2 Corinthians 4:1-18 · Treasures in Jars of Clay
The Incredibility of the Gospel
2 Corinthians 4:1-18
Sermon
by Maxie Dunnam
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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, buried 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 lesson for this message is such a case. I may have told some of you the story. It was Senior Recognition Day at Candler School of Theology, Emory University, 1958, and I was graduating. The dean had invited Dow Kirkpatrick for our Senior Recognition Service. Dow was at his best – and that was great!

He told a story I think I will never forget. He 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 at St. Mary’s Church, the university church, and commemorating the life and ministry of 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 Ligette, then over ninety years of age.

Ligette remembered hearing his mother telling her memories of having heard John Wesley preach. Ligette was in good health, but didn’t have much strength. His doctors decided that if he would conserve his strength, he might preach that evening. So, 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 of 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 – vigorously. Then, just as he asked the congregation for the closing prayer, he swooned, every ounce of energy having gone from him.

Many of the congregation undoubtedly thought they were witnessing the passing of a great man. Ligette was taken out from the church, and then taken in an ambulance back to his hotel room, where a doctor was waiting. His friends gathered around and kept vigil. The report is that about 2:00 in the morning, 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 on that Senior Recognition Day at Candler School of Theology over forty years ago. For me that day was one of those Mt.Tabor experiences – you know – one of those experiences when God allows us to see a portion of His glory, and, in the ecstasy of that experience, lays His claim upon our lives, and we are never quite the same again.

I am sure I have read that Scripture before, but it never hit me as it did that day. It penetrated to the deepest core of my being, enveloped my soul, and has been a part of me ever since. Listen to a part of it again:

For God who commanded the light to shine
out of darkness, hath shined in our hearts, to
give the light of the knowledge of the glory
of God in the face of Jesus Christ.

This is the gospel in a nutshell. I don’t know another text that gathers up the essence of the gospel as this one does. I mean by “essence” what the dictionary says, “That which makes

something what it is – the distinctive quality or qualities of something.”

Now that which makes the gospel what it is, is here in this text. And there is only one word for it – incredible. So I want us to think about the incredibility of the gospel.

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 has shined in our hearts is ours to declare – and this is the incredibility of the Christian witness.

That is what the text says. It is the essence of the gospel…the gospel in a nutshell. And now and then we just need to just focus in that fashion. So let’s look at it in this way: One, the incarnation; two, the Christian experience; and three, the Christian witness.

I

First, the incarnation. This is Christianity’s unique claim: “The radiant glory of God shines in the face of Jesus Christ.” Incredible! God’s ultimate revelation in Jesus. We call it incarnation.

Let me put it in contrast. There are a few men in the twentieth century who seem as immortal as Mao Tse Tung. Chairman Mao became the incarnation of a movement, a system of thought, and a revolution that impacted nine hundred million people – that was the population of China back then. He lived to be 83 and was China’s leader for over three decades. It was difficult for even the most casual observance to imagine a China without Chairman Mao. Yet, he died. An admirer wrote shortly after Mao’s death: “He conceived of the Chinese revolution, then helped cause it to happen, and in the process, every thought of Mao’s became the primary thought of almost every Chinese. The word almost literally became flesh. (Orville Shell, In The People’s Republic, p. VIII) Note the conditional word “almost”. The word “almost became flesh.”

John, writing of Jesus, said, “The Word became flesh.” No reservation – no conditional definition. And Paul said in our text: “The light of the knowledge of the glory of God shines in the face of Jesus Christ.”

I was in China two years after Mao’s death. His likeness in picture and his statue was still everywhere. The little red book of quotations was still in all the bookstores. And of course, Chairman Mao has taken his place in history with other great shapers of national life – but the limitation is still there. When I was in China in 1979, the magnificent mausoleum that had been built for Mao was closed. The official word was that it was closed for repair, but the informal word passed on among the guides was that it was a deliberate effort to diminish Mao’s presence in the minds and hearts of the people. And that diminishing work goes on in China today.

In Mao, powerful man that he was, the word almost became flesh. But with Jesus, the Word did become flesh and dwelt among us. We beheld His glory – the glory of the only begotten Son of the Father. This is the incredibility of the incarnation – that the radiant glory of God shines in the face of Jesus Christ.

Sometime ago a group of historians gathered for fun – deciding to rewrite history as if certain things had not happened. What would history be like:

If Napoleon had come to America

If the Moors had won the war in Spain.

If Booth had missed Lincoln

If Lee had won at Gettysburg

But in all of that fun of contemplating history if certain things had not happened – these historians left out the biggest IF of all

If God had not come to us in Jesus Christ.

Jim Henry brought this powerful consideration to focus, using the rubric – if God had stayed at home – if He had not come to us in Jesus Christ.

If God had stayed at home we would not know who God is and what God is like.

If God had stayed at home there would be no salvation – no answer to our sin problem.

If God had stayed at home we would have no power over Satan.

If God had stayed at home there would be no victory over death, no promise of eternal life.

But God didn’t stay at home. He walked down the stairway of heaven with a little baby in His arms – incredible – the incarnation: The Word became flesh.

If we don’t get this in our understanding of the Gospel, we won’t get the rest. If we don’t begin here, there is no place to go. There will be no renewal of the Church, no revival of faith among us, no witnessing to the world, unless and until we lodge this truth solidly in our minds and hearts and proclaim it unreservedly. The radiant glory of God shines in the face of Jesus Christ. That is the incarnation and that is the incredibility of the gospel.

II

Now a second ingredient in this essence of the gospel: the Christian experience. The radiant glory of God shining in the face of Jesus Christ, Paul said, “has shined in our hearts.”

That is our salvation. That is conversion. That is what it means to be a Christian; that is what it means to be born again. I believe in being born again. I believe it because Jesus calls us to it, but I believe it also because I have experienced it. Even so – though I believe in being born again – I pray that the day will come in the Christian church when we won’t have to talk about being a “born-again Christian.” You see, that phrase is redundant. If one is a Christian, one is born again. If one is born again, one is a Christian. How that happens is not the issue. That it happens is a life-and-death issue – eternal life or eternal death. There is no Christian tradition apart from a personal encounter with the living Christ.

I heard a story about a husband who was berating his wife for her extravagant spending. “How many times do I have to tell you,” he warned, “that it is economically unsound to spend money before you get it?” That 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 will have something to show for it.”

If you have a Christian experience, whether you talk about it in terms of being born again, or new life in Christ, or the light of the knowledge of the glory of God 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.

The New Testament talks about it in terms of freedom and deliverance. One of the most powerful expressions of it is in Colossians 1:13-14: “(God) has rescued us from the power of darkness and transferred us into the Kingdom of His beloved Son, in whom we have redemption, the forgiveness of sins.”

I like the way Eugene Peterson has paraphrased that: “God rescued us from dead-end alleys and dark dungeons. He’s set us up in the Kingdom of the Son He loved so much, the Son who got us out of the pit we were in, got rid of the sins we were doomed to keep repeating.”

There are all sorts of images for it. Among Christians in Africa, the New Testament word for “redemption” is “God took our heads out.” Now that is a rather awkward, clumsy phrase, but if you go back to nineteenth-century Africa and the practice of slave trading you will see what a powerful image it is. When white men invaded Africa, they carried off men and women from the villages, and would put an iron buckle around their necks. That iron buckle would have a chain on it connected to an iron buckle around the neck of another, and that connected to another, and another and another – until a long chain of human beings would be driven to the ocean to be sent off to America or to Britain to be sold into slavery. Along the way, one might recognize a friend, or a family member, and if they could pay a ransom, they could buy them out of that slavery and the buckle would be taken off and they would be set free. Thus that image, “God took our heads out.”

However, we state it, whatever image we use out of our own experience, the word is redemption: God’s action in Jesus Christ sets us free from the bondage of sin, guilt, and death.

I know many of your stories – and you could witness to this far more dramatically than I.

Transferred from what Dr. Mulholland calls himself “A self referenced” existence a life of selfness, self-centeredness, self-indulgence – transferred from that never-satisfied state into a life of service – care and passion for others.

Delivered from drugs, sexual addiction or some other addiction

Set free from bondage to material security

Freed from the shame and guilt of alcohol or the ravages of some other destructive habit

Transferred from that kingdom where you are on the throne to a Kingdom where Jesus is Lord.

Yes, I like the way Peterson puts it: “The Son got us out of the pit we were in, got rid of the sins we were doomed to repeating.”

But we may not yet be completely free. There may be sins with which you are still wrestling, chains that may still bind you. Three weeks ago one of the students for whom I was praying that week told me he was praying and fasting every Wednesday to overcome the anger that was controlling his life. That sort of thing might be going on with you – you’re not completely free – there are sins with which you are still wrestling.

I want us to be silent for a minute. Would you close your eyes and close out the persons around you – think only of your own situation. Is there something in your life from which you need to be set free? delivered? Even now – by your confession and repentance, by your completely yielding yourself to Christ, you can know freedom and the joy of deliverance. Seek that now, confess and repent now in silence and begin to find that freedom that comes only in Christ.

I am praying that our special times of “revival” this week – tonight, Wednesday and Thursday night – will be times of powerful visitation of the Spirit. I am praying that the living Christ will work in a powerful way in each of our lives to do that which each of us needs.

This is the incredibility of the Christian experience – that the light of the knowledge of the glory of God shining in the face of Jesus Christ can shine in our hearts.

III

Then there is the incredibility of the Christian witness.

Listen to this: “The light of the knowledge of the glory of God shines in the face of Jesus Christ,” that is the incredibility of the incarnation. The light of the knowledge of the glory of God shining in the face of Jesus Christ has shined in our hearts; – that is the incredibility of the Christian experience. The light of the knowledge of the glory of God shining in the face of Jesus Christ which has shined in our hearts is ours to declare, that is the incredibility of the Christian witness. Witness is the vocation of every Christian.

Listen to verses 13 and 14, which were not a part of our text but are in II Corinthians from which our text came: “But just as we have the same Spirit of faith that is in accordance with Scripture – ‘I believed, and so I spoke’ we also believe and so we speak, because we know that the One who raised the Lord Jesus will also raise with Jesus…”

Again, Eugene Peterson adds special energy to these words: “We are not keeping this quiet, not on your life. Just like the psalmist who wrote, “I believed it, so I said it,’ we say what we believe. And what we believe is the One who raised up the Master Jesus will just as certainly raise us up with you, alive.”

It is our vocation – to witness – we can’t keep quiet about it.

But who would want to keep quiet? If Christ has done His mighty work in our life – then let’s share that good news with others – but more than that, friends, let’s live that good news and demonstrate the incredibility of the gospel.

MaxieDunnam.com, MaxieDunnam.com, by Maxie Dunnam