090301 Beat Him, Join Him, Or Crucify Him 01 Get In Or Get Out - Presentation Transcript
Get In or Get Out! Matthew 12:22-32
Jesus continually ranks at the top of the list of admired people
Even non-Christians regard Jesus as:
Great teacher
Great leader
Great visionary
Even today, he is the subject of:
Magazine articles
Documentaries
Coffee shop dialogues
Popularity like no other person in history
So why did his contemporaries kill him?
What was so upsetting about him that:
Religious leaders wanted him dead
Secular leaders were willing to kill him
Crowds that had followed him turned on him
Men demanded his blood & cheered his pain
If Jesus was the gentle genius some portray, how could this have happened?
The not-so-meek-and-mild Jesus
More than:
Gentle soul
Poetic philosopher
Insipid preacher
Innofensive friend
Innocuous celebrity
He was the light of heaven on a dark world
Jesus was not:
Politically correct
Religiously pious
Socially tame
Jesus was dangerous:
Made claims that people couldn’t take
Gave commands that left people undone
Named realities that others sought to bury
Broke barriers no one else would assault
Dismantled the status quo
Do we know this radical Jesus?
Or is our Jesus so domesticated that he:
No longer disturbs us
No longer disrupts us
No longer disciples us
What do we do with the Jesus who says “Get in or get out”?
Matthew 6:24 NIV “No one can serve two masters. Either he will hate the one and love the other, or he will be devoted to the one and despise the other. You cannot serve both God and Money.”
Matthew 12:25 NIV … “Every kingdom divided against itself will be ruined, and every city or household divided against itself will not stand.”
What do we do with the Jesus who says “Get in or get out”?
Matthew 12:30 NIV “He who is not with me is against me, and he who does not gather with me scatters.
What do you do with the Jesus who says: Get off the fence!
Walking the Fence
We live in a fence-walking world
Comfortable with:
Partial commitments
Hedged bets
Associate memberships
Part of the game from the safety of the stands
Stick to principles, if no personal cost
Boast of successes, distance from setbacks
Want sane lives, with the perks of “success”
Homer worked up courage to propose to the girl of his dreams
“ Sue, I know I’m not:
Wealthy like Tom
Handsome like Tom
Cultured like Tom
Romantic like Tom
But I love you.”
“ I love you too, Homer…
But tell me more about Tom!”
Fence-walking with God
“ Take my life and leave me be …”
Manly version:
“ Take my wife and let her be Consecrated, Lord, to thee. Take my children as thine own As for me, I’ll stay at home.”
Hard to get that “consecrated” part down
As they say in Texas Hold ‘Em, to go “all in”
Not that we’re not interested in God, just wary of full investment
Wilbur Rees put it this way:
“ I would like to buy $3 worth of God, please – not enough to explode my soul or disturb my sleep, but just enough to equal a cup of warm milk or a snooze in the sunshine. I don’t want enough of him to make me love a black man or pick beets with a migrant worker. I want ecstasy, not transformation; I want the warmth of a womb, not a new birth. I want a pound of the Eternal in a paper sack. I’d like to buy just $3 worth of God, please.”
God is not interested in partial investments & divided loyalties
A religious leader can build quite a following by pretending otherwise
Suggesting that God is mainly interested in some fine-tuning of our personalities
That he’s content so long as we’re spending time & money on him on Sundays, even if we’re dallying with Tom the rest of the week
Gordon MacDonald explains why:
“ When the crowd got too large, [Jesus] would inevitably sharpen the blade of his teaching. He would make it clearer that there was a dramatic cost to discipleship.
“ It was almost as if he were saying the size of this crowd suggests that you haven’t heard me plainly enough or some of you wouldn’t be here; so let me give it to you another way. And when he finished restating his message, many would then leave because they finally understood that no one can remain in the presence of Christ and be merely a very nice person.”
Crazy Sound Bites
To Christians at Laodicea
Revelation 3:15-16 MSG "I know you inside and out, and find little to my liking. You're not cold, you're not hot--far better to be either cold or hot! (16) You're stale. You're stagnant. You make me want to vomit.
Possible interpretations:
Jesus prefers opposition (cold) to indifference
A tale of two coffees:
Hot on a cold day; cold on a hot day
Lukewarm? Never! Lost its distinctiveness!
Supposed to be different from environment, not like it!
Described life with God in terms of
Leaving behind:
Parents & family
Safe boats
Professions
Possessions
Denying self
Not intrinsically wrong
Jesus is not:
Anti-family
Anti-safety
Anti-possessions
Anti-self
He calls the question
Pursue them the world’s way
Pursue them his way
He is asking:
Where are you standing?
Who & what do you really love?
Where are you planting?
What fruit is it producing?
Are you straddling the fence?
We’ll examine ourselves the next six weeks?
Hope to see three results:
Our character will be more consistent with our claims
Need to see where our lives are fragmented
God will work on us & improve our character & influence
The world has plenty of people just like us today
Running on their own power, driven by anxiety, fear, or anger
If we are really going to be the salt & light of the world
We have to get off the fence & align ourselves with God
Ultimate fruit of spiritual discipline is greater joy
Discipline is not a word we associate with joy
Hebrews 12:2 NIV Let us fix our eyes on Jesus, the author and perfecter of our faith, who for the joy set before him endured the cross, scorning its shame, and sat down at the right hand of the throne of God.
No wonder they crucified him!
Matthew 7:24-27 NIV
“ Therefore everyone who hears these words of mine and puts them into practice is like a wise man who built his house on the rock. (25) The rain came down, the streams rose, and the winds blew and beat against that house; yet it did not fall, because it had its foundation on the rock.
Matthew 7:24-27 NIV
(26) But everyone who hears these words of mine and does not put them into practice is like a foolish man who built his house on sand. (27) The rain came down, the streams rose, and the winds blew and beat against that house, and it fell with a great crash.”
How would Jesus have affected you, if you had been there?
I’d like to believe that I’d have heard the Spirit of God speaking through him
“ Could this be the Son of David,” the promised Savior? How do I walk with Him?
But I might have been more like the Pharisees
Certain that change was mostly what others needed
I might have done the unforgivable thing – regarding the Spirit of God, still trying to reach me, as evil
I might have been so smug in my niceness & stuck in my religion as to say, How do we get rid of this man?
How about you?
Edward Sandford Martin:
“ Within my earthly temple there’s a crowd. There’s one of us that’s humble; one that’s proud. There’s one that’s broken-hearted for his sins, And one who, unrepentant, sits and grins. There’s one who loves his neighbor as himself, And one who cares for naught but fame and pelf. From much corroding care would I be free If once I could determine which is me.
Who are you? Who, with Christ’s help, can you become? Are you willing to make a choice? Or, would you rather just crucify him?
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