Luke 9:51-56 · Samaritan Opposition
Journey To Jerusalem
Luke 9:51-56
Sermon
by Brett Blair
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In 1536 Reformer William Farel recruited John Calvin to come to Geneva, Switzerland to pastor St. Peter's Church. Calvin, a sickly man all his life, was on his way to Strasbourg to be a quiet scholar, but he relented under this need, this request, to become a pastor.

Two years later, the city fathers publicly banished Calvin from Geneva. Actually, Calvin felt relieved. The moral chaos of the city was terrible. He went to Strasbourg. Three years later in 1541, the same city fathers who had tried to humiliate him begged Calvin to return and help restore order.

He didn't want to go this second time, either, "yet," he wrote, "because I know that I am not my own master, I offer my heart as a true sacrifice to the Lord."

This became the motto of Calvin's life. His emblem would include a hand holding out a heart to God with the inscription, prompte et sincere ("promptly and sincerely"). Promptly and sincerely Calvin answered a call to very difficult task.

Jesus had moved from obscurity to prominence in a matter of months. News of his miraculous healing had spread throughout the region. Crowds flocked to benefit from his powerful presence. His disciples followed him with enthusiasm. The long-awaited kingdom was at hand.

But his fortunes soon began to change. Opposition developed. The crowds got smaller. The zeal of the disciples began to wane. Caesar’s reign became more self-evident than God’s dawning reign. It was to this background, Luke tells us, that Jesus resolutely “set his face to go to Jerusalem.” Why should he spoil success by going to the capital? His strength was in the countryside. But there was no changing his mind. To announce God’s reign, he would have to go to the center of earthly power. What caused Jesus to journey to Jerusalem?

I

First, he knew who he was. Someone once asked Martin Luther what gave him the fortitude he needed to challenge the Roman Catholic hierarchy and unjust principalities. His answer: “I have been baptized.” His identity came through his relationship with God. When we understand our identity and our belonging, it goes a long way to give us courage.

In the early 1920’s Philo Farnsworth was working on a farm, plowing a straight line on a potato farm. His mind was far away, thinking about the possibility of transmitting moving pictures through the air. He had no electronic or engineering background, nor was he a scientist. No one in the world of science would have considered him a serious contender in the chase to find the answer to photographic transmission without the aid of wires.

Scientists from all over the world had been struggling to solve this dilemma and although many had been aided by research grants, no one came up with the answer. So, what chance did Farnsworth, a potato farmer with no education, have?

While plowing, he imagined a different approach. He imagined dividing a screen into long rows just like the field he was plowing, using electricity to create areas of light and darkness at each point along the row. Then stacking the rows on top of each other, he imagined that they could bring to focus a picture. Bingo! The results were better than anything the world of science had ever conceived.

What did Farnsworth invent? Television. It was his vivid imagination coupled with a propensity toward science that has literally changed the world. But unfortunately he was not credited with the idea since he was only 14 years old. Two business men, George Everson and Les Gorrell took an interest in Farnsworth and invested their life savings in his research. In spite of his age they had faith in him and on September 7, 1927, Farnsworth transmitted history’s first electronic television picture.

He was a farmer. And a boy! But From a farmer’s mind came the logic needed to create the television. Let me ask you: Do you know who you are? Do you see yourself as just a farmer, or just a secretary, or just a pastor of a local church? Or do you see your strengths, skills, and intelligence as capable of offering great things? You should. The world changed because Philo Farnsworth kept his hands on the plow and never looked back.

II

Jesus knew who he was. Secondly, he knew where he was going. Back in the 1960’s a movie came out called “The Graduate,” which became an American classic It starred a then very young Dustin Hoffman as a college student trying to decide what to do with his life. There is a scene early in the movie where Dustin Hoffthan is floating on a rubber raft in a swimming pool. His father comes out and asks: “What are you doing.” He replies. “Drifting. Just drifting.” I suspect this was the writer’s way of letting us know what he is doing with his life. I fear far too many could give the same answer Just drifting

Jesus knew where he was going. Literally, of course, to Jerusalem, but figuratively to Calvary and his appointment with a destiny that was uniquely His. By walking toward something he was also walking away from something. He was turning his back to the false gods of popularity, power, and painless piety.

Albert Einstein, the German born mathematician, slowly watched his homeland give in to Adolf Hitler's fascist dictatorship. Einstein wondered if any were going to stand up and oppose Hitler. He said, and I quote, "When Hitlerism came to Germany I expected the Universities to oppose it. Instead they embraced it. I hoped for the press to denounce it, but instead they propagated its teachings. One by one the leaders and institutions which should have opposed the Nazi philosophy bowed meekly to its authority. Only one institution met it with vigorous opposition and that was the Christian Church."

Einstein confessed, "That which I once despised, I now love with a passion I cannot describe." The commitment of the Church in standing against evil made a profound impression upon Einstein. Those individuals in the 1930's understood the cost associated with their actions, and they did not back down. The church today can do no less.

Listen to me! Righteousness will cost you dearly. When Jesus headed off to Jerusalem he knew where he was going. I think Paul had his Lord’s cross in mind when he observed: “Five times I have received at the hands of the Jews the forty lashes less one. Three times I have been beaten with rods; once I was stoned. Three times I have been shipwrecked; a night and a day I have been adrift at sea; on frequent journeys; in danger from rivers, dangers from robbers, dangers from my own people, danger from Gentiles, danger in the city, danger in the wilderness, danger at sea, danger from false brethren; in toil and hardship, through many a sleepless night, in hunger and thirst, often without food, in cold and exposure. And apart from other things, there is the daily pressure upon me of my anxiety for all the churches” (2 Corinthians 11:24-28).

Paul sounds like Jesus. He knew where he was going. He knew following Jesus meant danger on all sides.

III

Third, Jesus knew who walked with Him. Far more than the disciples accompanied Him. He walked with the great “I Am,” the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. In the ancient men of faith we can hear their encouragement. We can hear Daniel say, “He was with me in the lion’s den.” Shadrach, Meshack, and Abednego join in, “He was with us in the fiery furnace.” Moses says, “When the Red Sea was in my front and Pharaoh was in my back, He was with me.” And then David joins in: “Great is the Lord God of Israel His mercy endures forever.” Wherever you go, God goes with you.

At the end of Luke chapter 9 we read this story about Jesus' final approach to Jerusalem. On his way he meets three men who wish to follow him and he warns them that it will cost them dearly to do so. To the three he says, you will be homeless, your family will be left behind, and your past life must be forgotten. As you can imagine the three, who were once so certain, are now hesitant. This story is about commitment or the lack thereof. It is about Jesus "setting his face" and three men "turning their heads."

Why did these three hesitate? Because they did not know who walked with them? Do you? Amen.


If you wish to extend this sermon you might add the following:

Now I understand as well as the next person that progress towards peace is, especially in war, slow. When it comes to the peace process, progress is measured in inches not miles. So little has changed in the world since Jesus' day.

We are told in Luke 9 that Jesus set his face toward Jerusalem and to get there he and his disciples take the direct route through Samaria. When he arrives in the villages the people there do not welcome him. Why? Because he is a Jew and he is headed to the city of Jerusalem for Passover. I'm sure the Disciples thought better of going the way Jesus chose. They would rather have taken the longer path around Samaria because of the centuries' old conflict between the Jews and Samaritans. It was a common practice to hinder any band of pilgrims who used their villages as a shortcut. It is therefore no surprise, when they are rejected by the townsfolk, that James and John, the Sons of Thunder, ask if they can call fire down from heaven to destroy them. In conflicts there is nothing sweeter than the total annihilation of the enemy and when God can be included in the destruction, all the better.

Take for example the Mideast. Whether it is today's conflict between the Palestinians and the Jews, or yesterday's conflict between the Samaritans and the Jews, peace is hard to come by in the Mideast. It's as if they are running a marathon and making advances an inch at a time. I don't know how the President and Prime Minister should handle the situation but I do know how Jesus handled it. Look at verse 55. Jesus rebukes James and John for their suggestion. We are not told what he said to them; we are simply left with the impression that destruction of one's enemies is not the Christian way.

In fact, Jesus' choice to go through the villages of Samaria looking for hospitality tells us that he was extending a hand of friendship to enemies. Tolerance. It is a hard lesson. One that took the disciples years to learn. But, the virtue of tolerance, and tolerance for the right cause, needs to be taught in the church. So, what is our cause? Why should we befriend an enemy? Our cause, simply put, is Christ. I know of no other cause. That was his way. It is your way. And, it is mine.

ChristianGlobe Network, Collected Sermons, by Brett Blair