Today’s passage from Luke’s gospel is
really about our response to Jesus and this is what I’d like to look at this
morning.
In the first few verses we see Jesus
being sent by God the Father to Samaria. Remember that he only did what his
father asked him to do.
So Jesus would have prayed about this
beforehand. ‘Father where do you want me to go next,’ and God sent him to the
Samaritan people.
God’s heart was to reach out to the
people of Samaria through Jesus - to tell them the good news of the kingdom; to
heal them from disease and sickness and to set them free from spiritual
oppression.
In short God’s plan was that through
Jesus many Samaritan people would be saved.
Now lots of Christians talk about
being saved – but what does this mean?
Well most of the time we use it in
the sense of being saved from hell and judgement but actually it means more
than this.
The Greek word “sozo” from which we
get the word saved, doesn’t just mean to to save or rescue. It also means to deliver,
to protect, to preserve, to heal and to make well.
So God’s will for the Samaritan
people was that through Jesus they should firstly and most importantly be saved
and restored to a relationship with Him – but also over time - be made whole in
body, soul and spirit – to be restored to the people He originally intended
them to be.
And of course this is ideally what
God wants for each one of us here today.
Firstly through Jesus, He wants us to
be saved and rescued from judgement and restored to a relationship with Him.
But also as we walk with Him through life, He wants to continue to sozo us. To
deliver and protect and heal us and make us well – not just physically, but
mentally and spiritually and in our characters and relationships.
Being saved is both immediate and
continuous. We are saved the moment we put our faith in Jesus but God also
continues the process of our salvation.
And of course we won’t be completely saved
- sozo’d - until we go to heaven where one day we will be made whole and
perfect – but the process of our sozoing starts the moment we accept Jesus into
our lives.
At this point God can start His work
of restoring us to the people He originally intended us to be.
You see, as far as God is concerned
each person He creates is a potential masterpiece. But we are born into an
imperfect and evil world and this world mars and spoils us.
We are cut off from a relationship
with the one who made us and we live in a spiritually dark world where people
and evil spirits can hurt and harm us.
The masterpieces that God originally
intended us to be get wounded and damaged. And God’s heart bleeds for us
because this is not what He intended.
His heart is to sozo us – to save us and
rescue us – and like a portrait painting that has been damaged – to restore and
repair us to the people He originally intended us to be.
And this of course is why Jesus came
and died for us on the cross. This is why he took our sin and failure upon
himself and died for us – so that we
could be sozo’d and restored to a relationship with God.
And then through that relationship – over
time - the effects of all the ugly and bad things that have hurt us and spoiled
our lives – can gradually be healed and removed from us – and we can be set
free to love ourselves and to love God and those around us.
I’m conscious when I say this – that
being sozo’d is a long process – something that God does bit by bit. Sometimes
the effects of what we’ve experienced in life stay with us for many years – and
God’s restoration process can seem very slow.
But as we co-operate with Him, as we
seek to live as His children and to study His word and to serve Him, He wants
to set us free from fear and oppression and to make us well.
Of course sometimes God does allow us
to go through difficult and testing times and we may experience sickness and
suffering.
And sometimes we may not be phsically
healed – and this can be confusing and upsetting – but still we may be made
well in other areas of our life: spiritually, mentally and emotionally and in our
relationships with others.
So, Jesus went to Samaria with a
heart full of love for the Samaritan people – but they rejected him and did not
receive him – and so God’s plan was frustrated.
And its the same today. Many people
like the Samaritans in this passage - reject Jesus out of hand and don’t even
want to hear what he has to say.
And there are others – as we see in
today’s reading - who know about Jesus and have heard his message but still
hold back from following him.
This includes some people who go to
church. They hear about God’s love and being saved – but they want to keep God
safely at arms length.
These people can be religious and may
like coming to church. It may comfort them and enable them to feel that they’re
doing their bit for God – but they don’t really want a relationship with God.
They don’t want to invite Jesus into
their lives – and allow him to direct and guide them. And so like some of the
people in today’s gospel reading, when pressed they come up with excuses.
They don’t want a God who asks them
to lay aside their own plans and agendas for their lives – and to follow His
plan instead. They want to be firmly in control of their own lives.
Actually if the truth be told - they
want a God who is a bit like superman – who will turn up and help them when
they need it - but will then retire gracefully until He’s needed again.
There are others who have felt Jesus
knocking at the door of their lives – and know they should make their peace
with God – but they’re not ready to do this yet, so again they come up with
excuses.
I will follow you one day God but
first let me focus on earning lots of money so that I can provide for my
family.
I will follow you one day God – when
I’m a bit older and have indulged myself a bit more and enjoyed more of what
the world has to offer.
I will follow you one day God but
life is awfully busy at the moment – and I don’t really have the time.
You see it really comes down to
whether we are prepared to allow God to be the God of our lives – and to live
life His way, under His direction and guidance.
I like the analogy of a driving
instructor. When we learn to drive we have a instructor sitting next to us in
the car. And he tells us where he wants us to go and what he wants us to do.
And this is what the Christian life
is like. We invite God into our lives to sit next to us and to guide us through
life – to tell us where we are to go and what He wants us to do.
Of course we retain our free will –
we’re driving – and sometimes we may hesitate or question where He’s leading
us.
Sometimes like the prophet Jonah, we may even deliberately take a wrong
turn.
But we’ll only find that we get lost
and end up at a dead end – and then when we’re ready God will gently direct us
back onto the route He has planned for us.
And because God created and designed
us – the route He has mapped out for us will be the best possible route through
life. It will be the route that brings the greatest possible blessing not just
to us – but to those around us. And it will be the route to heaven.
God gives us free will and we can
resist him and push him away and say ‘no this is my life – I’m going to go exactly
where I want and do exactly what I want to do.’
But the likelihood is that if we’re
honest enough to recognise it – in time we’ll end up feeling empty, disillusioned
and lost – and in need of God’s loving presence in our lives to help us find
our way.
So to start to tie up what I want to
say this morning, God is looking lovingly at each one of us here today – and
His plan and His hearts desire is to save us – to rescue us from judgement, to
deliver us from oppression, to protect us , and over time to heal us and make
us well.
And some of us are co-operating with
this plan. We’ve invited Jesus into our lives and although we’re far from
perfect and we don’t always get it right - we’re doing our best to follow him.
And as we follow Jesus and seek to
play our part in his plan to save those around us - we’ll find that we
ourselves are sozo’d.
God will protect us and deliver us
and over time make us well, not always physically, but mentally and spiritually
and relationally.
But equally there are those of us
like the people in today’s reading who for various reasons have pushed away or
put off saying yes to God’s plan for their lives.
So this morning I think God wants
each one of us to think about where our lives are focused. Do we want to live
life in co-operation with God?
Do we want Him living in our lives –
sitting next to us as it were – and guiding us? Do we want to discover why He
created us and with His help roll up our sleeves and seek to play our part in His plan to save and bless those around us.
Or are we keeping Him at arms length?
The choice is up to us.
Don’t be deceived the only way God can save us is is
through us welcoming Him to come and live in our hearts and lives.
You can come to church as often as
you want. You can sing heartily and take communion for many years – but if you deliberately
persist in keeping God at arms length He cannot save you.
However, the moment we say yes to Him
– yes Lord I do want to follow you – yes I do want you in my life - He rescues
us from judgment and saves us – and then as we co-operate with Him, His plan
for our lives can start to unfold.
God loves each one of us – but He
will never force himself upon us. The choice to invite Him into our lives is
ours.
And it is a choice – not a feeling.
We can choose rationally regardless of how we might be feeling.
I’d like to close with a time of
prayer.
Close your eyes and reflect for a
moment. Do you want to invite God into your life?
Do you want Him to save you from
judgement and to protect you and deliver you and over time to make you well.
Do you want Him sitting next to you
as it were and guiding you through life? Are you prepared with His help, to
follow Him?
If your anwser is yes just repeat
quietly after me in your heart the prayer I’m going to say now.
Lord I’m sorry I’ve pushed away your
love and gone my own way in life.
I’m sorry for the bad things I’ve
done in my life and the people I’ve hurt.
Lord Jesus thank you for loving me
and dying for me on the cross.
Thank you for taking my sin and being
punished in my place so that I can go free.
Lord Jesus I want you in my life.
I want you to direct and guide me.
I want you to be my God.
Lord Jesus please come into my life
to be with me for ever.
Amen.
If you’ve said that prayer and really
meant it - do come and see me or Campbell after the service. Thank you.
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