Tuesday, November 01, 2016

Prayer: Abram and Lot (Genesis 13-14)


Heavenly Father,

You come first in everything. Before there was a mote of dust or a sliver of light, before anything was created, you were there. You have always been, always are and will always be. You are the first in power: you have the first say in what happens when, how, by who and why. You provide meaning to all things. And you have the last say: when everything is wrapped up and finished, you will judge and you will be right; and no-one will be able to question it. You are the first in righteousness: you are always right and good and true. There is no shadows in you, no lies, no scheming or deviance. You can always be trusted to have everyone's absolute best interests in your hand; you can make the simple wise, you can turn evil to good, you can turn stubborn hearts towards you, you can make the sick well, the humble exalted and the weak strong. And you are the first in love: before we loved you, before we were even born, you have loved us so powerfully, so intentionally, so perfectly and so fully that you would come to earth as one of us, join us in the trials and troubles of life, to stand with us, to teach us, to reveal yourself to us and to die for us and save us from the wrath we deservedly face. You are first in the resurrected life too: you did not stay dead, but rose again, and in doing so lift up our hearts with hope and assurance that you are victorious. You come first at the very end; your enemies are not your equal. You rise far above them, and you will cast them away so that there will be no more crying, no more pain, no more suffering and no more death.

We stand in awe of you, God. You are amazing from first to last, perfect in every way, and loving without fault. And we thank you that you pour your strength into us through your Spirit so that we can be a part of your amazing work in this world. We pray that through us you might heal the sick, lift up the weak, stand up for the oppressed and rescue the lost. We thank you for every person who comes through our church doors; those who have known you for decades, and those who still aren't quite sure about Jesus. Work in each of our lives so that we might know you more, and be Jesus to others. We pray for every child that comes in contact with our church - in C4K, in scripture, in junior jivers, in Oasis and in WAY - we ask that you will make yourself known to them again and again, and keep knocking on the doors of their hearts so that they might open up and receive Jesus. We pray for those who come to us for comfort, for strength and for help - by your power let us give them what they need in Jesus.

And we pray for all those who might never set foot in our doors; let our own lives be open doors to Jesus for all the people we meet. We pray for the people in our community of Waitara, our city of Sydney, and our country Australia; let them mix and mingle with Jesus through mixing and mingling with us. Let them meet Jesus at the shops, in schools, in the workplace, over shared fences, on public transport and in the street. May we be your ambassadors to many throughout our lives, and may Jesus walk among the people we meet.

And we pray for those who we may never meet; let our lives still speak the name of Jesus to them in every way they can. We pray for those thousands of people whose lives are touched by the Scotts in Taiwan, the Ongs in Malawi, the Compassion kids we support, and every person who receives a bible throuhg the Bible Society. We ask that through our prayers and through the gifts we provide, Jesus will be revealed to people we may never meet in this life. Just as you are first in everything, we ask that you would be first in everything we do and think and say.

Amen

Sunday, September 25, 2016

Prayer: The wisdom of hard work (Proverbs)

Heavenly Father,

We are really thankful for work. You are a god who works: who has created all things; who sustains everything; who works hard at relating to people and reaching out to them; who sent Jesus to do the work of closing the gap between people and God by defeating our sin, nailing it to the cross.

You provide all good things for people, and you also have given us a say in how we go about getting those things. You provide us with so many good things to do, and there is so much good that comes from it! We can give people things they need. We can bring joy into people's lives. We can be creative and inventive. We can make a difference in this world. We work in jobs that pay us wages that we use to meet our physical needs, or in our families where children or the sick need care and sustenance and shelter, or in study in order to learn and grow and create future opportunities, or we simply work on cultivating godliness and joy in ourselves and others. You have given us a part to play in our own lives, and the lives of others, so that we can make a difference, and we are thankful.

But we live in a broken world, where it doesn't always work out the way we'd like. You have told us that you have a plan for people and for the world, but we so often see things going against your plan. We want to pray for and commit to you, Lord, people who are unemployed because they cannot get work, or who are too sick to work. We pray for people who don't want to work. We pray for families where the young or the old are neglected and not looked after. We pray for people whose jobs are sometimes boring, or unnecessary, or whose work does not help meet people's good needs, or who are trapped in a job and cannot leave. We pray for those whose work is valuable, but who are underappreciated or forgotten; or who are exploited by their employers or by society. And we pray for those who don't have anything worth doing, or who waste their time and money on things that are pointless, that don't bring joy, or that bring trouble and harm. We pray for those who work for work's sake, and who miss out on the rest that you provide.

None of these things are in your plan, and yet we live in a world where they are so common. We ask you, please Lord, to help us to follow your guidance for work. Help us to help others who are trapped in these problems and troubles of work. And help us not to turn work into an idol, or to trust in our work to solve our problems, but instead to trust you to have everything in hand.  And help us to rest in you; to place things into your hands, look to you for our provision; and to spent quality time with you. Give us the values of your own heart: let us work for your glory, your righteousness, for truth, and for love.

We pray all these things in the name of Jesus Christ, Amen

Sunday, September 11, 2016

Sermon: Psalm 1 - Live Righteously

Once again, I include here not only the sermon itself but also the scribbles of thoughts that I had as I was working it up (you'll find that a little further down) . I hope that is of help!

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"Blessed is the one who does not walk in step with the wicked, or stand in the way that sinners take, or sit in the company of mockers, but whose delight is in the law of the Lord, who meditates on his law day and night." Over two and a half thousand years ago, well before Jesus walked the earth, these words greeted the person who opened the Book of Psalms. Psalm 1 stands at the front of the Book of Psalms as an introduction to the whole book; a message to anyone who would open this book of prayers and songs belonging to the people of God. It encourages the hearer of this psalm, and then of every psalm following, to treat these psalms as God's law, his instruction to his people.

Psalm 1's message is simple: live righteously. This psalm expresses in a few short ideas what it means to live righteously in a world with a righteous God.

Psalm 1 is all about how great it is to live righteously, and what it looks like to live righteously. But interestingly, it has nothing to say about why we should live righteously.

Now you've just heard the psalm read, and you might think, well, hang on, it sounds like the psalm does answer this question - it says the righteous will be blessed. It says everything they do prospers. It says that God watches over their way. Aren't they good reasons to be righteous?

Well, not really. See, living righteously for the sake of personal benefit and gain is like boasting about how humble you are: it's a contradiction. The moment you boast about your humility, you're no longer humble. The moment you start living righteously for personal gain, you're no longer righteous.

So why live righteously? Psalm 1 doesn't really seek to answer this question at all, because in the mind of its author, and in the mind of its readers, the answer is absolutely obvious: you should live righteously because it is the right way to live! That's why it's called being righteous - because its right.

Think about this anti-smoking commercial. Smoking kills. Ads like this have been around for decades. In fact, they have been around for so long that people sometimes ask, Why do we still need these ads? Surely everyone knows by now that smoking kills.

And yet even this ad, stating the obvious, still assumes something - that killing people is bad. This ad doesn't need to explain why something killing you is bad. Everyone knows killing is bad. Psalm 1's message is the same: live righteously, it says. It doesn't need to explain why righteousness is good. Everyone knows that doing the right thing is right - that's why it's called the right thing.

And so maybe we might ask instead the same question that people ask about anti-smoking ads - if the message is so obvious, why say it at all?

And the answer is simple: people still smoke. People still live wickedly - that is, the opposite of righteously. It turns out that knowing something is right is not enough to make someone do it. Pretty much every smoker these days knows that smoking kills, yet they keep smoking. It's human nature that knowing something by itself is often not enough to change our behaviour.

There are other anti-smoking ads that come at it from a different angle. We're told, Every cigarette you don't smoke is doing you good.  Give up smoking for a week, and your sense of taste and smell improves. Now that alone isn't the reason to give up smoking - the reason to give up is because smoking kills. But the other health benefits are an encouragement to quit, and a testament that quitting is truthfully good for you. Again, the ad doesn't need to explain why getting better is a good thing. Being healthier is just good, everyone knows that.

Psalm 1 is like one of these commercials. But instead of being anti-killing and pro-healthy, it is anti-wickedness and pro-righteousness. It is an important and powerful message to us, and so that's what we're going to be looking at today.  That message is, "Live righteously because it is right; and be encouraged that living righteously is good for you, which is helps us know that it is right."

What, then does it mean to live righteously? Psalm 1 says three things: Living Righteously means not living wickedly; Living Righteously means savouring God's instruction; and Living Righteously means living a life that lasts.

Let's start at the beginning, verse 1: "Blessed is the one who does not walk in step with the wicked, or stand in the way that sinners take, or sit in the company of mockers." You might notice that the new NIV that I just quoted is a bit different from the old one, "Blessed is he who does not walk in the counsel of the wicked, or stand in the way of sinners, or sit in the seat of mockers." I like the new translation, because it makes it a bit clearer - this verse is not about someone becoming an obstacle for sinners by blocking their way from sitting in their chair. It's about a person who does not follow the ways of wicked people.

Now, it might seem obvious to say, but it's an important place to start: living righteously means not living wickedly! But the emphasis is on the "living". Look at this verse again: "Blessed is the one who does not walk in step with the wicked, or stand in the way that sinners take, or sit in the company of mockers." The simple fact is that everyone lives a life that is made up of both right things and wrong things. You can be faithful to your spouse whilst cheating on taxes. You can work hard to provide for your family, but also be greedy. You can selflessly work to cure blindness in rural Australia and the third world whilst publicly stating that there is no God. Righteousness and wickedness are two parts of every human being's life. We all do things that are against what God's will is.

The question is not "Have you ever done anything wicked?" Perfection is God's standard for salvation - which is precisely why we need Jesus, because we aren't perfect and can't meet that standard. We need to remember that we can't do anything to earn our salvation. God and Jesus have that under control, and thank God for that. Psalm 1 is not calling people to put their faith in God to save them. It is calling people who have already put their trust in God as mighty, majestic and merciful to now change the direction of their life to one that is righteous. Living righteously isn't about living perfectly. Living righteously is about responding to God by striving meet his standard, shaping our lives around doing the right thing for God, for other people, and for ourselves.

Take a moment to reflect on that. Think about your life's compass. A proper compass always points north, no matter what you do. Sometimes there's a mountain in the way though, and you need to go around it, and you might get lost or take a wrong turn, but your compass continues to point north. What determines which way your life points? What determines how you make your decisions? Do you plan your life based on what God wants, on what is right? Or do you just do what everyone else does, or what feels good, or what draws less attention, or what makes you secure?  Well, a proper life's compass points your life towards righteousness. You might take some twists and turns, but if you are living righteously, it means that compass keeps pointing towards righteousness, towards God. If your life's compass is pointing towards anything other than righteousness, then your compass is broken, and you shouldn't follow it.

Verse 2 says this: "But whose delight is in the law of the Lord, who meditates on his law day and night."  Living righteously means savouring God's instruction.  The word translated 'law' in this verse is 'Torah'. When we think of 'Torah', we usually think of the first five books of the Bible - that is, the Old Testament Laws. But the word more correctly means 'instruction' - not so much like instructions for putting something together, but more like the teaching a student receives from a teacher. And God's teaching to us is more than just following laws. As I said, one of the reasons this psalm is first in the book of psalms is because it encourages people to treat these psalms as God's instruction. Of course, nowadays we are blessed to have not just the first five books, not just the psalms, not just the Old Testament, but the whole New Testament as well. And from this collection of books we can discover God's instruction to us.

And it stands to reason that living righteously requires a relationship with God's instruction. After all, where else does righteousness come from, if not God, the righteous one? This is of huge importance: the message of what is righteous and what isn't is contained in God's instruction to us.

So what then do we do with God's instruction? We must savour it. Listen to the words that the psalm uses: "whose delight in the law", "meditates on it day and night." This does not describe simply reading the Bible. There are scholars out there who have read the Bible many times, who know its contents back to front, and who treat it simply as a historical document that has no impact on their lives.

We must savour God's instruction like a tree savours water. Verse 3 says "Such a person is like a tree planted by streams of water, which yields its fruit in season and whose leaf does not wither. Whatever they do prospers. 4 Not so the wicked; they are like chaff that the wind blows away." Savouring God's instruction includes producing good fruit that comes from his instruction. It includes thriving on his instruction. And it means that what we do will prosper - our actions, based on God's instruction, will achieve God's purposes.

Think about the tastiest thing you've ever had to eat or drink. Not necessarily the most expensive thing, but the most delicious thing.  I love chocolate ice cream. And my favourite chocolate ice cream was Cape Byron Supreme Chocolate Mud Cake ice cream. It was superb. Creamy. Chocolatey. Swirls of mud cake. full of rich flavour, and with a thick body. You don't just eat that kind of ice cream. You savour it. When you're eating it, you dwell on it; it's the most important thing you're doing at that moment; you enjoy the taste, and the texture, and the whole experience. It brings you bliss. And when you aren't eating it, you still think about it. You remember it. You wonder when you'll get to have it again. And when you have something else, you are still thinking about it! You're comparing the quality, the flavour, the creaminess, the price.

And it's not even about how often you have it. I haven't had Cape Byron ice cream in years - they don't make it any more - but I still think about it even now. That's what it means to savour something. And that's what our relationship with God's instruction should be like.

It's about seeking God's instruction from the Bible, but also from books that discuss the Bible, from sermons that explain the Bible, from songs that rephrase the Bible, from seeing people's lives that are shaped by the Bible. God's message, his instruction, exists in all those things. It's about enjoying the fact that when you read it, or hear it, or sing it, or remember it, it is God's very own teaching for your life. It's about recognising its value. It's about thinking about it all the time - not necessarily in a scholarly way, but in a real world practical way, thinking, "How does what God's told me fit into this bit of my life right now?" And it means when you hear other people say different things about how you should live, holding up God's instruction against it and comparing the message, the meaning, the rightness and the impact on how you live righteously.

It's not about how much Bible you read, or how often. Reading it more will help, certainly. But there are very, very few people who get to spend all day every day reading the Bible. Most of us have to work, or go to school, or look after our families. It's about savouring God's teaching when you can - from the Bible, from sermons, from songs, from a book, from talking with other Christians and seeing their life - and valuing that instruction, letting it sink in, mulling it over, deliberating on it, and holding it up as the truth against which other teachings get compared.

Think about a school classroom. Imagine if the teacher simply stood up the front and read out the textbook in a monotone regardless of whether the children were paying attention, misbehaving, asleep, bored, out at lunch - would you send your kids to that school? What about a teacher who used poetry, and music, and games, and stories and activities, who worked as much at keeping the children's attention and enjoyment as providing their instruction - would they be the better teacher?

Think about your relationship to God's instruction.  Does the thought of seeking out God's teaching fill you with joy? Do you delight in reading it, or hearing it? Do you meditate on it and say to yourself, "What does that mean in this situation?" Do you hold it up during your day and say, "How does this compare with what the government is telling me, what my boss is telling me, what the television is telling me?" Because if you're not savouring God's instruction like a tree savours water, then everything you do will eventually dry up and blow away like dry husks left behind after a harvest.

Now we move on to the last two verses: verse 5, "Therefore the wicked will not stand in the judgment, nor sinners in the assembly of the righteous. For God watches over the way of the righteous, but the way of the wicked will be destroyed." This psalm transitions beautifully from looking at what it means to live righteously, (blessed are those who don't live wickedly but who savour God's instruction) to what it looks like to live righteously (they savour God's instruction like a tree savours water so they prosper, but those who don't dry up) and now, finally, to what the results of living righteously are (those who don't dry up and blow away, they are not God's people, the follow a path that disappears).

The last big point of psalm 1 is that Living Righteously means living a life that lasts. And that's something we need to hear, because so often we see situations and hear stories where people who are not living righteously seem to be doing really well, while those who are living righteously suffer for doing it! Big companies profit at the expense of child labour while paying no tax, and their shareholders cheer; governments lock up innocent people for months and years in offshore prisons, and their votes increase; people campaign for God to be removed from schools and public discourse, and their voices spread across the airwaves. Meanwhile those who release evidence of corruption and blow the whistle on wrongdoing get forced into exile; those who pray for the release of prisoners are arrested; those who spend their lives healing the poor are kidnapped by terrorists. Where is the blessing? Where is the prosperity?

Psalm 1 lets us look further forward, to see the end result of a righteous life and a wicked life. We're told that the life of the person who lives righteously, the life we should be living, is a life that God watches over. The word for "watches over" has a very personal connotation to it. God knows this way of life, he is familiar with it. He keeps it close to himself, because this is God's way of life - the life we see lived by God on earth as Jesus Christ. It is a life that lasts forever - not because by being righteous we earn our place in eternity with God, but because a righteous life is the life we will be living in that eternity. A righteous life is the life of the eternal God.

But the wicked way of life? It will be destroyed. There is no room in God's eternal kingdom for wickedness. And thank God for that! Greed, lust, murder, theft, corruption, violence, rebellion against God - all of these things are temporary! They don't last! God doesn't just punish those who live that way; he destroys that way of life entirely! And as for those who choose to live wickedly and reject God, they will not stand when judgment comes! They will not fit in with the assembly of the righteous. God has no place for them in his kingdom. And we are reminded of these truths every time we see the wicked get brought down, every time their schemes blow up in their faces, every time they are exposed; we're reminded every time we do the right thing and we see God's plans furthered in people's lives. That's the way it's meant to be, and that's the way it's going to stay.

We started off this morning with the question "why be righteous?" and I said that psalm 1 assumes we know why - because it's right. But the book of psalms actually words the question a different way, which we see following directly after psalm 1. It's no accident that the first words of psalm 2 are this: "Why do the nations conspire and the peoples plot in vain? Etc" 

We want to ask the question," Why should we be righteous?" But God puts the question to us, "In the face of a righteous and loving God, why would you be wicked?"
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Big idea: Righteousness is great
Big question: what does it mean to live righteously?

Main points:
1) Living Righteously means not living wickedly
2) Living Righteously means being steeped in God's word
3) Living Righteously brings lasting prosperity
4) Living Righteously is the way of God

Not about why to live righteously - that's kind of meant to be obvious. You can't live righteously because it pays off - that's not righteous! You're meant to live righteously because it is RIGHT. Hence the name.

Psalms are part of the lord's instruction for us. God doesn't just demand rational thought worship, nor just pragmatic hands worship. He expects emotional heart worship.

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We are bombarded by advertising. Everyone wants to tell us why we should do something or not do it, buy something and not something else, what you should eat, what you should wear. They make all kinds of promises. Some of them seem reasonable: come to our dentist and we'll fix your teeth. Others are outlandish: drink Coke, and you will have fun. Some are outright comically ridiculous: wear Lynx body spray, and crowds of women will chase after you.

But you don't often see advertisements like this: Eat food. Stay hydrated. Breathe air. For the vast, vast, vast majority of people, these things don't need to be said. There are some basic things in life that we do because they are a self-evident good. You could make an advert for eating food just like any other ad - eating food will keep you alive. Eating food leads to fun and excitement. One of the key habits of successful people is to eat food. But the truth is we don't really need to tell people to eat food. We eat because it is part of being alive. If someone isn't eating at all, we know something is wrong.

Instead, we might have public service announcements about things that people need to know but otherwise don't - eat healthy food, don't just eat bad food all the time. Drink water, but because there is currently an e coli crisis, make sure you boil it before you drink it from the tap. Don't inhale glue fumes, because they are dangerous.  Or we might use advertising to encourage people to do something they already know but find difficult - smoking is bad, you should quit.

Psalm 1 is a psalm like this. It's talking about a self-evident good - being righteous, or living righteously. It's a short psalm, only six verses, and it stands at the front of the Book of Psalms as an introduction, a message to anyone who would open this book: live righteously. It doesn't say why, because asking why you should live righteously is like asking why you should eat food - the answer is obvious! You eat food because it is food. You live righteously because righteousness is right. A poster that says "Smoking kills" doesn't need to explain why dying is bad. And the first psalm doesn't have to explain why righteousness is right.

Instead, it describes what it means to live righteously.

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Monday, July 25, 2016

Prayer: Unwrapping people (Revelation 6 and 7)

Heavenly Father,

We are amazed at your majesty. You are the God of Eternity, the God of Existence, the God of Power and Greatness and Salvation. You are so much bigger than we can understand or comprehend. And yet you talk to us.  You are so strong that sin and suffering and death are things that you can bat away with the back of your hand. You are so amazing that you can use the prayers of little children to defeat your enemies.

In the face of your greatness, we can only ask why? Why would you even deign to pay any attention to human beings at all? We are just one part of your grand creation. We only live a short time. We cause lots of pain and suffering. We ignore you, and seek to oust you from our lives. We rail against your rightful rule, and rebel against your good and perfect plans.

And yet not only do you listen to us; you love us. You glorify us and honour us with your attention. You make us in your image, and you give us freedom. You choose us, you set us apart. You lift us up over the rest of the earth, giving us power to shape it and change it and improve it; to be creative and innovative, just like you. You deputise us to look after what you have created. You treat us with dignity and respect.

We're sorry that we don't always treat you the same way. We apologise for all that we have done this week that has disrespected you, that has gone against your plans for us, that has caused us to push ourselves away from you. We also pray on behalf of our families, our communities and our leaders, all of whom may have turned against you in some way this week, may have caused harm and injury to others, may have plundered the weak or frustrated the poor, been unjust to the innocent or oppressed the powerless. We come to you pleading for those who are suffering, that you might be with them, comfort them, and bring an end to their sorrow. Tonight in particular we pray for the Chapman family, and for Bruce's recent diagnosis of cancer. We pray for your comfort of their family, your healing of Bruce, and that the hope you give us might bring them joy.

And we thank you that despite all this, you sent your Son to walk as one of us - to be human as we are human; but to be perfect as you are perfect. We thank you that in Jesus we can see the relationship that you so desire from us. And we thank you that you work your perfect plans through his life, his death, and his resurrection. You have redeemed us from the curses of death and judgment by Christ becoming a curse for us. And then you have destroyed these enemies once and for all through his great resurrection. We thank you for your promise to us that there will no longer be crying, there will no longer be mourning, no more hunger, pain or death. What a great God you are to clue us in to your plans, to give us that hope, and to let us start living for you now.

And so we praise you together, Lord Most High. We praise you not as slaves to sin and death, but as children and heirs in your eternal family. Help us, in all that we do, to proclaim your wonderful deeds. May our lives mirror those amazing actions of Christ, so that the earth might be filled with your glory.

In all these things we pray by the authority of Jesus Christ,
Amen

Prayer: Eternity Unwrapped - Revelation 21 and 22

Heavenly Father,

We praise and adore you as the one who is before all things, who always was, always is, and always will be. You have the whole of history at your fingertips, and every day of the future is an open book to you. For you there are no mysteries. And not only do you know all that has happened, all that is happening, and all that will happen, but you hold it all in the palm of your hand. You are the architect of the future, building and furthering your plans through every decision we make, right or wrong. You are so great that you can turn our worst mistakes into your biggest blessings. You even turned our rebellion against you and our denial and murder of your son Jesus Christ into our eternal salvation. You are just that amazing.

But even though you can see the beginning, and the end, and you know what came before, and what will come after, you still dwell here with us in the now. You care about every one of us, and our momentary concerns. You want us to call on you when things get tough. You tell us to ask you when we are sick, to complain to you when life is hard, to question you when things just continually go wrong, and in all that to continue to have faith in you that you've got everything under control. And you do, Lord God. Because you don't hide your plans from us. We hate sickness, we abhore injustice, we avoid pain and we are upset by death. And you have shown us that these things will not last. You will last forever. We know that. But you call us to live with you forever, to live a life with you where there is no sickness, there is no injustice, there is no pain and there is no death. That's your plan, and you have shared it with us. And you have told us that these words are trustworthy and true. Our pain and our shame and our grieving will all be done away with. And we can trust you to do it, because you are our God.

And so we pray to you about all these things, as you have told us to. We pray for the sick in our midst, and those in our lives who are plagued with illness. We pray for those who face injustice, unfairness and oppression, both in our community and across the world. We pray for those who are wracked by pains, whether from physical hurt or from guilt, shame and betrayal. And we pray for those who grieve because of the loss of loved ones. We pray for all these things because we know you care about them. Give comfort and strength, encouragement and support to your people, so that we might see for ourselves these glimpses of your eternal kingdom. And then let us take those lights out into the world, where others might too see your glory through the comfort and strength and encouragement and support we offer others, as we pass on this testimony of your Son that you have given us - the time is coming, and it is coming soon. We praise you because you promise to accept anyone who wishes to take your free offer to live with you forever.  These words are trustworthy and true.

We rejoice in the thought, and we pray together, "Come, Lord Jesus." And we ask that the grace of the Lord Jesus be with your people. Amen.

Thursday, June 09, 2016

Sermon: The reality of God's glory (Rev 4-5)

[Once again, I include some notes below to show some other directions I was going to take in the sermon at some point. In this case, however, you'll see that I started with an idea about God's glory, and then actually came to a different conclusion. Hooray for sermons teaching you things!]

We are continuing to look at the book of Revelation to see how it reveals the true nature of things. Today, we will learn about the reality of God's glory, or his greatness. I'll use those terms interchangeably. Keep your bibles open to chapters 4 and 5, and there's a sermon outline in the handout where you can make notes and follow along.

This is a Chinese imperial bridal carriage. It's pretty spectacular. This one was made to celebrate close relations between Australia and China, and given as a gift to Sydney in the bicentennial year of 1988. It used to be on display in the Queen Victoria Building, then was moved to the Chinese Garden of Friendship, and is now in the Golden Dragon Museum in Bendigo. 300 tonnes of raw stone (serpentine, a green stone like jade) was carved down into this 2 tonne carriage. Altogether there are 188 dragons, 18 Phoenixes, 36 bats and 155 strands of beads. It is made to represent the greatness of a Chinese royal bride. It is made out of precious stone to be particularly extravagant. When you look at it, you can't help but be impressed.

A person's greatness is not something we can see, so we often use something else, like extravagant objects, to represent the greatness of a person. When we look at chapter 4 of Revelation, John is given a vision. There's a massive throne in heaven. It's surrounded by a rainbow. It has lightning and thunder coming out of it. It's surrounded by 24 other thrones, with 24 kings all with gold crowns. The person sitting on that throne can only be described as looking like precious jewels; like jasper and ruby. What John is seeing, what his vision is depicting for us, is God's greatness. This is how Revelation works: it's not depicting how God really looks; it's using pictures to reveal to us the truth about God. The truth is that God is not just great and powerful, like a human king. God IS greatness and power.

What's the difference? Think of it like this. This is Elvis Presley. He is often referred to as The King of Rock n Roll, or sometimes just "The King". We might ask the question, "How great a rock n roll star was Elvis?" And people might compare him to John Lennon, or Bruce Springsteen or some other rock n roll singer. Elvis was pretty great rock star. He might even be the greatest rock star. But he's still one rock star among many others.

Now this is an Elvis impersonator. His name's Shawn Klush. The BBC named him the World's Greatest Elvis. He talks the most like Elvis. He sings the most like Elvis. He moves the most like Elvis. He wears the same clothes, the same boots, plays the same guitars. He's the best attempt at Elvis there has ever been.

Now think about this: How is it that Elvis Presley is not the world's greatest Elvis? It's because he's not an impersonator! He's the Elvis! He's not just the standard against which all other Elvises are measured. He's the source of what it means to be Elvis. He didn't have to try to be Elvis - he was naturally Elvis.  He's not the best Elvis among many. He is the real Elvis. All the other Elvises are all just imitating.

In this vision in Revelation 4, God is not just the most powerful ruler among a list of other really powerful rulers who jockey for position. God is power itself - he is its source. God is not just the greatest among many. He is greatness itself - he is its source. God doesn't have to try to be powerful or great. All power, all greatness, doesn't just get measured against him - it comes from him.

When we talk about God's glory, that's what we mean. The picture John gives us has the four living creatures, which represent all created beings, saying to God, "Holy, Holy, Holy is the Lord God Almighty, who was, and is, and is to come." God is not just holy; he is holy holy holy - he is Holiness. God is not just mighty; he is almighty - he is mightiness. God doesn't just exist; he always was, he always is now, and he always will be - he is existence. This is why when the four living creatures have said what they say, the 24 kings fall down before God, and they lay down their crowns before him, and they say in chapter 4 verse 11, "You are worthy, our Lord and God, to receive glory and honor and power, for you created all things, and by your will they were created and have their being." ALL OTHER THINGS rely on God for their very being. There is no little whizzing atom in the universe which does not owe its existence to God.  There is no blip of energy to cause any kind of change without God.  There is no concept or idea which exists for any other reason than God. No feeling or emotion outside God. Even nothing, so far as nothing is something, cannot be without God. This is what it means for God to be Greatness.  This is God's glory.

Now that, to me, is amazing. It truly blows my mind. And yet that's not the end of it. Revelation has still more to tell us about God and his glory. In the next chapter, chapter 5, John sees another heavenly vision; another picture to reveal the truth about God and his glory to us. In chapter 5 we see a scroll, sealed with seven wax seals, like on old documents, used to keep them shut until someone with authority can come and open them and act on the contents. The scroll, we will discover, is God's plan. It's what God has in store for his creation. But it can't be acted on until it's opened, and it can't be opened because no-one can open it! No-one is worthy to bring about the fulfillment of God's plans. No wonder John cries at this: God's plans are always the best, but they cannot be acted on because no-one can be found, not in heaven or in earth or under the earth, who can open this scroll or even look inside.

Let that sink in a moment. No-one can be found to open this scroll. Not under the earth - neither Satan nor any of his demons can crack it open. No-one on earth - no king or president or scientist or magician can even take a peek. Not even in heaven will you find someone to carry out God's plan. No angel, not even God himself will open it. The God we just saw on his throne, source of all power and greatness, of existence itself, will not open this scroll.  Something is missing.

Then someone is pointed out to John. They are called God's King - the Lion of Judah, the tribe of kings; and the Root of David, the line of kings. More than that, they are standing on the very centre of God's throne. Not in front of the throne, not around the throne, not beside the throne - this person is in God's very own place. And they are depicted as a lamb - and not just any lamb, but a lamb that has been slaughtered. And this lamb reaches out and takes the scroll of God's plan.

This is the picture given to John to show us the reality. This Lamb is Jesus: God the Son, who was slaughtered - and yet who lives. And it is because of Jesus' death and resurrection that God's plans can come to pass. God's glory - all power, all greatness, all holiness, all creation - hinges on the death and resurrection of Jesus.  The saving act that brings an end to sin and death for us, and opens up a way for humanity to relate to God as Father, and to Jesus as Brother, and to the Holy Spirit as friend, is as central to the very essence of God as his being the creator of all things. God's plans from the beginning, before creation, and into eternity, forever and ever, all hang on what Jesus did on that cross. If the idea that God is Glory - that he is Holiness and Power and Existence - was not mind-blowing enough, then to realise that capital S Salvation is as much a part of God's Glory as these other things just knocks me right out of the park. Our salvation, our relationship with God, is not an afterthought. It's not even just a piece of the puzzle. It is key to God's character and his plans. It is as much his greatness as anything else. He has made us, and a relationship with us, as fundamental as existence itself. What an amazing God. What an amazing, wonderful God.

According to the book of Revelation, according to God, this is reality. But how does our attitude towards God line up with the reality of God's greatness pictured for us in Revelation? I want to ask you to think about two questions.

Firstly, how do you think about God's greatness? It's quite easy to think of God's greatness as a big pile of stones - as though it is somehow possible to remove stones one at a time, and lessen his greatness, or add stones to increase his greatness.  You mightn't say it like that out loud. But if you've ever thought that you can somehow bargain with God and say, "I'll do this to glorify you, and in return I expect a roof over my head, a family, a good job doing something I enjoy," then you've thought that way. Likewise, if you've ever thought, "I am such a shameful sinner and a hypocrite. I must turn people away from God," then you have thought that way. When he blesses us with wealth, he doesn't get less rich. When he gives us strength, he doesn't get less strong. God's greatness is not a pile of stones.

God's greatness is actually more like a story.  If I write a story, I am the source of that story. If I tell you the story, I don't lose it - you simply gain it. We share it together. God is the source of all greatness. His greatness is written on our lives through our creation, through our salvation. We tell his story by being created, by being saved. Doesn't that put a different spin on evangelism - the story of God's glory is told to the world simply by being him saving us! We don't add to God's story of glory, nor do we take away from it, any more than a character in a book adds to the story in which they exist. Rather, he includes us in his glory. All glorify God, we are told: Christian and non-Christian; angel and demon; living and dead - chapter 5 verse 13 says "every creature in heaven and on earth and under the earth" gives praise and honor and glory and power to God and to Jesus. We don't need to worry on that score: God's glory is guaranteed. 

Secondly, how do you think about your relationship with God as a Christian? It's quite easy to think of our salvation as just a part of our lives, and just a part of God's plans.  And so we compartmentalise our life with God into the time we spend at church, or the time we spend praying, or the time we spend volunteering for things. But it's so much more than that. A relationship with God through Jesus Christ is as vital as existing. It's central to God's glory. It is therefore central to our entire being. There's no part of our life where God should be absent.

In Revelation chapter 4, we see a picture of the 24 kings with 24 golden crowns. A crown represents sovereignty - supreme and independent authority. But Revelation shows us the reality of God's glory - that there is no such thing as authority independent from God. All power and glory and greatness and salvation comes from God. We have to accept that reality. And that means taking off our golden crowns, and laying them down at the foot of God's throne where they belong; giving up our pretend authority and accepting God's actual authority.

Are you still holding on to your authority over your life, your golden crown, hoping you can use it to bargain with God? Are you living as though Christ's death and resurrection is only important on Sundays? Is God's voice just one of a bunch of competing voices demanding your attention? Don't ignore reality! Give your pretend authority over to God. Not because you think it will get you something. Not because you think it will glorify God - everyone does that eventually. Do it because he loves you enough to die for you, and because you love him back. That relationship of love with God, possible because of Jesus, is the most important thing there is. That's reality. Let's live like it.

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And again, that is reflected in the songs that are sung. The four living creatures and the 24 kings sing a new song to the Lamb, "You are worthy to take the scroll and to open its seals, because you were slain, and with your blood you purchased for God persons from every tribe and language and people and nation. You have made them to be a kingdom and priests to serve our God, and they will reign on the earth." And then the angels, all the angels, all the angels ever, cry out in praise to the Lamb, "Worthy is the Lamb, who was slain, to receive power and wealth and wisdom and strength and honor and glory and praise!" And then every creature ever made calls out the praise of God and the Lamb, together, "To him who sits on the throne and to the Lamb be praise and honor and glory and power, for ever and ever!" Their songs epitomise the truth of the picture we have seen: Jesus and God, the very essence of existence, creation, power, and salvation, glorified together as one.








But their songs tell us something else too. "Worthy is the Lamb, who was slain, to receive power and wealth and wisdom and strength and honor and glory and praise!" But I just said that God is the source of all these things. Don't ever think that you can bargain with God, or that he demands anything from you that he hasn't already given you in the first place. This is not a transaction; it is not a business dealing.

That's what it is like for God and his glory. Whatever small power or wealth or wisdom or strength or honour or glory or praise we have, we have it only on deposit from God. Anything we do with it ultimately comes from him, and belongs to him. If we aren't giving it back to him, who are we giving it to?






Now if you're like me, you read these amazing songs, and you think, "Yeah, Jesus and God are worthy of all that stuff. How can I make that happen?" Or maybe you were simply thinking, "Okay, so God is great. I knew that. What now?" Or perhaps you have picked up something interesting in those songs of praise that the creatures and the kings and the angels are all singing to God and to Jesus.  They say things like, "You are worthy, our Lord and God, to receive glory;" and, "Worthy is  the Lamb, who was slain to receive <among other things> glory;" and, "To him who sits on the throne and to the lamb be <a list of things including> glory." And you might be thinking, "But if God IS glory, and Jesus IS glory, then how can they receive glory? How can we give God and Jesus glory if they are already the source of glory?"





Let me ask you this: why do we applaud people? Sometimes it's because of what they do - so you might receive applause when you graduate from school, or win an award, for a good catch, or scoring a point, or their good form in their swing. Sometimes we do it to congratulate people - like at a wedding when we celebrate the happy couple. We might applaud when we find a joke both funny and clever. We might applaud when someone is giving a speech because we want to show that we agree with what they said.

And then sometimes we applaud people simply because of who they are. When a powerful personality is being presented - a leader, a stand out person, a hero - we applaud them before we have even heard what they have to say. In those cases, we are applauding not just because it's polite (you can tell the difference in a polite clap). We applaud because of who they are in relation to us. They are not just a leader, they're our leader: we respect them, we love them, and we applaud simply because it is them who stand before us.

Now that raises an interesting question: do we clap because someone is great, or are they only great because we applaud them? A person has greatness, or glory, because of who they are and what they do; and we give them glory by acknowledging the greatness of who they are and what they do. We don't add to someone's greatness by applauding them; really, we rob them of their rightful glory if we don't give it to them.

Giving glory, then, is like money in the bank: you earn the money by your work or because you inherit it (what you've done or who you are), and the bank pays it to you not because you earn it from the bank, but because the bank owes you that money. If the bank didn't pay when you had a positive balance in your account, and they said, "Oh, you just need to put in a few hours work first," how upset would you be!? That's your money that you deserve. They need to hand it over.

Giving glory is like that, but it's more than that, because we don't just give glory because it's due. We give it because we respect and love the great person who deserves it. Let me show you what I mean. If you love God, join with me and let's give him a big round of applause. Really show him how much you respect his greatness. How does that feel? It's not enough, is it? It doesn't even begin to express the greatness God has. It's good enough to congratulate a married couple or welcome a new baby into church, but it doesn't do justice to God's greatness, to the awesomeness that is existence and salvation.

We need to give people the glory they deserve. And God and Jesus deserve so much glory that applause alone will not cover it. power and wealth and wisdom and strength and honor and glory and praise!”

There are two reasons we should hand over our whole lives to God.

Sunday, April 17, 2016

Prayer: God at Work in Spite of Fear (Judges 6)

Heavenly Father,

We know you are a god of Good.  We know that you don't delight in evil or wickedness, that it doesn't please you when people do wrong. And yet we look around our world, and we see so many acts of evil and wrong, human against human, or the world seemingly against us, and it shakes us up. We hear of oppression and bullying and mistreatment of people based on their sexuality or gender identity, and we fear that they might suffer harm. We watch people fleeing from danger being put into detention centres by our government, and we fear for their safety and health. Stories of terrorism abound - bombings in Belgium and Pakistan that kill and wound hundreds; kidnappings, beheadings, shootings, knifings, all of which are designed to strike fear into our hearts. We hear statistics of domestic violence and child abuse, and they scare us - they make us look at our own churches, even our own families, and see possible dangers for ourselves and our children. All around us people get sick, and although we have good medical facilities and hard-working doctors and nurses, people still suffer with health problems, they grow frail and they die.

We know you're a good God, but when we see and hear all these terrible things, we become afraid. And so we call out to you, our mighty God, and we ask you to hear us in our fear. We don't understand why all these terrible things happen, but we thank you that we can trust in you, Lord, knowing that you are in control. We thank you that no matter how big and scary and unstoppable the forces of evil might seem to us, you are bigger and more powerful, and you can stop them, and you will stop them. We take your promises to heart, and we rely on them, knowing that you have set a time when evil will fall, pain will end, and you will call all of your people to come to you forever. Thank you for having that wonderful endgame, and sharing it with us so that we can have that hope.

And with that end in mind, we ask that you will give us faith to stand firm in amongst the many things that we might fear in this world. Give us strength in your spirit to carry your name into dark places, so that all of your children might hear your voice, hear your call, and come back to you.  Make us your hands and your feet, so that we can offer refuge to all who call on you and ask for your help. Fill our hearts with your love for the lost, the marginalised, the mistreated, the oppressed and the weak. Fill us with joy that we can share with them in their distress. Bless us as we give whatever we have, Lord, so that they might see your light and receive your gifts.

We pray for your protection and relief for those who are suffering in the grip of physical and mental health issues. We pray for new mothers and expecting mothers and fathers, that you will be with them and watch over them, and fill them with joy and keep their children safe. We pray for those who have lost loved ones through sickness or violence, that you will be with them in their grief. We pray for those who are struggling financially, that you will ease their burdens. And we pray for those struggling with sin and spiritual darkness, that you will show them your amazing grace, and welcome them into your wonderful light.

All these things we pray, trusting in your son, Jesus Christ, amen.

Prayer - God at work despite our disobedience (Judges 14-15)

Heavenly Father,

We know that you are a holy God, perfect in love, justice and truth. We know that you are set apart from anything or anyone else. You're certainly set apart from us. We're definitely not perfect in love, justice or truth - not as individuals, not as a church, not as a society, and not as the human race. We fall short of your perfect holiness, and yet you tell us, "Be holy, because I am holy," and Jesus tells us, "Be perfect, as your heavenly father is perfect."

We are not perfect, and you know that. We are tired, exhausted, sick, troubled and weak. We despair at our condition, and you know that too. So we ask you to have mercy on us, Lord, because we are faint; heal us, Lord, because we are in agony; save and deliver us, Lord, because our souls are in deep anguish. 

And we thank you, our glorious and awesome father, because when we look around this world, full of troubles and sins and suffering, we see you at work through the weakness and inability of your people. We hear about you healing people through medicines and doctors and nurses and people who go out of their way to bring relief to the sick; and we pray that you will continue to heal the sick through your people. We watch videos of you bringing comfort and relief to those who are losing homes, brothers and sisters, mothers and fathers, children and fields because of persecution they face or because of disasters that strike; and we especially pray for those in Japan who are helping with the earthquake relief efforts there, and for those in Chibok, Nigeria, whose kidnapped daughters have now been missing for two years. We read about those who are taking your message into places it's never been, or to people who've never heard, or who have heard a hundred times before, who are guiding and discipling people into brand new relationships with you; and we pray that you will continue to work in the hearts of all those who hear in prisons, in scripture, in church and everywhere else. And we can look around and see your hand stretching over the adults and children and families in this church, and thank you for the provision you give, the instruction you give, the support you give, the love you give amongst us and between us; and we pray that you might help us as we continue to love and support one another through times of difficulty and stress and even joy - for all the new and expecting mothers and fathers of our church, we pray you will work through your people to provide love, comfort and support.

We know that we can turn our backs on you, and yet we thank you that you never turn your back on us. We are amazed at how you can turn even our weakest moments, even our greatest failures or temptations or sins, into your most glorious successes, into times that will make the heavens fill with songs of gladness. Only you can turn evil into good, O Mighty God - only you can create perfection with such imperfect tools - and we are humbled as you choose to work through our weakness to further show your strength and glory. Help us to embrace our weakness and accept your strength as we rejoice in your glory, and praise your amazing name.

By the grace of Jesus Christ we pray,

Amen

Saturday, April 02, 2016

Prayer: Understanding Miracles (John 20:24-31)

Heavenly Father,

All your works are amazing and astounding to us. From the beginning, you created the world and everything in it, suspended in a universe so finely tuned for our survival that the very existence of everything speaks to us of your love and care for us. You made humanity in your own image, and revealed yourself to us, wanting your creation to know its creator and to relate to you in love. Again and again you have chosen to work through the weak, the troubled, the sinful and the scorned, so that when you are victorious - which you always are - your victory is that much more impressive for the path that it came. You chose a man and woman, old and unable to have kids, and turned them into a nation. You took that nation, when it was overpowered and enslaved, and made them your people, giving them freedom and riches and blessings.

When you came into our world as Jesus, you didn't do it as a mighty king backed by legions of angels, or born to the emperor of the most powerful nation. You chose shepherds and foreigners for your ancestors, a carpenter and a vulnerable young woman for your parents. You came without fame or fortune, and yet you healed the sick, drove out demons, and taught us your will with power and authority. You modelled a life of love and holiness, caring for the needs of your creation. And then you did the most amazing thing we can imagine: you defeated our greatest enemies - sin and death - through dying yourself. You made yourself the lowest of the low, a criminal on a cross, cursed for us.

And then you raised Jesus from the dead... and he left again.  Rather than storming the earth and conquering it at the hands of your glorified and risen Son, you sent your spirit to dwell in your people, in ordinary people, in people like us, and you sent them to conquer the world in your name - not with violence, but with love. You have worked through us - ordinary, normal, weak and stuttering and sinful and stumbling people - to bring your loving message to billions. 

And so we come together today, Father, to ask you to continue doing what have done from the beginning. We ask you, Lord, to glorify yourself. Make your name great among all the people that we meet - Waitara locals, family and friends, workmates, acquaintances and strangers. Show your love to us and through us to others, so that more and more people might know you and love you in return. Reveal yourself and your love in every way possible, and give us the faith to know your love and accept it even when it doesn't look like the love we might want.

We pray for those among us who are sick, who are struggling, who are in pain, who are suffering trials of many and various kinds. We ask, in love for them and for you, that you will act in love to them. And we know in faith that you already do. If it is your will to heal them and to make their situations easier, do that and be glorified, Lord. If it is your will that they continue on these difficult paths and you give them the strength to overcome through faith in you, do that and be glorified, Lord.  And if it is your will that they be helped through their pain and suffering by the loving actions of your people, give us the strength to do that, so that you will be glorified, Lord.

And in all these things we pray that you will be revealed to us in greater measure, so that we might know you better, love you more, and live for your glory. And we ask these things in the authority of your son, Jesus Christ. Amen

Wednesday, March 02, 2016

Sermon: The Man From Heaven Heals on the Sabbath (John 5:1-15)

 As per usual, I include the sermon itself, then after that you'll find a whole bunch of scribble notes I also made whilst preparing it, so you can see where my brain was going at the time. This sermon took a number of rewrites to get right. It was mostly rethinkings about the focus of God's priorities, and what was right and not right to say about them. This turned out to be a much more focused precision point than I first thought.

Update: I did a bit more thinking about my sermon, and I have posted the updated version below, along with the sermon outline that gets handed out to people in church. The main changes are swapping around the second and third point (so now it goes God's priorities, we ignore them, we misunderstand them). I tried to disentangle these points from the illustrations and applications a bit - one of the difficulties of this sermon is the applications and illustrations apply to both points, and that could create confusion.  I also removed a hypothetical illustration, both for time purposes and because I don't think hypothetical illustrations are as powerful or helpful as the real deal. I've left the original further below, but the updated one is directly below.


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Today I will be talking about priorities - our priorities and God's priorities. Let's start with a prayer, that God might help us focus: Heavenly Father, guide our minds and our hearts, so that we aren't off track, but prioritise you today. Amen. You may need your Bibles open for this talk, and there's a sermon outline in the handout. If you do have the handout, please draw a little arrow to swap the last two points.

Once when I used to work in a petrol station, I was training a new employee on the midnight shift.  Some time in the middle of the night, a large, scary looking man came in - with a big beard, shaved head, tattoos all up his arms - and started microwaving chicken sandwiches, eating one while loading the rest into a plastic bag. Then, bold as brass, he went to walk out the door without paying for them. Before he could, I pressed a button under the counter that locked the front door, so he couldn't leave. And then he went mental. He yelled and screamed and told me to let him out, because he was already on CCTV and the cops could just catch him later. I calmly approached him (calm on the outside, I was so afraid!) and told him that he could keep the sandwich he was eating, as we obviously couldn't sell that, but he needed to give me other microwave chicken sandwiches, because they didn't belong to him.  He looked at me as if I was crazier than him, and then after a moment gave me the bag full of sandwiches. I let him out, and he left the store.

Shortly after this, my new trainee asked me, "Is that what we're expected to do?" The answer, of course, is no! A petrol station attendant is not expected to put their life at risk for the sake of a microwave chicken sandwich. Or anything else, for that matter. At the time, I thought I was doing the right thing, but in reality I had made a stupid mistake. I had made some chicken sandwiches more important than my own safety. I had the wrong priorities, and I didn't even realise until a trainee pointed it out to me!

Right from the beginning of the series we heard that John didn't record everything Jesus did, but rather had a very clear purpose in recording certain acts of Jesus - 20:31 "these are written that you may believe that Jesus is the Messiah, the Son of God, and that by believing you may have life in his name." This act of Jesus that John records in chapter 5:1-15 is all about showing us that Jesus follows God's priorities.  As Christians, we have to make sure that our priorities match up with God's priorities. We can all have the wrong priorities - if we misunderstand God's priorities, or go so far as to even ignore them.

We can see God's priorities by looking at Jesus. Jesus learns of a man who has been crippled for 38 years and, because he cares about his physical wellbeing, Jesus heals him. Being healed allowed the man to go back to the temple - crippled people were barred otherwise. It's no accident that the next time Jesus meets this man, it is in the temple.  So not only does Jesus heal him, but he restores his relationship with God's people.  When he meets the man again, Jesus tells him that the consequences of sin are even worse than a lifetime of crippling disability, so he must deal with his sin problem, and so expresses concern for his eternal spiritual welfare. Jesus's priorities are for this man's wellbeing: physical and relational and spiritual. Jesus looks for the person who is really in need - the person who is really broken - and helps them.

Jesus is showing God's priorities.  God loves people and wants to fix their problems.  God promises us he will take away all sickness, suffering and pain.  God promises to bring people into relationship with himself and with each other as a community. God really cares for people who are really broken, who really need him. That alone is enough for us to see that Jesus is the Son of God and believe in him.  But that is true for any healing that Jesus performed.  As always, when we look at the gospel of John, there is more to it.  And we see it when we realise that Jesus is willing to face persecution and death at the hands of his enemies to demonstrate and pursue God's priorities.

Now you might think, Why would anyone want to persecute someone whose priorities are caring for a broken person's physical, relational and spiritual wellbeing? And yet they do. We read about it in the verse just after our reading: "So because Jesus was doing these things on the Sabbath, the Jewish leaders began to persecute him."  This act of Jesus involves more than just Jesus and the crippled man.  So let's look at the other people in our story: the Jewish leaders.

In the passage today, the wrong priorities are perfectly illustrated by the questions the Jewish leaders ask the ex-crippled man. If I wanted to be generous to them, I would say that they were trying to help everyone live a life of holiness to attract God's salvation. If I wanted to be harsh on them, I would say they were using God's laws to make life more comfortable for themselves. As we read the gospels, the truth seems to fall somewhere in the middle.  The Jewish leaders at the time thought that if people kept God's laws, maybe God would drive out their Roman dictators and set them free.  But they also wanted to wield political power over others to benefit themselves. In this way they misunderstood God's priorities of how people come to God, and they ignored God's priorities by focusing on their own comfort.  Both are wrong, and these are traps we can just as easily fall into.

The first thing they say is, “It is the Sabbath; the law forbids you to carry your mat.” That's not actually true.  What the Jewish leaders did was establish a set of rules that boxed in God's own laws - laws to stop people from breaking laws.  By boxing in God's laws with other laws, they sought to stop people from sinning so as to attract God's salvation. But when the Jewish leaders made up rules like "Don't carry your mat on the Sabbath," they then enforced them by excluding people from coming to the Temple. That made them powerful!  It made them important people, and they liked it.

The man gives his answer, which is essentially "Some guy healed me, and he told me to carry my mat, so I did."

Now what did the Jewish leaders ask? "Who told you to pick it up and walk?" Not "Who healed you, who made you well, who is performing such a remarkable miracle?"  But, "Who told you to pick it up, who told you to break our laws? Who is challenging our authority?" Again, the Jewish leaders had the wrong priorities.  Their priority is finding out who is telling people to break their rules (stopping them from being saved); and who is challenging their authority (and their power and importance they love so much).

The Jewish leaders had made up laws, and they wanted people to follow those laws. And just like the Jewish leaders, as a Christian community we can sometimes make up laws to box in people's relationship with God. We use these rules to draw a line between what's right and what's wrong, so we can point to (usually someone else's) actions and say, "That's wrong." We draw these lines for lots of reasons, but ultimately it usually comes down to the same two reasons the Jewish leaders had: we think laws will bring people to God; and we want power over others because our rules make us comfortable.

And both reasons are based on wrong priorities. We are mistaken about God's priorities, and we just plain ignore them. As I said, both of these things can exist together. Let's start with when we ignore God's priorities. This is sin itself. There's no positive intent in this. It is all about making ourselves more comfortable.

Making up rules is a way of making clear lines between good and bad. And that makes us comfortable, because it means not only do we now know what's right and wrong, but we also get to say what's right and wrong. You can usually tell when we are doing this for our own comfort, because we draw lines that make actions we would never take really black and white, while we make sins we might commit rather more grey.

Look at how the western Church treats greed - an actual sin, not something we made up. On Tuesday I was sitting next to a Christian woman at the doctor. She goes to church, runs a bible study in her home, and loves God. She was complaining that her $2000 gold watch was running slow. The western church is very good at thinking that someone who spends $2000 on a watch isn't greedy.  We can't judge them for wasting money on an utter extravagance when there are people in their church who live on less than that a month and struggle to pay their rent. We're good at being non-judgmental when it comes to greed. We're very cautious. We consider that we don't know the whole story. We don't know how much the person gives to church and Christian causes. We don't know what their own conscience is like. We don't know the background or the circumstances. We are very, very careful.

But how do we treat people who smoke cigarettes?  Who wear clothes that show too much skin? Who gamble? Who vote for the Greens? It's so easy to point at them and say, "That's wrong!" But these aren't God's rules; they're our rules. And our rules are to do with our comfort zones. You can probably think of other examples of things we rail against because they make us uncomfortable. Someone goes and watches an MA15+ rated movie full of swearing and violence like Deadpool, and we can furrow our brows and tut our fingers. Someone takes a holiday and flies business class, and we say, "Ooh, that must have been nice."

Don't get me wrong. Rich does not equal greedy, and I'm not calling on us to be more judgmental of people because of their wealth or their greed. I'm saying we need to be less judgmental of people whose actions and activities we are uncomfortable with. We know how to do it with greed - we need to learn how to do it with everything, and especially things that aren't God's rules, but rather middle class cultural rules.

Tony Campolo, spiritual advisor to US President Bill Clinton, once said to a big Christian conference:  "1) Last night 30,000 kids died of starvation or diseases stemming from malnutrition. 2) None of you give a <swear word>. 3) You all care more about the fact that I just said <swear word> than the fact that I just said 30,000 kids died." I don't have the guts to read out that quote exactly, because I know the moment I swear in church, there are people who will be so distracted by it they won't hear anything else I have to say. But if we care more about swear words than about kids dying, we plainly have the wrong priorities!

Now sometimes there's more to it. Sometimes someone's sin hurts us, or someone we love. It seems unfair to talk about that as if it is mere discomfort. Sometimes the pain of sin is not just the loss of a comfy chair; it's torture and betrayal and loss. And so, in pain, we lash out. I understand that, and so does God. But that  doesn't make it right. Even in the midst of pain, we must still pursue God's priorities. Torture and betrayal and loss are what Jesus experienced on the cross because of other people's sin. And he sought to fulfill God's priorities in looking after broken people on that cross! Keeping Jesus free from suffering was not God's priority. Jesus died precisely for those who caused him pain. And we are called to love others - not because they're lovely, but because we love God, and that's his priority.

Now let's move on to mistaking God's priorities by thinking we are bringing people closer to God.

I want to make it clear, it's not wrong to tell people how to live holy lives. I have no problem with telling people that something is against God's will - I do it every time I preach. And there is nothing wrong with telling someone that their sin is an obstacle between them getting to God. Of course it is! We can never get to God on our own - that's the gospel! The mistake comes when we start telling people that their sin is an obstacle between God getting to them. That is wrong! Nothing is an obstacle between God getting to them! God overcomes sin! God does away with sin! God destroys sin! That's why Jesus came - to save the lost!  To quote Jesus from another gospel, "It is not the healthy who need a doctor, but the sick. I have not come to call the righteous, but sinners." Sinners are the ones Jesus came for!

I think we tell ourselves we're good at recognising this gospel truth. We say we understand God's grace. We think we wouldn't make a mistake like that. Of course someone's good works don't lead to their salvation. But then we see someone in our church commit a certain kind of sin, and it's like we lose our minds. "They call themselves a Christian? They shouldn't be sinning! They must be backsliding! They mustn't really be saved!" But that's the mistake! Christians are sinners. If we're not, why do we do a confession at church every week? Why confess if we don't have any sins to confess? If you say those words every week, and you mean them, but then you judge another Christian because they have sinned, you're a hypocrite. And if I then judge you for being a hypocrite, I'm a hypocrite. My point is not to judge people who are judgmental, but rather to point out that we're all sinners! Living more holy lives is a great way to love God.  But it's a terrible way to solve our sin problem.  We can only rely on God in Christ Jesus for that.

God's priority in caring for people's physical, relational and spiritual wellbeing is not reliant on our ability to live holy lives, so we don't need to worry about regulating other people's lives to make sure they are holy enough for God. If we prioritise their knowing and loving God and his care for them - God's priority - a transformed life will follow.

If we start complaining that sinners are coming to church, we're very close to the Jewish leaders complaining that Jesus heals cripples on the Sabbath, and we are outside God's priorities. And if we start judging people because they're breaking our rules, we're doing so because they are challenging an authority we don't have, and we're outside God's priorities. God makes the rules, not us. Jesus showed us he is God's son that by healing on the sabbath. We should be following God's priorities of loving broken people, meeting their physical, relational and spiritual needs, and giving them every opportunity to believe that Jesus is the Messiah, the Son of God, so that by believing they may have life in his name.

What are God’s Priorities?


    1.
        1. God’s priorities are shown in Jesus


Jesus cares for physical wellbeing
“At once the man was cured” (5:9)

Jesus cares for relational wellbeing
“Later Jesus found him at the temple” (5:14)

Jesus cares for spiritual wellbeing
“Stop sinning or something worse may happen to you” (5:14)

    1.
        1. Our priorities are either God’s or wrong


The Pharisees had the wrong priorities
“[B]ecause Jesus was doing these things on the Sabbath, the Jewish leaders began to persecute him” (5:16)

We can ignore God’s priorities
“It is the Sabbath; the law forbids you to carry your mat” (5:10)

We can misunderstand God’s priorities
“Who is this fellow who told you to pick it up and walk?” (5:12)

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This morning, I will be talking about priorities - our priorities and God's priorities. Let's start with a prayer, that God might help us focus: Heavenly Father, guide our minds and our hearts, so that we aren't off track, but prioritise you today. Amen.

Once when I used to work in a petrol station, I was training a new employee on the midnight shift.  Some time in the middle of the night, a large, scary looking man came in - with a big beard, shaved head, tattoos all up his arms - and started microwaving chicken sandwiches, eating one while loading the rest into a plastic bag. Then, bold as brass, he went to walk out the door without paying for them. Before he did, I pressed a button under the counter that locked the front door, so he couldn't leave. And then he went mental. He yelled and screamed and told me to let him out, because he was already on CCTV and the cops could just catch him later. I calmly approached him (calm on the outside, I was so afraid!) and told him that he could keep the sandwich he was eating, because we obviously couldn't sell that, but he needed to give me other microwave chicken sandwiches, because they didn't belong to him.  He looked at me as if I was stupid, and then after a moment gave me the bag full of sandwiches. I let him out, and he left the store.

Shortly after this, my new trainee asked me, "Is that what we're expected to do?" The answer, of course, is no! A petrol station attendant is not expected to put their life at risk for the sake of a microwave chicken sandwich. Or anything else, for that matter. At the time, I thought I was doing the right thing, but in reality I had made a stupid mistake. I was trying to prevent the chicken sandwiches from being stolen at the expense of my own safety. I had the wrong priorities, and I didn't even realise until a trainee pointed it out to me!

It is possible for us to have the wrong priorities - to misunderstand God's priorities, or sometimes to even ignore them. As Christians, we have to make sure that our priorities match up with God's priorities.  Right from the beginning of the series we heard that John didn't record everything Jesus did, but rather had a very clear purpose in recording certain acts of Jesus - 20:31 "these are written that you may believe that Jesus is the Messiah, the Son of God, and that by believing you may have life in his name." This act of Jesus that John records in chapter 5:1-15 is all about showing us God's priorities.

We see God's priorities by looking at Jesus. Jesus learns of a man who has been crippled for 38 years and because he cares about his physical wellbeing, Jesus heals him. Being healed allowed the man to go back to the temple - crippled people were barred otherwise. It's no accident that the next time Jesus meets this man, it is in the temple.  So not only does Jesus heal him, but he restores his relationship with God's people.  When he meets the man again, Jesus expresses concern for his spiritual welfare, and tells him that the consequences of sin are even worse than a lifetime of crippling disability, so he should deal with his sin problem. Jesus's priorities are for this man's wellbeing: physical and relational and spiritual. Jesus looks for the person who is really in need - the person who is really broken - and helps them.

Jesus is showing God's priorities.  God loves people and wants to fix their problems.  God promises us he will take away all sickness, suffering and pain.  God promises to bring people into relationship with himself and with each other as a community. God really cares for people who are really broken, who really need him. That alone is enough for us to see that Jesus is the Son of God, and believe in him.  But that is true for any healing that Jesus performed.  As always when we look at the gospel of John, there is more to it.  And we see it when we realise that Jesus is willing to face persecution and death at the hands of his enemies to demonstrate and pursue God's priorities.

Now you might think, Why would anyone want to persecute someone whose priorities are caring for a broken person's physical, relational and spiritual wellbeing? And yet they do. We read about it in the verse just after our reading: "So because Jesus was doing these things on the Sabbath, the Jewish leaders began to persecute him."  This act of Jesus involves more than just Jesus and the crippled man.  Let's look at the other people in our story: the Jewish leaders.

What were the priorities of the Jewish leaders?  The first thing they say is, “It is the Sabbath; the law forbids you to carry your mat.” That's not actually true.  What the Jewish leaders did was establish a set of rules that boxed in God's own laws - laws to stop people from breaking laws.  If I wanted to be generous to them, I would say that their priority was to try and help everyone live a life of holiness to attract God's blessing. If I wanted to be harsh on them, I would say that their priority was to use God's laws as a way of making life more comfortable for themselves. As we read the gospels, the truth seems to fall somewhere in the middle, and both are wrong.  The Jewish leaders at the time thought that if people kept God's laws, maybe God would drive out their Roman dictators and set them free.  In this way they misunderstood God's priorities.  But they also wanted to wield political power over others to benefit themselves. That is, they ignored God's priorities. And these are mistakes we can just as easily make.

In the passage today, these wrong priorities are perfectly illustrated by the questions they ask the ex-crippled man. When they first see him carrying his mat on the Sabbath, they approach him and ask him why he is breaking the law they had made, which they wrongly call God's law. And the man gives his answer, "A man healed me, and he told me to carry my mat, so I did."

Now just stop there for a moment. Imagine you see someone walking down the street carrying their wheelchair over their head. People may be freaking out a bit because, you know, they don't want this guy to drop a wheelchair on their head. And so someone, maybe you, comes up to him and says, "Hey mate, why are you brandishing that wheelchair about?" And he responds, "I broke my back 38 years ago and I've been stuck in this wheelchair ever since, but then someone came along and healed me instantly, and he told me to carry it home, so I am!" What would your initial reaction be? What would you first ask this person? What's the obvious question in that situation?

WHO HEALED YOU? Right? Well, as it turns out, that is only an obvious question if your priorities are caring for people, or you have even a bit of interest in other people or in amazing miracles.  But what did the Jewish leaders ask? "Who told you to pick it up and walk?" This tells us about the priorities of the Jewish leaders: this guy's healing is not important to them. They don't ask him about his healing. They may accept that he was healed miraculously. It's not important to them, because their priority is finding out who is telling people to break their rules - who is challenging their authority.

The Jewish leaders wanted people to follow the laws they had made. And just like the Jewish leaders, we can make up laws to box in people's relationship with God. We feel like we need to be able to draw a line between what's right and what's wrong, so we can point to someone else's actions and say, "That's wrong." We draw these lines for lots of reasons, but ultimately it always comes down to the same two reasons the Jewish leaders had: we think our laws will bring God's blessings, and we want power over others because our rules make us comfortable.

And in both cases, we are wrong. We are mistaken about God's priorities, or we just plain ignore them. Let's start with the mistake.  Why is it a mistake to want people to live holy lives? Why is it wrong to tell people what's good for them? The answer is: it's not wrong. I have no problem with telling people that something is against God's will. There is nothing wrong with telling someone that their sin is an obstacle between them getting to God. Of course it is! We can never get to God on our own! The mistake comes when we start telling people that their sin is an obstacle between God getting to them. Because nothing is an obstacle between God getting to them! God overcomes sin! God does away with sin! God destroys sin! That's why Jesus came - to save the lost! To quote Jesus from another gospel, "It is not the healthy who need a doctor, but the sick. I have not come to call the righteous, but sinners." Sinners are the ones Jesus came for!

I think we tell ourselves we're good at recognising that truth. We understand God's grace. We wouldn't make a mistake like that. Of course someone's good works don't lead to their salvation. And then we see someone in our church sin, and we lose our minds. "They call themselves a Christian! They shouldn't be sinning! They must be backsliding! They mustn't really be saved!" But that's a mistake. Christians are sinners. If we're not, why do we do a confession at church every week? Why confess if we don't have any sins to confess? If you say those words every week, and you mean them, and then you judge another Christian because they have sinned, you're a hypocrite. Of course, if I then judge you for being a hypocrite, I'm a hypocrite. My point is, we're all sinners, and while living more holy lives is a great way to love God, it's a terrible way to solve our sin problem.  Much better that we rely on God in Christ Jesus for that. We must ensure we have this right in our minds.

So that's when we make a mistake about God's priorities. What about when we ignore God's priorities? This is sin itself. There's no positive intent in this. It is all about making ourselves more comfortable. What does this look like?  For the Jewish leaders, it involved making up rules like "Don't carry your mat on the Sabbath," and then enforcing them.  Because they made the laws, if you wanted to know how to please God, you had to ask them what the laws were, and they enforced them when they were broken. They could exclude people from coming to the Temple by saying they were unclean. They were preachers, and police and judges all in one. That's what made them powerful!  It meant they could walk around in flowing robes and be greeted with respect in the marketplaces, and have the most important seats in the synagogues and the places of honor at banquets. It made them important people.

That is what is fundamentally comfortable about making up our own rules. It's a way of making clear lines between good and bad. And that makes us comfortable, because it means we get to say what's right and wrong. You can usually tell when we are doing this for our own comfort, because usually we draw lines that make actions we would never take really black and white, while we make sins we might get involved in rather more grey.

Look at how the western Church treats greed. On Tuesday I was sitting next to a Christian woman (who goes to church, runs a bible study in her home, and loves God) complaining that her $2000 gold watch was running slow. We're very good at thinking that someone who spends $2000 on a watch isn't greedy.  We can't judge them for wasting money on an utter extravagance when there are people in their church who live on less than that a month and struggle to pay their rent. We're good at being non-judgmental when it comes to money. We're very cautious. We consider that we don't know the whole story. We don't know how much the person gives to church and Christian causes. We don't know what their own conscience is like. We are very careful.

But how do we look at people who smoke cigarettes?  Who wear clothes that show too much skin? Who vote for the Greens? It's so easy to point at them and say, "Sinner!" But these aren't God's priorities; they're our rules. Someone goes and watches an MA15+ rated movie full of swearing and violence like Deadpool, and we can furrow our brows and tut our fingers. Someone takes a holiday and flies business class, and we say, "Ooh, that must have been nice."

Don't get me wrong. Rich does not equal greedy, and I'm not calling on us to be more judgmental of people because of their wealth. I'm saying we need to be less judgmental of people whose actions and activities we are uncomfortable with. And I know sometimes someone's sin hurts us, or someone we love, and we just sort of lose it. I understand it, I really do. And it seems unfair to talk about that as if it is mere discomfort. Sometimes sin is not just the loss of a comfy chair; it's torture and betrayal and pain. Just like the torture and betrayal and pain that saw Jesus on a cross. But keeping Jesus free from suffering was not God's priority. And keeping us free from suffering is not God's priority either. Broken people's physical, relational and spiritual wellbeing is God's priority. And that makes it our priority too.

Tony Campolo, spiritual advisor to US President Bill Clinton, once said to a big Christian conference:  "1) Last night 30,000 kids died of starvation or diseases stemming from malnutrition. 2) None of you give a <swear word>. 3) You all care more about the fact that I just said <swear word> than the fact that I just said 30,000 kids died."  I don't have the guts to read out that quote exactly, because I know the moment I swear in church, there are people who will be so distracted by it they won't hear anything else I have to say. But if we care more about swear words than about kids dying, we plainly have the wrong priorities!

If we start complaining that sinners are coming to church, we're very close to the Jewish leaders complaining that Jesus heals cripples on the Sabbath, and we are outside God's priorities. And if we start judging people because they're breaking our rules, we're no better than those who crucified God's son Jesus Christ. We should be following God's priorities of loving broken people, meeting their physical, relational and spiritual needs, and giving them every opportunity to believe that Jesus is the Messiah, the Son of God, so that by believing they may have life in his name.


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Sermon notes

Healing on the sabbath
Healing of a crippled man (38 years!), otherwise marginalised from society
Jewish leaders don't care about healing, only about rules (sabbath - lies)

Big idea: Jesus highlights God's priorities

Big question: What are our priorities?

How do you feel about people who break the law?
What if they have an excuse?
What if they have done their time?
What if they have changed?

You may not know, but our church turns some people away. They are not welcome.

Jesus accepts those even his people reject. Those on the margins. 38 years - a lifetime of sickness!

Jesus tells this guy to carry his mat. It breaks the Jewish leaders laws (not God's laws)

We focus on who is carrying their mat - Jesus focuses on healing someone's sickness

We focus on what what sounds unfair or impossible - Jesus focuses on our eternal future

It is fine to be concerned about safety - but it is not our top priority

* Our priorities can be wrong
* God's priorities revealed in Jesus
* Jewish Leaders have different priorities
- want to protect people
- want to control people
* God's priorities are right, ours are wrong
- Churches can have wrong priorities
- Individuals can have wrong priorities
* How do we realign our priorities?

We like rules - but they're not our job
We have to separate between God's priorities and ours, because we sometimes get them mixed up

Prevention is great. Prevention is not better than cure when it comes to sin - it's impossible to prevent sin. God calls people through curing sin.

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Jesus seeks out and welcomes the broken people

How do we treat broken people

1) Jesus is showing that he is God by healing on the Sabbath
2) Humanity would rather have God's laws than God
3)

The act of Jesus we're looking at today involves Jesus healing a crippled man next to a pool.  But the healing is just one part of the picture, and I want to make sure that today we understand why John included this act of healing when he has left out so many others. As we were told a few weeks ago, it's not just a miracle, it's a sign - it points to something.

Here at Waitara Anglican, we're working through the early chapters of the gospel of John.

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Let me give you a simple example. There's a movie out at the moment called Deadpool. You don't need to know much about it - it's about a comic book character, and the whole point of the movie is violence and profanity. Now it's really easy if you're not a fan of comic books to just say, "It's violent and profane, don't see it." You're not going to see it, so drawing the line there is nice comfortably distant for you. But I'm a nerd, and I like the comic book movie genre. I'd love to go see this movie, and if I did, I think I'd laugh and enjoy myself. I won't see it, because I don't think I should. But I don't judge fellow Christians who have seen it, or are going to see it. And I definitely don't judge non-Christians who go see it, because that's not my role.

And if that's our biggest problem, then thank God! Because he's dealt with our sin. That's his priority - praise Jesus.

And yet it's so easy when you're on this side of salvation to cry out to the world, "Don't get drunk! Don't watch bad movies! Don't carry your mat!" because we're already saved. That's probably more what we need to hear. But non-Christians don't care what God wants, and have no reason to change how they live.  They don't need to hear "Change your life!" They need to hear, "Jesus will change your life!" And I'm not saying that God doesn't convict people of sin. Of course he does. But

That is the

I'm not saying we can't ever tell when someone is doing the wrong thing. Our society has specific people in positions of judgment - like judges in courts, and politicians who make laws. Those are very specific roles - and while they are blessed by God, they are still human institutions that are prone to human errors. And loving broken people sometimes means protecting them from their own brokenness, or protecting them from other people's brokenness. But we can't insert ourselves into another person's free will relationship with God. God changes hearts and minds. We simply love people along the way. That's God's priorities. And it has to be this way, because human lives are complex. The choices aren't always black and white. Sometimes we don't even know what's going on in our own lives, how can we judge someone else's? Now I know that love and judgment can be done together. I know that, because God does both. But he doesn't call us to do both. He calls us to love, and he says he will judge. We need to listen to God, and keep his priorities.




Let me give you a simple, non-confrontational example. There's a movie out at the moment called Deadpool. You don't need to know much about it - it's about a comic book character, and the whole point of the movie is violence and profanity. I'm a nerd, and I like the comic book movie genre. I'd love to go see this movie, and if I did, I think I'd laugh and enjoy myself. I won't see it, because I don't think I should. But I don't judge fellow Christians who have seen it, or are going to see it. And I definitely don't judge non-Christians who go see it. That's not my role.

Let me give you a confrontational example. Look at how we treat greed. We're very good at saying that someone who spends $500 on a bottle of wine isn't greedy, isn't wasting money on an utter extravagance when there are people in their church who live on less than that a week and is struggling to pay their rent; or the person who borrows to the hilt to buy a house in the local area so they can be close to church but now have to work more hours and cut their giving. We're good at being non-judgmental when it comes to money. We're very cautious. We consider that we don't know the whole story. We don't know how much the person gives to church and Christian causes. We don't know what their own conscience is like. We are very careful.

Now look at how the church in the western world treats any sexual sin. We lose our collective minds.

Don't get me wrong here. I'm not calling on us to be more judgmental of people because of their wealth. I'm saying we need to be less judgmental of people for those other sins we struggle with.


Even as churches we can have the wrong priorities. Tony Campolo, spiritual advisor to US President Bill Clinton, once said to a big Christian conference:  "1) Last night 30,000 kids died of starvation or diseases stemming from malnutrition. 2) None of you give a <swear word>. 3) You all care more about the fact that I just said <swear word> than the fact that I just said 30,000 kids died."

I don't have the guts to read out that quote exactly, because I know the moment I swear in church, there are people who will be so distracted by it they won't hear anything else I have to say. But if we care more about swear words than about kids dying, we plainly have the wrong priorities!

And as individual Christians we can have the wrong priorities too.  Take me, for example. I love justice. I love it so much I'd throw my life away to protect a stolen chicken sandwich. Justice is a good thing! But if I go out and become a vigilante, that's not God's priority. He doesn't want me out there judging people. He tells me that quite clearly. Justice is good, but judgment is not my job. God's priority for me is love. I can have all the good intentions in the world, and still not be following God's priorities. I might have good priorities, but I need to have God's priorities.

This was the reason Jesus did this healing sign on the Sabbath, and it's the reason John has recorded this act in his gospel: to show us that the only priorities we should have are God's priorities, and to show us God's priorities: care for broken people, look after their physical, spiritual and relational wellbeing, so they come closer to God and closer to his people.

Now, it shouldn't surprise us that non-Christians don't have God's priorities.  But why is it that we as Christians still have these hard choices to make, if we have accepted God's priorities? I want to suggest three things that confuse our priorities, so that we can recognise them, change them in our minds, and re-align with God's priorities for people's physical and spiritual and relational wellbeing. Firstly, we're all sinful. Secondly, we feel responsible for other people's decisions.  And thirdly, we misunderstand wisdom.

First things first, we're all sinful. We all go off the rails. Sometimes our priorities get skewed because we're selfish - we don't want to follow God, so we do something else. Sometimes we think we're doing the right thing and have good intentions, but have bad practices based on wrong priorities - me with the chicken sandwich. Sometimes we've had something painful done against us, and we react to protect ourselves - someone hurts us, so we hurt them back. It's all sin. If you're a Christian, then you've accepted that you are a broken, sinful person. Just like that crippled man, we are the broken people that Jesus came to seek out and save!

My friends, how great is it that this is our biggest problem - because it is already solved! We can't do anything about being sinful, and we don't need to - because Jesus has done everything for us! God knows we're sinful. He knows we'll react badly. He knows we will have wrong priorities sometimes. And I'm not saying that so you can do whatever you want. I'm saying don't sweat it. Accept that it's going to happen. Repent when it does, and know that you are forgiven. Then move on, learning the lesson of your failure, and change your priorities to match God's.

Secondly, we worry about other people's decisions. This is sin! We can't change people's minds. That's God's job. But

Thirdly, I feel I need to say something about wisdom. I could not count the number of times I have heard a Christian say, "But we must exercise wisdom." We must be good stewards of our money. We must not let anyone get hurt. We must make sure we aren't putting ourselves in compromising situations. We must be seen to be doing the right thing.

That's not wisdom. That's risk assessment. That's duty of care. That's public relations. It's not wisdom. It's what we might call "world wisdom". This is what Paul says about world wisdom: "

You know what wisdom is? "The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom," so says Proverbs and so says Psalms.

* We are still sinful
* We worry about other people's decisions
* We misuse wisdom

One is because we are concerned about the consequences of our actions. And that's fair enough. After all, our priorities might lead us to unforeseen consequences. My chicken sandwich bravery could have led to my death or injury. The government's priority of stopping people smuggling leads to children suffering. A parent's priority of strict discipline for children might lead to those children going off the rails. The Jewish leaders' priority of stopping people breaking the Sabbath led them to persecute God's son and put him to death on a cross.

The thing is, changing our priorities to God's priorities doesn't stop bad things from happening as a consequence. Jesus is the ultimate example: he followed God's priorities perfectly, and was persecuted and put to death by the Jewish leaders. The problem isn't that negative consequences happen. The problem is we think that's somehow our responsibility. And it isn't. It just isn't. God doesn't leave it up to us. God's priorities aren't about our results. We don't have heavenly key performance indicators. What God cares about is that we have put him first. That's all. The consequences are all in his hands. It's a question of us having enough faith to trust that God will do his will through us keeping his priorities, even if that means consequences that we might not like.

If they make a bad decision and get hurt, then I'll love them and help them. And I'll do it seventy times seven times. "If you see any brother or sister commit a sin that does not lead to death, you should pray and God will give them life." 1 John 5:16. Because that's God's priorities for Christians.


Life is full of decisions we need to make, opinions we need to have, and positions we need to hold. And a lot of them compete. They clash. And we struggle to tell which ones should come out on top, because sometimes there are multiple good positions and we don't know which one should be given priority. It's hard, and we get it wrong.

Our focus often highlights our priorities, both as Christians individually and together as a Christian community.

Our priorities tell us something about ourselves.  For instance, you might think that my chicken sandwich story tells you that I believe that God will keep me safe in the face of danger; or that I am a very loyal employee; or maybe that I was showing off in front of the new trainee and I'm vain. Well, I can tell you why I went toe to toe with that monster of a man over a chicken sandwich: because I didn't think it was fair that he got a sandwich for free. I felt it was unjust, and so I stood up to him. And justice is a great priority to have, right? God loves justice, right? Yes, he does. But there are already structures in place to take care of that petrol station's precious chicken sandwich. My brave stupidity saved the company $6. That company's shareholders made $5.9 billion dollars last year. Their CEO alone gets paid $15 million a year. I might have died, but I saved them $6.