Series
Title: Resurrection Encounters
Sermon
6: An Encounter with Joy
Text:
Luke 24:44-36
According
to the Church Calendar, Thursday was the celebration of Ascension Day.
It is the day the Church sets aside to commemorate that great event of
the Risen Lord Jesus Christ returning to heaven.
Luke
tells us the disciples returned to Jerusalem with great joy! (v. 52).
How come? Their leader was gone. Their beloved captain had ascended into
the blue skies. You would expect them to return to Jerusalem with great
fear. After all nothing had changed. The Romans who put Jesus to death
were still in the country. The priests who conspired to have Jesus assassinated
were still running the temple.
Could
it be that on the Mount of Olives they had experienced something that
had transformed their sadness into gladness? Could it be that as they
watched Jesus ascending into heaven, doubt and fear, anxiety and misgiving
were done away with and in their place were joy and confidence?
Today
I want us to look at what Jesus said to them on the Mount of Olives that
would make them return to the city, where they had been hiding, full of
joy. When I think about the disciples on that particular day, I try to
stand in their sandals. Let’s stand with them. As I stand there
with them and I am full of questions. The first question that comes to
my mind is, “Where do we go from here?” Jesus answered that
question in vv. 46-48. He told them to go into the whole world.
Jesus
Gave Them a Great Purpose
There
are some very important verbs in these two verses: suffer; arise; be proclaimed.
The first two had been accomplished by Jesus, and now He was turning the
work over to them. “Go and tell the whole world that I suffered,
died and rose again and that repentance and remission of sins should be
proclaimed.” The verb ‘to proclaim’ can also be translated
‘to herald.’ A herald is someone who delivers a message on
behalf of his master. His task is to make the message known. He does not
change the message in any way.
As
I travel from country to country in Northern Europe I see our Church has
many different ways of presenting this message, but everywhere I go I
perceive that the Message is the same. The package might be different
but the content is exactly the same: repentance and remission of sins
should be proclaimed. Why would someone who is working two jobs to support
his family, in Oslo, Norway want to plant a church for Portuguese- and
Spanish-speaking immigrants? Why would an electrical engineer leave his
job and take his wife and five children to the poorest part of Eastern
Hungary to plant not one but three churches? Why would a bright, young
M.A. graduate give up the opportunity to begin a lucrative career to volunteer
to set up a language school in Poland? Why would a trained opera singer
give up her career to begin a choir ministry among former communist atheists
in Northeast Germany? Why would a very successful pastor in the Caribbean
leave his home and take his family to London, England to pioneer ethnic
churches? Why would a physiotherapist whose husband is a District Superintendent
want to begin a church in their hometown in Holland? Why would a worship
leader travel 3,000 miles and relocate in a new culture, when most people
his age are thinking about retirement, to pastor our only church in the
Republic of Ireland? There is one answer to all of these questions. They
are driven by A Great Purpose. It is the same purpose that took those
first apostles back to Jerusalem with great joy. It is the desire of Jesus
that repentance and remission of sins should be proclaimed. The world
still needs to hear that message. Where do we go from here? We go into
the entire world.
Remember,
I’m standing with the disciples. The next question that comes to
my mind on hearing the answer to the first question is, “How can
you be serious Jesus? I mean, these people have proved themselves weak
in the past. Don’t you remember? They were scared to death when
you were sleeping in the boat in the storm. They had to waken You to come
to their rescue. They could not heal the lunatic boy when You were on
the mountain with Peter, James, and John. You had to do that when You
came down to join them. There were lazy in Gethsemane when You wanted
them to support You in prayer. They argued among themselves on more than
one occasion as to who was the greatest among them. One denied You and
the others never spoke up for You in your hour of greatest need.”
The
more I think about those disciples standing there contemplating going
into the entire world, and I think about you and me facing the same prospect,
the more I think, “How can You be serious, Jesus?” We are
just like them. We are just an extension of those first apostles. There
are times when we feel afraid; when we are weak; when we stay at home
and rest instead of going to the prayer meeting; when we argue as to who
is best; when we do not speak up for You. How can You be serious Jesus?
As we stand with those apostles, no matter how ineffective, how unprepared,
or how hopeless we might feel, Jesus still wants us to do it. Now as we
stand there, a momentous turning point occurs.
Jesus
Gave Them a Great Promise (v. 49)
Jesus
did not expect them to do this work on their own. He would fulfill the
promise of His Father when He returned to heaven. He would send them the
Holy Spirit, the One who would be in them; the One who would work with
them and through them. As I stand there with the apostles, I discover
a great truth: this is His work. Jesus started it and He will complete
it. But He wants me to help Him. I look at myself and my first reaction
is, “I cannot do this.” But He gives me the promise of the
Helper.
I
had a call from someone in distress. He was endeavouring to evangelize
and had been through several gruelling meetings with the local authorities.
They wanted another meeting. The individual was reluctant to go. The other
meetings had been too painful. As the person prayed about the meeting
he told the Lord he would do anything other than go to the meeting. The
day before the meeting the individual got so agitated that he said to
the Lord, “If this is so important why don’t You go to the
meeting? That’s it Jesus, you go.” As he sat in prayer the
Lord responded, “OK, I will go, but can I borrow your body to get
there?” Wow, what a realization: the Lord would be there. He would
be in that person and working through him. He was not on his own. And
neither am I when I go in His name.
There
are a few verses in 2 Timothy 4 that seem to speak to me on a regular
basis. Paul is in prison and he is writing to Timothy, telling his young
student about his ordeals. In v. 16 he writes, “At my first defence,
no one came to my support, but everyone deserted me, may it not be held
against them.” Have you ever felt let down by people, especially
people you trusted? I’m glad his report does not end there. Triumphantly
he recalls, “But the Lord stood at my side and gave me strength,
so that through me the message might be fully proclaimed and all the Gentiles
might hear it. And I was delivered from the lion's mouth. The Lord will
rescue me from every evil attack and will bring me safely to his heavenly
kingdom. To him be glory for ever and ever. Amen.” What a Saviour,
who never leaves us on our own.
By
now you know I am one of those people who likes asking questions. Where
do we go from here? You go into the entire world and proclaim repentance
and the remission of sins. Jesus gave them a Great Purpose. How can You
be serious? I will make sure you are never alone. Jesus gave them a Great
Promise. How will that work? You know when You were with the disciples
they rarely got it right. You know how timid and fearful they were. So,
how will it work?
Jesus
gave them the Prospect of a Great Power
The
Holy Spirit of promise would fill them with a Great Power that would make
them adequate to perform their work in Jerusalem and enable them to expand
their ministry to the uttermost parts of the world. As I stand with them
I hear myself saying, “Yes. That’s exactly what I need.”
No wonder they returned to Jerusalem with great joy. On the Mount of Olives
Jesus had given them a purpose for their lives, He had given them the
promise that they would never be on their own, and the prospect of a power
to complete their purpose.
As
I read the story Jesus wrote through their lives, I observe that those
disciples were empowered to stand and proclaim repentance and the remission
of sins to thousands of people, and they were unashamed and unafraid.
Some of them were empowered to perform miraculous feats; others were used
in healing the sick instantaneously. They were empowered with wisdom to
help them discern error and courage to confront evil. They were empowered
to endure the most torturous deaths. Something transformed those timid,
awkward, fearful disciples into bold, devoted, and inspiring followers
of God. That something was power, the power of the Holy Spirit. It was
the power to be faithful to Jesus Christ and His Church, and dedicated
to the purpose Jesus gave to their lives that day on the Mount of Olives.
I
was saved at the age of seventeen. An old man in our hometown took several
young converts under his wing to help us become established in our new
faith. He taught us to study the Word of God and to pray. He took us onto
the street to proclaim our faith in open-air meetings. His son and I were
good friends. When the old man died his son took me to his father’s
study. He took a large envelope off one of the shelves. It was bulging
with little scraps of paper. He said, “Take one.” I took one
and read it. There was a date at the top and information below, “Two
young women saved.” “Take another,” he said. We sat
for a long time to read every piece of paper and shared in the ministry
of a man who was mightily used of God. When we had finished reading the
contents his son turned the envelope around and his father had written,
“Acts chapters 29 & 30.” Now, if you look at your Bible,
the book of Acts ends at Chapter 28. What Jimmy was conveying to us was
that the Purpose of Jesus, the Promise of Jesus, and the Power of Jesus
spoken to the disciples that day on the Mount of Olives did not end at
Acts 28. We live today with the same purpose; with the same promise; with
the same power. And Jesus through the Holy Spirit is writing Acts 29 &
30 through our lives.
I
wonder what kind of story He is writing through your life and mine? When
the stories are read in heaven how will ours read?
You know I like questions. Please allow me ask you a few this morning.
Does
your life have a Great Purpose? There is more to it than making money
and making life comfortable. There is an incident that happened during
the bombing of London during the Second World War. Some people arrived
at church to discover that the church had suffered damage the night before.
As the people entered they saw a statue of Jesus with His hands broken
off. Someone had placed a card at His feet which read, “Jesus has
no hands but our hands to do His work today.” He needs us. He wants
us to be fulfilled in our lives. He desires that our lives would be given
to His Great Purpose. Why don’t you come to the altar this morning
and tell Jesus you are available to fulfil His purpose in your world?
Do
you feel alone and lonely? Are you facing something and you sense that
you are by yourself. Why not come and talk to Jesus and ask Him to renew
His Great Promise to you personally?
Do
you lack the power to fulfil His purpose in your own world? That power
is freely available to all of us. Why not come and talk to Jesus and ask
Him to fill you anew with His Great Power?
That
day the disciples left their final meeting with Jesus with great joy.
How will you leave your meeting with Jesus today?
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