Pastor Sherry’s message for April 14, 2024
Scriptures: Acts 3:12-19; Ps 4; 1 Jn 3:1-7; Lk 24:36-48
The story is told of Mahatma Ghandi that…”As a young man, [he] studied in London. After learning about Christianity, and after reading the Sermon on the Mount, he decided that Christianity was the most complete religion in the world. It was only later, when he lived with a Christian family in East India, that he changed his mind. In that household he discovered that the word rarely became flesh — that the teaching of Jesus rarely became the reality of Jesus.”
(Susan R. Andrews, “Holy Heartburn,” article in The Christian Century, April 7, l999; p. 385.)
What a shame! This is the guy who forced Great Britain– through peaceful means–to give India its independence. He had been baptized.
He had read the Bible, and was particularly inpressed by the “sermon on the mount,” but he rejected Christianity because he did not see people who called themselves Christians living according to the precepts of Jesus. It was as though these were great ideas, but none could live them out in reality. Imagine the impact he may have had on India if he had encountered Holy-Spirit-filled Christians like Pastor Terri preached about last Sunday!
Our faith in Jesus ought to be demonstrated in the way we live our lives, day to day—not just how we behave in Church on Sunday. Let’s see what our Scriptures today tell us about living a life that shows others we have been changed for good:
A. First we see Peter in Acts 3:12-19. Peter and John are going to the Temple at 3:00p.m. to pray. This was the hour of the evening sacrifice when Jesus had died on the Cross. Remember, the new Christian Church was composed only of Jewish believers at this point, and many continued their Jewish religious observances.
A crippled panhandler asks them for money, much in the way we see homeless with their signs at the corners of our city streets, or at the on/off ramps of our interstates. Peter replies, famously, (v.6) Silver or gold I do not have, but what I have I give to you. In the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth, walk.” What a terrific gift! Peter and John lift the guy to his feet, and his feet and ankles realign as they are made strong. The beggar has asked for money, but he receives a healing. He’s asked for money–provision for a day or two–but Peter and John give him the ability to support himself for the rest of his life. This is the first recorded miracle of the infant Church.
This incident also prompts Peter’s 2nd sermon. Once again, he emphasizes the facts that Jesus was real—He lived, died, and truly rose from the dead. Once again, he asserts the need for repentance for sin and faith in Christ. Dr. Luke, the physician and author of Acts, tells us 5,000 men (not to mention women and children) at the Temple that day came to faith in Jesus. (Remember Peter’s sermon on Pentecost resulted in 3,000 conversions). He’s now preached 8,000 souls into the Kingdom.
Metaphorically speaking, Peter’s hair is on fire! He knows that Jesus lives and has empowered him to take the Gospel to whoever will hear it.
He is no longer fearful, shaking in his boots! Peter’s behavior change demonstrates that conviction/faith plus a relationship with Christ (being born again) changed his life for good.
B. Psalm 4 This psalm of David constitutes a prayer for relief.
In it, the King first cries to God for help (perhaps for end of a drought or a victory over an enemy). In verses 2-3, he inquires of his people why they seek help from fake gods rather than the One True God. As J. Vernon McGee says, “The refuge of the people of God in the time of trouble is prayer.” (Through the Bible Commentary on the Psalms, Thomas Nelson, 1991, p.42). We cry out to God with and in our prayers.
King David knows the pressure of life is often very great, so,
in verses 4-5, he offers his people a correction: Do not give in to exasperation, anger, or anxiety; instead, put your trust in the Lord.
This is how we live a life centered on God.
Finally, in verses 6-8, David reminds us all that God is good to us and that He offers provision and peace. Our God is neither asleep at the wheel, nor careless, nor incompetent. We can place the fate of ourselves and of our loved ones in His hands when we/they are ill or distressed. We can trust in the power of prayer. Furthermore, we don’t have to feel totally alone, up against hostile or evil forces, because we are loved and cared for by our God. A “true believer,” changed for good, lives life with confidence!
In 1st John 3:1-7, the Apostle John urges us to live like we know Jesus. He is saying that our lives ought to demonstrate the fact that we are, as Paul says, “in Christ.” Knowing Jesus should make a positive difference in the way we relate to God and to others: We don’t just talk the talk, spinning the impression that we love Jesus; instead, we actively walk it out. We try to keep short sin accounts with God, asking for His forgiveness daily. We cooperate with the Holy Spirit who assists us to behave like Jesus. We are kind, loving, and forgiving of others. Our lives truly reflect the difference loving Jesus has made in us.
John wants us to know that knowing Jesus intimately is going to change us in ways we couldn’t even predict. If anyone had told me—even 15 years ago—that I would one day pastor a Methodist Church, I would have written them off as delusional. Think of the behaviors you have changed since coming to know Jesus: Maybe you’ve stopped cussing; or stopped being so self-centered; perhaps you have curbed being so critical of others; or stopped gossiping or worrying so much. Have you added some good behaviors, become more generous? Are you more peace-filled, more compassionate, more forgiving?
Some time ago, I shared with you what happened to the sailors from the mutiny on the HMS Bounty (which took place on April 28, 1789): Led by Lt. Fletcher Christian, they mutinied because their Capt., Lt. William Bligh, was so cruel. But they also rebelled because they had all become attached to Tahitian women (probably topless) when they spent time in Tahiti for repairs. Apparently they put Bligh and 18 officers in a lifeboat and then sailed the ship back to Tahiti to pick up their girlfriends. They then located Pitcairn Island—what someone has said is “1,000 miles from nowhere”–put ashore and burned the ship, fearing capture and death (Mutineers were summarily executed in the British Navy in those days).
Most then proceeded to drink themselves to death within 10 years.
The women and their children became afraid of them and avoided them. The last two men standing, an old guy and a young fellow, then discovered a mildewed Bible at the bottom of a trunk. They began to read it and doing so changed their lives. The children were the first to notice a change in them. Soon they encouraged the women to come see. The young guy, Alexander Smith, wrote, “I had been working like a mole for years…and suddenly it was as if the doors flew wide open, and I saw the light, and I met God in Jesus Christ, and the burden of my sin rolled away, and I found new life in Christ.”
Eighteen years following the mutiny on the Bounty, a Boston whaler came across Pitcairn Island. The Captain went ashore, where he found a community of godly people, filled with love and peace. When he got back to the United States, he reported that he had never before met a people who were so good, gracious, or loving—all due to reading and absorbing the Bible…these folks had been changed for good because they believed in Jesus Christ and followed His precepts for living.
D. Rather than chastise the Apostles for having abandoned Him during His trials and His crucifixion, in this Post-Resurrection Gospel passage, Luke 24:36-48, Jesus greets them with good will. He offers to dine with them (demonstrating He was not a ghost, as spirits do not eat). He then opens up for them the Law, the Prophets, and the Psalms. What a fabulous Bible Study that must have been! Messiah Himself teaches them how the Old Testament predicted and described Him, as well as how He fulfilled every “jot and tittle.”
What grace! What mercy! With the possible exception of John (who stood with the women at the foot of the Cross), they had all let Him down.
He doesn’t retaliate or abandon them. Instead, He reinstates, reassures, equips, and encourages them. Additionally, He also goes on to entrust them with a great mission: take what He has taught them into the world….He overlooks (or simply accepts) their human frailties. And realizing their potential, He gives them a new purpose for living.
This is the God we serve; this is the Jesus we believe in.
As Pastor Terri said last week, if we are born again, we have Holy Spirit power. If we are born again, we will live lives that conform to that of Jesus.
Let us pray: Lord, help us to live in ways that prove to a new believer—perhaps someone like Mahatma Ghandi—or even to an unbeliever, that loving Jesus really can change us all for the good. Amen!
©️2024 Rev. Dr. Sherry Adams