A, Post Pentecost 6 Proper 9 - Matthew 11:28-30 A Balancing Yoke
When you read or hear God’s Word, does God reveal His
message to you? Does hearing or reading His Word leave you wanting to know more,
or do you find yourself thinking, “I’m glad that’s done; now I can do something
more constructive”?
If so, you may be weighing up God’s Word in the wrong way,
and the depth of God’s power in His Word may remain hidden from you. Perhaps
you are not allowing God the Holy Spirit to open God’s Word to you. Perhaps it
is not important enough in the scheme of your life.
Or perhaps your stubborn, independent self-sufficiency is
not allowing the Holy Spirit the time to work His will in you. Like stubborn Pharaoh
placing a harsh burden on the Israelites through hardheartedness, you may be
placing a harsh burden on yourself through your own stubborn self-sufficiency.
The question we must ask ourselves is this: “Do I want to
continue in self-sufficiency, letting my heart become darker and harder through
stubborn perception and deception, with the very real possibility that God
hands me over to drown in my sins and their consequences?” No! I believe most of
us don’t.
Next Sunday we’ll hear Jesus’ address what can happen to
the Word of God when it has been sown in the heart. For now, He invites those
who are weary from human hardheartedness to come to Him, take on His yoke, and
learn from Him.
This invitation from Jesus is not simply a comforting
saying; it reveals what God is doing with our weariness. He is drawing us away
from the exhausting burden of self-sufficiency and towards the rest that comes
from being yoked to Christ.
Jesus says, “Come to me,
all who labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon
you, and learn from me, for I am gentle and lowly in heart, and you will find
rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.” (Matthew
11:28–30 ESV)
Chances are God is allowing your weariness to reveal
something about yourself, just as He has done with individuals and groups
throughout history. Perhaps God is teaching you how you relate to Him,
especially when self-sufficiency leads you to forget or refuse to let Him be
your God. Yet He remains the God whose kingdom, power, and glory are, were, and
will continue to be.
We’ve all heard the saying, “there’s no rest for the
wicked”. This saying finds its origin in
God’s Word where in Isaiah 48:22 we hear, “There is no peace,” says the Lord, “for the
wicked.” (Isaiah 48:22 ESV)
God’s kingdom, power, and glory manifest themselves to us
through His steadfast love. Our God is a God of generosity and mercy. So too are
God the Son and God the Holy Spirit. Father, Son, and Holy Spirit invite us to
receive Their generosity and mercy, and to live in the steadfast love of Their
providence, salvation, and will.
We mostly think our heavy burden and weariness is a
negative that has been inflicted upon us by the sins of others. However, the reality is unlike Jesus, we are
far from gentle and lowly in heart. When
push comes to shove from the sins of others our meekness or gentleness
vaporises like an oasis in the desert, proving to be a mirage or
deception. Any lowliness of heart hardens
in the heat of the moment.
Yet Jesus invites you to take on his yoke. A yoke still
sounds like a burden to us. Most of us picture oxen yoked to a plough in the
paddock, or a dray hauling heavy loads up a hill while the bullocky breaks the sound
of shackles and chains on straining cattle with his most colourful language.
Jesus is not like a coarse bullocky, nor does His yoke make
beasts of burden. No! “The Lord is gracious and merciful, slow to anger and abounding in
steadfast love. The Lord is good to all, and his mercy is over all that he has
made.” (Psalm 145:8–9 ESV) So too is
our Lord Jesus since He and the Father are one!
But what is His yoke if it is not a beastly yoke? Another
yoke is similar to that which rests on the neck of the beast, and it does carry
things. However, the focus is more on balance than burden. In fact, if the
balance is not right on a yoke the burden can be unbearable. So, what can we
learn from Jesus about His yoke and the balance of what He bears and how He
bears it? In other words, what does Jesus invite us to learn from Him?
As humans, we tire and weary ourselves with the old
knowledge-of-good-and-evil narrative. As we all know, this is as old as
humanity itself, reaching back to Adam and Eve. Since then, we have embellished
this knowledge in countless ways. Unfortunately, these embellishments exhaust
humanity more and more, as each of us uses this knowledge on others while it’s
used on us.
As humanity prides itself on advancement in technological,
social, academic, and practical knowledge, how much do these advancements become
the very things that create a greater burden upon us? The things we thought
would make life better often make us more anxious and burdened about living.
This tiredness ends in eternal death when the knowledge of good and evil remains
as one’s yoke.
What we learn from Jesus is that our balance is way out of
whack! Judging ourselves and each other with a yoke of good and evil misjudges
and misunderstands the yoke of Jesus. His yoke is a yoke of holiness built on
the Law, that shows us that both the good and evil deeds that come from our
natures are wicked. Our wickedness is that we do not fear and trust God but
that we would prefer to fear and trust the desires of our hearts above God.
Jesus’ yoke rebalances the holiness of God in human life. In
His meekness and humility, He removes the burden we place on ourselves and each
other. Jesus’ yoke took Him to the cross, and He calls us to bear our cross. Yet
the yoke of our cross is not the yoke Jesus bore in His death. That yoke has already
been borne.
We learn from Jesus that bearing our cross is about putting
off the very things that weary us. What we learn from Jesus is not that we must
be good like Him and use Him as a method for our salvation. That would place Gospel
before Law: Jesus did it, showed us what to do and how to do it, and now we
must do it to be saved. Put simply, this is just a revised version of the
knowledge of good and evil.
Paul shows us the reality of trying to make ourselves
self-sufficient in Romans chapter seven, where he cries out, “For I do not do the good I want, but the evil I do not want is what I
keep on doing.”(Romans
7:19 ESV)
In the exhaustion of Paul’s good and evil he celebrates, “Thanks be to God through Jesus Christ our Lord!” (Romans 7:25a ESV)
What we learn from Jesus while on earth, during life,
ministry, cross, death, and resurrection is that He rested His divinity as the
Son of God and was wearied with what worries every human being. But in the
weakness of yours and my flesh He remained holy and without sin. Unlike us He
was not wicked, and unlike us He lived life solely to please God the Father,
setting Him aside in all holiness. And He did not do this from His own divinity
but was led by the Holy Spirit in hallowing God and His name before all.
This is what it truly means to be gentle and lowly in
heart, or meek and humble in heart. Where we become soft and sin making us
hardhearted, Jesus was hard against sinning while becoming soft towards those
who know their reality and call on the name of the Lord for help.
Jesus now yokes us with His Word of Law and Gospel. The
Holy Spirit uses that Word to show you the weight of your sin and the weariness
it brought upon Jesus Christ on the cross. Yet the same Word gives you the gift
of His sinless life, which did not deserve the cross. By the power of God’s
Word, you are made holy and given rest in the holiness of the Father’s presence,
in peace.
Since this yoke balances yours and my debt with our Father,
surely it gives you and me the will to walk in meekness and humility, to love
others as Christ loves us, and to serve others as Jesus served us at the cross
and as He continues to serve us before the Father in Heaven. Amen.
Heavenly Father, we bless You for blessing and balancing us
with the yoke of Your Son, Jesus Christ. Help us to speak of the glory of Your
kingdom and tell others of Your power. Let the Spirit dwell in us so Your power
is made manifest in meekness and humility to others. Let us make known the
glorious splendour of Your everlasting kingdom, now and forever. Amen.
***
Sermon Summary
This
sermon calls hearers to recognise how easily God’s Word can be treated as
something weighed, judged, and managed by human self-sufficiency rather than
received as the living Word through which God reveals Himself. The burden
addressed is not only the suffering caused by others, but also the heavier
burden created by stubborn independence, hardheartedness, and the old
knowledge-of-good-and-evil narrative by which people judge themselves and one
another.
Against
this weariness, Jesus’ invitation in Matthew 11:28–30 is presented as more than
comfort. It is the gracious call of Christ to come to Him, take His yoke, and
learn from Him. His yoke is not beastly oppression but holy rebalancing. By His
Law and Gospel, Jesus exposes the weight of sin and gives the gift of His
sinless life, which has already borne the burden of the cross for us.
The
sermon therefore moves from human exhaustion to divine rest. Christ, gentle and
lowly in heart, does not leave sinners to carry the crushing yoke of
self-justification. Through the work of the Holy Spirit, Jesus joins us to
Himself, we’re taught meekness and humility, and willed to rest in the Father’s
presence. To bear the yoke of Christ is to be freed from sinful
self-sufficiency, rebalanced by grace, and drawn into a life of humble service.
Bearing the yoke of Jesus in the wider context on Matthew 11
Matthew
11 places before us the picture of children in the marketplace calling, “We
played the flute for you, and you did not dance; we sang a dirge, and you did
not mourn.” Jesus uses this image to expose a generation unwilling to respond
to God’s visitation, through Him and John the Baptist. John comes with the
solemn dirge of repentance, yet they will not mourn. Jesus comes with the
joyful music of the kingdom, eating and drinking with sinners, yet they will
not dance. They reject both because they do not want God to set the tune.
Reflection:
What unrepentant things do I do to set the tune for my life?
This
refusal is unrepentance. Christ’s mighty works are the music of God’s kingdom
breaking into the world: the blind see, the lame walk, lepers are cleansed, the
deaf hear, the dead are raised, and the poor receive good news. Yet Chorazin,
Bethsaida, and Capernaum remain unmoved. They have heard both flute and funeral
song but answer neither. Their burden is not lack of revelation but resistance
to it; their hearts remain yoked to themselves.
Reflection:
What goods and evils need to be unyoked from my life with the yoke of Jesus
Christ?
At
that time Jesus rejoices that the Father has hidden these things from the wise
and understanding and revealed them to little children. These little children
are not childish in stubbornness, but childlike in dependence, receptiveness,
and trust. They receive what the Father reveals through the Son. Here the
mourning of the burdened becomes blessed: those who labour and are heavy laden
know the dirge of sin, disappointment, judgement, and death, yet Jesus does not
leave them under that load. He reveals the Father and calls them to Himself.
Reflection
prayer: Dear Heavenly Father, send the Holy Spirit to move me to proclaim the
good news of Jesus Christ and to respond with thanksgiving when I hear it. Help me to mourn over my sin, so in
repentance I daily place it on the cross.
To
take the yoke of Jesus Christ is allowing the Holy Spirit to teach and move us
to respond to God’s music. His Law teaches and moves us to mourn what sin has
done; His Gospel teaches and moves us to dance before God’s mighty works in
Christ: His mercy, healing, forgiveness, cross, resurrection, deposit of the
Holy Spirit, and promised rest. His yoke is not the heavy yoke of performing
for God, nor the stubborn yoke of refusing God. It is the gracious yoke by
which Christ brings mourners into joy and the weary into rest.
Reflection: How does the yoke of Jesus encourage me to be humble in my blessings, and endure in the hardships, of this life? How does the yoke of Jesus enable me to be “like Jesus” to my neighbour?
