The Sunday night message given in the Gettysburg United Methodist church August 27, 2023. The Bible verses used are Mark 12:35-44.
Have you ever talked to someone on the phone, or
met them online, or maybe heard them on the radio or something, but never
actually seen them? You get kind of a mental picture of what you think
they look like, right? And then you actually see them, and--you get
confused. Because they don’t look anything like what you thought they’d
look like. Your mental picture of them turns out to be completely wrong.
I bring this up
because one of the things that confused the religious leaders of Jesus’ day is
that they all had a mental picture of what the Messiah would be like. Not
just his looks, but his actions, his beliefs, everything. The Messiah
would be the Son of David. The Messiah would come as a conqueror.
The Messiah would raise an army, defeat the Romans, and re-establish the
Kingdom of Israel. And, of course, the Messiah would make sure the
Pharisees and the teachers of the law and all the other religious leaders had a
prominent place in the kingdom once it was established.
And then, here
comes Jesus, and he’s nothing like what the Messiah was “supposed” to be
like. He had no interest in establishing an earthly kingdom. He did
not want to fight the enemies of Israel--in fact, he said people should love
their enemies. He did not try to raise an army--he preached a gospel of
peace. And he had no particular use for the Pharisees or the teachers of
the law or any other religious leaders of his time.
It was not only
that, though. Jesus simply did not see things the way the Messiah was
“supposed” to see them. Jesus turned all the established rules on their
head. And we have three examples of that today.
We start out with the idea that the Messiah would be the
Son of David. Now, the genealogies of Jesus, as set forth in Matthew and
in Luke, establish that Jesus was, in earthly terms, descended from King
David. But Jesus says, worrying about that misses the point. David
himself said so. Jesus said, David calls the Messiah “Lord”. David
would not call his son “Lord”. So, the Messiah must not be his son.
We’re told that
the crowd around Jesus listened with delight. We’re not told how the
Pharisees or other religious leaders reacted. But it’s not hard to guess
that they were not very pleased. “Everybody knew” that the Messiah would
be descended from David. For Jesus to say that did not matter--well, that
was outrageous. It certainly was not something the Messiah would say.
Then, Jesus says something even more
outrageous. He tells people to watch out for the teachers of the law, and
not in a good way. Jesus said the teachers of the law were
arrogant. They made a big show of how great they thought they were, and
they expected everyone else to think they were great, too. Jesus says,
“These men will be punished most severely.”
Again, we’re not
told how the teachers of the law reacted, but I’m pretty sure they were not happy
about it. These were the people the Messiah was supposed to love and
bring to prominence. These were the people who were supposed to get the
top spots in the new kingdom of Israel. To say they would be severely
punished--well, again, that’s just not something the Messiah would say.
Then Jesus goes to the temple. He watches people put
their money into the treasury. He sees some people put in big
amounts. Then, a poor widow comes by and puts in a few cents. And
Jesus says her contribution was more valuable than all the others, because she
has put in everything she has to live on.
And again, the
religious authorities were outraged. Does Jesus not know how much money
it takes to run the temple? Does Jesus not know how many salaries have to
be paid, how much the supplies cost? How can Jesus say this little bit
that the poor widow put in is more valuable than the big donations? I
mean, yeah, we get that she put in as much as she could, but if everybody put
that little in, we’d never make it. We need the heavy hitters, the big
contributors.
Now, it’s not
that Jesus did not understand economics. And note, he does not criticize
the wealthy people for the amounts they put in. He does not say their
contributions are unimportant or are not valued. His point is that most
of us, no matter our financial status, put in what we can afford. This
woman put in everything she had. She did not worry about whether she
could afford it. She was completely sold out for God. And that’s what
the religious authorities could not understand. It just did not sound
like something the Messiah would say.
Now, we look at this, from our perspective, and we wonder
how the religious authorities could be so dense. How could they not
understand what Jesus was saying? How could they not see how wrong they
were? What was wrong with those people?
And yet, are
those religious leaders really all that different from you and me? How
many times do we just kind of ignore what Jesus said, because it does not fit
our mental image of what the Savior should be and what the Savior should
say? I mean, we might pay lip service to it. We might say, yeah,
that’s what we ought to do. That’s how we should live. But then, so
many times, we don’t live it out. We just keep living like we have been,
because what Jesus told us to do does not fit what we want the Savior to say.
And again, I do
this, too. I know I say that a lot, but I never want anyone to think that
I’m standing here thinking I’m better than you. I don’t want this to
sound like I think I get this and you don’t. There are many, many times,
as a pastor, that you preach to yourself as much as you preach to anyone else,
and this is definitely one of those times. I struggle with this at least
as much as anyone else.
But think of some
of the things Jesus said, and think of how little we tend to live those things
out. “Love your enemies”. How many of us do that? How many of
us even try? I mean, maybe we do it in theory, but what actions do we
take to show that we love our enemies?
“If someone
strikes you on the right cheek, turn to them the other also.” How many of
us have ever done that? I mean, even once, much less as a regular
practice? It just does not fit the way we think a person should live
their life.
“Do to others as
you would like others to do to you.” Again, it sounds good in theory, but
do we actually live it out? Too often, we treat others as they actually
treat us, not as we’d like them to treat us. If people are nice to us,
we’re nice to them. If they don’t treat us well, we don’t treat them
well, either. Again, it just does not fit with how we think people should
live.
“Give to everyone
who asks you, and if anyone takes what belongs to you, do not demand it
back.” That one does not even make sense to us, does it? Did Jesus
not understand human nature? If we give to everyone who asks, we won’t
have anything left. Why would Jesus even say such a thing?
“Whoever believes
in the Son is not condemned, but whoever does not believe is condemned
already.” But God loves everyone, right? Why would God condemn
people for not believing in Jesus? I mean, sure, maybe murderers and
people like that, but why would God condemn good people, people who love others
and do things for others, just because they don’t believe in Jesus? That
cannot be right.
We could go on and on. The point is that we tend
to try to make Jesus fit our image of what the Savior should be, just like the
Pharisees and the other religious authorities tried to make Jesus fit their
image of what the Savior should be. And when Jesus’ words do not fit our
image, we tend to ignore them, or try to explain them away, or try to come up
with some reason why Jesus did not actually mean what he said. We don’t
want to adjust our image to the reality of Jesus. Instead, we want to
adjust the reality of Jesus to fit our image.
God understands
why we do that. God will forgive us for it, if we ask Him to. But
God does not want us to keep doing it. God wants us to forget our image
of what the Savior should be. God wants us to believe in the Savior that
is. God wants us to hear the words of Jesus and take them
seriously. It’s only by doing that, that we can say we truly believe in
Jesus Christ, rather than just believing in our image of Jesus Christ.
So let’s take an honest look at the words of
Jesus. Let’s not ignore what he said. Let’s not explain it
away. Let’s not come up with reasons why Jesus was not serious about
it. Let’s really look at Jesus’ words. Let’s take them to
heart. And then, let’s ask for God’s help in living them out. Let’s
not worship the Savior who fits our image. Let’s worship the real Savior,
Jesus Christ.
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