John 1:14-18; Philippians 2:5-11. This sermon was preached by Pastor Marty Bonner on Palm Sunday, April 2, 2023.
Today we begin a 6-part series about God's love, and how we should respond to it.
Love is a matter of call and response, or action and response. In a way, God is always the initiator of love because of His eternal nature. We are always the responders.
I want to refresh our memories of just how much God loved us in the coming of the one we know as Jesus, or in Hebrew, Yeshua. On top of His love 2,000 years ago, we have His great love for us today, for you, and for others. Do you not realize that God's amazing love will be embracing you even unto your last breath? His amazing love will even be with humanity to the end of this age, and into eternity.
Let's look at our passage today, and remind ourselves of God's great love.
The Word became flesh (John 1:14)
In this chapter, John speaks of the One called "the Word" who is identified in verse 17 as Jesus Christ. The Word becoming flesh points back to that moment in time when Mary first conceived.
The miracle of the incarnation is often doubted. It is believed that Mary clearly made up the story. However, does this square with all of the evidence?
Let's just go with the cynic on this one and assume that Mary did make it up. Her pregnancy would have either been by Joseph, or some other man that she is unwilling to name. Modern man may scoff that they didn't know science like we do today. Thus, the people of Nazareth were easily duped.
Of course, this is not what happened and is very snobbish towards that generation. They knew exactly how a woman became pregnant. No one believed Mary's story at first, not even Joseph. He was going to put her away silently. However, Joseph changed his mind and married Mary. They lived their lives with the stigma hanging over their heads that they had not waited for the proper moment to be intimate. No one would have bought their story.
Here is the rub. If Mary was lying, then Jesus should have fallen within the range of the Judeans of his day. He might be a little smarter or not, but we would not expect him to stick out among the greats of Israel, much less all mankind. The miracles of Jesus, his death and resurrection, are not explainable by a natural conception. Of course, the skeptic continues to deny everything. None of the miracles happened. The resurrection didn't happen. Over the top of all the eye witness testimony, the skeptic's biases reign supreme. There is just too much evidence that something strange was going on with this Jesus of Nazareth.
In the opening verses of this chapter, it is clear that John is using language from Genesis chapter 1, "In the beginning..." The apostles of Jesus had come to see the reality of who Jesus really was. He is the Son of the Most High God, but not in the way that humans would understand sonship. Even before anything was created, the eternal Son existed as the eternal Word of God. How does John come up with the idea that there was a "Word" of God in the Genesis 1? Well, primarily he doesn't "come up with it." He understands it by the revelation of Jesus and the Spirit of God. However, it is important to see that Genesis 1 describes the Father saying, "Let there be light," When we speak, words go forth from us. Of course, God is not flesh and blood and there is no air around Him to propagate sound waves. However, something greater is being revealed. The One who created man, with the ability to speak and send powerful ideas out into the world around him, is able to "speak" and send forth "word" in a greater way. What is not made clear in the text of Genesis 1 is explained in John 1. The eternal Word was the eternal Son who went forth to accomplish what the Father desired. John is also probably looking at Proverbs 8, in which wisdom is personified and depicted as working with God at Creation. In a sense, John is saying that Proverbs 8 is not just poetry. It is revelation that is not clear until the Wisdom of God, the Word of God, took on flesh.
This is the amazing part. This One who has eternally existed not only with God, but as divine, became human. This speaks to the depths that God was willing to go in order to save us, to show His love for us. Yes, God is good and therefore He will do good things, but He doesn't have to be that good! This call and response of love cannot be broken down into "laws." Anyone who says, "This is what you have to do in order to love me," has something wrong in their heart. They are not speaking with love themselves. Love must be free to act and to respond. Love must not be controlled and manipulated; true love will not dictate to other how they "must" show love.
This brings us to Philippians 2:5-11. It uses language from Genesis 1 as well (verse 26). In Genesis, man is made in the "likeness" of God. He is not God, but is like Him enough that a personal relationship can develop between them. We see this in Genesis 3 when it tells us that God would come down in the cool of the day to meet with Adam and Eve. In Philippians, something is happening in the opposite direction. Though man is made in God's likeness, through Jesus, God has taken on the nature and form of a man. The Word didn't just become like a man. Rather, He became a man.
This begs the question, "What was He thinking?" The context of Philippians 2 is the kind of mind that Christians need to have. Thus, Paul points back to the incarnation, taking on of flesh, of the Word of God in Jesus. We need the same kind of mind that Jesus had when he agreed to such a plan.
Of course, becoming human is nothing to us because we are human. Jesus was divine and the creator of all mankind. Taking on the nature of a human is a big deal. In fact, Paul parallels the act of Jesus taking on the likeness of humans with him taking on the form of a slave. He didn't just become human. He became a human slave for God the Father.
Again, what was the eternal Son thinking? What is this love of God that would go to such lengths, to such depths, in order to save us? As humbling as becoming human is for God, this was not the depths of his love.
The Philippians passage uses three verbal phrases to describe the depths of God's love for us.
First, he "emptied himself." It doesn't say exactly what he emptied himself of. In the context, the mind of Christ is in view. Thus, we might ask ourselves this question. What would I have to empty myself of in order to do something like that? Of course, Jesus is not proud and arrogant. However, he did create all things, and has dwelled in eternal glory with the Father. He would have to empty himself of all the reasons and thinking that would object to such a plan of salvation. It would be an attitude that says, "I am this (a glorious God); I shouldn't have to do that (become human, etc.).
As humans, we are altogether too familiar with that attitude. It is not an attitude of love. This is why Paul is pointing us back to the incarnation. We need to first understand just how amazing it is that the Word would do this for us, and then make the leap to the fact that we should do the same for others.
Second, Philippians 2 tells us that Jesus "humbled himself." At its root this word speaks of a lowering of position. The eternal Son abased himself in taking on human flesh. Yet, as a man, we see him washing the feet of his disciples. He wasn't just becoming a great king of the earth that everyone would serve. Instead, he was a slave of God to serve us. He lived without purpose and will of his own, and instead, lived out only the will and purpose of the Father in heaven. Since the men whose feet he washed were his disciples, they would then have to figure out how to lower themselves even lower than their master. How is that possible? Only by the grace and help of God's Holy Spirit; that's how.
Palm Sunday is all about the triumphal entry of Jesus into Jerusalem. It represents all that we want in the natural. Jesus presents himself to Jerusalem as her awaited Anointed King from God. We do not object to God coming down and becoming human in order to conquer our foes and lay them at our feet. However, we do balk because we do not know what our true enemy is. One day we are saying yeah for team Jesus, and then he does something we don't understand and we are ready to crucify him.
Just as Israel was looking for Messiah to show up and conquer the Romans, so we do today. The Ukrainians hope for God to show up and crush the Russians. Americans may complain that if God would just show up and destroy those who are taxing us to death, then we would be good. Really? The truth is that Israel's problem was not actually the Romans, and the problem for American's is not your tax-happy State capital, or Washington D.C. Our problem is sin that is entrenched in our own hearts. We will point out every sin, but our own. This is our greatest problem: we are in bondage to sin.
The Word dwelt among us
Back in John 1:14, we are told that the Word became flesh and then dwelt among us. John again uses language from the Old Testament, this time from Exodus 25-40. The word for "dwelt" connects back to the animal skins of the tent, or tabernacle, God had Israel build in the desert. This verb could be translated as "and tented among us."
Yeshua is literally God, Yahweh, tenting among us. Remember, the whole purpose of the tabernacle was to create a place that God could dwell in among the people of Israel. As they camped in the wilderness, the tabernacle was there in the center of their camp. The presence of God was visible in a pillar of cloud by day and a pillar of fire by night.
This visible presence of the Lord had become a thing of the past by the first century. However, it is important to understand this picture of God dwelling among His people within a structure of animal skins.
This brings up the age old contention between Christians and Judaism, the idea of the Messiah being divine. Is this just a Christian perversion? Are Christians teaching things that are not in the Old Testament, either because they don't understand Hebrew, or they are purposefully twisting the Scriptures?
The presence of God was always understood to be a mystery in ancient Israelite worship. If one pays careful attention to the text, you might accuse the writer of contradicting themselves. On one hand, the Scriptures pound home the idea that mortal humans cannot see God without dying, and yet God is able to reveal Himself in lesser, or mediated forms. The bush that Moses sees is somehow Yahweh, and yet it is not fully Yahweh. The fire and smoke on Mt. Sinai is somehow Yahweh, and yet not fully Yahweh. The same scary manifestation of fire and smoke on the mountain, then moves to the tabernacle as a less scary pillar of cloud (a somewhat different manifestation, yet of the same). We see Moses speaking with God in the tabernacle, but at the same time he asks God to look down from heaven (Deuteronomy 26:15). Moses was not contradicting himself. He simply knew that God was capable of manifesting in a mediated form on the earth, while still being God in heaven.
This is the mystery of the presence of God. It is never fully explained. It is simply revealed and discovered by Moses and Israel. Even the New Testament does not completely demystify this mystery of the person and presence of God. Yet, Moses had no problem accepting that God could be "tenting" among His people within animal skins (the tabernacle) while still being resident in heaven. Thus, before the first century, rabbis would speak of the Invisible Yahweh and the Visible Yahweh (a mediated form of the invisible God). God is One, and yet He can somehow localize without leaving heaven.
This comes to a head in Exodus 33 to 34. There Moses is talking with God. He is asking God to go with them, even though Israel has been sinful and rebellious. God promises to send His Presence with them. At this point, Moses asks God to see His glory. God agrees to let him see His receding glory, that is, not its fullness, because Moses could not handle it.
The even is described in chapter 33, but happens in chapter 34. God tells Moses to stand on a certain rock. God would then come down and pass before Moses. God's hand would simultaneously place Moses in a cleft of the rock, and shield him from seeing God's face. Yet, as God passes by, He removes His hand so that Moses can see His back as He goes away from him. Meanwhile, God is "declaring" the name of the Lord. I will come back to this declaration of the name of the Lord in a moment.
Notice that in this passage God is spoken of in human terms: face, hand, and back. This is a mediated human form, yet not a human. Thus, we can see that there is no great leap to understand that just as Yahweh could tent among His people in animal skins, appear to Moses in human form, all while being resident in the heavens, so in Jesus, Yahweh could tent among His people in human skin, while still being resident in the heavens.
Why would He do this? What love is this?
We beheld His glory
Finally, John 1:14 tells us that they beheld his glory. Just as Israel saw God's glory come down upon the mountain, then onto the tabernacle, so God's glory was made visible in the person and work of Jesus.
I would like to point out that God's glory is not just one thing in the Old Testament. There are many different expressions, forms, and even layers to the manifest glory of God. No human has ever seen the unmitigated glory of God. We cannot handle it. Then, we see the powerful glory that scares people like at Mt. Sinai: smoking fire, Loud voice, trumpet blasts, shakings, etcetera.
Then, there is the kind of glory that Moses saw that is a human like figure. This connects with the Angel of Yahweh passages as well. This Angel is more than a created spiritual messenger for God. God's Name is somehow in Him, and he forgives sins (Exodus 23:21). Moses saw this human form of God's glory declaring the "Name of the Lord." What was the declaration? Exodus 34:6-7, "And the LORD passed before him and proclaimed, “The LORD, the LORD God, merciful and gracious, longsuffering, and abounding in goodness and truth, keeping mercy for thousands, forgiving iniquity and transgression and sin, by no means clearing the guilty, visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon the children and the children’s children to the third and the fourth generation.” God's glory is displayed in God allowing Moses to glimpse what He could of Him, but it is also wrapped up in the truth about God's nature. He is Mercy, Grace, Patience, Goodness, Truth, Forgiveness, and the fear of the guilty. Thus, John alludes to this passage as well when he says of Jesus in John 1:14 that Jesus is full of grace and truth. In Jesus, Israel receives a greater glimpse of what Moses saw on the mountain.
Of course, some of Israel saw a greater glory in Jesus than the others similar to Moses seeing God's glory greater than Israel did. The disciples saw Jesus do things that others didn't, like walk on water and calm a storm with just the words, "Peace, be still." However, James, John, and Peter saw the Lord's face transfigured into a glorious brightness that the other nine did not see.
Yet, the miracles and such demonstrations were probably not the greatest glory that Jesus expressed. A case can be made that his death on the cross was the greatest display of the glory of God. On that day, he fully revealed the heart and nature of God the Father, not only to Israel, but also to the Gentiles. The heart of God is full of Grace, and yet also full of Truth. He will bend over backwards to save us, even to the point of dying for us, but we must turn to Him in truth.
Today, I want us to understand what it says about the love of God that He would even come down and take on the nature of a human. The heart of God has always been about relationship with us, and to dwell with us. Revelation ends with us dwelling with God and the statement, "They shall see His face." We will have been fitted to not only dwell in His presence, but also to look into the face of the full glory of God without dying! This relationship has always been His goal. It was there in the Garden of Eden until the serpent and sin broke that fellowship. It was there with Israel in the wilderness, until sin and rebellion broke it.
All humanity is full of rebellion against God, and against His Anointed King, Jesus. Yet, even now He holds out His hand in an offer of peace. He offers the joy of dwelling with Him throughout eternity. This is the love of God. How can I say no to such love?