Luke 4:14-30 · Jesus Rejected at Nazareth
A Short Sermon
Luke 4:14-30
Sermon
by James Garrett
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During Advent and Christmas we examined Luke’s account of the birth of Jesus. The first Sunday of the new year we watched as the young parents brought the Child into the temple. There in the temple was an old man, whose name was Simeon. He takes the baby from Mary and cradles him in his own arms. Holding the baby close, he says: “Lord, now let thy servant depart in peace… mine eyes have seen thy salvation.”

Only a few days old and already one has taken him into his heart and claimed his salvation.

From the temple we went to the Jordan where John, the baptizer, is preaching repentance and baptism. Jesus is there to provide the fullness of salvation John preached. He identifies with this new gospel of salvation for all people by being baptized himself. It is the launching of a new age.

Following his baptism, Jesus goes into the wilderness to be alone. There he faces temptations. He emerges from the wilderness victoriously. He returns to Nazareth where he was brought up.

In his home town church Jesus reads the Scripture lesson. When he was through, he rolled up the scroll and gave it back to the attendant and sat down. He looked around, and then said quietly: “Today this Scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing.” That was all.

It was a short sermon!

At Christmas I received as a gift the book, Holy Sweat, by Tim Hansel. I enjoyed it very much. He tells of a guest preacher in a rather large church who began, “There are three points to my sermon.” Most people yawned at the point. They’d heard that many times before.

But he went on. “My first point is this. At this time there are approximately two billion people starving to death in the world.”

The reaction through the congregation was about the same, since they’d heard that sort of statement many times before, too. And then he said, “My second point…”

Everybody sat up. Only 10 or 15 seconds had passed, and he was already on his second point? He paused, then said, “My second point is that most of you don’t give a damn!”

He paused again as gasps and rumblings flowed across the congregation, and then said: “And my third point is that the real tragedy among Christians today is that many of you are now more concerned that I said ‘damn’ than you are that I said two billion people are starving to death.” Then he sat down.

The whole sermon took less than a minute, but it is in many ways one of the most powerful ones ever given. He was reminding us we are called not to mere piety but to genuine morality. We are called to action, not to fancy words.

Jesus preached a short sermon. But what a sermon. He clearly denotes the kind of ministry he came to pursue. It is to be a ministry to the poor and outcast, the blind and unaffirmed.

Jesus made a bold claim that day. I am the Christ! Salvation has become real, visible today.

This was not what they expected to hear. The Scripture goes on to record: “When they heard this, all in the synagogue were filled with wrath. And they rose up and put him out of the city.” The good news was bad news.

We’ve heard all sorts and varieties of good/bad news stories. One is about a man who goes to see his doctor. The doctor says, “There’s some good news and there’s some bad news.” The patient says, “Well, doc, give the good news first.”

“The good news,” the doctor says, “is that you have 24 hours to live.” The patient gasps, “If that is the good news, what is the bad news?”

“Well, the bad news,” the doctor continues, “is that I couldn’t reach you by phone yesterday.”

Jesus said, God “anointed me” to preach good news to the poor, to proclaim release to the captives, recovering of sight to the blind.

When it comes to the good news of salvation all of us are charity cases. We can do nothing but hold up our little tin cups to the only One who can fill it. Martin Luther’s last written words were: “We are all beggars.”

Jesus saves… saves whom? Saves Joe, saves Charlie, Ann, saves me, saves you -- just the names without any Mr. or Mrs., without any degrees or titles or Social Security numbers, just who we are, no more, no less.

The captivity referred to is moral and spiritual. Is it true we’re slaves? Can we be slaves, we who of all people are so much our own masters? And the answer, of course, is that we’re slaves precisely because we are our own masters.

The most blind were not those whose physical eyes were sightless. It was a moral and spiritual blindness.

At our better moments we are appalled by the culture we have created. Imagine archaeologists, some 1,000 years hence, unearthing the movies and plays and television we watched, pouring over the books we read, hearing the music we heard -- rock music, hard rock, punk rock, and the kinds of horrors that fascinated us on the evening news.

Now, of course, they would discover we’ve had our good times too, our blessed times. There have been moments when we’ve been brave and wise and kind. Every once in awhile a word was spoken that gave us back our lives again. Maybe we even spoke such a word ourselves. Now and then we’ve had our vision of the people we might be.

Ralph Waldo Emerson made the observation: “An institution is the lengthened shadow of one man.” Take that thought -- the institutional church is the lengthened shadow of one Man -- Jesus Christ. We Christians owe it to ourselves and to the world to resurrect this message of Christ from the debris of history.

Colin Wilson, a provocative writer, wrote: “Human beings seem to have an extraordinary capacity for being deluded by their emotions, so their ‘convictions’ are usually a mass of unexamined prejudices.”

In Christ hangs the destiny of us all. “Come to me,” is how he put it. Christ is not a way of escaping the world but of loving the world, and beneath all the horror, of being loved by him.

Bob Pierce, founder of World Vision, lived by the motto: “May my heart break with the things that break the heart of God.”

That is the gospel. Jesus is the good news of salvation, release to captives and recovering of sight to the blind.

‘‘Today this scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing.” Today, not tomorrow. Not next year. Today.

May the power of the Holy Spirit touch our hearts and make them receptive to his grace, the freedom and the healing he offers today!

C.S.S. Publishing Company, GOD’S GIFT, by James Garrett