Luke 4:14-30 · Jesus Rejected at Nazareth
A Remedy for Rejection
Luke 4:22-30
Sermon
by King Duncan
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Have you ever been rejected? Have you ever had a door shut in your face? Welcome to the real world. Parents spend years grooming their children for success. Perhaps it would be more profitable to train our children to handle failure and rejection because everyone faces these unhappy experiences sooner or later.

Go to Google. Type in the words “famous rejections.” If you do, you will learn that J.K. Rowling, author of the Harry Potter series of novels, was rejected by 12 different publishers before her work was accepted. One of them even advised her to “not quit her day job.” Fortunately she did not listen. To date, her writings have netted her more than one billion dollars. That’s a billion with a “b.” I believe she can live on that.

You’ll also discover that after just one performance, Elvis Presley was fired by Jimmy Denny, the manager at the Grand Ole Opry. He reportedly told Elvis, “You ain’t going nowhere, son. You ought to go back to driving a truck.” Last I heard, Elvis did all right for himself, too--at least as a performer.

Steve Jobs of Apple computing fame was at one time fired by the very company he created. Eventually he was taken back, of course, and Apple went on to become the most profitable company in the world, but even Steve Jobs knew what it was to fail.

Stephen King’s first novel, Carrie, was rejected 30 times before it was published. Carrie, as you may recall, went on to spawn four movies and a Broadway musical.

Director Steven Spielberg was rejected three times for admission to the University of Southern California School of Theater, Film and Television. I guess they figured that Spielberg who directed such films as Jaws, E.T., Raiders of the Lost Ark, Saving Private Ryan and many, many more just couldn’t cut it in the film business. (1)

Many young people today are having a difficult time getting their careers and even their lives off the ground. Critics point to the many adult children who still live at home. But many young adults who are on their own are also struggling. All I can say to these young people is “don’t give up” if you aren’t an instant success. Many of the most successful people who have ever lived have failed their first time at bat--or even several times at bat. It even happened to Jesus.

Jesus was just beginning his ministry. He was about thirty years old. He had been baptized by John the Baptist. You’ll remember that, at his baptism, the Holy Spirit descended on him in bodily form like a dove. And a voice came from heaven: “You are my Son, whom I love; with you I am well pleased.”

Almost immediately he was led by the Spirit into the wilderness, where for forty days he was tempted by the devil. When today’s story takes place he has returned to Galilee in the power of the Spirit, and news about him has spread through the whole region. Teaching in their synagogues, he is met with praise everywhere he goes.

Until  . . . he returns home. “You can't go home again,” said writer Thomas Wolfe, and in Jesus’ case, he was right. Luke tells us Jesus went to Nazareth, where he had been brought up, and on the Sabbath day he went into the synagogue, as was his custom. He stood up to read, and the scroll of the prophet Isaiah was handed to him. Unrolling it, he found the place where it is written:

“The Spirit of the Lord is on me, because he has anointed me to proclaim good news to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim freedom for the prisoners and recovery of sight for the blind, to set the oppressed free, to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favor.”

After reading those words, Jesus rolled up the scroll, gave it back to the attendant and sat down. The eyes of everyone in the synagogue were fastened on him. Then he began his lesson by saying, “Today this scripture is fulfilled in your hearing.”

To this point, people were impressed. Jesus spoke with authority. There was something about the way he presented himself that captured their attention. “All spoke well of him,” Luke tells us, “and were amazed at the gracious words that came from his lips. ‘Isn’t this Joseph’s son?’ they asked.” Their hometown pride swelled. If only Jesus had stopped there.

But Jesus kept talking and the more he talked, the more displeased his hometown congregation became. “Surely,” he said, “you will quote this proverb to me: ‘Physician, heal yourself!’ And you will tell me, ‘Do here in your hometown what we have heard that you did in Capernaum.’

“Truly I tell you,” he continued, “no prophet is accepted in his hometown. I assure you that there were many widows in Israel in Elijah’s time, when the sky was shut for three and a half years and there was a severe famine throughout the land. Yet Elijah was not sent to any of them, but to a widow in Zarephath in the region of Sidon. And there were many in Israel with leprosy in the time of Elisha the prophet, yet not one of them was cleansed--only Naaman the Syrian.”

The mood in the synagogue began to change. What’s he saying? He’s not going to perform miracles in Nazareth like he’s performed in other places? Why not? Is he saying that his theological views have taken him far beyond the small town attitudes that he was brought up with? The people in his hometown didn’t understand Jesus at all.  Whatever he was saying, it was not what those folks wanted to hear. Luke tells us they were furious. They were so furious that they rose up and drove Jesus out of the town. In fact, they were so aroused with anger that they took him to the brow of the hill on which the town was built, in order to throw him off the cliff. He escaped, but that was a remarkable beginning to his ministry. And you are worried about your future!

I mean most every young pastor has a lukewarm response to their first sermon, but this was ridiculous. They were ready to kill him. Tough audience. However, someone has noted that these town folk had biblical grounds. Deuteronomy 13 says that if you have a false prophet in your midst, you may kill him. In the eyes of his own people, Jesus, the Son of God, was perceived as a false prophet and eventually, of course, was put to death.

This is a sad but true fact of life. False prophets often prosper while true prophets are often rejected. Sometimes people are punished, not because they have done something wrong, but because they have done something right.

Corrie ten Boom was one of the saints of the twentieth century. Many of you know her story from her book, The Hiding Place. Corrie could have had a comfortable life if she had chosen to cater to the biases of her time. Instead, Corrie decided to do what she believed Jesus was telling her to do, and because of that decision, she was thrown into the dread Ravensbruck Concentration Camp north of Berlin during World War II . . . where living conditions were horrendous.

What was her crime that caused her to end up in this terrible place? Did she steal? Did she kill? Did she commit adultery? No, her crime was helping Jews escape from the Nazis. Corrie was a Christian lady who, along with her father and other family members, helped many Jews escape the Holocaust by hiding them in their homes. And many of these Christian people, including Corrie, paid a terrible price.

Before the war ended, ninety-six thousand women died there at Ravensbruck. We’re told that the smoke from the crematorium was like a black haze over the camp. Every day 700 women died or were killed. Corrie’s beloved sister, Betsie, became an old woman in Ravensbruck right before Corrie’s eyes and slowly starved to death.

Here’s what most disheartening. Corrie ten Boom went through the closest thing to hell on earth that a human creature can imagine, and it was not because she was doing wrong, but because she was doing right!

Such things do happen in this world. False prophets get rewarded. True prophets get crucified. Or even worse, get ignored. Popularity is never the proper way to judge who is right. The only measure that is trustworthy is whether that person reflects the love and grace of Jesus Christ.

What I am saying is this: Do not despair if you get rejected as long as you are following Jesus. It doesn’t matter how you are rejected. It might be socially, it might be professionally. It might be by people you thought were your friends, or it might even be your own family. It might be because you have done something right or it may be because you have done something wrong. Either way, rejection stings.

But listen to this word of reassurance. There are two remedies for rejection: The first is time. “Time heals all wounds,” says the ancient adage. Some insightful sage has added, “and wounds all heels.”

There is a grand measure of truth there. Time is a great healer. That funny lady Phyllis Diller once added, “Yes, time is a great healer, but time is a terrible beautician.”

Here is what we need to know: persistence will eventually conquer resistance. Ask anyone who has made it through a heartbreaking experience, and they will tell you that, if you hang in there long enough, the sun will surely shine again.

That is why, by the way, we must never make it easy for people to take their own lives. Most people who take their own lives do so during a period of depression, and for most people, depression passes given enough hours and days and weeks. The desperate person, if he or she will simply hold on a little bit longer, will live to see the ultimate worth of life. That is the word that must always be spoken to rejected hearts. Don’t give up. Better days will come.

I was reading recently about the tragic ending to the life of Kurt Cobain of the rock group Nirvana. On April 8, 1994, Cobain was found dead at his home in Seattle by an electrician who had come to install a home security system. His death was ruled a suicide by a self-inflicted shotgun wound to the head. He was 27 years old. 

During the last years of his life, Cobain struggled with heroin addiction and chronic depression. He also had difficulty coping with his fame and public image. And there seems to have been problems in his marriage to his wife, musician Courtney Love.

Cobain traced many of his problems back to his parents’ divorce when he was nine years old. He seemed to have felt that in addition to rejecting one another his parents were rejecting him by divorcing. In fact, all his short life this seemed to be a common theme--rejection. One of his last recordings was titled, “Jesus wouldn’t want me for a sunbeam.” (2)

Twenty-seven years old! What a waste. Drug addiction is a terrible thing. So is depression. That is why I am saying to you if you are going through a hard time right now, hang in there, regardless of how desperate you may feel. Most people who determine to take their own life discover that, if they can just hang in there until the cloud passes from their soul, there is hope on the other side.

Time is a remedy for rejection. But an even greater ally is God. If somebody had just gotten the word to Kurt Cobain, not in a superficial way, but in a deep, authentic way that “Jesus would want him for a sunbeam,” what a difference it might have made. The most powerful antidote to feelings of rejection is the deeply inclusive, all-embracing love of God.

A young man named Jeremiah, one of the premiere prophets of the Old Testament, discovered that. Jeremiah was rejected in the same way as Christ was rejected, and it broke his heart. In fact, he was known as the “Weeping prophet.” Deeply religious people sometimes experience depression, don’t forget, just like everyone else. But Jeremiah had a good reason for weeping.

Jeremiah was called by God to prophesy Jerusalem’s destruction. This destruction, he said, would occur by way of invaders from the north. This was because Israel had been unfaithful to the laws of the covenant and had forsaken God by worshiping Baal. The people of Israel had even gone as far as building high altars to Baal in order to burn their children in fire as offerings. The nation had deviated so far from God that, in God’s eyes, they had broken the covenant, causing God to withdraw his blessings from them. Jeremiah was guided by God to proclaim that the nation of Judah would be faced with famine. Furthermore they would be plundered and taken captive by foreigners who would exile them to a foreign land.

How do you think such a prophecy was received? “Change the channel, Gladys,” one of them probably said, “I’m tired of hearing what’s wrong with this country.” That’s how it was received. And the people turned against Jeremiah.

Jeremiah could not have endured the isolation and the scorn that was his lot without a deep and abiding faith in God. The word of the Lord came to him saying, “Before I formed you in the womb I knew you, and before you were born I consecrated you.” Wow, what a source of security! No wonder he could handle rejection so well. His life was built upon the rock of God’s love for him. He knew, because he was speaking for God, time would prove his assertions as true. He had the greatest ally that anyone could have. He was on the side of God.

Do you have that kind of security--an inner strength that will not fail? It was in the Ravensbruck Work Camp that Corrie ten Boom discovered that the Lord was indeed her refuge--as she put it, her “hiding place.”

My friend, God offers each of us that same kind of security, that same kind of refuge when we are rejected. Rejection hurts. It is a universal hurt. But we can go on. There are two remedies for rejection that will not fail us, time and God. Hang in there when things get tough and trust Him.

A popular little song from days gone by says: “If tears were pennies And heartaches were gold, I’d have all the money My pockets would hold.”

We have all been there in our own way. But there is another song. It’s in our hymnal. In it you will find these hopeful words:

“Down in the human heart, crushed by the tempter, Feelings lie buried that grace can restore: Touched by a loving heart, wakened by kindness, Chords that were broken will vibrate once more.” (3) Don’t give up, regardless of your situation. God is with you.


1. https://www.scoopwhoop.com/inothernews/famous-people-rejected/#.4xn2igugx.

2. “Least Wanted List,” by Wesley D. Tracy, Herald of Holiness, March 1996, p. 2.

3. Fanny J. Crosby, “Rescue the Perishing.”

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Dynamic Preaching First Quarter 2019 Sermons, by King Duncan