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Mark Sermon

What does it mean to walk alongside Jesus – Mark 10:32-52

[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]What does it mean to walk alongside Jesus? – Mark 10:32-52

Our passage for today is from Mark 10:32-45. [READ]

As we read this passage, the first thing we notice is James and John approaching Jesus and trying to reserve a prominent place next to Him, one on his right and one on his left, in his glory.

If we are honest, the request that James & John makes shouldn’t be a surprising one for us. Because, if given a chance we all like and desire to have a special place next to the person we love and admire. Won’t you agree?

We like to be the special child to our parents and have a special place in their heart, we like to be the special employee at work – have a close rapport with our managers and bosses, we like to have a special place at church – a close rapport with the leaders, we also love the idea of been associated with famous people, etc

I see my sons Jairus & Amaze often battle with each other to sit or sleep right next to mom & dad.

Likewise, even John & James desired for a special place next to their Lord whom they loved dearly. In the last 3 years, they walked with him, talked with them, also fully convinced that He is the promised Messiah, the son of God.

When Jesus said. “Can you drink the cup I drink or be baptized with the baptism I am baptized with?”. They were so compelled by His love they immediately answered with a ‘Yes’, saying ‘we can’, they loved him so much that they were willing to do anything to be close to Him, however, I don’t think they fully understood what that meant.

What we see here is that their desire to be and walk alongside Jesus was a good desire, but the motive and the approach wasn’t right.

Among all the people that were following Jesus, he had 12 who were close to him, but even among the 12, there were 3 that were closest to him.

Peter, James & John.

What we see James and John doing is that they were pushing themselves to get pre-eminence over others, even pushing Peter out of the circle. In Matthew 20:20 Matthew writes that they got their mother to come to Jesus

and request him to allow her boys to sit next to him.

Looking at what John and James did, in verse 41 Mark writes “When the ten heard about this, they became indignant with James and John.” In other words, they saw it as a cheap stunt to get ahead of others in the group.

If I have to put that in the church context, it’s like us wanting to follow Jesus, wanting to come to church, have fellowship with brothers and sisters, wanting to participate in worship, listen to the word – all because we genuinely love Jesus and his people.

But the approach in which we do it could be by performance before God and others & even trying to push ourselves ahead of others

We often do that without even really understanding the truth of what it really means to be called a believer and to walk alongside Jesus.

I believe what this passage teaches us today is ‘What does it really means to walk alongside Jesus’, what does it mean to know Jesus as our Lord and saviour and walk in his paths. Three important lessons to remind ourselves.

To walk alongside Christ, we need to have the mind of Christ.

The number one lesson this passage teaches us is that “To walk alongside Christ, we need to have the mind of Christ.”
Let’s read through (v32 to v37)

32 They were on their way up to Jerusalem, with Jesus leading the way, and the disciples were astonished, while those who followed were afraid. Again he took the Twelve aside and told them what was going to happen to him. 33 “We are going up to Jerusalem,” he said, “and the Son of Man will be delivered over to the chief priests and the teachers of the law. They will condemn him to death and will hand him over to the Gentiles, 34 who will mock him and spit on him, flog him and kill him. Three days later he will rise.”

35 Then James and John, the sons of Zebedee, came to him. “Teacher,” they said, “we want you to do for us whatever we ask.”

36 “What do you want me to do for you?” he asked.

37 They replied, “Let one of us sit at your right and the other at your left in your glory.”

Jesus is on the way to Jerusalem, the place where he will be delivered over to the chief priest, condemned to death, handed over to the Gentiles, mocked, spat on, and hanged on the cross.

He is literally walking towards his painful death, and he is, in fact, leading the way. The verse says the disciples were afraid and at the same time astonished to see Jesus walking towards Jerusalem where the Pharisees and the teachers of the law hated him and was waiting to kill and torture him.

Can you imagine what’s going on in Jesus’s mind as he is taking that route?

I believe, all he was thinking was about was us – the disciples, you, me and the numerous lost souls for whom he left his heavenly glory, emptying himself, taking the form of a servant, humbled himself to become God’s perfect sacrifice for the sins of the whole world.

His mind was set on the purpose for which he came down to earth, sent by his Father in heaven.  To set us free from Sin and death.

He seems so full of it that he ends up reminding them once again that the Son of Man will be delivered over to the chief priests and the teachers of the law. They will condemn him to death and will hand him over to the Gentiles, 34 who will mock him and spit on him, flog him and kill him. Three days later he will rise.”

Now, What’s on the disciple’s mind?

Just as Jesus finished his statement, James & John immediately go to Him and says “Teacher,” they said, “we want you to do for us whatever we ask.”

Reminds me of a scenario in the office where the Manager just gave a presentation on the new marketing strategy and asks his team members to give feedback, and one guy raises his hand and says “Are we going to have Chinese for lunch today?”

It tells us two things about the guy, first, he wasn’t really paying attention to what his manager was talking, second, his agenda for the day was to have Chinese for lunch.

Is it possible for us to have a totally different agenda in our mind and be distracted when we come to church, when we approach Jesus in prayer, when we have fellowship with other believers? Yes, it is possible.

Is it right? NO
To walk alongside Christ, we need to have the mind of Christ.
Paul writes in his letter to Philippians 2:5-8

“Have this mind among yourselves, which is yours in Christ Jesus, who, though he was in the form of God, did not count equality with God, a thing to be grasped, but emptied himself, by taking the form of a servant, being born in the likeness of men. And being found in human form, he humbled himself by becoming obedient to the point of death, even death on a cross.”

Paul is urging the Philippian believers to set their mind on the eternal things, just as Jesus did.

If we truly desire to be with Jesus and walk with him daily, we have to change the way we think, we can’t fix our eyes on the earthly things. Money, possessions, positions, pride – we have to lose sight of all these distractions and fix our eyes on the eternal purpose of God in our lives.

We can’t desire to walk with Jesus and worry about tomorrow, what we will eat, drink, where we will live and what we will wear.

It’s easy to say I want to be with Jesus but let us also be willing to have the mind of Christ – our hearts, minds and soul fixed on the eternal purpose for which we were created. – TO BRING GLORY TO GOD.

To walk alongside Jesus, we have to embrace the Cross (v38 – v40)

38 “You don’t know what you are asking,” Jesus said. “Can you drink the cup I drink or be baptized with the baptism I am baptized with?”

39 “We can,” they answered.

Jesus said to them, “You will drink the cup I drink and be baptized with the baptism I am baptized with, 40 but to sit at my right or left is not for me to grant. These places belong to those for whom they have been prepared.”

When Jesus said, “Can you drink the cup I drink or be baptized with the baptism I am baptized with?” Jesus meant to ask them, whether they are willing to carry their cross and follow his footsteps.

Just like in Matthew 16:24 where Jesus asks – “Are you willing to deny yourself and take up your cross and follow me?

“Take up your cross and follow Me” means being willing to die in order to follow Jesus. This is called “dying to self.” It’s a call to absolute surrender.

Which means dying to our fleshly desires, letting go of our carnal dreams, letting loose the things of the world, the emotions attached with the world, the needs of this world. Where we are fully trusting in God’s provision and providence for us on this life on earth.

I remember when I was a young believer my Pastor, every time we went to a cemetery or a funeral, he would look at me and say “Saju, do you know that dead men don’t feel any pinprick”, He will point me to the graveyards and tell me no matter what you tell these dead men they will never react to you, because they are dead.

And then he would go on to explain what it means to die to ourselves in the Kingdom of God. He would tell me, nothing of this world should move you or distract you from trusting in God and fulfilling His purposes. Consider yourself dead to the world.

(Luke 9:24-25) – “For whoever wants to save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for me will save it. What good is it for a man to gain the whole world, and yet lose or forfeit his very self?”

On the other hand, we should be aware that Christian life is a radical life, we’re going the systems of this world, the human cultures and traditions and beliefs. You are going against the very foundations on which this sinful world is established.

In Matthew 5 Jesus said you will be insulted, persecuted, falsely accused, for my name’s sake. Our family will hate us, our close friends will reject us, our society will mock at us. But rejoice and be glad, because great is your reward in heaven.

How can we endure these pain, persecution and hate? We can only do that when we are prepared to carry our cross and follow Jesus, dying to our self, denying the world & trust in God alone.

We can’t say that we enjoy the rains but don’t like the idea of getting wet.

In the say way, we can’t desire to walk alongside Jesus and don’t like the idea of embracing the cross & going through suffering for the sake of Christ. It is part and parcel of our Faith.

Sadly, every time Jesus would talk about carrying the cross his followers would keep reducing. Because even though they liked the idea of following Jesus they did not like the idea of letting go of the world.

Let’s check our hearts and see where do we stand?

To walk alongside Jesus, we have to be servants (v42- v45)

42 Jesus called them together and said, “You know that those who are regarded as rulers of the Gentiles lord it over them, and their high officials exercise authority over them. 43 Not so with you. Instead, whoever wants to become great among you must be your servant, 44 and whoever wants to be first must be slave of all.45 For even the Son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many.”

When the other 10 disciples look down on James and John, Jesus turns to them and tells them about what it really means to become great in the kingdom of God, which is what probably everyone in the room desired for.

He says unlike the Gentiles “whoever wants to become great among you must be your servant, 44 and whoever wants to be first must be a slave of all.45 For even the Son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many.”

No believer is called to sit on the pedestal and watch. We don’t follow Jesus or come to church just to be an audience, we are called to be participants in the Kingdom of God.

Nobody who claims to be a follower of Jesus should say that they love Jesus and love coming to church but are unwilling to serve in any manner. If our Lord whom we love and admire did not come to be served but to serve and give his life as a ransom for many. We also ought to have a heart of a servant.

We don’t wait from someone to come to us and assign us a role to serve. Instead, we ought to look for opportunities to serve in small and big measures as per our giftings.

We shouldn’t come to church with a consumerist mentality, where it’s all about us wanting what pleases us. Music of our taste, preacher of our style, church building of our status, a people group of our mindset etc.

We ought to be servants in the Kingdom of God if we desire to walk alongside Jesus.

Yes, it is great that you love Jesus but how are you serving one another with the love of Christ, when was the last time we sacrificed our time, money & pleasure to bring joy and encouragement to another brother or sister in the Lord.

Conclusion:

As I conclude, I want to encourage you to desire more to be and walk alongside Jesus but let’s do it with the motive and approach. Fully understanding that to walk alongside Jesus, we need to have the mind of Christ, we have to embrace the Cross & we have become servants.

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Mark Sermon

Gaining by Losing – Mark 10:17-31

[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]Good morning church! How’s everyone doing? For the last few months as a church we’ve been studying the gospel of Mark. We’ve completed a little over half of this book and are now in Mark 10:17-31.

Much of this gospel seeks to answer two questions: “Who is Jesus” and “if Jesus is God, then what does it mean for both you and me”. After all we probably know what it means to follow human leaders but what does it mean to follow God? There is this strong focus on being a follower of Jesus Christ that can’t be ignored in this gospel.

Does my entire life need to change? Or do I need to change a few habits here and there? These are the kind of questions we’ll attempt to answer as we look at today’s passage in Mark 10 starting in verse 17.

17 And as he was setting out on his journey, a man ran up and knelt before him and asked him, “Good Teacher, what must I do to inherit eternal life?” 18 And Jesus said to him, “Why do you call me good? No one is good except God alone. 19 You know the commandments: ‘Do not murder, Do not commit adultery, Do not steal, Do not bear false witness, Do not defraud, Honor your father and mother.’”

20 And he said to him, “Teacher, all these I have kept from my youth.” 21 And Jesus, looking at him, loved him, and said to him, “You lack one thing: go, sell all that you have and give to the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven; and come, follow me.” 22 Disheartened by the saying, he went away sorrowful, for he had great possessions.

23 And Jesus looked around and said to his disciples, “How difficult it will be for those who have wealth to enter the kingdom of God!” 24 And the disciples were amazed at his words. But Jesus said to them again, “Children, how difficult it is[b] to enter the kingdom of God! 25 It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich person to enter the kingdom of God.” 26 And they were exceedingly astonished, and said to him,[c] “Then who can be saved?”

27 Jesus looked at them and said, “With man it is impossible, but not with God. For all things are possible with God.” 28 Peter began to say to him, “See, we have left everything and followed you.” 29 Jesus said, “Truly, I say to you, there is no one who has left house or brothers or sisters or mother or father or children or lands, for my sake and for the gospel,

30 who will not receive a hundredfold now in this time, houses and brothers and sisters and mothers and children and lands, with persecutions, and in the age to come eternal life. 31 But many who are first will be last, and the last first.”

“You must sacrifice short term pleasure for long term success.”  Those are the words I told myself when I returned back to the gym after a long gap. The short-term pleasure being my love for eating fried food. I think every person at least superficially understands this concept: “You’ll need to give up something for the achieving something better”.

But Jesus totally turns this concept on its head when he says “You receive eternal life by abandoning everything”. “You follow me by leaving everything” “You will gain life by losing everything”. In the kingdom of God, we gain by losing everything! And it’s radically different from the way the world thinks. The world says “You gain by accumulating everything”.

After all it’s not the first time Jesus mentioned something like this. A few chapters earlier he said that if you want to be the greatest, you need to be least and a servant of all. Last week we read the passage where Jesus says unless you receive the kingdom of God like a child, you can’t enter it.

It’s truly an upside-down kingdom! The principles of this kingdom of God is the opposite of what we are used to experiencing every single day. That’s why there’s even more reason for us to pay close attention to hear the seriousness in the call to follow Jesus. It’s a weighty call but a yet a very fulfilling one.

So how can we gain life by losing everything?

We gain by losing our self-reliance (v17-20)

One of the biggest barriers that often prevents us from following Jesus completely is our dependence on our own self – our abilities, our ideas, our accomplishments, our good works.

We love the idea of a “self-made man” even though we might not declare it publicly.  We see the same trait in the rich young man. His self-reliance prevented him from:

Confronting the reality of God (v17,18)

He approaches Jesus and calls Him “Good Teacher”. Interesting way of addressing Jesus. And Jesus asks him “Why do you call me good? No one is good except God alone”.In other words, Jesus was asking him “Are you approaching me just as a teacher or as God?”

“Are you here just for good advice or do you want to really know me?” He had Jesus Christ – the Son of God, Maker of the heavens and the earth, the Messiah who saves the world, the sustainer of all creation right in front of him and he was blind to it.

Even his question was “What can I do to receive eternal life?” instead of “Jesus, can you give me eternal life?”.

Also his self-reliance prevented him from Conceiving the Holy Standards of God (v19)

Jesus starts listing out the Ten Commandments. “Do not murder…Do not commit adultery” And we know that God didn’t give His people the commandments so that they could perform, He gave them the commandments so that they would understand the holiness and righteousness of God.
I heard it once mentioned like this – God told us to not murder because He is life. God told us to not commit adultery because He is pure. God told us not to lie because He is truth! The rich young man failed to conceive the great divide between him and God. In Romans 3, Paul says the same thing. He says by the law no one becomes right with God…but the law was given so that you know that you have sinned.

His self-reliance prevented him from Confessing his need for a Savior (v20)

Because he thought he was doing exceptionally well in his performance, he basically was saying “Jesus, I know all this. What next?” He didn’t see how bad was his condition and how he needed to be rescued by God.Imagine a guy.

Let’s call him Jimmy who newly joins a company. A few days later he meets another colleague called Rohit. Since Jimmy is new to the company, Rohit takes time out to help him understand what he’s supposed to do. Instead Jimmy responds by saying “Rohit, you don’t have to do this. I already know all of this. I’ve been doing this forever.

” Shortly after this incident someone else comes and refers to Rohit as “Sir”. Jimmy is quite surprised and inquires and finds out that Rohit is the CEO of the company.  Trouble!!! The CEO sits down with Jimmy and tells him how he wasn’t actually doing his job correctly as he imagined. Not only did Jimmy insult the CEO by claiming to know more than the CEO but his attitude didn’t allow him to receive the necessary help to grow.

I think that’s what happens to us in our self-reliance and pride. Sometimes we are blinded to think how our efforts to have a consistent time with God everyday, being able to share the gospel with multiple people during the week or being a regular church attender or having restrained ourselves from falling into a particular sin in the week or our knowledge of the Bible is what makes us right before God.

These are all good things but your performance on these things doesn’t determine if you are right with God or not. In fact, if you are self-reliant you won’t be confronted with the reality of God as you read the Word, you won’t conceive the Holy Standard of God and neither will you confess your need for the Savior Jesus. You can see how self-reliance is a big barrier.

But not only do we need to lose our self-reliance, but we also need to

Lose our treasure (v21-25)

When Jesus told the rich young man to forsake his possessions, Jesus wanted to uncover what this man valued deeply – what he considered to be his treasure.

Jesus is essentially saying is that our heart matters more than our external acts of obedience! More than often our external acts of obedience is a mask to hide what’s really going on in our heart. Two things about heart treasures:

We treasure what we love (v21-22)

Till this point it seemed like the rich young man was willing to do whatever was needed to inherit eternal life but when Jesus told him to give up his treasure and possessions, he became extremely sad and went away because he loved money.

Right before him were two choices – Jesus Christ – Son of God – the one who could give him eternal life & money and he chose money. He gave up the eternal for what was temporary. You see the principle there – What he loved determined his choice.

You want to know what’s your heart treasure? Ask yourself this…what is the one thing or person in my life whose presence or absence changes my behavior? Think about a scenario when this thing or person is taken away from you forever, how is that going to make you feel? Would you lose all meaning to life? Would life seem worthless after that?

If the same meeting was done over and over again with the rich young man, do you think his response would’ve been different? No, because we treasure what we love.

We treasure what we trust

In v23-25, Jesus multiple times talks about how difficult and impossible it is for wealthy people to enter the kingdom of God.

Just to clarify Jesus is not saying that people above a certain income level are not going to enter the kingdom of God. Abraham, Isaac, David, Solomon are examples of godly men who were wealthy but I think Jesus meant those who trust in riches will not enter the kingdom of heaven.

But why such a strong judgment against those who trust in riches? I think it’s because wealth like any other heart treasure gives us an illusion of providing us with safety, security and joy.

It replaces itself in the place of God. That’s what makes us completely dependent on it. We say things like “We cannot live without it”. It in reality becomes our god.

I’m reminded of my friend whom I spoke to a few weeks back who went through a difficult break up. As we were speaking we were able to identify that this relationship was indeed his treasure. He didn’t know how to deal with the relationship breaking off.

To the extent where he was contemplating leaving the city and also hurting himself. I felt like it was a visual picture for me on how disastrous can it be to have heart treasures apart from God.

It’s not just with wealth and money. Some of us have made our jobs and careers our treasure. Others have made our relationships and family to be our treasure. Some of us have made self-pleasure our treasure. Maybe habits can be changed, but how do you change your love? How do you change what your trust?

That’s exactly the question that Peter asked…“Well then who can be saved?” And Jesus says “What is impossible for man is possible for God”. In other words, God needs to make a provision for you and I to lose our self-reliance & also lose our treasure.

God sent His one and only Son to the earth. Jesus Christ Himself lived the life you and I was required to live but couldn’t live. Ultimately, He died the death we all deserved to die.

He rose again on the third Day crushing not just the penalty of sin but also freeing us from the power of Sin. Do you want to change your love? Realize you’ll need God to perform a heart surgery to do that. He can certainly do it!

So what do we do in response to this great and amazing love? V28-30 says that…we lose everything that keeps us from following God and turn to Christ. We repent and trust Christ.

We repent and trust Christ. And this will invite persecution and rejection from family members as we see happening in reality with one of our brothers right now.

But we gladly follow Christ in spite of that because we love Him, we treasure Him, we trust Him and are deeply thankful for doing everything that was done for us.

Sometimes we forget how the story of God is the story of our God and Savior losing everything – he literally died so that He could rescue us in order to gain an everlasting relationship with us. Why should we be self-reliant? Why shouldn’t He be our only treasure? Lose everything to gain Him through His perfect work.

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Mark Sermon

To Such Belong The Kingdom – Mark 10:13-16

[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]It is such a joy to come together as God’s people and sit under the instruction of His Word. I think it’s good for us to be consistently reminded that the Word of God is our only authority.

It is the Word of God that is living, and active and sharper than any 2-edged sword. It is the Word of God that heals, and comforts and brings conviction in our lives. It is the Word of God that will endure when all else fades away.

And so, when we come to this time each week where we open the Scriptures together, let’s come with expectant hearts. As we seek after Him let’s expect that He will transform us.

Let’s expect that He will conform us to the image of Jesus. Let’s expect that we will look different when we leave this place because we’ve been with Him.

And that’s our prayer this morning; that we would be with God in His Word and that He would bring glory to His name through our transformation. So, if you have a Bible with you, I’d encourage you to turn with me to Mark chapter 10. While you’re turning to Mark 10, I’ll take some time to ask the Lord to do these things in us. Would you pray with me?

We will be looking specifically at verses 13-16 this morning. It’s a very short text, but a very important one for our lives. And I would remind you that these verses are a part of our larger study of The Gospel of Mark.

So I would like to take just a few minutes and recap what we’ve been discussing in this overall narrative.

We’ve said before that Mark 8:27-30 represents a turning point in the life and ministry of Jesus. It’s about the halfway point in Mark’s gospel and it’s where Peter confesses Jesus as the Christ.

You might remember that Jesus looks at His disciples and says, “Who do the people say that I am?” The disciples responded, “Some say that you are John the Baptist, or Elijah, or one of the prophets.”

And then Jesus asked the disciples, “Who do you say that I am?”  To which Peter responds, “You are the Christ.”

That proclamation gives us an important dividing line in the gospel of Mark, where things begin to shift. Before Peter’s confession we read a lot about who Jesus is and how He lived. We get to read a lot about His character and His nature.

After Peter’s confession we read a lot about what Jesus has come to do; how His life is really about His death. And, as we reach chapter 10, Jesus is moving quickly toward Jerusalem.

He’s heading quickly toward the Cross and the culmination of what He came to the earth to accomplish. But as He’s heading toward Jerusalem, He’s still teaching and correcting the disciples.

We’ve said over & over again that the disciples still don’t really get the point. Which is why Jesus is always identifying these teachable moments where He reminds them of the truth about who He is and what He has come to accomplish.

Last week Saju unpacked one of those teachable moments as Jesus taught on the subject of divorce and remarriage. He pointed out how Jesus took the subject back to God’s intention for marriage. That marriage is, in fact, a covenant where a man and a woman become one flesh.

That is the way that God designed it to be. And divorce (like all of sin) is a distortion, a perversion of that design. It takes a gift, given by God for our good, and bends it toward a destructive end.

This morning we see Jesus use another teachable moment to show the disciples something significant about salvation and the Kingdom of God. And we need to make sure that we really understand this because it reminds us of something incredibly important for our lives as well. This is what Mark records in chapter 10, verse 13-16:

“And they were bringing children to him that he might touch them, and the disciples rebuked them. But when Jesus saw it, he was indignant and said to them, “Let the children come to me; do not hinder them, for to such belongs the kingdom of God. Truly, I say to you, whoever does not receive the kingdom of God like a child shall not enter it.” And he took them in his arms and blessed them, laying his hands on them.” Mark 10:13-16

I’ve already said that the disciples still don’t get the point. That’s pretty obvious from this text. The picture that we have here is people attempting to bring children to Jesus, and the disciples are scolding them for it. They didn’t want Jesus to be bothered by the presence of children.

Now, culturally, that actually makes a lot of sense. In the culture at the time it would be normal to not have children around these types of interactions with adults, especially when there is teaching happening from a respected teacher.

So, culturally, it would have made sense for the disciples to rebuke the people trying to bring children to Jesus while He’s speaking. But we know that the gospel turns culture upside down. That the gospel is, in fact, creating a new culture. You see, the Kingdom of God has entered and things are different now. Jesus isn’t playing by the cultural rules that the people would expect.

So that’s one reason that Jesus opposed the disciples in this. But, it’s also because it wasn’t that long ago that Jesus had addressed this issue of children with the disciples. You might remember that the disciples were arguing about which one of them was the greatest.

And in the middle of the conversation where Jesus was correcting them, He took a child on His lap and said very clearly, “Whoever receives one such child in my name receives me…” Which I believe implies that the converse is true:  If you don’t receive these children, you don’t receive me.

Now I realize that we don’t know exactly how much time had passed between that conversation and this conversation, but it couldn’t have been too long. Where Jesus said, “If you receive children, then you receive me.” And now we have an account of the disciples responding to children being brought to Jesus by telling them to go away.

It doesn’t make a whole lot of sense, does it? I think the point is that the disciples still don’t really get it. They really don’t understand what Jesus is working to accomplish, and so they rebuke people from bringing the kids to Jesus. And Jesus became indignant with them.

And this provides the context for yet another teachable moment. In fact, Jesus sees an opportunity to drive down to the very core of what it means to enter into the Kingdom of God, what it means to have faith in Him. It’s found in what Jesus says in verse 15. Let’s read this again so it’s fresh in our minds: “Truly, I say to you, whoever does not receive the kingdom of God like a child shall not enter it.”

That’s what I want to focus our time on this morning because it gets right to the heart of the doctrine of salvation and how Jesus rescues us from sin & death. I want to begin this discussion by making a very simple statement, and then we’ll spend the rest of our time unpacking that statement:  The Kingdom of God cannot be earned, it can only be RECEIVED.

Now that’s a very different message than the message the world communicates to us. The world says that you must earn everything. The world says that who you are & what you have is determined by what you do.

We see that message all around us, don’t we? And so it’s no wonder that the religious systems that come from the world communicate the exact same message as it relates to how we are made right with God. Every religious system is a variation of that same message.

Here are the things that you must do in order to have right standing with God, in order to go to heaven. In order to be made whole and complete, you have to do these things (whatever those things are).

I’ve shared this illustration before, but this is the picture that comes to my mind when I try to describe how all of these religions work. It’s like God is on the top of a mountain and people are down at the bottom of the mountain.

And the goal is to get up to the top of the mountain to be with God. And so, Muslims believe one thing about how you get to God. And Buddhists believe another thing about how you get to God. And Hindus believe another thing about how they get to their God.

And people who claim to be Christians, but who don’t understand the truth of the gospel, believe yet another thing about how you get to God. It’s like there are all of these different paths that lead up the mountain to God, and each religion has their own path to get up that mountain.

And each of those paths represents some type of work that you must do, some type of achievement that allows you to travel up the mountain to be with God.

This is the picture of all the religious systems that have been crafted by man throughout the history of the world. But that is not the message of the Bible. That is not the picture that biblical Christianity paints for us.

The story that the Bible tells is that God is in fact up on that mountain by Himself because He is Holy. There is none like Him! He is the Alpha & the Omega, the beginning and the end, the Creator of the Heavens and the earth, the One in whom all creation finds its existence (including you & me). The Bible tells us that God is perfect in all of His ways and completely holy.

The Bible also tells us that we are, in fact, at the bottom of the mountain because of our sin. Romans 3:10-11 says that “None is righteous, no, not one; no one understands; no one seeks for God.” Verse 23 says that “all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.” So, yes, we are at the bottom of that mountain separated from God and unable to be with Him because of our sin. I think Ephesians 2:1-3 puts it most clearly. “And you were dead in the trespasses and sins in which you once walked, following the course of this world, following the prince of the power of the air, the spirit that is now at work in the sons of disobedience — among whom we all once lived in the passions of our flesh, carrying out the desires of the body and the mind, and were by nature children of wrath, like the rest of mankind.”

So God is at the top of the mountain in His holiness. And we are at the bottom of the mountain in our sin. I don’t think that most of the religious systems of the world would disagree with that. But here’s where the truth of the Bible and all of the religious systems of the world disagree (and this is the point that Jesus is making in our text).

Where other religions say that you must do things to get to God (to get up that mountain), the Bible says that no amount of good works will ever get you up that mountain to God. That there is, in fact, nothing that you can do in and of yourself to be made right with God.

Which sounds like really bad news, right? But no, it’s actually the most beautiful news that ever was. Because God loves us so much, knowing we cannot get back to Him on our own, He came for us.

The Bible tells us that God has come down the mountain to be with us in the person & work of Jesus Christ. Romans 5:8 says that, “God shows his love for us in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us.”

Paul says the same thing in a different way in Ephesians 2:4-5 (these are the verses right after the ones that we just read about being dead in our sins & trespasses). Paul writes, “But God, being rich in mercy, because of the great love with which he loved us, even when we were dead in our trespasses, made us alive together with Christ—by grace you have been saved.”

Friends, that is why the gospel of Jesus Christ is called “Good News”. We were hopeless & helpless, with no ability to do anything to rescue ourselves. But, because of His love for us, God has made a way for us to be reconciled to Him by grace.

And what is grace? It is a gift! It’s receiving something that you don’t deserve. Later, in Ephesians 2:8-9, Paul says, “For by grace you have been saved through faith. And this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God, not a result of works, so that no one may boast.”

This is what sets the message of the Bible apart from every other religious system ever developed by man. Our salvation can never be a result of our good works because no amount of working can get you up that mountain.

That’s because, apart from God, we are spiritually dead. I read a quote recently in a book that I’m reading on how the gospel creates in us a heart for our neighbors. It’s by Rosario Butterfield. This is what she said:

“We need God to come to us, to rescue us, because we can’t summon the strength to save ourselves and, even if we could, we would not know where to go. And this is what Jesus Christ did and does. Through union with and growth in Him, we are made new. We are redeemed, forgiven and adopted as children of God.”

The good works that we are able to walk in happen once you have been united with Jesus Christ. They happen once He has breathed life back into your soul. And so, those works are a result of the grace of God being poured out upon you through the sacrifice of Jesus Christ on your behalf.

And this is what Jesus is communicating in our text. The Kingdom of God can never be earned, it must be received because it is the FREE GIFT of God to everyone who has FAITH (faith like a child).

Now, if I can, I’d like to briefly make 2 addition points very briefly, and then we’ll be done. 1) I want to talk about the reality of what happens if we don’t receive this gift and 2) I want to explain how you can receive this gift.

First, what is the result of not “receiving the Kingdom of God”? Well, to put it simply, it’s death. Romans 6:23 says that “the wages of sin is death.” That means that the payment that is due for our sin is spiritual & eternal death.

And someone has to pay that bill. If Jesus doesn’t pay the price for your sin, you will pay it — and it is eternally costly! 2 Thessalonians 1:8-9 says “Those who do not know God and those who do not obey the gospel of our Lord Jesus. They will suffer the punishment of eternal destruction, away from the presence of the Lord and from the glory of his might.”

And so, the short answer is that those who do not receive this gift from God and enter into His Kingdom spend eternity separated from Him in hell.

Second, how do we receive the gift of the Kingdom of God. Well, on this point the Bible is equally clear. Romans 10:9 says, “If you confess with your mouth that Jesus is Lord and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved.” This isn’t about agreement or intellectual belief. Satan and his demons know exactly who Jesus is and yet they are not saved. This is about submitting your life to the truth of who Jesus is.[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row]

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Mark Sermon

How should Christians view Divorce – Mark 10:1-12

[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]I’m excited to return back to the Gospel of Mark, but what we covered in our short series “Living out our Identity in Christ” was indeed refreshing and a beautiful reminder.

The passage we will be looking at today is from Mark 10:1-12 and the subject we will be dealing with is “How should Christians view Divorce“?

I want you to know that as I am preaching on the topic of Divorce this morning, both Jane and I have been dealing with a divorce situation with a very close Christian family.

The husband, who is also a father of two children, came home one day and told his wife that he is no more in love with her, he doesn’t find her attractive and that he has no feelings for her. And therefore, he wants a divorce from her.

As we walk with the family, we’re experiencing how devastating and painful it is for the wife and for the children. And while preparing for this sermon, I couldn’t stop thinking of how immature and foolish we can behave without having the right understanding of the Gospel truth concerning marriage.

We think we know these truths but when hardships, trails & temptations come our way they reveal the true state of our heart.

Today as we walk through Mark 10:1-12 and talk about Divorce I am happy for the opportunity God has given me to give you a godly perspective on this topic. As most of you sitting here are young men and women who are yet to get married, I want you to listen carefully and allow the Holy Spirit to convict your heart of sin patterns that if not dealt with can destroy your future relationships.

And as God reveals those sin patterns repent and believe in the Gospel and let these gospel truths transform your life.

I also believe this sermon will present to you the Church’s position on the subject of divorce so that you know what to expect from the leaders when such a situation arises.

If you have your bibles, let’s turn to Mark 10:1-12

To give you the context of this passage, as Jesus continues his ministry, the Pharisees envied him for his fan following and would look for opportunities to trap him. Their main intention was to turn the people against him.

Today’s passage is one such incident where the Pharisees pose a controversial question to Jesus. And the question was “Is it lawful for a man to divorce his wife?“.

There may have been a couple of reasons why the Pharisees asked that question, and I don’t think I want to spend time exploring that aspect. But whatever the motives of the Pharisees were I’m glad that it opened an opportunity for us to get a godly perspective on the matter of divorce, and that too from the author of life himself.

When the Pharisees posed the question on divorce, Jesus replies with another question saying “What did Moses command you?” and they answered saying “Moses permitted a man to write a certificate of divorce and send her away.”

And Jesus said to them, “Because of your hardness of heart he wrote you this commandment.”

In other words, what Jesus was saying to them was that “it was not meant to be that way, but because of your hardness of heart & unwillingness to change Moses had to write that. If Moses hadn’t permitted divorce in that situation, you men would have done something even worse.”

And then Jesus goes on to tell them how in the beginning when God created male and female, the idea of joining them together was God’s design and that no man has the right to separate what God joined, and if a divorced man or women re-marries while the other partner is still alive or single, it is sinful in the eyes of God.

Obviously, there are a lot of practical questions in your mind relating to each one of the statements mentioned above, perhaps I will answer some of them. But what I want to do today is to turn our hearts to God because the goal of this message is not to give tips on how to protect your marriage from divorce.

The purpose of the message is to help us love Jesus and seek his Kingdom more than our spouse. It’s also to show you how in doing so, God protects and preserves our marriage, ultimately Glorifying His name on the Earth.

I want to put across three words that will help you unpack this passage for us and help us meet our goal.

Covenant

There are two basic kinds of relationships – Consumer relationship and Covenant relationship.

Consumer relationship is the kind of relationship we have with our local vegetable vendor. As long as he supplies fresh vegetables for a reasonable price, we will buy vegetables from him. But the day he stops giving us fresh, good quality vegetables, we will quit going to him and instead approach another vegetable vendor.

In a consumer relationship, our needs are more important than the relationship itself.

This is how the ungodly view Marriage, as long as they get what they want they will stick with that relationship. The day they stop getting what they want they want to get out of that relationship.

On the other hand, a Covenant relationship is a kind of relationship between a parent and the child. No matter how much mischief our children get into and the tantrums they throw, we don’t abandon them and go pick up another child.

Concerning marriage when Jesus said “At the beginning of creation God ‘made them male and female.’ ‘For this reason, a man will leave his father and mother and be united to his wife, and the two will become one flesh.”

From the words of Jesus we clearly understand that marriage was meant to be a Covenant relationship and not a Consumer type relationship.

The term “one flesh” comes from the Genesis account of the creation of Eve. Genesis 2:21-24 describes the process by which God created Eve from a rib taken from Adam’s side as he slept.

Adam recognized that Eve was part of him—they were in fact “one flesh.” The term “one flesh” means that just as our bodies are one whole entity and cannot be divided into pieces and still be a whole, so God intended it to be with the marriage relationship. There are no longer two entities (two individuals), but now there is one entity (a married couple).

And therefore, in a covenant relationship, the relationship between the two is more important than the interest of each individual before they were united.

An even better example of the covenant relationship is the relationship between God the Father, the creator of this universe, with his chosen children, us.

When we read the Bible, we see a plan that was established in eternity past when God, Son and the Holy Spirit covenanted together to redeem us. We understand how God keeps his covenant that even while we were sinners, he sent his son Jesus to die for our sake.

For God, relationship with us was more important.

Therefore, a marriage relationship can be protected from divorce only when we understand and Covenant relationship. And in a covenant relationship separation is not an option.

Violation

The second word I want us to remember is Violation.

Violation, in legal terms, means ‘the action of breaking a contract or an agreement.”

If marriage is a covenant, divorce is a violation of the covenant we make with our spouse. A marriage between two believers in God’s presence, witnessed by God’s people is a Sacred and Holy union – It is what God has joined together.

In verse 9 & 11, 12 Jesus said, “what God has joined together, let no one separate. Whoever divorces his wife and marries another commits adultery against her, and if she divorces her husband and marries another, she commits adultery.”

Jesus is not just talking about outsiders who create divisions in a marriage, but the husband and wife themselves have no right to separate what God has joined  – No matter what excuse you have it doesn’t matter.

Separation through Divorce is a direct violation of Gods original design for marriage – even in case, the other partner is caught in adultery.

If you dig deep into the root of divorce, it is selfishness, pride, unwillingness to change, unwillingness to forgive, reluctance to bear with each other, unwillingness to humble one’s self; it is deeply rooted in sin.

In God’s loving kindness through his covenant relationship when He created us in his image, he gave us a free will, so that willfully we would obey him, honor him and Glorify him. But in the garden of Eden, we violated all his commands.

And because of Adam and Eve’s violation of God’s commands, we too are born sinful.

Since the time we were born all we do, day in and day out is violate God’s Holy commands and refuse to bind ourselves in God’s loving covenant relationship. We try to attain freedom and power and dominion without God, not realizing that the devil’s lies and deception.

The devil told Eve that by disobeying God “You will certainly not die”, “That when you eat from the tree (God commanded not to eat) your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God, knowing good and evil.”

Instead, we had to face the consequences of our disobedience, our spirit died and became eternally condemned to death. God cast mankind out of the circle of trust, bond and fellowship they shared and more devastating was that it broke our relationship with our loving creator God who meant it all for good.

The evil we see around today in our generation is the repercussions of our broken relationship with our Creator. The tendency to violate God’s Holy command is what is also seen in a divorce situation.

Restoration

But this is the beauty of Gods covenantal relationship with us. Even though we violated all his commands, we sinned, we rebelled, we disobeyed.

In Psalm 103:10 the psalmist writes “But God did not treat us as our sins deserve or repay us according to our iniquities.”

John 3:16 “For God so loved us, that he gave his only Son, to die for us, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life.”

In Romans 5:8 Paul writes “But God demonstrates his own love for us in this: While we were still sinners, Christ died for us”.

Isn’t that a beautiful expression of a covenant relationship?

In Jeremiah 2:13 the prophet says by worshiping idols under every green tree we committed adultery against the Lord, like a faithless wife who leaves her husband we too were drowning in our sin.

But Jesus, who is also called as our bridegroom came back for his bride, to take all our guilt and shame, clean us from all our iniquities and  restore our souls. He died for our sake and later rose again victoriously, sitting at the right hand of God the Father, interceding for us.

And all that is required from us it to repent of our sins and fall in love with Jesus and put our trust in him.

And when we find ourselves in a relational issue, especially marriage, here’s how our response should look like.

Just, as our heart and flesh tend to violate God’s commands day in and day out. We need to change this pattern by going to God day in and day out, repenting of our sins and putting our faith in his son Jesus – Remembering the Gospel, adorning Christ, mending back our relationship with our creator God.

And as we do that, the Spirit of God deals with the root Sin, deals with our selfishness, deals with our pride, with our unwillingness to change, our unwillingness to forgive, unwillingness to bear with one another. Eventually restoring our hearts back to God.

I believe if our friend who just decided to divorce his wife had a genuine love relationship with God, he would have never even thought of separation. Christ’s love would have compelled him to love his wife as Christ loved him. Not based on feelings or outward appearance but because of the covenant relationship, he was into.

Finally, based on what we’ve learnt so far, I want to share three practical advice that you should apply to your situation.

  1. If you are unmarried and looking out for a partner, don’t marry someone who merely calls himself/herself a believer, but marry the person who’ve truly understood the Gospel, knows what a covenant relationship means and is genuinely in love with Jesus.
  2. If you are already married, my advice to you is to live a Gospel-centered life, know that your marriage is covenant relationship united by God, love Jesus more than your spouse, and whether in good times or bad times, whether your partner is believer or an unbeliever – Let your life display the fruit of the Spirit. Love, Serve and Submit to one another in all humility.
  3. If you are divorced, my advice to you is repent before God, and believe in the Gospel. If your spouse is still alive, single, believer of Jesus and willing to reunite, make every effort to restore that relationship back.

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Categories
Mark Sermon

How must we respond to Sin and Temptation

[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]Good morning church! If you’ve been tracking with us over the last few months, as a church we’ve been preaching through the gospel of Mark. Right now we are in Chapter 9.

We are back in our study of the gospel of Mark this week.

As you all know we took a short break from our study to do a series on Living out our Identity in Christ. And that was a wonderful reminder for our heart to know the identity that Christ has given us. Even though that series is over, we’ll often be coming back to those themes as we deal with various scriptures. We are right now in Mark 9 v42-50.

As you are turning to the passage, I’ll share the background of today’s text. Jesus announced for the second time that he’s going to suffer and die on the cross and be raised on the third Day. The disciples don’t understand what Jesus is saying and they seem to be more concerned about finding out who’s the greatest among them.

Jesus uses this opportunity to teach them on servant-hood. He says “if you want to be first, you should be last and a servant of all. You should care for the least and insignificant. You should welcome and accept those who follow me even though they might not be in our tribe”. God is concerned about all his disciples…especially the ones that are weak and different.

42 “Whoever causes one of these little ones who believe in me to sin,[g] it would be better for him if a great millstone were hung around his neck and he were thrown into the sea. 43 And if your hand causes you to sin, cut it off. It is better for you to enter life crippled than with two hands to go to hell,[h] to the unquenchable fire.[i] 45 And if your foot causes you to sin, cut it off. It is better for you to enter life lame than with two feet to be thrown into hell. 47 And if your eye causes you to sin, tear it out. It is better for you to enter the kingdom of God with one eye than with two eyes to be thrown into hell, 48 ‘where their worm does not die and the fire is not quenched.’ 49 For everyone will be salted with fire.[j] 50 Salt is good, but if the salt has lost its saltiness, how will you make it salty again? Have salt in yourselves, and be at peace with one another.”

As you’ve noticed in the gospels, Jesus used different figures of speech while he taught his disciples. Sometimes he used parables, other times he used metaphors and now in today’s text he uses “hyperbole”. Hyperbole means exaggerating a thought in order to drive home a point.

Most of us growing up would have heard either our teacher or parent say something on these lines “If your friend jumps into the well, would you do that also?”

Now they don’t literally mean that we jumped into the well or needed to that in the future…it was a way for them to drive home a point to not be easily influenced by our friends. At the same time this passage has got a very direct, convicting tone. Three things that this passage tell us of:

  1. Caution – Cautioning us from being a stumbling block
  2. Cut-off – Cutting off the patterns of sin from within
  3. Confirm – Confirming that our faith is Real

Caution – Cautioning us from being a stumbling block

42 “Whoever causes one of these little ones who believe in me to sin,[g] it would be better for him if a great millstone were hung around his neck and he were thrown into the sea.

It’s important for us to first understand who are these “little ones”? Those are believers who the world may see as weak and insignificant. I think this could also refer to new young believers who join the church at a very tender stage in their spiritual life.

But these believers are not insignificant to God…in fact they are very precious! God loves them and deeply cares for His people especially those who are lowly and powerless.

But why such a severe judgment upon them? Jesus is saying in comparison to the judgment that will come upon those who cause these young believers to sin, it’ll be better for them to tie a heavy millstone on their neck and be hurled into the sea!

It’s because believing in Jesus is more than intellectually agreeing to facts. Believing in Jesus means that you are united to Him. It means that you belong to Him.

Just a few verses earlier, Jesus tells them 37 “Whoever receives one such child in my name receives me, and whoever receives me, receives not me but him who sent me.” It’s a very close intimate relationship that God has with His children.

Jesus takes it upon Himself to guard & protect you. Anything that causes a young believer to distrust and disobey Christ does not only mean harm to the person but Christ as well.

That’s why Paul when he’s answering the question if it’s right or wrong to eat food offered to idols, he tells the Corinthians to always think about the weaker brother and not be a stumbling block for him. He says when “sinning against your brothers[e] and wounding their conscience when it is weak, you sin against Christ.” (1 Cor 8:12)

I may have shared this story with you all…As a brand-new believer in Mumbai, I started following all these prosperity televangelists. What I didn’t realize at the time was how they were abusing the weak and the naive.

Even I remember “sowing a seed” in one of these ministries because the pastor promised that it’ll come back to me double-fold or ten times more.

And with their lavish lifestyle, their luxurious home, cars and expensive suits – what they were doing by twisting Bible verses and through their lavish lifestyle was feed into my idolatry.

The truth is ultimately I wanted those things more than Jesus and more and more stumbling blocks were put in my way that was causing me to distrust and disobey my Savior. I praise God that He freed me from that but we know how they continue to prey on young, weak believers in the same way even today.

And it’s not just the prosperity preachers. Prosperity preachers are more like in your face & actively placing stumbling blocks but there are other ways how we do that passively. It happens when we are persistently unrepentant of our sins. When young believers see us have a very casual approach to sin and sometimes even worse when they see us enjoy and brag about our sin, it can really cause a lot of damage.

It’s different when you come to your brothers or sisters and grieve over a sin pattern and look for hope and healing in the gospel. But what I’m talking about is persistent unrepentance. A feeling where you think “I’m okay with my sin…It’s not as bad as some others”. Sin is serious and it is a serious offence to God! That brings me to point number 2

Cut-off – Cutting off the patterns of sin from within

43 And if your hand causes you to sin, cut it off. It is better for you to enter life crippled than with two hands to go to hell,[h] to the unquenchable fire.[i] 45 And if your foot causes you to sin, cut it off. It is better for you to enter life lame than with two feet to be thrown into hell. 47 And if your eye causes you to sin, tear it out. It is better for you to enter the kingdom of God with one eye than with two eyes to be thrown into hell, 48 ‘where their worm does not die and the fire is not quenched.’

It’s not referring to literally cutting yourself. It’s a hyperbole! But it does tell us 3 things:

  1. Identify the sin – “If your hand causes you to sin” You’re not being generic but very specific of those sins that you know are affecting your relationship with God.
  2. Take Radical Steps to cut off the sin – You’re not just sitting and saying “what to do? I guess I’ll be living in this sin forever or God is so gracious so He’ll forgive”. That’s not how it is for a believer. A believer does whatever it takes to fight the sin.
  3. Immediate response – It’s not telling you to deal with the sin tomorrow and sometime in the future. Right now cut off the sin! Today cut off the sin!

And this passage makes it very clear – what’s at stake is eternity! Now we know that it’s not our efforts or works that can save us from hell. Today if you have eternal life, if you’ve been given a passport to the kingdom of God, if you’ve been protected from being eternally separated from God – it’s only and only because Christ died for your sin.

But let’s realize Our attitude to cutting off sin shows that Christ’s blood has washed us. Our attitude to cutting off sin shows that we are truly His.

Imagine a guy who has a problem with diabetes. He’s got very high blood sugar. The doctor tells him that he cannot have any sugar or sweets or it’ll be fatal. The guy agrees to the doctor when he’s at the clinic and goes back and tells his family the diagnosis. However, when he’s browsing on the internet he keeps looking at the newest editions of Dairy Milk.

He goes to work and tells his colleagues how much he loves chocolate and how amazing the taste is. He looks through the magazine and gazes at the image of the newly imported Swiss chocolate that’s now available in India.

What do you think is going to happen the next time he’s at the grocery store? He is going to buy chocolates! Because even though he identified his diabetes problem, he didn’t take any radical steps and immediate steps to tackle it.

Similarly, what sin is God calling you to cut-off today? It maybe the circle of friends that you’re in close relationship with. You know that they constantly influence you to sin but you keep hanging around.

What would it mean for you to cut it off? It might be a dating relationship that you are currently involved in and you know it doesn’t honor God. Or it’s images on your computer screen or mobile phone that’s enslaved you. Or it may be social media and entertainment that’s filling your mind. Or it might be unforgiveness that has held your heart captive for so long.

God’s Word tells us to Cut it Off!  Take very strong steps to cut it off. Even if means inconvenience or discomfort but cut it off! People around you might think you are crazy to take these steps. But you do whatever it takes to honor God and preserve your best affections for Christ!

Rom 13:14: make no provision for the flesh, to gratify its desires.

Confirm – Confirming that our faith is Real

49 For everyone will be salted with fire. [j] 50  Salt is good, but if the salt has lost its saltiness, how will you make it salty again? Have salt in yourselves, and be at peace with one another.”

This suddenly is a puzzling statement. We were talking about Caution and Cut-off but what is this whole conversation about “Salt”. Again…it’s a figure of speech. In those times, the people’s main source for salt would come from the Dead Sea. It had to be processed properly to be in a usable condition. If it wasn’t processed properly, it would taste really bad and couldn’t be used in the food.

What does this have to do in this context?

I believe what these verses say is that fire or hardships and trials will truly reveal those who are real disciples of Christ! And just as unprocessed salt is useless for the food, a life that isn’t actively cutting off sin is useless and dead.

James 2:17 says “So also faith by itself, if it does not have works, is dead.” Real faith will express itself in good works. It’s like two sides of the same coin.

Let me ask you, how do you know that you are a believer in Christ? You might say “I prayed the sinner’s prayer”. I’m not saying God doesn’t use it but there’s no mention of a sinner’s prayer in the Bible. It’s not a mantra prayer that guarantees salvation.

But you may say “Every Sunday when I worship I’m really moved in my heart”. But that in itself is just an emotional experience. Well I know a lot of Scripture from the Bible and I know the churchy language. Be we know from Scripture that even the demons know a lot of Scripture. James says “Even the demons believe that God is One and shudder”.

What’s the solution then?

Don’t look at yourself and your actions but look to the cross. Look and see the Son of God who died on your behalf and rose again on the third Day to completely destroy and free you from the power of sin!

Look at his perfect provision for you. (Rom 5:8) and if you call upon him today and believe not in your works but His perfect work on the cross for you…you will be saved (Rom 10:9). Would you want to experience real faith today by trusting Jesus?

For others, you know you have real faith. You truly grieve over your sin and have tried every single way to cut-off that sin-pattern and have seen a lot of failure. I just want to remind you of the power and the tools that are at your disposal to wage war against sin. You have the Holy Spirit within you. And the Holy Spirit will strengthen you to kill and cut-off sin as you humble yourself, turn away from your sin and yield to what the Spirit asks you to do today.  

Romans 8:13 – For if you live according to the flesh you will die, but if by the Spirit you put to death the deeds of the body, you will live.

In 1 John it says that He who is in you is greater than He who is in the world.

Would you call out to God and ask Him to help you hate your sin and develop great and intense affections for the Savior today? And would you commit yourself to close group of believers who will hold you accountable and help you cut off the sin that is within![/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row]

Categories
Mark Sermon

Pride that keeps us from the Truth – Mark 9:34-41

[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]Good morning Gathering! It’s good to be back with you this morning. I had the opportunity to serve at a church in Santa Cruz last week. That congregation was recently removed from their worship space because of some protests, and it was good to be with them to encourage them. But, as great as it was to fellowship with those brothers & sisters, this is our church home and we definitely miss you guys when we’re away. So, it’s good to be back and I’m excited to continue in our study of The Gospel of Mark. If you have a Bible with you this morning, I’d encourage you to turn with me to Mark chapter 9. I’ll go ahead and PRAY for our time together in God’s Word.

We’ll focus our time this morning on verses 38 – 41. But, what I’d like to do is back up and begin reading in verse 30, because, if you look carefully at what’s happening in this larger section of text there is a pattern that we see with the disciples. And if we don’t understand this pattern, we won’t really understand our verses correctly.

So let’s begin reading in verse 30, and we’ll end with verse 41. This is what God’s Word says:

“They went on from there and passed through Galilee. And he did not want anyone to know, for he was teaching his disciples, saying to them, “The Son of Man is going to be delivered into the hands of men, and they will kill him. And when he is killed, after three days he will rise.” But they did not understand the saying, and were afraid to ask him. And they came to Capernaum. And when he was in the house he asked them, “What were you discussing on the way?” But they kept silent, for on the way they had argued with one another about who was the greatest. And he sat down and called the twelve. And he said to them, “If anyone would be first, he must be last of all and servant of all.” And he took a child and put him in the midst of them, and taking him in his arms, he said to them, “Whoever receives one such child in my name receives me, and whoever receives me, receives not me but him who sent me.” John said to him, “Teacher, we saw someone casting out demons in your name, and we tried to stop him, because he was not following us.” But Jesus said, “Do not stop him, for no one who does a mighty work in my name will be able soon afterward to speak evil of me. For the one who is not against us is for us. For truly, I say to you, whoever gives you a cup of water to drink because you belong to Christ will by no means lose his reward.” (Mark 9:30-41)

Let’s make sure we’re clear on what’s happening here — and I’ll back up a little bit into chapter 8 for review. We see Peter confess Jesus as the Christ. He declares, “You are the Son of God!”, “You are the Messiah!”, “You are the One who has been sent to rescue us!” And we’ve said that this is the turning point in The Gospel of Mark. Everything shifts at that point, from who Jesus is, to what He’s come to do. After Mark 8:27-30, things start moving very fast toward Jerusalem and toward the Cross. So Jesus sits His disciples down and He tells them exactly what ‘s going to happen to Him (8:31-33). He says that He’s going to suffer, He’s going to be rejected by the religious leaders, He’s going to be put to death, and He’s going to raise from the dead on the 3rd day.

And how does Peter respond to this? After this beautiful confession he’s just made of who Jesus is as the Messiah, Peter actually tries to rebuke Jesus for saying that He’s going to die. Just let that sink in for a moment. Peter tries to rebuke Jesus! Now, of course, we read that and say, “That’s ridiculous!” But there are all kinds of ways that you and I practically rebuke Jesus in our lives, aren’t there? Like when His designs for my life don’t match what I’ve designed for my life?

The point here is that the disciples still don’t get it, even when Jesus puts it plainly to them. Then we fast forward a bit to the Transfiguration — this amazing event where Peter, James and John get to see the glory of Jesus. And then we look at the account of the disciples who are unable to cast a demon out of a boy and Jesus has to step in and do it for them. Both events that should have reiterated who Jesus is in the hearts and minds of the disciples. But they still don’t get it.

And we know they’re not getting it, we know that something is misfiring in their hearts, because Jesus tells them a second time that He’s going to lay down His life so that He can be raised from the dead. And what do the disciples do right after that? They start arguing about who’s the greatest. Now, just think about that for a moment. Jesus says, “Hey, as the Messiah, the deliverer, the one who will make all things right, the one who will reconcile people to God, I have come to lay down my life — to give myself as a sacrifice so that I can raise from the dead.”

Right after He says that the disciples start arguing over who among them is the most awesome. It’s a pretty stark contrast between Jesus and His disciples, between servanthood and looking to be served, between humility & pride. And, again, the temptation in our flesh is to say, “Those morons!” “How could they not get it???” But how often do you and I promote ourselves, and seek the approval of man, and try to advance our agenda over and above everyone else? The truth is that we do this same thing — and it’s actually worse for us because we have the Indwelling Holy Spirit.

So Jesus sits these guys down and says, “Look, if you want to be first, you have to be the last.” “You guys are talking about being the greatest, you should be talking about who can be the least.” And then, to drive the point home, Jesus actually welcomes one of the “least of these” into their conversation. He brings a child into their midst (which would have been very counter-cultural in the day). In fact, you might remember in Matthew chapter 19, the disciples actually rebuked people for bringing children to Jesus. So Jesus illustrates what He’s talking about by bringing a child into the middle of their conversation.

All of that has been happening in this scene: Pride, selfishness, these guys completely missing the point. And then, as we come to our verses today, John chimes in once again. He says, “Hey Jesus, we saw this guy who was casting out demons in your name and (you’d be super proud of us) we told him to sit down & be quiet because he wasn’t following us!” Did you catch that little bit of grammar? John didn’t say, “Because He wasn’t following you, Jesus.” He says, “This guy wasn’t following us.” More pride, more selfishness, another example that they’re just not getting the point.

So Jesus responds, “Why would you do that? Don’t stop him, he’s doing work in my name.” And then He says, “The one who is not against us is for us.” So that’s the overall flow of what’s happening with the disciples. Now, before we get to what I believe is the main idea for us this morning, I want to point out a couple of things that are interesting. In fact, these are things that don’t seem to make sense.

The first deals with John himself. Based on what we know about John’s temperament & character, these conversations don’t seem very “John-like”, do they? At least not the John that I grew up hearing about in Sunday School. Isn’t John supposed to be the disciple that’s all about love?” It is true that John becomes that. There are early church historical records that detail John living to a very old age and being known for his Christ-like temperament. And we certainly see that heart come out in his New Testament writings. But that’s not who he is at this point in the narrative. In fact, we need to remember that Jesus gave John & his brother James the nickname “Boanerges”, which means “Sons of Thunder”.

The truth is that this John was known to have a fiery temperament. What we see here is John before Pentecost, John without the indwelling Holy Spirit, John before God’s grace transforms Him. And here he is telling this guy to stop casting out demons because the guy isn’t following him. And that’s all about pride being revealed in John’s heart. “Who does this guy think he is? This guy hasn’t spent any time with Jesus! He doesn’t have the knowledge that we do, he hasn’t seen what we’ve seen! I received my commission directly from Jesus! I’m a called out one, a trained one! And, on top of that, all of these other guys know that I’m Jesus’ favorite. That’s who I am, and this guy isn’t following me, so he must not be legitimate!”

What is all of that? It sure seems a lot like pride and a desire to be in control. We’ll come back to that in a few minutes to unpack it, but can we all agree that those are common struggles in our lives and in the church as a whole? This is just another point at which we need to check our hearts and say, “Oh, that’s right, I do that exact same thing!” We’ll circle back and unpack that in a few minutes but first, I want to point out one other interesting thing here (because I always want to address the confusing things in Scripture).

I’ve already pointed out that Jesus said, “The one who is not against us is for us.” But, here’s what’s interesting about that — Jesus says the exact opposite thing in Matthew 12:22-32. Here’s the context: Jesus is casting out demons and the Pharisees accuse Him of doing it by the power of the devil. Jesus responds by saying, “Why would the devil cast out the devil?” And then He says, “Whoever is not with me is against me.” It’s literally the opposite phrase. So, which one is it? “If you’re not for me, you’re against me? Or, if you’re not against me, you’re for me?”

It’s sort of like Proverbs 26:4-5: “Answer not a fool according to his folly, lest you be like him yourself. Answer a fool according to his folly, lest he be wise in his own eyes.” You read that and you’re like, “WHAT???” It literally says the opposite thing back to back. So, which one is it? Do we answer a fool or do we not answer a fool? It depends on the situation and it takes wisdom to discern that. The same thing is true of Mark 9 & Matthew 12. Sometimes it’s right to say the one, and sometimes it’s right to say the other. It depends upon the context. So,let’s think about the contexts of these 2 situations briefly:

In Matthew 12, Jesus is casting out demons but the Pharisees accuse Him of doing it by the power of the devil. What Jesus says in response is, “There’s no middle ground here, either I’m doing this because I’m from God or because I’m from the devil.” “If you’re not for me, you’re against me.”

In Mark 9, the context is completely different. There’s someone casting out demons in Jesus name, so he’s doing the right thing. He’s saying the right thing and He’s accomplishing the right thing. And what Jesus says in response is, “Why would he be a problem?” “The one who isn’t against us — is for us.”

Now, the application on that is tricky and takes wisdom to know how to apply it. The key in our text is that we’re dealing with the issue of truth. The man in question here is saying what is true, He’s doing what is true and he’s accomplishing what is true. Jesus says, “I don’t care that you’ve never met him before, he’s on our team.”

Another point of interest is that Paul, in Philippians chapter 1, makes basically the same point that Jesus makes here in our text. Listen to Philippians 1:17-18: “Some preach Christ out of selfish ambition, not sincerely but thinking to afflict me in my imprisonment. What then? Only that in every way, whether in pretense or in truth, Christ is proclaimed, and in that I rejoice.”

Paul’s saying, “Look, some of these guys are preaching Christ out of rivalry & envy, they’re preaching Christ and people are hearing the gospel, so that’s a win!” And that really drives us back into the main idea of what Jesus is communicating in our text this morning.

I don’t think that this has as much to do with the circumstances of this guy not following the disciples, I think it has a lot more to do with exposing sin in John’s heart. It has to do with the pride that’s still lodged there because, if you look at the pattern of what’s been going on, it’s been lodged there for some time.

Now, let’s bring this back to our lives and talk a little bit about how this translates to you and me. I’ve already pointed out, as we’ve gone along, how the same things that we see coming out of the disciples (in attitude & behavior) are things that we exhibit in our lives as well.

But, I want to focus in for a moment on the subject of theological pride. There is an overwhelming sense of tribalism in the modern day church. Do you know what I mean by tribalism? We get into little theological, ecclesiological tribes based on our theological beliefs & doctrinal convictions. And, there are some really helpful elements to that because sound theology matters and right doctrine is crucial. It’s important to affirm and deny things based on what the Bible teaches. It’s important to know what we believe & why we believe it.

But, here’s the danger with tribalism: only being able to recognize truth when it comes from our own tribe. That’s what I think was happening with the disciples in this situation. Because it wasn’t coming from them, they couldn’t recognize the truth. And, if we’re going to be honest, we’re guilty of this far more often than we’d care to admit. The longer I’m in ministry, the more I have realized just how much I have to learn. And a part of what I’m learning is to celebrate the truth, even when it comes from an unlikely source (even a source that I didn’t know existed).

Pride stops that from happening. I had a good friend who used to say, “Pride calcifies ignorance in the heart.” In other words, there are things that you don’t know (that you’re ignorant of) pride solidifies that in your heart because you’re not willing to learn new things.

Humility, on the other hand, confesses with our actions and our attitudes that we believe that God is big & we’re small. Humility helps us understand that God is working in thousands of different ways, through millions of different people, and I certainly don’t have the market corned on truth. Does that make sense?

Now, there is certainly dangers that comes with this. We must learn to weigh everything against Scripture. We can’t be naive. We must have discernment and learn to be sharp biblically. But that shouldn’t hold us back from humbly learning from others.

The other danger here (or maybe tension is a better word) is, how can we be passionate about our convictions, theological distinctives, and good doctrine, while also being passionate about the Kingdom over our tribe? I think the key to this is found in what Jesus says in verse 39: “… for no one who does a mighty work in my name will be able soon afterward to speak evil of me.”I believe that we should be praying for the supernatural work of God in every church (even ones that are doctrinally suspect). Because the supernatural working of the Holy Spirit draws people toward Christ & toward right doctrine.

So, in light of all that, I want to close our time this way. We are going to celebrate the Lord’s Supper this morning, but I want to do 2 specific things with our time in Communion. I want to come against the pride in our hearts and I want to pray for the Kingdom to advance in our city — through all the church.[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row]

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Mark Sermon

Pursuing What Really Matters – Mark 9:30-37

[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]Today’s passage is Mark 9:30-37

Last Sunday we heard a beautiful sermon that reminded us of our unbelieving hearts and also reminded us of the fact that till the last moment of our lives we will all battle with unbelief.

But we saw God’s provision for our unbelief. In times of unbelief he expects us to depend on him because

1. We need God’s PATIENCE when we don’t believe
2. We also need God’s PROVISION when we struggle to believe
3. We also need God’s POWER to sustain our belief

In today’s passage we see another kind of struggle we all go through and that’s the issue of Pride, a feeling of deep pleasure or satisfaction on one’s own achievements and even possessions which is equally sinful in the eyes of God.

We all have this problem and in some ways we all struggle in this area.

Sadly, it’s become part of our culture and tradition where we’re taught by our parents and teachers to take pride in our achievements and in our material possessions.

We are told that if we are born in a certain caste, religion or country then we are superior to others. If we posses more knowledge and achieve higher ranks in school than we are the smartest and brighter than others.

And on top of it all our Consumerist society wants us to take pride in everything we own and have so that they can sell us more products and services to fire into flame our desire to take pride in our possessions.

In our passage today, Jesus is secretly passing through Galilee along with his disciples and for the second time in a row he is predicting his death and resurrection. The first time he did was in Mark 8:31.

What surprises me is the ignorance and the lack of attentiveness in the disciples, that even after mentioning it for the second time they were unable to understand what Jesus is trying to tell them. And instead of going back to Jesus and clarifying their doubt they keep quiet because they were afraid.

Here’s an eternal perspective on life placed right in front of them, the revelation of the Son of God who came down leaving his glory to offer himself as a sacrifice for the sins of the world so that they can get to be part of heaven by trusting in him and his finished work on the cross.

But instead they chose to focus on the earthly perspective and try to figure out who among them was the greatest so they can take pride in it and feel good about it.

God may have been doing great things through the disciples – healing the sick, performing miracles etc. But instead of focusing on Jesus and his words they became busy arguing among themselves about who among them is the greatest.

It seems like the world and its ideals were corrupting their minds and making it futile to understand what Jesus is trying to tell them.

My question is even if they had figured out who among them is the greatest what’s the big deal?

Where are the so called great men who claimed to be great men? Where is Caesar, Roman politician and military general. Where is Pontius Pilate, the governor of Judea who ordered to put Jesus to death? Where is Herod? also known as Herod the Great. And where are the leaders of the Pharisees and the Sadducees who claimed to be people who know everything.

In the last few days, as I was looking at the calamity that struck Kerala I was wondering what happens to people who took pride in their earthly possessions, acres of land, 2-storey – 3-storey properties.

You see, At the end of day every earthly position and possession comes to nothing in comparison to the greatness and Sovereignty of the creator God, the ultimate owner and ruler of this world and everything in it.

1 John 2:17
“And the world is passing away along with its desires, but whoever does the will of God abides forever.”

Let me give you another perspective.

Right now you may not be struggling with pride about your position because you’re not in any such position that is better than others. Or even pride in you possession because you really don’t have enough to take pride in it.

But what is that other thing which is of this world that is taking away your focus from Jesus and his words.

  • It could be the pressure and worry of getting married
  • It could be the pressure at work to perform better
  • It could be the illness in the family that is taking a long time to heal
  • It could be the struggle to perform and be better than others
  • It could be the pressure of buying a house of your own
  • It could be the pressure of pushing yourself harder at your workplace so that you can secure a superior position
  • It could be the pressure of going abroad and settling there which you might think of as an ultimate goal in life

Jesus doesn’t offer a solution just to address that single issue of pride but he is challenging their world view which is what he wants to do in our hearts today.

When the disciples are arguing among themselves about who is the greatest, Jesus picks up the least among all of them, a small child and puts him in their midst, takes the child in his arms and says “Whoever receives one such child in my name receives me, and whoever receives me, receives not me but him who sent me.”

In Luke 9:48 we see an extended version of that conversation where Jesus also goes on to tell them “For he who is least among you all is the one who is great.”

In Judaism, children and women were largely auxiliary members of society whose connection to the social mainstream depended on men (either as fathers or husbands). Children, in particular, were thought of as “not having arrived.” They were good illustrations of “the very last” (v. 35).”

This is not how the society defines greatness. According to the world greatness is achieved by doing great things, achieving great knowledge, possessing great things.

But Jesus challenges our world view and the world view of the disciples, just as he challenges the world view of the rich young ruler who comes to Jesus and asks What should he do to inherit eternal life.

Jesus tells him to go sell all that he has and give it to the poor which he wasn’t really prepared to do and goes away.

In light of what we understand from this passage let’s evaluate our own lives.

We are in the church this morning. God is speaking to us through his word, he is giving us an eternal perspective and convicting our hearts of our sin and pointing us towards himself.

  • What is it that is stopping us from responding to Jesus the way we are supposed to.
  • What is it that is diverting our attention away from him.
  • Why is it that we are unable to grasp and understand the heavenly truths about the true kingdom. The Kingdom of God.
  • Why is it such a big challenge to catch hold the eternal perspective placed right in front of us.
  • Why is it that we are unable to see Jesus as better than everything else in this world.

If we are honest the answer to these questions will reveal how badly we are stuck with the petty things of this world. Worries, anxieties and fears that has become part of our lives because our upbringing, our circumstances and the influence of society and the people in it.

An honest answer will also reveal our prideful heart that doesn’t want to submit to Gods authority and his eternal reign.

Every motive or desire or pursuit we have in our lives which is a pattern of the world Jesus will challenge them and ask you to do exactly the opposite of what the world says.

Our response will determine who we are siding and what we treasure.

In Mark 8:36 Jesus says “What good is it for someone to gain the whole world, yet forfeit their soul?”

John 14:27 “Peace I leave with you; my peace I give you. I do not give to you as the world gives. Do not let your hearts be troubled and do not be afraid.

John 8:12 – “I am the light of the world. Whoever follows me will never walk in darkness, but will have the light of life.”

Many of the times we don’t see and realize the riches of who God is and what he has in mind for us in eternity. It’s time we change out thinking and fix our eyes on the heavenly things.

And just like David in Psalm 31:19 we sing

How abundant are the good things
that you have stored up for those who fear you,
that you bestow in the sight of all,
on those who take refuge in you.

Let’s pray![/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row]

Categories
Mark Sermon

God’s Remedy for Our Unbelief – Mark 9:14-29

[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]Good morning church! If you’ve been tracking with us over the last few months, as a church we’ve been preaching through the gospel of Mark. Right now we are in Chapter 9.

As you are turning to the passage, let me remind us a little bit of where we were. Last weekend we read how Jesus takes Peter, James and John with him to the top of the mountain where he gets transfigured in front of them!

Also while this is happening, Jesus is talking to Moses and Elijah who are standing with him. This great event left a strong impact on the hearts and minds of the disciples!

In the letters that these disciples wrote many years later to the churches, they often mentioned this event because Jesus revealed His glory as the Son of God, He showed that He was the fulfillment of the Law and the prophecies and that He was the True King – defined by the words of the Father when He says “This is my beloved Son. Listen to Him”. And this great event sets up the next story which we will read today:

Read Mark 9:14-29

I am an unbeliever!!! Woah! Did the elder of the church just say that? There have been many times in my Christian where I’ve either thought that or said that to myself.

I believe that what Christ has done is full and sufficient to save me. But there are times when I evaluate my fight with sin, the times when I think about the future and don’t trust in God’s promises and then think “would a believer really be like that, would a believer really respond like this?”

And so even after trusting in Jesus I know there are various pockets in my life where I am an unbeliever. I’m an unbeliever needing Jesus to rescue me from that.So today’s message is for all unbelievers.

Maybe you’re an unbeliever who’s never known Jesus or like me you’ve known the Lord but struggle to believe in other areas of your life. Let me invite you to look at this passage for encouragement. Because we are prone to unbelief, because our hearts naturally turns to unbelief:

1. We need God’s patience when we don’t believe (v16-19)

“What are you arguing about with them?” 17 And someone from the crowd answered him, “Teacher, I brought my son to you, for he has a spirit that makes him mute. 18 And whenever it seizes him, it throws him down, and he foams and grinds his teeth and becomes rigid. So I asked your disciples to cast it out, and they were not able.” 19 And he answered them, “O faithless generation, how long am I to be with you? How long am I to bear with you? Bring him to me.”

Right after Jesus comes down the mountain, he sees the scribes and the crowd arguing with the remaining disciples. And Jesus asks them why they were arguing and a man from the crowd told him about the terrible affliction that came upon his son due to an evil spirit.

He brought his son to the disciples for healing but because they couldn’t heal him and that resulted in an argument. Jesus responds by telling them that they are a faithless generation!

How long was he to bear with them? Was Jesus losing his patience? Was Jesus getting frustrated with the people? Why did Jesus say something seemingly harsh?

In order to answer this, I think we need to consider two things:

  • Language: Where else did Jesus use similar language? Towards the end of chapter 8, Jesus refers to the current generation as an adulterous and sinful generation. In the OT the prophets would often term the rebellious nation of Israel as “Crooked and twisted generation, unfaithful people”. And it’s not because the prophets developed a disliking or hatred towards people. It was their own people. Their own nation. But they were merely describing the hearts of people that repeatedly and relentlessly turned away from God.
  • Insult of unbelief: Sometimes we downplay the expressions of unbelief in our lives because we don’t even think of it as sin. We think “Rape, murder, Stealing”….these are all the big sins…what is unbelief in comparison to that? It seems like a thought or a feeling. But we should understand that unbelief is an insult to the goodness of God. Unbelief tells us that God isn’t good enough or isn’t loving enough or isn’t caring enough towards us. Unbelief tells us that God can’t be trusted. Unbelief tells us that God isn’t faithful so we need to find some other way apart from God. Are you seeing a theme run through all of this? Unbelief lies at the root of every sin. Unbelief is a perversion to God’s design of man and woman. Unbelief is everything that God doesn’t want in His children!

Let’s evaluate our hearts for a moment: When you don’t get what you want, does it cause you to become bitter toward God and His people? When God doesn’t answer your prayer according to your timings, does it cause you to abandon your trust in Him?

I know as we are hearing these truths, we are feeling the weight of the reality of our own unbelief. If unbelief is the root of every sin, then we end up displaying unbelief in so many areas.

God in His Holiness and Justice has every right to wipe us out due to our unbelief but instead He displays great patience through His Son Jesus.

I think as Jesus was mentioning v19 – he wasn’t losing his patience but rather like a loving parent was expressing the great deal of patience and tolerance He has towards rebellious people like you and me.

Not only do we need God’s patience, but

2) We also need God’s provision when we struggle to believe (v21-24)

You know it’s not the first time Jesus started a conversation with people before performing a miracle. Also, here Jesus starts talking to the man asking him about the condition of his son.

As the son is convulsing on the ground, the father explains how this evil spirit has caused his son to fall into fire, into water and severely wound him. Then for the for the first time you see the man ask Jesus to help him. He says “If you can do anything, please have compassion on us and help us”.

He still doesn’t fully believe. Jesus says “If you can?” “All things are possible for one who believes”. In tears this man says “I believe; help my unbelief”. In the Greek it reads it as “Lord I believe; help my unbelief”.

Do you notice the difference between the manner in which the man addressed Jesus in the starting? He called him “Teacher” but now he calls Him “Lord”. It’s wonderful to see how Jesus drew out the faith in this man.

He was part of the crowd initially that displayed unbelief and bitterness, but now he’s acknowledging his need for Jesus. Initially he just wanted a miracle, but now he’s displaying trust in Jesus. But yet he struggles to believe! In other words he’s saying “Lord, I want to believe. Help me overcome my unbelief”.

If you’re a believer in Christ, pretty soon you will come to this place where you’ll look at the struggle with sin in your life, or a difficult situation that you’re facing in your family or work or in friendships where you’ll cry out “Help me overcome my unbelief”.

You’ll feel the tension like this man where you want to believe but struggling to do the same. What is one of the means of grace that God has provided for us?

Ephesians 2:8 says “For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith—and this is not from yourselves, it is the gift of God.”Faith is in itself a gift from God!Therefore, let’s realize that it cannot be automatically generated, it needs to be provided by God.

Hearing the words of Christ: So faith comes from hearing, and hearing through the word of Christ.(Rom 10:17) If your heart is unbelieving, it doesn’t mean you need to read less of God’s Word or wait until a later time when you grow in maturity to read the Word.

No…you need the Word right now. You need to listen to Christ’s voice right now. It’s infact through your time with Scripture that God will convict your heart of sin and unbelief and give you the faith and the promises to trust Christ.

If you’re confused on which passage to read or if you’re struggling to understand make sure you call a brother or sister who can help you and speak those words of truth into your hearts.

Not only do we need God’s patience and God’s provision but

3. We also need God’s power to sustain our belief (v28-29)

After this whole episode is done, in private Jesus’ disciples ask him why they couldn’t cast out the demon out of this man. Jesus says that this kind can only be driven out by prayer!

These disciples just a few chapters back were given the authority to cast out all demons and heal all kinds of diseases. They experienced first hand what it meant to be used by God! I’m sure by this point they saw several lives being transformed through their ministry.

But I think they reached this point where they trusted more on themselves than God. They forgot that they needed their power source which came about by communing with God. They forgot that they needed to depend on God in prayer. It’s interesting how in John 15, Jesus reminds us that “apart from Him we can do nothing”.

Think about that for a minute everyone. Apart from Jesus we can do NOTHING. Sometimes we tend to rely on all the sermons that we’ve heard, all the Christian theology that we know, all the past experiences we’ve had, all the Christian conversations we’ve had more than dependence on God through prayer.

Again all these things are good but all our bible studies and theology should fuel our hearts to cry out to Jesus.Prayer is how we depend on God’s strength and power to make things happen in and through our lives.

My intention is not to bring this up to say “If you are praying for 15 minutes now, pray for 20 minutes from tomorrow”. Or to beat us all down on how we aren’t praying enough. But I do want us to question ourselves on how central prayer is to our lives.

Do we pray about everything in our lives? Are we honest before God – transparent as we talk to Him? We know that the only reason why we can have our prayers and petitions delivered to God is because of the Saving work of our Savior. Therefore we aren’t praying to earn brownie points but we pray to grow in our trust and love for Christ![/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row]

Categories
Mark Sermon

The Purpose of Jesus’ Transfiguration – Mark 9:1-13

[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]Last Sunday we read the account where Jesus wanted to know from his disciples whether they know him and were willing to face the reality of the events that was about to happen to in their lives because they were his followers.

But, there was a gap between what they knew and what they believed.

About believing, we learned that it is not enough to say that we believe in Jesus but we have to be delighting in that fact, embracing that fact, and making Christ the treasure and the Lord of our life by surrendering to him.

  • It means to be willing to deny ourselves by the power of the Holy Spirit and carry our cross daily.
  • It means to lose our lives for Christ and the Gospel.
  • It means that we are not ashamed of Christ and his words in this adulterous and sinful generation.

When we look at this lifestyle, to some of you it may sound quite like an impossible task to accomplish but I believe our passage today will enable our hearts to realize that yes it is possible.

Let’s look at it closely.

The passage starts with a prophecy made by Jesus and then the fulfillment of it in the following verses.

In verse 1 Jesus said to them “Truly, I say to you, there are some standing here who will not taste death until they see the kingdom of God after it has come with power.”

Verse 2 – After six days, Jesus took with him Peter and James and John, and led them up a high mountain by themselves.

The first question that rose in my mind was why only these three men and not the others. After researching for an answer I concluded that there is absolutely no clue within the scripture that reveals anything about the choice of these three men.

However if you research on the internet you will see a lot of assumptions made by people but we need to be careful when we read anything that is not explicitly mentioned in the scripture or else we will end up interpreting the passage wrongly.

After taking them to the mountain Jesus transfigured before them, and his clothes became radiant, intensely white, as no one on earth could bleach them. And there appeared to them Elijah with Moses, and they were talking with Jesus.

Why Moses and Elijah?

Most commentaries say that Moses represented the Law and Elijah represented the prophets. Moses was a prophet as well as the law-giver of Israel; Elijah was expected as the forerunner of the Messiah. The presence of Moses and Elijah as forerunners attests to the culmination of a purposeful revelation of God’s Son with the history of Israel.

Verse 5 – Peter says to Jesus “Rabbi, it is good that we are here. Let us make three tents, one for you and one for Moses and one for Elijah.” For he did not know what to say, for they were terrified.”

And a cloud overshadowed them, and a voice came out of the cloud, “This is my beloved Son; listen to him.”

Can you imagine? God himself, the creator, the alpha, the omega – spoke to them out of the cloud saying “This is my beloved Son; listen to him.”

What a privilege it must had been for these three guys to hear the voice of God speaking to them.

And as they were coming down the mountain, he charged them to tell no one what they had seen, until the Son of Man had risen from the dead. So they kept the matter to themselves, questioning what this rising from the dead might mean. And they asked him, “Why do the scribes say that first Elijah must come?” And he said to them, “Elijah does come first to restore all things. And how is it written of the Son of Man that he should suffer many things and be treated with contempt? But I tell you that Elijah has come, and they did to him whatever they pleased, as it is written of him.”

This question was asked by the disciples referring to the prophesy made in Malachi 4:5-6

“Behold, I will send you Elijah the prophet before the great and awesome day of the Lord comes. 6 And he will turn the hearts of fathers to their children and the hearts of children to their fathers, lest I come and strike the land with a decree of utter destruction.”

In Matthew 11:13-14 Jesus reveals who this Elijah was

“For all the Prophets and the Law prophesied until John, 14 and if you are willing to accept it, he is Elijah who is to come.”

Without over complicating the whole passage with lots of details I want to quickly talk about the application of this passage in our lives which I think is most important.

The Purpose of Jesus’ Transfiguration

To know the application of this passage in our lives we need to know the purpose of Jesus’ transfiguration.

And to plainly put it, the purpose of Jesus’ transfiguration was to make himself know to the disciples in his full glory, power and might.

All this while they knew Jesus as a teacher, a friend, a brother. As a fellow human being who had some extraordinary powers to perform miracles and heal the sick.

Through the event of his transfiguration Jesus wanted to reveals to them that just as he was fully human he is also fully God. In fact he is God first, human later.

Hebrews 2:14-17

“Since the children have flesh and blood, he too shared in their humanity so that by his death he might break the power of him who holds the power of death—that is, the devil— 15 and free those who all their lives were held in slavery by their fear of death. 16 For surely it is not angels he helps, but Abraham’s descendants. 17 For this reason he had to be made like them,[k] fully human in every way, in order that he might become a merciful and faithful high priest in service to God, and that he might make atonement for the sins of the people.”

For the Peter, John and James this was not an ordinary moment. We see their excitement when they mention about it their later writings.

John wrote in his gospel, “We have seen His glory, the glory of the one and only” (John 1:14).

2 Peter 1:16-18 – Peter also wrote of it, “We did not follow cleverly invented stories when we told you about the power and coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, but we were eyewitnesses of His majesty. For He received honor and glory from God the Father when the voice came to Him from the Majestic Glory, saying, ‘This is my Son, whom I love; with Him I am well pleased.’ We ourselves heard this voice that came from heaven when we were with Him on the sacred mountain”

It was the most powerful encounter in the life of these men that changed them forever. And if you track the lives of these three men through the rest of the new testament you will what an impactful lives they led bringing glory to God.

  • Denying their selves by the power of the Holy Spirit and carried their cross.
  • Lost their lives for the sake of Christ and the Gospel. In fact James was the very first one to be-headed by Herod because of his faith.
  • Never ashamed of Christ and his word.

Imagine you are working in the largest company in the world (Toyota Motors – 4th Largest), you are working at the lowest rank possible, maybe as a sweeper or something. And you are the most lazy and wicked person one can imagine, even stealing from the company for selfish gain.

One day you meet an old guy who joins you as fellow sweeper, he is warm and friendly, you start enjoying his company, because he’s  good guy you start getting influenced by him and his nature and feel convicted of all the all the wrong things you’ve been doing, but no matter how hard you try you are unable to change because of your inner heart condition.

And one day this old guy takes you into a room and removes his mask and reveals to you who is really is. You get to know that he is actually the owner of the company. The Boss of all bosses.

Imagine him telling you that he knows you by your name, that even though he was hired as a sweeper the decision was made by him. Among millions of people he chose you to work in his company.

Imagine what that will that do to you.

Now, imagine him telling you that he always knew how wicked, lazy and crook you were. But he still wanted you around and never wanted to see you leave the company and suffer.

Even after sending his manager to correct and rebuke you never changed. And the only way he could change you was if he himself can come down to your level and reveal himself.

Tell me how would you feel?

Now, imagine him telling you that the day you joined the company you were also assigned shares in the company, that you are not just a sweeper but a partner in the company.

Will this kind of an experience do something to you?

Brothers and sisters, this is just an earthly scenario which sounds so exciting.

This is true and it has happened to us in the heavenly realms. Jesus, the creator God, the all powerful, all mighty chose us to be his sons and daughters before the foundations of this world, but we lived in ignorance and sinned against him, although we knew Him, we did not honor him as God or gave thanks to him, but become futile in our thinking, and our foolish hearts darkened, claiming to be wise, we became fools, and exchanged the glory of the immortal God for images resembling mortal man and birds and animals and creeping things.

The purpose of Transfiguration was to reveal Jesus to us in his full glory so that it changes us from within and enables us to live lives that glorify him on this earth.

Those who witnessed the transfiguration bore witness to it to the other disciples and to countless millions down through the centuries which includes us.

If you are wondering how you will live such sacrificial life for the sake of Christ and his Gospel.  The answer is by knowing who Jesus is whom we worship.[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row]

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Mark Sermon

Knowing and Believing – Mark 8:27-38

Our passage for today is from Mark 8:27-38 (Read)

Last Sunday as we looked at the story from Mark 8, we learned about the unbelief of the Pharisees and the disciples. We looked at the fruit and the root of their unbelief.

In the Pharisees the fruit was their demanding nature and the root was the sin barrier and in the disciples the fruit was lack of discernment and the root was worry.

We saw how Jesus addresses those two issues and now in our passage today Jesus and the disciples are on their way to the villages of Caesarea Philippi.

This moment to me looks like a perfect example of discipleship where Jesus after having a prolonged conversation with the disciples about their unbelief is now digging deep into their hearts to see if they’ve got it all right and have clarity about who he is.

He starts the conversation by asking two questions:
Who do people say that I am?
Who do you say that I am?

It’s like what generally happens in our GC’s (Gospel Community) where the leader starts the conversation by asking what did we think about the sermon this morning? – Then there is a dead silence for a couple of minutes and then one guy starts the conversation giving some bits and pieces here and there and others pick up from there and start sharing their thoughts and convictions.

But every time the  leader asks that question he is expecting a specific answer – He wants to know whether we have understood the overarching essence of the word and whether it has really addressed our unbelief, sin, ignorance of our hearts and have pointed us to the Gospel.

After spending so much time with Jesus and to see him do all the miracles, Jesus wanted to know what the disciples thought about him. Whether they realized who Jesus really is.

Referring to his previous conversation, Jesus wanted to see whether they now have the eyes that can see and ears that can hear.

Like the blind man, who was healed by Jesus in two attempts  – He wanted to know whether they still see trees or men.

The answer to Jesus’s first question which is “Who do people say that I am?“, the disciples said some call you “John the Baptist; and others say, Elijah; and others, one of the prophets”

Immediately, Jesus asked them “Who do you say I am?

I don’t know if there was a dead silence at that moment, or whether they started looking at each other’s face. But Peter, the smart guy, always ready to say something, answered , “You are the Christ.

We might not see Peter’s answer as a big deal today because from this side of the Jesus story we know he is Christ. But for Peter to address Jesus as Christ at that time was a big deal.

To an outsider Jesus was a normal looking man just like you and me, the event happens in the midst of a strong religious culture, surrounded by people with super religious sentiments about God. Calling Jesus as Christ would be considered a heresy, Peter could have been beheaded for saying that.

And that is why Jesus strictly charges them not to tell anybody about him.

Following that revelation by Peter, Jesus then teaches them on what’s going to happen next according to the scriptures. He says “Son of Man must suffer many things and be rejected by the elders and the chief priests and the scribes and be killed, and after three days rise again.

We see here that Peter got the revelation right but when he heard the facts about whats going to happen next, he couldn’t come to terms with what’s going to happen to Jesus, he did not want to such a terrible thing happen to his master whom he loved the most, maybe he was also worried that along with Jesus they will also be punished.

He valued Jesus’s life and their lives on earth more important.

Instead of setting his mind on the heavenly things – the overarching purpose of God glorifying himself through the sacrifice of his son and bringing redemption to human kind.

Peter is influenced by Satan to think from a worldly perspective. He takes Jesus aside and rebukes him.

I’m assuming Peter must have told Jesus, why are you saying that – nothing will happen to you. You’re doing great – A couple of years more and our ministry will flourish and we can be the most popular people on earth. Why are you talking about death.

But Jesus in the presence of all other disciples rebukes Peter and says “Get behind me, Satan! For you are not setting your mind on the things of God, but on the things of man.

And immediately after that Jesus calls the crowd to him along with his disciples and says “If anyone would come after me, let him deny himself and take up his cross and follow me.

As I was trying to imagine the expressions on Jesus’s face, I could sense the seriousness in his eyes and the tone of his voice. If I have to paraphrase that statement it would sound like Jesus telling them that I’m not joking about, I’m serious that if you want to come after me, you better be prepared to deny yourself and take up your cross.

If you think this life here on earth is everything and that your goal in life is make much of yourself. Then you better know that “For whoever would save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for my sake and the gospel’s will save it.

For what does it profit a man to gain the whole world and forfeit his soul?

For whoever is ashamed of me and of my words in this adulterous and sinful generation, of him will the Son of Man also be ashamed when he comes in the glory of his Father with the holy angels.”

Application

This passage has some really good one liner verses that we can pick up and put it on a frame. But its only when we look at the whole passage as a conversation we see what Jesus is actually trying to say to us. They verses are not just meant to be framed and hanged on a wall.

These words of Jesus calls for our serious attention – it changes our perspectives and motives in life.

So, what do we learn from this passage?

I believe in the light of these scriptures the first thing we need to ask ourselves is “Who do we think Jesus is to us?

Now that we are on this other side of the Jesus story where you can see backwards into history, and been in a safe environment we can easily say that “Jesus is Christ”.

But please don’t look at it as a plain statement, anyone on the road can say that along with you if you offer him a price. It’s not just saying or knowing for the matter – it is really about BELIEVING.

But when we talk about believing, does believing Jesus is Christ, the Son of God and believing Donald Trump is the President of America the same thing?

If it is the same thing than Devil himself will say that he believes that Jesus is Christ, the Son of God.

When Jesus came into the world and began to confront the demonic powers of the Devil, they said out loud, “We know who you are. You are the holy one of God. You are the Son of God.”

We don’t say we believe Jesus is Christ because my friend says so, or my parents taught me so. If our belief is based on someone else’s belief than our belief is not a true belief.

Listen.

What is missing is not believing in the fact that Jesus is the Son of God but delighting in that fact, embracing that fact, and making Christ the treasure and the Lord of your life by surrendering to him. Fully putting our faith in Jesus and his finished work on the cross where he offered himself as a sacrifice for our sins, restoring our broken relationship with God the Father against whom we’ve sinned.

True “belief” is seeing him for who he really is, seeing him as infinitely valuable as the Son of God. It’s not just acknowledging the fact that he is the Son but also seeing him as infinitely precious and valuable.

Satan, on the other hand, does not view God as precious and valuable. He hates Christ and Christ is a threat to his own value.

How do we know that we truly believe “Jesus is Christ”?

The answer in is verses 34 – 38

If we truly believe and call ourselves followers of Christ then we will walk by the Spirit and daily deny ourselves, deny to focus on the things of the world, deny to give in to temptations that cause us to stumble – deny ourselves through a lifestyle of repentance and faith.

And endure the pain that comes by denying our self and the world by carrying our cross daily.

It’s on our vision statement, the third point under Jesus.

If we truly believe that Jesus is Christ, the Son of God then we will be willing to lose our lives for the sake of Christ and the Gospel. – Willing to sacrifice everything to take the gospel to those who do not have it. (2 point in our vision statement, under Mission)

If we truly believe that Jesus is Christ, we will not be ashamed of Christ and his words in this adulterous and sinful generation. – we will be distinct from the world in the way we love and serve one another. (2 point in our vision under Family)

If these attributes are absent in our lives. If we only come to church and GC (Gospel Community) because my friend comes here, or my parents brought me here, or because I get to hang out with cool people and spend my Sunday well. Then brothers and sisters, we’ve totally got it wrong.

We are still a blind man and a blind women.

But today as we hear this message Jesus is inviting us, with open arms he is calling us. Calling us to put our trust in him, belief in him. He is willing to fill us with his Spirit that will give us the courage to endure the hardships of this world and to live a life that pleases him.

Lets pray!