Luke 4:14-30 · Jesus Rejected at Nazareth
Someday - Today
Luke 4:14-30
Sermon
by Eric Ritz
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Today, I invite you to look and examine for a few moments these words coming to us from the Gospel of St. Luke which describe the Homecoming of Jesus to the Town of Nazareth and his subsequent rejection by them.

As our Gospel Lesson opens it states: "And he came to Nazareth where he had been brought up, and, as his custom was, he went into the synagogue on the Sabbath Day."

I have never been to the Holy Land, but one of my colleagues who has shared with me a slide picture of the actual synagogue where they believed this drama unfolded.

As I prepared for this sermon today, I sat in my office and became very still--and began to imagine all the thoughts and emotions that must have been evoked as Jesus returned to his hometown where he had been raised and nurtured.

It is fairly well accepted by scholars that Joseph (Jesus'' father) had died, which was one of the reasons Jesus didn''t start his ministry until the age of 30.

However, here in Nazareth Jesus had worked and labored alongside Joseph in the carpenter shop. He most likely had assumed responsibility for the business and then trained his other brothers to take over the shop. He could remember going to the synagogue with Joseph until his death and then with the other men of the town. It was here that perhaps Jesus attended Nazareth synagogue school. It was here that Jesus brought the tithe to God''s House every Sabbath. We know that Jesus had worshipped in other places during his absence, but this was his special place.

It was here that Jesus first learned the Hebrew language necessary to read the sacred scrolls. Jesus was probably "Bar Mitzvahed" here.

It was here that Jesus grew from a mere lad to full manhood. Mary, his mother, pondered all these things in her heart. We can only imagine the special and deep relationship of Jesus to Mary His mother.

However, Jesus'' soul had been stirred by the reports of one called "John the Baptizer" in the wilderness. Jesus goes to hear John. Then Jesus is baptized in the river Jordan: A voice cries out from the Heavens,"This is my beloved Son whom I love, with you I am well pleased."

When Jesus left Nazareth He was a citizen of that town. He returned with another identity and mission, as The Saviour of the WORLD. Behind him now was His baptism and wrestling with Satan in the desert.

Everything had to change for Him when he set foot that day in Nazareth. It was here He would announce the platform of the Kingdom and mission that was given to Him. Jesus announces His new mission right there in the synagogue. However, one word changes the environment of acceptance to one of rejection.

We know from verses 14 and 15 that "news about Him spread throughout the whole countryside. He taught in their synagogues, and everybody praised Him."

I believe there was great curiosity about the identity of Jesus already present in the gathering when Jesus arrives at the local house of worship where He had been taught the faith and the traditions of his people.

Jesus picked up the Sacred Scrolls and read a lesson from the great prophet Isaiah. Jesus talked about social justice, freedom from oppression, healing, restoration and everyone was smiling from ear to ear. They must have looked like a proud people who had swallowed a banana sideways. It was good to have young people involved at the synagogue. I can even imagine the people wanting Jesus to be the head of an appointed blue-ribbon commission to study Isaiah''s recommendations and come back with suggestions to SOMEDAY implement them.

However, we know that Jesus had just returned from His battle with the powers of evil. He had faced the devil eyeball to eyeball, so that is your first clue it isn''t going to be business as usual. Jesus was going to relate religious faith to the realities of Life and Liberty.

It seems one word--TODAY--changes the entire atmosphere of that gathering, the difference between SOMEDAY and TODAY. Jesus states in verse 21, "TODAY this scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing."

You see, my friends, there is a BIG DIFFERENCE between SOMEDAY and TODAY. That revealing and necessary difference was expressed that day --and in countless other moments of history.

As some of you know, the Methodist spiritual founder and mentor, John Wesley, was a dedicated priest of the Church of England. John Wesley became greatly concerned about the spiritual demise and climate of the Church of England and its inability to reach the masses of people who were locked out of the church. He wanted to reform the church--and was determined to relate the religious faith to the cruel realities of life for so many people. The institutional church was unable to change--it kept saying SOMEDAY.

The Methodist Movement began when "on April 2, 1739, about 4:00 P.M., four thousand miners gathered to hear a small man, with a shrill voice, proclaim: 'The spirit of the Lord is upon me because he has anointed me to preach the Gospel to the poor, he has sent me to heal the broken-hearted, to preach deliverance to the captives, and recovering of sight to the blind, to set at liberty them that are bruised.''"

Let me share with you a modern day example of the SOMEDAY-TODAY dilemma that every church in America faces whether it is large or small in membership or city or rural in location. Dr. Fred Craddock, who recently spoke to a gathering of United Methodists in Eastern Pennsylvania, shared a story about a church in Tennessee that he served as a student. His first impressions upon arriving as pastor were basically good ones. It was a picturesque white frame building. He felt them to be a warm, loving church family. After he had been on the job awhile, he noticed a pattern developing in the church and the community. It puzzled him why no one attended the church from all the new workers that had arrived in town for a big government building project happening at Oak Ridge. He took a drive and learned first-hand that the new people lived in trailer parks and quickly built homes that looked more like a shanty town. He observed so many children!

Dr. Craddock said he called the church governing board together and shared with them, "We need to reach out in Christian love to the new folks who are here. They are our new neighbors. God has placed a great new mission field in our own backyard to reap the harvest. What a grand opportunity for us to be the church."

The chairperson of the board stood up and said, "Oh, I don''t think so. These persons just wouldn''t fit in here." Dr. Craddock replied, "These folks need the church. We need to share the gospel with them." "NO! No, I don''t think so," exclaimed the Chairperson. Sometime after that, the board passed a resolution: "Members will only be admitted to this church from families who own property in the county."

Years later, Dr. Craddock had an opportunity to return to this part of Tennessee. Like most preachers, he immediately went to the church building. It was still pretty. He was somewhat surprised because the parking lot was filled with pick-up trucks, motorcycles, and smaller inexpensive cars. He looked closer at a new sign that hung on the church building. The sign said, "Barbecue chicken, Ribs, Pork, and etc." It was not a church anymore. The church had died out. The restaurant was packed with many different kinds of people eating away. Dr. Craddock turned to his wife and said, "It''s a good thing this isn''t a church anymore. These folk would not have been welcomed there."

Oh, the difference between Someday and Today. Oh, the difference between being a museum or being a mission to people. There is a big difference between being acquainted with Jesus and being a disciple of Jesus Christ. The real tragedy to me in the story told by Dr. Craddock is that the last time I checked, the Christian church was called to share Jesus Christ as "Bread" for the world. Are we doing that--TODAY?

Yes, it is always easier to have a Someday mentality:

You can have Discipleship without discipline

You can have Success without suffering

You can have Glory which detours around Golgotha

You can have Crown without a cross.

There is a BIG DIFFERENCE between observing history and making history. There is a BIG DIFFERENCE between being a respectful admirer of God and being a committed believer. Did Jesus say to the man at the pool at Bethzatha who was sick and paralyzed for 38 years - Would you like to be healed--SOMEDAY? Did Jesus say to Zaccheus, I would like to stay at your home--SOMEDAY? When Jesus was passing along the Sea of Galilee and He saw Simon and Peter, did He say, Would you please consider following me--SOMEDAY?

During the Revolutionary War a young man came to George Washington and said, "General Washington, I want you to know that I believe in you and your cause. I fully support you."

General Washington graciously thanked him and asked, "What regiment are you in? Under whose command do you serve? What uniform do you wear?" "Oh," said the young man, "I''m not in the army, I''m just a civilian." The General replied, "Young man, if you believe in me and my cause, then you join the army. You put on a uniform. You get yourself a rifle and you fight."

Jesus issues the same challenge to us today. He''s not interested in sympathizers, but in soldiers. For this is the kind of commitment that leads to a worthwhile and satisfying life. The civilian wanted to be an admirer. The civilian wanted to join SOMEDAY. George Washington said: TODAY!

However, my brothers and sisters in Christ, anybody can say someday. In fact most of us say, SOMEDAY. Republicans, Democrats, Liberals, Conservatives, Atheists, and church folks alike all have that standard political and religious line of someday. However, if I read history correctly, nobody ever gets into trouble saying, "SOMEDAY." However the pages of history are filled with the blood of martyrs and prophets who dare to say TODAY. Jesus wasn''t rejected in Nazareth because He said someday. He was rejected because He said TODAY--every day. It was that day in Nazareth that they discovered that Jesus would not be a local hero, but would be the Saviour of the World. They also would be called to repentance. So are we--TODAY.

Martin Luther King, Jr., wasn''t killed because he had a dream. It was because he couldn''t just be a dreamer, but the dream had to become reality TODAY--NOT SOMEDAY. Gandhi wasn''t beaten, tortured, jailed and eventually killed because he said someday, but because he said TODAY.

In 1980, the Archbishop Romeno declared his country could no longer wait for "Someday" to begin the process of land reform and democracy in his native land. He faithfully cried out TODAY. Not someday. Lech Walesa wasn''t imprisoned in Poland because he said Someday but rather TODAY.

Liberation is not a one-time happening but an ongoing historical process that the church must be aware of TODAY. Where is the place in your life and journey where God is calling you to respond by declaring TODAY--not SOMEDAY? Think about it.

Dynamic Preaching, The Ritz Collection, by Eric Ritz