Luke 19:37-40. This sermon was preached by Pastor Marty Bonner on April 9, 2017.
Today is Palm Sunday. In and of itself it looks like a good day in the life of Jesus, at least on the surface. But as we did deeper into what is really going on here, we see that ultimately it is a very sad day that reveals exactly why the crucifixion and the resurrection are necessary components to the salvation of a human being.
The calling of someone’s bluff comes from gambling at poker. Instead of only waiting until you have a good hand to bet large, a person will learn to play a more difficult game of pretense. I may pretend I have a bad hand or pretend I have a good hand. It makes it more difficult for others to tell if I am really bluffing. Now, between humans, this simply comes down to who is best at bluffing. However, you can always be wrong when you call someone’s bluff. If you call you must be ready to pay the price if you are wrong. At this point let’s switch to the topic at hand.
If God calls our bluff, there is no question. He knows our thoughts and our heart better than we do. Thus, for God the risk is not calling our bluff. The risk is to let us continue pretending that we have a good hand when in reality we are living in a land of our own imagination. People who try to live in reality based upon imaginary things and pretense ultimately will find their dream world turn into a nightmare as everything they think is good proves not to be so. The point today is that God loves us too much to let us keep bluffing. In reality this is exactly what Jesus is doing that day all those years ago. Let’s look at the passage.
The larger context tells us that there is a Passover festival at hand in Jerusalem. Many people are coming to Jerusalem to celebrate. So, we find Jesus making his way to Jerusalem. However, there are some unique things that he does. He purposefully comes in such a way that the religious people of Israel will know that he is presenting himself as the Messiah.
The two terms, Messiah and Christ, have come to us from the first century. Messiah is a Hebrew term that means “anointed one.” Throughout Israel’s history God had progressively revealed to them that He would eventually send His Anointed One who would be King of Israel and would restore Israel and the even the world to righteousness. He himself would be perfectly righteous. Some passages to back this up are: Psalm 2, 1 Samuel 2:10, and Daniel 9:25. During the time of David it was revealed that the Messiah would be of the line of David. So they had a promise of a coming savior who would fix all that was wrong with Israel and take over the whole world. So, if Jesus is presenting himself as Messiah, we might ask the question, “Why didn’t he do it?” It has been said that Jesus came the first time to fix only our spiritual problem and that his Second Coming will be about fixing our natural and geo-political problems. Though there is some truth to this, it is a gross simplification. To fix a person’s unbelief and sin, is to transform their life in the natural. Thus those who believed in Jesus and followed His ways discovered a transformed natural life, as well as a supernatural one. Let’s look at the Second Coming. Though Jesus will clearly remove the wicked kings and armies of this world and take over politically, it is also clear that he deals with our spiritual enemy, the devil. By the time of Jesus, the Greek language was as prevalent in the near east as English is throughout the world today. Thus the word Christ was used as a synonym for the Hebrew term Messiah. It too meant an anointed one.
Throughout his ministry Jesus had asked people to keep the fact that he was the messiah under wraps. He wasn’t ready to announce himself yet. But on this day he is ready. Before we look at how they would know that is what he is doing, let’s look at the timing issue first. Throughout their history Israel had waited for the messiah. Definitely since the prophet Isaiah who spoke of him throughout his book, but especially Isaiah 53. That would be over 700 years. But they had also been waiting since David and his many prophecies 950 years earlier. In some ways we can even go back to Abraham and God’s promises to him, or Eve and God’s promise that one of her seed would crush the serpent’s head. It is hard to keep positive about a promise that takes so long to keep. God’s timing is clearly not our timing. How many generations had been born, heard the promise, hoped in it, and then died without seeing it? Of course no one person had to wait over a 1,000 or even 2,000 years. Yet, intellectually they would recognize that it has been a long time. This would raise the question, is it really going to happen? Doubts, and even cynicism, easily creep in. This is typically handled one of two ways. We either outwardly reject it and live openly without that hope, or, we keep the doubt internal. We keep up the bluff that we believe in order to get the best out of the system that such belief has built up. So when Jesus presents himself that day, there are people in different categories. There are some who have held out hope against all odds that the Messiah would still come someday even though it had been so long. There were others who only pretended that they believed the Messiah would come. They actually lived their lives based on other hopes. Then there are those who had outwardly given up in believing. The life of Jesus had stirred all of these different groups. His miracles and powerful words shook them to the core.
I point all this out because we are in the same boat today. We have been waiting for the Second Coming of Christ coming on 2,000 years. In 2 Peter 3:3-4, the apostle warns us, “Knowing this first, that scoffers will come in the last days, walking according to their own lusts, and saying, ‘Where is the promise of His coming? For since the fathers fell asleep, all things continue as they were from the beginning.’” These same categories exist in our churches and across this world. In our humanity and in our sinfulness we want, and even demand, God to do it now! We want Him to operate on our timetable. Since God has not cooperated, we cast Him aside and seek to make ourselves God: observing all things (omnipresent), knowing everything (omniscient), doing anything (omnipotent), and living as long as we want (immortal). So the question today is this, do you trust God’s timing even though it has been so long? Are you willing to wait, or are you only pretending to be waiting for Him. One day He will call our bluff and Jesus will present himself to our surprise. On that day the hidden hand that we really have will be laid on the table for all to see. Don’t cast away the promise of God and forge your own way. The siren call of the modern world and its technology is that we no longer need a God. We can become the gods that we have always wanted. The problem is that there really is a God and He really has asked us to wait for Him. Future us will slam into that reality at light speed, just as Israel and Rome did all those years ago.
But it is not just God’s timing that bothers us. It is also the way in which He does it. There are parts of the plan that Israel liked (getting rid of the bad guys and ruling over the whole earth). But clearly there were other parts that they didn’t like. Jesus comes down the Mt. of Olives to the city of Jerusalem riding on the colt of a donkey as prophesied in Zechariah 9. But, this gives a far different picture of God’s Anointed King than our flesh would like to dream up. He does not come as the proud, flamboyant hero that our flesh desires. Instead, he comes as the humble, peaceful, unpretentious leader who is not drunk on their own authority. He did not have a sword, nor an army behind him, at least in the natural. He came not to pat the people on the back and say good job. But, instead he comes to save them from their sins, and those powers that used their sins to hold them in bondage. He was not after geo-political boundaries that day, but rather to break down the boundaries and walls that they had built around their hearts (that we build around ours even today). The heart of the matter is this, we want a leader who will not demand our hearts change, but rather will change the world around us. We want things to change without us having to change. Of course this is impossible. Even progressives who say similar things, but in order to increase our faith in the intellectual elite that will lead us into the New Age of Mankind, do not recognize that the only change that matters is the one that must happen in our sinful and rebellious heart. No. Mankind cannot fix itself because to do so is to refuse to change in the one area that it must (in hearts and minds). Thus our own hearts set us up for the betrayal of leaders who promise heaven and yet deliver hell, who look like Jesus but in the end they are a devil. Jesus did not fit the profile that the religious leaders had in their mind. All their lives they had said that they loved God and wanted His Messiah. And yet, Jesus was the fulfillment of all of this. God called their bluff and many of them were found wanting.
There are two aspects to the history of the Church. On one hand it may seem that it is no different from Israel and that God’s plan didn’t work. Definitely, the Church as an institution of people is like Israel because it is made of people. Yet, on the other hand, in the midst of it all, we do see people who believed God and refused to only honor Him with their lips. They were not bluffing. Just as Israel had her prophets and believers within the midst of many unbelievers, so too is the Church. When the hard call came to them in their day and age, they rejected what the world was offering and followed Jesus. Thus the early apostles did not create little kingdoms over which they all reigned as popes. Instead, they each sacrificed their lives to give the Truth of Jesus the Christ to the world. The reformers in Europe refused to shut up and obey man, but instead lost everything in order to follow Jesus. Dietrich Bonhoeffer said of Martin Luther that he thought he had left everything behind to enter the monastery. But what he found in the monastery was that there was one more thing he needed to let go of, his pious, proud self-will. Thus Luther had to leave this in the monastery and go back into the world, all the while being called a heretic and blasphemer by those who held the reins of power. None of these people were perfect, only Jesus is perfect. But they understood that to follow Jesus is to let go of everything that comes between us and him. It is ours to simply say yes to his timing and to his way. Yes, it will often be inconvenient and difficult. But it always leads us away from destruction and towards life.
What is it that Jesus is calling us to do today? Yes, in general, we are to be faithful to His Word and promote Jesus as savior and Lord. But what is he specifically saying to you about your life. Every time we read God’s Word, His Holy Spirit works in our hearts to call our bluff, or at least to get us to resist turning towards it. He calls us to be real. So what were the responses on that day? There really are only two that are possible.
Let us not kid ourselves. Jesus was clearly presenting himself as God’s Messiah (The Anointed One) who was the rightful King of Israel. As this gauntlet is thrown down those who believed that he was Messiah began to rejoice. His ways had confused them because he wouldn’t do anything that looked like he was going to take over. So on this day his followers are ecstatic because they think they know what will happen next. Finally, he is ready to do what we have asked him to do. Though they are in for a rude awakening as to what is next, it is still important to recognize their response to Jesus. They quote from Psalm 118, which was a psalm predicting a coming Anointed King who would save Israel. They believed in Jesus, and thus believed God who had sent Him.
All that said, even when we initially respond correctly, our faith is always going to be challenged. Today when he rides down the hill on a donkey their faith is strong. But what about later when he hangs on a cross and is buried, will they still believe? When he is resurrected and yet ascends into heaven without fixing everything, will they still believe? If we really trust God and His Anointed One, Jesus, then it is our duty to follow and accept that His way is perfect and mine is not. You see even then their hearts were still their greatest enemies. Would they be led astray by their wicked hearts? Thus the reality is this, those who believe will do the actions of faith. Their heart and their mind will protest a thousand times and yet, at the end of the day, they will choose to trust God over their own heart and mind. We will be tested on this time and time again throughout our life, not because God is trying to disqualify us, but because He is perfecting us. He is making us to be like Jesus, if we will let Him.
The Second response is simply to not believe. Those who did not believe that Jesus was the Messiah resisted and did the actions of unbelief. Thus the religious leaders rebuke Jesus and tell him to rebuke his disciples. Resisting can be open and heavy or hidden and slight. Regardless it is of the same ilk, unbelief. We are no different today. We must all come to Jesus as both savior and Lord. Yes, we want saved but we can’t dictate the terms of our salvation. We must follow him, not because he is headed in the direction that we desire or does what we desire. We must follow him because he is the Truth, and the Way, and the Life. We must follow him because he is the only Righteous One. Become a follower of Jesus today by walking away from the life that your flesh wants to create, whether religious or not, and letting him who alone has the words of life lead you forward no matter what that may look like.