B, The Third Sunday after the Epiphany - Mark 1:15 & Psalm 62:5-12 "Standing under Jesus"
Understanding Jesus Christ, in its simplicity, is simply standing under Jesus.
Understanding
Jesus is so straight forward, a child or an adult can stand under him, the poor
or the wealthy can stand under him, a new convert can stand under him, and so
too can a mature believer on their death bed.
Why then do we
struggle to understand Jesus? Is it
because when one seeks to stand out from under him, that the outstanding person
has little to no understanding of Jesus Christ?
From where does
one get an understanding of Jesus? One
gets it from standing under Jesus’ Word!
Standing under
Jesus can only occur when the fullness of the Good News comes to us, causing
one to repent and believe.
Therefore, we
trust! We believe and receive the Holy
Spirit, moving us to confession, bringing us to Jesus’ power over sin and death.
Standing under
Jesus, we need the Holy Spirit, so we are willed into God’s Word. We all know this by how difficult we can find
it to engage ourselves in God’s Word.
When you seek to
read the bible, notice how easily you’re distracted by other tasks that always
seem to pop up! Before you realise it,
the bible is not opened, the dust settles, and weeks pass by! The devil then works on the spirit of the sinful
self and guilt drives you further away from receiving the Word of God. Therefore, standing under Jesus’ Word,
requires the full help of the Holy Spirit.
When one is
starved of God’s Word, every other word floods in, to fill the void. The word of the human spirit within, is led
by the words of the world, so one becomes use to being without the Word of God.
This is the
struggle all face who seek to stand under Jesus. Our old nature would rather us forget and lose
interest in prayer and praying. Confessing
one’s sin, hearing God’s Word preached, and practicing the faith in a God
pleasing way, becomes detached and dysfunctional! The busyness of life quickly takes over and
the spirit within becomes comfortable with the status quo.
Standing under
Jesus requires faith. Faith does not
come from understanding, but rather, the other way around, understanding comes
from faith, and faith sees one standing under what we allow our ears to hear.
As Paul says to
the Romans, “For ‘everyone who calls on the name of the
Lord will be saved.’ How then will they
call on him in whom they have not believed? And how are they to believe in him
of whom they have never heard? And how are they to hear without someone
preaching? And how are they to preach
unless they are sent? As it is written, ‘How beautiful are the feet of those
who preach the good news!’ …So faith
comes from hearing, and hearing through the word of Christ.” (Romans 10:13–15,
17 ESV)
Jesus understands
that standing under him, requires us to be put in a position of hearing. Not just any word, but the Word of Jesus
Christ. God the Father, together with
God the Son, know this. That is why we
receive the Holy Spirit when we hear the Word of God. He leads us to the Father through the Word
made Flesh, Jesus Christ.
Jesus’ spoken word
drew an immediate response from Simon, and Andrew, James, and John. So much so, they left their families and
Galilean fishing boats and followed Jesus.
Through Jesus’ word the fishermen became his disciples and followed him.
We are discipled
by Jesus and grow in our understanding of Jesus, when we stand under his written
Word, just as those of his disciples, who remained under his word. All, with the exception of Judas Iscariot,
and that didn’t end well for him!
To get a greater
understanding of Jesus Christ you are called to stand under his written Word. Standing under it allows the Holy Spirit to
work faith in the Word within you! The
Holy Spirit continually points us back to Jesus’ way, the truth of Jesus’ Word,
and his life.
We are in the
season of Epiphany. In it we hear that
Jesus is proclaimed as the Son of God.
In the New Testament, Jesus is declared as the Son of God, some
forty-three times. Of these, it’s
recorded only four times in the Gospel of John, where Jesus refers to himself
as the Son of God.
Jesus is the Son
of God, but as Paul tells us in Philippians, “though he was in the form
of God, did not count equality with God a thing to be grasped, but emptied himself, by taking the form of a
servant, being born in the likeness of men.
And being found in human form, he humbled himself by becoming obedient
to the point of death, even death on a cross.” (Philippians 2:6–8 ESV)
Jesus put aside
his standing as the Son of God and stood under God the Father, and indeed stood
under all of humanity as the Son of Man. He served you, and still does, in human flesh!
Standing under the
Father, Jesus Christ demonstrated great faithfulness towards the Father and all
who trust in him. His understanding or
nature was such, he put aside his self-assurance in his divinity, and lived in the weakness of the flesh,
allowing himself to be guided perfectly by the Holy Spirit.
When Jesus, the
Word made flesh, went away to pray, he prayed his Word, the Word of God. The Psalms are Jesus’ Words of prayer, given
and written down years before he was born.
When we stand
under the Psalms as an anthology of Jesus’ intimate prayers, our faith is
encouraged by the depth of his faithfulness to God the Father. He allows his servanthood to stand, not on his
Godliness! But rather, is led by the
work of the Holy Spirit. Therefore, the
Psalms give a very personal insight into Jesus’ life as he submits to the will
of God the Holy Spirit.
In the same way,
when we stand under the Psalms, the Holy Spirit increases our understanding of
the perfect relationship between the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. Standing under God’s Word of the Psalms will
increase faith! So, we allow the Holy
Spirit to lead us just as Jesus was led by the Holy Spirit.
Jesus was led by
the Spirit to do the will of the Father, having put aside his heavenly divinity. As faith grows within us, we are led to do
the will of the Father, when we put aside our human spirit’s self-assurance and
desire for ill-gotten selfish divinity.
Faith allows us to surrender and lets the Holy Spirit point us to God
the Father and God the Son.
To understand
Jesus’ life, understanding the Word of Jesus’ prayers written in Psalms is as
simple as standing under the word by questioning; who is speaking, who is the
speaker addressing, and who is the speaker speaking about? Is a singular person speaking or
listening? Or is it a group of people,
usually Israel represented by those gathered in the temple?
We get
understanding of the Psalms and can stand under the Word of the Psalms when we realise,
how we, as individuals, or, as a heavenly congregation, are grafted into Words
of the Psalm by Jesus himself! Into
Jesus either, as the only Son of God, or, as the head of his body, the new
Israel, the church.
Psalm sixty-two
demonstrates the perfection of the Triune relationship, and the faithfulness of
God’s perfection into which we are grafted by Jesus.
(Psalm 62:5-12) For God alone, O my soul, wait in silence,
for my hope is from him.
Here, the speaker
is speaking about our Father in heaven to the hearer.
He only is my rock and my salvation, my
fortress; I shall not be shaken. On God rests my salvation and my glory; my
mighty rock, my refuge is God.
The speaker hear
is King David having been given these words from the Word made flesh, the King
of kings, Jesus. So, Jesus is the real
speaker of these words having inspired King David by the Holy Spirit to write
them down. By the Holy Spirit, it’s
Jesus who confesses and knows God the Father is his rock, salvation, and
fortress. He trusts God despite the
weakness of his flesh.
Trust in him at all times, O people; pour
out your heart before him; God is a refuge for us. Those of low estate are but
a breath; those of high estate are a delusion; in the balances they go up; they
are together lighter than a breath.
Jesus trusted in
God our Father at all times on earth, and he calls us to do so too. Jesus our King calls us to pour our hearts
out to our Father in heaven. Jesus, the
Son of God, put aside his divinity and gave up his human spirit on the cross. God is a refuge for us because Jesus is our
Good News.
Jesus did this for
Israel; he is the New Israel, into which we have been grafted. When weighed up, next to Jesus’ perfection in
the flesh and sacrificial suffering as the Lamb of God, our human haughtiness
and lowliness are as long lasting as a warm breath on a cold morning.
Put no trust in extortion; set no vain hopes
on robbery; if riches increase, set not your heart on them.
Israel failed in
the wilderness for forty years, then continued in failure right the way through
to Jesus’ revelation as the Son of God. Similarly,
we fail time and time again in our lives too. Jesus, the new Israel, did not fail having
been tempted by the devil in the wilderness for forty days. Jesus calls us to trust in his work, rather
than our lifetime of fruitless works, vain expectations, or earthly riches!
Once God has spoken; twice have I heard
this: that power belongs to God, and
that to you, O Lord, belongs steadfast love. For you will render to a man according to his
work.
Alone Jesus hears
only God speak. Therefore, we hear him proclaim
two things he hears and abides by about our Heavenly Father. That power and steadfast love belong to God!
We know from the
gospel; God the Father rendered the man Jesus according to his work. We know; the Holy Spirit led Jesus to finish
his work of suffering and death and was then raised to life by the Holy Spirit
having completed this work for our sake.
The Holy Spirit
works faith within us to trust the power of God. We become willing recipients of his steadfast
love made complete, for us, and in us, by the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit creates and maintains our faith
in God’s promises, in his Word. God the
Father renders or completes our salvation when we believe the work of his Son
Jesus Christ, hearing by the power of the Holy Spirit.
When we stand
under Jesus and his Word, we allow the Holy Spirit to foster faith within. Then we understand, standing in daily
repentance and belief, is standing under Jesus. Trusting the gospel or good news of our
salvation is knowing the kingdom of God is ours eternally. Amen.