there are times where it's going really well, where he's trusting God. When there's this beautiful covenant ceremony that he does, he puts Abraham in a dream.
And in the dream, the animals, they split an animal in two. And God walks through the center of it. And what is being declared in that ceremony is that this promise is going to happen. And if it doesn't happen, may God be like this animal who's been broken apart. Meaning this is going to happen. This promise is going to come true.
And then there are times where Abraham and Sarah, they try to force the promise. They don't trust God. They end up finding a surrogate, Hagar, to have a son who is Ishmael. We followed that story that Ishmael is a son. He loves Ishmael. But God says, this is not the promised son.
No, I'm coming to you, Abraham and Sarah. Y'all are going to have a son. His name is going to be Isaac. And then 25 years between God's promise to them and the birth of Isaac, Isaac finally shows up. Abraham's 100. Sarah's in her 90s.
And that is where we are today. Isaac's a little bit older. He's a young boy. And in this story today, which is one of the more, one of the biggest stories that we have in the Old Testament, we're going to walk through this story and we're going to see how God tests Abraham. We're going to see how God tests Abraham. Then we're going to see how Abraham responds.
He responds in faith and obedience, trusting God. Then we're going to see how God ultimately provides. And then as we back up, we're going to see what this story points forward to. So let me pray and then we'll walk through this story together. God, thank you so much that you love us, that we have a story that reminds us of your good news. God, I pray today that you would help us be present, that you would speak to us powerfully.
In Jesus' name, amen. All right, speaking of verse 1 and 2. So this story just took a very serious turn. It starts out by telling us that he tells Abraham, he reminds us that Abraham is going to be tested here. And what is the test going to be? You are going to sacrifice your son.
This story starts out like a tragedy. It starts out like a tragedy and understand really what's going on here as we walk through it. There's two things that we need to understand. Firstly, we need to have a basis for what sacrifices are, as it shows up here in Genesis. Sacrifices were made with animals early on in Genesis to show the heinous nature of sin. That sin is rebellion against God and it's costly.
It costs blood. You don't sin against the God of the universe and commit cosmic treason and there's no punishment. So early on in Genesis, we see this practice of sacrificing animals to show this. And then later on throughout the rest of the Old Testament law and Exodus and Leviticus and Numbers and Deuteronomy, we see this system, this formalized system of sacrificing animals to show this. To show the grievous nature of what sin is and what it does to the people and how serious it is. And in this system later on, you see burnt offerings.
Burnt offerings are to show the total destructive nature of sin. That animal would be slaughtered and they would be burned up completely. That is what a burnt offering is. And God just called Abraham to do this to his son. And we look at this and there's a part of you that should say, What? Like this doesn't make sense.
I mean, this is explicitly forbidden in the rest of the Old Testament law because this is what the pagans would do. They're the ones that would sacrifice their kids. This doesn't make sense and it should catch us off guard. Because I feel like there's something inside of us that says, No, that's not right. There's a part of us, when we watch movies and films and we hear stories and there's certain thrillers and horror films where you know characters are going to start dying off. And then there's a sweet little seven-year-old girl.
There's a part of us, when we watch these films, we have this kind of social compact with Hollywood that says, You can take some of the characters out, but the girl lives. The innocent one lives. There's something inside of us that says, No, this isn't right. And this story begins with a setup that he is calling Abraham to sacrifice his only son, the promised son. So we get frustrated.
We start to think this isn't fair. But we're going to walk through this more and see what's happening here. The second thing that we need to understand is that God has always tested his people. From Old Testament to New Testament, God has always tested his people. Now, sometimes that word tested gets conflated with the word tempt. And they are two different things.
This is not tempting. James 1.13 says, Let no one say when he is being tempted, I am being tempted by God. For God cannot be tempted with evil, and he himself tempts no one. God does not tempt. This is different. Tempting is luring you into sin and rebelling against God.
Testing is actually something that brings you closer to God. The Hebrew word for testing here means testing what someone is really like. Seeing what they are really made of through hardship and difficulty. And we see this all over the Bible. We see it in this story here. We see it in the book of Job.
The book of Job is another really challenging book where there's a man named Job, and he's prosperous, and he has a big family, he has lots of money, he has lots of land, he has great health. And then Satan comes along and says to God, you know, the only reason that job loves you and worships you is because of the things that you give. If you took it away, he would curse you. So God allows Satan to take away his health, his prosperity, and even some of his family. And ultimately, Job shows at the end of the book that he worships the Lord, he does not curse him. We see testing in the book of Job.
We see testing in how the nation of Israel comes out of Egypt. After the nation of Israel is brought out of Egypt by Moses, they sin against God in the wilderness, and they wander in the wilderness for 40 years. And this is what Deuteronomy says about this in chapter 8, verse 2. It says, And you shall remember the whole way the Lord your God has led you these 40 years in the wilderness, that he might humble you, hear this, testing you to know what is in your heart, whether you would keep his commandments or not. God tests our hearts to see what is in, to see if we will follow him. We see this in the New Testament when the early church is being persecuted, and Peter is writing to a church that is being persecuted, that's going through trials, and he says this, he says, In this you rejoice, though now for a little while.
If necessary, you have been grieved by various trials, so that the tested genuineness of your faith, more precious than gold that perishes, though it is tested by fire, may be found to result in praise and glory and honor at the Revelation of Jesus Christ. And the picture that is being played out here is that testing is like the purification of gold. When you purify gold, when you heat it up, impurities will rise to the surface. It shows what the gold is really made of. And it's an opportunity for you to clean the gold even further. And that's the picture of what testing gets to be, that when we are tested by God, it allows us to be closer to him, because it shows us our hidden faults.
It shows us where we don't believe the gospel, and it shows us where we need to repent and follow Jesus. Oftentimes what happens here is the thing that really gets us frustrated about testing, is we want to know specifically why. Why does this happen? Why does suffering happen? Why did this kind of period of testing happen for me? And a lot of times we don't get that answer.
We don't get the full picture. We get the theology here that we have to trust in the process, which is testing. But we don't always get the reasons, the specific reasons of why we're ultimately called to trust God, trust in the process, and trust that God is good, that he has good for us in the midst of testing. But every once in a while, I've seen this in my own life, every once in a while you might get a picture of why this happened, why periods of testing, periods of suffering happen. And in this story, we actually get the purposes of why this is going to become clear, why this is happening later.
So once you know, have a basis for what sacrifices are, once you have a basis for what testing is, we can walk through this story. He says, After these things, God tested Abraham and said to him, Abraham, and he said, Here I am. He said, Take your son, your only son Isaac, whom you love, go to the land of Moriah and offer him there as a burnt offering on one of the mountains that I shall tell you. He says, he calls out to Abraham. Abraham says, Here I am. And then he says, Take your son, your only son, and offer him as a burnt offering.
That word son is going to show up repeatedly here. Son, your only son. Now, both Abraham and God know this is not his only biological son. They both know this. This just comes off the heels of the story of Ishmael. What is being implied here is this is the promised son.
This is him. This is the one. And it's repeated 14 times in this passage. Son, son, son, only son. Your only son whom you love. It's meant to show us this is the promised son.
It's meant to remind us of everything that it took to get here. Think about this. It took them 25 years after years of being childless. 25 years for this promise to come to fruition. They have this promised son whom they love, and God has just called him to reduce the promise to ashes. This is a weighty calling that he is calling Abraham to, and this is how Abraham responds in verse 3.
He says, It says, Oftentimes when we read the Bible, we have an American way of reading passages, of reading the text. I don't think it's necessarily bad. It allows us, I think, to be empathetic. We read it. We're a feelings-based culture. You talk to any other cultures that look at us, they say, Well, Americans, we care a lot about our feelings.
And that can go crazy. That can go awry. I went through 90s self-help seminars and schooling. That can go a little bit crazy with emotions. But I think it allows us, since we're an empathetic culture, to put ourselves in other people's shoes, to be able to understand some of these stories and how they play out.
I think that's helpful. But what can happen is, is that we can start to make definitive statements about what they were thinking and what they were feeling when the text doesn't give us some of those pictures. Ultimately, we have to look at the text and what it is telling us. But sometimes, in the Bible, we get the behind-the-scenes picture. Sometimes we get to understand a little bit of what they were thinking. And we get that in this story, but it's not in this chapter.
You've got to flip to the New Testament. If you go to Hebrews 11, it says, By faith, Abraham, when he was tested, offered up Isaac, and he who had received the promises was in the act of offering up his son, of whom it was said, Through Isaac shall your offspring be named. Hear this. He considered that God was able even to raise him from the dead, from which, figuratively speaking, he did receive him back. So in the mind of Abraham, as he's received this calling, in his mind he knows God is able to even raise Isaac back from the dead.
So he has plans to go through with this. He's going to trust the Lord. But in the back of his mind, he knows God is even able to raise this son from the dead because this son is the promised son. This is the one that he is going to bring this great nation through. It is him. So he is trusting the promises of God as he's being tested.
And we see this in how he responds. He says, Abraham gets up, that he packs his donkey, that he grabs some supplies, that he gets some help from two young men, then he gets his son, and they hit the road. And if you read that, right off the heels of what he was just called to, man, it just seems robotic. He just got told to sacrifice his son, and he packs up everything, and they hit the road. It's a little confusing. Two things.
Again, we don't get a window into his emotions. It is reasonable to think this is very difficult for him. He loves his sons. You can see in his relationship with Ishmael in the previous chapters, he loves his sons. This is a difficult and weighty calling. But ultimately, we look at what he is trusting in.
He believes the promise that Isaac is the promised son. He has faith that God will come through him this promise, even if it takes resurrection. So he's trusting God. Verse 4. On the third day, Abraham lifted up his eyes and saw the place from afar. And Abraham said to his young men, stay here with the donkey.
I and the boy will go over there and worship and come again to you. So after a three-day journey of coming to Moriah, they finally see the place from afar. He sees it. They're getting closer. He tells the two young men, he says, you guys stay behind. It's just going to be Isaac and I.
Now, y'all, it's been three days. Three days. Every day. Every night. One step closer to this happening. One step closer to where he's being called to bring the knife down on his son.
Now, while Abraham is clinging to the promise and he's trusting that God can even raise him for the dead, the weightiness of this obedience is growing closer. But he's still trusting the promise of God and he ends this conversation. It's telling how he says it. He says, I and the boy will go over there and worship and come back again to you. He's saying, we're coming back. Isaac and I were going to the mount, but we're coming back again.
Verse 6. It says, And Abraham took the wood of the burnt offering and laid it on Isaac, his son. And he took in his hand the fire and the knife. So they went, both of them together, and Isaac said to his father Abraham, My father. And he said, Here am I, my son. He said, Behold the fire and the wood, but where is the lamb for a burnt offering?
God will provide for himself the lamb for a burnt offering, my son. So they went, both of them, together. So Abraham, he gets the wood, he hands it to Isaac to carry, and Isaac starts to carry the wood, which tells us a little bit that Isaac, he's a young boy, but he's old enough and he's big enough to at least carry this wood. So he puts the wood on his back. They start to go towards the hill. And that shows us a little bit of what Isaac is doing here.
Isaac's being obedient. He's being obedient to his father as his father is trusting the Lord. And then Isaac, in the midst of this, he asks the obvious question. Dad, I see, I see the fire. I see the wood. You've brought a knife.
Where's the lamb? They didn't bring one with them. They didn't stop and buy one along the way. They haven't taken one. See, Isaac realizes that something's up. This isn't normal.
That something is out here. But he's going to trust his father as his father trusts God. Abraham looks at him. He says, God will provide. Abraham knows that God is going to provide. That he's even capable of raising the dead.
He just has to be prepared to go through with this. He has to be prepared to bring the knife down on his beloved boy. And the intensity is building even further. Abraham and Isaac, both being obedient to what they are called to. Abraham now has the knife and he now has the flame. And these are both visual representations of what is about to be called of him.
But he believes Isaac is ultimately going to be okay. But that still doesn't take away from the horror of this situation of what he's being called to. That in the midst of testing, Abraham is still trusting the promises of God. And then the scene finally arrives. Verse 9. When they came to the place of which God had told them, Abraham built the altar there and laid the wood in order and bound Isaac his son and laid him on the altar on top of the wood.
So they finally get to this place, this place of sacrifice. And I want you to picture this scene with me. Abraham at this point, he's well over 100. He starts to build the altar. And this is going to take some time. He's older.
He's building the altar. And piece by piece, as he's building this altar, there's a question that's still lingering in the back. Where is the lamb? And then he gets the wood. He takes the wood from Isaac. Isaac is watching this.
He grabs the wood. He starts to stack the wood. And the question still remains, where is the lamb? And he takes his son. Y'all, his son that he loves. And he starts to bind him.
He starts to tie him up. And Isaac doesn't struggle. Doesn't say that he ran off. He could have. He starts to tie him up. And he takes his son, this son he waited so long for, and he places him on the altar.
Then Abraham reached out his hand and took the knife to slaughter his son. So he reaches out the knife. He has the knife. He's getting ready to bring the knife down on his son. And it's at this point in this story that something screams within us, where is the lamb? Like, what is happening here?
How? Is this gone far enough? You see that he trusts you. What is happening? This does not seem fair. He has the knife, and he's ready to bring it down on his son.
But the angel of the Lord called to him from heaven and said, Abraham, Abraham. And he said, Here am I. He said, Do not lay your hand on the boy or do anything to him. For now I know that you fear God, seeing that you have not withheld your son, your only son from me. And Abraham lifted up his eyes, and he looked, and behold, behind him was a ram caught in the thicket by his horns. And Abraham went and took the ram and offered it up as a burnt offering instead of his son.
So Abraham called the name of that place, the Lord will provide. As it is said to this day, on the mount of the Lord it shall be provided. So in the midst of him holding the knife, an angel intervenes and intercedes and says, Abraham, stop. Don't touch him. You've proven yourself. It's clear that you fear the Lord.
Step away. It's over. And Abraham can take his son. He can unbind him. He can do what every father would want to do in that moment. He can hold him.
He can hug him. He can tell him everything is going to be okay, that he was always the promised son. He can tell them what this was. It was never in doubt. You were always going to be the promised son. And then he picks up his head, and he sees the ram.
He sees the ram in the thicket. God provides the lamb, and then he takes it, and this is the sacrifice that was going to be there all along. He takes this ram, and he slaughters it as a substitute in Isaac's place. And Abraham can say, I knew it. I knew that God was going to come through with his promises. And they call this place, The Lord Will Provide.
That this place, Moriah, will forever be remembered as the place that God intervened, that God made a substitute, that God kept his promise, and the line of Abraham was preserved. And the rest of this chapter is that working of this blessing, declaring this blessing that is going to be, and you get to the end of it, and it's over. The story's done. And there's this lingering question, I think, that we still have when we read this. What was the point? What was the point of this story?
I mean, I get it. I'll concede. God tests his people. But calling a father to sacrifice his son, that seems a little too far. Calling him to take his innocent son. I mean, Abraham's old.
Couldn't God see his heart? Couldn't he see the faith that was in it? Why put an old man through that kind of grief? Why put Isaac through that kind of terror? Why? What is the point?
Because ultimately, this story is pointing to something else. The location of this place, Moriah, is significant. Later on in 2 Chronicles 3, we learn that Moriah is the place where Solomon built the temple. This is Jerusalem. This is not an accident. God could have chosen any place.
He could have chosen any mountain, but he chooses this hill. Why? Because this story was going to play out centuries later. That years down the line, there was going to be a son. There is going to be a son whom the Father loved deeply. The kind of love that is eternal.
The kind of love that stretches back into eternity past that is unbroken and perfect and pure and good. And out of this love, he's going to send his son. And out of this love, the son is going to obey the will of the Father. And he's going to travel on the same path that Isaac and Abraham took. The son is going to obey and he's going to put wood on his back. He's going to carry the wood up the hill.
The same path that Abraham and Isaac took. And this wood is going to be a wooden cross. And he's going to carry the wooden cross to a place that they called Moriah, a place that we as Christians now look at and call Calvary. And after being beaten and mocked and spit upon and abandoned and tortured, he's going to take that cross as far as he can go. He's going to need help just to get it up the hill. And when he gets to the top, there's going to be no need to ask the question, where is the lamb?
Because Jesus knew all along, he was the lamb. He was the ram and the thicket. He is the substitute. And he gets to the top and they bind him to the cross on the altar. They raise him up. And as, what's different from Abraham and Isaac now is as the knife is coming down and the angel stops, that doesn't happen here.
The spear pierces his side. The blood and the water pour out like an offering. And unlike Abraham and Isaac where Isaac is unbound, he can tell him everything's going to be okay. God the Father who's perfectly been in relationship and in love with his son is going to turn his back on him. This story in Genesis 22 is ultimately looking forward to the cross. That God spared Isaac.
He does not spare Christ. Jesus is the better Isaac. The one who carried the wood up the hill. And Abraham was right. The lamb would be provided. Jesus is our ram whose blood was spilled to take away our sins.
And the feeling that you have when you read this that says this isn't right that an innocent one should die, that is correct. We deserve wrath. Jesus dies in our place. Why? For God so loved the world that he gave his only son that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life. That's the hope of the gospel.
Why? Because you and me we need a sacrifice. We need someone to stand in our place because we have sinned and rebelled against the creator of God. We have trampled on his commands. We pursued flesh. We pursued the world.
We need a sacrifice. We are like hopeless sheep without a shepherd and Jesus comes from heaven and he seeks us and he claims us because the father loves you so much that he did not leave you here in sin but he sent Jesus to die for you so that he might carry you home. You are correct. It is not fair. We deserve wrath but Jesus obeyed the will of the father that he might become the ram that thicketh for us. He is the fulfillment of Genesis 22 and as Christians y'all we get to look at this story look at this picture of the gospel and respond in worship.
We get to respond in repentance.
Multiply or Bust
Transcript
Good morning. My name's Chet. I'm one of the pastors here. Grab your Bibles. Go to Mark chapter 4. We're in the fifth and final week of our Multiply series.
We'll be picking back up with Genesis next week. Genesis is a very long book, so we spent a good bit of time in it in the fall. We're going to spend a good bit of time in it in the spring, just studying through, going through that narrative and trying to learn what we can about God and how it displays to us Christ through what he did with creation and the patriarchs as he built the nation of Israel. But we, as we started this year, started off in a series called Multiply, where we were looking at the Great Commission and kind of understanding what we ought to be doing and how we ought to be spending our time.
And in some ways, as we began it, we said it's kind of like some New Year's resolutions for our church family, for us to kind of focus in on what matters most and say, here's what we want to be doing, here's how we ought to be spending our time. And so the first week we talked about the Great Commission, and that's kind of been the basis for this whole thing, that Jesus takes his disciples, and he, after his death and burial and resurrection, says, Go, make disciples. Go do with others what I've been doing with you. Proclaim to them the gospel that they might believe, and then baptize them. As they repented and had faith, baptize them.
And then he says, And teach them to obey everything I've commanded you. You should walk with them and train them and equip them. And as you're going to make disciples, the people that become disciples continue to help make disciples. And you guys, I hate to spoil the ending for you. They did that, and it made it all the way to us. That this train of discipleship, this equipping people and sharing the gospel and seeing people baptized is all the way to here, and we are to continue that.
And so, at first week, Spencer talked about what. Then we talked about why. Why would we do this? That people would actually believe that there is real hope in Christ, that there is a real eternity, there is a real weight to whether or not we believe, and that people will actually believe if we'll go, if we'll share. And so then we talked about how we can do that, and we said that we can share an invitation, that we can share our story, that we can share the gospel, just in a moment just tell somebody the basics of the story. And we said ultimately we'd share our lives with people and hope and pray and plead with them that they might know Christ and follow him.
And so then we talked last week about discipleship specifically, that we would commit to discipleship. And so we said that discipleship is a life of learning, that it's life on life, it's life in community, and it's life on mission. And now we're kind of finishing up the series today, and we're actually going to, as we end today, we're going to walk through this text, then we'll sing a few songs, and then I'll come back up and we'll talk about a few kind of prayers for the year for us. And that's how we'll finish our time this morning, is kind of talking through some of that. And so what would normally be our just, hey, we've got two or three announcements, is actually going to be short, short sermon number two.
It won't be that long, but it will be longer than announcements, because we're trying to end on here's where we're going, here's where we're headed. And so pick up in Mark 4, I'm going to pray, and we're going to start reading this text together. God, we pray that you would bless our time this morning, that it would be fruitful, that your word would make it to good soil. In Jesus' name, amen. So Mark 4, Jesus, we're going to look at the parable of the sower today, and so we're going to just pick up Mark 4, verse 1.
It says, again, he began to teach. So Jesus did this often, and he is the he there. He began to teach beside the sea, and a very large crowd gathered about him, so that he got into a boat and sat in it on the sea, and the whole crowd was beside the sea on the land. So they start getting so gathered around him that he climbs into a boat and uses that as a stage, and then he's yelling to all these people who have gathered around the edge of the sea, and he's sitting in a boat. And it says he was teaching them many things in parables, and in his teaching he said to them, parables are stories, they're word pictures, they're metaphors, they're analogies, but they're not explained fully.
So they're just kind of, here's what it's like, and he tells the story, and then where a lot of hours would have, and the moral is, a parable just goes, here's the story. Mic drop, walk away. Like you don't necessarily know, you have to kind of figure out, okay, what does that mean, how does that work? And so that's what he'd been doing. He said, listen, behold, a sower went out to sow. Which if you're a sower, that's a good thing to do.
So a sower went out to sow, and as he sowed, some seed fell along the path. Okay, so this isn't needle and thread sowing, this is casting seed sowing. So this guy's got a bag, he's got some seed, and he's casting seed, and we're going to hear what happens. As he sowed, some seed fell along the path, and the birds came and devoured it. Other seed fell on rocky ground, where it did not have much soil, and immediately it sprang up, since it had no depth of soil. And when the sun rose, it was scorched.
And since it had no root, it withered away. Other seed fell among thorns, and the thorns grew up and choked it, and it yielded no grain. And other seeds fell into good soil and produced grain, growing up and increasing, yielding 30-fold, 60-fold, and 100-fold. And he said, he who has ears to hear, let him hear. So this is the story that he tells, and you can pull the picture up, but they would have been able to picture this pretty well.
And the idea that he's saying that he's spreading grain means that grain is a cereal crop. You actually eat what you plant. So you either, when it grows up, you either eat or you replant. It's not like an apple tree where you get to eat the apple and plant the seed. This is, you're choosing. I'm going to eat this, I'm going to replant it.
So you usually would hold back some to eat, and you would store some to replant the next year. So he's casting this out. So every little seed can then grow up and become more seed. That's how it works. So that's the story he tells.
So he said, a guy goes out, he's sowing. Some of it falls on a path. It's real hard ground. People use that to walk. It just sits there. Birds see it, come eat it.
Some falls on rocky ground, and it starts to grow down, but realizes it can't go much further. So it starts to grow up. And immediately, that's the stuff you see first. It looks pretty. You're like, hey, it's growing. Then the sun pops up, it's like peekaboo, and kills it.
Because it has no way to get any kind of nutrients. It's not deep. Then some of it went among thorns, and the thorns just choke it out. So it begins to grow, but the thorns grow better, steal from it, choke it, kill it. Some lands on good soil, and it grows. And it bears fruit.
And it multiplies. Some 30-fold, some 60-fold, some 100-fold. And then he ends by saying, and if you understand that, understand that. So he's saying, who has ears to hear, let him hear. And then he's done. And his disciples, it says, verse 10, And when he was alone, those around him with the twelve asked him about the parables.
So he ends with, if you understand that, understand that. And then his disciples get back with him. And he's like, man, I don't know what he's doing. He's like, whew, good teaching. And they're like, hey, Peter had a question. And Peter's like, yeah, we didn't understand that.
And so he, they just kind of asked him, what was that about? Why are you teaching in parables? What were you talking about? And he said to them, to you has been given the secret of the kingdom of God. But for those outside, everything is in parables.
So that they may indeed see, but not perceive. And may indeed hear, but not understand. Lest they should turn and be forgiven. And he said to them, do you not understand this parable? How then will you understand all the parables? And then he tells them, he says, the sower sows the word.
So he begins to explain the parable to him. So he looks at his disciples. He's gathered the crowd and he's taught in a parable and just says, if you can understand that, you understand it. And then he leaves. And his disciples said, we don't understand that. And he says, y'all get the secret.
You're going to get to know things that nobody else does. To you has been given the secret of the kingdom. And he explains it to him. He doesn't just say, well, you're out. Sorry. He says, no, no, y'all get to be in.
And he explains it. And this is what he says. He says, the sower sows the word. Okay. So the seed that's being cast out kind of aggressively, like, you know, you think you'd plant it or whatever.
This guy's just like slinging it. It's hitting rocks and paths and thorns. And he's just like, it's going to grow somewhere. It's going to be awesome. So he says, the sower sows the word.
And the word is the gospel, this good news of the kingdom. Mark's already used that. He said that Jesus, people gathered around his house and he preached the word. This idea that he's telling you what is good and true and important in life. And ultimately, we know that the word is the gospel, is the truth of who Jesus is and what he's done and the right way to understand scripture. So he says, the word is taught and these are the ones along the path where the word is sown.
Okay. So the word's taught and people respond. And so what we're looking at is four heart level responses to the gospel for heart level responses to the proclamation of the word. And when Jesus teaches this, I want you to see this. It is factual and final. These are four heart level responses to the gospel and everybody responds one of these four ways.
That's how Jesus teaches it. That as the word is sown, this is how people respond. And the reason I say it's factual and final is that from Jesus's eternal perspective, that's how it looks. From our perspective, it doesn't look factual and final. Because at times it seems like somebody would be in one category and then later there's a twist ending and they're in another category. And hopefully it's a good twist ending.
It's like, oh, wow, like it turns out it was nice. Not like an evil twist ending where everything falls apart at the end. You're like, this is terrible. But they do go both ways and we can't see exactly where we are in the story. Don't even know personally where we are in the story at times. We're supposed to walk out our salvation and fear and trembling and to continue to walk towards the Lord in life.
So as we talk through this today, we will talk through it as both. We'll talk through it as the way Jesus sees it and how these people end up. And then we'll talk through it as how we get to walk with people when it seems like they're in these zones. Does that make sense? Because there may be somebody who seems this way and then later is something else. But we can only go with what we can see.
All right. So he begins to explain. He says, these are the ones along the path where the word is sown. When they hear, Satan immediately comes and takes away the word that is sown in them. So Satan is the bird that swoops in, snatches the seed.
Matthew, he says, when they hear the gospel and don't understand it, the enemy comes or the devil comes. And so what we've got to see there is that there are some people who it just doesn't, it just bounces off of them. They don't understand it. It doesn't connect. It doesn't have any amount of growth whatsoever. And that we have a real enemy who does not want people to believe the gospel.
That Satan actively works to snatch away the good proclamation of the gospel. This was actually second Corinthians four, four says it this way. It says, in their case, the God of this world, that's, that's Satan. That's the devil. God's enemy has blinded the minds of the unbelievers to keep them from seeing the light of the gospel of the glory of Christ, who is the image of God. That the enemy, the enemy opposes the proclamation of the gospel.
And there are those who just simply won't believe. I, when I was working at Sears in Lynchburg, I was going, I would go to my coworkers and I would say, Hey, you know, I'm in seminary and I feel called to start a church. Um, I didn't just start there. They knew that. So it made a little more sense.
And then I would say, so I, at some point I want to tell you about Jesus. When can we do that? Um, and with most of my coworkers, first of all, this catches people off guard, but with most of my coworkers, they just went, um, I, I guess now because it was like a break time. I picked it up opportunity time. They weren't like talking to a customer and I wasn't like standing behind him. Like I waited till there was like a good moment and they would say that.
And then I would share the gospel with them, um, as best I could. In the moment, some of my coworkers were like, uh, lunch break. Like they would give you a time or they would say maybe later. And I would say, when later? And like, I had one coworker that I came to him and I said, Hey, you know, I'm, uh, in seminary. I'd love to tell you about Jesus at some point.
When can we do that? And he went, um, turn to look at me. He's doing training on a computer. That's what this was. Y'all can't see that, but he wasn't left-handed. It was this hand.
He looked at me and said, how about never? Yeah, let's do that. Never. And then he just turned back to his computer work. And that was when I shared the gospel with him was never. I was ended up how it, how it worked.
I didn't have another time that it worked out. He didn't want to hear it. There are some people that you have the chance to share the gospel with them and they just reject it or they don't want to hear it. And here's the thing. There are some people in this category. You're going to share it with them and it's just, it isn't going to sink in.
It's not going to make any sense. It's not going to click. There's some people who aren't going to let you or don't want to. Now, Jesus tells his disciples that you can shake the dust out of your clothes. You can shake the dust off your shoes. You can go to another town.
So there is room for us to say, I'm not going to continue to try to share the gospel with someone who doesn't want to hear it, who's against it. But there's also, we don't know. Paul would have been a terrible person to share the gospel with until Jesus knocked him off his horse and made him blind. And then he went around sharing the gospel with everybody. So we don't know exactly where they are.
So if it's your cousin or your neighbor, keep the relationship, be gracious to him. But maybe they're not ready. But also realize that you can't sit and make somebody be good soil if they're not and feel the freedom to say, I shared, I tried, I'm moving on to somebody who wants to hear. So those are the, those along the path, rocky ground. It says, and these are the ones sown on rocky ground. That's verse 16.
The ones who, when they hear the word immediately receive it with joy and they have no root in themselves, but endure for a little while. Then when tribulation or persecution arises on account of the word, immediately they fall away. So there's a group of people who will immediately receive it with joy, which is how you want people to receive the gospel is this is the best news ever. Thank you. I'd love to follow Jesus now. And I know if you share the gospel enough and someone does this, it's at times can be surprising.
You're like, you're, you're all nervous. And you're like, I'm gonna tell you about Jesus. And they're like, yes, that sounds amazing. I want to follow Jesus. And you're like, okay, well, you don't have to be mad. Wait, what?
Yeah, that would be great. You should do that. Like you're almost caught off guard sometimes, but you're like, yes, let's do that. And so they immediately begin to follow Jesus. But as soon as some difficulty arises, some persecution, they're out.
Now, in other countries, this looks different than here. There are other nations where your spouse leaves you, your family disowns you, you're physically attacked. Yeah, you're no longer allowed to work. That doesn't happen here. Like you didn't go to work and say, hey, I'm following Jesus now. And they were like, leave Walmart and never come back.
They don't, they don't do that. You still get to be a greeter there. Like they don't, there's no persecution on that level. But there are times where somebody may be, maybe this is somebody you share the gospel with while you're at school and they go home for the summer and they come back and they're like, no, no, no, no, I'm not doing that anymore. Because they got around their friends and their friends made fun of them or said, really? Are you serious?
And it was the first bit of difficulty and the first bit of persecution and the first bit of somebody who wasn't, they weren't just hanging out with your group and being excited and they're just, I'm done. And this is maybe opposite. Somebody goes off to school and the first professor that says, this is stupid. They just quit. This is somebody who the first little bit of life change that has to come. They just, they call it.
And so they're excited. This is hurtful. This is sad, but they're excited. They're going to follow Jesus. And then you talk to them and they're like, yeah, I think I'm done with that. And you're like, really?
You're going to give Jesus up for this? But that's what happens. And in those moments we can correct and we can try to point them towards what's true, but we cannot love Jesus for them and you cannot make rocky ground to be good soil through any of your own effort. That's not how it works. As Jesus tells it, it's factual and it's finalized so that if someone's in that zone, they will not change. Now we don't always know who's in that zone, but we do have the freedom to say, Lord, I've tried and I'm going to spend my time with somebody who wants to hear the gospel and wants to grow.
Third, third zone, third type of soil. And the others are the ones sown among thorns. So the gospel goes among thorns and it says, these are those who hear the word, but the cares of the world and the deceitfulness of riches and the desires for other things enter in and choke the word and it proves unfruitful. I think the majority of the church, those who would walk with the church are in these last two zones, in these last two bits of soil, that there are those who would walk with the church for a while. See, the other ones immediately fall away. These are slowly choked.
So they would say, I'm a believer. They would begin to walk. But over time, they'd prove, prove means over time, that eventually they'd prove unfruitful. It says that the desires of the world, that the cares of the world, the desires for other things and deceitfulness of riches. I want to talk briefly through those. The cares of the world, I think probably the best way to describe that, at least in our context, would just be busyness.
Oh man, I'd love to. Just got so much going on. I just, I mean, with, with work and the kids and avoiding y'all, like there's just, sorry, that's desire for other things. The cares of the world is this genuine, like, I want this, but I just, I don't have time. This is, I just, I don't know. I just can't kind of make it from here to there.
And, and so there are some people that would hang out with your group and they'll be around some and they'll be there ish. And then they'll be gone for a while. And, and I'm not saying a season. I know that there are seasons where there's sickness or there's seasons where there's Job loss or there's seasons where there's difficulty or there's seasons where you have a child and they're the worst. And then they're beautiful and wonderful, you guys. And we're glad they're in here this morning, but there are seasons, but I'm talking over time.
It proves if you've had a seven year long season of just too busy, that's not how it works. Then he says the deceitfulness of riches. And I love that he says it that way. He doesn't just say riches. He says the deceitfulness of riches. Y'all know riches are a trick.
That they're a trick. One of the things we talk about sometimes is that men are supposed to build and conquer and grow and develop. Not to say women aren't, but men are called to these things. And that one of the problems we have culturally is video games because video games short circuit that. They make you think you're building and developing and growing. I'm the general and I'm over an entire city.
No, you're not. You are in your mom's basement. And you haven't bathed in four days. Like when you level up on a video game, you level down in real life. I don't know how else to, I mean, some amount of riches does that to everybody. It short circuits the promises of God.
It steps in and it's just such a good, tasteful, easy alternative that it lies to us and we believe it. The promises of God that he gives us hope, that he gives us life, that he gives us fullness, that he gives us joy, that there are pleasures at his right hand forevermore, that we have a future. Man, doesn't money just pull all that closer? Smaller. It doesn't last. There's a song I grew up singing in church and it's, uh, because he lives.
And it would say, because he lives, I can face tomorrow. Because he lives, all fear is gone. Because he lives, I know who holds the future and life is worth the living just because he lives. But man, doesn't money just sneak in there and work? Because I'm rich, I can face tomorrow. Come on.
Because I'm rich, all fear is gone. I can commit crimes and won't even have to go to jail. Because I know, I hold the future and life is worth the living just because I'm rich. Money tricks us. It hops in, in place of Jesus so easily and it promises things that it cannot deliver. It's, it's deceitful.
But there's a whole group of people who would say they believe, who would say they've hoped in Jesus and they have been lied to and they are pursuing riches and it's going to choke the fruitfulness of the word. I was watching a movie called Ash Lad in the Hall of the Mountain King on Amazon. It was a free Amazon movie and it, it was made in Norway. And so it was dubbed over in English. It was a children's movie, which aren't great anyway, but to have their mouths not match made it a little bit also hard to watch. But it was doing like Swedish and I'm sorry, it wasn't made in Sweden, it was made in, it was doing, I don't remember where it was made, somewhere over there in the top part of Europe.
I looked it up and now I've forgotten. And it was doing myths that, that matched that area where it was made. And these guys were going through the woods, they're traveling on this, this quest to fight a goblin and they, they're very hungry and they find golden apples in the woods as you, as you do. And, uh, they were like, well, whoever left these golden apples wouldn't mind if we have one because of course not super generous left their golden apples there. So they start eating them.
Turns out they're delicious. Uh, and so they start eating more. And then the third brother, the youngest one just kind of catching up. So he shows up kind of towards the end of this. He tastes one. He, uh, follows them in and then he finds his older brothers and they're laughing hysterically because what's happened is these three ladies come out of the woods as often happens.
And these guys think that they're the most beautiful women they've ever seen. And they kind of drag them along and they take them and they say, we're going to get married. These guys are laughing hysterically and they go around and they're having so much fun and they sit at this feast. And so the youngest brother only had a little bit of an apple. He comes around, he's sitting with him. He's like, this just feels weird.
And then eventually he begins to be able to see clearly. Turns out the golden apples were a trick. And these beautiful young ladies are not beautiful young ladies. They are old, uh, scary witches and the food that they're eating at this feast is cockroaches and bugs and rotten things. And he sees it first and he has to do everything he can to grab his brothers and to escape. And that's what riches is for us.
Seems beautiful now. Tastes good now. Promises things it can never deliver. And at the end of the line, we're just eating cockroaches. It's just falling apart. It wasn't beautiful.
It was a trick. And that's what he says. That there's a whole group of people who we would see as Christians and say, believe, and you would watch them over time. And the cares of the world and the deceitfulness of riches choke out the word so that they are unfruitful. He also says the desire for other things. And man, isn't that true?
I'm following Jesus until I can get a boyfriend. And you sit down with them and you say, you're heading in the wrong way. This is not helpful. This is not edifying. This is not life-giving. And they say, I don't know.
I prayed about it. I don't feel bad. We ain't got to pray about it. It's written down. Do you want to read it again? Like all you said was my heart's so far from Jesus.
I so much desire something else that I want it so much more that I don't feel bad. I can't, it can't even get to me at this point because I so desire this and I'm getting it so I feel great. The desires for other things. This is when people say, yeah, I just really have a hard time reading the Bible. Like, okay. But you know the entire recruiting class for your favorite sports team?
You've kept up with every mom blog on this half of the internet? Feels like you know how to read. Feels like you want other stuff. And that's what happens. And as we're walking with people like that, we get to correct them. We get to call them towards joy and hope.
But eventually, you cannot make someone be in good soil. And you have the freedom to say, I think you're wrong and I love you and I hope the Lord changes your heart. But I'm going to build with those who want to build and I'm going to walk with those who want to walk. And our group's going to move on mission with those who want to move on mission. And we can't sit because you're too busy or because you want other things. It's heartbreaking.
And the prayer is that Jesus would change them. But there are people in that category. It proves unfruitful. Verse 20. But those that were sown on the good soil are the ones who hear the word and accept it and bear fruit 30-fold and 60-fold and 100-fold.
He's saying there's a group of people that hear the gospel, that hear the word, and it sinks into their heart and they begin to grow. Now, it doesn't say they immediately receive it with joy. It says they accept it. Okay. I think you're right. Now, they can immediately receive it with joy.
I don't think that would be wrong if they did. But I also think that it doesn't mean they start off like a bottle rocket. They may be like having to wrestle it out and having to walk it out. But eventually, tribulation comes, persecution comes, and they keep going. The cares of the world, the desire for other things come, and they keep going. And this good soil, they grow and they produce more grain.
And grain, if we're going to push the analogy a little bit, like I said, is either eaten or replanted. We've been talking about discipleship. I think that fits well. They're either sharing the gospel or they're helping others grow. That's what happens. That's what he's saying.
It bears fruit. The gospel becomes more seed that goes out for other people or it becomes eaten and people grow and are healthy from it. But there's this idea that people would grow up in the faith and they would be mature and they would help others mature and they would help others meet Jesus. That there's good soil that later will be used again for health and life and joy in the gospel to spread. Some 30-fold, some 60-fold, some 100-fold. Now, when we're walking with people like this, again, we don't always know, but they're going to be around.
They're going to repent when corrected. That's one of the things we talk about all the time is that Christians repent. The reason we correct one another in sin is because Christians repent. And the reason we have to at some point say goodbye to people is because they are not living as Christians because they are refusing to repent. So you'll go to this person, you'll correct them, and they'll say, you're right.
Maybe, maybe they'll say, you're stupid, I hate you. And then they'll call you back the next day and say, no, you're right. The Holy Spirit's at work in me and I can't, I can't keep doing this. Maybe they walk off for a season, but they come back. But eventually there's a group of people that bear fruit.
And you think about the people in your life, if you've been following Jesus for a while, who have shown up at the right time to correct you, who have walked with you for a season to coach you, to teach you how to read the Bible, or who have walked with you and helped you through something, and they're bearing fruit. Some 30-fold, some 60-fold, some 100-fold. There was somebody who grabbed you at some point and told you, you need to believe in Jesus. And they're bearing fruit. And that our prayer is that we would be those people. That if you're looking at this and you're going, okay, I've got to be one of the four.
Just so you know, you're one of the four. And you get to pick. Go with the one that's lit up right now. It's just a suggestion. But if you've got to pick, and you're going to ask the Lord to help do something in you, go with bottom right.
You want to be good soil that you might produce, that you might grow. You pray that, Lord, I want to share the gospel with you and have them believe it. Have them grow. I want to help others walk and grow. I want to help people mature. That that's the hope.
And he says there's a group there. And isn't that beautiful that there is a group there? Jesus, before he told this parable, if you look at the very back end of Matthew 3, Jesus is with his disciples. His parents think he's going crazy, or his mama does. His mama and his brothers and sisters come because they need to talk to him because it's like, you were a carpenter and now you're doing some weird things. Like you recruited some fishermen and now you're just teaching people stuff and we need to talk.
And they say, your mama's here. And Jesus says, who's my mama? They're like, the lady outside that we were just talking about. And he says, those who follow the will of my father, those who do the will of my father are my mother, my sister, and my brother. And there's this idea when he goes into the parable and Mark then takes us into this parable of the soil that what displays a Christian is ultimately fruitfulness. And that if we were to say, no, I'm a Christian.
And we bear no fruit. We do not do the will of the father. We do not share the gospel. We do not disciple others. We we do not. We actually, if you looked at our life, if you looked at our bank account, if you looked at our time, we desire other things or the cares of the world have choked this out.
That we cannot claim Christ. Jesus says, if you love me, you'll obey me. Now, here's the beautiful part of that. He doesn't say, if you obey me, I'll love you. He says, if you love me, you'll obey me. What happens is we can get to the end of this and we can go, OK, OK.
All right. I'm going to do it. I'm going to be the picture in the bottom right. I'm going to get it together. I'm going to quit letting the cares of the world. I'm going to quit letting the desires of other things.
I'm not going to hang out with my friends that tell me I'm stupid. And I'm going to do this. The problem is that's not how it works. And that's not even how Jesus says we ought to respond. All right.
So if you were paying attention at the beginning of this, Jesus said this was a secret. And then one of his disciples snarked and wrote it down and then they printed it and we got to all read it. Now, it would seem as if the person who did that did something Jesus did not want them to do. Jesus said, everybody else gets just to hear the parable. I'm going to tell you the secret. And there was one in the back going, watch this.
Wiki leaks. That may be really politically charged. I don't know enough to know if I just said something that threw everybody off. Spencer will tell me later. He'll be like, bro, I can't say that. But that's what they did.
Somebody wrote it down. But here's the thing. Jesus goes to the cross. And then Paul says, there's a beautiful mystery that just got revealed. And now it's for everybody. That Jesus goes and suffers and dies in our place.
And it is the revealing of God. He is the image of God. And the proclamation of the gospel now goes to everyone. So if you look back at how it began, Jesus says this. And we'll have it on the screen, but it's in your text as well. And he said to them, verse 11, To you has been given the secret of the kingdom of God, but to those outside, everything is in parables.
To us now, because of the gospel, has been given the secret. And Jesus is the secret. He's the mystery revealed. He dies on the cross so that we might have life in him. That's ultimately what happens. And here's what he says.
That they may indeed see, but not perceive. And may indeed hear, but not understand. Lest they should turn and be forgiven. He tells you the point of the parables. And he tells you how to respond to the parables. Turn and be forgiven.
He doesn't say turn and try harder. He doesn't say turn and work it out. He doesn't say turn and finally be good. He says turn and be forgiven. The appropriate and correct response to the gospel proclaimed and to understanding this parable today is to turn and say, Lord, forgive me. Help me.
I can't change my heart, but you can. I can't make myself good soil, but you can. I can't jump from being a path. I can't go from being rocky ground. I can't get rid of these thorns, but you can. And Jesus, I need you to help me.
So the response is not, I am now going to multiply. I'm now going to make disciples. I'm going to make grain. And I'm going to go sit and flex and try. No, the response is to run to Jesus and say, I need you to change my heart so that the desires of the world fade because I see how beautiful and glorious you are. I need to see you on the cross and have you so capture my soul.
And I need you to forgive me because I am so often tempted to believe that something else is more glorious than you. And I need you to work powerfully in me. And then we get to live, as Paul says, where he'll say, by God's grace, I worked harder than any of them. That we get to live out that it's Jesus's grace at work in us, that he works powerfully in us for us to be effective. And that's the hope. So the band's going to come back up.
We're going to sing a song. We're going to sing two songs, both of them dealing with this idea that we would give up everything else to know and love Jesus more. And in doing that, we are turning to him and we're saying, I want you above everything else and I want you to change me and I want you to matter more to me and I want to desire you above everything else so that it makes sense that I would spend my time for this, that I would spend my life for this. That it would be a joy and a delight as you work this out in my heart. And our prayer is that we would turn and ask for forgiveness and that his grace would work powerfully in us that we might bear fruit and multiply.
Let's pray. God, we thank you for your grace. And we know that as you see it, it's finalized and factual, but as we live it out, we're in the moment and we don't know. And God, we pray that we would make it to the end proving fruitful. But God, we can't change our hearts.
We can't make ourselves different through effort or work. You had to come and die so that we might be changed, so that the secret of you in us might be revealed. And so we ask that you would forgive us, that you would be in us, and that you would work this out powerfully in us for your glory. And that nobody here today would have the enemy snatch the gospel away from them. And nobody here today would face tribulation and run from you. And nobody here today would be tricked and lied to.
And at the end of days, realize they spent their life on something that mattered so little. And we ask that your grace would be prevalent and present, and that your spirit would be at work, that we might be fruitful by the power of your grace, for the glory of your name, and the good of our souls. In Jesus' name, amen. Amen. So we believe the stuff we've been saying in this series.
We believe that Jesus sent us, sent his church, and we believe that there are people in our city who do not know Jesus, and will spend an eternity in hell. That we are called to make disciples, and that we ought to, any amount of time and effort and money and energy given to the cause of Christ, and his gospel and his glorious name is worth it. We don't always carry that out. Well, we have seasons where we get confused, and we do things we ought not to do, and that's the beautiful hope. While we gather every week and remind ourselves that Jesus saves sinners, this isn't awesome club. And I'm sorry if you thought that.
Hang out for a week or two. You'll figure it out. Jesus saves sinners, but we do believe that by his grace that he works in us, and that he uses us, and he makes us effective. And so we have a handful of things that we're praying for. We've been talking about them throughout the series, but I wanted to remind us of them. We'll talk about them more throughout the year, but we've got a handful of things that we're praying for, and we're just asking the Lord to accomplish.
That we actually want to do this. We actually want to see this happen. But they're not just goals, because some of us get a goal, and we think, well, all right, if we have to be unhealthy, we're still going to accomplish that goal. And that's not what we're talking about. We're not talking about just making something happen in our own strength. We're asking the Lord to do it in his strength, in his power, and then it gets to last and gets to be beautiful, and it'll be great.
So here's the first one we're praying for. We said this a while back, and we said it a specific way, and we're kind of changing the language so that it makes a little more sense for us. But we said we want to have 100 everyday missionaries this year. Like we're just praying that 100 everyday missionaries. So we said 100 preachers or 100 sharers, but I don't like having to say sharer, and preacher might confuse people.
So this is language we use often, which is that you would be active in sharing your faith. You would be active, that you would look at the world, our world, our city, your neighborhood, your job, the way a missionary would, and you'd say, I'm using this job for the purpose of mission. I'm using this home for the purpose of mission, and I want to see people meet Jesus. And so we're praying that we'd have 100 everyday missionaries. We have 80 adult committed members here. We have about 119 adults hanging out with groups.
So we said, we know some of those people hanging out with groups aren't Christians, but we also, we're just praying this year we'd have people, 100 people that have shared their faith with somebody else that have, and so we're asking the Lord to do that. And so we want you to be praying that. I want you to write that on your prayer list. I want you to talk with your group about it. I want y'all to be praying about it, but we want to have 100 people that are doing this. The second thing we're praying for is that, every group would get around the pool, that every single group this year would get to see someone baptized.
Now, that may not happen. I don't know if y'all just heard the sermon that was just preached, but we can't control the soil. We do get to indiscriminately, psychotically throw, throw seed, but we can't control the soil. And so your group could be actively on mission this entire year and not see anybody meet Jesus. And that's okay. And by God's grace, that happens.
And by God's grace, maybe some people will meet Jesus next year. But this is the thing we're asking him to do. So we're going to ask him that he'd send us to receptive people and that they would believe the gospel and that they would stick. This means we are changing some things about how we do baptism. I mean, we're still going to completely dunk people because we think that's biblical. But what we've done in the past is we've had two kind of big baptism parties a year.
We get a big like portable hot tub thing and we build it right here and we get fried chicken and we have a big celebration. But what's happened is we have said, Hey, we've got baptism coming up and we've kind of even said like, Hey, we've got baptism coming up. So if you've got some people you need to share the gospel with, you should do that. So we are sharing the gospel people for an event. And that's not what it says. We're supposed to share the gospel with people.
They're supposed to believe and be baptized. And so we're going to start baptizing more often because we want to be sharing the gospel constantly. And so when someone believes and you say, Hey, we've got some inner group who's believed in Christ and we want to, to walk with them about what baptism is. We still want to be able to do videos, but we probably won't have as big of parties. We're still going to celebrate because baptism is awesome and we're going to make it a big deal, but we're going to do it more often. So it can't be as big a deal.
And the, the item, the tub can't probably be as big. So I don't know. We just got to get them completely wet. You guys, um, that's really the only goal. I've seen some pictures of missionaries where they got like somebody ducked down in a bucket. So we might get like a 55 gallon drum and just push their head down.
We may get like the first person we baptized was in a horse trough. We may get a horse trough and glue some wheels to that bad boy. I don't know, but we're going to try to celebrate baptism more often as we are effectively, consistently sharing our faith with people. And then when they believe we want to baptize them in response to faith and not have people, uh, consider faith in response to baptism. So our hope, our prayer is that every group this year gets to gather around a pool, gets to see somebody baptized.
It's pool sounds better. Bucket didn't sound as good or 55 gallon drum, but gets to gather around, see them baptized and celebrate together as a group. And we want you to be praying that as well. Uh, the third thing we're praying for is that everyone in groups is 100% committed to discipleship. Now we don't have a way to test this.
Uh, we're working on something where it's like the little diabetes thing where you test for blood or whatever. We're working on something, but we can't do it yet. So, uh, we don't have a way to test this, but we're asking the Lord to do it through his, through his power, through the grace, uh, at work in us and through his Holy spirit. And so our prayer is that by what we mean by that is that you would be devoted to helping the people in your group grow, that you would show up to your group knowing that it is not about you. And in knowing that, that you would grow. You see, we grow as we sacrifice.
We grow as we serve. We grow as we collectively learn. And so our prayer is that we would be devoted to that, that a life of learning, life on life, life in community, life on mission, and that we would grow. What we're praying ultimately with all of these things is that God would let our church be in good soil, that we would grow and prove fruitful. The final one, and this one gets me excited because it means a whole lot of things have to happen, is we're praying that within the next year to 18 months, every single one of our groups multiplies. What that means is we have to be training leaders.
We have to be sharing the gospel. We have to be willing to get uncomfortable and intentionally identify some new mission fields and some new areas that we're going to try to launch groups into. It means that Jesus has to be at work all over the place. And so we think it's a good thing to pray for, to ask him that our groups would be able to multiply, that we'd be able to equip leaders, that we'd be able to send people out to be missionaries in our city. And ultimately, here's one of the things we've found. Our community groups can basically handle being a group and loving and being church family and serving and working together with about the amount of people you can fit in a house around a table and a handful of couches.
It's 15. 15 to 20. After that, you don't realize you're doing this, but you start thinking, I can't invite my friends because this would freak them out. There's too many people here. And so what happens is we actually, one of the ways that we continue to grow is that we multiply and we open up more room for us to invite, for us to share the gospel, for us to see people have what we have. And the beautiful thing is if you've been in groups that have multiplied, right when you went to multiply, you thought, I can never live without these people.
They're the most amazing people ever. And the first week after y'all kind of went to your different areas to be on mission together with a new group of people, it was really sad and awkward. You're like, just the eight of us, this is the worst. And then a year later, you had people in your group that knew Jesus now, that'll spend eternity with him in his kingdom, praising him. And you're like, I can't live without this person. And it gets to happen over and over and over again.
And what Jesus actually says is, unless a grain of wheat dies, it can't reproduce. And so in order for us to see fruit and growth and discipleship and health and people meeting Jesus, we have to die a little bit. And ultimately we get to live. And Jesus empowers that by his grace. And so our prayer is that these would happen. Write them down.
I wouldn't get a tattoo because this is just for like this year we're praying this. But write them down. Let's be praying this together. Let's be asking Jesus to be at work by his grace, his Holy Spirit to empower us that we might prove fruitful. Because we really, really want to see some people know Christ and have their hearts changed with the hope that's in the gospel. And Jesus came and said to them, all authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me.
Go, therefore, make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you. And behold, I am with you always to the end of the age. Our prayer is that we might do that. So let's pray for these for a moment and for that, and then we'll be sent out. Yeah. Thank you.
Thank you. Jesus, all authority is yours, and you promise to go with us. By your grace, make us fruitful. Help us make disciples. Amen. Your son.
Simply Unstoppable
Transcript
Good morning. My name is Chet. I'm one of the pastors here. We are in the fourth week of our Multiply series. We'll finish it up next week. And we began this year talking about how Jesus commissioned his church, sent his disciples out to make more disciples.
And so we've been discussing what it looks like for us to make disciples and how we go about that and how we multiply disciples, how we equip people and send them out, that we share the gospel with them, that we walk with them, train them up into what it looks like to follow Jesus and equip them to do the same with others. Jesus talking in Matthew chapter 13 says this. We're not going to turn this on the screen. We'll be somewhere else this morning, but I want to start here. Jesus talking in Matthew chapter 13. He says he told them another parable.
He says the kingdom of heaven is like leaven that a woman took and hid in three measures of flour till it was all leavened. Now, if you're like me, baking analogies. Am I right? Like as soon as he said the kingdom of heaven is like leaven, you were like, yes, leaven. No, what he's saying is three measures of flour is 36 liters. And unless you're Raz and from Australia, that doesn't help you that much.
It's like two five gallon buckets. It's a lot of flour that you just put a little bit of leaven in and the leaven takes over. What he's saying is that the kingdom of heaven seems simple, seems small, that if you zoom in on it, if you look at it and just kind of investigate it, you go, that's it. And Jesus says, yeah, that's it. Now, wait a minute. And it's going to take over.
When you zoom in on the gospel that the God of the universe would die, that he would come in humility, that he would live simply, that he would die on a cross, and that you would go, really, that's what he came to do? He didn't come to set up this kingdom. He didn't come. He said, no, the kingdom of heaven starts small and then overtakes everything. And so that's what we're talking about, that discipleship works that way, that the kingdom of heaven grows that way, that it's small and simple and it's bit by bit, but eventually it spreads and overtakes everything, that the kingdom of heaven expands.
And so grab your Bibles, go to Acts chapter 2. That's where we'll be today. So Jesus sends out his disciples. He commands them to go make more disciples. And then we pick up in the book of Acts as the church spreads and we see what the disciples did so that we get to learn from them how they went about making disciples. So what happens is in Acts chapter 1, they pray, they replace Judas with another disciple.
They say, we're going to keep the number at 12. Then the Holy Spirit falls in Acts 2. Peter stands up. He opens his mouth. He proclaims the gospel. It's what we talked about last week.
We would share the gospel and people believe the gospel and they say, what do we need to do? And the disciples were like, we're ready for this because Jesus has just told us. Be baptized in the name of the Father, Son, and the Holy Spirit. That's what he said. Go make disciples, baptize in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. So they say, repent of your sins and be baptized.
And then we get to see how they began to teach them to observe everything that Jesus commanded, how they began to make disciples. And so our question today as we look at this is, what does discipleship look like? How do we make disciples? How do we grow as disciples? We've been talking about how we share the gospel, how we get people to believe the gospel and be baptized. And now we're saying, okay, what does it look like to help them observe everything that Jesus commanded?
So I'm going to pray. Pray with me and we'll study this this morning. God, we ask that we would be disciples who make disciples for the glory of your name and the growth of your kingdom. In Jesus' name, amen. So today we're going to look at four aspects of discipleship.
That what needs to be in place, what needs to take place in order for us to be making disciples. What is the content of discipleship? What is the context of discipleship? And so that's what we're doing. We're in 42. And they devoted themselves to the apostles teaching and the fellowship to the breaking of bread and the prayers.
So we're going to start there. The first thing that we're going to see is that discipleship is a life of learning. If you're going to be a disciple, you're going to commit to a life of learning. That you're going to consistently be learning and growing. And so it says they devoted themselves. And I want us to see that first.
They devoted themselves. One of the things we've talked about a lot in our church is that we belong to one another. That we're family. That we're members of one another. And so we rightly have taught that we ought to pursue one another. We ought to correct one another.
We ought to, when somebody's running in sin, we ought to go to them and challenge them and point them back to the gospel. But what happens is over time sometimes, especially the good-natured, good-hearted ones of us. Some of us are like, not exactly there, but others of us start really trying to want Jesus on behalf of somebody else. Start trying to want to follow Jesus on behalf of somebody else. And that's not how it works. They have to devote themselves.
We have to devote ourselves. The people who follow Jesus are the people who wanted to. Now, certainly we should correct each other and certainly we should go to one another when we're in sin. But eventually, some people are going to choose not to follow Jesus and we can't want Jesus for them and we can't follow Jesus for them. The encouraging thing is if you want Jesus, you'll get him. If you want more of Jesus, you get more of Jesus.
But if you don't, you won't. And so the first thing we have to see is that they specifically, intentionally devoted themselves to the things we're about to talk about. So it says they devoted themselves first to the apostles' teaching. So the apostles were the twelve disciples that Jesus had sent out, proclaimed the gospel, and then people said, what do we do? We need to repent and be baptized. And then the apostles began to teach them everything that Jesus had taught.
And so they devoted themselves. They were hungry for it and they ate it up. So how do we do the same thing? We devote ourselves to the Bible. That's the apostles' teaching. That they were taking the Old Testament, explaining how Jesus showed up in it, and teaching the new things that Jesus had explained.
That within about 15, 20 years, we started having the letters that we have being passed around the churches. In about 30 to 40 years, we started having the gospels written down, bound together, that we have. By about 90 years, we had all of the New Testament that was being shared and spread around. And so we study the New Testament and we study the Old Testament in light of Jesus. And that's us devoting ourselves to the apostles' teaching. So that if you're going to be a disciple, you're going to be hungry for the word.
You're going to study the Bible. That's one of the reasons we gather on Sundays. That's why we read biblical texts. That's why we say them out loud together. That's why we study them together. That's why we study them in our groups, is that we would be devoted to the scriptures.
And as Americans, we have the least excuse whatsoever to not be devoted to the scriptures. Your phone will read the Bible to you. If you pay a little money, James Earl Jones will read the Bible to you. We have podcasts and websites. We have ways to access the Bible in multiple translations. Not just in English, but in multiple translations that we might pursue the word together.
And so what I would say is that the content of discipleship is a life of learning. That we are learning and studying the Bible. Studying the scriptures together. That we might grow together. I would encourage you to do a couple of things. If you're new to trying to read the Bible, I would encourage you to find somebody who's not new to trying to read the Bible.
And y'all read it together. Or just say, hey, I'm going to read these three. We're going to read the first three chapters of Matthew over the course of this week. And then we'll talk about it. And you just write down things that you have questions about. You know you can read your Bible and text somebody and say, hey, what is this doing?
I still do this. I'll open my, I'll be reading my Bible. I'll open up the Bible app. I'll copy the verse. I'll send it to a group of guys. And I'll say, what on earth is that talking about?
Is it this or this? And we discuss it. And I grow. It's edifying. I would also encourage you to get a study Bible. They're very helpful.
If you want more, if you want to listen to podcasts or know some websites, we'd love to talk to you and point you in the right direction. I would not encourage you to just Google your questions. I would encourage you to go to resources that have already been tested for faithfulness. So it says they devoted themselves to the apostles' teaching. We're going to skip over the fellowship because that's what we're going to talk about next more in depth. They devoted themselves to the apostles' teaching to the breaking of bread.
This means two things. It means that they shared meals together. That they got together. They shared meals together. But specifically as we see this play out in the New Testament, these are intentional gospel meals.
Intentional church family meals. That ultimately this is communion as we have it now. That they would get together and specifically intentionally say, we are reminding ourselves over a meal of who Jesus is and what he's done for us. One of the ways we've done this in our community groups is when we've taken communion in our community groups, we've actually gone in a circle, person by person, and said, how do you need the gospel right now? What is it that you're fearful over? What is it that you're in doubt?
Where are you sinning and not believing that the gospel is better than the thing you're chasing? Where is it that you need the good news? And somebody would just confess or they'd say, here's where I'm struggling. And the rest of the table would just say, well, here's how Jesus is better than that. Here's how this is good news for you. Here's what you're celebrating when you take communion tonight.
And we would ask at the end of that, do you understand when we take communion what you're celebrating? How Jesus is good and how the gospel is for you? And they say, yes. And we go to the next person. And that's what they were doing. They were actively, intentionally applying the gospel to life.
They were sharing gospel meals. They were reminding each other of what Jesus had accomplished for them. And they were spending time together. So they devoted themselves, not only to just learning what the apostles were teaching, but to applying that in repentance and applying it to their lives as they celebrated communion. And the prayers. That they were intentionally, collectively praying together and praying separately.
That they were devoted to the apostles' teaching, to the breaking of bread, to applying the gospel to life, to practicing the gospel in life through repentance and through celebrating what Jesus has done and praying. That is the content of discipleship. That if you're like, I'd love to try to walk with somebody, but I don't know what to do. Okay. Get together. Get your Bibles out.
Talk about how the gospel applies to life. Repent of sin. Celebrate that Jesus is good. Pray. Boom. That's the content of discipleship.
That's what they were doing when they gathered together. This is how they were practicing this. And the other thing they were devoted to is the fellowship. That's the context. That this happens in relationships. And so discipleship is a life of learning, but it's also life on life.
That you would actually be around each other. This is what it says if we keep reading. So it says they devoted themselves to the fellowship and all came upon every soul and many wonders and signs were being done through the apostles and all who believed were together and had all things in common. And they were selling their possessions and belongings and distributing the proceeds to any to all as any had need. And day by day, attending the temple together and breaking bread in their homes, they received their food with glad and generous hearts. That they were around each other day by day.
They were gathering in big groups. They were gathering in homes. They were sharing their possessions. They were with each other in life. I want to read Deuteronomy 6. When the law was given to the nation of Israel, God gives this command.
It's called the Shema. Shema just means here. This is the command that Jesus says, if you'll go to Deuteronomy 6. This is the command that Jesus says is the most important command. Hear, O Israel. Yeah, cool.
All right. This is what Jesus tells them. This is the greatest commandment. It says, hear, O Israel, the Lord our God, the Lord is one. You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your might. And these words that I command you today should be on your heart.
So the first command is that you would love God and that you would have his words in your heart. And then he says, and you shall teach them diligently to your children and shall talk of them when you sit in your house and when you walk by the way and when you lie down and when you rise. He's teaching them how to train others, how to equip others. First step, love the Lord. Have his word in your heart. Second step, live your life.
With others, that's what he's saying, that you would love the Lord so much that when you're just typaling your children, that it's what you talk about when you rise up. That's what you talk about when you sit. It's what you talk about when you walk. It's what you talk about when you lay down, that it's part of life, that your love for Jesus is so part of your life. Now, this was a command specifically to parents for their specific children. So for me, it'd be my two boys.
But it was also a command to the nation of Israel for the next generation, that they would teach their children. And it is how discipleship works, that you are around people in life. So I want to pause for just a second and talk about discipling children. And then we'll go back to talking about exactly how we do this in application to each other. Parents, you're supposed to disciple your children. The church is supposed to join in that and help that the collective call to disciple and raise up children is something that takes place in community groups that we try to help with in Kid City.
But primarily, you are around your children way more. And here's the thing. Sometimes parents go, all right, I don't know what to do. Like, am I supposed to read a Bible story? Or am I supposed to, are we supposed to do like family worship and every night or just once a week? And how's that supposed to look?
And they get real stressed out about it. And I understand taking it seriously. And it does help to read Bible stories. And it does help to do family worship. I mean, that's as easy as playing something on a podcast, singing with them. Or if you're with my son singing Joy to the World, 365 days a year.
This is his favorite song ever. And sometimes I'm just like, no, bro, we're not singing that tonight. Like, I just, I don't like Christmas that much. We've got to sing something else. There are other songs. But like, walking with them, training them in specific moments.
But really, your kids pick up way more who you are and what you love all the other times during the day than just some specific moments when you say, okay, now we're going to teach. Now we're going to learn. Because that's what he's saying. Teach them diligently, meaning be intentional. But also, when you wake up, when you walk, when you sit, when you lay down.
By the time your children are in middle school, they've got a real good handle on what you actually care about. By the time they're in high school, by the time they're graduating, they've got a good, good handle on if you really love the Lord and his word is in your heart. Or if what you really appreciate is the praise of men. And you were always worried about how your family appeared to others. If what you really cared about was your own personal comfort. They've got a good handle on that.
You actually make, you reproduce who you are way more than reproducing what you teach. This is just true for any amount of discipleship. You reproduce who you are way more than what you teach. We can see this very simply in some of our community groups. We've seen it as we started out. Matt and I were the first two group leaders.
Matt's groups tended to be very encouraging towards one another. Very loving. There's like a lot of hugs in their groups. My groups tended to be easily distracted and sarcastic. It wasn't uncommon for us to quit studying the Bible to make fun of one another. Lose our train of thought.
And it just had to do with I was trying to teach the Bible but unintentionally just sharing a lot of what I'm like. Easily distracted and sarcastic. I didn't promote encouragement. We promoted saying mean things to one another. And that's what happens and that's what he's saying is that that life on life discipleship is how you raise your children. I want to tag one more thing with raising children.
Your children matter and if you are new to parenting, which a lot of people in this room are, they're like little cannonballs into your life. You had a nice little life and then you had a child and they're terrorists. They are. They're. I'm going to scream until you feed me. That's how they enter the world.
And then I'm going to scream because I went to the bathroom. I'm going to scream because I'm sleepy or I'm going to scream. And you know that I just slept, that I just ate and I have a clean diaper. I'm just going to scream. They're terrorists that you're deeply in love with. It's super weird.
And what happens is it's pretty easy early on with your children to start bending your life to them. You have to. But at some point, you've got to help them bend their life to Jesus. And you've got to help them see that life, that he, it's a long-term value play, that he matters more. And so what happens is at some point, we're like, I've got to work around my kid's schedule. And at some point, you've got to say, no, my kid's schedule has got to work around how we follow Jesus.
And this will happen when they're young with nap schedules and with bedtimes. And it will happen when they're older with sports and school. Now, it's a life of loving Jesus, which means that for some of you, you need to say no to travel sports because it affects how you follow Jesus. And for some of you, you need to say yes to travel sports because it's one of the best places to teach your children how to be on mission and how to love people and how to serve people and how to connect people and how to share the gospel. But over the course of a life, your children will pick up, did they matter more than Jesus?
Did their schedule matter more than Jesus? Did sports matter more than Jesus? And whether or not the value play was at right in your home or was he in your heart and his word in your heart and your life was, how do we rise? How do we walk? How do we sit? How do we sleep in a way that we love Jesus?
And that is how discipleship works. It happens life on life. So Jesus gets disciples and the first thing he says to them is just come follow me. You, come follow me. Leave your tax booth. Let's go.
You, drop your nets. Follow me. Let's go. And he just starts going. And then they start picking up what he's like as he goes. That's how it happens, that they're around him in life.
Teaching my son Bible stories. He's two and three, so we would just act him out so that he'd help remember him. I remember one time I was laying on the floor. My wife comes in. He's throwing all his Nerf balls at me. She's like, what are y'all doing?
He's supposed to be getting ready for bed. I'm like, well, we're doing the story of the stoning of Stephen. And she said, are there not appropriate children's stories you can do? I was like, he's loving it. In a second, he'll get to declare that Jesus is great and I'll throw balls at him. It'll be wonderful.
But I was doing one where, sorry, I was doing one where we were trying to help him see, you know, Jesus just trained his disciples in life. And so what we said was, you're the little kids. Your mom's going to be Jesus. I'm going to be the disciples. I want you to come over and ask me, can I come see Jesus? Y'all know this story?
The disciples tell the children no. And so he would come over and say, can I see Jesus? And I'll go, no, you can't see Jesus. And I'll just push him to the ground, which is a little more than what the Bible says it was, but I was trying to help him pay attention. And then finally his mom would say, no, let the children come to me. And he would go over there and she'd hug him and tell him he was wonderful and we'd do it again.
And I thought this was great, but what I ended up teaching was the disciples were bad guys because at one point I was like, we're disciples. He's like, no, we're not disciples. We're the worst. But the disciples on that day learned something because they were with Jesus in life and they began to see how he valued the world and how he loved children. And what happens is that's how discipleship takes place, that it isn't just sufficient to get with someone for one hour and teach a thing, but we're actually meant to be around each other in life so that we might share who we are. That is why you will disciple your children, whether you want to or not.
You will train them. You will teach them what is valuable, what is good. It will happen. That's why he says be diligent. And at first you got to love the Lord and you got to have his word in your heart. And the truth is anybody that walks with you in life will be slowly discipled by you.
And so what we need to do is love Jesus and then intentionally be around one another that we might help grow one another towards Jesus. That's what we see throughout the New Testament. First Thessalonians 2.8 says, Paul's specifically writing to Timothy there and he's saying, you know me, you've been around me, you know my life. Not just you've read all my letters. No, no, you know me. You know what matters.
And that's what he says in 1 Corinthians 11.1, be imitators of me as I am of Christ. And that is a lot of how discipleship works. As you say, no, walk with me as I walk with Christ. Follow me as I follow Christ. Let's walk together.
Let's imitate one another as we imitate Christ. As we picture this out for one another and display this to one another. That we're meant to walk in life together. So the content of discipleship is scriptures, actively, intentionally applying the gospel to life through sharing meals and through sharing communion and through applying the gospel to each other and walking in repentance and praying. But the context for all of that is normal, everyday life.
Life, not some extra bonus time, not once a month at Starbucks. Everyday, normal life. And it's life on life, but it's not just life on life. It's life in community. It's not just you and one other person walking together. It's not just you and two other people walking together.
But it's a communal picture. So let me show this. We showed this a couple of times. This was kind of Spencer's. It used to have little names in there or whatever. But Spencer's line of this person shared the gospel with these people, helped disciple them.
They shared the gospel with these people, helped disciple them. And the truth is, if that's just evangelism, just sharing the gospel, that is how it looks. This person shares the gospel. They share the gospel. And it does spread and grow and multiply. If it keeps going, it gets beautifully ridiculous.
You know, kind of like leaven. All right, so, but what happens when we see that in the discipleship mindset is, okay, you immediately start picturing this next picture, which is this, which one am I? Who am I ready to be? Am I a discipler? Or do I need to be a disciplee? Like some people looked at that and saw and said, I'm not ready to have two or three people that I'm helping coach and equip.
That's overwhelming. And some of you saw it and thought, okay, I'll do it. Yeah. White knuckle. And this is your little chart here. This is how you follow Jesus sometimes or how you decide it.
I'm going to try harder. I'm going to do it this time for real. And you get fatigued. You're tired. So you quit.
Then eventually you feel bad again and you try harder again. That's the wheel of religion. Some of you are like, yes, that's me. I'm in like a hamster wheel of that. Okay, that's not the gospel. Try harder.
Get exhausted. Quit. Feel bad. Try harder. Get exhausted. Quit.
And there are churches that are just running through with like, all right, we're going to work with the 20% that are in the guilt zone right now. Y'all in the guilt zone? You ready to work? Y'all are fatigued? You quit? We'll get back to you when you feel guilty again.
We don't want to do that. And we don't want discipleship to look like that. And we also don't want you to be fearful and say, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. I can't. I just need to be coached up. Because the truth is that's not the best picture of discipleship.
That's not a good picture of the gospel, but it's also not a picture of how we go about discipleship. So the next slide is how we intend to go about discipleship. We want to be in community groups. Now, community groups aren't in the Bible. We are trying to actively apply what we see in the Bible, which was they were around each other day by day. And they gathered in homes.
And they gathered together, large groups in the temple. They gathered in homes. They shared life together. And here's what we know about Americans. You don't have to share life with anybody. We say this all the time, but you can watch friends instead of having them.
You can be very independent. You're taught that you're supposed to be. Like the ultimate hero of America is like the marble man out by himself smoking on a hilltop or whatever. And doesn't need anybody and doesn't want anybody. And he's going to get cancer and die. It's going to be awesome.
But we're actually meant to be in life together. And so what we do is we say, no, no, no, no. We're going to be intentional, diligent about making this happen. So here's you. And don't tell anybody I told you this, but you are the shining star in your group. You're the best group member.
Here's how this works. You're connected to everybody. And everybody's connected to you. Once you're in a community group, you get to know everybody. You're connected to everybody. Everybody's connected to you.
And I didn't tell Miss Bebe I was going to say this. And she's here. So hopefully she'll forgive me. But Miss Bebe told me one time that one of the things that she began to enjoy and appreciate about community groups was that she could no longer read her Bible the way she used to. She used to read her Bible and she could only think from her perspective. She read it like Bebe.
And she said, I now read my Bible and I see everybody else. I hear everybody else. I know people who have small children. I know people who are in this season of life and this difficulty. And she said, I read my Bible now with our group in mind. And it's changed the way I read the scriptures.
And what we're seeing is that we're supposed to be connected to other people. And we're supposed to be connected to other people where the thing that we have in common is Jesus and nothing else. There are supposed to be people in your group that you have an extremely hard time talking to. That's how it's supposed to work. And it's possible that you have a hard time talking to them because they have a hard time talking with everyone. And it's possible you have a hard time talking with them because you have a hard time talking with everyone.
And it's possible you just aren't on the same page. But that's how it's supposed to work. that we're supposed to be around people that we don't naturally connect with because they help us grow and they help us see things that we don't see otherwise. But you're connected to everybody. Everybody else is connected to everybody. So this is what groups look like.
Because they're supposed to be connected to everybody. But it's life on life and life in community, so there's also this. You're more connected to a few people. Just how it works. You get along a little easier. You're in similar stages of life.
You live near one another. Maybe you're not in similar stages of life. Maybe they're empty nesters and you have small kids, but they love small kids, so they just hang out with you all the time because they have more open schedule. I don't know, but you've got some people that you connect with a little better. And the truth is, that's the case for everybody in your group. That everybody's got somebody they connect with.
There we go. That's what it looks like. Now, for some of you, seeing this web and thinking about a community group, you're like, yes, I'm an extrovert, and that's a trampoline of awesomeness. And some of you who are introverted is like, that looks like a spider web of despair. I would get trapped in that. It would suck the life out of me.
This would be terrible. So I just want to talk for just a second about what this looks like and how this plays out and talk to a few different people. So some of you think, no, no, no, no, no. I have the thick lines with everyone. What I'm willing to bet is you make a certain depth of relationship and never go past that. So everybody feels like they're on the same level.
Everybody's your thickest line. And what you ought to do is get to know people a little more deeply. You ought to walk a little more closely with some people. We want to have people that can speak into your life. You want people who love Jesus, who are not you, who see the world a little differently, be able to speak into your life. One of the things that frustrates me to no end that happens all the time in churches is someone just announces some big life change, some big we're doing this, we're doing that, and everybody just goes, oh, congratulations.
We're in a community group, but we end up being like Facebook friends. We just all press the like button. And somebody needs to know you well enough to go, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. I got some questions. Not saying this is a terrible idea. Just saying I got some questions because I know you.
I've walked with you long enough to know that one of the things that you have as an idolatrous nature in your heart is this wonderlust, that you have to be in some other city in order to be happy, and you get bored with places, and you don't know how to build deep relationships. And so when you said, I've got a job. I'm moving to Tulsa. And everybody said, yay, congratulations. I immediately thought, that might be terrible for you. Let's talk.
Someone when you say, I've met the man of my dreams. I've met the girl. She's the one. Someone who knows you well enough to go, isn't this your fourth one? In like four years, like don't you do this every time you meet somebody? I'm sure they're nice, but let's just tone it down a step.
People who know you well enough to not just cosign everything, but love you. Now, for the introverted person, keep the spider web up there, please. For the introverted person, there's a lot of slides. Thanks, Nick. You're doing a great job. Way more than normal.
Usually it's like, here's a Bible verse, and then we just go for it. For the introverted person, some of y'all looked at that and thought, some of you looked at it and thought, I've been in the group for a while. I don't have a deep connection with anybody. And that may be true. I'm sorry if it's true. Don't be okay with that and don't think that's how that has to work.
You may need to insert yourself a little more. If you only build relationships one-on-one, you may need to invite people one-on-one. There are some people in your group who feel perfectly, beautifully connected with you because their level of relationship only goes to a three. I feel super close to everybody in my group. But that's because I have to work real hard to get closer with people.
My wife, it takes her like 15 years to develop a friendship. Now, once you're there, she'll help you bury a body. She'll stab people for you. She is on your team. I feel sorry for any teacher or anybody that ever messes with one of our children. People think I'm intense.
I'm going to be the person just holding her and she's going to be like, I'm going to get on my back. No, no, hold on, hold on. So some of you, it takes a while to build relationships. Keep doing the hard work of relationship building. Some of y'all see that and think everybody's already full. They already have all the relationships they can handle.
That's not true. That you're meant to be welcomed. So here's what I want. If you're that person who just says, I don't feel like I've connected with anybody, announce that to your group in a non-condescending, non-condemning way. Just say, hey guys, I'm having a hard time and I really would like to hang out with someone one-on-one. Community groups.
Make that happen. I have a hard time making friends in groups. So I end up just sitting next to this conversation and sitting next to that conversation and sitting next to that conversation. And I feel like I'd be intruding to press into that any and I need some people to just, can somebody just hang out with me? Can we just get a cup of coffee? Can we get, I just need to.
That's why one of the reasons why our groups try to do fun things periodically is because it helps change the dynamic. We believe fun makes family. Okay. Content. First aspects of life of learning. And the content is the word.
Applying the gospel to life. Praying. The context is a life on life, life in community. And we actually have to see each other in real life and we have to be around people who we would not normally choose to just be around. And that's what makes the church beautiful. That's where all the one another's come in.
That we love one another. That we serve one another. Then he starts saying things like bear with one another. Forgive one another. Be patient with one another. Do you know you have to bear with, forgive, and be patient with?
People who frustrate you. People who you're around more than just a little bit. A lot of us have been in a group and we've gotten super frustrated with people. And it's the moment, the moment where we can apply the gospel. And we can confront and we can confess and we can forgive and we can bear with and we can be patient. It's that moment where we can really do some Bible things.
And you know what we do? We say this group's messed up. Filled with sinners. I'm going to find a church where they're not like that. We go to our next church. We say my last group was terrible.
And they were so sorry. They wouldn't build friendships with me. We're so sorry. They were the worst. We're so sorry. Come.
We're not like that. We love Jesus. We love you. Come. And you're like, this place is great. And it is like a year, year and a half, two years until you start trying to build some real relationships.
Until your friend Karen does the same crap she's done 1,500 times. And you're like, you know what? They're all the same. It's like, no, you have a moment to grow, to repent, to be gracious, to forgive, to be patient, to bear with. And when you do that, it becomes beautiful and glorious and we grow. So that's discipleship.
Life of learning. Life on life. Life in community. Now, immediately you might ask, okay, cool chart, bro. How on earth do I have time to do that? I'm glad you brought it up.
Here's February. How on earth do I have time to be in life on life, life in community? I'm super busy. Okay, well, your group meets every Tuesday. Every Tuesday. Did you know that?
Some of you are like, it's Wednesday. Okay, whatever. Once a week. And for two hours, hour and a half, if y'all are quick and got a bunch of people with little kids and you want to go home. Three hours if you're super chatty. Two hours studying the Bible.
Praying together. Sharing a meal. Applying the gospel. Confessing sin. Every single week. We get together every Sunday.
Every Sunday. We're here. Unlock the bill and we pay for it. Every Sunday. We gather together to devote ourselves to the word. To be around one another.
Some of you, a community group isn't enough for the amount of relationships you can have. Some of you, it feels too much. It's overwhelming. There's 12 people here. I can only have two real friendships. So it's like, okay, we'll find those two people, corner them and talk to them.
Some of you are like, I need 45 friendships. I will know everything about you. I will remember you. I will know your birthday. You're the people who are super frustrated when anybody forgets anything. Because you're like, how on earth can you not?
If you love people, you know every aspect of their life ever. And you can keep up with everybody ever. Show up on Sundays and get to know people. We want to be a bigger group. We want to have, you can have friendships outside of your group. We want you to be intentional with the ones in your group.
But you can, don't feel like it's wrong to have other friendships. If that's you, do that. We gather on Sundays, but you get to see, there's a handful of guys in our community group that show up early on every Sunday. I get to hang out with them on Sundays. Sometimes we get into really intense conversations about the Bible. Sometimes we get into really intense conversations about SEC football.
It doesn't matter. We're walking in life together. Serving, seeing each other on Sunday. Seeing each other when we get together during the week. Let's say your group decides on a specific Saturday that you're going to do some kind of a mission outreach something.
You're going to try to get around some people to share the gospel. You're going to all go to a park and just try to meet people. You're going to go downtown and hand some food out in some areas where homeless people hang out. You're going to go serve at a school. So all of y'all are going to see each other on Saturday as you're on mission together.
Let's say there's a Friday during February when somebody just says, hey, we're going to a movie. If anybody wants to come, come on. Hey, we're all going to go eat at Cracker Barrel. Hey, we're doing a game night at our house. And so you get to hang out then. Let's say that on Thursdays, some of the guys are able to get together for lunch.
Or some of the ladies get together for an extra Bible study. Or maybe they get together for breakfast. Or you figure out a way to trade off who's watching kids. And you figure something out. The guys in my group used to eat at Denny's every Thursday morning. Now we're trying to get some lunches.
It happens about twice a month. And it's not everybody, but it's whoever can make it. Now it's 2019. I'm not going to tell you which color represents which gender. You can pick that for yourselves. Let's say that with the people that you hang out a little more with, you get to see them more often.
Your life overlaps a little more. It's easier for you to watch kids together or not have kids. Or you both get off of work at 11 p.m. and you play video games or whatever. You get to see some other people. But look at that.
That's a normal schedule in people whose lives are busy, who've set out some intentional time, and then who go out of their way to overlap their lives. It is doable for you to be around people. It does take some effort. It does take us working with our schedules because we're busy people. And if we're not intentional, our schedules will fill up. But it's possible for us to devote ourselves to being around one another, to walking in life together, to pointing each other towards Jesus, and to be around each other in enough circumstances in life that we might be able to grow together as disciples.
Lastly, it's life on mission. That we were meant as Christians to be making more disciples and sharing the gospel. And that when we stop doing that, we become unhealthy. If your group ceases to be on mission, it will start becoming unhealthy. I can tell you the best way to be miserable anywhere in your community group, but you can also import this into your marriage or your roommate situation, whatever, is to show up and think that it is about you. When we cease to be on mission, we forget that we're supposed to be actively sacrificing to see other people grow and to see people meet Jesus.
And when we stop doing that and when we fail to be on mission, that's what the disciples, what it says here is that day by day, attending the temple together, this is verse 46, breaking bread in their homes, they received their food with glad and generous hearts, praising God and having favor with all the people. And the Lord added to their number day by day those who were being saved. They were walking in life together, loving one another, serving one another, sharing with one another, and making their city better, proclaiming the gospel, and people were hopping in all the time. The Lord was saving people day by day.
Let me tell you what happens. If you start hanging out with your group and y'all cease to be on mission, you start thinking that the purpose of your group is for your own personal edification and your own personal growth. And you show up and you start asking questions like, what am I getting out of this? Who's talking to me? You see people enjoying, you ever been out to eat and you're having a good time until there's two tables over is having a better time? They're laughing real loud and everything's going super great.
And so suddenly you're like, well, my dinner's not as nice as it used to be because look at them. And so what happens sometimes you start hanging out with your group, you start hanging out and you start going, well, they're better friends than I am. They talk during the week. They just said they got caught. And you start, and we forget that the whole purpose is that we collectively grow together, that you're here to serve other people. You're here to pour into other people.
And we're actively walking in, helping other people meet Jesus, that we would be on mission together. And there's joy in that. Also, mission happens better in community because there are things that you're gifted at that the person next to you isn't, and vice versa. And as we serve and connect and love together, more people meet Jesus. They get to see what the gospel does among a group of people, and more people buy in because more people connect, more people understand, more people see how on earth do y'all hang out with each other, and they get to begin to see what it looks like for people to follow Jesus together.
And then they, maybe you're really good at inviting, but somebody else is really good at getting close to somebody. I've had that happen in my group. I've been friends with somebody for a couple weeks, known them at work, bring them to our group. They finally come, they hang out a little bit, they hang out one time, and afterwards, a week later, one of the people in my group will go, hey, how's that? How's that issue that they've been struggling with? How's that going?
I'm like, what issue? What are you talking about? They were like, well, they told me they were struggling with issues. They were like, well, nobody tells me that stuff. Nobody, my coworkers aren't volunteering that they're struggling with things with me. That's not how conversations go with me.
I've never really just made a conversation go there. I have to have been someone's pastor for two and a half years, and then they're like, maybe I'll tell it. But there was somebody in my group who just went over and said, how are you doing? I don't know, the Holy Spirit works in that. The person looked at them and went, terrible. And they talked, and they worked, and the Holy Spirit works, and people end up getting closer to Jesus, so they meet Jesus, and it's because we collectively are on mission better together.
So that's what happened in the New Testament church, and that's how we walk this out. So I want you to know it is doable as you commit to all the small things, that you're going to love the Bible, you're going to have God's Word in you, and you're going to commit to being around each other. You're going to commit to showing up to your group, to showing up on Sundays, to talking to people, and we're going to commit collectively to try to help other people meet Jesus, and guess what? We'll make disciples. See, that's what Jesus is saying about the leaven. So if you zoom in on it, it doesn't seem that spectacular.
If actually, if you just walk somebody through the February schedule, it's like, yeah, we meet every week, we meet on Sundays, yeah, we're confessing sin, we're walking together, but the truth is, you pull that out over a year for someone who's bought in, committed, devoted themselves to the Word, devoted themselves to the fellowship, devoted to applying the Gospel, and guess what? They're growing. And if we're actively devoted to sharing the Gospel with people, more people are hopping in, more people are growing, and none of it looked that spectacular, and none of that was overwhelming, and none of that was amazing, but it was we just collectively decided, this is who we're going to be, we're going to be around each other, we're going to devote ourselves to the Word, and we'll get to see it happen. That a little bit of leaven is going to take over the whole thing.
And so, if there's any aspect of that, that you have opted out of, don't. Devote yourself to it. Some of you, it needs to be, you need to devote yourself to the Word. Some of you, it's life on life. You hang out with your group, but other than that, you don't really get to know people, you're not really talking to people. Some of you, it's life on life, but you won't hang out with your group, so you only hang out with somebody one-on-one, but you never get in the community aspect.
Some of it's a mission. But that was how they made disciples, and that was how they began, and the church exploded. with people meeting Jesus, and people growing. And that's what we want to see, and that's what we hope to see. The band's going to come back up. We're going to sing one song together, and as we sing, we're going to take communion, because as we've gathered to fellowship today, we're also taking communion, we're breaking bread together, to remind ourselves that Jesus saves sinners, that He's good, and that it's not on us to just try harder, or to do better, but to trust Him, to work in us, and to be faithful in all the small things, knowing that He ultimately makes them effective.
That He's died, that we might be redeemed, and then if you're sitting here today, and realize I hadn't been doing this stuff, you don't need to feel overwhelmed, or crushed, you need to run to Jesus, and know that He works, and He redeems, and He's good, and you're holy, blameless, and above reproach, and we get to take communion, and walk this out together. So if you are a believer, if you are part of our church, we'd love for you to take communion. If you're not a believer, we would ask that you refrain from taking communion, because we want you to know Jesus, before you practice the remembrance of His death, and His resurrection. Let's pray.
God, we thank you for your grace, and your goodness. We pray that we would be active, in all the small things, as your Holy Spirit works in us, that we might see disciples made, that we would be intentional about it, that we'd be devoted to it, that we'd be diligent in it, daily, in all the small ways, to overlap our lives, and to be around one another, and to study your word, so that we might proclaim your gospel, and see more people come to follow you. We love you, and we praise you in Jesus name. Amen. Y'all stand, sing when you're ready. Take communion.
During the sermon, there were many slides used to visually display the concepts taught. We have included them below with a brief summary to help you better follow along while listening to the sermon online.
Discipleship multiplication as described by Spencer during the first sermon in our Multiply series.
When we start considering discipling others we may begin to think of it as a simple dichotomy: Am I a prepared to be a disciple-er” or do I need to be a “disciple-ee?” But the truth is more easily accessible.
As discipleship plays out within groups you are connected with everyone in your group and everyone is connected with you. Therefore you are both able to pour into others and have them pour into you.
You are not alone in your group. Everyone is intended to disciple everyone; therefore, the weight does not fall entirely on you.
You will naturally have deeper connections with some people than with others and you will spend more time discipling those you have deeper connections with and having them disciple you.
As long as you are invested in your group, you will have deeper connections with some people than with others. Spend your time cultivating those relationships understanding that this is how it works for everyone. In this way discipleship gets to be both Life on Life (deeper relationships) and Life in Community (the full group dynamic).
By committing to your group, you will have opportunities in your schedule to be around people in your group. We gather on Sundays, meet once a week, and have various rhythms throughout the month to ensure the people within our groups are spending time together. It take intentionality in our already busy schedules, but it is doable and it is worth it.
Share It All
Transcript
Good morning. My name's Chet. I'm one of the pastors here. As we get started this morning, I want to give an update on our gift project. Every year, towards the end of the year, we do a gift project where we're able to, we try to raise financial support for some sort of specific need, some sort of specific work. We've raised money for church plants before.
We've given gifts to children in local areas before. We've done some different things. This past December, we were raising support for some missionary work and for some church planting happening in Minya, Egypt. Our goal was $15,000, which, just so y'all know, the most our church has ever raised for a gift project is like $7,400, $7,400. So our goal was twice what we've ever raised.
And we were just like, let's go for it, because that's what they said they needed for a whole year to be able to buy. They took some transportation and to be able to have their budget for the whole year. And so we, during our church family, during the month of December, we were able to raise about $11,500, which was very exciting. At the same time, a local church, New Spring Church over in the Columbia area, said they were praying that they had had a surplus or that they're blessed financially and that they had heard about us and they wanted to just support us and show us that they love us. And so they wrote us a check for $3,500.
And so the pastors got together and just, we started praying, asking the Lord what he wanted us to, first of all, let me say, we got together and started talking about what we wanted to do with the money. And then we were like, maybe we should pray and ask the Lord what he wants us to do with the money. And, you know, it took us a little longer to get there than it should, but we did get there. And so I just want y'all to know, you should be very proud of us. So we prayed about it and we asked the Lord what he wanted us to do with it and felt confirmed and united in that we were supposed to give that to the work in Minya, Egypt.
We had someone in our church family say that that got us close enough that they'd pay the difference. And so we actually were able to raise $15,000 for the gift project. And super excited. The Lord knew we didn't have enough money, so he told another church to give us some so that he can go to Egypt and we're excited in how he does that and just blessed to get to be involved. Grab your Bibles, go to John chapter 1. We are in our Multiply series where we are talking through this call that the church has to make disciples.
And so we're discussing what that looks like and how we ought to respond to that, that we're called to share the gospel, to see people believe in Jesus, be baptized, and then to teach them, to train them in what it looks like to follow Jesus. And so as we've been talking through this today, we're specifically coming to how do we share the gospel? How can we go about pointing people towards Jesus? And we're going to look at several different ways this morning. We're going to look at several different kind of some methods and some different ways that we can go about pointing people towards Jesus.
So in John chapter 1, we're going to start here in verse 43. John 1 verse 43. It says, The next day, Jesus decided to go to Galilee. He found Philip and said to him, Follow me. And that is primarily what being a disciple is. It's someone who follows Jesus, who learns from him, who in this time, and this very practically was, Jesus got up and went somewhere.
You walked behind him. You followed him. You saw what he was teaching, what he was doing, how he acted, how he treated people. There were times where he would stop and just explain something. And this is what has carried on from then on is that as followers of Jesus, we try to learn who he was, what he taught, what he did, how he treated people. And then we collectively walk together.
And that's a disciple, a learner from Jesus, someone who practices following Jesus and who he was and what he did and what he cared about. So he says, Follow me. Now, Philip was from Bethsaida, the city of Andrew and Peter. So Andrew and Peter are already following Jesus. Philip found Nathanael and said to him, We have found him of whom Moses and the law and also the prophets wrote, Jesus of Nazareth, the son of Joseph. So Jesus finds Philip.
Philip finds Nathanael. And this is what we're talking about today, that as Christ followers, as people who Jesus has found, who are following Jesus, that we get to be a part of finding other people and bringing them to Jesus. And what does Philip say? He says, We have found him of whom Moses in the law and also the prophets wrote, Jesus of Nazareth, the son of Joseph. He goes to Nathanael and says, You know, That stuff we've been reading in the Old Testament, the stuff we've been memorizing since forever, and that we're Jewish and we celebrate waiting for this prophet to come, this Messiah to come.
Found him. He's from Nazareth. His dad's name is Joseph. His name is Jesus. We found him. And you know how excited Philip is to be doing this?
How much prayer has been answered? How much hope and longing that this... And this is us if you're a Christian. Christian, the point of the universe, the hope of the world, the forgiveness of sins is in Jesus. And he's found us. If you're a Christian, he's redeemed you.
Your hope is in him. And all Philip's doing is going to his friend and saying, Hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, have I got some good news for you. You know that stuff we've been longing for. You know that stuff we've been worried about. We found him. That's what he's doing.
And that's what we get to do. And so today we're going to specifically talk about how do we get to be like Philip in this passage and like some other people we're going to see as we jump around a little bit this morning. How do we get to go to other people and just say, Hey, you want this? Because it's so good. And Jesus is so good. And if you're a Christian, he is.
All the questions we have about, why are we here? What happens to us after we die? What's the point of this? What's the meaning behind this? Is my life going to count? Do I have hope?
How will I get through this? All of that is found in Jesus. And so we just get to go to other people and do what Philip said and said we found him. So let's pray. And then we'll talk through several methods, several different ways that we can go about bringing people to Jesus. And then we're going to talk about kind of a way of life, just how we get to live as these people.
So let's pray. God, we pray that you would bless our time this morning as we study your word and that you would send us as disciples who make disciples, as followers of yours who lead other people to follow you, that you would equip us to do that through the power of your spirit. And we love you and we thank you for how good you are. In Jesus' name, amen. So, he says, Philip found Nathanael and said to him, We have found him of whom Moses in the law and also the prophets wrote, Jesus of Nazareth, the son of Joseph. And Nathanael said to him, Can anything good come out of Nazareth?
So you would think Nathanael would be like, That sounds great. That's not what Nathanael says. He says, No, you didn't. That's kind of his response. It's like, No, nothing good comes out of Nazareth. Now, this is taught often, this is just a shot at the fact that Nazareth was a hick town and it was.
But more than that, he knows his Old Testament and he's saying, No, I don't think so because, you know, I went to school, I've studied this and nobody comes out of Nazareth. Like, there's no prophecy. We don't sing any songs about it. There's no, nobody's excited to be from Nazareth. Nobody comes out of Nazareth. This is actually like an informed Bible question.
He just basically says, Can anything good come out of Nazareth? So Philip goes and invites him and he just says, No, I don't, I don't, like, what do you, I don't think so. That doesn't sound right. Philip said to him, Come and see. Come and see. And this is the first thing we're going to talk about is you can just share an invitation.
That's it. One of the, one of the primary ways that we can try to bring people to Jesus is just share an invitation to something where there's a good chance they'll encounter Jesus. That's all Philip says. It's like, Okay, good Bible point. You know your Old Testament. We're proud of you.
Come see. Come meet him. You'll see. You'll see what I'm talking about. And so we get to do that. Some of us are like, I don't know enough.
I don't know all the answers. And if I come and they're going to say, Well, what about this? What about that? And you just get to say, It's a good point. I don't know. There's like 12 other people in my community group.
Come and ask them. Come and see. Let's see. His hope was that they would encounter Jesus. That Nathanael would come meet Jesus. So he says, Nathanael said to him, Can anything good come out of Nazareth?
And Philip said to him, Come and see. Jesus saw Nathanael coming toward him and said of him, Behold, an Israelite indeed in whom there is no deceit. Nathanael said to him, How do you know me? Jesus answered him, Before Philip called you when you were under the fig tree, I saw you. And Nathanael answered him, Rabbi, you are the son of God. You are the king of Israel.
Jesus answered him, Because I said, I saw you under a fig tree. Do you believe? You will see greater things than these. And he said to him, Truly, truly, I say to you, you will see heaven open and the angels of God ascending and descending from the son of man. Now, that went really well for Nathanael and it went really well for Philip because he says, We found him. Nathanael says, No, No, I don't think so.
He says, We'll come and see. And then like two seconds into meeting Jesus, Nathanael says, You're the king of Israel. You're God. And Philip's like, Told you. That's what I was talking about. He did the same stuff to me.
I was just standing there. He said, Follow me. And something was like, Yes. And then I knew he was. And it was just, That's why I wanted you here. That doesn't always work that way.
But sometimes it does. I've invited people to things before where I'm like, Just come. Just come. They showed up and it didn't go like this. It was weird or things didn't go like I had planned. But I'm not in charge of how that works.
I'm just in charge of saying, Come see. But then there's been other times where you've invited someone to your community group and they finally show up and your group gets to talking about weird stuff or gets to talking about good stuff or talks about something. Matt Freeman was telling me one time that he invited somebody over and his group just got to confessing sin and talking about some things. And he was thinking, Oh, come on guys. This is a bit heavy for this person's first time. Like, can't we just talk a little bit, like, a little higher up, not getting everybody's basement.
And then the person at the end said, Thank y'all so much. This meant so much to me. And began to confess as well and began to talk as well. And it was like, And Matt said he leaned back and was like, I'm sorry Jesus, I forgot you're in charge of this. And that sometimes it works like this and so that we just get to make an invitation hoping that they'll encounter the Jesus that we know. We don't have all the answers.
This is one of the things I love about when we do our baptisms and we have baptism videos. We want people to have the opportunity to share their story. And so many times we've had people who have met Jesus and would not trade Jesus for anything. And in their story they say, Yeah, this person harassed me. And then I kind of ran out of excuses. So I eventually showed up to a group.
And then I saw what they were talking about. And then I met Jesus. And I'm here to tell you that I'm going to follow him with the rest of my life. And there is something to just being able to say, Hey, come see. Come see what I'm talking about. Come see what my group's like.
Come see. Come hang out on a Sunday. Come. And it doesn't have to be just your community group. It can be, Hey, we're all going to be hanging out and eating a meal. But come see what I'm talking about.
What it looks like when people who love Jesus just get together and just having an invitation. Now, some of you are like, Sweet! That's what I'll do. If that's sharing the gospel, that's what I'll do. And I'll tell you that that's part of it and it does work. And you do see a lot of people meet Jesus this way.
Jordan Surratt, who's led a community group in our church family, who serves a lot. His cousin invited him to a prayer meeting. Now, if you're thinking, What should I invite my friend to? Most people wouldn't go to a prayer meeting. Jordan went to a prayer meeting. Didn't love Jesus.
Didn't know Jesus. He said it was really weird and it wasn't what he was expecting and then he just kept coming back. And surprise, Jordan's a Christian. Loves Jesus. Follows Jesus because his cousin said, Come pray with us. This does work and this is helpful, but what you have to understand is it's specific invitation.
Philip said, Come now. Let's go. Took him to Jesus. There's, sometimes we just do the, Hey, you should come hang out with my church sometime. Hey, you should come hang out with my group sometime. Just the same way that you look at your friend that you hadn't seen in a long time and you say, Yeah, we should hang out sometime.
And how often have y'all been hanging out? None, because sometime is no time. Sometime isn't an actual time and so that when we make these invitations, they need to be specific. They actually did some research on this, Lifeway did, because they do research on all kinds of things. And they found that 80% of people who are invited to a church or to some sort of a church thing will go, will accept the invitation if the person inviting them will walk through the door with them. So we'll set up a specific time to, Hey, let's meet here, let's grab some coffee, then let's go over there.
Hey, let's meet here, I'll meet you outside, we'll meet in the parking lot, I'll meet you at this gas station, I'll meet you there, I'll come pick you up, whatever, let's go. It's a specific invitation for a specific thing with the hope of them meeting Jesus. And that is one of the things that we can do is that we can share an invitation. Move to John chapter 8, we're going to look, John chapter 9, verse 8. We're going to look at another thing that we can do. So we can share an invitation, just hoping that they'll meet Jesus, that he'll work, that they'll see what we've seen.
We don't have all the answers, we just want to get them there. John chapter 9, we can share our story. So that's what, that's what's going to happen here is we're going to see this guy who's sharing his story. He's just telling people what Jesus has done with him, how it's worked with him. So John chapter 9, verse 8, we're going to pick up with a guy who was born blind.
The disciples are actually walking along with Jesus, they see him, and they say, okay, we want to know something, we have a theological question, who was the sinner, him or his parents, that he was born blind? And Jesus says, that's not how it works. And then Jesus heals him. And so he's a grown man who's never seen, and now he has sight. This is a beautiful day. I watched recently a video of a nine or ten month old that had never heard and they got some hearing aids and stuff and they put him in and the mom starts talking and she starts cackling, laughing, just so excited to be able to hear.
This guy's a grown man, has never seen. And Jesus, who's the king of all things, heals him so that he can see. In verse 8, it says, the neighbors and those who had seen him before as a beggar, were saying, is this not the man who used to sit and beg? And some said, it is he. And others said, no, but he is like him. And he kept saying, I am the man.
So some of them were going, I think this is the guy who used to beg. And other people were going, no, but he looks a lot like him. And then he kept going, no, it's me for real, you guys. Except for he said it like this, I'm the man. All right.
So they said to him, then how were your eyes opened? And he answered, the man called Jesus made mud and anointed my eyes and said to me, go to Siloam and wash. So I went and washed and received my sight. And they said to him, where is he? And he said, I do not know. I want y'all to know something is this guy shares his stories.
He tells in Christian circles, this is called a testimony a lot. This is his story of how he met Jesus and what Jesus did for him and how that's changed his life and worked in him. He's willing to say, I do not know. He doesn't have all the answers. He has his story. He has what Jesus has done with him.
And so, so often when we're thinking, I'm going to try to share the gospel with somebody, I'm going to try to tell them about Jesus. I'm going to try to, and this idea that they'll ask a question where we don't know the answer is terrifying to some people. Guess what? You can say, I do not know. So if you're talking with somebody at work and you're trying to point them towards Jesus or you're talking to them about church or how Jesus has worked in your life and they say, oh yeah, you believe all that mess.
What about evolution? What about, how could a good God let these bad things happen? What about this big social issue? You really believe and they'll pull something out that's this huge and you get to say, I do not know. Our group was actually talking about this this week. That's actually one of my favorite things to ever have happen when I'm talking to somebody about Jesus.
I like it most when it works like with Nathaniel and they're just like, wow, Jesus is God. That's the best one. But if they start just asking questions that I don't know the answer to, y'all don't know how excited I get. I'll tell you. Very. Because here's what happens.
If I don't know the answer, I just get to say, oh, I don't know. That's a really good question. That's really smart. Which makes them feel great because that was what they were going for, being really smart and making me look dumb. Usually, sometimes they're genuine questions. A lot of times, it's just, they wanted to just beat you.
And then guess what, you guys? This conversation is not over. I will be back. And the conversation will start right when I walk up because they gave me something to go study and to immediately start the conversation back up with. You see, sometimes the conversation kind of ends and it's really hard to get back into the conversation or it feels weird to get back into the conversation, but not if they stump you. You just go, that's really good.
I'll go look into it. And then you just go walking back in and go, so you were asking about dinosaurs. Well, guess what about Jesus? And you just get to jump right back into the conversation. And they have no choice. They're on lunch break.
You know they can't leave yet and you just get to talk to them. So he gets to say, I do not know, but he keeps going and here's what he leans into. He's just telling his story. It says, they brought, they brought to the Pharisees the man who had formerly been blind. This is verse 13. Now it was a Sabbath day when Jesus made the mud and opened his eyes.
Sabbath was a big deal to the Jewish people that you were not allowed to work. It was a very big deal to the Pharisees. This was their Mark of what made them faithful Jews, faithful to God. And Jesus runs around healing people all the time on the Sabbath. If you read the gospel accounts, it seems like he only healed people on the Sabbath. I'm assuming he did it a lot other times, but these are the ones where they got really annoyed and became a big deal.
So the Pharisees again asked him how he had received his sight and he said to them, he put mud on my eyes and I washed and I see. Some of the Pharisees said, this man is not from God for he does not keep the Sabbath. But others said, how can a man who is a sinner do such signs? And there was division among them. So they said again to the blind man, what do you say about him since he opened your eyes?
And he said, he is a prophet. Verse 18 says, they don't believe him. They keep, they eventually call his parents. They make his mom and dad come down and they're like, is this your son? They're like, yes, that's him. Was he born blind?
Yes, he was. And then they say, who healed his eyes? And his parents are afraid to say Jesus because they're afraid of the Pharisees. So they don't answer. They just, they say, well, he's old enough. Ask him, but that definitely is our son and he did used to be blind.
Verse 24. So for the second time, they called the man who had been blind and said to him, give glory to God. We know that this man is a sinner. And he answered, whether he is a sinner, I do not know. One thing I do know that though I was blind, now I see. And all he's doing is saying, I know what he did for me.
I know what he's doing. I know, I know what he did. I know I was blind. I know, now I see. And this is one of the ways that we get to share the gospel is just share our story. I don't know the answers to all that, but I know what he's doing to me.
I know that he's changed my heart. I know how I respond in anger now. I know how he's fixed my anxiety. I know how he's gone to work in me and my selfishness. I know what he's done in me. I don't know all of those answers and I'm willing to look them up and I'm willing to walk with you in it.
But I do know one thing. I was blind and now I see. And that's a beautiful way to point to Jesus. You can share an invitation. You can share your story. One of the things that happens that I want to just address here is that sometimes people think, well, I became a Christian now, but I used to be terrible.
I used to hang out with all these people and do all these things that I shouldn't have done and that I'm ashamed of now. And then they think, and I can't go back and tell them about Jesus because I look like such a hypocrite. I've heard this before. I thought this before. I just want to help you out. That's incorrect.
Does this man look like a hypocrite for seeing, even though, because he used to be blind? No. He's just saying, Jesus is great. I used to be blind and now Jesus has made me be able to see. And so if you go back and talk to all your friends about Jesus and they say, you, you, you coming to tell me about Jesus? I know how terrible you are.
And you'd be like, no, you don't. You don't know the half of it. I was way worse than what you think. I just, you only know about stuff I did with you. I did other stuff with other people that was way worse. I'm here to tell you that I'm terrible and that Jesus is great.
That I was blind, but now I see because Jesus did work. And I'm here to tell you that you can have hope in Jesus. I'm not saying come be a good person like me. I'm saying, come to Jesus. I actually know a guy who planted the church in his hometown for that very reason. It's a little podunk town.
Nobody cared much about it. It wasn't that big a deal. And people ask him, why are you planting there? And he's like, oh, because I was the worst. I'm very well known in that town for being a terrible person. So I just want to go back to that town and tell people about Jesus because no one will believe that I am a pastor and that I follow Jesus.
And if I don't do this in my own town, they just won't believe it. So I'm going back there and starting a church. And you get to do that. You get to share your story. Some of you are like, yeah, okay, well, I became a Christian when I was five, so I don't really have that kind of story. Yeah, you do.
Because even though you became a Christian when you're five, Jesus has continually been a good savior to you who is a sinner. And he's continually opened your eyes and helped you grow. And so you get to talk about how the gospel is good news right now for your soul that would run from him so fast if he didn't have a death grip on you. For you who's continually needing to grow and continually needing his hope and continually needing his light in your darkness. And you absolutely can share the gospel even if you've walked with Jesus most of your life. You can say, let me tell you what he's doing in me.
I can't answer all the questions, but I can tell you how he changes my heart. So you can share an invitation. You can share your story. And this third one is that you can share the gospel. And ultimately, the goal is that you would share the gospel in all of these, that the gospel would be clearly, explicitly said. But what we're really talking about here is that you can open your mouth and just tell them the facts about the gospel.
It doesn't have to involve you. It doesn't have to. It's just here's what Jesus has done. Go to Acts chapter 10. There's a lot of examples of this. Acts 10 is one of them.
There are plenty throughout the book of Acts, throughout the gospels. But this is where Peter was praying and God told him, hey, some people are going to come and I want you to go with them. At the same time, there was a man named Cornelius who was a Roman centurion. He had been praying and God said, hey, I'm sending some people to you. I want you to listen to them. And it's a really cool picture about how in prayer God prepares people to hear the gospel.
And so one of the things I would tell you is that in any of these, in all of these, you might be praying. I'll tell you specifically three things to be praying for. You want to pray that God would send you to receptive people. That God would prepare them beforehand. That he would work in their lives. That he would work for this moment to be the right moment for you to share the gospel.
That he would send you to receptive people. That he would make you sensitive to the spirit. Sometimes we're around receptive people but we're not sensitive to the spirit. They're sitting next to us at work and they're going, man, nothing ever works out for me in life. God's prepared them to hear the gospel and we say, yeah, tell me about it. I'm going to go to the drink machine and you want to go to the mountain too.
And we need to be leaning in and listening to the spirit that we might be prepared. And thirdly, that he would give us boldness. That he would lead us to receptive people. That he would make us sensitive to the leadership of the spirit and that he would give us boldness to speak when it's time to speak. But that's what happens here is that Peter's praying.
He's sensitive to the spirit. When the spirit tells him to go do something, he goes and does it. We're going to pick up in verse 30. Cornelius said, four days ago, about this hour, I was praying in my house at the ninth hour. And behold, a man stood before me in bright clothing and said, Cornelius, your prayer has been heard and your alms have been remembered before God. Send therefore to Joppa and ask for Simon who is called Peter.
He is lodging in the house of Simon a tanner by the sea. So I sent for you at once and you have been kind enough to come. Now therefore, we are all here in your presence, in the presence of God to hear all that you have been commanded by the Lord. He is very prepared. An angel actually told him, I'm going to send somebody to you so you can hear this. And this is miraculous, but the truth is it's no less miraculous how he does this all the time now.
That somebody has not walked with Jesus, doesn't know Jesus, but has God's been preparing their heart to be able to hear, to be ready for this, to be able to acknowledge him through life circumstances and they're in the right spot at the right time with the right person and God opens the window and tells somebody to speak and here's what it says. So Peter opened his mouth and said, that's the third method is that we would actually just share the gospel, that we'd open our mouth and say, which means that we would know the gospel, we would know the foundational core parts of the gospel. And so let's read what he says. It says, truly I understand that God shows no partiality, but in every nation anyone who fears him and does what is right is acceptable to him.
As for the word that he sent to Israel preaching good news of peace through Jesus Christ, he is Lord of all. You yourselves know what happened throughout all Judea, beginning from Galilee, after the baptism that John proclaimed, how God anointed Jesus of Nazareth with the Holy Spirit and with power. He went about doing good and healing all who were oppressed by the devil for God was with him. And we are witnesses of all that he did, both in the country of the Jews and in Jerusalem. They put him to death by hanging him on a tree, but God raised him on the third day and made him to appear, not to all the people, but to those who had been chosen by God as witnesses who ate and drank with him after he rose from the dead.
And he commanded us to preach to the people and to testify that he is the one appointed by God to be judge of the living and the dead. To him all the prophets bear witness and everyone who believes in him receives forgiveness of sins through his name. That is all true, but God has to work on somebody's heart for them to believe it. But there are times when we are led by the Spirit and ought to just tell somebody, open our mouth and say, here's what's true. Jesus Christ was good and holy and he was murdered on a cross and he died in that to save us from our sins and he rose from the grave so that we might have hope and there is forgiveness in his name and salvation in his name.
And that's good news and God prepares people to hear it. And the circumstances around it are interesting. My uncle and his friends when they were in college were riding around sharing the gospel with people and they had practiced a certain method where you have kind of certain little lead-in lines that you kind of open up with or whatever. So three of them are in a car and they're riding and they see a guy who's hitchhiking and they just go to pick him up. He hops in the backseat of the car and they're riding around sharing the gospel and so this is like, hey, God just sent like a hitchhiker here, somebody ready to hear.
So the guy sitting in the backseat with him uses the opening line they'd learned and he leans over to him in the backseat and he says, if you died tonight, do you know where your soul would go? And the guy just looked at him and he says, deep in thought. And they pull up to a stop sign and that guy opens the door and takes off running as fast as he possibly can. And they were like, oh, you know, now that I think about it, that probably wasn't the best opening line given the circumstances. Sometimes people aren't ready. I mean, I think you probably could have done that a little better, but sometimes it's not the right moment.
God hasn't prepared. It's not, we're still supposed to open our mouths. We're still supposed to share. I was in college coming out of a study hall and one of my friends I played football with said something about death. And I just asked him, I was like, man, do you think about death? And we just got to talking about what happens after you die.
And I asked him, do you know what would happen to you after you die? And he's like, no, how can you? And I was like, well, the Bible says you can. And we just started talking. I shared the gospel with him and he said, I said, do you want to follow Jesus? He said, yes.
He committed his life to Jesus, standing out under a street lamp on our way back to our dorms. I didn't follow up well with him, didn't do discipleship stuff well with him. If you're in my community group, that makes sense to you because that's how I usually do stuff. I'm very excited about people who don't know Jesus and once they believe in Jesus, I'm like, cool, figure it out, see you at the end. That's why we're working on some of these things. But I talked to him recently and he said, hey, you know, it's about two weeks away from anniversary of me committing to follow Jesus.
And I was like, dude, first of all, I didn't know when that happened and second of all, I'm so glad to know that you do. And so, sometimes God prepares people. Patrick Harden, who's a part of our church family, is a part of CEO's Campus Outreach and they go to Myrtle Beach every year and they send all these college students up and down Myrtle Beach to while people are vacationing on the beach to share the gospel with them, to go tell people about Jesus. They have different methods they try. They do start a conversation and just lead them to Jesus just to get there. They do four spiritual laws, I think, is one of them where there's like a set way that you kind of start talking about this and you move to this and you move to this.
That's kind of the thing where if you die tonight, like it's this startup conversation. They have a couple of different ways. They share their story. They have a couple of different ways. And if you were to pick the people that you think who's most likely to want to follow Jesus, I would say people vacationing at Myrtle Beach. They want you to come talk to them about Jesus.
Like if I'm sitting out on the beach enjoying the beach, I want four college students to come over and be like, hi, do you know you're a sinner? It's like, yes, I do. I'm a pastor. Keep going. Guess what? Every week, every day, regardless of the method, people commit to following Jesus.
People are ready and want to hear the gospel. And guess what? Every week, every day, regardless of the message, some people say, I don't want to hear this. But some people are prepared and there just needs to be some people who go and open their mouths. That we have good news to share and that God is at work in the lives of people to prepare them for these moments. And I think sometimes we're in the habit of making fun of someone who would just go around and tell people about Jesus and that's really cute of us to make fun of people who would go around telling people about Jesus when we haven't sat down and told anybody about Jesus in who knows how many years.
And the truth is, God is at work. The message is good. And I don't care if we share an invitation. I don't care if we share our story. I don't care if we just walk up to people and share the gospel. We've got to be active in doing what Philip did, which is trying to grab somebody and saying, come see Jesus because he's so good and all the hopes and all the prayers and everything's been answered in him.
And all your fear and all your doubt, it's in him. Some of you are here this morning because someone invited you. And I want to just tell you something. They just want you to meet Jesus. They want you to have what they have. They want you to check out what they're checking out.
They want you to see if you're seeing what they see in Christ. They care about you. They're really nervous because they're like, please don't say anything weird or let's not do anything weird today because it's just like, and we don't usually do anything weird, but they're just thinking maybe today would be the day we do something super weird. People get nervous when they bring people around churches. And I just want y'all to know that it's your first time here. We're so glad you're here and we don't want you to feel uncomfortable.
And I know churches do some things maybe you're not familiar with. And in a minute, when we pass by the bucket full of snakes, people think because it's their first time they have to take a snake. You don't have to take a snake. Just pass the bucket. Just kidding. We're not going to do that.
You guys, we don't ever do that. We just want you to know Jesus. And here's the thing. This is ultimately, like I said, we're going to have a couple of different methods and really just share your life is the last one. That you would so know and love Jesus that you would just share your life, that you would be a person so impacted by the gospel that you would just be around people and you would be a gospel person. So this is Mark 12, 30 says this.
This is Jesus talking and he says, this is the greatest commandment. He says that you shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind and with all your strength. That God and ultimately revealed to us in Christ would be so primary to us that every part of our life would be saturated by this gospel. And so then we just get to know people at work. We just get to know our neighbors and we're gospel people. One of the ways we talk about this is that the concept of gospel fluency, that if you're a Christian, that how you receive the world, how you understand the world is through the gospel.
Fluency is the idea that you would speak a language fluently, that you could dream in it, that when you think, you speak English fluently, most of you speak English fluently so that you're not having to translate what I'm saying right now, pink elephant. You're able to just kind of take in whatever is said. Your brain processes it without you being able to control that flying giraffe. Like you just, whatever is said, just you can't help it. You understand that you're fluent. Now, that's not the case for us if we go to another place.
I got to go on a trip one time to a mission trip to Romania and I learned some phrases in Romanesti. And honestly, I know what the phrase means, but they're just noises I memorized. I know that means, may God bless you. I don't know which part means what and what order it's in because I just memorized the sounds. So that's the way I am with, I know a little bit of Spanish, but all I'm really doing is taking the Spanish word and go into the little Spanish dictionary in my brain and trying to say, I think that word means this word in English.
I'm just really trying to get it to English. I'm not fluent. But the goal for us as Christians is that this would be true, that we would love God so much with all our heart, with all our soul, with all our mind, with all our strength, that it's how we see and understand the world, that the gospel is how we think about everything so that you can't talk to us about marriage, you can't talk to us about money, you can't talk to us about relationships, you can't talk to us about savings, you can't talk to us about death or life or hope or the future or sadness or anything without us, the gospel just coming out. Here's the thing, some of us have this down when it comes to our groups.
One of the things we've talked about over and over again is that we would be, we'd give the good news before we give good advice. We have it down. We're gospel fluent. We have a gospel accent. It pours out of us when we're in church family. And as soon as we get around our neighbors and as soon as we get around our coworkers, we go TV newscaster on it.
My wife and I got to go, my parents won a trip to Jamaica through his job, my dad's Job. They weren't able to go and we got to go for free and I would absolutely recommend that to you. If you ever get to go on a free trip to Jamaica, you should go. It was very enjoyable. While we were there though, we were watching some TV and I don't know how they worked out this deal, but they just had channels from all over the place. And so we were watching.
Well, the funny thing was, if you watched any local news, you couldn't tell where they were from because they all had newscaster voice. They had this same little dialect that they all speak. The severed limbs were found in the elevator shaft. Good news for egg lovers, like whatever, like they just have this same tone, same voice, whatever. So we ended up realizing we were watching one that was from Miami, one that was from Canada.
They sounded the same as the people in Columbia, South Carolina, because they've all trained to just, if you're going to do the news, you just got to cut that out. And that's what we've been taught by our culture. If you're going to be a Christian, that's fine, but when you go to work, you just got to cut that out. You just can't sound Christian at work. You just got to, or you can be Christian light. You can say some things about God or whatever, but let's not talk about Jesus and let's not talk about, we just cut it out as soon as we get outside.
We put on our little newscaster voice. I'll give you an example of this. If your group, one of the questions in your community group was, what would you do if you won the Mega Millions jackpot? Most of us, if we really had to think about that in our Christian world, I got to know my answer, I'd be terrified because I think me having a billion dollars is probably not good for my soul. I really probably should keep going to work. It's nice right now that I can't own everything I would like to own.
There's something good about when God says you can't serve God and money. It's really nice that I don't have a billion dollars saying serve me. It's nice that I don't have much money and I go, you're right God, that sounds brilliant, but as soon as you gave me a billion dollars, I'd be like, well, I don't know, maybe some jet skis. The lake starts looking real good on Sundays. Like, you know, whatever. And so I'd be like, well, I think I'd probably have to give a lot of it away.
I'd probably have to get a whole bunch of people involved, maybe set up a trust, maybe spend the rest of my life just handing out money, maybe just give it to the IMB and go back to work the next day and be like, that was cool. IMB is the International Mission Board. All right. That's probably how I'd answer in our group. I'd really try to think about it. I'd talk about what was real to me and what really mattered and I'd try to fit it in the concept of eternity.
And if someone asked me at another Job or another place, hey man, what would you do if you win the Mega Millions? I'd just go newscaster on it. They don't want to hear all that stuff about how I think I'm a sinner and if I got a lot of money it would ruin my soul because that's a weird thing to say to somebody. So I'd just say, I'm going to probably own a mountain with like a castle and some sort of gun turrets because that would be amazing. We just cut it out so that when somebody's dealing with real things, you see the gospel applies to every aspect of life. This is one of the things that happens in the Old Testament.
There used to be a God of the forest and a God of the rivers and a God of the rain and a God of, in the Old Testament comes along and God says, no, I'm the God of everything. I'm the God of the rain and I'm the God of the wind and I'm the God of the mold in your kitchen. I own everything. And then Jesus comes along and he says, the gospel applies to everything, every aspect and every square inch of your life. So that if someone's talking about sadness or brokenness or depression or the Mega Millions jackpot or what they're going to do with their life or what they're hoping for their future or what they're struggling with with their kids, guess what?
The gospel applies now. It's good news now and there's hope now. That's what Peter says in, nope, sorry. It's not Peter next. It's 1 Thessalonians. Here's what it says.
It says, being affectionately desirous of you, we were ready to share with you not only the gospel of God but also our own selves because you had become very dear to us that we would be such gospel people that when we begin to build friendships with people who don't know Jesus, not only do we share the gospel with them, we share ourselves with them and ourselves as a representation of what it looks like as the gospel goes to work on somebody. Not that you're perfect but that you're repentant. Not that you have it all together but that you trust someone who does. Not that you have all the answers but you have a lot of hope in the one who does.
1 Peter 3.15 says this, But in your hearts honor Christ the Lord as holy, always being prepared to make a defense to anyone who asks you for a reason for the hope that is in you. Yet do it with gentleness and respect. This means that as Christians the gospel will be so real to us that it didn't matter what the objection was, what the comment was, what the... This is usually taught that you're going to be at work and someone's going to come to you and say, You are so joyous and happy. What's special about you? And for some of you maybe that happens and you ought to respond that the gospel gives you hope and that Jesus works on your soul.
That's not the context this is written in it. Most of what Peter was talking about was someone's going to come to you and say, Really? You're a Christian now so you had to break up with your boyfriend? Oh, you're a Christian now so y'all can't live together? Oh, you got this going on? Oh, and they're going to have this aggression and you're going to go, Oh, gentleness and respect.
I'm so glad you brought that up. Jesus is way better than sex. I'm so glad you brought that up. Jesus is way better than money and you have a real reason that the gospel is a hope in you and you have a real answer. That's what he's talking about. The hope would be that we would be gospel people so that whether we were sharing an invitation, sharing our story, sharing the gospel, that ultimately we'd just be sharing our lives and that's who we'd be.
That we'd be those type of people who so know and love Jesus and his word so dwells in us richly that it didn't matter what we were talking about. It didn't matter what we were doing that it just comes out of us, pours out of us and some of us need to learn how to lose our newscaster voice and go back to having our gospel accent when we're out in the world so that some people might find hope and might hear the goodness of the gospel and this sharing your life thing helps us a lot when people say, well, I can't share the gospel at work. What they mean when they tell you that at work is that you can't go around trying to proselytize everybody. You can't start handing out tracts.
You can't, but you can share your life and you can be a Christian and you can, when somebody's struggling with something and you're their friend, you can say, hey, can I tell you the hope I have? Can I tell you what I lean to in these moments? Can I tell you that there's a Bible story that talks about this? And it also means that, okay, maybe you can't share the gospel at work. Maybe you got fussed out for that. Guess what?
You can share the gospel in your backyard when you have a cookout. Get to know your coworkers. That way when you say, hey, you want to eat burgers at my house? They say, that sounds like a good idea. And then guess what? Who gets to talk about Jesus at their own house all day long?
I'm going to close with this story. I have a friend named Josh Davis. I met him across the street playing at the park with his children and our kids are about the same age and we started hanging out. We had a, pretty early on, had a conversation about the gospel, which is helpful. Just so y'all know, some of you are like, I'm developing a friendship and seven years from now, when the moment's right, I'll jump out of the bushes and say, turns out I've been a Christian the whole time. It's not super helpful.
Just own it right when you start. And then if people are like, I don't want to be friends with a Christian. Okay, that person's probably not going to be Jesus right now. They're not ready. But some people go, okay, and you get that already open.
The conversation's already there. And so I had the chance to talk with him pretty early on. And one of the things Spencer's been challenging us on is just looking at people and telling them, I want you to know Jesus. I want you to believe this. So much we make it this big conflict, but the truth is, it's us trying to love somebody and trying to help somebody find something that is so good.
And so we continued this friendship and we hung out some and I just realized the next time I saw him, I needed to just say to him again, hey, I want you to know Jesus. So we were over at the park playing and we were heading back to my house and I just stopped and said, hey, our kids were playing at the park. He and I weren't playing at the park. We're on the seesaw. It was awesome. We hold hands and run to the field.
We're walking back over to my house and they were going to be there for a minute and I just stopped and said, hey man, I just want you to know I care about you. We like your family and I want you to know Jesus. So as much as we can talk about that and as much as you have questions about that, I just, I think he's amazing and I want you to know him. And he just stopped and then he said, I think I really needed to hear that. And I was just like, yes, Jesus, that's awesome. And then we talked about Jesus for the next hour or so.
He didn't become a Christian. I'm still praying for him. I'm going to keep saying that to him. I'm going to keep building a relationship with him. I'm going to keep using all these methods. I'm going to invite him to stuff.
He's coming to hang out with our group some. He's not going to do that all the time. I'm going to keep inviting him. I'm going to keep sharing my story and how Jesus is at work in me. I'm going to keep sharing the gospel with him whenever I get the chance and hopefully at some point it'll be the right moment and he'll say, what do I need to do? How do I follow Jesus?
See, our prayer for our church family this year is that every single one of our community groups would get to see somebody baptized. See, last week we said that we'd be all preachers, that we'd be all sharing, that there'd be a hundred people out proclaiming the gospel. And this week, as we talk about ways that we can go about doing that, our hope, our prayer, and we don't know if it'll work because it doesn't always work. God doesn't always lead us to the people. We don't know how his timing on all that, but our prayer this year is that every single one of our community groups would be on mission, would be active in sharing the gospel and we get to gather around the baptismal pool and see some people who on their videos say, I got tired, I ran out of excuses, and Jesus is so good.
I was blind, now I see, and I'm so thankful that somebody grabbed me and said, you need to meet this Jesus. Band's gonna come back up. As we sing this next song, we as a church family are gonna take communion. This is where we, through the bread and the cup, that we remember that Jesus' body was broken for us, that his blood was shed for us, and that we need the gospel and that in Jesus we get the gospel. That he died for our sins, that our hope is in him, that our joy is in him, that our life is in him, and so we take a moment to pray, to repent. The repentance isn't that we have to be good before we come up there, but that if we are walking in unrepentance, we are not believing the gospel, which is that Jesus saves sinners and that there's hope and freedom in the gospel.
And so we pray, we repent, we confess sins, and then we joyously, celebratorily take communion. And I pray that as we pray this morning that you would also pray for those who need to know Jesus, who need to have what you have in Christ, that we might be led to receptive people, that we might be sensitive to the Spirit, that we might be bold in sharing our faith so that more people might have the Jesus, so that we know who loves and saves sinners. Let's pray. God, we thank you that the gospel is good news and that it is hope in our darkness and that it is a bandage for our souls and that our life and our joy are in you and nowhere else.
And we ask, Lord, that you would make us effective in sharing the gospel. And we pray right now, collectively, that every single one of our community groups this year would get to see somebody baptized, we get to know the joy of sharing the gospel and of having someone begin to follow Jesus, that we'd get to be like Philip and that you'd lead us to the right Nathaniels who are ready to hear and know the goodness of your word and hope in Christ. In Jesus' name, amen. When you're ready, take communion.
The Word of the Lord
Transcript
We're going to talk about why, and we're going to talk about this gospel proclamation. So grab your Bibles, go to Romans chapter 1. We're going to be in three different places in Romans today. We're going to Romans 1, then we'll go to Romans 5, then we'll go to Romans 10, as we talk about why, as we talk about, why would we spend our time, proclaiming the gospel, and seeing people grow up in the gospel, so that they might proclaim the gospel. That's what discipling is, that we would share the gospel, people would become Christians, they would grow to the point, that they could share the gospel, and train others to follow Jesus.
Let's pray, and then we'll begin reading in Romans 1. Father, we thank you, for how good you are, and for this time we get to spend this morning in your word, and we pray that it would be fruitful, and effective, and that your Holy Spirit would move in us, that we might commit to being people, who share the gospel, and that you might center in us, ground in us, why we can do nothing else. In Jesus' name, amen. We'll look in verse 16. This is Paul writing to the church in Rome, and he says, For I am not ashamed of the gospel. The gospel is the news of Jesus, the proclamation of the news of Jesus, what he had done on the cross for us, that he paid for our sins.
So he says, For I am not ashamed of the gospel, for it, for this message, this news, is the power of God for salvation, to everyone who believes, to the Jew first, and also to the Greek. For in it, in the gospel, in this message, in Jesus' work on our behalf, in it, the righteousness of God is revealed from faith, for faith, as it is written, the righteous shall live by faith. Now this is kind of his thesis statement as he carries out the rest of this book, but what he's saying is, I'm not ashamed of this news, because it's where we get salvation. It's the power of the gospel, the power of God for salvation, is in this message, that Jesus Christ died for sinners, that he rose again, and that from faith, for faith, we get righteousness, which means, that you don't bring your own righteousness to the table, you get it, by having faith in Jesus, and he gives it to those with faith, so that we have faith, it's from faith, it's for faith, that we trust him, that everybody comes forward as a Christian and says, it's all on you, Jesus, I'm trusting you, I'm not holding anything back, I'm not trusting in myself, I'm trusting you.
By having faith in Jesus, and he gives it to those with faith, so that we have faith, it's from faith, it's for faith, that we trust him, that everybody comes forward as a Christian and says, it's all on you, Jesus, I'm trusting you, I'm not holding anything back, I'm not trusting in myself, I'm trusting you. And so as I read that, and I just spent some time this week thinking about the idea of being ashamed, or being not ashamed, being unashamed, and I know that if you ask me, are you ashamed of the gospel, I would answer, no. And the reason I would answer no,
Is because, I don't think I'm ashamed of the gospel, and secondarily, I know I'm not supposed to be ashamed of the gospel, I want to be like Paul, where he says he's unashamed, and there's this idea throughout the scriptures, that we're to proclaim Jesus, we're to hold him up, we're to be not ashamed of him, and that he won't be ashamed of us, and so I think for most of us as Christians, if you asked, are you ashamed of the gospel, you'd say, no. And if you've been around the church for a while, maybe in your head, you'd start being like, no, it's the power of God, for salvation, like I'm not ashamed of the gospel. Now,
I want to change subject for just a second, to help us picture this idea of shame, I, some of y'all may not follow this section of news, as I have some unfortunate news to share with you, if you haven't been keeping up with it, something terrible happened, on Monday night, my wife and I, were on vacation, we got to go on a free trip, they said, do you want to go, it's free, I said free is my first cousin, we would love to go, but even while we were on vacation, this news reached us, the Clemson Tigers, won the national championship, in college football, now this is terrible news, some of y'all again, don't follow this,
Don't pay attention to this, but you live in Columbia, South Carolina, the home of the Gamecocks, I am a Carolina fan, and as we were going to travel, we went and got on an airplane in Columbia, where there shouldn't be Clemson fans, but they've infected the whole state, and we saw so much orange and purple, two very ugly colors, that they've mixed together for some reason, and these people were very proud, and they're on their way, to the national championship, and I remember thinking, like I was sitting near them, and I remember thinking, like I was glad, I didn't just accidentally, wear some Gamecock stuff, because I don't want to have to talk, to them about it, that's all it was,
It was like I realized, I didn't want to get in a conversation, because the truth is, as a Gamecock fan, those conversations, haven't been going well, for the last five years or so, they're not good conversations, and Carolina's not doing great, and Clemson's got continually better, they looked amazing on Monday night, it hurt my feelings to watch, and here's what happened, like I just realized, and I remember thinking about it later, and I was like, why was that, like what was that feeling, that feeling was shame, I was ashamed to have to talk, like I didn't want them to be like, oh yeah, how was y'all's bowl game, because they knew how our bowl game was,
First of all, we worked really hard, to barely make it to that bowl game, just to have our feelings hurt, and so I got to thinking about it, and the truth is, for a lot of us as Christians, we would say we're unashamed, but at the moment, we come to, maybe I should tell this person, about Jesus, is there something in us, that goes, I don't really want to talk about that, I don't really want to be that guy, I don't really want to be that girl, I don't want to, wouldn't that make things weird, I saw a comedian stand up, he said I'd love for everybody, I hope everybody's having a good night, I hope everybody's comfortable, and since I want everybody to be comfortable,
I'd love to speak with you, tonight about Jesus, everybody busts out laughing, because, they're immediately uncomfortable, like I know, that when I have to tell people, I'm a pastor, I don't even have to say Jesus, I just say ask me what I do, and I'm like here we go, this is going to get weird, you can't tell people you're a pastor, without it getting kind of weird you guys, they're either way too excited, they got a lot of questions, they got a lot of stories, or they're like oh, you can see them thinking, like it's okay, how do I leave, like it, that's just saying pastor, it's not even saying Jesus,
Is there something in us, at that moment, when we're like oh, maybe I should share, maybe I should say something, maybe they need to hear this, it goes oh, but what would that do, would that be weird, and is that in us, shame, for people who would declare, I am unashamed of the gospel, is there something, that we trip over, in our own hearts, when it comes time, to actually tell somebody, about the goodness of the gospel, and we believe it's good, you know who's not ashamed, right now, Clemson fans, and do you know why,
They're not ashamed right now, Clemson is really, really good, and do you know why, we are to be unashamed, of the gospel, because it is really, really good, far better than Clemson, the gospel is good, so grab your Bible, so if you've already, hold them, go to Romans 5, as we talk about why, why would I spend my time, sharing this, why would I go out of my way, why would I jump that hurdle, of hesitation, why would I push past, into the awkwardness, why would I do this, the first answer,
Is that the gospel, is too good, this news, is too good, and so we're going to read this, we're just going to talk about, how good it is for a second, we're going to remind ourselves, how good it is for a second, because for some reason, we get caught up in life, we get to following Jesus, and we forget, how good this is, maybe it's because we've forgotten, how lost we used to be, Romans 5 chapter 6, for while we were still weak, at the right time, Christ died, for the ungodly, now that sounds like, a not very godly thing to do, Jesus,
The son of God, God the son, is coming to rescue, humanity, and who does he rescue, the ungodly, now I don't know, if y'all are familiar, with basic English, but that's the opposite, of godliness, he's godly, who does he rescue, the ungodly, now if you're ungodly, that's really good news, that he comes to rescue you, at your worst, at your ugliest, at your meanest, at your pettiest, at your most despicable, that that is who, Jesus redeems,
That is who Jesus dies for, is the ungodly, let's keep going, because this news, gets better and better, for one will scarcely die, for a righteous person, though perhaps, for a good person, one would dare, even to die, but God shows his love, for us, and that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us, that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us, he shows his love for us, he says, some people would dare die, for a good person, that maybe you would, you would know of a good person, who is worth dying for,
Maybe you know, this happens with like, the secret service, or whatever, they're like, this person's life, is valuable to the country, so I'm willing to die for them, that like, we understand that concept, but he says, who dies for scoundrels, who dies for people, who are basically human garbage, someone who loves them, that's what he says, that Jesus loves the ungodly, that he dies, while we're still sinners, that while we were still weak, that he redeems us, do you know how good, that news is, you see,
We're tempted to believe, that the way that we go to salvation, in Christ, the way that we come to salvation, in Christ, is much like getting a mortgage, like he's going to check, your credit history, and you need to show, some credit worthiness, that you know, he's got the money, he's, I know Jesus saves, I know Jesus saves, he's the one with the money, I realize, I got to go to him, do the interview, fill out the paperwork, I get that, I can't save myself, I don't have the net worth, but he does,
I understand that, and so this is how people, think about it, like yeah, I can go get salvation, from Jesus, but, you know, he's going to check my credit, I got to show credit worthiness, or if I don't have, any credit worthiness, I'm not really going to bring that up, I'm going to bring pay stubs, super good Jesus, like I, don't look at that, look at future me, maybe it's a little bit of both, you also, maybe you kind of think, there's like an interest rate thing, where like, well he was pretty good,
Jesus saved him, but like he didn't have as much to pay back, I was super bad, Jesus saves me, I got a higher interest rate, I got more to do, that's not what it says, he doesn't take people with good credit, he takes people to get that 39% APR, that they don't even tell you about, that's who he gets, he's the buy here, pay here, people like you, you go like he, you don't have to have credit, no credit, no money down, no nothing, you just show up and say, hey, I really don't deserve anything, and he says, this is my team,
Do you know how good that is, because the truth is, even you, who believe you have good credit, have zero before God, that's what Paul spends his time doing, in the first four chapters of this, he says, those people are terrible, they're the worst, they've rebelled against God, that's all Romans 1, they've sinned, they've replaced God with idols, and he gets everybody going, yeah, those people, and then in chapter 2, he goes, so you have no excuse, those who judge, and you're like, why did you, why we were talking about them,
Why did you bring me into this, and he spends the rest of the time, saying that good works, and good morals, aren't going to save you, and then he comes here, and he says, he died for sinners, he died to save the ungodly, and if you know you're a sinner, and you know you're ungodly, that's good news, it's also good news, for all your sinner friends, and your sinner relatives, that he loves us, we're going to put verse 9, and through 11 up here, and we're going to talk through this, so this is, he saves, he dies for the ungodly, he dies to rescue those, who don't deserve it,
Who have no credit history, no future pay stubs, who only bring debt, all I have is debt, I have nothing else, I just bring debt, he pays that off, he dies for us, to redeem us, to buy us back, since therefore, we have now been justified, by his blood, much more shall we be saved, by him from the wrath of God, for while we were enemies, we were reconciled to God, by the death of his son, first thing I want to show us there, is it says, we have now been justified, by his blood, that if you are in Christ, you are justified,
By his blood, justified is a legal term, which means that if you went to court, you would be declared, not guilty, that if you are in Christ, his blood has covered you, so that you have no record of debt, you have no record of sin, that we think sometimes, when we go to judgment, he is going to pull up, every bad thing we have ever done, not if you are in Christ, we are declared not guilty, more than that, that is all that our legal system, will declare you, is not guilty, God is going to declare us innocent, because we are blameless, and above reproach in Christ, that if you are in Jesus, you are justified,
By his blood, you have been made right, you walk out scot free, in a legal sense, but it says, it didn't stop there, he says that we are saved by him, from the wrath of God, so that we are not just justified, but that we are saved, this idea that we are saved, from the wrath of God, or that Jesus absorbs, the wrath of God, so if you have the word justification, which is a big Bible word, this is the word propitiation, for those of you who care, about those sort of things, I will say it again, and for those of you, don't ignore the next second, propitiation, that he absorbs wrath,
On our behalf, so that it's not just, that we are made holy, before him, it's not just that we are justified, that we get to walk out, in a legal sense, but that actually, he absorbs the wrath, that we deserve, because Romans 1 says, that wrath is coming, towards the ungodly, and then it says, that he saves the ungodly, but then he keeps going, for while we were enemies, we were reconciled to God, by the death of his son, much more now, that we are reconciled, shall we be saved, by his life, more than that,
We also rejoice in God, through our Lord Jesus Christ, through whom, we have now received, reconciliation, reconciliation, means that we are, brought back in, we're made right with God, and we are brought to neutral, and he's like, alright, not guilty, but I better not, see you back in here, he's like, alright, not guilty, you wanna go grab a hot dog, like he, he invites us in, he brings us in, we're reconciled, our relationship is good,
I have a three year old son, so I am learning, how to parent, consistently, every day, he is challenging, he's great, but he's also challenging, and I really love, being a daddy, and the opportunities I get, but I, my wife and I are always like, I just, you know, parenting, you don't get to think, you just, you just have to go, and then you get to think, so like I've entered into situations, and I'm like, well I finished the situation, but goodness,
That shouldn't go that way next time, so I'm always like, you know, I go into parenting, and Anna and I, like she coaches me up, we talk about it, or whatever, it doesn't go well, when she tries in the middle of everything, to coach me up, but it goes better, if we get to discuss it later, because as soon as she shows up, he's like, my advocate's here, excuse me, if you'll just speak with my legal counsel, from now on, thank you, so it goes better, when in the situation, I get to handle things, we talk about it later,
But the other day, I was doing stuff with him, and when he's getting more amped up, I get more amped up, and I don't get loud, I've never been a loud person, I don't shout, I just get intense, and so I do this, I say, boy, let me tell you something right now, and I was talking to him, and he was getting louder, so I was being more intense, or whatever, and I came out, and the situation didn't go super well, you know, I parented through it, it's fine, but it wasn't my best work, I came out, and Anna said,
You're talking to him too intensely, like it's too much for a three year old, she said, I honestly think the way you're talking, you might, could make some grown men cry, and I was like, baby, you really think I can make a grown man cry? You know, just the sort of thing to say to me, she felt like I focused on the wrong part, so, but one of the things I've had to learn with him, is that like, it's not just that, like I, kids have parents for a reason, they don't, they don't have good sense, they need adults around them, there's a reason why they're not like, you know, I watched a TV show about iguanas,
And those things like, born and they can run off, and go do their own thing, your child can't, because it needs you there, making decisions for it, for a very long time, but one of the things I've realized, is as I correct him, and as I discipline him, one of the things I've started doing, is I just afterwards, I hug him, I tell him I love him, I get down on my knee, you know, the other day, he had gotten in trouble for something, and he got popped, and I said, you can go play, and he said, wait daddy, you forgot the part where you hug me,
And I was like, yeah, dude, come here, it's a good point, I'm glad you know the system, he wouldn't, I don't think he'd be like, what about the part where I get spanked, he probably wouldn't do that, but the hug, he remembers, and that's what that says, that we're reconciled, that he doesn't just say, okay, I've made some people even with me now, you're not guilty, it says, no, that he brings us in, that he loves us, that you're right with God, that when he thinks of you,
He thinks fondly of you, that he enjoys you, that you're reconciled, that your relationship with him is good, because of Jesus, do you know how good that is, he goes on, this is what we're covering in this section, but he also talks about in Romans 8, that we're adopted, that it's not just our relationships, right, but that he brings us into the family, other places talk about, that he does expiation, which means that he takes everything, that's ever happened to us, everything that would be on our record, he removes it, everything that's ever, all the sin that's been committed against us, all our shame, he cleans us, this news is too good,
For us to have even a twinge of shame, when it comes to telling somebody about it, it's too good, it's too eternally good, and too eternally urgent, it's too soul satisfying, that we would even trip, or have a hint of a, this propels us forward, and here's the thing, it's not just that it's too good, the stakes are too high, because if you don't have Christ, everything we just talked about, is flipped on its head, that when you stand before him, he does have a record of your guilt, you are not justified, you will not be declared not guilty, you will not leave that courtroom, that when you meet him, it will not be a moment of reconciliation, you will not get the hug, you do not get welcomed in,
You are not adopted, that you will stand before your judge, and your maker, on your own account, and it will not go well, and that rightfully, and justly, you will bear the wrath of God, because Jesus did not bear it for you, on the cross, and that is true, infinitely, eternally true, for everyone outside of Christ, now he died for the ungodly, which means that everybody is welcomed in, who will follow him, this news is too good, and the stakes are too high, for us to not spend our time, sharing it, for us to keep this to ourselves, you think about your life with Jesus, if you are in Christ,
And how you handle your life, when you are faced with anxiety, when you are overwhelmed, you see when you are talking to people at work, or you are talking to your neighbors, or you are just enjoying a friendship, with somebody who doesn't know Christ, they are going to talk to you about their life, and life is messy, and life is sinful, and life is hurtful, and life is fearful, and they are going to talk about, their fears for the future, and their fears for their children, and how difficult they are having, time in their marriage, and how anxious they are over money, or over how this job may not work out, or they have got a new boss, and they are not sure, if the new boss likes them, and they are going to talk about, all these things in life,
And the truth is, if you were walking through this, with yourself, or with someone in your community group, what would you be saying, I am dealing with anxiety, I am going to remind myself, that there is a God, who rules over the universe, that he is sovereign, that he tells me, that if I am fearful and anxious, I actually have no ability, to accomplish anything, but that he is good, and I can cast my cares on him, but I am worried about the future, if I really, you want to know, if I really get worried, about the future, you know you can pick up your Bible, and jump to the back end of Revelation, and see how it is going to shake out,
There is a part in there, where it says, everybody who loves Jesus, is gathered around the throne, in a place where there are no tears, and there is no suffering, and there is no night anymore, and there is no pain anymore, and that he welcomes them in, and that we get to spend eternity there, and sometimes, when you are fearful about the future, just go to the back end of Revelation, and say the future is going to be fine, for those who are in Christ, when you are worried about, being able to pay bills, don't you remind yourself, that Jesus looked at some people, and said, consider the ravens, they don't toil, they don't have barns, but they eat every day,
Look at the lilies, they don't sow, they don't spin, but they look better than Solomon ever did, you remind yourself, that you are going to be cared for, that he loves you, when you feel down, and shameful, and dirty, and all the enemy has been doing, is bringing up everything wrong, you've ever done, do you remind yourself, that one day, you'll be clothed in righteousness, that Jesus will stand in your place, that you will be justified, that you're holy, and blameless, and loved, and welcomed, and that he adores you, because he adores Christ,
And that Christ has swapped places with you, and then we have a co-worker, talking to us about their anxiety, and we have the shameful audacity, to say yeah, sounds awful, and to hold our hope, and not share it, when they talk about their fear, for their children, and their fear for their future, and we have the audacity, to say yeah, I deal with that too, but without telling them the cure, that there's a God, who works, and who redeems, who they can know, who loves them, who loves them, and they can know him, and he can work in them, and for them,
Because he's good, and we just say yeah, doctors are scary, this news is too good, and the stakes are too high, for us to not learn how to respond, and for us to not be active in this, turn to Romans 10, we're going to pick up in verse 8, Paul's talking about the gospel, he's referring to some Old Testament passages, and that's why he says, but what does it say, quote in Old Testament passage, the word is near you, in your mouth, and in your heart, that is, the word of faith, that we proclaim, so he's talking about the gospel there, this word is near you, it's in your mouth, and in your heart,
This gospel, this truth about Jesus, and who he is, he says, because if you confess with your mouth, that Jesus is Lord, and believe in your heart, that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved, for with the heart one believes, and is justified, and with the mouth one confesses, and is saved, for the scripture says, everyone who believes in him, will not be put to shame, there is no distinction between Jew and Greek, for the same Lord is the Lord of all, bestowing his riches on all who call on him, for everyone who calls on the name of the Lord, will be saved, there is not a person in the history of the world, who has cried out to God, and said,
I need you, I need your help, I can't do this on my own, that was put to shame, that that turned out to be a mistake, there is not a person in the history of the world, that has claimed, Jesus I love you, I need you, I need your help, I know I am a sinner, I know all I bring is debt, but I need you to redeem me, that was not, and will not be saved, by Christ, everyone, so this news is too good, and the stakes are too high, and everyone who believes, will be saved, everyone, think of the worst person you know, that person,
Will be saved, if they believe, and if it's you, if the only person you can think of, that you think is terrible is you, you will be saved, if you trust Jesus, he loves you enough to die for you, while you were a sinner, not waiting for you to clean yourself up, let's keep going, 14, how will they call on him, in whom they have not believed, so he says, all who call on the name of the Lord, will be saved, but he says, how are they going to call on him, if they don't believe in him, because if they don't know what he does, and how good he is, and what he's accomplished, they're not going to,
Nobody's going to call on him, you understand the logic there, and how are they to believe in him, and whom they have never heard, and how are they to hear, without someone preaching, now most of the time, when you think about preaching, you think about what's going on right now, what I'm doing this very moment, this is preaching, I don't know why you laughed, it is, but what he means there, is preaching is a broader term, than just what happens on a Sunday, in a church, church, it means to proclaim the gospel, to tell of the gospel, to tell the good news, of the gospel, and so it also happens at gas stations, and in dorm rooms,
That the gospel can be shared, and proclaimed anywhere, so he says, how will they call on him, if they haven't believed, and how are they going to believe, if they haven't heard, and how are they going to hear, without somebody preaching, and how are they going to preach, unless they are sent, those last two ones, are the ones that we get involved in, we preach, and we send, as Christians, that's what we're supposed to do, that's discipleship, that's teaching them to obey everything, is sending, is that we're proclaiming, we're training somebody up, and we're sending them out, to go proclaim this gospel,
And having them, having people be baptized, in the name of the son, is us proclaiming the gospel, so that we proclaim it, we preach it, we tell people about it, we see people baptized, we train them up, we send them out, this is why we always talk about, multiplying our groups, because we want to multiply our groups, because we want to see more people, in more areas, in more times, during the week, with more room at a table, to see people proclaiming the gospel, we want to see, a group in Irmo, and a group in Gaston, we want to see, this continue to move,
And more people be welcomed in, and more people invited in, because there's more people, in this city proclaiming the gospel, we got, right around 80, members, in our church family, people committed to membership, we've got around 100 adults, in groups, and our goal, our prayer, is that that would be 100 preachers, it'd be 80 preachers, people that are going around, and so unashamed, of this gospel, they're telling people about it, how are they to preach, unless they're sent, as it is written, how beautiful, are the feet,
Of those who preach, the good news, so that's, that's this, this idea, that as you travel, you know, your feet would get, dusty or dirty, or grosser, as you travel, as you go around, but he's saying, it's the opposite, that there's beautiful feet, that those who carry good news, those who bring you good news, have beautiful feet, say that to someone, next time they tell you good news, they tell you good news, and you just say, wow, those are some good looking feet,
But that's what he's saying, that we get to be that, that we get to carry good news, he says, but they have not all obeyed, the gospel, for Isaiah says, Lord, who has believed, what he's heard from us, so faith comes from hearing, and hearing through the word of Christ, so some people would say, well not everybody's going to believe, right, but some will, some will believe this news, you did, and how many people, after you believed the gospel, and Jesus began to change you, were like, wait, who?
Nah, do we need to go back, to your high school reunion, I'll go with you, so this person follows Jesus now, look at people's faces, some of you, you were the most unlikely candidate, but people will believe, this news is good, what Jesus does, and who he is, and what he's accomplished for us, there's a couple of things, that I think crop up, as soon as we start talking about, that we would go around, sharing the gospel, first there's this idea, that it would make us weird, I think it's worth being weird for, honestly, if the culture doesn't like, talking about Jesus,
They're confused about who he is, and as soon as they know him, they think it's a good idea, so okay, let's be okay with that one, let's roll past that, that little bit of shame, where it's like, I think people will think, I'm like a Jesus person, and I think that's a good way, to be defined, I think sometimes we go, okay, but I'm too busy, I have to make special time, for this, I'd have to try to figure out, like what, I got to start going to five points, and just yelling at people, you can, probably won't be the most effective, but people do believe that way sometimes,
Most of us, that's not that true though, you have a 40 hour week Job, or you go to school, or you live in a dorm, and you are surrounded by people, who need to know this news, some of you have children, or multiple children, and they don't know the gospel yet, and you ought to be active, in proclaiming the gospel to them, another thing that happens, is people think, well I have to be perfect, if I'm going to start telling people, Jesus, I got to get my act together, well first of all, it's not a bad idea, for you to start repenting of sin, and getting your act together, so I'm not against that idea, but the concept,
Of I have to be perfect, to share the gospel, is not a biblical concept, it's actually nonsense, because if the gospel, is that you're a really, well behaved person, you don't understand the gospel, the gospel is that you're ungodly, and that Jesus saves sinners, so that when I do something, really terrible, I had somebody say, well I can't share the gospel at work, because I get mad and cuss, like bro, the gospel is that Jesus saves sinners, not well behaved, perfect people, there are times that I do things, and people are like, man you do that, aren't you a preacher, I'm like yeah,
Jesus saves sinners, people who act like a complete fool, you saw me at Walmart with my son, yeah, sinners, people who don't do right, that's who he saves, that he works to redeem, those who are broken, so if you say, well if I do this, and it's not good or whatever, then I've messed it up, it's like no you haven't, the gospel is that Jesus is good, not that you are, that he saves people like you, do you know how refreshing, and hopeful that is to people, now continually change, and repent, and ask for forgiveness, certainly, the other thing is,
That we'll think, well I have to know everything, no you don't, I have to know everything, I have to have every answer, what if they ask me this, what if they ask me that, what if I say this, and they're like, alright, I believe in Jesus, tell me about dinosaurs, first of all, dinosaurs is not the route to Jesus, so they won't, that's not how that works, secondly, they may have some questions, and you can say, I don't know, let's talk about it, but you know enough, if you follow Jesus, you know enough,
You know he saved sinners, you know he saved you, we're going to talk more about that next week, specifically how to share, this news is too good, the stakes are too high, everyone who believes, will be saved, not everyone will believe, but some will, the news is too good, the stakes are too high, not everyone, everyone who believes, will be saved, not everyone, will believe, but some will, so I want to ask you this, if you become active, in sharing your faith, this becomes a normal part, of your life, that you're praying,
To the Lord, and saying, give me opportunities, lead me to people, who are receptive, help me to have windows, where I can share, how I would think about anxiety, how I think about the future, how I think about parenting, help me have windows, where I can tell people, how good Jesus is, let me ask you a question, how many times, could you tell people, about Jesus this next year, if you became active in this, if you committed to, this is too good, and I'm going to share it, because that's what we want to do first, we want to commit to why, we want to commit to,
Yes I'm going to do this, I want to have beautiful feet, they ain't so pretty right now, but I want them to be beautiful, by the end of next year, what's that look like, how many people can you share the gospel with, and I'm not saying, it's like a challenge to, to like we all got to pick a number, but what I'm saying is like, if you think about it, and you can share the gospel, with five people this next year, five people that you know, that you care about, that you're around, let me ask you a question, what if one believes, what if their eternity is changed, what if you end up being able, to share the gospel once a month, what if all 100 of our preachers do, and 1200 more people,
Get to hear how good Jesus is, isn't that a good year, isn't that 1200 people, who are blessed, with some really helpful information, sometimes we say, well they know I'm a Christian, so they'll ask, they don't think they need Jesus, because they don't know what he does, they don't know how good he is, Bianca's going to come back up, she's going to play the piano for a minute, we're going to take communion here in a second, but here's, I want us to consider for a second, I want you to sit and think for a second, that if you are a Christian, I want you to ask the Lord, am I ashamed of the gospel, where is that, what's causing that, and I want us to repent, I want us to ask him to help us,
And I want us to grow, to be active, in telling people about him, we're going to talk about how next week, but that we ought to, that why matters, now some of us, it's enough for you to know, that Jesus told us to, you didn't need today, you're like Jesus told me to, I'm going to, and that's a good reason, but it's such good news, and the stakes are too high, for us to not be active in this, so our prayers, we've been kind of setting some, goals for ourselves, and we'll talk about this, at the end of every sermon this year, at the end of every sermon this series, as we've set some goals for ourselves, our prayer,
Is that our church family, our community groups, that each of us would be active, in sharing our faith, because I want to guarantee you something, if you spend the rest of your days, telling people about Jesus, that some will believe, and everyone who believes, will be saved, nobody who calls on the name of the Lord, will be put to shame, it's worth it, that there are going to be days, without end, where we are with the Lord, and that means that everything, in this life is going to pale, in comparison, it's going to fade, except for Christ, who will shine in eternal glory, so I want us to ask, am I ashamed,
And I want us to pray, that we wouldn't be, and I want us to commit, I want you to take the time, to genuinely commit yourself, to the Lord today, and say I'm, no I'm going to, I'm going to share the gospel, I'm going to begin doing this, I'm going to figure out how, so that some, might believe, you don't have to be perfect, you're not going to have to do it excellently, that puts all the weight on you, that's not the gospel, it's Jesus who saves, but I'm going to do this, and we're going to figure out how together, and if you're in this room this morning, and you, have not, called on Jesus,
You've not run to him, with your debt, you still are trying, to get your resume together, your credit history, your pay stubs for a future, whatever you're going to do, that's nonsense, Jesus saves the ungodly, and I would ask you, to run to him, to him who loves, sinners, and redeems them, and welcomes them, and adopts them, justifies them, reconciles them to God, brings them into the family, and glorifies them, and his glory for eternity, all because he's great, and those who run to him, won't be put to shame,
So take a moment to pray, as she plays, she's going to play for a little while, and then when you're ready, we'll take communion, communion is a physical representation, of what Jesus has accomplished, for us on the cross, that he literally died, that he was buried, that he rose again, that his body was broken, his blood was shed, and that we as the church, remind ourselves, how much we need the gospel, and how good it is, so if you are a Christian, we would invite you, to take communion, if you are not a Christian, we would invite you, to trust in Jesus, but if you have not yet done that,
We would not invite you, to take communion, so we're going to pray, she's going to play, and in a moment, when you're ready, we'll take communion, Father, we ask that your Holy Spirit, would be active, right now, to lead us, that we might, genuinely commit ourselves, to you, to be, preachers, where we work, and where we live, and where we, play, that we might, share this good news, that we would not,
Keep it to ourselves, in those moments, that you would help us, to be unashamed, and we ask Lord, that some might, hear, believe, and call on you today, in Jesus name,
You're talking to him too intensely, like it's too much for a three year old, she said, I honestly think the way you're talking, you might, could make some grown men cry, and I was like, baby, you really think I can make a grown man cry? You know, just the sort of thing to say to me, she felt like I focused on the wrong part, so, but one of the things I've had to learn with him, is that like, it's not just that, like I, kids have parents for a reason, they don't, they don't have good sense, they need adults around them, there's a reason why they're not like, you know, I watched a TV show about iguanas,
And those things like, born and they can run off, and go do their own thing, your child can't, because it needs you there, making decisions for it, for a very long time, but one of the things I've realized, is as I correct him, and as I discipline him, one of the things I've started doing, is I just afterwards, I hug him, I tell him I love him, I get down on my knee, you know, the other day, he had gotten in trouble for something, and he got popped, and I said, you can go play, and he said, wait daddy, you forgot the part where you hug me,
And I was like, yeah, dude, come here, it's a good point, I'm glad you know the system, he wouldn't, I don't think he'd be like, what about the part where I get spanked, he probably wouldn't do that, but the hug, he remembers, and that's what that says, that we're reconciled, that he doesn't just say, okay, I've made some people even with me now, you're not guilty, it says, no, that he brings us in, that he loves us, that you're right with God, that when he thinks of you,
He thinks fondly of you, that he enjoys you, that you're reconciled, that your relationship with him is good, because of Jesus, do you know how good that is, he goes on, this is what we're covering in this section, but he also talks about in Romans 8, that we're adopted, that it's not just our relationships, right, but that he brings us into the family, other places talk about, that he does expiation, which means that he takes everything, that's ever happened to us, everything that would be on our record, he removes it, everything that's ever, all the sin that's been committed against us, all our shame, he cleans us, this news is too good,
For us to have even a twinge of shame, when it comes to telling somebody about it, it's too good, it's too eternally good, and too eternally urgent, it's too soul satisfying, that we would even trip, or have a hint of a, this propels us forward, and here's the thing, it's not just that it's too good, the stakes are too high, because if you don't have Christ, everything we just talked about, is flipped on its head, that when you stand before him, he does have a record of your guilt, you are not justified, you will not be declared not guilty, you will not leave that courtroom, that when you meet him, it will not be a moment of reconciliation, you will not get the hug, you do not get welcomed in,
You are not adopted, that you will stand before your judge, and your maker, on your own account, and it will not go well, and that rightfully, and justly, you will bear the wrath of God, because Jesus did not bear it for you, on the cross, and that is true, infinitely, eternally true, for everyone outside of Christ, now he died for the ungodly, which means that everybody is welcomed in, who will follow him, this news is too good, and the stakes are too high, for us to not spend our time, sharing it, for us to keep this to ourselves, you think about your life with Jesus, if you are in Christ,
And how you handle your life, when you are faced with anxiety, when you are overwhelmed, you see when you are talking to people at work, or you are talking to your neighbors, or you are just enjoying a friendship, with somebody who doesn't know Christ, they are going to talk to you about their life, and life is messy, and life is sinful, and life is hurtful, and life is fearful, and they are going to talk about, their fears for the future, and their fears for their children, and how difficult they are having, time in their marriage, and how anxious they are over money, or over how this job may not work out, or they have got a new boss, and they are not sure, if the new boss likes them, and they are going to talk about, all these things in life,
And the truth is, if you were walking through this, with yourself, or with someone in your community group, what would you be saying, I am dealing with anxiety, I am going to remind myself, that there is a God, who rules over the universe, that he is sovereign, that he tells me, that if I am fearful and anxious, I actually have no ability, to accomplish anything, but that he is good, and I can cast my cares on him, but I am worried about the future, if I really, you want to know, if I really get worried, about the future, you know you can pick up your Bible, and jump to the back end of Revelation, and see how it is going to shake out,
There is a part in there, where it says, everybody who loves Jesus, is gathered around the throne, in a place where there are no tears, and there is no suffering, and there is no night anymore, and there is no pain anymore, and that he welcomes them in, and that we get to spend eternity there, and sometimes, when you are fearful about the future, just go to the back end of Revelation, and say the future is going to be fine, for those who are in Christ, when you are worried about, being able to pay bills, don't you remind yourself, that Jesus looked at some people, and said, consider the ravens, they don't toil, they don't have barns, but they eat every day,
Look at the lilies, they don't sow, they don't spin, but they look better than Solomon ever did, you remind yourself, that you are going to be cared for, that he loves you, when you feel down, and shameful, and dirty, and all the enemy has been doing, is bringing up everything wrong, you've ever done, do you remind yourself, that one day, you'll be clothed in righteousness, that Jesus will stand in your place, that you will be justified, that you're holy, and blameless, and loved, and welcomed, and that he adores you, because he adores Christ,
And that Christ has swapped places with you, and then we have a co-worker, talking to us about their anxiety, and we have the shameful audacity, to say yeah, sounds awful, and to hold our hope, and not share it, when they talk about their fear, for their children, and their fear for their future, and we have the audacity, to say yeah, I deal with that too, but without telling them the cure, that there's a God, who works, and who redeems, who they can know, who loves them, who loves them, and they can know him, and he can work in them, and for them,
Because he's good, and we just say yeah, doctors are scary, this news is too good, and the stakes are too high, for us to not learn how to respond, and for us to not be active in this, turn to Romans 10, we're going to pick up in verse 8, Paul's talking about the gospel, he's referring to some Old Testament passages, and that's why he says, but what does it say, quote in Old Testament passage, the word is near you, in your mouth, and in your heart, that is, the word of faith, that we proclaim, so he's talking about the gospel there, this word is near you, it's in your mouth, and in your heart,
This gospel, this truth about Jesus, and who he is, he says, because if you confess with your mouth, that Jesus is Lord, and believe in your heart, that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved, for with the heart one believes, and is justified, and with the mouth one confesses, and is saved, for the scripture says, everyone who believes in him, will not be put to shame, there is no distinction between Jew and Greek, for the same Lord is the Lord of all, bestowing his riches on all who call on him, for everyone who calls on the name of the Lord, will be saved, there is not a person in the history of the world, who has cried out to God, and said,
I need you, I need your help, I can't do this on my own, that was put to shame, that that turned out to be a mistake, there is not a person in the history of the world, that has claimed, Jesus I love you, I need you, I need your help, I know I am a sinner, I know all I bring is debt, but I need you to redeem me, that was not, and will not be saved, by Christ, everyone, so this news is too good, and the stakes are too high, and everyone who believes, will be saved, everyone, think of the worst person you know, that person,
Will be saved, if they believe, and if it's you, if the only person you can think of, that you think is terrible is you, you will be saved, if you trust Jesus, he loves you enough to die for you, while you were a sinner, not waiting for you to clean yourself up, let's keep going, 14, how will they call on him, in whom they have not believed, so he says, all who call on the name of the Lord, will be saved, but he says, how are they going to call on him, if they don't believe in him, because if they don't know what he does, and how good he is, and what he's accomplished, they're not going to,
Nobody's going to call on him, you understand the logic there, and how are they to believe in him, and whom they have never heard, and how are they to hear, without someone preaching, now most of the time, when you think about preaching, you think about what's going on right now, what I'm doing this very moment, this is preaching, I don't know why you laughed, it is, but what he means there, is preaching is a broader term, than just what happens on a Sunday, in a church, church, it means to proclaim the gospel, to tell of the gospel, to tell the good news, of the gospel, and so it also happens at gas stations, and in dorm rooms,
That the gospel can be shared, and proclaimed anywhere, so he says, how will they call on him, if they haven't believed, and how are they going to believe, if they haven't heard, and how are they going to hear, without somebody preaching, and how are they going to preach, unless they are sent, those last two ones, are the ones that we get involved in, we preach, and we send, as Christians, that's what we're supposed to do, that's discipleship, that's teaching them to obey everything, is sending, is that we're proclaiming, we're training somebody up, and we're sending them out, to go proclaim this gospel,
And having them, having people be baptized, in the name of the son, is us proclaiming the gospel, so that we proclaim it, we preach it, we tell people about it, we see people baptized, we train them up, we send them out, this is why we always talk about, multiplying our groups, because we want to multiply our groups, because we want to see more people, in more areas, in more times, during the week, with more room at a table, to see people proclaiming the gospel, we want to see, a group in Irmo, and a group in Gaston, we want to see, this continue to move,
And more people be welcomed in, and more people invited in, because there's more people, in this city proclaiming the gospel, we got, right around 80, members, in our church family, people committed to membership, we've got around 100 adults, in groups, and our goal, our prayer, is that that would be 100 preachers, it'd be 80 preachers, people that are going around, and so unashamed, of this gospel, they're telling people about it, how are they to preach, unless they're sent, as it is written, how beautiful, are the feet,
Of those who preach, the good news, so that's, that's this, this idea, that as you travel, you know, your feet would get, dusty or dirty, or grosser, as you travel, as you go around, but he's saying, it's the opposite, that there's beautiful feet, that those who carry good news, those who bring you good news, have beautiful feet, say that to someone, next time they tell you good news, they tell you good news, and you just say, wow, those are some good looking feet,
But that's what he's saying, that we get to be that, that we get to carry good news, he says, but they have not all obeyed, the gospel, for Isaiah says, Lord, who has believed, what he's heard from us, so faith comes from hearing, and hearing through the word of Christ, so some people would say, well not everybody's going to believe, right, but some will, some will believe this news, you did, and how many people, after you believed the gospel, and Jesus began to change you, were like, wait, who?
Nah, do we need to go back, to your high school reunion, I'll go with you, so this person follows Jesus now, look at people's faces, some of you, you were the most unlikely candidate, but people will believe, this news is good, what Jesus does, and who he is, and what he's accomplished for us, there's a couple of things, that I think crop up, as soon as we start talking about, that we would go around, sharing the gospel, first there's this idea, that it would make us weird, I think it's worth being weird for, honestly, if the culture doesn't like, talking about Jesus,
They're confused about who he is, and as soon as they know him, they think it's a good idea, so okay, let's be okay with that one, let's roll past that, that little bit of shame, where it's like, I think people will think, I'm like a Jesus person, and I think that's a good way, to be defined, I think sometimes we go, okay, but I'm too busy, I have to make special time, for this, I'd have to try to figure out, like what, I got to start going to five points, and just yelling at people, you can, probably won't be the most effective, but people do believe that way sometimes,
Most of us, that's not that true though, you have a 40 hour week Job, or you go to school, or you live in a dorm, and you are surrounded by people, who need to know this news, some of you have children, or multiple children, and they don't know the gospel yet, and you ought to be active, in proclaiming the gospel to them, another thing that happens, is people think, well I have to be perfect, if I'm going to start telling people, Jesus, I got to get my act together, well first of all, it's not a bad idea, for you to start repenting of sin, and getting your act together, so I'm not against that idea, but the concept,
Of I have to be perfect, to share the gospel, is not a biblical concept, it's actually nonsense, because if the gospel, is that you're a really, well behaved person, you don't understand the gospel, the gospel is that you're ungodly, and that Jesus saves sinners, so that when I do something, really terrible, I had somebody say, well I can't share the gospel at work, because I get mad and cuss, like bro, the gospel is that Jesus saves sinners, not well behaved, perfect people, there are times that I do things, and people are like, man you do that, aren't you a preacher, I'm like yeah,
Jesus saves sinners, people who act like a complete fool, you saw me at Walmart with my son, yeah, sinners, people who don't do right, that's who he saves, that he works to redeem, those who are broken, so if you say, well if I do this, and it's not good or whatever, then I've messed it up, it's like no you haven't, the gospel is that Jesus is good, not that you are, that he saves people like you, do you know how refreshing, and hopeful that is to people, now continually change, and repent, and ask for forgiveness, certainly, the other thing is,
That we'll think, well I have to know everything, no you don't, I have to know everything, I have to have every answer, what if they ask me this, what if they ask me that, what if I say this, and they're like, alright, I believe in Jesus, tell me about dinosaurs, first of all, dinosaurs is not the route to Jesus, so they won't, that's not how that works, secondly, they may have some questions, and you can say, I don't know, let's talk about it, but you know enough, if you follow Jesus, you know enough,
You know he saved sinners, you know he saved you, we're going to talk more about that next week, specifically how to share, this news is too good, the stakes are too high, everyone who believes, will be saved, not everyone will believe, but some will, the news is too good, the stakes are too high, not everyone, everyone who believes, will be saved, not everyone, will believe, but some will, so I want to ask you this, if you become active, in sharing your faith, this becomes a normal part, of your life, that you're praying,
To the Lord, and saying, give me opportunities, lead me to people, who are receptive, help me to have windows, where I can share, how I would think about anxiety, how I think about the future, how I think about parenting, help me have windows, where I can tell people, how good Jesus is, let me ask you a question, how many times, could you tell people, about Jesus this next year, if you became active in this, if you committed to, this is too good, and I'm going to share it, because that's what we want to do first, we want to commit to why, we want to commit to,
Yes I'm going to do this, I want to have beautiful feet, they ain't so pretty right now, but I want them to be beautiful, by the end of next year, what's that look like, how many people can you share the gospel with, and I'm not saying, it's like a challenge to, to like we all got to pick a number, but what I'm saying is like, if you think about it, and you can share the gospel, with five people this next year, five people that you know, that you care about, that you're around, let me ask you a question, what if one believes, what if their eternity is changed, what if you end up being able, to share the gospel once a month, what if all 100 of our preachers do, and 1200 more people,
Get to hear how good Jesus is, isn't that a good year, isn't that 1200 people, who are blessed, with some really helpful information, sometimes we say, well they know I'm a Christian, so they'll ask, they don't think they need Jesus, because they don't know what he does, they don't know how good he is, Bianca's going to come back up, she's going to play the piano for a minute, we're going to take communion here in a second, but here's, I want us to consider for a second, I want you to sit and think for a second, that if you are a Christian, I want you to ask the Lord, am I ashamed of the gospel, where is that, what's causing that, and I want us to repent, I want us to ask him to help us,
And I want us to grow, to be active, in telling people about him, we're going to talk about how next week, but that we ought to, that why matters, now some of us, it's enough for you to know, that Jesus told us to, you didn't need today, you're like Jesus told me to, I'm going to, and that's a good reason, but it's such good news, and the stakes are too high, for us to not be active in this, so our prayers, we've been kind of setting some, goals for ourselves, and we'll talk about this, at the end of every sermon this year, at the end of every sermon this series, as we've set some goals for ourselves, our prayer,
Is that our church family, our community groups, that each of us would be active, in sharing our faith, because I want to guarantee you something, if you spend the rest of your days, telling people about Jesus, that some will believe, and everyone who believes, will be saved, nobody who calls on the name of the Lord, will be put to shame, it's worth it, that there are going to be days, without end, where we are with the Lord, and that means that everything, in this life is going to pale, in comparison, it's going to fade, except for Christ, who will shine in eternal glory, so I want us to ask, am I ashamed,
And I want us to pray, that we wouldn't be, and I want us to commit, I want you to take the time, to genuinely commit yourself, to the Lord today, and say I'm, no I'm going to, I'm going to share the gospel, I'm going to begin doing this, I'm going to figure out how, so that some, might believe, you don't have to be perfect, you're not going to have to do it excellently, that puts all the weight on you, that's not the gospel, it's Jesus who saves, but I'm going to do this, and we're going to figure out how together, and if you're in this room this morning, and you, have not, called on Jesus,
You've not run to him, with your debt, you still are trying, to get your resume together, your credit history, your pay stubs for a future, whatever you're going to do, that's nonsense, Jesus saves the ungodly, and I would ask you, to run to him, to him who loves, sinners, and redeems them, and welcomes them, and adopts them, justifies them, reconciles them to God, brings them into the family, and glorifies them, and his glory for eternity, all because he's great, and those who run to him, won't be put to shame,
So take a moment to pray, as she plays, she's going to play for a little while, and then when you're ready, we'll take communion, communion is a physical representation, of what Jesus has accomplished, for us on the cross, that he literally died, that he was buried, that he rose again, that his body was broken, his blood was shed, and that we as the church, remind ourselves, how much we need the gospel, and how good it is, so if you are a Christian, we would invite you, to take communion, if you are not a Christian, we would invite you, to trust in Jesus, but if you have not yet done that,
We would not invite you, to take communion, so we're going to pray, she's going to play, and in a moment, when you're ready, we'll take communion, Father, we ask that your Holy Spirit, would be active, right now, to lead us, that we might, genuinely commit ourselves, to you, to be, preachers, where we work, and where we live, and where we, play, that we might, share this good news, that we would not,
Keep it to ourselves, in those moments, that you would help us, to be unashamed, and we ask Lord, that some might, hear, believe, and call on you today, in Jesus name,
Multiply
Transcript
This is an exciting time for me. I know that some of you don't get as excited about New Year's. I know that some of you, I've seen the jokes. Some of you don't stay up to watch the ball drop at New Year's Eve. Some of you aren't the biggest fan of New Year's resolutions. I get it.
It's okay. I am. I love New Year's. It is one of my favorite holidays. It's a big deal for our household. Every year we do a New Year's Eve party at our house.
This year our group, which is the Grove group and the Kitty Wake group, got to come together. And we got to watch the ball drop together. It was exciting. The next day I got to go hunting and I got to spend some time in thinking through New Year's resolutions. Because I like them. I value them.
I have personal resolutions. How I want to grow in my faith. How I want to grow as a father. How I want to grow as a husband. I have pastoral resolutions. And how I want to grow in caring for our church.
How to serve here better. How to grow in preaching. I have professional resolutions. Because I also do real estate. So how I want to grow in that.
And I hold on to those. I'm one of the few. I just like it. It's measurable stuff for me that I can look at throughout the year. I get really excited. Which is good.
Because over the last three months, all four of us pastors have been sitting together, praying, have been studying the scriptures, have been reading books, have been thinking through one of the ways that we can grow in 2019. And one of the things that we want to grow in is in multiplying and making disciples. So we spent the last three months preparing for this. And that's why we have a series that we are doing called Multiply. We're going to take the next five weeks to walk through this as a church family. We'll get back to Genesis when we get done with this series.
But we want to grow in this. And today we're going to be in Matthew 28, verses 16 through 20 on page 487. And the blue Bibles around you. If you don't have a Bible at home, please take that. That's our gift to you. We want you to be able to have a Bible that you can read.
This is called the Great Commission. For centuries, that's what this has been called. This is Jesus commissioning out the church and the start of the church. So we're going to be in this today. And what today is going to look like is just a big picture of what it looks like to make disciples. We want to see the big kind of picture of what Jesus is calling us to.
I want us to see it, get excited about it as we lean into 2019. And then Chet, over the next four weeks, is going to give some more practical handles how we walk this out, how we make disciples. But today we're just going to go big picture. So go ahead and flip there. We'll get to it in a moment. One of the most successful philanthropic movements that I've ever seen was the Ice Bucket Challenge.
Y'all remember that? Remember how big of a deal that was in 2014? For like a month, that's all you saw. It was a big deal and it was so simple. I would have loved to have been in the pitch room when they kicked this idea off. This was designed to raise money for ALS and awareness for ALS research.
I would have loved to have seen it when someone said, Hey, I got an idea. How about we get people to take buckets of ice water and they'll dump it on their friends. And then their friends will challenge other people. It'll be great. Someone at some point said, Okay, sure. Yeah, let's run with it.
What are we going to call it? The Ice Bucket Challenge. Let's hashtag that. It's going to be trendy. And it grew. Something as simple as that.
A few people challenged another. A few people challenged another. All of a sudden it swept across the globe. And it raised over $115 million in a little over a month. There's been no other movement that's happened like that. I mean, it had real effects.
And the year after that, they saw real impact in research and how this impacted ALS research. It was a big deal. And people have looked at this and they've studied this and they've wondered, How did they do it? How did they get something to go so viral? How did they get something to be so widespread? And when you look at it, it was very simple.
If you get people excited about something, that they're going to own it, so much so that they take a bucket of ice water and pour it on their heads, and then you get them to challenge others, what happens is you're not adding people to your cause, you're multiplying. You can go from one and they challenge three other people, and then those three people do it and they challenge three other people, and you've gone from one to three to nine, and then you get those nine to challenge three other people, you've gone from one to three to nine to 27, and then you keep going exponential growth to 81. I don't math much farther than that. But it grew so widespread, and that is because multiplication, exponential growth, is greater than addition, and that is not a new idea.
And we go back to how the early church, this is how it began. It was a multiplication movement that changed the world. A few disciples who owned this and were commissioned out, and it changed the world. So we're going to take the next five weeks looking at through this, and as we walk through the Great Commission today, what we're going to see is that Jesus, he chose a few ordinary people to invest in them that they might impact many and might change the world. So we're going to see it as we walk in.
I want to pray, and then we will dive in. And God, I'm so thankful that we get to start this year by looking at the Great Commission. I'm so thankful that you call us to join you in mission. God, I pray that you would help us see this, the beauty of it, the glory of it, and the simplicity of it, and that we would leave here today encouraged by it. In Jesus' name, amen. All right, so let's walk through these first two verses.
It says, Now the eleven disciples went to Galilee, to the mountain which Jesus had directed them, and when they saw him, they worshipped him, but some doubted. Now this is after a bunch of events have happened. So this is after Judas betrays Jesus. That's what's being mentioned here when it says the eleven. That's what's being brought to mind. There was twelve, but Judas betrays Jesus.
Now there's eleven. This is after Jesus goes to the cross, taking on our sins, our punishment. This is after he goes to the tomb, where he conquers death at the resurrection. He appears to the women at the tomb. Then he appears to the disciples in the upper room.
And then he directs them to go. Go to this mountain. We don't know which specific mountain it was in Galilee. There's some scholars that they think it may have been where the Sermon on the Mount was. We don't really know, but it's significant for them for this moment. So they show up, and when they get there, the text tells us that some doubted.
Now we don't really know who was doubting. We don't really know what went into their doubts. But Jesus sees their doubting. And he intentionally addresses this great commission with that in mind. So he sees their doubting, and he says in verse 18, he says, All right, so there's a lot going on in this passage.
Let's walk through it bit by bit. He starts off this great commission addressing some of their doubts. Because when he says, All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. I want you to picture this. They're on a mountain. And Jesus is saying, Do you see the heavens?
Do you see the earth? I am king over all of it. God the Father has given me authority from the heavens where you see the sun, the moon, and the stars, and the galaxies, all the way down to all of creation, as far as you can see, from galaxies to atoms. I am king. I am the sovereign ruler over the universe. He makes it clear that he is in control.
And before he delivers this commission, he delivers this special mission that they're going to take part in, he makes that abundantly clear. And that is a great encouragement. That the king of the universe is behind this mission. It's like the game is rigged in our favor. It's kind of like, it's a little bit like, Bama football. I know.
Some of y'all tomorrow, like, no, it's not going to be. Maybe. You might be right. But it's kind of like Bama football. They've got the best coach. They've got the best players.
They just keep winning. It's obnoxious. We're all tired of it. But the game is rigged. It's so much more so than that, man. We have a rigged game.
The king of the universe stands behind us. And that's the beauty of this, is that as he delivers this commission to the disciples, it also affects everyone who believes in Jesus. All of us have this authority that stands behind us, the sovereign ruler of the universe. And this is huge. Because here's the deal, man. When we start talking about making disciples, when we start talking about sharing the gospel, we start talking about multiplication and reaching people, man, I get it.
This brings up doubts for some of us. This brings up doubts for many of us. Doubting our abilities to do this. What am I going to say when it comes to a situation where I'm going to share the gospel? What's going to come out? There's some anxiety that goes into that.
And I love when Jesus teaches in the gospels, he says, specifically when he's talking about persecution, he says, when the time comes, the Holy Spirit will give you the words. This is the king who stands behind us. He is sovereign. He is the ruler. Which means he's also sovereign over salvation. And that frees us up.
Because hear this, we don't change hearts. We don't bring repentance. That's the work of the Holy Spirit. And we're just called to be faithful in this. So all this is brought into this.
That we, our main goal here, the only main way we can mess this up is not being faithful. That we are just called to be faithful in declaring the good news in this commission. So all that authority gets brought into here when he says, go therefore and make disciples of all nations. So let me walk through this piece word by word. The word therefore there is important. Because it links all the authority that he just established.
Which is a great comfort for us. He brings all of that in to this command. So it is a comfort, absolutely. But it's also a responsibility. And the same way that a general gives orders. And the same way that a coach calls the play.
There's some responsibility and some weightiness that's brought to it. So it is a comfort, but it's also weighty. So therefore, go. Go. Now, in college, I did a thesis, which is a capstone. I spent a whole semester researching a topic.
And I was going to present this paper and have to defend it before my professors and before my peers. And I chose this passage. And I specifically chose the word go. Go. I wanted to focus in on this. And I felt pretty good about myself.
I was like, you know what? It doesn't mean go. It means as you go. So I did this whole big thesis on it. This whole big explaining how the Greek actually says as you go. And I had professors that were like, yeah, that's really good.
I had peers that were like, good Job. I had pats on the back. I made an A. And I felt like I had some swagger. Because I looked at all the English translations out there. Every one of them that said go and said, no, I've discovered it.
It is different. And I get to seminary. And in one of my first Greek syntax classes, my professor goes, hey, you know, sometimes knowing a little bit of Greek is dangerous. Let me give you an example. Could have chosen any example he wanted. He said, you know how some people translate the Great Commission as as you go?
I got excited. I said, yeah, come on. I know all about this. He said, yeah, well, for the next 15 minutes, he just absolutely dismantled my whole semester's work of thesis. But all the work I had done.
I was like, yep. I guess knowing a little bit. It's not really good for you. If all the English translations say go, it means go. That's the force. It's meant you go.
So if you've ever heard that, no. Trust me, you don't have to go through the pain that I did. It means go. And that doesn't necessarily mean you always have to go across the world. For some of you, if you lean in to the Holy Spirit and he reveals to you that it's not going across the world, it definitely means going across the street. It definitely means going across the office.
It means going and reaching people. But for some of you, obedience to the Lord is going across the world and planting churches amongst unreached people groups. The forces go, but that's not the main point, the main thrust of this passage. When it says make disciples, that's it. That's the meat. That's the main verb of this passage that everything else kind of surrounds it by.
It is the focal point. It is make disciples. Disciple. And what Jesus just did was he took a word, disciple. All right?
And he made it a verb. Because in that language, there's not really a way to do that. He just said, discipleize. And the same way that we take Google, which is a noun, which is just a name, and we made it into a verb by Googling stuff. That's exactly what he just did. He verbalized and said, do this.
Make disciples. Disciple's. So in order for us to understand this, we need to clearly state what a disciple is. A disciple is a learner. It's a student. It's an apprentice.
That's what's being implied here. And it's not just a learner or a student or apprentice in general. It means an apprentice under somebody else. You see, this was common in first century Judaism. When a great rabbi would be raised up and they would come and people would hear them preaching, they would have crowds that would come and hear them. That's what happened with John the Baptist.
And John the Baptist chose disciples. He chose apprentices. And the picture of what it would look like is they would have a rabbi that they would learn from, that they would literally sit at the feet of their teaching, collecting the dust from their sandals, learning, growing in wisdom, and becoming just like them. That's why Paul says in 1 Corinthians 11, he says, imitate me as I imitate Christ. Christ, the picture there is that you're so much learning and growing, you're imitating him as you're imitating all the way back to Jesus. So that's what a disciple is.
It's someone who's learning everything they can, soaking it up. And he says, make those. Make disciples. And he says, of all nations. Now, I don't have a lot of time to spend on this today. We did do a lot of this in our gift series.
But all nations means all people groups. Everywhere. Every tribe. Every tongue. Every nation. That we get to participate.
And we got to do this in our gift project. We got to raise thousands of dollars to help a church plant all the way across the world in Menya, Egypt. Because we want to see disciples be made of all people groups everywhere. Go, therefore, make disciples of all nations. And then we get two big phrases. So, make disciples, that's the meat.
These two big phrases that come out of this. This is the seasoning. This is the juices. This is helping us understand what make disciples means. He says, baptizing them in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit. And he says, teaching them to observe all that I've commanded them.
So let's sit in this first part. Baptize in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit. Baptism happens because someone placed their faith in Jesus. And they were changed by him. And that only happens when people go and share the gospel. That's what Romans 10 teaches.
That faith comes by hearing the word of God. So what's being implied in this passage, what's being implied in baptism, is that we would go and we would share the good news. That we go to our neighbors, to our friends, to our co-workers, to people that we know, to family, and we would declare that Jesus is Lord. We would tell them that he is better than everything else. And that God willing, they would believe and trust in him. And they would stand in a baptism pool.
And we would say, who is your Lord and Savior? And they would say, Jesus. And we'd say, we baptize you in the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. And that we'd celebrate knowing that Jesus changed lives. That that is a big part of making disciples. That we get to go and we get to declare who Jesus is to those who don't know him.
The second big part is teaching them to observe all that I have commanded. Now the word observe there isn't always the most helpful. Because we observe Christopher Columbus Day. I mean, some people do. Like bankers. I don't.
I know most of y'all are working. I guess that doesn't help us complete the picture. What's being lost in the word observe is also keep. It's to keep. It's to obey. That we would keep, obey all that Jesus has commanded.
And when it says, all that I have commanded you. Man, that is where this really gets interesting. Because that encompasses everything. All of the ministry from the last three years that he has done with the disciples. This is the part of the story. We're at the end of it.
It's kind of like Pulp Fiction or Titanic. It starts with the end of the story. And you've got to go back to the beginning. And see the rest of the story. Or, if you watch Bird Box. Start at the end.
And then rudely move between the beginning, the middle, and the end. With no grace at all. That was for three of you that watched that movie. I thought it was like 45 million. But y'all didn't get on Netflix.
That's fair. It's good. But this is the part of the story where we've got to go back to the beginning. We've got to run through the middle. We've got to understand what's happening here. We've got to understand the ministry that Jesus does with his disciples.
Because that is going to complete the picture for us. As we understand what make disciples means. So you go back through how Jesus starts his ministry. He starts with preaching in Matthew 4. He starts preaching that the kingdom of God has come. And when he starts preaching that the kingdom has come.
People get excited. He starts having crowds that surround him. And they start wondering more about this. That a great rabbi is being raised up. He's preaching the kingdom. And then they're anticipating at this point he's probably going to choose disciples.
Because this is what rabbis do. So they're waiting for it. And then he chooses his first disciples. He chooses fishermen from Galilee. Now, I know that that gets lost on us a little bit. There's a cultural difference here in understanding this.
But the equivalent of that is choosing chicken farmers from Saluda. That's it. That it's, I mean, blue collar work. My best friend from high school and college, he grew up in a chicken farm. I thought it smelled, he said it smells like money. It's blue collar work.
And Saluda, just like Galilee, is the sticks. It's the middle of nowhere. And I can say that because I went to school in Saluda. Those are my people. But it's, people are anticipating who are you going to choose.
And he chooses fishermen from Galilee. It's like conventional wisdom says you would have chosen the biggest and the brightest and the best. Like, why did he choose? You would have expected this montage of all these different people. Similar like in Ocean's Eleven when Danny Ocean starts choosing all of his, all of the criminals that are going to rob the Bellagio's vault together. He chooses like a guy who can do all kinds of jumping and all around.
Another guy that can disarm stuff. Another guy, all these really gifted criminals. And then Matt Damon. Do you guys really know what his point in the movie is? But I guess he did something.
But he chooses all these gifted people. And that's what this is supposed to look like. That's what culture is expecting here. They're thinking he's going to choose the evangelists and the preachers and the movers and the shakers and all the important people in society. And he chooses fishermen. They're not super educated.
They're not super elite. They are blue collar. And the rest of the society doesn't uphold them. And then he goes on and chooses more fishermen. And then he chooses a tax collector who, I mean, they're like the bottom social rung of society. Like everyone hates them.
They're traitors. They're the worst. Then he chooses to sell it. Think conspiracy theorists who's trying to overthrow the government. It's kind of weird. And then we don't even know who the rest of the disciples were.
I don't know what Bartholomew did. He could have been a fisherman. He could have been doing anything. We don't really know. And that's the point. They were of no notoriety.
The rest of the world didn't uphold them and say, man, they are awesome. And that is good news for us because God chooses ordinary people of no social, no worldly importance to do extraordinary things. That's good news for you. And that's good news for me. That's good news for our church. Because y'all, we're ordinary people.
I know that someone back in the day said, you're extraordinary. Yeah, you're made in God's image. That is extraordinary. Outside of that, we're fairly ordinary. We just are. My whole life, listen, own it.
My whole life is taking an ounce of talent and maximizing that through hard work and a few good breaks. Like I have the most average white guy look possible. Like there's nothing remarkable about me. I'm like, you find the emoticom for a bearded white guy and that is me. Which is cool because if I ever get in a bind, the FBI comes for me. I'll just show up to a Dave Matthews concert, blend in.
You will never find me again. And what I love is that I'm not the only one. And that's why I love our church is that you guys are ordinary too. You guys, we are a bunch of ordinary people that God has chosen to do extraordinary things here in Columbia. That we might see disciples be made here. God chooses the ordinary to do the extraordinary.
And he intentionally chooses these ordinary disciples and he pours into them. For three years, he invests in them. He walks them through the scriptures and teaches them from the scriptures. Showing them the beauty and the wonder and the mystery and the glory of God's word and its importance in their lives. He models what prayer is for them. Teaching them to pray.
He says, don't pray like the Pharisees who pray so that everyone else can see them. Don't pray like the pagans who just say all kinds of words. Pray like this. Our Father who art in heaven, who lives in heaven. Hallowed be thy name. Holy is your name.
He makes it so simple. There are moments when Jesus has big ministry moments where he heals lots of people. Where he feeds lots of people. And then the next moment you see he gets away with his disciples. And then he even steps away from them. And he gets to be before the Father in prayer and solitude.
He models the importance of prayer. He models the importance of servitude. Focus on serving the least of these. He focuses on how the last will be first. He washes their feet. Their stinky first century sandal wearing, collecting dung and dirt feet.
He models the perfect embodiment of service and love. Over the next three years he invests in them. Showing them how to be a follower of him in everyday life. The focus of Jesus' ministry. Hear this. Is the disciples.
They're the main focus of his ministry. People might push back on that. And they say, wait, wait, wait, wait. He did real public things. He preached. He had big followings.
He healed lots of people. It was all public. And I'd say, yes, absolutely it was. But who is front and center for all of that? If you think that his main part of his ministry was public ministry, you need to go back and you need to read the Gospels. You need to go back to Matthew 4 after he calls the disciples.
In Matthew 5 through 7 is the Sermon on the Mount. The Sermon on the Mount doesn't say he had big crowds and they all came around. And then he started teaching them. It starts with he taught the disciples. They're the main part of his teaching. The main focus of his teaching.
When in Matthew 8 through 9 he starts doing these big miracles, guess who's there? The disciples. In Matthew 10 when he commissions out the first missionaries to go and declare that the kingdom of God is coming, guess who the first ones are? It's the disciples. And the rest of the book of Matthew, the rest of the Gospels is Jesus doing big public things and serving and teaching. But his disciples are there for all of it.
Because they are the main focus of his ministry. That he would pour into this few. And even more so than the 12, he poured into select three. He poured into Peter, James, and John intentionally investing in a few that they may impact many. So why did Jesus invest the majority of his time in these disciples?
It is because they were the ones that were going to start this multiplication movement. They were the ones that were going to start and lead the church. They were the ones that were going to make disciples. This is all what is implied when he says, observe all that I have commanded. It is the pattern of ministry that he did with them for three years. That they might go and do this.
That is discipleship. That's the plan. That is what is implied here. And it shows up all throughout the rest of the New Testament. You see shades of it. You see it in the book of Acts as the church starts to grow.
One of my favorite stories in the book of Acts is in Antioch. When the city of Antioch explodes with the Gospel. It is significant because this is the city that Paul and Barnabas are sent from to take the Gospel all over Europe. But in the city of Antioch it says, in 1421 it says, They preached the Gospel in that city and won a large number of disciples. And the word for won a large number of disciples is the same word that we get in the Great Commission for make disciples. We see this keep showing up.
We see this in a really cool way when Paul in 1 Corinthians 4 starts talking about spiritual family. Paul never had kids. He never had a wife. But he discipled people. And he considered them to be spiritual children. And that he was their spiritual father.
And we see a uniqueness in that in biblical family and the discipleship relationships that he had. We see this in 2 Timothy 2.2 when it says, And what you have heard from me in the presence of many witnesses, entrust to faithful men who will be able to teach others also. That you would take what you have learned and you would entrust it to others. We see this in the discipleship relationship that Paul had with Timothy, with Titus, with Luke. We see it in the discipleship relationship that Peter had with John Mark. John Mark being the one who wrote the Gospel of Mark.
Y'all, we are called to this kind of discipleship. This intentional process of investing in a few that they may impact many. And y'all, it is a beautiful thing when you get to see this happen. Let me walk through really quickly what this has looked like in my story. Years ago, I became a Christian when I was 17. I was excited about Jesus.
And then I went to college, still excited, but didn't really know a whole lot. Early on in my first semester, I was in an intramural softball game. And we lost. And I was walking off the field and there's another guy there. And he was from the other team. And he started talking to me.
And I was like, oh, cool, this guy's a Christian. So we started talking. His name was Andrew Hawkins. We called him A-Hawk. We'll put this up on the screen. So A-Hawk, we go to dinner.
And his plan was to share the Gospel with me. And then I was like, oh, no, no, I believe this, man. It seems like you know a lot. It'd be great if you would teach me because I don't. I'm excited. But I don't really know some of the things that you're talking about.
And for the next two years, he discipled me. He spent time with me. We'd go out in the woods on some hunting property and he'd show me how to study the Bible. Show me how to read it. Show me the importance and the beauty of God's Word. That he would show me what it looked like to pray.
Because I didn't really have handles for that. He would show me what an intentional prayer life looks like. He would show me how to share the Gospel. Because I didn't know how to share my faith. And we'd go out and I'd see him share the Gospel with other people. And I'd learn.
He showed me how to love others. He spent two years investing in me. And then he graduated. And he said, you need to do the same thing with others. This is what making disciples looks like. So then the next two years of college, there's three specific people that I've got to spend some time with.
The first one was a guy named Brent Thompson. Brent was a guy who came to college and he was lost looking for significance and meaning and everything else. So we spent time with him. We shared the Gospel with him. And then finally Brent believed. And it changed his world.
We started walking with him. I started doing the same thing that I learned from Ahog. Reading the Bible. Showing the importance of prayer. Started walking with him. Ended up transferring.
The next semester he went off to Texas. He still lives there today. Still following Jesus. I got to spend time with another guy named Will Lewis. Will, same kind of story. Came to college.
Didn't believe in Jesus. A few of us shared the Gospel with him. He finally placed his faith in Jesus. And I still catch up with Will from time to time. He lives in Tennessee. He's still following Jesus.
And then there was one other person. His name's Brian Trail. Brian was all over the map. We couldn't peg him. He was in my community group. We shared with him.
I was like, I don't know if he's getting this or not. And then I graduated. And like a year later, I see him. I'm like, dude, what's up, man? He's like, dude, I believe in God now. I'm going to believe in Jesus.
I was like, that's awesome. I didn't know. Because it was hard to tell. He's like, no, man, I believe this. And I'm actually going to be a part of a college ministry now where I'm going to do this. Where I'm going to make disciples.
And he still does today. He's investing in students with the hope that he would invest in a few and impact many. And that's not even the real, that's not even close to the complete story. Because if you work backwards, Ahok had someone who poured into him. And his name was Devin. Devin did the same stuff that Ahok did with me that I got to do with Brian.
He read the Bible with him. He taught him how to study the Word. He taught him how to pray. And Devin is still doing this. He does this in North Carolina. And there was someone else that poured into Devin.
And his name was Ben. And Ben has done this for over a decade. Investing in a few that he might impact many. There's a long line of people that believe in Jesus. Because he invested his life into this. And Ben's not even the full story.
There's a guy named G. Joe that poured into him. And Anna and I, as we've been praying the last few months. As we've been thinking through. Who are some of the best disciple makers we've ever met? Man, G.
Joe Joseph is one of them. He has poured into. I would be willing to bet that at this point, after 20 years of ministry, he has poured into tens. He has poured into hundreds. Who have poured into thousands. He has had an impact.
And G. Joe is a 5'2 Indian guy. I mean, he's not the most relatable person in the world. But he relates to basketball players. He relates to everyone in between. He has invested in so many people.
He has leveraged his life to see a multiplication movement come out of it. One, that he will never see the end of it. Until one day he stands before the presence of Jesus. And there will be thousands of people who are there worshipping the king. Because he was faithful to go and make disciples. This is the vision of what making disciples looks like.
And this is just a small piece of the story. That generations of believers can be impacted by the gospel. When we multiply disciples. I want us to dream. What can this look like in our groups? What can this look like?
Some of the people that you have been building relationships with. Some of the people that you've been getting to know in your work. In your neighborhood. What if this year in 2019. You get to share the gospel with them. And they believe.
And they trust in Jesus. And they start coming to group. And they start learning. And you take some intentional time to walk them through the Bible. Teaching them what the Bible. How to study the Bible.
How to love the Bible. That you get to spend some intentional time with them. Teaching them what it looks like to pray. Teaching them what it looks like to serve. They get plugged in here. And they're serving.
And they're growing. Teaching what it looks like to steward their finances. All of this. And while this is going on. Over the next few years. They do the same thing.
They share the gospel with somebody else. Who believes and trusts in Jesus. And as you're pouring into them. They're pouring in to others. And then we start doing this. And there's a few people.
Let's just say there's three people over the next few years. That we start pouring into. And groups start multiplying all across this city. And then one becomes three. Becomes nine. Becomes 27.
Becomes 81. And we impact thousands. And what if in our church we do this? What if we invest in a few. And we see that many. That we don't even get to see the full effect of it.
That down the line there are people in the presence of God. That we get to worship with for the next thousand years. What could we resolve to do in 2019? This better than this. What has more eternal significance than this? This is exciting.
This is something that stirs our souls. That we get to participate in God on mission. To see him change this city. But I get it. It's also intimidating. It can be a little bit anxious.
It can be a little bit nervous. And that is why I love how Jesus completes this commission. He ends it by saying. And behold. I am with you always. To the end of the age.
I am so encouraged. By how he closes this out. That Jesus never forsakes us. That he's with us to the end. That when we get a little bit anxious about this. A little bit anxious about sharing the gospel.
He is with us. That when we start doing this. And people trust in Jesus. What is inevitably going to happen. What we have seen happen in our church. Is that people get spiritually attacked for it.
That the enemy comes for it. And what he reminds us is. Is that when we are kicking down hell's door. And seeing people be robbed out of the kingdom of darkness. And trust in Jesus. In the midst of those attacks.
He is not going to leave us. He is not going to forsake us. He is forever going to be with us. That when we have our own doubts. And our own frustrations. And our own difficult seasons.
That we are walking through. And we are still trying to do this. Y'all. He is never going to leave us. He is never going to forsake us. He is with us all the way to the end.
That is the beauty of what happened. When the Holy Spirit came upon the church. He sealed us in faith. And he promised. He is never going to let us go. He is with us to the end.
So y'all. Let's do this. In 2019. Let's do this. Let's see Jesus go to work.
In a multiplication movement. That thousands of years from now. We will be worshipping in the presence of Jesus. Meeting people that we have never even met before. That came to Christ. Because we share the gospel of the co-worker this year.
And pour it into them. That we invest in a few. That we might impact many. Matt is going to come up. And as we take communion today.
The Joy of Christmas
Transcript
Good morning. My name is Spencer. I'm one of the pastors here with Mill City Church. This is our Christmas gathering. This is the time where we get to, it's the last Sunday of the year we get to meet, so we get to celebrate the coming of Jesus and all the joy that comes with that, all the anticipation and excitement that comes with that. It's the one Sunday I can bust out a bright red sweater, and it's okay.
It's not over the top. So we're going to be in Matthew 2 today, which is on page 471 in your blue Bibles. If you don't have a Bible at home, please take that. That's our gift to you. We want you to have a Bible that you can read at home, but we're going to be in Matthew 2. And today we're going to look at the story of the wise men, and we're going to see something a little bit different.
I think oftentimes we're very familiar with this story, but I want to expand a little bit. I want us to see a little bit how this story fits in the bigger picture of Jesus and how this story points forward. But before we do that, I want to set it up a little bit. I want to walk through a little bit of Jesus' birth story, starting in Matthew 1, verses 18 through 25. It says, Now the birth of Jesus Christ took place in this way. When his mother Mary had been betrothed to Joseph, before they came together, she was found to be with child from the Holy Spirit.
And her husband Joseph, being a just man and unwilling to put her to shame, resolved to divorce her quietly. But as he considered these things, behold, an angel of the Lord appeared to him in a dream, saying, Joseph, son of David, do not fear to take Mary as your wife, for that which is conceived in her is from the Holy Spirit. She will bear a son, and you shall call his name Jesus, for he will save his people from their sins. All this took place to fulfill what the Lord had spoken by the prophet. Behold, the virgin shall conceive and bear a son, and they shall call his name Emmanuel, which means God with us.
When Joseph woke from sleep, he did as the angel the Lord commanded him. He took his wife, but knew her not until she had given birth to a son, and he called his name Jesus. In the first two chapters of Matthew, God gives us the intro story to Jesus. And good introductions that we see here, we see in the Gospels, and they point forward to the rest of the story. It's God tipping his hand a little bit of where the story is going, because good introductions do that. I think it's one of the greatest movies that's ever been made, The Dark Knight, which is Christopher Nolan's, it's his magnum opus, it's his greatest, I think his greatest achievement.
And it's brilliant. In the intro scene, there is stuff in it that points forward to the rest of the story. The first scene's a bank robbery, which is the Joker, it's his M.O., he robs banks, and in this bank robbery, each of the people who are involved in the bank robbery are wearing clown masks. It's pointing forward, this is the Joker who is involved here. And as this is happening, the music that sets the tone for this, it really sets the tone for the rest of the film, is unnerving. It's meant to put you a little bit on edge, which is pointing to the madness that is the Joker.
And as this bank robbery unfolds, each of the characters starts to build up the legend of the Joker, starts to tell more about him, you're starting to see more of who this character is going to be. And in this bank robbery, it's genius, it's a mastermind plot, but it's also chaotic. And that's because the Joker is an agent of chaos, as he is a genius. And finally, the big build-up to when you finally see the Joker, he takes off his mask, and his face is even more insane than the mask. And he says, I believe that whatever doesn't kill you makes you stranger. And that's it, like it hooks you.
This man is a madman, he is insane, and this movie is going to be just like this. And it's genius how it points forward, because that's what good introductions do. They point forward in the story, and that's what we get in the Gospels. That's what we get as we walk through Matthew 1, the birth story. It tells us that Jesus was born of a virgin, which means this baby, this son, is different than every other child that has come into this world. That he has set apart.
There's something unique about him that says he will be called Emmanuel, which means God with us. That this is the God-man. This is the God-child, God in human form, that has come to dwell amongst men. It says that he will save the people from their sins. That this is going somewhere. That he is going to save the people.
It's pointing forward to the cross. And then, and then we get to Matthew 2. When we look at Matthew 2 and this story that we're so familiar with, it's actually pointing forward to a bigger part of the story. So we're going to zoom in on this and catch a glimpse of what God is doing here in this story as the wise men come and visit Jesus. And ultimately, we're going to see this story is hope-filled. This story is joyful for all of us that follow Jesus.
And we'll get to see that in this season as well. So let me pray, and then we'll dive into the story. God, I'm so thankful that you came, that in this season we get to celebrate the joy of your coming. God, I pray that you would help us see that. You would help us feel that as we walk through this story. We ask this in Jesus' name.
Amen. Alright, starting in verse 1 and 2. Now after Jesus was born in Bethlehem of Judea in the days of Herod the king, behold, wise men from the east came to Jerusalem saying, Where is he who has been born king of the Jews? For we saw his star when it rose, and I've come to worship him. Now, there's a lot going on here in these first couple of verses. And a lot of it, honestly, is informed by nativity tradition.
By our understanding of the nativity. The nativity scenes, we're all very familiar with them. That tradition helps inform this. And what I want to do this morning is I want to throw a little bit of a wrench in that tradition. It's going to mess up your nativity scene just a little bit. It's going to be a little bit painful, but it'll be good.
Because it's helpful to know things even if we don't understand them. Recently, this happened to me. For 20 years, I have worn contacts. And then recently, a few weeks ago, I had one of those days that it just wasn't fitting right, and I was messing with it, and I was trying to get it to submit to my eye, and finally, and you know how that, even if you don't wear contacts, you know having something on your eye, it drives you insane. But I was like, I've had days like this.
This happens. I'm going to make it work. Came into the office here, and then Chet goes, hey man, I see that you've been struggling this morning. Maybe, maybe you put it in backwards. To which I said, no Chet, you can put contacts in any way you want. They're reversible.
And he said, no. They're really not. There's only one way to put it in. I was like, no, I've worn contacts for 20 years, Chet. I think I know how to put a contact. He's like, I don't think you really do.
I'm like, says who? He says everyone. Optometrists, the internet. So finally, we went to Google. And I learned a thing. Contacts are not reversible.
That for 20 years, I've been putting, I've been forcing them on my eye. I know that some of you are thinking, man, bless his heart. What an idiot. To which I say, slow your roll, okay? First, I blame, I was 10 when I started. I blame the optometrist for not teaching me.
Secondly, what you should be thinking is, is how amazing are his eyes? I have superhuman eyes. They could force contacts in the submission for 20 years, and I can still see. So, it's impressive, but it's helpful to actually know the truth, to actually know how to do that. And I just want to correct a little bit, the nativity scene for you, starting in the first part, when it says, now after Jesus was born. That is an indefinite period of time.
Directly after this passage, which we won't get into today, King Herod feels threatened by Jesus, and his kingship. So he has all males under the age of two, he orders them to be killed. Which begs the question, why under the age of two? And the reason is, is that he has figured out, that sometime in the last two years, sometime in the last two years, Jesus, this Messiah, was born. Which means, he could have been two, when the Magi, when the wise men visited. He could have been one.
He could have been 18 months. We don't really know, but it's, it's pretty clear from the text, that the wise men, were not at the birth, of Jesus. So, you can do what my son does, every morning, when he comes down to, his little people nativity set. You can come down, it's all nicely put together, you can grab the wise men, and you can throw them under the couch. Just kidding, if you like the wise men, we have another one that's wooden, the kids aren't supposed to touch. Keep them, they're nice.
Just know, what's actually going on here. The second part of the nativity change, that may be helpful for some of us, is the text says, that wise men from the east, came to Jerusalem. They were wise men, not kings. I know we three kings, is special to some of you, but that kind of messes up your brain, a little bit. The word that more accurately, reflects what's happening here, the wise men, is the word magi. That's what the text is getting at.
Magi were priests. They were magicians. They were astrologists. They were dream interpreters. They were alchemists. They dealt in the mysterious.
We see this in the Old Testament, when Pharaoh is going, when Moses is going toe-to-toe with Pharaoh, and Moses does a miracle, and the Pharaoh, his wise men, his magi, come out, and they start doing magic tricks, to answer Moses. We see this in the book of Daniel. In the book of Daniel, in chapter 2, he becomes head of the magi, head of the wise men, and Daniel is a dream interpreter. So, by the time we get to the New Testament, it's still, that is true, and they serve specifically in royal courts. They serve kings. They're a part of royalty.
They use their gifts of looking at the stars, and the planets, and studying all of this, which means, when a star appears in the sky, that was not there, when creation itself, bends to something, that catches, people like the magi's attention. And then, we don't get this from the text, but we can tell, by the time they show up to Jerusalem, that God has come to them, and said, that there is a king of the Jews, that has been born, that this star, is shining upon. Now, I want to pause for a second. I know that some of you, that may like the mysterious, will go, cool, so like tarot cards, and horoscopes, and all that, that's, that's, no.
Let me pause for a second. We can have a separate conversation after this, if you want to. We don't deal in that anymore. We don't deal in the mysterious, because Jesus is the mystery of the universe, that has been revealed. And that in Christ, all of that, is gone and put away. We don't need that.
We have Jesus. If you want to come and talk to me later, we can have a conversation, about that. But these are magi. They are from the east. The, the original hearers of this, of this gospel, would have understood the east, to be Persia, Assyria, Babylon. All people that, that traditionally, the Jews do not mix with.
They've had a bad history with. But they're from the east, and they're not kings. So, we get to, verse 2, and it says, Where is he, who has been born, king of the Jews? This is the magi talking. For we saw his star, when it rose, and have come to worship him. When Herod heard, Herod the king heard this, he was troubled, and all Jerusalem with him.
So after they get, giddy, after they're excited, the star in the sky, has led them, to Jerusalem. We're getting closer, closer and closer, to where this star is. They land in Jerusalem, and they start asking around. And they're going to stand out. These are foreigners, a part of royal courts. Like, they're going to stand out.
And it says that when, where, when they ask this, that, that, that, that, that both Herod, and all of Jerusalem, they were all, uh, troubled. Which means, they weren't just going to Herod, and asking, where is this king? They were talking to anybody, that would listen. Where's this king, who was born? Who, you mean, King Herod? No, no, no, smaller, baby king.
Where is he? Uh, how, how did you know to come here? We followed a star. This starts to get the whole city stirred up. Jerusalem's a, it's a big city, but this is the kind of city, where buzz is going to circulate. And they start to get, uh, stirred up, and Herod is trying to figure out what's going on.
It says, verse three, when Herod, the king heard this, he was troubled. And all Jerusalem with him, and assembling all the chief priests, and the scribes of the people, he inquired of them, where the Christ was to be born. So Herod, he believes this, and he wants to find out what's going on. So he goes to, uh, the scribes, and the chief, and the chief priests, to the religious leaders, who know the Old Testament, to try to figure out, uh, where this Messiah, is coming from. It picks up in verse five, it says, they told him, in Bethlehem of Judea, for so it is written by the prophet, and you, O Bethlehem, in the land of Judah, are by no means least, among the rulers of Judah.
For from you shall come a ruler, who will shepherd my people, Israel. So they reveal to Herod, yes, the Messiah, from the prophets, uh, Ezekiel, from the prophet Micah, in the Old Testament, the Messiah is going to be born, in Bethlehem, this is true. So then Herod responds, and he says, then, uh, verse seven, then Herod summoned the wise men secretly, and ascertained from them, what time the star had appeared. And he sent them to Bethlehem, saying, go, and search diligently for the child, and when you found him, bring me word, that I too may come, and worship him. So Herod, he doesn't have, good intentions.
He wants to find out, where this child was born, where Jesus was born, because he feels threatened. His earthly kingship, is threatened. He has a plot, that he's going to try, to kill Jesus, in order to protect, his earthly kingship. So, he tells him, go, find him. When you come back through here, tell me where he is, so I can come, and worship him too. And we're not going to get into this today, but that plot is full.
God has a plan here. They go back a different way. It picks up in verse 9, it says, after listening to the king, they went on their way. And behold, the star which they had seen, when it rose, went before them, until it came to rest, over the place, where the child was. When they saw the star, they rejoiced, exceedingly, with great joy. And going into the house, they saw the child, with Mary his mother, and they fell down, and worshipped him.
Then opening their treasures, they offered him, gifts, gold, and frankincense, and Mary. And being warned in the dream, not to return to Herod, they departed, to their own country, by another way. So, they leave Jerusalem, and they know they're close. Bethlehem, geographically, even today, is not that far from Jerusalem. So they know, they're getting close.
And you have to remember, these are, these are men, that have devoted, their lives, to the study of the stars, and the planet. And God has come to them, told them about the, king of the Jews, and the star, is shining over the city, there, this town, Bethlehem, they're getting closer. And as they come up, over the hill, into Bethlehem, they see, where it is shining. And they're getting closer, to the house. And there's this, anticipation, that is building up. And finally, they knock on the door.
And when the door is open, and Mary and the child, are there, the text tells us, they rejoiced. They rejoiced exceedingly, with great joy. Which is just, they lost it. They were so excited, they had stumbled, they came and found, this child, that God had led them to. This baby king. And they fell down, and they worshipped him.
They said, ma'am, we came all this way. We followed this star, for your son, he is a king. And we didn't come, empty handed. We brought gifts. They bust them out. We brought gifts of gold, and frankincense, and myrrh.
Now, there's been a lot of people, over the years, that have tried to figure out, the meaning of these gifts. There's a lot of different things, that can be a little bit confusing, and trying to pinpoint that. There is something, that is a common thread, in each of these gifts. These gifts, are meant for a king. These are royal gifts. Gold, frankincense, which is an incense, myrrh.
These are expensive gifts, that you would bestow, on a king. And they come, and say, here are the gifts. Here they are. Here, and another thing, with the tippy tradition, we don't know actually, if there were three magi. We do know, that there are three gifts, and I like to think, that it makes sense, each of them, would be bringing, a gift, to the king. So they, bestow these gifts, they lay them at their feet, and they rejoice, and they are, worshipful.
This is a, joyous occasion. They have, they have come, and they have seen, the child that is going to change, the course, of history. And they're doing this, and I want you to picture this. They are, joyous. They are, celebrating. They are, high-fiving.
They are, worshiping. They are, so excited. And Mary, and Joseph, are standing here, and they are watching this, and there's a part of me, that thinks, that in their head, they had to be thinking, this is great. Why are you here? Like we, like they've seen a lot, at this point. They've, they remember when Jesus was born.
They remember, uh, the angels, that were bursting forth, in praise. They remember the shepherds, who came, and, and, and worshipped, Jesus. They remember when they, presented Jesus, at the temple, at the temple, when the prophet, and the prophetess, were prophesying, that he was the Messiah. They remember, all these things. They were treasuring, these things, in their hearts. But all that, was inside the house.
All that, was amongst Jews. So there had to be, a thought, why are you here? Foreigners, magi, from distant lands. Why have you come here? And that, is the part, of the story, that points forward. That's the part, of the story, where God is, tipping his hand.
God calls, magi, wise men, from the east, to show you, who he was coming for. To show that, these were the very, kind of people, that Jesus was coming for. They represented, the very people, that Jesus was going, to reach. This baby king, was not just going, to be king of the Jews. He was going to be, king of the nations. And this story, is tipping its hand.
It's not an accident, that God calls, magi outsiders, to worship the baby king. He's telling us, where the story is going. That Jesus is coming, for the outsiders, for the lost. And that means, me, and you, and everyone, that wasn't a part of, the Jewish people. This is a, hope filled, story, for the world. That the light, that lit up Bethlehem, is going to light up, the world.
It's going to light up, the nations. That's how, I love the gospel of Matthew. It starts with a picture, of God tipping his hand, that God is coming, for everybody. And it ends with, go therefore, make disciples, of all nations. This story, is the first glimmer of hope, for all of us, who are outsiders. This is why, we sing songs, in this season, that are joy, to the world.
Because God is coming, for all of us. It is a, hope filled story, that we get to, pause every year, and remember, and be joyous, and be glad. But I get it. I understand that, for some of you, that is hard to do, in this season. For some of you, this season brings up, really difficult memories. For some of you, this has been, a really difficult year.
And it has been hard, to be joyous, and to remember the gospel, to remember that, glimmer of light, that was shining, in the desert. It's hard. Because some of you, have had a rough year, you've experienced, real loss. And preaching the gospel, to yourself, in this season, has been difficult. It's lost its flavor. Some of you, have gone through, real temptations, you've gone through, real trials, this year.
And it's, you are just tired, and it is hard, for you to be joyous. Some of you, have wrestled with, with sickness, with physical suffering, with mental illness. There's been, all kinds of suffering, that you can feel deep, in your bones, that you can feel deep, in your soul, and the cynic in you, wants to post a meme, that just destroys, the holly jolliness, of everybody around you. Because it's been hard, and it's been rough. And I want to say to you, specifically, I know it is difficult, but I want you to pause, in this season, and join the chorus. I want you to fight through, and I want you to see, the light that lit up, the darkness.
I want you to feel, the hope that came. Because that hope, that came for you, is the hope, that secured a place for you, that one day, you will be in the presence, of Jesus, for eternity. And that day, there will be, no more tears, there will be, no more pain, there will be, no more suffering. That's the joy, that we get to celebrate, that came to this world. And I know, that you felt alone. I want to say very clearly, for those of you in Christ, you were not alone.
Jesus did not abandon you. And I want you to, to fight through, and remember, that he is going to carry you home. He has put you on his back. This is a real, and actualized, and vivid, and joyous hope, that I want us to pause, in this season, and see. I want us to feel, and I want us to remember. That's why this Friday, we get to do a worship night.
Because I want us to pause, as a church family, and remember, the Jesus that came, the humble babe, that came in this world, to rescue each of us. I want us to pause, like the Magi, and celebrate, and be glad, and be joyous, and remember. That's the hope, that we remember at Christmas. So as the band, comes up, and as we celebrate, communion, I want us to remember, this. As we approach the table, I want us to remember, the way that Jesus, came into this world. He came in naked, and humble, in the form of a babe.
Because it helps us, remember the way that He died, naked, and humble, on a cross.
Come and Die
Transcript
I went to Sheely's with my wife, my father-in-law, and I sat down and he goes, you don't like green beans? And it's like, well, it's not that I don't like green beans, but I know how to do buffets. And I'm at Sheely's. Green beans have no place on my plate at Sheely's like rice. Hash, baked beans, barbecue with a little bit of collards and some macaroni and cheese. I know what I'm doing.
I've been to these before. And so I'm not getting green beans. But what I like about it is that you have to choose. You have to pick. You have to decide what matters, what's important. And the truth is in life, we're doing this all the time.
We're deciding what matters most. We only have so much room on our plate. We only have so much time. We only have so many resources. We're deciding all the time what's going to fit, what doesn't. We do this on autopilot a lot.
We end up putting things on our plate that if we really had thought about it, if we really had seen what we were giving up. See, that's what I like about a buffet. You can see what you're giving up if you put this on your plate. Jim Gaffigan, one of the great thinkers of our time. He's a comedian, for those of you who don't know who he is. You're like, oh, look him up.
No, don't. He's not like reading any books or anything, but he talks about getting to the end of a breakfast buffet, and that's where they kept all the bacon. And you're immediately like, bacon. If I had known you were here, I would have only gotten you. He's like, you're looking at your plate going, why do I have fruit here? And that's what we're doing in life, though.
We're always filling our plate with something. We're always putting something on here. We're choosing. You have a limited amount of time. You have a limited amount of energy. You have a limited amount of dollars.
And you are choosing what's the good stuff. What do I want to put on my plate? What do I want to have here? And the problem is that so often we do this on autopilot. We just kind of do whatever's there, and we just go forward. And sometimes we make conscious decisions, and sometimes we don't.
What we're looking at today is where Jesus is going to press on to decide to hear. He's going to talk about his mission as he sends them out. He's going to talk to them about making those decisions, about deciding what has value, and what doesn't, deciding what is ultimately worth and what isn't. So right now, we're in the third week of our gift series. What we are trying to do is raise money, partner with 1040 Hope. 1040 Hope is an organization.
I thought about Ben Johnson and his wife. He's here. I thought of our church family. I just recently submitted the membership. But what they do is they're trying to plant churches and launch people in the 1040 window.
It's one of the most unreached places. We talked about this last week. And so what we're trying to do is partner with them specifically in Egypt. So in our gift series, around this time of year, we always call ourselves to generosity. We always call ourselves to do things that are eternal with our money, to do things that ultimately, infinitely matter. And so we're partnering in Egypt to try to see people meet Jesus there.
There's a place in Minya, Egypt, where they are already seeing some growth. They're already seeing some things happen. We're trying to partner with them to fund them for a year. Here's our goal, which is a big goal for our church. We believe that the Lord would have to move, that he'd have to work in us for that to happen. We don't. $15,000 isn't.
Y'all know us, right? You know you. You know your budget. That's big for us. We're trying to buy them a tuk-tuk. It's the first thing we want to do.
My wife was asking for clarification after our first week. She said our gift project is to buy a motorcycle for a guy in Egypt. I was like, we didn't explain that well. We're trying to. It is a tricycle kind of motorcycle thing. And it's for them to be able to travel, for them to be able to get their leaders to travel around, for them to be able to do some sidewalk Sunday school stuff.
There's a lot of opportunities for them if they're able to move throughout this area. I know some of us are like, well, all I'm ever really able to do is $20, $30, $40. The truth is if that's for your budget, that's beautiful. The one lady that's highlighted for giving in the New Testament, she gave a mite, which is like nothing. It's like a shaving of a – it's like you took a penny and like scraped some of it off and put it in there. But that's all she had, and Jesus said she gave the most because she actually gave what was her first, what was her best.
And so for some of you like that, best I can do is $20. But the truth is we're trying to buy phone cards. A phone card is $20. That would allow one of the leaders to be able to use a phone for a month. That's a really cool thing if you're able to do $10, $15, $20. But we're trying to ultimately raise $15,000 so they can do this for a whole year in an area where people, the whole area in general, does not want the gospel.
They're hostile to it. So what we're doing in our Give Project is saying we want you right now while everything's – you feel spread thin and your budget is tight, we want you to pull money out of that and give it to a place where they are receptive to the gospel and hostile to the gospel. There are people who are fighting against the gospel spreading here where it is dangerous and where there's a lot of people who when they hear this good news receive it joyously. We want a partner there. You see, ultimately, at this time of year, we've been celebrating that Jesus is the ultimate missionary, that he was born, he came out of heaven, was born on earth, lived a normal life to pursue us and to ultimately to suffer and to die, that we might have the gospel, that he's a light that shines in the darkness.
And last week, Spencer was talking about that his plan from the beginning of forever was to have the nations be glad, to sing his praises. And what I love about that is that it is not a begrudging submission, but that he wants to steal our hearts. That he wants the hearts of the globe so captivated with him, so overwhelmed by him, so joyous that they can't help but be glad, they can't help but sing songs of praise. That he, through the gospel and through his work on the cross, is going to redeem people for himself, that we have actual beautiful good news to share. That Jesus Christ, through his blood, saves sinners.
Now, I'm going to do something that's a little bit different for us, but I want this to be clear as we move into this text this morning, what we're going to try to see. I'm going to read a few statements to try to help us see clearly what it is that we're trying to look at today, what it is we're trying to cement in our minds, have become real in our hearts. As we study, and if you'll grab your Bibles and go to Matthew 9, that's where we'll be this morning. Matthew 9, we'll start in verse 35. Jesus is sending his disciples out, and then, like I said, there's a scarcity of resources. You only have so much time, so much energy.
Ultimately, you will die, and you will have spent the time, the energy, the money you had, the abilities you had on something. You'll have lived for something. You'll have died for something. And so Jesus is calling us to make wise choices with what we put on our plate. So Jesus, I want to read a few of these statements to try to help us see what we're trying to see today as we go through this text.
Jesus is of such supreme value that there is nothing in existence that can be sacrificed for him that will outweigh what is to be gained in him. He is of supreme, infinite, unmatched worth. Jesus is to be loved and treasured above all else. See, this is what he's showing them as he walks through this, as he sends them out. He's trying to help them understand his supreme value, his worth, the joy in knowing him in the gospel. There's nothing on earth of comparable value to Jesus.
And he eternally rewards those who follow him. This makes all human sacrifice for the cause of Christ wise investment rather than foolish risk. Not one thing laid down in devotion to Jesus or his mission to reach the globe with the good news of his suffering and salvation on their behalf is wasted or forgotten. If we love our earthly treasures more than Jesus, if we value them higher than him, we will not get Jesus. We will not deserve Jesus. We will be unworthy of him.
And we will gain something that proves worthless, losing what is eternally priceless. Because the one who loses everything to gain Jesus ultimately loses nothing and gains everything. To put it simply, Jesus is better than everything else and is therefore worth giving up everything for. So our goal today as we study this passage is to cement this truth in our hearts so that the eternal unmatched worth of Jesus might propel us to invest all that we have. To see those who don't know him receive him. And we might see his value and know the wisdom in the seemingly reckless way we're called to lay down everything in response to his call on our lives.
There was a very good professional cricketer. And I know that that means so much to the people in this room. In the late 1800s in England, cricket is like baseball but weirder because they flatten the bat out and they bounce the balls and they run back and forth. So just pretend that he's English baseball and then it makes more sense. But he was very good at it.
He was a professional. His name was C.T. Studd. He became a Christian, continued playing cricket and over time started realizing that what he was spending his time doing, what he was spending his life for, what he was spending his energy for, he decided it wasn't worth it. So he stepped away from it and ended up being a missionary in Africa, China and India.
He wrote a poem at one point and the refrain that he keeps coming back to in his poem is, Only one life will soon be passed. Only what's done for Christ will last. Only one life will soon be passed. Only what's done for Christ will last. So as we walk through this passage in Matthew, as Jesus looks at his disciples and sends them out and he's going to give them specific coaching as to what that's going to look like.
And as we're thinking right now about what's on our plate and what matters most and what we're going to do with our money and what we're going to do with our time. And as we're thinking about joining with these people in Egypt who are giving up everything for the sake of the gospel and everything for the sake of the king. We're going to look at this and hopefully have the Lord stir in us his supreme value, his supreme worth, so that it only makes sense for us to have the appropriate response. That everything's on the table. So I would ask you.
All the Christians in the room. To pray and ask the Holy Spirit to help us see where we've made poor valuations. As we study this together this morning, so let's pray. God, we believe your word. We believe in eternity. So often we get focused on what we can see and feel.
So we ask that you'd help us to clearly see what we've put on our plates and what we've given up. The trades we've made. The value you have. So that we might live. As your people. In Jesus name.
Amen. So Matthew 9 verse 35. Says and Jesus went out, went throughout all the cities and villages, teaching in their synagogues and proclaiming the gospel of the kingdom and healing every disease and every affliction. So Jesus is going around. He's proclaiming the gospel of the gospel of the kingdom, which is that the kingdom is coming among you. And then he's displaying as he proclaims.
He's displaying the gospel because he's healing afflictions and diseases. And he's ultimately showing practically on earth what the gospel is going to do eternally, spiritually, that eventually there will be a place where Jesus reigns, where it is the fulfilled kingdom. And there won't be sickness and there won't be crying and there won't be death and there won't be pain. And so he goes through healing afflictions and sicknesses and disease to display. This is the kingdom. This is what it's going to look like as he proclaims the good news of the gospel.
When he saw the crowds, he had compassion for them because they were harassed and helpless like sheep without a shepherd. My grandparents were missionaries in Nigeria. Most of us don't know much about sheep or goats or anything. I mean, unless you grew up on a goat farm. So most of us don't know much about sheep or goats.
It's not really an American thing. But in Nigeria, they had sheep and goats. And they said that when the tail is up, the brain is on. And when the tail is down, the brain is off because a lot of goats have their tail point up and they are intelligent. And sheep have their tails point down and they are stupid. So if you know sheep and Jesus says they're like sheep without a shepherd, what he's saying is they're in trouble without him.
That he ultimately sees these crowds and he sees how they're living their lives, that they're harassed, that they're helpless, that they are in the darkness and they need the light to shine in the darkness so that the darkness cannot overcome it. They need to be rescued. They need to be saved. They need to be cared for. And so he says he cares for them. He has compassion for them.
Then he said to his disciples, the harvest is plentiful. So he's looking at these harassed sheep. And now he changes and he says his harvest is plentiful, but the laborers are few. Therefore, pray earnestly to the Lord of the harvest to send out laborers into his harvest. So what he says is there's plenty of people who need me.
But there aren't plenty of people who are going to go and tell them this amazing news. So I want us to take a second. And as earnestly as we can pray in about 20 seconds, I want us to ask, join Jesus in accomplishing what he's asking here. And let's pray to the Lord of the harvest that he'd send more people into his harvest. Let's pray for many.
Let's pray for the 1040 window. Let's pray for right here where the majority of the people in our area don't know Jesus. Heard of him. They don't know him. Let's pray that he would change hearts, that he would send more laborers.
Can we do that for 20 seconds? Amen. So he tells him to pray that he'd send more laborers into his harvest. And then it says this. And he called. This is chapter 10, verse 1.
He called to himself his 12 disciples and gave them authority over unclean spirits to cast them out to heal every disease and every affliction. The names of the 12 apostles are these. And then it lists them off specifically. And so what this is saying is that Jesus calls specific people to himself. He calls them specifically individuals with names and stories and backgrounds. He calls them specifically.
And then it says this. Verse 5. These 12 Jesus sent out. So they went from being learners, disciples, to being apostles, which means sent. He sent them out instructing them. And then we're going to get to see what the instructions were in a second.
But Jesus says pray that the Lord would send out laborers. And then he picks people and says prayer answered. Go. I hope that he does that with us. That he burdens us to begin praying. And then while you're praying, he taps you on the shoulder and says, pray your answer.
Bosnia. I just hope he does that. I hope he begins to work in our hearts that we would go, that he would say, you know that place you work? You know that giant mass of cubicles? You're an apostle now. You're sent.
That's what he does. And he calls people to himself that he might send them out. This is what he did with Ben Johnson. He shared this with us a week ago. That he was in school studying Bible. It was Bible school.
And this guy gets up and starts talking about the children of Ishmael. And Ben said, I started to weep. And then I left class. And I went home. And I continued to weep. And he's like, I didn't care anything about Muslims until that day.
But it was like a lightning bolt struck him. And Jesus said, go. So what he does. Calls specific people and sends them out. And so here's what we're going to do. We're going to read his specific instructions to them.
We can learn helpful things as we go through this. But they are specific instructions. So sometimes he tells you, go here, do this. This is where Christians sometimes get confused. Somebody will start arguing with you. Well, we're supposed to do this.
And it's like, maybe you're supposed to do that. We're supposed to proclaim the gospel. He told you to go there. He told me to go here. As long as we're going, as long as we're proclaiming. All right.
Verse five. These 12 Jesus sent out instructing them. Go nowhere among the Gentiles and enter no town of the Samaritans. But go rather to the lost sheep of the house of Israel. And proclaim as you go, saying, the kingdom of heaven is at hand. And he says, heal the sick, raise the dead, cleanse lepers, cast out demons.
So he's telling them, you get to spread the gospel the way I have spread it. You get to push back on darkness. You received without paying, give without pay. Acquire no gold or silver or copper for your belts, no bag for your journey or two tunics or sandals or a staff for the laborer deserves his food. So he says, go.
People will take care of you, but don't get rich off of this. Your goal is to not make money. To be provided for is fine. Whatever town or village you enter, find out who is worthy in it and stay there until you depart. As you enter the house, greet it. If the house is worthy, let your peace come upon it.
But if it is not worthy, let your peace return to you. And if anyone will not receive you or listen to your words, shake off the dust from your feet when you leave the house or town. Truly, I say to you, it would be more bearable on the day of judgment for the land of Sodom and Gomorrah than for that town. One of the things that's helpful to understand from this is he says, go. And go to the people who receive you. And the people who don't want to hear it and fight with you.
Go to the next house. Eventually, if a whole town tries to run you off, go to the next town. He's preparing people to receive this. One of the things our group prays for on a semi-regular basis is that he would send us to the people he's preparing. That he would send us to welcoming, open people. Verse 16.
Behold, I am sending you out as sheep in the midst of wolves. That's not very encouraging. He's saying this will be dangerous. So be wise as serpents and innocent as doves. Beware of men, for they will deliver you over to courts and flog you in their synagogues. And you will be dragged before governors and kings for my sake to bear witness before them and the Gentiles.
When they deliver you over, do not be anxious how you are to speak or what you are to say. For what you are to say will be given to you in that hour. For it is not you who speak, but the spirit of your father speaking through you. Brother will deliver brother over to death and father his child and children will rise against parents and have them put to death. And you will be hated by all for my name's sake. This is happening right now in the area we're trying to partner with.
One of the pastors in Lebanon, his wife divorced him after he became a Christian. The majority of the pushback that comes in some of those areas is from the families that are responding very negatively and poorly. It's people in their family becoming Christians. That's what Jesus is talking about. That brother will turn brother over. That father will turn son in.
That this will go poorly. For truly I say to you, you will not have gone through all the towns of Israel before the son of man comes. A disciple is not above his teacher nor a servant above his master. It is not enough for the disciple to be. Is it not enough? It is enough.
Sorry. It is enough for the disciple to be like his teacher and the servant like his master. If they have called the master of the house Beelzebub, which Satan. How much more will they malign those of his household? John Child, this has been in the news the past couple of weeks. He's prepared to go as a missionary to a small island off of India where it is a group of people that have largely been untouched by everything.
It's a tribe there that they're not supposed to send missionaries to. He went. He had been before. Told them that he loved them and Jesus loved them. They shot an arrow at him. It stuck in his Bible.
He got back in his boat. Decided to go back. All we basically know is that he landed at night and they were dragging his body back out and laying it on the shore in the morning. There's been a general reaction in our culture that this is ridiculous. First of all, he's a fool. Secondly, Christians are imperialists trying to force their ideas on other people and just leave them alone.
And I say if our ideas are that there's an eternal hell and a saving king who died to redeem us from our sins, imperialize away. We don't have to outsource capitalism. We don't have to outsource westernism. We don't have to convince them of anything other than what's here. But what's here is such good news.
But he was hated. So is his savior. He was killed. So is his master. We shouldn't be surprised. We should keep going.
So he says. He told them to beware. Be aware. Be aware they're not going to like you. Be aware they're going to hate you. And then he says this.
So have no fear of them. So be aware of them. Be wise as a serpent. But have no fear. For nothing is covered that will not be revealed. Or hidden.
That will not be known. What I tell you in the dark say in the light. And what you hear whispered. Proclaim on the housetops. And do not fear. Those who kill the body.
But cannot kill the soul. Okay. I think that's one of those sayings that we hear Jesus say. And we're like hmm. Because Jesus gets away with saying things. And I think we've gotten used to hearing him say things.
But did you hear what he just said? Killing the body is one of the things that we're in general kind of afraid of you guys. Like that's kind of a big deal. Is that your body would be killed. Like if you were looking for homes. And you were with a real estate agent.
And they took you to this area. And you said. Now isn't this kind of a rough area? Is this like a house? This neighborhood? Is it kind of dangerous?
And they said. Don't worry about this neighborhood. Don't be afraid to live here. All they do in this neighborhood is kill the body. Excuse me. What?
They'll just kill your body. They can't touch your soul. Also we do need you to sign some paperwork that says once they kill your body. We can immediately put this back on the market. Because that's actually how this just came open. But have you seen the countertops?
Like you would be like. Okay. I'm going to need a new real estate agent. Because this one is crazy. Also probably don't want to live in this neighborhood. But when Jesus says this to his disciples.
He says don't fear them. All they can do is kill the body. He's speaking as if he has seen and known eternity. It's as if he knows the limited amount of time that we are here. And the infinite mass of eternity. And the infinite worth of his glory and his name.
It's as if his perspective is so different from ours. And then he continues and helps clarify this for us. And it is different from ours. Do not fear those who kill the body. But cannot kill the soul.
Rather fear him who can destroy both soul and body in hell. He says no, no, no, no. The worst thing that tribe can do. The worst thing they can do. Is get your heart to stop pumping. And drag a limp carcass back out onto the beach.
Let me tell you who to fear. There's a king of the universe. Who ought to be so supreme. Because you understand. That he doesn't just hold bodies and breath. But he holds souls and eternity.
And he says he'll destroy souls in hell. And one of the things that we've done in the American church. Is we've kind of responded with like. Well we don't want to talk about hell. Because we don't want to be offensive. And we just want to talk about God's love.
And let me explain something to you. If you're a Christian and you believe in hell. Do you know how absolutely unloving it is to not talk about that? To not share that with people. To not explain to them the reality of an eternity without God. He says I'll tell you what to be afraid of.
There's an eternity coming that could come at any moment. It's wet outside. It could come today. You could turn onto a road. Someone could slide through. And you could be entering into eternity.
And let me explain something to you. An SUV can kill your body. But there is a king who rules your soul. That's what Jesus says. He says let me tell you what to be afraid of. You can get a house in any neighborhood you want.
The worst thing they can do is kill your body. But there's a gospel to be proclaimed. That has to do with souls. And there is a hell that is a reality. Where the flame does not die. The worm does not die.
And it is not quenched forever. And I have come to redeem you from that. I've come to die. To take that onto my own back. And all we're supposed to do is go proclaim this reality. So he says I'll tell you what to fear.
But then listen to what he says. Are not two sparrows sold for a penny? Now that doesn't translate well into English. Can't you get a rotisserie chicken from Costco for five dollars? Isn't there a chicken plant in West Columbia? Next to some really nice apartments that's stinking the place up.
Chickens are rolling through. You see those big trucks? I see them in West Columbia and I say sorry buddy I know where you're headed. And later I'll see you at Egg Roll Station. What he's saying is. That's what it translates to.
Don't chickens die all the time? And then listen to what he says. Not one of them will fall to the ground. A cart from your father. There's not a chicken that's died at that plant that didn't die at the will of the father. That's why I don't mind eating meat.
Because God was in control of that. He oversees all this. And so what Jesus is saying is there's a king who rules eternity. And let me explain something to you. You when you follow after him will die at the exact moment that his will allows it. And not a moment before and not a moment after.
That you can say I'm going to this people group. I'm going to this people. That John Chow died the exact moment that the Lord was ready for him to die. That his blood was spilled to the exact ounce that it was supposed to be spilled to. And that we can send another missionary. And we can send another person.
And they will last as long as the Lord wants them to last. But he has a kingdom that will reign forever. And he will claim those whom he's going to claim. That we're told in Revelation chapter 5 and 7 that there will be people from all nations around that throne. Not all the people. But there will be people from all nations.
And if that is a distinct people group on that island I can tell you one thing. Somebody from that island will be proclaiming that Jesus is king around the throne. Because I've seen it in Revelation 5 and Revelation 7. You see. There is a reality to a heaven and a hell and an eternity. But there is a God who rules over it.
Verse 30. Even the hairs of your head are all numbered. Not counted. Numbers. Fear not. Therefore.
You are of more value than many sparrows. So. Everyone who acknowledges me before men. I will acknowledge before my father who is in heaven. But whoever denies me before men.
I will also deny before my father who is in heaven. Do not think that I have come to bring peace to the earth. That's a downer at Christmas time. Peace on earth and mercy my Lord. But he says.
I have not come to bring peace to the earth. I have come to bring not peace but a sword. That would be a different song. Swords on earth. It just doesn't have the same. Net King Kull can't make it work.
I have not come to bring peace but a sword. For I have come to set a man against his father. And a daughter against her mother. And a daughter-in-law against her mother-in-law. A person's enemies will be those of his own household. Jesus demands singular allegiance.
So that when he enters into a household. And you place your faith in Jesus. And your parents say we're going to need you to stop. When Muslims are coming to Christ. And their parents say you don't belong to us anymore. The son or daughter who's placed their faith in Jesus.
Is supposed to say you're right. I have a new father. I've been purchased by a different brother. Now I want you to know him. But I want him more than I want you.
What's happening in our culture. As we shift away from Christianity. Is it happening in reverse. That there are a lot of parents who love Jesus. Whose children are saying I don't want this. I don't want you to try to push it on me.
I don't want you to try to tell me about this. I don't care. Where we decide. What are we holding with a closed hand. And what are we holding with an open hand. What are we going to try to cling to.
A person's enemy will be those of his own household. 37. Whoever loves father or mother more than me. Is not worthy of me. And whoever loves son or daughter more than me. Is not worthy of me.
And whoever does not take his own cross. And follow me. Is not worthy of me. Jesus says I am of such supreme. And matchless value. That if you think you can put anything else on the scale.
And it's going to even out. You are wrong. You have done the equation incorrectly. You have not seen me. Fully. You are not worthy of me.
Whoever finds his life will lose it. And whoever loses his life for my sake will find it. You got a plate. And so many of us are running around trying to find life. Trying to find something that's enough. We're trying to find something that will fill us up.
We're trying to find something that at the end of the day. We can hang our hat on. That we can say this is enough. This makes me good. We're trying to find our life. And what he says is.
If you run around doing that ultimately. You will get to the end of the days. You will enter into eternity. And if you have piled your plate with anything other than Jesus. You've lost it. But whoever will take their plate.
Turn it sideways. Hand it to Jesus. And say whatever you want. You'll get more life than you ever understand. During World War II there was a poem that was written in it. And it says this.
It says some men die by shrapnel. Some men die by flames. Most men die inch by inch. Playing silly little games. See the truth is. You are going to live your life for something.
And you are declaring with every moment. That that something is also worth dying for. You are living your life for something. Your heartbeats are going to something. Your energy is going to something. Your talent is going to something.
Your treasure is going to something. And Jesus is ultimately. He's the only thing worth laying everything on the altar for. This is why in the American church. Where we've begun to teach our children. That security and safety is primary.
I want us to know. That as we do that. As we proclaim that with our lives. And our decisions to our children. We are lying about the gospel. Because Jesus says there are some things worth dying for.
And I'm not saying. You need to just put your children in undue risk. But I am saying. That there are some things worth risking for. The idea that you can't be a missionary. Because you have children.
Is false. Is false. 40. Whoever receives you. Receives me. And whoever receives me.
Receives him who sent me. That's why we go. Because if they'll receive you. And the proclamation of the gospel. They get Jesus. And if they get Jesus.
They get the father. And they get everything. That's why we send a John Chow. That's why C.T. Studd was right. To put down that crooked flat baseball bat.
And go do something else. Because if they'll receive him. They'll get Jesus. He's of infinite worth. The one who receives a prophet. Because he is a prophet.
Will receive a prophet's reward. The one who receives a righteous person. Because he is a righteous person. Will receive a righteous person's reward. And whoever gives one of these little ones. Even a cup of cold water.
A phone card. A tuk-tuk. Because he is a disciple. Truly I say to you. He will by no means lose his reward. Jesus says there's not a thing that's wasted or forgotten.
That will extend into eternity. Won't be forgotten. See Jesus doesn't ever look at us and say. Don't want reward. He says fools. There's an eternity of reward.
Why are you spending it all here? If you went to stay four nights in a holiday inn. After your first night you thought. You know these sheets are scratchy. These countertops are lame. And that wall art is terrible.
Putting in new countertops. I'm buying new sheets. I'm going to get a better bed in here. Eventually even the people that own the hotel will be like. Thanks but are you a moron? You're only here for four days.
Why are you tricking out this hotel room? And that's what Jesus is looking at them and saying. Go for the real reward. Make an investment. That continues to turn over. Make something that doesn't waste.
And doesn't go away. I'm telling you even a cup of cold water in for God. Go somewhere where the reward is matchless. Jim Elliott. Was a missionary. Got a lot of things that rhyme today.
Because they help stick in my brain. These are things that have stuck with me for a while. But Jim Elliott. I'm sorry. I introed it that way. This doesn't rhyme.
Jim Elliott was a missionary. He showed up to a place. They got off on the land. And were immediately met by the people there. And killed. It found written in his journal prior to this.
It said he is no fool. Will give up. That which he cannot keep. To gain. That which he cannot lose. I want to tell you all a story.
About some Swedish missionaries. To the Congo. They went to the Congo. This was in 1921. There were two couples. Joel and Bertha Erickson.
And David and Savia Flood. David and Savia had a son. It was a two year old named David. They had been there for a couple years. And Joel and Bertha came to David and Savia. And said hey.
We're leaving. This is a waste of time. God has abandoned this. I don't know. He's not in it. And David looked at Joel and said.
There's that one boy. That we've led to the Lord. And Joel said. Yeah one boy. We're going to die of malnutrition. Or malaria.
And we don't even really know. If he understands what we're talking about. So Joel looked at David and said. Bertha and I are leaving. We want y'all to leave too. And David and Savia said.
We're not leaving. Joel and Bertha left. They didn't go all the way back to. They were from Sweden. They didn't go. Switzerland.
Sweden. Sorry. They didn't go all the way back. They went to. A kind of a mission outpost. Still in the Congo.
But not in the area they were in. It was more dangerous. So David and Savia continue to work. Savia gets pregnant. Has a daughter. Named Ana.
And when she's 17 days old. Savia dies. Of malaria. And complications from birth. David digs her grave. Standing over her grave.
Decides. God has forsaken this. This was a waste. And I'm done. Going back home. Starting my life over.
He goes back to the mission outpost. Joel and Bertha. Beg him. To not take. His newborn baby girl. With him.
Says she won't make the journey. It's 1921. It was a very difficult journey. From there. Back to Europe. So begrudgingly.
Takes his son David. And he leaves. Then about eight months. Joel and Bertha die. David's little girl. Is adopted by some American missionaries.
Who name her Agnes. Eventually. She grows up in this home. Eventually they leave. They go back to America. She gets married.
On her 25th wedding anniversary. She raises up enough money. To go. Visit her dad. Her birth dad. For the first time ever.
He's 73 years old. He's. Consigned to a chair. Because he's had. Some strokes. She goes in to see him.
He hugs her. He says. I'm so sorry. I didn't want to have to. She says. It's fine.
God took care of me. This he tensed up. And said. No. God abandoned us. She said.
No. There are right now. About 600 Africans. That we know about. In the Congo. Who know Jesus.
That little boy. Grew up. And he led. His entire village. To the Lord. And we know.
About 600. It wasn't a waste. And God didn't abandon. A couple years later. She gets to go to an evangel. An evangelism conference.
In England. There's somebody there. From the Congo. Who is standing up. And declaring. That there are.
10,000 Believers. In the Republic of Congo. Who now follow Jesus. He talks about the work. Being done there. The church is being planted.
When he gets down. She goes over to him. And she says. Sir. Have you ever heard. Of David.
And Sibia Flood. He says. Ma'am. Sibia Flood. Led me to the Lord. She said.
Sibia Flood. My mom. And immediately. He started crying. And said. Thank you so much.
For letting your mom die. So that we can live. They later. Went back. With him. To that spot.
He knew where the grave was. So he showed her the grave. They gathered a church there. To proclaim. The goodness of Jesus. And the pastor taught.
From John 12. 24. And I'm going to read it to you. Truly. Truly. I say to you.
Unless a grain of wheat. Falls into the earth. And dies. It remains alone. But if it dies.
It bears much fruit. Jesus looks at his disciples. And he says. If you won't pick up your cross. And follow me. You're not worthy of me.
And we have. To die. To our schedules. And our agendas. And our wallets. And our plans for our life.
And hold out our plate to the Lord. And say. What do you want? Because it's worth it. He's worth it. And one day.
There might be. Two people. That are in eternity. Because we poured out everything we had. There might be. One person.
That's in eternity. That's before the king. That is not spending. An eternity in hell. That is in. Gathered around the throne.
There might be two. There might be ten. There might be ten. Thousand. That are proclaiming. The name of our king.
That are joyously singing. With the rest of the nations. Glad songs of praise. Because God has so captivated. Their souls. And captured their hearts.
And we. Get to be a part of that. When God invites us. Into mission. Into service. Into sacrifice.
It is an invitation. Into so much more. It's not even a cold cup of waters. For God. As we finish up today. I just want us to take a minute.
A minute to listen. To the Holy Spirit. That if you. As we've been here this morning. If the Holy Spirit's been working on you. Maybe he's been working on you for months.
Maybe he's been talking to you for months. Maybe he's been nagging. And working in your soul for years. We know that we're sent. That's true for the church. But there are times.
When he calls out names. Specific. Men and women. And says I want you to go. I want you to go here. For this purpose.
For my purpose. And if he's doing that. I want you to listen. Because it's an invitation. Into living a life. For his matchless worth.
Some of us. He's pressing on us. Just because we're not even willing. To go across the street. Or go at work. And I want you to listen.
Listen. I want us to think. For just a second. If you can. If you can close your eyes. And picture your life.
And if you can picture. What you've put on your schedule. What you spend your money for. Where all of your energy. And ability. And intelligence goes.
And want us to ask. Have I filled my plate. With the right stuff. Do I live. As if I understand. The weight.
And the reality. Of eternity. I don't always. Fully believe this. In my soul. I don't always have it.
I wrestle. And I struggle. Because I'm weak. But I can definitively. Tell you that it's worth it. Whatever the Lord's.
Pressing on you. Whatever he's asking you. That feels like a sacrifice. At this moment. It's worth it. That feels like a loss.
At this moment. It's worth it. He tells his disciples. There's not a single thing. That's given up. That isn't given.
A hundred fold. In eternity. And a hundred fold. Here with suffering. That we. Enter into joy.
And gladness. Here with suffering. And eternity. There's no pain. There's no crying. There's no.
None of that anymore. There's no. There's no. There's no. There's no. I don't know.
What the Lord may be saying. Right now to you. I just know you ought to listen. I know if he's leading you to repent. If he's leading you to confess. If there's somebody you need to talk to.
I know you need to do that. If he's leading you to. Open your wallet. Or open your schedule. If he's telling you right now. Somebody you're supposed to go share the gospel with.
I don't know. But we're going to take a minute to just try to listen. Some of you right now. Need to realize the weight of eternity. And for the first time ever. Turn your life over to Jesus.
And just say I'm yours. I trust that you died for me. I need you to pay for my sin. Because I don't want to stand before you. And have to pay for it on my own. And I need you to change me.
I need you to rescue me. But I know as a church. That we ought to give. And we ought to go. And that none of it's wasted. Not a minute.
Not a dime. Not an entire life. That if you live to be 85. And spend your whole time pursuing Jesus. It wasn't wasted. And if you are killed at the hands of people.
Who hate Jesus. And hate the gospel. In the next year. It was not wasted. God we ask right now. That we would listen.
That we would yield. That some of us right now. Would begin to clean off. All the stuff we've piled on our plate. And we would just hold it out to you. And say.
What do you want? What do you want here? Jesus we trust you. You died to save sinners. We can do nothing to make ourselves. Redeemed.
Or fixed. Or saved. You've done all of that. And we ask that in a correct. And appropriate response to that. That we would live our lives.
As if eternity was real. Working us in this next moment. We're going to sit. For just a minute listening. And then. We'll stand and sing together.
For just a minute. And I'll see you here. Thank you. Thank you.
Let the Nations be Glad
Transcript
Good morning. My name is Spencer. I'm one of the pastors here with Mill City Church. We are going to be in Psalm 67 today, which is on page 275 in a blue Bible that is in front of you or beside you. If you don't have a Bible at home, please take that. That is our gift to you.
We want you to be able to have a Bible that you can read at home. We'll be walking through Psalm 67 today. We are in our gift series. Every year around this time, we pause to walk through this gift series because this time every year, collectively as a culture, we kind of lose our minds. We kind of get really materialistic and get obsessed with things. And every year around this time, we want to pause and say, no, for those of us that are called in Christ, we don't become obsessed with things.
God has called us to generosity. And then every year we walk through this to be reminded that we are called as Christians to be generous. And around this time every year, we also do a give project. And we've had different give projects over the years. A few years back, we were able to partner with a church plant in Chattanooga. Last year, we partnered with a church plant locally in Two Notch.
We've helped a women's shelter in the past. This year is a little less tangible because we are partnering with 1040 Hope, which is the organization that Ben and Patricia Johnson, who are members of our church, that you'll hear more from a little bit later. We're partnering with 1040 Hope specifically to help a church plant in Minya, Egypt, that we might cover all of next year's budget. And we're excited about partnering with this to see God bless the nations. And that's where we're going today in our text as we continue this gift series. So, Psalm 67.
You can go ahead and flip there. We'll jump to that in a minute. Have you ever pictured, ever wondered what eternity is going to look like? Have you ever thought about what heaven is going to be like? I feel like we do this a little bit. And sometimes when we do this, we picture heaven filled with some of our favorite hobbies.
Like if you like football, and maybe you're a Gamecock fan, it's like maybe in heaven, maybe in eternity, there's football, maybe there's some Gamecocks that are playing, and they actually win games consistently. Not excellent, just very good, never disappointing you. Maybe you're like me and you love music, but you're not really gifted in that department. And eternity is filled with maybe like, for me, it's like Matt Freeman invites me to come help lead worship, and I pick up a guitar and I start playing, and I can actually play. And I sing. And it sounds like poetic joy coming from my vocal cords, which is not exactly what happens when I sing now.
Maybe it's filled with food. I know that we have some biblical pictures of it being a feast, and I like to think it's kind of like Thanksgiving, except you don't feel terrible after you eat it. We fill it with hobbies. We fill it with pictures of loved ones, grandparents that have gone on, parents that we've lost, friends that we've lost, that we might be reunited with them again. Sometimes we have biblical pictures of what heaven is going to be like. We focus on what worship will be like, that we get to eternally worship the King, that we get to be in the presence of the Lord, that there's going to be a place of no more pain, of no more suffering.
Maybe we extend that picture even further, realizing that heaven is temporary, it is going to come down. There's going to be a new heavens and a new earth, and that Revelation 21 will be fully realized, that we'll be in the presence of God as He rules, and as He reigns for eternity. But we have this, and we do this. We picture what heaven is going to be like. So if you've done this, or if you haven't done this in a while, I want to give you a few moments to picture what eternity is going to be like.
Now, I want you to be honest. Who were the people that were there? What did they look like? Did they look like us? You see, often when I've done this, my picture has been incomplete. Because in my mind, I've welcomed family, and church family, which is a beautiful picture of what eternity gets to be like, and that's awesome.
But what I've failed to realize is that there is extended family, extended church family, every tribe, every tongue, every nation, that doesn't fit into my picture. That oftentimes, when I've sat down for the feast, and when I think through it, I think through the good southern comfort food that's going to be there. But what I've failed to realize is there's going to be plantains, there's going to be all kinds of other foods like curry that I don't picture in the feast in eternity. The music that I like to picture of what eternity is going to be like, it's indie rock music, which is kind of my thing.
Not some of your things, but that's my thing. But what I've failed to realize is there's going to be African drumbeats, there's going to be Indian sitars, it's going to be filled with the nations praising God. And I think that many of us have a muted picture of what eternity is going to be like. And I think that is in part to our incomplete view of mission. That we have a muted picture of eternity, and it's due to our incomplete picture of mission. So today, I want to fill this picture.
I want to fill this picture up and expand our scope for what mission is supposed to be as we walk through Psalm 67. What we're going to see is God's purpose in salvation is to claim all the praises from all the nations. That all people groups, that all nations will be in the presence of God joyously praising who He is for eternity with us. And because of this, as we walk this out of the church family, may we be motivated to see Chechens and Tibetans and Uzbeks and every tribe and every tongue being glad in the presence of God because we join God in the mission to see Him reach every tribe, every tongue, every nation with our focus, with our prayers, with our time, and with our money.
So I'm going to walk through Psalm 67. I'll pray. Then we'll jump in. Verse 1, May God be gracious to us and bless us. May His face shine upon us. Selah.
Selah, as we walk through in our Psalm series, we don't really know what it means. It could be a pause. It's just in the Psalms regularly. That your way may be known on earth, that you're saving power among all nations. Let the peoples praise you, O God. Let all the peoples praise you.
Let the nations be glad and sing for joy for you. Judge the peoples with equity and guide the nations upon earth. Selah. Let the peoples praise you, O God. Let all the peoples praise you. The earth has yielded its increase.
God, our God, shall bless us. God shall bless us. Let all the ends of the earth fear Him. Let's pray. God, I pray that you would fill this picture up for us, that our picture of mission may be expanded in such a beautiful and joyous way as we look at how your heart and your hope is that all the nations may be glad. God, help us be present this morning and speak to us and go to work on us.
In Jesus' name, Amen. All right, so verse 1 says, May God be gracious to us and bless us and make His face to shine upon us. I love what the psalmist does here. He's getting ready to take this Psalm and show God's heart for the nations, but what he does is he takes a traditional Jewish blessing that was meant only for the Jewish people. This, may God be gracious to us and bless us, make His face shine upon us. This comes from number 6.
It was a priestly blessing for the people of Israel and what he's doing, he's taking a traditional Jewish-only blessing and he's expanding it for the nations. He's getting them to pray bigger, to think bigger. In college, a buddy of mine, we were praying specifically for a fraternity called Pike, which was notorious for having the most, the wildest, really the most just lost people and Matt Freeman, who was voted four years in a row the worst fraternity member, Pike. But we were praying that God would go to work and I remember praying something that I thought was so bold. I said, God, may you, homecoming weekend was coming up and a lot of alumni were coming back and I was thinking, God, may you change Pike so much, may they be turned over for the gospel so that when the alumni come and see it, they'd be disappointed.
They'd be disappointed because it looked nothing like they used to remember. And then my buddy, he one-upped me and he said, God, may you also change the alumni that they would love Jesus and come back and be glad to see the fraternity be changed by the gospel. And when he did that, I was a little bit offended because he just dunked on my prayer. But it just, it reminded me how small our prayers can be, that it needs to be expanded to pray bigger and that's what the psalmist is doing here. He's inviting them to think bigger, that God is going to bless all of the nations and we need that too because I think we're really good at praying for the person across the street but we don't pray for the lost people across the world.
So, comes to verse 2, that your way may be known on earth, your saving power among all nations. Now there are two really important words in this verse that help us understand what God is doing here. The first one is the word that. That is a big shift here. That is a word of purpose. May God bless Israel so that they may be a blessing to the nations. that they may display God's saving power to the nations because Israel was chosen and raised up to be a nation that would be an ambassador of God's saving power.
That's what you get from Isaiah 49, 6 when it says, but I will make you, Israel, a light to the nations so that all the world may be saved. They were supposed to be an ambassador of God's glory. Ambassadors are supposed to represent the best of where they come from. The best of their nation. We've sent out really good ambassadors. I think of John Huntsman and Nikki Haley who we've sent out to be ambassadors of our country to foreign nations.
But we also have some bad ones and some unofficial really bad ones. I don't know if you know this, but Dennis Rodman is our unofficial ambassador to the People's Republic of North Korea. He hangs out with King Jumun and they talk and watch basketball and laugh and he speaks on behalf of the American people which is kind of scary because Dennis Rodman's crazy. I don't know if you don't know who he is. He won titles with Michael Jordan. Also married himself.
Very crazy person. If you don't know who Dennis Rodman is, go back, Google the 90s. It's more than the Backstreet Boys and Friends. There's a whole lot going on there and Dennis Rodman was a big figure in the 90s and he represents unofficially our country. That's a little scary. He's a poor ambassador for what we stand for and Israel fell into the same trap over and over again.
They were driven away by idols. They did not represent God's glory well. They were chosen that this is what we walk through in Genesis when God raises up Abraham. They were chosen as a people that might reflect the glory of God to the surrounding nations and that's the second big word we need to understand is the word nations. Decades ago there was a movement in theological studies to understand what this word means because generally what it's been understood to mean is bigger nations like the United States like Nicaragua. But as they studied this more as they zoomed in more on this word what it actually came to realize is it's more specific.
It means people groups. People groups. Peoples that are unified by a common language by a common culture. So it's not just God is going after the nation of Indonesia that has 242 million people most of them who are Muslim. He's not going after Indonesia. He's going after the 300 plus people groups that make up the country of Indonesia.
God is specific. Hear this. He's specific in his battle plan. And taking back ground from the kingdom of darkness God is very specific in how he goes to war. In World War II and the Pacific Wars both my grandfathers fought in the Pacific Wars. One of them was a boilermaker on a ship.
The other one was an original member of Navy SEAL Team 6. The dude was bathabony. He'd jump off ships and swim for miles and scout out bombs. But they were both a part of the Pacific Wars and what was cool about the Pacific Wars is we didn't have this general plan that we're just going to fight the Japanese and win it. Then it was really specific.
It went sea by sea we're going to conquer ground. Island by island we're going to take back islands all the way to Tokyo because that's how wars are won. They are won with specificity. And God is taking back ground people group by people group. He is taking back ground from the kingdom of darkness. It is the reason why Ben Johnson who you hear from in a little bit was called over a decade ago to go to Lebanon to go to a foreign place that he might proclaim God's saving power to the Lebanese people.
It is the reason why church planting teams are raised up that they might plant churches in darker places like the region of Chechnya to see Chechnyans experience the glory of God. It's the reason why teams are raised up that they might smuggle Bibles into the hands of Tibetans which is one of the hardest to reach places in the world. It is the reason why translators spend 26 years translating the Bible into people groups into the language of the Alun people in Indonesia that they might actually have a Bible that they can read in their own language. God is taking ground people group by people group and he is very specific in how he is reaching this whole world.
We see God's specific plan and we see it all the way back to how the psalmist is describing this here. He says, that your way may be known on earth your saving power among all nations. Verse 3 Let the peoples praise you, O God. Like, take a minute and soak in that. The psalmist is overwhelming with joy that God's saving power might make the nations be glad. He says, let all the peoples praise you with an exclamation point.
There's so much anticipation to see this gospel advance. Like a kid on Christmas morning who's looking forward to seeing what's going to happen. There's so much anticipation to see God's mission unfold. That was the hope that comes all the way back to Psalm 67. But as we've seen before in the nation of Israel they did not fulfill this hope well.
They were driven by idols. They abandoned God. And that the light that they were in reflecting God's glory started to go away. Light was being snuffed out. Hope was starting to grow very dim until at the darkest point of creation in a town of Bethlehem light entered the world. And then what we see is that Jesus' entire life is the fulfillment of Psalm 67.
That when Jesus was born he had three foreigners three magi who came and visited him declaring that he was the king. And it starts to tip the hand that this blessing is going to expand further. It's the reason why Jesus in his ministry he specifically goes to a Samaritan woman and reveals to her that he is the Messiah that he is God and that the Samaritan people are going to be brought into this faith. It's the reason why when he looks at a Roman centurion the very person who represented the oppression of the Jewish people and points to a Roman centurion and says who has more faith than this man here?
He starts tipping his hand. He takes all of that work to the cross where he dies for all peoples everywhere. And he conquers death at the resurrection. And then after the resurrection before he ascends he tells the disciples and the followers of Jesus go make disciples of all nations of all people groups. and then the Holy Spirit falls upon the church in the book of Acts and then we start to see God's plan unfolding. Then in Acts 8 we see northern Africans the Ethiopian unit get exposed to the gospel.
In Acts 10 we see Romans like Cornelius who get exposed and believe in Jesus. We see Syrians who trust in Jesus in Acts 11. We see Cyprians in Acts 13. We see Greeks in Acts 17. And people group by people group let the nations be glad becomes the refrain of the mission of God. And the psalmist continues in verse 4 it says let the nations be glad and sing for joy for you judge the peoples with equity and guide the nations upon earth.
Selah. Let the peoples praise you oh God let all the peoples praise you. And nations are reached and churches are planted and new people groups are exposed to the gospel and there's a succession of believers and church plants that gets all the way to how we are in this room today. And then over time what starts to happen is that for those of us who have been exposed to the gospel churches denominations and people groups what happens over time is we start to forget that we are called to join our father in this mission to make all the nations be glad. And guys we are missing out. We are missing out on this mission.
Light in the Darkness
Transcript
Good morning. My name's Chet. I'm one of the pastors here. This is the first week of our Give Series. I'm always excited about this time of year, love this time of year. This past week, our church got to, kind of led by the Kitty Wake Group, and Charlie Earp got to go to the Gentle Pines area with Turner AME, and was able to, on Thanksgiving Day, give out about 150 to 200 meals.
And so that's a really cool thing that gets to happen this time of year. And we get to start our Give Series this time of year. It's just a good time of year. I like Christmas. I like that it's cold. I like Christmas lights.
I like that all the food this time of year turns into meat and carbohydrates. Like, that's it. Like, if you play your cards right, you won't have to eat a vegetable again until the New Year. I mean, and if you do, it'll be like sweet potatoes, and they're going to put some, like, you know, pecans and brown sugar on top of that thing. So just eat the top and, you know, smush the rest of it around.
Like, it's going to be good. So we, in our Give Series, always try to rally our church towards generosity. It's what Spencer was saying earlier, that we're gospel people, that Jesus has changed us, and therefore we ought to live with a gospel generosity. That it's how he has given to us and how he has sacrificed for us, and that Christmas is this picture of him giving up heaven so that we might be welcomed in, and so that we get to join in that at this time. So grab your Bibles.
Go to Isaiah chapter 8. What we're going to do today is we're going to talk through some stuff, and then we're going to intro what our gift project is for this year, how we're kind of joining together and rallying together to give our money away for the purposes of seeing God work and seeing him work in us to change our hearts, because it's so easy for us to get caught up in consumerism and to get caught up in what I have defines me and that what I own is what brings me joy, and the Bible says none of that is true, but that our money is tied to our hearts, and so it's helpful for us to send some of our money away to help change our hearts. When I was about four or five, I was at my grandmother's house. My grandparents' names are Iya and Baba.
They were missionaries to Nigeria, and those are Nigerian grandmother and grandfather in Yoruba, and so I was at my Iya and Baba's house, and they had a fairly large house. He was a doctor, and we have a fairly large family, so it was all my aunts and uncles and all my cousins. There's like 13 of us. I was like four or five, so we were all over the place and running around, and at some point I went into their pantry, and their pantry is underneath a stairwell, so it's kind of like the thing that Harry Potter lived in, and so I went kind of into the back of the pantry. I don't know what I was doing.
My guess is trying to swipe some food, and the door closed behind me. I didn't have the light in the pantry on. I was just using the light that was coming in from the doorway, and so the door closes behind me. I don't know if somebody walked through that. It was kind of in the hallway under a stairwell, so I don't know if somebody walked through and just closed the door because why it shouldn't be open, or if I, being four, didn't know that it was just going to close behind me, but it closes behind me. It's pitch black.
They did have a light bulb with a string, conveniently adult height, and so there was no getting to that, although I tried, and then went to the door, and it was locked, and so I began to handle it really well as a four-year-old, scream and cry and bang on the door and yell for help, and nobody could hear me because they were all having a festive time two rooms away enjoying their Christmas shenanigans, and so I was in a closet in the pitch black with the inability to turn the light on and no ability to get out for an extended period of time until they... My mom doesn't remember how long I was in there. She said it was long enough for them to count up children and go, wait a second, we're missing one, which in this house, while everybody's running around playing, was a fairly long time. I was four, so it was ten years.
I was in a closet for ten years because that's how time works when you're four. I almost died in there. I didn't have a can opener. There was no way to get to the food that I was looking for. It was pitch black. They finally come around looking.
They hear me yelling. They open the door. I'm red-faced and crying, and they were like, did you yell? I was like, yeah, yeah. You know, intelligent, helpful four-year-old things. And what the Bible tells us about the state of humanity is that without Jesus, without God at work on our behalf, all of us are as effectively trapped as a four-year-old in a closet, that we are in the dark with no ability to fix our situation, no ability to turn the light on on our own, no ability to open the door on our own, no ability to do anything, but fumble around in the darkness and eventually die.
That is the beautiful beginning of the story to Christmas. It starts off very bleak and very dark and very painful and very hopeless, and then we get the hope and the joy and the peace that comes along with Christmas. Now, culturally, it's a little weird because if you remove Christ from Christmas, and I'm not just talking about putting an X on your sign at your store, I'm talking about if you remove Jesus as the centerpiece and the hope of Christmas, you don't actually have the hope anymore. It's flimsy. It won't hold the weight of the darkness that surrounds it. It can't fix the problem.
If you replace it with, you know, goodwill towards man, or peace, or just some generosity, or Santa Claus. Like, it can't handle the amount of darkness, the amount of hopelessness. That's why this time of year is collectively all of us kind of locking arms and saying, okay, be good to people, be kind to people, because we all realize that we're not. We don't have it together. We're not. This isn't, the world doesn't work the way it ought to, and some people get very, very depressed at this time of year because they can see the hopelessness, but no real reason for hope.
Isaiah 8. Isaiah is a prophet. He's speaking into a similar time where there's just rampant sin, there's darkness, there's hopelessness. He's in the bottom kingdom. He's in Judah at this time. So the kingdom of Israel was one kingdom for Saul, David, Solomon, and then it broke in half after Solomon.
You had the top kingdom of Israel with the top ten tribes, and then you had the bottom kingdom, Judah, with two tribes. Judah had some good kings. Israel had no good kings. They never got it together. Judah had some, but this is Ahaz, is the king now in Judah, and he is not a good one. The way 2 Kings describes him, it says, he did not do what was right in the eyes of the Lord, his God, as his father David had done, but he walked in the ways of the kings of Israel.
He even burned his son as an offering according to the despicable practices the nations whom the Lord drove out before the people of Israel. And he sacrificed and made offerings on the high places and on the hills and under every green tree. That's what it says in 2 Kings about King Ahaz, that it's the king at this point, that there was worship, it's rampant everywhere. Worship was all over the place, under every green tree they were worshiping something. He even sacrifices his son as an offering. And this is what Isaiah is speaking into this climate, into this time, with this king leading them in utter darkness.
Isaiah 8, verse 11. Let's look. It says, For the Lord spoke thus to me with his strong hand upon me and warned me not to walk in the way of this people, saying, Do not call conspiracy all that this people calls conspiracy and do not fear what they fear nor be in dread, but the Lord of hosts, him you shall honor as holy. Let him be your fear, let him be your dread, and he will become a sanctuary. All right, did you hear that?
He says, Don't go along with these people being afraid of everything they're afraid of and calling everything that they call a conspiracy. He says, Let the Lord be your dread. Doesn't that sound like a nice invitation? God's like, I'll tell you what to be afraid of. Me. And you're like, Okay, that sounds a little heavy-handed.
That's a little crazy. And then he says, Then I'll be a sanctuary. Because when we have God as the most fearful, most holy, most revered being in the universe, everything else is so much smaller. Everything else is so less fearful. My dad, when we were little, and we'd be like, Dad, there's a monster in my closet. Dad, there's something scary in here.
He'd come in. He would look. He'd go look in the closet. He'd look under the bed. He'd say, No, there's not. He'd go, Watch.
It's just because it's dark. You're scared. He'd turn the light off. And then he'd go, Oh, wait. No, it came back. Oh, no.
It's huge. It's got a closet. It's getting right. Oh, it's right near your face. And then he would turn the light on and go, Oh, no. It was dark.
That was our imagination. There's no monster here. He would come in a couple of times to check. You know, you keep saying, No, it's back. It's scary. Whatever.
Eventually, he would come in and say, Look, I am the scariest thing in this house. And you need to be way more afraid of coming and telling me one more time to look in this room because there is nothing in here that is scary. And I'm down the hall and I'm very scary. And then we would go to sleep because our father was scarier than the monster we were sure was there. And that's what God's saying. He's saying, If I'm dreadful, then you're free.
But that's what happens in culture. That's what happens in life. When God gets removed, everything else becomes scary. And I love that he says, Don't call everything a conspiracy. These people call it conspiracy because it wasn't just before YouTube. That conspiracies were everywhere.
YouTube just helps us find them better. But haven't y'all seen this? It's not YouTube, y'all. It's CNN and Fox News. Do you remember when Barack Obama was president and how many things you heard about what he was secretly trying to do? And what he was going to, what was going to happen around election time and what was going to happen and he was going to do this and there was something with the military and you had to...
Anybody in on those? Anybody in on the new ones about Trump? All his secret plans? Trump is either, he's pitched to us as either a buffoon who cannot put on his own pants or some evil mastermind. But no matter what, he's going to tear the country down and there's going to be the Democrats that are working at this and the Republicans that are going to do this and suddenly, all of a sudden, the Green Party is going to rise to the top.
Nobody believes that one. But... We hear things about the Russians and the Chinese and there's just going to be... And he's saying, look, don't join in. Not everything's that fearful when I am most to be feared. He says, I'll be a sanctuary and...
Pick up verse 14. And he will become a sanctuary and a stone of offense and a rock of stumbling to both the houses of Israel. A trap and a snare to the inhabitants of it, Jerusalem. And many shall stumble on it and they shall fall and be broken. They shall be snared and taken. Eventually we're told that Jesus, ultimately the gospel, is the ultimate stone, the ultimate rock of offense.
The stone of... The rock of stumbling, the stone of offense. But there's this idea that God will either be a sanctuary or you'll fall completely over him. You won't be able to stand before him. Verse 16. Bind up the testimony.
Seal the teaching among my disciples. I'm sorry. I've got to pause for just a second. I should have said this earlier. We're going to read a lot of scripture today and we're going to move fast. A lot of times when you read the Bible, it's like a wine tasting.
You take one verse. You swirl it. You smell it. You put it in your mouth. You swish it around. You spit it out.
You put it back in. I think that's how they taste wine. You soak it in. It's like hard candy. You just hold it in there for a long time. Other times, reading the Bible is like jumping in a pool.
You just jump and you're like, whoa, it's cold. It's just you get the feeling of the sense that's what we're doing today. We're just going to move kind of quickly and we're going to get a lot all at once to try to paint one big picture for help us to understand and see this idea of darkness and light, hopelessness and hope. And so we're going to keep going and I should have said that earlier and I'm sorry. 16. For those of you with ADD, you're tracking.
Let's go. Bind up the testimony. Seal the teaching among my disciples. I will wait for the Lord who is hiding his face from the house of Jacob and I will hope in him. So this is Isaiah talking.
Behold, I and the children whom the Lord has given me are signs and portents and Israel from the Lord of hosts who dwells on Mount Zion. And when they say to you, inquire of the medians and the necromancers who chirp and mutter. So a medium would speak in between those and necromancers would speak on behalf of the dead and he says, they chirp and mutter. He says, should not a people inquire of their Lord? I love that he mocks them. He says, I speak clearly and they chirp and mutter.
They don't have a clear point. They're not helpful. Should they inquire of the dead on behalf of the living? Verse 20. To the teaching and the testimony. So he's saying, go to what's written.
Go to what we know. If they will not speak according to this word, it is because they have no dawn. Meaning they have no light. They're in the dark. They have no wisdom. One of the ways the Bible talks about darkness is that it's this lack of wisdom, lack of understanding that you would fall and stumble.
He's saying they have no light. Verse 21. They will pass through the land greatly distressed and hungry and when they are hungry, they will be enraged and will speak contemptuously against the king and their God and turn their faces upward and they will look to the earth but behold distress and darkness, the gloom of anguish and they will be thrust into thick darkness. Okay, so when God is most fearful, everything else isn't as scary. And when you remove God, everything else becomes a conspiracy. The Republicans and the Democrats are coming for you.
Like everything else becomes spooky. Everything else becomes unstable. And then what it says is when everything starts to fall apart, they'll look upward enraged. This is a global thing. But that we would push away God, that we would not worship God and then as soon as everything goes bad, we go, see?
If there was a God, this wouldn't have happened. They look up enraged and then it says they'll look to the earth. This is verse 21. They'll immediately then say, we've got to figure out the problem. We've got to work it out. We'll look to the earth.
We'll solve this. And what they'll find, they'll look to the earth, but behold, distress and darkness, the gloom of anguish, and they will be thrust into thick darkness. That without the Lord, all we have is darkness, hopelessness. There are a lot of good things that people are pushing for. There's a lot of good charities and things that are going to happen around the holidays where people are going to say, we need to do this, we need to do that. There's some good things that are godly things.
People will say, we've got to, we've got to, we've got to, the problem is ignorance. We've got to educate people. Or the problem is this, and we've got to fix it. And some of those things are right and some of them, but ultimately, if we say those are the, that's the only problem, that's the only thing we have to fix. If we fail to see that God is holy and that we are sinners and that sin is at work everywhere, we won't fix the problem. Ultimately, it will fail.
There are going to be people who tell you, look, the problem is this political party and this other one needs to rise up. The problem right now is men. They need to sit down. Women need to rise up. The problem is this skin tone. They need to sit down.
This skin tone needs to rise up. The problem is this political ideology, this economic ideology, but the issue is ultimately that we're sinners and we're in darkness and we're hopelessly trying to fix a problem that we cannot fix. We are thrust into deep darkness without God and that is a global problem. That without Christ, there is no fix and without Christ, as messed up as this world is, this is as good as it gets because one day we will face Christ and stand accountable for our sin. chapter 9. But there will be no gloom for her who was in anguish.
In the former time, he brought into contempt the land of Zebulun and the land of Naphtali. That's the northern part of Israel. But in the latter time, he has made glorious the way of the sea, the land beyond the Jordan, Galilee of the nations. Matthew quotes this, says this about Jesus. He calls it Galilee of the Gentiles. What he's saying is this promise of hope isn't just for the people of Israel, but the promise of hope is for everybody, for the Gentiles, for the nations, that there's going to be hope.
The people who walked in darkness have seen a great light. Those who dwelt in a land of deep darkness, on them light has shone. That's the hope of Christmas. Some of you see the darkness. You know it. You feel it.
You listen to emo music. You watch independent film. Some of you know about the darkness. You know about... Some of you work in fields where you see it all the time. In social work or in police work.
Where it's in everybody. Everybody. You feel like everybody lies. Everybody cheats. Everybody. I got a speeding ticket this past... about a week ago.
I'm part of the problem. Because I am one of the reasons why we need police officers. Because if they weren't there, I would be doing whatever the heck I want on I-95 on my vacation. I would just be driving as fast as I possibly could. And I was until he pulled me over. And then I slowed down.
And I tried to tell my wife the odds of me getting two tickets in the same day are very slim. But the truth is we're all part of this problem. And he says there's hope. Light will shine. Verse 3. You have multiplied the nation.
You have increased its joy. They rejoice before you as joy at the harvest as they are glad when they divide the spoil. I love that. The joy of the harvest that when... If some of you have a... Your work is seasonal and there's a harvest time.
There's this... Oh man, this is when it's booming. My parents... I grew up in a family where we sold swimming pools in the summer. We could do whatever we want. And then as soon as the fall hit...
Because my parents didn't budget, y'all. They just kind of... They just rolled with the cash we had, you know. As soon as the fall hit they were like, Alright. No more happiness in this house. Every year.
The joy of the harvest. This hope. This... And then he says when they divide the spoil that means you've won the battle. The relief. And the joy.
Clemson thought they were just going to roll over South Carolina. And they eventually did. And they felt relief and joy. South Carolina was like, We got some punches in and we feel good about it. This is when they divide the spoil. It says, For the yoke of his burden and the staff for his shoulder, the rod of his oppressor, you have broken.
As on the day of Midian. For every boot of the tramping warrior in battle, tumult, and every garment rolled in blood will be burned as fuel for the fire. For... So he says, The staff of the oppressor, the warriors, everything is gone. For... For...
To us a child is born. To us a son is given. And the government shall be upon his shoulder and his name shall be called Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace. Now I want to show you all something interesting that happens here. He says a son will be born and immediately we're thinking, Okay, somebody, somebody's going to come along and they're going to fix this problem. And that's good news.
When Isaiah is... When he was prophesying this to the Israelites, they're like, Okay, we're going to have some kind of a Messiah. We're going to have somebody. But then he immediately says he's going to be called Mighty God. He's going to be called Everlasting Father. So this can't just be a regular person.
Can't. That wouldn't flex well with the God of the Hebrews who's the only God and does not share that. Remember how he's dreadful? He talked about it earlier. So he's saying this is going to be more than just a person.
Ultimately we know that this is Christ. That he comes who is God, joins us. He is Emmanuel, God with us. Prince of peace. Of the increase of his government, of the peace, there will be no end. On the throne of David and over his kingdom to establish it and to uphold it with justice and with righteousness from this time forth and forevermore, the zeal of the Lord of hosts will do this.
All right. Jump to John chapter 1 because he picks up with the same idea. He's talking about Jesus coming and this idea of light entering darkness. And we're going to read through this pretty quickly. I'm going to point out a few things and then we're going to try to draw all this together to help us understand what's going on as we intro our gift series. So there's going to be someone born who's going to fix this problem.
This is Jesus. This is the hope of Christmas that everything was terrible, everything was dark, everything was awful and then somebody opens the door. Okay. At some point, I think we're going to teach through the book of John and when we do, we will approach this the way that John wrote it. He holds off telling us this is Jesus until way later. I'm going to ruin the surprise.
He's talking about Jesus the whole time, you guys. Okay. In the beginning was the Word, Jesus, and the Word was with God and the Word was God. He was in the beginning with God. all things were made through Him and without Him was not anything made that was made. In Him was life and the life was the light of men. The light shines in the darkness and the darkness has not overcome it.
I love that verse. The light shines in the darkness and the darkness has not overcome it. There are, for some of us in this room right now, we feel, see, wake up with darkness. We go to bed with darkness. We feel it in us. We see it at work in the world.
We feel like we're in a situation that is just darkness. It's just hopeless. It's just sinful. It's just broken. And He says, the light shines into the darkness and the darkness has not overcome it. That's how light works.
I think when He built the world, He just said He did, He was like, I'm going to make light and darkness work like this and then later I'm going to say, I'm light. It's going to work perfectly. You ever turned a light on in a dark place and the darkness was so dark it just covered it up? No, because that's not how darkness and light works. Light always wins. Darkness is just the absence of light.
The absence of light. The sun does not timidly creep over the horizon. Before you can even see it, it's already lit everything up. It's not even there yet. Everything is perfect like I can see as far and then it's like, oh, there you are. Because light just wins.
And that's what it says, that Jesus is light and then He shines into the darkness and the darkness has not overcome it. That is worth singing about. That is worth celebrating. That is good news. Because without Christ, we have nothing. We're fumbling around in the dark with no ability to fix it.
Let's keep going. There was a man sent from God whose name was John. He came as a witness to bear witness about the light that all might believe through him. He was not the light but came to bear witness about the light. So, John the author is writing about John, another John, John the Baptist. He's talking about Jesus and then John just kind of interrupts.
He's like, okay, so there was this guy who talked about the light. He wasn't the light but he came to bear witness about the light but he wasn't but he talked about him a lot and he thought everybody would believe through him. Then he goes right back to talking about Jesus. Verse 9. The true light which gives light to everyone was coming into the world. He was in the world and the world was made through him yet the world did not know him.
He came to his own, that's the Jewish people, and his own people did not receive him but to all who did receive him who believed in his name he gave the right to become children of God who were born not of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man but of God. You ever heard someone say well we're all God's children? John chapter 1 says no. To all those who receive Christ and who believe in his name he gives us the right to be called a child of God. We're all created by God we're all God's creatures but those who trusted in Jesus Christ as King and Savior and Lord are brought in not by lineage not by effort but by Jesus and his work.
And the word became flesh and dwelt among us and we have seen his glory glory as of the only son from the father full of grace and truth. John interrupts again. John bore witness about him and cried out this was he of whom I said he who comes after me ranks before me because he was before me for from his fullness that's Jesus's we have all received grace upon grace for the law was given through Moses grace and truth came through Jesus Christ. Christ. Okay. The story of Christmas and the story of the gospel is such overwhelmingly good news that I don't want us to miss it. when we're told here's a cataclysmic eternal problem and then you're told but a son will be born that's why it's grace that's why it says grace came through Jesus the law came through Moses see Moses showed up and he gave the law he gave rules he gave here's what God wants from us and we can't do it we can't I kind of was trying to pay attention to what the speed limit was but there was something I just couldn't I couldn't do it I could kind of eventually there's something to us when we see God's law it's like we're a part of the problem but Jesus shows up and he does it for us and from Christ we receive grace that he's the light that shines into the darkness and he does the work for us that we have a manger a cross a crown a throne all of which are are filled by not us Jesus was the son who was born Jesus is the son and the servant who goes to the cross and Jesus is the son who reigns as king and that's good news because it doesn't have to be you you're not the one who has to fix the problem I did not have to MacGyver my way out of that closet I just wailed and cried and fumbled around and then here I am you guys I'm not still in the closet that's that's what gets to happen for us as Christians that you should when you see a manger scene when you see a nativity you should be so overwhelmed by the fact that he came to solve this problem that he rescued us so the question is that's the hope we have at Christmas that's the darkness and the light the true darkness that overwhelms the world and the true light that overwhelms the darkness that's what we get at Christmas but the question is what do we do with that how do we respond to that well first we believe we trust Jesus we get welcomed in we get rescued the darkness in us gets banished we get free and then we do what John did and I love that he can't keep his mouth shut even while it's in the middle of this it's like he's talking about Jesus but John the Baptist keeps showing up because he it's almost like he's interrupting the story to proclaim how good the light is and I love verse 6 7 and 8 it says there was a man sent from God whose name was John he came as a witness to bear witness about the light that all might believe through him he was not the light but came to bear witness about the light John who are you going to tell about the light all of them all of them are going to believe through me that's what John the Baptist is saying I'm going to so aggressively loudly constantly point to Jesus that all of them will know about the light because of me you ever had such good news you just wouldn't shut up that's what John is saying this light that shines into the darkness is that it's such good news so beautiful we can't not share it okay I have to take a second and talk to the people who might be listening to this on the internet later before I intro our gift project if you are listening to this on the internet you are not going to get to hear what our gift project is because some of the information is sensitive and we are not going to post it online have a nice day to decir you
God's Promises and Our Sin
Transcript
My name is Spencer. I'm one of the pastors here with Mill City Church. We are in Genesis 20 today, which is on page 9 in the blue Bibles that are around you. If you don't have a Bible at home to read, please take that Bible. That is our gift to you. But we'll be in Genesis 20 today.
This is our last week in Genesis for the fall. We're going to take a break. Every year we do a gift series after Thanksgiving, and we will jump into that. In the new year we will come back to Genesis. But this is our last week.
We have been journeying through Abraham and leading up to the promised son, the promised son of Isaac. And today we get another chapter of Abraham's failures. We get to see him fall on his face yet again. Abraham, he feels a little bit like character Gabriel from The Walking Dead. Gabriel is a priest. And you know when Hollywood gets a chance to portray Christians and priests, it's going to really go well.
And he shows up in the fifth season, and immediately something's off. And you quickly learn that he's a coward. That he's a fearful man. That when the apocalypse happened and zombies started to take over, he locked out his church members who came for refuge and safety at his church, and they all died because he was fearful. And you think that there's going to be some character development. It happens a little bit.
There are times where he starts to grow and being a little bit courageous. He starts to grow as a character. But then there are times where he falls again. And he's fearful. And he turns on the people that he's with. He's just this character whose influx is moving between fear and courage.
Finally, I feel like right now he's hitting his stride, which is about the time that usually characters in the show die off. But he's finally starting to hit his stride. And we're kind of there with Abraham. His life is fear and then it's courage. But we're not there to his shining moment.
When we pick up in the new year, we're going to see Abraham's moment where he gets to trust the Lord and his word. But today we get to look at another chapter of his failures because Abraham is a man that is driven by fear. That in the face of God's promises, the face of this unveiling covenant that is happening, he is driven by fear. So that's what we're going to walk through today and sing this in this story. And I know that some of you heard, oh, we're going to talk about fear. Cool.
I don't have fears. Listen, just because you're always packing, just because you maybe can bench 300 or you know some moves, doesn't mean that we all don't have fears. Because the reality is that we do. We have, some of us have fear of man. Some of us have fear of financial uncertainty. Some of us have fear of failures.
And in those moments, there is fear within us that shapes the decisions, that shapes our outward actions. And in that, we get to relate to Abraham. He's a character that we absolutely can relate to. And what we're going to see in this story and what we see throughout the Bible is that God accomplishes his purposes by giving generous grace to those who are driven by fear. That God accomplishes his purposes by giving us generous amounts of grace, those of us that are driven by fear. So we're going to walk through this.
We're going to see this. I'm going to pray. And then we'll be in verse 1. God, I am so thankful that you've given us stories like this. God, I pray that you would help us see the gospel in it, that you would help us see that you are better and that you are worthy of our fear and nothing else is. In Jesus' name, amen.
All right, verse 1. From there, Abraham journeyed toward the territory of the Negev and lived between Kadesh and Shur and he sojourned in Gerar. Which, by the way, I will continue to point this out. I just love how the Bible does history. I think it's giving you specifics of the territory of the Negev, somewhere between Kadesh and Shur and he's sojourning in the Gerar. All right, so let's give some context.
We bounced around a little bit in this part of Genesis. I'm going to give some context for the timeline here. In Genesis 18, God comes to Abraham and Sarah and says, you are going to have Isaac. He is going to come. He will be here in a year. So that's Genesis 18.
Quickly after that, in Genesis 19, we have Sodom and Gomorrah. God brings destruction on those cities. And then after that is when they move to this territory. Now, in 21, which we're not going to get to today, that is when Isaac is conceived. Which means, if you do the math, this is about a three-month stretch that we just went through before Isaac is getting ready to be conceived and before the nine months later he is going to come. So that's where we're at a little bit in this timeline.
And it picks up with from there. Now, we don't really know why they moved from there. The text doesn't give us that. It's possible that living next to two cities that just got destroyed wasn't that great. But we really don't know.
It just tells us that they moved and they moved into a region that they are strangers. That they're not known. That they're sojourners and they're strangers. And we don't have time to get into Genesis 21, which should give us another part of this story. But there's an important detail about this territory that we need to know that comes from that chapter.
And that is that this people, these are the Philistines. And if you know a little bit about the Old Testament, that should trigger something in your brain. Because the Philistines and the Israelites have a really, really rough history. They're consistently at odds and at war. If you've heard the story of David and Goliath, Goliath was a Philistine. So it is possible that this is the first meeting between Abraham, who is the father of the Israelites, and the Philistines.
And this doesn't go well today. And it's possible that from this is where the tension starts to grow. All right, picking up in verse 2. And Abraham said of Sarah his wife, She is my sister. And Abimelech, king of Gerar, sent and took Sarah. Now if you remember Genesis 12 and what happened there, this is the moment of a collective facepalm.
It's like Groundhog Day. If Bill Murray was pimping out Anna McDowell for safety. It's like, what? This is happening again. He's 100. And this is still happening.
Back in Genesis 12, he goes before Pharaoh and says, This is my sister. And then she's brought into the household of Pharaoh. It's like, are we, collective wisdom says, You're 100. She's 90. Why don't you just roll up into the region of the gap and say, no, no, no. We don't have to do this.
No, let's make cookies. We'll be the cool old people that knit sweaters for dogs. Like, we'll be invited. We'll be neighbors. Why do you need to run this again? And if you step back and look at the context of this, God in eternity past shows Abraham, whose life is filled with fearfulness like this.
And that should be an encouragement for us. Because if you're in the zone where you're thinking, Man, there's no way God can use me because of my past. Maybe there is sexual sin in your past. Maybe there is a streak of violence in your past. Maybe you've got something, some stuff currently going on in your life. And you're thinking, There's no way that God can use me because of my anxieties, because of my fears, because of my anger.
All of that. And if we take a step back and realize, God chooses people that are broken. He can use anybody. He uses Abraham in spite of his fears. We get that example from this. So jumping back into the story, what is strange about this is that it works again.
She's 90. She has to be the most stunning looking 90-year-old woman in history because it works, and Abimelech brings her in to his household. All right, verse 3. But God came to Abimelech in a dream by night and said to him, Behold, you're a dead man, because of the woman whom you have taken, for she is a man's wife. Now Abimelech had not approached her.
All right, pause. This probably is the first recorded you're a dead man threat we have on record. And it's because he has taken, who's about to learn, is Abraham's wife. And what's important here is what the text tells us. It adds an important caveat. He had not approached her.
Nothing sexual has happened here. And it's important for this to be noted because the text is telling us, No, it is about time for Isaac to be conceived. Abimelech is not the father. No, Abraham is. So once the text makes that clear, Abimelech goes into his defense.
Pick it up. He says, Lord, will you kill an innocent people? Now that word people is intentional. It didn't say, will you kill an innocent man? It didn't say, will you kill an innocent person? This is a people.
The Hebrew word for nation is the same word that is used here for people. Because Abimelech, he knows what's up. He gets it. I mean, this is, he has probably heard of the destruction that has happened in Sodom and Gomorrah. He is fearful and is a right response. He's not like the kings of Sodom and the kings of Gomorrah.
He is fearful of the Lord. And he continues his defense. He said, Did he not himself say to me, She is my sister. And she herself said, He is my brother. In the integrity of my heart and the innocence of my hands, I have done this. So he is pleading his case before the Lord.
I was deceived. She was in on it. I did not know this. I have not touched her. And he's doing this because he knows that judgment is on the line here. And that ignorance and not knowing what is happening here is not going to be an excuse for him.
He appeals to his heart and to his intentions. And then in verse 6, it continues. It says, Then God said to him in the dream, Yes, I know that you have done this in the integrity of your heart. And it was I who kept you from sinning against me. Therefore, I did not let you touch her. There are two things from this verse that show God's sovereignty, how he rules and he reigns that is important for us to see.
And the first one is that God sees the heart. He sees the heart, which is your innermost self. It's your affections. It's your motivations. It's your desires. It's where all of your actions stem from.
He sees the heart of Abimelech. He sees the heart of Abraham. He looks through and sees the heart. And that is important for us to know. We need to own that. That God can see our hearts.
If we have outward actions that don't match our inner self, there's a problem. If you are currently angry with another believer and there's bitterness that's welling up within you, but your go-to is to smile and not act like everything is okay. Maybe you're fearful of confrontation. Maybe you're fearful of making it awkward. God sees through that. He sees the heart.
Maybe you're the kind of person that here on a Sunday or in your group, you look, talk, act one way. But when you get around people that don't love Jesus, that don't follow Him, you look and act completely different. The reality is that God, He sees the heart. You cannot hide your heart from God. He knows the motives behind every single action. God is sovereign in how He sees our hearts.
He's also sovereign in this verse in how He keeps us from sin. That's the second thing that we see here. It says, It was I who kept you from sinning against me. Tim Keller is a pastor in New York. He has this quote. We've used it before.
He says, You are far more sinful than you could ever possibly imagine, but you're far more cherished than you could ever possibly dream. That has vast implications for a lot of different things. But that first part, you are far more sinful than you could ever possibly imagine, is a reality that left to our own devices, left to our own self, we are far more jacked up than we could ever possibly understand. So when you have lustful thoughts, you think, There's no way that I could ever commit adultery. But that quickly rolls over.
It takes a little more thoughts, a little more action, and then eventually, that's where you land. It's how quickly, for anger goes from, Oh, I'm just a little bit angry to violence. It rolls over very quickly. It's how malice turns into rampant gossip, into slander. It rolls over very quickly, and we think, and we see, especially when we see other people that fall. We see other people that fall into sin.
It's easy for us to pass judgment and say, I would never do that, but the reality is, is that God keeps us from sinning. Circumstantially, He can prevent you from it, but we see, Jude 24 says, Now to Him who is able to keep you from stumbling, and to present you blameless before the presence of His glory with great joy. Tell me, who is it that prevents us from sinning? Who is it that presents us righteous before the Lord? For those of us who are in Christ, the Holy Spirit in us, intercedes for us, keeps us from sinning, keeps us, hear this, from being the worst possible version of ourselves. So God is sovereign in how He keeps us from sinning, and how He keeps us from letting our fears that rule in our heart, let that result into all kinds of rampant sin.
God accomplishes His purposes by giving generous grace to those of us that are driven by fear. So the Lord, He keeps Abimelech from sinning further, and then He tells him what to do next. Verse 7. He says, Now then, return the man's wife, for he is a prophet, so that he will pray for you, and you shall live. But if you do not return her, know that you shall surely die, you and all who are yours.
Alright, so what we see out the gate from this verse is that Abraham is a prophet. This is the first time in the Bible that we see anyone is called a prophet. And this prophet, from what we can see in his storyline, he is not exemplary at all. He is driven by fear. There's this old saying that God uses crooked sticks to make straight lines. We don't really know who said that.
This has been attributed to a few different people. But how true is that? That God uses crooked sticks. He uses the broken to accomplish his purposes. So Abraham is a prophet, and he says to Abimelech, he says, if you don't return her, you're done.
You and all of your household, all of the nation, all of you. Now we don't have time to look at this, but the very last part of this chapter, judgment has already happened because of this. God has closed up all of the wombs in the house of Abimelech. All the women are barren. Judgment is weighing on Abimelech, and they do not take this lightly. It picks up in verse 8.
It says, So Abimelech rose early in the morning and called all his servants and told them all these things. Hear this. And the men were very much afraid. But unlike Sodom, unlike Gomorrah, this place fears the God of Abraham. They take this warning very seriously. In verse 9 it says, Then Abimelech called Abraham and said to him, What have you done to us?
And how have I sinned against you that you have brought on me in my kingdom a great sin? You have done to me things that ought not be done. And Abimelech said to Abraham, What did you see that you did this thing? Abraham said, I did it because I thought there is no fear of God at all in this place, and they will kill me because of my wife. I feel like Abimelech would have been understandable had he been a little more aggressive in his approach. Because the reality is that Abraham's actions has put him, his wives, his kids, his nation in jeopardy.
And he comes to him, he says, What have you done? Why have you done this? Abraham says, I did it because I thought there was no fear of God in this place, and I thought you would kill me because of my wife. Now aside from the fact that Abraham was dead wrong, there is fear of God in this place. It's evidenced by their response. He put that whole nation at risk at the age of 100 because he was fearful.
After decades of getting to see how God has been beside Abraham, we have evidence. You go back to Genesis 14 as we walk through that he supported, he was behind Abraham in the wars that defended Lot. We go to Genesis 15 when he looks at Abraham and he picks up his head and he says, Look at the stars. You see the stars? That's how numerous your descendants will be. He does the ceremony that we got to walk through where Abraham splits the animals and God walks through the center.
What's being said there is may I be burst apart. The God of the universe, may I be burst apart if this promise doesn't come true. Abraham is given example after example, evidence after evidence to not be afraid to trust God. And he's fearful. And then we get a little bit of the back story of what all went into this and how far this deception goes back. He says, Besides, she is indeed my sister.
Alright. The daughter of my father, though not the daughter of my mother. I said, That makes it better. And she became my wife. And when God caused me to wander from my father's house, I said to her, this is the kindness you must do to me. At every place which we come, say of me, he is my brother.
Now, I don't have time to get into why it was somewhat permissible here for intermarriage to happen, for him to marry his sister. And yet, when the law is handed down in Exodus, it's explicitly forbidden. We did cover that early in our Genesis sermons over why that was permissible. You can go back and listen to that. But, aside from that, Abraham, we get some more background on how he cowardly passes off his wife as his sister. Part of it is, is it's a half-truth.
He says, Well, she's kind of my sister. By my dad's side. Now, I wasn't really being deceitful. I wasn't really lying. And some of you, man, some of you hear that and you're like, Well, technically, he wasn't lying. She is his sister.
Well played, Abraham. You did it right. It's technically not lying. No. It is absolutely lying. It is absolutely deceitful.
I can be a little more blunt with this because the worst version of myself does this. Before I was a Christian, like that was my MO. That's how I got out of trouble. My mom would say, Are you, you going over to your friends? Is there going to be drinking? Yeah.
There's going to be a few guys. There's going to be some beers. But there's not going to be any driving. It's going to be chill. It's going to be okay. And the reality was, the full truth was, that there's going to be a lot of people.
There's going to be a lot more drinks. There's going to be a lot more drugs. It was a half truth that I could give out to get out of trouble. And I've seen this, y'all. I've seen this already welling up in my daughter. She's three and I'll see her and I'll say, Ellie, did you just take your brother's toy?
And she goes, No, no, no, no. I gave him a toy. See, I gave him a toy. And I just, I said, No, no, no. First of all, I saw all of this. You took your brother's toy.
You made it look better because you gave her a toy in replacement. But that, she's already picking up on the sinful nature that I've passed down to her. That half truths are, that she can deal in half truths. And what she's going to have to learn and what I had to learn upon becoming a Christian and being changed by Jesus is that we as Christians don't get to dabble in half truths. Half truths are not truths at all. They are deceitful.
They are lies. The people of God who've been claimed and redeemed by Jesus don't get to tell half truths. Abraham's scheme was just that. It was a scheme. It was a lie masquerading as a half-baked truth. So if you love and follow Jesus, you don't get to deal in half truths.
And he's been doing this for a while. We see the history here. It says, When God caused me to wander from my father's house, I said to her, This is the kindness you must do to me. At every place to which we come, say of me, He is my brother. Which means they've been running this place since they left their homeland. This is how long this has been going on.
And again, take a step back. Look at this. God, in eternity past, chose to bring redemption through Abraham. In spite of his failures, in spite of his fears, God gives generous amounts of grace to those of us that are driven by fear. So we get this powerful picture in Abraham of God's grace towards us, and we also get a picture of repentance from Abimelech.
Verse 14. It says, Then Abimelech took sheep and oxen and male servants and female servants and gave them to Abraham and returned Sarah, his wife, to him. And Abimelech said, Behold, my land is before you. Dwell wherever it pleases you. To Sarah he said, Behold, I have given your brother a thousand pieces of silver. It is a sign of your innocence in the eyes of all who are with you and before everyone you are vindicated.
Then Abraham prayed to God and God healed Abimelech and also healed his wife and his female slaves so that they bore children. For the Lord had closed all the wombs of the house of Abimelech because of Sarah, Abraham's wife. So Abimelech's actions here are evidence of a contrite heart. That God has, that he is, he is repentant. He gives oxen, he gives silver, he shows hospitality here. Saying that this land, you can dwell in this land.
You are, you are welcome here. Take this, settle here. And all is well at the end of this story between Abraham and Abimelech. So outside of just this being another example of God's radical grace of how he has shown so much grace towards Abraham, how does this story fit into the greater picture of the Bible? Two ways. First, God's rescue plan here is preserved.
Abimelech threatened the rescue plan. He threatened the line of redemption that was going to come through Abraham. That Abraham and Sarah were promised that they were going to have a son and through him redemption would come and that plan was threatened which is why God's response to Abimelech is so severe. Because the reality is is that without the seed coming through Abraham and Sarah there is no redemption for sinners anywhere. That includes the line of Abimelech. That future Philistines down the line will have the opportunity to hear the gospel because God's redemption through Abraham and Sarah.
Second, this is the first time that we see explicitly a prophet who makes intercession in the Bible. Intercession in the Bible is when someone Acts as a mediator between God and man and there's two main pictures that we see that happen throughout the Old Testament. For this, we see prophets and priests that act as intercessors between God and man. Priests interceded at the temple. Their job was to be at the temple to make sacrifices on behalf of the people that it might turn away God's wrath for sins. They interceded on behalf of the people at the temple in the presence of the Lord.
Prophets were raised up. Prophets were raised up that they might preach repentance. They might preach and call Israel to turn back from sin and call them into fellowship with God. Those are the two main roles of intercessors that we see in the Old Testament. Notice that Abimelech has to go to Abraham to have him pray for him that he might be forgiven, that his nation might be spared. And if you think about this, Abimelech goes to the man who deceived him to have him intercede between God and them.
Abraham, like the rest of the prophets that are going to follow, Abraham is not perfect. He is fallen. He is a poor type of the one prophet who is to come. He is a poor example of the prophet in Jesus that is coming. So praise God that we have a better prophet in Christ who came preaching a message of the kingdom, preaching a message of repentance, serving the least of these, who came bearing the message of the gospel and standing, hear this, courageously in the face of death, courageously in the face of people who were threatening him.
He stood his ground and was taken to the cross to take our sins on him. Praise God we have a better intercessor, a better high priest who took our sins with him on the cross, the final sacrifice for our sins that we might have a high priest who stands before us in the heavens. As the book of Hebrews talks about as our intercessor, it says, Hebrews 4, for we do not have a high priest who is unable to sympathize with our weaknesses, but one who in every respect has been tempted as we are, yet without sin. Let us then with confidence draw near to the throne of grace that we may receive mercy and find grace to help in the time of need.
That Jesus perfectly fulfills the role of intercessor. He is able also, hear this, he is able to sympathize with us. That in every respect he was tempted and tried, which means he was tempted in the same way that Abraham was to tell half-truths, to be deceitful. He was tempted like Abraham to be fearful, to fear others and not fear the Lord. All of us are tempted to chase after idols, to chase after things, to let fear rule in us that it might shape us to make decisions in ways that are contrary to what God has for us. And Jesus can empathize with all of those temptations because he was tempted and tried and did not sin.
That is the God that we get to pray to. That is our high priest. That is the one who made intercession for us. All of the prophets like Abraham failed. Jesus did it perfectly. So that's how that fits into the greater story of the Bible.
Now coming back to Abraham, if I'm honest, it is frustrating as we walk through his story. It's frustrating because I'm like, seriously, after all that God has done, after all the promises he has made, you, this unique relationship that you have with the God of the universe, you still are fearful at the age of 100 after decades of hearing this promise unfold. And when I get that judgmental posture in my own heart, man, we need to look in the mirror because God makes promises to us all the time. We have promises throughout the Bible that call us to trust him. I think of Matthew 6 is a passage in the Sermon on the Mount where God is addressing our fear of God providing.
How many of us are fearful of seeing bills paid, fearful of how we're going to make budget, fearful of how we're going to plan for retirement, fearful for how God is going to provide for daily bread and Jesus, he sees that. He says, look at the birds of the air. They neither reap nor sow nor gather in barns and yet your heavenly Father feeds them. Are you not of more value than they? How quickly are we driven to anxiety and fear of our finances when God has given us a promise? You are more valuable than all of creation.
I am going to take care of your needs. How many of us are fearful and when that happens we are driven into old sinful patterns. When we get scared, when we get worried, our go-to is to be driven back into who we used to be. That's our old patterns. Whether it's drinking, whether it's running, whether it's escapism, you fill in the blank. What we have in Romans, Paul says, for you did not receive the spirit of slavery to fall back into fear, but you have received the spirit of adoption as sons by whom we cry, Abba, Father.
Meaning, we don't have a spirit of fearfulness in us. We have the Holy Spirit living and reigning inside of us. We don't have to let fear drive us into old patterns. We can trust in what God is doing. We can trust in His promises. He will work in us.
And I'll give you one more. For those of us that fear man and what man can do to us. Whether that's you fearing others and you being so concerned about their opinion of you. Maybe that's you. You are fearful to share the gospel with somebody because of how they might respond. We let other people and our fear of them drive us to do actions or to not do actions like sharing the gospel.
And Jesus in Matthew 10 says, And do not fear those who can kill the body but cannot kill the soul. Rather fear Him who can destroy both body and soul in hell. And the picture that we have here is that those fears are so temporary. They are so temporary. We are eternal. If we believe in Jesus, if we have trusted in Him, He has claimed us.
What could anybody possibly do to us? We are eternally His. We have no reason to fear. We can trust in His promises. This is the Lord who came from heaven who sought us and redeemed us that we might not fear anyone else, that we might only fear and worship Him forever. God accomplishes His purposes by giving radical, generous amounts of grace to those of us that are driven by fear.
And we can relate to Abraham and y'all, that is good news because God has given us grace.
Sodom and Gomorrah
Transcript
Well, good morning. My name's Chet. I'm one of the pastors here. Y'all enjoying the new carpet smell? We are excited to have new carpet, and I actually like the smell. We close the doors, the chemicals start seeping into your brain, and as the sermon goes, my jokes get funnier.
Alright, that would kill at the end of the sermon, just letting y'all know. So, Kim, just keep breathing in those fumes. Grab your Bible, go to Genesis chapter 18. We're walking through the book of Genesis. We're in chapter 18, and we're going to actually pick up. So, what we did a couple of weeks ago, and even for the past two weeks, was we looked at some stuff that was happening in Genesis chapter 16, 17, and then we jumped past 18 and 19 to look at 21.
So, now we're picking back up. We're going to go 18, 19, and chapter 20 next week. So, we're going to look at 18 and 19 today. We'll be looking at picking back up with Lot. Last time we saw Lot, he and Abraham, he is Abraham's nephew. And the last time we saw him, they had grown too large for each other.
They had too much cattle, too many herds, too many people kind of living in their camps. And so they said, hey, let's not fight. Let's spread out. And so Abraham tells Lot, pick where you want to go. If you go this way, I'll go that way. Lot looks around.
He looks this way. And everything's dry and rocky. And it almost sounds like it even kind of maybe stunk that way. Like it just wasn't good. He looks this way. Everything was pretty and lovely.
And there was water. And it was like the garden of God. And so he was like, hmm, this way. And so Lot goes that way. And it says that he moved his camp all the way to Sodom, which was a very wicked place. And so it was kind of, it was bird-dogging a little bit, kind of telling us where it was headed.
And then it tells us kind of what happens with Abraham. So we're picking up in 18. I'll pray. And we'll start reading. Lord, we thank you for your word, that it doesn't move, that it is sure and steadfast, that we can study it now. And a hundred years from now, others can open it and study it.
And it helps. And it teaches. And it leads. We pray that we would learn from your word today. That your Holy Spirit would guide us in our time. In Jesus' name.
Amen. Amen. All right, we've read some of chapter 18 already. When we were talking through the story of Sarah and Isaac, the birth of Isaac, we're going to read back through it and kind of follow through the rest of the chapter. So it says, The Lord appeared to him, him as Abraham, by the oaks of Mamre.
Now that's where Abraham had settled as he sat at the door of his tent in the heat of the day. So Abraham is kind of hanging out in the, would have been like just like a covered space in front of his tent. These are goatskin tents, most likely black tents. It's hot. So we know that it's a hot time of year.
And a lot of times they would roll up the sides of their tents, but they still had an inside area that was still had the sides down where women, children were often. And so he's sitting in front of his tent. It says, God appears to him. The Lord appears to him. He lifted up his eyes and looked and behold, three men were standing in front of him. Okay, so it reads like we don't know if they just appeared.
If like they weren't there and he looked this way and he looked back and they were there. And so it was kind of magical. Or if he was like dozing off because that was a common thing in the middle of the afternoon and it was super hot. I wish South Carolina would institute a siesta. I think that would be wonderful. But we haven't.
But they had a similar system as that. And so he may have been sleeping a little bit. But it says he sees three men. So we're already told that it's the Lord or that the Lord is among them. He sees three men. So it is the Lord in some form of veiled glory.
It's not the Lord as we will see him. It's not the Lord as he has seen at other times in all of his glory. It's veiled glory. He looks like a man or at least it's fair to describe him that way. When he saw them, he ran from the tent door to meet them and bowed himself to the earth and said, Oh, Lord, if I have found favor in your sight, do not pass by your servant. Now, that could read as him knowing exactly who he is talking to.
He doesn't say the name Lord. If you'll notice in your Bibles, when it said at the very beginning, verse one, it says, And the Lord and its capital, all caps, L-O-R-D. Down here it says, and he says, Oh, Lord. And it's lowercase O-R-D. That means it's a different word in the Hebrew. So the first one is the divine name of the Lord.
This one is just a term, Lord. And so he's either being very gracious, very hospitable. This isn't odd for him to describe visitors this way. So this wouldn't be out of place for him to say, You're my Lord. I'm your servant. He's being really humble.
It's like when someone brings you in and says, Look, this house is your house. You don't say, Sweet, give me the keys and get out. You understand they're being humble. They're saying, You can have whatever's here. They're not giving you the... So that's what he's doing.
He says, Oh, you're my Lord. I'm your servant. It is obvious that he uses the singular Lord. So there's at least of the three, one of them, who is obviously in a higher status than the other two. It is possible. Abraham knows who he's talking about.
It's possible he doesn't. It doesn't make a big difference because in a little bit he's going to have figured it out. And the story plays out the same. So he says, Let a little water be brought and wash your feet and rest yourselves under the tree while I bring a morsel of bread that you may refresh yourselves. And after you have and after that, you may pass on since you have come to your servant. So they said, Do as you have said.
And Abraham went quickly into the tent to Sarah and said, Quick, three sea is a fine flour. Sea is about a gallon. So he said, Get a lot of flour. Three sea is a fine flour. Knead it and make cakes. And Abraham ran to the herd and took a calf, tender and good, and gave it to a young man who prepared it quickly.
Then he took curds and milk and the calf that he had prepared and set it before them. And he stood by them under the tree while they ate. Okay, so if he knows it's the Lord, he goes above and beyond for the Lord. He is sacrificial. He gets a calf, not a goat or a lamb. Which a goat or a lamb would have been plenty for three visitors.
He gets a calf, a young, tender, fat one. So he goes above and beyond. He gets milk. He gets curds. He gets her. He says to him, Oh, let me give you a little water.
Just a bite, a morsel, a skosh of bread. And they're like, okay. And then he's like, okay, kill a whole cow. Get three gallons of flour. Bake cakes. He goes above and beyond.
And he's being very hospitable here. There's a guy who hangs out with a community group. He was baptized a year ago. His name is Taha Hataram. And his family lives in my neighborhood. They are from Pakistan.
And I was over there talking with them at one point. And they said, hey, come in and have some tea. Would you like some tea? And I said, yeah. They said, we make really good chai tea. I said, that sounds delicious.
So I came in. I sat down there. And they were like, while you're having tea, here's some puri. And here's some, and I was like, okay. And I started eating that. And they were like, here's some kebab, which was like a smushed chicken thing.
And then they said, here's some naan. Here's some dal. She just cooked. By the time I was done, there was this whole table was full of food. And I was just eating like a king. And then I was like, I got to head home.
Bag it up. You know, like, it was great. Every once in a while, I swing back by. And I'm like, y'all got any tea in there? You know? That's what he does here.
He says, let me get you a little bit. And he goes above and beyond. And this is common Middle Eastern hospitality. We talk about Southern hospitality. The Middle Easterners eat our lunch on this. And we're less hospitable than we used to be.
But we ought to grow in hospitality as a church. Because it's one of, it's a very godly thing to welcome people. The New Testament over and over again says that we'll entertain angels unawares. That when we welcome somebody, we welcome Jesus. And so this ought to be a thing that as a church, we ought to be good at. When people come over, don't just pop out the mountain lightning.
Get out some mountain dew. Like, go above and beyond. Host well with whatever you have. And if mountain lightning is your favorite, well, pop it out. If that's your best. If that's what you like.
You know, but host well with what you have. So that's what he does. He stands by them while they eat. Now, verses 9 through 15. We have already read a couple weeks ago. I'm going to paraphrase it just so we don't miss this part of the story.
That is where the Lord starts asking about Sarah. He calls her Sarah, which means he knows her name has changed. He starts saying prophecy stuff about she's going to have a child. At this moment, if Abraham did not know he was dealing with God or some sort of divine representative, he does now. This is where God says, Sarah's going to have a child. She's super old, so she laughs by herself.
God looks at Abraham and says, why is your wife laughing? Abraham's like, uh. And then his wife says, I didn't laugh. And God says, yeah, you did. And that whole ending of change goes on. All right, we stopped there and skipped ahead before.
Now we're going to keep reading. Verse 16. Then the men set out from there and they looked down towards Sodom. So down means they are in a higher elevation. So where they are, they are up a hill, up a mountain, looking down.
It's a hilly region. Sodom is in a valley. They look down towards Sodom. Also, Sodom would be about 20 miles away. So they're just looking in that general direction.
I don't know if you'd have been able to actually see the city or not. And Abraham went with them to set them on their way. And the Lord said, shall I hide from Abraham what I am about to do? Seeing that Abraham shall surely become a great and mighty nation. And all the nations of the earth shall be blessed in him. For I have chosen him that he may command his children and his household after him to keep the way of the Lord by doing righteousness and justice.
So that the Lord may bring to Abraham what he has promised. Okay, so the Lord stops. Abraham's walking with him. He stops. And it's almost like he speaks to the other two men, which we're told later are angels. And he says, should I tell Abraham what I'm going to do?
Should I hide from him? He's going to be a great and mighty nation. He's going to be the one through whom I bring the promise. He's going to be the one who blesses all nations. He's talking about Christ. He's saying, should I leave him out of this or should I go ahead and include him on what I'm going to do?
They don't answer, but God keeps going. Then the Lord said, because the outcry against Sodom and Gomorrah is great and their sin is very grave. I will go down there to see whether they have done altogether according to the outcry that has come to me. And if not, I will know. So he says, should I tell Abraham what I'm about to do?
And then he looks at him and says, the outcry against Sodom and Gomorrah is great and their sin is very grave. And we're going to check it out to see if it's as bad as the outcry has been. Now, I don't think it would be correct, given the rest of Scripture, for us to understand that God actually had to show up over there to know what was going on. I think this should be very encouraging to us. First of all, that God wants to include Abraham in what he's doing. He doesn't need Abraham.
He chooses to include Abraham in what he is doing. It's like when Archer has helped me build furniture. He did not help. I chose to include him. That's what he's doing with Abraham. He doesn't need Abraham.
He chooses to include him. And then he says, the outcry has been great and I'm going to go be near. I'm going to go be close to that. And honestly, that's a thing that we would want from God. That he would be near when we're crying out. That he would investigate.
That he wouldn't just sit far off, but that he would come close to what is going on. That he would see it. That's what it says. The sin is great and I'm going to go be close. I'm going to go investigate. I'm going to go see this.
So the men turned. This is verse 22. Turned from there and went towards Sodom. But Abraham stood, still stood before the Lord. Then Abraham drew near and said, Will you indeed sweep away the righteous with the wicked?
Suppose there are 50 righteous within the city. Will you then sweep away the place and not spare it for the 50 righteous who are in it? Far be it from you to do such a thing. To put the righteous to death with the wicked so that the righteous fare as the wicked. Far be that from you. Shall not the judge of the earth do what is right?
Okay. That was bold. God says, should I include Abraham in on this? And Abraham immediately jumps in and says, hold on a second, God. And his question, I think, is a fair question. I think it's one that we have all the time.
Abraham, first of all, understands what God's going to do. God said, I'm going to go investigate. I think Abraham knows at least the reputation of Sodom and Gomorrah. It doesn't say that he's thinking of Lot when he kind of goes into talking to God about this. But it's likely that he knows that Lot lives there or is in that city.
He at least knows that's the direction he went last time we picked up with him. There's a good chance he knows a lot more than that. But here's his question. He's asking God about what's good and what's right and what's just and what's fair. And he's pleading with God. If you're going to plead with God, pleading with God based on his own nature is a good way to go about it.
God, you are good. Won't you do what's good? You are just. Won't you do what's just? But he says, far be that from you.
Don't go down there if there are righteous people in that city and just wipe it away. Now, city, we don't know how big it is. There were ancient cities that got pretty big. This one doesn't seem like it's that big. Sodom and Gomorrah I don't think would have been that large. We saw that they were part of 13 other cities that were paying tribute earlier.
So we don't know how big a group of 50 is in this city. Similar to. They had a king. Similar to what we've seen. If you've watched. I've studied.
Or. If you've studied history. Or. Watched movies and television. I was just going to assume no one had studied. But I don't want to be rude.
The two of y'all have studied. Y'all know about this. If you're like me and you've watched television. There would have been like a castle. Some of these in this area would have been made out of wood. Some of them might have been made out of stone.
We heard about one that was in the same area where they made. Their own bricks. Then they would have had a walled area. And people who lived inside the area. Lived inside the city. And had the protection of the king.
So we don't know how big this area was. Most likely not a very massive place. But. Substantial in the area. And his question is. If there are 50 there who are righteous.
You'll destroy the whole city. Will the righteous fare the way the wicked do? And his question is a fair question. And it's one we're still asking. Which is. What is just?
You see. When someone harms us. Our outcry goes to God. And we want God to care about injustice. We want God to when someone is harmed or abused. Or when someone in power takes advantage of somebody else.
We want him to care. We want him to pursue this. We want him to follow up. We want justice to be served. But then we have all these questions about.
Well. How much and how and to whom. What's fair? Have you ever thought about this? If there is a God. I would postulate that there is.
But. If there is a God. And he has a system for judging. What's fair? This is. This is a question that.
That's. It's. It's in our culture all the time. We're having to answer this. If you're mostly a good person. But you've done some really bad things.
Is it 50-50? What's his threshold? Is it graded on a curve? Do you have to be better than half the population? Do you have to be. Does it.
Does it matter what you come from? So if you're in general a nice person. But you also have a good digestive system. And you grew up in a fairly wealthy family. With nice parents. In a nice area of town.
And you turn out nice. Did you do much? Never really harmed anybody. It's like. Yeah. But where you came from.
You should be doing a lot more. If somebody comes from a place. That's not nice. Didn't have parents. All they ever got was. Was beaten.
All they were ever taught. Was how to be aggressive. And they grow up aggressive. Can. Can. Can.
Is Scrooge okay. Can you be a terrible person. For 80 years. And a nice one. For five. We just.
Supreme Court justice. Does it matter how long you've gone. How long it's been. Since something's happened. Can we just say. Oh well I was like that.
But that doesn't matter. Now there was a guy in Columbia. Who committed. Three murders. 45. 50 years ago.
And lived in Columbia. As an upstanding citizen. They found out it was him. They arrested him. Why? Because he committed three murders.
That's what he's saying. What is just. What is right. What are you going to do. And I think this is a fair question to ask. How good is good.
How righteous is righteous. And what should happen. So what he says is. Will you let the righteous fare the way the wicked do. Will you destroy the wicked. A wicked along with the righteous.
Here's God's response. 26. 26. And the Lord said. If I find at Sodom. 50 righteous in the city.
I will spare the whole place for their sake. So Abraham says. It's unjust. For the wicked. And the righteous. For the righteous to get what the wicked deserve.
And God says. Okay. If there are 50 righteous. Then the wicked will get what the righteous deserve. Is that just? Is that how that should work?
27. Abraham answered and said. Behold. I have undertaken to speak to the Lord. I who am but dust. And ashes.
Suppose five of the 50 righteous are lacking. Will you destroy the whole city. For lack of five. He said. I will not destroy it. If I find 45.
There. Again. He spoke to him and said. Suppose 40 are found there. He answered. For the sake of 40.
I will not do it. Then he said. Oh. Let not the Lord. Be angry. And I will speak.
Suppose 30. Are found there. He answered. I will not do it. If I find 30 there. He said.
Behold. I have undertaken to speak to the Lord. Suppose 20 are found there. He answered. For the sake of 20. I will not destroy it.
Then he said. Oh. Let not the Lord be angry. And I will speak again. But this one.
Suppose 10. Are found there. He answered. For the sake of 10. I will not destroy it. And the Lord went his way.
When he had finished speaking to Abraham. And Abraham returned to his place. God invited Abraham in on that. And Abraham intercedes on behalf of Sodom. Abraham goes before the Lord. And says.
I've undertaken to do this. What about 10? What if there's just 10? He says. I won't do it if there's 10. Abraham doesn't push it further.
We don't know. If God gave him some clues. Throughout the conversation. It gets. The sentences get shorter. So it's possible Abraham knew.
I should stop. But we don't know. You thought Job interviews were tough. Or that first dates. Were nerve wracking. I think Abraham walked back to his tent.
A little. Interceding with God was. A bit much. But God. Graciously. Listens to Abraham.
19. The two angels came to Sodom in the evening. Okay. So the three men. One of them was the Lord. Two of them were angels.
The Lord is no longer among them. At least. Visibly. Came to Sodom in the evening. And Lot was sitting in the gate of Sodom. So most likely they would be closing the gate soon.
Most of the people who sit in the gate. Are prominent people. So Lot is in the gate of Sodom. Which means he's. Most likely a fairly prominent person. In the city.
When Lot saw them. He rose to meet them. And bowed himself with his face to the earth. And said. My lords. Again.
I just think this is interesting. He's going to respond. You'll see some similarities. Between how he and Abraham treat them. And also. Abraham said.
My Lord. Because I think there was obviously one. That was above the others. He says. My lords. Because.
Couldn't really tell. Y'all just seem like y'all are friends. You're on the same level. Please turn aside. To your servant's house. And spend the night.
And wash your feet. Then you may rise up early. And go on your way. They said. No. We will spend the night.
In the town square. But he pressed them strongly. That word is like. He grappled with them. Like he twisted their arm. So they turned aside to him.
And entered his house. And he made them a feast. And baked unleavened bread. And they ate. But before they lay down.
So it was evening. Sun's going down. Before they go to sleep. The men of the city. The men of Sodom. Both young and old.
All the people. To the last man. Surrounded the house. So he no longer lives in tents. He lives in a house in Sodom. And they called to Lot.
Where are the men who came to you tonight? Bring them out to us. That we may know them. That phrase is used as a euphemism. It can mean know. Like get to know.
We want to befriend them. It can mean we want to have sex with them. Similar to the way we use the term slept together. It can mean slept. It can mean not slept. So we don't really know yet.
We're about to figure it out. It's not the good one. Lot went out to the men at the entrance. He shut the door after him. Shut the door after him. And said I beg you my brothers.
Do not act so wickedly. Behold I have two daughters. Who have not known any man. Let me bring them out to you. And do to them as you please. Only do nothing to these men.
For they have come under the shelter of my roof. Okay this got crazy. So these two men come to his home. They're like we're going to stay in the city gate. He knows about the city he lives in. He says no you're not.
They're like we'll be fine. He's like no no no no. Come come come come come. Come stay in my house. Every man to the last man young and old. Guys they didn't have TV.
Or cell phones. Word traveled. Seems like they didn't have anything else to do. I guess this town doesn't get visitors often. They show up. They surround the house.
And they say. Two men came in there. Send them out. We want to rape them. Lot. Steps out.
Closes the door behind him. He's staring at a sea of faces. I don't know if they had torches. I don't know how well he could see. It was getting dark. I don't know if he can tell.
It's just people and people and people. Until it gets too dark to see. Bravely says. Do not do this. And this sounds. Says something that sounds so absolutely crazy to us.
He says. I have two daughters. Take them. Now. That is absolutely crazy to us. It's crazy that this situation has played out to this point.
But if you understand a little more about Middle Eastern hospitality. That some people hold to. This is less crazy. If you've ever seen or heard the story about. Marcus Luttrell. He was the Navy SEAL.
Who they made the movie about. Lone Survivor. Navy SEAL. Four of them were sent in. Three of them die. He eventually escapes.
The Taliban is who they were trying to. There was a leader in the Taliban. They were trying to take out. He makes it to a small village. He is very very badly beaten. He has a broken back.
He has a dislocated shoulder. He's at some point bit his tongue in half. Muhammad Gulab. Sees him. Takes him into his home. The Taliban show up.
Muhammad gets a gun. And starts fighting. And the whole town fights to defend this guy. That has come under his roof. Because they understand. If he comes under my roof.
I have a sacred oath to him. That I must defend him. That's what's going on here. So Lot says take my daughters. And it's like what on earth. But he understood.
That there was a sacred thing. To hospitality. So he goes out. He says. I beg you. Don't do this.
Take my daughters. Verse 9. But they said. Stand back. And they said. This fellow came to sojourn here.
And he has become the judge. Now we will deal worse with you. Then with them. Then they pressed hard against the man Lot. And drew near to break the door down. But the men reached out their hands.
And brought Lot into the house with them. And shut the door. And they struck with blindness. The men who were at the entrance of the house. Both small and great. So that they wore themselves out.
Groping for the door. Okay. So these men have surrounded the house. They yell. Hey Lot. Send those men out here.
We want to rape them. Lot comes out and says. Do not do this. Do not act so wickedly. But he can tell.
They didn't just disperse them. He says. Look I have daughters in here. You can have them. Leave these men alone. They've come under my roof.
And they say. You're going to judge us. We're about to do worse to you. Than we were going to do to them. Instead of two men. We'll have three.
And they come at him. Angels grab him. Snatch him inside the house. I think this was probably the most aggressive grabs he has ever received. And thankfully so. They close the door.
And the angels strike with blindness every man outside. For the record. The angels would have been fine in the town square. And it says. That they wore themselves out. Trying to get to the door.
That's one of the craziest parts in the story to me. I think. If we were in the middle of something. And I suddenly went blind. I think I would say. Hey I suddenly went blind.
Some version of that. I think you pretty quickly would have found out. Yo me too. I am also blind. What a weird occurrence. At that point.
I don't know who's leading this gang. Someone should have said. Let's call it a night. Since we're all blind. Magically. It almost seems like it just made them angrier.
They must know. They have such a great vast majority. That they think. Even blind. We got this. And they.
They're enraged. And it says. They wear themselves out. Trying to get in the door. Blind. Now.
This puts on display. The great wickedness. Of Sodom. It has been often taught. That the primary sin of Sodom. Was homosexuality.
The New Testament. Does say. Does highlight. Their sexual sin. This passage. Is highlighting their sexual sin.
I don't think. The primary point of this passage. Is homosexuality. Those in the LGBT community. Have come along and said. That's not it at all.
It doesn't have anything to do with homosexuality. It has to do with a lack of hospitality. Certainly. What they suggested. Was not hospitable. I don't think.
That is a fair reading of that either. I think what this displays. Is when there is a complete rejection. Of God. And when there is active. Unrepentant sin.
Sexual sin. Rises. Rises to the top. Sexual confusion. Sexual misunderstanding. Sexual assault.
I think you can see that culturally. Right now. For us. We've spent some time. Talking about. Gender dysphoria.
Homosexuality. And I want you to know. If that's something you struggle with. Or don't struggle with. Feel perfectly fine in. Think that you want.
To celebrate. You're welcome here. Would encourage you. To talk with us afterwards. So we can clarify this position.
A little more. Because we believe. That you're welcome. That Jesus loves all of us. But that we're loved.
And welcomed in our repentance. And that God offers. Grace to sinners. This is sin. And it is actively. Aggressively.
Put on display. That's all the time. We'll spend. Talking about that. Specifically. Because it's not the point.
Of the passage. Then the men said to Lot. Have you. Have you. Anyone else here. Sons-in-law.
Sons. Daughters. Anyone you have in the city. Bring them out of the place. For we are about. To destroy this place.
Because the outcry. Against its people. Has become great. Before the Lord. And the Lord. Has sent us.
To destroy it. Can you imagine. The visitors. That showed up. The people. Who were wondering.
And saw lights. In a city. And went to Sodom. For refuge. All the times. That it wasn't angels.
Can you imagine. Why Lot. When they said. We'll stay in this town square. What he knew about. When he said.
No no no. Don't stay in the town square. Can you imagine. The tears. And the pain. Can you imagine.
The amount of times. If this is happening. And they're gathering. To do this. How much. Abuse.
How much. Theft. How much murder. How much. Has taken place. In this city.
And how often. Someone. Beaten. And bloody. Wept. And it came to God's ears.
How often. The outcry. Just rose. Rose. We see this. In small fashion.
When it comes out. That a teacher's been. Sexually assaulting people. And all of a sudden. You'll start hearing. More came forward.
More came forward. More came forward. More came forward. As soon as the Me Too movement. Started. And there was just.
Me. Me. Me. And how many tears. And how much brokenness. And how much of an outcry.
Had arisen to the Lord. From a city. That welcomed. And accepted this. Down to the last man. Maybe some of them.
Were just there. To see what was going to happen. But none of them. Save Lot. Were saying. This is wicked.
And we ought to stop. It says. The outcry. Has been great. So Lot.
Went out. And said. To his sons-in-law. Who were to marry his daughters. I'm assuming. Since it was down to the last man.
They were at his home. Earlier in the evening. Up. Get out of this place. For the Lord. Is about to destroy.
The city. But he seemed. To his sons-in-laws. To be jesting. He comes to him. And says.
Get up. Get up. Move. Get out of here. The Lord. Is going to destroy.
This place. And they thought. He's a joke. Some of you. May be in a similar situation. You've had people.
Come into you. And say. I'm telling you. God will judge sin. And Jesus. Does save sinners.
And they sound. Crazy. Sounds like a joke. They didn't believe. What Lot believed. And they thought.
He was kidding. As morning dawn. So it's been all night. As morning dawn. The angels urged Lot. Saying up.
So he said. Up to his sons-in-laws. They're saying. Up to him. Up. Get up.
Move. Take your wife. Your two daughters. Who are here. Lest you be swept away. In the punishment of the city.
But he lingered. So the men seized him. And his wife. And his two daughters. By the hand. The Lord.
Being merciful. To him. And they brought him out. And set him outside the city. And as they brought them out. One said.
Escape for your life. Do not look back. Or stop. Anywhere in the valley. Escape to the hills. Lest you be swept away.
And Lot said to them. Oh no my lords. Behold. Your servant. Has found favor in your sight. And you have shown me great kindness.
In saving my life. But I cannot escape to the hills. Lest the disaster overtake me. And I die. Behold. This city is near enough to flee to.
And it's a little one. Let me escape there. Is it not a little one? And my life will be saved. He said to him. Behold.
I grant you this favor also. That I will not overthrow the city. Of which you have spoken. Escape there quickly. For I can do nothing. Till you arrive there.
Therefore the name of the city. Was called Zor. Which means little. So he says. Get up. We're about to destroy the city.
Lot lingers. I don't know if he was packing. I don't know what he was doing. He doesn't tell us. I don't know if he was thinking. Well if the two of y'all.
Are going to destroy the city. You're not going to. As long as you're here. I don't know what he was doing. But they eventually just grab him.
They walk him out. And they say. Run. Run to the hills. Don't look back. Don't stop.
Don't linger. Don't catch your breath. Go. This whole place is getting destroyed. And he says. Let me go there.
It's closer. I'm not going to make it. All the way there. And that's. It's a little. It's barely even.
It's little. Isn't it little? Looks really small from here. There's not that many people. Let me go there. And what always baffles me.
Is I want angels and God at times. To just slap someone and say. Shut up. Do what I told you. He says. I'll grant you this favor also.
He says. Okay. And he says. Hurry. He says. Hurry.
I can't do anything. I'm not allowed to do anything. Until you get there. When you get there. Trouble starts. 23.
The sun had risen on the earth. When Lot came to Zor. Then the Lord. Reigned on Sodom and Gomorrah. Sulfur and fire. From the Lord.
Out of heaven. And he overthrew those cities. And all the valley. And all the inhabitants of the cities. And what grew on the ground. But Lot's wife.
Behind him. Looked back. And she became. A pillar. A pillar. Of salt.
Okay. Lot makes it to. To Zor. His wife is behind him. We don't know how far behind him. He was moving.
She was not moving as fast. And God from heaven. Rains down fire. And sulfur. I think this would have been. In the past.
Hard to picture. But with movies. And video. From wars. I think we can kind of understand. What happened.
Things started flying. Exploding. And there was fire. And there were tears. And there were two sons-in-laws. Who were very surprised.
The city was destroyed. And it says. Lot's wife looked back. And I heard this. Growing up in Sunday school. All the time.
And I always thought. Wow. That was super strict. Don't look back. Yeah. Salt.
I don't think that's a fair reading of the text. Especially. Since Jesus later clarifies it a little better. And we'll read that in a minute. But Jesus says.
Remember Lot's wife. Those of you. Who want to save your life. Will lose it. And those of you. Who are willing to lose your life.
Will save it. And the point was. When she looked back. She was longing for Sodom. She had turned back. She wanted to save.
What she had. She loved it. She had grown used to it. She didn't want to give up everything. Her looking back. Was not following.
What the Lord had said. Was not trusting him wholeheartedly. But going. I know. But. And it's not.
What if it's not. And then she turns back. And she's destroyed. And swept away. 27. And Abraham went early in the morning.
To the place where he had stood. Before the Lord. And he looked down. Towards Sodom. And Gomorrah. And toward all the land of the valley.
And he looked. And behold. The smoke of the land. Went up like the smoke of a furnace. He looks towards this valley. And the sky is just filled.
So it was. That when God. Destroyed the cities of the valley. God remembered Abraham. God remembered Abraham. And sent Lot.
Out of the midst. Of the overthrow. When he overthrew the cities. In which Lot had lived. There were not ten righteous. But when God comes.
He remembers. Abraham. And he has mercy on Lot. Verse 30. Now Lot went out of Zor.
And lived in the hills. With his two daughters. He was afraid to live in Zor. Okay. So. We don't know why he was afraid.
I think he should have run for mayor. Y'all only exist. Because I didn't want to run further. But. He leaves. It's a bad place to be.
So he lived in a cave. With his two daughters. In this area. In the Middle East. There are a lot of caves. This is why.
When we've. Been in fights with the Taliban. And that sort of thing. They've moved from cave. To cave. To cave.
To cave. To cave. This is historically. People would. Move to caves. To hide.
He lived in a cave. With his two daughters. And the firstborn. Said to the younger. Our father is old. And there is not a man on earth.
To come into us. After the manner of all the earth. Come. Let us make our father drink wine. And we will lie with him. That we may preserve offspring.
From our father. So they made their father. Drink wine that night. They understood. That he would not be on board with this. And the firstborn.
Went in. And lay with her father. He did not know. When she lay down. Or when she arose. He was very very drunk.
The next day. The firstborn. Said to the younger. Behold. I lay last night. With my father.
Let us make him. Drink wine tonight also. Then you go in. And lie with him. That we may preserve. Offspring from our father.
So they made their father. Drink wine that night. Also. And the younger arose. And lay with him. And he did not know.
When she lay down. Or when she arose. Thus both the daughters of Lot. Became pregnant. By their father. The firstborn.
Bore a son. And called his name Moab. He is the father. Of the Moabites. To this day. The younger.
The younger. Also bore a son. And called his name. Ben Ami. He is the father. Of the Ammonites.
To this day. And that is the last. We hear of Lot. In the book. Of Genesis. That story is gross.
And it makes you go. Why is this even. In here. I think there are. A few reasons. Why it is.
And a few things. We can quickly. Learn from it. I think it is. In here. Because it happened.
I think it is. In here. Because it tells us. Where the Moabites. And the Ammonites. Come from.
Who will play out. In the rest of Israel's history. I think it is in here. Because the Bible. Does not shy away. From displaying to us.
What humans are like. As much as we want to act like. This is. And what people are like. It shows to us. How much Sodom.
Had crept into. How much the daughters. Of. Lot. Were willing to accept. The sexual ethic.
Because you think. How would this come into. Anybody's mind. As an acceptable idea. Lot. It also displays.
That Lot. Isn't. A superhero. You read this story. And you are like. Okay.
Cool. There was one righteous. God goes and saves Lot. And then it is like. Lot got super drunk. And slept with his daughters.
It is like. What on earth? It is like. If you watched Rudy. And he gets to play. That last play.
And he makes the tackle. And it freezes. And then he goes. Twenty years later. And the last fifteen minutes. Of the movie.
Are him super drunk. Yelling at his television. And beating his children. And you would say. To the director. Why on earth.
Is that how the movie ended. Why would you put. Fifteen minutes of that. In here. And him cussing. And knocking over the table.
At their birthday party. It is like what. Just because he played. A little bit of Notre Dame. Doesn't make him a good person. I want people to understand.
How stuff works. It would be a terrible movie. That is what happened to you. You read this. And you are like. Okay Lot.
And then you go. Oh. What on earth? And you see. I think. When we look at this story.
As a whole. And we see. What is going on here. I think it is. We need the New Testament. To help us.
Understand how to read this. So. I am going to show a few verses. Where the New Testament. Begins to address some of this. Second Peter 2.
Six. Says. If by turning the cities. Of Sodom and Gomorrah. To ashes. He condemned them.
To extinction. Making them an example. Of what is going to happen. To the ungodly. The Sodom and Gomorrah. Is a small picture.
Of what is going to happen. Jude seven. Just as Sodom and Gomorrah. And the surrounding cities. Which likewise. Indulged in sexual immorality.
And pursued a natural desire. Serve as an example. By undergoing a punishment. Of eternal fire. That God. Will not stand sin.
Sodom and Gomorrah. Is a small picture. Of ultimately. What he is going to do. Which is judge. Wickedness.
Jesus. Brings it up as well. In Luke 17. They ask him. When the kingdom will come. And he says.
It is already working. Among you. He says. That don't get. Don't get confused. When someone says.
I found Jesus. He has already returned. He says. I'll come back like lightning. I'll rip the sky open. It'll be very obvious.
Then he says this. Likewise. Just as it was. In the days of Lot. They were eating. And drinking.
Buying. And selling. Planting. And building. But on the day.
When Lot went out. From Sodom. Fire and sulfur. Reigned from heaven. And destroyed them all. So we'll be on the day.
When the son of man. Is revealed. On that day. Let the one. Who is on the housetop. With his goods.
And the house. Not come down. To take them away. Likewise. Let the one. Who's in the field.
Not turn back. Whoever loses his life. Will keep it. So Jesus says. That his return. Will be like.
It was in Sodom and Gomorrah. The day before. Will be normal. And there will be many. Who are like Lot's wife. Who've just grown used to it.
If you think about. Us right now. What we've grown used to. What we've begun to accept. What we've begun to love. And to long for.
That's just earthly. Think about the sin. In our culture. That we're just becoming. Numb to. That we don't weep over.
We don't lament. We don't pray. That God would end. That he would fix. We're just. Used to it.
Think about what you. Watch now. That maybe you. Used to wouldn't. Think about what you'll. Laugh at now.
That maybe you used. To wouldn't. Think about. What you'll partake in now. Or accept now. Or join in now.
That maybe you used to wouldn't. That certainly. Our grandparents. Wouldn't have. You see. It's going to look normal.
There'll be weddings. Somebody will be leaving. For their honeymoon. It'll be a normal day. You'll get up and go to work. And the sky will crack open.
And Jesus will appear. And at that moment. For those who like Lot. Have trusted. And run from it. Some will be like Lot's wife.
Who thought that's what they were doing. But then turned around and said. I don't know. I kind of like this. And many will be like the sons of. Sons in law of Lot.
Who thought it was a joke. So the question. I think we need to ask. Because the band comes back up. Is when God cracks the sky open. What's his standard for righteousness.
I think if you'll genuinely believe. And understand. That there is an eternity of punishment. Coming for those who are wicked. That we will pay for our sin. That it will find us out.
That we will not live forever. Peaceably. But we will stand before God. My son. Watches. This movie called Lego Batman.
And at one point. They get taken to this little place. And this little block shows up. And says. Plays a little highlight reel. Of their badness.
I think if you played a highlight reel. Of some of your good qualities. Be your favorite movie ever. You'd be looking and going. Wow. Look at what I did.
Look at how I acted. Look at how great I was. And we could immediately. All of us could flip it. And show all the times you were petty. And all the times you lied.
And all the times you took advantage of somebody. And all the times you hid. And all the times that you went out of your way. To puff yourself up. Or to put somebody down. And I think we could watch.
In excruciating agony. As we saw how little we deserve God's grace. And I think it's a fair question to ask. What is his judgment going to look like? And how will he judge us? And what does righteousness look like?
Who gets. Who counts in the ten? Romans 3 says this. Paul's answering that question. For we have already charged. That both Jews and Greeks are under sin.
As it is written. None is righteous. No, not one. No one understands. No one seeks for God. All have turned aside.
Together they have become worthless. No one does good. Not even one. Later in the chapter he says. We all have fallen short. So that if God's standards of righteousness.
Is that you. Would live up to his perfect goodness. When he returns. No one is righteous. And there is. An eternal punishment.
Sodom and Gomorrah is a blip on the radar. There are people who are spending. Eternity in hell. They were there last night. They woke up there. This morning.
And they are not one day closer to that ending. There are people. That you work with. That when Jesus returns. Will not be a joyous occasion. Second Corinthians 521 tells us this.
For our sake. God. Made Jesus. That's the he made him. To be sin. Who knew no sin.
So that in him. We might become the righteousness. Of God. That there are. That there are. A group of righteous.
That will be redeemed. That will be. That will escape the city. And it's those. Who have had Jesus. Become their sin.
So that they can become righteous. That's the hope. That's the only hope. That Jesus Christ. Who knew no sin. Who deserved no punishment.
Took all of our sin. And all of our punishment. And all of our blame. And became our sin. He became the worst. Among us.
He became an abuser. He became a rapist. He became a murderer. He took it all on himself. And was nailed to a cross. And when he rose again.
He swapped places with us. So that all who place faith in him. Become the righteousness of God. That there are a righteous. Who are redeemed. That story says.
That on that day. When he destroyed Sodom. God remembered Abraham. And he rescued Lot. And there will be a day on judgment. Where I'm going to say.
When God judged the world. He remembered Christ. And so he saved his church. I want you to know. As best as I can say it. If Jesus Christ has not borne your punishment.
You will bear it. If Jesus Christ has not become your sin. And your wickedness. You will own it. And as Lot ran around and said. Up.
The city will be destroyed. Make a move. Do something. Trust me. Some of you need to get up. You need to trust.
You need to decide. You've been hanging out for a while. But you haven't decided. I'm going to follow Jesus. I'm going to trust in him. I need him to pay for my sin.
Because I will stand before God. And my highlight reel of my sin. Is not pretty. And I will justly deserve. The punishment I get. And there are so many of us.
That will not get what we deserve. Will get what Jesus deserved. Will be loved. And cherished. And welcomed. For eternity.
Because we've been made. Righteous. In Christ's righteousness. And will shine like the stars in heaven. And will reign with him. Because Jesus redeems sinners.
So here's how we're going to finish today. If you're a Christian. Prior to taking communion. Where we actively remember. That Jesus Christ became our sin. So that we could be made righteous.
So that the day that Jesus cracks the sky open. And like lightning shows up. Will be the most explosive. That the day that has ever happened for us. That's why we can leave everything behind. That's why we can run from everything the world has to offer.
Because it pales in comparison to the Christ. Who redeems those who don't deserve it. Prior. To taking communion. And celebrating that. I want you to ask the question.
Am I running around the city telling people to get up? If I believe that Sodom is a blip on the radar. If you thought tomorrow. That Columbia would be destroyed. Who in Columbia would you rescue? And Jesus says it won't just be a city.
It's going to be eternal. And it's going to be the whole world. And who are we seeking to say get up. Trust in him. I don't care if you think I'm a joke. I don't care what I look like.
This place is going to be gone. No. And if you haven't placed your faith in Jesus. In a moment. When his church gets up. After praying.
After repenting. After praying. Pleading for God. To redeem. Standing in the gap like Abraham. And saying Lord.
As we take communion. There's going to be some people around the room. Over in this area. And a few over in this area. Some of you need to get up. And you need to decide today.
I'm going to follow Jesus. You need to get up. You need to make a move. You've been hanging out for a while. You've been toying with it. You've kind of taken some steps.
You've kind of taken some steps back. Some of you are in the mode. Where you're jogging along behind the church. You're Lot's wife. You're trotting along. Everybody thinks you're going to escape.
And everything's holding you back. And at some point. You're just going to stop. And you're going to turn around. Because you never really believed it. You never really bought in.
Your heart never left Sodom. Some of you need to decide today. I'm going to get up. I'm going to trust. And I'm going to encourage you to stand up. To make a decision now.
To go talk with somebody. To pray. To place your faith in Jesus. Some of y'all need to walk through. What that looks like. Some of y'all just need to get up.
And take communion for the first time. As an actual Christian. Trusting that Jesus can become your sin. And you can be made righteous. And when we stand in judgment. We'll join with all those who've had mercy.
Poured out on them. Let's pray. God. God. God. We ask that in these next moments.
That those. Who have thought this is a joke for too long. Would hear it. See it. Know it. Believe it.
And that you would change them. And we ask in this moment. For those who seem like they're escaping. Who are trotting along with the church. And we can't tell the difference. But their heart.
Longs for this world. That they would trust you. And not look back. And we pray. That for those of us. Who know the truth.
That we would be unashamed. In proclaiming it. God.
Circumcision and the Outsiders
Transcript
Good morning. My name is Spencer. I'm one of the pastors here with Mill City Church. We are going to walk back through a little bit. Last week, Chet walked us through the story of Sarah and Hagar. This morning, we get to do that.
We get to do it a little bit differently this time. It's going to be on page 7 if you have a Blue Bible. We're going to be mostly in 17 today. If you don't have a Bible, please take that Bible home. That is our gift to you. A few weeks back, my wife and I got to do something that's been on our bucket list for a while.
We got to see the Broadway production Hamilton. If you haven't heard of it, it's a hip-hop Broadway that tells the life and legacy of Alexander Hamilton. We finally got to see it, and it absolutely blew our minds. It was way better than we thought it could be. And there's this two-song set in the first act. And the first song is the telling of how Alexander Hamilton met his wife, Eliza Schuyler.
And it's just the story. It's how they met. It's how Angelica, her sister, introduced the two of them. They meet. They start writing letters. They fall in love.
They get married. And on the set, when the wedding is over and the song is done, there's this center part of the stage that is circular. And it can go forward and it can go backwards. It goes in a circle. And they start reversing the set. And they start going back in time.
And they tell the story again. The second song is called Satisfied. It's one of the biggest songs from the whole production. And in that song, it tells the story, but it tells it differently. It gives a little bit of a why, a little bit of what's going on behind the scenes. It's this Angelica Schuyler, it's the sister.
She's the one singing the song. And you realize it's a whole lot more complicated than it actually looked, that Angelica actually sees Alexander and falls for him. But she doesn't realize, she doesn't think he has the money, has the class to hang with her New York royalty. So she sees her sister. Her sister also falls for him. She introduces the two of them with the hope that she can kind of have access to him later.
It turns into this weird love triangle that continues throughout the whole time as you see it play out. And we get to do a little bit of that today. We get to walk back through a story that was told last week. But we get to see what's going on behind the scenes. We get to see the bigger picture of what's happening here. Because if you are just working through this story, you might miss what's happening.
Like I can read one of the passages we're going to have today is Genesis 17. And in 10 and 11 it says, This is my covenant, which you shall keep between me and you and your offspring after you. Every male among you shall be circumcised. You shall be circumcised in the flesh of your foreskins, and it shall be a sign of the covenant between me and you. And when you read that, it kind of feels a little bit out of place. Like we're going through this story.
Where did this come from? But there is major eternal significance in what's happening here. It has implications that play throughout the rest of the Bible. So we want to get a different view on this story. As we work from Genesis into the New Testament this morning, we're going to see the implications that play out. So I'm going to pray, and then we're going to dive in.
God, I'm thankful that you've given us your word. I'm thankful that we get to hear what you have to say. God, I pray that you would show us the big picture of what's happening here, and that would motivate us to respond to your glory. In Jesus' name, amen. All right, so like I said last week, Chet introduced this story of Sarah and Hagar.
I want to give a quick recap of what happened in chapter 16. So Sarah and Abram, at this point, had been changed to Abraham. Sarah and Abram are waiting on this promise. This promise of a line, of a son, of a legacy, of descendants. They're waiting on it, and it does not happen. And Chet hinted at this last week.
At this point, she probably has gone through menopause, and they don't believe the promise is going to come, so they decide that they're going to force the promise themselves. Sarah suggests, why don't you take my servant Hagar, and we can have a line through her. And Abraham doesn't step up. He doesn't say, no, we're going to wait for the promise. No, he says, okay. So she conceives, and then when she conceives Hagar, the text says that she looked upon Sarah with contempt, which is a little bit of saying, it's a little bit of a power play.
There's a little bit of a, she's going to stage a little bit of a coup here. She's going to try to overthrow the line, overthrow the promise. And Sarah's not having that. She responds with deep anger, and the text tells us that she abused her. So in the middle of all of this, Hagar, she bounces.
She just leaves. It kind of turns into a Latin soap opera very quickly, which, for the three of you that laughed, everyone else, if you don't know Latin soap operas, go YouTube Tello Novello today. Take five minutes to watch the dramatic scenes. You're welcome. But it quickly turns into that.
And Hagar is in the wilderness, alone, pregnant, and God meets her. He meets her where she's at, and he calls her and says, there's a greater purpose for you. There's a plan here that you are going to have a son. That son will be called Ishmael. Ishmael is he who hears. This is God hearing her affliction, and he responds.
And he says, you're going to have a great nation that comes from you. And what ancient commentaries have done is they have traced the line of the Arab people back to Ishmael. They've looked at, we won't read this today, but later in 17, it talks about how Ishmael is going to have 12 princes come from him. They're ancient commentaries that look back at those 12 princes, and that is where they draw their line. The Arab people come from Ishmael. And then later on in history, we know the story, Islam comes along, takes hold of that tradition, and claims that Ishmael is actually the one who got the real promise.
And then the rest is history after that. We see the great proclamation in Genesis 16, 12, the prophecy. It says, he, talking about Ishmael, shall be a wild donkey of a man. This is talking about his legacy. His hand against everyone and everyone's hand against him, and he shall dwell over against all his kinsmen. And that played out even into today.
That Arabs and Jews are still at odds, that Arabs and surrounding nations are still at odds. And then 13 years later, it picks up in Genesis 17, where we're going to be today. So 13 years later, Ishmael is 13, Abraham and Sarah are approached by God. It says in verse 1, When Abram was 99 years old, the Lord appeared to Abram and said to him, I am God Almighty, walk before me and be blameless, that I may make my covenant between me and you, and may multiply you greatly. So this covenant, this promise, starts in Genesis 12.
And we've watched it unfold, that God tells him he's going to make a great nation. He's going to bless his descendants as numerous as the stars and the sand. And then he promises that he's going to have the promised land. There's going to be a great land for his people. And then we walk through Genesis 15, when the ceremony of splitting the animal in two, and God walking through. And this promise, this covenant is continuing to unfold.
But this right here is the climax. This is the climax of the covenant in Genesis 17. So this is a big moment. And the text continues in verse 3. It says, That Abram fell on his face, and God said to him, Behold, my covenant is with you, and you shall be the father of a multitude of nations. No longer shall your name be called Abram, but your name shall be called Abraham.
For I have made you into a father of a multitude of nations. So that's what Abraham means. A father of many. This name change is significant. It's meant to jar Abram, because names are significant in the Old Testament. They have meaning and value, and a name change is really big.
It would be big in our culture, too. If I walked in this morning with my kids, only one of them, because one of them decided to get sick on the way here, and went back home. But if I walked in with both of them, and checked them in, and Isaac's at the front, and Isaac goes, Hey, Ellie. Hey, Bridgers. And I said, No, no, no, no. That was them.
We changed their names. This one, Ellie, is now she who rules the children. And Bridgers is he who destroys the children. Now, what snacks are you having today? That would catch Isaac off guard. First, he'd be like, Dude, we can't put that on a name tag.
You got nicknames? Yep. Ruler. Destroyer. You got this. What about snacks?
Like, he would be, No, no, no, no, no. Are you trying to stage a coup in Kid City? What's happening here? You get Raz involved, it would be a big thing, because a name change is meant to jar you, it was meant to jar Abraham, to remind him of the promise. No, this promise is going to happen. You are going to be a father of a great nation.
There is going to be many that are blessed through you. So, Abraham's all right. Feeling it? Verse 6. I will make you exceedingly fruitful. I will make you into nations, and kings shall come from you.
And I will establish my covenant between me and you and your offspring after you throughout their generations for an everlasting covenant to be God to you and to your offspring after you, and I will give to you and your offspring after you the land of your sojournings, all the land of Canaan, for an everlasting possession. I will be their God. Now, we'll get to this in a second, but that language of offspring is significant. And we'll pick that up later. It continues in verse 9. He says, And God said to Abraham, As for you, you shall keep my covenant, you and your offspring after you throughout their generations.
This is my covenant, which you shall keep between me and you and your offspring after you. Every male among you shall be circumcised. Now, I feel like Abraham was feeling really good until that last line. He's like, wait a second. The name change was cool? Circum what?
Huh? Huh? And he would have been familiar with signs that came with covenants. He could think back to Noah. He's like, man, Noah got the rainbow. You did this really cool thing when you made the covenant with Noah.
Circumcision? That's really how this is going to be? Yes. And he keeps going in verse 11. You shall be circumcised in the flesh of your foreskins, and it shall be a sign of the covenant between me and you. Now, there's a few things I found puzzling in life.
My wife mentioned this a few weeks back. She said, why do mosquitoes exist? And I wanted to argue because that's what I love to do. And I couldn't. I said, I don't know. I don't know if they serve a purpose.
Like, they're just annoying. I can't really make a case for them. I don't know if you've ever thought about this either. Why does Tarzan have a clean-shaven face? It doesn't make sense. He grew up in the jungle, raised by apes.
It's like, that doesn't make sense. And I have stumbled upon this before over and over again. And I'm like, why? The most significant sign of the Old Testament. Why did God choose circumcision? It seems odd.
It seems like a curveball. It seems a little bit out of place. So first out of the gate, let me give you, let me say two quick things. Firstly, this is what circumcision is. It is the removal of the foreskin from the male genitalia. There's the scientific explanation.
Circumcision means to cut around. Now, you may have heard of something called female circumcision. That is a false term. It is. That's not like that. That is what we, what happens across the world is called, female circumcision is actually called female genital mutilation.
It is a barbaric practice that still happens today. But the term female circumcision, it doesn't apply because circumcision only applies to males. There is no sign, there's no female circumcision in the Bible at all. It is only male circumcision and females are brought into the covenant by being mothers, by being daughters, by being wives. They're brought into the family of God that way. There's no need for a female son.
So that's, that's something that we need to know coming out the gate. Secondly, I just want to state this. We'll get to this more clearly later. We as Christians in the new covenant do not have to practice this. This is a medical choice that you can make, but this is not something that is practiced. Jesus fulfills the law of the Old Testament.
He fulfills the sign of circumcision. What happens in the New Testament, which we don't have time to get in today, is that it gets replaced by the sign of baptism, that baptism is the new sign of the new covenant just as Abraham trusted God and was circumcised. Those in Christ who trust in him are responding in baptism and that is our sign. So those two things we need to state right out the gate. Let's keep diving into the text.
Verse 12. He who is eight days old among you shall be circumcised. Every male throughout your generations, whether born in your house or bought with your money from any foreigner who is not in your offspring, both he who is born in your house and he who is bought with your money shall surely be circumcised. So shall my covenant be in your flesh as an everlasting covenant. Any uncircumcised male who is not circumcised in the flesh of his foreskin, hear this, shall be cut off from his people. He has broken my covenant.
So not only is this it's seeming a little bit odd it gets more serious. If you don't do this, if you are not circumcised, if the men in your household are not circumcised, if you do not circumcise your son, you are cut off from the covenant. So this is a really serious sign and the question is why? Why is this so significant? Why is it so important? I'm going to give you four reasons why this sign has great importance in this story.
The first is that this is a sign of the promise through faith. It's a sign of the promise through faith. Hear this, Abraham had to have trusted God. We see the evidence here. But also, he wouldn't have circumcised himself if he didn't trust God.
That's not how that works. You just don't up and do that. No, he had to actually trust God and follow through on this command. And this sign, this promise, this sign is explicit for a reason. It is intentionally sexual. Abraham trusts God and then he goes through with this and he is going to pass this on to his son Isaac.
Because we read last week that we're not going to have time to read this week that Ishmael gets circumcised. He responds and circumcises himself. He circumcises Ishmael and the men in his household. So why can't Ishmael get the promise? And the reality is is that he's not going to get the promise because there's something unique and intentional about Abraham trusting God then being circumcised then conceiving Isaac. It's intentional for a reason.
He is going to pass this on through Isaac and this is going to go all the way down the line. Second, this covenant was a sign of cleanliness and purity. We see this play throughout the entire Old Testament. Circumcision was a cleansing ritual. The rest of the Old Testament is going to refer to those who were clean and those who were unclean. You're going to see that over and over again.
Clean, unclean. And the reason why is because God is taking possession of his people. And this is an act, a holy act, what the Bible is going to say, a consecrated act. They have made themselves holy, that they are going to be set apart from the rest of the surrounding nations. So this clean, unclean distinction is going to show up over and over again.
And it is a daily and regular reminder for the people of God that you belong to him. That you are his people. You are supposed to be set apart. Third, this was a sign of priesthood. Circumcision is a priestly sign. Contrary to popular belief, Jews were not the only ones that did this.
They were the most famous for doing this and there weren't many other ones who actually did this, but there were some and there's one group of people that's actually very significant for understanding this and that was Egyptian priests. Egyptian priests would circumcise themselves and what they were doing was they were saying, we are separate from the rest of the Egyptian people, we have consecrated ourselves, we have made ourselves holy and we have access to the Egyptian false gods. And what happens as the story plays out is that the Israelites eventually end up in Egypt. They are enslaved for 400 plus years.
Then God, through Moses, brings them out of the promised land and when they come out of the promised land, here's what God tells them, you will be a kingdom of priests. You are going to be, as the New Testament calls it, a royal priesthood. You're a kingdom of priests. They just circumcised their priests. This whole nation bears this sign. And when you get into the land, the promised land, and you set up the nation of Israel, this is where I will rule and reign from, this is where the tabernacle and then the temple will be, you are to be a royal priesthood that will reflect the glory of God to the surrounding nations.
It's a priestly sign. Lastly, it's a sign of new creation. This is a sign of new creation. Why the eighth day? Why were circumcised, why were boys wait, why do they wait eight days to circumcise them? Chet gave a little bit of medical evidence, this is a little bit of God's design in humans, that blood starts to clot better by the eighth day.
It is safer then. But the theological reasons are because the eighth day, hear this, comes after the seventh. The significance of that, and this is a, is that it goes back to Genesis 1. The God created the world in seven days. This was the first week and the first day after, that was the first day of this newly created world. And what happens is, is that on the eighth day that the males are brought into the covenant.
They're brought into the covenant. This is day one for you being a part of the nation of Israel. So there's a whole lot of significance that is packed in to this sign. But like many signs and many symbols over time, this is going to start to lose its meaning. It's going to start to fade. And this happens with symbols.
I mean, in our culture, if you've ever been to a barber shop and you've seen a barber pole, you probably thought, cool, America. The red, white, and blue stripes. That's actually not where that comes from. It goes back to medieval times. In medieval times, there were barber poles and what these would signify is that barbers weren't just skilled with the blade to shave, but also could do basic surgery. So this pole, the red stripe symbolizes blood, the white would symbolize bandages.
Some think that the blue symbolized veins and that they were known for this is a place that once you see the pole that you can get basic medical care. But over time, that sign fades. We start to lose the significance of it and that happens with the sign of circumcision. Over time, circumcision ceases to be a sign of the faith, a sign of the promise, a sign of new creation, a sign of priesthood and it gets reduced down to a few things. It gets reduced down to ethnic superiority. We see this in the New Testament that the circumcised ones are superior.
They follow the law. Circumcision is always attached to the law. They follow the law that that makes them righteous, that makes them better and that makes them insiders. That they are higher than the pagan outsiders. That circumcision makes you an insider. And by the time that Jesus comes, circumcision has been so corrupted by pride and self-righteousness.
And then he comes. Jesus enters the scene and what does he start doing? He starts ministering to outsiders. He starts ministering to Samaritans. He starts ministering to Romans. He starts ministering to outsiders and he starts calling out the insiders.
He starts calling out the religious leaders. And he starts to expose the hypocrisy of the whole system. He starts to expose the hypocrisy of the good parts of their story. Circumcision was meant to be a good sign. The law is a good gift that God had given and they had used it as a bludgeon to keep outsiders out. Even against their own people.
And he starts to expose the failure of the system. He starts to expose the failure of them as a priesthood. And eventually this gets him killed. And he's killed. He conquers death at the resurrection. Then he commissions out the church.
And he says, go and make disciples of all nations. And then the church responds. And you read through the book of Acts that Gentiles start to be reached. That outsiders start to be reached. They start believing and trusting in Jesus. And then a new problem happens.
A group of people called the Judaizers which comprised of super Jewish Christians but also Jews who just wanted to stir trouble in the New Testament church. They start to come into the church and this is where we pick up in the New Testament in Galatians 4. It's page 566 in your blue Bible. In Galatians Paul addresses the problem of this group. This group comes into the church. They start preaching a different message.
They start preaching yes, okay, Jesus but you need Jesus plus circumcision. So they were going around trying to have people circumcised. You need Jesus plus the law. You need Jesus plus customs. You need Jesus plus the festivals. And anytime whether it's then or now that you start preaching a Jesus plus message you have lost the gospel.
It is only by Christ and faith in him alone. It is only by grace by what we just sang. And Paul just absolutely dismantles it. Take some time today to go read the first three chapters of Galatians. Man, he absolutely just dismantles the argument. Goes hard after it.
And then we get to chapter 4 and he shifts the story back to Sarah and Hagar. And we look at this from a different angle. Picks up in verse 21 it says, Tell me, you who desire to be under the law, do you not listen to the law? For it is written that Abraham had two sons, one by a slave woman, one by a free woman. But the son of the slave was born according to the flesh while the son of the free woman was born through the promise.
Now this may be interpreted allegorically. Let me pause real quick. Allegorically here means he's taking two literal people with literal stories and they are symbolic of something that is greater. Doesn't mean they weren't real people with real stories. We see that he uses Abraham and circumcision in the book of Romans. They are real people with real stories and real meaning.
He just takes these two figures and shows something greater. This may be interpreted allegorically. These women are two covenants. One is from Mount Sinai bearing children for slavery. She is Hagar. So Paul begins to set up this argument.
He starts to say children of freedom and children of slavery. And in verse 25 he says, Now Hagar is Mount Sinai in Arabia. She corresponds to the present Jerusalem for she is in slavery with her children. Now, you probably didn't catch this because you're not a first century Judaizer going around trying to circumcise people. But Paul just threw some major shade.
I mean, he just threw some major shade here. You see, Mount Sinai is the place where the law was handed down. And he talks about present day Jerusalem and he's referring to these people. He said, You Judaizers, you people, you who boast in the law, who boast in circumcision, who uphold these things and do not understand them, y'all aren't children of freedom. You are Ishmaelites. You are children of slavery.
And that, man, those are some fighting words. That's the moment in the playground when two kids are going at it. One kid finally says something. Everyone backs up because they know something's about to go down. Someone's about to start throwing bows. He absolutely lays it down, but he didn't let up.
Verse 26, he says, But Jerusalem above is free. She is our mother. He's talking about heavenly Jerusalem. This isn't literal Jerusalem. This is the place where God rules and reigns from. And then he picks it up in verse 27.
This is where the story really all starts to tie together. Isaiah 54, 54, this is what's being quoted here in this passage. He says, For it is written, Rejoice, O barren one who does not bear. Break forth and cry aloud, you who are not in labor. For the children of the desolate one will be more than those of the one who has a husband. I just want to pause for a second.
This is a sub-point of this. But isn't it cool here? This is a small picture that we get that you don't have to have literal children to have a spiritual legacy, an eternal legacy, that by taking the gospel to those who don't believe, you can have children of faith that will eternally be in the presence of God. That's just a helpful word for a culture, I think, that's overly obsessed with kids. He says, Who has no husband, now you brothers, like Isaac, are children of the promise. So he quotes Isaiah 54 and this story starts to come into full view.
He says, For years, of this argument coming up to here, is for years they have lost the symbol of circumcision. They've lost what understands the story of Abraham, the formation of the nation of Israel. They've lost the handing down the law. All this has been lost over time. And they have made it as a message of outsiders, insiders and outsiders, Jews and those who were not Jews. Paul quotes Isaiah 54 and what's being implied here often in the New Testament when the Old Testament is being quoted.
This is not just Isaiah 54 1 that is being understood here. He's actually bringing in the meaning, the context, which is verse 2 and verse 3 of Isaiah 54. And this is what Isaiah 54 2-3 says. Enlarge the place of your tent. Let the curtains of your habitations be stretched out. Do not hold back.
Lengthen the cords. Strengthen your stakes. For you will spread abroad to the right and to the left. And your offspring will possess the nations and will people, or in other words, inhabit, and will people the desolate cities. And that is when this story starts to come into full view. The tent was always going to get bigger.
The tent was always going to get stretched. It was not literal descendants of Isaac. It was not literal descendants of Abraham. That was never the story. It was through faith that you became children of God. Through faith in the promise.
The tent was always going to get bigger. And that word offspring here is significant. Paul in Galatians 3 addresses this. This offspring here is singular. And it would have been understood at the time to be implied to the nation singular Israel. Paul comes along and says, actually, no.
No, actually, in Christ, He is the offspring. That is the one this is talking about. That an offspring is going to come and perfectly fulfill the requirements of the law, perfectly fulfill the sign of circumcision, that He's going to take that perfection on the cross with Him, and then He's going to make a way through the resurrection, loosening the power of death, loosening the power of the law, and then after this, in the big, beautiful twist, what Chet likes to call the M. Night Shyamalan move, which, his name is M. Night Shyamalan, in case you're wondering. The big twist that happens here is that this tent was always going to be expanded and that Ishmaelites, Africans, Greeks, Romans, everyone, the plan was to save them all.
The plan was to save the nations that when Christ would come, they would be brought into the tent. That's the beautiful twist of this whole story. This story's been longing for, because I'll be honest, man, sometimes when I read this story, I get frustrated, because Chet said last week, there's no good, there's not any exemplary characters here. I mean, Abraham is, again, passive, again, failing. Sarah gets vicious, and Hagar, I mean, she's not innocent. She tries to overthrow the line.
She shows contempt. But there's a part of me that gets frustrated, because I'm like, now what kind of choice did she have? What about Hagar? What about Ishmael? And I have often heard, in the past, as people have thought about this story, as they've thought about, as we ended last week in 21, when Hagar and Ishmael are wandering in the desert, they are thirsting to death, they are getting ready to die. I have heard people say, you know, wouldn't it have just been better had they died?
Wouldn't it have just been better had they not gotten water? Had God just left them? And what's being implied when that is said is what good are this people, this wild donkey of a nation? What good are the Arab people? And the same that is said about them can be said about us, because all of us were outsiders. I haven't seen your Ancestry.com profiles, but I'm willing to go on a limb and say most of you, if not all of you, are not Jewish.
We are all outsiders, wandering in the desert, thirsting, having no hope. Jesus comes along, someone brings the gospel to us, and then we actually get to drink living water. We get exposed to the gospel, we believe in Him, we're brought into the family of God. That's the hope of the mission of the church. That's the hope of the mission going forward. And what can clearly be seen is that God cares about the Arab people.
You can see it in His care for Hagar and Ishmael and the story, and you can see it today. There's a something called the 1040 window in missions. It's the latitude and longitude from North Africa all the way to Indonesia, and it's the most unreached, the most lost people groups in the world, and the overwhelming majority of that window are Arabs and Muslims. Because Islam eventually comes along, takes that tradition, and there are billions that are wandering around in the desert that don't have water, that don't have the hope of the gospel. Some of them don't even have access to it. There's not someone within a thousand miles who believes in Jesus who can actually bring living water.
They are thirsting in the wilderness. But the hope of the gospel is that God cares about Arabs. He cares about the lost. And He is sending people out today to go out and bring living water. There's a couple in our church, Ben and Patricia. They're here.
I'm not going to point them out and make it awkward for them. But they're here and they're sitting over here. They are here. They were in Lebanon. Patricia is Lebanese. She grew up in Lebanon.
And this is her first time in the States. And Ben was a missionary for close to a decade. They are part of a missions organization called 1040 Hope. And I've loved having them here. I've loved having them in our group as we've talked through how Jesus is saving lost people in Lebanon. How people are trusting in Jesus.
And it gets me excited. It gets me fired up. But you know what's even cooler than that? They are like one of hundreds of thousands of mission organizations of churches who have a heart for the Arab nation and are sending people in to bring living water. And as we close out today, may we be humbled in worship by the God who sins because if He had not sinned, we would still be outsiders. We would not have access to this living water.
Sarai and Hagar
Transcript
Good morning. Grab a Bible. Go to Genesis chapter 16. If you do not own a Bible, there should be, or if you didn't bring one with you, there should be a blue one on your row. If you don't own a Bible, take that one home with you. We want you to own a Bible.
We want you to read it. But you will need a Bible today, so I would encourage you to grab one. There won't be any verses on screen, and we have a lot of reading to do. We're going to be working our way through kind of a longer story. The story we're going to look at today will span several chapters. We'll actually skip a few because in the middle of kind of this story playing out, there's some other things that happened, and so we'll come back to those later.
And so it's the first time we've kind of moved around a little bit. We'll do that. And the story that we're looking at has great theological and historical implications. I mean, massive for how humanity plays out, for how the rest of the world is going to work, and we are going to talk about none of that today. We will talk about that next week. So next week we'll look at a lot of the similar texts and look at the historical significance and the theological significance.
And today we're really just zooming in and kind of seeing this story as it happens, in the time it happens, to see how God interacts with these individuals. And I'm hoping that as we go through it, we're going to be pretty straightforward today. We're just going to read the story. We're going to talk about the story. We'll draw some things out kind of as we go. And then hopefully as we move through it, we will see how God chooses to interact with these individuals.
And we'll learn a little bit about what does God do and what do we do when life gets sideways, when our circumstances are just terrible, everything's bottomed out, when people have sinned against us and we are in a bad spot, when we in our hearts have grown angry and bitter and frustrated and lost hope and lost faith, when our circumstances are bad, when we are sinning, when others are sinning against us. And for most of us, that is how life plays out. I think sometimes we like to think that we are the, at least I do, I like to think I'm the main character of my story. And, you know, like in a good movie, there's a few plot twists, but mostly like I develop character over time.
There's like things I'm going to overcome and then there'll be this resolution and everybody will be happy. At some point in my life, I'll just freeze and there'll be words at the bottom of the screen that say, you know, the last little bit of facts that happened, but they're not super important because I already accomplished all this stuff. But that's not really how life works. For most of us, we have, I have whole seasons where my character doesn't develop at all, you guys. And they just be terrible to watch. Like, it's like, when is this guy going to grow?
And it's like, I don't know, keep watching, maybe never. You know, it's like sometimes my life looks like, what's the police show where it's the same thing every single time you watch it? Like, it just feels like that. And if I remember that, that would have been helpful, but I don't remember the name of the show. So, um, it goes, don't, don't, you know, it's all I'm talking about now. No, not helpful.
Law and order. It's the same thing every single time you watch it. Sometimes my life looks like that. No character development, no change, no whatever. Even if the character dies, I just swap them out for the same person who does the same stuff. So, uh, there's whole seasons of life like that.
There are other times where you feel like, oh, I've conquered this, I've overcome it, I've gotten better. And then, no, you haven't. And so that's kind of what we're seeing here is real people in a real story in real life. And it's a mess. What does God do? How does he interact?
What happens in the middle of that? And so let's pray and then we'll start reading. God, we pray that your word, um, would train us, would correct us, would encourage us today. and that ultimately as we see this story, um, that we would see you more clearly and more fully and in a real, genuine way that sinks into the depths of our hearts. And we pray this in Jesus' name. Amen. Um, Genesis chapter 16.
So we'll, we'll read through 16, we'll read through a good bit of 17, we'll read through half of 18, and we'll read through some 21. So we got, we got our work cut out, but it is a story and so hopefully it'll be better than if we just read through all of Ephesians or something at once. All right. Now, Sarai, Abram's wife, had borne him no children. Okay, so we hadn't talked about Sarai in a little while. Uh, when they introduced her at the beginning of this in chapter 12, they say Sarai, or chapter 11, they say, uh, Abram's wife, Sarai, was barren, she had no children and this is kind of her marker throughout life.
This is, uh, her identity is wrapped up in, uh, barrenness. And so it seems that, uh, for Sarai, this would have been part of who she understood that she was, part of who, how she understood her life. And if you think about this, there's a lot of pain wrapped up in that one verse that we just read. She, at this point, is in her seventies. she would have gotten married fairly young, most likely. Um, so if she got married somewhere between 15 and 25, she has been married for 50 to 60 years and has born no children. And in this culture, even in our culture, but in this culture, that was specifically, uh, consistently painful. she's actually married to a great man who's the head of a clan.
And that's very surprising because they have no children. He actually, at one point, has to go to war. We already read about that. He took 300 trained men that were born in his household, but he doesn't have a physical offspring. He doesn't have a physical household. He has a household that he has amassed through, uh, growth over time, but he's married to Sarai and she has never born children.
And this has to hurt that for a long time, she prayed and hoped and wished nothing. The people kept kind of thinking, right, is this going to happen? And then eventually the assumption would be there's something wrong with her or God is displeased with her or at least he hasn't put his favor on her. Forty years go by. I'm assuming at some point she accepts this. This is how it's going to look.
This is what it's going to be like. And then God, God, goes and speaks to her husband and says, you're going to be the father of a great nation. You're going to be a father of a great offspring. Your children won't be able to be numbered. And I'm assuming when he went back and told Sarai that for the first time in a long time, she had some hope here. Sarai the barren wouldn't be barren any longer.
When we pick up here, that was ten years ago. So for ten years, she waited, hoping, longing. Abraham waited. Abram waited. I'm assuming every month, no, not pregnant. Okay.
Every month for ten years, no, not pregnant. Now, Sarai, Abram's wife, had borne him no children. She had a female Egyptian servant whose name was Hagar. It's possible they picked her up while they were in Egypt. If you'll remember that story, they went there. Abram said, you're really pretty, but that's a problem.
Pretend to be my sister. He let her marry another guy. It was not his finest hour. Don't worry, though. He learned from it and does it again in chapter 20. So, she, it's possible that's where they picked her up.
It's possible at some other point. They kind of live on a trade route, so it's possible that people were going back and forth throughout there. They are Chaldeans, or at least they come from that land, and this is an Egyptian servant. And Sarai said to Abram, Behold, now the Lord has prevented me from bearing children. Go into my servant, it may be that I shall obtain children by her. So, Sarai comes to Abram, she says, Behold, now the Lord has prevented me from bearing children.
It is most likely, it's possible that she lost hope over the course of ten years, but she's reached 70, she's in her 70s, it is most likely that what she is saying is, I have ceased to have my cycle. That she has entered menopause or gone, completed menopause, which you know that had to be so painful the first time that, because when you enter menopause, and I looked this up, I don't know much about it, your menstrual cycle becomes irregular. And so for Sarai, who's been hoping and praying and longing for an irregular menstrual cycle, one time it doesn't happen. she waits. She's not pregnant. She goes through menopause and is no longer able, biologically, factually, to bear children.
I assume this crushed her. She goes to Abraham and says, the Lord's prevented me. God has chosen to say no to this. And I guess the hope that was in her, that maybe that was going to happen through her, that she was the one who was going to receive the promise that God was going to make a great nation out of her, that finally this thing she had longed for was going to happen, that she would no longer be Sarah, the barren, is gone. And so what she does is she comes up with a plan. She immediately enters in with, okay, I've got the backup plan.
She kind of tries to take control of the situation. I think she probably felt pretty insecure in her situation with Abram anyway, if he was willing to let other people marry her. I think that probably damaged their relationship a bit. And so she now is no longer able to bear children, but this promise to Abram is that he will have children. She was never mentioned in the promise. It was just to Abram.
It was assumed. Maybe she longed for, hoped for, that it would be her, but it's not. And I think if you went to her and you said, well, just hope, maybe it's still you, she would say, hope is gone. Look at the facts. We were wrong. It's not me.
But she comes up with this plan. She says, I'll give you Hagar, and maybe by her, I'll bear children. Now, that may sound crazy to us, and maybe it doesn't sound crazy to you, but that was a common practice. to have a surrogate practice in this way was common in this time. I don't think it was ideal. I don't think God blesses this as we read the rest of the story, but this was a common practice. That someone who was in a position of power, someone who had means and had servants, would present a servant to their spouse and say, she's going to bear children for me, and the children would actually be hers.
That's what Sarah says. Now, I wish this story stopped here. Let's read. It says, Go into my servant. It may be that I shall obtain children by her. And Abram listened to the voice of Sarah.
I wish that it didn't say that. I wish it said that Abram looked at Hagar and said, I'm sure you're very nice. I'm sure you're a lovely person. And then he looked at Sarah and said, Boo. You are the only woman for me. And then the lights got dim and he said, baby, baby, baby, baby.
I wish that was the story. Or at least he said, hey, maybe we ought to pray about this. God's the one who gave us the promise. Maybe we ought to seek him a little bit. It does seem like maybe that's not what's going to happen. I don't know all the stuff you've got going on, but you're saying you're not going to have children.
Maybe we ought to pray about this. Maybe we ought to seek his face. What it says is, and Abram listened to the voice of Sarah. Now, most people would argue that listening to your wife is a very good thing. This phrase, however, when used in Genesis, has only ever been used negatively. It was what God says to Adam when he shows up.
He says, because you listened to the voice of Eve, because you listened to the voice of your wife, and now it says he listened to the voice of Sarah. It does not mean just listened. It means obeyed. Abraham's the idea that he just took her word and submitted. He took her word and followed. It's what we're supposed to do with God.
Listen to the voice of God. If it said, and Abraham listened to God, what it would mean is he took it, he took it to heart, and he acted on it. You see, Abram is supposed to lead, love, defend, care, and he doesn't. Abram's in this story throughout the rest of this time, and he's the first sitcom dad. He does this. That's pretty much what he does in the rest of this story.
He just is kind of there. There's a lot of times where you're like, okay, do, okay, no. Okay, you're going to, okay, no. And he doesn't lead, love, serve as he ought. Abram listened to the voice of Sarah. Verse three.
So after Abram had lived ten years in the land of Canaan, so that's when the promise came when they came, so she's had ten years of trying to be pregnant. Sarah, Abram's wife, took Hagar, the Egyptian, her servant, and gave her to Abram, her husband, as a wife. And he went in to Hagar, and she conceived. And when she saw that she had conceived, she looked with contempt on her mistress. So that's Hagar.
When she saw that she was pregnant, she suddenly viewed Sarah as worthless. she hated her. She looked on her with contempt. Now, Hagar hasn't had a say in this. This historically plays out this way that those who have no means, often what they do have, their body, their talent, is taken from them by those who do have means. that those who have the ability to pull some strings and have some money and have some ability will take those who have nothing really and will use them for their own purposes, their own value, use them up. They're only good for what they're able to do. They have no value in and of themselves.
So Hagar is in this position and her response is hatred, contempt, towards Sarah. She suddenly feels like, okay, hold on a second. First of all, it confirms very quickly according to the text that Sarah was the issue, that she was not able to get pregnant, that it was something going on with her, not with Hagar. And so Hagar immediately is pregnant and then looks down on Sarah. Treats her differently, Acts differently towards her. And it also can kind of hold the idea, contempt can mean that she just kind of rejects this idea, she's going to keep the child, it's not going to be Sarah's.
There are places in the Bible where it says that you have contempt on the plan, you're not going to do this until it seems like that may be what is happening. She looked on contempt with her mistress. Verse 5, And Sarah said to Abram, May the wrong done to me be on you. I gave my servant to your embrace, and when she saw that she had conceived, she looked on me with contempt. May the Lord judge between me and you. But Abram said to Sarah, Behold, your servant is in your power, do to her as you please.
Then Sarah dealt harshly with her and she fled from her. So Hagar gets pregnant, she treats Sarah with contempt, she becomes maybe haughty, she looks down on her, she treats her as worthless, Sarah goes to Abram and says, This is your fault, may the wrong done to me be on you. She had told herself that if Haggai got pregnant she would feel better, that this would work, that this would be beautiful, that this would fix the plan. And she had, in the midst of her turmoil and hurt, she had grabbed the reins and just said, I'm going to work this out. I'm going to make sure I'm still in control here, I'm going to make this work, and it doesn't.
And that's played out in human history, that's played out in our histories over and over again. This will fix me, this will make me happy, if I can just make this work out, I'm just going to step in, I'm going to pull some strings, and then when we get it, it's worse. When we get what we wanted, it falls apart, it makes it worse, it's more hurtful, it's more painful, that's what happens. And she goes to Abram and says, this is your fault, and she's not entirely wrong. And all he says is, hey, hey, hey, hey, she's your servant, do whatever you want. So it seems as if Sarai beats her, she dealt harshly with her, and Hagar flees.
The angel of the Lord found her, that's Hagar, by a spring of water in the wilderness. So she runs away into the wilderness. This would not have gone well for her. She is pregnant. We don't know how pregnant, but obviously pregnant. She runs off into the wilderness where we're told in the land that they are in it is not well watered, so she finds a spring.
She's hanging out there. She has no real hope of a future. She can live in the woods and try to have a baby by herself, which probably won't go well. She can get picked up by somebody else and be a servant or a slave. She can die. She finds some water, she's there.
The angel of the Lord found her by a spring of water in the wilderness, the spring on the way to Shur. And he said, Hagar, servant of Sarai, where have you come from and where are you going? We're told at the beginning that that's her name, is Hagar. She's not called by that any time that Abram or Sarai speak of her. She's called the servant. Servant, servant, servant, servant, servant.
Until God shows up, until the angel of the Lord shows up and he says, Hagar. Because her value to him does not come from what she's able to do. Her value comes from who he has made her. His love for her. That she is a person that he cares about and he calls her by name. And I'm assuming the voice that she heard both instilled her with fear and with longing and with hope.
He said, Hagar, servant of Sarai, where have you come from and where are you going? She said, I am fleeing from my mistress Sarai. The angel of the Lord said to her, return to your mistress and submit to her. Those are not words of hope. That sounds terrible. He says, no, go back.
Submit to her. Change your attitude. Change your posture. Be there. The angel of the Lord also said to her, I will surely multiply your offspring so that they cannot be numbered for multitude. So there now lies hope that the baby will live or that eventually she'll have more children, that she will live.
And the angel of the Lord said to her, behold, you are pregnant and you shall bear a son. And that's exciting. She got to do an old fashioned God version of an ultrasound. And you shall call his name Ishmael, which means God hears. He doesn't say that, but that's what it means. You shall call his name Ishmael because the Lord has listened to your affliction.
He shall be a wild donkey of a man, his hand against everyone and everyone's hand against him. And he shall dwell over against all his kinsmen. Now, when we hear that, we might think, okay, is that like, is that good? Is that Bible talk for something good to be a wild donkey of a man? Because I've read Song of Solomon and he says your teeth looked like sheep and he was trying to be nice. Your neck is a pomegranate.
Like, is this just one of those weird? No, it translates about as well in English. It's not a nice thing to say about someone. If you're like, yeah, my neighbor is a wild donkey of a man. You're going to be like, he seems nice. So it's not a good prophecy.
He will be great. He will be a great multitude, but he will be against everyone and everyone will be against him. That plays out in history. Very significantly, and we're not going to talk about it. Verse 13. Talk about it next week.
So she called the name of the Lord who spoke to her. You are a God of seeing. For she said, truly here I have seen him who looks after me. So she says, I'm seeing. He knows me. He hears me.
That's what he says. I see you. I hear you. I know you. Only person in the Old Testament, male or female, to give God a name. Right here.
You are a God of Abraham. Abraham a son. Abraham called the name of his son, whom Hagar bore, Ishmael. Abraham was 86 years old when Hagar bore Ishmael to Abraham. So Abraham is excited.
He has a son. The promise is being fulfilled. She comes back and says, God says he's going to make him a great multitude. He's going to be a wild donkey. We'll talk about that later. Abraham is like, what was that?
She's like, you're going to Abraham was 86 years old. Now he's 99 years old. This is a 13 year old. Ishmael is 13 now. So Sarai, she's not mentioned.
Hagar comes back, says, God met me, told me to come back. Hopefully she changed her attitude and did what God told her to. There's a son. Sarai watches Ishmael grow to be 13. the promise has moved. He's going to be the great multitude. That's the situation Sarai is in.
When Abram was 99 years old, the Lord appeared to Abram and said to him, I am God almighty before me. I'm God almighty. Walk before me and be blameless that I may make my covenant between me and you and may multiply you greatly. Then Abram fell on his face, which is a good response. And God said to him, behold, my covenant is with you and you shall be the father of a multitude of nations. No longer shall your name be Abram, which means exalted father, but your name shall be Abraham, which means father of a multitude.
Be Abraham, which means father of a multitude. For I have made you the father of a multitude of nations. I will make you exceedingly
Fruitful and I will make you into nations and kings shall come from you and I will establish my covenant between me and you and
Your offspring after you throughout their generations for an everlasting covenant to be God to you and to your offspring after you and I will
Give to you and to your offspring after you the land of your sojournings all the land of Canaan for an everlasting possession and
I will be their God so Abraham is laying on his face and God is just saying this is what I'm going to do
This is my promise this is what's going to happen and God said to Abraham as for you you shall keep my covenant you
And your offspring after you throughout their generations this is my covenant which you shall keep between me and you and your offspring after
You every male among you shall be circumcised you shall be circumcised in the flesh of your foreskins and it shall be a sign
Of the covenant between me and you he who is eight days old among you shall be circumcised which is interesting that's when blood
Begins to clot in a human generations whether born in your house or bought with your money from any foreigner who is not your
Offspring both he who is born in your house and he who is bought with your money shall surely be circumcised so shall my covenant
Be in your flesh an everlasting covenant any uncircumcised male who is not circumcised in the flesh of his foreskin shall be cut off from
His people he has and we're not going to talk about that verse 15 and God said to Abraham as for Sarai your wife
This is the first time that we've seen God speak about Sarai as for Sarai your wife you shall not call her name Sarai
But Sarah which means princess so all of you who get really down on little girls being called princess and being taught that they're
A princess boom proof text Sarai is a princess I will bless her and more over I will give you a son by her
I will bless her and she shall become nations kings of people shall come from her then Abraham fell on his face and laughed and
Said to himself you ever laugh at an inappropriate time Anna and I were at a wedding reception rehearsal dinner they were doing toast luckily we were at the
Back table we got to laughing so hard we were both crying I couldn't look at her it was terrible this is worse Anna and I really shouldn't go places together
It's a problem he laughed and said to himself shall a child be born to a man who is 100 years old shall Sarah who
Is 90 years old bear a child and Abraham said to God oh that Ishmael might live before you and God said no but
Sarah your wife he says that over and over again by the way he says Sarah your wife Sarah your wife a little bit of hey next time
She says marry this other lady say no Sarah your wife shall bear you a son and you shall call his name Isaac this
Is great y'all Isaac means he laughs so Abraham falls over laughing I guess he thinks God didn't know and he said you know
What you're going to name him you think this is funny it's going to be hilarious that's what it says that Abraham falls over
And Esau is the same it says Abraham falls over he laughs he says yeah that's what we're going to name him I will
Establish my covenant with him as an everlasting covenant for his offspring after him as for Ishmael I have heard you behold I have
Blessed him and will make him fruitful and multiply him greatly he shall father twelve princes God shows up when Ishmael is thirteen and
He says hey Abraham your name is Abraham now which is good because that's what I've been calling him the whole time hey Abraham
Remember that covenant that we cut I'm about to cut it into your flesh we're going to cut it into your flesh and it's
Going to be with you and Sarah your wife and I'm assuming that when Abraham went back to Sarah and he said it's you
You you're the one he said her her her she she she Sarah Sarah Sarah Sarah I even I hate to bring this up
I was like are you sure and he was like yeah Abraham has great love for his son Ishmael but God says no I'm going
To do it through Isaac and it's interesting the Bible doesn't place a lot of circumcised who conceives Isaac God comes in and says no this covenant wasn't clear
Enough I'm making the promise to you and to her and we're cutting it into your flesh the rest of this chapter says that
Abraham got up and did what God said and on that very day circumcised himself and everybody in the household which I can just imagine some
Guys watching some sheep and some people came running towards him and they were like what's going on and they were like God just
Spoke to Abraham God spoke to Abraham what'd he say the covenant he's gonna have children do what now everybody I wasn't even born
Here I was bought bought too he clarified twice when right now okay this is all coming on a little fast I'm gonna be
Honest well they got it over with and Abraham did what the Lord told him to 18 and the Lord appeared to him by
The oaks of Mamre and as he sat at the door of his tent in the heat of the day now their tents would
Have been goat skin tents so these are big black tents made out of goat skin and they would have during the summer most
Likely rolled the sides up so it was just like a big open air kind of thing and during the winter they rolled the
Sides down because it gets pretty cold but it says he's in the heat of the day he's sitting out in his tent so
It's probably pretty warm he's sitting out underneath the covering also remember he's very old as he sat at the door of his tent
In front looked and behold three men were standing in front of him I said earlier that the Lord appeared to him so these
Three men it says the Lord is among them and behold three men were standing in front of him when he saw them he ran
From the tent door to meet them and bowed himself to the earth and said oh Lord if I have found favor in your sight
Do not pass that you may pass on since you have come to your servant so they said do as you have said and
Abraham went quickly into the tent and said quick three seeds of fine flour knead it and make cakes and Abraham ran into the herd
And took a calf tender and good and gave it to the young man who prepared it quickly then he took curds and milk
And the calf that he had prepared and set it before them and he stood by them under the tree while they ate I
Don't know if they fried the cheese curds but if you ever get a chance to eat fried cheese curds are delicious verse nine
They said to him where is Sarah your wife I want y'all to see this God shows up to Abraham the first thing he
Says when he sits down he says where is Sarah he cares about her he reinstituted this promise and he says this is for
Sarah and he says where is she he said she is in the tent and the Lord said I will surely return to you
About this time next year okay if we're sitting next to a tent just think about this for a second we're sitting next to
A tent or in the so she wasn't even like she was at the door she was at the flat behind him now Abram
And Sarah were old advanced in years the way of women had ceased to be with Sarah so Sarah laughed to herself saying after
I am worn out and my Lord is old shall have pleasure meaning will this come true will this finally be real now immediately
You're like is that a good laugh is it like a joyous laugh is it like a not good laugh it's not good one let's see how
God respond Lord said to Abraham why did Sarah laugh and say shall I indeed bear a child now that I am old is
Anything too hard for the Lord so her laughter was lack of faith she scoffed we'll talk about that in a second is anything too
Hard for the Lord at the appointed time I will return to you about this time next year and Sarah shall have a son
But Sarah denied it saying I did not laugh I did not laugh she just pokes out behind the curtain or she just shouts
It what no laughing in here something else was funny for she was afraid and he said no but you did laugh no you
Did Sarah you did okay here's what happened God said I've made a promise to Sarah and then he reiterates it and she goes
Yeah okay we do that somebody comes up to you you're in the midst of a situation you can't see past the situation all
You know is pain all you know is hurting they say let me tell you something God loves you and in your heart you go
Okay do we do the thing I know I do this I don't necessarily laugh but I'll do the thing where it's like theologically
I know God can do whatever he wants secondarily I know he won't she has facts on her side after the way of women
Has ceased it's just how she wants to walk out and say don't you know biology I thought you created stuff ain't happening it's
Not a joyous laugh when Abram came back and told her this promise she was too shut down she was too hurt she didn't hold
On to this because it says about the same time next year twice meaning that God shows back up the first question he has
About Sarah is because when the news reached her that the promise was to her she did not believe it and God wants to
Talk to her about it this is where is she about this time next year she's gonna have a son and he says why
Are you laughing is anything impossible for so many of us we get in these situations where all we can see is impossible and
Then somebody comes along in your group and says let me remind you how much Jesus loves you let me remind you what happens
When the Holy Spirit works on somebody that they might repent let remind you and you go yeah okay and he says no but
You did laugh all right Sodom and Gomorrah happens situation with Abraham and Abimelech where Abimelech marries Sarah again somebody else marries her it's not great he thinks
You get over some stuff they would quit doing this anyway chapter 21 it's an exciting chapter you'll notice a little heading that was added
Later the birth of Isaac kind of giving away the ending here but okay chapter 21 the Lord visited Sarah as he had said
And the Lord did to Sarah as he had promised meaning that God fulfilled his promise he said he was going to do this
He did and she conceived and bore Abraham a son in his old age at the time of which God had spoken to him now think about this she just
Started gaining weight y'all she's 90 wasn't like she was on a menstrual cycle that she could notice was missing all of a sudden one
Day she was just like no maybe she started throwing up first I don't know I don't know how this went she started having
Problems and then she was like wait a second Sarah conceived bore Abraham a son his old age at the time of which God had spoken to him Abraham
Called the name of his son who was born to him who Sarah bore to him Isaac and Abraham circumcised his son Isaac when he was eight days old as God
Had commanded him Abraham was a hundred years old when Isaac was born to him and Sarah said God has made laughter for me
Everyone who hears will laugh over me I love that verse she said who would have said to Abraham and Sarah who would have
Said to Abraham that Sarah would nurse children yet I have born him a son in his old age she has a son 75
80 Years late 25 years after the promise and she says I get the joke he made laughter for me so much joy in
That moment she also says everyone else will think this is funny and it is funny picture a 90 year old woman now picture
Her nine months pregnant it's startling yet humorous she gives birth to this child she does not die she has a healthy child she
Is healthy she nurses she says who on earth would have ever said this would happen and she now believes the impossible she says
The Lord did this and I get it I get the kind of laughter that this Isaac was going to be I get it
And the child grew and was weaned started eating solid food and Abraham made a great feast on the day that Isaac was weaned
Men take a note here if you're the husband the dad the head of the household find things to celebrate this is one of
The cool things that Abraham does here he says you're eating solid food now well you're about to get all kinds of solid food
This is going to be a celebration find things to celebrate put your foot in the ground on some stuff don't always just be
Like it about time you started eating food I've been telling your mama I thought you were behind on that don't do that say boy
You ain't even have fried chicken for have you like just throw down find things to celebrate find things to be excited about don't just
Fuss when things are bad but celebrate but Sarah saw that the son of Hagar the Egyptian whom she had born to Abraham laughing he's
15 16 At he had an attitude so she said to Abraham cast out this slave woman with her son for the son of
This slave woman shall not be heir with my son Isaac her heart towards Hagar has not changed cast out this slave woman her
The son of this slave woman will not be an heir with my son and the thing was very displeasing to Abraham he's that
Word pretty heavy he's very frustrated very angry on account of his son he's like that's my son you can't just say get rid of
Your son but God said to Abraham be not displeased because of the boy and because of your slave woman whatever Sarah says to
You do as she tells you for through Isaac shall your offspring be named so I just want to point this out earlier was a problem when he
Listened to his wife because God wasn't involved now she has some wisdom God steps in and says no listen to her so it's
Not like a general rule don't listen to your wife no she's helpful but listen to God as well what God said to him
Be not displeased because of the boy because of your slave one whatever Sarah says you do as she tells you for through Isaac
Shall promises for Sarah and Isaac that's where the promise has always been send them out I think this is a big messed up
Situation I think God also thinks it is but this is what should happen they're still facing the consequences of their sin and their
Desire to take control in their own hands so Abraham rose early in the morning he took bread and a skin of water and gave
It to skin was gone so this is some days later she had a skin of water they've been rationing it I'm assuming they're
Trying to figure out a place to go they're trying to make it somewhere safe when the water and the skin was gone she
Put the child under one of the bushes then she went and sat down opposite him a good way off at the distance of the
Shot for think it means he was refusing water and letting her drink that's my guess so she lays him parched lips chapped lips
Cheeks sunk in she drags him under a bush when he finally falls over because they're out of water and they've been out of
Water for a while and she just goes off somewhere kind of close but not too close because she doesn't want watch her son
Die she sits down let me not look on the death of the child and as she sat opposite him she lifted up her
Voice and wept and God heard the voice of the boy and the angel of God called to Hagar from heaven and said to
Her what troubles you Hagar fear not for God has heard the voice of the boy where he is his name is God hears
He said I have Ishmael Ishmael and it's like M. Night Shamelan signs or whatever when all just comes together at the end he
Was going to hear him all along I heard the voice voice the boy where he is verse 18 up lift up the boy
And hold him fast with your hand for I will make him into a great nation then God opened her eyes and she saw
A well of water she went and filled the skin with water and gave the boy a drink and God was with the boy
And he grew up he lived in the wilderness and became an expert with the bow he lived in the wilderness of Paran and
His mother took a wife for him from the land of Egypt she's like I'm done with these Chaldeans okay you read this who's
The person that you think ah let's learn moral lessons from this character Hagar isn't the main character she does she's not terrible from what
We can see she has a lot of really bad circumstances happen to her but they're not really highlighting Hagar Sarai has this moment
Of redemption where she's laughing and it's almost like you got it you see what God was doing and then she sees Ishmael laughing
And says the joke is not for him kill him and you're like like y'all were having a party what what on earth she
Goes to Abraham in the middle of the party and says they gotta go he'll have nothing to do here and there may be
Some he was a threat to her son she's afraid of it but she's not saying send him away give bread give him some water and they
Can go die Abraham is not the hero in this he's not held up as like they wrote this so that everybody would think Abraham was awesome
That's not how it's written Ishmael seems okay from the little bit that we see Isaac started eating solid food that's pretty good I think he's the
Best character he made people happy and then he ate food and it's like all right Isaac this story is a mess and that's so
So good because your story is a mess and do y'all see how good God is in this story how tender he is how loving
He is like I want him to show up and bang some people's heads together like you want him to show up and say
What are you doing come no come here Abraham come sit down Sarah you think this is funny too come here both y'all in
Trouble like you want him to do that when he shows up to Hagar like he there's just these moments where you're like but
He just shows up and he's so kind and he's so gracious and he's just walking with them through this we so often think
That he's just so disappointed in us and he's so slow to anger and so slow to wrath and so welcoming and gracious and
In the middle of this he's just working it out with them and he's saying it's going to be okay no no let me
Clarify that the promise was for her now I hear you about Ishmael but I will bless him but it's not for him and
He just the whole time is just working through this and I want y'all to know that that God definitively does that for us
In Christ that he calls our name that he works out our problems that he accomplishes his purpose for our good in Jesus that
Ultimately Jesus is the Isaac that we get the laughter and the joy in the midst of our broke down inability to get there if you are
Not a Christian today I want you to just think and be like Hagar for a moment and know that God calls your name
I want you to hear him call your name and know that he knows you and that he sees you and that he loves
You and he can work in the middle of this and you can't see past your pain I want you to know that he
Works with you so similarly to the way he works with Sarah the promises don't break down because you actively worked to destroy them
He shows back up he renews him he reminds you and he works for your good and he calls you princess or prince if
That's better for you that you're a son or daughter of the king and his promises will hold fast a band is going to
Come back up here Matt and Bianca are going to come back up here we're going to sing we're going to worship a God
Who in the midst of our chaos and our sin and our lack of faith and our contempt and our scoffing at his promises
Consistently works to draw us nearer to him loves us so deeply is so kind and so gracious and that's what those pages are drenched
With the love of God for them and I don't know where you are I don't know what you've got going on right now
I don't know the circumstances you can't see past I don't know the promise you've been waiting on for 5 10 15 25 35
45 60 Years I don't know I know what you've been holding out on I don't know what you thought was going to happen
In life that hasn't happened in life I don't know what you have seen just crash around your ears but I know that there
Is a God who sees you and knows you and knows your name and through Christ is at work for your good and who
Cares and who loves and who in the midst of you being so devastatingly disappointing is not disappointed but comes to you and says
No and that through Jesus we can have that eternally secured for us forever let's pray God we thank you for your grace that you
See us thank you that you hear us and we thank you that when we are a catastrophic mess you call to us you
Clarify you walk with us you address us and you drag us forward towards your hope and your joy we pray that those who
Don't know Jesus would be forever changed by him would hear him calling their voice today would step out in faith we pray those
Who have grown hardened to your promises that you would soften them they would see the joy and laughter and the hope and the
Promises that are given from you and they would know that nothing is impossible with you in Jesus name we pray amen
October Baptism Party
Transcript
Good morning. My name is Spencer. I'm one of the pastors here with Mill City Church. Welcome to our baptism gathering. Welcome to a gathering with lots of our families in the room. Today is going to look a little bit different.
We're not going to be in Genesis this morning. We're taking a break. For this week, we're going to be in Galatians 3. So you have a blue Bible around you. It's on page 566. I encourage you to turn there as we will read through it.
So today's a little bit different. We've got all our families in the room. So this is going to be a little bit shorter for the sake of the attention spans that we have in the room. And today's exciting. It's Baptism Sunday. It's one of the most exciting Sundays we get to celebrate.
We celebrate that Jesus has changed four lives that we get to celebrate in baptism. In sports, one of the more exciting things you get to see, especially if you're a hopeless fan like me, if you love the Gamecocks or the Colts, you're always looking forward to new players. That's an exciting time. Whether it's in college, you're looking forward to signing day when players are going to declare, this is the school I'm going to go to. Whether it's in professional sports where there's a draft when a player is going to get chosen and they're going to put on a jersey or a hat, when that moment happens, everyone's excited.
Fans, players, families, coaches, because someone has been added to the team. And this moment that we get to celebrate today blows that out the water. What we get to celebrate as a church family that Jesus has changed four lives is so much more exciting because of the eternal implications of what are happening here today. So we're going to work through Galatians 3 as a church family together. And as we work through verses 22 through 29, we're going to see three different pictures. We're going to see a picture of who all of us were coming into this world as captives.
That we are all captives before faith in Jesus. And then we're going to see how faith brings us into freedom. That we have freedom because of what Christ has done for us and that that freedom was purchased and brings us into a family. The third picture we'll see today. That we belong to a church family. And as we work through these three things, we're going to see that baptism gives me a picture of how faith brings us from captivity into freedom and into a family.
So I'm going to read through this. We'll pray. And then we'll dive in. Verse 22. But the scripture imprison everything under sin so that the promise by faith in Jesus Christ might be given to those who believe.
Now before faith came, we were held captive under the law, imprisoned until the coming faith would be revealed. So then the law was our guardian until Christ came in order that we might be justified by faith. But now that faith has come, we are no longer under a guardian. For in Christ Jesus, you are all sons of God through faith. For as many of you as were baptized into Christ have put on Christ. There is neither Jew nor Greek.
There is neither slave nor free. There is no male and female. For you are all one in Christ Jesus. And if you are Christ, then you are Abraham's offspring, heirs according to the promise. I'll pray and then we'll jump in. God, thank you so much for your word.
God, I pray that you would make the gospel so clear and evident as we walk through this. As we celebrate what you have done. In Jesus' name, amen. Alright, so the first part of this passage, we're going to see how we all come into this world as captives. This is in verse 22. But the scripture imprisoned everything under sin.
So the promise by faith in Jesus Christ might be given to those who believe. Now before faith came, we were held captive under the law. Imprisoned until the coming faith would be revealed. So then the law was our guardian until Christ came. In order that we might be justified by faith. That is the reality for all of us.
That is the picture of all of us before we encounter Christ. That we are imprisoned. We are captive by sin. And chasing sin is actually an ironic picture in comparison to how culture looks at this. Because culture looks at us as Christians and says, No, you guys aren't free. Y'all are the ones that are in prison.
Your faith has imprisoned you. Everyone else gets to be free to do whatever they want. The classic caricature of this shows up all over the place. But specifically you see it in the Simpsons. Over the last two decades of that show being on, Who's the classic Christian next door neighbor? Ned Flanders.
And for over two decades, he has been the stereotype of what Christians are. He's not fun. He's kind of boring. He can be kind of awkward. And his kids get to see that. And they look over and over again at the next door neighbor, the Simpsons.
They look at Homer Simpson and Bart Simpson. And all the fun and all the things they get to do. But they have to go inside and read their Bible and pray. And it's best captured, I think, in the full feature movie they did. Towards the end of the movie, the kids look at the Simpson kids and their father. And they say, I wish Homer was our dad.
And Ned Flanders says, well, I wish he didn't have the devil's curly hair. That's the caricature that gets put on us. That we're the ones that are in prison. That everyone else is free. But that is a false picture.
Because it's not actually freedom. The pursuing sin, pursuing the things of this world, isn't freedom. It actually reveals that you're not free. It actually reveals that you are a slave. That you are captive to your desires. That your desires, your sinful flesh, your pursuit of the world, that drives the train.
And that your free choices to pursue that further shows that, no, you're just a slave. Let me just give you one quick picture of what this looks like. There are millions of Americans that have lots of credit card debt. Because in our culture, the economy is really built on buying things and pursuing things. How many of us, I mean, to keep up with the Joneses, like if you want the newest and nicest phone, you've got to drop like $1,000 every year to keep up. On top of all the other data plans that you might spend on.
I mean, Americans shop regularly. How many of us have credit card bills that are loaded with shopping? Beauty is pushed in our culture. So hundreds of dollars every month in some budgets are spent on beauty. There is always the pursuit of newer and nicer vehicles where the prices go up and up and up. There's always a pursuit of toys, of things, of guns that we keep adding and adding and adding.
And many of us are swimming in this. And what it reveals is that you are actually a slave to materialism. That you actually worship comfort. And that out of that, your free choices to spend your money the way that you like it actually reveals, no, something else is driving the train. You weren't free at all. And you can pretty much do that with every other sin set there is.
Because it boils down to idolatry. Worship things in the place of God. And that is what drives the train. You are not actually free. Because worldly freedom is not freedom. And it's actually further imprisonment.
And the law reveals this. That's what this passage says. The law reveals this. The law is talking about the Old Testament law, which is the first five books of the Old Testament. But it gets expanded in the New Testament to mean all of the Bible.
That the Bible stands guard. And what it reveals is, is that these, you will never live up to what God has called you to. And also it reveals that you are a slave. That you are not actually free. And it stands guard and it reminds us of this. And if that was just it, if that was the whole of the news, then we wouldn't have this baptism water soon.
We wouldn't be celebrating this day. But, verse 25, But now that faith has come, we are no longer under a guardian. For in Christ Jesus, you are all sons of God through faith. For as many of you were, for as many of you as were baptized into Christ, have put on Christ. What we see here is that baptism begins to be a picture of how faith takes captives and sets them free. That's the exchange that happens.
It's faith. Our faith differentiates us, it separates us from every other belief system, every other value system in the world. You can look at Buddhism. In Buddhism, and I know there's different, there's Therafada Buddhism, there's Mahayana Buddhism, I get this, but the whole gist of Buddhism is that there's an exchange that happens. You bring self-denial to the table in exchange for the final state, which is nirvana. In Islam, you exchange submission to Allah, you exchange that, that's the currency, and then you get paradise.
We see this in the American dream, a value system that we're all so familiar with, that you put in your work, you put in your blood, sweat, tears, identity, and then you get to level up. We used to say you used to get the house with a white picket fence, but I don't really see houses with white picket fence as much anymore. But it is, I want all the shiplap, I want all the luxury vinyl plate floors, I want all the quartz, the granite, the works. I want the cars, I want to level up in all of that. And I exchange all of that to get into that. Another value system you see that's been prevalent over the last couple decades is kind of the find yourself movement.
I mean, basically the last couple decades has been different forms of expression. You exchange expression for acceptance. You exchange identity for acceptance. That there are different tribes in our culture that will accept you, and you give yourself, you give a piece of yourself and express yourself and your identity in this and you will be accepted. You can do this with every value system, with every different religion. There's always going to be some type of exchange that you give of yourself, and the gospel cuts through all of that and says the opposite.
It says, some will say that you bring nothing to the table and Jesus takes care of the rest, and that's not even completely accurate. Because you don't just bring nothing to the table in our faith. No, you bring sin debt. You bring an accumulation of sin that stands against you with its legal demands. So we bring that to the table, and Jesus makes an exchange.
I want you to picture with me for a moment. Picture with me for a moment if you are in prison serving a life sentence. You've been serving this life sentence in prison for years. This is pretty much all that you know. And that every day is the same. You wake up, you leave your cell, you go eat breakfast, and you go, and maybe you go to the yard to do some, to work out, to play basketball, and then you go to a prison Job.
Or you work the job, go eat lunch, continue finishing the job, maybe you get done, have some more time for reg, then you eat a meal, then you go back to your cell, and then you wake up and do the same thing over and over and over again. Sounds like more than prison, sounds like reality for some of us. And you keep doing this over and over again, and then finally, someone comes and visits you. They sit across the table, and they say, this isn't actually freedom. This reality that you have isn't free at all. So here's the exchange.
You can walk out of here today. You can leave the barbed wire, you can leave the fences, you can leave the cell, you can walk out of here today. You just have to trust my word. Trust me, and you walk out, and I will take your place. I will take the sentence that you deserve, and you get to walk out. It's that easy.
That seems like a no-brainer. That seems like, absolutely, that's what we should do, but there is a chorus of lies that comes from everyone else in the prison that says, no, don't do that. No, that is a backwards system. That's archaic. That is, his followers are crazy. Don't do it.
And it's easy to get caught up in the chorus of lies. But that's all it takes in Christ, is to simply trust what he has already done. That in Christ, he went to the cross, he took death for us, so that we might not have to be slaves to sin, we might have to be, we might not be captives anymore, that we might be free. And all it takes is simply trusting in his life, his death, his resurrection, and he stands for us, that we take off the orange jumpsuits, and he gives us robes of righteousness, that all of his work will stand for us. And that's as simply as it gets in faith, that faith brings us from captivity into freedom.
And that's what we're going to get to celebrate today with these four stories that step into these waters, that they were once captive in sin, but through believing in his life, death, and resurrection, he made them free. As it says in verse 27, for as many of you were baptized into Christ, have put on Christ, that from this point forward, after placing their faith in Jesus, that Jesus' perfect record stands for them. That they get a point to that. They can't be accused anymore. All of their sin paid for at the cross. And that lastly, that they were purchased and brought into a family.
That's what we see in this last part. It says, verse 28, There's neither Jew nor Greek. There's neither slave nor free. There's no male and female. For you are all one in Christ Jesus. And if you are Christ, then you are Abraham's offspring.
Heirs according to the promise. This is what baptism gets to be a picture of. How faith brings us out of captivity, into freedom, and into a family. I've had some friends over the years that have adopted children. My wife and I actually currently were praying through this as adoption. It might be an option for us in the future.
There's one specific family I remember. This guy that I looked up to a lot. He has four kids. All four of his kids are adopted. And all of his kids come from different backgrounds. They're from different parts of the country.
They're different ethnicities. They have different stories. And some of these kids, they bounced around from foster home to foster home, from family to family. When you are a kid, the common questions you might have when you go through something like this is do I belong? Do I matter? Does anybody actually want me?
And these kids would land up on his doorstep and he would make it very clear. They'd make two things very clear. He'd say, listen, this is your forever family. This is the last stop. You belong. You matter.
You are here. This is your forever family. You are forever a part of this. And the second thing he would make clear is that you are a Jones. That's their last name. He'd say, you're a Jones now.
That's the most important thing you need to hear. You are a part of this family. And you are a Jones with everything that comes with that. And man, what a beautiful picture that we get in the gospel. That we are adopted into a family. We're adopted into a forever family that is so diverse with different people, different stories, different backgrounds.
That's what this passage is highlighting with some of these differences. It says, he intentionally pairs up different categories. He says, Jews, Greeks, which are different backgrounds, different stories, different cultures, but also what he's highlighting here, as we've talked about in Genesis, as we've been walking through the story of Abraham, is that the Jews ethnically thought that they were heirs to the original promise, but what happens in the New Testament in passages like this is that that gets blown up. It's not by ethnicity, it's by faith. You are heirs to the promise by faith. Jews and Greeks are different.
He says, slave, free, male, female, all different backgrounds. And that's true for us. You have black, white, rich, poor, male, female. The local church, the global church, we're all different in our backgrounds, different in our stories, but the New Testament makes it so clear. The most important thing about you when you have trusted in Jesus as your only hope is that your chief identity is Christ. Your whole, the whole of who you are is Jesus and that you are part of a forever family where God has sealed you with his blood.
And that's what we get to celebrate in these baptism waters as each steps in the water. What's going to happen afterwards is there's going to be a celebration. There's going to be people who celebrate and that's your church family as we celebrate what Jesus has done. So as we get ready for baptism, here's a couple things you're going to hear and here's a few things you're going to see. You're going to hear some stories. There's going to be some videos and it's going to tell the stories about each of these four individuals of who they were and now who they are in Christ.
And then, as a church family, we're going to celebrate which is a reminder that you've been adopted into a family. A family of different people with different stories as we celebrate the gospel together. And then, as the band comes up, I just have two closing thoughts. Church family, this is exciting. This is a fun moment that we get to celebrate together. Let's do what we do.
Let's go crazy. Let's celebrate that Jesus took people who were dead in sin and made them alive in Christ. That what happens here in these waters is that they're going to be, they're going to declare that Jesus is their Savior. They're going to be dumped under water which is symbolized that they were dead in sin. That they were once captive. And when they come out of the waters, they are free.
They are alive. It is a picture of the hope that they have trusted in. So, church family, let's celebrate. Let's be glad. if you, if there's anyone in here that has not trusted in Jesus as your only hope, if you are not a Christian, this is our hope for you today. That you would hear this word, that you would see these stories and you would see this is better. That you are actually in prison.
You have not experienced freedom and the hope of the gospel is that you can experience freedom in Christ and all it takes is faith. Faith will bring you out of captivity. It will bring you into freedom. And the hope of the gospel is that you will join our family as we celebrate what Jesus has done, as we get to celebrate together today in baptism. Let me pray. God, I am thankful so much for your word.
I am thankful so much for this holy symbol that we get to practice today. God, I pray that if there's anyone here who's not trusted in you as their only hope, they'd stop running. they'd see your freedom is better and they would surrender to you. God, I'm so thankful for how you work. Let's let this be a joyous celebration in Jesus' name. Amen.
The Covenant
Transcript
Good morning. My name's Chet. I'm one of the pastors here. We are going to be in Genesis chapter 15. So we've been walking through the book of Genesis, and we are in a section we're calling the Patriarchs, which is just we're looking at the life of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.
And so the beginning of Genesis chapters 1 through 11 is kind of this the history of humankind and kind of how we have spiraled out of control after we rebelled against God and spiraled into sin. And then God's promise that he's not going to let sin win. And it zooms in on this one man, this one family, and kind of the rest of Genesis is going to carry out of this family. And really the rest of the Bible is going to carry out out of this family, out of what God does with Abraham and then Isaac and Jacob and Joseph and just this family as it plays out in history. And is he going to be able to fulfill his promise to not let sin win, to not let us all be overcome by sin and rebellion and death?
Can he somehow redeem us? And that's where we are. We're in the story of Abraham in Genesis. God hasn't changed his name yet, so it's still Abram. We're in chapter 15. We looked at the first kind of three chapters of Abraham last week, 12, 13, and 14.
And so we're picking up today and we're going to see two massively important kind of events take place in the life of Abraham and really in the life of us as believers. And so let's pray and then we'll study this story together. God, we thank you for your word, for the instruction and for the hope that is found in it. And we pray that as we read this story of something you did with this one man long ago, that we might see you more clearly in it and your son more clearly through it. In Jesus' name, amen. All right, so we're going to start reading in chapter 15, verse 1.
After these things, and that just means the events we read about last week, after these things, the word of the Lord came to Abram in a vision. Fear not, Abram. I am your shield. Your reward shall be very great. So he comes to Abram in a vision.
He says, fear not. I am your shield. I'm your protector. I'm your defender. I'm what covers you. I'm what guards you.
And he says, your reward should be very great. And Abram responds. He says, but Abram said, oh, Lord God, what will you give me? For I continue childless. And the heir of my house is Eleazar of Damascus. And Abram said, behold, you have given me no offspring.
And a member of my household will be my heir. Okay, so Abram's response is kind of interesting. God comes to him and says, I'm going to be your shield. Your reward will be very great. And Abram starts interacting with the promises that God's already given him, which is that he's going to make him into a great nation. That he's going to give him land.
He's going to give him a great nation. He's going to give him people. And so Abram's saying, like, if you keep giving me stuff, the thing I really want, the thing that really clinches this deal, makes this wonderful, is that you would give me an heir. And so in some ways he's questioning God's plan. And in some ways he's just trying to understand if I misunderstood what's going to happen here. Do you actually want to continue to bless me and have all this go to the current heir that I have, which is Eleazar of Damascus?
Like, I'm going to give it to a person who's just part of my household, but he's not. He's not. He doesn't come from me. He's not in my family line. Or are you going to do something different? It's kind of what he's asking.
He's questioning God on how is this going to work. And I think maybe some of us have been there before where we're looking at the situation we're in. We're looking at what God says he's going to do. We're looking at how the Bible says things play out, how he treats Christians. And we're going, I don't see it. I don't see how you're going to do that from here.
I don't see how that's going to work out well from here. So that's what Abraham's saying. And behold, the word of the Lord came to him. This man shall not be your heir. Your very own son shall be your heir. And he brought him outside and he said, look toward heaven and number the stars.
So this vision happened at night or really early morning prior to sunrise. If you are able to number them. Then he said to him, so shall your offspring be. So he takes him outside. He tells him to look at the stars. And maybe you're used to looking at the stars in Columbia.
So you've ceased to try to look at the stars. But at this moment, Abraham walks out of his tent in an area where there is no light pollution. And he stares up. And he sees innumerable little pinpricks of light. Like the pictures you see on your computer desktop. Where it's just insane.
Where it almost looks like you're staring out beyond the world. And you can almost fall into it. That's what he sees. And he's staring at this. And God says, if you can number those, you'll have a good handle on the number of your offspring. And so as Abraham's staring up and as he's hearing the word of God, it says this.
Verse 6. And he believed the Lord. And he counted it to him as righteousness. So what that says is that Abraham believed the Lord. And God counted it to him as righteousness. Okay, so this is very interesting.
And very, very good news for us. What it says is that Abraham believed the Lord. Now that phrase there means that this, it settled. It became firm. That's the first time this word is used. And it means that it kind of, it settled in.
He locked it in. He believes him. Because we've seen Abraham trust the Lord before. We've seen him do things the Lord told him to go do. But this, in this moment, is where it really settles in his heart that he genuinely believes.
He comes to a firm, okay, I trust you. I don't know how you're going to work this out. I don't know when that's going to happen. I'm really, really old. And so is Sarai. But okay, I trust you.
It's this moment where that happens for him. That he locks this belief in. And for those of us who are genuinely believers in Christ, maybe you fully understand what it's saying. Because there might have been times prior when you were studying your Bible. When you were hanging out with a church or something. Where you kind of believed the Lord.
And then you would kind of back off. You would get a little bit tossed to and fro. You would vacillate. There was like this, no, I do believe. And then something would happen. And you're like, well, maybe not really fully.
I don't really know. And then at some point it became so clear to you. That actually in the face of mounting evidence. In the face of doubt. In the face of frustration. In the face of questions.
No, I believe. I trust you. Beyond I trust what you've done or what you will do. I trust you. And that's what Abram does here. And it says that the Lord counted it to him as righteousness.
Now, we need to know what righteousness is. Righteousness means being right. It means being good. It means being holy. It's actually, if you ask people. The majority of people believe that there is a God.
And if you ask them, what does he want from you? The general response is, he wants me to be a good person. That may be your answer. He wants me to be good. There's a big holy creator God. And he looks down at me and says, behave.
Do the things you're supposed to do. Don't do the things you're not supposed to do. Be good. Be righteous. That he wants me to be generous. He wants me to be kind.
He wants me to not hurt people. That's what the term righteousness means. But what did we just see? Is Abram righteous? He is because God credited him with righteousness when he believed him. So that Abram places his trust in God.
And he just says, I trust you. My faith is in you. I believe you. And God says, okay, that counts as righteousness. If you'll think back to school. Some of you are still in school.
So you don't have to think as hard as other people. Some of you got to think kind of hard. If you'll remember extra credit. So there were some people that you went to school with and they had intelligence. They didn't need extra credit. And there were other people who needed extra credit.
They needed something that made up for being able to just show up, take tests, do well. Maybe you didn't test well. Maybe you didn't study well. Maybe you, because you never studied, even though you might have been good at it, you never tested well. I don't know. But you needed extra credit.
You needed your teacher to say, I will trade hard work for intelligence. And there were annoying people in your class who were like, I don't need to do extra credit. And there was you who was like, I'm doing all the journal assignments. I'm doing all the things. I'm cutting clippings out of newspapers and gluing them to some sort of marker board. I'm doing whatever it is for me to get extra credit.
And what your teacher was saying was, I will trade. I will count. I will credit extra work, hard work for good grades. And so what God just said to Abram was, I will credit faith for good behavior. I will credit faith for righteousness. That you, if you trust me, that's the same.
I will credit it as if you have just perfectly behaved yourself. This is, Paul picks this up in Romans. We're just going to have this on the screen. That God applies this to his account, whose account. So if it says for, if Abraham was justified by works, now justified means made right, made righteous.
You're justified that your actions are justified. If you did something perfect and you said, no, I feel justified in this. It means that you did it the way it was supposed to be done. So if he was justified by works, then he has something to boast about, but not before God. For what does the scripture say? Abraham believed God and it was counted to him as righteousness.
Okay, so what it says is, if Abraham was just a really good person, and if he was just righteous, then he could walk before God and say, look at my account. I have done so, so well. He would have something to boast about. He would say, everybody else on earth. This is the deal that God would have with Abram. And this is what we're tempted to think.
That God looked around on earth and he said, Abram's got it together. That's the guy I want. That Abram could actually look at God and say, everyone else on earth, trash. They're the worst. But I'm doing great.
Now, if you were here last week and you saw when Abram told his wife to pretend to be his sister so she can marry another guy, you probably aren't sold on his righteousness. Probably aren't convinced that he's the best. He has nothing to boast about before God. He can't walk before God and say, just take it on all my account. Just grade my little sheet and you'll know that I'm perfect. It doesn't say that.
It says, no, he didn't have anything to boast about before God because he believed God and it was counted to him as righteousness. Now, to the one who works, his wages are not counted as a gift, but as his due. If you have a job, when you get your paycheck, your boss says, thank you, not your welcome. It's your due. You worked for it. They don't act like that you somehow are indebted to them.
They're indebted to you. That's what it's saying. So that if God had a system where you behaved and you went to him and you said, look at my behavior and he would owe you, but he doesn't owe you. It's not your due. It's a gift. And to the one who does not work, but believes in him who justifies, makes right the ungodly, his faith is counted as righteousness.
Now, all of our little hearts should have just started fluttering because what it says is that God justifies the ungodly. Y'all know who that is? Us. We're the ungodly. You can't stand here and say, no, in all my actions and in all my thoughts, I have been like God. I've been godly.
I've been holy. I've been pure. No, you haven't. This is us. We're the ungodly. I know y'all.
That's y'all. My wife's here. Ask her. She can co-sign. That's me. His faith is counted as righteousness.
And then he says this, just as David also speaks of the blessing of the one to whom God counts righteousness apart from works. Blessed are those whose lawless deeds are forgiven, whose sins are covered. Blessed is the man against whom the Lord does not count his sins. So not only does he credit us with righteousness, but he doesn't count our sin. He takes our sin away. How?
By faith. That we trust God and he gives us righteousness. Now, some of you are genuinely appropriately excited. And some of you are like, wait a second. That doesn't sound fair. And you're right.
It is not fair. But it's not fair in our favors who don't complain. It's not fair towards the ungodly. We don't get what we deserve. He doesn't hold our sin against us. If we trust Jesus, if we place our faith in God, we get righteousness on our account.
The only people who have a problem with this are the people who think they're good enough. The only people who have a problem with this. That's why Jesus and the religious leaders didn't get along. Because Jesus came along proclaiming this idea. This is what he worked for. This is the people he reached.
And everybody who thought they had it together was really annoyed with him. Because they had been working. And they felt like God owed them. I've been punching the clock. You owe me. But the people who know they're ungodly.
Who know their sin. And who know that they can't work enough to pay it back. Or to be good enough. Who just trust Jesus covers me. God, you are good. And you are gracious.
And you justify the ungodly. Those people are excited. Remember in class. And the teacher, you had homework. But she forgot to take it up.
And you were so happy because you didn't do it. Teacher didn't say anything about homework. And you were like. And then this little greasy hand shot up. In the back. Um.
This is how they talked. I didn't go to your school. But I know what they sounded like. You didn't take up homework. And you were like. I'm going to choke somebody today.
Now do you know who raises their hand and says that? The person who did their homework. Not a single person ever shot their hand up and said. You didn't take up homework. And I didn't do it. But I just felt like being honest.
He justifies the ungodly. Abram is righteous. Not because he was well behaved. Not because he put in work. Not because he was good. Not because we're going to read Genesis.
And be blown away by how magical Abram was. He's righteous. Because he believed God. When God spoke. He's righteous. Because when God made a promise.
He said I trust you. And he placed all his faith in him. And he pushed all his chips over to God. And he says I'm following you. I trust it's settled in his heart. And that's good news for anyone who knows that they're ungodly.
So let's keep going. Because this is going to get more interesting. Where God kind of continues along with Abram in this story. Verse 7. And he said to him. I am the Lord.
Who brought you out. From Ur of the Chaldeans. That's modern day Iraq. I'm the one who brought you out of Ur of the Chaldeans. To give you this land to possess. But he said.
So this is Abram. Oh Lord. How am I to know that I shall possess it? I want y'all to be really encouraged. We just got told that Abram believes God. And he believes him so much.
Settled so much. That he has faith in him. But he still has questions. Sometimes people think. Like if you're going to be a Christian. It's just blind faith.
You can't question anything. You can't. It's like no. Like we get to wrestle with God. We get to talk to God. Did you read the Psalm we read a minute ago?
The part that Josh read. We don't read the discouraging parts out loud. We read the encouraging parts out loud down here. But did you hear what Josh said? Are you going to be angry forever? Is it going to be terrible forever?
Is everything going to fall apart forever? That's in the Bible. Like we get to wrestle with God. We get to ask him questions. And still trust. And still have faith.
And so that's what he says. Oh Lord. How am I to know. That I shall possess it? Verse 9. God said.
He said to him. Bring me a heifer. That's a female cow. Three years old. A female goat. Three years old.
A ram. Three years old. A turtle dove. And a young pigeon. And he brought him all these. Cut them in half.
And laid them each half. Laid each half over against the other. But he did not cut the birds in half. And when the birds of prey came down on the carcasses. Abram drove them away. Okay.
So that got weird. God was like. Go get some animals. And Abram just starts chopping them up. It's like. Hey.
I think he jumped the gun. He didn't tell you what to do with them man. But what happened here. Is that Abram knows what God is asking for. Even though we don't. But we're separated from Abram culturally.
So as soon as he said this. Abram knew what he was talking about. I'll give you an example of like cultural things that we're used to. That would seem weird to like. If you weren't familiar with our culture. And there were two people.
And one of them. They were haggling over. Like a car. They were talking about price. And they were going back and forth. On how much they were going to.
How much they were going to spend on it. How much they were going to buy. How much it was going to be selling. All of a sudden. One of them just said. He just.
Poked his hand out at the other one. The other one clasped his hand. And they jiggled it firmly. Makes perfect sense to us. That's a handshake y'all. But if we'd never seen one.
You'd be like. What just happened here? And then they said. Draw it up. Draw what up? We know.
Contract. Draw it. Like let's write it up. Let's put it up on some paper. It doesn't mean. Draw a picture of the car.
But we would know that. Because we're familiar with the concept. There's just certain things. That were social cues. That we're used to. I was playing football in college.
And one of our coaches. Was chewing out. One of the other linebackers. His name was Chris Hackney. He was chewing him out. About something.
They were arguing. Because there was a disagreement. Over how a play had been handled. And what had happened. And so. Chris was giving his point of view.
On how it went down. And the coach was giving his point of view. And in the middle of this. As they're kind of debating. Back and forth. The coach just sticks his hand up like this.
Which in the coach's mind. Symbolized. Shut your mouth. But in Hackney's mind. It symbolized. I just realized you're right.
Give me a high five. And this was awesome. Because they're arguing. Coach sticks his hand up. Hackney high fives it. And turns around.
And it didn't go well for him. But there's these cultural things. That we're used to. These cues. That we're used to seeing. These things that we understand.
That we know culturally. And here's what happens. When God tells him to get these animals. It's not that Abram lost his mind. Or that he was like. Oh you want me to get animals?
I'm mad at him. It's that Abram knew something was happening here. It's not that every time you tell Abram. He does this. It's like Uncle Abram. I want a pony for Christmas.
Will you get me one? I'll get you a pony. It's not like that. It's not. What he's doing. Is they're entering into.
A suzerain vassal covenant. Or a suzerain vassal treaty. That phrase actually. When earlier. Where it said. I am your shield.
One of the ways to accurately translate that. Is for him to say. I'm your suzerain. So this is how much of the ancient world. Was organized. There were suzerains.
And suzerains were the greater party. They were the kings. They were the stronger party. The more powerful party. And vassals were the weaker party. The humble party.
And they were often kings as well. But they were kings of smaller kingdoms. Or weaker kingdoms. And so here's what would happen. We actually read about this. Some of you were here last week.
In 14. When there was. Kings battling kings. It said that these used to serve that one. But they stopped.
That was actually a suzerain vassal covenant. That they broke. And that was why there was a big war. And it was a big mess. What happens is. A more powerful king.
A more powerful kingdom. A suzerain will have vassals. And that just means. That your kingdom. Submits to my kingdom. That I'm taking you in.
You are a part of my kingdom now. So you still get to reign. You still get to have your kingdom. Or whatever. But you're underneath me.
Your people are like my people. I will protect you. If somebody attacks you. As if you're my people. But you're going to obey me.
You're going to follow me. You're going to. If I muster your army. You're going to show up. You're going to do what I say. You're going to pay taxes.
There's just. That's the agreement. And the vassal would be saying. I obey you. I follow you. I'm going to submit to you.
Often in these treaties. When they were written up. And we have a handful of copies of these. That we know about. They would be called Lord. And servant.
Or master and servant. Or they would be called father and son. So you entered into these treaties. It's a very serious thing. That the suzerain is going to be the father. He's going to be the Lord.
The vassal is going to be the son. Or the servant. And the way they would do these treaties. They would call it cutting a covenant. They would take animals. They would cut them up.
It was different animals. Or a lot of animals. Whatever. They would cut them up. They would cut them in half. They would lay them.
On either side. So that there was this trail. Of blood. In between the animals. And then. There was two ways this would play out.
Way number one. The suzerain and the vassal. The suzerain. The suzerain. The suzerain and the vassal. Would walk through the trail of blood.
It was a mess. They would get stuff caked all around their shoes. Their feet. If they had sandals. They would get it if they had long robes. I'm assuming they dragged those in the blood as well.
And it would soak up. Because the only reason I assumed that. Is if you had a long robe. I think you would look funny. If you held it up like this. While you walked.
So I just. Just as I picture it. They dragged that through the blood as well. But it was to symbolize. So the suzerain and the vassal.
Would walk through. And what they were saying. Was the suzerain was saying. You now serve me. You now belong to me. And if I break this covenant.
Let me be like these animals. That you'll cut me up. That was one way that would happen. The vassal would be walking through saying the same thing. I serve you. I follow you.
And if I break this covenant. If I don't obey you. If I don't do what you say. You can cut me up like these animals. These animals aren't just animals. They're me.
Often. Often. And this makes sense. The suzerain didn't walk through the blood. Just the vassal. They'd cut up animals.
The suzerain would watch. The vassal was the one who would walk through by himself. And say. I commit myself to you. And if I fail to hold up my end of the bargain. You can cut me up.
Like these. Suzerains were allowed to have more than one vassal. Vassals were only allowed to have one suzerain. That's what they're doing. Abram knows that. So as soon as he says.
How will I know? He says. He's already told him. I'm your shield. He already told him. I'm your protector.
I'm the one overseeing you. He says. Go get these animals. And so Abram rolls up. Cuts them up. Knows exactly what he's waiting for.
We're going to do a suzerain vassal covenant. And you know that Abram. While he's cutting them up. He has to think. He has to be thinking. Can I do this?
Can I. Can I obey fully? Can I obey perfectly? Can I actually commit to. This kind of consequence. For not following God.
We're to assume. He decides. Yes. Like he doesn't try to back out of this. He says. No.
I can do this. We actually have. And it'll be on the screen. We have. A segment from a. One of these covenants in another place.
It says. This head. Is not the head of a spring lamb. It is the head of Matai Elu. It is the head of his sons. His magnates.
And the people of his land. If Matai Elu should sin against this treaty. So may. Just. As the head of the spring lamb. Be cut off.
The head of Matai Elu. Be cut off. And his sons. And his magnates. And it's a long document. And it keeps going.
It says. This shoulder. Is not the shoulder of. This is the. It says. We're going to cut you in half.
Like we cut this in half. We're going to cut your wife in half. Like we cut this in half. Like it is a very serious thing. I think. That if we still did covenants like this.
We wouldn't break them as often. If you were at Verizon. You worked out your deal. And he's like. Right. Let me head to the back.
He gets your iPhone. He walks out with a goat. He's like. All right. You sure about this? Family plan.
Two years. That would make those commercials. When they were cutting the bills in half. With like chainsaws and stuff. Those commercials would be more intense. Because they'd be like.
We will fight Verizon for you. You may break your covenant. We will assault them. This is how they did it. And this is the seriousness. With which Abram understands.
He's entering into. This covenant. He chases off the birds of prey. As they're trying to mess with him. He sits out there all day long. Because it was the night.
When he was first talking to God. He goes and gets this. This is a long process. Now verse 12. As the sun was going down. A deep sleep.
Fell on Abram. And behold. A dreadful. And great darkness. Fell upon him. Then the Lord said to Abram.
Know for certain. That your offspring. Will be sojourners in a land. That is not theirs. And will be servants there. And they will be afflicted.
For four hundred years. So he's prophesying. The Israelites being in Egypt. But I will bring judgment. On that nation. That they serve.
And afterward. They shall come out. With great possessions. As for you. You shall go to your fathers. In peace.
You shall be buried. In a good old age. And they shall come back here. In the fourth generation. For the iniquity of the Amorites. Is not yet complete.
When the sun had gone down. And it was dark. Behold. A smoking fire pot. And a flaming torch. Passed between these pieces.
So a torch. Passed through. Smoking fire pot. These represent divinity. They represent God. Passed.
Through these pieces. On that day. The Lord made a covenant with Abram. Saying. To your offspring. I give this land.
From the river of Egypt. To the great river. The river Euphrates. The land of the Kenites. The Kenizzites. The Kadmonites.
The Hittites. The Perizzites. The Rephaim. The Amorites. The Canaanites. The Girgashites.
And the Jebusites. So God promises him. I'm going to give you this land. And all of these people. Are going to be conquered. And kicked out.
Now. We don't know much about these covenants. We're not used to these. But they just did something very, very weird. If you remember how these covenants work. One way.
The suzerain and the vassal walk through. That's option one. Option two. Just the vassal walks through. Okay. But in this one.
Just the torch. And the fire pot go through. Abram doesn't. God actually. Like knocks him down. Puts him to sleep.
And then. In this moment. He. Dreadful darkness. Goes around him. And then just the torch.
And the fire pot go through. And this should trigger for us. Something. Something strange just happened. It's like if you. You've been to a wedding before.
You go to a wedding. I get to perform weddings every once in a while. It's a lot of fun. I get to stand at the front. Um. With the groom.
We usually walk out. First. We stand there. And then. People walk down. And they play whatever kind of music.
You know. Canon and D. Or whatever. And then. Like the doors will close. Or.
If it's outside. Like. The girl will hide behind a tree. Or whatever. Then the music will stop.
They wait like three seconds. So everybody can go. And then. They start playing the other song. The wedding march. Or whatever.
Which. Bum. Bum. Bum. Bum. Bum.
Bum. Bum. Bum. That song. And then. She starts walking down.
Everybody has to stand up. If the mom stands up. Or whatever. And everybody's got to look at her. And she walks all the way down. Okay.
But if you were at a wedding. You came walking in. Right when you walked in. To get seated. The bride was standing up at the front. In her dress.
You might. Would be like. Am I late? If you don't know. So you just go sit down.
And. They start playing music. People start walking in. Then music stops. Gets real quiet for a second. And then here comes the groom.
Here comes the groom. Starts playing. You're not as familiar with it. Sounds like the song from Star Wars. And the doors open. And this guy comes walking in.
With his little suit on. You would be like. Okay. It's 2018. And they're making some kind of point. I don't know what the point is.
But they did this on purpose. You would be. You would realize. That this had been done. Different. Backwards.
Whatever. For a reason. And so if you know. Suzerain vassal covenant. You read this section. You go.
Wait a second. I actually was reading. In one of my commentaries. And it said. This setup. Most resembles.
A suzerain vassal covenant. But. It cannot be. Because in. A suzerain vassal covenant. There is no example.
Where just the suzerain. Walks down the aisle. And that messed me up. Because here's what God just did. When he. Is the master.
He's the Lord. He signs off as the servant. And when he's the father. He signs off as the son. He walks through here. And he signs both sides of the covenant.
And he. Takes the position. Of son. And servant. Which is unheard of. And you almost want to yell at the text.
Like you did this wrong God. You're not the son. You're not the servant. That's Abram. Abram's on the hook. For this.
Abram's the one who's got to obey. Abram's the one who's got to make this work. He's the one who's smaller than you. You're. You're the shield. You're the suzerain.
You're the king. You're the Lord. You're the father. And God is. But he signs off.
As son. And servant. And he makes a promise. That Jesus is going to make good on. Which is Abram. You're going to obey me.
You're going to follow me. You're going to do what I say. You're going to be faithful to me alone. And if you don't. I'll make myself like these animals. This isn't the blood.
Of a heifer. It's the blood of me. A son. And a servant. This isn't the blood. Of a goat.
It's my blood. When I'm a son. And I'm a servant. And then we see Jesus Christ come and fulfill this. That we fail. That we fall into sin.
That Abram's family doesn't live this out. But God comes as a son. And a servant. And he says. I didn't come to be served. But I came to serve.
And to give my life as a ransom for many. That the son of God would be nailed to a cross. That we might have redemption. And freedom. And that this covenant. That might be fulfilled.
That God would justify. Those who have faith. Through his own blood. That's how he gives us righteousness. He doesn't pull it out of the air. He takes it from his son.
And he gives it to us. Because he makes good on the promise. That Abram couldn't make good on. And that we couldn't make good on. I want to read. Paul picks this back up.
In Romans. He says. No unbelief. He's talking about Abram. No unbelief. Made him waver.
Concerning the promise of God. But he grew strong in his faith. As he gave glory to God. Fully convinced that God was able to do. What he had promised. This is why his faith.
Was counted to him. As righteousness. So the God promises. Abram. I'm going to make you right. I'm going to be.
Your faith. Your faith will count as righteousness. And then it says this. But the words. It was counted to him. Were not written for his sake alone.
But for ours also. It will be counted to us. Who believe in him. Who raised from the dead. Jesus our Lord. Who is delivered up for our trespasses.
And raised. For our justification. Justification means for our righteousness. That he was raised. That we might be made righteous. That this is the hope.
That we have in the gospel. That every single one of us. We're supposed to enter into a deal. With God. That said. I will behave.
I will be good. I will worship you alone as king. And if I don't. Then I don't deserve you. And I don't deserve love. And I've fallen so far from your glory.
And I haven't treated you. As holy as you are. Then you can destroy me. That every single one of us. By our birthright. I entered into that.
But that Jesus came. And swapped places with us. And he said. No I'll sign off. And if you trust in me. And my work.
It'll be my head. My blood. My body. Not yours. That we get to. By faith.
Approach God. And in trust. And in Christ. And that God raised him from the dead. That he died for us. And that he rose from the grave.
That we get to be made righteous. That God pays our penalty. That he signs both sides of the covenant. And that we do not come to God. To present our good work. Or to boast.
We come to God. To enjoy. And celebrate. And in faith. Love and worship Jesus. Who paid the price for us.
That that is our hope. In Christ. That's why we do what we do. That's why we gather on Sundays. Because we're here. Not to practice being good people.
But to proclaim that Jesus was good on our behalf. To celebrate what he's accomplished for us. That's why we gather in community groups. That we might be on mission together. That we see more people come to know Jesus. We aren't going around and saying.
Hey do you want to join the behavior club? We're going around to our friends. And saying. Hey I've noticed over time. And I just wanted to point out. That you're the worst.
But I have really good news. Jesus saves the ungodly. He redeems people like you. And like me. Because we can't be good enough on our own. But Jesus was for us.
We're going to take communion. We've started taking it more often as a church family. And it's because we need to remind ourselves constantly. That we need Jesus for us. When we take communion. What we're doing.
Is we're taking a piece of bread. That symbolizes Jesus's body. We're taking a cup. That symbolizes his blood. We're reenacting. A suzerain vassal covenant.
That was signed by Jesus for us. And that's not our blood. And that's not our body. Even though it deserved to be. Even though through our sin. We had earned it.
It's his blood. And it's his body. And that he paid the price for us. And so that we get to have a shield. We get to have a suzerain. We get to have God watch over us.
And care for us. And love us. And we get to have righteousness. Through faith. And through the work of Jesus. And so if you're a Christian.
In a second.
The Call, Failures, and Faith of Abram
Transcript
Well, good morning. My name's Chet. I'm one of the pastors here. If you will grab your Bibles, we'll be in Genesis chapter 12 today. We are continuing along in Genesis, and we have worked through the first 11 chapters, and Genesis changes. The story of Genesis, the approach of Genesis changes at chapter 12.
So here's what happens in the book of Genesis. The first 11 chapters are kind of setting up the history of humankind, and then at chapter 12 it's going to shift into focusing on one family. And so we're still walking through Genesis, but we're calling this section the patriarchs, and that just means the heads of households that are males. And so the New Testament's going to talk about the patriarchs, and that's Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, three Middle Eastern men, as it zooms in on this family. And so here's the book of Genesis starts off with God creating the world, and he makes it beautiful and glorious, and then humanity rebels against him.
And sin enters the world. It's kind of like if you've ever been on Facebook or Instagram, and somebody takes a picture of like, look at this cake I just baked, and look at how beautiful it is. And then like five minutes later you see their next post, and it's the cake on the floor, and it just says, I dropped it. That's kind of how the Bible starts off. It's like, look at how glorious and beautiful it is. And then immediately humans are like, okay, all right, well, all right.
But it was a little more malicious than that. We actively rebel against God, and so then we see that sin enters the world, and God kind of comes in and he makes this promise that he's going to have a seed. There's going to be a seed, an offspring of Eve that is going to destroy the serpent, that the serpent isn't going to win, that sin isn't going to win, that Satan isn't going to win, that ultimately sin isn't going to overcome God's good design. And that's the promise made in Genesis 3. And then we just get to watch humanity kind of carry out until Noah and the flood. And then after that we still don't get it together, and it kind of just continues to go downhill in sin and rebellion until the Tower of Babel and God disperses humanity across the face of the earth.
That's what we read last week in Genesis 11. The back half of Genesis 11 is a genealogy, just kind of telling us this person had this person had this person until we get to Abram and his wife Sarai. And it introduces her in Genesis 11 as Sarai was barren. She had no child. Really trying to make that point, drive that home, because it's going to play out in this story through the rest of this time. So we're going to pick up in Genesis 12 this morning.
Let's pray, and then we'll kind of talk about what we're going to see as we spend our time here this morning. So let's pray together. Lord, we ask that you would bless the reading and the study of your word. We pray that you would bless the proclamation of your gospel, the good news that is for us and found for us in Christ. And we ask that you would help us to grow in our love for one another and our love for your word and our love for you this morning. In Jesus' name, amen.
So we're going to pick up in Genesis 12, and it starts this way. Now the Lord said to Abram, Go from your country and your kindred and your father's house to the land that I will show you, and I will make you a great nation, and I will bless you and make your name great so that you will be a blessing. I will bless those who bless you, and him who dishonors you I will curse. And in you all the families of the earth shall be blessed. So the end of chapter 11 kind of intros Abram.
It just tells us who his parents were. It tells us he's got a brother who passed away, and his brother had a nephew, and the nephew's kind of with him. His name's Lot, and it tells us that he's married to Sarah, and that she's barren. And then it just says God speaks to Abram. We don't know anything really about him other than some basic details. And God speaks to him, and God says, Abram.
Ultimately, later, this is going to be Abraham. God changes his name later, but he starts off as Abram. He says, Go from your country. Go from your kindred. Go from your house. Go.
Go. I'm going to send you to a place that I'll show you. They didn't even tell him what it is yet. He just said, I'm going to show you. I'm going to send you to a place. And he says, I'm going to bless you.
You're going to be a great nation. So he doesn't have any children, but being a great nation means that he will. He's promising him he's going to have children. He's going to be a great people. And he says, I'm going to make you so great that you're a blessing to everybody. And through you, the whole world's going to be blessed.
And then he promises protection. He says, Those who bless you, I'll bless them. If somebody's your friend, they'll be my friend. Those who dishonor you, it's not going to go well for them. They won't be my friend. Like he says, I'll bless those who bless you.
I'll curse those who curse you. This is the promise that comes in Abraham. And this is where the rest of Genesis is going to follow this family. As this answer to the fall, that God now says, I'm taking you and I'm going to use you to bless the rest of the world. So what we're going to see today, we're going to look at three chapters as our introduction to Abraham and to his walk with the Lord.
We're going to look at three chapters. We're actually going to see these three different scenes, these three different stories in Abraham's life to try to understand who he is and how he walks with God. A lot of times when we study the Bible, we zoom in on one particular thing and the Bible's sturdy enough to handle that. We can take one verse and spend a lot of time on it. But sometimes when we do that, especially when there's narrative, we kind of miss out on the fact that as humans, we exist in a story that your life plays out over time and that there are some parts of your story that you fondly remember or you won the championship or you were really generous or you were super kind or there's this good season and there are parts of your story that you don't want to remember at all and you hope everybody else forgets that you've tried to bury.
And we're going to see as we watch Abraham, it's like his story playing out before God and the whole time, Abraham's going to get to choose faith, trusting God's promise because God just comes to Abraham and that's it. We just know, we don't know anything about him other than God promised him. So he's going to get to choose God's promise over what he can see. 2 Corinthians 5 puts it this way for Christians. It says, for we walk by faith, not by sight. Meaning that as Christians, we're called to live our life trusting God over and against what we can see.
That we walk by faith, not by sight. And that's going to be the story of Abraham and that's going to play out as the story of God's people throughout the rest of the Bible. That God designed humanity to walk by faith, not by sight. To trust him and his word and trust his promises. And so we're going to look at three stories in the life of Abraham and we're going to see when faced with circumstances, when faced with what he can see, does he trust God? Does he lean into his promises or does he not?
And then we'll draw some conclusions at the end for how we get to walk in a similar manner with the Lord. Now, God told him, go from your country, your kindred, your father's house to the land that I will show you and I'll make you a great nation and I'll bless you and I'll make your name great so that you'll be a blessing. And he later says, all the families of the earth should be blessed. Now for us, that sounds really nice. Like those are some good promises. Those are good promises that he's going to do all this.
But this lines up a little better with the American dream rather than the Middle Eastern dream because we value self over everything else. We value the individual over everything else. We like the Wrangler man, not the Wrangler, the Marlboro man who rides around on a horse smoking cigarettes. He's like an American hero because he doesn't care about anything and he just does what he wants. But that's not, that's not a Middle Eastern thing.
He's coming from an area where your family was who you were. Your value in life was how you served your family, how you fit in with your group. So for God to come to him and say, I want you to leave your family. He's saying, I want you to leave everything you use to define yourself. I want you to leave your kindred. I want you to leave your people.
I want you to leave your country. And then I'm going to make you great. Now he would have appreciated and understood the idea of being a great nation, but it's not as easy as some of us would have been like, sweet, leave my dad's house and go get to do my own thing. You got it, God. Like this is a little more difficult for Abram. So this is the promise.
This is the word that he has. And so it says this, verse four. So Abram went as the Lord had told him and Lot went with him. That's his nephew whose dad passed away. Abram was 75 years old when he departed from Haran. Okay.
Now people in Genesis lived longer. We've talked about this before, but still 75. He's middle aged. He's 75 years old. He departed for Haran and Abram took Sarai, his wife, and Lot, his brother's son, and all his possessions that he had gathered and the people that he had acquired in Haran and they set out to go to the land of Canaan. I want you all to see that.
God says go and he went. Our first impression of Abram is pretty good. God comes to him, speaks, says go do this and Abram obeys. When they came to the land of Canaan, Abram passed through the land to the place of Shechem to the Oak of Morah. Now Oak of Morah would be a place where the Canaanites were worshipping and it tags that.
It says at the time the Canaanites were in the land. So that means it's like a shrine. It's some sort of setup to a deity. And then the Lord appeared to Abram and said, to your offspring I will give this land. So he said, I want you to go to the place I'll show you.
He brings him out there. He says this is it. So he built there an altar to the Lord who had appeared to him. From there he moved to the hill country on the east of Bethel and pitched his tent with Bethel on the west and Ai on the east. And there he built an altar to the Lord and called upon the name of the Lord. And Abram journeyed on still going toward the Negev.
So God says go. Abram goes. God shows up to him. He's building altars. So far our intro to Abram is good.
He's following. He's obeying. And we're going to get to kind of continue to see this story. One of the things my dad says sometimes is that he thinks when he meets a person he's kind of meeting a blank canvas. He doesn't know anything about this person at this point. And he says the more you get to know him the more you get to color in parts of the canvas.
The more you get to understand a little bit what they're like. And he says sometimes you'll go through a situation and it'll be really good and you'll get to paint this whole section of the canvas of this person as generous or kind or whatever. Sometimes it's kind of like oh wow I didn't realize that's how you watch sports and so you're going to you know realize you're not invited to the next party. Why were you throwing things? Whatever. So it's just like you get to paint in and so we're going to get to do with Abram a little bit.
We're going to get to kind of this is our first introduction to him. Let's see what he's like. How he walks with God. Whether he trusts him when he walks in moments where he's faced with difficult circumstances. So pick up.
This is kind of the first scene the first time we get to see Abram faced with difficult circumstances. We'll read through this together and then we'll talk a little bit about it. Now there was a famine in the land. So Abram went down to Egypt to sojourn there for the famine was severe in the land. When he was about to enter Egypt he said to Sarai his wife I know that you are a woman beautiful in appearance and when the Egyptians see you they will say this is his wife then they will kill me but they will let you live say you are my sister that it may go well with me because of you and that my life may be spared for your sake.
When Abram entered Egypt the Egyptians saw the woman was very beautiful and when the princes of Pharaoh saw her they praised her to Pharaoh and the woman was taken into Pharaoh's house and for her sake he dealt well with Abram and he had sheep oxen male donkeys male servants female servants female donkeys and camels. Let's stop there for a second. Okay guys I think many of us have heard about Abram or Abraham maybe even sang the song Father Abraham and many sons we're going to get to that God promises him that. One of the temptations as we walk through the Bible is for us to lift these people up as superhuman heroes of the faith.
Father Abraham and many sons we're going to get to that God promises him that. One of the temptations as we walk through the Bible is for us to lift these people up as superhuman heroes of the faith. This isn't a good introduction to Abram. So far we've only seen his actions God tells him to go he goes but the first time he speaks it's kind of creepy. It's not a good thing so here's what we see
This is the first time he's faced with difficult circumstances as far as we know Abram as far as the story we're getting told there's a famine in the land. Now we don't understand famine. We don't. The best thing to compare it to mentally is probably the Great Depression when the whole society just kind of shuts down and everybody's just trying to survive just trying to find a way to eat because when there's
A famine there's no food and it could be due to a drought it could be due to some sort of blight on the crops could be due to locusts but all of a sudden he goes where God sends him he's in the place where God wants him he's following and obedient so far he's crushing it some of us this is us as Christians it's like I became a Christian and I immediately started doing all the stuff I was supposed to do
I was going to a group and I was repenting of sin and I quit doing some of that stuff and I started doing some of this stuff he's right where he's supposed to be right where God told him to be and all of a sudden there's no food and that's a big problem and so all we're told is he goes to Egypt and at first when we're reading that we're going okay we don't really know is he abandoning what the Lord wants from him is he going down there with good intentions
Is it really just the famine is what it is and you gotta do what you gotta do and then he speaks and we realize his heart is far from God he is way off he's not trusting in the promises of God he's operating out of fear he's entered into a mode of let me fix the problem so ladies let's think for a second you're dating a guy he seems nice he's attractive enough he has a job he bathes regularly he doesn't play video games this is going pretty well you are with this guy
You're going to the first kind of public outing to like a party or maybe like like the club I don't know where y'all are going but it's somewhere like that it's going to be alcohol and other people and he stops right before you get in and he says girl girl you are so beautiful and you're like and then he says and that's going to be a huge problem when we get inside because there's going to be a lot of guys here
There's going to be a lot of alcohol they're going to come hit on you and then I'm going to be in a spot I'm going to be in a pickle because what am I going to do do I have to tell him to stop do I have to like defend your honor defend my honor I ain't trying to get in all that so here's what we're going to do when we go in there you're going to be my sister that way when guys hit on you you introduce me as your brother they'll want to be nice to me
Because they want to get along with you I might even get a free drink or two out of this now none of you would swoon and say this is the man I'm going to marry that's messed up it wasn't just Dana this is his wife and he says hey when we get in here I'm going to need you to tell them you're my sister and his reasoning is I want things to go well with me because of you I want you to take a risk
I want you to put in a weird spot I want you to have your feelings hurt I want you to be I want to harm my marriage but I want to get some stuff out of it that's his plan they're running from a famine they're not trusting God they've left the place they were supposed to be not leaning into the fact that God can feed them God can provide for them not waiting for God's instruction on what to do they show up he comes up with this plan that this is how
We're going to work this out they go in he lets her marry another person at no point he was like okay too far time out there wasn't even like at the ceremony when they say you got any objections I don't know if the Egyptians did that but like at some point you think he would have been like hey guys surprise y'all watch
Soap operas this is about to get interesting he doesn't do that so much so that he takes her to his house we're supposed to assume he just they got married they moved off he was there like throwing rice at the wedding and then he's there long enough to get stuff oxen and camels and female servants and male servants he just hangs out stays in Egypt profits off of this while his wife
Is married to somebody else okay let's pick it back up verse 17 but the Lord thank goodness but the Lord afflicted Pharaoh and his house with great plagues because of Sarai Abram's wife so Pharaoh called Abram and said what is this you have done to me why did you not tell me that she was your wife why did you say she is my sister
So that I took her for my wife now then here is your wife take her and go and Pharaoh gave men orders concerning him and they sent him away with his wife and all that he had so God puts plagues on Pharaoh's house and Pharaoh figures out hold on a second something's wrong here they somehow discern understand that he they are being
Punished by God because she is Abram's wife and he is livid the last sentence there where he says here is your wife take her and go that is translated in English so that it is smoother in Hebrew it is here wife take go it is this very curt and the fact that Abram does not respond in the text shows us
That he understands that he was wrong this was poorly done and so the only person who shows up looking good in this is Pharaoh and maybe Sarai she trusts in the Lord in this process but we don't really know where her head is so he sent out God showed up on Abram's behalf on Sarai's
Behalf and he fixes this chapter 13 verse 1 so Abram went up from Egypt he and his wife and all that he had and Lot with him into the Negev now Abram was very rich in livestock in silver in gold and he journeyed on from the Negev as far as Bethel to the place where his tent had been
At the beginning between Bethel and Ai to the place where he had made an altar at the first and there Abram called upon the name of the Lord I just want to highlight this because we're Christians and I want us to see this in the text God shows up in the middle of he's made a promise to Abram I'm going to do this
Abram derails and God shows up in the middle of that and brings him right back to where he had him at the first and there are some of us who began following Jesus and trusting him and walking him and circumstances showed up and we derailed and there's this temptation to think well that's it I'm done can't fix that it's over but God
In his grace at times will use circumstances will knock us down will bring us back and get us right back where he wanted us because our hope ultimately is that God makes good promises to us through Christ and that he's the one who upholds all of that not us and not our ability but Abram situation one he's over one had an opportunity to face circumstances and to trust the promises that God had made that he was going to
Look if he's told him I'm going to make you a great nation that means you're going to live through the famine if he's told him I want you here in this land that means that he'll either provide for him in that land or send him somewhere else he's made real promises that Abram could have just said hey God what what do we do and trusted that the Lord could speak to him
That the Lord could provide for him that the Lord would care for him but he doesn't let's see how he continues from here story number two verse six verse five and Lot who went with Abram remember this is his nephew but kind of seems a bit adopted kind of as his son we'll see he doesn't really say that but he's with him the whole time also had flocks and herds
And tents so that the land could not support both of them dwelling together for their possessions were so great that they could not dwell together and there was strife between the herds there was strife between the herdsmen of Abram's livestock and the herdsmen of Lot's livestock at that time the Canaanites and the Perizzites were dwelling in the land then Abram said to Lot let there be no strife
Between you and me and between your herdsmen and my herdsmen for we are kinsmen is not the whole land before you separate yourself from me if you take the left hand then I will go to the right or if you take the right hand then I will go to the left and Lot lifted up his eyes and he saw that the Jordan Valley was well watered everywhere like the garden of the Lord like the land of Egypt in the direction of Zor this was before the Lord destroyed destroyed Sodom and Gomorrah so Lot chose
For himself all the Jordan Valley and Lot journeyed east thus they separated from each other Abram settled in the land of Canaan while Lot settled among the cities of the valley and moved his tent as far as Sodom now the men of Sodom were wicked great sinners against the Lord the Genesis is kind of tipping its hand a little bit there because it's going to go poorly for Sodom in the next story and then a few stories
Later it's going to go really bad for Sodom the Lord said to Abram after Lot had separated from him lift up your eyes and look from the place where you are northward and southward and eastward and westward for all the land that you see I will give to you and to your offspring forever again promising you have children you don't yet Sarah's barren but you're going
To have children I will make your offspring as the dust of the earth so that if one can count the dust of the earth your offspring also can be counted arise walk through the length and the breadth of the land for I will give it to you so Abram moved his tent and came and settled by the oaks of Mamre which are at Hebron and there he built an altar to the Lord so the second story works like this
Abram and Lot move back and they don't get along their people aren't getting along because there's too much too many of them they're fighting over water they're fighting over pasture land somebody gets hit in the head with a stick like it just goes poorly I read that into the text it doesn't say that but there was strife between herdsmen I think someone swung a stick alright Abram goes to him and says hey let's not do this
Now how would Abram handle the situation if what we know from him about in Egypt carries on well he would try to figure out viewing his circumstances how best to work things in his favor no matter who it hurt no matter the cost but what's he do he looks at Lot and says you pick you go that way I'll go this way you go that way I'll go this way and any other iteration
Of that wherever I can point you pick so Lot looks around and it seems like the choice wasn't actually all that difficult Lot looks around and Abram is the senior partner here he could have just said Lot go I want you to understand that like he he has he is over Lot in the patriarchy system here but he does and he says you pick Lot looks around and he sees a place that looks like
The garden of God you guys it's nice that's what that means it's well watered it's beautiful and then Canaan's over here and not so beautiful and he says I'm going to go this way Abram says okay and then God renews his promise to Abram he says you see where you are this is yours so Abram in that situation just stopped and he said he just leaned into the promises
He leaned into trusting God he knows at this point it seems that God's going to provide God's going to care he saw the plagues in Egypt hopefully he learned a thing we'll see later as Genesis plays out he didn't learn all the things he should have learned but that's kind of how we work and so in this moment he's now one and one
He trusts he leans into the promises and God provides and God cares and Abram shows generosity and kind of a blind choice and some faith alright next story as we continue to see this play out and I think this is helpful for us to continue to walk through some of this stuff because I think sometimes we in the American church have gotten caught up in experiences y'all know this right
You're going to go away to this conference and you're going to have this experience and you're just going to be you're going to come back or you're going to go on a Sunday and it's just going to be this lightning bolt and you'll be fixed forever and that would be awesome but that's not really how that tends to work most of the time we play out our stories in time with God continually having to make similar decisions continually having to
Act the same way in circumstances continually having to choose faith over sight over and over and over and over again that's why we're perfectly fine with a lot of our community groups meetings being kind of boring what was the magical thing that happened we shared a meal with people who will live for eternity we tried to love each other we talked about some stuff
We spent way too long talking about this one weird passage in Revelation turns out everybody in my group is super into dragons and I don't even think that's what that was about because we believe that it's formative that's why we study through whole books of the Bible because we believe it's formative that over time we continually grow by making similar decisions in the face of similar circumstances and that's what we're looking at Abraham
As he continually faces circumstances what kind of decisions is he going to make is he going to lean into the promises that God has made him and trust that God can carry that out because he's God or is he going to which we all want to do take the reins get everything in our control and do what we can to get out of the situation situation number three also I know that at times there are a lot of pregnant ladies in our church family or people who want to be pregnant later this next section
Is I mean loaded down with awesome baby names so get ready chapter 14 verse 1 in the days of Amraphel king of Shinar Ariok king of Elessar Chedeloamar king of Elam Tidal king of Goam these kings made war with Barah king of Sodom Bersha king of Gomorrah Shinab king of Adma Shemabur king of Zeboam and the king of Bella that is Zor and all these joined forces in the valley of Siddam that is the salt sea it's kind of now that was intro telling us a little bit of the backstory here 12 years had
They had served Chedeloamar but in the 13th year they rebelled in the 14th year Chedeloamar and the kings who were with him came and defeated the Rephaim and Ashtaroth Karnam and the Susam and Ham and the Emam and Sheva Kiriatham and the Horites in the hill country of Sair as far as El Paran at the border of the wilderness then they turned back and came to end Mishpat that is Kadesh
And defeated all the country of the Malekites and also the Amorites who were dwelling in the Hazazon tomorrow okay did y'all catch that? I feel a little bit when I read that passage like when I listen to people talk about the World Cup it's like I'm sure that means something to you there's a king this is how this would have worked there was a king who would have a kingdom and most of them were kind of small
It was tribal but there were certain kings that had more powerful kingdoms so they would come through and they would basically rock up and they would say you pay tribute or we're going to kill you and there were all these what they would call a suzerain and a vassal and so what we're seeing is there was a bunch of vassal states underneath this bigger king and they did this for 12 years and they kind of get to talking and they're like I don't think he's as strong as he used to be I remember being real scared when I met him a long time ago but I'm really tired
Of shipping off our money and our food and our people to him so let's just stop that and see what happens so they do and Cheddar Lower Mar which I think is the name that wins if you get to choose call him Chet for short marches down through Israel through it's not Israel then but it becomes Israel it's the land of Canaan marches down and just starts just destroying everybody that's what we hear and then let's pick up in verse 8 see what happens
Then the king of Sodom the king of Gomorrah the king of Adma the king of Zeboim and the king of Bella that is Zor went out and they joined battle in the valley of Siddam with Chetalo Amar king of Elam title king of Goem Amraphel king of Shinar and Ariok king of Elessar four kings against five now the valley of Siddam was full of bitumen pits that's tar pits asphalt big pits full of it bitumen pits and as the kings of Sodom and Gomorrah
Fled some fell into them and the rest fled to the hill country so the ones that rebelled do not win so the enemy took all the possessions of Sodom and Gomorrah and all the provisions and went their way they also took Lot the son of Abram's brother who was dwelling in Sodom and his possessions and went their way did y'all see that coming remember Lot got to choose
Where he wanted to live and he went and lived next to Sodom and then Sodom was full of wicked people and they rebelled and then this guy shows up and takes Lot and now we go oh this is why this is here went their way verse 13 then one who had escaped came and told Abram now Abram wouldn't have had a kingdom but at this point we're going to find out he's actually a pretty big like nomadic tribe that's traveling around that's taking over this area Abram the Hebrew
Who was living by the oaks of Mamre the Amorite brother of Eschol and of Aner these were allies of Abram when Abram heard that his kinsmen had been taken captive he led forth his trained men born in his house 318 of them and went in pursuit as far as Dan ok so this tribes in areas where it wasn't safe he had trained men 318 of them and they were born in his house which means loyal to him as loyal as it can get because they belonged to him all his life
It wasn't newly people that had joined him it wasn't people who had married in it was people born in his house 318 of them if there's 318 trained men that means there's probably around a thousand that are rolling around with Abram at this time he's a big big nomadic tribe leader in the area 15 verse 15 and he divided his forces against them by night he and his servants and defeated them and pursued them to Hoboth north of Damascus then he brought back
All the possessions and also brought back his kinsmen Lot with his possessions and the women and the people so Chetalo Amar and his group have come down and beat up everybody and they have taken all this stuff and they're heading back and then Abram takes 318 he splits them up at night he's 75 years old or older and he leads an army to attack them they defeat them and they get everything so they defeated them well
Because it wasn't just like they defeated them and they all ran away at night they defeated them and they were like load up all the stuff and so they start marching back down with caravans full of people and all the things that had been taken from all the kingdoms around and here's how this works all that stuff is now under the control of Abram to dispense with as he wishes or to have to defend if someone wants
To take it from him but it belongs to him he's the last person who won and took it now so far Abram has handled this better than we maybe would have thought he would especially if he'd handled it the way he did in Egypt in Egypt he said I want you to take a risk so that I can have good things and so far he's taken a risk on behalf of another
So at least that's better but it's possible he just wanted all the stuff he saw an opportunity to become the most powerful person in the region everybody around him has been defeated maybe he thinks cool I can become the new suzerain over this whole area and everybody in all the kingdoms will bow to me we don't know yet 17 after his return from the defeat of Chetelomar
And the kings who were with him the king of Sodom went out to meet him so the king of Sodom goes out to meet Abram he just ran he didn't fall in a pit but he made it back he's going to go meet Abram just been defeated not in the best most powerful spot meet him at the valley of Sheva that is the king's valley and Melchizedek king of Salem brought out brought out bread and wine he was a priest
Of God most high okay we got to pause for a second just so to make you aware Melchizedek just now showed up he has not been mentioned yet so he has no connection to this whatsoever other than he just appears at this moment Melchizedek king of Salem brought out bread and wine he was a priest of God most high we don't know yet
When you're reading this you're going okay is that the God that Abram follows is that the Bible telling you he's the God most high what's happening and he blessed him and said he blessed Abram blessed be Abram by God most high possessor of heaven and earth and blessed be God most high who has delivered your enemies into your hand and Abram gave him a tenth of everything he just says every tenth item
Every tenth person whatever is yours and the king of Sodom said to Abram give me the persons but take the goods for yourself but Abram said to the king of Sodom I have lifted my hand to the Lord so that's proper name for God God most high so he says I'm connected with this priest king of Salem he and I worship the same God that blessing was this God I've lifted my hand to him
That I would not take a thread or a sandal strap or anything that is yours lest you should say I have made Abram rich I will take nothing but what the young men have eaten and the share of the men who went with me let Aner Escol and Mamre take their share okay we gotta unpack this for a second because what he just did there is kind of amazing
Abram comes back he rolls in as the most powerful person in the region another king just shows up and gives him bread and wine just kind of blesses him prays a blessing over him he's got one king sitting here that represents just this kind of blessing from God his name Melchizedek means the king is righteous and it says he's the king
Of Salem and Salem means peace so this is a righteous king who's the king over peace Hebrews later tells us that Jesus is a better Melchizedek he comes in that line he's the king of righteousness he's the king of peace he's a king and a priest that's Jesus and it says that he's like Melchizedek not that Melchizedek
Is Jesus we'll get that twisted up but Melchizedek points us shows us kind of Jesus is like him all right so Melchizedek shows up he just prays a blessing and then the king of Sodom shows up in a very weakened position and is not gracious he just says hey give me the people he's still trying
To show a little force give me the people but then he's also saying you can have all this stuff and so at this moment Abram gets a guy who's not connected to anything just giving a blessing and he gets the king of this area who apparently is he's listed first every time was the most powerful king in the area saying you can have
All this stuff and he could absolutely have this power position in the area which would seem like it was God doing what God had promised giving him the area giving him power in the area and what's he say he says no I already told God I'm going to trust that he's going to provide
All this and we're not going to have anybody in this area saying they're the ones that blessed me they're the ones that provided for me they're the ones that made me strong it's not going to happen now before he went into Egypt we heard him speak first and then we watched him act
And this one flips we see him act first we don't know his intentions and then we see that beforehand before he even went he said God I'm trusting you you're the one who says you're going to give me this land you're going to give me the land you're the one
Who's going to make me rich you're going to make me a big nation you're going to make me powerful you're going to do it I'm not going to do it my own might I'm not going to trust myself I'm trusting you and see how this plays out he comes
Back he gets to see a blessing from the God most high and then Sodom and he chooses blessing he gives that guy 10% of everything he says we're on the same page this person I worship the God most high
And he says take all your stuff I don't need it now he's two in one he handled this one better and here's the thing throughout the rest of Abram's life and throughout the rest of your life we will consistently be faced
With situation after situation after situation where we get to trust the promises of God or we get to trust our own ability our own strength our own wisdom our own know-how our own effort to make everything work out so Melchizedek
Is this picture briefly here of what Jesus is for us Jesus shows up and he gives a better bread and wine which is his blood and his body shed for us and he gives
A better blessing and better promises if you are a Christian you have better promises than Abram ever had you get an eternal home you get an eternal family you get to reign in the eternal kingdom that God
Says that we will belong to him and that we will relate to him and that we will be his children his sons and daughters not that we'll have a lineage but that we'll have an inheritance from the God of the universe
Through Christ that God has given us better promises and then called us to walk by faith and not by sight so how do we do that when so often we're just bombarded with circumstance we're just bombarded with what we can see
And feel and know you feel really hungry during a famine and you feel very much like you've got to do something real fear real hunger real pain real sadness I think firstly we have to know a deep and in a deep and abiding way we need to know the promises of God
We have to know his word because we're always having to choose between trust in his word and trust in what we see we have to know in a deep and abiding way the promises Abram needed to have repeated those promises to himself over and over and over and over
Again wouldn't it be nice if God promised you you'll have children and you hadn't had children yet when you enter into a battle I guess you'd be like well maybe she's pregnant now and I'm gonna die but otherwise I think I'm making it out of this
One see he gets to lean into these promises there are times as a Christian where you're gonna get to go God it doesn't look like I'm gonna be provided for but I know you say you will it doesn't look like this is gonna work out
But I know that you love me and that you promise that I'll never be you'll never leave me or forsake me so I can trust that you're here in the middle of this God I so badly want all the things that I can see but I know that you've promised me that there's pleasures at your right
Hand forevermore and that I'm to spend my life for something that matters eternally not something that I can have for a few years we're gonna do this throughout our lives you're gonna be in middle school where the primary currency of middle school is coolness and it's middle school coolness so it's not even real
But the primary currency and it feels real it's so real in the daily life of being in middle school and there's gonna be a kid who is so not cool that just talking to her just being around him makes you lose cool points you can feel him just being sucked out of you you get to choose faith or sight you trust a God who says there's more to life than what
We can see and that everybody matters and everybody has a dignity and everybody has worth can you think for a second about what it's like to be this kid who goes home every day just having to be them you're gonna get to choose and that choice doesn't stop in middle school some of you face that situation at work there's one co-worker that everybody just has
So much fun talking about them behind their back and you get to choose am I gonna look like Christ and defend them am I gonna care for them am I gonna befriend them am I gonna join in you're gonna get to choose when you get a job how honest you're gonna be are you gonna bend the same rules that everybody else bends and say well that's just how this industry works you're gonna get to choose in relationships some of us are gonna have
To choose faith oversight and stay with someone we're married to even though it does not look like that'll ever work or be good and some of us are gonna have to choose faith oversight and leave somebody because even though we know that the finances won't work out if we're not living together and going into retirement when the American dream is so palpable and so within reach and it's just like Sodom saying here take all this we're gonna have to say no
I have riches you don't understand from a God who's bigger and more eternal I'm not gonna have the nicest house I'm not gonna have the boat I'm not gonna have the stuff but I am gonna have a God who has a mission and I'm gonna see some people meet Jesus and then I'm gonna go meet him this is gonna play out forever and the hope for us is the same hope that was for Abraham you see when you become a Christian you are saying I am a sinner in need of a savior and I trust that these
Promises are good and our hope for us is that the promises will overcome the fact that we are terrible at carrying this out that the promises are strong enough to get us out of Egypt that when we've derailed when we've run when we've fallen the promises are strong enough that God will redeem us that he will save us that his his cross is bigger than our sin that his resurrection is bigger than our death that we get to trust in him and he'll bring us out and the truth is if you are a Christian he will so that's our hope and
We continue to walk this out with Abraham and see his story we're gonna see all the other times he has to choose between trusting in faith and walking by sight and our hope is that we would do that daily as we trust in Jesus and that we would know his promises so well that nothing else seemed appetizing band's gonna come back up we're gonna sing in a minute we'll take communion my prayer for us as a church is that we would be people who so believed in God and his goodness and his word that we wouldn't be enamored with everything we can see wouldn't be derailed by
Job loss wouldn't be derailed in the midst of pain of relationships and hurt we'd be hurt certainly we'd be confused certainly we'd be hungry we'd but we'd be trusting and that we'd live as people who walk by faith and not by sight and that ultimately God's promises would overcome our failures which is what he promises to do in the cross let's pray God we thank you for your grace and your goodness we thank you that you redeem real people not the perfect not the absolutely moral not those who always keep it together not those people who only go undefeated but those people who are absolutely defeated
And know that they need a savior and we ask that you'd help us to so trust you and so believe in you that even as we walk through the situations that we are in the middle of right now that we believe that you're good that you won't forsake us that we can cast our anxieties on you that you care for us that a peace that we don't understand will guard us that your Holy Spirit is a helper and a comforter that you walk with us God that we would know and love your promises and we would trust that you're the one who takes care who feeds who provides who
Loves in Jesus name amen and thank you thank you so
And defeated all the country of the Malekites and also the Amorites who were dwelling in the Hazazon tomorrow okay did y'all catch that? I feel a little bit when I read that passage like when I listen to people talk about the World Cup it's like I'm sure that means something to you there's a king this is how this would have worked there was a king who would have a kingdom and most of them were kind of small
It was tribal but there were certain kings that had more powerful kingdoms so they would come through and they would basically rock up and they would say you pay tribute or we're going to kill you and there were all these what they would call a suzerain and a vassal and so what we're seeing is there was a bunch of vassal states underneath this bigger king and they did this for 12 years and they kind of get to talking and they're like I don't think he's as strong as he used to be I remember being real scared when I met him a long time ago but I'm really tired
Of shipping off our money and our food and our people to him so let's just stop that and see what happens so they do and Cheddar Lower Mar which I think is the name that wins if you get to choose call him Chet for short marches down through Israel through it's not Israel then but it becomes Israel it's the land of Canaan marches down and just starts just destroying everybody that's what we hear and then let's pick up in verse 8 see what happens
Then the king of Sodom the king of Gomorrah the king of Adma the king of Zeboim and the king of Bella that is Zor went out and they joined battle in the valley of Siddam with Chetalo Amar king of Elam title king of Goem Amraphel king of Shinar and Ariok king of Elessar four kings against five now the valley of Siddam was full of bitumen pits that's tar pits asphalt big pits full of it bitumen pits and as the kings of Sodom and Gomorrah
Fled some fell into them and the rest fled to the hill country so the ones that rebelled do not win so the enemy took all the possessions of Sodom and Gomorrah and all the provisions and went their way they also took Lot the son of Abram's brother who was dwelling in Sodom and his possessions and went their way did y'all see that coming remember Lot got to choose
Where he wanted to live and he went and lived next to Sodom and then Sodom was full of wicked people and they rebelled and then this guy shows up and takes Lot and now we go oh this is why this is here went their way verse 13 then one who had escaped came and told Abram now Abram wouldn't have had a kingdom but at this point we're going to find out he's actually a pretty big like nomadic tribe that's traveling around that's taking over this area Abram the Hebrew
Who was living by the oaks of Mamre the Amorite brother of Eschol and of Aner these were allies of Abram when Abram heard that his kinsmen had been taken captive he led forth his trained men born in his house 318 of them and went in pursuit as far as Dan ok so this tribes in areas where it wasn't safe he had trained men 318 of them and they were born in his house which means loyal to him as loyal as it can get because they belonged to him all his life
It wasn't newly people that had joined him it wasn't people who had married in it was people born in his house 318 of them if there's 318 trained men that means there's probably around a thousand that are rolling around with Abram at this time he's a big big nomadic tribe leader in the area 15 verse 15 and he divided his forces against them by night he and his servants and defeated them and pursued them to Hoboth north of Damascus then he brought back
All the possessions and also brought back his kinsmen Lot with his possessions and the women and the people so Chetalo Amar and his group have come down and beat up everybody and they have taken all this stuff and they're heading back and then Abram takes 318 he splits them up at night he's 75 years old or older and he leads an army to attack them they defeat them and they get everything so they defeated them well
Because it wasn't just like they defeated them and they all ran away at night they defeated them and they were like load up all the stuff and so they start marching back down with caravans full of people and all the things that had been taken from all the kingdoms around and here's how this works all that stuff is now under the control of Abram to dispense with as he wishes or to have to defend if someone wants
To take it from him but it belongs to him he's the last person who won and took it now so far Abram has handled this better than we maybe would have thought he would especially if he'd handled it the way he did in Egypt in Egypt he said I want you to take a risk so that I can have good things and so far he's taken a risk on behalf of another
So at least that's better but it's possible he just wanted all the stuff he saw an opportunity to become the most powerful person in the region everybody around him has been defeated maybe he thinks cool I can become the new suzerain over this whole area and everybody in all the kingdoms will bow to me we don't know yet 17 after his return from the defeat of Chetelomar
And the kings who were with him the king of Sodom went out to meet him so the king of Sodom goes out to meet Abram he just ran he didn't fall in a pit but he made it back he's going to go meet Abram just been defeated not in the best most powerful spot meet him at the valley of Sheva that is the king's valley and Melchizedek king of Salem brought out brought out bread and wine he was a priest
Of God most high okay we got to pause for a second just so to make you aware Melchizedek just now showed up he has not been mentioned yet so he has no connection to this whatsoever other than he just appears at this moment Melchizedek king of Salem brought out bread and wine he was a priest of God most high we don't know yet
When you're reading this you're going okay is that the God that Abram follows is that the Bible telling you he's the God most high what's happening and he blessed him and said he blessed Abram blessed be Abram by God most high possessor of heaven and earth and blessed be God most high who has delivered your enemies into your hand and Abram gave him a tenth of everything he just says every tenth item
Every tenth person whatever is yours and the king of Sodom said to Abram give me the persons but take the goods for yourself but Abram said to the king of Sodom I have lifted my hand to the Lord so that's proper name for God God most high so he says I'm connected with this priest king of Salem he and I worship the same God that blessing was this God I've lifted my hand to him
That I would not take a thread or a sandal strap or anything that is yours lest you should say I have made Abram rich I will take nothing but what the young men have eaten and the share of the men who went with me let Aner Escol and Mamre take their share okay we gotta unpack this for a second because what he just did there is kind of amazing
Abram comes back he rolls in as the most powerful person in the region another king just shows up and gives him bread and wine just kind of blesses him prays a blessing over him he's got one king sitting here that represents just this kind of blessing from God his name Melchizedek means the king is righteous and it says he's the king
Of Salem and Salem means peace so this is a righteous king who's the king over peace Hebrews later tells us that Jesus is a better Melchizedek he comes in that line he's the king of righteousness he's the king of peace he's a king and a priest that's Jesus and it says that he's like Melchizedek not that Melchizedek
Is Jesus we'll get that twisted up but Melchizedek points us shows us kind of Jesus is like him all right so Melchizedek shows up he just prays a blessing and then the king of Sodom shows up in a very weakened position and is not gracious he just says hey give me the people he's still trying
To show a little force give me the people but then he's also saying you can have all this stuff and so at this moment Abram gets a guy who's not connected to anything just giving a blessing and he gets the king of this area who apparently is he's listed first every time was the most powerful king in the area saying you can have
All this stuff and he could absolutely have this power position in the area which would seem like it was God doing what God had promised giving him the area giving him power in the area and what's he say he says no I already told God I'm going to trust that he's going to provide
All this and we're not going to have anybody in this area saying they're the ones that blessed me they're the ones that provided for me they're the ones that made me strong it's not going to happen now before he went into Egypt we heard him speak first and then we watched him act
And this one flips we see him act first we don't know his intentions and then we see that beforehand before he even went he said God I'm trusting you you're the one who says you're going to give me this land you're going to give me the land you're the one
Who's going to make me rich you're going to make me a big nation you're going to make me powerful you're going to do it I'm not going to do it my own might I'm not going to trust myself I'm trusting you and see how this plays out he comes
Back he gets to see a blessing from the God most high and then Sodom and he chooses blessing he gives that guy 10% of everything he says we're on the same page this person I worship the God most high
And he says take all your stuff I don't need it now he's two in one he handled this one better and here's the thing throughout the rest of Abram's life and throughout the rest of your life we will consistently be faced
With situation after situation after situation where we get to trust the promises of God or we get to trust our own ability our own strength our own wisdom our own know-how our own effort to make everything work out so Melchizedek
Is this picture briefly here of what Jesus is for us Jesus shows up and he gives a better bread and wine which is his blood and his body shed for us and he gives
A better blessing and better promises if you are a Christian you have better promises than Abram ever had you get an eternal home you get an eternal family you get to reign in the eternal kingdom that God
Says that we will belong to him and that we will relate to him and that we will be his children his sons and daughters not that we'll have a lineage but that we'll have an inheritance from the God of the universe
Through Christ that God has given us better promises and then called us to walk by faith and not by sight so how do we do that when so often we're just bombarded with circumstance we're just bombarded with what we can see
And feel and know you feel really hungry during a famine and you feel very much like you've got to do something real fear real hunger real pain real sadness I think firstly we have to know a deep and in a deep and abiding way we need to know the promises of God
We have to know his word because we're always having to choose between trust in his word and trust in what we see we have to know in a deep and abiding way the promises Abram needed to have repeated those promises to himself over and over and over and over
Again wouldn't it be nice if God promised you you'll have children and you hadn't had children yet when you enter into a battle I guess you'd be like well maybe she's pregnant now and I'm gonna die but otherwise I think I'm making it out of this
One see he gets to lean into these promises there are times as a Christian where you're gonna get to go God it doesn't look like I'm gonna be provided for but I know you say you will it doesn't look like this is gonna work out
But I know that you love me and that you promise that I'll never be you'll never leave me or forsake me so I can trust that you're here in the middle of this God I so badly want all the things that I can see but I know that you've promised me that there's pleasures at your right
Hand forevermore and that I'm to spend my life for something that matters eternally not something that I can have for a few years we're gonna do this throughout our lives you're gonna be in middle school where the primary currency of middle school is coolness and it's middle school coolness so it's not even real
But the primary currency and it feels real it's so real in the daily life of being in middle school and there's gonna be a kid who is so not cool that just talking to her just being around him makes you lose cool points you can feel him just being sucked out of you you get to choose faith or sight you trust a God who says there's more to life than what
We can see and that everybody matters and everybody has a dignity and everybody has worth can you think for a second about what it's like to be this kid who goes home every day just having to be them you're gonna get to choose and that choice doesn't stop in middle school some of you face that situation at work there's one co-worker that everybody just has
So much fun talking about them behind their back and you get to choose am I gonna look like Christ and defend them am I gonna care for them am I gonna befriend them am I gonna join in you're gonna get to choose when you get a job how honest you're gonna be are you gonna bend the same rules that everybody else bends and say well that's just how this industry works you're gonna get to choose in relationships some of us are gonna have
To choose faith oversight and stay with someone we're married to even though it does not look like that'll ever work or be good and some of us are gonna have to choose faith oversight and leave somebody because even though we know that the finances won't work out if we're not living together and going into retirement when the American dream is so palpable and so within reach and it's just like Sodom saying here take all this we're gonna have to say no
I have riches you don't understand from a God who's bigger and more eternal I'm not gonna have the nicest house I'm not gonna have the boat I'm not gonna have the stuff but I am gonna have a God who has a mission and I'm gonna see some people meet Jesus and then I'm gonna go meet him this is gonna play out forever and the hope for us is the same hope that was for Abraham you see when you become a Christian you are saying I am a sinner in need of a savior and I trust that these
Promises are good and our hope for us is that the promises will overcome the fact that we are terrible at carrying this out that the promises are strong enough to get us out of Egypt that when we've derailed when we've run when we've fallen the promises are strong enough that God will redeem us that he will save us that his his cross is bigger than our sin that his resurrection is bigger than our death that we get to trust in him and he'll bring us out and the truth is if you are a Christian he will so that's our hope and
We continue to walk this out with Abraham and see his story we're gonna see all the other times he has to choose between trusting in faith and walking by sight and our hope is that we would do that daily as we trust in Jesus and that we would know his promises so well that nothing else seemed appetizing band's gonna come back up we're gonna sing in a minute we'll take communion my prayer for us as a church is that we would be people who so believed in God and his goodness and his word that we wouldn't be enamored with everything we can see wouldn't be derailed by
Job loss wouldn't be derailed in the midst of pain of relationships and hurt we'd be hurt certainly we'd be confused certainly we'd be hungry we'd but we'd be trusting and that we'd live as people who walk by faith and not by sight and that ultimately God's promises would overcome our failures which is what he promises to do in the cross let's pray God we thank you for your grace and your goodness we thank you that you redeem real people not the perfect not the absolutely moral not those who always keep it together not those people who only go undefeated but those people who are absolutely defeated
And know that they need a savior and we ask that you'd help us to so trust you and so believe in you that even as we walk through the situations that we are in the middle of right now that we believe that you're good that you won't forsake us that we can cast our anxieties on you that you care for us that a peace that we don't understand will guard us that your Holy Spirit is a helper and a comforter that you walk with us God that we would know and love your promises and we would trust that you're the one who takes care who feeds who provides who
Loves in Jesus name amen and thank you thank you so
Tower of Babel
Transcript
Well, good morning. My name is Chet. I'm one of the pastors here. Grab your Bible. Go to Genesis chapter 11. Genesis is the first book of the Bible.
If you are new to your Bible or new to here, grab one of the blue Bibles. It'll be on page 5 in that Bible. We're going to look at the story of the Tower of Babel today. Now, we've been walking through the book of Genesis, and we're going to spend a good bit of time walking through the book of Genesis because the book of Genesis is a big book. We think that it is good for us to just study through whole books of Scripture. We believe that all of the Bible is breathed out by God, that it's beneficial to us.
One of the things that may be a danger for us as we walk through the book of Genesis is that it's easier for us to start thinking, kind of, what? That's neat, but what does that have to do with me? It's easier for us to kind of sit in here and go, yeah, that's a cool, cool story, bro. Nice, nice Job, preacher man. But I got, like, kids that won't listen to me, and I got job issues, and I got relationship issues, and to kind of act as if the book of Genesis is a little bit separate from us because there are other sections in the Bible that are just like, do this, don't do this.
If you do this, things will work out. Like, there's more coaching involved in the book of Genesis. It's like, here's a thing that happened. You want to hear another thing that happened? And it just kind of keeps walking through. It doesn't coach us up.
It doesn't tell us how to think about a lot of the stuff that it says happened. And so I just wanted to say that I think for us to approach the book of Genesis, we have to understand a few things about how God works, how the Bible works, and kind of how humanity works for us to get as much out of it as we need to. First of all, the story of the world does not have you as its main character. Now, in your life, you feel like the main character. I understand that. We're designed that way.
But the story of the world does not have you as its main character, that God formed this world, and God is actively at work interacting with humanity. And the story of the Bible is the story of the world, which is that God is the main character, and that we get to play a part in that story, but that we do ourselves a great service by understanding who God is, and what he does, and how he Acts, so that we might interact with him, and enjoy him, and appreciate him, and know him, and love him. And so when we come to Genesis, it's very helpful for us to understand that we're looking at the story of God as he interacts with human history. And that to just look at things through our own life-centered, our own kind of narrow perspective, that we actually miss out on the point of the world, and therefore we miss out on a lot that does directly affect us.
And so it's helpful for us to study all of God's Word, to look at Genesis, because Genesis is not just the beginning of the Bible. It sets the stage for all that we're going to see in the rest of the Gospels, and in the rest of the Old Testament, and in the New Testament, and everything. It lays all that out for us. It's hard to read the New Testament and not know who Abraham is. It's hard to read the New Testament and not see what happened when we made it through to the Exodus and all of that. But it's the Genesis of the world.
It's how human history started. The other thing that I think we run into when we read things, especially like Genesis, is that we're really far removed from them time-wise. So these are people roaming around, watching sheep, living in tents, and there's a tendency for us to think that we're not like them, or that they're not as smart as we are. Like, I feel really smart because I have Google. I'm actually not that smart, but I feel really smart because I can figure things out really quickly, because someone else figured out something that makes me seem smart, and I get to carry that around in my pocket.
And so we just kind of look at these people, and we think that we're different from them, but we aren't. And what we're going to see is that their sin, their struggles, their pain is a lot like ours, and it's very helpful for us to understand how God interacts with them so that we can understand how He interacts with us. And today, we're looking at the Tower of Babel. Now, if you grew up in Sunday school, you've probably heard about this. Even if you didn't grow up in church, you've probably heard references to this. And it is an interesting story, and I'm excited that we're going to get to walk through it.
So let's pray, and then we're going to study this together. God, we thank You for Your Word. We thank You that You actively, directly interact with humanity, that You pay attention to us, that You care for us in how our lives play out. And we pray that as we study Your Word today, we would grow in an appreciation for who You are and what You've done, and Your plan for the world. And we love You and we praise You in Jesus' name. Amen.
Genesis chapter 11, verse 1. Now, the whole earth had one language and the same words. So, the whole earth had one language and the same words. Now, if you had been reading and paying attention, Genesis chapter 1 through 10. Spencer, do you mind turning that light on in the back? Well, Genesis chapter 1 through 10.
Spencer, carry everyone. Thank you. All right. Genesis chapter 1 through 10. You would realize that chapter 11, verse 1, causes some problems for us. Because Genesis chapter 10 says things like, From these, the coastland people spread their lands, each with his own language, by their clans in their nations.
Two verses before this one, it says, their clans, their languages, their lands, and their nations. So, Genesis chapter 10 is telling us what happens when people get off of, when Noah gets off the ark. If you remember, we talked about this a couple weeks ago. Spencer walked through it. Noah gets on the ark. God's wrath is poured out.
Noah gets off the ark. God looks at him and says, Be fruitful, multiply, fill the earth. That's in chapter 9. Pull it up. That's in chapter 9. And, Nope.
Nope. God blessed Noah's son and said, Be fruitful and multiply and fill the earth. That's the command as soon as Noah gets off the ark. That's what God tells him. And so we hit chapter 10 in Genesis, and it seems like we're doing it. They spread out.
They're covering the earth. It says they moved out by their clans. It gives us this long genealogy in chapter 10. And then as soon as we hit the first verse in chapter 11, it's like, wait a second. Something has happened here. Now, we are right to assume that Moses, who wrote this, did not forget what he had written two verses before when he said there was a bunch of languages.
That he intentionally told this story out of chronological order to make a point. So we have, Noah gets off the ark. God says, Be fruitful, multiply, fill the earth. Genesis chapter 10 says, Here's how that started to play out. And we're like, finally. Finally, humanity is getting it together.
Finally, we're doing what God told us to. Because God made humanity, and this is the first command he gives them, Be fruitful, multiply, fill the earth, have dominion over it. He wants that humanity would spread out to display his glory over the whole earth. That they would be humans everywhere who related to God and displayed his glory over the whole earth. And then they don't do it. They rebel against God.
And so the flood comes because they're sinful. They're running away from God. They're hateful. They're harming each other. And then as soon as Noah gets off the ark, God looks at him and says, The exact same thing he said to Adam and Eve. Be fruitful.
Multiply. Fill the earth. We read Genesis 10, and we're like, yes. We're really getting it together. And then Moses starts Genesis chapter 11 with, Not so fast. I'm going back to before there were languages to tell you a story about how this happened.
And he did it to M. Night, Shamel Amos, and have a twist on the end there. And he stuck it in here to mess with us. So here it is. Now the whole earth had one language and the same words.
And as the people migrated from the east, they found a plain in the land of Shinar and settled there. That's Mesopotamia. Is that area it's modern day? Iraq. And they said to one another, Come, let us make bricks and burn them thoroughly. And they had brick for stone and bitumen for mortar.
Now, what that's telling us, they say, come let us make bricks and burn them thoroughly. It sounds like some of y'all, when you go to cook a meal, you're like, come, let me make spaghetti and burn it thoroughly. What it's telling us is that they learned how to make bricks, that they figured this out. It's showing ingenuity. It's showing creativity that they had designed. They moved to a plane where they would have usually made stone.
That's what they say. Let's make bricks for stone. They would usually use stone to build things, and they figured out a way to make bricks. And bitumen or bitumen is asphalt. So they would have been big.
If you've ever heard of tar pits, it's actually an asphalt pit. And so that's what they would have had. So they figured out a way creatively to design things really well. So so far, the story is going well. They're doing what they're supposed to. They're spreading out.
And they're using what God has poured in them as image bearers to display his glory. And so that's what they say. Come, let us do this. And then it says this. And they had brick for stone and bitumen for mortar. We're in verse four.
Then they said, come, let us build ourselves a city and a tower with its top in the heavens. And let us make a name for ourselves, lest we be dispersed over the face of the whole earth. OK, so this next slide is laying that out. It says, come, let us build ourselves a city and a tower with its top in the heavens. Let us make a name for ourselves, lest we be dispersed over the face of the whole earth. OK, so let's kind of lay out their thinking here.
They said, let us build ourselves a city with a tower as tops in the heavens and let us make a name for ourselves. So build a tower. So they're going to build a city and a tower. With its tops in the heavens. So that's their plan.
They figure out how to make the get creative. They figure out how to make stuff. And they say, we're going to build a city and a tower so far. No problems. We're doing good. Then what's it say?
And let us make a name for ourselves, lest we be dispersed over the face of the whole earth. OK, now we have a problem. Because if you've been reading Genesis, what did God command humanity to do? Genesis 1. Be fruitful. Multiply.
Fill the earth. What did he command Noah twice when he gets off the ark? Be fruitful. Multiply. Fill the earth. We get to chapter 11.
And what did they say? Nope. Not doing that. Their whole plan is to glorify themselves and not be dispersed. So God says, I've poured myself into you.
I've made humanity in my own image. I want you to spread out for my glory over the face of the earth. And they say, how about we come together for our glory? How's that sound? That's their plan. It is an exact opposite of what God has called.
It is a complete rejection of his call on humanity. That's the issue with the Tower of Babel. Not that they built a tower. Not that they built a city. Those things are celebrated. Like God, it designed humans to create things.
He meant for us to do that. Whenever we make stuff. Like I have a three-year-old and he'll say, did Jesus make this basketball goal? And I'm like, he made people. And he made them smart. And he made all the things that we've created and we're able to make it.
So yes, but he likes to do it through us figuring things out. That's how God designed it. Nobody reads this and goes, oh, they built a tower. God's going to get them. He hates towers, you guys. Everybody knows God hates towers.
That's not what's happening here. The truth is what they're doing doesn't matter. They could have come together and said, we're going to dig a big hole and become mole people. It's the reasoning behind it. It's the goal behind it. It's them saying, we don't want to be dispersed.
We want to praise our own name. We want to make our own glory. So it's for their glory, their name, and their will. So if you think about how Jesus teaches the disciples how to pray, he says, our father in heaven, honored to be your name, your kingdom come, your will be done. The Babylonians, the tower of Babel, these people who came together, their plan is let my name be honored. Let my will be done.
It is the opposite of God's call on humanity, which means that their heart is far from God. This is very interesting for us because often we think that sin is just the action. We want to think that sin is doing a bad thing. But the truth is you can do really beautiful things. They had a super nice tower, you guys. But they did it for a bad reason.
When we sing, you better watch out, you better not cry, you better not pout, I'm telling you why. So we're training our children, you need to behave for greed. You need to so love stuff that you can control yourself. Now I understand that when you're training children, you have to start with a lot of law. You have to start with a lot of regulations. You have to be pretty hemmed in.
I think my son behaves a lot of times because when he does, good things happen. And when he doesn't, bad things happen. That's how it's supposed to work. He's a child. I can't explain to him a lot of these things. But at some point we have to realize that there are ways to train ourselves to do the right actions for the wrong motive.
And it works for a con man who's tricking your grandmother into getting her savings by being really nice to her and driving her around and tending to her house. And then suddenly he's moved in. He's taken over right to a lawyer and all that kind of stuff. You know what I'm saying? Like how this works where he's done a lot of really good actions but all of a sudden for a really bad reason. And that some of us try to con God by having all the right actions.
But our goal, my name, my will. There are many people. We live in the south. There are many people right now on a Sunday morning. Some in here. Many in other places.
Who are very moral. Who show up to church. Who give. Who do a lot of things. And their only goal is to behave well enough that Jesus leaves them alone. Because if they sin, they're in his debt.
But if they can behave well enough, they can hold him far away and he owes them. It's a con game. Because their heart isn't in it. It's not for his glory. It's not for his will. It's if I do these things, this will work out.
And that's what they did. They said we're going to do really good things that God poured in us. We're going to be inventive. We're going to be creative. All things that God would celebrate. That the Bible does celebrate.
That even the book of Genesis celebrates. But they do it for sinful reasons. So let's see how God responds. So they say, verse 4. Let's read that again.
Then they said, Come, let us build ourselves a city and a tower with its top in the heavens. And let us make a name for ourselves. Lest we be dispersed over the face of the whole earth. And the Lord came down to see the city and the tower which the children of man had built. I love this verse. The Bible mocks them.
I love two things that happened in this verse. First is, where was their tower going to go? Do you all remember when they built it? It's going to go into heaven. And then the next verse says, God came down to see it. It didn't shoot through the floor of where he lived, you guys.
They didn't quite accomplish what they wanted. Now the point isn't that God couldn't see it. That God can't tell what's going on over the face of the earth. It does indicate that God chooses to be intimate with humanity when he doesn't have to be. He chooses to be close when he doesn't have to be. We see that throughout Scripture.
But it's also meant to be some nice scorn. God was like, hey, I heard they built a tower that's stabbing up into where we live. Y'all want to go down and see it? He went down and he was like, this is cute, you guys. It's meant to mock it, that God comes down to see this tower. And then it says this, that the children of man had built.
That phrase, children of man, it's a Hebrew phrase that the word children can also be sons. The word man is also Adam. So it could just be the sons of Adam, the children of man. All it means was not that these people that lived in Babel were particularly amazing sinners. They were just people. You see, a lot of times we read the Bible and we like to think, those people were bad.
I'm one of the good ones. Those are the people who messed things up. I'm glad God went down there and fixed them. I'm so happy that he went and did that. That's neat. And we miss the fact that what it's saying is this is what humans do.
This is the natural bent of our heart is to, for our name and our will and our glory, to live our lives in a way that God really doesn't mess with us and we get to do what we want. They're just humans. So he goes down to see it. And then he pays them a great honor and he pays humanity a great honor. Let's see what he says.
And the Lord said, behold, they are one people and they have all one language. And this is only the beginning of what they will do. And nothing that they propose to do will now be impossible for them. Come, let us go down there and confuse their language so that they may not understand one another's speech. So the Lord dispersed them from there over the face of all the earth and they left off building the city.
Okay, so here's what he says. He comes down, he looks at the tower and he says, they're not going to spread out. They're just going to keep doing stuff. And he pays humanity a great compliment. I mean, he poured himself into humanity. He made us in his image and he says, they're just going to keep creating.
They're going to keep making things. They're not really going to be able to, there's nothing standing in the way of them just sitting here for their own glory forever. And so then he just says, I'm going to make it to where they don't understand what each other are saying. And that'll fix the problem. Which it did. I don't know if y'all know this, but we have historically humans have not gotten along with people that look and speak differently than themselves.
Did y'all know that? We draw little lines. We say, your eyes and skin color are different. The way you talk is funny. We're going to kill you. That's what humans have done.
It wasn't always said in English, but it has pretty much always been said. That's what God did was he just said, I'm going to make it to where they don't get along the same way. And we still, as far as humanity has gone, we've accomplished a lot of things. We have a space station that we have to work out with other people because we speak different languages. We have to translate from standard measurements to metric measurements. We have to do all these kind of things.
I mean, there's two different types of countries in the world. Those who use the metric system and those who've been to the moon. And we have to work that out. We have to overcome these differences. This was God's plan here. And I want you to see how gracious this is.
We just read about the flood. Humanity gets off and immediately rebels against God. I mean, thumbing their nose at him. We're going to build a tower into heaven. We're going to be awesome and we're not going to do what you say. That was their plan.
I told my son something one time and he said, nah. I said, buddy, you don't say nah to me. He said, daddy, daddy, daddy. I said, what? He said, the reason I said nah was that that was not a good idea. I said, brother, that's not how this works.
That's what they did. God said, here's my plan for humanity. You're going to spread out. You're going to display my glory. You're going to have dominion. And humanity went, nah.
We're going to cluster together. We're going to have glory. We're going to do what we want. God could have crushed them. He could have destroyed this city. We just saw his act of wrath in a flood.
By the time you read this, you would think, oh no, here it comes again. He said he wasn't going to flood it, but he's got other stuff, you guys. Ain't just water that kills people. But he doesn't. He also, this is gracious what he does. You see, God has active wrath and passive wrath.
Active wrath is where we pay the direct penalty for our sin. You see that throughout scripture. Passive wrath is when he gives us exactly what we want. And we discover that it is extremely lacking because what we needed was him. I had a buddy of mine ask one time, he's like, why does bad stuff happen to people? Why do they?
If you're, he's like, you're a Christian. You believe in God. Why do people get cancer? Why do people get sick? I said, honestly, man, the biggest issue that humanity has is sin. And a lot of times we don't realize that we need God as long as our bank account's full, our belly is full, and our health's rocking and rolling.
The truth is, a lot of times circumstantial pain leads us to a beautiful savior. Because it's God's wrath on you if everything works out swimmingly until you stand before him and you realize you lived your whole life for your name and your will. And that's a problem because that's not how the world was designed to work. So what God does is gracious and, I think, kind of funny. Because this had to be pretty hilarious. If you were God.
It's pretty stressful for everybody involved, I think. Here's why. You ever been somewhere and you hear people speaking and it takes you a second to realize, oh, wait, that's a different language? Like you didn't realize you were trying to eavesdrop, but then you got annoyed because you're like, I don't know what they're saying. And then you're like, wait a second, that's because I'll never know what they're saying because I'm pretty sure that's Portuguese. And nobody's trying to learn Portuguese.
No offense if you speak Portuguese. A little bit, but that wasn't intended. Or you're watching a movie or you're hearing a song, like you're riding on the road and you're like, I don't understand those lyrics. And you turn it up and you're like, oh, that's a different language. But see, you understand different languages exist.
There was a day when they didn't. And then the next day they did. So if you walked outside and you saw someone and you said hello and they said bonjour, you'd be like, well, that's French. And unless you know English, we're not going to talk much. But if you didn't know other languages exist, you wouldn't recognize it as a French word.
It would be noises. Strange noises. Now, it's possible you woke up and noticed that you were thinking in a different language and you spoke strange noises. But we've seen people who have gone into like car accidents and stuff. They get hit in the head. They wake up from a coma and they speak a different language.
And they don't realize they're speaking a different language. That's just language to them now. We've seen this happen, which is a crazy thing, which makes me think that when you woke up and started speaking a different language, you didn't notice it was a different language. So you walked outside. You said hello to your neighbor. And they went, glee-blank.
Because you wouldn't have recognized it as anything other than sounds. And you were like, what? They said, skeetle-deedle. And everybody did this all day long. Nobody spoke. If you woke up, I'm assuming there maybe were a few people who were still speaking the same language, but can you imagine you walk outside, you look at the street you live on, and it's just symbols that you don't understand?
If you just walked outside and every sign now is in Arabic, and you were just like, that's a heck of a prank for someone to pull off overnight. Do you see why they all left the city? It didn't work anymore, you guys. I guess at some point, I'm assuming he made little patches of people that did speak the same language, so eventually you were just walking around going, does anybody know what I am saying? And you heard someone yell, I do! And you were like, we're best friends now!
Because it's just us! That's what happened! God said, y'all don't want to spread out and invent culture. That's actually what God's desire was. That there would be culture. That they would spread out.
Because most of culture, a lot of culture, comes from not your language, but your location. You know why we have high fructose corn syrup? Because we had corn. We didn't have sugar. We figured out how to make corn taste like sugar, and we've never looked back. We were like, this is what corn is for from now on.
Alright, we'll allow grits and cornbread. But that's it. Don't eat corn. Drink it. It tastes like magic. If you think about it, we speak the same language, mostly, as people from Australia and people from England.
But the culture is different. We're not on the same page. He designed it. He wanted them to spread out and create culture. Because God wants people who look and act and think differently to worship Him and love Him and display His glory. Because there's something about every culture that points back to God.
And they weren't going to do it, so He created language and therefore created culture. And here's what happens. You read it. He says, Come let us go down. This is verse 7. Come let us go down there and confuse their language so that they may not understand one another's speech.
So the Lord dispersed them from there over the face of all the earth. And they left off building the city. Therefore, its name was called Babel. I'm going to get back to that. That's important. Because there the Lord confused.
That in Hebrew sounds similar to Babel. So it's not as clever in English. Babel and confused. The language of all the earth. And from there the Lord dispersed them over the face of all the earth. They said, Let's come together.
We're going to build a tower. We're going to build a city. And we will not be dispersed. And then it says God dispersed them. Their plan did not work out. I want to ask you a question.
Did God destroy the tower? No. What was the purpose of the tower? It was to make a name for themselves. It was for them to get glory. Glory.
Whenever anyone sees the tower of Babel. Or speaks about the tower of Babel. Who gets the glory? God does. Because that's the point of the world. Is that God would get glory from his creation.
I want to make something really clear to you. That's how glory works. You can spend your whole life trying to figure out how to develop your name. And make much of your name. And glorify your name. But your life at the end of the day will glorify God.
You will either glorify God intentionally or unintentionally. We will either glorify God by being so enraptured by his glory and his goodness and his love. That we pour our lives out for him and his mission and his will. Or we will reject God. We will run from God. And we will suffer the glorious wrath of God.
But he will get glory from our lives. Either by us paying the penalty for our sin. Either by us standing on our own merit and seeing how woefully short it falls. Or by displaying his glory intentionally. But that's how it works.
The tower does not make much of them. It makes much of God. But he's gracious to them. He does not. He creates culture. Now.
They spread out. And here's what's beautiful about this. As we get to read the rest of the story. As we get to see where God goes from here. Oh. I said that I would come back to this.
Babel is translated everywhere else as Babylon. So it's setting up this kind of dichotomy that's going to play out through the rest of scripture. Where Babylon is kind of the seat of rebellion against God. Even by the time we get to the book of Revelation. It's going to be talking about God making a city. And crushing the city of Babylon.
So that's just the theme that runs throughout. We're not going to keep talking about it this morning. But I just wanted to point that out for you. That's where that begins. Okay. Here's what God does from this.
He calls Abraham in the next chapter. We're going to look at that next week. He just calls a guy and says. I'm going to make a nation out of you. And then he's promised to him immediately. It's through you.
All the families of the earth will be blessed. So he promises. Bless Abraham. To bless everybody else. Then. He makes nation.
Out of Abraham. He brings them out of slavery in Egypt. After they go to Egypt and become slaves. He brings them out. He eventually continues to promise. That I'm going to bless everybody through you.
And he brings Christ through Abraham. And the goal. Is not just to make one nation. But that all peoples. And all languages. And all nations.
Would worship and love God. And so he does this through Jesus. Jesus comes. Lives a perfect sinless life. Dies on behalf of sinners. Which is the children of man.
He even tells people. As he's doing this. He says. I'm going to rescue the house of Israel. But I've got sheep.
That don't belong to this house. That are going to be mine. He keeps saying. Like this is for everybody. This is going to be for everybody. As soon as he rises from the grave.
Having conquered sin on our behalf. He grabs his disciples. And he says. Go and make disciples. Of all ethnicities. You see that God is reversing.
What happened in Babel. Through the gospel. Because he is going to have a world. Covered. By people. Of different cultures.
Who love him. And worship him. He will accomplish that. Pentecost. Is the reverse of Babel. Where they.
The Holy Spirit falls. They begin to speak a language. That everybody understands. Because God is going to have a world. Covered with people who know. Love.
And worship him. And then he sends them out. First to the Jews. Then to the Gentiles. Then to everybody.
Which is the Gentiles. But just further away. And we see in the book of Revelation. That it says. John stands up. And he says.
I see them gathered around the throne. Worshipping him. Worshipping God the Father. And Christ. And it says. This is Revelation 5.9.
They sing a new song. Saying. Worthy are you to take the scroll. And to open its seals. For you were slain. And by your blood.
You ransomed people for God. From every tribe. And language. And people. And nation. And he says.
I look. This is 7.9. Two chapters away. After this I looked. And behold. A great multitude.
That no one could number. From every nation. From all tribes. And peoples. And languages. Standing before the throne.
And before the God. Clothed in white robes. When Christ redeems peoples. He does not make them one culture. He does not wipe away their skin color. Or their language.
He brings them together. And he makes them one family in him. But when John looks around the throne. He says. I see everybody speaking different languages. But they're all saying the same thing.
I see a multitude of peoples. And nations and languages. But they're all saying the same thing. Worthy is Jesus. That's God's plan. He enacts it in Babel.
And he overcomes it. In the gospel. That the world will be covered with people who worship him. And he mixes up the languages. And then he says. Everybody's still going to belong to me.
Not everybody in the world. Because that's not how this works out. But people from every tribe. And language and nation. Will follow Jesus. At least one.
Somebody's singing in French. Somebody's singing in Yoruba. There are people groups on the face of the planet right now. We have not translated the Bible in their language. We have not reached those people group. And I will guarantee you one thing.
Somebody from that people group is coming out. And they will be around that throne. And they will be making much of Jesus. Because that's God's plan. Now. How do we read this story.
And respond. Now. In 2018. Knowing all that we know. Well. I got a few quick things.
First of all. We know God's will for us. So God told. Adam and Eve. Then he told Noah.
Be fruitful. Multiply. Fill the earth. Okay. Done. That's not.
That's not the thing for us anymore. We are still supposed to have dominion over the earth. Which means you need to care for the peace of earth that you have. You need to care for those around you. We're supposed to work jobs. We're supposed to do that.
But then. In the cross. He sends out his disciples. Those who follow him. And he says. Make disciples.
Of all the people. Of the earth. That God has given his church a mission. That we know. His will for us. Now.
You may make disciples. In your neighborhood. You may make your disciples. As a mechanic. Working at a shop. Who gets to know the people he works with.
You might make your disciples. Working at Blockbuster. And then they closed it down. So you start working at Sears. And then they closed it down. And now you work for a call center.
But you're making disciples somewhere. Wherever you are. That all people would come to know him. That all people would worship him. That all people would follow him. And here's what happens though.
Much of our life is not the prayer. Our father in heaven. Honored be your name. Your kingdom come. Your will be done. Much of our life is spent with.
Our father in heaven. May my name be honored. May my kingdom come. May my will be done. We spend a lot of our time. Not caring about what God has put in front of us.
To love. To serve. To have a mission for. We spend a lot of time caring about our bank account. Our name. Our glory.
Our will. Guys. I'm a pastor. Father. And it's really easy for me. To not want to preach sermons for God's glory.
But for mine. It's really easy for me. To when we have baptisms. Want to see a lot of people get baptized. Not because that means somebody new. Is going to be around the throne.
Praising Jesus. But because it helps indicate. That we're doing a good job here. It's really easy for us. To do good actions. For wrong reasons.
Where we want our will. And our glory. And that is written. Into the heart of humanity. And we need God to save us from it. I had a friend of mine.
He's a pastor. And he said. That there are times. Where he thinks. He cares more about his dynasty on Madden. Some of y'all.
Understand what those words are. Some of you don't. Than he does about the mission of God. But you can replace dynasty on Madden. With your garden. Your promotion.
Your 401k. Your car collection. Your children. You can replace it with anything. Even really. Really good things.
That we care more about. What God's called us to do. And the mission he's given us. See the truth is. Many of us. Will never have a tower.
That reaches to heaven. But we will have something. That we spent. All of our energy. All of our time. All of our intelligence on.
And often. Far too often. It was for our name. And our will. So that we could be comfortable.
So that we could be successful. So that we could be. Given glory. And it was in complete. And utter rejection. Of what God's called us to do.
So I think the way we respond. Is twofold. I think we need to ask the question. We need to look in our heart. We need to ask the Holy Spirit. To tell us.
Where am I living. For my will. And my glory. Secondly. The way that we respond. To this story.
Of the Tower of Babel. Is we get to know people. Who look differently. Speak differently. Act differently. Than us.
I remember the day. That I went. My cousin came here. He is. First generation. Nigerian American.
I've told this story before. We went. He wanted to know. Kind of some good food around here. So we went to a restaurant.
That's closed now. But it was very good. Mexican food. I got horchata. Which is. It tastes like.
The bottom of the bowl. Of cinnamon toast crunch. It's amazing. And then we went. To another place. That had churros.
And I remember sitting with him. And I was eating a churro. And I thought. I've never thought about this. But churros are going to be in heaven.
I know biscuits will be there. But I had never thought about churros. And I know. Like it was. It just dawned on me. That there's going to be.
Culture in heaven. And that we ought to display. That so beautifully here. That we don't just hang out. With the people who look like us. Think like us.
Act like us. We don't just hang out. With people who like spicy food. Or don't like spicy food. But that we.
We look like the kingdom of God. Which is a bunch of people. Who look and act. And think differently. And so what that means for us. How we respond to the story.
Is that we love God's mission. And we love it enough. To be made uncomfortable for it. For the sake of people. Who don't know him. And for some of us.
That means you are supposed to. Quit your job. Be an international missionary. Go someplace. Or maybe they don't speak. The way you speak.
And maybe nobody there. Loves Jesus. And it's possible. That there are churches. Around the globe. That will consistently.
Send Christians to. The reason that unreached places. Are unreached right now. Is because they are hard to reach. They don't want to be reached. And so there are going to be people.
Who have to die there. For the sake of the gospel. And we're going to send in somebody. And we're going to send in somebody. And we're going to send in somebody. And Christians are going to shed their blood there.
And we're going to do it. Because we know at some point. Somebody's coming out. Somebody's going to be around the throne. Some of you it means. Getting to know someone you've worked with.
For a long time. But you've never really talked to. Because y'all don't see eye to eye. Or you don't act the same way. Or you don't like the same music. Some of you it's going to mean.
Walking across the street. And getting to know your neighbors. Some of you it's going to mean. Stop inviting them to everything. But accept the invitation they've given you.
You go be the only person. With your skin color. You go be the only person. Who doesn't understand the references. You go be mad. Uncomfortable for the gospel.
The band's going to come back up. And I want us to ask the question. God do I care more about your glory or mine? Do I care more about my name? Do I care more about what I want in life? Do I care more about what I think is best.
Most comfortable. Most enjoyable. Or do I care about what you care about? And we're going to repent. We're going to ask Jesus to change our hearts. We're going to ask him to use us.
Through his Holy Spirit. We're going to take communion here in a second. Which is for Christians. Who have repented of sin. And placed their faith in Jesus. Who died for sinners.
The truth is. That we are all going to mess this up. We are all going to fall short. None of us are going to live perfectly. Or be on mission perfectly. Or love God's mission.
In his name. In his glory. More than ours. And that's why we trust Jesus. That he saves sinners. That he loves failures.
That he's strong enough where we are weak. And that we continually get to follow after him in repentance. But that ultimately we're going to stand before him. Not because we were the best at mission. And not because we were the best at diversity. And not because we were the best at loving people.
But because he was. And we're going to stand in him. And so if you are a Christian. I would invite you to take a moment to ask him. Where do I need to change? Where do I need to grow?
Where do you need to purge from me? The fact that I would have fit in so perfectly in Babel. And where do you need to change my circumstances? For your grace. And for your glory. And for your name.
And then I invite you to take communion. If you are not a Christian. Communion is not for you. Christ is. And you can repent of your sin. And have Christ.
But Christians partake in communion. To remind themselves. That they've placed their faith in Christ. And what he's done for them. So let's pray.
The band's going to sing here in a moment. And during that song. After you've prayed. And when you feel ready. You'll come take communion. If you have a celiac disease.
Or a gluten allergy.
Elder installation
Transcript
Well, good morning. Like I said, my name is Chet. I'm one of the pastors here. Today is an exciting day in the life of our church. We are installing Spencer Carey as an elder. And so it's going to be a good morning for us.
We are taking a break from our time in Genesis to install Spencer. He's been doing pastor and training stuff with us for a couple of years. And a lot has gone into this, and we're excited to be able to do this this morning. I hope everybody made it safely through the great mist of 2018. I know that if you live closer to the coast or have family that way, that there has been some significant damage in that direction, although we didn't catch the brunt of it. So thank the Lord for that, for Columbia.
So a little bit about what we're going to do today. It's going to be kind of like a wedding, because in some ways Spencer is going to be committing himself to our church family. And us as a church family, we're going to commit ourselves to Spencer. So there'll be times where I'm talking to us as a church family. There'll be times where I'm just talking generally from what the Bible says. There'll be times where I'm specifically addressing Spencer.
And so in similar ways, when I get to do a wedding, the couple stands. And then there are times where I'm talking to everybody, just kind of what the Bible says. There are other times where I specifically address the couple. Except for today, I think that as we specifically address Spencer, he'll listen. The couple at a wedding usually doesn't. They're just kind of staring doughy-eyed at each other.
But I don't think Spencer's going to be doing that with you all right now. So hopefully he'll listen as we kind of walk through this. I got to meet Spencer in college. And it took us a while to kind of admit it to each other after he had been hanging out here. But we did not appreciate each other's company in college, which I think is a testament both to our judge of character in college and our general attitudes towards humans.
And so we've grown since then. We like each other now. And Spencer's been around for a while. He felt called to plant in Lexington. And so he moved from Sojourn from Louisville, Kentucky, where he was going to Sojourn. No, Sojourn was the church.
Sorry, Southern Seminary is what I'm trying to say. Sojourn was the church he was a part of. Moved from Southern Seminary to be here to plant in Lexington. Called us up because somebody said, Hey, well, there's some guys that are planting a church. You should get to know them. He said, Well, I already kind of know them.
But he had to have a sponsor church. So he thought, Well, maybe these morons will sponsor me and we can go ahead and plant our church. And so we met and it turns out we had a lot in common. We had a lot that we believed similarly about how to pursue the mission and to worship Jesus and to mobilize people and make disciples. And so Spencer started hanging around. Eventually he started feeling like he was actually called to be here.
And that was an exciting moment for our church. And now as he's been doing pastor and training, we are going to install him today. So I want to go ahead and tell you a few things. One that Spencer's already done for our church. One of the things that he did pretty early on was he and he treated it like it was a gospel issue that we have better coffee on Sundays. So he used to be a barista or a barista.
I don't know. He's a guy. I don't know how that works. And he he he kind of just said, We can't drink this. If we believe all the things that the Bible says about how God's good creation, we can't be drinking this on Sundays. And we're like, What?
It's like seven week old Maxwell House. I don't understand what the problem is. And so we've gotten better coffee. He he fought hard for liturgy, which means a set order to worship. It stresses him out any time that we kind of break from that. But he's he fought hard for that.
So if you like responsive readings, you can thank Spencer. If you're like me and they make you uncomfortable, you can thank Spencer. I remember when he would say he's like, Why don't you all do responsive readings? And the answer was basically, I don't like them. And he was like, Well, you know, the Bible, he like went. He pulled the Bible out on us.
And he was like, You know, the Bible says for us to read together, for us to devote ourselves to the reading of scriptures. And I was like, Yeah, but they make me uncomfortable. And so since we didn't have a good point and he did, we've started doing them. And they've actually been really good and helpful. And I do appreciate them now. Other things that we have in liturgy are when Spencer gets up here and says he's going to give us a benediction, which is a blessing for the road.
And we had to tell him, Stop saying that. Just do it. Just say the benediction. He also fought really hard for shorter sermons. And I know some of y'all have been hanging around for a little while and you're like, These are the short ones. Yes, these are the short ones.
These are the shorter sermons. He's done a lot with shepherding and member care. I will also say that we have already made some allowances for Spencer that we hadn't made for other pastors. Everybody who's a pastor so far, the way we did email addresses was your first initial and your last name. But Spencer's name is Spencer and his last name is Carrie.
And he was really up in arms about having scary at millcitycolumbia.com be his email handle. So we already changed that up for him. So here's what we're going to do today. We're going to look briefly. I thought it was an awesome email address. We're going to look briefly.
I was like, didn't your parents do that on purpose? We're going to look briefly at three different passages. The New Testament has a lot to say about pastors and about what the church is supposed to look like. The New Testament church. And we're going to look briefly at three different passages that just deal with the kind of the role of the office of pastor, of elder. And we're going to talk through that this morning.
And then kind of at the end of our time, we're going to call Spencer up here and we're going to go through a list of things that he's going to commit himself to. And then we're going to commit ourselves to him as a church and he will be installed in our church as an elder. So I'm going to pray and then we're going to jump in. God, we thank you for this time and we thank you for what it means for the life of our church. We pray that we'd honor you well as we study your word together this morning and as we install Spencer as a pastor of our church. Thank you.
And in Jesus name. Amen. Grab your Bibles, go to Titus chapter one. Titus chapter one. It's going to be on page 579. If you have a Bible that looks like this.
And we're going to pick up in verse five. So we're going to talk briefly about the character of a pastor, kind of what the Bible outlines. There's several passages that do this. We're going to look at Titus today. Before we do that, I want to answer kind of a big question for us. So he says in verse five, this is why I left you in Crete.
That's where Titus is so that you might put what remained into order and appoint elders in every town as I directed you. OK, so what happens is the New Testament, Paul and the other apostles travel around. They share the gospel. People believe the gospel. People become Christians and become disciples of Jesus. And then it would say that they would come back through and kind of appoint elders, make sure that all the local churches and all the churches in all these cities had some organization, had some leadership.
And so that's what's happening here. And so today we will install. We will appoint Spencer as an elder. Now, for some of us, that word, we're not really familiar with the word elder. We use that term interchangeably here at our church. So the Bible also uses it interchangeably.
The word elder overseer are different words in the Greek, but they're used interchangeably. And we also use the word pastor. And so those are all three different words in the New Testament that are used to describe this kind of same role, the same office, this same thing that people are supposed to do. And so we interchange them. Now, some people look at that and go, OK, doesn't elder mean older? And then you might look at us and say, you don't look older, to which I would respond.
Thank you. I moisturize. I appreciate that. No, I would respond. We aren't that old. We are on the young end of kind of pastoring.
We're on the far end of this. And here's the thing. The term does mean older. And it originally meant in the Old Testament, you're going to see it means all the older people, all the heads of families were called together. But as it comes into the New Testament, it is only ever used as an office.
Similar to our term senator. Same root word is senile. Same same root word. It means older. But now we just use it as an office.
And that's how the New Testament uses this. And the primary thrust of what the Bible calls for from an elder is not physical age, but spiritual maturity. And so that's why he lists off these qualifications. In these qualifications, there is a call for maturity, but never a specific age. So that there can be people who are young and spiritually mature, old and not spiritually mature.
And the hope is that we would grow as we are young pastors. We would grow to be more spiritually mature over time. As we age. So here's what he says. Verse six. If anyone is above reproach, means nobody can bring any kind of claim against them.
The husband of one wife and his children are believers and not open to the charge of debauchery or insubordination. For an overseer as God's steward, meaning that he's a stand in for God. The person who's overseeing a church, an elder, a pastor, is handling God's people, God's word. He's not in charge. He works for God. Must be above reproach.
He must not be arrogant or quick tempered or a drunkard or violent or greedy for gain. But hospitable, a lover of good, self-controlled, upright, holy, and disciplined. He must hold firm to the trustworthy word as taught so that he might be able to give instruction in sound doctrine and also to rebuke those who contradict it. So let's talk briefly about the character outlined for a pastor. So these are character qualifications.
There's only one in here that is a skill, which is the ability to instruct, the ability to correct. The rest of them are character, character qualifications that you have to see over time that wouldn't show up on a resume. So here's what it says. It says if you're above reproach. This is actually why as we went to install Spencer, we would announce we're going to install him on the 23rd. If you have anything to bring against him, anything that he has done, any slight, we need to know about it so that we can approach it, that we can talk to him about it, that we can correct it.
And that we see that he seems eligible for this, but we want to make sure that he hasn't been wronging and harming people in other areas. It says the husband of one wife, which means a one-woman man. This has been an honor to see how Spencer pursues his wife there. He's very busy. He does a couple of days here serving. He teaches often here, which takes a lot of his time.
He works with our member care and shepherding. He's put a lot of work into that, and then he does real estate, which keeps him very busy. And so there's often days where he's here working. He goes and does some showings. He goes and does some pastoral care. He gets home late, and he has to be very intentional with his wife, Anna, and it has been beautiful to see how intentional they are to spend time together, to date one another, to enjoy one another.
But it says husband of one wife and his children are believers and not open to the charge of debauchery or insubordination. 1 Timothy 3, which also outlines character qualifications, says that manages his household well and his children are submissive. And so one of the things we see is that one of the first realms that you pastor is your home. And so we did not, when I first became a pastor here, who's considerably younger than I am now, didn't have any children. So now that qualification matters more because I have to keep my children submissive.
At some point, my son, he's three. He can't really be open to the charge of debauchery, although he did feel a little insubordinate last night before he went to bed. But we handled it. Boy, you're being insubordinate and churlish. Like, we walked through this with him. But what it means is that you manage your household well, that your children grow up.
And this is one of the things that we talk about on a regular basis as pastors is that as our children get older, there may be a season where we say, hey, guys, I no longer meet these qualifications. I have children who are rebelling, who are pursuing open, flagrant sin. They're not submissive. I'm not leading my household well. And I need to step back. We talk about that regularly.
This is the thing that we need to be prepared for. This is one of the reasons why not only do we believe it's biblical that we would have multiple pastors. Some people would look and say, you're going to have four pastors for this size church. And our answer is yes, because we believe that elders are supposed to be plural. That's why he says appoint elders in every town, that there should be more than one. And we believe that it's healthy.
It's helpful. It gives us room to shepherd our families well. It gives us the ability to shepherd each other, to be accountable. But there may be seasons where we have to walk through that. For an overseer, God's steward must be above reproach. He must not be arrogant or quick tempered or a drunkard or violent or greedy for gain, but hospitable.
He must have his home open to people. He must love good, be self-controlled, upright, holy, and disciplined. So that those who are to lead the church are meant to be, they don't eat too much. They don't drink too much. They're not too aggressive. They're not too loud.
They're tempered. They control themselves. That they're disciplined. That they might set an example. Then he says he must hold firm to the trustworthy word as taught, so that he may be able to give instruction and sound doctrine and also able to rebuke those who contradict it.
So there ought to be an exemplary character and a love for the scriptures and an ability to rightly teach and correct. We take this very seriously here. If there's two kind of caricatures of pastors, maybe many of you have grown up and you've known pastors who are really genuinely good people. They loved the Lord. They were humble. They were gracious.
They were caring. And that's one picture we have of pastor. The other one is that pastors are messed up. They're sneaky. They're greedy. They're power hungry.
I know that that's in me. When I meet somebody and they say they're a pastor, I'm like, okay, well, you might be weird. And I feel bad that I feel like that because I know I tell people I'm a pastor and I assume they think maybe the same thing. It's like, okay, weirdo. We'll see. But that's the thing.
And so we take it very seriously that we would uphold and display what God has intended. I want to turn. I'm going to talk a little bit more about this, but I want us to turn to the next place before I do. So we're going to look at the commitment of a pastor. So we're going to go to Hebrews 13.
So just a few pages over. And again, there's a lot of different passages, but I wanted to highlight a few things. So the Bible says that the pastor should have a godly character. And then it talks about how we are to commit both to the pastor and the pastor commits to us. And so I want to talk about, Spencer, what you're committing to today and what we as a church are committing to today. Because we are, as a church family, making a commitment when we install a new pastor.
And Spencer today will be making a commitment to us. So let's look. We're going to read a couple of verses and we're going to jump kind of a section and read another couple of verses. Because Paul introduces this idea. He talks about some specifics for this church. And then he kind of closes with this idea.
So we're going to verse 7. He says, remember your leaders, those who spoke to you the word of God. Consider the outcome of their way of life and imitate their faith. Jesus Christ is the same yesterday and today and forever. I didn't have this on there, but I want us to read verse 9 as well. It says, do not be led astray by diverse and strange teachings.
Okay, I just want to read that because it's going to apply to something we're about to have to read in here on verse 17. So verse 17 says this, and this is to the church. The church was talking to us collectively as a church family. Obey your leaders and submit to them. For they are keeping watch over your souls as those who will have to give an account. Let them do this with joy and not with groaning.
For that would be of no advantage to you. So if you're part of our church family, if you've committed to membership here. One of the things that happens when we install a new elder leader in our church family is that this applies. That we would obey and submit to our leaders. Now, as a pastor here, I wish that was worded differently. I wish it said like, consider it, but you still make the call.
Like, you know, think about it. They've probably been studying stuff, but don't overdo what they say. But that's not what it says. It says obey and submit to them because they're going to be held accountable. That's what the passage says. That's scary to me.
And this is another reason why we take eldership really slowly here. One of the phrases we use is we take it slower than we want to take it. I think Spencer could have been ordained a while back. The truth is if he can be ordained now, he could have been ordained earlier. That's usually how that works. Could have been installed earlier.
We actually had people, I had somebody in my group come to me and say, why isn't Spencer a pastor yet? And she was like, he's the best one we have and he's not even a pastor. And I was like, you said that right to my face. Like, I'm here. You're talking to me. And the answer is twofold.
One, character can only be seen over time. So he just said, remember their way of life. We have to watch way of life. We could tell Spencer could preach when he showed up. I remember the first time he preached when we were doing teacher development. I thought, yeah, we could listen to this guy.
You could listen to this guy week after week. That was helpful. That was good. That was encouraging. But there's certain things that don't show up on a resume that aren't going to show up as you get to talk to somebody.
And that's character. You have to see him in seasons of life. Are they consistently faithful? Do they love their spouse? How do they handle it when they don't have any money? How do they handle it when their child is going through a really difficult stage?
How do they handle it when they're sick? How do they handle it? Character only unfolds over time. So there's no way to do that quickly. Secondly, after we install him today, we as a church family have to obey and submit to him. And we want to make sure he's got some sense.
Because that would be really difficult to do. We want to see that. We take that very, that's a very weighty thing that we would say that we believe that we're going to, he's going to be my pastor after the day. I'm going to have to submit to his leadership. We wanted to watch and see, can we do that now? I've been submitting to some of his leadership.
I've been obeying some of the things that he lays out because he's got wisdom and he handles the Bible well. But we're co-signing that as a leadership team, as an elder team for the rest of our church family. And we want to take that really slowly. And the other thing that we have to see is that the, as Matthew 20 says, Jesus says, I didn't come to be served, but to serve, to give up my life as a ransom for many. What he says is that the leaders of you should be your slaves. The first among you should be last.
So what happens is Spencer's about to move into a position where he can lean into the fact that our church family is supposed to obey and submit to him. And he can do that as someone who is power hungry and loves authority. Or he can do that as someone who understands that his role is a servant. He's meant to die to himself on behalf of those that he serves because they belong to Jesus. One of the things we say often is if you can't take the trash out, you can't lead a church. You can't be an elder.
Or if you can't serve, you don't get to do anything else. Because it seems from a worldly perspective as if he's moving up in the ranks. But biblically, that's flipped upside down and he's moving down to be a slave to more people, to serve more people. So the Bible says, obey your leaders. Now, that does not mean check your brain at the door. We just read where it says, don't be led astray by diverse and strange teachings.
So he says, don't be led astray, obey and submit to your leaders. So what he's saying is biblical, healthy, godly leadership is what we follow. That we open the Bible. There's a reason why we set this out in the middle of everything. And we open the Bible up and we set it on here because this is what is leading us. This is what is teaching us.
God through his Holy Spirit, as he empowers his word, I could fall over dead. And what is important is still here. And so we follow the leadership that's outlined for us in scripture. But there are places where pastors have to make house rules. Because the Bible tells us certain things we're supposed to do and certain things we're not supposed to do. And then there's some areas where we got to make some calls.
Give you an example. It's kind of like parenting. When I was growing up, I had to be in bed at nine o'clock. All the way until I left my father's house. Eighteen years old. At a nine o'clock bedtime.
A little more lax on the weekends and during the summer. But not real lax. Just a little more. During school, nine o'clock, go to bed. You could get away with it a little more if you weren't annoying him. You could push it to like 9.15 or 9.30.
But if he like, if you bothered him, it was close. Bedtime. Now, as a house rule. At your house, you may not have had that rule. I was called to obey my parents. He said, go to bed at nine.
If I stayed up, if he told me to go to bed, and I said, no, I'm sinning. If I was up at ten in rebellion against my father, I'm sinning. Now, at your house, where you had no curfew, you weren't. Because it wasn't a house rule. You were supposed to obey your parents. They said, show up by three.
I remember when I first started dating my wife, Anna. And I said, what time do you need to be home? Because I was trying to, you know. She said, I don't have a curfew. And I was like, your parents hate you. Truth was, she had never done anything that had to be restricted.
She behaved herself. Phillip's voice, home at nine, in bed. There were restrictions at my house. And this messed me up. Because I was in college. And at 9.30, my body started to shut down.
I'd been going to bed at nine o'clock my entire life. People were like, you want to do stuff? And I'd be like, yeah, it sounds. My body's like, what are you doing? You're going to die. I'm like, you know what?
I'll catch you later. I've got to go to sleep. My roommate my freshman year hated me. And he moved out. And it was nice. I had my own room.
And I went to bed at nine. And he didn't make any noise. There are house rules. One of the house rules we have as a church family is our community groups. The Bible does not say you have to be in a group. People ask us this all the time.
What does the Bible say you have to do that? No, it doesn't. But the Bible does say that we're to love one another. We're to serve one another. We're to bear with one another. We're to forgive one another.
We're to be hospitable to one another. And we live in a culture where you are never forced to do any of those things. There's another church right down the road. So as soon as something gets difficult, you don't have to forgive. You can go over there. You can go over there and tell them how terrible everybody was here.
And you know what that church will say? We're so sorry. Because they want to put on a good impression of Christ to you. And they'll say, well, we love you. We'd never do that. And they're well-meaning.
But the truth is you should have stayed here and repented. Or you should have stayed at your last church and repented. We're called to do all these things. And we live in a culture where you don't have to. You can go home and watch, friends. You don't have to have any.
My brother, when they canceled the show The Office, he said, I feel like I've lost a lot of my friends. And I'm not going to see him all the time anymore. Then Netflix came out, and he's fine, you guys. So we say you need to be in a group. Because we're trying to apply what the Bible said. So we made a house rule to help us accomplish what we think we're supposed to do.
And so when the Bible says obey your leaders and submit to them, there are places where that shows up. And that means there are going to be times where, as a church family, we disagree. That's what submission is. It doesn't say agree with your leaders. It says obey, submit. And so we take our time to try to figure out, this person loves Jesus.
Does he love the word? Are we in agreement on how this plays out? Because the truth is, since there are house rules, Spencer might be installable elsewhere, but not here. Because we disagree on what the Bible is saying and how we ought to live that out. So we take our time.
But here's what it says. The two commitments that the church family is making and that we'll make later, we'll actually read and we'll kind of say, by God's grace, that we will. Is we're committing today to obey and submit to Spencer. And then it says, let them do this with joy and not with groaning, for that would be of no advantage to you. So some of us maybe said, okay, well, I'll obey, I'll submit.
But man, am I going to make that awful. And the truth is, it's not what he says. It says, let them do it with joy. Spencer's supposed to be here. If he's supposed to be here, if he's supposed to serve, he's supposed to do this. Then we want him to do it with joy.
We want him to do it not begrudgingly. We want him to show up excited to be a part of this church family and to serve this church family and to slave for this church family. We want that to be a joy because it does us no good if he's bitter and unhappy, if he's frustrated. That is not how you want your pastors to be. So as a church family, we're designed, supposed to make things joyful.
Now, as a pastor, I want to give you a few tips on how to do this. One, if you are frustrated or hurt by something that one of your pastors has done, just go talk to them. It's one of the best ways to make bleeding a joy. Because someone sitting you down and saying, hey, you hurt my feelings. It's so much easier. It's so much biblical.
So what we're supposed to walk through. There are times where somebody sat me down and said, I think you need to repent. And when they got up, I was like, you're right, I do. I do need to repent. I handled that poorly. My thinking on that's been wrong.
And I get to grow and we get to move forward together in love. Being frustrated and complaining and whispering to other people doesn't help us grow. It doesn't model the gospel. It doesn't display anything good. So when you're frustrated, go talk to the pastor.
Whichever pastor it is. It's probably razz. Go talk to him. Sorry. I do remember I've had people sit down with me and after doing that, because they did it, they thought it was biblical, they knew they were supposed to, they sat down and afterwards said, that wasn't that bad. It's like, yeah, I just look angry.
I'm actually not a terrible person. Tell your friends. Encourage. When you see something that is encourageable, encourage. Fan the flame. When Spencer, and be specific.
When he does something that's helpful or encouraging or blessed you or you see Jesus at work in him, tell him. Because the truth is, often we as pastors run around, we get to work and serve. We've been called to this. We work and serve with everybody who's hurting. Everybody's weak. Everybody's frustrated.
Everybody's in the midst of sin. And we may spend a week, three weeks, four weeks, five weeks, just doing that. And if you're doing well and you see Jesus at work in your life, you see Jesus at work in your group, just grab a pastor sometime and just say, hey, I just want to let you know how this is working and how this is going. Grab Spencer at some point and say that to him, because that helps make this a joy. Spencer. Verse 17.
Obey your leaders and submit to them, for they are keeping watch over your souls as those who will have to give an account. You are committing today to care for the souls of Mill City Church. This is one of the reasons why we do membership is that we want people to actually look and say, no, I commit to this. I believe in Jesus. I'm going to be here. I'm going to belong.
We don't know how it works. We know that as pastors, we're saying we're in charge of care for souls, eternal souls that will exist either in hell or in heaven with Christ and that one day we will stand before God and we will give an account. Not just for how we care for souls, but also the Bible tells us we have a stricter judgment for those who teach that we actually studied, that we actually tried, that we actually were as clear as we could on what the Bible says. But there's going to be a time, and I don't know if we get to go in together, I don't know if the four pastors of Mill City Church are going to stand shoulder to shoulder, I don't know if they're going to read off a list of names, I don't know how it's going to work, but we're going to stand before God and be accountable for souls.
Spencer, you're committing to that today, to have a moment in judgment that otherwise wouldn't exist, to have a moment in our judgment before God that wouldn't be there outside of accepting the call that you think he's placed on your life to do this. To stand before him and say, I wasn't just distracted, I wasn't just in it for gain, I wasn't just in it, but I was praying, and I was weeping, and I was trying, and I was studying, and I was pouring myself out. Because he knows. We can fake it in front of people, but he knows. That's what Peter says, one day the chief shepherd's going to show up, and we're going to be held accountable.
So that's what you're committing to in church family, that's what we're committing to. Turn to Acts chapter 20, it's one of my favorite passages in the Bible, it's where Paul calls together the Ephesians elders, so it's going to be back to the left. This is kind of some of the stories from the early church, after Christ had died on the cross, after he had risen from the grave, and the church had been commissioned and sent out into the world. So we're going to talk about the charge, kind of the commission or the task of a pastor. And yes, they were all three C's, because once you do two C's, you have to do a third one or you get in trouble.
So the charge, what we're called to do. So we're just going to read this passage, and we're going to make some observations about what this is supposed to look like. So verse 26, Paul's called together the elders of a church, the pastors of a church, he's going to call them elders, he's going to call them overseers. We said that's interchangeable. Verse 26. Therefore, I testify to you this day, that I am innocent of the blood of all.
For I did not shrink from declaring you the whole counsel of God. Pay careful attention to yourselves and to all the flock in which the Holy Spirit has made you overseers, to care for the church of God, which he obtained with his own blood. I know that after my departure, fierce wolves will come in among you, not sparing the flock. And from among your own selves will arise men speaking twisted things to draw away the disciples after them. Therefore, be alert, remembering that for three years I did not cease night or day to admonish everyone with tears. And now I commend you to God and to the word of his grace, which is able to build you up and to give you the inheritance among all those who are sanctified.
So look back at the first thing that Paul says. He says, I'm innocent of the blood of all, for I did not shrink from declaring to you the whole counsel of God. And so as we stand accountable for souls, what he's saying is that we, Paul says, I'm innocent because I read, studied, knew my Bible and proclaimed my Bible to everybody. I didn't shrink from even saying things that were unpopular or disliked. I proclaimed what was true. One of the most frustrating things, Spencer, is that we cannot help people repent.
We can't make them see it. We just get to say it. We just get to plead with people. We get to sit them down and say, this is what the Bible says. And this is where you're headed. And this is where destruction lies ahead for you.
And they don't see it. They don't believe it. Some of the stuff we tell people sounds crazy about marriage, about sexuality. Paul says he didn't shrink from it. He proclaimed it. And then he can walk away without having the blood of others hanging over his head.
So the first charge I would say for a pastor is that we would know our Bibles, love our Bibles, and proclaim from our Bibles. We would know it. We'd memorize it. We'd believe it. We'd trust it. In Paul's letters to Timothy, he says, I charge you in the presence of God and Christ Jesus, who is to judge the living and the dead by his appearing and his kingdom, which about as many things as Paul could think of, all the things you could charge someone by, he pulls them together and he says, preach the word, be ready in season and out of season, reprove, reprove, rebuke, and exhort with complete patience and teaching.
Then he says, until I come, this is in another passage, I devote yourself to the public readings of scripture, to exhortation, to teaching. This is one of the ones that Spencer cited on us that said we had to publicly read scripture. Do not neglect the gift you have, which was given you by prophecy when the council of elders laid their hands on you. Practice these things, immerse yourself in them so that all may see your progress. We as pastors are supposed to grow in being Bible people. We're supposed to grow in it.
Progress should be seen. From what I understand, this is already true for Spencer. One of his first sermons he got to preach, he talked about the cross and repeated the phrase, gaze upon the carnage so many times that it made people very uncomfortable, but not in a good, here's the gospel way uncomfortable, just in a, you probably should stop saying that way uncomfortable. I'm sure there are more, but that's the one I wanted to talk about. But that this should be a thing that growth is seen, that we grow as men who love and trust our Bibles and proclaim our Bibles.
Because what else are we going to proclaim from? We do not have sufficient wisdom, but the Bible makes the simple wise. And there's our hope. Verse 28. So we would be Bible people.
Secondly, he says, pay careful attention to yourselves and to all the flock in which the Holy Spirit has made you overseers to care for the church of God, which he obtained with his own blood. So Spencer, you have to commit today to watch your own soul, to pay careful attention to your own sin, to your own proclivities, to your own desire for evil. And then pay careful attention for God's people, that you would love them, that you would care about them, know them, pray for them. They belong to Jesus. He purchased them with his blood. Then he says, I know that after my departure, fierce wolves will come in among you, not sparing the flock, and from among your own selves will arise men speaking twisted things to draw away the disciples after them.
Therefore, be alert, remembering for three years I did not cease night or day to admonish everyone with tears. So that today you commit yourself to a group of people that you might love, that you might proclaim the word of God to them, that you might weep for them. I remember when I was first doing some internships with Midtown Fellowship, the pastors there said that they felt like pastoring a lot of times was standing next to somebody on top of a roof saying, don't jump. Please don't jump. I can tell you how far it is down there. I can tell you what happens when you land.
I can tell you why jumping is a terrible idea. Please don't jump. And then watching them jump and then immediately saying, okay, I'll meet you at the bottom. That's what Paul says. I didn't cease to admonish with tears to correct, to say, don't do this. Please see your sin.
Please turn. Please love Jesus. Spencer, you're a sinner and you're not sufficient. For the weight of caring and caring for the souls of those who belong to Jesus. In order to kind of highlight how big of a sinner you are, we got your wife to do a video where she outlines some things. No, that would have been fun though.
You are not sufficient for the weight. And that's why Paul ends, as he's talking to them, he says this to them. We're going to end with it. I now commend you to God. So Paul's telling him he's not going to see him again.
And he says, I'm handing you over to God and to the word of his grace, which is able to build you up and to give you an inheritance among all those who are sanctified. That those who lead the church are sanctified the same way that everybody else is. They're saved the same way that everybody else is. That we trust that Jesus, through his grace, has accomplished for us what we could never accomplish. That we are sinners who need a savior and ought to be the first to proclaim them. So Spencer, as you take on the weight of shepherding among our church family and among this people for as long as God gives you the grace to do so, we commend you to God and to his grace that you might walk in it and that you might one day stand sanctified along the rest of our church family, trusting that Jesus has redeemed us from our sin and set us free and given us hope, which he is our hope, our only hope, that anything would be good.
That you will not save yourself through pastoring well, that you will not save yourself through people responding well to what you teach, that you will not save yourself through your family being proud of you, that you will not save yourself through how well you lead a group or how often it multiplies, that you will not save yourself by leading people to Christ, that you will be saved the same way that everybody else is saved through the blood of Jesus on your behalf as a sinner who had no other hope. At this time, I'd like to ask our other two pastors, Matt and Raz, to walk up and Spencer to come up as well. So we're going to read a few things that Spencer will respond to, and then we're going to read one that we as a church family will respond to, and I'll tell you when that's coming. Spencer, do you believe by God's grace in your life that you meet the qualifications laid out in Scripture for an elder and have not hidden sin in order to serve in this capacity?
Spencer, do you commit yourself to God's Word, to study it, meditate on it, cherish it, striving to mold your life to its instruction while actively seeking to train others to do the same? Spencer, do you commit yourself to keep a close watch on yourself and your sin, being quick to repent in an error? Spencer, do you commit to keep a close watch over Mill City Church, sacrificially loving and serving and leading those to whom God's Holy Spirit has seen fit to make you an overseer? And Spencer, have you committed your life to Jesus above all else, believing only in the gospel, not your good works or efforts or success in ministry for your salvation?
Okay, church family, this is ours, so if you are a member of Mill City Church, we're going to commit to the things we talked about earlier. So we're going to respond with, by God's grace we do. Church family, do we commit, under the authority of the Word of God, to submitting ourselves to Spencer's direction and seeking to make his time serving here one of joy? By God's grace we do. Spencer, by the grace through Jesus Christ that we have, we commission you to serve alongside of us as an elder of Mill City Church, as one of God's stewards over his beloved people, sacrificially loving, serving and leading those to whom he has assigned to us for as long as God, in his grace, allow us.
Please come stand here, we're going to lay hands on you, we're going to pray. God, we thank you for this moment, for what it means. We thank you for this man. We pray that you would bless him, that your Holy Spirit would be at work in him to do beyond his ability in loving and forgiving and repenting, that you'd help him to be quick to see his sin, that you'd help him to be quick to offer grace, that you would work through him to enable your Holy Spirit and his giftings to serve your church for as long as you see fit, that you might receive glory. In your name, and in the power of the Holy Spirit, and as we collectively gather as a church who belong to you, we appoint Spencer Carey as an elder in our church family to lead, to serve, to sacrifice, and to love.
And we pray that we collectively would respond well to him, that we collectively would serve well together to see more people come to know you in this city. In Jesus' name we pray. Amen.
That's good. Amen. invite you to in a moment as we stand and sing for you to come down the aisle, for you to take some bread, dip it, and partake in communion as we celebrate that Jesus has covered us, that his blood has redeemed us. If you have a gluten allergy, the metal tins are for you over here. Let's pray and then we'll sing and take communion.
God, we thank you for your grace on us as a church. We pray that you would multiply the efforts of our church in loving, serving, sacrificing, forgiving, and caring for one another and for this city, that you might be given great glory. We love you and we praise you in Jesus name. Amen.