Luke 4:14-30 · Jesus Rejected at Nazareth
Connect the Dots
Luke 4:14-21
Sermon
by Leonard Sweet
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In us, the world sees a picture of Christ.

Printed as a bulletin insert this morning is a simple bunch of dots a kind of randomly-shaped, computer-generated blob. Right?

Now try an experiment. Stare at the four dots right in the center of the blob for about thirty seconds. Concentrate all your attention on them, don't look away and let the dots be all you see....(wait 30 seconds.) Now let's all of us together close our eyes.

See anything? Do you see it? Did you suspect it? Isn't it amazing how a seemingly meaningless collection of little dots can actually be leading up to such a startling image?

All of us are always seeing a lot more than we think. Under hypnosis, people can remember the license numbers of cars that passed them in the street or the eye color of a salesclerk who had waited on them three weeks ago. Even when we're not consciously aware of it, our minds are taking in thousands of little pieces of information, processing them and creating from these fragments our general impressions of life, our basic concepts of reality.

When Jesus rose to read the Scriptures in his home synagogue in Nazareth, the people gathered there were seeing a lot more than they thought. Even though these worshipers were impressed with Jesus' learning and reacted to Jesus' words with amazement, they could not take to heart what he was saying. In Luke 4:22, immediately after Jesus announces "Today this scripture has been fulfilled ...," the synagogue murmurs, "Is not this Joseph's son?" Jesus could not be the Messiah. He was just the boy down the street now grown up. Because this congregation could only see a "dot," one tiny aspect of Jesus' being, they could not see his true image as the Son of God.

Try looking at the pattern of "dots" that makes up the image you present to the world as yourself. Consider that each time you respond to anything you encounter in life, your reaction is just one tiny "dot" on an otherwise blank sheet of paper. Over the course of a lifetime, your paper becomes filled with dots. If every experience you had in life was registered as a dot, what kind of pattern would those dots begin to form?

We need to take steps to help us make sure that every "dot," every response we make, reflects the living presence of Christ in our lives. If the church is the body of Christ, then each one of us is a "dot," a part of the composite image of Christ that the church presents to the world. Do people see Christ in you?

Try some of these very simple ideas on for size and see if people don't come to see Christ in you.

1. Make every stranger you meet glad to have met you.

Have you ever known a person whose presence in any group made everything else different? Someone who, when he or she entered a room, made the spiritual and moral climate of that room better, who lifted the mood and spirit of that meeting? Why not make it a matter of principle that no one who ever comes into your presence will leave worse, only better?

2. Bring peace to every meeting.

Medical doctor Gerald Jampolsky wrote a book a few years ago called Love Is Letting Go of Fear (Berkeley, Calif.: Celestial Arts, 1979). In it he asked this question: "Have you ever given yourself the opportunity of going through just one day concentrating on totally accepting everyone and making no judgments" (97)?

Try "not keeping score of wrongs" (Paul's phrase) for one day. Dr. Jampolsky adds: "Everything we think, say or do reacts on us like a boomerang. When we send out judgments in the form of criticism, fury or other attack thoughts, they come back to us. When we...send out only love, it comes back to us" (99).

3. Say only nice things about people.

There is a lot to be said for the old maxim, "If you can't say anything nice, don't say anything at all." When you become conditioned to look for some good quality, some strong suit and admittedly sometimes it's a bit of a challenge it is surprising how much easier it gets.

4. Look for the image of Christ in all of creation.

Ignatius once observed: "Consider how Christ works and labors for me in all creatures upon the face of the earth." If Christ labors in all creatures, then Jesus can be found in every aspect of creation: The family cat who awakens you in the morning; the birds who sing on the fence; the flowers that spread their fragrance over the garden; the rain forest of South America and the mountains of Colorado; the child playing in the schoolyard; the homeless man fumbling for aluminum cans all sharing in the image of Christ, and therefore, both our responsibility and our joy.

The body of Christ is brought into focus for this world one tiny dot at a time. For each of us who can manage to reproduce the image of Christ through the way we "love and serve the Lord" in all we do and say, that picture of Christ grows a little clearer, a little sharper each day.

What kind of dots are you making? Are you producing dots that lead people to see Christ, or is your life and lifestyle painting a different picture for the world? What are people seeing in the dots of your life?

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Works, by Leonard Sweet