Luke 4:14-30 · Jesus Rejected at Nazareth
The Upside Down Life
Luke 4:14-30
Sermon
by Leonard Sweet
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I confuse “inversion therapy” with “aversion therapy.”

The latter (“aversion therapy”) is where you train your dog not to leave your yard, or not dig, or not bark, with a collar that shocks the dog when it does run off, dig, or bark.

“Inversion therapy” helps alleviate back and neck pain by taking the usual gravitational press we live with and literally “standing it on its head.” One method is to strap your feet into boots and hang upside down like a big bat. Rosie O’Donnell once did this on the Ellen DeGeneres Show, I think. Another method is to strap your whole body to a flat surface that then completely flips upside down, the body suspended head down, feet in the air.

Inversion advocates claim when you exercise while in this upside down position — in other words, when you do sit-ups or torso twists upside down — you are helping your squished, painful vertebrae to expand, realign, and even regenerate. Strengthened by exercise and set free from the constant compression of gravity, sore backs, stiff necks, arthritic hips, can all relax and literally “take a load off.”

But here’s the rub: When our perspective is turned upside down, it is not usually very comfortable. Things look different. Things feel different. Things work different. Things ARE different.

The world of the Haitian people has turned terrifyingly and tragically upside down. What used to be ceilings and roofs are now floors and heaps of rubble. The center for Haiti’s commerce and government has become the center for devastation and loss. Where there had been roads, there is now impassable ruin. A 7.2 earthquake is no respecter of persons. Both the rich and the poor are homeless, helpless, and hurting. Port-au-Prince is gone. Nothing is the same. Things ARE different.

What turned Haiti upside down has changed our world as well. Last week the perspective of America was also forced upside down. Remember the tyranny of terrorism and the muscle-flexing of military might that has kept our eyes and energies focused on the far away middle east? Suddenly overnight the natural disaster in Haiti snapped our hearts and hands back to this side of the world.

Remember the national debate on the need for “full body scans?” Suddenly we were frantically trying to help free bodies from the rubble and ruin.

Remember obsessing over how to keep airliners in American airspace terrorist free? Suddenly we were rushing airplanes filled with emergency supplies and rescue workers to land at an airport that for a few days didn’t even have any air traffic controllers. Pilots had to guide themselves in by chatting with each other, and the tarmac looked like a shopping mall parking lot on Thanksgiving weekend.

Remember sending our troops into a country armed with the latest weaponry? Suddenly we were sending our troops into a country with food, water, medicine, rescue dogs, earth moving equipment, communications devices.

Who among us has not heard hearts breaking at the horror of the new realities confronting Haiti? But being turned upside down has released a healing spirit of humanity and compassion around the world. And as we identify with the Haitian people, we know we all stand on fragile crusts of earth that can shake us up and shake us down, at any time and any where.

Turning things upside down, shaking up perspectives, shaking down assumptions, was Jesus’ specialty. Jesus taught “inversion therapy” from the moment he began to speak in public until his final breath on the cross.

The Jews were anxiously awaiting the Messiah. The hope was that this Messiah would be a divinely appointed, spiritually anointed deliverer for Israel. This longed-for Messiah would wield military might and political punch. He would bring in a “new Israel,” a new Zion that would be a re-birthed political nation. The new “city on the hill” geographically would be on the same Judean hilltops that surrounded the old Jerusalem. The messianic kingdom most Jews dreamed of wasn’t different from the old Israel, just bigger, better, tougher, invincible, and finally recognized as God’s holy nation by the rest of the riff-raff in the (now beaten down) world.

When Jesus read from the Isaiah scroll at the Nazareth synagogue, the text he proclaimed stood these dreams of power and might on their head. Isaiah’s words proclaimed to the Jews that within their own community it would be “the poor,” “the blind,” and “the oppressed” who would be “released,” who would receive the focus of divine activity in the new messianic era.

It would not be the most obedient. Not the most devout. Not those who prayed most earnestly and fervently. Not those whose piety was unimpeachable. Not those whose learning was deep. Not those who were wise. Not hose who were strong.

The “poor” meant all those with “poor status.” In the Mediterranean world the “poor” had bad genes. Bad reputations. Bad health. Bad histories. Bad credit scores. Bad clothing. Bad neighborhoods. Bad relatives. Bad habits. The “poor” are the riff-raff. The “poor” weren’t just fiscally bankrupt. They were spiritually bankrupt.

How could the Messiah be anointed and appointed for such as these?

The “blind” meant not only those with physical blindness, but those who suffered from spiritual blindness as well. Physical handicaps, infectious diseases, plagues, infirmities, and physical deficiencies were all assumed to be a sign of divine judgment. If you were blind, sick, lame, or diseased you were assumed to be have done something to “deserve it.”

How could Jesus possibly imagine that the newest action of God would be directed towards these most obvious outcasts?

Jesus didn’t even repeat the most self-satisfying portion of the Isaiah text he was reading. He ends with the declaration “to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favor” (Isaiah 61:2a).

Where was the threat of judgment to accompany the “good news” of salvation?

How could Jesus focus on all these “fringe-types” who would receive grace and healing and freedom?

How could Jesus forget to promise a divine smack-down for those who didn’t make the cut?

The messianic vision Jesus sketched out for his hometown audience wasn’t black and white. It wasn’t about good or bad, faithful or fallen, whole or broken, free or slave. The message Jesus proclaimed was an “inversion therapy” that turned messianic expectations upside down.

But that wasn’t the worst of it.

Not only were the poor the ones to get the “good news.”

Not only were the blind the ones to receive healing.

Not only were the weak and oppressed the ones granted release and reprieve?

The worst of it was this: The identity of the Messiah himself was revealed. And it was revealed to be completely wrong, according to the hopes and expectations of the people.

So who is the Messiah? Not a great military leader. Not a powerful king. Not a divinely-empowered conqueror. Not an angelically-accompanied Presence.

No, the Messiah, the appointed and anointed one, is just Jesus. You heard this right: just Jesus. Just Jesus is the one who claims “the Spirit of the Lord is upon me.” Just Jesus announces that God has “anointed me.” Just Jesus preaches the good news because God “has sent me.”

The Nazareth crowd is momentarily impressed with his first century text-messaging. But ultimately the Nazareth crowd cannot get over the fact that this speaker in their midst is “just Jesus.” Isn’t this “just Jesus” who they have known since his childhood as “Joseph’s son” (v.22)?

Jesus doesn’t so much preach an upside/down message. Jesus’ very existence is upside/down.

At least according to the established standards of the day. In ancient cultures, whether it be Roman, Greek, or Hebrew, there was a clear pecking order. Always, first and foremost, was the father. Whether this was the Father God, Zeus, Jupiter, or Yahweh, or the father within a family of nomadic sheep herders, the father was the undisputed head over all. Today we’d call him the “big boss with the hot sauce.”

A far distant second was the mother — although once any male child grew to adulthood, he stepped in front of her.

Bringing up the rear, in last place, were children — powerless and without status. Daughters could only hope to someday be wives and mothers. Sons could only wait for the death of the reigning father figure so that they could step up.

Christianity turns all these traditions topsy-turvy and inside/out. Christianity mixes status and muddles social standing. For Jesus the order was children, mother, father. Look at the Christmas story: top billing goes to a child, then Mary, then Joseph.

Jesus claimed Sonship. He claimed he and the Father were One. The Church declares itself the Body of Christ AND the Bride of Christ. Within traditional Catholic orders males are referred to as “brother” or “father.” Women who take holy orders are referred to as “sister’ or “mother.” And all these brothers, sisters, fathers, and mothers serve in worshipful obedience to “the Son.”

As messed up as a Messiah who is a servant is a Savior who is a “Son.”

Culturally it is just wrong.

Divinely it is just right.

For salvation it is Just Jesus.

Upside/down. Inside/out. Last things first. Weak is strong. This was Jesus’ identity. This was Jesus’ message. This was Jesus’ scandal, even before the cross.

In fact it is when Jesus was held most upright that he most turned the world upside down. When power and prestige, fear and hate, nailed Jesus to the cross, forced his body into an unnaturally upright position, that is when Jesus finally and fully inverted the universe.

In weakness he found power. In brokenness he found wholeness. In death he found eternal life.

It’s the same for us.

In weakness we find power. In brokenness we find wholeness. In death we find eternal life.

There is a daytime children’s tv show called “The Upside Down Show” that features Dave and Shane of The Umbilical Brothers. But the real star of the show is “The Remote,” a device that when you point it at something turns it upside down or makes kids see what you’re looking at from a totally different perspective.

Jesus gave his disciples a gospel that is just like “The Remote.” Whatever we look at, we are to look at from the bottom up, from the upside down, from the inside-out. So let’s see how this would play out.

[I encourage you to actually close by doing this with the props outlined below and explaining it as you do it. Or you can simply tell the story. Here it is.]

A theology professor stood before his class and had some items in front of him. When the class began, wordlessly he picked up a very large and empty mayonnaise jar and proceeded to fill it with rocks, about 2" in diameter. He then asked the students if the jar was full? They agreed that it was. So the professor then picked up a box of pebbles and poured them into the jar. He shook the jar lightly. The pebbles, of course, rolled into the open areas between the rocks. He then asked the students again if the jar was full. They agreed it was.

The professor picked up a box of sand and poured it into the jar. Of course, the sand filled up everything else. He then asked once more if the jar was full. The students responded with an unanimous yes. The professor then produced two cans of soda [pick your favorite soda or beer] from under the table and proceeded to pour the entire contents into the jar effectively filling the empty space between the sand. The students laughed. "Now," said the professor, as the laughter subsided, "I want you to recognize that this jar represents your life. The rocks are the important things your family, your partner, your health, your children – things that if everything else was lost and only they remained [as in Haiti for many people], your life would still be full. "The pebbles are the other things that matter like your job, your house, your car. The sand is everything else the small stuff.

"If you put the sand into the jar first," he continued, “there is no room for the pebbles or the rocks. The same goes for your life. If you spend all your time and energy on the small stuff, you will never have room for the things that are important to you. Turn your life upside down. Pay attention to the things that are critical to your happiness. Put the rocks in first. Play with your children. Take your spouse out dancing. Invest in your church.

Turn your life upside down. Take care of the rocks first the things that really matter. The rest is just sand.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by Leonard Sweet