©2003 Larry Huntsperger Peninsula Bible Fellowship
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12/14/03 |
A Stable Beginning |
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12/14/03
A Stable Beginning
Therefore, since we have so great
a cloud of witnesses surrounding us, let us also lay aside every encumbrance,
and the sin which so easily entangles us, and let us run with endurance the
race that is set before us...
That statement is found in the first
verse of the 12th chapter of the book of Hebrews.
If you have an interest in taking a
look at its context on your own,
you’ll
discover that it follows a description in the 11th chapter
of
a number of men and women
whose lives did not go at all well from
our human perspective
as a direct result of their decision to remain
faithful to what God had revealed to them of Himself.
If I were to brutally paraphrase
what I hear the author of Hebrews saying to us in this statement
my
paraphrase would go something like this...
“Get a grip, you guys!
What? Do you think you are the first person in
history to reach out to God
and
discover in the process that what you’ve received is not at all what you
expected,
and
His response to your faith is not at all what you would have chosen?
Those who have come before us
truly
were no different than you and I.
They could not see into the future
any
more than we can.
Most of them did not see themselves
as great people involved in great events.
They, too,
wondered
if anyone noticed,
or
cared,
or
sometimes if it mattered at all.
And they, too, wondered at times
why
their choices of trust in God so often seemed to make life harder rather than
easier.
But they did not do what they did
because
the world noticed.
They did what they did
because
their God noticed,
and because He cared,
and
because even though they frequently did not understand what He was doing, or
why,
still
they found Him to be good,
and
to be more than adequate for all that they went through.
So look around you,
and
see honestly the lives of God’s people who have come before,
and
draw strength from what you see there,
and
then run with endurance the race set before you by your God.”
(You can see why the Lord wisely did
not involve me in the writing of the original text. :)
I have begun our time together today
with this verse
and
then with this paraphrase
because I have realized over the years
that
one of Satan’s most effective tools for depriving us of the power of God’s Word
in our lives
is the way in which he is able to
convince us
that
there was something fundamentally different
about
the men and women whose lives we have recorded for us in Scripture.
He may convince us that trusting the
Lord
was
far easier in quiet, stable, rural communities 2000 years ago,
with
no wrist watches, and no cars, and no cell phones, and no computers, and no
internet,
than it is in the midst of all the
complexities of our technological age.
Or he may suggest to us that the
people themselves were different,
that
there have been some “special people” throughout history,
people
uniquely created by God,
people who saw the unseen world around
them in ways we cannot see,
people who could hear His voice in ways we
cannot hear,
people for whom “faith” came more easily.
But, whether he tells us the times
were different or the people themselves were different,
the
effect is the same.
Once we accept his deception,
when
we read the accounts found throughout Scripture
of
the lives of those who have come before us,
we automatically set them aside
as
being irrelevant to our own unique situations.
And there is probably no other
Biblical account
where
this type of deception has happened to a greater degree
than
with the account of the people involved in the events surrounding the birth of
Christ.
For nearly 2000 years now
the
world has held a mental image of Mary, and Joseph, and the shepherds, and baby
Jesus, and the manger
that
is utterly inconsistent with what must have actually existed.
Even the words we have selected to
describe the setting
are
designed to separate it from reality.
If I say the word, “Manger”,
what
mental image does it create?
Of course,
we
picture this nice little wooden crib,
all
lined with clean straw,
with baby Jesus snuggled inside, sleeping
peacefully.
Have you ever heard anyone use the
word “manger”
to
describe anything other than that special birth place of Jesus Christ?
The word itself has taken on a
reverence,
a
kind of special holiness that proclaims peace, and reverence,
a
place where everything is right.
Do you know what the word actually
means?
It means a feeding trough for
livestock
or,
more broadly, the stall in which livestock are kept.
Exactly the same word that we
translate as “manger” in the Christmas account
appears
again in Luke 13:15.
But this time listen to how it’s
translated.
LUK 13:15 But the Lord answered
him and said, "You hypocrites, does not each of you on the Sabbath untie
his ox or his donkey from the stall, and lead him away to water him?
“...untie his ox or his donkey
from the stall...”
Now, why isn’t it translated
“manger”?
I think it’s because even the
translators were affected by that Baby-Jesus-In-The-Manger image,
and
they didn’t want to corrupt it
by
using that special word
do
describe just any ordinary, dirty old animal pen.
But the truth is there is no
difference,
and
even though it may seem like an act of reverence on our part
to
place the Baby Jesus into His own special, warm, cozy, sanitized little manger,
if we do so
in
the end we destroy a tremendous amount of the power
of
what I believe we were designed to discover through the account of Jesus’ birth
as
it is really presented to us in Scripture.
And to help us better appreciate
what I want us to see here
it
might help if we allow ourselves to live with Mary
as
she moved through those nine months preceding the birth of Christ.
You see, there are some striking
parallels between what she experienced
and
what many of us experience
in
our own walk with the King.
OK, let’s start where she started,
at
what had to be one of the absolute high points of her life.
It all began at that point where God
Himself barged into her life.
LUK 1:26-28, 30-33 ¶ Now in the
sixth month the angel Gabriel was sent from God to a city in Galilee, called
Nazareth, to a virgin engaged to a man whose name was Joseph, of the
descendants of David; and the virgin's name was Mary. And coming in, he said to her, "Hail, favored one! The Lord
is with you.” And the angel said to her, "Do not be afraid, Mary; for you
have found favor with God. And behold, you will conceive in your womb, and bear
a son, and you shall name Him Jesus. He will be great, and will be called the
Son of the Most High; and the Lord God will give Him the throne of His father
David; and He will reign over the house
of Jacob forever; and His kingdom will have no end. "
God has a way of doing that, you
know -
barging
into people’s lives.
If you know Him,
if
you’ve entered His family through faith in Christ
then
I think you know what I mean.
The details are unique with each of
us,
but
the end result is the same.
There we are, just trying to make it
through life as best we can,
unaware
of anything real about our God whatsoever.
And then all of the sudden He barges
in.
We understood all about going to
church occasionally,
and
about trying to be a good person,
or
at least as good as the next guy.
But this was something altogether
different.
There was something far too REAL about
this.
This
wasn’t just going to church,
and
tossing some money in the offering,
and
promising to clean up our act a bit.
This was God Himself
wanting
and expecting us to make some very real choices
about
Him and His involvement in our lives.
And, just as with Mary,
all
of the sudden He was THERE,
and
He was asking for our permission to make some major changes inside us.
And He wanted us to say, “Yes.”
Of course with us He doesn’t ask us
to give birth to His Son,
but
He does ask that we allow Him to create something else inside us -
a
new spirit,
and when we said, “Yes.”,
it
altered our lives every bit as much
as
it altered Mary’s life when she said,
LUK 1:38 "Behold, the bondslave of the Lord; be
it done to me according to your word."
And this parallel between us and
Mary doesn’t stop there,
not
by any means.
We are not told much about Mary’s
thoughts following that visit from Gabriel,
but
it isn’t hard to imagine.
Some of them certainly had to be
troubling.
What
is Joseph going to think about this?
What
will my family think?
How is this going to affect my reputation
with my friends?
And it’s not at all uncommon for our
submission to the Lord
to
bring similar concerns into our lives as well.
What in the world will people think
if I tell them what’s happened in my life?
They’ll
think I’ve gone all religious.
How
can I explain this to those around me?
What do I say?
And it’s true that God’s entrance
into Mary’s life
caused
some difficult times for her,
just as His entrance into our lives
brings
about changes within us, and between us and others
that
do complicate our lives.
But there is something else that
takes place when God barges in as well,
whether
we’re talking about His initial entrance into Mary’s life,
or
His initial entrance into our lives,
or
whether we’re talking about some of those countless other intrusions of His
that are such common stuff in the life of
His children.
For, when God barges in
and
starts messing about in our lives,
His
entrance brings with it a tremendous sense of hope
and
great expectations.
With Mary there is no doubt that
God’s creative work within her
caused
no end of social turmoil for her.
But it certainly must have also
brought with it
amazing
feelings of having been loved and honored by God Himself.
People could talk all they wanted,
but
Mary would never forget,
could
never forget those words spoken to her by the Angel of God.
LUK 1:28, 30 "Hail, favored
one! The Lord is with you. Do not be afraid, Mary; for you have found favor
with God.”
You have found favor with God...
You
have found favor with God...
You
have found favor with God...
Could a person ever hope for more?
God Himself didn’t just notice her,
He
chose her for Himself,
and
placed Himself inside her.
And there is something similar that
takes place inside each of us
when
God barges into our lives,
asking
for permission to enter,
and
we say yes.
Several years ago I heard an
interview with Billy Graham
in
which the interviewer asked him what things he would like to ask God
when
he meets Him face-to-face.
The first thing he said was,
“I’d like to ask Him, ‘Why me? Why
did You choose to honor me the way You did?’”
When he said that
I
understood exactly what he was saying.
We’re not Billy Graham, of course,
nor
does God want us to be.
But, when we become aware of the
living reality of our God’s love for us,
and
when, for no logical reason, we see Him working in us,
and
at times working through us in the lives of others,
it brings with it an amazing sense
of being honored by God,
and
causes us to wonder, “Why me, God? Why
did You care about me? Why do you love me the way you do?”
And it brings something else with it
as well.
It brings with it expectations,
expectations
of what our future will be like
now
that our life is held in the hands of God.
You know it must have been that way
with Mary.
How
could it have been otherwise?
LUK 1:31-33 "And
behold, you will conceive in your womb, and bear a son, and you shall name Him
Jesus. He will be great, and will be called the Son of the Most High; and the
Lord God will give Him the throne of His father David; and He will reign over
the house of Jacob forever; and His kingdom will have no end. "
Here she was, carrying inside her
the Son of God Himself,
the
One who would establish a kingdom in this world
that
would have no end.
Now, doesn’t it seem reasonable
to
assume that God Himself would go before Mary in this pregnancy,
and,
indeed, in her entire life,
removing obstacles, making sure
everything went well?
No fears of a miscarriage here!
And, when we become fully aware of
what’s going on inside of us,
when
we realize too, the truth of what Paul is saying when he tells us,
2CO 6:16 ...For we are the temple
of the living God; just as God said, "I will dwell in them and walk among
them; And I will be their God, and they shall be My people.”,
that
knowledge cannot help but create expectations within us.
We know good and well that we didn’t
deserve to be chosen by God for Himself,
but
having been chosen,
we
cannot help but live with expectations of what it will mean
to
be one of the chosen ones of God on this earth.
Surely He will now go before us.
Surely
He will now show Himself strong for us.
Surely
life will now be so much different, and so much better in so many ways than it
ever was before.
And it is...
so
much different,
and
so much better
in
so many ways than it ever was before.
And He does go before us,
just
as He went before Mary,
and He does show Himself strong for
us
just
as He did with Mary.
But He does so in ways
that
are perfectly consistent
with
the work He needs to do in us,
and
the work He is seeking to do through us,
and the work He is seeking to do in those
around us,
and most of all with our growing discovery
of the true nature of His love for us.
I will tell you something now
that
I think maybe you will not believe,
or
at least you will not want to believe.
Most of the time most of us have
absolutely no idea
what
will really communicate the love of God to our minds and emotions.
We think if He would just give us
what we want,
or
if He would just fix what’s broken with our lives,
or
if He would just make our lives easy and comfortable
it
would communicate His love.
In other words,
we
think His love is communicated through the things that He gives.
And it is certainly true
that
He frequently does pour out on us
all
sorts of good things
that
come to us simply as expressions of His kindness to us.
But Those things in themselves
do
not
and
cannot really fill our hearts with the awareness of His love.
The only thing that can do that
is
our discovery that He is with us,
and
that He truly delights in being with us.
We shouldn’t be surprised at this,
of course,
because
it works the same way in human love relationships.
Do you know what communicates love
to your children?
No matter what they may be telling
your right now,
it
is not that pile of presents under the tree.
It’s not even those times when you
take the family some place together.
It’s those times when it’s just you
and your child together by yourselves,
those
times when, they look at you
and,
without your even saying a word,
they look into your eyes,
and they listen to the tone of your voice,
and they know that you delight in them.
It’s the same way with our marriage
partner.
Love is not communicated through
that perfect gift you are searching for so frantically right now.
It’s communicated through building
regular time together into your life,
and
through making those choices that say,
“This
day, once again, you matter more to me than anyone else or anything else in the
world.”
And if you have not built those
times into your life,
with
your children,
or
with your mate,
nothing you ever give them will
compensate.
But I’m getting off track a bit
here,
and
I’m running out of time,
so
let me bring us back to Mary,
and
to this message I see being communicated to us through her
in the events surrounding the birth of
Christ.
For, you see,
I
am certain that Mary,
just
like us,
must have had expectations about how her
life would play out
because of the presence of Christ within
her.
And can you imagine how unsettling
it must have been for her
when,
just days before Jesus’ expected birth,
she
and Joseph find themselves suddenly compelled by the Roman Government
to
travel 80 miles from Nazareth to Bethlehem,
80 miles with Joseph on foot
and
Mary clinging to the back of that little donkey.
It would have involved days of
difficult travel in the best of conditions,
even
if Mary was not nine months pregnant.
But now, with this child due at any
time,
it
must have seemed utterly overwhelming for them both.
And don’t you think they must have
wondered why?
Why
this now?
Why
hadn’t God arranged it all so differently?
And every jolting step of the way
I
think Mary was praying, “Lord, You alone can get me through this.
You
alone can give me the strength.
All
I have is You.
Just get me through this next hour, this
next mile.”
Ever been there?
Ever needed Him desperately?
Ever
gone through a time in your life
when
you knew that God alone could bring the healing,
the
hope,
the strength you needed just to make it
through one more day,
through one more hour?
What happened between you and your
God because of that time in your life?
He became real to you, didn’t He,
real
as He had never been real before.
And you discovered in Him
a
strength and a comfort,
you discovered that your God really
was there,
and
that He really truly does love you,
and
that He can and He will be your solid rock
one
painful step at a time.
I don’t know why it has to be that
way sometimes.
I
just know that it does.
And I know that what we bring out of
those horrible trips to Bethlehem
stays
with us for the rest of our lives,
and after the pain is gone
the
richness of the presence of Emanuel - God With Us - stays with us forever.
And how about that business with the
stable,
and
the manger?
It wasn’t all warm and glowing and
filled with fresh clean straw, you know.
It was a barn,
filled
with all the dirt,
and
the smells,
and
the filth that come with barnyard animals.
They made the best of it, of course,
but
it certainly wasn’t what Mary had envisioned
when,
nine months earlier,
God Himself told her that she would give
birth to the One who was destined to one day sit on the throne of David.
And I think there are some of you
here this morning
who
have found that your walk with the King
has
led you to your own personal stable.
It’s poorly lit,
making
it very difficult to see what’s going on,
and there is a definite stench about
the place.
The truth is,
it
simply makes no sense to you
why
in the world your Lord would have done it this way.
Well, here again I think Mary can
help us,
because
through Mary,
and
Joseph,
and
the birth of Jesus in that barn that night,
our God was saying some things to
His creation,
something
He could not have said any other way.
He was telling us that this Savior
He is giving us
is
a Savior for the real world in which we live,
the
world filled with filth,
and
stench,
and darkness,
and pain.
And He was telling us
that
His Savior,
our
King,
has no problem at all being with us
in the stables of our lives,
and
because we are there,
He
is well pleased to be there with us.
I don’t know what God will bring
into being for you
in
that stable you find yourself in right now.
I do know what He brought into being
in
that stable 2000 years ago.
He brought into being on this earth
the
One who alone gives hope to the human race,
the
One who brings true salvation and eternal life to all who turn to Him.
From the very beginning
some
of God’s finest work has been done inside stables,
and
barns,
and
feeding troughs,
and on city garbage dumps that are
punctuated by three bloody wooden crosses.
Because, you see,
one
of the many things our God does best
is
take the worst things in our world,
and
in our lives,
and recreate them into the greatest treasures we’ll ever know.