Mark 1:9-13 · The Baptism and Temptation of Jesus
Facing the Wild Beasts Within
Mark 1:9-13
Sermon
by Mike Ripski
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I. What Lent is for

At his baptism, Jesus heard heaven’s Voice say, “You are my Son, my Beloved; I am very pleased with you.” The Holy Spirit descends upon him to empower Jesus to be who the Voice said he is.

But what does it mean to be the Beloved Child of God? Answering that question and living the answer is why the Spirit has driven him into the desert.

What does it mean for us to be beloved children of God? And how well are we being who we are?

Isn’t this what Lent is for? Will we allow the same Spirit that drove Jesus into a time of honest examination also lead you and me to do the same?

What does it mean to be a beloved child of God? We don’t make up an answer on own. We are given one by God in Jesus.

During Lent we go up to the door facing, where Jesus’ stature is imprinted, and we stand up to it to see how we measure up. Or don’t.

So how have you grown in Christ-likeness?

II. The full measure of Christ

John Westerhoff was a professor of Christian education. He was interested in understanding how people tend to grow in their faith. So he interviewed people. He listened to their stories. I’ve found his work helpful, because, when I outgrew the faith of my childhood, I wondered if I was still a Christian.

A. Our expanding faith

Westerhoff saw growth in faith as a process of expansion. He likened our maturation into Christ-likeness to the growth of a tree. A young tree is still a tree, even though it only has a few rings. An older, larger tree is an expanded version of the younger tree. And, since the more mature, expanded tree still contains within it all its earlier rings, there is no room for judgment of those who are less mature. A new Christian and a mature Christian are both Christians.

B. “Experienced faith”

The first style Westerfhoff called “Experienced faith.” This is the pre-conceptualized faith of a child. What shape the way the child leans into life are the child’s experiences. If the child has experienced love from those around her or him, the child will learn to trust. If the child has experienced abuse or indifference, the child will learn to be fearful and apprehensive.

I know that the children who come forward for the Children’s Message won’t remember much of what I say. They will, however, remember that their pastor spent time with them and that their church family valued them enough to treat them as the beloved children of God they are. They will be shaped by the experience of our valuing them. We don’t learn to love by talking about it. We learn to love by being with people who love us and each other.

C. “Dependent faith”

The second style or expansion of faith is “Dependent faith.” This is often the faith of the elementary and middle school child. It is characterized by feeling and emotion rather than the intellect and analysis. There’s a strong need to belong, to be known by name, to have a role to play in the group, and to be missed when absent. There’s identification with an authority figure, who is admired and trusted.

There are churches which understand their mission to be that of keeping people at this stage of maturation. They are told to trust the church’s authorities. It goes something like this: “Questions are a sign of doubt, and doubt is a sin, and sin will send you to hell. So accept what you’re told as the absolute truth. Or you can’t belong.”

D. Seeking, Searching faith

The Apostle Paul speaks in Ephesians 4 about no longer being children tossed to and fro by every wind of doctrine and people’s trickery, by their craftiness in deceitful scheming, but rather growing to maturity, to the measure of the full stature of Christ (vss. 13 & 14).

Paul’s faith had changed. He expected that life with Christ would entail our being changed. Such a change requires our looking at the faith we have inherited and making it our own. The way to do that is by examining it.

This style of an expanding faith is called, “Seeking, Searching faith.” Here feeling and emotion give way to questioning, analysis, and doubt. Persons may have to leave the group that earlier they belonged to. Instead of being dependent upon an authority, they test the various authorities against each other. They learn how to judge and evaluate. They know that the real test of faith lies in daring to risk living it.

E. “Owned faith”

Many churches are uncomfortable with those going through this phase of seeking and searching. But it is necessary in order to move to the expansion of faith that Westerhoff calls “Owned faith.”

In Owned faith, one knows what one believes and why. More importantly one is willing to live its implications, regardless of the cost. Owned faith permits us, as Jesus told us, to deny ourselves, take up our cross, and follow him.

And this brings me to what I believe happened with Jesus in the desert.

III. The “wild beasts”

A. The wilderness

Quaker Parker Palmer in a recent Weavings (March/April 2009, pp. 7-16) article has given me a new understanding of the wild beasts that Jesus faced in the wilderness.

In the Bible the wilderness is where people go to wrestle with God and whatever may be keeping them from the relationship God created us for. In the wilderness we learn who we are by facing what seeks to threaten us and control us by fear.

B. The” tyranny of the primitive brain”

Parker Palmer calls it the “tyranny of the primitive brain” – that part of our human nature that, when faced with danger, causes us to resort to one of two reactions: fight or flight. I believe that what Palmer is referring to is that which Jesus came to terms in the desert. The wild beasts are as much inside us, as our animal nature, as outside us.

C. “Standing in the tragic gap”

Jesus faces the human reflex reaction of fight or flight, of seeking to destroy the threat or to run away from it and hide. Jesus faces our animalistic tyranny of the primitive mind toward violence, on the one hand, and absence, on the other. He assumes a third option. Palmer calls it, “standing in the tragic gap.”

Jesus stands in the tragic gap. Only there can you love your enemies as well as your friends. His disciples ran. Jesus stood in the tragic gap and permitted himself to be arrested. And when Peter took his sword and cut off the ear of the high priest’s slave, Jesus told him to put his sword away. “Because those who live by the sword, die by the sword.”

Jesus’ Way is a different way. It is the Way of the Cross that leads home.

Standing in the tragic gap and neither be controlled by fight or flight requires God’s grace. Love is a miracle that God wants to work through us. Love is the alternative to defeating each other and abandoning each other.

D. Our church’s decision about worship

Regina and I are trying to stand in that gap between those who attend the 8:30 service, the 8:45 service, and the 11:00 service. We love those who attend all three services. It’s not the style of worship, or the place, or the music that matters most to us, it’s you.

We are trying to stand in the middle. We ask you to join us. Granted we all struggle with the wild beasts that would cause us to run away, give up, or fight with those who disagree with us.

Jesus faced the wild beasts and committed himself, as the Apostle Paul put, to a more excellent way.

Pray for those who will meet tomorrow night to design a proposal for the future worship life of this church. May we resist the wild beasts and their tyranny of fight or flight. May we seek the more excellent way of Jesus and follow it.

“…and he was with the wild beasts; and the angels came and ministered to him.” May they come and minister to us too.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by Mike Ripski