Luke 10:1-24 · Jesus Sends Out the Seventy-two
Fleshing Out The Word
Luke 10:1-24
Sermon
by Larry Powell
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In the summer of 1983, I participated in a ministerial exchange program sponsored by my denomination. My assignment was to a circuit of churches on the Isle of Man, a tiny island located in the Irish Sea. The months preceding the exchange included considerable correspondence with the minister on the island with whom I would exchange pastoral duties for six weeks. Additionally, there were all kinds of other preparations to be seen after: passports, financial arrangements, reading everything available about the Isle of Man, and trying to anticipate everything which could go wrong (on both sides of the ocean) and allow for it. Despite all that, the Isle of Man was still pretty much just a place on the map to me and, for some reason, the whole business of the exchange simply had not come alive for me. That is, until the week before we were to leave.

A wonderful couple in our church invited my wife and me to have dinner with them one evening in their home. Knowing that our main meat dish for the next six weeks was to be lamb, they served lamb and sauce to acquaint us with a food unfamiliar to our palates. But the really special thing they did was to invite another guest, a Presbyterian minister friend, originally from Scotland. Enjoyment of the meal was exceeded only by our fascination with the good brother's spell-binding dialect. We all asked questions just to hear him speak. Following the meal, he referred to a world map, pointing out his birthplace, the birthplace of Robert Burns and other famous Scots, commented about St. Giles Cathedral, the Edinburg Castle, Waverly Station, and "Just here," he said, "not many miles from Scotland, is the Isle of Man where ye will soon be and I have been many times."

It all came alive for me then. It came alive for me because a "real person" representing a wonderful reality, an "eyewitness," had fleshed-out, actualized something beyond my experience.

There is no better witness than an eyewitness. There is no better example than a living example. Jesus knew that when he "appointed 70 others, and sent them on ahead of him, two by two, into every town and place where he himself was about to come (Luke 10:1)."

God teaches us in his word, in just such examples as our text, of the dynamic, creative, interpretive power of the personality.

God conceived a design in his great mind for creation. That design was willed into actuality. However, God was still lonely. Creation was incomplete somehow. How did he address this loneliness? Fashion a prototype for a harmonic cosmic structure, divine a great idea, assemble a computer, construct a robot, or design a dynamic program? The missing ingredient, the key part, the thing which was to bind it all together, was added: "Male and female created he them." Let us stop talking around the word and say it: persons!

It cannot be emphasized enough that of all things in the universe, the hinge article, the thing with which the Spirit of God does business, the thing which shall cause the total plan of God to work (or not work) is persons.

Oh yes, some other things are well designed, ingeniously made, but they are not supremely pivotal.

Instinct. We have all read and pondered about the swallows which annually make their way back to Capistrano. We know that when it is winter in California the swallows are in South America. Then, following the winter, they return to California. As a matter of fact, they return on the same day each year - March 19. It is documented that, despite the 6,000 mile journey, they have regularly returned on this date except in 1935 when they were delayed by storms. To be sure, there is a controlling, powerful force innate to the animal kingdom - instinct - but it is not supremely pivotal to the fulfillment of God's plan.

Tradition. No one would question that tradition is an influential factor upon any social setting, but to claim that it is the epoxy which binds a community or area together is questionable. Especially since some of our revered traditions are considerably distorted in the first place. For example, we in the South have a tradition of enjoying an emotional involvement with the song, "Dixie." Many in the South regard it as "our song," or a kind of regional anthem. To sing of cotton and frosty mornings and living and dying for Dixie stirs up emotions which transport the mind back to an antebellum, magnolia shaded, honeysuckle scented nostalgia-plated era. How easy it is to picture in one's mind a pensive romantic sitting on a long ago veranda, peering across dew-covered gardenias and endless rows of cotton, lovingly writing down the words to "Dixie."

There is only one thing wrong with all that. It just isn't so. The song was written in 1854 by a man named Emmett, a member of a minstrel company. It was written as a "walk around" number to allow characters to change positions on stage and was first performed in New York City.

Tradition, distortions and all, exerts a strong influence but it is not supremely pivotal to the fulfillment of God's plan.

Great Ideas and Great Books. Enough great ideas have been advanced through the centuries to change the world several times over. But great ideas, soon or late, invariably are outdistanced by other ideas perceived to be greater. Billions of books written as testaments to great ideas create an impressive bulk of material, but they are not supremely pivotal to the fulfillment of God's plan.

Clearly, all things in creation, celestial and terrestrial, the key to the fulfillment of God's plan is persons motivated by the Holy Spirit.

There is no better example than a living example! Several years ago, the Sears-Roebuck Company decided to merchandise a particular image. The image was one of youth, vitality, freshness, happiness, and all-American wholesomeness. That was the concept, and when Sears-Roebuck chose to portray the concept in a person, they selected Cheryl Tiegs. She was the personification of the idea. In the same manner, Norman Lear undertook to portray a certain element in America to convey, what was at the time, a rather daring social message. His new television series centered around a narrow minded bigot. The character? Archie Bunker.

When an idea or concept gets into a person, it comes alive! And again, there is no better example than a living example. Allow this Scripture to become fixed in your mind: "The Lord appointed 70 others and sent them on ahead of him, two by two, into every town and place where he himself was about to come." Forerunners of one who was to come, but also living examples of an idea; proof of a reality.

Let us now transpose some implications of our text to Christians in general.

The Christian as forerunner.

A forerunner prepares the way for one who is to come. John the Baptist clarified his own role and witness when he declared that he was preparing the way for the coming of one mightier than he. He was not the one of whom the Scriptures spoke, but he was important to the one of whom the Scriptures spoke, soon to come.

The Billy Graham Crusade came to Little Rock this past September. Besides being spiritually rewarding, it was quite impressive strictly because of the manner in which organizational details were carried out. Night after night, things moved along without the slightest hitch, so far as one could tell. Vehicles moved smoothly upon city streets, parking was uncomplicated and orderly. Getting in and out of the stadium was remarkably simple. Seating was casual and made easy by polite, easily identifiable ushers. The worship services themselves included a massive volunteer choir, excellent special music, well and effective personal witnesses, challenging sermons by Dr. Graham, and the invitation to respond to the leadership of the Spirit. Counselors were available for those who chose to respond, there was follow-up on new converts, and local pastors were notified for weeks following the crusade about individuals who had indicated a religious preference. The Billy Graham Crusade accomplished a great work for the kingdom of God. But underline this one thing: without long months of preparation by the crusade team who had come as forerunners, the record would read quite differently. Having met with the team, I can confirm that they were excellent representatives for what they were promoting, proficient at what they were about, and assumed a tremendous personal responsibility for the success or failure of the mission.

Because we have named the name of Christ, you and I are forerunners of the coming kingdom. We pray for the grace to be good representatives of what we proclaim, proficient in our witness, and assume a personal ownership in the ultimate victory.

The Christian as the Word became flesh.

The gospel according to Luke relates how Jesus came to Nazareth, his home town, and attended the synagogue on the sabbath. Reading from the scroll, he quoted a passage from the prophet Isaiah; the Spirit of the Lord is upon me because he has anointed me to preach the good news to the poor ... to proclaim the acceptable year of the Lord (Luke 4:18, 19)." When he had finished reading, he gave the scroll to an attendant and boldly announced, "This day this Scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing." Please observe that those present took no offense at this announcement. It was when Jesus proceeded beyond the claim of being the Word become flesh and began behaving as the personification of God's Word that they became upset. The concept had not disturbed them. The fleshing-out of the concept did (see 4:29). Fleshing-out, or living-out a concept - personifying something - inevitably brings consequences. The living example takes his or her chances, and that is precisely what the gospel invites us to do while assuring us that the matter of "risk" never comes into the consciousness which has been absorbed into the Spirit of God. Witness becomes a natural expression rather than a calculated risk.

About a month ago, I preached a series of sermons in a small church located in a lovely rural setting, far removed from the rush of traffic and the busy schedules of urban life. It was refreshing just to be in such a place, and even more uplifting to worship with such wonderful people. You know the kind of little country church I'm talking about. Many of us grew up worshiping in churches like them and most every pastor has served in such a church at one time or another. One of the first things I noticed upon entering the small sanctuary was a rather large wallhanging directly behind the pulpit. It was, I believe, what is referred to as a handmade "latch hook" portraying the last supper. I was impressed by its appearance, unusual size, and by the thousands of pushes and pulls of a needle required to create such a work. Having commented about it during the sermon, I was pleased, following the service, to meet the lady who had created it. Standing close to her husband, she smiled, "I am the lady who made the picture." I immediately observed that her vision was extremely poor. "I am sure it must have required a great deal of time," I replied. "Yes sir, it did," she sighed, "and I couldn't have done it without my husband. He had to describe all the colors of thread to me because my eyes are so bad I couldn't tell one from the other."

That was her witness. Actually, it was their witness - one stitch at a time: his eyes, her hands. Fleshing-out the Word.

Attending the services each evening was a little girl, whom I judged to be 10 or 11 years of age. She will always be in my memory. Badly crippled, feet pointed in, totally blind. One evening, her mother assisted her to the front of the church and into the pulpit area. "Step up," the mother whispered a couple of times. "Here's a step. Careful. All right, here's the microphone; hold it tight." A tape containing the musical accompaniment was inserted into a tape player and the little girl sang. The name of the song was, "She's Got Her Father's Eyes." When she finished, we all applauded. She was so happy that she applauded. For those of us in that place, the Word had become flesh.

If any of you think that you are not equipped to "fleshout" the gospel, I invite you to come with me to a little country church and meet a little disabled girl and a woman almost blind who would be thrilled to have the equipment you have for witness. The Word becomes flesh when it becomes personified in you!

The Christian as victorious.

Jesus did not send the 70 out to fail. As a matter of fact, he instructed them not to waste much time or emotion on persons who were not receptive to their witness: "But whenever you enter a town and they do not receive you, go into its streets and say, 'Even the dust of your town that clings to our feet, we wipe off against you; nevertheless know this, that the kingdom of God has come near' (Luke 10:10, 11)." It was almost as if he was saying, "Don't even give failure the opportunity to happen. Press on toward the victory!" Jesus did not intend for his forerunners, or witnesses, to have their spirits sapped by being rejected when there were so many positive opportunities to be claimed for the kingdom. And when they returned, they "returned with joy, saying, 'Lord, even the demons are subject to us in your name' (Luke 10:18)."

Do not mistake the work and ministry of Christ as being directed toward anything but victory. In Matthew 6:3 if, Jesus taught that seekers of his kingdom should not despair about what they would eat, or drink, or wear for these things will be provided. In Matthew 10:19f, Jesus assures his followers that when they are called into account by enemies of the kingdom, there is no need to worry about what to say, "for it will be given to you." In Mark 9:23, Jesus makes this startling statement: "All things are possible to him who believes." Mark 10:27 has it, "All things are possible with God." That just about covers everything, doesn't it? Everything is directed toward victory! Even in dying, the Christian is triumphant for, as we read in John 14:2f, "In my Father's house are many rooms; if it were not so, would I have told you that I go and prepare a place for you? And when I go and prepare a place for you, I will come again and take you to myself, that where I am, you may be also."

Christ invites each of us to be a forerunner, a personification of the Word, a "living example," and victorious over the world!

The Word will not come alive for you until it comes alive in you. It will not come to life in great ideas, great books, or great programs. It comes to life in persons.

May God grant us the grace to allow the Word to become flesh in us!

C.S.S Publishing Co., BLOW THE SILVER TRUMPETS, by Larry Powell