When God is too Gracious

Jonah 3

This is the third sermon dealing with God’s acceptance of those beyond Israel.  Human conflict is often fueled by a fear of “the other.”  And it was easy for the ancient Israelites to assume that God approved only of them.  Yet, over and over again, God breaks the barriers down that keep God’s love and God’s grace from reaching those that are not, in our opinion, worthy of God’s love. 

Jonah’s experience again is another challenge to God’s intention to send his grace to those beyond the pale of God’s light.  First, he refuses to go, then he gets mad when he is successful, then he has to be taught a lesson by God in the end.  Then we are not told if the prophet changed his mind about God.

Again, our church’s decision to be Open and Affirming is a difficult position.  Not because it conflicts with the gospel (which it doesn’t), but because we must be continually searching our heart to root out any prejudices against someone different from us.  This is the hardest position for us to live up with: because it requires us to continually to be humble.  Humility is a character of Christ that we are invited to also take upon ourselves.  Matthew 11:28-30:

28 Come to me, all who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. 29 Take my yoke upon you, and learn from me, for I am gentle and lowly in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. 30 For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.”

Pastor Greg

Jesus Shows God Does Not Fit in a Box

“Certainly there were many needy widows in Israel in Elijah’s time, when the heavens were closed for three and a half years, and a severe famine devastated the land.  Yet Elijah was not sent to any of them. He was sent instead to a foreigner—a widow of Zarephath in the land of Sidon.  [Luke 4:25-26 (NLT)]

Last Sunday’s sermon was noticing how God breaks out of any boundary we try to impose on him.  Solomon said that the Temple in Jerusalem was a place for those outside of Israel.  This week’s story of Elijah and the widow of Zarephath (1 Kings 17:1-16) shows God’s provisions beyond the borders of Israel.  This was so significant that Jesus noted it in a sermon at his home synagogue in Nazareth.  His inclusion was so radical that his hearers took him out of town to push him off a cliff. 

That is often the reaction that inclusion provokes from even the faithful church attenders.  But this is not a “them” problem (the people opposed to inclusion), but it is a “us” problem.  We fall into this trap too often.  We have our views of who God loves, and who is doing it the right way, and those who don’t do it the right way, we judge and even condemn. 

When we practice getting God out of the box, it calls us to have compassion on those who are demanding God get back in the box.  I see that only God can change their hearts and their attitudes.  We must have an inclusive attitude toward them too.  This calls for humility.  Only through humility can we throw away all the boxes we demand God to fit into and allow God to do the amazing work of grace in this world.

Pastor Greg

Promise for All Nations

1 Kings 8:27-30, 41-43

“But will God indeed dwell on the earth? Behold, heaven and the highest heaven cannot contain you; how much less this house that I have built!” (1 Kings 8:27)

This question, asked by Solomon in his prayer of the dedication of the Temple, pushes our human understanding of God.  In early 1 Samuel, the idea was that God was only present with the Ark of the Covenant.  That is why the Ark was taken into battle, and eventually lost to the Philistines.  Now the Temple is built, the Ark is in its place, and we are told that God is not just there, God cannot be contained by the highest of heaven.

That challenges us today in our understanding of God.  What limits do we place on God?  There is a passage in 1 Kings 20, where the Syrians were trying to pin God to a certain area of operations.  They concluded that the Lord is a God of the hills, so they wanted to battle against the Israelites in the valley; where they thought the Lord would not be able to help them.  How many times do we put such limitations on God?

No, we do not say the Lord is the God of the hills, but maybe we say that God is only for my private life.  We do not acknowledge God, nor God’s truth in our public lives.  The God that is the Creator of the Heavens and the earth, that cannot be contained in the highest of heavens, nor does the sovereignty of God limit itself to matters of religion.  God is not the God of just the inner life, God is the God of our morals, our relationships, our work, and our opinions.  The Syrians wanted to put God in a box, and they learned that could not happen to their own peril.

Also, Solomon addressed the issue of who is God for.  He anticipated the foreigners would come to seek the Lord and to pray at the Temple, and God would hear them.  Because God is not just the God of the Israelites (or Christians).  God is the God of all people, whether they conform to our expectations or not.

We do not push our understanding of the God that Paul presented to the Athenians: “God did this so that they would seek him and perhaps reach out for him and find him, though he is not far from any one of us.  ‘For in him we live and move and have our being.’ (Acts 17:27-28)”

Jesus, talking of the Temple in Jerusalem agreed with Solomon, “‘My house shall be called a house of prayer for all the nations.’ (Mark 11:17).  We need to get God out of the box we have created for him, stop restricting him to only a narrow area of influence, and discover the God that speaks to all of life and human existence. Pastor Greg

Perpetuity’s Promise

2 Samuel 7:1-17

Although David made a promise to God, God had other plans and made a much bigger promise to David: David’s descendants would forever be on the throne of Israel, and they would be the ones to build the temple for God. God’s promises and plans are so much bigger than we could ever conceive. 

David saw his palace of fine cedar then noticed that the Ark of God was in a tent.  David felt that God deserved a better place.  But God wanted to give David a better place.  Not a new palace, but a house or family that will last forever.  The same Hebrew word in 2 Samuel 7 is translated “Temple, “House” and “Household or family.”  There is a word play going on here, and God turns the desire of David to build a house for God into a promise that God will build David’s House (family.) 

That promise is reaffirmed when the angel Gabriel comes to Mary and delivers the news that she will bear the Messiah.  Luke 1:31-33, “And behold, you will conceive in your womb and bear a son, and you shall call his name Jesus.  He will be great and will be called the Son of the Most High. And the Lord God will give to him the throne of his father David, and he will reign over the house of Jacob forever, and of his kingdom there will be no end.”

David wanted to build a temple for God, but God had other things in mind. It would not be David, but his son, Solomon, who would eventually build that temple. Even when we seek to do God’s will, sometimes we try to make decisions that are God’s decisions to make. Despite our best intentions, God’s plans come through for good.

Pastor Greg

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