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Passage Matthew 28:1-10

Powerpoint Slides

Sermon Audio

We had loads of "C and E" church-goers last week (Christmas and Easter).  Pretty close to the beginning of the talk I challenge them like this... (Do you think this sort of thing is valid / worthwhile??)

...Now imagine if Jesus had died and stayed dead in that tomb?  You know what would have happened, the women would have come, paid their respects to the memory of Jesus, they’d have gone home and gotten on with their lives without Him.

And if Jesus died and stayed dead, that would be an honourable thing to do!  They could come, pay their respects, remember the good times, remember His teaching and His love, then off home for some DIY on Easter Monday.  And perhaps they’d come back again next year, on the anniversary of His death and pay their respects again.

That would make total sense wouldn’t it… if Jesus had stayed dead.

But if He rose from the dead, then, once these women heard about it, they couldn’t dream of carrying on as normal, could they?  Once they hear that He’s alive, they can’t go back to their old lives.  Once the angel tells them, they need to meet this risen Jesus, don’t they?  Paying respects to a dead teacher has been forgotten, now they’ve just got to meet the risen Christ.

Now perhaps this morning, you’ve come to church, a bit like these women.  It is an honourable thing to do – to pay respects to the dead.  It’s understandable that you want to remember the teaching and the love of Jesus.  It’s admirable that you want to mark the anniversary of His death.

But what if He really did rise?  If He really did rise, it transforms everything.  It means Christianity is not about remembering a dead teacher.  Instead Christianity means knowing a Living Lord.

These women went home from the tomb determined to have a living encounter with the risen Lord Jesus.  Why don’t you make the same resolution this morning?  [I go on to explain about our Christianity Explored courses]...

Full sermon text below...................

...continue reading "Easter Sunday All Age Talk"

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Audio

This passage is the story of two cups.  Easter is the story of two cups.

One cup was offered in the upper room.  The other cup was offered in the Garden of Gethsemane.

One cup Jesus gives to us.  One cup Jesus drinks for Himself

One cup is a cup for the forgiveness of sins.  One cup is a cup of wrath and judgement.

One cup brings life.  One cup brings death.

One cup the bible describes as a cup of blessing.  The other cup is a cup of curse.

But this is the story of Easter – Jesus drank the cup of curses so that we can drink the cup of blessings.  In other words, Easter is all about a wonderful exchange.  That’s how Christians for thousands of years have described it: a wonderful exchange:  Jesus takes the curses that we deserve in order to give us the blessings that only He deserves.  He doesn’t deserve the Garden of Gethsemane.  He doesn’t deserve to drink the cup of curses, but He does.  And we don’t deserve to sit at the Feast with the LORD Almighty.  We don’t deserve to drink the cup of blessings, but we do.  It’s a wonderful exchange.  He takes what we deserve to give us what we don’t deserve.

...continue reading "Two Cups: Matthew 26:17-46 – Maundy Thursday Sermon"

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Sermon audio: Mark 15:21-41

Two thousand years ago, the Apostle Paul said this:

the message of the cross is foolishness to those who are perishing, but to us who are being saved it is the power of God.  (1 Corinthians 1:18)

The cross splits the world.  Either you look at the cross and think – that’s pathetic – or you look and you think – that’s powerful.  It’s either pathetic or powerful.  If you think it’s pathetic, Paul says “you are perishing.”  The way milk perishes and goes off and soon it gets chucked away for good – that’s you if you think the cross is foolish.  But if you think it’s the power of God, you are being saved.  That means you have been plucked from the perishing crowd and set on a one-way street to heaven.  But it’s one or the other.

The cross splits the world.  And tonight we’re going to hear the message of the cross.  If you have not become a Christian, the bible says that right now you are in the perishing camp.  And you need to look again to find salvation.  But you can, tonight, you can look at the cross and say “Wow!  That is the power of God!”  And you can go home saved from your perishing.

And if you are a believer already, you and I need the message of the cross daily.  A few verses later in 1 Corinthians, Paul says “I’m determined to know nothing except Jesus Christ and Him crucified” (1 Cor 2:2).  Christians grow in their faith as they contemplate the cross.  So let’s look at the cross together, and let’s allow Mark’s Gospel to be our guide.

Turn to the beginning of Mark. Have a look at chapter 1, verse 1.  And here’s where we need to begin with the cross.  We need to begin by realizing WHO is hanging on the cross. Who is He?  Mark 1:1

The beginning of the gospel about Jesus Christ, the Son of God.

So who is Jesus?  Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God.  Those are two different titles for Jesus.  Christ means “The One Anointed with the Holy Spirit.”  In Hebrew it’s the word “Messiah.”  In Greek it’s the word “Christos.”  In English we say Christ – but it’s all the same thing.  Christ means, “The One Anointed with the Holy Spirit.”  It means that Jesus is King, because KINGS are anointed.  We usually think about “crowning” a King, but in the bible (and even in the British coronation service) you ANOINT kings.  It means pouring oil on their head.  The oil symbolized the Holy Spirit.  The King would reign in the power of the Spirit.

So Jesus is THE Christ.  THE King.  THE Anointed One.  And it’s not like Jesus has been anointed by mere men.  Even before the universe began, Jesus has been the One anointed with the Holy Spirit. The One filled to overflowing with the Holy Spirit.  The One who has the most intimate and intense relationship with God the Spirit.  That’s what it means that He is the Christ.

And He is also “the Son of God.”  That means He has always called the Almighty God, Daddy.  Before there was a universe, Jesus was always calling God Most High, Daddy.  He’s the eternal Son of the Father.

This is Jesus:  He is the Christ – He has the ULTIMATE relationship with the Spirit.  And He is the Son of God – He has the ULTIME relationship with the Father. Jesus is one of the Trinity.  He is God the Son, loved by God the Father and filled with God the Spirit.  He is God filled by God with God.  He is God filled by God with God – He is the Christ, the Son of God.

Now then, think, who is hanging on the cross?

He is God filled by God with God.  He is the Lord of this world.  He is our Maker.  He is the Author of Life, the Centrepiece of all reality.  And He is nailed to a piece of wood until He dies.

Here is the message of the cross:  Does that sound powerful or does that sound pathetic?

God filled by God with God comes to planet earth.  And we kill Him.  And He lets us.

Does that sound powerful or does that sound pathetic?

God filled by God with God comes to planet earth.  And we kill Him.  And He lets us.

If that’s true then what are we like?  And what is He like?

...continue reading "The Power of the Cross – Mark 15:21-41"

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Readings:  Genesis 2:19-25; Colossians 3:12-19

Opening gag: Pete and Claire it’s my duty to tell you that you are now sat next to the person who is, statistically speaking, most likely to kill you.

Pause for nervous laughter

The bible is all about marriage.  It begins with marriage and it ends with marriage when all Christ’s people are united to Him at a cosmic wedding banquet.  In the middle the bible is always describing our relationship to Christ as a marriage relationship.

Our first reading described the first marriage.  Adam and Eve.  Did you hear how they came together?  The Groom was put down into a death-like sleep, his side was pierced, his bride was formed, he was raised up and they were brought together to become one.

And the ancient commentators would wax lyrical about the formation of Eve:

She was not taken from Adam’s head to be his ruler, nor from his feet to be his servant, but from his side, that she might be his equal, from under his arm, that he might protect her, and from close to his heart that he might love her.

Isn’t that beautiful?  But it’s a picture of Christ and His bride the church.  He went down to death, His side was pierced to form His bride, He was raised up again and when we come to Him in faith – we are united to Jesus, like a bride is united to her husband.

So friends if you’re here this afternoon and you’re not a Christian, let me tell you what Christianity is all about.  You’ve just seen it.  THIS is the heart of the Christian faith.  According to the bible, this shows us the heart of all reality!

Did you hear those vows:

All that I am I give to you
All that I have I share with you.

Of course when Emma and I said those vows to each other there were sniggers in the congregation because effectively we were saying “All my debts I give to you, And all my student loan repayments I share with you.”

But in our marriage to Jesus it’s different.  He doesn’t have any debts, He has only riches.  But we have debts.  We are in over our heads in cosmic debt towards God.  We are trillions in the red.  We have a wealth of badness and a terrible poverty of goodness.  And we all have a bad name.  We have inherited a shameful family name.  “Humphrey” is quite a good name.  In spite of all Jonathan’s trying to do to ruin that name, “Humphrey” is still a decent name.  But our name, inherited from our human family, sullied by all that we’ve done as a race – that name is stained.  We’re in debt and in shame.  But the minute we say “I will” to Jesus, what happens?  We say:

All that I am I give to you
All that I have I share with you.

We give to Jesus all our debts, all our sins, all our shame.  And Jesus takes it.  His name covers over ours – the way Deaves has now covered over Humphrey.  His name covers over ours, and His riches pay off our debts.  He absorbs  our debt, and pays it all off on the cross.

Then Jesus turns to us and says:

All that I am I give to you
All that I have I share with you.

What’s that?  His riches, His righteousness, His honour, His royal status.  He covers over our old name and gives us His name.  And He invites us into His royal family, to share in His royal power and royal inheritance.  And best of all we get HIM.  He gives HIMSELF to us, to enjoy forever.

History is headed towards a cosmic wedding banquet where we will enjoy our marriage union to Christ FOREVER.

That’s Christianity.  And anyone can come to Christ and say “I will” to Him.  And at that moment they come in on the ultimate royal marriage.  Maybe some here would like to do that, or find out more.  Come find me today and we can talk more.

But because of this marriage union to Jesus, our second reading for today is true:

It says that Christians are:

God's chosen people, holy and dearly loved

You might think, how can we be called chosen, holy and dearly loved.  We certainly don’t look it.  And we rarely act like it.  Well, remember the marriage analogy.  Remember our Groom, Jesus – He is choice in God’s eyes, He is holy in God’s sight, He is dearly loved.  And when we are united to Jesus we share in His choiceness, His holiness, His dearly loved-ness.  We’re adopted into the family, we enter the palace and we become the ultimate rags to riches story.

And so our passage goes on, and tells us, now that you’re in the palace, put away the rags and start wearing the royal clothing.  He says:

clothe yourselves with compassion, kindness, humility, gentleness and patience.

What wonderful clothes, every marriage could do with this couldn’t it:  compassion, kindness, humility, gentleness and patience!  It’s the clothing of Christ, isn’t it?  He is compassionate, He is kind, He is humble, He is gentle, He is patient.

And maybe we think, if we just put on this kind of character, our marriages will go fine, right?

Well it couldn’t hurt.  But our passage goes on:

Bear with each other and forgive whatever grievances you may have against one another. Forgive as the Lord forgave you.

Our reading expects there to be grievances, it expects there to be things that feel unbearable, it expects there to be sins that need forgiving.

So, Pete and Claire: the strength of your marriage won’t actually be determined by your nice-ness to each other.  You need to hear that, because you’re some of the nicest people I’ve ever met.  But marriage doesn’t run on nice-ness.  It runs on forgiveness.

A successful marriage is not about your goodness, it’s about how you respond to badness.  And this passage says, “forgive as the Lord forgave you.”

You know when we came to Christ we came in with a trillion pound debt.  And Jesus took it, absorbed it, paid it off, and it’s gone, forgotten, never to be brought up between us again.  Pete and Claire, you’re going to cost each other thousands of pounds worth of hurt.  And sometimes tens of thousands of pounds of hurt.  And maybe at points a million pounds of hurt.  And if you’re just looking at the hurt it’ll be unbearable and you’ll consider it unforgiveable.  But if you look to Jesus, it doesn’t compare with how He has forgiven us.  So may this be your motto, especially when you drive each other crazy: forgive as the Lord forgave you.

And then Paul tells us how Christ’s forgiveness and love will be brought to mind:

Verse 15: Let the peace of Christ rule in your hearts.

Verse 16: Let the word of Christ dwell in your hearts.

Verse 17: Let the name of Christ infuse all your life.

Be Christ-filled people…

And then we come to the specific verses about husbands and wives.

Pete – verse 19 is yours: Love your wife and don’t be harsh with her.

Do you know why that verse is in the bible?  Because A) Jesus is NOT harsh with us.  And B) Husbands ARE harsh with their wives.  And that just can’t be.

Husbands are playing the part of Christ in this whole Christ-and-the-Church picture.  So love Claire the way Christ has loved us.  He is not harsh with us.  He leads in servant-hearted, forgiving, gentle love.  How can husbands be harsh, when Christ is so gentle?  “Love your wife and do not be harsh with her.”

Claire – verse 18 is your verse: “Wives, submit to your husbands, as is fitting in the Lord.”  Pete is laying down his life for you, to lead you in sacrificial service.  Let him.

Pete – love.  Claire – receive that love.  The great heresy in the history of the church has always been a church that doesn’t receive the love of Christ but tries to earn and perform and do and work and get busy for God.  It’s heresy.

And if the great temptation for men is to be a false Christ and shrink back from responsibility, shrink back from service, to never get off our backsides and love – the great temptation for women is never to rest in love.

CS Lewis once said the best marriage prep would be to put a couple in a chaotic kitchen together.  The pot’s boiling over, the toast is burning, the cats are nibbling at the plates.  Here’s the challenge:  the woman has to sit down and do nothing.  And the man has to jump up and sort it out.  The man has to not be harsh.  And the woman has to submit.  How counter-cultural, how counter-intuitive!  But that’s Christian marriage.

Husbands – love.  Wives – submit to that love.

And then you’ll have a marriage that bucks all the stereotypes.  Our culture rightly despises the caricature of marriage where husbands are cruel or cowardly and women are clamouring or closed.  Not so with you.  The world will look on and ask – why is your marriage so different to the stereotype.  And you can answer – Let me tell you about our riches in Christ.  Let me tell you about the ultimate marriage.  Because of His love – that’s how we manage it.

 

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Sermon Audio

In America there’s a ridge running up and down the Rocky Mountains – it’s called the Continental Divide.  Any water that falls on this ridge has to go one way or the other.  A raindrop may fall on this ridge and if it trickles to the west it ends up in the Pacific Ocean.  The next drop may fall on that very same place and trickle off to the east.  It will end up in the Atlantic Ocean.  Consecutive drops of water will fall on same ridge, but eventually thousands of miles will separate them.

That’s what the cross does to the whole human race.  We are all divided into only two camps heading to only two destinations.

Verse 18 speaks of two kinds of person: there are “those who are perishing”, and there are “those who are being saved.”  The whole human race divides into the perishing and the saved.  This room divides into the perishing and the saved.

...continue reading "1 Corinthians 1:18-31 sermon"

Luke 15 bears a thousand ruminations...

Sinners run hard from a Heavenly Slave-Driver.
Slaves run hard for a Heavenly Slave-Driver.
Sons run happily towards a Heavenly Father.

Sinners are strangers to God in the far country.
Slaves are strangers to God in the field.
Sons are sinners in the Father’s arms.

Sinners seek freedom yet find deeper slavery.
Slaves seek righteousness yet find deeper sin.
Sons seek Christ and find both freedom and righteousness.

Sinners are wretched in their rebellion.
Slaves are wretched in their righteousness.
Sons are wretches, wrapped in His robes.

Two older sermons:

The younger son

The older son

Sermon Audio

Do you ever worry that you’re not a proper Christian?  Do you fear you might not be a child of God after all?

Do you ever struggle to pray?

Do you worry about friends who are caught in certain sins?

Do you wonder what to do about those who once said they were Christians and now they’re speaking against Christ?

Do you ever find your heart wandering from Christ, and falling for other things?

John is going to address all these questions as he concludes his letter.  And his answer to all these questions is to bring us back to Jesus.  If Jesus is at the heart of our thinking then we’ll be able to handle these question.

...continue reading "1 John 5:13-21 sermon"

Sermon Audio

Where is this world headed?  This weekend we’ve seen the power of the natural world.  Tectonic plates shift and millions are affected.  Earthquakes, Fires, Tsunamis, Explosions, threatened nuclear melt-down.  It all reminds us that planet earth is not a safe place to make your home.

If the earthquake doesn’t get you, maybe the tsunami will.  If not the tsunami maybe radioactive contamination.  Or further afield, maybe a cyclone or a bushfire or a drought or a volcano.  Or something less spectacular – a car accident or a virus or cancer.  One way or another this world will be the death of us.  Whether in Japan or here, disaster and decay surround us.

So where is this world headed?  Could it possibly be headed anywhere good if buildings can collapse in a heart-beat and walls of water can sweep away cities?

Will chaos have the last word?  Will death have the last word?  Whether quickly or slowly, won’t we all get swept away in the end?

When you watch a devastating tidal wave sweep buildings and cars and people into oblivion, how can we have any hope in a happy ending for this world?  Aren’t those images just a picture of our own lives?  Won’t chaos catch up with us all?  Surely death will have the last word.

There’s a verse in Psalm 29 that says:

The LORD sits enthroned over the flood; the LORD is enthroned as King for ever. (v10)

Surely this weekend disproved that.  Surely the flood is king, not the LORD.  Chaos rules.  Not God.  The highest power is not the LORD, it’s death.

Well if we say that, we cheapen the deaths of those who have perished this weekend.  Because if this world is ultimately ruled by natural forces then nothing tragic has happened.  One tectonic plate has grinded against another and one building has collapsed onto another and hundreds or thousands of hearts have stopped beating.  If the LORD is not enthroned over the flood then impersonal forces are god.  And all that’s happened is that one force has impacted on another.  And the fact that a tidal wave crashed into a school is no different to it crashing into a rock.

No, see it won’t help to give up on God.  Not only will it not solve the tragedy, it won’t allow you to call it a tragedy.  Without God this is just “stuff that happens” while we all decay on the cosmic compost heap.  No, giving up on God won’t help.

So what about listening to the One who is God.  The One who came into this world, who knows our sufferings and who’s taken them for us.   What does Jesus say about such tragedies?

In Mark 13, Jesus calls earth-quakes: “birth pains.”  (v8)  Not “death throes”.  “Birth pains.”  Oh they’re painful alright.  They are beyond tragic.  Our hearts go out and we pray and give towards the relief efforts.  But they are not simply pains.  They are birth pains.

See, Jesus doesn’t think the world is headed for the compost heap.  He doesn’t think that earthquakes are death throes.  He sees a joyful future for the world.  New birth for creation.  That’s not to minimize the pain of this tragedy.  It’s to open our eyes to the colossal hope which Jesus Christ brings to the world.

Even in the face of earth-quakes, Jesus says this world is heading for rest, for perfection, for Sabbath.

Sabbath was the seventh day of creation.  In the beginning, the LORD created the heavens and the earth.  For six days He worked, He divided light from darkness, and waters from dry land.  He laboured to make the world very good.  And He finished His work on the sixth day so that He could rest on the seventh – the Sabbath.

He was setting up a profound pattern.  God’s world is heading towards rest.  It’s heading towards perfection – seven is a number of completeness.

And the week preaches to us God’s purposes for the world.  God is working all things towards perfection.  There will be labour pains, groaning and toil in this life, but then there’s rest.  After all the disorder and chaos of the world, there is rest.  The world is headed for a cosmic Sabbath.

And so in the Old Testament, God told His people to enter into the spirit of Sabbath.  The Israelites were told to do all their work in six days and rest on the seventh.  So written into their calendar would be this hope-filled pattern that preached to them.  Every week they were reminded that toil and pain and labour will give way to perfect rest.

Sabbath is a beautiful thing.  It preached that God would remake the world – God would bring rest.

But here’s what happened?  People turned Sabbath on its head.  It was supposed to be God showing them His goodness.  They made it an occasion to show God their goodness.

The religious types among them were going to keep Sabbath.  And I mean REALLY keep Sabbath.  Over the years they developed more and more things they refused to do on Saturday.  They weren’t in the bible, they were rules they made up to show God and the world just how obedient they were.

And over the next thousand years it got seriously twisted.  How twisted?  Just have a read of Luke 6.  Verse 1:

One Sabbath Jesus was going through the cornfields, and his disciples began to pick some ears of corn, rub them in their hands and eat the grain. 2 Some of the Pharisees asked, "Why are you doing what is unlawful on the Sabbath?"

So here are the Pharisees – these are the arch-religious do-gooders.  And my question here is: Where did they come from?  Were they lurking in the field?  Hiding behind a hay-stack?  It’s like that Monty Python sketch: “No-one expects the Spanish Inquisition!”

You can picture them can’t you, these moral policemen in their flowing robes.  Binoculars.  Clip-board and pen.  Frowning madly:

“Why are you doing what is unlawful on the Sabbath?”

Now they weren’t upset because the disciples were picking grain in someone else’s field.  That’s not unlawful.  In fact there’s a verse in Deuteronomy 23 that says, if you’re walking through a field, you can help yourself along the way.  I’ll read it to you.

25 If you go into your neighbor's standing grain, you may pluck the ears with your hand, but you shall not put a sickle to your neighbor's standing grain.

That’s a good law isn’t it?  You can grab a handful of grain or seeds or whatever.  But if you take a sickle, you’re taking the mickle.  That’s the law.

And it’s a good verse to have to hand next time you’re in Asda and want to sample the grapes isn’t it?  Break out Deuteronomy 23 next time you’re in the fruit and veg section!  “Read it and weep.”  Or “Read it and reap” if you like.

So picking the grain was lawful.  But what was unlawful, according to the Pharisees, was doing it on the Sabbath.

You see, according to these moral policemen.  This is work.  They were harvesting: first plucking is reaping, then rubbing it in their hands is threshing, and throwing away the husks is presumably winnowing!  It’s work!  Now the bible never outlaws this.  It never even comes close to it.  But the Pharisees are adamant:  Jesus, you are presiding over Sabbath-breaking, how could you!?

How would you respond to these idiots?  I love Jesus’ response

3 Jesus answered them, "Have you never read [the bible]

Isn’t that great?  He’s dealing with men who think they’re spiritual heavy-weights and Jesus says “You might want to check out the bible some time.  I’m guessing you’ve never read it because you seem to be completely biblically illiterate to me.”

I love that…

“Have you never read what David did when he and his companions were hungry?  4 He entered the house of God, and taking the consecrated bread, he ate what is lawful only for priests to eat. And he also gave some to his companions."

This is the incident that Ian read out to us from the Old Testament.  It happened in 1 Samuel chapter 21.  And it’s brilliantly illuminating actually.  Let me give you the context:

King David had been anointed by God as the true King of Israel.  But, King Saul was the one who sat on the throne and who everyone looked to.  Now Saul and his men were hunting down and trying to kill David.  So David is on the run along with his companions – guys called “mighty men.”

So there’s David, the true King of Israel, but people don’t acknowledge him and the authorities are trying to kill him.  He and his companions are hungry and they go to the temple.  The priest gives Jesus the holy bread that only priests are meant to eat.

It’s this acknowledgement that David is a very special guy.  Not only is he kingly, he’s also priestly.  David is very much like the Christ who would be descended from him.  And so David has this special bread and gave it to his companions.

So this story is very appropriate.  Because Jesus is exactly like David.  He is the true King of the world, but not acknowledged to be so.  He’s running around with these companions – the mighty men.  And the Pharisees?  Who are the Pharisees here?  They are the enemy, they are like Saul’s men, hunting down God’s True Anointed King!

This is a devastating Scripture for Jesus to wheel out.  And while they’re reeling from it, Jesus delivers the death blow.  Verse 5:

5 Then Jesus said to them, "The Son of Man is Lord of the Sabbath."

This is awesome.  He might as well say “I AM the Law!”  I don’t bow to the law, the law bows to me.  Because I am LORD of the Sabbath.  Now when was the Sabbath instituted?  From the beginning!  The Pharisees were treating Jesus like some Jonny-come-lately rule-breaker.  Jesus is saying, “Don’t give me that.  I was in on the ground-floor of Sabbath.  I am the LORD who instituted the Sabbath.  I am the Creator of Genesis chapter 1 – the Eternal Word of the Father, the Lord, the Son of Man.”

Which means Jesus is not just the author of this law.  He’s the author of the universe.

The Pharisees have no answer to this.  They are utterly silenced by Jesus.  And they have to regroup for another assault on Him.  So they wait for another Sabbath (because they’re obsessed).

So, verse 6:

6 On another Sabbath Jesus went into the synagogue and was teaching, and a man was there whose right hand was shrivelled.  7 The Pharisees and the teachers of the law were looking for a reason to accuse Jesus, so they watched him closely to see if he would heal on the Sabbath.

So here are the Pharisees again and you might think there’s some hope for them because they’re in the synagogue.  But they’re not there to worship God.  They’re not there to listen to His word.  They’re certainly not there to help this disabled man.  Why are they there?  To accuse Jesus!  To catch out and accuse the LORD of the Sabbath.

They seem sure Jesus will heal a man.  I wonder if even the disciples had that much faith.  They seemed to know that Jesus would heal – they’d obviously seen His powers many times before.  But instead of saying “Wow, Jesus calls Himself LORD and acts with all the power of the LORD, maybe He IS the LORD.”  Instead of concluding, “Hmm, I wonder if Jesus is the LORD God!?” All they can think of is their precious rules.  And whether the LORD might break them.

So there they are in the synagogue, just waiting to be infuriated by a miracle.  Isn’t this ridiculous?

And of course you have to ask, How restful do they find their Sabbaths really!!?  With their binoculars and clipboards, and their constant frowning – isn’t that the most exhausting work actually?  It seems to me that all this moral policing is incredibly taxing, and yet they do it all in the name of Sabbath rest.

But friends, before we dismiss them, how are we like them?  Because there are real temptations for us in this direction.  Rules and rule keeping is tempting, because rules keep score.  And they show everyone that I’m better, and you’re worse.  They help you justify yourself.

Rules can make you feel better about yourself – at least when you keep them anyway.  But if you buy into rules they will end up ruling you.  You will find your identity in keeping them and suddenly they will become more important than anything.

Think of these Pharisees in that synagogue.  They were surrounded by such important things that should have had priority.  They were in a house of worship, they were listening to the word of God, there was a real hurting person in their midst and there was God in the flesh about to unleash the powers of heaven.  But they completely failed to respond to the needs around them appropriately.  All they could see was their little rules, and horror of horrors, they were about to be broken.

Are you convicted by this?  Maybe the Holy Spirit is convicting you of moralistic rule-keeping.  Our rule-keeping ways usually go unnoticed but occasionally we’ll get caught out when we encounter someone in need, like this man with a withered hand.  Perhaps we’ve failed to meet someone’s need. We’ll think “Gosh, I should have gone to visit that person, or I should have been a lot more compassionate when they told me their problems.”  That’s usually a good sign that there’s some rule-keeping going on there that’s keeping us from the real needs.

These Pharisees are just extreme examples of what can happen to anyone if you try to prove yourself through rule-keeping.  Rules become rulers and you get closed down to the real needs around you.  But Jesus stands opposed to that kind of living.  Verse 8:

8 But Jesus knew what they were thinking and said to the man with the shrivelled hand, "Get up and stand in front of everyone." So he got up and stood there. 9 Then Jesus said to them, "I ask you, which is lawful on the Sabbath: to do good or to do evil, to save life or to destroy it?"

Don’t you love that Jesus asks this as a question?  If He just said “It’s more lawful to do good.” It wouldn’t have the same power to expose their hearts.  No He puts the ball firmly in their court and He wants an answer.  So verse 10

10 He looked round at them all,

Whoah.  How long did that take?  Let’s say there were the same number as are here this morning – there were probably more.  But how long would it take for Jesus to look at each and every worshipper in the synagogue.  What do you think?  Is it lawful to do good or evil?  What a moment!

There’s just no answering Jesus.  So Jesus turns to the man

and then said to the man, "Stretch out your hand."

Isn’t that a strange thing to say to a man with a withered hand?  He can’t stretch out his hand Jesus – that’s the problem.  Ah, but the word of Jesus is very different to the word of the Pharisees.

Think about the commands of the Pharisees.  The Pharisees had hundreds of little commands that mapped out what you should and shouldn’t do.  They had all sorts of rules for rest.

But their commands didn’t bring rest.  They just told you how you should go about getting rest.

Jesus’ word is different.  His word actually brings restoration.  He doesn’t give us a 12-step plan for life.  He gives us life.  He doesn’t communicate rules for rest.  He communicates rest itself.  There is a divine, creative power to the word of Jesus.  So He says “Stretch out your hand”

he did so, and his hand was completely restored.

Here is the LORD of the Sabbath in action.  Here’s what Sabbath is all about. Here we see the work of RESTORATION.  That day it was a hand.  One day it’ll be all creation.  COMPLETELY RESTORED.  Here in the synagogue is a token of His cosmic powers of restoration.  A miracle.  A completely appropriate Sabbath miracle.  Surely this miracle will change the hearts and minds of the Pharisees.  Wouldn’t you think?

I’m always hearing people say, “I’d believe if only I saw a miracle.”

Really?

Let’s see how they reacted in verse 11:

11 But they were furious and began to discuss with one another what they might do to Jesus.

How chilling.  These are church-going people (if you like).  Synagogue worshippers.  They are religious, very religious.  Moral, very moral. Bible-students who knew about the power of God.  But when they SEE the power of God up close and personal they are FILLED with FURY.

Jesus must die.  Why?  He healed someone.  On the Sabbath.  He broke our rules.  He’ll have to pay.

And by the end of Luke these Pharisees get their way.  Jesus dies not at the hands of an angry pagan rabble.  Jesus dies not at the hands of mobsters.  He dies at the hands of moralists.  He dies at the hands of these guys with the clip-boards and the binoculars.  The most religious, ethical and upstanding members of society killed the Lord of Glory.

What a reception for Jesus!  He comes to bring life and peace and restoration to the world, and what does He get for His efforts?  Death.

But here’s the irony.  Through that death He would bring life.  Through His work on the cross, He would bring rest.

You see Jesus would be killed on a Friday – the sixth day.  And He got His work done before nightfall.  With evening coming and the Sabbath closing in, He cried out from the cross, “It is finished.” (John 19:30).  You see Jesus was taking all that is broken and cursed in this world and summed it up Himself.  The LORD of this world, took its pain and suffering and sin to Himself to put it all to death.

You know the earthquake and tsunami – they disprove a lot of gods.  Suffering disproves a lot of gods.  But not this God.  Not the true God – the One who suffers.  He enters in.  He knows it from the inside.  And He suffers Hell to brings us through to perfection.  He’s not just enthroned over the flood.  He knows what it is to get swept away too.

But it’s by entering INTO that chaos and death that Jesus will bring us ultimately to perfection.  And He accomplishes this cross-work on the sixth day.  Therefore He rested on that holy Saturday.  He took the ultimate Sabbath rest in the grave.

And then wonderfully, on the next day, He rose up into a whole new week – a whole new world!

And He offers His new life to all.  Now we can know spiritual rebirth today.  And when He comes again He will RESTORE the whole world.  Just as this man’s hand was restored, just as Christ Himself was restored from death, one day heaven and earth will be restored.

Where is this world heading?  Not the rubbish dump.  We are heading for perfection.  For COMPLETE RESTORATION.  We’re heading for Sabbath when Jesus gives the whole world new birth.

But how do we come in on this perfect future?  Not like the Pharisees.  Not through our efforts.  Not through our stupid little rules.  Not through our rituals.  Not through our obedience.  Not through our work.  Through His work.  Through His obedience.  Through His efforts.  Through His cross and resurrection.

We get life through His death and rest through His work.

So Jesus is calling us out from the Pharisees, just like the man in this story.  He calls us out of our self-righteous rule-keeping, and to stand with Jesus instead.  We don’t work towards life and peace.  It’s a gift, purchased by HIS work.  So now hear the words of Jesus:

28 "Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest. 29 Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. 30 For my yoke is easy and my burden is light."  (Matthew 11:28-30)

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