2 Corinthians 4:1-18 · Treasures in Jars of Clay
The Essence of the Gospel
2 Corinthians 4:1-18
Sermon
by Maxie Dunnam
Loading...

I don’t know how It Is with you, but I can recall occasions when a text of scripture grabbed my imagination, gripped my mind, burrowed its way into my soul, and became a part of my being. In many instances, I can relive the setting when that happened, and it energizes my life.

Our scripture for this is such a case. It was Senior Recognition Day at Candler School of Theology, Emory University, 1958. From the time I answered the call to preach as a seventeen- year-old country boy in Mississippi, I’ve always had a passion for preaching. I believe with all my heart that that was the call of God upon my life. I believe with all my heart that that has always been the call of God upon my life. That passion for preaching is still alive - I hope you know that — and I continue to be humbled every time I mount any pulpit, or stand before any audience to proclaim the Word, humbled by the fact that God would choose me.

That year I was graduating from the Seminary, the Dean had invited Dow Kirkpatrick to be the preacher for our Senior Recognition Service. Dow was at his best — and that was great. He told a story I think I never forget. It came out of the World Methodist Conference, which met in Oxford in 1951. The high point of that program was the service of commemoration held in St. Mary’s Church, the University Church, commemorating John and Charles Wesley. There was only one man alive at that time who was the right man to preach on such an occasion. He was John Scott Lidgett, then over ninety years of age.

Lidgett remembered hearing his grandmother tell her memories of having heard Wesley preach. The old man was in good health, but didn’t have much strength. His doctor decided that if they could conserve his strength, he might preach that evening. They brought him to Oxford on the train and put him in a hotel to rest. Then they dressed him in his preaching robe and brought him to the church in an automobile. The pulpit chair was carried out to the car. He was put in it and then carried back to the platform. He didn’t stand all during the service, until time to preach. He preached almost thirty minutes and vigorously. Then, just as he asked the congregation for the closing prayer, he swooned, every ounce of energy having gone from him. Many in the congregation, undoubtedly, thought they were witnessing the passing of this great man, Lidgett. He was taken out and taken by ambulance back to his hotel room. The report was, that at about 2:00 am, he roused, opened his eyes, and said, “Preaching always did take something out of me.”

Well it does, and it should. My calling to preach was confirmed that day in an extra portion of God’s Grace which I’ve tried to keep alive through these years since. For me that day was one of those Mt. Tabor experiences — when God allows us to see a huge portion of His glory, and in the ecstasy of that experience, lays his claim upon our lives and we can never, ever quite forget it.

I’m sure that I had read the scripture before, but it had never really hit me. That day it did. It penetrated to the deepest core of my being, enveloped my soul, and has been a part of me ever since. Hear it again: “For God who commanded the light to shine out of darkness, hath shinned in our hearts, to give the light of the knowledge of the Glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ.”

I don’t know another text that gathers up the essence of the Gospel as that one does.

I mean by “essence” what the dictionary says: “That which makes something what it is - the distinctive quality or qualities of something.” (The Reader’s Digest Great Encyclopedic Dictionary).

There’s only one word for this text: Incredible.

Listen to this: the radiant glory of God shines in the face of Jesus Christ — this is the incredibility of the Incarnation.

The radiant glory of God shining in the face of Jesus Christ has shined in our hearts — this is the incredibility of the Christian experience.

The radiant glory of God shining in the face of Jesus Christ, which shines in our hearts, Is ours to declare — this is the In credibility of the Christian witness.

That’s the way the text breaks itself down — this essence of the Gospel, so let’s look at it in that fashion: One, the incredibility of the incarnation; two, the incredibility of the Christian experience; and three, the incredibility of the Christian witness.

I

THE INCREDIBILITY OF THE INCARNATION

First, the incredibility of the incarnation.

This is Christianity’s unique claim: The radiant glory of God shines In the face of Jesus Christ Incredible — God revelation in Jesus Christ. We call it Incarnation

Let me put it In contrast. There are few men in the Twentieth Century who seemed as immortal as Mao Tse-Tungi. Without any value judgment of his person, or evaluation of his philosophy, Chairman Mao became the incarnation of a movement, a system of thought, and a revolution that impacted 900 million people. He lived to be 83 and was China’s leader for over 3 decades. It was difficult for even the most astute observers to imagine a Mao-less China, yet he died. An admirer wrote shortly after Mao’s death: “He conceived of the Chinese Revolution, and then helped caused it to happen, and in the process, the thought of became the primary thought of almost every Chinese. The word almost literally became flesh. (Preface, Page VIII, Orville Shell, In the People’s Republic).

Notice the conditional word: almost “the word almost became flesh.”

John, writing of Jesus, said: “The Word became flesh no reservation no conditional definition! I was In China two years after Mao’s death. His picture and statue is still everywhere. The little “Redbook” of quotations is still present almost every where, yet, it is obvious that Chairman Mao will take his place in history with other great shapers of national life, but the limitation is still there. Unlike Jesus, the word almost became flesh.

But with Jesus, the Word became flesh. This is the incredibility of the Incarnation — that the radiant glory of God shines in the face of Jesus Christ.

Jesus is central in the Gospel because Jesus is God’s movement of love toward us. Jesus Is God’s invitation to salvation and eternal life. Jesus is God’s affirmation that we are not left to make it on our own. We are not forgotten, we are not forsaken. We’re not given up to be strangers and sojourners in a foreign land with no signals to direct us, or no destination to draw us on. Incredible! God has become one with us to make us one with Him. If we don’t get this, we won’t get the rest. If we don’t begin here, there is no place to go. The radiant glory of God shines in the face of Jesus Christ. That’s the incredibility of the incarnation.

Now, a second ingredient in this essence of the Gospel.

II

THE INCREDIBILITY OF THE INCARNATION

The incredibility of the incarnation: The Radiant Glory of God, shining in the face of Jesus Christ, hath shined in our hearts.

That’s salvation — the radiant glory of God shining in the face of Jesus Christ hath shined in our hearts. That’s what it means to be born again. I believe in being born again - I believe in it primarily because I’ve experienced it, and because Jesus calls us to it. You’ve heard me say, on more than one occasion, that I pray that the day will soon come when we will realize that to talk about “being a born-again Christian is redundant. If one is a Christian, one is born-again. That’s what it means to be a Christian — to be born again. How that happens is not the issue; that it happens is the most important thing in the world.

I heard a story the other day about a husband who was berating his wife for her extravagant spending. “How many times do I have to tell you,” he warned angrily, “that it’s economically unsound to spend money before you get it?”

But he didn’t intimidate her one bit for she replied, “Oh, I don’t know about that. This way, if you don’t get the money, at least you have something to show for it.”

If you had a Christian experience, whether you talk about it in terms of being born-again or new life in Christ, or the light of the glory of Christ-shining in the face of Jesus Christ shining in our hearts — it doesn’t matter how you talk about it - you have something to show for it.

Let me tell you two stories. Before I left The Upper Room, one day the Customer Service Department sent to my office a copy of a paid invoice they had received from a customer. They were confused because on the invoice the customer had written, “Say hello to Maxie Dunnam. Last year, John Barleycorn, this year Billy Graham.” What was he talking about?

I knew and my heart stirred within me. My eyes brimmed with tears as I recalled meeting this man. He and I sat together at an 11:00 pm to midnight prayer meeting, December 31, 1979, in Tulsa, Oklahoma, as people from all over the nation came to launch a decade of evangelism. Later, persons like Oral Roberts and Billy Graham were going to speak. This man told me his story - a story of tragedy and loneliness, futility and despair. He had been a victim of alcohol. He stated his case dramatically. “Last year, I closed the old year and began the new, unconscious — a victim of John Barleycorn. This year I closed the old and the new in a prayer meeting and listened to people like Billy Graham. I’m conscious. More than that, I’m alive.” So, Joe’s scribbled note on an invoice carried a world of meaning. The truth of Paul’s affirmation, “The light of the glory of God shining in the face of Jesus Christ has shined in our hearts.” The truth of that was verified again.

Now another story. A young man, thirty-five to forty years old I’d say, asked to see me about a month ago. He shared the sad news that he was having to leave our church - his job was taking him to another city. He was sad, very sad, because he didn’t want to leave Christ Church. But there was a radiant joy about him as he reminded me of the commitment to Christ that he had bade here about a year ago. He even recalled the occasion and the sermon. That commitment led him to tithe his income, which he said, was giving him incomparable joy. It put living daily with scripture, which has enriched his life, deepened and informed his faith; and prayer has become a vital reality for him — he talks and he listens to God.

His was not a dramatic experience last year, and he was not delivered from debilitating destructive habits. It was a quiet but definite experience in which he came clearly to the conviction that something was missing in his life. He was without spiritual direction and meaning. There was no assurance of salvation. There was no joy.

I know I didn’t imagine it. As we talked, I know “the radiant glory of God shining in Jesus Christ” was shining in my friend’s heart. That’s the incredibility of the Christian experience.

Does that strike a responsive note in you? Perhaps you’re here and there are glaring sins in your life. You’ve not been willing to admit that. You are a slave to those sins. You haven’t been willing to admit them to yourself or to anyone else, or to God. You haven’t been willing to bring those sins to God in repentance and receive his forgiving grace. You’re not quite certain you want a new life, but you know that the life you now have is not providing you the meaning and joy you want.

For others, in fact for many more of you — I’m sure the case is not so dramatic. You’re not victimized by glaring sins. You don’t feel bound or imprisoned by your sins. But you know the gnawing restlessness that keeps you moving hither and yon, jumping from one effort and finding meaning to another…the vague but painful stirrings within that don’t go away when you get that new car, or that new job, or that new house that you thought would make you happy. I heard a rather powerful count country song the other day that was packed with pathos - as a lot of country music is. One line of the song said, “Mr. Jones bought Mrs. Jones a bigger house - now she has more room to cry in.” We know something about that, don’t we? The unhappiness, the lack of meaning.

Then there are others for whom there is an aching void. That perhaps you haven’t confessed to another because everyone thinks “you have it made”, and you don’t think they would understand.

There is an answer for you — wherever you are in life today — the radiant glory of God shining In the face of Jesus Christ can shine in your heart. That’s the incredibility of the Christian experience. It can be yours by confession and repentance where that is needed, by simple trust in Jesus Christ as Savior and a willingness to forthrightly commit yourself to him — to yield your life to Him, saying, Jesus, I want you to be Lord of my life.

III

THE INCREDIBILITY OF THE CHRISTIAN WITNESS

The incredibility of the Incarnation the radiant glory of God shining in the face of Jesus Christ. The Incredibility of the Christian experience: the radiant glory of God shining in the face of Jesus Christ has shined in our hearts. There is still another sounding in this thrilling essence of the gospel: the incredibility of the Christian witness. Phillips’ translates this verse, “We can enlighten men only because we can give them the knowledge of the glory of God as we see it in the face of Jesus Christ. This is the incredibility of the Christian witness.”

Witness is the task of every Christian. The light of the glory of God shining in the face of Jesus Christ may not shine in certain lives unless it shines through you. Words are necessary. You must speak the word. But maybe even more important than words is how you are with people, your avail ability in love, your listening and responding, your genuinely caring about what’s going on in their life.

Here is a story to illustrate the point. A minister’s wife was afflicted with terminal illness. He told of stepping out of his house one day when a fellow clergyman was coming by. The clergyman pulled over and asked, “How’s your wife? I hear she is ill.” Then the minister recalls, “I answered his questions courteously and when he felt he could leave, he gave me a professional smile, and said, well, chin up and knees down.” That left me churning inside. Later in the day one of my friends met me for coffee and as we sat he asked me ‘Well, how is she?’ I told him. And the full significance of my words became clear to him, he wept. No glib words, no quoted scripture texts, no pious advice – just tears running down his cheeks. I’ve never been so comforted as I was at that moment.

You see witness must extend beyond words to relationship. The Incarnation did not end with Jesus when the Word became flesh. The Incarnation must go on with us, as the radiant glory of God shining in the face of Jesus Christ shines in and through us to others. Let me try to tie it altogether as I close.

Do you remember Don Quixote and his “Impossible Dream?” Do you remember how he treated that kitchen woman, Aldonza? He treated her as though she were a queen, and even gave her a new name – Dulcinea.

At first Dulcinea couldn’t take the new name. She acted with a crude cynicism of her exploited years, saying that Quixote was after what all men were after. But Don Quixote kept affirming her, kept trying to get through the hard shell of her bitterness and rejection, feeling for her virtue, her nobility, her beauty. Finally Aldonza asks, wonderingly: “Why do you say these thing?”

Quixote says, “What things my lady?”

“These ridiculous things you say,” responds Aldonza.

Quixote says, “I hope to add some measure of grace to the world.” But Aldonza responds shallowly, “The world is a dung heap and we are maggots that crawl on it.”

But Quixote responds, “My lady knows better in her heart.”

Aldonza can’t believe it – Then, hardly, but slowly though, her disbelief is melted by his continuing to love her and his continuing to call her by the new name he had given her, Dulcinea.” He loved her through and through though she was tough and hard.

Finally there is a beautiful moment when Aldonza lets her heart open just a chink to Don Quixote, and she sings to him:

“Turn the clouds from your eyes
And see me as I really am.
Can’t you see what your gentle
Insanities do to me! Rob me of anger
And give me despair.
Blows and abuse I can take and ‘give back again.’
‘Tenderness, I cannot bear.’”

Through the love of Don Quixote, Aldonza became Dulcinea, and you remember that closing scene? Don Quixote lies dying, confused, and doesn’t remember people, doesn’t remember their names even though Aldonza pleads with him to remember her name. He days, “Is it so important?” And she says through her tears, “Everything, my whole life, you spoke to me and everything was different. You looked at me and you called me by another name – Dulcinea, Dulcinea. And whenever you spoke the name, an angel seemed to whisper, “Dulcinea, Dulcinea.”

O my friends, that’s what God wants to do for us. He wants to give us a new name – he’s called us to himself – more than that, he wants to give us a new life. That’s the meaning of the Incarnation of God in human flesh, and that’s also the meaning of the continuing incarnation in you and me.

Let me close by simply repeating in summary what I’ve said. The radiant glory of God shines in the face of Jesus Christ – that’s the incredibility of the Incarnation. The radiant glory of God, shining in the face of Jesus Christ has shined in our hearts – that’s the incredibility of the Christian experience. The radiant glory of God, shining in the face of Jesus Christ, which shines in our hearts, is ours to declare – that’s the incredibility of the Christian witness.

And that’s the essence of the Gospel, and it’s all incredible.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by Maxie Dunnam