Pastor Sherry’s message for February 25, 2024
Scriptures: Gen 17:1-7, 15-16; Ps 22:23-31; Ro 4:13-25; Mk 8:31-35
I read a humorous story this week. Again, it has to do with a child’s perception of how things “ought to be”:
“A Sunday School teacher held up a portrait of Christ. She explained to the class that it was not an actual photograph of Christ but only an artist’s conception of what Christ might have looked like.
‘’But,’ said one little girl, ‘you’ve got to admit it looks a lot like him.’’’
(Borrowed from a sermon entitled, “A Pair of Ducks and Abundant Life,” www.sermons.com, 2/23/2024).
Isn’t that just the cutest thing? I love how literal children tend to be and the humor that often results. Little kids are trying to figure out how things in life work. I remember when my 49 year old son was about 2 or two and a half and was trying to figure out animal categories. We had a dog with 4 legs, two ears, and a tail. In his child-logic, he looked at cows and told me (since they had 4 legs, 2 ears, and a tail), “Moo-tows are Biggggg doggies!”
It would be interesting to hear a child’s perspective on the elderly Abraham—at a great-great grandparent age—having a baby and his faith that God’s promise to him could still come true. This constitutes the focus of several of our readings this morning:
A. In our Old Testament reading, Genesis 171-7, 15-16), God appears to Abraham for the 5th time, and reiterates His Covenant Promises:
God is giving him lots of land (the Promised Land, Canaan, or present day Israel; and even a baby from him and his elderly wife, Sarah. Notice, the passage emphasized Abraham’s age, 99 (Sarah’s is 89). God the Father wants Abraham—and us– to know that neither Abe’s biological age, nor his body’s elderly condition, could prevent God’s from fulfilling His promises.
Our God is capable of making awesome promises, with spectacular fulfillments. The Israelites later did occupy God’s Land Grant. And, at age 100 for Abraham (and 90 for Sarah), Isaac was born to them. The Jewish people came from Abe via Isaac, and later Jacob. The Arab people came from Abe via Ishmael, and Jacob’s twin, Esau. By now, those two people groups constitute, in fact, millions upon millions of Abraham’s descendants.
B. Paul is very taken by this fact, as evident in today’s epistle reading from Romans 4:13-25. He is arguing for Abraham’s faith, and the need for our faith! He is saying God fulfilled His promises to Abraham not based on anything Abe had done for God (except for trusting in Him). God fulfilled His promises to Abraham due to Abe’s faith in the Lord to fulfill His promises. This is so important for us to understand! We are to trust in God, as Abraham did. We are not looking for a promised baby in our old age, or a promised land. We are looking for salvation. Perhaps we are looking for healing or for peace. We are anticipating living with God forever in Heaven—our happy ending. But none of these gifts are due to any of our actions or our works. Our salvation comes from the actions, the completed work of Jesus Christ and Him alone.
Who would have thought His death on the Cross and His resurrection would be the means by which God would redeem us? Who would have thought a 100 year olf man would birth a man who would then go on to have…first 2, then 12, then dozens, then hundreds, then thousands, then millions of descendants? Clearly Isaiah the Prophet was correct when he quotes God as saying (Isaiah 55:8-9, as per Peterson’s The Message, p.1317)”I don’t think the way you think. The way you work isn’t the way I work.” God’s decree. “For as the sky soars high above earth, so the way I work surpasses the way you work, and the way I think is beyond the way you think.“
Our God makes awesome promises. He provides spectacular fulfillments. In deed, He set us right with Himself.
C. This is why Jesus gets so upset with Peter in today’s Gospel (Mark 8:31-38). This interaction takes place just after Peter tells Jesus, “You are the Christ,” meaning the Messiah or the Anointed One. It is also just before Jesus reveals Himself as God on the Mount of Transfiguration—during which Peter is present. Jesus is trying to tell them all what His mission entails: To redeem human kind, He must (v.31)— …suffer many things and be rejected by the elders, chief priests, and teachers of the Law, and that He must be killed, and after three days rise again. Peter was so outraged after hearing this that he probably stopped listening when he heard Jesus say He would be executed. We can imagine this, can’t we? It’s just so human. We don’t want someone we value or love or admire to die early. Neither do we want them to die a horrible, gruesome death. No, we want them to continue to live so we can enjoy their presence. In speaking up so, poor Peter doesn’t realize he has just voiced to Jesus Satan’s short cut—take the crown but reject the cross. Poor Peter doesn’t realize until he’s said it that Satan has used him to again tempt Jesus. Jesus’ response is swift, isn’t it? (V.31)—Get behind Me, Satan! Then He admonishes Peter—You do not have in mind the things of God, but the things of men. Or, as Peterson paraphrases it, Peter, get out of My way. You have no idea how God works.”
It’s true, isn’t it? Peter doesn’t want Jesus to suffer and die. He wants Him to keep on teaching, interpreting Scripture, healing, and casting out demons…being his friend. Obviously, these are the desires of men and women, but in this case, not of God. Having total faith in the Father, Jesus is committed to doing God’s will God’s way. Nothing will deter Him from it.
He knows His mission is a huge undertaking. It is nothing less than setting us right with God!
D. Additionally, Jesus is familiar with Psalm 22. We will note on Good Friday that the first portion of the psalm predicts Jesus’ thoughts from the Cross. In the portion assigned to us today, verses 23-31, King David (and later Jesus) assert that they will praise God the Father amidst the congregation of all the people. Even from the cross, Christ will trust that God still loves Him. The hours on the cross, when Jesus becomes sin for us, the Father will turn His face from Him. Nevertheless, He knows His Father is waiting to welcome Him back, to resurrect Him. Too exhausted to speak, He praises God in His heart, crying out only (v.31) Tetelestai/it is finished.
Jesus’ final words from the cross are that He has completed the work of redemption the Father gave Him to do. He has set us right with God again.
Thank you, Jesus, for Your courage and bravery! Thank you for Your great agapeo (New Testament)/hesed (Old Testament) love for us. Your loyal, everlasting, long-suffering love for us. Thank You that You love us enough to have done for us what we could not do for ourselves. Thank you for setting us right with God.
None of us knows what You look like, but I’ll bet Your face in Your resurrected body is beautiful. (Isaiah said that His face would be unremarkable in His first Coming, so as to not attract the kind of fame a rock star gathers about himself; see Isaiah 53:2.) Keith Greene, a Christian musician who died at 28 years old–way too young–in a 1982 plane crash, wrote and sang a song about the face of Christ. The words go like this:
Oh Lord, You’re beautiful,
Your face is all I see,
For when Your eyes are on this child,
Your grace abounds to me.
I want to take Your word and shine it all around
But first help me just to live it, Lord
And when I’m doing well help me to never seek a crown
For my reward is giving glory to You.
Oh Lord, please light the fire
That once burned bright and clean
Replace the lamp of my first love
That burns with holy fear.
Oh Lord, You’re beautiful,
Your face is all I see,
For when Your eyes are on this child,
Your grace abounds to me.
May it be so for each of us. Amen and Amen.
©️2024 Rev. Dr. Sherry Adams