August 26, 2007--Season of Pentecost
Lectionary Texts: Jeremiah 1:4-10 and Psalm 71:1-6
or Isaiah 58:9b-14 and Psalm 103:1-8
Hebrews 12:18-29
Luke 13:10-17
Sermon Text: Luke 13:10-17
God's Will Be Done
Today I want to discuss the concept of rules with you. For
some of you the word “rules” has stirred a worried feeling
inside you. You know who you are. You are the ones who drive more the
5 mph above the speed limit or chatter when the pastor is delivering the
message. But others of you are thrilled because you are thinking finally
someone is going to say something to get the pesky youth pastor or children’s
pastor to leave the place like they found it. Well I hate to burst your
bubble, but I’m not here to change anyone. God may change you though.
Let’s see what God has to say about rules.
This morning we are going to take a look at Luke 13:10-17
in which Jesus heals a crippled woman on the Sabbath. Jesus was teaching
in a synagogue. Many would be gathered round to listen to Jesus including
the synagogue rulers. A woman entered who has been crippled over for 18
years. No one noticed her. No one in the crowd saw her. But Jesus noticed
her. He called her to himself. Did you notice how she did not call Jesus,
but He called her? He saw her affliction and her need. He healed her through
His touch. She had not asked to be healed as so many others had before
her. She walked into the synagogue one day without any expectations other
than to worship God, and she walked out healed. Her first impulse was
to thank God by rejoicing and praising God. Her day turned out to be great,
full of joy and happiness.
But it was not so for some of those who witnessed this healing.
The synagogue rulers were angry with Jesus because He had broken the law
by healing on the Sabbath. Jesus could have six days a week to heal the
rulers didn’t darn step over the line by healing on the Sabbath.
It was simply unacceptable for the keepers of the law. They would not
have it, and they let Jesus know just how they felt.
But Jesus, always the wise teacher, reprimanded the synagogue
rulers and their supporters for their ignorance of the law. He rebuked
them for allowing the watering of animals on the Sabbath, yet they would
deny a woman to be set free from the bonds of Satan just because it happened
to be the Sabbath. For them an animal should be treated better than a
chosen woman of God. You see some people made the law the most important
thing and had forgotten about the will of God. They made the law, the
rules, guide their actions rather than letting God’s will for their
lives guide their actions. Jesus was straight up with them and called
their sin hypocrisy.
It’s not so different today. We too get caught up
in personally living right with Jesus. We make sure we regularly attend
church, tithe, and stick to our daily study of God’s word regardless
of anything else in the world. We strive to live this “perfect”
Christian life for ourselves and in the process lose sight of the lost,
the suffering, and the “least of these” we encounter in our
daily lives.
Dan, a good friend of mine, has a passion for reaching out
to trailer park kids. He spends his summers loading up vans to bring these
kids to church just so they can get fed and hear that Jesus loves them
even when it may feel like no one else cares about them. Dan has revealed
to me stories of the moms who tells their kids they won’t be fed
today since they will be getting a free meal from the church. He has shared
with me stories of children who cry because the vans are only picking
up the teens on that particular day. They cry because they want nothing
else than to be on the van and be loved like only Jesus can love them.
This is what Dan does best.
But Dan’s program needs funding by the church. So
he must go to the church board meetings before the summer begins. One
would think it would be easy, but not so. One man sits on the board and
has decided budgets aren’t being paid, so the money that would go
to feed children, spread the gospel, and share the love of Jesus will
go to administration outside Dan’s church. Now before any leaders
get upset with me, I fully believe budgets need to be paid, but do the
rules behind paying budgets mean a church can’t take 200 dollars
and share the healing love of Jesus? Sometimes we get so caught up in
doing things right we forget to do the right thing.
There is always hope for us in Christ Jesus. If we look
back to Luke, we can find the answer to the problem of the sin of “hypocrisy.”
Jesus was fully aware of the laws of God more so than anyone ever could
be fully aware. Jesus knew the laws before He decided to heal the crippled
woman. Remember she did not ask for or expect His help. Jesus knew the
right thing to do regardless of the day of week it was or any person’s
desire to keep the law. Jesus knew it was important to keep God’s
will. Jesus knew the Sabbath laws did not restrict the will of God’s
activity or plans on any given day. God desired this crippled woman be
healed that day, and His will be done. Of course it took Jesus to notice
the crippled woman as no other in the synagogue had bothered.
It is the same for us today. We fail to notice those who
need our help, our loving hand, or our time. We fail to notice because
we are human and imperfect, yet with Christ all things are possible. Jesus
calls each of us to respond to a life of what theologian Dietrich Bonhoeffer
calls “costly grace.” Jesus calls us to leave behind our old
lives, our self-will, and follow Him submitting ourselves to His will.
It is the call to die to self-will so the will of God comes first. We
are to be the presence of Jesus in the world.
We start out living in this world for ourselves by doing
what is right simply because we know it is right. But then Jesus comes
along and becomes part of our lives. Then one day Jesus begins to pull
us into this life of Christian service, and we say to ourselves: I guess
I’ll go along for the ride because it’s the right thing to
do. But something funny happens to us. We decide today is the day I’m
going to live for Jesus. I’m going to lay it all down because He
laid it all down for me on the Cross. I’m going to give up my will
in exchange for His will. Jesus does something to us through the power
of the Holy Spirit. He changes our heart. The rules seem to become less
important than living in God’s will in our lives, than looking to
Jesus for the example of a life to be lived. We no longer look at the
homeless person sitting on the street asking for a handout the same way.
We see him the way Jesus sees him. Our hearts can break for the single
mom struggling to put food on the table for her children by working two
jobs. And one day we decide to anonymously send her a gift card to the
local grocery store. We see her the way Jesus sees her. When summer comes
and children show up to be fed and hear the gospel, we no longer see grimy
faces on boisterous children, but we see a child in need of the kind of
love only Jesus can give. We see the children the way Jesus sees the them.
When we live in God’s will, we are no longer the same not because
of anything we have done. No, we could never love like Jesus of our own
will. We have given up our will. The will of Jesus and the will of the
Spirit are now within us. We can now have eyes like Jesus. We can see
the world the way Jesus sees the world.
If you’re tired of living life your way and doing
things your way, Jesus has a better plan. You can have the eyes of Jesus,
I want to invite you to submit your life and will to Christ today. Let
us pray:
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