John 1:43-51 · Jesus Calls Philip and Nathanael
It’s a New Year: Take 7 Steps Forward
John 1:43-51
Sermon
by Leonard Sweet
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How many parents have blessed the invention of the “Swing’N’Sway?” Can I get a witness?!

There are actually two versions of this battery operated baby care gizmo. For newborns there is a Swing’N’Sway bassinet that gently rocks from side-to-side and back-to-front to simulate the infant being held and walked and rocked. This enables new Moms and Dads to catch some desperately needed shut-eye. For babies old enough to sit up there is a Swing’N’Sway rocker — an infant seat secured in a kind of swing-set stand that allows the child to happily rock back and forth while parents keep an eye out, but keeps their hands free to accomplish other tasks.

Both these “Swing’N’Sway gadgets satisfy the baby by giving the child the illusion that they are moving forward or being taken for a walk when in reality they are staying safely in one place.

By the time our children can walk on their own, these devices are done for. The tiniest, shakiest, clumsiest first “baby steps” are far more exciting to toddlers than any stationary “pretend” movement offered by a Swing’N’Sway. Our very first steps, no matter how halting and weak, are not only the ones most anticipated, most praised, most celebrated by our parents. They give us our first taste of self-reliance. Learn to take those first baby steps and, baby, you’re on your way to  . . . wherever you want to go. The time for swinging and swaying in one spot is over.

When Jesus started his public ministry it was from the outset an “on-the-road” show. Jesus’ first invitation to his first disciples was “Follow me” or “Come and see.” Notice, it was not “sit down and listen,” or “kneel and pray.” It was an invitation to movement, motion, and mission.

Notice too: Jesus’ invitation was not to “follow him” to some specific location or to “come and see” a central sanctified place. Rather it was an open-ended invitation, a challenge for all followers to “come-to-go.” In John’s gospel the moment John the Baptist identifies Jesus as the “Son of God”, as the “Lamb of God,” and points his own disciples towards the one he had been waiting for, Jesus is on the move.

Jesus is always on the move, one step ahead of us. From the moment he left John the Baptist’s nurturing presence, Jesus immediately hits the road. In Galilee he continues to encourage his disciples to join him in this journey — not a journey that traverses new terrain, but a journey that forms new faith. Jesus constantly challenges his followers to step over the line — over the line between Judea and Galilee, over the line between Galilee and Samaria, over the line between Jew and Gentile, over the line between pure and impure, over the line between male and female, over the line between God’s vision and human viewpoints.

Wherever and whenever Jesus called other to “Follow me,” he was always asking them to step forward in faith. But as all four of the gospels affirm in one way or other, this journey of discipleship, this pilgrimage of following Jesus, was a painstakingly “step-by-step” undertaking. No matter how much territory it covered, following Jesus was a series of off-balance, unsure, “baby steps” that stumbled along until after the Pentecost gift of the Spirit put wings under the feet of all Jesus’ followers.

What kind of steps does Jesus call us to take today? We might not be jogging through Judea, sneaking through Samaria, or ambling across the ends of the earth. But we are all on a faith journey that requires negotiating some hazardous challenging terrain. Like Jesus’ very first disciples, our own step-by-step faith journey involves learning to move forward with a variegated gait.

As we begin a new year, it is helpful to think about the Seven Steps Forward of Faith:

1) Step Ahead

The first move our faith must make is to “step ahead” of where we currently stand. No one ever reached “point B” by standing still and unmoving at “step A.” “Stepping ahead” in faith means stepping away from the familiar and even stepping beyond what we know to be our own best abilities. If school teachers always volunteer to teach kids Sunday school or CPS’s always volunteer to help plan budgets, no one is “stepping ahead” of themselves or stepping out into unfamiliar territory. It is when we trust God, not our own abilities and expertise, that we truly begin to move forward in faith.

My friend Vern Hyndman puts it like this: “To step forward in faith is to take at least one step past yourself.”

Will you step past yourself in 2012?

2) Step It Up.

Step up the tempo

 “Slow and steady wins the race” is only a half truth. The other half, and just as much a truth, is that sometimes taking a “leap of faith” is a fast moving moment. Athletes who depend on speed — downhill skiers, speed skaters, Nascar drivers, cross-country bicyclists know there is a sublime point where skill and speed combine. What looks like out-of-control careening to bystanders is experienced as a focused flow of amazing energy by the competitor.

When we allow our faith lives to pick up speed — to move beyond a plodding Sunday-showing only to an every-moment-count experience of God’s presence, PLUS an every-person-counts conviction of Christ’s love our souls move from schlepping to skimming.

How does the song go? “Wise men say . . . only fools rush in.” Well, we have been called to be “fools for Christ,” rushing in to offer love, to offer compassion, to offer solace and solutions to those in need.

Will you step up the tempo in 2012?

3) Step up

Step Up to the plate

When Babe Ruth famously stepped up to the plate and confidently pointed to where he fully intended to bash the baseball, the fans went wild. How could anyone be so brazen, so brash, so completely sure of their own actions and abilities? 

If a baseball player can step-up-to-the-plate and fully expect, despite all the human variables at work, that he will successfully “swing for the bleachers,” how much more can those of us who claim to depend upon the power of an omnipotent God and the compassion of an all loving Christ not step-up-to-the-plate and claim victory in the face of great and terrible opposition?

Remember: the victory is won, not when your Goliath-problems come tumbling down, but when you have enough David-faith to step up to the challenge, to step out and pick up some pebbles, and step up to the plate. The victory is won not in falling Goliaths but in raising faith to the level of the challenge. Faith IS the victory.

Will you step up to whatever 2012 puts on your plate, even when it seems that plate is overflowing? 

4) Step in It

There’s no stepping around it.

Sometimes there is no other way forward but through a real mess and morass. Jesus waded into the middle of the money-changers who were preventing the prayers of those on pilgrimage, especially Gentile prayers, and tossed them out.

There are times when our faith requires us to “get down and dirty.” One of the biggest on-going  battles Jesus fought with the Pharisees was that he constantly was crossing the line between what was considered “pure” and what was considered “impure.” Jesus hung out with lepers, prostitutes, well-known sinners, Gentiles, and even tax collectors. These were quagmires of impurity and impropriety in the eyes of the Pharisees, who were the original “puddle-jumpers.” Pharisees were the avoid-the-dirt-at-all-costs people.

Jesus leads his disciples hip-boot high into puddles and ponds of human waste-edness. There is no way to “muck out” a stable without stepping in it. Sometimes “stepping in it” IS putting our “best foot” forward, our “faith-forward foot” into it.

Will you step in puddles in 2012?

5) Step down

When Jesus calls his disciples, in the first century or the twenty-first century, he offers the invitation to “Follow Me.” Not, “Let’s walk together.” Not, “Why don’t you lead the way.” Not, “”Let’s make this a team effort.” Accepting the forward step of faith in Christ require a concurrent “step down” of self.

In today’s text, everything Jesus’ first disciples confessed was absolutely right. Yet absolutely wrong.

The Twelve thought they knew who and what they were talking about. But it took their discipleship journey with Jesus to reveal to them they did not know, did not understand, did not have a clue, about the greater plan that God had going.

Following forward in faith doesn’t mean making the “smart choice,” or working the “best option,” or applying the “best practice.” Following forward in faith means also stepping back from the controls, stepping down from a position of ultimate authority and giving up control. Forward following faith looks ahead towards God’s unfolding vision, not at the possibilities revealed by our own clouded view.

Will you step down from your high and lofty throne of being in charge, and give your Crown of Control to God in 2012?

6) Step over the Line

To step forward in faith is by definition to step over the line.

When forward stepping faith takes charge of our steps, we will — not might, but WILL find ourselves “stepping over the line,” pushing the accepted parameters of the polite, the permissible, even the possible. You can’t toe the line and live by faith.

Jesus’ disciples challenge “accepted truths” by first accepting that Jesus himself is “the Truth.” He is our goal and our guide and our guardian. The “line” that Jesus consistently crossed over was not the lines between political groups, or the lines between wrangling religious authorities, or the line between legality and morality. The line Jesus stepped on with impunity was the line that divided human beings from God’s love.  Faith forward steps stumble forward over that line all the time, no matter how much it knocks our shins or stubs our toes.  Faith forward disciples bring God’s love, Jesus’ sacrifice to all, no matter where they stand.

Will you step over the line in 2012?

7) Stand Firm

Jesus always comes in surround sound. It’s time to hear the both/and.

You can’t step forward without standing firm.

It is the contrary sounding truth that makes all forward moving faith possible.  When we are firmly planted to start with, springing forward is a movement from strength. The “Swing’N’Sway” false movement that fools babies into thinking that they are moving when they are not is sure sign of immaturity.

For those of us beyond the toddler stage there is something called the “sway test.” Blindfolded, an individual is surrounded by others who keep calling out warnings and suggestions. Despite the fact that the blindfolded individual is not moving or tipping in any way, these onlookers holler and warn, “You’re falling to the right!” “Wait, your tipping to your right!” “Watch out, you’re swaying backwards!” “Hold on, you’re falling forward!”

It’s called the “Sway Test.” It has been well documented by psychologists and human behavior researchers that those who best resist all these unsolicited and unsubstantiated admonitions are those who are most emotionally mature. Those who, despite the fact that they are standing on solid ground, begin to believe the voices around them and start desperately trying to adjust their bodies according to all the directives they are receiving, are the most immature. 

Forward stepping faith can start moving forward because it has a solid, stable base. The first “forward step” any disciple must make is that which anchors all other movement.

Our first action, our most important decision is to respond to Jesus’ invitation to “Follow me,” with our whole heart and whole soul and whole mind. From that most immovable place our faith can take us anywhere.

Will you stand firm in 2012?

Stand Firm: So that you can . . . 

Step Ahead, Step It UP, Step Up, Step in It, Step Down, Step Over the Line,


COMMENTARY

Matthew and Luke begin their gospels with the small — minute details of the birth of the baby Jesus and the gradual, incremental growth of Jesus’ ministry and reputation. John’s gospel, on the other hand, begins big, with a cosmic bang that echoes Genesis 1: “In the beginning . . .”

“In the beginning was the Word.” The very first speakers exclaim and expound Jesus’ divine identity. In John’s first chapter, over the course of four decisive days, first John the Baptist and then the newly called disciples proclaim Jesus to be the “Lamb of God” (v.36), the “Messiah” (v.41), the one about whom Moses wrote (v.45), the “Son of God” (v. 35, 49), and the “King of Israel” (v.49). There is no pussy-footing around about Jesus’ divine distinctiveness in these first encounters, Jesus’ public ministry begins with clear theological pronouncements in John’s text.

Having already been identified by John the Baptist and joined by first followers Andrew and Simon Peter, on this “fourth day,” as described in today’s gospel text, Jesus journeys to Galilee. The text is grammatically unclear here about exactly who it is that makes this decision to journey to Galilee and who it is that offers the invitation to “follow me.” It is possible to assume that the subject of all this activity is still Andrew (from v.40). If that is the case, Andrew makes the decision to take the jaunt to Galilee where he continues to offer invitations to others to join him in his discovery of the “Messiah” in Jesus (from v.41).

Such a translation is less popular, yet it does suggest the reason behind the text’s next assertion, the detail that Philip was from Bethsaida, the same hometown as Andrew and Simon Peter. If Andrew is the one offering the invitation, it is reasonable to assume he would first seek out those he already knew. Likewise if this invitation to “follow” comes from Andrew, it is in keeping with the rest of these first “calls.” Jesus’ first disciples come through the witnessing work of others: John the Baptist’s witness sends Andrew, Andrew invites Simon Peter and (possibly) Philip, Philip, in turn, invites Nathanael.

However, it may also be grammatically argued that “”Jesus” is the subject of all this action. In other words, Jesus decides upon the Galilean journey and Jesus, as he does so powerfully in Matthew and Luke, offers the charismatic call of “follow me.” In either case Philip’s exclamation to Nathanael overstates his own activity, not unlike Andrew had to his brother Simon Peter. Andrew had Jesus pointed out to him by John the Baptist. He did not “find” the Messiah on his own. Philip’s enthusiastic witness to Nathaniel in v.45 proclaims “We have found him . . .” when in fact Philip was the one who was “found” — either by Jesus or by Andrew.

The rest of Philip’s declaration to Nathanael is, like Andrew’s to his brother, accurate and yet inaccurate. Andrew identified Jesus as “The Messiah,” a term with a host of meanings and possible identities in first century Jewish culture. Philip proclaims Jesus to be “him about whom Moses in the law and also the prophets wrote” (v.45). Philip understands Jesus as the fulfillment of scriptural promises. Furthermore, Philip emphasizes the human side of Jesus’ story. He is the “son of Joseph from Nazareth.” John the Baptist’s earlier testimony that Jesus is the “Son of God,” the “Lamb of God,” has not yet been echoed by these first, fledgling disciples.

Given Philip’s emphasis on Jesus’ apparently prosaic roots, it is hardly surprising that a skeptical Nathanael utters the apparently proverbial observation, “Can anything good come out of Nazareth?” (v.46). Philip’s response recalls Jesus’ invitation to Andrew in verse 39: “Come and see.”

But before Nathanael sees Jesus it is evident from the text that Jesus has seen him. As Nathanael approaches him Jesus reveals he already knows all about him: “Here is truly an Israelite in whom there is not deceit!” (v.47). So stunned is Nathanael that he fails to greet Jesus with any polite salutation or acknowledgment of the exalted position Philip has claimed for him. Instead he simply blurts out an incredulous, “Where did you get to know me?” (v.48).

Jesus’ assertion that Nathanael is “without deceit” or “without guile” would perhaps bring to the mind of Jewish readers the exchange between Jacob and Esau where the deceitful actions of the younger brother trick the older out his birthright and blessing (Genesis 27:35-36). This connection is further suggested by yet another image from the life of Jacob that will conclude this week’s text (v.51). Jesus’ explanation for his insight into Nathanael’s character is the seemingly cryptic evidence that he saw him “under the fig tree before Philip called you” (v.48). This evocative yet imprecise image has been suggested to reveal everything from a simple image of Nathanael at home, to an image of Nathanael’s studious dedication to the Law (reading under the fig tree), to a larger reference to the distinction between good and evil. Whatever this image might subtly convey, Jesus’ apparently accurate insight into Nathanael’s life convinces him that he stands before one with special, divine knowledge.

Overturning his previous rudeness, Nathanael first properly addresses Jesus as “Rabbi,” a sign of genuine respect. But Nathanael continues and adds two additional titles. He proclaims Jesus to be both “the Son of God” and “the King of Israel.” While Nathanael’s confession provides the mature Johannine presentation of Jesus as the “Son of God,” that title also had other applications in first century Judaism. The “peacemakers” in Matthew 5:9 are referred to as “sons of God,” for their actions and attitudes mimic God’s own. Likewise, in Hebrew scripture the messianic ruler, chosen by God, is declared to be God’s “son.”

Nathanael’s titles affirm his acceptance of Jesus as Messiah, with all the divine attributes and advantages that title bears, including the messianic promise of “King of Israel.” Nathanael’s confession is the most insightful yet among Jesus’ disciples. But it will take the rest of the gospel story for the absolute correctness of this confession to be revealed.

Jesus affirms Nathanael’s belief, yet seems to express some disappointment that his confession is based not upon trust but upon Jesus’ apparently miraculous insights. The paltry pieces of information that were enough to convince Nathanael will pale before the revelations that are yet to come. Jesus steps beyond the usual messianic activities to declare that among those miracles yet to come will be the sight of “heaven opened and the angels of God ascending and descending upon the Son of Man” (v.51). This image is clearly a reference to the “Jacob’s ladder” dream found in Genesis 28:12, 16-17. Now, however, instead of the angels traversing between heaven and earth on a “ladder” and coming to a single place — the site Jacob named “Beth-El” (the “House of God”) the way between heaven and earth is determined by an individual, by Jesus the Son of Man.

Not just one geographic place, but wherever the Son of Man may be found, is the entranceway for heaven into earth. The divine presence on earth is found in Jesus the Son of Man, the Son of God, not in any temple shrine.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Leonard Sweet Sermons, by Leonard Sweet