Sunday, 7 September 2025

The journey into the storm


COLERAINE EVANGELICAL CHURCH
SERMON NOTES FROM SUNDAY 7 SEPTEMBER 2025 – MR CALVIN 
STRIPP
MATTHEW 8 VERSES 23 TO 28, LUKE 8 VERSES 22 TO 26 AND MARK 4 
VERSE 5 TO 5 VERSE 1

 

It was praised by the Romans and it was the pride of the Jews – this was a vast 
basin of water known as the Sea of Galilee. It is also known at the Sea of 
Tiberius or Genezareth Lake or Kinneret. It is 13 miles long and 7 miles wide 
with a depth of 200 feet. Historians tell us there would have been 10 cities 
around the shoreline of Galilee. It is one of the sights you would visit if you 
travelled to the Holy Land. It is shadowed by the picturesque mountain range of 
the Golan Heights. It was here that the disciples fished, that Peter walked by 
faith on the water, where our Lord ministered. “Let us pass over unto the other 
side." It was a journey that you would think you needed to be prepared for. 
“They took him even as he was in the ship.” The Lord was able to speak to the 
multitudes from the ship. The ship was slightly out of the shoreline and he 
preached to them from there. Everyone was able to see him quite probably. He 
asks his disciples to take this journey over the Sea of Galilee to the country of 
the Gadarenes. I want to speak of the journey through the midst of the storm. 
There are 3 accounts given with different views of the same event. They are 
not to contradict one another but to compliment each other. They were 
witnessed by 3 different people with a different slant on what happened. 

 

Their departure – verse 36. The Lord is possibly already in the ship. When they 
set off no doubt their hearts were burning in them. They were on the mountain 
top experience. They had witnessed the healing of the leper, the centurion’s 
servant, Peter’s mother-in-law and had heard the sermon on the mount. They 
had witnessed the casting out of the devils and no doubt were on a high. They 
were probably talking about all that had taken place. It was real to them. It is 
interesting here that we read they took Jesus as he was already there. There 
was no preparation in a sense. The Lord was no doubt preaching from the ship. 
There was no time for preparation – to go to the local shops to gather bread or 
fish. There was no time for any changes of raiment or time to gather up water. 
No preparation was made for the journey. Although no earthly preparation was 
made, Christ was with them and that is what mattered. The application is 
straight forward – through your journey of life you have no preparation for 
whatever happens. Christ is with you - that is what matters. You might say “I 
could do this with that to make my life more comfortable or God could take that 
away and life would be good.” Christ is with you – that is far better. Tomorrow 
you will set out on a new week. You are setting out on a new journey. We don’t know what it will bring. We don’t know what a week will bring us but the Lord knows and the main thing is as you enter out into this new week you will have that closest fellowship with your Lord. We may not know what may come but if we have Christ and are close to him then we will be able to pass through that storm. For the departure no preparation was made but they had a passenger –Christ. Christ is with you today. His Holy Spirit dwells in you.

 

Notice their dilemma – verse 37. Everything was going so well when a great 
storm of winds and waves rose up. The winds beat into the ship so it was now 
full. These men were hardened fishermen. They had an occupation of fishing. 
They fished on the Sea of Galilee. They knew what it was to be out in rough 
weather. Today was different. Our text tells us they toiled and fought against 
the storm. As the waves continued to come into the ship they realised this was 
no ordinary storm and the master is asleep on a pillow. The word “great” comes 
from the Greek word mega – of huge and great significance. A great storm, a 
mega storm. In Luke the word storm could be translated as a whirlwind. In 
Matthew it is the word tempest that is used. The word earthquake is also used 
elsewhere. This was no ordinary storm and they knew it. This was a great storm 
and they were in the middle of it. Notice their urgency. In Luke we read that 
they cried out “Master, master, we perish.” Here we read thy cried “Master, 
carest thou not that we perish?” You will note it is in the present tense. They 
are afraid of dying. When you hear a child crying you can understand the cry 
strikes alarm in the heart of the parent. That is what their crying was like. Was 
it wrong to wake the Lord in the middle of this storm, to approach him and wake 
him? Who else could they go to? Their case was urgent. If help was to come 
from the other ships it would have come too late but Christ was there. Prayer is 
often our last resort but it never fails. God’s time is the best time. We see 
their urgency. Notice their unbelief in regards to this dilemma. They knew the 
Lord was the only one who could save them in this situation. Be careful what you say in this situation. Would the disciples have said something different if they had to do it again? They had professed faith but now realised the faith they 
had was little. We often find ourselves doing the same as the disciples did. We 
may discover our weakness when those storms come in our lives. “With Christ in the vessel we can smile at the storm” we often sing. But we rarely smile at our 
storms. Jeremiah 32 verse 17 “thou hast made the heaven and the earth by thy 
great power and stretched out arm and there is nothing too hard for thee.” 
Look at Christ’s actions – verse 39 “He arose and rebuked the wind. He spoke to 
the sea. He can do that because he created it. He rebuked the wind and said 
unto the sea ‘peace be still’ and the wind ceased and there was a great calm.” Be silent he said to the sea. Be silent and it stops. It didn’t take time, no it stopped  immediately. When the creator spoke to his creation and said be silent and it stopped. That is your secret today. God is all knowing and all powerful. What a scene of his deity and humanity. He was sleeping on a pillow then we wakes and speaks to his creation. Although he was asleep he knew the storm was coming because he is God. He could have stopped it yes but in his infinite wisdom and purpose he let it come. There is a simple lesson for you through his actions – we don’t know what will come but he does. It might surprise you physically, mentally, spiritually. It might roll over the top of us, push our life out but he knows it is coming. He is in the ship with you. We may not know but he knows. Peace be still – Christ’s action. It was a great calm. In Mark’s account that word great is the same word again – mega. Christ speaks to his creation, to the sea to be silent and there is a great calm. A mega calm. The sea was like glass. In the blink of an eye. We see his disciples reaction – verse 41 “ they feared exceedingly.” Why? They were about to die, consumed in the place they had their employment, the place they grew up in, played in and swam in. After Christ spoke to the sea they said to one another “what manner of man is this that even the wind and sea obey him?” Why Because he created it and it obeyed him. What is the Lord telling you to do Christian? Are you obeying him? 

 

The destination – verse 1 of chapter 5. They arrived safely at their destination 
– the country of the Gadarenes. The journey brought them to their destination. 
Their faith was enlarged and strengthened because of the storm. They had 
started out with the words “O ye of little faith, wherefore didst thou doubt?” 
Their faith had to be tested to allow it to function properly. The Lord knew the 
disciples needed to exercise their faith. They arrived and arrived safely. They 
now had reverential fear – for their master. They had offended him by saying 
“carest thou not that we perish?” I am sure there have been times when we 
have said “Lord you don’t care for me, you have forgotten about me.” He still 
cares for you today. Their faith was enlarged. When the Lord takes you through 
a storm and you reach your destination you see him as you have never seen him 
before. You worship like you have never worshipped before. You trust him like 
you have never trusted anyone before. The storm is for our good as it was for 
the disciples. Spurgeon said “if we fear God we have nothing else to fear.” 
Remember – you will reach your destination one day. We have God as our 
passenger and we will reach the shores of eternity. Notice in verse 36 that 
there were other little ships on the Sea that day. They were in the same storm 
but they didn’t have Christ with them. Do you have Christ in your vessel today? 
Regardless of what storm this week brings you don’t have him. There is a bigger 
storm coming – that storm of eternity. If you enter into God’s eternity without 
him as your personal Saviour, are not covered with his blood then you are lost 
for all eternity. Those other little ships were in big trouble. God is willing to 
save you today. Are you willing to take the step of faith towards him? Turn from your sin and turn to him. You are in those other ships and one day that 
storm will come. For the Christian Psalm 23 is so relevant – the Lord is with us 
holding our hand when the death angel comes. If you are in the other little ships 
your money, your house, your land will be of no use. We often see those big 
cruise liners travelling on our seas. It is a picture of our ship heading towards 
the shores of eternity. There is great feasting and drinking on board. People can 
swim and enjoy all sorts of leisure activities on board. That ship is still heading 
for a destination. It moves constantly and continuously to its destination. Once 
it arrives it is too late for those on board, for time has ceased and eternity has 
rolled in. The disciples were trusting him, though their faith was small it was 
exercised. We are not prepared for the departure that is coming. There will be 
a dilemma to face. One day our destination will come. All because of Christ. The 
journey through the midst of the storm – may we learn from it today. Look to 
him, the author and finisher of our faith. Let us not become disheartened and 
say things to the Lord we don’t mean because he loves us with an everlasting 
love. He is our passenger on that ship just as he was for the disciples

Monday, 1 September 2025

The Almost Christian

 

COLERAINE EVANGELICAL CHURCH


COLERAINE EVANGELICAL CHURCH 

SUNDAY 31 AUGUST 2025 pm – PASTOR DENIS LYLE

Acts 26 verses 13 – 32

THE ALMOST CHRISTIAN – verse 28

D L Moody, the famous American evangelist.by his own admission made a mistake on 8 October 1871. It was a mistake he was determined not to repeat. He was preaching in Chicago at a gospel mission. It drew his largest audience. His message was – “what should I do then with Jesus which is called Christ?” He presented the gospel faithfully. He then said “now I am going to give you a week to think over what I have said, when we come together again I will give you an opportunity to respond.” A soloist began to sing but before the final note the music was drowned out by clanging bells and wailing siren. The great Chicago fire had started. In the ash afterwards hundreds were dead with over 100,000 homeless. Some of those who had heard D L Moody that evening had perished in that fire. He reflected remorsefully he would give his right arm before he would give an audience another week to think about that message of the gospel.

Are you here right at the door of salvation, right at the point of making a decision for Jesus. Perhaps you think you have another opportunity. Maybe you will say “Pastor what you said in the service is true, I agree 100%, almost thou persuadest me to be a Christian.” Is that not what King Agrippa said to Paul? This is one of the most dramatic stories in all the word of God. Anybody who was anybody was in Caesarea that night. If you ever travel to Israel and arrive in Tel Aviv at Ben Gurion airport you would travel up to Caesarea, a beautiful setting, beautiful place. This story took place in Caesarea. Everyone who was anybody was there to welcome Festus, the new Roman governor. King Agrippa came to visit with his sister Bernice. While they are there to pay their respects they are confronted with this man, the apostle Paul. Imagine the scene. These different characters represent people in this audience tonight. Festus represents those who are alienated from Christ. He thought Paul was a mad man, that Christianity was an emotional crutch to get you through life. Paul represents those who are altogether for Christ, he was total committed to Christ – he lived by one motto “For me to live is Christ is to die is gain.” Agrippa represents those who are almost to Christ, he was almost a Christian, not altogether saved. When you look through the word of God this it is not the first time of the tragedy of the almost. Remember Israel at Kadesh Barnea when they turned and walked away. Almost in the Promised Land but not altogether for 40 years they wandered almost in the land of promise but not altogether. Remebmer the man who came to Jesus. Jesus told him “thou are not far from the kingdom.” Almost but not altogether. One of the greatest tragedies is for a  person to be almost saved. What a tragedy to hear the word of God preached yet turn away, never be saved. I wonder in recent days have you been thinking about your relationship with God? Have you been thinking of your destiny, eternity. You have been very close, almost a Christian. I want to talk about the almost Christian.

First, what persuaded King Agrippa? Paul was doing his best to persuade the king to become a Christian. Verse 29. How do you persuade someone to become a Christian? What persuaded him to say this?  First of all there was the persuasion of powerful scriptures – verse 26. What things was he thinking of? Verse 22. Moses and the prophets. The scriptures. What the bible has to say. He used the powerful tool called the holy scriptures to bring Agrippa to the point of salvation. It is the purpose of the word of God. To bring a person to a saving knowledge of Jesus Christ. The intention of the bible is to bring a person face to face with his sin and need of salvation, with the loveliness, adequacy and sufficiency of Christ. Has the word of God had an impact on your life in recent days? I wonder as it cut you like a sword, crushed you like a hammer, consumed you like a fire? Charles Haddon Spurgeon was checking out the acoustics in Crystal Palace London. He would preach to thousands of people and he was trying out his voice on the platform. He stood and shouted “Behold the Lamb of God that taketh away the sin of the world.” A workman at the back of the balcony heard the message. The Spirit of God took the word of God and applied it to his heart. He couldn’t sleep, that word of God was searching him, smiting him. He got down on his knees and repents. Those words brought him to faith in Christ. Has the word spoken to you in recent days? He used persuasion of powerful scriptures. He also used persuasion of the personal soul winner.  “I am persuaded.” Paul was the Lord’s messenger to bear his name before Kings and Gentiles. Although all the leading citizens of the city are around him Paul has one purpose. His eye is on one man, his focus was upon King Agrippa. He mentioned his name repeatedly. Verses 2, 7, 13, 19 and 27. What’s this man doing? He is after the soul of King Agrippa. Don’t be surprised if God mentions your name. Don’t be surprised if he takes what I say tonight and makes it personal. God has a habit of doing taking that, the statement of messenger so that you think the preacher is getting at you. Have you ever had that experience, you felt uncomfortable as you listened to the message of the gospel? That no-one else is in the building. That you are answering to God for all of your sins. God was after the soul of King Agrippa. Paul was after the soul of King Agrippa. I wonder if you have ever encountered some Christian who is living for the Lord? They love the Lord. They have challenged you about your need of Christ speaking about salvation. Is God using that as a link in the chain? There was also the persuasion of the precious Saviour. “For this thing was not done in the corner.” He is talking of the cross of Christ, how he went to calvary and died for our sins. He took the king by the hand and led him up Calvary’s hill. Can you see the soldiers gambling for the garments of the Lord Jesus. Can you hear the crowds as they said “he saved others let him save himself.” Hear the cry from Jesus himself “Father forgive them for they do not know what they do. My God, my God why hast thou forsaken me. It is finished. Father into thy hands I commit my Spirit.” When he died on the cross he was dying for your sins. Is there not something persuasive about that? Is there not something deeply moving about that? For the sinless the Son of God, the one who did no sin, knew no sin, was no sin. He was dying for my filthy sin. He was bearing my sins on his body. All my sins were laid on him. Jesus bore them on the tree. Then Paul talked about the resurrection of Christ. No-one could become a Christian. No-one could believe in Jesus without believing the death and resurrection of Christ. Christ died for your sins. God judged them on your behalf. He became your substitute. He was buried and raised on the third day indicating that he was fully satisfied with the work of his Son accomplished on the tree. Able to save. Able to satisfy. Paul confronted him with the truth and he said “almost thou persuadest me.”

What dissuaded the King? Why was the king almost there but not altogether there? Imagine what the King Agrippa felt at this time. The Herods of the New Testament were not such a nice family. They were always opposing Christ and the gospel. Not the first time he had come into contact with the gospel. Some of his family had terrible deaths but now God is at work in his life. He is moved internally and something is happening in his life. He was standing at the gate of almost but never got into the land of altogether. Why? He faced a number of problems. Problem one was corruption, of Bernice. Agrippa was her brother but they had one of the most infamous relationships in all of the scriptures. Here they were brother and sister but they were living in incestuous relationship husband and wife. If he would become a Christian he realised he would have to give up his sin. He stopped short of coming to know the Lord because he realised he would have to turn from his sin. He had a corruption problem sin. Do you recognise that? You have to turn from sin if you come to Christ. “Except you repent you shall all likewise perish.” Many come to the verge of coming to Christ but they turn their backs on the Lord because of sin.  They have turned away because of sin. When you begin to think of coming to Christ what sin is keeping you for the Saviour. There was not only Bernice and the problem of corruption. There was Festus, the problem of courage – verse 24. Festus looked at Paul and said “you are a crazy man.” Maybe Agrippa thought what would Festus say if I become a Christian a follower of the Lamb? Is the fear of man keeping you back friends think, my wife or husband say, the people I work with, the boys I play football with say?  Harry Ironside had a godly mother. She would often talk to him about coming to Christ. He would always say “I would love to become a Christian but I am afraid of what my friends would say, I am afraid they would laugh at me.” She would reply “remember Harry your friends will laugh you into hell but they will never laugh out of hell.” Is the fear of others keeping you from committing your heart to Christ? What was it that dissuaded the King. There was Paul, the problem of cost? Paul might have been one of the reasons why Agrippa didn’t become a Christian. There he stands with chains on his hands, scars on his back, manacles on his feet. He sees it would cost him to becoming a follower. Was he not willing to pay the price? It costs you nothing to become a Christian but it may cost you everything to be a Christian. Have you counted the cost of what it will cost to come to Christ? It certainly means from that moment forward he is charge, he is the Lord. He is the one who maps out the course of your life. What will it cost me? I wonder did he look at Paul and thought what will it cost me? Will I be like Paul and end up in prison? That I might lose my life? I think the real reason that King Agrippa did not come to Christ that day was not the other people in the room that day. There was Bernice the problem of corruption Festus the problem of courage, Paul the problem of cost but there is also Agrippa himself, the problem of commitment. Verse 27.  “Man do you believe it, I know you believe it.” There are different kinds of belief – belief in your head and belief in your heart. “If thou shalt confess with thy mouth the Lord Jesus and believe in thy heart that God hath raised him from the dead, then you shall be saved.” Where are you tonight in coming to Christ? How far along are you in the decision process? Intellectually you know you are a sinner. You say “I know that.” Do you believe that Jesus the sinless spotless Lamb of God died on the cross to pay for your sin? Do you believe that? Do you have a desire to come to Christ? Do you believe that sooner or later you would love to come to Christ. If you stop there that is too short. There has to be an act of faith. The only thing a person has to do to go to hell is to do absolutely nothing. Knowing you need to get saved doesn’t make you a Christian. Having a desire to become a Christian is not enough. You must arise you must repent, you must turn from your sin, seek the Lord, place your faith and trust in Christ. Be prepared to say “I will give my life to Christ now.” Are you ready for that last bit now?

What evaded the King. Here’s King Agrippa standing at the threshold, standing at the door of salvation, almost persuaded but lost. Space shuttle Colombia almost completed their mission. They were only 16 minutes from landing. They had been on a 16 day science mission in space. Their families were brought in so they could be reunited after they landed. Something tragically happened. Space Shuttle Colombia broke up and it began to rain down pieces of that shuttle in Texas. Almost completed the mission. They were almost home but almost is not good enough. Are you at the door of salvation? Are you almost there? What will you do in this critical moment? King Agrippa turned his back on Christ. Look at what he missed. He missed grace in the present. He never experienced the saving grace of God. “For by grace are you saved through faith and that not of yourself, it is the gift of God not of works lest any man should be boast.” Only 2 basic ideas in the world about salvation – there are those who believe you are saved by what you do and there are those who believe you are saved by what God is able to do. That is the difference between a works salvation and a faith salvation. A salvation by grace. The bible tells us that God has intervened. He has done something we could never do. He has come down in the person of Jesus Christ. Jesus Christ has died a death that we could never die. He has done a work we could never accomplish. He has made it possible for us to be saved. We are saved by the grace of God. We don’t deserve it, we don’t work for it, we don’t merit it. We are saved by grace through faith. Grace is God doing something for us that we don’t deserve. Faith is the arm that stretches out in gratitude to God for what he has done. Faith has been described – Forsaking All I Take Him. Have you ever taken that step. Agrippa never found Christ, he never took Christ, he never trusted Christ. He missed grace in the present. He missed glory in the future. For to be almost a Christian is to not be a Christian. Heaven’s most gifted persuasive spirit filled messenger had presented the king with the message of the gospel and he shrugged them off. As far as we know the Holy Spirit never gave him another chance. One of the most dangerous things is to come to a meeting like this. Having come you have heard the message of the cross. Stop - what if God had almost loved us? What if Christ had almost died for us? What if the Holy Spirit had almost convicted us? Then there would have been no message to preach, no forgiveness to enjoy, no prospect to anticipate. Ours is not an almost gospel, it is altogether gospel. For all the way to Calvary he went for, he died to set me free. You know the message, you know the gospel, the opportunity is here what will you do? Will you turn from Christ and go into an eternity of regret?

I want to pull back the curtain, to see some of the personalities in hell. There is a man sitting on a throne of fire, he is saying “I have betrayed innocent blood” – Judas Iscariot. He betrayed the sinless spotless Son of God for 30 pieces of silver. Go further and there is another man he is washing his hands in bowls of flames of fire. He is saying “I am innocent of the blood of this just person” – Pontius Pilate. He had the opportunity to trust Christ, to put his faith in Christ but he neglected it. There is another man and he is shouting “when I have a convenient season I will call for you” – Felix. The tragedy of tragedies … Walk a little further and there’s a man screaming “almost, almost, almost.” Who is that? Agrippa. Almost persuaded but lost. Will that be said of you? You say “I am a member of this church” No “are you saved?” You say “I am a member of that church”. “No it will take you to hell.“ Are you saved? By grace alone, through faith alone, in Christ alone. Almost there but lost. Come to Christ, come now.

Sunday, 31 August 2025

Bring the Book

 



COLERAINE EVANGELICAL CHURCH

SERMON NOTES FROM SUNDAY 31 AUGUST 2025 – PASTOR DENIS LYLE

NEHEMIAH 8 – 3 WORDS FOUND IN VERSE 1 “BRING THE BOOK”

 

French author Victor Hugo said “England has 2 books, the Bible and Shakespeare. England made Shakespeare, but the Bible made England.” Supporting that view historians tell us that Elizabethan England was a nation of one book and that book was the bible.  How far removed are we from those days. If we want to return to the book of God, to return to the blessing of God we need to return to the book of God. The book of Nehemiah falls into 2 sections – chapters 1 to 6 and chapters 7 to 13. Chapters 1 to 6 are all to do with the reconstruction of the walls. Chapters 7 to 13 are to do with the reinstruction of the people and central to that was the word of God.  They were not merely interested in building the walls but what went on inside those walls was more important than the walls themselves. So now attention is turned to the more difficult task of the reviving of God’s people. The test of any movement that claims to be doing the work of God is the place given to the word of God. Is the bible central or is it peripheral? It was central in the days of godly King Josiah in 630 BC when he turned the people from idolatry and apostasy and replaced it by the word of God. It was central to Nehemiah and Ezra as they sought to instruct the people in the things of God. It was central in the days of the early church “they continued steadfast in the apostles doctrine.” 400 years ago God lit a fire in Europe. The bible came into the language and hands of the German people. The word of God was central in the reformation. In Scotland John Knox read God’s words, trusted God’s promises and mobilised Scotland into what became known as the Scottish Revival. Then came the Wesley brothers. In his 50 years of ministry John Wesley delivered 40,000 messages, he spoke to audiences of 20,000 people without amplification. He travelled 225,000 miles on horse back most of the time proclaiming the word of God. One of the pillars of the 1859 revival in Ulster was the infallibility and centrality of the word of God. All the preaching, praying, testifying of the revival was grounded in the word of God. Here we see the word of God was central in a time of revival. The walls were now finished, the gates were hung, the material needs of the people had been met. Now it was time to focus on the spiritual needs of God’s people. Ezra and Nehemiah put the word of God first in the life of the city. Martin Lloyd Jones said “the primary task of the church and of the Christian minister is preaching the gospel to make known the truth of salvation through Jesus Christ.” The decadent eras and periods of the church have also been those times when the preaching of the word of God has declined. The Spirit of God uses the word of God to revive the hearts of the people of God. That is why we need to cry “bring the book”.

The people of the book – various pictures are given to us of this people in the passage. In verse 1 they are united in their desire to hear God’s word, in verse 3 they are attentive to God’s word, in verse 5 they have respect for God’s word because when Ezra opens the book they stand up, in verse 8 they understand God’s word as it is made clear to them, in verse 9 they are repentant as the meaning of God’s word dawns on their hearts, in verse 16 they are obedient as God’s instructions are communicated to them, in verse 17 they are glad as they  promptly obey what was required of them. Here are this congregation gathered before the word of God. Notice their oneness in verse 1. The water gate which symbolized the word of God. They were gathered as one man. Although from different homes within Jerusalem’s walls they were driven by a common desire – to hear the word of God. A united people waiting on God, to hear God speak through his word. Is that how we are to come before the Lord when we meet? Do we expect to hear from God when there is division and discord – “if thou bring thy gift to the altar and there rememberest that thy brother hath ought against thee; Leave there thy gift before the altar, and go thy way; first be reconciled to thy brother and then come and offer thy gift.” (Matthew 5 verses 23 and 24) Is that what it says? Together as one man. All together as one man. A beautiful picture of ideal congregation before the word of God. Remember when Peter came to Cornelius he said “now therefore are we all here present before God to hear all things that are commanded thee of God.” (Acts 10 verse 32) Is that not how we ought to hear sermons? Biblically and scripturally? Are you here when the word of God is being expounded, always present when the people of God gather around his word? Are you obedient to God’s obedient express command - “Not forsaking the assembling of yourselves together as the manner of some men is.” True Christian unity is not based on subjective experiences, it is based on the objective truth of God’s word. Verse 1 oneness and then there is eagerness. The Pentateuch, the first 5 books of the bible. Notice the initiative came from the people rather than the leaders. They craved for the bread of life, they hungered for the word of God. The cry of their heart was “bring the book”. The old book, the infallible book, the ancient book, the inspired book, the indestructive book of God. “Bring the book.” It was the appeal by people like John Wycliffe who wanted every plough boy to have the word of God. Sir Walter Scott pleaded when he was dying “bring the book”. “What book” they asked. “There is only one book, the bible.” Is your cry this morning bring the book? Do you have a hunger for the word of God? Psalm 19 speaking of the judgment of God he said “More to be desired are they than gold, yea than much fine gold.” Do you have a desire for God’s word? More than making money? Job said “I have treasured the words of his mouth more than my necessary food.” (Job 23 verse 12) Do I love this book more than meat or necessary food? Do you read God’s word? Do you read it daily, ritually, systematically, methodically? Do you read through the bible once a year? George Mueller was said to have read the bible 200 times in his lifetime. William Evans in the early part of the last century memorised the entire bible in the King James version. Nelson Bell, a medical missionary doctor, made a point of rising early at 4.30 am every day and read the bible for 2 or 3 hours. No medical journals or commentaries but he read the bible. He was a walking bible encyclopaedia. People wondered at the holiness and the godliness of his life. Spurgeon said “a bible that is falling apart usually belongs to someone that is not.” If you want to know revival in your life you need to know revival in your bible reading. Notice in verse 3 their attentiveness – this was a period of 6 hours here. They are there gathered for 6 solid hours to listen to the reading and teaching of God’s word. In verse 5 they are standing the whole time. In verse 13 they came back the next day for more. Verse 18 covers 7 days. Imagine that – picture that, visualise that. They had an attentiveness to the word of God. Why? Because of their respect to the word of God. When Ezra opened the book they arose to their feet. They were convinced of the authority of this book. We worship the God who addresses us uniquely through his word. John Calvin “we owe the scripture the same reverence as we owe to God since it has its only source in him.” They did not say “when is this preacher going to stop, he is going on a long time.” These people had been in captivity for 70 years. They had been without God’s word for 70 years. Now they couldn’t do it without it. Roland Hill was an 18th Century preacher used by God. Before he died he visited an old friend who remembered a sermon he had preached 65 years ago. When Hill asked him what it was he said “When listening to the message some don’t like the delivery of the preacher. But suppose you went to a lawyer to hear the will of a relative, you will hardly criticise the manner in which the lawyer who is reading the will. You want to pay attention to all that was left to you and how much it was. That said Hill is how you hear the word of God preached.” Have you learned to cultivate that state of heart and mind? Do we prepare ourselves before we come, do we pray as we come, do we exercise control when we come? Is your heart atuned to the living God? The people of the book.

The preacher of the book.  Notice something interesting here. Nehemiah’s name means Jehovah comforts. He is for the most part in the background. Ezra is the man who steps to the front. Nehemiah in the first section occupies the foreground. Now we meet another outstanding leader – Ezra. His name means Help. God always takes a man with the bible in his hand to be the key to spiritual revival of the church and the winning of the lost for Christ. There are several things about this man. The modesty of this man. Up to now Nehemiah is in the forefront. In 538 BC 50,000 Jews returned to the land of Judah to rebuild the walls of Jerusalem and the temple. Cyrus the pagan king gave a decree. Notice God in in control. He can take up a pagan ruler like Cyrus to accomplish his sovereign purposes. In 515 BC the temple is rebuilt. In 458 BC Ezra returns to Jerusalem with another group. Now 13 years later in 445 Nehemiah returns to Jerusalem and rebuilds the walls. He is a gifted administrator. He mobilises the people. When it came to the word of God he took a backseat to Ezra. He had set his heart to study the word of God. He could only carry out his ministry in a limited way. There in the background all the time. He was not pushing or projecting himself. He was waiting for the right time to exercise his ministry. Now the time had come. Is there not a word of encouragement for those waiting on the Lord in his service. You may not have been able to carry out all you desire to do. There may be weeks, months, years when your gift is not recognised but in God’s time the opportunity will come. The gift will be utilised. God is there thrusting him to the forefront. Not only modesty but the maturity of this man. One test of true leadership in the work of the Lord is the willingness to work with others, Just as gifted, as godly, as talented. There was some things that were others better at than he was. Ezra leads in the worship service. He didn’t know anything about building, he left that to Nehemiah. Similarly, Nehemiah was not good at preaching, he left that to Ezra. These 2 men illustrate beautifully God’s idea of team ministry. Sometimes people who think they are good leaders also think because they are good at doing one thing they are good in everything. They are expert in everything. You do not have all the gifts or talents. Ezra needed Nehemiah and Nehemiah needed Ezra. As each served in the orbit of God’s will there was blessing for God’s people. Is that not how God intends it to be? Paul to the Corinthians church compares the church to a body, all are interdependent,  complementary to each other. There is that in the body of Christ. Unity, diversity. All parts belonging to the same body. Do not have the same function. I need you and you need me. We both need each other. Have you been given place of position, a position of responsibility? Do you recognise others gifts as well as your own? In verse 5 we see the ministry of this man. Ezra opened the book and all the people stood up. What a respect they had for the word of God. They are all on their feet – verse 8. This was the ministry Ezra had been trained. He was the right man to lead them in revival. He had the qualifications. Ezra 7 verse 6 and 10. He loved the word – verse 10 “he prepared his heart.” The most important thing a preacher can do is not to prepare sermons and messages. No, it is to prepare his heart. Heart preparation is the most important thing. He loved the word. He also learned the word – verse 10 “to seek the law of the Lord.” Before Ezra could teach he had to learn God’s word. If God has called you to preach or teach the word there is one book you need to concentrate on – the bible. Verse 10 he lived the word - he studied this word to do it. He lectured the word – to teach in Israel’s statues and judgements . A black preacher was once asked what was the secret of his preaching. He thought to himself “I think myself full. I think myself clear. I reads myself fulI, I praise myself hot then I lets myself go.” One man said “I don’t even take my bible to church anymore, they don’t use it.” How sad. Someone once said “Liberalism takes the word of God from us, humanism takes us from the word of God.” Nehemiah chapter 8 verse 8. Is that not a good statement or definition of expository preaching? Exposition is simply the opening up of the scriptures so people can understand them, to know what the bible says. Ezra is a bible expositor. He is explaining the scriptures. To open up the scriptures is the job of preachers. We don’t need to follow fads and fashions and fables. We need to keep the ship of our ministry anchored to the rock of this book, believing it, defending it, proclaiming it, obeying it. The people didn’t seek Ezra’s opinion nor the ideas of Nehemiah. They honoured the servants of God. Rightly so. But they were to be ministers of the word of God. One of the principles of the reformation was grace alone, faith alone, Christ alone but also scripture alone. Here’s a ministry that was scriptural. It was said of the early church “they spake the word of God boldly and they went everywhere preaching the word of God.” Is my ministry bible centred? It is so easy to become engaged in politics and philosophy instead of the word of God. When CH Spurgeon came to London many years ago he found that the people were so starved that a morsel of the gospel was a treat to them.  A remarkable work for God took place. As he preached week after week souls were being saved. When he died it was said the congregation knew more of their bible that the theologians. Why? Because Spurgeon expounded the word of God. The people of the book. The preacher of the book.

 

The power of the book. Martin Luther said “the bible is alive, it speaks to me. It has got feet it runs after me, it has got hands it lays hold of me.” One thing is sure, when Ezra  expounded the word the people were moved – and moved in 3 ways. First - emotionally. They wept. Because what they heard in the word of God condemned their lifestyle. Then they rejoiced.  It was an occasion for rejoicing. It was the Feast of Trumpets. Their hearts were touched. The word of God brought conviction to their hearts and tears of penitence to their eyes. Does the word of God no longer move us? When was the last time as you read God’s word you wept. Has it ever happened? Remember King Josiah when his life was brought under the search light of God’s word “because thine heart was tender, and thou hast humbled thyself before the LORD, when thou heardest what I spake against this place, and against the inhabitants thereof, that they should become a desolation and a curse, and hast rent thy clothes, and wept before me; I also have heard thee, saith the LORD.” (2 Kings 22 verse 19) Is your heart tender when you sit under God’s word? We don’t see a lot of weeping over the word of God today. Who weeps for this old world weighed down by sin? Who weeps for men and women and families on their way to hell? They were moved emotionally. They were moved intellectually. An earnest listening to the word of God wetted the appetite for more. They came back the second day. As they listened they discovered the will of God. This related to the keeping of the Feast of Tabernacles. Leviticus 23. God had revealed the details of this Feast but it had not been observed for a long time. Are you seeking God’s will for your life? Your cry should be bring the book? Are you seeking God’s will? Is the cry of your heart bring the book? There is only one way to guide the flock – bring the book. The Psalmist said “Thy word is a lamp unto my feet and a light unto my path.” They were moved emotionally, intellectually and they were moved relationally. The word of God not only touched their heart and will. They kept the Feast of Tabernacles. It involved inconvenient living but they kept it  because it was God’s will. The Feast of Tabernacles commemorated when the children of Israel were brought out of Egypt and they camped in a place of Succoth, the place of booths. For 40 days they had no permanent shelter.  A Feast of Remembrance. They looked back to the Exodus and the wandering of their forefathers in the desert. They kept the feast. Ours is also a feast of Tabernacles when we remember the Saviour who died and rose again for our sins and salvation. How long is it since you kept the feast? Since you sat at the Lord’s table in fond remembrance? In verse 16 it was not only national obedience (verse 14) but it was unquestioning obedience. In verse 17 it was glad obedience. People of the book. Preacher of the book. Power of the book. Here we see an expectant people. An expository preacher. You may be looking for someone to fill your pulpit. Don’t be looking for someone who is going to fill your ears with fables. The cry of your heart needs to be “we need a man who is saturated in the word of God.” I took part in a funeral service in Coagh recently. I said he was a man of Psalm 1, he was a separated man. He was separated from the counsel of the ungodly, from sin to salvation, from death to life from hell to heaven. He was a saturated man – his delight was in God’s word and he meditated on it day and night. But also he was a situated man – like a tree he was planted by the rivers of water and his fruit brings forth its fruit in season. We need someone who is going to bring the book and expound the word of God. There is a lovely phrase in the last verse what a bible convention this was. The word of God had a central place of God in their lives day by day is. “O how I love thy law, it is my meditation all the day.” (Psalm 119 verse 97)

 

 


Friday, 29 August 2025

Taking a Stand for God


COLERAINE EVANGELICAL CHURCH

SERMON NOTES SUNDAY 24 AUGUST 2025 – MR TOMMY ANDERSON

DANIEL CHAPTER 3

Things are changing fast in our world. People who once stood strong as believers have weakened on many things. I have come to the conclusion that if you slip on something that is small you will slip on something bigger. The devil will make sure that if you err on one thing he will get you on something more. There was no one more hard line than Jesus and Daniel. Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego were facing something that they never faced before and we would not probably face in our lifetimes. They had been taken captive into the land of Babylon. They were living in a land of strange gods. The people were idolaters and idol worshippers. They have tremendous potential. Nebuchadnezzar asked for really good men. Men he wanted to train to help him rule his country. They are taught to become politicians. They were not long in this country until it began to change. The Babylonians didn’t like them. They had taken a high position in the government in Babylon, a role they wanted themselves. Nebuchadnezzar moves into the next realm of pressure. He puts up an idol, a statue of 90 feet tall and 9 feet wide. This is a massive idol representing him. He makes a decree. When the music plays everyone will worship the idol. These young men are brought under tremendous pressure. What will they do? Daniel 1 verse 8. They would not defile themselves. These Hebrew boys asked for vegetables rather than meat. The servants said “no, if you get weak I will be in terrible trouble.” They persuaded the servants to allow them to try it for several days. After a period of time they were healthier than any of the rest.  “They purposed in their heart”. The pressure was on when this music plays – what will they do? They were in the government, in a seat of authority, had a good salary, a good position in society. They had climbed the social ladder quickly. Suddenly they were in a good position, had great wealth and power then comes the idol. Everyone has to worship it. Whenever the music plays everyone as instructed bows except these 3 Hebrew men. They were under tremendous pressure. They had already committed the situation to God and said “we will not bow”. They were prepared already. It was a “bow and burn” situation. What are you going to do? Sure we could save the situation. We are only asked to sacrifice our conscience for a moment. We could bow down but in our heart, not really doing anything to keep out of the danger we are in. “Lord you know our situation, I am not turning my back on you God.”  Maybe there are those who say “God I know this is wrong but I am not really bowing down in the eyes of the world.” The pressure was real, the orchestra was loud, thousands were bowing, all the top notch people were there. Everyone was there of importance and 3 boys say “we are not bowing”. Imagine what it must have been like among all those people. You couldn’t have missed them. The pressure was great because there were those who were watching. The Babylonians and Chaldeans were waiting for the moment to pounce. The world is watching you and I. If we make one wrong step they will pounce. Someone might turn and say to us “I never expected you to be here.” As soon as the Chaldeans seen them they went straight to Nebuchadnezzar. They flattered the king – “live for ever, you are one of the best we have ever had.” Verse 9. He loved it all. He loves control and money. It hasn’t changed today. Often we have seen it when one leader steps down and we ask ‘who wants the job’? The job brings power and prestige and finance. Sadly it brings compromise too. What are these boys going to do? The men have turned up at the palace and tell the king “you made a decree, when the music plays everyone is to bow down. We don’t really want to have to come and tell you but we thought it right. There are 3 Hebrew boys defiling the order. That got the king angry. He was furious, boiling in anger. He asked for the Hebrew boys to be bought to the palace and they were brought. He looks at the 3 boys and said “is it true what I hear?” He gives them an alternative, a moment of opportunity. This is when the pressure is at its boiling point. They are at the very seat of power. It is either the furnace or compromise. He had a heart for them. He didn’t want them to go to the burning furnace. He didn’t want them to go there. If you bow down you will go free. He was prepared to do that. What would we do? This is life or death. It is not fiction. This is real. Nebuchadnezzar has made a decree and he is not backing down. These Hebrew men are before him. He is being watched. They are waiting. He realises he is also being judged. The pressure is on. The 3 boys, everyone took it as a privilege to give a testimony of what God meant to them. Verses 16, 17 and 18. They turned the situation around. There is another person who controls the power not you. He will deliver us from the fiery furnace and from you. They go on to say if not “be it known unto thee O king, that we will not serve thy gods, nor worship the golden image which thou hast set up.” They were not messing around. They knew this was life or death. They were prepared to go to the furnace. They did not care about their position or the power given to them by this man. They simply say “we belong to God, we will not serve your god.” “All who will live godly in Christ Jesus will suffer persecution” the New Testament tells us. These men said “we will not bow, our God is able to deliver us, but if it is his will not to live come what may.” That was their privilege. They were taken to the furnace which was heated 7 times hotter. It was so hot that even the soldiers that took the 3 men bound to the furnace were slain. The heat was so intense that men shrivelled up by it. The 3 boys fell into the fire and they find themselves in a new position. Suddenly they are loose and walking about. Even their clothes were not burnt, nor a hair singed. These 3 men had not even a smell of burning. Nothing is destroyed. The position they are. I don’t think Nebuchadnezzar really liked the fact that he was sending these men to the furnace. These were 3 of the best. He didn’t want to do what he did. He was committed to his people. When he looked inside of the furnace he sees 4 men walking about. He calls his counsellors and asks “did we not put in 3 men?” And they said “yes.” The king said there is an extra one in there like the Son of God. God delivered them to the flames. God delivered them in the flames. God delivered them from the flames. What a mighty God we serve. They were walking around free and enjoying fellowship with God. I don’t know what you are going through, whatever the difficulty you are in – God says “I will be with you, I will not forsake you even when ...” This seems difficult and different but this is the moment to shine for him – before your families, your neighbours, your loved ones. To see Jesus in you. These 3 boys came out of the furnace and were given a new position. Nebuchadnezzar said “there is no god like the God of Israel of Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego. If any of you say anything of them, says anything against the God of these men I will have you thrown into the fire.” He turned the whole thing around. What a mighty God we serve. That is still true today.


Wednesday, 20 August 2025

Keswick at Portstewart 2025 - Bible Reading with Sam Alberry - Jonah 4


KESWICK AT PORSTEWART 2025 

BIBLE READING - FRIDAY 11 JULY 2025 - MR SAM ALBERRY

JONAH 4

Jonah 4 makes me think of those movies that have a really good twist at the end eg The Prestige, The Shawshank Redemption, The Usual Suspects, The Sixth Sense. The thing with a good movie twist is not just a surprise, it is some new revelation that makes sense of everything that went before. It makes you want to rewatch the movie and now helps you understand something was being hinted at all along. Something unexpected that explains everything. We have lot of surprises in this book. There is Jonah’s call to Nineveh, Jonah’s fleeing from his calling, his deliverance from the storm, the response of godless brutal Nineveh. In chapter 4 we have a twist, a bombshell dropped and it makes sense of all that has gone before. We find out not just why Jonah refused to go to Nineveh but we also find out why God was so persistent that it had to be Jonah who went to Nineveh. Jonah’s response is not elation that it has all gone so well, he is angry. Angry at their repentance and of God relenting in his anger. Like the best movie twists there are signs along the way that something like this was brewing. There are signs throughout the book that all was not ok with Jonah. In chapter 2 when he was describing the predicament he had been in, what God had rescued him from. He talked about the waves overwhelming him, the hand of God being against him but at no point did he confess any sins, he did not admit any wrongdoings. In chapter 3 we see all the Ninevites repent, pretty much all of them from the king on down through all society but at no point does Jonah repent. By chapter 3 we see that he had resolved to do the right thing but we realise his heart had not changed at all. Jonah has gone from being the rebellious younger son to becoming the resentful older son in the prodigal of the lost son.

 

Think of the chapter in 2 parts – Jonah’s anger and then the Lord’s compassion.

 

We must realise that we are like Jonah and we need the one who is the opposite of Jonah, the one who is far greater than Jonah.

 

Jonah’s anger. We might think Jonah would be humbled by this point after all he has gone through. He has obeyed God’s call and see the fruit of preaching God’s word. We would think he would be saying “I now know Lord your ways are greater than mine, I am going to trust you more, thank you for being patient with me and being merciful to this city.” But instead we see Jonah angry. Chapter 4 is an ugly side of Jonah. We are told that the Lord has relented from this disaster and the very first thing we read is “it displeased Jonah exceedingly.” In chapter 1 we read the sailors “feared the Lord exceedingly.” Now we have Jonah being displeased with the Lord exceedingly. One of the ironies of this book is the name Jonah means dove which is a sign of peace in the bible. Mr Peace is furious. But it is interesting we are told Jonah was angry and yet in verse 2 he prayed. I want to commend this one aspect of his behaviour in this chapter. In his anger with God he prays to God. He realises he does not have to be stuck in a fish to learn to pray. Rather than running away from the Lord this time he prays to him. It is not a commendable prayer in any respect. The bible does encourage honesty with God. There are many examples in the bible of people bringing their complaints to God. One thing we can from this chapter is this - if you have a problem with God take it to God. He can cope with that. That is what Jonah does. He is angry with the Lord so he prays. He takes his issue to God himself. We see why he is angry in verse 2 – “is this not what I said, Lord, when I was still at home?” Nineveh was not destroyed, it was preserved, God held back from punishing their sin. Now we see why Jonah needed to be there. Jonah is triggered by the compassion of God to Nineveh. Jonah was expecting Nineveh to repent. He is not angry because he was expecting judgment because he just knew God would be like this, to shew mercy. He had articulated this back in chapter 1 – it is not recorded for us but he knew it would happen. I was going to go there, preach your word and you would shew mercy. We know now why Jonah fled. He was not worried about them opposing him. He was worried about them repenting and God loving them. That was his worst fear and it has come to pass. God has been gracious to Nineveh. The background of Jonah we see in 2 Kings does make some sense of this. It was his preaching that had been so instrumental in Israel’s borders being restored. They had managed to drive some of their enemies back across the old borders  and to keep them out. Now God is asking them to cross that very border and be a means of mercy to one of Israel’s worst enemies. Jonah’s problem is it is so typical of God to be like that. He says ‘I knew that you are gracious God and merciful, I knew this would happen, that you would go soft on those guys.’ He cannot take it, of God being gracious to them. He quotes back from Exodus 34 verse 6 God declares himself with these words “The Lord, the Lord, the compassionate and gracious God, slow to anger, abounding in love and faithfulness, maintaining love to thousands, and forgiving wickedness, rebellion and sin.” This is what God wants the world to know about him – slow to anger, abounding in love. Jonah both understands that and misunderstands that. When it comes to his people he is grateful that God is slow to anger and abounding in love. When it comes to his sworn enemy Jonah is wishing God was slow to love and abounding in anger. He is happy for God to be all those things to us but not to them. Here’s what Jonah has not understood – as a nation Israel had tasted that time and time again but the Old Testament never said he would be gracious to Israel only. He had shown his intention that eventually all nations would be blessed. That is what Jonah cannot stand. He wants God to be gracious to us but not to these people. We can see how he is gripped by this feeling in verse 3. This has consumed him utterly. He is so full of contempt for what he has done with the Assyrians and Jonah is saying “I cannot live unless things go my way on this. It is either me or them. If you are going to spare them then let me die. If you want to keep me you have got to catch up with them and judge them.” Again as we look at that it is tempting to think Jonah is a headcase. And he is. But we are to see Jonah as a mirror to ourselves. He knew the scriptures. He had been used by the Lord. His ministry had been fruitful. He had strong theological credentials. If he could display this attitude we can also. Let us see if we are guilty of the same attitudes.

 

Jonah says he now wants to die – verse 3. What would God have to do, to change in your life to be able to pray verse 3. For you to say “Lord take my life, I am done. It is better for me to die than live. What would be a non negotiable in our lives that the Lord is not allowed to mess with? What is becoming your bottom line? I can cope with this but if you take that I am done.” It is easy for our faith in God to become conditioned on God pulling through in some very  particular area of life and when he doesn’t we are out. This was the case with Jonah – something else had become to mean more to him than his faith in God. When that something else was threatened he was done.

 

What has triggered Jonah specifically – God has been merciful to Nineveh of all places. A question we might need to ask ourselves - Who is it that we do not want God to show mercy to? Before we are tempted to say ‘no-one’, we need to be careful – the bible tells us the heart is deceitful above all things. And normally when we find ourselves reflective and saying “I would never do those things.” It means we are doing things in a way so subtle we don’t recognise it. fThere may well be someone who has deeply hurt you, someone who has profoundly wronged you, someone you have a history with. If that someone started showing up in your church you might have a problem with it.  What if you got the sense that God wanted you to be the means to bring that person to himself? This works at individual level – there might be individuals we might not want to be spiritually united with. It also works in a broader more communal level. Jonah was a follower of the Lord but he was also a nationalist – back in chapter 1 he was Hebrew first, fearer of God second. Rather than allowing his faith to moderate and temper his nationalism, his nationalism actually moderated and tempered his faith. Jonah could not bear to see Israel’s sworn enemy finding mercy from God. So, is there a group, is there a subculture, a political affiliation, some demographic we would struggle to worship alongside? Is there a border we would be reluctant to cross for the Lord? Is there a class of people we would be far more eager to see receiving God’s judgment than to see receiving his abundant blessing? One of the lessons Jonah needed to learn is that God’s love does not stop at the borders of Israel. There may be people we hold in our heart that actually we would be ok to see spiritually written off.

 

We see Jonah’s anger and God responds with that question in verse 4. “Do you do well to be angry?” A great question. God is asking “Jonah are you right, are you nailing it as a human being right now, being angry with me?” The proof that God is really slow to anger and abounding in steadfast love is that there is a verse 4. The question is left hanging presumably because there is not a satisfactory answer to it. Instead Jonah moves on. We move from Jonah’s anger to God’s compassion. Verse 5. We see now what has been driving God this whole time. Jonah finds a spot to watch the city. He has a little hut set up and he sits there to see what will happen. ‘Maybe God will change his mind and bring judgment after all, I want to see it if it comes. These Ninevites are good for this repentance for a day or two but they will go back to their old ways so I am going to sit here and see what will happen.’ He is encouraged by what happens next – verse 6. God appoints a plant and he makes it come up over Jonah that he might be saved from his discomfort. Jonah is delighted – “he is exceedingly glad”. Thank you Lord you are doing something right. He can now enjoy the shade and watch in comfort. His exceedingly gladness is shortlived – verse 7. Now God appoints a worm that attacks the plant so that it withers and dies. Just as Jonah is about to blow his top over that – verse 8. With no protection he quickly feels the heat. The scorching wind and the middle eastern sun is enough to make him very uncomfortable and he is faint. Again he says “it is better for me to die than live.” Again God asks “do you do well to be angry?” Jonah answers and says “yes I do, actually yes, yes.” I am angry enough to die he says. He is convinced he is right. Come on God I have you this time. God responds to Jonah in verses 10 and 11. He has gone to great lengths to get Jonah to this point. He has actually appointed a storm, a fish, a plant, a worm and wind all because Jonah needs to hear verses 10 and 11. It is the point of the whole book. “But the Lord said, “You have been concerned about this plant, though you did not tend it or make it grow. It sprang up overnight and died overnight. And should I not have concern for the great city of Nineveh, in which there are more than a hundred and twenty thousand people who cannot tell their right hand from their left—and also many animals?” Jonah your relationship with that plant can be measured in minutes but you are bothered by what has happened to it. In other words “you are more compassionate about a plant you have known for 15 minutes than you are for a city of people. Something’s off.” Jonah is a prophet, he can summarise God’s character, preach God’s word but he is not sharing God’s heart. He does not love what God loves. He does not pity what God pities. We can see ourselves in Jonah’s character. We care about all sorts of things that should care less to us. We are callous about things that should matter so much more to us. God’s concern is different to Jonah’s – verse 11 “And should I not have concern for the great city of Nineveh, in which there are more than a hundred and twenty thousand people who cannot tell their right hand from their left—and also many animals?” Those are people I created, I made those people. They are lost, they do not know right hand from their left hand. They have no idea how to live or how life is meant to work. 120,000 persons is a lot of God’s image which is why God cares about it. If God’s image in this sense matters to him it should matter to us. If we are indifferent to the spiritual plight of people made in God’s image our hearts are out of sync with God’s heart. The lostness of these people prompts God’s compassion, prompts his pity. As we look around and see the spiritual lostness of people we should feel the same thing, Jesus did. We read in Mark 6 where Jesus has been with his disciples, they have gone out on a mission and they have come back. They have been overwhelmed with people, no time to eat. Jesus tries to take them off to a quiet place, just him and his disciples. They get onto a boat and someone tells others where they are going so that when they get off a boat there are a crowd of people there. Mark 6 verse 34 “when Jesus went ashore he saw a great crowd and he had compassion on them for they were like sheep without a shepherd and he began to teach them many things.” When Jesus sees the lostness of the lost he does not get irritated, he does not scold them, he has compassion and he starts to teach them about himself. Should that not be the case with us? It is easy for us to get angry when maybe we should be responding with pity, with compassion. The Lord pities them. Verse 11 takes the form of a question and it is left hanging in the air – we don’t know what happens next. There is no resolution recorded for us. As the viewer in a movie you don’t know what happens next. The point of chapter 4 is not how Jonah will respond but what is our response. What is our answer to God’s question? Should not God pity Nineveh, any lost person, our sworn enemies? Again the question is there to search our hearts. Who are the people we are tempted to forget are made in the image of God, or think God should not pity? Who are the people whose spiritual fate is of lest concern to us than some of our material comforts like Jonah had with the plant? When we search our hearts we are more like Jonah than we care to admit. The answer is not ‘stop being like Jonah’ but we need to confess how the ways in which we are like Jonah we are. The best response is to lift our gaze and fix our eyes to the one who is the opposite of Jonah, our Lord Jesus Christ. The more we see Jesus’ non Jonah-ness, the more we see the beauty of how Jesus is, the more that will change our own hearts. As we love the non-Jonas-ness of Jesus we will find a growing non-Jonah-ness in our own hearts. Jesus also went to a city to preach a message of repentance. Like Jonah he stood outside that city and thought about it. When Jonah was outside the city he longs for its destruction. When Jesus was outside Jerusalem he longed for its deliverance. Jonah was willing to weep for the plant but Jesus we are told wept for the people. Jonah wanted to die outside the city, Jesus did die outside the city. Hebrews tells us he suffered outside the city gates to make the people holy through his own blood. Jonah was being driven by self pity, Jesus was driven by self sacrifice. Instead of wishing judgment to fall on his enemies Jesus took that very judgment and bore it himself for the sake of his enemies. So that we now who should by all rights be his enemies are his friends. He is not ashamed to call us his brothers. So the best way to avoid the heart of Jonah is to cherish the heart of Jesus himself. May we so gaze on him that we become more and more like him. That our heart becomes more like his, that our loves become like his love. That we celebrate his grace in the lives not just of ourselves but others as well.

Monday, 11 August 2025

Following Jesus in a Strange New World - New Horizon 2025 Saturday 2 August - Mr Gilbert Lennox


NEW HORIZON 2025 EVENING CELEBRATION

SATURDAY 2 AUGUST 2025 - GILBERT LENNOX

The culture outside your home is very different than the culture inside your home. Those of us older can so easily feel a little bit like Alice in Wonderland when things  don't work the way we think they ought to. The developments in science and technology and especially now with Ai are challenging enough but it is at the deeper level of attitudes and beliefs, about the basic aspects of our human lives that I think the bigger challenge lies. In the world that I grew up I could assume that most people hold common views of right and wrong, anchored firmly to Judeo-Christian roots. But no longer. The anchors have largely gone. What once seemed so obvious and settled is now unsettled and hotly contested. For example, the idea that biological sex and gender go together or that marriage should be between one man and one woman, once commonly shared, are, as we know, increasingly regarded as belonging only to a bigoted and dangerous lunatic fringe. Now I am old enough to remember the introduction of decimalisation in 1971 and I particularly remember a news interview with a gentleman who I think ran a petrol station in a rural area. And he was asked about how he was looking forward to and preparing for all the changes that were going to be involved. And he gave a rather dismissive smile and replied something to the effect 'Well I'm not worried about it. I don't think it will catch on round here now.' He had to learn what we have all to learn - that while we may not like the way the world is, it is where we live. What it mean to follow Jesus in this strange new world?

What does it mean to follow Jesus in this strange new world? That's the theme of our week together. All the talks including this evening are based on 4 chapters in Matthew's Gospel, the section that immediately follows what we call the Sermon on the Mount - chapters 8 to 11. Here is how this part of Matthew begins. "And it came to pass, when Jesus had ended these sayings, the people were astonished at his doctrine. For he taught them as one having authority and not as the scribes. When he was come down from the mountain great multitudes followed him." By focusing on the reaction of the crowd, Matthew highlights the 2 major themes that he wants to get across in these chapters - first of all Christ's authority. They were surprised because he taught with authority. And second, the theme of following Jesus. Their response was to follow him. And the 2 things of course go together because once a person truly recognises the authority of Christ, the logical response is to follow him. That's what's involved in being his disciple, in his authority he commands. We respond by following. And Matthew weaves these 2 themes together through these chapters. For example, his authority and the incident that we read involving the centurion's paralysed servant. The centurion tells Jesus "speak the word only and my servant shall be healed. For I am a man under authority." And in chapter 9 Jesus heals a paralysed man to demonstrated the Son of Man has authority to forgive sins. And in case we miss the point, Matthew unlike Mark and Luke who relate the same incident gives us the reaction of the crowd in these terms "they glorified God who had given such authority to men." And then at the start of chapter 10 we read that Jesus called his 12 disciples and gave them authority to do various things. Authority, authority, authority stressed on 5 occasions in these chapters. And then the emphasis on following Jesus. The big crowds followed Jesus down the mountain. Well that's a matter of geography but as the section goes on, it develops and we discover that it's more than geography not less than. We have to follow Jesus somewhere but it's more than geography. We read in chapter 8 for example of people volunteering to follow Jesus such as the theologian. He said "I will follow thee whithersoever thou goes." And in response Jesus had to reset the person's expectation of what following him would actually involve. This is more than ticking the button on Facebook, the person you want to follow or Instagram or TikTok or whatever. It is following Jesus because he's cool and you happen to like him at the minute and then we can unfollow later. Following is more than that. And it is also in this section that Matthew tells us about his own conversion and he tells it in these terms. Jesus said "follow me". He didn't say to Matthew, at least it is not recorded "Believe in me and receive eternal life." That's true of course, but what he said was "follow me." Conversion for Matthew and for us means a belief that follows, that allows Jesus in his authority to set the direction for our life. And then in verse 38 of chapter 10 we have the famous statement "And he that taketh not his cross, and followeth after me, is not worthy of me." So with the basic definition to be Christ's disciple is to accept his authority and to follow him. Let's think a little bit more about the incidents that Matthew presents to us immediately after this big block of teaching that Jesus gave on the mountain.

What amazed the crowd about Jesus' teaching was the self-evident authority with which he taught. They'd never heard anything like it. Their rabbis would normally say things in the name of someone else. So they immediately noticed the different with Jesus and were amazed by it. "You have heard that it was said" Jesus would repeat and then followed it with, "but I tell you" speaking in his name, in his own authority for he is Messiah, Son of God, the authority, the final word on what is right or wrong on what is true spirituality and what is false. Leading up to the very famous final illustration at the very end of the sermon, that the only way to build a life that is able to stand when the storms come is to build it on Christ and his world. And the result was that many followed him. Not everybody but many, because in a confused and confusing world, there are many who seek for a voice that speaks with authority. So let's take encouragement from that, especially those of us involve din teaching and leading, that we continue to hold out the words of Jesus because they are the words that come with authority, the words and the authoritative voice that this world needs. But at the same time, authority is a very tricky concept in our world because there's so much corruption, so much abuse of authority. And that has helped fuel the suspicion about anyone or any institution that claims to have authority. So it raises the question, Ok, he taught with authority but what is the nature of that authority. What does it look like? Can it be trusted? Suppose we were to ask President Putin for example for a demonstration of his authority, what would that look like? Probably it would be some massive display of military might designed to strike fear into you and to impose his will on you through sheer brute force. How does Matthew present Christ's authority? Well he presents us with a leper. I mean out of all the people that he could have presented us with in response to this wonderful sermon, the academics, the theologians, whoever the great and the good, he presents a leper who comes and kneels before Jesus and says, "Lord if you are willing, you can make me clean." The issue for him was not so much as authority and power. It was his character, his willingness. How would this great teacher treat an unclean leper? Would he issue an order - "clean yourself up and then come and talk to me? You are not fit to be in my presence." Well of course not. Jesus reached out and touched the man, saying "I am willing, be clean" and immediately he was healed. There is a world of a difference between commanding clean yourself up and saying "I am willing to make it clean." In that culture whatever the precise skin disease the leper refers to, it was deemed by God's law to make the person unclean, not just physically unclean as a contagious disease and therefore they were separated from people but ceremonially unclean. And so we notice that when the leper was healed, Matthew is careful to tell us what Jesus then instructs him to do, to go and show himself to the priest and to offer the gift Moses commanded as a testimony to them, as a witness to them. Well why to the priest? Why not to the doctor? Well because it was the priest's responsibility to pronounce people either clean or unclean. The condition wasn't simply a physical problem, it was a ceremonial problem. The priest taught the people that God takes uncleanness seriously, uncleanness of all kinds, not just physical but moral and intellectual and spiritual. And so a disease like the skin disease, as well as other conditions such as blindness and so on became metaphors of a desperate level of the human condition. It wasn't an insult to the individual leper or to the individual blind person. It didn't mean that he or she was more sinful than anybody else. But it was a metaphor of what is wrong at that deeper level of humanity. But in what way then was this a testimony to the priests? Well it wasn't a criticism of the priest. It wasn't "go and show yourself to the priests and there you go." No. Jesus wasn't undercutting or criticizing the priest. The simple fact was that the priest couldn't cure anybody. They could only pronounce a person clean or unclean. They couldn't make a person clean. The testimony was here is a someone at last in this world who is able to do what all the priests in the world and all the religion in the world simply cannot do and that is to make a person clean. Just imagine the challenge that would have been to them. I mean, what could they say to such witness, such evidence? Very difficult to say on one hand that you stand for cleanliness and for holiness but at the same time continue to deny the claims of the only one who can make people clean. But tragically that is what many of them did because religion is often the enemy of salvation. But let's make this personal. Because when I listen to Jesus' words, when I read through the Sermon on the Mount, the effect is to expose my uncleanness. His words penetrate deep beneath my often proud veneer, expose what is really going on in my heart in the deepest secret areas of the real me, exposing my mixed motivation, how I really think, exposing my spiritual hypocrisy, exposing my love of self, of going my own way, whatever the cause to others, exposing my jealousy and selfish greed. I feel exposed, unworthy, unclean. So what will he say to me if I come to him, if I come clean about my uncleanness. The leper believed Jesus had the power to do it but was he willing? Well he need not have worried. Jesus stretched out his hand and touched him, saying "I will, be clean." And immediately his leprosy was cleansed. I want you to try to imagine what that felt like. Someone who hadn't felt the compassionate touch on his life, probably for years, in fear and trembling. No need to say that he was unclean, it was obvious. And coming to this Supreme Teacher with all authority, kneeling before him, wondering if when he looked up, the man would still be there and feeling the touch of his hand on his life. That's what conversion looks like isn't it? Discovering that he is willing and he cam make us clean. Some of us are so aware of how unclean we are, how exposed we are. What an encouragement. This is not religion that tells us try harder, do better, clean yourself up. Jesus does for us what we cannot do for ourselves and makes us clean. And that's what attracted and still attracts millions of people across the world to him. They hear the voice, the authority of his teaching but they feel the touch of the heart of God in their life. A God who doesn't expose their sin in order to condemn them, but exposes it in order to touch them and make them hope. 

And then Jesus presents us with another illustration of Christ's authority in this brilliant incident of the Roman centurion and his paralysed servant who came to Jesus asking for his help. And Jesus replied to the man saying "shall I come and heal him?" To which the centurion replies "I am not worthy, I don't deserve you to come under my roof. But speak only the word." Fantastic. He's an army man, trained in understanding the chain of command and now in charge of many soldiers, so used to exercising that authority simply with a word of command because it was linked into a whole system of authority. But now his authority was limited. He could say to the servant, "please get my uniform ready, please tidy the house, please go and look after the horses." The servant couldn't do anything. He's paralysed his authority in one sphere but not in another. But he recognised that Jesus operated at a different level. He recognises authority but vastly superior to his - "speak only the word". He reasoned it out because faith reasons. Jesus doesn't actually need to come down to where my servant is and into my house. I'm not worthy of him doing that. But he doesn't need to do it because he commands all authority. He speaks the word and that's all it takes for my servant to be healed. Because Christ's words are not simply words that bring with them the power to achieve. And Jesus remarked on the centurions faith for this man was a Gentile, not a Jew, not a son of the kingdom to use Jesus' term later on. And yet, says Jesus, look at his faith, so many sons of the kingdom are going to miss out completely. But not this man. Why did they miss out? Why did they not line up like the centurion did and submit to the authority of Christ? Perhaps some of us need to face the same question. Have we lined up to submit ourselves to the authority of Christ? Or do we just admire him from afar? Perhaps you are wondering how could I get that kind of faith? Well, listen to what Paul says about how faith comes. "Faith comes from hearing and hearing through the word of God." It's not something we work up. Some psychological trick, I believe, I believe, I believe we repeat into the mirror in the morning. It isn't about psychology. This is about listening to the words of Christ and allowing them to transform our lives. And that is why the central task of the disciple is to learn, because a disciple is a learner. We are commanded at the end of this gospel to go into all the world and make learners, those who will sit at the feet of Jesus, take the yoke of Christ' teaching and learn of him. 

And that leads to the third story, a beautiful short snippet but wonderful what lies behind it. It involves Peter's mother-in-law. I wonder - did Peter warn his wife that he was bringing this preacher home for tea? You know people come in and the person who's supposed to be responsible maybe for making the dinner is sick and can't do anything. And there's chaos. And that's the kind of something imagine the chaos. And we can see from what eventually happened how gladly Peter's mother-in-law would have served Christ. But she was sick. She couldn't serve anyone. She herself needed to be served. And Jesus saw that. He didn't sit on the outside saying "this is ridiculous, where's my dinner? Do you know who I am? I mean this is ridiculous Peter. You invited the preacher for dinner and this is the way you treat me?" He perceived that the woman had a fever and he touched her serving hand. I think the details are exquisite. He touched her hand, that hand she had used all her life to bless her family, to serve her family, her neighbours, to serve her God was now unable to use it the way she wanted to because she had this fever and Jesus touched her hand. The fever left her. She got up and began to serve him. And as I said, it's a lovely story, but why include it? Why include it here? Because it follows logically on from the previous stories when the Lord has cleansed us and when he has released us from the paralysis of sin, of guilt, of fear, of bondage, of ungodly religion. The response is to serve. When we think of the mercies of God, don't we want to present our bodies, our minds and wills to him in service? It's a logical response. And yet sometimes in life and in our service, we catch fever. The temperature rises. We feel totally out of sorts, weak, stressed. It's hard to think straight when you have a fever, hard to do anything. You just want to lie down, feed a cold, starve a fever. the energy goes, we run out of steam and we need the quiet touch of the Lord Jesus on our lives. To rest in his authority, the authority of his word that never changes and allow him in that process to restore us so that we can serve again.

3 brilliant incidents, 3 different conditions - uncleanness, paralysis, fever. What does it the authority of Jesus look like? Who is this God who commands? He touches the leper who can touch your life the same tonight. He ends the uncleanness. He can touch your life if you come and ask him. So many of us are weighed down by the paralysis of guilt and fear, bondage, trying our best, never feeing good enough. Listen to his words. sit at his feet, take time with him and allow him to speak those words personally into your life.  And if have a fever, are tired, exhausted, shattered by service, often unrecognised, unapplauded, find the touch of the Lord. Find rest for yourself.