Series
Title: Resurrection Encounters
Sermon
4: An Encounter with the Breath of God
Text:
John 20: 19-22
God
spoke with His creative voice, and light and darkness appeared. God looked
at everything He had made and gave His verdict, “It is good!”
God
spoke with His creative voice, and the skies and water come into view.
God looked at everything He had made and He gave His verdict, “It
is good!”
God
spoke with His creative voice, and the seas separated, land became visible.
The land produced tress, plants and grass. God looked at everything He
had made and He gave His verdict, “It is good!”
God
spoke with His creative voice, and the sun, the moon, and the stars came
into sight. God looked at everything He had made and He gave His verdict,
“It is good!”
God
spoke with His creative voice, and fish, birds, and animals of all kinds
became visible. God looked at everything He had made and He gave His verdict,
“It is good!”
On
the sixth day of creation God said, “Let us make humans in our image.”
Now this is the part of the creation story that gets to me. God created
everything we see with His voice, but on the sixth day the Creator comes
to the earth He has fashioned, He kneels in the dirt, He gets His hands
dirty, and He moulds the first human from the dust of the ground. Just
stop and think: the Eternal God gets His hands dirty to create humans.
We
were on vacation some years ago and as we walked along the beach we noticed
a crowd of people looking intently at something in the sand. We joined
them to see a sand sculptor at work. Who knows how long he had been there,
but we could see he was putting the finishing touches to his work, and
we could see the form of a man lying on the ground.
Picture
that with me as we contemplate God’s construction lying on the ground.
The human is lifeless. All of creation looks on. Heaven is awestruck.
God is kneeling in the dirt, and look what He has created. Then there
comes a very holy moment. God bends over the sand sculpture and breathes
life into the being. What a moment, as the breath of God gives life to
the inanimate. The first human rises from the dust of the earth.
Now
God looked at everything He had made and gave His verdict, “It is
very good!” What made the difference? For five days, at the end
of each day God gave His verdict on everything He had made: “It
is good!” But on the sixth day His verdict was, “It is very
good!” The difference was that the image of God was now on the earth.
From
Genesis 3 we know humanity did not stay very good for long. In the Fall
the first humans sinned, and the image of God became marred in humans
and humans became egocentric.
We
move very quickly to a little town called Bethlehem. There in a manger,
God deposits all He has and all He is in the form of the Christ Child.
Another holy moment occurs as the Child takes His first breath and the
perfect image of God is now on the earth.
The
God-Human had come to earth. His mission was to destroy all the works
of the devil and to restore the image of God in humankind; to make it
possible for sinners to be forgiven and to be reconciled to God. That
mission took Him to the grim darkness of Calvary and death by crucifixion.
Now
picture this: to create humankind God came to earth and got His hands
dirty. But to redeem humankind, God came to earth and not only got His
hands dirty, but He had them pierced with rusty nails. What love! What
compassion! I will never be able to comprehend fully all Jesus did for
me on Calvary. But my heart cries out, “Hallelujah! What a Saviour!”
It
is now Sunday. Some women have been to the tomb of Jesus. They return
to some of the disciples with an unbelievable report, “Jesus is
alive.” Some of their number ran to the tomb. They saw the folded
grave clothes. Mary told them the risen Lord had called her by name. She
thought He was the gardener. There is confusion. Some believe some do
not know what to believe. They are afraid. The authorities know they were
with Jesus. They are together. They are in hiding. They have locked themselves
away from the Jewish leaders.
How
often we, as the church, find ourselves behind closed doors, fearful and
ineffectual, living on the wrong side of the resurrection. At times the
problems we face can be so vast, and the task of reaching the world for
Jesus can be so overwhelming. What can we do but hide in the sanctuary
and discuss how desperate the situation is?
But
then Jesus came to these men and women, and “stood among them.”
The first word He spoke to them addressed their situation, “Peace
be with you.” At that moment I wonder how many of them went back
to the night on the boat in the storm, when they thought they were all
going to drown. Jesus had been sleeping in the back of the boat and they
were so afraid. When they woke Him, He addressed the storm, “Peace,
be still.”
To
prove to them that He is worthy of trust and to dispel any doubts they
have that it is really Jesus, He shows them His scars and marks. Now they
are convinced the same suffering Jesus has become the risen Christ. With
these incontrovertible proofs their fear turns to joy.
But
He has come to do so much more than dispel their fear and put their doubts
to flight. The reason He has come to them is then made clear. Jesus shows
them they are worthy of His trust. He has a mission for them to accomplish.
He delegates His work to them. As He earlier sent Mary forth with the
message of life, so He now sends the disciples. They are assigned the
same mission to which the Son was appointed by the Father: the mission
of restoring sinful humankind to God.
This
is a very holy moment. He shows them His scars and in so doing informs
them He can be trusted. But further, by handing over His life’s
mission to them, He lets them know He trusts them.
There
is an apocryphal story of Jesus returning to heaven. He is met at the
gates of heaven by the Archangel Gabriel. Gabriel asks Jesus how His mission
went on earth. Jesus informs him that the mission was successful. “So
what is the plan now?” Gabriel asks.
Jesus
replies, “I have left some men with a message that will change the
world.”
Gabriel
is astonished and enquires, “And if they fail, what is the backup
plan?”
Jesus
responds, “There is no backup plan. They will not fail, I have confidence
in them.”
In
the room everything goes quiet. Jesus has just expressed His belief in
them to carry out the mission, and there comes a very holy moment, and
He breathes on them and says, “Receive the Holy Spirit.” He
breathes new life into them. He breathes resurrection life into them.
Not only does Jesus trust them for the mission, He equips to undertake
the mission. There is one further point to note before we move from v.
22. Jesus places His call to ministry in light of the call to receive
the Holy Spirit. They go hand in hand. If a ministry is going to be fruitful,
it has to be Spirit led.
We
move forward to the Day of Pentecost. The disciples are all together with
one accord and there comes another one of those very special holy moments.
There comes a sound like a mighty rushing wind and they are all filled
with the Holy Spirit. Now their ministry has begun. Peter preaches a very
simple message and 3,000 converts believe in Jesus. The church is born.
These spirit-filled disciples go everywhere at the command of Jesus, and
everywhere they go they see signs and wonders following their preaching.
We
get to Acts 17. The gospel has already gone beyond Judaism. Gentiles are
responding to the Good News. Paul and Silas travel to Thessalonica. After
preaching in the synagogue many people, Jews and Gentiles, become believers.
The Jewish leaders stirred up trouble. They grabbed Jason, who had hosted
Paul and Silas, and took him to the city authorities. Here is their commentary
on the mission of the apostles, “These men have turned the world
upside down.” At that point I want to jump into the scene and shout,
“No! These men are turning the world the right way up! They are
restoring the marred image of God in men and women through the power of
the risen Christ!”
The apostles were in the business of rectifying humankind. And so are
we. Their ministry has been handed down to us. Our mission is to preach
repentance and remission of sins through the Victorious Risen Christ.
Our task is to rectify humankind; to help as many as we can to come to
faith and have their crazy, upside-down worlds turned the right way up.
Amazingly,
Jesus entrusts this ministry to us. We know we can trust Him. He has been
faithful in building His church for nearly two millennia. But His call
comes to us, to take Him into our world and to make Him known. He trusts
us. Now, if the call comes to us, as it did to the fearful disciples,
in association with the reception of the Holy Spirit, then I have a question.
Have you received the Holy Spirit? Have you received the enablement to
live for Jesus in this world? Have you felt the breath of God upon your
life? Have you sensed His presence with us today? Do you desire a fresh
encounter with the Breath of God? Come and receive His Holy Spirit.
God
knelt in the dirt to fashion the first human, and breathed His breath
to make a living soul. Jesus held out His hands to receive iron nails
to redeem us, and breathed His resurrection breath on His disciples to
equip them to continue His ministry.
What we need today is a fresh breath of God in our beloved church.
Bessie
Porter Head (1850 -1936) was an Anglican who wrote a hymn that could not
be more appropriate for our church today.
O
Breath of life, come sweeping through us,
Revive Thy church with life and power;
O Breath of life, come, cleanse, renew us,
And fit Thy church to meet this hour.
O Wind of God, come bend us, break us,
Till humbly we confess our need;
Then in Thy tenderness remake us,
Revive, restore, for this we plead.
O Breath of love, come breathe within us,
Renewing thought and will and heart;
Come, Love of Christ, afresh to win us,
Revive Thy church in every part.
O Heart of Christ, once broken for us,
'Tis there we find our strength and rest;
Our broken, contrite hearts now solace,
And let Thy waiting church be blest.
Revive us, Lord! Is zeal abating
While harvest fields are vast and white?
Revive, us Lord, the world is waiting;
Equip Thy church to spread the light.
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