An invitation

An invitation

Luke 4 v 38-39 “Jesus left the synagogue and went to the home of Simon. Now Simon’s mother- in-law was suffering from a high fever, and they asked Jesus to help her. So he bent over her and rebuked the fever, and it left her. She got up at once and began to wait on them.”

 

He has not called Simon to be a disciple yet but he is accepting presumably an invitation to his home.

What is one of the most natural social behavioural actions on earth, the simple invitation, would end up being the foundation for not just the transformation of one life but that of the church to come. I wonder what would have happened if Jesus hadn’t gone? More to the important I wonder what would have happened to Simon if he hadn’t invited Jesus home that day?

 

Are you invitable?

That’s probably not a word. But are we who people want in their homes?

Do we make a positive difference?

Have people seen something in us and they know they need to have more time with us, they need to bring us home?

Maybe the ‘synagogues’ have become so ineffective that the last person to be invited home is the one who has been teaching?

Can you imagine the reverse? Can you imagine that the Church being the first ones to be invited into homes? Homes that are in need, that are broken, that have tried everything, that the Church becomes a 999 emergency service?

 

Are we inviting?

Many leave Jesus in the ‘synagogues’ and return home and close the door. Inside their home and inside the ‘synagogue’ can be polar opposites.

‘May our homes be filled with dancing’ is a line of a song that blessed me the first day we sang it in Church.

May our homes be filled with joy!

Our homes sure get a battering in the storms of life. Some can even fall down completely if built on ‘sand’.

We need Jesus home with us.

Come Jesus, come to my home today, it’s not functioning the way it should. One of our loved ones is sick. We are struggling. Please come and help us.

And He will come.

And as He bends over your home His shadow will fall on areas of pain. He will rebuke the devourer and remove what should not be there. Go on, invite Jesus to your home.

 

Ministering with authority

Ministering with authority

Luke 4:33-37

In the synagogue there was a man possessed by a demon, an evil spirit. He cried out at the top of his voice, “Ha! What do you want with us, Jesus of Nazareth? Have you come to destroy us? I know who you are-the Holy One of God!” “Be quiet!” Jesus said sternly. “Come out of him!” Then the demon threw the man down before them all and came out without injuring him. All the people were amazed and said to each other, “What is this teaching? With authority and power he gives orders to evil spirits and they come out!” And the news about him spread throughout the surrounding area.

 

A man can be demonised and be in the centre of religious worship and teaching and be very quiet. So quiet that no one notices he was there. How long had this man been in worship prior to worship. A year, ten years? It would appear demons don’t mind religion. But they do hate the presence of Jesus!

They are afraid of the authority of Jesus.

There are sleeping ‘demons’ laying within churches that pulpit preachers are unaware of.

There are silent ‘secrets’ rocking the church asleep.

Authority wakes up even sleeping demons.

In the presence of Jesus even demons who serve the father of lies, have to tell the truth.

Are you going to destroy us? The answer was yes.

Not even the religious were acknowledging the truth of Jesus’ identity. They were more blind than the man.

“I know who you are, the Holy One” … correct!

We have been given authority to set people free from the enemy of our soul.

We have authority to see men shake and demons flee and there be no injury.

We need to minimise the injuries that occur in Church and there needs to be zero-tolerance of injury to the vulnerable whether that be spiritual, mental, biological or emotional etc.

How many horrendous images have you witnessed of so called deliverance ministries who seem to do nothing more than make the person worse? Better to have a demon than have some quack deliverance minister get their hands on you! (Joke! Don’t write in!)

Jesus delivers without injury! Amen!

The Church needs authority today more than ever.

May the Church rise with such authority today.

 

 

Speaking with authority

Speaking with authority

 

Luke 4: 31-32 “Then he went down to Capernaum, a town in Galilee, and on the Sabbath began to teach the people. They were amazed at his teaching, because his message had authority.”

 

Matthew in his gospel writes that Jesus taught as one who had authority and “not as their teachers of the law” (7:29).

 

It is well known that teaching rabbis would endlessly quote other rabbis when they were teaching. “Rabbi such and such says this…” or “I am here to tell you what Rabbi X said 5 years ago on this topic”. Now there’s nothing wrong with using some quotes to help your case. Preachers do it all the time. But can you imagine listening to your Pastor who only ever spoke like an editor of other people’s messages.

When I first began pastoring I went to a church where I had to prepare 2 sermons and a bible study every week. So for the first 6 months I preached my father’s messages (once I could decipher his handwriting). I did it because not only did it help me time-wise but also I didn’t feel like I had much authority in the pulpit. So I borrowed an authoritative voice and used that.

In the course of time I gained confidence from my own stories of life and experiences and more importantly finding God’s voice in the Bible and partnering my voice with His. I began to speak with my own authority and recognised that it came from God.

Authority in the pulpit isn’t connected to the decibels of noise coming out of your mouth nor how much sweat you pour out, neither is it determined by your upbringing, as Jesus of Nazareth would remind us. Nor does it come from some religious credential, Jesus didn’t have any. Nor does it come from a conformity to the religious rule book, Jesus tore his generation’s book up. No. The authority I speak about comes not from man or prestige or performance but from God.

He gives it through your life’s journey to be used maybe even years later. God fills your life with stories and experiences that belong to you, so that you can draw on them later in life.

God gives you authority through learned obedience. Painful journeys where you have learnt submission to His will.

God gives you authority beyond your years as you reside in Him.

Our churches need authority and Christians need to find their authoritative voice again.

The good news is that Jesus has said that He possesses all authority and He has given it to those who follow Him.

 

Walking in authority

Walking in authority

Luke 4: 28-30 “All the people in the synagogue were furious when they heard this. 29 They got up, drove him out of the town, and took him to the brow of the hill on which the town was built, in order to throw him down the cliff. 30 But he walked right through the crowd and went on his way.”

Offence in the synagogue. I guess nothing much has changed. There’s nothing like a gathering of people to cause an offence.

Especially when the offender is Jesus who has turned an ancient text on its head and declared basically that mercy triumphs over judgment. That offence is still here sadly.

A while ago I was accosted by a leader with the fact that a national leader had welcomed everyone to his meeting with words similar to “Doesn’t matter who you are or what you have done or what gender or identity you claim to be, Jesus welcomes you”. I mean honestly! Jesus welcoming sinners! I’ve never heard of such a thing! But the offence raged on. Good job that national leader wasn’t near a cliff edge.

But Jesus was. He was led there, well, dragged actually. To the very place that the town was built many years ago. Jesus at the centre of that town, at the foundation of the community – and what for? To be judged condemned and sentenced because of their offence.

The root of so many lives is a deep sense of judgment, of a desire to eradicate grace because we are afraid of any relaxing of the rules we have staked so much on.

From that cliff edge Jesus rose with authority.

Authority is being able to be taken to a cliff edge but not be thrown off if. You may think you are on the edge today and that actually you are really close to giving up. But within you is the presence of Christ and you have the authority to resist.

Authority is being able to walk through a condemning crowd. The fear of man is a snare. Ignore the threats and what people have said they will do or won’t do. Ignore and walk on. Walking away from conflict is at times stronger than staying for it.

Authority is saying I choose where I surrender and who I surrender to. Jesus knew this was not the place for his death. They would not take his life from him. He came to lay his life down.

In the next few days we will be encouraged even more to rise in authority

Do we really know Him?

Do we really know Him?

Luke 4: 16-30

“He went to Nazareth, where he had been brought up, and on the Sabbath day he went into the synagogue, as was his custom. He stood up to read, and the scroll of the prophet Isaiah was handed to him…

Jesus took the scroll and found Isaiah 61 and then read from it,

The Spirit of the Lord is on me

Because he has anointed me

To preach good news to the poor

He then leaves out: He has sent me to bind up the broken-hearted

He has sent me to proclaim freedom for the prisoners

He then adds: and recovery of sight for the blind,

(By the time of Christ, Jewish thought was heavy on the idea that the purpose of the Messiah would be to open the eyes of the blind).

He then adds from Isaiah 58:6 to release the oppressed,

To proclaim the year of the Lord’s favour

And then leaves out: and the day of vengeance of our God.

V22 “All spoke well of him”

 

They were initially pleased but when Jesus told 2 stories to illustrate his edited reading, one of the widow of Zaraphath and that of Naaman of Damascus they became furious, they knew why he had edited it, v28.

This was Nazareth, a settler town in Galilee. Galilee had become known as ‘Galilee of the Gentiles’ (Matt 4:15).

The Jewish plan was to move Jewish settlers from Judea onto the land in Galilee and take Nazareth. Isaiah 61 was their motivating prophecy.

This prophecy of the coming Messiah promised great things.

Isaiah 61: 2 there would be a day of vengeance of God

V4-11 = there would be rebuilding and restoring places, places like Nazareth.

V7 = there is the promise of a double portion.

V5-6 = the Gentiles around them will be their servants and they will be fed on their wealth.

But Jesus stops reading this popular and well known passage at the point at which judgment and submission is pronounced on the Gentiles whom the Nazareth settlers were there to displace, places like Zarephath and Damascus.

Jesus knew these 2 stories would offend.

So what was Jesus doing?

V21 Today this Scripture is fulfilled and one of the things the Messiah does is what you never expected and it is regarding justice.

To release the oppressed is not in Isaiah 61, but taken from Isaiah 58:6-7 where it is used in the context of God not being impressed with empty religious gestures.

The use of this phrase from that context is significant in that Jesus was communicating to those who carried a sense of justice in their lives.

But by using 2 stories of reaching out to the Gentiles, Jesus is saying the justice of the Messiah is compassion for the weak and exhausted among those who are downtrodden and the outcast.

It amazes me how sure God’s people are to how He will respond to situations especially in terms of judgment.

Jesus took a text of judgment and turned it into a text of mercy. The text of judgment was from Isaiah of all people, passed down generationally, steeped in their culture, thought and word life. Isaiah 61 it is settled, we know what it means. Yet the Messiah turned it upside down into a text of mercy. Mercy offends when you are banking on judgment.

They thought the messianic age would be a golden age for them. In fact it would be all about them. Jesus shifts the text from ‘Here is what you will receive” into “Here is what you are expected to give”.

 

May Jesus come into our synagogues of life today and drastically change our picture of Himself.

May He unlock us from the many years of carrying an idea of Him that perhaps is not a complete reflection of who He is.

May He take from us that revelation that was given to us from man which didn’t draw us near to Him or others near to us but brought alienation.

May He birth new understanding that God the Judge is but one aspect of His nature which is held by God’s grace, love and mercy.

May this new picture change us. Let it change how we pray and what we expect and may it enable us to step out in faith to do what we would never have done. Let a whole new vocabulary emerge and a new sound be heard in the house of the Lord, in our lives.

And as that happens may our world change, our homes, our work, our communities and our churches. Changed by an understanding of His revelation.

 

Amen

The power of the Spirit

Luke 4: 14-15 “Jesus returned to Galilee in the power of the Spirit, and news about him spread through the whole countryside. 15 He was teaching in their synagogues, and everyone praised him.”

The power of the Spirit

Luke writes in verse 1 that Jesus was full of the Holy Spirit and led by the Spirit into the wilderness. Now he returns in the power of the Spirit.

The power of the Spirit is the longing of the Church who seek after this with all of their might. Yet it comes only after the devil has done his worst in a place which cannot be described as an oasis, refreshing nor a revival.

I imagine the Sri Lankan church to emerge in the power of the Spirit after their onslaught from the enemy. They are limping out of this testing time reporting on the world news of forgiveness to their killers. Already so powerful.

The power of the Spirit is connected to how you survived the wilderness testing.

But it is also connected to your return. No matter what has happened you return. You may have been hungry for 40 days. You may have faced an onslaught of temptation. You may have avoided dangers of wild animals. You may have needed the ministry of angels to help you recover. But can you get up and return again. I have a friend who lost everything. His wife, children, work, position in life, credibility and testimony. Yet he made a return and was in church with his new wife this Easter Sunday.

It is also connected to your mission. Jesus returned to Galilee or as Matthew describes, Galilee of the Gentiles. The power of the Spirit is not for you, it is for others. It is for serving and leading others into the Kingdom of God.

Finally the power of the Spirit will lead you into a new danger which can be as much an enemy attack as the desert trial. The season of exposure, of being known, of opportunities and praise, can be laced with possible dangers that can divert you from your purpose. We will see more of this in how Jesus held his course during the praise reports from the people.

The power of the Spirit comes

  1. after a season of difficulty
  2. as you dust yourself off and return
  3. as you focus on others
  4. and leads to further challenges.

May we walk in that power today.

 

 

Know the opportune times

Luke 4 v 13 “When the devil had finished all this tempting, he left him until an opportune time.”

 

Jesus would experience further attacks of the devil in terms of the stealing of the message from people’s hearts (Luke 8:12), separating and sifting (Luke 22:31), lies (John 8:44), promptings (John 13:2).

Further, there are attacks of sickness (Acts 10:38), all kinds of deceit and trickery (Acts 13:10), pretence (2 Corinthians 11:14), footholds (Ephesians 4:27), schemes (Ephesians 6:11), blocking our attempts (1 Thessalonians 2:18), traps (1 Timothy 3:7), attacks of suffering (Revelation 2:10).

When does all this take place? At opportune times.

Some Christians don’t believe in a personal devil so they don’t have to think about this.

However, for us who do, we need to safeguard over opportune times where we are most likely to experience further attacks from the devil.

Last night I was listening to the radio whilst driving as a group of presenters and Sri Lankan politicians were discussing how long their government and Security Council had known that terrorist attacks were planned against the Christian churches and hotels some of which had been advertising Easter events at their premises. It seems it was for at least 17 days! Over 2 weeks of knowing that the enemy was planning an attack and yet nothing was done about it and apparently the President said no one had told him. There is a lot of anger in Sri Lanka today.

If you have been a Christian for a while then you should know when the devil is more susceptible to attack you.

For me an opportune time for the devil to attack me is:

  1. When I have been successful in something there is a tendency to not lean so much upon God for His help.
  2. When I am perhaps only a short time away from a significant event there is a tendency to be more sensitive to emotions and temptations that will weaken my confidence entering into that season of possible blessing.
  3. When I am tired I tend to be too weak and open to all kinds of attacks.
  4. When I am impatient for God to move and/or impatient for God’s people to move I tend to want to take things into my own hands to speed things up a bit.

It is important to know those opportune times for you.

But know this also:

  1. Resist the devil and he will flee from you (James 4:7)
  2. Do not be afraid of what the devil can do to you (Revelation 2:10)
  3. The devil is a loser who continues to lose and who loses for all eternity (Revelation 20:10).

Be careful of the high points. Luke 4: 1-13

Luke 4: 1-13

Be careful of the high points.

The devil said to him, “If you are the Son of God, tell this stone to become bread.” Jesus answered, “It is written: ‘Man shall not live on bread alone.”

The high point of who he was: If you are the Son of God, then you can do anything and it is certainly justified because you have needs, you are hungry. Jesus knew he was the Son of God, the devil knew and so took him to that high place of identity. There is nothing more disturbing or toxic than a group of leaders at whatever level fighting over their positions and titles. Jesus the good Shepherd calls us to lay our lives down.

The devil led him up to a high place and showed him in an instant all the kingdoms of the world. And he said to him, “I will give you all their authority and splendour; it has been given to me, and I can give it to anyone I want to. If you worship me, it will all be yours.” Jesus answered, “It is written: ‘Worship the Lord your God and serve him only.”

The high point of ambition: if you stop acknowledging the Father you can achieve anything and far less costly. Jesus knew that to gain the whole world from the authority of the devil he would need to pay the cost. Cheap ambition is the desire to gain without dying first. Jesus tells us that we should only submit to God.

The devil led him to Jerusalem and had him stand on the highest point of the temple. “If you are the Son of God,” he said, “throw yourself down from here. 10 For it is written: “‘He will command his angels concerning you to guard you carefully; 11 they will lift you up in their hands, so that you will not strike your foot against a stone.” 12 Jesus answered, “It is said: ‘Do not put the Lord your God to the test.”

The high point of demonstrative power: if you step out, be bold, be remarkable, just show you can, you trust, who you are, then God will match your level of faith. How so often we are encouraged by conferences, books and other stories to demonstrate that we can and that we are as good as anyone else. Our social media statuses need to match the next. We also need to be great. The testing of our faith can be done by ourselves to demonstrate we are powerful and it is a test we usually fail at some point down the line.

The devil’s temptation of Jesus began at the high points. Be careful where he leads you.

 

He is the Son of God!

He is the Son of God!

Luke 3: 38 “the son of God”

So we finish today, this incredible Easter Sunday, having gone through the 77 names listed in Luke’s genealogy.

Adam, the son of God is actually referring to how Adam was made in the image of God.

Israel is called God’s Son in Hosea 11:1 “When Israel was a child, I loved him, and out of Egypt I called my son”

And of course, we as peacemakers are called children of God in Matthew 5:9 “Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called children of God.”

At the cross the centurion saw God in the horrific death of Jesus: Mark 15: 39 “And when the centurion, who stood there in front of Jesus, saw how he died, he said, “Surely this man was the Son of God!”

But throughout the New Testament Jesus is referred to as the Son of God in a way different to that of Adam, Israel and ourselves. These 2 verses help to show that when we see Jesus we are looking at God:

Colossians 2:9 “For in Christ all the fullness of the Deity lives in bodily form”

1 John 5:20 “We know also that the Son of God has come and has given us understanding, so that we may know him who is true. And we are in him who is true by being in his Son Jesus Christ. He is the true God and eternal life.”

It was the resurrection of Jesus that was the pivotal evidence that Jesus was the Son of God and God eternal.

T. Wright in his book ‘Who Was Jesus?’ notes, “There were many messianic movements in the first century. In every case, the would-be Messiah got crucified by Rome as Jesus did.” And this is what he writes: “In not one single case do we hear the slightest mention of the disappointed followers claiming their hero had been raised from the dead. They knew better.”

The resurrection was foundational to the Church and always has been.

But it was more than what the Jews believe in that at the very end of time there would be a resurrection. No, for the Church they believed because Jesus was raised it meant that resurrection was now and it was this which gave them hope as they faced constant persecution and death for their faith. They became fearless because death had now no hold over them. Where O death is your sting?!

1 Corinthians 15: 12-14

 But if it is preached that Christ has been raised from the dead, how can some of you say that there is no resurrection of the dead? 13 If there is no resurrection of the dead, then not even Christ has been raised.14 And if Christ has not been raised, our preaching is useless and so is your faith. 15 More than that, we are then found to be false witnesses about God, for we have testified about God that he raised Christ from the dead.

It is the centre of what we believe.

It is the offence of the gospel.

It is why there is only one way to heaven through Jesus Christ.

It is why Jesus is more than a prophet.

It is why Jesus is the Son of God, God Himself.

It is why those who put their trust in Him will never die but be raised to new life.

Who is Adam?

Who is Adam?

Luke 3:38 “the son of Adam”

We have arrived! ADAM: the first ‘man’, in Hebrew it is a both a personal name and a general noun, ‘mankind’.

Adam, made in the image of God, placed into Eden which means ‘His Presence’, given a companion wife and given work to do.

Adam, who messed it up, rejecting God’s sole authority was expelled from ‘His Presence’ and life became tough for him and his wife.

It was Apostle Paul who wrote connecting Jesus with Adam comparing the two.

Romans 5: 12-19

“… just as sin entered the world through one man, and death through sin, and in this way death came to all people, because all sinned … if the many died by the trespass of the one man, how much more did God’s grace and the gift that came by the grace of the one man, Jesus Christ, overflow to the many! … For just as through the disobedience of the one man the many were made sinners, so also through the obedience of the one man the many will be made righteous”

But what of Jesus? Did he think of himself as Paul saw it? Paul says Jesus came to do what the first Adam failed to do in 1 Corinthians 15: 45-49 “So it is written: “The first man Adam became a living being”; the last Adam, a life-giving spirit. 46 The spiritual did not come first, but the natural, and after that the spiritual. 47 The first man was of the dust of the earth; the second man is of heaven. 48 As was the earthly man, so are those who are of the earth; and as is the heavenly man, so also are those who are of heaven. 49 And just as we have borne the image of the earthly man, so shall we bear the image of the heavenly man.” But did Jesus see himself as this?

What perspective of life did Jesus hold to?

Let’s take one of the time when he was being challenged. Matthew 19:3-6 “Some Pharisees came to him to test him. They asked, “Is it lawful for a man to divorce his wife for any and every reason?” “Haven’t you read,” he replied, “that at the beginning the Creator ‘made them male and female,’ and said, ‘For this reason a man will leave his father and mother and be united to his wife, and the two will become one flesh’? So they are no longer two, but one flesh. Therefore what God has joined together, let no one separate.”

His perspective was ‘at the beginning’. His answer was ‘what was Gods original intention?’ At the beginning there was never a need for a certificate of divorce.

The mission of Jesus was to link man back to the beginning. It is for the purpose of revelation in order to bring wisdom to us on how to do life.

How did God reveal Himself at the beginning before He revealed Himself as El Shaddai to Abraham, Isaac and Jacob? It was ‘El Elohim’ meaning Creator God. “In the beginning God created”

This revelation of God as it forms in you will change your praying and expecting and what you do and how you spend your life.

Your prayer shifts from ‘Help me Jesus, save me Jesus, Deliver me Jesus’ to that of ‘Give me wisdom, give me strategies, use me to change the culture I work in and live in.’

The Creator God, the One who created Adam first but who came as the last Adam, the Son of Man, releasing what is inside of us, creating, producing and changing. We stop praying ‘Help me get through this day’ and we pray ‘Help me to change this day into a creative day’.

We stop crying out ‘Where are you?’ and our call is ‘what do you want me to do?’ We become involved in our world, not trying to escape it afraid we may be tainted by it.

We are raised into a taskforce to bring creation out of chaos, values out of the void with an energy that stands in contrast to the emptiness of people’s lives, outward looking, community and missional.

This is what the Last Adam successfully achieved and He did it because He went to the cross and he died because of our fall. He brought us back into ‘His Presence’ and gave us purpose again. A purpose given to us by the Creator. So now let us go today and make a difference, let us invade our culture with a different perspective. Let us walk into the room and change atmospheres because the God of Adam, the Creator God is inside of us because the Last Adam paid the price!