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Preached this last night at Carols by Candlelight.  (audio here)

Lots of kids (there was a nativity).  Readings were Matthew 2:1-12 (the Magi) and Philippians 2:5-11.

I think I managed to say at one point "There was never a time when Jesus and His Father existed."  Be assured I'm not a oneness Pentecostal.  I meant to say there was never a time when they didn't exist.  Hope people understood!

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Christmas is weird.  Do you ever think how weird Christmas is?

Wise men come from the east to see the Baby Jesus.  And what do you do when you see a baby? 

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You say "A-wooga-booga-booga-booga, who's a beautiful brown eyed boy?"  That's what you do when you see a newborn baby.  But these wise men - you know what they did?  They got flat on their faces in the middle of a stable and worshipped a baby!

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Wise men worshipping a baby.  WISE men. Dignified men.  Important men.  Intelligent men.  Bowing down to a baby who was wriggling around in a feeding trough.  Did you know that's what a manger is? 

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A manger is a feeding trough that cows and sheep eat out of.  I'm sure they cleaned it up as best they could but nonetheless - a tiny baby, wriggling around in a feeding trough, and WISE MEN worshipped!

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If you saw me worshipping a newborn baby you would not think that I was wise.  You would think that I'd been mulling a little too much wine.  And if you lived in bible times you would be shocked.  Because in the bible you worship nothing and noone except God Almighty.  And these WISE MEN worshipped the baby Jesus. 

That's weird right?

Well it get's weirder. 

Do you remember in our reading the wise men were coming from the east to find Jesus?  And King Herod was worried because they were talking about Jesus as a King.  And Herod wanted to find out where Jesus would be born.  So they consult the Bible - they go straight to the Old Testament.  And, clear as day, the Old Testament prophet Micah said the promised King would be born in Bethlehem.

Here's what the verse said:

2 "But you, Bethlehem... though you are small among the clans of Judah, out of you will come for me One who will be Ruler over Israel, whose origins are from of old, from ancient times."

So that's how Herod knew God's King would be born in Bethlehem. 

But do you notice how the verse ends?  "His origins are from of old, from ancient times."

Micah says that God's promised King is very old.  In fact the word there for ancient times is the word for eternity.  So the verse is saying, God's promised King who's going to be born in Bethlehem, He is God's eternal King.  God and His King Jesus go WAY BACK.  And I mean WAY WAY WAY back.  Before there were any people or planets or protons - God and His eternal King Jesus existed.  And then 700 years after Micah, that Eternal King is born in the little town of Bethlehem.  So the Baby in the manger is Ancient - He's from eternity!!!  The Baby is ancient!

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Is that weird or is that weird?  The Baby is ancient!  Jesus Christ is not 2000 years old.  He is MUCH more ancient than that.  He is God's Eternal King.  There has never been a time when Jesus did not exist with His Father. 

So on that first Christmas, the Baby wriggling in the manger is ancient - an eternal King.

I told you this was weird.  But if that's twisted your melon, now I'm going to turn up the weird factor to nuclear.

Because in our second reading for tonight we heard something so weird that it actually makes all of that seem perfectly natural.

In Philippians 2 we get to see the thought-life of the Ancient King Jesus.  In Philippians 2 we get to hear what Jesus was thinking long long before Christmas. 

Look with me at Philippians 2 from verse 5. The apostle Paul writes:

5 Your attitude should be the same as that of Christ Jesus: 6 Who, being in very nature God, did not consider equality with God something to be grasped, 7 but made Himself nothing, taking the very nature of a servant, being made in human likeness. 8 And being found in appearance as a man, He humbled Himself and became obedient to death--even death on a cross!

So this is an insight into the attitude of Christ.  Do you see that's how it begins in v5 - your attitude should be the same as Christ's attitude.  Well what's Christ's attitude?  From v6 it tells us.  Jesus is in very nature God.  He is completely equal to God His Father.  But, v6,  Jesus makes a consideration.  He thinks to Himself.   And He thinks - "Just because I'm equal with God, I'm not going to use that to serve myself.  I'm going to use that to serve others.  And so He chooses to get born.  Isn't that amazing?

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Who here chose to get born??  You didn't decide to get born.  I'm guessing if you had been offered the chance to get born, you'd have taken it.  But Jesus is the Ancient Ruler, God's Eternal King - He's been around forever.  If He get's born into the human race it's only because He chooses to get born into the human race.  And that's what He did - He chose to get born.

But I promise you, if you were in His shoes, you'd never have chosen what He chose.  If you were in very nature God, if you were the Eternal King, surrounded by the worship of heaven, in the direct presence of Your Father who you adored with all your heart and had done forever - if you were in Jesus' shoes you would not have chosen what Jesus chose.  Because this is how Jesus considered things:  Being in very nature God, He chose not to grasp at His privileges or to exploit them.  Instead He chose total self-emptying.

Do you see that in v7?  It says 'He made Himself nothing'.  Literally it says 'He emptied Himself'.

Imagine the most enormous dam you can think of. 

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Trillions and trillions and trillions of gallons of water, full to overflowing.  And then...

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... that water pouring down, completely emptying itself. 

Jesus chose to completely pour Himself out for the world.

And He poured Himself out in service.  He took the very nature of a servant.

So Jesus the Eternal King, chose to be born.  Chose to empty Himself in service, He chose to take the form of a servant.  And verse 8 says 'He humbled Himself'.

He humbled Himself alright.  He left the riches of heaven to become poor.  He left the throne to become a servant.  He exchanged being Commander in Chief for, v8 becoming obedient - even to death on the cross. 

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You know when you see Jesus in the manger, it's like watching a man falling.  Because He's come from the highest heights.  And on Christmas morning you see Him heading down.  .....  Down, down, down all the way to death. 

And all of this happens - the crib and the cross happens - because, v6, Jesus made a decision.  He considered His options.  He weighed it up.  On the one hand He could stay in heaven and hold onto His divine privileges.  But Jesus thought No.  Because that would not show us the true nature of God.  Let me say that again because I think it's quite shocking - Staying on the throne would not show us the true nature of God.  The true nature of God is shown by climbing down off the throne, pouring Himself out as a servant, wriggling in the manger and writhing on the cross.  That's what shows us the very nature of God!  Not grasping but giving.  Not exploiting but emptying.  Not being served but serving.  Not domination but humility.

In the Times yesterday the front page has Robert Mugabe saying "I will never, never surrender.  Zimbabwe is mine."  The very opposite of how Jesus considered His power.  When we think about people in power, they never want to let go of their power.  The worst leaders don't - even the best leaders find it very difficult to let go of power.  We grasp at it.  We cling on. Jesus emptied Himself.  They say absolute power corrupts.  Well it might corrupt us, but it didn't corrupt Jesus.  He used His absolute power to serve.  Isn't that incredible?

Neil told a story this morning that I'm going to steal.  Imagine if you're slobbing around at home, the place is a tip and you get a knock at the door.  You answer the door in your dressing gown and it's only the Queen.  Your jaw is on the floor and she walks past you into your home and says, don't get up - I've come to do a spot of cleaning.  She takes off her pristine white gloves, puts on the marigolds and starts doing the housework.  What would you think?

Well friends, Jesus has come from far greater heights, and He's stooped down to far greater depths.  He has served you and me in the most incredible way.  That baby in the manger is the Lord of heaven stooping down to serve you.

Which shows us something very important.  It shows us that Jesus thinks we're in trouble.  He mounts a cosmic rescue mission - because He thinks we need it.  Jesus does not stay in heaven and simply call us up.  He knows that we can't do it.  He knows that we can't go up - He must come down.  So that's what Jesus does.  He comes from the heights and swoops down to meet us where we are - in the depths.  That's how Jesus uses His power, to stoop, to serve, to save.

Isn't that the most wonderful thing in the world, that He would do that for us?  God the Father thinks it's the greatest thing ever.

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 Verse 9, when God the Father sees His Son pouring Himself out in service ...

9 Therefore God exalted [Jesus] to the highest place and gave Him the name that is above every name, 10 that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, in heaven and on earth and under the earth, 11 and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is LORD, to the glory of God the Father.

When God the Father sees His Son poured out as a humble servant and dying a hellish death - THEREFORE He exalts Jesus.  Because of the crib and the cross, the Father says "Have the crown."  Because the crib and the cross are the true expressions of God's crown. 

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One day everyone will bow the knee to Jesus, the LORD, and they will do so because He poured out His life to death.  And when the Father sees that He says "YES!  That IS what it means to be LORD.  And He exalts Jesus to His right hand to tell the universe:  This Servant is LORD.  This is what it means to be in very nature God. 

And one day every person who has ever lived will bow before Jesus, the Divine Servant.  Whether they love Him or hate Him, EVERYONE will be flattened by the glory of the Servant King.

When He returns one day, still bearing the scars of His crucifixion, we will be overwhelmed.  Everyone in this room will bow to Jesus.  Whether gladly or reluctantly.  Everyone outside this room will bow to Jesus.  We won't be able to help ourselves.  The power of His Self-Emptying Majesty will force us down on our faces to confess that this - the Most Humble Servant there's ever been - is LORD of all. 

Well what do you think of the Wise Men now?  Do you understand their worship?  Or is it still weird to you?  Have you also looked inside the manger and seen the Glory of God?

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Maybe even as I've been speaking you have begun to look differently at that Baby.  Maybe now for the first time you realise who He is.  You realise that He chose to come, chose to serve, chose even to die - and He did it for you.  Can you see what the Wise Men saw?

Maybe you've never worshipped Christ the LORD before.  That's what a Christian is - someone who worships Christ the LORD.  You might have always considered yourself a Christian but you've never worshipped Christ.  You've always thought the Wise Men were a bit over the top.  You've never, yourself, bent the knee to Jesus.  You've never confessed that He is the LORD, He is the One it's all about.

Well maybe tonight you realise: life's not about you, it's about Him.  He is worthy of worship.  And maybe you've realised God's not aloof.  He draws near.  And maybe you're feeling Him drawing near.  Perhaps in your heart right now you're beginning to worship Jesus.  If you are - you're becoming a Christian.  Come and talk to me or Neil afterwards, we'd love to help you in you're your first steps as a Christian.

But for all of us - do we see the divine humility of Jesus?  This Christmas - rejoice that God really is that good.  Don't think dark thoughts about God.  Don't wonder whether He loves, whether He cares, whether He's interested.  Christmas tells you He loves, He cares, He hears and He comes.  This Christmas let us worship Christ the LORD.

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6 Christ Jesus, being in very nature God, did not consider equality with God something to be grasped, 7 but made Himself nothing, taking the very nature of a servant, being made in human likeness. 8 And being found in appearance as a man, He humbled Himself and became obedient to death--even death on a cross! 9 Therefore God exalted Him to the highest place and gave Him the name that is above every name, 10 that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, in heaven and on earth and under the earth, 11 and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is LORD, to the glory of God the Father.  (Phil 2:6-11)

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Divine humility.  Sounds contradictory?  You don't understand Christmas.

Jesus Christ, existing in the form of God, made a judgement.  That's right.  Before Christmas morning, Jesus took a decision.  (btw, v6 is proof that it's ok to call the pre-incarnate Son 'Jesus' - but that's for another time...)

Now you didn't decide to get born.  I'm guessing if you had been offered the chance to get born, you'd have taken it.  But Jesus had to choose to get born.  And I promise you, if you were in His shoes, you'd never have chosen what He chose.  If you were in very nature God, surrounded by the worship of heaven, able to do whatever you pleased, you would not have chosen what Jesus chose.  Because this is how Jesus considered things:  Being in very nature God, He chose not to grasp at His power or to exploit it.  Instead He chose total self-emptying.  He chose servanthood.  He chose to humble Himself.  He chose obedience.  He chose death.  He even chose the death of the cross - lifted up as an accursed thing.  That was Jesus' consideration - being the God that He was.

Question:  Would you have chosen that?

Answer:  No.  Every day I fail to give up even the smallest of comforts.  Let alone to give up my very life!  Let alone to suffer godforsaken hell - and that for enemies!  Would I have chosen this path?  No!

Question:  Well if Jesus did make this choice, did that stop Him from being in very nature God?

Answer:  By no means!  He is ongoingly, continually 'in very nature God'.

Question:  Well then, is Jesus' self-emptying a major detour from His glory in the form of God?

Answer:  No this is what equality with God actually looks like!  This is the very expression of the Father's glory - not exploiting but emptying.

Since He is in the form of God so He took to Himself the form of a slave!  And in this self-emptying He shows what true equality with God looks like.  It looks like the crib and the cross!

Christmas morning and Good Friday are not detours from the glory of God.  They show us that divine glory at full strength.  In eternity Jesus made this consideration.  He chose His history as the incarnate Servant to be that which truly expresses His equality with God.  And the Father affirms this choice - hyper-exalting He who hyper-humbled Himself.  And into all eternity we will gladly serve the Servant.  (And don't forget, He will serve us! Luke 12:37!)

Implication:  The baby in the manger, the victim on the cross - this is what it means to be in very nature God.

What is God's nature?  Don't simply look to the crown.  Look to the crib and to the cross.  God's nature is disclosed as one of utter self-giving.  Divine humility.

Glorious!

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 A sermon by Darrell Johnson on this passage (one of my favourite sermons ever!)

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I'll get round to responding to comments soon.  Here's the second part of yesterday's trinity sermon

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Trinity Sermon part 2:  Galatians 4:4-6 (audio here)

...The trinity is the good news that God is love. 

 

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On the other hand: - the imaginary, solitary, self-centred god is nothing but bad news. 

 

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The difference between these two ideas of God comes out very clearly when we ask ourselves - how would I go about serving these gods? 

Let's think about the false, self-centred god first.  How would you serve such a god? 

Well if God was just one person and if he desires any kind of service, who's going to have to give it to him?  Well it has to be us.  There's no-one else to do it.

 

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So in terms of serving God, it's all about what I can offer God. 

This god might demand obedience and religious service and sacrifice and prayer and elaborate worship. But with this god, the only sacrifice is our sacrifice, the only obedience is our obedience, the only prayers are our prayers.  This is the way of all human religion.  There is some kind of deity who requires some kind of payment because 'they're worth it' - and religion is about us paying it to God.  Horrible!

But the God who is Father, Son and Holy Spirit has other ways of getting the job done.  Look with me at chapter 4, verse 4:

4 But when the time had fully come, God [the Father] sent His Son, born of a woman, born under law, 5 to redeem those under law, that we might receive the full rights of sons.

 At just the right time, Christmas time to be precise, the Father sends His Son and v4 says He is born of a woman. The eternal Son of God joins the human race.  He enters into our family tree and becomes our brother, one of us.

And as our strong older brother, Jesus sticks up for us.  He steps into our shoes and He does for us what we could never do.  V4 says He is 'born under law'.  That means that He put Himself under the obligations of God's commandments. So whatever God wants from human beings, the Son of God gives.   Jesus paid to His Father the debt that we owe...

All the worship, obedience, devotion, prayer, love and sacrifice which the Father demands, the Son performs.  God wants human obedience.  But our human obedience is paltry, pathetic, perverted.  So the Son comes born of a woman to do in our place what we should have done. 

And then v5 tells us He does this that we might receive the full rights of sons. Now we don't have any right to be treated as sons.  We don't have any rights to inherit the blessings of God.  But THE Son of God has that right.  And so He works His perfect obedience in our place and then gives us all the rights that belong to Him. 

 

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In the diagram you're meant to get the sense that the Son overshadows us.  We are in Him. (It worked better in Powerpoint).

Imagine today a champion runner, entering the London marathon under your name and running in your place.  And they win and suddenly all newspapers tomorrow go with 'Glen Scrivener wins marathon.'  And I receive a gigantic cheque and am hailed as a star athlete.   I'm not a star athlete, brushing my teeth is about as aerobic as I like to get.  But imagine the full rights of the winner are given to me because a champion ran in my place.  That's what this is like.  Someone has run the race of obedience in your place and then given you all the winnings.  

Chapter 3 verse 29 describes it as belonging to Christ - so that His vast inheritance becomes ours.  I like that image, but I like the image of chapter 3 verse 27 even better: I am clothed with Christ.  I am wrapped up in Jesus while He offers the perfect worship, obedience and sacrifice to the Father.  If you belong to Jesus, the Father looks on you and sees Jesus.  He looks on you as His beloved child and says 'here, have my fatherly love, have my verdict of 'holy', have the whole universe.  It belongs to Jesus and you belong to Him. 

Now if that weren't good enough, chapter 4 verse 6 tells us we don't only have the Son of God wrapped up around us, we also have the Spirit of God in us.

6 Because you are sons, God sent the Spirit of his Son into our hearts, the Spirit who calls out, "Abba, Father."

The Father sends the Spirit of the Son into any who belong to the Son.  Do you belong to Jesus, do you trust Him, then you have the Eternal Spirit of God living in you.  And the Spirit calls from within us 'Abba, Father'.  Abba is a very intimate term, it means something like 'daddy' or 'father dearest'.  It's something so intimate that only the Son of God could ever get to call the Father Almighty 'daddy'.  But now, if we belong to Jesus, we get to do what Jesus did and call the Most High God - Abba - Daddy. 

The Spirit sweeps us up into the Son's relationship with the Father.  If you're a Christian, the Spirit has swept you up into the Son's relationship with the Father.  Everything that the Son has by rights, you now have through Him.  Everything that the Father feels towards His Son, He feels towards you who are clothed in Him.  If you're a Christian, the Spirit has gathered you into the circle of divine love.  By the Holy Spirit, you know Jesus as your Brother and the Almighty Father as your 'Daddy'.  You now belong to Jesus, and He belongs to the very life of the Trinity.  Our privileges in Jesus couldn't be greater.  As 2 Peter chapter 1 says, we 'participate in the divine nature.'

I started with a mental test, let me give you one more.  Christians here, if I were to ask you 'how is your prayer life going?' How would you respond?  If you belong to Jesus, you can look me in the eye and tell me 'my prayer life is unimprovable'.  How's your prayer life? 'My prayer life is divine.'

I am clothed in the Son of God and His prayer-life is pretty darned good.  What's more, chapter 4 verse 6 tells me that His prayer to the Father is a prayer that is placed in me by the Spirit. The Spirit prays the perfect prayer of the Son in me and through me. I'm not just invited to pray, I am already caught up in the prayer life of God.

All our little prayers are the 'Amen' to Jesus' perfect prayer.  He's prayed the perfect prayer and we say 'Amen, Father.  What He said, Father.  My Brother Jesus couldn't have prayed it better. Amen, Father'  And as we go on in the Christian life, the Spirit of the Son will help our little prayers to become more child-like, so that we call out "Daddy" in reverent love.  That's so important because nothing kills a prayer life better than praying to God like you're a slave and He's a slave-master, like you're a soldier and He's a commanding officer.  Jesus didn't teach us to pray 'Our Sergeant-Major in Heaven' or 'Our Line Manager in Heaven'  - instead: Our Father in Heaven.  We need to be little children in prayer and thankfully the Spirit of the Son makes us exactly that and helps us to pray child-like prayers where we depend on our heavenly Dad.  Our own attempts at praying won't be very good but, wonderfully, the Spirit takes even our most rubbish efforts at prayer and wraps them up in the Son's perfect prayer and lifts them the to the Father.  

I hope you can see that the God who is Father, Son and Holy Spirit is unlike any god ever imagined.  He is the living, loving, working, worshipping God who invites us into His life of other-centred love. 

But, finally, if you don't belong to Jesus, you are shut out of this life.  And you cannot get in.  No amount of your own religious works and moral deeds will earn your acceptance into this divine family.  The only way in is through Jesus, who offers to be your older brother, who offers to clothe you in His righteousness, who offers to give you His inheritance.  Maybe today you need to say Yes to Jesus - to say 'I want in.  I don't want to live my solitary, self-centred life any more, I want in on your life Jesus.'  Maybe for some of us, today is the day we join the Father, Son and Holy Spirit in their life of love.

 

Let's pray.

 Heavenly Father, thank You that we can call you Father.  Thank You that Your Son has become our Brother and so You have become our Father.  Thank You for inviting us into Your family.  Thank You for sending Your Spirit into our hearts. If we are Christians here, may each one of us know that we are clothed in Your Son and loved with an everlasting love.  For those who don't yet belong to Jesus, would you draw them, would you woo them, would you claim them as your own.  May we all live in your love, Generous Father, Gracious Son and Powerful Spirit.  Now and always, Amen.

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Trinity sermon (text below)

Seems like a few more people have stumbled onto the blog recently (thanks for the links Dave, Dan, Ed, Paul, others).

I thought I'd bring everyone up to speed with where I'm coming from.  This is a sermon I preached a couple of years ago.  It's about the trinity and grace.

I reckon between preaching, trinity and grace that's covered a good chunk of what I rant about here.

(By the way, I stumbled on this trinity sermon by Jurgen Moltmann yesterday.  I tell you - agree with him or not - no-one writes more beautifully on trinity than Moltmann.)

My sermon audio

Trinity Sermon: Galatians 4:4-6

Let me ask you a question and let's see where you mind goes. 'What was God doing before the creation of the world?'  What do you think God was up to when there was no universe to run, no people to care for.  Just God, nothing else. What was that like?

Well the wrong answer to that question is basically to think about one solitary god.

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God was not lonely before creation, He wasn't bored, He wasn't just itching to get on and create since He had only His thoughts for company!

No, what was God doing before creation?

They were enjoying one another. Who's they?

The Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit.

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Is that who you were thinking about when I asked my question? Or were you thinking about some other god - a god who is not Father, Son and Holy Spirit?

This morning we will learn that God is not, and never has been, lonely or aloof or self-centred or brooding or solitary or bored.  God is and always has been, loving and giving and other-centred and relational and sociable, companionable, friendly.  Because the real God is the relationship of Father, Son and Holy Spirit.  Christians call this relationship of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit the trinity (and I'll tell you why in a second).  And this God, the trinity, is the living and true God.

But that other, solitary, self-centred god is not really God at all.

That god is simply an imaginary idea that reflects our own culture and times.  Other people in other times have imagined - perhaps - lots of different gods and warring people have imagined warring gods. Sensual people have imagined sensual gods.  Intellectual people have imagined that God is 'an eternal mind'.  And touchy feely people have imagined God as 'pure energy which we tap into'.  None of this tells you about the real God - instead it tells you a lot about the people who offer their opinion.  It's like the heavens are a gigantic mirror, we look up but all we really see is ourselves.  God has to tell us about God.  And we just have to listen and discard all our own opinions on the matter.

I'm convinced that most of the problems people claim to have with the trinity, are because they want to have the trinity AND the god of philosophy, or the god of our popular imagination.  For most of us it's an attempt to MIX the trinity with the solitary, self-centred god.  And you just can't do it.

So let's allow God's Word - the Bible - to tell us who He really is.  And let's be prepared to let go of your own dearest ideas of god.  And be shaped again by God's Word

Have a look with me at Galatians chapter 4 and verse 6.

6 Because you are sons, God sent the Spirit of his Son into our hearts, the Spirit who calls out, "Abba, Father."

Now all three Persons are on show in this verse, that's why it's a good one to study.  Let's see who they are and how they relate to one another.

Look at who they are.  The One at the beginning of the verse called 'God' is also called at the end of the verse 'Father'.  And then there's the Spirit who God sends.  And there's the Son who (kind of ) owns the Spirit.  Three Persons.  Father, Spirit, Son.  And how do they relate?  Well the Father sends the Spirit.  And the Spirit calls out to the Father.  The Father is father of the Son and the Spirit belongs to the Son.  You don't have to get all of this, I just want us to see how inter-twined these Persons are?  The Father is father of the Son and sends the Spirit.  The Son is son of the Father and possesses the Spirit.  The Spirit is sent by the Father and belongs to the Son.

These three Persons - the Father, Son and Holy Spirit - are involved in inseparable, loving relationships which go back and forth.  Which is why the Bible can say 'God is love.'  It doesn't just say 'God is loving' which would be true.  But God IS love - He is who He is because of these love-relationships between the Father, Son and Spirit.

And that's what that we mean when we talk about the 'Trinity'.  It's simply the unity of these three - it's the three-unity, the tri-unity.  The Trinity.  So what's God like?  God is Three Persons united in love. That's what the trinity means: Three Persons united in love. Simple.

The trinity is not a maths problem: "How can three be one?" It's clear how the Father, Son and Spirit are one - they are bound together in love.  In the Bible that's how real one-ness comes - love.  In the Bible, when people get married they become one.  In the Bible, when a whole group of people get together and agree on a certain direction, they speak as one.  There's even an example of this kind of one-ness in our passage.  In chapter 3, v28 we see lots of different people Jews and Greeks, slaves and free, male and female but they are all one.  What does it mean that they're one? Have they all disolved into the one person, are they all thrown into a giant melting pot and all that's left is the single essence?  No, they are different people who are a community - united in love.  And God is different Persons, the Father, Son and Spirit, united in love.

But let me make something very clear - the trinity is a community far far superior to any other.  I could leave the community of St John's and somehow, you'd still get on without me.  You'd still be St John's and I'd still be me.  Gerri Halliwell can leave the Spice Girls and the Spice Girls, unfortunately, kept on going.  But with the Father, Son and Spirit - none of them are going to leave the band.  The Son is not going to split from these relationships and begin a solo career.  Why not?  Well think about who the Son is.  He is the Son because He has that relationship with the Father.  And the Father is the Father because He's always had His Son.  The members of this band don't have a solo career, they've never had one.  They don't just work as a team, they ARE this team.  There was never a point when the three Persons decided 'Hey, why don't we form a group!'  They have always been bound in loving relationships.  They were never solo artists in the first place and their band will never split up.  Their loving community is not just what they do - it's who they are and who they will be for all eternity.  God IS love.

So, to find the pulse of the universe (if you want to tap into the heart beat of reality) what do you find?  You find fierce, passionate, determined, life-giving love that flows between the Generous Father, His Beloved Son and the Life-Giving Spirit.

The life of these Persons, the relationships which they share IS the source of all true beauty, joy, goodness, holiness and love.  To belong to this God, to participate in this circle of divine friendship is the goal of all existence, it is the meaning of life.

The trinity is not a maths problem.  The trinity is the good news that God is love.

.... to be continued tomorrow...  part two here

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We've talked about how Jesus is the Good Samaritan.  But seriously - this is how you preach it...

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d5Mr4UUYetw&eurl=http://thefoolsgold.net/&feature=player_embedded]

ht Fools Gold

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I was like a wounded man

Jesus came all the way down.

On a Friday evening, He died on a Roman cross

Early one Sunday morning He got up

How many of you believe - He got up?

Thank You, for being a Good Samaritan

Thank You, You didn't have to do it

Thank You, for taking my feet out of the miry clay,

Thank You, for setting them on the rock

Thank you, for saving me,

Thank You, for binding up my wounds

Thank You, for healing my wounds

Thank You, for fighting my battles

Did He pick you up?

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We've talked about how Jesus is the Good Samaritan.  But seriously - this is how you preach it...

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d5Mr4UUYetw&eurl=http://thefoolsgold.net/&feature=player_embedded]

ht Fools Gold

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I was like a wounded man

Jesus came all the way down.

On a Friday evening, He died on a Roman cross

Early one Sunday morning He got up

How many of you believe - He got up?

Thank You, for being a Good Samaritan

Thank You, You didn't have to do it

Thank You, for taking my feet out of the miry clay,

Thank You, for setting them on the rock

Thank you, for saving me,

Thank You, for binding up my wounds

Thank You, for healing my wounds

Thank You, for fighting my battles

Did He pick you up?

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Mark 5:21-43

mark-5

...

So we've seen how the woman's expectation was frustrated, she was driven down then lifted up. 

The same happens to Jairus.  He had expected Jesus to come and heal His little girl.  But talk about frustration.

Can you imagine being Jairus in v24?  You're leading the way back to your place, Jesus is coming but the crowd is holding everything up.  How fast can you go when a large crowd is pressing around?  You can bet Jairus wished the whole crowd would just disappear.  I mean there are even people grabbing hold of Jesus' clothing as they're racing back to his house.  But frustration just isn't the word when in v30, Jesus stops.

"Why have you stopped Jesus?  Didn't you understand v23: my daughter IS dying."  This is a race against the clock.  Jesus has brought everything to a halt and now He's looking around a large crowd and asks 'who touched me?'  Put yourself in Jairus's shoes. 

"Who touched you?  Who touched you???  A) Everybody.  B) Who cares!!"  It's incredible isn't it.

I mean verse 31 from the disciples is just dripping with sarcasm and incredulity:

"You see the people crowding against you," his disciples answered, "and yet you can ask,'Who touched me?'"

That's how the disciples were thinking, how must Jairus have been thinking?? 

I have no medical training, I have no healing powers but if you told me your daughter was dying I'd come with you in a second.  And nothing would get in my way.

Jesus is very different.  He frustrates our expectations.  We keep coming up against this in Mark.  Just think about the last three weeks.  In Mark 4 a hurricane blows up and not only does Jesus not immediately still it, He takes a power nap.  And the disciples say "Jesus don't you care if we drown!?"  Jesus does not do what He's meant to.  Unbelievably Frustrating.

Last week we saw Jesus deliver a man oppressed by an army of unclean spirits.  If you were here last week you'll remember Jesus had granted the request of the demons, He'd granted the request of the hostile crowd but when this delivered man just wants to hop aboard and be with Jesus, Jesus says 'No.  Go back as a missionary.'  Jesus frustrates our desires. 

Here a father wants healing for His dying girl.  Is there anything wrong with that request?  Anything wrong with wanting your twelve year old daughter to live?  Well then Jesus, if you have the power and if you're good, you'll do this thing.  But what does Jesus do?  He waits. He stops and talks to a woman - a destitute, unclean woman who wouldn't have even been allowed into Jairus's synagogue.  And what's more this woman has been bleeding for 12 years now, she could wait another hour Jesus.  But no.  Jesus is unmanageable.  He has His own agenda.  He's insanely frustrating.

And verse 35,

"While Jesus was still speaking to this woman, some men came from the house of Jairus, the synagogue ruler." 

And here are some of the most painful words you could ever hear

"Your daughter is dead." 

"Your daughter is dead."  Put yourself in Jairus's shoes.  He's left his daughter's bedside.  He's come and put his career on the line, he's prostrated himself at the feet of Jesus - begging for his little girl's life.  And Jesus has not come through for you.  Now you hear 'Your daughter is dead.'

Jairus's story is our story.  Every one of us either has had or will have moments like this in our Christian lives.  We have come to Jesus.  We have real needs.  We are sure we know the best way He can help us.  But He doesn't do what we'd thought and our worst nightmare happens. 

These last three weeks have been teaching us painful but invaluable lessons. 

The storm of Mark chapter 4 taught us: We will go through storms and Jesus won't calm them right away.  It will get to the point where we say "I'm dying here and you don't care do you?".  The story of Legion in Mark 5 taught us:  Jesus will say 'No' to us even when our desires seem completely legitimate and godly.  This week we learn:  Jesus will delay and nightmare scenarios will arise. 

What do we do?

This is what we're supposed to do - v36:

Ignoring what they said, Jesus told the synagogue ruler, "Don't be afraid; just believe."

That's incredible.  How can that be in the bible?  How can Jesus say that?  Everything in us tells us this is the moment NOT to trust Jesus.  This is the moment to conclude He's not good or He's not powerful but either way He's not helping, He can't be trusted.  Jesus says "Don't be afraid, trust me."

Jairus is being driven down further than he'd ever anticipated.  You would have thought at the start of the story that begging Jesus for healing was as desperate as Jairus could have been.  But no, his daughter is now dead and still Jesus asks Jairus to trust him.  Jairus is being driven down.

He is brought to the point where there is no earthly hope whatsoever.  Only the God of resurrection can be trusted at this point.  When your daughter is dead you must either be swallowed by despair and conclude that nothing is bigger than the grave or you can trust in the God of resurrection, but there's no other option.  Either death swallows everything or there's a God of resurrection.  Jesus says 'Trust me - I am the God of resurrection.  I eat death for breakfast.'

Jairus gets to see firsthand the God of resurrection at work. Let me read from v38 (it's worth just reading this in full):

38 When they came to the home of the synagogue ruler, Jesus saw a commotion, with people crying and wailing loudly. 39 He went in and said to them, "Why all this commotion and wailing? The child is not dead but asleep." 40 But they laughed at him. After he put them all out, he took the child's father and mother and the disciples who were with him, and went in where the child was. 41 He took her by the hand and said to her, "Talitha koum!" (which means, "Little girl, I say to you, get up!"). 42 Immediately the girl stood up and walked around (she was twelve years old). At this they were completely astonished. 43 He gave strict orders not to let anyone know about this, and told them to give her something to eat.

Jairus was driven down and then lifted up in the most incredible way.

Jairus came to Jesus for a healing.  He got a resurrection.  And when it came, verse 42 says they were 'completely astonished'.  Literally it says they were mega-ecstatic. Mega-ecstatic.  Greatly beside themselves.  Completely astonished.  Jesus raised their dead daughter the way you or I would wake the sleeping.  Those words in verse 41, "Talitha coum," are in Aramaic - the language Jesus spoke most often.  And Mark leaves them in their original Aramaic because people remembered the exact words that came from Jesus' mouth.  It was such a precious moment people would always remember the way He spoke to that little corpse.  Jesus said 'Talitha coum' which is a term of great endearment.  'Talitha' has the feeling of 'Little girl', 'little madam', 'little missy' - it's warmly affectionate.  I heard one American translate it 'Honey.'  Honey, it's time to get up.  That's the flavour of what Jesus says.  He takes a 12 year old dead girl by the hand and says 'Honey, it's time to get up.'  Immediately she rises from the dead at the word of Jesus. 

And at the end of the story Jesus has saved both daughters.  He's saved both daughters.  Everyone thought the bleeding woman could wait while Jesus healed the dying girl.  But no - Jesus He's saved the woman with the flow of blood and He's saved the dying girl.  He calls the one 'daughter', He calls the other 'Talitha' - both terms of great affection.  He does care, He is powerful and He does know how to bring things to a happily ever after that far outstrips anything we expected.  Through sickness and suffering, through frustration and painful delays, through death and grief, Jesus brings us through to resurrection and leaves us in verse 43 feasting.  That's what you do when you rise from the dead you eat.  That's what we'll do when we rise from the dead, we'll feast with Jesus, and on that day we will see how Jesus has brought us through suffering into astonishing glory.

Do you know that the same Jesus who said 'Talitha koum' is alive and well and ruling the universe?   Do you really know that?  Do you really know that this Jesus who calls the woman 'Daughter' and the girl 'Talitha', He is seated on the throne of the universe.  He is the One ruling the events of this world and this week and my past and my present and my future.  This Jesus who is the same yesterday, today and forever, this Jesus is Lord. 

And He was crushed ultimately at the cross so that power could come out for our salvation - by His wounds we are healed.  He ultimately went down into death, and He ultimately rose up again and is now reigning over history and over you.  And now when we come to Him we find forgiveness and cleansing.  We can have a one-to-one with Him where we tell Him the truth about ourselves. And we can know ourselves to be a beloved Daughter or Son.  And one day beyond our own deaths Jesus will say to us 'Rise and shine.  It's time to get up.  It's time to feast.'

In the meantime we may face crippling pain, financial ruin, sickness, overwhelming grief and horrific frustrations.  But all the time Jesus is saying to us "Don't be afraid, just believe!"  He is saying this to us right now 'Don't be afraid, trust me.'  And we can trust Him.  The One more powerful than the storms, more powerful than the demons, more powerful than death itself, will bring us through suffering to a completely astonishing glory of resurrection and feasting.

So, "Wait for the LORD.  Be strong and take heart and wait for the LORD." (Ps 27:14) 

Therefore to God the Father, God the Son and God the Holy Spirit be ascribed all the glory, all the honour, all the majesty, all the power and all our trust, now and forever.  Amen.

 

Taken from this sermon.  Audio here.

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Mark 5:21-43

mark-5

In this story, two people come to Jesus with their needs.  They are very different people.  Jairus is an important man.  V22 says 'a synagogue ruler'.  He's a man, he's a ruler, he has a family, he's religious and very respectable in the community.

The woman is not even named.  Jesus calls her 'Daughter' in v34, which is even better than telling us her name.  But as the story begins she is an unnamed and unclean woman.  She has, v25, an unstoppable flow of blood which made her perpetually, ceremonially unclean.  This woman is unnamed, unclean, sick and now destitute.

Verse 26 details her 12 years of suffering:

She had suffered a great deal under the care of many doctors and had spent all she had, yet instead of getting better she grew worse.

That really tells a story doesn't it?  Suffering under the "care" of many doctors.  I don't know if you've been passed around from doctor to doctor and they can't seem to help you.  That in itself is frightening and dehumanizing enough.  But this woman has been suffering at the hands of these doctors.  We can only imagine how these 1st century physicians were treating her or what they were prescribing.  Mark just tells us that she suffered a great deal.  And she paid a lot of money for these worthless and painful treatments.  Now she has nothing, you can add financial ruin to her list of woes.  This woman is in a desperate position.

So this woman has had 12 years of great suffering. 

She is very different to Jairus.  Jairus, we can imagine, has had 12 years of joy with his 12 year old daughter.  But now with his daughter on death's door, Jairus is brought to the woman's level.  They are both needy beggars coming to Jesus.

Verse 22 this respectable man falls at Jesus' feet and pleads earnestly with Him.  This was very dangerous for Jairus to do.  We know from chapter 3 verse 6 that the religious authorities have been plotting to kill Jesus.  So for this synagogue ruler to fall at Jesus' feet could well have cost him his job and his reputation.  But what's that compared to your 12 year old girl?

So Jairus and the woman, very different, but both come to Jesus in their need.

And both people think they know how Jesus is going to help them.  They both have very particular expectations of Jesus.

Verse 23: Jairus thinks Jesus ought to come and lay hands on his sick daughter.  And he probably thought that because Jesus had performed other healings where that's what He did - He laid hands on people.  Other times Jesus healed people from a distance or just with a word, or He spat on the ground and made mud or He put His fingers in their ears.  Jesus didn't have a single way of healing people, but Jairus thought 'laying on hands' was the order of the day.

Verse 28: the woman also thinks she knows how to get a healing.  She thinks if she just touches Jesus' clothes she'll be healed.  Why did she think that?  Well quite probably it was because of an Old Testament prophecy. There's a verse from Malachi chapter 4 and verse 2 that speaks about the Messiah as the Sun of Righteousness who would rise up with healing in His wings.  That might be a familiar verse to you at Christmas.  When we sing Hark the Herald Angels Sing we say Jesus is "Ris'n with healing in His wings."  Well in Hebrew the word for wings is the same as the word for the end of your garment.  Where we might talk about coat tails, they'd talk about wings.  And so there was this expectation that when the Messiah rose up, there was going to be healing in His wings, His coat tails, in His clothes.  And this woman thought 'if I just touch His clothes, I will be healed.'  So in her head she was just going to grab the end of Jesus' coat, get zapped and slink off.  That was her plan.  She had a plan, it was her sickness, she knew how best to be treated.  This is how Jesus is going to help me.

Now you can understand their expectations can't you?  They seem fair enough.  But for both of them Jesus frustrates their plans and they are driven down much further than they were prepared to go before being raised up much higher than they'd dare dream.

What do I mean they were driven down and then raised up?  Well let's see it first in the woman.

There she is, just an anonymous figure in the crowd, pressing in against Jesus.  She wants to remain anonymous, she doesn't want a fuss, she doesn't want to meet Jesus.  She just wants to get zapped and get on with her life.  Well incredibly even with that kind of belief, which is bordering on the superstitious, even with that tiny mustard seed of faith, Jesus responds. 

Verse 30:  At once Jesus realised that power had gone out from Him. He turned around in the crowd and asked, "Who touched my clothes?"

Power goes out from Jesus.  Isn't that amazing?  Jesus feels power going out from Him. 

We might imagine that if Jesus is the LORD of creation, well then everything He does is effortless.  Surely the One who calms hurricanes with a word will take a healing like this in His stride.  Well if we remember that the ultimate power of Jesus is shown at the cross, if we remember that the healing of the world happens when Jesus is crushed, then we might start to think differently.  Isaiah the prophet said of Jesus: By His wounds we are healed.  Are we healed by His strength?  Yes.  Are we healed by His omnipotent power over sin, sickness, Satan and death?  Yes.  But it is no less true that "by His wounds we are healed".  The healing power of Jesus is grounded in His suffering death on the cross.  Jesus is not like a broadband package - unlimited downloads.  It's not clinical like that.  It's personal.  Those He heals, He also suffers for. 

If you've come to Jesus you should know He has suffered for you.  You haven't just downloaded salvation from His infinite hard-drive, it's personal.  He has suffered for you.  Paul would write in Galatians 2:20, "The Son of God loved me and gave Himself for me."  Christians know this to be true.  I'm not an anonymous member of the crowd who happens to have been zapped by Jesus.  Jesus has suffered for me.  He has felt power going out of Him for me.  On the cross, He was drained... for me!

This woman thought she would mean nothing to Jesus.  She wasn't going to bother Him.  She just hoped for a zapping.  But there's no such thing.  You can't have Jesus' power without having Him.  His power is a personal power and a power that costs Him dearly.  He wants one-to-ones with each and every one of us.  Immediately Jesus feels that power has gone out and immediately He wants to talk to this woman.

The woman is terrified.  It seems to take her a while to own up.  Verse 32, "Jesus kept looking around to see who had done it."   The woman wanted an anonymous experience.  Jesus wants a personal encounter.  And that's scary.  This is far more than the woman bargained for.  But eventually v33:

Then the woman, knowing what had happened to her, came and fell at his feet and, trembling with fear, told him the whole truth.

The woman is driven down.  Just seconds ago she'd hoped for a zap and run, but now face-to-face with Jesus she falls at His feet.  And she tells her story to Jesus.  "This is who I am Jesus, I'm a poor, sick, unclean, desperate woman.  That is the whole truth."  The woman is driven down further than she'd ever expected, but then Jesus lifts her higher than she's ever dreamed.  Verse 34:

Jesus said to her, "Daughter, your faith has healed you. Go in peace and be freed from your suffering."

This woman is not just an anonymous woman to Jesus. To Jesus she's a daughter.  He doesn't want anonymous followers hanging onto His coat-tails.  He wants daughters, He wants sons, who tell Him the whole truth. 

And Jesus explains to the woman - your faith has healed you.  Jesus is telling her, 'It's got nothing to do with any magical powers in my clothing. You believed in Me, that's the thing.  I'm the Power that healed you, and you trusted Me.  Now go in peace and be freed from your suffering.'

This word peace means wholeness, soundness, welfare, prosperity, tranquility, friendship.  It's peace with God, peace with others - Jesus says go in peace.  What a brilliant encounter with Jesus.  She wanted to get zapped and run, Jesus wanted to call her 'Daughter' and give her peace.  Driven down, but raised up much higher. 

Do you have a zap and run mentality with Jesus?  He wants a face-to-face.  He wants you driven down to confess to Him your whole story and He wants to lift you up and speak peace to you.  But you can't just be anonymous in the crowd when it comes to Jesus.  Fall at His feet, tell Him the whole truth. He will lift you up.

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Taken from this sermon.  Audio here.

olive-oil-press-4

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Mark 5:21-43

In your imagination, picture olives being crushed and pressed together and the oil seeping out at the bottom. 

That's a picture of Jesus that Mark hints at again and again.  In Mark's Gospel, Jesus is in almost constant danger of being crushed.

 Mark 3:7-9:

Jesus withdrew with his disciples to the lake, and a large crowd from Galilee followed. When they heard all he was doing, many people came to him from Judea, Jerusalem, Idumea, and the regions across the Jordan and around Tyre and Sidon. Because of the crowd he told his disciples to have a small boat ready for him, to keep the people from crushing him [that's literally the word - 'crushing Him'].  For he had healed many, so that those with diseases were pushing forward to touch him.

That's why in Mark 4:1 Jesus has to get in a boat to teach people, otherwise they'd smother Him.  When he decides in v35 to go over to the other side of the lake, v36 says 'they took Him along, just as He was, in the boat.'  He couldn't even risk stepping ashore, so they whisk Him off away from the crowds. Of course in this crossing, Jesus calms the storm (end of chapter 4), lands on the other side (chapter 5).  Then, do we remember from last week, He meets Legion, exorcizes an army of demons and sends the delivered man back to his people as a missionary.  That probably only took Him an our or two.  So now, with that job done, He returns.  So, v21, He's back after His flying visit. And the crowds are there again.  Mark says: 'A large crowd gathered around Him.'

Mark really wants us to get a feel for this crushing crowd.  And so Mark 5:24 says it again:

A large crowd followed and pressed around Him.

The disciples use the same word in verse 31:

You see the people pressing against you [literally]

This is a mini theme of Mark's Gospel.  The whole world flocks to Jesus in their need.  And in the midst of that crush - healing, forgiveness, restoration, salvation, peace and new life flow out.

The woman in this story presses in - she's part of this crush - but what she finds is that, in the crush, power comes out of Jesus and she is healed, freed, granted peace.

Now at the end of Mark's Gospel we see Jesus praying in a garden called Gethsemane.  Gethsemane mean oil press.  It's where the olives from the Mount of Olives were crushed.  That's where Jesus was oppressed like you and I would never understand, that's where He contemplates the cross and He undertakes to die under the weight of a world's need.  And because Jesus was crushed the oil of His Spirit flows out for the salvation of the world.  In that ultimate crush, that ultimate power was released for all who come to Him. 

Mark 5 is giving a miniature picture of that truth.  Here in this crush, power goes out from Jesus and healing, peace, freedom and ultimately resurrection results...

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I'll post the rest of the sermon in parts.

For the whole script go here

For the audio go here.

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big-fish-eat-little-ones2 Mark 5:1-20

Jesus is stronger than the storms (Mark 4:35-41).  He is stronger than death (Mark 5:21-43).  In Mark 5:1-20 He takes on an army of demons to prove Himself stronger than the Strong Man (Mark 3:27).

Read the sermon here

Listen here

 

Sermon in brief...

The Before and After shots of this demonized man would be something to behold!

Before: living among tombs, naked, cutting himself, unable to be held by the strongest chains, screaming out night and day.

After: Seated, dressed, in his right mind.

How powerful is Jesus?

If one boxer knocks out another that shows a certain strength

But what if one boxer simply commanded his opponent and his opponent knocked himself out.  That's power.  That's what Jesus displays.

Jesus proves Himself much the bigger fish which makes Him incredibly scary

The locals want Him gone - that kind of power, that kind of liberation even is too threatening.  We are too attached to our little slaveries to naturally want Jesus' power around.

The stunning thing is - when they ask Him to leave, He goes.

Amazingly Jesus grants the requests of the unclean spirits, He grants the request of the hostile crowd, there's only one request He denies - that of the delivered man.

This man just wants to be with Jesus - isn't that a good request?  Shouldn't Jesus grant this?

Jesus says 'no'.  Why?  He sends the man back as a missionary.

He's like us - freed to witness.  We just want to be with Jesus but there's a job to be done first.

When Jesus returns to the region in Mark 7 and 8 He feeds the 4000.  You can imagine the reunion.  The man had been witnessing in the region and had perhaps brought many people to Jesus.  On that day they would feast together.  The man back in the company of his Redeemer, feasting with Christ and with those he's brought to Christ.

Same with us.  The only reason we're not with Jesus now is that we might tell others (beginning with our family) of the Lord's mercy.  But one day we'll be face to face and we'll feast.

And in the meantime know this: Jesus is more powerful that the strongest forces of destruction in your life.  You can't change yourself - you're the littlest fish.  But He is stronger.

 

[youtube=http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=JZBPD-T20t0]

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