Luke 4:14-30 · Jesus Rejected at Nazareth
The Bible: Head and Heart
Luke 4:21-30
Sermon
by Gary L. Carver
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"With Jesus in your heart, you just can't hate anybody." That is our destination, but sometimes the journey is just as important as the destination. I want to take you on a journey through the text for today. As we continue to preach on the life of our Lord Jesus, we will basically arrive at the same destination: "With Jesus in your heart, you just can't hate anybody." This is a wonderful text, a dense text that is chock full. It's almost like a good hamburger with all that good stuff hanging over the sides and juice dripping everywhere.

Hear the story again. The village of Nazareth was in a buzz. Everyone was so excited because they heard that Jesus was coming home. He had been serving in Capernaum for a period of time teaching, preaching, healing, and performing great miracles and enjoying immense popularity with the people. Crowds were following him everywhere and now the "home boy" was coming home. There was great excitement. Everyone went to hear the "home boy" that had made good. The synagogue was packed. The biggest crowd in years. Jesus stood to read the Word of God. "The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me to preach the good news to the poor. He sent me to proclaim freedom for the prisoners and recover sight for the blind, release the oppressed and proclaim the year of the Lord's favor."

Jesus then handed the scroll to the attendant. The Bible says that the eyes of everyone were fastened upon him as he said, "Today this scripture is fulfilled in your hearing." The people spoke well of him. They all were amazed at his gracious words and they said to each other, "Is this not Joseph's son?" You can just see two "good ole" boys sitting on the back pew; one punches the other and says, "I always knew that boy would do good. I tell you what, I could see it in him even as a young child." "Yeah, he used to come by my shop and I would give him a word or two of advice. I always knew he was destined for great things. In fact, I remember when I used to teach him in synagogue school. We're mighty proud of him."

As Jesus continued his lesson, he said, "You will surely quote this Proverb to me, 'Physician, heal yourself.' Whatever we have heard done in Capernaum, do also here in your country." Jesus reminded them of their own scriptures. He told them about the days of Elijah when there were many, many widows but Elijah went only to the widow Zarephath in Gentile territory. He reminded them that there were many lepers in Israel in the days of Naaman but God only healed Naaman the Syrian, a Gentile. After speaking those words, the Bible says that the people were furious. The congregation so quick to worship was now furious. The same two "good ole" boys sitting on the back pew are saying, "Who is this? Who does he think he is? Why is he saying all of this about us? What a shame upon this synagogue and the people of this town. Who does he think he is?" "Well, you remember the circumstances under which he was born...." And with that, the whole congregation reached out to try and kill Jesus. One moment he is the grandest thing in the world since sliced bread and the next moment they're ready to kill him. What happened? How could someone be favored one moment and in such disfavor the next? What did Jesus do to make his hometown want to kill him?

Was he just too familiar to them? Familiarity does breed contempt. "Well, that's Mary and Joseph's boy. We know his brothers and sisters. I can't believe he is talking like this. We watched him grow up." Maybe they were just too familiar with Jesus. Sometimes being familiar with someone can make us think they are less capable. The Bible says that Jesus' brothers did not believe in him.

I think just the opposite is true, in a sense. When people who know you best, love you and care for you, that can be a true indication of your real nature. For example: One of the greatest testimonies to the life that Jesus lived, to his deity and to his resurrection was his brother, James. The Bible definitely says that, before the resurrection, James did not believe in his brother, but after the resurrection, James became the pastor of the Jerusalem church. What a turn around! Why? Because Jesus was exactly who he said he was and one who knew him best believed it. What a testimony about the nature and life of our Lord Jesus! Just too familiar? Was that the reason they turned on him?

Or maybe it went a little deeper than being too familiar. They were not at war with Jesus the person; they were at war with the nature of his ministry. Jesus was saying, "I am going beyond Israel. I am going to the Gentiles," and with that one statement, he destroyed their notion of privilege. In speaking to them, he tore down all of their officially sanctioned walls and barriers of hatred. "We're God's special people so that gives to us special privileges and it also gives to us the ability to exclude anyone who is not one of us." Jesus destroyed that and they responded in anger.

We can understand a little of how they felt. They were God's chosen people. They had been persecuted all of their lives because they maintained God's Word and kept up the Jewish customs. They built the temples and tried to live as God would have them live because they were God's people. They had taken a stand and were persecuted for it. It is true that when you are a persecuted people you have to develop a sense of pride merely to survive. But the real danger is when that pride becomes exclusive. It's hard for persecuted people to hear that others will be included in the same grace that they will know and feel they have deserved.

It's hard for us, also. It's okay as long as food is delivered to our door, but what about when grace is extended to our neighbor? It's hard for us, as a denomination, to accept the fact that we're not the biggest and the best any more and that missionaries are now being sent to the United States to try and convert us to their beliefs. The white American male has dominated, but that is rapidly declining. It's hard for us to admit that other countries are experiencing great revivals and other cities are knowing great growth in discipleship. It's hard for us to hear that other people are prospering in the Word of God.

We have to remember that God loves everybody. If we get to the point of excluding anyone, we will exclude, first of all, ourselves, because the Bible says that Jesus could not do any great work in Nazareth because of their unbelief. They would not accept the fact that he was going beyond them to the Gentiles, and because they could not accept the nature of his ministry, they could not receive his blessings and his miracles. By excluding the Gentiles, Nazareth excluded itself.

It could be that the conflict is not between Jesus and his familiarity or between Jesus and the nature of his ministry. Although, both certainly are contributing factors, but very possibly what this text is all about is that these people were at war with their own Bible. Jesus read to them from their Bible and they became angry. They already knew the Bible taught that the Word of God was for everyone. It was not the exclusive property of the Jews. Never! They already knew that the Bible said that Abraham would not only bless his people but through Abraham all the nations of the earth would be blessed. They already knew that Exodus 19 said that God had chosen the Jews to be a nation of missionaries. They had already heard the story of Elijah. They had already heard the story of Elisha. They had already heard the story of Amos when he said that God had not only delivered the Israelites from Egyptian bondage but delivered the Syrians and Philistines as well. God had been working with a lot of different people, not just the Jews. They knew all of that because their Bible said so. But it was difficult for them to hear those words.

We hear it with our heads and we know it to be true, but to hear it with our hearts, believe it, and do it, that is something quite different. The longest journey you will ever make will be the journey from your head to your heart. We've read the Bible over and over again and we know it in our heads, but to know it in our hearts is quite another thing entirely. We know that men and women ought to be treated equally in the work place because the Bible says so. But we say, "Don't take it out of my paycheck!" We know that everyone ought to be given equal housing, but we say, "Don't move into my neighborhood and cause my property value to go down!" We know that God cares and loves everybody and gives to us the ministry to love and care for everybody - the homeless, the poor, those with AIDS, but we say, "Don't make me touch one of them!"

We know in our heads, but to know in our hearts is completely different. Jesus was trying to give to them a new version of reality. Jesus was trying to enter into their imagination and help them see a different world. Things did not have to be the way they were. Jesus was trying to help them see a new vision of reality, a new vision of how the world could be because that's the way behavior is changed. Behavior is changed through imagination.

In order for an addict to be changed, they have to envision themselves as being clean. People who are unforgiven have to envision themselves as being forgiven. Those full of hatred have to envision themselves as being loving people to ever rid themselves of hate. Behavior is changed through imagination. It is changed through the acceptance of another vision of life. It is changed when we accept that God is making us into something that is new and different.

God wants to remake us in the Spirit of God with Christ living within us and holiness at the core of our being and neighborliness the practice of our everyday lives. We are a new people because God has made us new and there is something new in our heart because God's presence lives there. We relate to our brothers and sisters out of true neighborliness because he says we are to love our neighbor.

Jesus was trying to help them envision a new world. When we see that vision and truly hear his Word, we have one of two choices. We can accept it or we can reject it. In Jesus' day there were those who accepted his Word and became a part of the kingdom of God, followed him, and gave birth to the most powerful movement in the history of the world - the Christian church.

And there were those who said, "No! I don't believe it. I don't accept it, go on your way!" The decision is ours. We can accept his will and way for our lives or we can say, "I don't want to have anything to do with it." I think sometimes we make the decision to reject his Word because we just don't want to get involved; life is too crowded as it is. "Don't bother me with any more of those details. I may be in a rut but it's my rut and I like it."

Then there are those who would love to change and have this new vision of a new reality in their lives but they just don't think they can do it. Well, let me tell you something. You can't! Not on your own power. It can only come about through the power and the presence of the living God within your life. The question is this and it is a matter of faith: Do you believe that God has the power to make you into the person he wants you to be? Do you believe that?

I saw a Walt Disney movie on television recently. It was a wonderful movie titled, Ruby Bridges. It was the story of Ruby Bridges, a six-year-old African-American girl, who was the first person to integrate the schools in New Orleans. Every day the federal marshals escorted her into the schoolhouse because both sides of the sidewalk would be lined with people who were screaming threats. Robert Coles, a noted Harvard psychiatrist, volunteered his time to work with young Ruby. Every day he would talk with her, trying to help her weather the crisis. On the news one night, he noticed her walking up the sidewalk and the people were screaming and throwing things, but suddenly she stopped and said something and started backing down the sidewalk. Then the marshals picked her up and took her into the building. That night, Cole asked her what she said to the marshals. She said, "I was not talking to the marshals." He said, "Yes, you were. I saw you on the news. I saw your lips moving. You were talking to the marshals." She said, "I was not talking to the marshals." He said, "Well, what were you doing?" She said, "I was praying for those people who were hollering at me. I had forgotten to pray and I was trying to go back and pray for them as I walked to the school building." Cole shook his head and said, "You were praying for the people who were screaming at you?" She said, "Yes, my mama taught me that when people speak mean of you, you pray for them just like Jesus prayed for the people who spoke mean of him."

You see, when Jesus lives in your heart, you just can't hate anybody.

CSS Publishing Company, Inc., Sermons for Sundays in Advent, Christmas, and Epiphany: Building a Victorious Life, by Gary L. Carver