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Other Ecclesiastes Posts:

The Teacher is not an Atheist - he's a crummy christ

"Vanity of vanities"

"Nothing new under the sun."

"To everything there is a season"

"Eat drink and be merry"

"A fly in the ointment"

"A little bird told me"

"Cast thy bread on many waters"

"Of making many books there is no end"

"Two are better than one"

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Meaningless, meaningless, utterly meaningless, everything is meaningless.

That’s quite an opening to a book.  Especially a book in the bible.  Aren’t you supposed to open up the bible and find little nuggets of timeless truth?  Isn’t that how the bible works?

I have a friend who works for Gideons – they’re the people who put bibles in hotel rooms all over the world.  He has story after story of people alone in their hotel rooms who intend to commit suicide (hotel rooms are popular places to commit suicide) but they pick up a Gideon’s bible, randomly open up and something leaps off the page and they see Christ and that He loves them and they’re saved.  But I hope no depressed person ever randomly opens up to Ecclesiastes to find encouragement. Can you imagine opening up chapter 1:

The words of the Teacher, son of David, king of Jerusalem:

Oh this ought to be good.  He’s a teacher and a king, he sounds like he knows a thing or two:

"Meaningless! Meaningless! Utterly meaningless! Everything is meaningless."

It’s such a strong opening you’re knocked to the floor before the book’s even got going.  The teacher hits you with four punches to the stomach, each harder than the last.  First the teacher says “Meaningless.” And you can imagine someone like his wife at a dinner party, “Now dear, don’t go off on one, you don’t mean to say meaningless.”  And the teacher says it again “Meaningless!” – the second punch. And then his wife says “Come on now darling, life’s not completely meaningless, what about...”  And then he cuts her off again “Utterly meaningless.”  The wife tries one last time, “But darling surely some things are meaningful.”  And the teacher says “EVERYTHING is meaningless.”

"Meaningless! Meaningless! Utterly meaningless! Everything is meaningless."

Life is emphatically, absolutely and entirely meaningless.

...continue reading "Ecclesiastes 1 – Sermon"

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Sermon Audio

What consolation do we offer suffering people?

Worse things happen at sea?  Count your blessings?  Lightning doesn't strike twice?  At least you're not being shredded by industrial machinery and flung into an acid bath?

God's got a plan?  Gotta keep trusting?

Here's my favourite:  “Nothing a resurrection won’t fix.”  Now that’s consolation.

Job is the story of man.  Therefore it's also a story of terrible suffering (and of terrible human comfort).  But in the end we learn that there's nothing a resurrection won't fix.

Job 1 – Wooded Place, East, Upright Man, Animals, Satan ruins everything.
Remind you of anything?

Satan’s place: Planet earth
Satan’s premise: People only love God if they’re paid.
Satan’s power: Under God’s. The leash is as long as the LORD decides.

But upright man prevails and Satan's premise is (for once!) proved untrue.

Job 2 – Not just wealth and family, health too. Here come the “Friends”.

Their silence is the best thing they offer.
The trouble comes when they open their mouths.

Job 3:1-5 – How would you summarize? "I wish I was dead." That’s not sinful!

Burden of Job’s speeches: I really am upright, I really am suffering!
There is such a thing as innocent suffering.
Bad things really do happen to good people just as good things happen to bad people.

Job 4:7-9 How would you summarize? "What goes around comes around!"

We all fall into this fleshly way of thinking.  We like to imagine we’re safe if we do good.  In fact most of our goodness is simply suffering-insurance.  That's why innocent suffering offends us so much.

Job 8:1-6 Summarize?

Job 11:13. Summarize?

 Job 12:1! Sarcasm is great!  16:1-3; 26:1-4

Job 16:16-21 In the midst of suffering we need to know our Witness; Advocate; Intercessor; Friend!

Job 19:17-27: Redeemer; Earth; Flesh; See.

Job 38:1-11,19-21: The LORD shows up!  Not with a cup of tea and a shoulder to cry on!

Whirlwind!  He humbles Job, makes him see: We can’t weigh it up. We can’t play God:

Job 42:1-6: Job never gets an answer to his why questions (he asks 20 times).

We are simply not in a position to do suffering calculus.  We should leave it to the LORD

Job doesn't get a neat answer.  Instead he gets an experience of the LORD and he gets resurrection!
That's what we really need!

Job 42:7-9 Notice Job's title: "Servant". Prays for friends, makes sacrifice, accepted.  Remind you of anyone?

This really is the story of man, taken down through Satan into suffering and death, but raised up again through the righteous Servant of the LORD.

Have you been prayed for by Jesus?  Have you claimed His sacrifice for your own?

Job 42:10-17 Twice the original. Not just Eden regained – the world glorified.

Redemption - Jemima: Sunshine. Kezia (Cassia): aromatic. Keren-Hapuch: little makeup box.

There's nothing a resurrection won't fix!

 

 

 

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Sermon Audio

Powerpoint

We love to judge.

George Carlin once noted a universal rule of the road: Everyone who drives slower than you is an idiot.  And everyone who drives faster is a maniac.

To the speeding driver, everyone’s an idiot.  To the slow driver, everyone’s a maniac. But one rule applies to all:  My speed is just right.

Two weeks ago the BBC, CNN, the Daily Mail, The Telegraph and many other news sites and blogs have reported a hoax as fact. The hoax was this: Internet Explorer users are less intelligent than those using other web browsers.

It is a lie that has spread like wildfire despite the thinnest of fabricated “evidence” produced by a website cobbled together in the last month. Why did this lie find such instant and universal acceptance (amongst the web-savvy anyway)? Because we love to judge.

David Cameron shortly after the riots said that pockets of our society are not just broken but sick.  Pockets?

Rioters; Politicians; Police; Media

We feel superior, but you know what they say?  When you point the finger at others, you have three fingers pointing back.

Jesus says:

37 "Do not judge, and you will not be judged. Do not condemn, and you will not be condemned. Forgive, and you will be forgiven. 38 Give, and it will be given to you. A good measure, pressed down, shaken together and running over, will be poured into your lap. For with the measure you use, it will be measured to you."

Jesus says there’s two realities you can buy into.  Either Judgement and condemnation; or Giving and forgiving.

Jesus tells us the currency that God deals in.  Verse 36:

36 Be merciful, just as your Father is merciful.  (Luke 6:36)

He is in the forgiveness game.  What game are we in?

...continue reading "Getting out of the blame game: A sermon on Luke 6:37-42"

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Here's my Acts 6:1-7 sermon audio.

But this two and a half minute video from Walter Brueggemann says what my sermon says far better and more concisely.

My sermon text is below...

...continue reading "Acts 6:1-7 sermon (and Walter Brueggemann video)"

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To be preached in the open air on Saturday (hopefully there'll be thousands coming past). I'll have a board with the visuals to be velcroed up as we go...

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"Not just broken but sick."

That's what David Cameron said.  And he meant those dreadful rioters

Maybe he's right, do you think?  Though perhaps he should have looked behind him when he was making the statement:

And so the politicians point the finger at "parts of our society" that are sick.

He said:

“It is a complete lack of responsibility in parts of our society, people allowed to think that the world owes them something, that their rights outweigh their responsibilities, and that their actions do not have consequences.”

Of course 18 months ago MPs were ordered to repay over a million pounds in falsely claimed expenses.  Between just 650 MPs that’s quite a lot, isn't it?

As just one example, this man Gerald Kaufman broke parliamentary rules to get £8000 worth of flat screen TV and home entertainment system.

He didn’t wear a hoodie, break a window and carry it out under his arm though.  He just fiddled his expenses is all.  But, like hundreds of other MPs , he thought the world owed him something and that there'd be no consequences and so he did a smash and grab with his expenses form.

Who can we trust then?  Perhaps we trust our police to catch the bad guys?

I'm sure the vast majority do a good job but in the last 6 weeks, 2 of the senior Met Police have had to resign in disgrace amidst allegations of widespread corruption in the force.


And how do we know all this?  The media.  Well at least we can trust the media, right?

Ok so those are the bad people right?  There's sick Britain: Rioters, Politicians, Police and Media.  But do you notice something about them all?  They're all blaming each other [draw arrows between them all].

Everyone's blaming everyone else.

And we're blaming them.

Are we the only ones who are healthy?

Maybe we are the one section of society that's not sick.  Maybe we're alright.  Do you think?

Maybe we're part of the solution.  Maybe we've even picked up a broom and joined the clean up!

Sure, good idea.  Clean up the streets, but I tell you, you’re not cleaning up your heart.

I can sweep the streets, but even as I do it I have the same sickness inside me.  And it’ll take more than a broom to sweep me clean.

Friends, the bible says you're the same.  We're all the same.  The problem is not with them over there.  It's not those people who are sick.  We're all sick.

You  and I are well capable of the same violence and greed and corruption as all these people - even as we denounce them!  That is the nature of the human heart.

Let me ask you:

WHAT WOULD YOU DO IF YOU THOUGHT THERE WOULD BE NO CONSEQUENCES?

The rioters don't feel like they'll be brought to justice.  Neither did the corrupt media, police or politicians.  They have strength in numbers and feel anonymous, but what about you?  What would you do under the cover of anonymity?  What would you do if all around you thought it was ok and there’d be no punishment?

Maybe you wouldn’t steal a TV or set a shop on fire, maybe you’d cheat on your partner or cheat on your tax return.  If you thought there’d be no consequences, what would you do?

Maybe you wouldn’t run down the streets with weapons, maybe you’d just run from your responsibilities, from your family and friends who need you.  Maybe you’d just run into drugs and alcohol cos it’s safe there.  Maybe you wouldn’t loot, you’d only rob someone of their reputation.  You wouldn’t start a fire, you’d only set a blaze of gossip going.  Maybe you’d only do violence to your enemies in your heart.  Maybe you'd be consumed with anger and bitterness on the inside.  Maybe you’d just content yourself with feeling superior to the nasty people over there – all the while your heart is just as sick.

Not just broken, sick.

Let me tell you a shocking truth: It's good to admit that you're sick.  It's good, because Jesus did not come for the righteous, He came for the riotous!

Jesus once walked up to a man who did more than fiddle his expenses, more than take bribes, he was a nasty white collar criminal called Matthew and he was a traitor to his people the Jews.  He was hated.  He was scum.  And Jesus walked up to him and said “Follow me.”  Instantly Jesus took him on and Matthew became one of the 12 disciples, he even wrote a book of the bible – The Gospel of Matthew.

What is Jesus like?  How does he respond to a sick society?

Well that night Matthew threw a party so that all his mates could meet Jesus.  And what kind of mates do you think Matthew had?  Criminals, scumbags, sinners.  The lowest of the low came.  Some were rich, others were poor, but all of them were considered “Not just broken, but sick.”

I wonder what you think about Jesus, the Son of God, hanging out with such low-lives.

Let me tell you something shocking, if Jesus came today He wouldn't spend His time with the righteous but with the riotous.  How do you feel about that?

Well in Jesus' day some people got very angry.  They gate-crashed the party and told Jesus He really mustn't associate with sick sinners like these. Do you know what Jesus said?

“It’s not the healthy who need a doctor but the sick.  I have not come to call the righteous but sinners.”

Jesus is like a doctor.

Who here goes to their doctor and says “I’m a picture of perfect health, I thought you’d be impressed”?  Doctors are not impressed by that, doctors are for sick people and Jesus is for sinners.  Only sinners.

Are you a sinner?  Are you sick?  Spiritually sick?  Sick at heart?  I am.  I’m not just broken, I’m sick.  I have violence in my heart, I have greed in my heart, I have lust and anger and hypocrisy and jealousy and selfishness deep in my heart.  And those rioters with alcohol and peer-pressure and a lack of consequences – you know what they are?  They’re me with the hand-brake off.

I’m sick.  Are you?  I’m a sinner.  Are you?

Maybe you were offended when I said that Jesus did not come for the righteous but for the riotous.  If you were offended it's because you don't think of yourself as riotous.  But the Bible says our hearts are full of anger, rage and malice.  Can you admit that, deep down, you're not righteous, you're riotous?

Jesus is the Doctor for the sick.  Only for the sick.  Don’t spend your time pointing the finger at others.  Don’t spend your time thinking, thank goodness I’m not like those bad people.  Don’t pick up a broom if you think that by it you can clean yourself up.  Confess your sickness: “Jesus I am sick, heal me.”

Jesus is a Doctor for sick sinners. He did not come into this world to congratulate the healthy, He did not come to condemn the sick.  He came to heal the sick - that's what a Doctor does.

He did it by taking our spiritual sickness into Himself.  He deliberately contracted our terminal illness.  On the cross he died the death of sick looters, sick politicians, sick policemen, sick journalists, sick hypocrites, sick me and sick you.  That's how much He is for the sick.  Then He rose up again and offers to meet you in your sickness – not with condemnation but with healing.

And that’s the only power to change rioters, and politicians and police and the media and you and me.

I’m not just broken, I'm sick.  Thank God there’s a Doctor!  Call out to Him now to receive His care.  And take this Gospel from me to read about Jesus who came for the sick.

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Here are all 12 of Mike Reeves' "Great Theologians" - from the 2nd century to the 19th.

Lots of great sermons from Mockingbird - Anglican-y, Lutheran-y, pastorally sensitive, engaging with culture, what's not to like.

Stunning sermon (text) by Jason Goroncy on Matthew 15.

Jeremiah 39 and Jude 1 (now updated) by Rich Owen.

2 Corinthians 4 by Dev Menon.

And don't forget Paul Blackham's Jesus talks here.

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Sermon Audio on Matthew 3:1-17

There are many frustrations involved in being an Australian cricket fan in this country.  Many more in recent years!  But one of the biggest frustrations is the fact that in the middle of an international test series to decide the number one team in the world, the sports news in this country seems more concerned about the off-season exploits of club football.  Why?  Transfer deals.  Every club wants to find a man who will turn their fortunes around.  They scour the world trying to find the man who will bring them glory, who will lift the trophies, who will win them the silverware.  And they pay millions of pounds to secure this man.

But of course it’s a myth.  There isn’t one footballer who can really do all that.  But football fans pretend and hope against hope and spend ludicrous amounts of money, and take up all the column inches in the newspapers.

It’s a myth that one man can turn it all around, but imagine it works.  Imagine they discover the man who will raise the club to fresh heights.  He scores in every game, he takes them to the FA Cup final, he scores the winning goal in the dying seconds of the match.  And you’re there in the crowd.  And all season – even pre-season – he’s been your man, you’ve always trusted in him, you’ve always believed that he would be the one.  And you’re there in the crowd and everyone is going crazy, and he runs to the sideline, right where you are, and lifts his arms and makes a gesture like “This is for you.”  And you’re bellowing you celebrations to him, and you’re hugging total strangers, but you’re all on the same team, you’re all united IN the one man.  You are united TO your champion.  His victory is your victory, and you celebrate as though you had scored the winning goal.  You haven’t scored the winning goal.   You haven’t expended a calorie of effort in the victory, but your man has done it and you share in his glory.

That’s how Christians feel about Jesus.  He is the one man, the one man who comes to reverse our fortunes, the one man who steps forward to defeat all the powers we could never defeat.  The one man who wins victory and then shares His victory with we who believe in Him.  He is our Champion, and we need to understand that about Jesus.

...continue reading "Christ our Champion – Sermon on Matthew 3"

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Sermon Audio

When I lived in London, one of the things I loved to do on a Sunday was visit Speaker’s Corner.  Every Sunday at Speaker’s Corner you have the right to go and proclaim whatever you want to proclaim about – could be true, could be a pack of lies, doesn’t matter – as long as you are 6 inches off the ground you have total freedom of speech and you can just let fly.  So naturally enough this attracts any number of religious nutters – like me – and you can wander the length of Speakers Corner and listen to pretty much every religion under the sun.

On a sunny day the speakers will get up on their soapbox and point to the wonder of creation and say – “Look what the God Ram has done.”  A few metres down – “Look what Allah has created.”  A few metres down – “look what I have made.”  Everyone’s looking at the same sun shining on the same blades of grass, listening to the same birds.  And yet it seems there are as many gods and spiritualities and philosophies as there are people.

Why don’t we all have a clear picture of God?  And why isn’t everyone’s the same?  What do we make of all these religions in the world?  And where does Christianity fit in?

Well I wonder how you answered our first question: “What do you picture when you think of God?”

I imagine we have as many answers to that question as we have people here this morning.  That’s a very question.  And if you look at verse 15 of our passage you’ll see why it’s difficult to picture God.  Do you see v15.  Why’s it difficult to picture God?  He’s invisible.

And that’s not just a conceptual difficulty.  It’s not just that He’d be a difficult Pictionary clue.  In the Bible – seeing God is caught up with the idea of knowing Him.  To see Him is to know Him and to be known by Him.

And the bible says we don’t know God.  We just don’t.  Everyone talks about God.  Most people believe in God.  Billions pray to God.  The trouble is we don’t know God. ...continue reading "Why Bother With Christianity? Sermon on Colossians 1:15-23"

I'd downloaded Dev's sermon on addiction last week, but I finally listened to it last night.  Wonderful!

The church of God is not a gathering of the self-righteous, but the gathering of the broken well diggers around the Fountain of Life-Giving Waters. We are a community of grace, where mistakes are understood for what they are, because we are addicts too, addicts in rehabilitation. Together we fight the battle to stand firm in the grace of Jesus Christ, in the love of God, in the fellowship of the Holy Spirit – together we fight the battle against unbelief. We use every resource God has given us to proclaim the desirability, the beauty of Jesus to one another – that we may see Him, believe in Him and remain in the Light.

Read (or listen to) the whole thing.

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