Matthew 11:28-30; John 4:23-24; 15:2-4; 2 Corinthians 5:17; Romans 8:14-17. This sermon was preached by Pastor Marty Bonner on Sunday, April 19, 2020.
In this modern world, there are many who see the Church as an antiquated relic of the past that holds no help for modern man. Of course, if the Church was only an organization created by humans then that would be true. However, if what the evidence from history tells us is true then the Creator of the Church was not just a human. And, that makes all the difference. Yes, humans were involved, but that doesn’t discount the overall work of God, and we should not be quick to toss it aside.
I want us to stop looking at what people have done in and through the Church, whether when we were kids or even recently as adults. Instead, I want us to stop and just listen to what the Creator of the Church said that he intended for the Church to accomplish. When you simply look at what Jesus told his Church to do, you find a revolutionary concept that is timeless, and one that saves us from our own penchant for self-destruction, whether as individuals or as a world.
In some ways, this sermon is about convincing people to connect to Jesus. If you are a believer, it may come across a bit like a married person watching a wedding. However, that can be a good thing because it reminds us why we married in the first place; it reminds us of when our love was fresh. Let this sermon inspire you to a deeper connection and a more intimate relationship with Jesus.
Years ago, our leadership sat down and worked to develop a model or image that would picture exactly what Jesus said he wanted to accomplish through us and the Church world-wide. Here is what we developed (figure 1).
At the heart of this picture, is the concept of whole-life worship. Everything that we do should be in worship of God. Yet, even those things that we do should be instructed and informed by the Spirit of God working in us. As we focus our whole life upon Jesus, he teaches us and leads us in fulfilling God’s purposes rather than the destructive purposes that our heart and mind draw us towards.
So, what does God want us to be doing as an individual Christian and as a local expression of his Church? It all begins with connecting to Jesus and moves around this cross through three other facets and back to connect again. They are all happening at the same time, and yet, they are connected to one another. They are all different facets of our worship of God through our life. The more you try to analyze them and break them apart, the more they all sort of dissolve and fall back into worship of God.
I should say that, by worship, I mean living in such a way as to demonstrate that God is worth more to us than anything else. It is literally all that we do to show that God is worthy of our life.
We connect to Jesus as a declaration that God is worth it.
We grow to become like Jesus as a declaration that God is worth it.
We serve Jesus in the way that he tells us to do as a declaration that God is worth it.
And finally, we share Jesus with others as a declaration that God is worth it.
In short, this image pictures the full, abundant life that God wants you to have on this side of eternity. However, abundant life doesn’t end at death; it has only just begun. In fact, Jesus is Abundant Life and the only source of it for all humanity.
We have simplified this whole image into the mission statement: “Connecting people to the Abundant Life found in Jesus Christ.” Everything begins with connection to Jesus and it ends with connection with Jesus. Let’s look at some Scriptures about connecting (figure 2).
In Matthew 11:28-30, Jesus is calling us to come to him. There is much in the Scriptures that emphasizes the rebellion of humanity against the Creator, and the judgment that has come upon the whole world because of it. However, the other side of the coin is that God does not want to leave us under that judgment. He wants to save us. Like Adam and Eve, we run from God when we realize that we have broken His ways. However, God came after them, not to destroy them, but to redeem them.
Have you ever stopped to think that Jesus is inviting you to come to him? Before we get into the details, just let it sink into your heart and mind that God is calling out to you and inviting you to come to Him. Why would He do that if He only wanted to judge and destroy you? He wouldn’t, and He doesn’t.
The Bible tells us that God is patient towards us, not willing that anyone should perish, but that all would come to repentance through faith in Jesus. He simply says, “Come to me.” There are many who have written Jesus off as a mythical story like Santa Claus. Others are simply afraid to get involved with any religious leader. Don’t just pass him by. Take a hard look in this passage, and others, and see just who this guy is who is telling you to come to him.
Jesus is describing those whom he is calling, those who are laboring under a heavy burden in their life. Human governments at any level very rarely actually care about the difficulties of your life. Jesus is not talking about how bad it is to have to work for a living. Work is not what makes life heavy. It is the pressure that we put on ourselves, and the pressure that society puts upon us to live for purposes and goals that God never intended. It is the lack of true care for your soul that makes life heavy. Yet, like a loving parent whose child has gone far, far astray, God still cares for you and longs for you to come to Him. He knows how tough it has been. He actually has compassion for your predicament.
Thus, He offers you rest. This is the same kind of rest that God gave to Israel on the seventh day, when all the other nations were out breaking their backs seven days a week. It was always intended to be much more than a physical rest from work. It was a rest from the pressure that everything depends upon us. It is learning to rest, to lean, upon the grace and help of your heavenly Father.
Today, humanity has co-opted God’s plan for rest and added another day for pleasure. But, what has it become? For many, the weekend is no rest, but a flurry of activity which leaves us empty.
It is interesting that, after Jesus says that he will give us rest, he offers us a yoke. The imagery is that of a beast of burden like an ox. A yoke would be used to harness the ox to a cart, a plough, or a carriage. Thus, a yoke represents the work and the purpose to which we are connected. No matter how free you try to be, you cannot grow up in this world without having a multitude of yokes around your neck. We can get to the point of near suffocation under them. Some are from yourself, and many others are from the world around you, but Jesus offers a different yoke, a lighter yoke. Yes, it is a burden; that is, it is a purpose and a task. However, it is singular and good. You are exchanging a large number of heavy yokes for a single light yoke. This yoke does not leave you worn-out, over-burdened, and empty. It leaves you rested and satisfied. It is not tyranny.
So, God is calling you to come and connect to Him through Jesus. Jesus is our point of contact with the Creator. However, we need to take a closer look at the connection itself.
In John 4:23-24, Jesus tells us that God is looking for people who will worship Him in spirit and in truth. In short, He is looking for people who will connect to Him in a relationship of faithful worship. This connection is spiritual, but also real (truth). It is a spiritual connection that cannot be shut-off, taxed, or infringed upon by this world. These are not just nice archetypal stories meant to inspire us into performing certain roles. This is a real offer from our heavenly Father saying that we can connect to Him by connecting to Jesus.
Jesus came into this world to do many things, but one of the greatest of them was to create a real point of connection between us and God. Later in John 15:1-4, Jesus gives us the image of a vine that has branches connected to it. He tells us that he is the vine and that we are the branches. God intends us to be branches that have a living connection to Jesus, a connection through which we can draw life.
This spiritual and real connection to Jesus is able to make our lives fruitful. We are not talking about being able to build an international business that makes you billions of dollars. Of course, God could bless you with that, but it alone is not the fruit that He is looking for. He is looking for a life that is itself life-giving, no matter what station or level of ability you find yourself.
Jesus tells us that he will pour into us when we connect to him. That life will work inside of us until it produces external evidence of its internal existence, that is fruit. Everyone in the world bears some kind of fruit, but most of it is deadly. Only the fruit that Christ produces in us can truly give life. He mentions that when we are fruitful, there will be times of pruning (John 15:2-3). Pruning is part of becoming more fruitful. Sometimes, perfectly good things in my life need to be cut off in order to focus more energy on doing what has eternal value, as opposed to temporary and transient value.
The fruit of my life comes from what is at the center of my heart. So, what is at the center of our hearts? Is my heart connected to Jesus, or is it connected to the desires of my flesh and the hopes of this world?
The third thing about this connection is that it needs to continue or persevere (vs. 4). You can’t connect for a while in order to get a little bit of religion; you know, just enough to do a person good. This is about much more than an ethical framework for life. Jesus tells us to “Abide,” or “Remain” in him. The word has the idea of taking up residence in him, making him your home for life, i.e. like a marriage.
If we don’t have a real and living connection that is healthy and fruitful then the perseverance of our connection can be threatened more easily. There is a spiritual enemy called the devil who is looking for people to devour. He devours us spiritually to the point that we see no hope in God, and especially in Jesus. We have to guard our hearts from the temptations and philosophies of this world that would draw us away from continuing to trust in Jesus.
Now, the imagery of a vine and branches is very informative, but it does come across as kind of cold, when you think about human relationships. This is because the analogy points to something much bigger than itself. We are not connecting to a religion, but to a relationship with the Lord of Life! The more noble image is that of a family relationship.
In 2 Corinthians 5:17, it says, “Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation; old things have passed away; behold, all things have become new.” When we connect to Jesus, we become a new creation, a new person. There is a difference in us that is new, and yet needs to grow, like a newborn baby. This creates a tension between the “old me” and the “new me.” This verse says that the “old things have passed away.” Another way to say this is that we have moved past our old way of living. It doesn’t mean it no longer tries to tempt us back. Rather, I have reached a place where I am moving past the old selfish life and choosing to live for God and His purposes. I am now spiritually alive and responding to the Holy Spirit within this fallen world. Of course, we are not mind-swiped. The old me is there struggling to regain control. However, its way of living produced very little, if anything, that was truly living and full of life. Even that which seemed to have life at first, very quickly loses its flavor and becomes a mouth full of gravel in the end. The new creation has come to see that Jesus is the source of life itself, not just a source of a life.
Let's finish this with looking at Romans 8:14-17. Here the Apostle Paul uses the same family terms that Jesus and others used of our relationship with God. The Holy Spirit is working all the time to draw people to Jesus, and we must never forget this. Those who put their faith in Jesus are responding to His drawing. When that happens, they are adopted into the family of God. They are “sons of God” (vs 14) and “children of God” (vs 16).
Have you ever thought about the fact that life on this world is just the nursery of eternity? As we trust Jesus and maintain a living connection to him, we will grow up to become adult sons of God in eternity.
Jesus is much more than a static vine that can do nothing about our connection to Him. He is a being with a heart that loves you so much that he has come down after you into the muck and filth of this world. He wants to have a relationship with you. Sure, at first it may seem strange to have a relationship with a spiritual being. It may seem strange to pray “into the air” and fear that someone might see you and think that you have lost your mind. However, it is what you were created for, relationship with your Father in heaven. When we go through this life without having a living relationship with our creator, we are empty, and the things of this world are vain and unsatisfactory. The entropy of this world seems to squeeze the life out of even that which is good.
Yet, God loved you. He was not content to be separated from you. He paid the price so that you could join His family.
This brings us to the last part of the Romans 8 portion we are viewing. We will inherit all things with Jesus, if we keep connected to Him. God’s plan is that He will resurrect all those who belonged to Him at the end of this age in immortal bodies without a bent towards sin. He will then fix this world and hand it over to Jesus.
The doors are still open. God is still calling to people to come to Him through Jesus. So, what must I do to connect to Jesus? It is simple. First, we are embracing Jesus through repentance from our old life and faith in his new life for us. This relationship with God is described as a whole-life worship. This makes us the children of God with a destiny that is more amazing than fiction.
Don’t delay. Make today the day that you surrender to the calling of the Holy Spirit. Join the Lord Jesus today by Admitting that you are a sinner who is under God’s judgment, and then Believing in your heart and mind that God raised Jesus from the dead as a covering for your sins. Lastly, Confess Jesus as your Savior and Lord with your words and your deeds. In so doing, you become a new creation, and a child of God!