Showing posts with label lie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lie. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 06, 2024

B, Midweek Lent 3 - Mark 14:70b-72 "Peter's Passover Pride"

Mark 14:70b–72 (ESV) And after a little while the bystanders again said to Peter, “Certainly you are one of them, for you are a Galilean.” But he began to invoke a curse on himself and to swear, “I do not know this man of whom you speak.” And immediately the rooster crowed a second time. And Peter remembered how Jesus had said to him, “Before the rooster crows twice, you will deny me three times.” And he broke down and wept.

Peter’s grief was raw and sharp.  The full weight of his ugliness was before him.  He had cut himself off from his Lord, calling down curses upon himself, he excommunicates himself from Jesus after telling Jesus, he would not deny him, but rather die with him.

Peter passed Jesus off; he passed over him in denial.  And at hearing the cock crow, he remembers Jesus’ promise and sees the foolishness of his own promise.  Peter realises his self-preservation had kicked in, to kick out his trust in Jesus and his word.

After Peter and the others fled from Gethsemene, Jesus is humiliated.  Hiding himself in the rabble, Peter cowardly follows at a distance.  The Lord needs Peter to be a witness, to see what happens to him at the hand of the Jews, without the helping hands of those who promised to follow him.

As guilty as those who commissioned false evidence against Jesus, is Peter, who now does not come to Jesus’ defence, but rather remains speechless with his omission of evidence on Jesus’ behalf.

Below in the courtyard Peter warms himself, when a servant girl sees him and says,   “You also were with the Nazarene, Jesus.”  But he denied it, saying, “I neither know nor understand what you mean.” (Mark 14:67–68a ESV)

Peter stands at a distance; he stands below Jesus.  He denies Jesus and says he doesn’t understand what the girl is saying about him and his relationship with Jesus!  The cock crows!  Then he excommunicates himself from Jesus with another lie, I do not know this man of whom you speak.

All those who bore false testimony against Jesus gave conflicting evidence.  Twice before the cock crowed, we hear the false witness borne against Jesus, did not agree.  Now, Peter’s lie is the testimony that agrees with the lies of the false testimonies that hands Jesus over to death.

The sin of commission from the mouths of the Jews, seals the fate of Jesus.  Peter adds his sins of omission and commission to also seal Jesus’ fate. 

The weightlessness of his words, despite being delivered with so much passion, proved impotent. 

If I must die with you, I will not deny you.  Even though they all fall away, I will not.” (Mark 14:29, 31 ESV) Is now part and parcel of Peter’s passing over of Jesus, ““I neither know nor understand what you mean.I do not know this man of whom you speak.

He fell away from Jesus!  He denied Jesus!  He understood exactly what the girl and others had said, and he knew the man of whom others spoke.  The weight of his lying lips spoken with so much passion, proved potent and powerful. 

We can clearly see why Peter’s Passover proclamation gutted him!  When push came to shove, he proved to be no different than any other person.  Frightened, fainthearted, faithless, fake, and futile!

Jesus’ word, “Before the rooster crows twice, you will deny me three times.” (Mark 14:30, 72 ESV) Proved to be true.  Peter’s three-fold denial announced the law to Peter, and it hit him hard.  Despite Peter’s positivity to support the Saviour, his pride crashed head-on with self-preservation to save himself. 

Peters “Passover crash” was the second most crucial thing to happen to Peter, second only to Jesus’ death on the cross!  As hard as Peter’s reality was, it was essential for it to occur, if Peter was to be a follower of Jesus.  Similarly, it is the same for us too.

The old saying, “Pride comes before the fall”, is relevant here!  Peter’s pride needed to pass away, to die its death.  So too does our pride, so Jesus can be our sole Saviour.

It is not a percentage game; we do not provide any percentage in our eternal salvation.  Jesus provides one hundred percent of the perfection in our eternal preservation.

We need to come to the gut-wrenching reality of our powerlessness to save ourselves, so we look to Jesus, and him alone.  Peter could only bear his cross and follow Jesus, after he realised what his cross  actually was, and what only Jesus’ cross could do for him.

Jesus’ cross must come before our cross,  if it doesn’t our cross is the wrong cross to bear.  In fact, if we put our cross before the cross of Christ, it’s a cross against our name, it’s a lie.  This is why when the cock crowed a second time, the pain of Peter’s realisation was great, and it had to be for Jesus’ salvation of Peter to be real.  So too for you and me.

When Peter called down curses upon himself, these curses were “anathema” in the Greek.  Peter unwittingly testified to being anathema or accursed.  Only the cross and resurrection of Jesus could kill Peter’s curse, and raise Peter up, blameless.  Only then, Peter could lead God’s church, not by himself, but by the power of the Holy Spirit in the knowledge of Jesus’ death and resurrection.

In God’s church, sin cannot be passed over.  The recognition of sin, in our lives is hard!  At some stage in your life, God will allow you to weep bitterly over your sin.  As hard as it is, it’s a healthy thing for those being refocused from the self to the selfless, single, death and resurrection of Jesus Christ.

With Jesus as our true Passover lamb your curse or anathema is removed.  At our resurrection we will see with our eyes what the Apostle John was shown, which is recorded in Revelation chapter twenty-two for our encouragement.  For your faith, hope, and love!

Hear what John reports, “Then the angel showed me the river of the water of life, bright as crystal, flowing from the throne of God and of the Lamb  through the middle of the street of the city; also, on either side of the river, the tree of life with its twelve kinds of fruit, yielding its fruit each month.  The leaves of the tree were for the healing of the nations.  No longer will there be anything accursed, but the throne of God and of the Lamb will be in it, and his servants will worship him.  They will see his face, and his name will be on their foreheads.”  (Revelation 22:1–4 ESV)

Amen. 

Thursday, October 27, 2022

C, Commemoration of the Reformation - John 8:31-36 "Unhidden Truth"

John 8:31–36 (ESV)  Jesus said to the Jews who had believed him, “If you abide in my word, you are truly my disciples,  and you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free.”  They answered him, “We are offspring of Abraham and have never been enslaved to anyone. How is it that you say, ‘You will become free’?”  Jesus answered them, “Truly, truly, I say to you, everyone who practises sin is a slave to sin.  The slave does not remain in the house forever; the son remains forever.  So if the Son sets you free, you will be free indeed.

Jesus speaks to the Jews who believed him.  Beforehand when he spoke, he sought to convince those who did not believe him.

We hear in John chapter seven, “On the last day of the feast, the great day, Jesus stood up and cried out, “If anyone thirsts, let him come to me and drink.  Whoever believes in me, as the Scripture has said, ‘Out of his heart will flow rivers of living water.’”  Now this he said about the Spirit, whom those who believed in him were to receive, for as yet the Spirit had not been given, because Jesus was not yet glorified”.  (John 7:37–39 ESV)

For the moment, I want you to hear him refer to “living waters”, but also note Jesus’ reference to the Spirit, which is the Holy Spirit.  I will speak more about the Holy Spirit later, in relation to the Reformation and Martin Luther.

With Jesus’ promise of “living water” flowing out of those who believe in him, he also says, “I am the light of the world.  Whoever follows me will not walk in darkness, but will have the light of life.  (John 8:12 ESV)

Whoever believes in Jesus Christ, “living water” will flow out of them, and whoever follows Jesus Christ will have the “light of life.”  Living light and living waters!  Life-giving waters, life-giving light!

The Pharisees did not want to believe and said to Jesus, “You are bearing witness about yourself; your testimony is not true”.  (John 8:13 ESV)

Jesus then addresses the hearers concerning his and God’s truth.  To those Jews who believed, he concludes his monologue, “If you abide in my word, you are truly my disciples, and you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free”.  (John 8:31–32 ESV)

I invite you to revisit John 8:12-36 and notice the word “truth or true”, how many times it occurs and how Jesus refocuses truth on his knowledge.  In fact, a thematic thread concerning truth, flows throughout John’s Gospel. 

Fifty-five references focus the hearer of John’s Gospel on truth or what is true.  Some will be quite familiar to you.  I am the way the truth and the life” (John 14:6), “Sanctify them in the truth your word is truth” (John 17:17), and Jesus’ and Pilate’s exchange, “[Jesus answered…] I have come into the world—to bear witness to the truth…”  Pilate said to him, “What is truth?” (John 18:37b–38a ESV)

So as Pilate asks, we can ask, “What is truth?” How does “truth” connect with the freedom Jesus proclaims to us?  Plus, how has this truth and freedom come to us through the Reformation and writings of Martin Luther as well as others of the Reformation?  

Let’s return to the passage before us today.  If you abide in my word, you are truly my disciples,  and you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free.  (John 8:31 ESV)

Three times “true or truth” is mentioned in this verse.  In the New Testament there are two words used for truth.  One of these words is borrowed from the Hebrew, and is often doubled for emphasis, in the same way as we use adverbs.  This is the word “Amen”.  We hear it said, “Truly, truly, or verily, verily, or amen, amen, depending on your bible’s translation.  It means, “Yes!  It is so!”

The other, which occurs fifty-five times in John is the Greek word, alethes (al-ay-thace), which is two words, the first being the negative, “not”, and lanthano meaning “to lie or hide”.

This makes Pilate’s question to Jesus, “What is truth?”, shine with all the double-speak and sarcasm of politicians throughout the ages.  “What is not a lie or what is not hidden?  Everything is hidden and a lie of sorts!”

But it also sheds light on the purity of Jesus’ word too.  If you abide in Jesus’ word, you are his unhidden disciples, and you will know what is unhidden, you will know what is not a lie, and these words that unhide, that are not a lie, will set you free!  Jesus’ word unhides, it exposes and reveals, and in doing so it gives freedom. 

This is the opposite of what one would expect.  A full disclosure or confession is what Adam and Eve feared most leading them to hide from God.  But now Jesus’ word unhides so we can be covered with his robes of justification and righteousness.

The question also must be asked, “What needs to be unhidden?  What has kept us from the freedom to which Jesus points us?”

Jesus makes it quite clear that we lose our freedom through sin.  He says, “Truly, truly, I say to you, everyone who practices sin is a slave to sin”.  (John 8:34 ESV)

Amen, Amen, yes, yes, sin keeps us from freedom, Jew or Gentile, man or woman, adult or child, pastor, or parishioner!  All, but Jesus, are enslaved to sin!  All, but Jesus, hide and lie!  What is truth?  What is not hidden?  What is not a lie?  Jesus Christ Son of God and Son of Man is truth personified, unhidden, without a lie.

He is the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth!  Our help from God! 

“Yes, your honour, I do the crimes, but my Lord and Saviour, Jesus Christ, has done the time!”

Now that Jesus has been glorified at the right hand of our Father in heaven, and we have access to him by faith alone, we have been given the Holy Spirit to bring us to him.  With Jesus, he justifies and makes you righteous with his blood.

The Holy Spirit brings us to the living waters.  He continually proceeds from God the Father and God the Son to bring us, out of our darkness of sin, into the light of life.  He does this by faith alone, grace alone, Christ alone, and Scripture alone!

The Reformation was a realignment back under Jesus Christ and the Holy Spirit.  Martin Luther was born into a Christian Church that had lost Jesus Christ.  He was still there, knocking on the door of people’s hearts.  But he had been covered up by humanity’s love of goodness borne in the righteousness of the self.

The Christian church was being enslaved by sin, while individuals within Christendom had lost their freedom through faith being replaced with the desire of one’s own feelings.

In practice, they had replaced the Holy Spirit who calls, gathers, enlightens, makes holy and forgives, with the human spirit who desires through self-love to climb up to God.  The starting point and the goal of this desire was egocentric.  Human desire and the satisfaction of this want was the goal. 

Humanity had become enslaved to itself in the church.  Humanity needed to be set free from itself so the one true Holy Spirit could once again lead us to the unhidden, one true body, one true hope, one true faith, one true Lord Jesus Christ, who puts us right, and justifies us in one baptism, before the one true Father and God of heaven. 

Because the devil and the world wills your old Adam to rise up against the baptism in which he was drowned, you and I need to daily welcome his death through the truth of confessing sin, having the lie and liar within exposed, and having the truth within ourselves unhidden.  Jesus’ unhidden truth kills sin and our old selfish selves with his light and life.

We cannot climb up to God through our own desire, the truth of our sinful nature is that we are too weighed down by sin to climb anywhere, let alone up to him.  Believing we can, and working accordingly, is believing a lie, wastes time, and distracts us from receiving God from where he is given.

As children of the Reformation, we are called to wash our robes in Jesus’ righteousness.  The Holy Spirit is the only spirit that will lead us to do this.  Left to our own spirit we will end up seeking to wash our robes in our own righteousness, where we find ourselves being enslaved by a lie once again.  Our own spirit will see us hidden again from living free to be in Jesus Christ.

So, practise your freedom!   Be true Christians!  Reveal, repent, reform each day under Jesus Christ.  Remain in God’s word, in Jesus Christ.  Be disciples, disciplined to receive God’s love.  Walk in your true unhidden weakness with Jesus Christ, with God’s Word made flesh.  If you want to put on the truth of Jesus in your life; read, study, and listen to God’s written Word!

Jesus’ life and death is for you, and it will set you free.  Amen.

Lord God Holy Spirit, free us from ourselves to receive the true life-giving waters, the true life-giving light that comes into the darkness of our days and lifts us into an eternity of light and life where you reign, together with the Father and the Son, one God, now and forever, truly, truly, Amen, and Amen!