September 19, 2008
Sermon by Rev. Donald Van Dyken
Trinity Church of Tri-Cities
September 7, 2008
Scripture: Hebrews 13:1,2
Hospitality I – What is Philoxenia?
Among the ancient Greeks proper hospitality was of supreme importance. The respect from host to guest, the respect from guest to host, and the parting gift from host to guest, are elements that exist in the Greek concept of hospitality even to this day. The host must be gracious to the guest and provide him with food and drink and a bath, if required. It was not polite to ask questions until the guest was fully comfortable. The guest must be courteous to his host and not be a burden. The parting gift is to show the host’s honor at receiving the guest.
In Homer’s Iliad we read that Alcinous, king of the Phraeacians, outlines this concept as he reaches out in friendship to Odysseus: “A stranger and a suppliant are held as a brother by the man who is even a little in possession of his wits.” Gift giving between guests and hosts is more than politeness or custom; it is the established law of the gods.
One commentator remarked, “The Trojan war described in the Iliad of Homer actually resulted from a violation of xenia. Paris was a guest of the Spartan king Menelaus but seriously transgressed the bounds of xenia by abducting his host’s wife, Helen. Therefore the Achaeans were required by duty to Zeus to avenge this transgression, which as a violation of xenia was an insult to Zeus’s authority, resulting in the war. Of course, underlying the whole story is an undercurrent of hysterical fear of xenoi.”
“Let brotherly love continue. Do not forget to entertain strangers, for by so doing some have unwittingly entertained angels.” (Heb 13:1-2 NKJV)
My subject this morning is hospitality and today I want to deal with the “what” and “why” of hospitality, not first of all as the Greeks practiced it, but as the Bible instructs us. In the next sermon I want to deal with the “how” of hospitality.
First, I want to define the words we find here, both our English words and the Greek words. Second, we will go over some of the commands the Lord gives in the Bible about hospitality. Third, we will look at some examples of hospitality, and some examples of failures. And finally, some reasons for hospitality.
Beginning with verse one of Hebrews 13 we hear these words, “Let brotherly love continue.” That is a familiar command. The apostle John spends a good deal of his time in his first epistle commanding us to love our brothers and sister. St Paul used one word for brotherly love, and that word is philadelphia. It’s one word but made up from two words, philos meaning love, adelphia meaning brother. Philadelphia, brotherly love.
In the second verse St. Paul commands us, “Do not forget to entertain strangers, for by so doing some have unwittingly entertained angels.” Again we have two words, entertain stranger, for which Paul used one word, philoxenia. Philoxenia means to love strangers. In Romans 12:13, St. Paul uses the same word when he says, “given to, or pursue, hospitality.” Hospitality, philoxenia.
The opposite of philoxenia is xenophobia, a fear of strangers. Xenos again means stranger and phobia is fear. You may be afraid of close and tight places, and that is claustrophobia. Fear of heights is alto phobia. Fear of being alone is autophobia.
Fear of strangers, xenophobia. In many societies strangers are looked upon with suspicion, with fear. Strangers are people who are different than we are, perhaps they dress strange, speak a different language, have a different color skin, and just don’t do things the way we do. Xenophobia. That fear can result in horrible atrocities, for it was xenophobia that drove the German death camps in World War II, and it is xenophobia that is so prevalent in South Africa right now, causing them to kill many foreigners.
We are commanded to have philoxenia, to love strangers. Hospitality. That English word is worthy to examine as well. It was first used in 1242 to describe a shelter for the needy. The word is related to hostel, host, and hotel. In 1418 the word hospital was used to describe a charitable institution to house and maintain the needy. Even the English word, entertain, originally meant how you made your guest feel completely comfortable in your home.
It would be fascinating to study how from the very beginnings of the New Testament church, the care of the poor, the sick, the needy, and the stranger, food, shelter, and, if needed, medical attention. Philoxenia.
That has changed of course, for the word hotel, which is closely related to hospitality has become, not an institution of charity, but a major means of making money. It is estimated that the hospitality industry is the largest employer in the world. It’s hard then to compete against Hilton and Olive Garden, but not impossible, for, if I may use the words of an old song, “What the world needs now is love, sweet love.” Even the word philoxenia has been commercialized, for there are hundreds of hotels and restaurants, in Greece and in the United States that carry that word in their name. Hotels and restaurants are largely motivated by philarguria, the love of money. And only the saints of God can provide a hospitality that is given in love. Philoxenia. As St. John said to Gaius, “Beloved, you do faithfully whatever you do for the brethren and for strangers, for xenous, who have born witness of your love before the church.” Heb. 13:1,2: Love your brother, philadelphia. Love strangers, philoxenia. Be hospitable. Why? Because this is a command of our God. And God began in the Old Testament to instruct His people about strangers.
First of all, since love does no harm, God’s commands were in the negative, they were to love strangers by not doing them any harm. Xenophobia, fear of strangers, was to have no place among the children of Israel. “You shall neither mistreat a stranger nor oppress him, for you were strangers in the land of Egypt.” (Ex. 22:21 NKJV) “Also you shall not oppress a stranger, for you know the heart of a stranger, because you were strangers in the land of Egypt.” (Ex. 23:9 NKJV)
God also gave positive commands: Love the stranger, treat him as one of your own, love him like your own children, your own brothers and sisters. “The stranger who dwells among you shall be to you as one born among you, and you shall love him as yourself; for you were stranger in the land of Egypt: I am the LORD your God.” (Lev 19:34 NKJV)
Next week when we deal with how to show hospitality, what we should do to show our love for strangers, to practice philoxenia, which is a verb, we will find that God gave Israel many ways to show hospitality, to entertain strangers, to make them comfortable among them.
Now I want to look at some examples of philoxenia. First to see how the saints of old practiced hospitality, and then to see some glaring examples of those who were inhospitable, and the striking consequences of their inhospitality.
Our text, Hebrews 13:2 says, “Do not forget to entertain strangers, to practice philoxenia, for by so doing some have unwittingly entertained angels.” Unwittingly, without knowing it, simply by practicing hospitality, by loving strangers, some have, without realizing who they were, entertained angels.
Many commentators believe that this refers to the events described in Genesis 18. There we find Abraham sitting in the door of his tent. When he sees three men in the distance walking towards him, Abraham immediately got up and ran to meet them. He was anxious to provide hospitality. For as soon as he met them, he begged them to let him serve them. “Please stay here a while,” he said, “let me get some water for your feet, so you can wash them. Rest here a while. I will get some bread for you to eat.” he then asked Sarah to make some cakes, and then went out and took a tender calf, gave it to a young man to butcher.
Then he took bread, butter, milk, and the roast calf and brought it to them. And while they were sitting down comfortable eating this little feast Abraham had prepared, he stood by them. Standing by, as it were, to be ready to meet their every need. He was the waiter, the proprietor of this house of philoxenia, and it was his pleasure to meet their every need. When they had finished, Abraham walked with them to send them safely on their way. What Abraham had done, of course, was not only serve a couple of angels, but he had the joy and privilege of serving God Himself.
“Do not forget to entertain stranger, for by so doing some have unwittingly entertained angels.” Lot, Abraham’s nephew was a worthy follower of his uncle in his philoxenia, for when the angels came to Sodom we read: “Now the two angels came to Sodom in the evening, and Lot was sitting in the gate of Sodom. When Lot saw them, he rose to meet them, and he bowed himself with his face toward the ground. And he said, “Here now, my lords, please turn in to your servant’s house and spend the night, and wash your feet; then you may rise early and go on your way.” And they said, “No, but we will spend the night in the open square.” But he insisted strongly; so they turned in to him and entered his house. Then he made them a feast, and baked unleavened bread, and they ate.” (Gen. 19:1-3 NKJV)
Philoxenia. Love the stranger. Show him hospitality. Hospitality means philoxenia, loving the stranger. Old Job said this in his defense against the accusations of his three friends: “But no sojourner had to lodge in the street, for I have opened my doors to the traveler;” (Job 31:32 NKJV)
Look at the hospitality of the woman at Shunem, who persuaded Elisha to stop at her house and dine. She said to her husband, “Look now, I know that this is a holy man of God, who passes by us regularly. Please, let us make a small upper room on the wall; and let us put a bed for him there, and a table and a chair and a lamp stand; so it will be, whenever he comes to us, he can turn in there.” (2 Kings 4:9-10 NKJV). . .Hospitality
Now I want to show some examples of a terrible failure to show hospitality. First, we go back to Sodom. When the two angels entered Sodom Lot was the only one who approached them to offer hospitality. The other men of the city evidently just ignored them. But they were not content with just ignoring them. Listen: “Now before they lay down, the men of the city, the men of Sodom, both old and young, all the people from every quarter, surrounded the house. And they called to Lot and said to him, “Where are the men who came to you tonight? Bring them out to us that we may know them carnally.” (Gen. 19:4-5 NKJV) They wanted to sexually abuse them. When Lot protested, they said, “Who are you to tell us what to do. You are a stranger here yourself.”
Now remember, not that many months earlier the kings of Sodom and Gomorrah had fought with some other kings, and lost the battle. The winners took all the people of Sodom, along with Lot, and got away. Abraham heard of it, took 318 men from his house, pursued them, and recovered everything for the men of Sodom. And this is their gratitude. Well, we know the consequence; we know what happened to these inhospitable people, these xenophobes, these haters of strangers. Fire and brimstone came down from heaven and burned them all up.
Another story. A Levite from the mountains of Ephraim traveled to Bethlehem to recover his concubine who had fled to her father. The girl’s father entertained the Levite lavishly, but finally the Levite determined to leave. As he traveled his servant suggested that they stay the night at Jerusalem, but no, said the Levite, this is a city of Canaan, these are Jebusites not of our people. Let’s go on to Gibeah. So they came to Gibeah, a city of Benjamin. It was evening, and they came to the open square of there they sat. Nobody paid any attention to them. Nobody thought, here are a couple of strangers, let’s invite them to our house.
But just then an old man came in from his work in the field. He was not a Benjamite, but from Ephraim. He asked them about themselves, and when they told him he said, “Peace be with you! However, let all your needs be my responsibility; only do not spend the night in the open square.” So he brought him into his house, and gave fodder to the donkeys. And they washed their feet, and ate and drank.” (Jud. 19:20-21 NKJV)
Philoxenia, loving the stranger. But again the men of the city, just like the men of Sodom were perverted, surrounded the house, beat on the door, and demanded to get at these strangers to sexually abuse them. Finally the Levite sent his concubine out to them, and they gang-raped her until morning when she fell on the doorstep dead. What was the consequence of these terrible acts that began with a failure to show hospitality, that began with xenophobia instead of philoxenia? The entire tribe of Benjamin was nearly annihilated; 25,000 dead and only 600 survivors.
Another example, not of failure to love strangers, but of failure to be hospitable to an outcast. The outcast was David, who was homeless, and wandering, fleeing the persecution of Saul. He sent some of his young men to the house of Nabal, “and David said to the young men, “Go up to Carmel, go to Nabal, and greet him in my name. and thus you shall say to him who lives in prosperity: ‘Peace be to you, peace to your house, and peace to all that you have! Now I have heard that you have shearers. Your shepherds were with us, and we did not hurt them, nor was there anything missing from them all the while they were in Carmel. Ask your young men, and they will tell you. Therefore let my young men find favor in your eyes, for we come on a feast day. Please give whatever comes to your hand to your servants and to your son David.’ “ (1 Sam. 25:5-8 NKJV)
What was the response? “Then Nabal answered David’s servants, and said, “Who is David, and who is the son of Jesse? There are many servants nowadays who break away each one from his master. Shall I then take my bread and my water and my meat that I have killed for my shearers, and give it to men when I do not know where they are from?” (1 Sam. 25:10-11 NKJV). . .Xenophobia.
Abigail, Nabal’s wife heard of it, and showed a love to this outcast that Nabal should have done. She practiced philoxenia. What was the result for Nabal? “So it was, in the morning, when the wine had gone from Nabal, and his wife had told him these things, that his heart died within him, and he became like a stone. Then it came about, after about ten days, that the LORD struck Nabal, and he died.” (1 Sam. 25:37-38 NKJV)
Finally one more example from the New Testament. Simon the Pharisee invited Jesus to his house. But Simon was a Pharisee, one who thought himself better than others, and therefore did not love others as himself. Finally Jesus had to say to Simon, “Do you see this woman? I entered your house; you gave Me no water for My feet, but she has washed My feet with her tears and wiped them with the hair of her head. You gave Me no kiss, but this woman has not ceased to kiss My feet since the time I came in. You did not anoint My head with oil, but this woman has anointed My feet with fragrant oil. Therefore I say to you, her sins, which are many, are forgiven, for she loved much. But to whom little is forgiven, the same loves little. Then He said to her, ‘Your sins are forgiven.’ “ (Luke 7:44-48 NKJV) What is the implication here? Not only that the sins of this woman were forgiven, but also that the sins of Simon remained where they were, on him.
Now I want to set before you some of the “why” of hospitality, the reasons we should practice philoxenia. First is the fact that we were strangers ourselves and we should know how it feels to be a stranger in a land that is not ours. Listen to God speak to Israel: “The stranger who dwells among you shall be to you as one born among you, and you shall love him as yourself; for you were strangers in the land of Egypt: I am the LORD your God.” (Lev. 19:34 NKJV)
Listen to God speak to the New Testament Israel, gathered from the Gentiles. “Now, therefore, you are no longer strangers and foreigners, but fellow citizens with the saints and members of the household of God,” (Eph. 2:19 NKJV) No longer strangers and foreigners. Strangers, the word is xenoi. We were strangers, but through the blood of Christ we are not just welcome guests, but have been made members of a house, a home, the house of God. We were strangers, we should know the heart of a stranger; we therefore should love the stranger.
Second, we must love stranger because God loves them. “He administers justice for the fatherless and the widow, and loves the stranger, giving him food and clothing. Therefore love the stranger, for you were strangers in the land of Egypt.” (Deut. 10:18-19 NKJV)
Third, in loving strangers we are loving Jesus Christ. In Matthew 25, that well known parable about the sheep and the goats, Jesus, as He welcomed the sheep into everlasting joy said, “I was a stranger and you took me in.” To the goats, He said, “Depart from me, you cursed, into the everlasting fire prepared for the devil and his angels, for I was a stranger, and you did not take Me in.”
Pretty compelling reasons?
Fourth, these are qualifications given for those who would serve as elders. In both Timothy and Titus, St. Paul lists being hospitable as one of the characteristics elders must have. The word is philoxenos.
And finally, let us remember where we are, we are in the house of God, and Jesus Christ Himself is our host. He has ministered to all the needs of our heart, made us worthy through His blood and pains so that we can enter, not just as guests in the house of His Father, but as His own brothers and sisters, children of God, served by Jesus Christ Himself.
That brings us to this blessed table, doesn’t it? For Christ Himself is our host. That is why I, a minister of Christ, and that is why your elders, as servants of Christ, stand and serve while you sit. Christ is honoring you, His people, giving Himself to you. Let us then, departing from this house of feasting, leaving this house of God, where God Himself through His Son has washed us, fed us, made us supremely comfortable in His presence, go out as those whose delight and goal is to practice hospitality, philoxenia. Amen.
September 18, 2008
Sermon by Rev. Donald Van Dyken
Trinity Church of Tri-Cities
Scripture: John 5
Jesus on Trial
Beloved Church of Jesus Christ, this series covers miracles from the various gospels and today from the Gospel of John. John, as you may remember from the very first verse in his gospel, presents Jesus Christ as the son of God, as God Himself. He reported, for our blessing and instruction (praise God!), the words and works of Jesus, and then what men did with them, how they reacted to Jesus, how they responded to Him. And that is the way Jesus is presented in this chapter. First Jesus performed a miracle of healing for the lame man at the pool of Bethesda, and then we see the reaction of men and how Jesus dealt with that reaction in teaching.
All the gospels, and now this one event in particular God has given to us as the revelation of Himself in Jesus Christ for our salvation. In this passage, the miracle itself is recounted in verses 1-9 only, and then the rest of the chapter records the reactions: of the healed man, of the Jews, and of Jesus response to the Jews. Because of this miracle, the Jews place Jesus on trial; they begin their accusations. That opposition, that attitude of hatred, will finally lead to the time they would crucify Him.
First, then, consider this miracle. It was the time of the feast in Jerusalem. The gospel doesn’t tell us which feast, whether Passover, Pentecost, Tabernacles, Purim, or even, as some suggest, just the weekly feast of the Sabbath. Next, John describes the pool near the Sheep Gate, called Bethesda. Bethesda is a beautiful name. Beth. . .house, and the rest of the name means mercy, compassion, or kindness. This is the house of kindness, the place of mercy.
It is thought to have been 360 feet by 130 feet by 75 feet. In its five porches or colonnades, there was a great multitude of sick and diseased people. Since they were all waiting for a miracle, it would seem that these people had diseases that were incurable, that Bethesda was the place of last resort. Verse 4 tells us that an angel stirred the pool at certain times, and whoever, or those who went first into the pool were healed of their diseases.
I need to note that there is disagreement among biblical scholars whether or not this verse about the angel should be included in the Scriptures. Apparently this verse is not found in the oldest manuscripts of this Gospel. If we want to consider the account of this stirring up of the water by an angel reliable we are still faced with a problem. Unlike any other miracles in the Bible, there is no identifiable person mentioned as God’s agent. God, for example, wrought the miracles in Egypt through Moses. God brought the son of the widow at Zarephath to life through Elijah.
There is another explanation offered by some scholars, and that is that this pool was fed by mineral spring. Mineral springs often have therapeutic value. Perhaps there was a periodic infusion of new waters, some agitation, and so with new infusion of healings waters, those who went in first received the greatest benefit.
Among all those laying about in various stages of illness, Jesus singled out a particular man. The Bible tells us that he had an infirmity, a sickness. It was a kind of illness that kept him from getting to the pool. Was he a paralytic? Lame? Blind? We don’t know. What we do know is that he had been in that condition for thirty-eight years. Did he spend all that time at the pool? Not likely. But thirty-eight years is a long time. He had been in that condition since before Jesus was born.
Here is another significant fact: He had been unable to find healing for thirty-eight years, the same number of years Israel was condemned to wander in the wilderness. And just as it was for this man, all during their thirty-eight years in the wilderness, they had not been able to pass through the waters into the promised land of rest.
Jesus appears, the New Testament Joshua and on the day of rest, the Sabbath, leads this man into rest through His healing power. Jesus, as our text tells us, knew that he had been in that condition a long time, and asked him, “Do you want to be made well?” To which the man replies, “Sir, I have no man to put me into the pool when the water is stirred up; but while I am coming, another steps down before me.”
What a life of frustration that man must have led. His own efforts, although he seemed to have made them many years, were useless. He simply could not make it in time. He seemed to be friendless, no one to help him down into the water. “Jesus said to him, ‘Rise, take up your bed and walk.’ And immediately the man was made well, took up his bed, and walked. And that day was the Sabbath.”
Let me make four observations here:
1) Out of all the sick and weary people gathered there, Jesus chose one man to heal. He could, of course, have healed them all. But He didn’t. He chose one of them. Consider your own life, you, living in a world of people sick under the death sentence brought by sin. Why did Jesus choose you to save? Do you not find this a wonder? Is this not sovereign grace?
2) Consider the command Jesus gave to this man who couldn’t walk. “Rise, take up your bed, and walk.” You must know and believe, that when Jesus gives you a command, He doesn’t ask you if you have the power to obey it, but with the command Jesus provides the ability to obey Him. Isn’t that wonderful?
3) In verse 13 we read that the man didn’t even know who it was who healed him, who it was who brought him into this Sabbath rest. So the question comes to you, sitting here this morning. Do you know this Jesus who brought you into His Father’s house that you might have rest?
4) When Jesus found him, verse 14, He said, “See, you have been made well. Sin no more, lest a worse thing come upon you.”
It would seem to be clear from this statement from Jesus, that the infirmity this man had for 38 years was the result of his sins, was in consequence of his sins, or was a punishment for his sin. Now, we know that not all illnesses are God’s direct punishment for sin. A little later John recorded that Jesus healed a blind man, and when the disciples asked, “Who sinned, this man or his parents?” Jesus replied, “Neither he nor his parents sinned. But this was done that God might be glorified.”
However, with this man at the pool, Jesus specifically implies that it was the consequence of his sins. It’s true, isn’t it, that the Lord often catches us in our sins, and brings bad consequences upon us for them. This is His way, and this is His way with His covenant children. Be sure, He says, your sin will find you out. This is a great blessing for every covenant child of God. God will not let us continue in sin, will not let our sin remain hidden to our eyes, but brings calamity or sickness to expose us, to make us conscious that we have left Him.
So when we cry to Him, He delivers us, and then, as He did to this man He says to us, “See, you have been made well. Sin no more, lest a worse thing come upon you.” God is not mocked. When we ignore, forget, or resist His mercy, His kindness, His rescue, we are inviting Him to visit us with more severity next time, perhaps even (and God forbid!) the great and fatal tragedy of just leaving us in our sins.
Let’s return to this man. When the Jews saw him carrying his bed on the Sabbath, they accused him of breaking the law, of breaking the Sabbath. You will remember that the law of God through Moses prescribed the death penalty for the breaking of the Sabbath. So the Jews put Him on trial, you might say. Was this really breaking the Sabbath? The Lord had said that they were to bear no burdens on the Sabbath. But what kind of burdens was God referring to?
I believe Nehemiah 13:15-18 will help us understand what God was talking about: “In those days I saw people in Judah treading wine presses on the Sabbath, and bringing in sheaves, and loading donkeys with wine, grapes, figs, and all kinds of burdens, which they brought into Jerusalem on the Sabbath day. And I warned them about the day on which they were selling provisions. Men of Tyre dwelt there also, who brought in fish and all kinds of goods, and sold them on the Sabbath to the children of Judah, and in Jerusalem. Then I contended with the nobles of Judah, and said to them, “What evil thing is this that you do, by which you profane the Sabbath day? Did not your fathers do thus, and did not our God bring all this disaster on us and on this city? Yet you bring added wrath on Israel by profaning the Sabbath.” (NKJV)
The kind of burdens God was talking about in His command about the Sabbath, were commercial burdens, loads of goods to sell and buy. In the days of Nehemiah the people of God were carrying on with business on the Sabbath. But the burden this man carried did not speak about earning a living, but spoke about grace, the grace and power of Jesus who freed him from the burden of that infirmity.
Well, the Jews wanted to know who told him to take up his bed and walk. So when Jesus had come to him and warned him about sinning again, he went to the Jews and told them that it was Jesus. So, now, it is Jesus the Jews go after. And here we see that Jesus provides Himself a substitute for this man. Instead of the man being on trial, Jesus is on trial. Instead of the man dealing with the accusation of breaking the Sabbath, Jesus is accused of breaking the Sabbath.
They accused Jesus of breaking the Sabbath and gave two items of evidence: Offense number one: on the Sabbath Day is considered work. Offense number two: He told the healed man to take up his bed. Jesus is then accused of inciting another man to break the Sabbath Day. Jesus’ response to these accusations begins in verse 17: “My Father has been working until now, and I have been working.”
We confess that the work of creation was the work of God the Father. Yet, although He rested the seventh day, yet He continued to work, upholding, governing, preserving, the creation. He continued to be the Lord of life and death. He brought life. “For,” said Jesus in verse 21, “as the Father raises the dead and gives life to them, even so the Son gives life to whom He will.”
Again, this is the wonderful sovereign power of grace, that God has chosen you and me to receive the gift of life. “My Father has been working until now, and I have been working.” But now the Jews have another accusation to bring. Jesus said that God was His Father, and that meant He was making Himself equal with God. Now they have three accusations against Jesus:
1. He broke the Sabbath by healing on it.
2. He broke the Sabbath by having a man to carry his bed on the Sabbath.
3. He made Himself equal with God. Blasphemy. And you will remember that when the Jews ran out of charges at His final trial, the high priest put Him under oath, saying, “Tell us, are you the Christ, the Son of the Blessed.” And when Jesus said, “Yes,” the high priest tore his robes crying out, “Blasphemy!”
That will come later. But now we see these fingers pointing at Jesus, we hear these serious charges laid against Him, and it would seem that the Jews have taken Jesus and put Him on trial. Jesus, however, takes this whole courtroom scene and turns it upside down. He begins with this statement: “For the Father judges no one, but has committed all judgment to the Son, that all should honor the Son just as they honor the Father. He who does not honor the Son does not honor the Father who sent Him.” (Jn 5:22-23 NKJV)
For He had given them notice before that, that just as the Father gives life to whom He will, so does the Son. The Son is God, and therefore these men are bringing accusations against God Himself. And that is a terrible and dangerous thing to do.
So Jesus tells them that the Father has given Him authority over all men to execute judgment. Then He goes on to tell of the great day of judgment – verses 28-29 “Do not marvel at this; for the hour is coming in which all who are in the graves will hear His voice and come forth – those who have done good, to the resurrection of life, and those who have done evil, to the resurrection of condemnation.” (Jn. 5:28-29 NKJV)
Beloved, this statement confronts everyone who has witnessed the wonderful work of Christ our Lord, giving life, raising the dead, healing this man, bringing him into the promised land of rest, giving him the true meaning of Sabbath. Do you think that only these people 2000 years ago witnessed His work? Let me tell you that everyone over the last two thousand years who has read this gospel is one of those witnesses that is confronted by this miracle of Jesus.
Our keeping of the Sabbath, our celebration of the great work of Christ, our worship of the Triune God, our rest of joy and celebration in Christ, is a witness to the world of the work of the Son. Through that witness, men and women everywhere are confronted with the Christ, who will bring all men into judgment on the last day.
Now Christ brings His charges, He is the accuser, He is the judge, and these Jews, these scribes and Pharisees are in the dock, in the seat of the accused. They had sought to prosecute Him, but He is prosecuting them. What charges does He bring? All the charges Christ brings concern their relation to Him. In some sense, no sinner is merely charged with breaking some laws, but with the rejection of the person of God in Christ Jesus. They rejected Him, the Creator, the law-giver. Christ then, as prosecutor, brings witnesses to the stand, witnesses for the prosecution:
1) The Father. . .vs.30 ~ “I do not seek My own will but the will of the Father who sent Me.” vs.31 ~ “If I bear witness of Myself, My witness is not true. There is another who bears witness of Me, and I know that the witness which He witnesses of Me is true.” The Father witnesses that this is His beloved Son, in whom He is well pleased. The Father says, listen to Him. The Father says, He who does My will is from me. The Son said, “I do nothing of Myself, but what I see the Father do, I do” vs.19, and vs.37, “And the Father Himself, who sent Me, has testified of Me.”
2) John the Baptist. . .vs.33 ~ “You have sent to John, and he has borne witness to the truth.” John you remember, said, “Behold, The Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world.”
3) His own works. . .Jesus calls His own works as witness: “But I have a greater witness than John’s; for the works which the Father has given Me to finish – the very works that I do – bear witness of Me, that the Father has sent Me.” (Jn. 5:36 NKJV)
4) The Scriptures. . .”You search the Scriptures, for in them you think you have eternal life; and these are they which testify of Me.” (Jn. 5:39 NKJV)
5) Moses. . .”Do not think that I shall accuse you to the Father; there is one who accuses you – Moses, in whom you trust. For if you believed Moses, you would believe Me; for he wrote about Me. But if you do not believe his writings, how will you believe My words?” (Jn. 5:45-47 NKJV)
And what are their reactions? Jesus tells us: They rejected all this testimony:
They rejected the testimony of the Father: “And the Father Himself, who sent Me, has testified of Me. You have neither heard His voice at any time, nor seen His form. But you do not have His word abiding in you, because whom He sent, Him you do not believe.” (Jn. 5:37-38 NKJV)
They rejected the testimony of John the Baptist: We read in Matthew that Jesus said to them, “Assuredly, I say to you that tax collectors and harlots enter the kingdom of God before you. For John came to you in the way of righteousness, and you did not believe him; but tax collectors and harlots believed him; and when you saw it, you did not afterward relent and believe him.” (Mt. 21:31-32 NKJV)
They rejected witness of the Scriptures: “You search the Scriptures, for in them you think you have eternal life; and these are they which testify of Me. But you are not willing to come to Me that you may have life.” (Jn. 5:39-40 NKJV)
They rejected the testimony of Moses: “For if you believed Moses, you would believe Me; for he wrote about Me. But if you do not believe his writings, how will you believe My words?” (Jn 5:46-47 NKJV)
The Scriptures tell us that no one is to be condemned except at the testimony of two or three witnesses. Jesus has brought together five witnesses for the prosecution, bringing charges against them. What shall we say now? First to you and to me: Jesus has brought all these witnesses to our attention that we may believe that Jesus is the Christ, that He is the Son of God, that He has the power of life and death, that He has come to us that we might believe, that believing we might have life through His name.
Jesus warns us, each and every one, that the Father, that the works of Jesus recorded in the gospels, that the words of John the Baptist recorded in the gospels, that all the Scriptures, that the five books of Moses, all testify of the Son, all bring us into a relationship with the Son. So that the question is this. . .”What do you think of the Christ? What will you do with Jesus, who is called the Christ?”
We should all remember that these five witnesses that Jesus brought for the prosecution of the Pharisees, were first of all witnesses that they and we might believe, and if, we don’t, just like for the Pharisees, these will testify against us.
Second, this is our message to the world, this is our presentation to the world through the gospel. We present Jesus Christ. Not a set of morals. Not a system of laws. Not a new philosophic system. Not a new paradigm of reality. But, through the Scriptures, we must bring men and women into contact with Jesus Christ. And in that contact, let us begin perhaps with ourselves; the wonder of the Jesus who confronted us, most of us from our youth. The wonder of the Jesus, who, seeing all the many in the world equally helpless, equally hopeless, equally unable to find healing, to find life, came to us and gave us life, hope and the wonder of the Sabbath rest purchased through His body and blood.
In that contact, let us recount how by nature, we too, resist all the evidence that Christ has presented to us in the Gospels, from the Father, through John the Baptist, the Scriptures, and Moses. In that contact, let us recount that Christ substituted Himself before the great court of Almighty God, and took our place as the accused, took our place as the condemned.
In that contact, let us bring forth the testimony God has provided us, that in our contacts with the unbelieving world, they may not face just someone who is pro-life, anti-abortion, someone who condemns the homosexual, but someone who carries the Word and presence of Christ, presenting Himself to every sinner by many infallible proofs.Amen
Sermon by Rev. Donald Van Dyken
Trinity Church of Tri-Cities
June 1, 2008
Scripture: Matthew 8:28-34
Jesus Dispossesses the Demons
This sermon continues our series on the miracles of Jesus. In the three miracles we are considering from Matthew 8, the Holy Spirit shows us a progression in the revelation of Jesus Christ as the Son of God, come to redeem us from our woes.
First, Jesus demonstrates that He has power over sicknesses, and not just any sickness, but the most incurable and loathsome disease current at that time, leprosy, the disease that ate you up, and at the same time destroyed your relations and fellowship with man and God.
Second, Jesus reveals that as the Son of God He has power over all creation, over the great storms that rose on the Sea of Galilee. During that episode Jesus gave His disciples a preview and a lesson. A preview of the storms of opposition that the world would whip up against the church, and a lesson, that just as Christ the Master of creation was in the boat, so Christ the Master of the raging nations would be with the church at all times. She but needed faith in this Jesus.
Third, Jesus’ mastery over the demons, and this is the event that has our attention this morning. My theme is Jesus Dispossesses the Demons. I use the word “dispossess” because our text says that these two men coming out of the tombs were demon possessed. I also use it because in the temptations Matthew records in chapter 4, Satan attempts to have Jesus bow down to him, promising Him all the kingdoms of the earth as a prize.
In some sense this was indeed true. Satan was the prince of the powers of darkness, the ruler of the darkness of that age. He held all nations in the thralldom of superstition and lies. He possessed the nations, although they were, we may say, eagerly waiting for the promised Seed of Abraham, for He would bring them the blessing of Abraham, that is, the covenant promise that they now, through Christ, could be freed from the slavery of the devil, and belong in glorious liberty to the Triune God.
Jesus, says our text, came to the other side. That is, He went from the west coast to the east coast of the Sea of Galilee. “There met Him two demon-possessed men, coming out of the tombs, exceedingly fierce, so that no one could pass that way.”
Two demon-possessed men. Throughout the gospel we meet people who were demon possessed. There seemed to be three areas of affliction by demons. First, their possession of a person would bring physical disabilities, for example: dumbness. . .Matthew 9; blindness. . .Matthew 12; deformity. . .Luke 13. Demon possession sometimes brought mental derangement, for example insanity in Luke 8, suicidal mania in Mark 9, masochism in Mark 5. Or demon possession might bring spiritual diseases; a corruption of the truth as Peter indicates in his epistle, or as Ahab experienced through the lying spirit God sent in the mouth of the 400 prophets, occult practices, as we see in Deuteronomy 18, or just plain immorality and treachery, as we see Satan possessing the heart of Judas and the will of the chief priests who crucified the Christ.
Demon possession seems to have been common where one of the two things were true. Where people lived in the darkness of rank heathendom, and where people, although they had received the light of the truth, nevertheless, so rejected it, that God sent them a spirit of delusion, as Paul refers to it in Thessalonians, that they might believe the lie.
What shall we say of the present age? First, I think many missionaries will testify that in the dark places of the earth where tribes have lived for centuries in total ignorance of the truth, there are people who are demon possessed. Second, in what we call Western Civilization, as we more and more break covenant with God, as people regress into the darkness of loving the lie rather than the truth, because , as Paul says in Thessalonians, they took pleasure in unrighteousness, we begin to see and will see more demon possession.
There is a terrible power in demons. However, we will be wise to follow the advice of C.S. Lewis, who said, “There are two equal and opposite errors into which our race can fall in our thinking about devils. One is to disbelieve in their existence. The other is to believe in their existence but to feel an excessive and unhealthy interest in them.”
Demons, devils, are real. The Scriptures testify to their existence and to their great power. However, what the divine Word also testifies is what John said in his epistle, that Jesus came in the flesh to destroy the works of the devil. Jesus Himself said that when a strong man keeps his goods they are in safety, but when a stronger than him comes and binds the strong man, he plunders his goods. The devil is the strong man, who held so many of the Jews, and so much of the world in bondage, but Jesus is the stronger man, who came to bind Satan, and then to plunder his goods, to free those who were kept in bondage.
So, by all means, have a healthy respect for the reality and power of demons, for we are not, as the Scripture tells us, ignorant of their devices. But fear them not, rather fear God, who through Christ has placed His foot on the head of Satan, and promises that we too, will shortly have Satan under our feet. The two men of our text came out of the tombs, out of the cemetery, the caves in the hillsides outside of the city where the dead were buried. We remember that every contact with the dead made a person unclean, so this is the proper place for devils, the place of the dead, the place of uncleanness.
Our text says that these men were exceedingly fierce so that no one could pass that way. The other gospels say that men tried to bind them with chains, but they broke all the chains. We must realize that the demons hate men. They hate men because they hate God, and God made man in His own image. It is because man is in the image of God, that through defacing and destroying men, by filling them with fierce hatred towards one another, by urging them to treasure up malice, to slander, to revile each other, the demons achieve their objective of fighting against God.
“And suddenly,” says our text, “they cried out, saying, ‘What have we to do with you, Jesus. You Son of God? Have you come here to torment us before the time?’ “ Strange words. . .”What have we to do with you, Jesus. You, Son of God?” These demons knew with complete certainty what the people of God didn’t seem to know yet, that this man before them was the very Son of God, and that all judgment was given into His hand. Isn’t that a sobering thought? What? That someone. . .for these demons were persons. . .that a human person too, can have no doubt but that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of the Living God, and yet be damned.
I want you to listen to what Matthew Henry says about these words, and about those who have the knowledge of Christ, but yet do not have real faith. He said, “It is not the knowledge but the love that distinguishes man from demons.” And then he went on to say, “He is the first-born of hell that knows Christ and yet rejects Him and will not be subject to Him and to His law.”
And we remember the words of the apostle James, who said, “You believe in God? You do well. The demons also believe and tremble.” “What have we to do with you, Jesus, you Son of God?” Ah yes, they wanted nothing to do with Jesus, but He had everything to do with them. For in the temptations in the wilderness, Jesus resisted the devil who came to Him, here He comes to the demons, not merely to resist them, but to overpower them. And, as we see from our text, and throughout His ministry, He did overpower them.
There will be a time, beloved, whether that is sooner or later, whether that is in the next hundred years, and whether it will wait for 20,000 years, there will be a time when Satan is loosed again for a little season. And what we need to remember, and what the Holy Spirit through the gospels is telling us, is that Jesus, even in His state of humiliation, was totally sovereign over the demons, over the forces of evil. How much more so now, when all rulers, and principalities, all the powers of darkness in heavenly places, are made subject to Him. How much more so now, as He is presently reigning until all rule and authority, all powers and persons, are made subject to Him, and every knee shall bow and confess that Jesus is Lord?
We just sang it, didn’t we? And though this world with devils filled should threaten to undo us, we will not fear, for God has willed His truth to triumph through us. One little Word shall fell him. And that Word is Christ. “What have we to do with you, Jesus, you Son of God? Have you come here to torment us before the time?”
Here again we see the knowledge of the reprobate, of the demons, who knew that the Son of God would come twice into this world. The first time He would come to bring the judgment of God upon all the chosen race upon Himself, the second time, to bring judgment upon all unbelievers and demons. They knew this, and yet were terribly fearful, that Jesus had come now to cast them into the lake of fire that burns forever and ever.
So even the demons knew what so many ignorant, unbelieving, and wicked of the world deny, that there will come a day of judgment, a day of reckoning, a day when God will exact the full penalty for their wicked lives. Yet they begged, “Please, don’t say that the day has already come? Not now, please?” And so, says Calvin, “the reprobate never reckon that the time for punishing is fully come: for they would willingly delay it from day to day.” This too, is an essential element of the gospel when we bring it to others. “Do not delay. Do not say with the Roman governor, ‘Go away, when I have a more convenient time I’ll call you to come again.’ “
Now is the day of salvation. Now is the acceptable time. Now is the day of the Lord’s grace and mercy. Now it is day, for the night comes soon enough when it is all over. It is given to men once to die, but after that the judgment. We perhaps should mix a little urgency into the gospel recipe we present to the world. But Jesus did not come this first time to bring final judgment on the demons nor on the wicked world. He did not come to destroy men’s lives but to save them. He came to usher in the great day of grace, the great age of the gospel proclamation, that through faith in the suffering, death, and resurrection of Christ, all men might be saved from the wrath to come.
Let’s continue with the text: “Now a good way off from them were a herd of many swine feeding. So the demons begged Him, saying, ‘If you cast us out, permit us to go away into the herd of swine.’ And He said to them, ‘Go.’ “
Although it is not certain from the text, we may believe that there certainly were Jews involved in the raising of these swine. It was the preferred meat of the Romans, and the Jews were not adverse to making money on the Romans, even if it meant, as it did here, making it through the raising and sale of unclean animals. For pigs were unclean. Pigs ate anything.
Pigs wallowed in the mud. Even today, if someone is really messy and dirty, we call him a pig. Swine, hogs, were an abomination to the Jews, even more so since the terrible episode that sparked the rebellion of the Maccabees some 160 years before. Yet here was this great herd of swine, feeding on the hillside. “Permit us to go away into the herd of swine.” And Jesus said, “Go.”
“Permit us.” Here again is great comfort for the believer, great comfort to know that even the greatest powers conspiring for our downfall, even the demons themselves, can do nothing except with the permission of Jesus Christ. Here again is another proof that Jesus is the Son of God, is God Himself. For throughout the Old Testament it is only to God that Satan shows himself subject. You remember Satan appearing before God about Job. Satan could only deal with Job as far as God allowed him and no farther. The same permission we find in the episode of Ahab and Micaiah the prophet. Micaiah tells Ahab that he saw the Lord sitting on His throne all the host of heaven on His right hand and on His left. Then God asked the question, “Who will go up to persuade Ahab that he may fall at Ramoth Gilead?” And one said this, and one said that. But at last a spirit said, “I will be a lying spirit in the mouth of His prophets.” And God said, “Go, and you will prevail.”
So when the news of the world and the news of this country, and your own personal struggles persuade you that the devil himself is in control, and there is simply no way out, go and read the book of Revelation again, a book full of demons and dragons, of fearsome beasts, of evil spirits like frogs, and know again, that the Lamb shall make war with them, and the Lamb shall overcome, for He is King of kings and Lord of lords.
“So the demons begged Him, saying, ‘If you cast us out, permit us to go away into the her of swine.’ And He said to them, ‘Go,’ So when they had come out, they went into the herd of swine, and suddenly the whole herd of swine ran violent down the steep lace into the sea, perished in the water.”
We have two questions here. First, why did the demons want to go into the swine? Second, why did Jesus let them do this wanton destruction of all these pigs? Why did the demons want to go into the swine? Perhaps we can give several reasons. Swine were unclean, and demons, by their very nature are unclean, filthy, and abhorrent to God and man. Demons are agents of destruction, and if they cannot destroy man, they will, as they did to Job, destroy his possessions. But perhaps the main reason for wanting to enter into and destroy these swine, was that in doing so they would create animosity against Jesus in the citizens of that country. I say that because if this indeed was their goal, they seemed to be successful.
Why then did Jesus say, “Go?” First, we must understand that this word “Go,” is not a word of command, but a word of permission. In giving them permission, Jesus Himself was not the author of the evil done, but the demons had full responsibility.
Second, Jesus would use this destruction of their property to test the citizens of the land. What did they value more? Their pigs. . .or the restoration of two men, their release from the graveyard and demon possession, into sanity and health again. What did they love more. . .their property or the presence of Jesus?
We continue with verse 33, “Then those who kept them fled; and they went away into the city and told everything, including what had happened to the demon-possessed men. And behold the whole city came out to meet Jesus. And when they saw Him, they begged Him to depart from their region. And when they saw Him, they begged Him to depart from their region.” And the next words in Scripture, Matthew 9:1, tells us, “So He got into a boat, crossed over, and came to His own city.”
The people of that city evidently thought Christ was responsible for the destruction of their swine. Yet, the swineherds told them everything, and that meant that they knew that Jesus had freed these two men from demon-possession. These two men were no longer fierce, they were no longer uncontrollable, they no longer lived among the dead. They were clothed and in their right mind, filled with thankfulness for the grace given to them, for the liberty that now was theirs.
What should have been here? They should have come rejoicing in the freedom of these men. They should have come to praise Christ, to praise God. They should have brought their sick and demon possessed to Christ. But these people evidently preferred swine to liberty from the demons. They chose pigs before people, swine before the Savior. They loved swineherds before the good Shepherd. And in doing so they condemned themselves as swine instead of sheep.
Oh, how the pleasures of sin grip people. How hard it is to let go of the satisfaction of wallowing in the mud of sin, of malice, of self-satisfaction, of forbidden pleasures. Swine before Christ. It is so, is it not? There are so many who so much prefer earthly satisfaction, fulfillment, and success that they willingly part with Christ. “You ask too much of me, O Christ, I cannot give these things up. Go away.”
What a contrast the Hebrew believers formed, as we read in the Epistle that they joyfully endured the plundering of their goods, knowing that in heaven they had a more enduring substance. And what was that more enduring substance? They had Jesus Christ as their Lord and Savior, their Mediator and Priest, their sacrifice and their life.
But, if God in Christ is no longer at the center of our existence, then He gets in our way. He keeps us from friends we may like. He won’t let us cheat. He makes us love people we don’t feel like loving. He makes us do things we don’t feel like doing. He forbids us things we do feel like doing. This is the presence of Jesus among us.
But those who say to the Almighty, “Depart from us,” will soon enough hear the Almighty say to them, “Depart from Me, you cursed, into the fire prepared for the devil and his angels.” So the question is, isn’t it: Will we love the sovereign Christ more than anything in the world, or will we die hanging on to our iPod?
Jesus dispossesses the demons: Demons are real. Satan is real. His rage against God and against the saints of the Lord is real. Is demon possession increasing in this age? Will any Reformation of the church today be accompanied by an influx of devils? Is this why in the 16th century Reformation Martin Luther wrote, “And though this world with devils filled should threaten to undo us?”
Yet, we will also sing with Luther, will we not, “Let goods and kindred go, this mortal life also, the body they may kill, God’s truth abideth still, His kingdom is forever.” Let me conclude with these verses from Revelation 12: “And the dragon was enraged with the woman, and he went to make war with the rest of her offspring, who keep the commandments of God and have the testimony of Jesus Christ.” (Rev. 12:17 NKJV) “And they overcame him by the blood of the Lamb and by the word of their testimony, and they did not love their lives to the death.” (Rev. 12:11 NKJV)
August 31, 2008
Sermon by Rev. Donald Van Dyken
Trinity Church of Tri-Cities
August 17, 2008
Scripture: Luke 17:1-19
Text: Luke 17:11-19
Mercy, Healing, Thankfulness, and Faith
Beloved congregation of the Lord Jesus Christ, In our passage Jesus is on his way to Jerusalem to offer Himself up as a sacrifice for the sins of His people. He knew what awaited Him there, for several times He told His disciples that He would be mocked, scourged, and crucified, and then rise again the third day.
Jesus was walking along the border between Galilee and Samaria. Galilee, you remember was a few days journey north of Judea and Jerusalem, and Galilee was the home of many Jews and the scene of many of Jesus’ miracles. Samaria was the home of a mixed race of people, sent there by the Assyrian king after the destruction of Samaria and the captivity of Israel about 722 BC.
When the king of Assyria had settled various races there, lions started killing them, so they begged the king to send them someone who knew the gods of the land so they could deal with the lions. The king sent a priest, not a priest of Aaron’s line, but a priest of the line that Jeroboam had begun. So, the people of the land they served their own gods, and tried after their fashion to serve the God of Israel as well, a kind of hybrid religion. And so they continued.
When the Lord brought back the captivity of Judah around 500 BC, under the supervision of Nehemiah they set about to reconstruct the temple and the walls of Jerusalem. The Samaritans, led by Sanballat and Tobiah vigorously opposed the reconstruction, mocked them, and petitioned the king of Persia to put a halt to the work. However, the people of God prevailed, the work was completed, but the animosity between the Samaritans and the Jews continued strong until the time of Christ. No Jew would eat with a Samaritan, talk with them, and when a Samaritan approached, they would make certain to stay a long way from him.
Jesus, traveling then along the border between Samaria and Galilee came to a certain village, and there ten lepers came into view. They stood a long way from Jesus, and you know the reason for we have met with lepers before in Jesus’ ministry.
Leprosy was a dread disease, not only the physical pain and disfigurement, but particularly the social stigma attached to this disease. Through Moses God had commanded that those who had leprosy were to cover themselves, and announce when they approached anyone, “Unclean, Unclean.” They were forbidden to live with others, and were prohibited from entering the temple of God. So they were cut off from God and man. The Jews of Jesus day thought leprosy to be a mark of God’s particular displeasure with them, a mark of a very sinful person.
Well, there was nothing forbidding them from keeping company with each other, and their common misery brought them together. We see from the passage that at least one of them was a Samaritan, so this leprosy, and their common pain, disfigurement, and ostracism, even overcame the barriers of racial hatred. As sheep and wolves will walk together in peace when threatened by a forest fire, or as they will huddle together on high ground fleeing from a flood, so these common enemies huddled together under the curse of leprosy.
“There met Him ten men, who were lepers, who stood afar off.” Stood afar off. They were humbly aware that they could not come near. Yet, as we see from their cry, they knew something of Jesus, they knew of His power, they knew of His mercy. For they cried out, “Jesus, Master, have mercy on us.” “Jesus, Lord, have mercy on us.”
Kyrie eleison. These Greek words have been part of the church’s liturgy now for centuries. Many songs have been composed with those words. Kyrie, or Lord, Master; eleison, have mercy.
Kyrie elieson. Kyrie. Jesus, Master. They knew something of his authority and power, for they called Him Lord. But what they really knew, for the words echoed in their heads, was the mercy of the Lord.
For these ten lepers, Jews and at least one Samaritan, the God of Israel, even in their misery, remembered Jehovah as the God of mercy. Even if they had to stand far off from the weekly worship in the synagogues, even if they could only stand outside the walls of Jerusalem, every Sabbath they could still catch the chorus of Israel’s choral anthem, “Praise the Lord, for His mercy endures forever. Let the house of Israel now say, For His mercy endures forever.” Jesus, Jehovah Savior, Lord, have mercy on us.
One commentator put it beautifully, remarking about the humility of these ten lepers, that the mercy of Christ is ready to flow into every heart that is lowly, as water flows into all low levels.
You know, when we think of ourselves in relation to someone we need and want to know better, we try to think of some point of contact. We may have a common interest in fishing, and so begin asking about the best way to catch bass. But where is the point of contact when we need God, and when we want to get intimate with Him? The point of contact is mercy. He Himself has laid down that point of contact in Jesus Christ, for, as Hebrews tells us, we come to God through Jesus, that, as Hebrews 4:16 says, “we may come boldly to the throne of grace that we may obtain mercy, and find grace to help in time of need.”
“So when He saw them…” and we can take from this that he then approached them, and just said these few word, “Go, show yourselves to the priests.” That’s it. Just those few words. Why did Jesus say this? We know from the verses that follow that as they went their way they were healed. So if they were healed, why did Jesus tell them to go to the priest?
They had to go to the priest for three reasons. First, they, (and we all need it) needed official assurance that they were clean, they were healed. The priest had to examine them, and then, as an official appointed by God, publicly pronounce that they were clean, healed of this dread disease. So, for their own assurance, for their own confidence that they were indeed freed from the disease that had so long plagued them, they needed an official act of God’s appointed priest to make the pronouncement.
Do you think that the reason so many people today still deal with feelings of guilt over past sins or omissions, and have trouble coming to the full assurance of forgiveness, is because they don’t have one of God’s officials make pronouncement over them? Think about it.
Second, they had to go to the priest, for the priest would also declare to all the people that this person was healed, and so was free to come and go among them. If he had a wife and children, he could finally go home. He could go to work again among his fellow laborers.
Third, and most important, the priest would declare that this ex-leper could now come into the assembly of God’s people in worship. God Himself, through the priest, was admitting this person into His presence again, and all the blessings from which he was formerly cut off, were his again to enjoy.
Jesus is telling us, isn’t He, that there are more dimensions to healing than just the physical. I think we may say that there are six dimensions. First, there is the personal dimension, what the person thinks of himself, is he whole again? Second, there is the other aspect of the personal dimension, what others think of him in terms of his healing. Has he really been healed? Third, there is the social dimension. Is he assured that others will accept him again? Fourth, the other aspect of that social dimension, can others say that they do accept him? Fifth, the spiritual dimension, if we may call it that, and that is this, is this person assured that God accepts him? Does he have that personal confidence that his cure has gained him admittance into the presence of God? And again, sixth, the obverse again, has God officially said that He accepts him? For you see, a person may have confidence that God accepts him, but unless that confidence is confirmed by God Himself, he will ever be uncertain. Someone may say, “I feel that God has forgiven me, and cleansed me.” But, and this is what will plague him, can he be certain that his feelings are a firm foundation for that confidence? Not really. He needs the verbal assurance from God Himself.
Are we aware of, and do we give proper recognition and practice to these dimensions in the life of the church today?
“So when he saw them, He said to them, “Go, show ourselves to the priests.” “And so it was that as they went, they were cleansed.” As they went they were cleansed; their scaly skin smoothed over, the open sores closed up, the raspy voices became harmonious, the fingers and toes that had fallen off were restored again, all the spots and blotches disappeared. They were whole again, they were clean. How they must have jumped and shouted, “Hallelujah, it’s over. We’ve been released. We are free. We can go home again. No more calling out “unclean, unclean.”
“And one of them, when he saw that he was healed, returned, and with a loud voice, glorified God, and fell down on his face at His feet, giving Him thanks. And he was a Samaritan.” “So Jesus answered and said, “Were there not ten cleansed? But where are the nine? Were there not any found who returned to give glory to God except this foreigner?”
And this introduces us to the subject of thankfulness, doesn’t it? First of all, this record shows us how often there is a great contrast between the people of God, whose lives and actions should be full of gratitude for the mercy God renews for them every morning. And yet, as we often pray, “Lord, teach us not to take all these things, these mercies for granted.”
Most of us are familiar with the words of Jeremiah in Lamentations, suffering under bitter trials, and yet saying, “It is because of your mercies that we are not consumed. Great is your faithfulness. Your mercies are renewed every morning.”
Why is it that in times of misery and woe, in times of trials and pains, in times of stress and problems that we cannot overcome, that we come so near to God? We plead with Him, we pray with tears, we groan, we cry out. “Hear me, Lord. Listen to me. Help me. Rescue me.” And that is all to the good. We honor God by coming to Him with our sorrows and problems. He has told us to cast all our cares on Him for He cares for us. “Call upon me in the day of trouble, and I will answer you,” says the Lord.
Yes, we call on Him, and we can call on Him even when we are in trouble because of our own sins and failings. Remember how often Israel cried to the Lord during the time of the judges, when they forsook the Lord and followed strange gods. He heard, He answered, and saved by His mercies. Yet, when saved, they soon forgot the Lord, and instead of thankful, obedient living, they went their own ways. Thankfulness. The Samaritan alone of the ten returned to praise God and give thanks to Jesus, Master, for showing mercy to him.
Were the other nine really cured? Yes, they were. The Lord had indeed showed mercy to them, and they received that mercy in their own bodies, and yet, we might say, they did not fully embrace that mercy, for if they did, they would have joyfully returned with this Samaritan to Jesus. Do we joyfully embrace the salvation God gives us? Not just the salvation against hellfire at the last day, but salvation from our hurts and pains, salvation from the dilemmas we find ourselves in because of sin, or because we have neglected our duties? How often have you had this experience, that you have faced a problem, that try as you may, you can’t solve it. Finally, out of desperation, you come to the Lord. Then, a couple of weeks later, the problem is resolved. It disappears. It’s not there any longer. Whoa, what happened? It went away. It’s gone. Wow. Then what? How does our thinking go? We think, well, it just went way. Really? And we forget that God acted in answer to our prayers, and we fail to give thanks to God.
Beloved, remember the words of the apostle Paul as he was writing about the vile heathen who knew not God. What did he say in Romans 1 that characterized the heathen apart from God? Romans 1:21: “Because, although they knew God, they did not glorify Him as God, nor were thankful…” Nor were thankful. Ingratitude is the great charge Paul brings against them. And us? Listen to the Psalmist, Psalm 116, the one we sang a few minutes ago: “What shall I render to the Lord for all His benefits toward me? I will take up the cup of salvation, and call upon the name of the Lord, I will pay my vows to the Lord now in the presence of all His people.” “Now in the presence of all His people.”
Public thanksgiving, gratitude and praise expressed in corporate worship. Verse 18,19, “I will pay my vows to the Lord now in the presence of all His people, in the courts of the Lord’s house, in the midst of you, O Jerusalem. Praise the Lord.”
How can we make this more meaningful, to bring personal, family, church thanks to the Lord? The nine were shamed by the gratitude of this one Samaritan. We remember God in adversity, but so soon forget Him in prosperity.
But what about the priests? Wouldn’t this Samaritan have had to still go to the temple and to the priests? He did. He did? Yes, however, instead of going to the Old Testament temple, he went to the New Testament temple, Jesus Christ himself. You remember that in John 2 Jesus said, “Destroy this temple and in three days I will raise it up.” He was speaking of Himself, for He was the true, the real meeting place of God and man. For He was both God and man.
He came to the temple, and he came to the priest, for the priest was Jesus Christ himself. He had that priest, and we have that priest, who today has entered the holiest for us, that we may have a strong consolation, that through His words, through His pronouncement, we are clean, personally, socially, and spiritually. Through the Word of Christ, through the body and blood of Christ, He Himself officially declares that we may consider ourselves to be children of God, saints, holy ones of the most High. He Himself declares that we are members of one another again, joined in community with all the members of the church, restored socially. He Himself declares, that as the Father has loved Him, so the Father loves us. We are accepted in the beloved.
But again, let me raise the question. How do we know all this? What is the ministry of the church and its officers for us in all this? Has this been neglected?
Let’s return to this theme of thankfulness again. This Samaritan came to Jesus, fell at his feet, and praised God, thanking the Lord Jesus for his mercies. “And He said to him, “Arise, go your way, your faith has made you well.” “Your faith has made you well.” This is a curious statement. For in our confession, the Heidelberg Catechism we ask the question: “Why do you say that you are righteous only by faith?” and we answer, “Not that I am acceptable to God on account of the worthiness of my faith…”
We have no problem accepting that as Biblical truth. And yet, and yet, the Bible so often presents us seeming contradictions, for in this statement of Jesus to the Samaritan He seems to attribute his healing to the worthiness of his faith. Well, we can believe both and still be comfortable, for this is what our God says.
There are four instances in the gospel of Luke where Jesus says this and each of the people to whom He says this are in some sense outcasts.
In Luke 7:50, Jesus said to the woman of ill-repute who had washed His feet at the home of Simon the Pharisee, “Your faith has saved you.”
In Luke 8:48, He said the same to the woman who was unclean because of the 12 year issue of blood.
In Luke 18:42 to the blind man at Jericho.
Each one, in their own way, was outcast, socially and spiritually, from man and from God. And in each case, Jesus said, “Your faith has made you well, or saved you.” Although in all cases He used the same word, which carries with it the meaning of saving, wellness, and above all wholeness. I want to comment on that later.
But now let’s look at this faith. “Your faith has made you well.”
Faith is perhaps the most precious of our possessions. We know it is a gift from God, but nevertheless, and paradoxically, God Himself treasures the exercise of that gift above all others.
Let me ask you this question: Do you aspire to have great faith? If you do, or if you now think that you should, do you realize that all the great trials and all the suffering you experience under the hand of God, are opportunities to exercise your faith, and exercise it in a way that triumphs, that wins?
Listen to what the apostle Peter says about faith, “Now for a little while, if need be, you have been grieved by various trials, that the genuineness of your faith, being much more precious than gold that perishes, (let me emphasize that) being much more precious than gold that perishes, it is tested by fire, may be found to praise, honor, and glory at the revelation of Jesus Christ.”
Faith is a precious commodity, a gift from God, treasured, loved, and honored by God, now, and certainly on the great day when Jesus will appear. Will God honor your faith? Well, here is some evidence for you. Read Hebrews 11, read of all the trials and struggles of the Old Testament saints, and then ask yourself how they conquered. The answer of course is, by faith. And God has set down the list of their conquests of faith continuously in print for 2000 years that we may admire them, and be encouraged to follow that faith, precious in the sight of God.
Now let me return to a theme I mentioned earlier, and that is the added dimensions to healing and cure. Jesus said, “Your faith has made you well.” That word “well”, as I mentioned, means wholeness, complete restoration. Being well is life in the kingdom of God that Jesus brought, living in the expectation and reality of full deliverance.
Each of the four accounts where Jesus mentioned faith and wellness, is followed, either directly or after another related narrative, by Jesus’ conversation about the kingdom of heaven. Luke 7 the forgiveness of sins. Luke 8 the resurrection of the dead. Luke 17, the call to suffering. Luke 18 & 19, a wholeness that includes both physical healing and salvation.
The Samaritan returned to Jesus, and became one of those, like the disciples, who found in Jesus entrance into the new kingdom, for Jesus was breaking into the old and establishing the kingdom of God on earth. This story’s definition of healing includes more than just a cure for leprosy. It describes a particular sense of wholeness, one that recognizes God, who created the world and elected Israel as a player in human life, on that sees the eschatological, the final and complete saving and healing presence of God in Jesus Christ.
For the healed leper then, community, restoration to social relations with others, is not merely human intercourse, it is the church, participation in the body of those who recognize Christ as Head, the place where outcasts and aliens find a home among the disciples of Christ.
Wholeness is given not merely by therapy, but by forgiveness; it recognizes the essential incompleteness of man without the saving work of God. Cure and healing are given not only for the sake of one’s own well-being; they are gifts of a Christ and teach us that life is found as it is given away (Luke 17:33), following Christ who models a mission of one who came not to be served, but to serve.
Many definitions of holistic and traditional healing know of the need to care for the spiritual dimension of life—often however with little content and no way to test the truth or value of such spirituality. Biblical healing sees a spiritual dimension to life because it sees a human person created in the image of God. It sees that because of sin and its consequences, man needs far more than creation can offer. Biblical healing recognizes a distance between man and God, the reality of alienation between man and God, and therefore between man and man.
God’s intervention in this world is to overcome this alienation in the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ. Healing and saving, healing and mission, are intimately and integrally related. Is the church in the healing business, apart from the vocations of some of its members? Was divine healing only a reality in the time of Christ? God does mean for people to be well, and he provides for it not only through creation and human vocation, but also through the ministry of prayer and the proclamation of the renewing power of God’s Spirit in and through the gospel of Christ.
Church ministry will not so much focus ministry on human potential as on the new life given by the death and resurrection of Christ and presented in word and sacrament. Jesus does not provide healing through ecstatic experience or unlock the secrets of creation known only to Him. Jesus embodies the very presence of God, and in that presence sin, death, and the devil cannot abide.
So, let us remember mercy, gratitude, faith, and the church’s ministry to bring wholeness. And let us come to the table now, in humble faith, knowing our need for mercy, in great thankfulness for God’s great gift of his Son’s sacrifice, and in complete assurance that the work of Christ’s Spirit in us will bring us all to complete wholeness. Amen.
Sermon by Rev. Donald Van Dyken
Trinity Church of Tri-Cities
Lord’s Day August 17, 2008
Scripture: John 6:1-14; 25-35
Text: John 6:5-14
Is There Enough Bread in Bethlehem?
Beloved congregation of the Lord Jesus Christ, unless you are old enough to have experienced the great shortage of food in Europe following the Second World War, you probably have never given much thought to where your next loaf of bread was coming from. Although many of us remember the vast oversupply of wheat this country had at one time, the rising price of wheat today is beginning to gain our attention, and the possibility of a shortage of b read is not so remote as it once seemed.
Throughout history bread meant the most basic commodity, the essential food for life. When famine and death stared Jacob and his sons in the face in Canaan, Jacob told his sons to go to Egypt, for he heard there was bread in Egypt.
Israel’s deliverance from Egypt 400 years later was commemorated by the feast of Passover, unleavened bread and the blood of the Lamb. And now in our passage this morning, Jesus went up on the mountain, and there He sat with His disciples. Now, says verse 4, the Passover, a feast of the Jews, was near. “Then Jesus lifted up His eyes, and seeing a great multitude coming toward Him, He said to Philip, “Where shall we buy bread, that these may eat? But this He said to test him, for He Himself knew what He would do.”
For my theme this morning, I have rephrased the question of Jesus this way, Is there enough bread in Bethlehem? I have used the name Bethlehem because that word means “House of bread,” and because Jesus was born in Bethlehem. Or, to repeat the question the children of Israel had in the desert, “Can God set a table for us in the wilderness? Can He provide bread here?”
Let me remind you again that we in this land, under the great blessing of our God, under the great reign of our King Jesus Christ, have never known a shortage of food; there has never been a day when we had no bread to put on our tables. It is good for us to realize that that may not always continue. We live in precarious times, times when the old certainties are tipping, when an inexhaustible supply of wheat to grind into flour to make bread, is simply not there any more. Is our Lord bringing us, or will He bring our children into a time where the prayer He taught us will take on new and pressing urgency: Give us this day our daily bread.
“Give us bread and circuses?” “Where shall we buy bread, that these may eat?” Jesus asked this question knowing the answer, but asked it to test His disciples. And the first thing the disciples thought about was money. That’s a natural reaction, isn’t it? For if you have enough money, the question of bread is answered, isn’t it?
Philip said, “Two hundred denarii worth of bread is not sufficient for them, that every one of them may have a little.” For Philip the question was not whether money could provide bread or not, but the question was whether they had enough money. But, does money answer the question, really? Does money make bread? Come with me to a place where perhaps most of the money in the world seems to be concentrated right now. Where is that? Let’s just say that it is concentrated in Saudi Arabia and in the United Arab Emirates. Have you ever seen the money being spent in Dubai? How much bread is that money producing? Nothing. Those countries are completely non-productive. If the great wheat producing countries of the world, the United States, Canada, Australia, and perhaps the Ukraine, did not grow a surplus of wheat, the Middle East, those rich Arab countries would starve, for all their money.
Is there enough bread in Bethlehem? Let’s go back to our father Adam in the Garden of Eden and ask the question, is there enough food here? What answer did Adam give? His answer was “No,” there is not enough food here, we need to eat of the tree that God has forbidden us to eat of. Because Adam gave that answer, God pronounced a curse upon him and said, “In the sweat of your face you shall eat bread, until you return to the ground.” Man would gain bread, his daily bread, by painful toil, living under curse. Yet the promise of God was that the curse would be lifted. Bread would come by promise not by labor. Bread would come by grace and not by earning. Bread would come by the Word of God, not by the word and power of man.
A lesson long in learning. Esau came in from hunting and needed bread. How would he get it? How would God provide for Esau? Esau was the first-born, and as the first-born he inherited the promises. What promises? The promises God made to Abraham and Isaac, the promises that He would be his God and the God of his children. The promise that he would inherit the land. The promise that God would multiply his seed as the stars of heaven. The promise of life. Esau weighed those promises over against his need, or what he perceived was his need, and sold those promises for bread.
Israel in the wilderness. No bread. What shall we do for bread in the wilderness? We are hungry. Why did you bring us out here to kill us with hunger? We remember that in Egypt we ate bread to the full, we could eat as much as we wanted. (Ex. 16:3)
Of course, they forgot that they were slaves, people under the curse, slaving away to earn their bread. But here they were in the wilderness, there was no bread, and they were hungry. Why did God let them become hungry? God told them why. “So He humbled you, allowed you to hunger, and fed you with manna which you did not know nor did your fathers know, that He might make you know that man shall not live by bread alone; but man lives by every word that proceeds from the mouth of the Lord.” (De. 8:3 NKJV)
“Man lives by every word that proceeds from the mouth of the Lord.” For the mouth of the Lord had spoken, “I will give you manna from heaven, your daily bread.” So Psalm 78 commemorates that by saying, “Yes, they spoke against God: They said, “Can God prepare a table in the wilderness? Behold, He struck the rock, so that the waters gushed out, and the streams overflowed. Can He give bread also? Can He provide meat for His people?” therefore the LORD heard this and was furious; so a fire was kindled against Jacob, and anger also came up against Israel, because they did not believe in God, and did not trust in His salvation. Yet He had given them of the bread of heaven. Men at angels’ food; He sent them food to the full.” (Ps 78:19-25 NKJV)
We, the children of God, are to live by promise, by grace, by the Word of the Lord. And when the Lord sees that we need to understand that more vividly, when He sees that we only have an abstract theoretical knowledge of what it means to live by grace, to live by faith in the Word of God, He may indeed send us a famine of bread. Are you prepared for that? Have you prepared your children for that? Is there enough bread in Bethlehem?
What is the answer to a shortage of bread? More money? What was the answer in the time of Elijah when God sent a famine upon Israel? Do you remember the story of Elijah and the widow? Elijah had marched into the throne room of Ahab and declared that there would be no rain or dew these years until Elijah said so. He then marched out. God struck the land with a famine. No bread. What could Elijah do? God told him to go to the brook Cherith where the ravens would feed him. So he went there, drank water from the brook, and the ravens brought him his bread every day.
When the brook dried up, God told Elijah to go to Sidon, for God had prepared a widow there to give him his bread. So he went there, and when he came to Zarepath, a little village in the region of Sidon, he met the widow. Not a rich widow. Not a widow with lands and fields, with houses and banquets. No. . .a poor widow with one little son, gathering sticks. “Give me some water to drink,” said Elijah, “and while you’re at it, give me some bread.”
“Alas,” said the woman, “I have but enough flour to make one loaf of bread. I am gathering enough sticks to make a fire to bake that one loaf for me and my son, and then we shall die.” “But,” said Elijah, “give me bread first. For here is the word of the Lord, your flour shall not fail until God brings rain on the land again.”
And so it was, that the flour did not fail. It was always there for the next loaf of bread. But, life is more than bread, for life is by the Word of the Lord. So the little lad became sick, and finally died. The poor widow, in her anguish, said to Elijah, “What have I to do with you, O man of God? Have you come to bring my sins upon me?” So Elijah went up to the little dead boy, raised him to life again, and presented him to his mother, who then said, “Now by this I know that you are a man of God, and that the word of the Lord in your mouth is truth.”
“Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceeds from the mouth of God.” And this, beloved is the answer, isn’t it? This is the foolishness of God that is wiser than man. This is the great promise of the Gospel that says, “Come, buy wine and milk without money and without price. Why do you spend your money for that which does not profit.”
Jesus had lived out that promise, hadn’t He? You remember that following His baptism and anointing by the Holy Spirit, the Spirit led him into the wilderness to be tempted of the devil. And after forty days without food, the devil said to Him, “If You are the Son of God, command these stones to become bread.” Could Jesus have done that? Of course He could, He was the Son of God. By Him all things were created, and without Him was not anything made that was made.
But Jesus answered the devil by quoting from Deuteronomy 8:13, “It is written,” said Jesus, “Man shall not live by bread only, but by every Word that comes from the mouth of the Lord.” Jesus came to fulfill the Word of the Lord. Jesus came to offer Himself as the bread of life for His people. Jesus came to say, “Unless you eat My flesh and drink My blood, you will die.”
“Two hundred denarii worth of bread is not sufficient for them, that every one of them may have a little.” said Philip. Andrew said, “There is a lad here who has five barley loaves and two small fish, but what are they among so many?” Then Jesus said, “Make the people sit down. Now there was much grass in the place. So the men sat down, in number about five thousand.”“Two hundred denarii worth of bread is not sufficient for them, that every one of them may have a little.” said Philip. Andrew said, “There is a lad here who has five barley loaves and two small fish, but what are they among so many?” Then Jesus said, “Make the people sit down.” Now there was much grass in the place. So the men sat down, in number about five thousand.”
It’s good to remember that the total number was much larger, for other gospel writers say that there were five thousand men, besides women and children. How many would that be altogether? One might say at least fifteen thousand.
Well, there was one lad anyway. But what were five loaves and two small fish going to do for them all? Nothing. What would have been better, at least in our thinking, that someone would stand up and say, “Lord, I have 156,000 denarii, and that will buy more than enough bread for everybody.” But, just as with Elijah, the Lord would choose one with the least, one whose supply in the eyes of man would provide nothing except a joke. Five loaves and two small fish for 15,000 people? Get real.
What could a poor widow offer? How could God use the gift of this poor widow? Well, she had faith, didn’t she? For instead of saying that Elijah could eat after she had finished, she first gave to him. What could this lad offer? Not much. But what he did have, Jesus used, Jesus multiplied.
Now I think there is much we can learn here. We can certainly learn that it is not the size of what we offer to the Lord that counts, but our willingness to give the all that we have, even if that all is so small. Sometimes we moan and groan that we have so little to offer to the Lord. We can’t put that much in the offering for missions. We don’t have much ability. We’re not very good at visiting people. We’re kind of shy when it comes to talking about the gospel to others. There’s not much we can do to help others.
What God wants you to do is to place the little that you have in the hands of Jesus your Lord and Savior, and let Him use it. For really, the Lord is not that much interested for you to wait until you have gained enough money to make what you would consider a great impact. The Lord is not interested for you to wait until you have developed your skills to the point where you are recognized as a great leader or speaker. The Lord wants the little you have right now, for it is His great delight to create strength out of weakness, to make much out of little.
And so it was with these five loaves and two small fish. “And Jesus took the loaves, and when He had given thanks, He distributed them to the disciples, and the disciples to those sitting down; and likewise of the fish, as much as they wanted. So when they were filled, He said to the disciples, “Gather up the fragments that remain, so that nothing is lost.” Therefore they gathered them up, and filled twelve baskets with the fragments of the five barley loaves which were left over by those who had eaten.” Then those men, when they had seen the sign that Jesus did, said, “This is truly the prophet who is to come into the world.” Yes, did they truly believe that? The prophet? The one who brought the Word of the Lord? Later, as we read from verse 26, Jesus said to them, “Most assuredly, I say to you, you seek me, not because you saw the signs, but because you ate of the loaves and were filled. Do not labor for the food which perishes, but for the food which endures to everlasting life, which the Son of man will give you, because God the Father has set His seal on Him.”
Jesus said, “I am the bread of life. He who come to me shall never hunger, and he who believes in me shall never thirst.” And that, beloved, is the point of this miracle, isn’t it? That Jesus came into the world to labor by the sweat of His face, to labor until His sweat was like great drops of blood, to labor under the curse that said, “Adam, in the sweat of your face you shall eat bread until you return to the dust. For dust you are and unto dust you shall return.” But Jesus came to become a curse for us, that
He might fill us with His blessing, with Himself, offered for us, broken for us, poured out for us. Jesus came that the Word might become flesh, and that we, receiving that Word, might have life in Him.
Is there enough bread in Bethlehem? Is the Word of God enough? The Word that created life, the Word that redeemed our lives from the curse, the Word that created the bread that sustains life? “Do not labor for the food which perishes, but for the food which endures to everlasting life, which the Son of man will give to you.”
Beloved people of God. There is a presidential election coming up. The issue, it seems, is no longer Iraq, but the issue is the economy. And when it is said that the issue is economy, it finally boils down to saying that the issue is bread. To whom shall we go for bread? To whom shall we direct people for bread?
At the end of this chapter, after Jesus had spoken many words relating to the issue of bread, after He had directed all those words to find meaning in Himself, in His body and blood, He said this: “It is the Spirit who gives life; the flesh profits nothing. The words that I speak to you are spirit, and they are life.” From that time, says verse 66, many of His disciples went back and walked with Him no more. Then Jesus said to the twelve, “Do you also want to go away?” Simon Peter answered Him, “Lord, to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal life.” And there it is. There may very well come a time, a time that the Lord Jesus
Himself will bring to this land, when there is a shortage of bread. There may come the day when there is a famine in the land. And where shall we go? Can the Lord set a table in the wilderness? Oh yes, the Lord can set a table in the wilderness. Jesus said, “I am the living bread which came down from heaven. If anyone eats of this bread, he will live forever; and the bread that I give is my flesh, which I shall give for the life of the world.”
Beloved, there are severe famines in many parts of the world right now. What shall we do? Shall we export American democracy? Shall we export free market economy? Shall we get the world bank to forgive their country’s debts? Shall we give them wheat? We have been doing all these things for fifty-sixty years. What we need is a renewed export of the gospel, the gospel that through the Word and Spirit of Christ creates churches, churches where the living Word of Christ is proclaimed, churches where a table is set, a table of bread and wine, of strength and joy.
Beloved, let us rejoice that the Lord Jesus still provides us bread for our tables every day, produced by the miracle, not the miracle of American agricultural technology, but by the miracle of the few people who began to settle this country with faith in the Word of God. No, not them, but the miracle of Jesus Christ, who, according to promise, has tamed flooding rivers, and turned the deserts of this land into gardens of God. Yes, Christ still gives us bread for our tables. But when that bread is gone, when He brings a famine, when He lets us go hungry, will we then remember, that we do not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceeds out of the mouth of the Lord. Will we and our children still rejoice in the God of our salvation, who will faithfully serve us the living Word of Christ, and who will set a table before us every first day of the week, a table in the presence of our enemies, a table of bread and of wine?
Amen.
Sermon By: Reverend Donald Van Dyken
Trinity Church of Tri-Cities
Lord’s Day August 10, 2008
Scripture reading: Luke 13:1-17
Text: Luke 13: 10-17
Sabbath Liberation
Beloved congregation of the Lord Jesus Christ, In every miracle Jesus opened up something about Himself, we learn something more about Him, and we learn something more about ourselves as well. In this miracle He not only reveals His power and compassion to a burdened and bent over woman, but also that this was for all the children of Abraham. And throughout this all Jesus reveals something to us about the nature of the Sabbath day, for is it not a day of fasting, but a day of liberation. As the prophet Isaiah said, “Is it a fast that I have chosen, A day for a man to afflict his soul? Is it to bow down his head like a bulrush, And to spread out sackcloth and ashes? Would you call this a fast, And an acceptable day to the LORD? “Is this not the fast that I have chosen: To loose the bonds of wickedness, To undo the heavy burdens, To let the oppressed go free, And that you break every yoke? Is it not to share your bread with the hungry, And that you bring to your house the poor who are cast out; When you see the naked, that you cover him, And not hide yourself from your own flesh? Then your light shall break forth like the morning, Your healing shall spring forth speedily, And your righteousness shall go before you; The glory of the LORD shall be your rear guard. Then you shall call, and the LORD will answer; You shall cry, and He will say, ‘Here I am.’ “If you take away the yoke from your midst, The pointing of the finger, and speaking wickedness, If you extend your soul to the hungry And satisfy the afflicted soul, Then your light shall dawn in the darkness, And your darkness shall be as the noonday. The LORD will guide you continually, And satisfy your soul in drought, And strengthen your bones; You shall be like a watered garden, And like a spring of water, whose waters do not fail. Those from among you Shall build the old waste places; You shall raise up the foundations of many generations; And you shall be called the Repairer of the Breach, The Restorer of Streets to Dwell In.” (Isa. 58:5-12 NKJV)
My theme then is: SABBATH LIBERATION. So we’ll follow this incident first looking at this woman’s bondage, second at the liberation Christ gave her, third at the hypocrisy of the ruler of the synagogue, and finally at how Christ ripped off this mask of hypocrisy.
Our text opens up telling us that Jesus was teaching in one of the synagogues on the Sabbath day. He was still in Galilee. The Jews had built synagogues in most of the principal cities of Galilee. The synagogue was the place where Israel came into the presence of the Word of God. For there they gathered each Sabbath day to sing Psalms, to offer prayers, to listen to the reading of the Law and the Prophets, the Old Testament, to hear again the wonderful promises of God, to bring their gifts, and to be taught out of the Word. And so Jesus was the teacher that day.
“And behold,” says our text, “there was a woman who had a spirit of infirmity eighteen years, and was bent over, and could in no way raise herself up.” Later on Jesus tells us that Satan had bound her these eighteen years. She had a spirit of infirmity. The word here means a weakness, a feebleness, a lack of strength, for, says our text, “she could in no way raise herself up.”
There is no indication that she was possessed by a demon, but only the indication that just as Satan, according to Hebrews 2:14, has the power of death, so he has the power of diseases and illness. He was the one who brought those terrible boils on Job’s body, so exquisitely painful that Job wished himself dead. Yet, as the experience of Job tells us, it is God that permits Satan to exercise this power, and it is God who finally brings relief. Why does Satan exercise that power? Well, every illness is a sign, is just another indicator that we are all falling towards death. And why is there death? That answer we know, death has come because of sin. But Jesus, who would abolish sin in the flesh, would also through that abolish death.
I don’t know if we are often that conscious of the fact that it is our old enemy Satan and his minions who brings sicknesses into our lives. On the one hand we know, from the incident of the man born blind, that his blindness was not because of his sin nor the sin of his parents. On the other hand we believe what the apostle James said, “Is anyone among you sick. Let him call for the elders of the church, and let them pray over him, anointing him with oil in the name of the Lord. And the prayer of faith will save the sick, and the Lord will raise him up. And if he has committed sins, he will be forgiven.” I understand anointing as reference to using the medical resources available, and that through prayer and the means God has provided, He will bring relief. I also see that the reference to sin is conditional, “IF he has committed sins, he will be forgiven.”
The woman was bent over double. She could see little but the ground. Mankind walks upright, but she was bent over like an animal who walked on all fours. She wasn’t a pleasant sight. She couldn’t look people in the face. She couldn’t look up. Only down. She was literally depressed. Are there more people who are like that in an emotional and spiritual way? Depressed, only able to look down, not able to see any blue skies, but only the dark earth? Yes, there are millions that way today. Depression, not only among adults, but also among children, is a major cause for concern today. And one of the terrible things about depression is just what this woman experienced, “she could in no wise raise her self up.” She was under such a weight that she couldn’t straighten up under it.
But that describes depression too, doesn’t it? We might say to the depressed, “Just look up, there’s hope. Things are not as bad as they seem.” “Just look up.” But they can’t. . .they are as powerless as this woman to see anything bright at all. They can’t see the sun, only the ground.
Do you or I ever come to the Lord’s house a bit down about things, or even depressed? In some sense that is nothing to be ashamed about, for if you are at home among the Psalm writers you will see that they often were downcast, depressed, discouraged, and took a dismal view of things. Perhaps the real question is whether you will admit it or not? Perhaps you mask your deep seated anxieties with a mask of “I’m ok. Everything’s just fine.” Well, I want to talk more about that later.
But other things can cripple us as well, can’t they? We may have secret sins that corrode our souls. We may have sins of malice and envy, sins of greed and lust, sins from which we may seem powerless to free ourselves. The sin of sloth, laziness cripples people, and bound in that sin cannot seem just to have the will power to get up and get going. The sin of wasting time cripples us, messing around with frivolous things when there is work to do.
Fear too may cripple us. Fear of man may keep us from speaking out when we should. Fears make us hesitate, afraid to continue as we should. With all these things, with depression, with sloth and idleness, with fears and anxieties, most people are simply powerless to lift themselves up. And I don’t think we should forget that Christ was not only ministering to individuals, but in calling her later on a daughter of Abraham, inferred that the seed of Abraham was in sore need of deliverance. Outwardly she was no longer independent. Ever since the Babylonian captivity she was a subject nation, first to Babylon, then Persia, then Greece and now Rome. But, of course, more than that, she was bound by the weight of her own sins, and could in no way lift herself up. For the blood of bulls and goats and the sprinkling of blood only gave evidence of outward washing, but Israel was yet powerless to cleanse herself from an evil conscience.
The condition for some of Israel was worse that that. St. John records in chapter 8 that Jesus said, “And you shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.” But they answered Him, “We are Abraham’s descendants and have never been in bondage to anyone. How can you say, ‘You will be made free’?” Jesus answered them, “Most assuredly, I say to you, whoever commits sin is a slave of sin.” Does that leave anyone out? “Whether Jew or Gentile, whoever commits sin is a slave of sin.” Jesus didn’t stop there, for He said, “If the son makes you free, you shall be free indeed.” Are any of you still slaves of sin? Or do you want to say that you were born free?
“And behold, there was a woman who had a spirit of infirmity eighteen years, and was bent over, and could in no way raise herself up.” So let me ask you, “Where was this woman?” And the answer is, “In the synagogue.” In the synagogue on the Sabbath day. And this was the right place at the right time, for Jesus saw her, and when He did, He called and said to her, “Woman, you are loosed from your infirmity.”
Why was this the right place? This was the right place because it was here that she could hear again the promises of God, here again that she could hear that the promise was to Abraham and to his children, to his sons and to his daughters. This was the right place because here was the Word of God, the power of God for salvation. This was the right place because God had truly promised, hadn’t He, that Israel would have a Son whose name would be Might God, Prince of peace. This was the right place, for this is where she could hear that God had promised that One would come who said, “For the Lord has called you like a woman forsaken and grieved in spirit.” (Isaiah 54:6) This was the right place, for here she could hear those precious words again from Isaiah 61, “The Lord has anointed me to heal the brokenhearted, to proclaim liberty to the captives, and the opening of the prison to those who are bound.”
She was in the right place. . .the synagogue. . .the gathering of God’s people to listen to the promises of the Word, and she was there at the right time, for it was the Sabbath day. Why was the Sabbath the right time? First of all, as every Jew should have known, in Deuteronomy 5 at the second reading of the law, in connection with the fourth commandment on the Sabbath day, the Lord said, “And remember that you were a slave in the land of Egypt, and the Lord your God brought you out from there by a mighty hand and by an outstretched arm; THEREFORE THE LORD YOUR GOD COMMANDED YOU TO KEEP THE SABBATH DAY.”
Every Sabbath day was to b e a commemoration of the great deliverance God had given them. They had been slaves, bent over under the whip of Pharaoh, and in no way could they lift themselves up. Remembering His promise to Abraham, the Lord raised them up out of the land of Egypt. Of course this was the right time, the right day for liberation. God reinforced this liberation theme in Deuteronomy 15 by saying: “At the end of every seven years you shall grant a release of debts.” Everyone who had been bound by a debt had to be freed from that debt. “Forgive us our debts, as we forgive our debtors.” The debtors were to be freed on that seventh year.
Verse 12: “If your brother, a Hebrew man or a Hebrew woman, is sold to you and serves you six years, then in the seventh year you shall let him go free from you.” The seventh year, like the seventh day, was a time of release. Every slave, and the Bible sometimes calls them bondservants, servants who were bound, had to be freed.
Let me bring out one more thing about this woman and her bound condition. She had been bound for eighteen years. May we suppose that all during those eighteen years she had faithfully attended the synagogue every Sabbath? I think so. For if she had simply given up on the God of Israel, if she thought that all the promises she heard from the law and the prophets were empty words, she would have stopped coming. But she persevered, she didn’t give up, but every Sabbath again she came with her need, she came with her longing to be free, to be raised up.
How easy it is for us to think that coming to the New Testament synagogue, the church, really does nothing for us, really never relieves our burdens, never really frees us from laziness, or fear, or depression. Do we persevere? Do we refuse to believe that the arm of the Lord is not shortened that it cannot save?
The woman had been bound, said Jesus, think of it, these eighteen years. Now she found liberty. “Woman,” said Jesus, “You are loosed from your infirmity.”
She had been bound. Later Jesus said that Satan had bound her. She had no power to loose herself. But Jesus liberated her. . .unbound her. . .freed her from those bonds, those cords that held her down. For the first time in eighteen years she stood upright. She belonged to the human race again. She could look people in the face. She could look up at the blue skies over her, at the clouds, at the sunrise and the sunsets. She was freed!
This is the liberation that Jesus gave. And this is the liberation that the apostles proclaimed throughout the world, first of all going into the synagogues of the Jews every Sabbath day. They proclaimed the blood of the Lamb of God that freed them from the guilt of sin which the law of Moses was powerless to do. They proclaimed that through the gospel of Jesus Christ men and women were free from the power of superstition, so the men and women of Ephesus burned books of magic worth 30,000 pieces of silver. Men and women every where were freed from bondage, from slavery to demons, and brought into the glorious liberty of the sons of God.
“But when Jesus saw her, He called her to Him, and said to her, “Woman, you are loosed from your infirmity.” And He laid His hands on her, and immediately she was made straight, and glorified God.”
“But the ruler of the synagogue answered with indignation, because Jesus had healed on the Sabbath; and he said to the crowd, “There are six days on which men ought to work; therefore come and be healed on them, and not on the Sabbath day.” What a mind and heart full of malice and hatred. And he didn’t even dare to speak directly to Jesus, but instead tried to get at Him by talking to the crowd instead. Why doesn’t this ruler forbid everyone from entering the synagogue on the Sabbath day, for wouldn’t that take effort, wouldn’t that be work?
“Come on other days for a cure.” As if the power of God lay asleep on the Sabbath day, and rather that the power of God is not chiefly exerted on that day.
We confess that it is, don’t we? In the Heidelberg Lord’s Day 38, we say that on the Sabbath we should attend the house of God so that God may work in us by His Holy Spirit.
For what purpose is our assembly, why do we come to the house of God, to the temple of the living God, as church is, if we cannot come to plead for the grace and help of God to free us from our sins, from our fears, from our depression, from our cares?
Why a hypocrite this ruler was, talking as if the lawful observation of the Sabbath interrupted the course of God’s favors, hindered men from calling upon Him, and took away from all feeling of His kindness. Jesus replies: “Hypocrite! Does not each one of you on the Sabbath loose his ox or donkey from the stall, and lead it away to water it? So ought not this woman, being a daughter of Abraham, whom Satan has bound – think of it – for eighteen years. . .be loosed from this bond on the Sabbath?”
“Hypocrite!” The word Jesus used we have taken over directly into English. The word meant and means actor, pretender. Everyone listening was familiar with the Greek theater and in the plays the actors wore masks. Those masks covered who you really were and presented another face to the public. And what Jesus did was to tear the mask off his face. Jesus said, Listen, if it is lawful to perform the office of common humanity to cows and donkeys, it is ridiculous to think that due observance will keep assistance from being granted to the children of God. You hypocrite, you show more kindness and consideration to beasts than you do to one of your own people.
For this man himself was bound up in his own hypocrisy. He was the man bound by Satan. He was a ruler of the synagogue. His job was to see that the Word was read, that Psalms and prayers were offered to God, and that the Word was explained. But he acted as thought the house of God belonged to him. He was only a servant in the house. Servants then, and servants now, whether ministers or elders, do not own the house of God. Jesus is the Son who owns the house. And proper conduct in the house of God must be done according to the Word of Jesus Christ, and the word of Jesus Christ is that the house of His Father is to be a house of prayer, a house of liberation.
What was wrong with this man? Never had such an honor been done to a synagogue of which he was ruler, and yet he was furious.
Verse 17 tells us that after Jesus said these things, all His adversaries were put to shame. Adversaries, those who opposed Jesus. Jesus, who went about doing good, they were adversaries, opponents to good. They were opposing God, for God is good. They were friends of Satan, for the name Satan simply means adversary, opposer. He is the great opposition, the great opposer to all that is good, the great adversary to the good work of liberation. He is the one to whom Jesus said, “Let my people go that they may serve me.” But like Pharaoh of old, he will not, until he is broken.
“Ought not this woman, being a daughter of Abraham, be loosed from this bond on the Sabbath?” This daughter of Abraham. Jesus had another time referred to someone that way, and that person too was lowly, and rather despised at that, for he was a very little man, half a man we might say, and despised and loathed by many of the Jews. That man was Zacheus, you remember. Jesus, by referring to them both as children of Abraham, gave them height, the woman could stand tall, and Zacheus could stand taller, for they were children of Abraham, not only by birth, but by faith, by the power of Jesus who freed them.
Are you able to stand tall? Has Jesus freed you from the guilt of your sins?
“And when He said these things, all His adversaries were put to shame; and all the multitude rejoiced for all the glorious things that were done by Him.”
Now let me draw two main lessons from this miracle of Jesus, the first about the way we come and conduct ourselves in the house of God. And the second, related of course, some strong hints as to how we should observe the Sabbath day to keep it holy.
When we prepare to come to church we put on clean clothes that honor the Lord Jesus before whose throne we assemble. Perhaps we also put on a happy face. And we should. We should come with thanksgiving in our hearts, ready to present to the Lord our gratitude and praises for all His blessings during the week gone by.
We also come with needs, don’t we? All those things I mentioned before, the sins that still cling to us and keep us from the full life of service. The fears that still plague us. The anxieties that gnaw at our hearts. Then too, so often we can be depressed, about ourselves, about others, about the church, about the country, about the world.
Do we bring them to Jesus? He said, “Come unto Me, all you who are weary and heavy laden, and I will give you rest.” Well, how do we bring them to Jesus? We must bring them to the temple of Jesus, this church worship service. We must not wear a mask, and pretend as though we come here with no burdens at all. We have them, and we must bring them. Unless we want to say to God, “I thank You Lord, that I am not like other people. I am never depressed, never discouraged. I have no fears. There are no sins in my life that I haven’t taken care of and conquered.” That would be wearing a mask.
But how do we come. . .and what do we do with our burdens? First let me tell you that you must come in honesty. . .without a mask, and then come in faith. Faith, believing that the Word of God is powerful, discerning the very thoughts and intents of your hearts, and that all things are naked and laid bare before the eyes of Him whom we worship. Faith. . .believing that we have a high priest who can be touched with the feeling of our infirmities. Faith. . .believing that from that throne of grace there is help in time of need. Read Hebrews.
How do we come, and how does Christ relieve us? Has not Christ appointed shepherds for this flock? Can you not come to minister or elders? What about each other? “Share one another’s burdens and so fulfill the law of Christ.” Share them with one another. So often our conversations can be so shallow. But these people here are the church of God, and it is these people through whom Christ ministers relief. Approach one another, and especially if you notice or know of the anxieties and fears of others, talk to one another. Rejoice with those who rejoice, weep with those who weep.
Confide in one another. Confess your faults to one another. These are commands from Christ, are they not? Confide in one another. . .this takes care and integrity, doesn’t it. . .and perhaps we don’t all have that. We must care for one another, be concerned for each other’s welfare, and at the same time, avoid, what the apostle Paul and especially Proverbs warns against, being busy bodies, meddling in one another’s affairs. We must have discretion, so that others, confiding in us, do not run the risk of having their innermost cares broadcast. We remember what havoc Solomon says is wrought by those who reveal secrets.
Yet, as we come to maturity in Christ, as we grow, we should more and more discover that the church of Jesus Christ is the place where we find that we are loosed from our burdens, relieved of our fears, and instead of replying to someone who asks, “How are you?” by saying, “Oh, I’m just great!” we will share some of our burdens.
That’s the first lesson, and the second lesson is to revise our understanding of the Sabbath day. It is the great day of liberation, the great day when we celebrate the resurrection of Christ from the dead for our justification. To make some activities consistent with the liberation theme of the Sabbath, let me read from Isaiah 58 again. First from verses 13 and 14, well-known verses about the Sabbath: “If you turn away your foot from the Sabbath, From doing your pleasure on My holy day, and call the Sabbath a delight, The holy day of the LORD honorable, And shall honor Him, not doing your own ways, Nor finding your own pleasure, Nor speaking your own words, “Then you shall delight yourself in the LORD; And I will cause you to ride on the high hills of the earth, And feed you with the heritage of Jacob your father. The mouth of the LORD has spoken.”
The question then is, how do we do this? There are a series of not’s here. . .not our own ways. . .not our own pleasure. . .not our own words. That means that we have been freed from the tyranny of self, and finding this day an opportunity to serve ourselves.
But how do we do it then? How do we honor the Lord? Well, perhaps we should listen to the words that come before this text and put meaning into it.
“Is this not the fast that I have chosen: To loose the bonds of wickedness, To undo the heavy burdens, To let the oppressed go free, And that you break every yoke? Is it not to share your bread with the hungry, And that you bring to your house the poor who are cast out; When you see the naked, that you cover him, And not hide yourself
From your own flesh? Then your light shall break forth like the morning, Your healing shall spring forth speedily, And your righteousness shall go before you; The glory of the LORD shall be your rear guard. Then you shall call, and the LORD will answer; You shall cry, and He will say, ‘Here I am.’ “If you take away the yoke from your midst, The pointing of the finger, and speaking wickedness, If you extend your soul to the hungry And satisfy the afflicted soul, Then your light shall dawn in the darkness, And your darkness shall be as the noonday. The LORD will guide you continually, And satisfy your soul in drought, And strengthen your bones; You shall be like a watered garden, And like a spring of water, whose waters do not fail. Those from among you Shall build the old waste places; You shall raise up the foundations of many generations; And you shall be called the Repairer of the Breach, The Restorer of Streets to Dwell In.” (Isaiah 58:6-12 NKJV)
Do you see the theme of liberation here? And do you see that your own liberation, your own freedom from what burdens you is linked to your service to others? Is this not what Jesus meant in the parable of the sheep and the goats, for He welcomed the sheep into an eternal life free from depression, cares, anxieties, and fears because they had ministered to the hungry, the thirsty, the sick, and the imprisoned.
Are there no nursing homes with children of Abraham who are lonely, burdened, and anxious? Are there no prisons? Are there no hospitals with the sick and depressed? Are there no hungry and homeless? Is there no opportunity to minister the great gospel of Sabbath liberation?
Now we come to the great question. . . Where will I receive the power to do all this? The great answer is in Jesus Christ, for as we come now to the Holy Table, Jesus presents Himself to us. We then are to take Him, take His body and take His blood, in full assurance that His liberating power will free us from service to self, just as He gave His body and blood for others, we will give ourselves to others. We then must take Him, in full confidence that with the body and blood of Christ that is filled with compassion and love, so we will be filled with that same compassion and love.
Amen.
August 29, 2008
Sermon by Rev. Donald Van Dyken
Trinity Church of Tri-Cities
August 3, 2008
Scripture: Matthew 15:1-31
Text: Matthew 15:21-28
The Characteristics of Great Faith
Beloved congregation of the Lord Jesus Christ, this is going to be a long introduction, for I want us to understand the setting of this miracle of Jesus. Our text says that Jesus went out from there, and that means He left Galilee. From there He went to the region of Tyre and Sidon. We might ask why did He do that? The parallel passage in Mark gives us a clue. Mark 7:24 says, “He went away into the region of Tyre. When He had entered a house, He wanted no one to know of it.” He, as it were, hid Himself from the multitudes.
Jesus left the normal scene of His ministry because, it would seem, He wanted to have a time of rest for Himself and for His disciples away from the crowds, away from His intense schedule of preaching, teaching, and healing.
There were also some strong political and religious pressures that He would escape. Matthew 14 records Jesus feeding the 5000. John 6 in a parallel account, tells us in verse 15 that Jesus saw that they were about to come and to take Him by force to make Him king. That was some of the political pressure, the Jews wanting to use Him to achieve their own political aims, to free themselves from Rome and gain independence. Matthew 14 also records the hatred of Herod who has just recently beheaded John the Baptist. This event too, exerted some pressure on Jesus.
There was also the religious pressure of the scribes and Pharisees. Just one example is found in Matthew 12, where, when Jesus healed a man on the Sabbath, we read, “then the Pharisees went out and plotted against Him, how they might destroy Him.” His own town of Nazareth, a city in Galilee, rejected Him, and following His preaching from Isaiah 61 had tried to throw Him off a cliff.
There was more. And that more was simply the failure of the Jews of Galilee to repent. Listen to Jesus speak in Matthew 11:20, “Then He began to rebuke the cities in which most of His mighty works had been done, because they did not repent: “Woe to you, Chorazin! Woe to you, Bethsaida! For if the mighty works which were done in you had been done in Tyre and Sidon, they would have repented long ago in sackcloth and ashes. “But I say to you, it will be more tolerable for Tyre and Sidon in the day of judgment than for you. “And you, Capernaum, who are exalted to heaven, will be brought down to Hades; for if the mighty works which were done in you had been done in Sodom, it would have remained until this day. “But I say to you that it shall be more tolerable for the land of Sodom in the day of judgment than for you.” “ (Mt. 11:20-24 NKJV)
But from what could they repent? Were they not Jews? Was not Abraham their father? What is the problem that Jesus talks about in their failure to repent? Hadn’t they heard the Sermon on the Mount? Didn’t Jesus teaching convict them of their failure to keep the law of God?
Just after that He said, “”Come to Me, all you who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. “Take My yoke upon you and learn from Me, for I am gentle and lowly in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. “For My yoke is easy and My burden is light.”” (Mt. 11:28-30 NKJV)
“You who labor and are heavy laden?” What is He talking about? He’s not talking about us. “Find rest for your souls?” We have our own rest. Here was the gracious invitation, but so few in Galilee were interested. Hadn’t they heard Jesus say, ”Ask, and it will be given to you; seek, and you will find; knock, and it will be opened to you. For everyone who asks receives, and he who seeks finds, and to him who knocks it will be opened.” (Mt. 7:7-8 NKJV)
But, what if they thought, “Well, what shall we ask for? Do we lack anything? Not really.” So again, so many of the Jews of Galilee declined the wonderful promises Jesus made to them. Now Jesus was leaving Galilee. He went to the region of Tyre and Sidon, a region of the Gentiles, a region just to the northwest of Galilee. These were the people of whom He said earlier, “For if the mighty deeds which were done in you had been done in Tyre and Sidon, they would have repented long ago in sackcloth and ashes.”
He is leaving then, the sons of the kingdom, for those outside the kingdom. He is leaving the region of cold and indifferent hearts, to a region where hearts were more receptive, more open to the grace of God.
And, let me pause here and ask, what about these United States of America. In this land lives the new Israel of God. Oh, not this country, but the church in this land. And unless we are totally blind, we have seen, over our history here, the stupendous, the mighty acts of Jesus Christ. The expansion of this land, the taming of the wilderness, the turning of deserts into gardens, the great cities stacked high into the sky, the astounding productivity of our farms and factories, 35 tons of potatoes per acre, 120 bushels of wheat, 180 bushels of corn, who ever heard of such a thing? The wonderful advances in medicine, the clean and healing hospitals, the peace and security, all these things, great and mighty wonders through the reign of Jesus Christ. This has all been the great goodness of God, which, said Paul in Romans 2, leads men to repentance. Repentance? What’s that? Have we repented? Have we turned away from our greed, our lying and cheating, our murder of innocents, our groveling at the feet of the god of money, our mad pursuit of sex and fun?
Well, it’s no wonder that anyone who wants to be a missionary would rather travel to the jungles of New Guinea, where miserable, poor, superstition-ridden, filthy natives know they have need, and realize so soon they need to repent than to the nice, decent, unrepentant, independent people of this land.
Jesus went into the region of Tyre and Sidon, and there met Him a Canaanite woman. A Canaanite woman; and perhaps we forget what that meant. Palestine was the land of Canaan. The land of Canaan was the land God promised to Abraham. The Canaanites were children of Canaan, the son of Ham, and it was Canaan who lay under the curse of Noah.
By the time Joshua led Israel into the land of Canaan, the Canaanites were so debased, such an obscene cancer on the body of humanity, so filthy in their sexual immorality that God said they had to be annihilated, everyone of them put to death. They were doomed to extinction.
Yet Israel had failed to wipe them out. This woman is identified as belonging to that race. A Canaanite. It is to this woman, then, that Jesus says, “O woman, great is your faith.” “Great is your faith.” We get the word “mega” from the word Jesus used here. She had mega faith. The Bible speaks of little faith, strong faith, abiding faith, continuing faith, bold faith, rich in faith, obedient faith, steadfast faith, dead faith, precious faith, common faith, unfeigned faith, and working faith. But this time He speaks of great faith.
This is the second time Matthew records Jesus talking about great faith. The first time was of the centurion who came to have his servant healed. Jesus said of him, “I have not found such great faith, not even in Israel.” Both of these times Jesus talked about great faith, He was talking about Gentiles, those outside the covenant, outside of Israel.
“O, woman, great is your faith.” It’s almost as if Jesus is standing before a wonder, a rare and awesome sight, such a sight as to make Him break out with that exclamation. So we have finally gotten to the theme of this sermon, and that is to learn what Jesus is teaching us about faith from His encounter with this Canaanite woman.
He teaches us that great faith is characterized by five qualities:
First, great faith has a great object. The object of her faith was the Lord Jesus Christ.
Second, great faith is repentant. Her repentance is implied, as we shall see.
Third, great faith is reverent. “Have mercy on me, O Lord,” she said, “Son of David.” “Then she came and worshiped Him.” Great faith is reverent.
Fourth, great faith is persistent. And our text makes that obvious enough. In some sense Jesus said that the door was closed to her, but she, seeing a glimmer of light through the crack at the edge of the door, kept on pushing until she got in.
Fifth, great faith is humble. Again, she worshiped Him, and we will see that this word translated “worship” means that she kneeled before Him. Great faith is humble, she was willing to accept being identified as a dog.
Great faith: Has Jesus as its object. Is repentant, reverent, persistent, and humble. Great faith has an objective, great faith has something on which to place full confidence, complete trust. This woman came to Jesus, and it was upon Him that she placed her trust. She was confident that He could heal her daughter. She was so confident that she didn’t even bring her daughter with her, but believed that even at a distance, Jesus could bring salvation, could make her daughter whole again.
Sometimes faith is characterized as a leap in the dark. They say that faith jumps into the dark void and expects to find a rock to land on. Is that faith? Is faith jumping from an airplane without a parachute? If you have a parachute you have something to believe in. If you don’t, jumping into the empty sky in not an act of faith, but an act of stupidity. What do you believe in? Some people believe in love. Or they believe in democracy. Or they believe in Reformed doctrine. Or they believe in believing. They believe in faith. Or they believe in prayer. Many believe in time. Many believe that in time it will all work out. Or they believe in goodness over evil. They believe that the good will finally triumph.
But all of that is a faith without content, it has no object really, only abstractions and shadows. Faith has a person as its object, and the only person worthy of faith is Jesus Christ. In Him alone all these other things have meaning. Prayer, like this woman made, is to Jesus. He alone is good. He alone will triumph over evil. He is the master of time. He is the content of Reformed doctrine. He is the Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the ending, the first and the last.
“And behold a woman of Canaan came from that region and cried out to him—cried out to Jesus— “Have mercy on me, O Lord, Son of David. My daughter is severely demon-possessed.” She believed in Jesus. She believed He was Lord, He was Master, that He was sovereign, that He had power and authority even over the demons. She called Him the Son of David. She believed that He was the promised Messiah, the Redeemer. Her faith had content, her faith had Jesus Christ, the promised one of God, as her object.
How did she become aware of Jesus? How did she come to a saving knowledge of Him? First, we remember that Mark records that early on in Jesus’ ministry many had come from the region of Tyre and Sidon to see and hear Him. “and Jerusalem and Idumea and beyond the Jordan; and those from Tyre and Sidon, a great multitude, when they heard how many things He was doing, came to Him.” (Mr 3:8 NKJV) So she was aware, either from first hand observation, or from reports from her fellow Canaanites, that Jesus performed mighty works.
Second, we see from the way that she addressed Jesus that she was aware of the words of the prophets, for she called Him Lord, and she identified Him as the Son of David. It was the prophets Isaiah and Jeremiah who gave God’s promise of the coming of the Son of David to bring redemption.
Did she also know that the prophets promised that redemption would also come to the Gentiles, to the Canaanites as well as to Israel? Could it be that the heathen would be aware of the mighty acts and promises of God? Yes, the Bible tells us that even the heathen had long memories. You recall how in the time of Samuel the Israelites brought the ark of the Covenant into battle against the Philistines. Now listen to the Philistines as the ark arrives in the camp of Israel: “So the Philistines were afraid, for they said, “God has come into the camp!” And they said, “Woe to us! For such a thing has never happened before. “Woe to us! Who will deliver us from the hand of these mighty gods? These [are] the gods who struck the Egyptians with all the plagues in the wilderness.” (1Sa 4:7-8 NKJV)
After nearly 400 years, the memory of God’s great redemption of Israel from Egypt was still vivid in the minds of the Philistines. So it is very possible that this woman knew of the prophecy of Isaiah who said, “The Spirit of the Lord GOD is upon Me, Because the LORD has anointed Me to preach good tidings to the poor; He has sent Me to heal the brokenhearted, To proclaim liberty to the captives, And the opening of the prison to those who are bound; To proclaim the acceptable year of the LORD, And the day of vengeance of our God; To comfort all who mourn,” (Isa 61:1-2 NKJV)
Yes, this was something for her. Her daughter was captive and the Son of David was the only one to release her. Was this for the Gentiles as well? Hadn’t Isaiah said, “The Gentiles shall come to your light, And kings to the brightness of your rising.” (Isa 60:3 NKJV) “Have mercy on me, O Lord, Son of David.” Her faith had Jesus as its object. Her faith was a faith of knowledge, of knowing who Jesus was because she had, as little as it might have been, knowledge of the Word of God, and because she knew the words of the Old Testament prophets, she knew Jesus, she came to Jesus, she believed in Jesus.
Great faith has an object, and that object is the person of Jesus Christ, the sovereign Lord, the Son of David, the promised redeemer, the great Messiah. Is this Jesus the object of your faith? Do you know Him as your Lord and Master? Do you know Him the great Son of David, the Redeemer and Savior?
Great faith is repentant. Did this woman repent? We may clearly infer that from our passage. She came from the region of Tyre and Sidon. As a Canaanite she came from a culture and country that served Baals and Molechs, the filthy, horrible gods of Canaan.
Do you remember Jezebel? Most of us would. She was the wife of Ahab who introduced Baal worship as the religion of the state into Israel. Do know the name of her father? His name was Ethbaal, and he was the king of Sidon. Tyre and Sidon were cities in a region sometimes known as Phoenicia, and the Phoenicians were great businessmen, great traders whose ships sailed the seas. They established the great city of Cathage in Libya. Even in the time of Hannibal the people of Carthage worshiped Molech, burning their children to that loathsome god. Archeological studies in Carthage have uncovered huge mounds of the bones of little children and babies, all burned to this god. These Baals and Molechs were the gods of sex, sex without children, sex that brought death and not life, sex that was perverted into homosexuality and bestiality.
From these gods of death, this woman turned to the Prince of Life. “Lord, Son of David, have mercy on me.” Great faith is marked by repentance. And it is from the gods of this world that Paul called the Athenians to turn, called the Thessalonians to turn. And he would later say to the Thessalonians, “how you turned to God from idols to serve the living and true God.” (1 Thess. 1:9)
Great faith is repentant. This is the first call of the gospel, isn’t it? John the Baptist, Jesus, and the apostles all cried, “Repent, for the kingdom of God is at hand.” Turn away from the gods of the self-righteousness of the scribes and Pharisees, from the gods of the power of the Romans, from the gods of the wisdom of the Greeks, from the filthy gods of Canaan to serve the living God, and to place your faith in his Son Jesus Christ.
Great faith is repentant. Great faith is reverent. Reverence sees the great chasm that exists between a lost sinner and a holy God. She asked for mercy. “Have mercy on me,” she said. Lord, don’t give me what I deserve, don’t give me what is due me, don’t give me what I merit, but I’m here in spite of the fact that I don’t deserve anything. I have no plea but your mercy.”
Great faith is reverent. It is the essence of the right approach to God. For God Himself proclaims Himself to be the God of mercy. Jesus Himself said, “I will have mercy and not judgment.”
Throughout this narrative, throughout her relation with Jesus her attitude was always one of reverence. “Lord, Son of David.” What a contrast to the irreverence of the Jews, who instead of calling Jesus Lord and Son of David, called Him a drunk, a friend of publicans and sinners, one who was in league with Beelzebub, the prince of the demons.
Great faith is reverent, great faith has always an attitude of respect and awe for Christ, and for those sent by Christ. “He who receives you, receives me,” said Jesus to his apostles, “and he who receives me, receives Him who sent me.” How is our reverence towards Christ shown today? Do you and I have the posture of this woman? A posture of reverence?
Great faith is reverent. Great faith is persistent. And this perhaps is the characteristic that stands out in this encounter. After she had made her plea, we read, “But He answered her not a word. And His disciples came and urged Him, saying, “Send her away, for she cries out after us.” Jesus met her prayer with silence. We may think this is terrible, but we need to understand that through this silence Jesus would not break down, but strengthen her faith. “He answered her not a word.” She made her prayer, Jesus heard her prayer, and Jesus chose to remain silent.
And so it seems is the case with many of our prayers, does it not? Has God heard? Yes, He had heard. Well? Well, God has chosen to remain silent, not to shut us off, but to build our faith, to bring us to be more persistent in prayer. For faith is the thing above all else that God treasures in his people. Faith is the essence of our relationship with Him. And our faith, which the apostles later describe as more precious than gold, faith, which our God wishes to display before the world on the great day of Christ’s return, is something God through Christ carefully cultivates.
“She cries out after us.” She would not be silent. She kept on so loudly that the disciples got really annoyed. “Send her away.” But Jesus answered, “I was not sent except to the lost sheep of the house of Israel.” And yes, of course, this was true. Salvation is and was for the Jews. The promises, all the great promises of God, from Genesis 12 through Malachi 4 were for the chosen people of God, they were for Israel. The Messiah would be born of Israel, the Messiah was announced as the one who would save His people from their sins. And who were His people? The Jews of course. It’s as though Jesus said, “Well, you’re not a member of this church. What do you expect?”
Not exactly seeker-friendly, was He? You know that term, “seeker-friendly?” Some churches use that term as a guide to the structure of their worship. They want unbelievers, the world, to find the church accommodating to them, friendly. For the church is the house of God in Jesus Christ.
No, Jesus wouldn’t fit the mold here. “I was not sent except to the lost sheep of Israel.” Yet, this woman, by her faith, by her repentance, by her reverence, by her pleading on the basis of nothing but mercy, showed herself to be a true daughter of Abraham. For Abraham was the father of believers.
“Then she came and worshiped him, saying, “Lord, help me.” Great faith is persistent. No demands, no arrogance, no arguments, only a plea for help. “But He answered and said, “It is not good to take the children’s bread and throw it to the little dogs.” Again, Jesus completely breaks the mold of the seeker-friendly God. “It is not good to take the children’s bread, and throw it to the little dogs.”
Jesus inferred that this Canaanite woman was a dog. Oh, the Jews would agree. What would you do? Are we surprised that this woman didn’t just leave? Perhaps we leave, we give up on God when He meets our prayers with silence, as Jesus did earlier to this woman. He called her a dog. Yet, although the Jews held dogs to be some of the lowest forms of life, the Greeks would often take little dogs as household pets. For that is the term Jesus used here, “little dogs,” puppies. It is not good to take the children’s bread and throw it to the puppies, the household pets.”
Yes, the bread did belong to the children, to the Israel of God. But, as we see later in the epistles, God drew the Gentiles into the people of God. They became one with the people of God. The bread of life, Jesus Himself, always belonged to the Israel of God, but the great work of God through the gospel, as Paul says so plainly in Ephesians, was to break down the middle wall of partition, and make them both one.
Did she know this? Perhaps not, but she knew Jesus, and she knew her need of mercy, and she knew that God was abounding in mercy, that He delighted to show mercy. This was the foundation for her persistence. And this must always be the foundation for our persistence, for if we are to have great faith, we must have persistent faith.
“And she said, “Yes, Lord, yet even the little dogs eat the crumbs which fall from their master’s table.” She was persistent. Some people have to struggle through their own doubts, but she had to struggle through the obstacles Jesus put in her way. People may say that it’s easy to be a Christian, but it wasn’t for her. “Yes, Lord, yet even the little dogs eat the crumbs which fall from their master’s table.” She didn’t argue with Jesus. She didn’t deny that the bread did belong to Israel. She accepts Jesus’ analogy. She doesn’t ask for a place at the table.
She pleads that her gain would not mean a loss for the children. She’s only asking for the crumbs that fall from the table. She’s not asking that bread be taken from the children and thrown to her, no, but only whatever accidentally falls from the table and onto the floor. Out of Jesus’ very words she weaves her plea. Yes, Lord, I am one of the dogs, I am one of the little dogs, the puppies. But then I am not really an alien, but I belong to the household, you yourself have implied that I am a household pet.
She catches Jesus’ in his own words, as Luther commented. Here is Jesus on Gentile soil, here is a short visit to the Gentile world, here is a little bit of Jesus, the bread of life. May she not eat of that crumb? Was her claim valid? Did Jesus reward her persistence. He did more than that, didn’t He? For His answer is really astounding, for, as I mentioned at the beginning, this is one of two times where Jesus referred to someone’s faith as great.
“Then Jesus answered and said to her, “O woman, great is our faith. Let it be to you as you desire.” And her daughter was healed from that very hour.” Again, it is as though Jesus stood back and marveled. It is as though someone took Jesus before one of the wonders of the ancient world. It is as though Jesus Himself stood in awe at such faith, great faith, always characterized by persistence.
Finally, great faith is characterized, has the quality of humility. Of course, every word this woman said gave evidence of her humility. Her willingness to accept Jesus’ analogy comparing her to a dog gave evidence of her humility. Great faith is humble. “I am a worm, and no man,” said David. “I am not worthy to untie Jesus’ shoes,” said John the Baptist. “Depart from me, Lord, said Peter, for I am a sinful man.” Humility is the recognition of the unbridgeable distance that lies between a sinner and a holy God. Humility expresses it self by silence in self-defense, and yet is always articulate, always speaks of the mercy and promises of God. Humility never speaks of our own actions but only of God’s acts. Humility is not only a characteristic of the heart, and not only is evident in words, but also expresses itself in action.
Our text says of this woman that in the middle of her conversation with Jesus, “Then she came and worshiped Him, saying, “Lord, help me.” She came and worshiped Him. What does that mean? Well, what do you mean when you say that you have come here to worship the Triune God through Jesus Christ? We worship Christ, for those who honor the Son, honor the Father. But what would you say if someone from the world asked what you meant? You would probably say, “Well, we come to church, we sing praises to God, we give offerings to God, and we listen to his Word. That’s worship.” And you would be right.
But it’s good for us to recognize that the Hebrew idea which is here expressed in a Greek word is not abstract, it is not an idea really, it is an action. For the word “worship” here literally means to fall on one’s knees before someone else and place your forehead on the ground. So here then is the picture.
“Then she came to Jesus, and worshiped Him, she came to Jesus, went down on her knees before His feet, and placed her forehead on the ground before Him. And it was from that place, with her head on the ground, right where the little puppies ran around, that she said, “Yes, Lord, yet even the little dogs eat the crumbs which fall from their master’s table.” And it is to that woman, kneeling on the ground, with her head pressed to the earth, that Jesus said, “O woman, great is your faith. Let it be to you as you desire.”
Now beloved, I hope and trust that through this encounter Jesus has filled you with the longing that some day Jesus will say to you, “O woman, O man, great is your faith.” That means, doesn’t it, that when you come to church, you come with a desire, with a longing, with a need for mercy. That you come with a great need, that you know of your great need, that you know where you are going to make your prayer, your plead. That means that the object of your faith is the Jesus, revealed through the holy prophets and the record of the apostles. That means that you know this Jesus to be sovereign Lord, and the Son of David who was promised to show mercy to the poor, to give compassion to the broken-hearted.
Great faith knows the barrenness of its own soul, and the fullness of Christ’s power and provision. Great faith is repentant, that you have turned away from the world and all the gods it offers, all its pleasures and follies, and that you recognize that life and joy are only found in Jesus Christ. Great faith is reverent, and you know and show, especially when you encounter Jesus Christ in this time in his Father’s house, that you know the great distance that separates you, yet, because Jesus Himself has bridged the gap and come down to earth, come down to you, you are persistent. Your faith is persistent in the face of the silence of God to your prayers, for you know Him, you know that He delights in showing mercy. And great faith is humble, that even the crumbs of grace that fall from the table of the Lord, are worth more than all the glory and riches this world can offer.
It is to this table that you as children of Israel are invited. Not to receive crumbs, but to receive, as we may say this woman did, the power, the glory, the mercy all bound up in the person of Christ Himself. For if the holy Supper proclaims anything at all, it proclaims that our faith rests and is fed only and alone in Jesus Christ and Him crucified. Amen.
August 28, 2008
Sermon by Rev. Donald Van Dyken
Trinity Church of Tri-Cities
July 13, 2008
Scripture: Luke 11:1-26
The Demolition of the Devil’s Domain
Beloved congregation of the Lord Jesus Christ. . .many years ago my wife and I attended a creation conference in Seattle. During one of the question and answer sessions, I think it was following a lecture by Nancy Pearcy, someone asked whether the New Age movement was a conspiracy. This was during the time of conspiracy theories. The communist conspiracy, the Tri-Lateral Commission conspiracy, Council on Foreign Relations conspiracy, the Bilderberger conspiracy, the Jewish conspiracy, the Roman Catholic conspiracy, and perhaps half a dozen more. The questioner wanted to know whether all these conspiracies were organized and directed by one person. The answer was no, but a qualified no. there is no one holding all these conspiracies together. Yet, there was a person, and that person was Satan, the moving, directing force, the great adversary of all that is good and holy.
And yet. . .yet, if you remember the fear that gripped so many conspiracy theorists, they were needlessly alarmed. For the good new of the gospel proclaimed by St. John is this: That Jesus Christ came into the world to destroy the works of the devil. Jesus Christ, as we see in our passage, bound the strong man. The good new of the gospel proclaimed by St. Paul is this: that Jesus Christ through death destroyed him who had the power of death, that is the devil, and released those who through fear of death were all their lifetime subject to bondage.
My theme is: The Demolition of the Devil’s Domain, the Devil’s dominion. In Luke 11:21 Jesus compares the dominion, the kingdom of Satan to the palace of a strong man. Whatever that strong man has captured, whatever he owns is safe, kept under his control. Whomever the strong man has captured, cannot escape, for he is fully armed, his sword, spear, bow and arrows, sling, shield, all his armaments are at hand, there to defend him against all who would attack him, against all who sought to escape him.
But, in our Lord’s illustration, He talks about someone stronger than the strong man. First, the stronger man attacks the strong man, overcomes him, strips him of all his armor, and divides the spoils. That means that he takes all the goods that the strong man was guarding.
First then, I want to talk some about this strong man, this demon, Beelzebub, the ruler of the demons. That’s Satan, of course, the great opposer, the great adversary, the great red dragon of Revelation 12, the serpent of Genesis 3.
Second, to see that Jesus is talking about Himself, for He said in verse 20, “But if I cast out demons with the finger of God, surely the kingdom of God has come upon you.”
Third, to see what happens to people, and then to nations, when a demon leaves, but is not replaced by the presence of Jesus Christ, by the Spirit of Jesus Christ.
The strong man, the serpent, the dragon. You know, I would suppose that you are not that much different than I, in that you seldom think about the devil, about Satan, or about evil spirits and wicked dragons. They’re kind of out there somewhere in ancient history, or in fairy tales and among mythological beasts and characters. But in our day-to-day existence, whether old or young, we don’t think much about Satan and his demon-soldiers. In raising our children, in going boating or swimming, running to the mall, working out problems in the office, driving or walking, talking to our family and friends, to our co-workers or the JC Penney clerk, Satan isn’t really a factor in our minds.
Well, I’m not going to say that Satan should very often be in the front of our minds. There is certainly a danger in giving him too much attention, for we just might grow to admire him, as so many have today. Perhaps, as we begin this study of Beelzebub, of Satan, we should listen to a couple of New Testament exhortations. The first is from St. Peter. He had suffered by following the lure Satan feathered with pride. Remember what Jesus said to Peter before Jesus’ trial? “Simon, Simon! Indeed, Satan has asked for you, that he may sift you as wheat.” (Lk 22:31 NKJV) Later, as he wrote to Christians Peter said, “Be sober, be vigilant; because your adversary the devil walks about like a roaring lion, seeking whom he may devour.” (1 Peter 5:8 NKJV)
The apostle Paul speaks of the devices of Satan, that is, those tricks and traps he uses to get a hold on us. Paul says, “lest Satan should take advantage of us; for we are not ignorant of his devices.” (2 Cor 2:11 NKJV) What is the implication? That we should be aware of the arsenal of tricks and traps, the lies and subtleties Satan uses to tangle up the unwary. So how do we become familiar with the tricks and lies of the devil? Let’s listen to God. He introduces us to Satan in the first pages of the Bible, Genesis 3.
The first thing the serpent said to Eve was, “Has God indeed said, ‘You shall not eat of every tree of the garden?’ “ What was Satan doing? Satan was trying to bring doubt into Eve’s mind. And that is the first and great weapon of Satan. He wants to plant the seed of uncertainty into our minds. He wants people to doubt the words of God. He begins by attacking the truth of God’s Word.
Never forget that. Doubt is the enemy of faith. Doubt is the thin edge of the wedge. When Satan gets you to think that perhaps the words of God, the promises of God, either for yourself or for your children, are really not as sure as you thought they were, then there is a thin crack in your faith. Satan can work with that. That’s all the beginning he needs. With that little doubt in your mind he will reach for his next weapon, his next tool, and continue his work to destroy you.
“Has God indeed said?” So when Satan had got that far, Eve said, “We may eat of the fruit of the trees of the garden; but of the fruit of the tree which is in the midst of the garden, God has said, “you shall not eat it, nor shall you touch it, lest you die.” Satan responded, “You will not surely die. For God knows that in the day you eat of it your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God, knowing good and evil.”
Into that small opening of doubt, Satan hammers in his next weapon, the lie. God said to Eve, “You shall surely die.” Satan said to Eve, “You shall not die.” And then went on to build on that lie. “God is really protecting himself, he’s afraid that you will know as much as he does. If you eat you will be like God, you will know, you will determine for yourselves, what is good and what is evil.” Here we see another of Satan’s armor, the weapon of pride. Of course, for that is what precipitated Satan’s fall from heaven itself.
Satan is a fallen angel, a creature of God’s creation. In Revelation 12 we read of war between Michael and his angels and the devil and his angels. And lest you doubt the identity of this serpent in Genesis 3, turn to Revelation 12:19: “So the great dragon was cast out, that serpent of old, called the Devil and Satan, who deceives the whole world; he was cast to the earth, and his angels were cast out with him.” (Rev 12:9 NKJV)
Sometimes Satan is called Lucifer. That name is really quite beautiful, for it describes Satan’s position before his fall. Lucifer means “morning star.” Turn to Isaiah 14. In that chapter Isaiah is describing Nebuchadnezzar. However, many Bible students throughout history have found this description to fit Satan. Isaiah 14:12-15: “”How you are fallen from heaven, O Lucifer, son of the morning! How you are cut down to the ground, You who weakened the nations! For you have said in your heart: ‘I will ascend into heaven, I will exalt my throne above the stars of God; I will also sit on the mount of the congregation On the farthest sides of the north; I will ascend above the heights of the clouds, I will be like the Most High.’ Yet you shall be brought down to Sheol, To the lowest depths of the Pit.” (Isa 14:12-15 NKJV) Satan had the beautiful name of “Son of the morning.” But, not satisfied with the place God had given him, he wanted to take the throne of God himself.
The armor of Satan: the weapon of doubt, the deathblow of lies, and the final battle-axe of accusations. In Revelation 12:10 Satan is called the “accuser of the brethren, who accuses them day and night before our God.” There was a time—although we see from Revelation 12 that that time is past—there was a time when Satan took his final weapon and swung it, not on earth, but in heaven. He came before God one time and accused Job of serving God because it paid. He asked God for permission to take everything away, for then, said Satan, “He will curse you.”
If only Satan could induce Job to sin, then Satan could seal Job’s condemnation. Then God himself would have the evidence to condemn Job. The sins of God’s people, that is the great arsenal of weaponry Satan so carefully hoarded. Sins that defile, sins that pollute, sins that disqualify anyone from appearing before God and survive that appearance. After Israel’s return from exile, the prophet Zechariah one time saw a vision, and in that vision Joshua the high priest standing before the throne of God clothed in filthy clothes, and there was Satan standing at his right hand to accuse him. Yes, there was the representative of God’s people, and he carried with him all the ammunition Satan needed to shoot him down, and remove him from the presence of God.
Let me return for a minute to Genesis 3. Satan seemed to win here, for Adam and Eve ate of the tree, and were condemned to die. But God intervened and made the promise of Genesis 3:15, “I will put enmity between you and the woman, and between your seed and her seed. He shall bruise your head, and you shall bruise his heel.”
For the salvation of mankind God drew a line between the serpent and the woman, between the seed of the serpent and the seed of the woman. Here began the two great kingdoms on earth, the kingdom of the seed of the woman, and the kingdom of the seed of the serpent. Those who believed the promises of God, and those who disbelieved. Those who were friends of God, and those who were friends of Satan. This began the great conflict that determines the rest of the course of the history of this world.
As the great battle continued, the people of God began to look for a champion, one who would contend directly with that old serpent, with Satan. Would it be Noah? In a time when it seemed that the seed of the serpent would overwhelm the seed of the woman, Noah stood alone with his family against those hordes of Satan. God intervened with the flood, but as a champion Noah failed. And Noah died. So it was with all the champions, with all the great men God raised up for his people. Abraham failed, Moses failed, the judges failed, David failed, his sons as kings of Judah failed. They all sinned, they all provided Satan opportunity for the fatal blow, the accusation before God. Finally Isaiah cried out in anguish, “Oh, God, that you would tear open the heavens and come down.” The help of man was vain. There was no one who could stand in the breach, no one who could contend with and overcome this great demon, Satan.
In that setting of conflict, in that setting of the failure of man, the failure of Israel’s great men, and in the setting of Isaiah’s cry, that God sent his Son into the world. That forms the background, the setting of the scene of our passage. “The kingdom of God has come,” said Christ to the Jews.
Jesus cast out a demon from a man, who because of that demon, was mute. He could not talk. When the demon had gone out, the man spoke, and the multitudes marveled. But, says our text, some of them said, “He casts out demons by Beelzebub, the ruler of the demons.”
“The ruler of the demons.” So there is no doubt that this is the name the Jews applied to Satan, he was Beelzebub. This is an old name, and you will find it mentioned during the time of Elijah. 2 Kings 1. Ahaziah, the son of Ahab had fallen down and was severely injured. He sent messengers and told them, “Go, inquire of Baal-Zebub, the god of Ekron, whether I will recover from this injury.” Elijah told Ahaziah, “Thus says the Lord, because you have sent messengers to inquire of Baal-Zebub, the god of Ekron, is it because there is no God in Israel to inquire of His word? Therefore you shall not come down from the bed to which you have gone up, but you shall surely die.”
Baal-Zebub, the god of Ekron, and during the time of Jesus, the name given to Satan, as ruler of the demons. The meaning of that name is not certain. Baal means lord, or master, and Zebub means what? Some say that Beelzebub means the lord who flies, and others say it means the lord of the flies, or even the lord of the manure pile. Well, manure and flies go together, and they both bring the image of filth, the filthiness of sins.
Some of you may remember that a book quite popular in college English courses some years ago was called just that, “The Lord of the Flies,” by William Golding. It is a horrible story, and illustrates, basically without hope at all, the depravity of man.
But getting back to these Jews, they too, by their statement about Jesus, give evidence that they had totally abandoned their faith in God. The only power they seemed to think was effective in ridding a person of a demon was the king of demons himself.
What a sad state of affairs. When the leadership of Israel under Ahaziah rejected God, they had recourse to the devil. When the leadership of Israel in Jesus time rejected God, they began to believe only the devil had ultimate power. As our society today rejects the Triune God, they too will, and have begun today to place confidence in the power of the evil one.
Jesus responded by pointing out the obvious, and yet those who are blinded by the deceit of Satan so often miss the obvious. “Every kingdom divided against itself is brought to desolation, and a house divided against a house falls. If Satan also is divided against himself, how will his kingdom stand? Because you say I cast out demons by Beelzebub. And if I cast out demons by Beelzebub, by whom do your sons cast them out? Therefore they will be your judges.”
Your sons. There were those, praise God, among the Jews who believed. There were those who followed Jesus. In Luke 10 we read that Jesus sent 70 of His disciples out to preach the gospel of the kingdom, the good news that the kingdom of God had come. That meant that God Himself had come into the world for the salvation of His people. That meant that God was setting His king on His holy hill of Zion, who would declare the decree, “You are My Son, this day have I begotten you.”
So we read in Luke 10:17, “Then the seventy returned with joy, saying, Lord, even the demons are subject to us in Your name.”
“If I cast out demons by Beelzebub, by whom do your sons cast them out? Therefore they will be your judges.” “But if I cast out demons with the finger of God, surely the kingdom of God has come upon you.” Then Jesus went on to say, “When a strong man, fully armed, guards his own palace, his goods are in peace. But when a stronger than he comes upon him and overcomes him, he takes from him all his armor in which he trusted, and divides the spoils.”
For those who heard, the meaning is obvious. Beelzebub is the strong man, Satan, who is fully armed, guarding his own palace, his kingdom, his armor. Jesus is the stronger man who overcomes Satan, takes his armor from him, and plunders his house. “Divides the spoils,” says our text. “Spoils” is a word that is used after the battle is finished, and the victors go to the slain, strip all their armor, and take all their treasures from their tents and houses.
Jesus is announcing the climax of the coming of the kingdom of God. For the coming of the kingdom of God meant the coming of the great King God had promised, the great King who would be called, Wonderful, counselor, mighty God, everlasting Father, the prince of peace. Jesus is announcing that the war of worlds, the stupendous collision of two kingdoms, the kingdom of Satan and the kingdom of God, was happening. Jesus was announcing that the great invasion of the kingdom of God into the kingdom of Satan was happening.
“I cast out demons,” said Jesus, “with the finger of God.” The finger of God. We see this image before in a great conflict between two kingdoms, the kingdom of Israel led by Moses, and the kingdom of Egypt, led by Pharaoh. When God brought the third plague upon Egypt, Pharaoh’s magicians said to him with quivering voices, “Pharaoh, this is the finger of God.” To free His people from their slavery to Pharaoh God brought judgment upon Egypt and upon their gods. To free His people from their slavery to Satan God brought judgment upon Satan, He brought His only begotten Son into the world to destroy the works and power of Satan.
“When a stronger than the strong man comes upon him, and overcomes him, he takes from him all his armor in which he trusted.” Jesus stripped Satan of all his armory, all his weapons. Remember what they were?
Doubt. Jesus declared the certainty of the Word and promises of God. Jesus was the certainty Himself, for He was the Word made flesh. In Jesus Christ, all the promises of God became Yes, and Amen. Jesus declared that not one jot or one tittle of the Word would be erased until all was fulfilled. Jesus came to bring the Words of God into reality in this world.
Jesus stripped him of his weapon of the lie. Jesus said, “You shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free. Satan is the father of lies, when he speaks, he speaks the lie, for he is a liar from the beginning.” Jesus stripped him of his lies, for Jesus said, “I am the truth.”
Jesus stripped him of his ultimate weapon, the sins of God’s people. The sins that made God’s people a complete anomaly, people who were called saints, holy ones, and yet people who were defiled with sins. People who were called the children of God, and yet because of their sins bore more resemblance to Satan than to God. People to whom Satan could so easily lie and say, “You think you are the people of God, the children of God? You church people really think that you belong to God? What a joke. You belong to me, for I am the father of sin and lies, and that is your life, isn’t it?”
Jesus stripped him of all those accusations. Jesus took all those accusations upon Himself, took upon Himself all the punishment pronounced against all of God’s people, and so erased the handwriting that was in evidence against us. All those accusations that Satan so carefully stored up, all those secret sins that Satan so carefully hoarded to present to God as prosecution, Jesus plundered them, Jesus bound this strong man, and took them all out of His house, paid the penalty for all of them, and presented the full payment before the throne of God. So that God then pronounced His people fully justified, innocent of any and all transgressions.
This is why Paul could say, “Who shall bring anything to the charge of God’s elect? It is God that justifies. Who is he that condemns?” “But when a stronger than he comes upon him and overcomes him, he takes from him all his armor in which he trusted, and divides his spoils.”
“Divides his spoils.” What are spoils? We know what it means in physical combat. But what does it mean in spiritual combat, what did it mean that Christ divides the spoils, the property, the treasures of Satan? It means that the kingdoms of this world have become the kingdoms of our God and of His Christ. It means that the many in Israel who were in bondage to sin and slaves of Satan now belonged to Christ. It means what you and I confess in the first Lord’s Day of the Heidelberg, “I am not my own but belong to my faithful Savior Jesus Christ, who with His precious blood has fully satisfied for all my sins and delivered me from all the power of the devil…” You see the cause and effect here, don’t you? Satisfied for my sins by His blood, and as a consequence, as a result, delivered me from all the power of the devil.
It means that the word of Christ’s victory over sin would be preached throughout the world, and thousands and millions of Gentiles, those who had been held captive by Satan, would be freed, and now belong to Jesus Christ. Those are the spoils. Jesus spoiled kingdom of Satan, and He continues to spoil him today.
Does Satan still labor today? Yes, indeed, and one of his great lies is that Jesus hasn’t really won, that Satan hasn’t really been conquered, that his armor is still with him. But these are all lies. Here is the truth of the matter: “Then I heard a loud voice saying in heaven, “Now salvation, and strength, and the kingdom of our God, and the power of His Christ have come, for the accuser of our brethren, who accused them before our God day and night, has been cast down. “And they overcame him by the blood of the Lamb and by the word of their testimony, and they did not love their lives to the death. “Therefore rejoice, O heavens, and you who dwell in them! Woe to the inhabitants of the earth and the sea! For the devil has come down to you, having great wrath, because he knows that he has a short time.”” (Re 12:10-12 NKJV)
“And they overcame him by the blood of the Lamb and by the word of their testimony.” The church today, although faced with the great wrath of the devil, is not to quietly endure his assaults, but to lay siege to hell itself. The church must take the battering ram of the gospel, for it will shatter the gates and walls of Satan’s realm. You know what a battering ram is, don’t know? This is a heavy pole with a head of brass or iron. It takes many people working together to lift it and swing it against the foundation stones of castle walls. One blow won’t do it, but with continuous blows, blows in regular cadence, a vibration rhythm sets up in the walls, until suddenly the whole structure collapses. And that is the work of the church, your work, together, shoulder to shoulder, swinging the battering ram of the gospel, blow after blow, until the kingdom of Satan is shattered.
“And they overcame him by the blood of the Lamb and by the word of their testimony.” They—that’s the church—overcame, just like Christ overcame. “By the blood of the Lamb,” that’s the blood you drink every Lord’s Day. “by the word of their testimony.” That’s the Word of the Gospel you receive each Lord’s Day. Go!
Finally, we need to see that this last paragraph is important in this context. What is Jesus saying here? He is saying that a man may be freed from demons, and yet if he remains empty, the demon will return with seven demons more wicked than himself and the last end of the man will be worse than the first.
Jesus implies here that demons may be removed from the lives of people, from our own lives as well, and if our lives, our bodies, our persons, are not occupied, are not lived in by God Himself in the person of the Spirit of His Son, we are open for worse demons than those that left us, or those we got rid of. This applies to persons, to families, and to societies.
Let’s look at demons in the sense of the demons of sin. The demons of drugs and drunkenness, the demons of sexual sins, adultery, fornication, lust, homosexuality, lesbianism, pornography, the demons of greed, covetousness, the demons of anger and murder, the demons of envy and hatred, the demons of depression and fear.
What are some ways one can be rid of these? Well, one great idol today is education. Sex education. Teach them about the dangers of drugs. Psychiatry, counseling, various programs to deal with these problems, as they are called. And of course, the great cure for all ills, pass a law, and budget 15 billion dollars, and surely the problem will be solved. And there is some measure of success to some of these means. I won’t argue that. You shouldn’t argue that either. That’s not the point.
What other means are there? Your own pride may cause you to rid yourself of these things. On a personal level, in families, in society, on the international scene, how are the problems of sin addressed? With many of these programs there is some measure of success. Yet, when they are finished the house is sill empty. What then?
For you, my brother and sister, for your families, for this church, for society, for the nation, any success in dealing with the problem of sin, in getting rid of it, without Jesus Christ is doomed to a worse state than at the beginning. “Take unto you Jesus Christ, and make no provision for the flesh to fulfill its lusts.” Take unto you Jesus Christ. Receive him. It is Christ alone who will protect us, who knows all the devices and tricks of the devil to instill doubt, to make us vulnerable to Satan’s lies. For it is Christ alone who has overcome the strong man, stripped him of his armor, and plundered his house. So, beloved, take Him. He comes to you in Word and Sacrament. Believe. Receive. And let the Word and Spirit of Christ dwell in you richly, fully, completely. Amen.
Sermon by Rev. Donald Van Dyken
Trinity Church of Tri-Cities
June 29, 2008
Scripture: Mark 5:21-43
Jesus Confronts Death
Beloved congregation of the Lord Jesus Christ, in Genesis 2 God said, “Don’t eat of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, for in the day you eat of it you shall surely die.” And Adam ate, and Adam died. And thereafter death pursued the sons of men, for no matter how many years they kept death at a distance, death finally laid them by the heels, and, even after 969 years read of Methusaleh, “and he died.”
Surely that will be true of you and of me too, whether you are 75 or you are five, death is a fearsome bloodhound, Adam gave him our scent, and he will dog our tracks until he overpowers us at the end of the trail.
Yet our old fathers in the first covenant raged against the dying of the light. The howling hound of death bayed close to young David for many years, prompting him to write: “The pangs of death surrounded me, and the floods of ungodliness made me afraid. The sorrows of Sheol surrounded me; the snares of death confronted me.” (Ps 18:4-5 NKJV)
For, cried David, what profit is there in my death? “Return, O LORD, deliver me! Oh, save me for Your mercies’ sake! For in death there is no remembrance of You; in the grave who will give You thanks?” (Ps 6:4-5NKJV)
But the promise was there, for Isaiah wrote: He will swallow up death forever, and the Lord God will wipe away tears from all faces; the rebuke of His people He will take away from all the earth; for the Lord has spoken. (25:8)
The Lord God had spoken the Word, and the Word became flesh, our Lord Jesus Christ, who in this passage confronted death and defeated death.
Jesus had crossed the lake from the country of the Gadarenes, and was probably in the region of Capernaum, on the north shore of the Sea of Galilee. Jairun, who approached Him, was a ruler of the synagogue. Shall I review for a minute what a synagogue was? It was not the temple, for the Lord had told His people that only at the temple at Jerusalem could they bring their offerings, and that was where they brought their worship. However, when Solomon’s temple was destroyed about 586 BC by Nebuchadnezzar and he brought the rest of the Jews into captivity, in all the lands where they settled they began to make meeting houses. The word synagogue is from the Greek and means to lead together, an assembly then, a congregation. Just like our word “church” which not only means the gathering of the body of Christ, but also means the building where they meet, so the same became true for synagogue.
In the synagogue the Jews came together every Sabbath, they offered prayers together, sang Psalms, read from Moses and the prophets, and had the passages explained to them. As a ruler, Jairus watched over the congregation, kept order, regulated the schedules of reading, and carefully listened to the explanations of the law given by the scribes.
This was the man, then, who came to Jesus and asked Him to heal his daughter, who was seriously ill. Jairus made an urgent request, for, he said, “My little daughter lies at the point of death. Come and lay Your hands on her that she may be healed, and she will live. Jesus agreed, began to walk towards Jairus’ house, and then was interrupted by the woman with the issue of blood. When she had been healed, exposed, and Jesus was still talking to her, somebody came from Jairus’ house and said to him, “Your daughter is dead. Why trouble the teacher any longer?”
His daughter was dead. What now? If Christ was like other doctors he comes too late. While there is life there is hope, hope that some means may be found to bring a cure, to keep life going. But when life is gone, what’s the use? It’s past recall. All the skilled doctors in the world can only work with a life that is there; but when it’s gone the doctor’s job is done.
So what was Jairus to think? Ordinarily for a child of God the thought may be, “The issue has been determined, the will of God is done, and I’ll just have to accept that. The Lord gave, the Lord took away.”
Or perhaps like David when the little baby boy of Bathsheba was lying sick. David fasted and wept, and prayed passionately that the Lord would b e gracious. But when the baby died, he stopped weeping. He said to His servants, “He is dead. Why weep anymore? I shall go to him, but he shall not return to me.”
Or perhaps Jairus’ thoughts were a little harsher. “If the Master hadn’t stood around like this with this woman, He probably would have made it to my house in time to heal her before she died. Why did He stop anyway? He knew the woman who touched Him was healed. Why did He have to go through all that conversation? It didn’t change anything, except that in the meantime my darling daughter died. She’s dead.”
So what was Jairus to think? Ordinarily for a child of God the thought may be, “The issue has been determined, the will of God is done, and I’ll just have to accept that. The Lord gave, the Lord took away.”
Or perhaps like David when the little baby boy of Bathsheba was lying sick. David fasted and wept, and prayed passionately that the Lord would be gracious. But when the baby died, he stopped weeping. He said to his servants, “He is dead. Why weep anymore? I shall go to him, but he shall not return to me.”
Or perhaps Jairus’ thoughts were a little harsher. “If the Master hadn’t stood around like this with this woman, He probably would have made it to my house in time to heal her before she died. Why did He stop anyway? He knew the woman who touched Him was healed. Why did He have to go through all that conversation? It didn’t change anything, except that in the meantime my darling daughter died. She’s dead.”
What are our thoughts when we cry to the Lord to save us and it seems that He delays and delays and delays. We are in physical or spiritual, or emotional anguish, and at times find ourselves at the point of crisis, and yet. . .no deliverance. And we may cry with the Psalmist, “My God, why have You forsaken me?” Where is the God of promise? Where is the God of salvation? Why do You hide Your face, Lord?
Yes, these were the anguished prayers of godly men and women of old, and perhaps these are the prayers and cries that are wrung from our hearts today. Does God hear? Are His mercies locked up somewhere? Has He forgotten us?
The child was dead. Cut off in the flower of her years. Just twelve years old. Amazing isn’t it? In verse 25 Mark tells us that the woman with the issue of blood was sick with it for 12 years. For 12 years she had lived in the gloom of impending death, and suddenly, when she touched the hem of Jesus’ robe, she was healed, the gloom and darkness was past, and the sun had risen in her life.
Jairus’ daughter had lived for 12 years in the wonderful sunshine of joyful childhood, loved and loving, carefree and healthy. Now suddenly, sickness had come upon her, and the sun of life and health that had shone on her so brightly was setting, and now had gone below the horizon, and she had gone into the blackness of death. The joyful sunshine in Jairus’ life had gone out. There is something so tragic about the death of a young child.
As soon as Jesus heard the word that was spoken, He said to the ruler of the synagogue, “Do not be afraid, only believe.” Fear not. . .only believe.
Jesus had delayed, but Jairus was to believe that no one is the loser by the gain of others. Because Jesus took the time to bring this woman into a personal relationship with Himself, because Jesus took the time to say to her, “Daughter, your faith has made you well. Go in peace, and be healed of your affliction.” Because He took that time, He didn’t steal that time from Jairus. It is not as thought when God shows mercy and kindness to others we know, that somehow they were first in line and we have to wait our turn, and wait and wait until it seems to late. Our crisis has passed, our troubles are past the point of recovery. It’s too late. . .no one is a looser in the mercy of the Lord because others are gainers.
“Do not be afraid, only believe.” Only believe! Jesus was speaking to Jairus, still an Old Testament saint. We live after Jesus had died and risen from the dead. But what was Jairus to believe? Does the Old Testament speak of the resurrection?
Well, yes, of course. And if I was in our Bible Study time again I would ask someone to tell me where God’s promises of life from the dead are found in the Old Testament. One, of course, is in Ezekiel 37. Ezekiel sees a valley of very dry bones, the whole house of Israel. God asked Ezekiel, can these bones live? Ezekiel answers, “Lord, you know.” God commanded Ezekiel to speak to those bones, God commanded the wind to come into them. Through the Word and breath, Spirit of God, they arose from the dead. Yes
Old Testament? Yes, Jeremiah records, “Thus says the LORD: “A voice was heard in Ramah, Lamentation and bitter weeping, Rachel weeping for her children, refusing to be comforted for her children, because they are no more.” Thus says the LORD: “Refrain your voice from weeping, and your eyes from tears; for your work shall be rewarded, says the LORD, and they shall come back from the land of the enemy. There is hope in your future, says the LORD, that your children shall come back to their own border.” (Jer. 31:15-17 NKJV)
Yes, do no be afraid, only believe. Believe in the promises of God, for faith is the only remedy in times of utter hopelessness. Faith is informed, nourished, fed, grows, on the promises of God.
For us, after the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ, we are exhorted by St. Paul, “But I do not want you to be ignorant, brethren, concerning those who have fallen asleep, lest you sorrow as others who have no hope. For if we believe that Jesus died and rose again, even so God will bring with Him those who sleep in Jesus.” (1 Thes. 4:13-14 NKJV)
Do not be afraid, only believe. Faith hopes in the future during the present on the basis of the past.
“Then He came to the house of the ruler of the synagogue, and saw a tumult and those who wept and wailed loudly. When He came in, He said to them, “Why make this commotion and weep? The child is not dead, but sleeping.” And they ridiculed Him. But when He had put them all outside, He took and father and the mother of the child, and those who were with Him, and entered where the child was lying.” (Mk 5:38-40 NKJV)
What shall we make of this? It would seem that in Jesus day when someone was so sick that death was near, the professional mourners stood ready to begin weeping and wailing, playing funeral music on flutes, tearing their clothes, throwing dust on their heads. Our passage says there was a tumult. It was a crowded scene. Jesus said, “Why make this commotion?”
Did the Jews mourning for the dead degenerate into heathen wailing and weeping, as those who had no hope? Had their funeral practices copied those of the world?
And what of ours today? More Christians today omit reference to the 11th Article of the Christian Faith, “I believe in the resurrection of the body,” content themselves with taking comfort that the soul of the departed has gone to heaven, and now we can cremate the body, because, after all, it’s the soul that counts, the body is nothing. But that is pagan.
When Jesus came in, He said to them, “Why make this commotion and weep? The child is not dead, but sleeping.”
Of course the Bible often refers to the dead saints as sleeping. When Lazarus, the friend of Jesus, died, He told the disciples, “Our friend Lazarus is sleeping, but I go to awake him.” The disciples said, “Well, Lord, if he is sleeping, he is getting better.” Then Jesus told them plainly, “He is dead.” What Jesus was telling Jairus and others in saying that she was sleeping, was that death is not final for God’s children. Death is like sleep, for when we see a child sleeping we have no fear, but expect to see the child wake up again. To sleep means to surrender consciousness in the simple faith that we will wake up.
Death seems so final for us too, doesn’t it? It’s hard for us not to think of it that way. The end of everything. Death always seems to be creeping up on us, sometimes at a distance, and sometimes close at hand.
I think there was a book named Peter Pan, and a movie made after it. In the movie Captain Hook was called that because he had lost one hand to crocodile, and had a hook instead. The crocodile though, having tasted how good that hand was, wanted to eat the rest of Captain Hook. The crocodile had swallowed an alarm clock, and because of that where ever he went you could hear that tick tock of the clock. So whenever Captain Hook heard that tick tock, he was scared to death. The crocodile was after him again, and was close by. That fear was always with Captain Hook. For a time he heard nothing, and could finally relax, but suddenly, as he was dozing, there was that horrible sound again, tick tock, tick tock. So that terror never quite left him.
The crocodile is the dragon, that old dragon. And it would seem to us, that he is never that far behind us. At times, when there is a threat of cancer or some other dreaded disease, the tick tock comes so close. . .horribly close.
But listen to St. Paul in Hebrews 2, “Inasmuch then as the children have partaken of flesh and blood, He Himself likewise shared in the same, that through death He might destroy him who had the power of death, that is, the devil, and release those who through fear of death were all their lifetime subject to bondage.” (Heb. 2:14-15 NKJV)
There it is. . .exactly what we are talking about. Jesus came to destroy him who had the power of death, and release us from fear.
Fear not. . .only believe. “The child is not dead, but sleeping.” And they ridiculed Him. Perhaps they too, as so many today, took the notion of the Greeks, that the body was just a ragged piece of garbage enclosing the soul, and that the resurrection of the body was something to ridicule. You remember that the Greeks at Athens laughed when Paul spoke of the resurrection of the body. And I’m afraid that many Christians today are in danger of falling into that heresy.
“I believe in the resurrection of the body.”
“And they ridiculed Him. But when He had put them all outside, He took the father and the mother of the child, and those who were with Him, and entered where the child was lying.” “He put them all out.” And that is a rather tame translation of the original, for what it means is that Jesus threw them all out. He cast them out. He expelled them, banished them. It carries with it the idea of violence.
There is simply no place near Jesus, nor near any of His wonderful works for those who are skeptics, for those who ridicule, who scoff and scorn the revelation of God in Jesus Christ. Jesus Himself expels such people. Jesus only took Peter, James, and John with the child’s mother and father, and went into the room where she was lying dead. Then, says our text, “He took the child by the hand, and said to her, “Talitha cumi,” which is translated, “Little girl, I say to you arise.” Immediately the girl arose and walked.
He took the child by the hand. Again, Jesus is touching the unclean, touching a dead body, and that made someone unclean for some time. But this is Jesus, the Son of God, whose holiness is so complete, so perfect, so powerful, that nothing can pollute it, nothing can contaminate it, but instead of receiving uncleanness, He radiates holiness and life. Nothing of sin flows into our Savior, but He gives righteousness and holiness.
What comfort for the sinner coming before a holy God. We need have no fear that the horribleness of our sins, the filth of our minds and hearts are a barrier to coming to Jesus. We will not effect Him, but if we come to Him in faith, He will effect us. He took the child by the hand, and said to her, “Talitha cumi, Little girl, I say to you arise.” Here again we have what we saw earlier, and that is that the word of Christ’s command carries with it the power to obey that command. Jesus spoke to a dead body, a girl hearing, sight, feeling, everything was gone. No blood flowed through her veins. No messages traveled along her nerves. She was dead.
The command of Jesus gave life, and in giving life gave the power to obey. And so it is for you and for me. Do we find Christ’s commands so often impossible? Read the Sermon on the Mount again, and see how impossible it seems to obey what Christ commands.
St. Augustine struggled with that truth. In his confessions he said, “Domine, da guod iubes it iube quod vis.” “Lord, give what you command and command whatever you want.” “Do not fear, only believe.” Christ works while He commands; He commands while He works. “Talitha cum, Little girl, I say to you arise.” Immediately the girl arose and walked.
“Talitha cumi.” These were Aramaic words, words that Mark left in the original and then translated for his Greek readers. Aramaic was the common language spoken among the Jews, and “talitha cumi” was a home phrase, a family sentence. The little girl had heard it so many times. As a toddler, when she fell down, mommy reached down her hand, took the little girl’s hand, and said, “Talitha cumi.” Little girl, get up.
When the little girl had slept through the night, mommy came into her bedroom, saw her there all rosy with eyelashes laid against her cheeks, and mommy said, “Talitha, cumi.”
So Jesus used the same words, “Talitha, cumi.“ Wonderful words, aren’t they? And some day, some day soon or distant, you will sleep the sleep of death. And then the day will come when Jesus comes to your bed room, the place where your body is resting, and to you, whether you went to sleep a fair flower at the age of 12, or whether you go to sleep when you are 95, aged, wrinkled, stooped and white-haired, He will say to you, “Talitha, cumi.”
And you too, like this young girl, will immediately arise and walk, and leap, and enter into a life of endless day with your Savior. And for the many of our loved ones whom we have laid to rest, hear St. Paul again: “But I do not want you to be ignorant, brethren, concerning those who have fallen asleep, lest you sorrow as others who have no hope. For if we believe that Jesus died and rose again, even so God will bring with Him those who sleep in Jesus. For this we say to you by the word of the Lord, that we who are alive and remain until the coming of the Lord will by no means precede those who are asleep. For the Lord Himself will descend from heaven with a shout, with the voice of an archangel, and with the trumpet of god. And the dead in Christ will rise first. Then we who are alive and remain shall be caught up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air. And thus we shall always be with the Lord. Therefore comfort one another with these words.” (1Thes. 4:13-18 NKJV)
And for you and I, who sometimes are still paralyzed with fear at the prospect of what men call a fatal disease, hear again the words of the Spirit of Christ explaining why Christ did come into this world in our flesh and blood: “Inasmuch then as the children have partaken of flesh and blood, He Himself likewise shared in the same, that through death He might destroy him who had the power of death, that is, the devil, and release those who through fear of death were all their lifetime subject to bondage.” (Heb 2:14-15 NKJV)
Fear not, do not be afraid, only believe. “Fear not” is a command, and we may and must believe that with that command Christ works in us the power to obey it. Let me finish with a poem by John Donne, Elizabethan poet and preacher, and as you may know, John Donne is a favorite of mine. This is a sonnet, Holy Sonnet No. 10.
DEATH be not proud, though some have called thee
Mighty and dreadful, for, thou art not so,
For, those, whom thou think’st, thou dost overthrow,
Die not poore death, nor yet canst thou kill me.
From rest and sleepe, which but thy pictures bee,
Much pleasure, then from thee, much more must flow,
And soonest our best men with thee doe goe,
Rest of their bones, and soules deliverie.
Thou art slave to Fate, Chance, kings, and desperate men,
And dost with poyson, warre, and sicknesse dwell,
And poppie, or charmes can make us sleepe as well,
And better then thy stroake; why swell’st thou then;
One short sleepe past, wee wake eternally,
And death shall be no more; death, thou shalt die.
AMEN.
Sermon by Rev. Donald Van Dyken
Trinity Church of Tri-Cities
June 22, 2008
Scripture: Mark 2:1-12
The Faith Connection
Beloved congregation of the Lord Jesus Christ, we are at a great distance in space from our lovely Savior, Jesus Christ. He is in heaven, seated at the right hand of God, and we are yet on this earth. He was on this earth at one time, but we are separated by a great span of time. . .20 centuries, from that time He was in the world.
However, when your Lord and Savior was about to leave this world and return to the Father, He promised to send the Holy Spirit, the Spirit of the Father and especially the Spirit of the Son, who would bring the presence of the son to the hearts and lives of believers of every age and every place. St. John tells us in his gospel, chapter 16:14 that Jesus said about the Spirit, “He will glorify Me, for He will take of what is mine and declare it to you.”
What is Christ’s, is the love and compassion He showed to His people while here on earth, and what is Christ’s is that same love and compassion, as He sits upon the throne of His Father.
What the Holy Spirit does for the church, for you and for me, beloved, is to bridge what we can’t bridge, to make a living connection between us and Jesus. He connects us to the works and miracles of Jesus while He was on the earth, and the love and power of Jesus as He is in heaven. This is the promise of the spirit Peter mentioned in Acts 2, the wonderful promise that the spirit reaches across the vast distance of time to bring us through the Word, this miracle of Jesus. At the same time the same Spirit assures us that through Him we have a living connection by faith to Jesus right now in heaven.
So let’s praise God for this blessing, and pray that through the preaching of the Word of this miracle our connection to Jesus Christ by faith may be widened and deepened. I want to consider this miracle under the theme: The Faith Connection.
Not only Mark, but Matthew and Luke record this miracle. These first three gospels are sometimes called the “synoptic”, a word coined in specific reference to these gospels. It came from two Greek words, sun meaning “together”, and optsis, meaning “seeing”. It means that Matthew, Mark, and Luke generally told the same stories about Jesus and have many parallel passages.
Our passage begins with Jesus crossing back by boat to the other side. He had been in the country of the Gadarenes where He had cast out the legion of demons. So He crossed the Sea of Galilee and a great crowd of people followed Him. Jairus, one of the rulers of the synagogue came, and falling at Jesus’ feet begged Him to come to heal his daughter who was at the point of death. He asked Jesus to come and lay His hands on her, that, said Jairus, “she may be healed, and she will live.”
Jesus answered his request by going with him towards his house. As He went the entire great crowd of people went along, and, says the Bible, “thronged Him.” That means the crowd was pretty tight, they pressed against one another and against Jesus as He went along.
“Now,” says our text, “a certain woman had a flow of blood for twelve years, and had suffered many things from many physicians. She had spent all that she had and was no better, but rather grew worse.”
Perhaps the first thing we should note here is that because of her constant flow, discharge of blood, she would be considered. . .unclean. Indeed, the law of Moses specifically labeled her as “unclean.”
In Leviticus 15 God instructed Moses to tell the people: “If a woman has a discharge of blood for many days, other than at the time of her customary impurity, or if it runs beyond her usual time of impurity, all the days of her unclean discharge shall be as the days of her customary impurity. She shall be unclean. ‘Every bed on which she lies all the days of her discharge shall be to her as the bed of her impurity; and whatever she sits on shall be unclean, as the uncleanness of her impurity. ‘Whoever touches those things shall be unclean; he shall wash his clothes and bathe in water, and be unclean until evening.” (Lev. 15:25-27 NKJV)
God went on to say, “Thus you shall separate the children of Israel from their uncleanness, lest they die in their uncleanness when they defile My tabernacle that is among them.” (Lev. 15:31 NKJV)
Does not this woman really represent Israel? Did not Christ pronounce woe against the scribes and Pharisees because although they were clean on the outside just like whitewashed gravestones, yet inside they were full of abominations? Ezekiel many years before said this of Israel: “Son of man, when the house of Israel dwelt in their own land, they defiled it by their own ways and deeds; to Me their way was like the uncleanness of a woman in her customary impurity.” (Ezek. 36:17 NKJV)
Indeed, Israel was like an unclean thing to the Lord. They washed the outside of the cup, but left the inside dirty. They defiled the temple of the Lord with moneychangers, making God’s house of prayer a den of thieves. Yes, this woman represented Israel in all her uncleanness. Though you wash yourself with water, said God through the prophets, your uncleanness is still with you. Can an Ethiopian change the color of his skin; can a leopard remove his spots? Then, said the prophet, shall you Israel, be able to remove your iniquities from you. Yes, just like this woman, Israel had gone in vain for help.
This woman had, says our text, “suffered many things at the hands of the physicians”. She had spent all that she had, but instead of finding any relief, instead of getting better, she became worse. But this, beloved, was the way of our fathers. You should know their history. They went to Syria for help. . .they went to Assyria for help. . .to Egypt, to Babylon. And each time they purchased the assistance of these kingdoms, these nations, by robbing the treasuries of the temple, by finally cutting off the gold from the doors of the temple. But instead of providing help, instead of coming to the aid of Israel, these nations were the curse of Israel. Israel became defiled through their contact with these nations.
Israel had a God, the great God of Abraham, but Israel forsook her God and went to a man. But vain is the help of man. Yet she was not yet finished, even at the time of Christ. For as a final and devastating attempt, she appealed to Rome. She finally said, “we have no king but Caesar”. but Caesar did not cure her but kill her. Caesar destroyed her.
And what of today? At every level we have forsaken the fountain of living waters and dug out for ourselves cisterns that hold no water at all. On the national level and for the sake of our oil supply we have allied ourselves with such a filthy nation as Saudi Arabia, and we are polluted because of it.
We drain our resources exploring Mars for signs of life when the God who created all things is near us. We take men and women whose lives are emotionally and physically wrecked, and spend millions treating them with psychiatrists, and for all that, they become worse. How many defiled, unclean, people walk this land today? Unclean because of drugs, because of drunkenness, because of sexual sins. And where do we send them?
There is a fountain, says Zechariah, opened for the house of David for sin, and for uncleanness. To this fountain the woman in our text came. “When she heard about Jesus, she came behind Him in the crowd and touched His garment. For she said, ‘If only I may touch His clothes, I shall be made well.’ “
There are commentators, and Calvin is among them, who think that this woman’s faith was mixed with error because, instead of coming right to Jesus and asking to be healed, she kind of snuck up behind Him. Why, was she afraid of offending Him if she was convinced of His power to save her? Other commentators think that she was somewhat superstitious, thinking that there was some kind of magic power in Jesus’ clothes.
I’m not so sure. It would seem to me that she was reluctant to come before Jesus because she had for twelve long years been considered an unclean person. Perhaps her reverence for Jesus, the Holy One of Israel, kept her from confronting Him.
If these commentators are right, there is a lesson to be learned here. Did this woman want the power of Jesus and not the person of Jesus? Did she want the benefit of health without coming into a relationship with Jesus? What about you and me? Do we think that Jesus and the Spirit of Jesus is some king of impersonal power that brings us blessings? Is the power of Jesus something like electricity, that if you can make a connection, you will be able to tap unlimited power in your life? But Jesus in not a power. He has power. . .but He is a person, and you and I must come into a personal relationship with this Jesus. We must know Him. . .and we must be known by Him. Does He know you? Does He know you by name? does He know you by need?
This woman believed, though that contact with Jesus, even if it was only contact with His clothes, would be a healing and restoring contact. “If only I may touch His clothes, I shall be made well”. Immediately the fountain of her blood was dried up, and she felt in her body that she was healed of the affliction. “And Jesus, immediately knowing in Himself that power had gone out of Him, turned around in the crowd and said, ‘who touched my clothes?’ Immediately knowing in Himself that power had gone out of Him”.
The Old King James says that “virtue” had gone out of Him. We think of virtue as goodness, and that’s a wonderful thought to connect with power. For how often do we think of power and goodness together? There is a famous saying by Lord Acton, I think that it goes like this. “Power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely.” But the power of Jesus, although it is unlimited and absolute is the power of God. The power of God. . .the omnipotence of God, is an attribute of God, and is always and forever totally filled with all the other attributes of God. That means that His power is always a Holy power, a power filled with goodness, a power filled with mercy, a power filled with justice, a power filled with grace.
“Jesus, immediately knowing that power had gone out of Him.” Jesus was, and is today, the great Physician. There are some doctors today, and there are other people too, who seem to have special hands. What I mean is that their hands almost seem to draw the pain out of their patients. If you are in sympathy with someone in pain, whether that pain is physical or emotional, you want to touch them, and as if were, want to draw that pain out of them and into yourself. You reach out to them and touch them with the strong desire, the great longing that you could just pull the pain out of them. The Bible tells us that Jesus, not just 2000 years ago, but today, is “touched with the feeling of our infirmities.” Hebrews 4:15, OKJV. Then if you remember that Matthew quoted Isaiah 53, saying: “that it might be fulfilled which was spoken by Isaiah the prophet, saying: ‘He Himself took our infirmities and bore our sicknesses.’ “ (Mt. 8:17 NKJV)
“Power went out of Him.” This woman, whose contact with Jesus was only with her fingertip touching the edge of His clothes, received in her body the power of Jesus, and her sickness left her. Jesus, through His power as the great physician, drew it out of her and into Himself. He was touched with the feeling of her infirmity. Jesus, asked, “Who touched me?” but His disciples said to Him, “you see the multitude thronging you and you say, who touched me?”
Let us see, my friends, that there are countless people like this crowd, all thronging about Jesus, all in some sort of contact with Him, and perhaps all needing some form of healing. Yet for all their contact, in spite of the fact that this pushing and shoving crowd whose shoulders and bodies came into contact with Jesus, none of those contacts resulted in power going from Jesus.
What is the difference? The difference is ‘faith’. There are countless multitudes of people today who are aware of Jesus. There are many who have His name on their lips. There are many who, like the crowd walking with Him on the road to Jairus’ house, have through the Bible watched Him, seen Him, and even had some kind of contact with Him. Yet how many have only a superficial contact? The essential contact is by ‘faith’ alone!
The difference is believing that Jesus is really, and especially today, touched with the feeling of our infirmities. The hand that reaches out to Him, your hand, weak and trembling, fearful, full of the anxieties that you know you shouldn’t have. . .when that hand of yours touches Jesus in faith, power, great good and merciful power goes from Him to you. And from you He takes all your sorrows, your cares, your worries, your shame too, and lifts your burdens.
Do you believe that? What else did Jesus mean when He said, “Come unto Me, all you who are weary and heavy laden, and I will give you rest.” What happens to all that heavy load, except that He takes it upon Himself, and releases you? What else does He mean when He says, “Cast all your cares upon me?” Ah. . .Lord. . .if we only had the faith to do so.
Jesus said, “Who touched me?” Did He know who touched Him? Of course He did. Why did He say that then? He said that so that the woman would come to Him and say what had happened to her. And so she did, for she came fearing and trembling, knowing what had happened to her, fell down before Jesus, and told Him the whole truth.
Perhaps it is as the commentators say, that this woman’s faith was of a small and faulty kind. Yet the promise always holds sure, “the one who comes to Me, I will never cast out.” Whenever you come to Jesus in faith, even a faith that is poor and small, He will not send you away empty. Jesus deals kindly and gently with His people, and accepts their faith though imperfect and weak.
A small faith, perhaps a misshapen faith, but, as one of the commentators said, the mercy of God flows like a river. That means it is like water, and water takes the shape of the containing vessel. Your faith may be as small as a thimble, yet God’s mercy will surely fill it. Your faith may be like a tin can, dented and bent, but God’s mercy will surely fill it. Your faith may be battered and twisted out of shape, but God’s mercy like water, will fit, will take the shape of your faith.
This woman, although perhaps her faith was placed on externals, placed on the power of Jesus garment, yet had an absolute confidence that the touch of her finger-tip on the edge of His robe was enough.
One of the commentators on this passage was Alexander MacLaren, a 19th century Scotsman, a Baptist of the Calvinist and Reformed persuasion. His expository preaching was famous and the twelve volumes of his sermons are still in print today, you can get them from Barnes and Noble. Anyway, he made what I think is an amazing statement for a Calvinist to make, “She was attaching undue importance to externals, thinking more of the hem of the garment and its touch by a finger than the heart of the wearer and the grasp of faith. But while we avoid such errors, let us not forget that many a poor worshiper clasping a crucifix may be clinging to the Savior, and that Christ does accept faith which is tied to outward forms, as He did this woman’s.” End of quote.
Then Jesus said to her, “Daughter, your faith has made you well. Go in peace, and be healed of your affliction.” “Daughter.” What a wonderful word Jesus used in addressing her. She is the only woman in the gospels Jesus called “daughter.” What a wonderful sense of joy and relief must have flooded her soul. For what a wonderfully intimate and tender relationship is given in this word “daughter.” She, who had been for 12 years unclean, is now made clean by Jesus. She who had been impoverished and pained by helpless doctors, is now declared to be a daughter of the living God.
Beloved, let us recover again the joy and peace the Lord gives us by calling us sons and daughters of the living God. The One who is holy, who is just, who is righteous, who is eternal, calls us who are yet struggling with sins, who are so often of little faith, who yet bear the image of the earthly, who stumble and fall, yet never does He stop calling us sons and daughter. Beloved, now we are children of God, and it does not yet appear what we shall be, but we know when Jesus comes, we shall be like Him for we shall see Him as He is.
Jesus said to her, “Daughter, your faith has made you well.” Oh, she wouldn’t misunderstand Jesus. She would not think that there was something in her that made her well. She knew that it was all in Jesus. His was the power, His was the mercy, and His was the grace that called her “Daughter.”
Yet, let us consider carefully. Jesus didn’t say, “Daughter, I have made you well.” That was true enough. But that’s not what He said. What He said, He said for her, and He said for us. “Daughter, your faith has made you well.” Her faith, and we have seen in the miracle we considered last week, her faith was visible. Her faith was demonstrated in action. She reached out her hand through that thronging crowd, and touched the edge of Jesus’ robe.
This too is what Jesus is saying. You must reach out, you must take. I realize that as Reformed we emphasize the sovereignty of grace, the fact that we don’t come to God, but He comes to us. “Tis not that I did seek Thee, for Lord that could not be. No I was found, was found of Thee.” So we sing, and so we believe. And so we may continue to believe. But our faith is in the words of Jesus.
We may mock those who talk about accepting Jesus, we may disagree with those who say that we have to take a step, we need to reach out. But, while maintaining, while confessing, while believing that the grace of God, that the act of God is first, at the same time we much believe what Jesus said here. “Your faith, your act of faith in reaching out to touch the edge of My clothes, that faith has made you well. If you hadn’t done that, you would still be unclean.”
That is the call of the gospel, isn’t it? We don’t tell people. . .just keep on sitting there in your sins, and wait until the grace of God comes upon you. No. . .we preach what the apostles preached. Repent – that is faith in action. Repent, means to turn away from your sins, to stop doing them. That’s action. Then the gospel calls men, “Come and be baptized.” That’s action too. They must come. Then it is that God acts upon them, for the water of baptism unites them to the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ.
And then again, the call for action, for faith in action is given. Take eat. . .take drink. “Daughter, your faith has made you well. Go in peace, and be healed of your affliction.” So here is this miracle. Jesus is on a mission to save the daughter of Jairus, the great crowd around Him, hustling Him, elbowing their way to stare at Him. But His heart detected the touch, and His heart went out with healing power.
So we may be sure, though a universe waits before Him, and the closed ranked hosts of heaven stand around His throne, we can reach out hands through them all, and find that He is touched with the feeling of our infirmities, touched with the feeling of our struggles, our tears, our anxieties, our burdens of shame and guilt, our weariness. We will find our faith, however shrunken and meager, filled with the power of His mercy.
Amen.
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