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What He Said!

Sermon
Fringe, Front and Center
Sermons For Sundays After Pentecost (Middle Third)
People left his presence marvelling -- this Jesus -- they left his great gatherings amazed. "What he said!" they said.

In today's gospel we are not told if our Lord actually said it, or whether he simply thought it: "They are like sheep without a shepherd." Modern medicine has an amazing diagnostic tool called Magnetic Resonance Imaging -- MRI. The machine provides the magnetic magic and computers translate it all into pictures sharper than X-ray. Whether Jesus thought it or said it, what we have here is the Messiah's Reaction Imagery: "They are like sheep without a shepherd."

The disciples had returned from their teaching trips through the villages. They reported to their Teacher. Their experiences must have ranged from tearful acceptances of the good news and of Jesus as the promised Messiah to outright rejection of their message and even ridicule of their persons. Now, here in this once deserted spot, they found themselves surrounded by a mixed mob of people, some hoping to see miracles, some suffering and sick, all hoping for healing, all pressing to see Jesus. And his MRI --Êhis Messianic Imaging? "They are like sheep without a shepherd."

For good or for ill, the shepherd-sheep analogy is a much-used biblical image. In the First Lesson (Jeremiah 23:1-6) today the prophet Jeremiah places that comparison in the mouth of "the Lord, the God of Israel." Saint Mark in today's gospel places the same figure of speech in the mouth of the Son of this Lord, the God of Israel. In Jeremiah God condemns those "shepherds who destroy and scatter" the people of God. God promises to gather the scattered sheep and to raise up shepherds who will do a good job of shepherding. In Mark Jesus sees God's task is not yet finished because the people of God were still "like sheep without a shepherd." Clearly, it is hard to get good shepherds and harder to keep them on the job.

But Psalm 23 makes the Lord himself the shepherd. And, of course, Jesus names himself the "Good Shepherd." Saint John writes that Jesus came to his own people and his own did not receive him. This is the greatest evidence that the mission of Jesus was vital; namely, to gather the lost sheep of the house of Israel (Matthew 15:25). In the Psalm the sheep knew their shepherd and realized that only with the shepherd's care could they want nothing. But what of those of us who know no shepherd?

May I say a word once more directly to those among us today who linger on the fringe of the flock, who are not ready to confess that this Lord, this Jesus Christ, "is my shepherd"? In all probability you, and most all of us, will acknowledge that we do not feel "sheepish" about our relationship with God. The imagery is not the most helpful for our age. But the vital situation God is making clear to us remains terribly important. "Sheep without a shepherd" describes all whose relationship with God has broken down or is non-existent. That is today's issue. Whether shepherds all did a poor job of shepherding in your case, or as sheep you deliberately scattered, or, poor lambs, you never seem to have had a shepherd or been introduced to God the good shepherd, all that is beside the point at this stage. But alienation from God is a terrible, tragic problem.

For us to realize what scatteredness, what shepherdlessness, what alienation from God means, we might do well to translate all this sheep-shepherd imagery into current terms. From God's point of view every created thing ought to realize that only in God do we live, move, and have being. Of course, there may be some here who do not admit the existence of God. Some of you may not concede that the concept "God" by definition makes that Being the source and the strength and the ultimate satisfaction of life. But the fact that you are here, even if only on the fringe of Church life, suggests that you do operate at least somewhat on the premise that God exists and that this God has definite relationships with all of us human beings. Come, then, let us reason together in contemporary terms.

Imagine one of those huge trailer trucks which carry six or seven new cars from the factory to your auto dealer's showroom. Those cars were made to be your helper, your servant. You arrive to make one your own, say the red convertible. You are ready to love, honor, and polish it, only to discover that it has this prejudice against gasoline. "I think it stinks. It may cause cancer. One spark and it might explode all over me." What to do? You could abandon it. You could try to reason with it. Beat on it, perhaps.

Now see this Jesus crossing the lake in a boat and coming to a deserted place with his disciples. And whom does he meet? Us. Us without a clue about what turns us over. Us with an aversion to the one thing which gives us life, liberty, and happiness. What is Jesus to do? In him dwells all wisdom and knowledge. By him all things were made. He himself, made as a man, as human as you and I, with arms, legs, organs, brains. The only thing we have he doesn't have is sin. Here he arrives, right off the boat, and discovers us. Some of us have the sheep's biggest problem -- not recognizing the shepherd. Some of us refuse to acknowledge our servanthood. Some scorn or ridicule the theory that gasoline makes the car go round. What did he do then? And now? "He began to teach them many things." What can we learn?

Today's Second Lesson (Ephesians 2:13-22) spells out a great deal of the "many things" Jesus revealed. He surely did not try to teach all of this, then, to those people. God has taught much of this to many of you -- and you will rejoice to hear it all anew. But even if some of you are not all that ready to hear all the details or the mechanics of what Jesus Christ has accomplished for this world, at least focus on what a great guy Jesus is. That was the most astounding of the many things he must have taught them -- that God, almighty, omnipotent God, cares, and not only deeply cares, but, truly, God is present, God is here. His very being there said, "You don't want to miss out on this. You can know God and you can have God's love and care and you can find meaning and purpose in life. Restless? Of course you are -- until you who were made by God, for God, find rest in God." "Come unto me," Jesus said, "and you will find rest!"

He taught them many things. Without God in the world you are without hope. But now God, coming to us in the flesh-and-blood Jesus Christ, has brought us near. God created this "nearness" by being near. "He is our peace!"

Much of Ephesians 2:13-22 describes how God-in-Christ has broken down the wall which divided Gentiles and Jews. But it also describes how the wall separating us from God has been broken down, and how God deeply desires to destroy the wall which still divides your heart from God's heart. Hear it that way. Hear more of the many things our Lord taught.

In his flesh-and-blood presence God has broken down the dividing wall of hostility between us and God. To know God-in-Christ is to love God. He has abolished the law which said that if you sin you die. Instead he died. God-in-Christ died and now, by his grace, even though you sin, you are forgiven. God has reconciled all of us to God through the cross, "putting to death that hostility through it." So he came and proclaimed peace -- proclaims now -- peace to you who were far off and to you who are near. Through him all of us have access in one Spirit to the Father. "So then you are no longer strangers and aliens, but you are citizens with the saints and also members of the household of God."

It's accomplished. It's done. You are in. Accept it! Believe it! Be glad about it!

There were many things Jesus did not teach that crowd then. He hadn't yet done many of the things he had come to do. Much of his teaching, all of his dying, his triumphant resurrection, are still in the future. But the essence of it all was there -- for he was there. God was in Christ loving; God was in Christ reconciling the world. And by Messianic Imagery Jesus made that clear. You bring your sick loved one on a mat to him in some marketplace and he touches the one you love and he heals your child, your wife, your husband. Do you doubt that God has come near, that God loves? Of course, God has not done anything like that for many of you, and many of you have asked time and time again. But Jesus did not heal everyone then, and he didn't even touch China or England, not to mention North America. God didn't even spare the Beloved Son the evil which sin has brought down upon us all. But when God delivered up that Son of God for us it has become certain that nothing like death nor illness nor things present nor things to come can separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord!

Well. Start your motors. Obviously Jesus would not have tried the automobile-gasoline analogy for that crowd. But he did work with the food analogy. He taught that we could not live on bread alone, but he fed that whole bunch after his sermon. And our Lord is prepared to do the food bit anew for us here. He takes this bread and promises, "My body." He takes this wine and promises, "My blood." And always repeats his promise, "Given and shed for you for the forgiveness of sins." Do this in remembrance, for the remembrance, of him. And run with it!

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In the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus told the people how they could be blessed by God and experience God's kingdom. In our worship today let us explore the Sermon on the Mount.

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* * * * * * * *


Child Sacrifice
Sandra Herrmann
Micah 6:1-8

SermonStudio

Stephen P. McCutchan
For Jews demand signs and Greeks desire wisdom, but we proclaim Christ crucified, a stumbling block to Jews and foolishness to Gentiles....
-- 1 Corinthians 1:23-24

Russell F. Anderson
BRIEF COMMENTARY ON THE LESSONS

Lesson 1: Micah 6:1--8 (C, E, L)
John N. Brittain
The other day I stumbled onto a Discovery Channel show about underwater archaeology (not basket weaving). The archaeologist described the process of identifying the probable location of an underwater wreck site, the grueling work involved in beginning the process, and the same kind of methodical work that characterizes all scientific archaeology. But then her eyes twinkled as she described the joy of uncovering the first artifact, or recognizing a significant discovery. And that of course is what it is all about, the final product of discovery.
Tony S. Everett
Late one night, Pastor Bill was driving home after spending the past 23 hours in the hospital with his wife, celebrating the birth of their son. It had been a glorious day. His wife was peacefully resting. His extended family was ecstatic. His son was healthy. Surely God was in heaven and all was right with the world.

Linda Schiphorst Mccoy
When I'm teaching a class, and want to get a discussion going, I often begin with something that's called a sentence stem. I start a sentence and let the participants complete it. This morning, if I were to ask you to complete this sentence, what would you say? "Happy are those who...." What would you use to complete the thought?
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E-mail
From: KDM
To: God
Subject: Demands On God
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Amy C. Schifrin
Martha Shonkwiler
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P: Our Lord Jesus calls each of us to a life of justice, kindness, and humility. We pray that in this hour before us our defenses would fall and your love would be set free within us.
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CSSPlus

Good morning, boys and girls. How many of you have spent time around babies? (let them answer) Babies are so cute when they are happy but hard to please when they are upset. Babies can't talk, can they? (let them answer) So when they don't get what they want they cry. When they are hungry they cry. When they are sleepy they cry. When a stranger tries to hold them they cry. How do we know if babies are sick, hungry, or tired? (let them answer) Most of the time a baby's mom can figure out what's wrong even when we can't.
Teachers or Parents: Have the children sit on the floor and pretend that they are on a mountaintop and learning at Jesus' feet. Ask: "How is this classroom different from classrooms you have seen?" "How is it like them?" Read various portions of the "Sermon on the Mount" (Matthew 5-7) that they might understand (such as Matthew 7:7-11 -- prayer; 7:12 -- the Golden Rule; 7:15 -- being true). Be careful -- many parts of the Sermon on the Mount are difficult for children to understand and may lead to great misunderstanding and perhaps fear.

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