The message given in the Sunday night service in the Gettysburg United Methodist church on Sunday, February 28, 2021. The Bible verses used are John 12:20-36.
Are you familiar with the Law of Unintended
Consequences? You probably are. Even if you were not aware that it
was called that, you’ve probably seen it in operation. Basically, the Law
of Unintended Consequences says that whenever we make a decision or take an
action, that decision or action will have consequences that we never
intended. And the more complex the situation is about which were making
that decision or taking that action, the larger the unintended consequences are
going to be.
Now,
of course, the Law of Unintended Consequences is a human thing. For God,
there are never any unintended consequences. When God acts, God knows
exactly what all of the consequences will be. And we can see that in the
life and death of Jesus.
In
our reading for tonight, Jesus talks about his death. He knows that he’s
going to be betrayed. The religious authorities are going to arrest
him. He’s going to be beaten and tortured. He’s going to be
sentenced to death. And that sentence is going to be carried out.
But
listen to what Jesus has to say about that. “Very truly I tell you,
unless a kernel of wheat falls to the ground and dies, it remains only a single
seed. But if it dies, it produces many seeds.”
The
religious leaders--the Pharisees, the Sadducees, the teachers of the law, all
the rest--thought that the entire Christian movement rested on the life of
Jesus. And so, they assumed that once Jesus was out of the way, the
movement would collapse. If they could just get rid of Jesus, their problems
would be over.
But
Jesus knew that his death would not be the end of the Christian movement.
It would just be the beginning. Obviously, part of the reason is that
Jesus is who he is--the divine Son of God. But there were other,
practical reasons why this was going to come about, too.
Jesus
knew that as long as he was there, the disciples, and everyone else, would look
to him to be the leader. And that was appropriate, of course. Jesus
was the leader. But the thing is, as long as Jesus was there, the
disciples would never take any initiative on their own. They would always
wait for Jesus to tell them what to do and where to go. They would stick
with Jesus, and follow Jesus. But everything would depend on Jesus.
It would all revolve around him. He would be the single seed that he
talked about.
But
then, the authorities had Jesus killed. And instead of the Christian
movement dying with him, it was born! In dying, Jesus produced many
seeds! And he still is, really. But the disciples took over from
Jesus. They carried his ministry forward. And because there were
more of them, once they went off separately they could cover far more ground
than Jesus ever could while he was on earth. The disciples, and the
others who heard about Jesus from them, spread the gospel all over the world.
And
the disciples going off separately was an unintended consequence of what the
religious leaders did, too. We did not read this tonight, but at first,
the disciples stayed together. They stayed around Jerusalem. But then,
the authorities started coming after them, threatening them with persecution
and arrest. And so, the disciples scattered. They scattered for
their own safety, but they took the gospel of Jesus Christ with them wherever
they went. And the gospel spread, and spread, and spread, all over the
world.
The
religious authorities thought they could stop Christianity by killing
Christ. Instead, they made it grow. The religious authorities
thought they could stop the disciples from spreading Christianity by forcing
them out of Jerusalem. Instead, their actions made Christianity reach
people all over the known world.
Those
were all unintended consequences for the religious authorities. But they
were all intended consequences for God. And Jesus, by his words, shows
that he knew it would happen.
But
it’s not just that these things happened. They happened to glorify
God. That’s referenced three times in Jesus’ statement. He starts
out by saying “The hour has come for the Son of Man to be glorified.”
Later he says, “Father, glorify your name.” And a voice comes from
heaven, saying “I have glorified it, and will glorify it again.”
I
want you to think about this. This struck me as such an awesome thing for
God to have done. You know, we think of the Pharisees, and the Sadducees,
and the rest, as the bad guys in the story of Jesus. And they are, in a
lot of ways. But they were not trying to be the bad guys. They
thought they were doing what God wanted them to do. They wanted God’s
name to be glorified.
And,
as a result of their actions, it was. Talk about an unintended
consequence! The actions of the Pharisees and the Sadducees resulted in
God’s name being glorified, but in a way that never would have occurred to
them. A way they never would’ve dreamed of. A way that never would
have entered their thoughts in any way, shape or form. The Pharisees and
Sadducees had everything completely wrong, and yet God used what they did to
bring about what they actually wanted--God’s name being glorified. That’s
a pretty amazing thing for God to do, don’t you think?
I
sometimes mention Romans Chapter Eight, Verse Twenty-eight, that God can use
all things for the good of those who love Him. But you know, when you
think about it, when the Apostle Paul wrote that, he was really kind of
underselling it. It’s not just that God can use all things for the good
of those who love Him. God can use all things to bring about His
purposes. God can use all things to glorify His name. God can take
the actions of people whose goal is to stop Christianity, to shut it down, to
do away with it, and use those actions to spread the gospel of Jesus Christ and
glorify the name of God. It’s incredible.
And
it should give us a lot of hope. You know, we look at the world, and we
see a lot of things going wrong. It’s not just the corona virus, although
that’s obvious a major one. It’s violence. It’s lack of
trust. It’s economic problems. It’s isolation and depression.
It’s failed relationships. It’s loneliness. We could go on and on
about the problems of the world.
And
it seems like there are a lot of people opposed to Christianity right now,
too. We don’t feel that as much here, because of where we live, but we’d
be foolish to think we’re immune from it. Churches are forced to
close. Pastors are threatened with jail for continuing to preach to live
audiences. Things that have been basic tenets of Christianity for
centuries are now called “offensive” and are censored. Christians often
censor themselves, and don’t want to talk about their faith, because they don’t
want to upset anyone. And in other countries it’s even worse. There
are places where people are literally killed for the Christian faith.
When
we think about these things, we can get depressed. We wonder what the
future holds. But we don’t have to be depressed. As the old hymn
says, we may not know what the future holds, but we know Who holds the
future. We know that it’s all in God’s hands. We know that God
remains in control. God always has been in control, and God always will
be in control. And God is going to work all these things to bring about
God’s purposes.
Anyone who thinks
they can stop Christianity is doomed to failure. They are as doomed to
failure as the Pharisees and the Sadducees were when they killed Jesus.
They may think they’re winning. Everyone around may think they’re
winning, too. But they’re not. They are going to see the Law of Unintended
Consequences take effect, big time. Or, another way to put it is that
they are going to see the Law of God’s Intended Consequences take effect, big
time.
Christianity
cannot be killed, just as Jesus could not be killed. And anyone who tries
is only going to see their actions result in Christianity growing all the
more. And they’re going to see God’s name glorified. God has
glorified His name, and He will glorify it again.
So, no matter what
you see around you, do not give up hope. Do not lose faith. Know
that God is still here. God sees everything that’s happening. And
God is going to use it all. God is using it all now, in ways that we do
not know and cannot see. We talk about God being all-powerful, and of
course that’s true, but even though we say it I don’t know if we actually
realize how true that statement is. Even when we think of all the amazing
things God has done, I don’t think we come anywhere close to realizing the
incredible, awesome power God has. We also don’t come anywhere close to
realizing the incredible, awesome love God has for us, that God would use God’s
power for our good.
God cannot be
stopped. God cannot even be slowed down. Everything that’s
happening now is being used by God. The single seed is falling into the
ground. It is going to produce more seeds that we can ever imagine.
God’s name will be glorified. That may be an unintended consequence of
what humans do. But it’s a consequence that’s fully intended by God.
No comments:
Post a Comment