The message given in the Sunday night worship service in the Gettysburg United Methodist church. The Bible verses used are 2 Timothy 2:8-19.
The Apostle Paul did a lot of writing.
Most of the New Testament is the letters of Paul to various churches or, as in
this case, to individuals. There are thirteen of Paul’s letters in the
New Testament, some of them pretty long. And I have no doubt that Paul
wrote a lot of other letters which, for whatever reason, are not included in
the Bible.
And yet, for all of his writing, Paul never lost sight of
his essential message. He states it time and time again. It’s the
very first sentence of our reading for tonight. “Remember Jesus Christ,
raised from the dead, descended from David. This is my gospel.”
For all of the things Jesus did while he was on the
earth–for all of his teaching and healing and miracles and driving out demons
and all that–for Paul, these were the essential things to know about
Jesus. He was descended from David, and he was raised from the dead.
Why is that? Why would Paul not focus on the love of
Jesus? Why would Paul not focus on the power of Jesus? Why would
Paul not focus on the wisdom of Jesus? Why are those two facts–that Jesus
was descended from David, and that he was raised from the dead–why are those
two things the essentials of Christian faith, according to Paul?
The reason is because those two things–that Jesus was
descended from David, and that he was raised from the dead–are the two things
that prove Jesus actually is the Messiah. He actually is the
Savior. He actually is the divine Son of God.
After all, there have been lots of people who have talked
about the importance of love, and lots of people who have shown love.
There have been lots of people who had power. There have been lots of
people who have wisdom. And don’t get me wrong, those are all good
things. I’m not criticizing them. But if those things are all that
you know about Jesus–that he loved people, that he had power, that he was
wise–you would not recognize him as the divine Son of God. He might be a
great guy. He might be a great teacher. He might even be a
prophet. But you would not know he was the Savior. You would not
know he was the divine Son of God. To know that, you need to know that
Jesus was descended from David and that he was raised from the dead.
Now, today, we sometimes think, what’s the big deal about
being descended from David? But it was a big deal, and really it still
is, because of the Old Testament prophecies. The Old Testament prophets
had said the Messiah would be descended from David. We read in Jeremiah
Twenty-three, Verse Five, “‘The days are coming,’ declares the Lord, ‘when I
will raise up for David a righteous Branch, a King who will reign wisely and do
what is just and right in the land.’” That’s why the gospels of Matthew
and Luke both give us lengthy genealogies of Jesus, showing that he was, in
fact, descended from David. That Jesus is descended from David was and is
proof that Jesus is the Messiah, the divine Son of God.
But of course, there had been lots of people who had been
descended from David, too. After all, King David lived somewhere around
one thousand B. C. A thousand years later, he’d have had lots of
descendants. Jesus being descended from David was still important, but he
shared that distinction with a lot of other people. What distinguished
Jesus from all those other descendants of David is that he was raised from the
dead.
That’s the proof. Human beings, even great human
beings, are not raised from the dead. When a human being dies, they stay
dead, at least in earthly terms. And when Jesus was killed, everyone
expected that to happen to him, too.
And I mean, everyone.
Even his closest followers. Remember how the women went out to the tomb
on that first Easter morning? They were not going out there to see if
Jesus was in the tomb. They knew he was in the tomb. They were
going out to prepare his body for burial. And when they saw that he was
not there, they did not assume he’d been raised from the dead. They
assumed his body had been moved, and they were trying to figure out where it
had been moved to.
That Jesus had actually been raised from the dead was the
last thing anyone expected. It was the ultimate proof that Jesus was who
he said he was. That he was the Savior, the divine Son of God.
That’s why, when the Pharisees found out what had happened, they bribed the
guards to say that they’d fallen asleep and Jesus’ disciples had stolen the
body. They knew that if the truth came out, if people knew Jesus had been
raised from the dead, they would know who Jesus was. They would know that
he was, in fact, the Messiah.
That’s why, for all the things Paul wrote in his letters, he
made sure this stayed at the forefront–that Jesus was raised from the
dead. No matter what else he wrote about, no matter what other issues he
was dealing with, Paul made sure not to lose that main point–that Jesus was
raised from the dead.
In fact, he said that was so
important that he was willing to endure anything in order to spread the word
about it. He did not care about what might happen to him as a
result. If he died, he’d be with Jesus. Listen to what he says:
“If we died with Him, we will also live with Him. If we endure, we will
also reign with Him.”
That’s faith. That’s an
incredibly strong faith. To say, if I die for Jesus, it’s okay, because
I’ll go to heaven and live with Jesus. And if I don’t die, but simply
have to endure suffering until Jesus comes again, that’s okay, too, because
then I’ll reign with Jesus. Either way, I win.
How strong is your faith?
How strong is my faith? Could we say what Paul said? Could we say
that if I die for Jesus, it’s okay, if I have to endure suffering for Jesus,
that’s okay, too, because as long as I have faith in Jesus, I’ll win?
If not, why not? Because
we’re not the Apostle Paul? Well, we’re not, but is that really an
excuse? I mean, suppose I’m standing before the Lord, and the Lord asks
why I was not able to endure suffering for Jesus, and I say, well, come on, I’m
not the Apostle Paul. You think that’s going to fly?
Paul goes on to say this:
“Do your best to present yourself to God as one approved, a worker who does not
need to be ashamed and who correctly handles the word of truth.”
That phrase, “do your best”, is
important. It’s good news in one sense, because it says God does not
expect perfection from us. God knows we’re going to slip, we’re going to
make mistakes, we’re going to fail. There will be times when our resolve
does not stay firm, when our faith does not stay strong. God knows
perfection is beyond our ability, and God does not expect it of us. God
just wants us to do our best.
But having said that, it’s also
important that we actually do our best. Because it can be really easy to
use that as an excuse, too. “Sure, I’m not as good as the Apostle Paul,
but I’m doing my best.” Now, if that’s actually true, that’s fine.
But here’s the question–are you doing your best? Are you really
doing your best? Am I really doing my best? Or are we
settling for something less? Are we settling for a mediocre faith, a
lukewarm faith, a faith that does not want to make waves or cause problems for
anyone? Including ourselves?
Now, I want to make clear I’m
not saying we need to earn our way into heaven. We go to heaven by our
faith in Jesus Christ, not by the things we do. But if we have faith, we
need to do the things Jesus told us to do. And Jesus told us to go and
make disciples. And to make disciples, we need to make sure people know
who Jesus is. And they cannot know who Jesus is unless they know Jesus
was raised from the dead.
So, we need to do our best–to truly
do our best–to make sure people know who Jesus is. Not because we’re
trying to earn our way into heaven by doing it. But simply because it’s
what Jesus told us to do. Simply because it’s the right thing to
do. Because our goal is to help other people find their way to faith in
Christ. Our goal is to help other people find their way to heaven.
“Remember Jesus Christ, raised
from the dead, descended from David.” That was Paul’s gospel. It
needs to be our gospel, too. And we need to share it with everyone we
can.
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