December 1, 2013

God's Miraculous Plan of Salvation - Dec 1, 2013

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SERMON:

If you’ve ever seen a fireworks display put on by a large city you know how it works. The pyrotechnics that begin the show don’t come close to matching those that erupt at the finally. But, if you watch those early explosions closely you’ll be able to gauge how big the finally will be. The colors, the size of the blasts, the shapes of the blasts, and the height of the detonations—all foreshadow what’s coming.

The same is true of the events preceding the birth of Jesus Christ. The birth of Christ was an unprecedented event. God had never been human before. When the Son of God was born in a stable in the outskirts of Bethlehem, it was a miracle to rival all miracles.

And to prepare the world for the birth of its Savior, God arranged a succession of lesser miraculous to occur. These miraculous events have been recorded for us in the Gospels of Matthew and Luke. This year, as we go about making all of our outward preparations to celebrate Christmas, we’ll also pause to prepare our hearts as well by reading about the miracles that preceded our Savior’s birth.

Each of the miracles we’ll be examining is marked by the appearance of an angel of God. These messengers were sent from heaven to give people details about how God was carrying out his plan to save mankind from sin and hell.

Today’s angel appears to an old priest named Zacharias.

Luke 1:5-12 (NASB)

    5   In the days of Herod, king of Judea, there was a priest named Zacharias, of the division of Abijah; and he had a wife from the daughters of Aaron, and her name was Elizabeth.
    6   They were both righteous in the sight of God, walking blamelessly in all the commandments and requirements of the Lord.
    7   But they had no child, because Elizabeth was barren, and they were both advanced in years.
    8   Now it happened that while he was performing his priestly service before God in the appointed order of his division,
    9   according to the custom of the priestly office, he was chosen by lot to enter the temple of the Lord and burn incense.
  10   And the whole multitude of the people were in prayer outside at the hour of the incense offering.
  11   And an angel of the Lord appeared to him, standing to the right of the altar of incense.
  12   Zacharias was troubled when he saw the angel, and fear gripped him.
We’ll pause there for now.

Luke has just given us the background on which to see a miracle take place. The time is around 6 B.C. King Herod is reigning. The place is Judea. Jerusalem to be exact, where the temple of the Lord stood.

Luke introduces two characters in this drama—Zacharias and his wife Elizabeth. A priest and his wife. Luke describes these people as “righteous in the sight of God”. That is to say, they were true followers of the God of the Bible. They trusted in him and ordered their lives according to his word as well, as any sinful human couple can.

Interestingly, Luke includes the fact that they had no children because Elizabeth was unable to bear children. And while there might have been hope for children earlier in their lives, now that hope was gone—for they were now well beyond their childbearing years.

Have you figured out what miracle God is about to do? Luke is pretty much telegraphing what’s going to happen. And in a way, so is God. You can almost imagine God’s train of thought…

“Hmm. I’m going to need someone to get the people ready to meet their Savior. I know!  I’ll have this someone born to parents who couldn’t have a child without a miracle happening. That’ll get the people’s attention. That’ll help them see MY hand is at work here. That’ll warm prepare them for the even more miraculous birth of my Son.”
After painting the background, Luke sets out the scene for Zacharias’ meeting with one of God’s angels.

Luke says that Zacharias was part of the priestly division of Abijah. There were a lot of things to take care of at the Lord’s temple. People came to worship and offer sacrifices to God on a daily basis. So, a lot of priests were needed. The different divisions of priests were essentially “worship teams” who took turns serving at the Lord’s temple.

One of the great honors for a priest was to be selected as the one who got to go into the Holy Place of the temple to burn incense to the Lord. Zacharias was chosen at random for this task. This was a pretty exciting thing for Zacharias. This might happen once in a priest’s life.

And so up the stairs he went, bearing the incense and the fire, and in through the door of the temple. This wasn’t a public event. Only priests were allowed into the temple proper. Everyone else had to wait outside. And when the incense was offered, only the selected priest was there. It must have been quite a sobering and awe inspiring experience for Zacharias.

And though he did not know it, Zacharias had already been touched by the miracle working hand of God. It wasn’t mere luck which had caused Zacharias to be born into the family of Aaron, the only family allowed to be priests in Israel. It hadn’t been mere chance which had brought the division of Abijah to serve during this week of the year. It wasn’t just the “luck of the draw” that caused Zacharias to be chosen at random to offer incense on this day. The Lord had wanted Zacharias here, in this empty room, on this day. He had an important message to give him.

In the book of Psalms David wrote…

“...all the days ordained for me were written in your book before one of them came to be” (Psalms 139:16 NIV).

God did not create the universe just to yield it up to time and chance. He is active in his creation. With purpose and a plan he drops opportunities into our lives and moves us from one place to another. In the same way that God brought Zacharias to that altar of incense, he has also brought us to this place of worship today. Through his guiding of our lives, and through his powerful Word, the Lord intends to bless and effect us.
So much for the little miracles of time and place in the life of Zacharias. Let’s get to the bigger, more obvious miracles. Verse 11…

Luke 1:11-13 (NASB)

  11   And an angel of the Lord appeared to him, standing to the right of the altar of incense.
  12   Zacharias was troubled when he saw the angel, and fear gripped him.
  13   But the angel said to him, “Do not be afraid, Zacharias, for your petition has been heard, and your wife Elizabeth will bear you a son, and you will give him the name John.
  14   “You will have joy and gladness, and many will rejoice at his birth.
  15   “For he will be great in the sight of the Lord; and he will drink no wine or liquor, and he will be filled with the Holy Spirit while yet in his mother’s womb.
  16   “And he will turn many of the sons of Israel back to the Lord their God.
  17   “It is he who will go as a forerunner before Him in the spirit and power of Elijah, to turn the hearts of the fathers back to the children, and the disobedient to the attitude of the righteous, so as to make ready a people prepared for the Lord.”
If you were to ask Zacharias if he had ever experienced a miracle, he’d probably mention that one time when he got a visit from one of the Lord’s angels. But there’s more miracles going on here than just that. When the angel opened his mouth to speak, a flood of prophecies came out. Prophesies that would later come true.

First of all, his old wife was going to have a child! The angel said that his prayer had been heard and would soon be answered with a resounding, “Yes.” How long ago had Zacharias prayed for that blessing? We have no way of knowing. But we can guess it wasn’t just yesterday! We ought to remember the flabbergasted Zacharias when we feel like God isn’t listening to our prayers. He marks each and every request from his followers. And he answers in his own time, according to his own plan, and in the way that his supreme wisdom deems best.

Not only would Zacharias have a son of his own, the angel told him that his son would be “filled with the Holy Spirit” right from his beginning. This was a miracle in itself. The Spirit of God would be with this child! Endowed with God’s power and presence, he was to serve the Lord.

And this child would perform miracles of his own. He would “turn many of the sons of Israel back to the Lord their God.” Human beings are born into this world as sinful creatures. Creatures infected with sin, whose hearts are set against their creator. But John would turn sinners back to God through the stern preaching of God’s Law, and the joyful preaching of God’s forgiveness which comes through the Christ.

And while many prophets of the Lord had performed this task through Israel’s long history, John would be special. He was to be the “forerunner” of the Savior. He would get the people ready for the Lord’s arrival in the flesh.
In years to come, people would look back on all these prophesies and see that they came to pass just as the angel had said. And this fact would strengthen their trust in the God of their salvation.

Today, this story moves OUR hearts to trust more fully in God’s plan of salvation. What God says, he does! Through prophecy and fulfillment in the past, God encourages us to trust him to keep his promises about our future. Through his faithfulness he penetrates our hearts and changes the way we look at the world. If he says something is sinful and damaging, we ought to believe him. If he says that our sins have been forgiven through the sacrifice of his Son, we ought to believe him.

But the hearts of mankind are hard and unfeeling when it comes to spiritual truth. And that much is seen here in Zacharias. For in the face of all these joyful and miraculous promises, Zacharias could only see the impossible. Verse 18…

Luke 1:18-20 (NASB)

  18   Zacharias said to the angel, “How will I know this for certain? For I am an old man and my wife is advanced in years.”
  19   The angel answered and said to him, “I am Gabriel, who stands in the presence of God, and I have been sent to speak to you and to bring you this good news.
  20   “And behold, you shall be silent and unable to speak until the day when these things take place, because you did not believe my words, which will be fulfilled in their proper time.”
There he stood, chosen to offer the incense at the Lord’s temple for what would probably been the only time in his life. There before him stood an angel of God, again, for what would probably be the only time in his earthly life. God promised him that he would have a son in his old age. Moreover, that son would be a servant of God and would precede the Savior’s entrance into the world. And yet among all these miraculous promises Zacharias seizes on one thing: the physical impossibility of his barren wife conceiving and giving birth to a child.

In the presence of God’s promises, doubt is an ugly thing.

I’m not sure if angels feel distain for human doubt. But you can at least sense a tone of unbelieving rebuke in the angel’s response to Zacharias.

“I’m sorry, maybe you don’t understand who I am, or who I come from. So let me make it clear. I AM GABRIEL. I spend most of my time next to the throne of GOD. But now I’m here because the GOD OF THE UNIVERSE has dispatched me with a bit of GOOD NEWS for you.”

Perhaps it was at this time that the needle on Zacharias’ “fear meter” started to redline. But it was too late. What was said, was said. And now he would receive a firm, but gentle, rebuke from God’s messenger. He would be unable to speak until the things Gabriel foretold had taken place.
Did you see what happened to God’s plan when Zacharias threw his “doubt” grenade? Nothing.

God had promised Adam and Eve that he would send a Savior to erase the fate their sins had attached to them. But God wasn’t about to back out on his promise because of some doubting Judean priest. Like Gabriel said, all these things would be “fulfilled in their proper time.”

And we can take a lesson from this. God’s miraculous plan of salvation was not stopped by human doubt, because God’s plan of salvation doesn’t depend on us. It’s a promise God made, and God fulfilled.

And when it comes to our own doubt, God has more than enough power to overcome that ugly wart. When the world causes us to doubt the reliability of the Bible, God says, “Compare what I’ve written to what you see in the world. You’ll see that it matches perfectly.”

When the world causes us to doubt the existence of a God who is active in human history, God says, “Check out all the prophesies about my Son’s birth, life, death, and resurrection from the grave. You’ll see that they’ve all been fulfilled.”

And when the devil himself causes us to wonder if God really forgives our darkest and ugliest sins, God says, “Who you gonna trust? The one who brought sin into the world, or the God who sent his own Son to save you from hell? Are you really forgiven because of what Jesus suffered in your place? You bet you are. That’s what all these miracles I’ve been doing are meant to show you. I’m bigger than your doubt. I’m your Savior. And what I say will be, will be.”
When you see the fireworks display for the first time as a child, there’s nothing quite like it. It dazzles your eyes and opens up a world of wonder in the sky above. And the next year you go out to see it again.

It’s the same with Christmas. We’ve seen in before. We’ve seen the fireworks that come before, and we’ve seen the finally. But don’t let that mute your amazement. Instead, as we move through these days of Advent, let’s think on how God has laid miracle after miracle before our eyes through the Scriptures. And all of them to point us to the miracle forgiveness that comes to us through his Son.

This Christmas, may God bury our all our foolish doubt with the miracle of his forgiving love, laid to rest in Bethlehem’s manger.

Amen.

November 28, 2013

Expressions of a Thankful Heart - Nov 28, 2013

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SERMON:

Thanksgiving has been celebrated in our country ever since 1863. During that year, in the middle of the Civil War, President Abraham Lincoln made a proclamation to the citizens of America. They were to “set apart and observe the last Thursday of November, as the day of Thanksgiving and Praise to our beneficent Father who dwells in the Heavens.”

Of course, that wasn’t the first time thankfulness had ever been expressed. People have been thanking God, and thanking each other since the beginning of the world. In the book of Genesis we read about how Cain and Abel offered the first-fruits of farm and herd on an altar, as an expression of gratitude to God. Down through the ages people have expressed their gratitude to each other by giving gifts, sending cards, making speeches, and in countless other ways.

When we thank someone, we’re not trying to pay someone back for the good they’ve done. We’re simply saying, “I value you.”

Different cultures go about thanking people in different ways. In Japanese culture, when a person gives a gift they often denigrate their gift. They say how terrible and pathetic their gift really is. They apologize for giving such a substandard gift. In America we do the opposite. We often talk the gift up, describing how it’s the newest and the best. Interestingly, both cultures are  trying to say the same thing.

The Japanese gift giver denigrates their gift as a way of saying, “There is nothing that I could possibly give you that would come close to matching how valuable you are.” The American gift giver brags up their gift as a way of saying, “You’re so valuable, I would only dare give you the best there is.” Isn’t that funny? Both cultures are trying to say the same thing, they’re just going about it from different angles.

So, what is the best way to say, “I value you.” I suppose there are as many ways to say thank you, as there are people to thank. 

Today, to help us learn how to thank “our beneficent Father who dwells in the Heavens”,  we’ll see how King David and the leaders of Israel expressed their thankfulness to God. May the Holy Spirit use these words to teach our hearts. Amen.

1 Chronicles 29:10-14 (ESV)

10 Therefore David blessed the Lord in the presence of all the assembly. And David said: “Blessed are you, O Lord, the God of Israel our father, forever and ever. 11 Yours, O Lord, is the greatness and the power and the glory and the victory and the majesty, for all that is in the heavens and in the earth is yours. Yours is the kingdom, O Lord, and you are exalted as head above all. 12 Both riches and honor come from you, and you rule over all. In your hand are power and might, and in your hand it is to make great and to give strength to all. 13 And now we thank you, our God, and praise your glorious name.
14 “But who am I, and what is my people, that we should be able thus to offer willingly? For all things come from you, and of your own have we given you.
King David and the leaders of the Tribes of Israel were thankful to the LORD for all that he had done for them. If it weren’t for the LORD’s actions year ago, their people would probably still be slaves in Egypt. But the LORD had led them out of Egypt with a mighty hand.

Then came their forty-year wandering in the wilderness. The LORD had watched over them there, even though they were a rebellious and unthankful people. He sustained them with bread from heaven, and brought them to the borders of a rich new land.

They wouldn’t have had the power, or the courage to take this new land for themselves. But the LORD gave them victory after victory until the land was theirs. It was God’s gift to them.

And in the following years, when the nations around Israel rose up to raid their land, the LORD caused great heroes to come forward from the people to beat back the invaders.

And throughout all of this he had blessed their land each year with harvest after harvest, with children and grandchildren, with blessing after blessing. And in recent years he had granted them their wish—to have a king. And David was now that good king.
For all these things, David and the leaders of Israel were thankful. And their thanks is expressed in a number of ways here in our text.

First of all, we see their thankfulness to God displayed in David’s prayer. This was a public prayer. The people were gathered and heard David’s words. In his prayer David recognizes God’s great glory, his ownership of all things, and his rule over all people.

Furthermore, David also recognizes the LORD as the source of all riches and honor given to man. David and his fellow leaders of Israel would not have had the wealth and honor they did if it weren’t for the LORD, and they knew it. God had given their nation its greatness and strength, and David says as much in his prayer.

When it comes to thanking the LORD, praising God with our words is one of the best ways. We do this when we pause during the day to send our inner prayers to God. Prayers of gratitude for the many daily joys he sends us. Thankful prayers for the food he sets before us. Thankful prayers for the special people the LORD has placed in our lives.

We praise God with our words at church too, when we sing hymns together. When we confess our faith in the words of the Apostles’ Creed, or some other expression trust in God’s Word. We praise God when we lift up our hearts to him in prayer as one people.

Whenever we speak about the LORD to others we are performing an act of worship. When we let the Word of God govern what we say and how we say it, then also we are praising God. Honoring him with our lips.

In all these things we are doing the same thing David did—we are saying, “LORD, I value you.”
We also see the thankfulness of David and the leaders of Israel displayed in their generosity. In verse 14 David prays,

“But who am I, and what is my people, that we should be able thus to offer willingly?” (1 Chronicles 29:14 ESV).

To understand what David is talking about you have to skip back a few paragraphs in this chapter. You see, the Temple had not yet been built. The LORD was still being worshipped in the movable “tent” that the Israelite had carried along their journeys. David had wanted to change all that. He wanted to build God a glorious Temple where the people could come to worship him properly. But God had told David that was a job set aside for David’s son Solomon.

But that didn’t prevent David from getting the temple materials ready. And so David gathered up gold, silver, bronze, wood, precious stones, and marble. But David didn’t just raid the nation’s treasury to provide all these things, David also dipped into his own personal wealth. We’re told that David gave three thousand talents of gold, and seven thousand talents of silver toward the building of the Lord’s Temple. In our measurements today, that’s about 110 tons of gold and 260 tons of silver. That’s 4.6 billion dollars worth of precious metals.

When the leaders of the Tribes of Israel found out about David’s generosity, they chipped in their own offering with 190 tons of gold, 375 tons of silver, 675 tons of bronze, and 3,750 tons of iron. That’s about 8.1 billion dollars worth. Not to overstress the point, but we’re talking about 12.7 billion dollars worth of freewill offerings to build the LORD’s Temple!

Of course, these offerings would only be true expressions of thankfulness to God if they were given as a genuine expression of devotion and not just as a way of looking good to other people. But David and company knew that all too well. And David prays in a later verse,

“I know, my God, that you test the heart and are pleased with integrity. All these things have I given willingly and with honest intent. And now I have seen with joy how willingly your people who are here have given to you” (1 Chronicles 29:17 NIV).

Human beings are not generally inclined to give with generosity. But a thankful heart responds in this way. When we give our time, our effort, or our possessions to the LORD’s service, we are praising him. These are acts of worship when they come, as David describes, from a willing and honest heart. And when that happens, God hears what we’re saying. He hears, “LORD, I value you.”
And this leads us to see the third way in which the thankfulness of David and the leaders of Israel was displayed. We see their thankfulness displayed in their humility.

In verse 14 David prays,

“But who am I, and what is my people, that we should be able thus to offer willingly?” (1 Chronicles 29:14 ESV).

And he adds…

“For all things come from you, and of your own have we given you” (1 Chronicles 29:14 ESV).

If we really want to grow more thankful toward God, we have to start with humility. I’m not sure anyone can truly be thankful without becoming humble first. If we feel entitled to what the LORD gives, can we really be thankful to him? Or, if we feel like our blessings come to us because we’re so talented and hard-working, can we really be thankful to God? No.

David expresses the right attitude to have, “God, we don’t deserve these things. But you’ve given them to us because you’re an amazing God. And anything we happen to give back is really something we got from you already. So gracious accept our child-like gifts as an expression of this fact—we value you.”
When the LORD teaches us humility, an amazing thing happens. HUMILITY toward God is like rich soil. And from this soil springs up a little sprout called GLADNESS. We look at what we have, be it little or much, and are glad to be blessed by God. And if that little sprout of gladness grows up it becomes THANKFULNESS. Thankfulness to God that expresses itself in word, deed, and attitude. And when this plant matures it becomes CONTENTMENT. And we feel that whatever we have at the moment, that is enough. God will provide what we need, when we need it. And this contentment flowers in the form of lasting PEACE. And we know that come what may, God has our back. We don’t have to scrabble around and worry about what tomorrow will bring. The great God who brought us to this day will carry us tomorrow. He knows who we are, and what we need. He knows all we are with our ugly sins and bad habits, and amazingly—he loves us anyway.
God didn’t bless King David and the nation of Israel because they were such thankful and thoughtful people. He blessed them because he loved them. The thankfulness came later, as a result of God’s goodness.

And there was another reason why he watched over them from Egypt to the Promised Land and beyond. It was from these people that the Messiah would be born—the Savior of the world. When the Son of God was born as a human child, he was born in the nation of Israel.

That’s how God works. He blesses people who don’t deserve it, so that they might turn to him and see his love. And when they see that he is a gracious and loving God, then he can then show them the greatest gift that he has in store for them—forgiveness for their sins. Forgiveness that was earned when the Son of God gave HIMSELF to suffer the penalty for our sins.
One hundred and fifty years ago, the people of America celebrated Thanksgiving Day for the first time. A day set aside to thank and praise our “beneficent Father who dwells in the heavens.”

Today, let’s celebrate Thanksgiving right. By praising the LORD with our words, with our generosity, and with a humble heart that continually looks to the God of the Bible as OUR God, and the source of all things good.

Amen. 

November 24, 2013

The Lukewarm Church - Nov 24, 2013 (Bonus Sermon to Finish the Series)

This Sunday we finished our series on the seven letters to the seven churches in Revelation. However, we didn't get to actually talk about the last church. Here's a sermon from a few years ago addressing the last church of Revelation. Sorry I couldn't post the audio for this sermon today. -Pastor Caleb Schaller

SERMON:

In the beginning of the book of Revelation Jesus appears to the Apostle John on the island of Patmos. In a powerful vision Jesus instructed John to write down seven messages that were to be sent to seven churches located in Asia minor.

In these letters Jesus speaks directly to specific congregations. He reveals their problems. He praises their accomplishments. He warns them of dangers. And comforts them in the way that only our Savior can.

Today we consider the message that Jesus spoke for the Christians at Laodicea:
Revelation 3:14-22 (NIV)

14“To the angel of the church in Laodicea write:
These are the words of the Amen, the faithful and true witness, the ruler of God’s creation. 15I know your deeds, that you are neither cold nor hot. I wish you were either one or the other! 16So, because you are lukewarm—neither hot nor cold—I am about to spit you out of my mouth. 17You say, ‘I am rich; I have acquired wealth and do not need a thing.’ But you do not realize that you are wretched, pitiful, poor, blind and naked. 18I counsel you to buy from me gold refined in the fire, so you can become rich; and white clothes to wear, so you can cover your shameful nakedness; and salve to put on your eyes, so you can see.
19Those whom I love I rebuke and discipline. So be earnest, and repent. 20Here I am! I stand at the door and knock. If anyone hears my voice and opens the door, I will come in and eat with him, and he with me.
21To him who overcomes, I will give the right to sit with me on my throne, just as I overcame and sat down with my Father on his throne. 22He who has an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says to the churches.”
Grace and Peace be to you from God our Father, and from our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.
Quite a few of us here are coffee drinkers. Perhaps you prefer a mocha to a latte. Perhaps you prefer good old drip coffee over espresso. Maybe you can’t stand the sugary sweetness of a flavored coffee drink, or maybe you couldn’t imagine a morning without it.

Regardless of your particular taste in coffee, most of us could agree on one thing: it’s gotta be hot, or ice cold. The tepid temperature of hour old bathwater is not exactly pleasant to the mouth. Yuk.

With this disgusting feeling in mind, Jesus’ rebuke of the Laodicean church is all the more dramatic. Jesus says to the Laodiceans, “Your attitude makes me nauseous, and I am about to spit you out of my mouth.”

That’s a harsh rebuke.

What was the problem among the Laodicean Christians? Lukewarmness. They were not hot with enthusiasm for Christ. Nor were they cold in opposition to Christ. They were indifferent. Complacent. Uninterested. Their faith was growing colder every day, and soon it would be dead cold like a corpse on the slab.

My fellow Christians, in our sermon meditation for today we’ll consider the danger of cooling faith. Our text will show us what causes it, and also that Christ is the only cure for “lukewarm” Christianity. For Christ is the fire that warms our faith.
The source of the Laodicean’s cooling faith is revealed by the words of verse seventeen.

17You say, ‘I am rich; I have acquired wealth and do not need a thing.’” (Revealtion 3:17a NIV).

The Laodicean Christians lived in a wealthy town. In AD 60, when an earthquake destroyed the city, it’s citizens rebuilt, without the help of Rome. Laodicea was well-known in its day as a center for banking. Laodicea also boasted a thriving wool industry, which sold dyed wools which were shipped throughout the world. There is also indication that Laodicea was the source of an eye-medicine which was prescribed by doctors living far away.

It is likely that the Christians at Laodicea had plenty of money. And it seems that this wealth had begun to take their attention away from Jesus. With their physical needs more than taken care of, they didn’t need to pray to Christ anymore. With so much going on, there just wasn’t a whole lot of time left over hear Him speak to them. Love of their blessings began to nudge out their love for Christ.

Cooling faith occurs when a Christian’s priorities shift away from Christ.

This danger is perhaps more pronounced in our day. In wealthy America few wonder where their next meal will come from. We have no end of gadgets which distract us from the God who gives them. Surely God’s blessings are good, but our misuse of those blessings corrupts and destroys the value of God’s blessings. Comedian George Carlin says it like this:

“We spend more, but have less.
We buy more, but enjoy it less.
We have multiplied our possessions, but reduced our values.
We’ve learned how to make a living, but not a life; we’ve added years to life, not life to years.”

Pray that Christ will remain our personal priority. Pray that Christ will be the pin that holds our family centered and together in Him. And pray to God that our faith will not cool to the near-dead lukewarmness that was the faith of the Laodicean Christians.
It is also possible that when the Laodiceans said, “I am rich” (Revelation 3:17a NIV), they weren’t talking about physical riches at all. Some people believe they meant rich in spiritual things. In other words, the Laodicean Christians might have thought they were rich in spiritual knowledge and no longer needed to learn from Christ because they knew more than enough already.

Cooling faith also occurs when a Christian thinks that he is self-sufficient and no longer needs to sit attentively at the foot of Christ.

A lukewarm Christian treats the Good News of Jesus like a fact which once absorbed cannot be lost. Like a pill that once swallowed doesn’t call for another thought.

But faith isn’t a pill. Faith is alive. Faith needs Christ like the human body needs oxygen. For our bodies to remain alive our lungs must continually come into contact with oxygen. In the same way, for our faith in Christ to remain alive, it must continually come into contact with Christ.

When a child is Baptized, God creates faith in the heart of that child through the power of His Word used along with the water. But that child must be raised to know and trust in Christ. That child’s faith must be nurtured with continual feedings of our Savior’s Word. The faith created in Baptism dies will die if it is not fed.
Perhaps the scariest thing about the lukewarm Laodiceans was they didn’t see how close to death their faith really was. They thought they didn’t have a care in the world.

Thankfully Jesus was watching out for them. And through His letter to them Jesus not only diagnosed their spiritual illness, He also provided them with the solution to their cooling enthusiasm. The solution was interaction with Christ Himself.

In verse eighteen Jesus says,

18I counsel you to buy from me gold refined in the fire, so you can become rich; and white clothes to wear, so you can cover your shameful nakedness; and salve to put on your eyes, so you can see” (Revelation 3:18 NIV). 
In older days rocks were sometimes heated thoroughly in the fireplace, slipped into a leather sheath, and then put in the bottom of a person’s bed to keep their feet warm. The rocks got their heat from the fire, so the longer they stayed away from the fire, the cooler they got until they were completely cold and worthless to have in your bed.

The solution to cold rocks in your bed, was to bring them back to the heat source. In the same way, Christ’s presence is faith’s only heat source.

In Revelation 3:18 Jesus advises the lukewarm Laodicean Christians to buy pure Gold, white clothing and eye medicine from Him. This could only be done by approaching Jesus and hearing His Word.

A lukewarm Christian cannot warm his own cooling faith, no matter how hard he try. But if a lukewarm Christian just stands in the presence of Christ, his faith cannot help but grow warmer.

We can try to sin less and be better people. But those things do not increase our trust in Christ. Those things do not warm our faith and make it hot again. Only when we hear of our sin, and how Jesus took it all on Himself does our faith grow warmer.

When we review the love which made the Son of God step down out of glory to live a life of pain, then we feel the warmth of faith increasing. When we look on the Savior’s bloodied back and His nail pierced hands and know it was for us, then we feel our warm faith growing hotter.

When we see how the Son was left alone on the cross, abandoned by all, even by His Father in Heaven, then we see how brilliant the bonfire of Christ’s love for us really is. Christ’s love for us was so intense that He was willing to feel the horror of being separated from God the Father. His love for us burned hot enough that He willingly faced the fire of hell in our place. Because He did, your sins and my sins have been taken away forever.

Christ is the fire that warms the Christian faith. So when your faith is cooling, return to the fire. In fact, don’t wait for your faith to cool. Stay by Christ’s fire every day. Through prayer and reading. Through song and quiet meditation with Him. He’ll keep the fire burning, just stay next to Him.
When I was in college I sometimes came to the end of a day and thought. What’s the point. Today I didn’t get anything done. Today I didn’t do anything good. What’s the point.

I remember staying in my room “sick” one day to try and catch up on my homework. And even after a whole day of studying, I still felt like I had accomplished nothing.

Finally God showed me what it was that was preventing my days from being complete. I noticed that the days that felt empty and worthless were the days that I had muddled through without pausing to read my Bible.

I found that if I started my day by reading God’s Word, my days no longer seemed worthless. Instead my day felt worthwhile before I even left my room.

I still find that to be true. When I don’t spend time warming up by the campfire of Christ’s Word, my days are likely to seem chilly and grey. My ability to deal with stress is diminished, and my family begins to suffer because of my increased impatience.

But when I spend part of my day in the presence of Our Savior, He rubs off on me. He reminds me I don’t have anything big to do, because He’s done the big stuff for me already. He warms my faith. Reminds me that He’s in control. Teaches me patience and love. He makes me whole again, and ready to step out into the world, not as the world’s victim, but as a light in its darkness.
Jesus’ rebuke of the Laodicean Christians may seem harsh, but Jesus rebukes out of love. Christ’s rebuke is actually a invitation to stand near the fire of His love. And that invitation into His presence is meant to strengthen the relationship that exists between a person and Him. In verses nineteen and twenty Jesus says,

19Those whom I love I rebuke and discipline. So be earnest, and repent. 20Here I am! I stand at the door and knock. If anyone hears my voice and opens the door, I will come in and eat with him, and he with me” (Revelation 3:19-20 NIV).

Christ wanted the Laodicean Christians to return to Him. If they would take His warning seriously they would find themselves in a renewed relationship with God’s own Son. Jesus pictures this relationship like a mealtime spent in private conversation with Him. Imagine that, a dinner date spent conversing with Jesus. This is what Jesus offered to the Laodicean Christians, and what He offers to us also. And His schedule is never to full to meet with us.
Jesus harshly rebuked the Laodicean Christians. But he didn’t require anything from them. He didn’t make them do any special deeds before He would let them back into His presence. He simply called out to them, telling them to turn around and come back to Him.

Jesus wanted to rebuild the relationship the Laodiceans had neglected. They needed Jesus by their side to navigating this dark world safely. And more than this, Jesus promised that this relationship would not be for this life only, but forever. In verse twenty-one Jesus says…

21To him who overcomes, I will give the right to sit with me on my throne, just as I overcame and sat down with my Father on his throne” (Revelation 3:21 NIV).

Jesus says whoever overcomes would sit with Him on His throne in heaven. That’s a close relationship. Not just any schmuck sits with Jesus on His Heavenly throne.

But we will. Yeah. We will. Because we are they who overcome. That phrase, “him who overcomes” is explained in 1 John 5:5.

5Who is it that overcomes the world? Only he who believes that Jesus is the Son of God” (1 John 5:5 NIV).

Our relationship with Jesus brings fulfillment and strength to us in this life, and great honor in the next. The closer our  relationship with Jesus is, the closer we are to the fire that heats our faith and makes it hot. The further away from Christ, the further we are from the fire that keeps us spiritually alive.

Brothers and sisters in Christ, Jesus wanted us to learn from this letter to the Laodicean Christians. He said, “He who has ears, listen up!” We have ears and we know our Savior’s voice. So let us listen with care and learn from this letter.

And next time you take a slurp of lukewarm coffee, remember Jesus’ loving word of warning to the Christians at Laodicea, and ask yourself, “Have I stood by the fire today?”



The peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your hearts and minds through Christ Jesus.

The Faithful Church - Nov 24, 2013

Sorry, I’m not able to post the audio for this sermon this week. –Pastor Caleb Schaller

SERMON:

When I was in college I got to play on a recreational softball team called the “Old Timers”. Now we weren’t all old guys. Some of us were young. In fact, there was a pretty good smattering of ages and abilities on this team.

There was one old guy we used to call “Socks” (I’m not sure why). His knees were just about shot. Every game he’d have his knees wrapped tightly with ace bandages and neoprene sleeves pulled on over those. But you could still see that just running the bases was painful for the guy. Not that he complained, you could just see it was painful. But boy could he hit. Just about every time “Socks” got up to bat he’d line a single over the infield and into the grass.

“Socks” wasn’t a power hitter. He wasn’t going to hit any out of the park, but he sure was dependable. You know, dynamite is nice, but most of the time dependable is better.
Today we’re going to read Jesus’ letter to the church at Philadelphia. The church at Philadelphia was a lot like “Socks.” Jesus himself says that they didn’t have a lot of power, but they were dependable. They had kept Jesus’ word and had not denied his name. Today we read Christ’s letter to The Faithful Church.

Revelation 3:7-13 (ESV)

“And to the angel of the church in Philadelphia write: ‘The words of the holy one, the true one, who has the key of David, who opens and no one will shut, who shuts and no one opens.
“ ‘I know your works. Behold, I have set before you an open door, which no one is able to shut. I know that you have but little power, and yet you have kept my word and have not denied my name. Behold, I will make those of the synagogue of Satan who say that they are Jews and are not, but lie—behold, I will make them come and bow down before your feet, and they will learn that I have loved you. 10 Because you have kept my word about patient endurance, I will keep you from the hour of trial that is coming on the whole world, to try those who dwell on the earth. 11 I am coming soon. Hold fast what you have, so that no one may seize your crown. 12 The one who conquers, I will make him a pillar in the temple of my God. Never shall he go out of it, and I will write on him the name of my God, and the name of the city of my God, the new Jerusalem, which comes down from my God out of heaven, and my own new name. 13 He who has an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says to the churches.’
It must have been surprising for the seven churches of Asia minor to get letters from Jesus. Letters addressed specifically to them. Letters dealing with their own personal situations, pointing out their own strengths, and weaknesses.

Out of all the churches who got letters, I imagine that the church at Philadelphia was the most surprised to get a letter from Christ himself. They weren’t a big deal like some of those other churches. 

 Jesus himself describes the church at Philadelphia as having “but little power”. Now, it’s hard to say what exactly what Jesus means by that phrase. Did they have “little power” because they hadn’t received an extensive education in the Bible? Were they just holding on to the simplest truths of Christianity? Perhaps their church was made up of the poor of the city who had little political power or influence among their neighbors. Maybe Jesus says they had “but little power” because they were prone to sickness and disease. Or, maybe Jesus is simply talking about their numbers. Maybe the church at Philadelphia was numerically the smallest of the Asian churches.

No matter how we understand “little power”, we still get the point. Philadelphia wasn’t dynamite. But, Jesus doesn’t have a single word of rebuke for this church. Maybe they weren’t dynamite, but they were faithful.

When they had heard that there was really only ONE true God in the universe, and that he was a compassionate God, they listened. When they learned how the Son of God went so far as to become one of them to rescue them from their own mess of sin. They warmed to the Gospel. And when they heard of the resurrection of Christ, which stood as divine evidence of all that Jesus had promised, they believed. And they had held onto the message of sins forgiven through Christ’s cross ever since. They had not been ashamed to be called followers of Jesus. Even when people from the local Synagogue ridiculed their faith, they refused to jump ship and abandon the divine Savior they had come to know and love.

And because they had continued to stoke the fire of faith that the Holy Spirit had ignited among them, Jesus was happy to call them his own people.
Sometimes we Christians lose sight of how huge that really is to really BE, “Christ’s people”. Not just to be CALLED Christians, but to be Christ’s people through faith in him. That slender, invisible bond to Jesus that we call “faith” is precious. For faith unites us to Jesus in a way that is more intimate and special than other unity known to man.

Before Jesus ascended back to the Father’s side he told his disciples…

“All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. 19 Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, 20 teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you. And behold, I am with you always, to the end of the age” (Matthew 28:18-20 ESV).

By faith in Christ, Christians are connected to Sovereign King who reigns over ALL people, things, and powers. Jesus illustrates this to the Philadelphian Christians when he describes himself as the one who…

“…has the key of David, who opens and no one will shut, who shuts and no one opens” (Revelation 3:7 ESV).

When King David ruled, his keys were held by a steward. This steward then had the power to open the treasury doors and dispense the riches of the king.

Here in Revelation Jesus is described as holding the “key of David”. But the key that Jesus holds isn’t just the key to an earthly treasure room. Jesus holds the key of the treasure room of Heaven.
In verse eight, Jesus tells the Christians of Philadelphia that he’s set an open door before them that nobody else can shut. Jesus isn’t just talking about any “open door of opportunity”. This door is the very door to heaven. In the next chapter of Revelation, the apostle John is given a vision of an open door in the sky. And when he is ushered through this door he finds himself in the throne room of the Almighty God. THIS is the open door that was placed before the Christians at Philadelphia. Through Christ, the door to Heaven was opened to them—even though they were sinful people.

This is what being connected to Christ means. To the humble Christians of Philadelphia, Heaven had been opened.

Jesus tells them not to be worried about what the local Synagogue was saying about them. In  the end, the people who slandered them and ridiculed Christ would be made to bow down before them and acknowledge that they were loved by Christ. The Christians at Philadelphia didn’t need to worry. Justice would be served eventually.

This is what being connected to Christ means.

And Jesus goes further. He tells the Christians at Philadelphia not to worry about anything that the future might bring. There was an “hour of trial” coming soon for the whole world, but in that hour Jesus would watch over them. Jesus would keep them as his cherished people.

This is what being connected to Christ means.

In verse eleven Jesus says…

“…Hold fast what you have, so that no one may seize your crown” (Revelation 3:11).

No matter what death would come to these Christians. Death by persecution. Death by crucifixion. Death by cancer. Death by old age. It didn’t matter. Connected to the resurrected Christ by simple trust, they could look forward to their own resurrection, and eternal life after that.
Of all the churches of Asia minor, the church at Philadelphia is the one we need to aspire to be. Not dynamite, but faithful. Not influential among the people of this world, but a church who knew they were loved by Christ. Not strong in their own abilities, but dependent on Christ for everything. Cherishing his word. Proud to carry his name. Patiently enduring whatever this life can throw at them. Joyfully waiting for the King’s return.

Through faith in Christ you and I have the same assurances that the church at Philadelphia had. Through faith, Christ is our King too, and we his people. Our King holds the key to the heavenly treasures of peace, hope, love, self-control, goodness, patience and compassion—just to name a few. Our King, has the power to open whatever door of opportunity he sees fit to set before us, in addition to the door of heaven. With Christ as our King we don’t need to even the score against people who hate us. Justice will come from our King in the end. With Christ as our King we can depend on being cared for in whatever “hour of trial” we find ourselves in. Even when we face death, which we all will, we too can be at peace, knowing that the crown of eternal life is already ours—in Christ.

This is what being connected to Christ means.
Jesus closes his letter to the Philadelphian Christians like he has all the other letters—with images that illustrate his promise of heaven. He gives them little pictures of promise to hold in their minds.

Jesus says that those who conquer, that is, those who keep trusting in him to the end will be made pillars in the temple of God. You could take THINGS out of a temple, but not the pillars. They were not movable. Those who cross the threshold of Heaven will never leave God’s presence ever after.

Jesus says that those who conquer by faith, will have the name of God written on them. You write your name on something to denote ownership. If God writes his name on you, that means you belong to him.

Jesus says that the faithful will have the name of God’s city written on them. The name of your state is put on your driver’s license to show where your belong. When God writes the name of his city on you, that shows where you belong. Where you reside. In the eternal city of God.

Jesus says that his people will have HIS new name written on them. Jesus is our Judge and our Savior. Having HIS name written on us ensures our eternal safety and illustrates His loving care. After all, you only label things  as your own when you really care about them.

This is what being connected to Christ means.
The Christians at Philadelphia weren’t dynamite, but they were faithful. They were connected to Christ. And as a result, they had Christ’s approval, protection, and the promise of a heavenly future.

In the book of Isaiah it says…

30 Even youths grow tired and weary,
and young men stumble and fall;
31 but those who hope in the Lord
will renew their strength.
They will soar on wings like eagles;
they will run and not grow weary,
they will walk and not be faint” (Isaiah 40:30-31 NIV).

In this world, the strength of youth degrades. Time weighs heavy on our bodies. Destroys our knees. Compromises our health. Turns the dynamite of youth into the little firecracker of old age. But those connected to God through His Son are connected to a power beyond this world. And that power will renew us one day that we might rejoice in his presence forever.

May we always aspire to be like the church at Philadelphia. Not dynamite, but simply faithful. Connected to Christ. For it is then that weak men and women like us—become truly strong.


Prayer: Dearest Lord Jesus, you have set an open door before us here at Redemption. Move us always to trust in your promise of forgiveness and life. When we feel weak, remind us that we ARE weak, but YOU are strong. Remind us that you hold us in your hand, and will never let us go. If we are to do great things in your name, it will have to be your power that accomplishes these things through us. Graciously teach us to yield up all that we have, our lives, and our egos, to your guiding hand. Dearest Savior, truly be our King. Amen.