1 Timothy 2:1-15 · Instructions on Worship
Worthy Is The Lamb
1 Timothy 2:1-15
Sermon
by Bill Bouknight
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I am especially excited today! While preaching is almost always a joy, sometimes it is an absolute delight, especially when I am declaring the heart of the Gospel, the good news of the cross.

Why, I could hardly sleep last night. I feel like a bird-dog on Thanksgiving morning or a racehorse in the starting blocks at Churchill Downs. I love to talk about the cross!

The Gospel is so simple that even a child can grasp it. It's so profound that no Ph.D. can fully plumb its depths. Here is the heart of it: because of our sin we were estranged from our real selves, from our God, and from other people. We could not fix our own brokenness. So, our loving God visited our planet as the man Jesus, sacrificed himself on a cross for the sins of the whole world. Then he conquered death. Any person who confesses his sin and trusts in Jesus as Lord will be forgiven, transformed, and eternally saved. Now, that's the good news!

Billy Graham was asked recently, "How has your preaching changed over the last forty years?" He replied, "Now I preach more on the cross and the blood. That's where the power is."

That's also where the opposition is. The devil doesn' t mind too much if the church will do nothing more than teach the golden rule. The devil won't get upset if we just read theological books, especially those that disagree with the Bible. The devil has no real problem if the church feeds the hungry, as long as we never mention Jesus. But it drives the devil crazy for us to talk about Jesus Christ, God's Son, dying on a cross for the sins of humanity.

Some church leaders claim we ought to drop our talk of the cross and get on with a vision more palatable to modern, rational, secular humanity. They urge us to get rid of those unpleasant associations with death, suffering, and execution.

A leading united Methodist pastor in Los Angeles said recently in a public address that "We must change the theological code from western-Christianity-only thinking. We must stop claiming that Jesus died to save us from our sins. "

Dr. D.S. Williams, Professor of Theology and culture at Union Seminary in New York, declared at a major interdenominational conference in Minneapolis: "I don't think we need a theory of atonement at all. I don't think we need folks hanging on crosses and blood dripping and weird stuff." Dr. Williams is not a United Methodist, but there are Methodist students at Union Seminary. Other people trivialize the cross, reducing it to just a meaningless piece of jewelry, often worn as a necklace or in the case of baseball players dangling from the ear. Madonna's frivolous use of the cross has spurred its marketability. A jewelry store clerk asked a customer if she wanted the plain cross necklace or "the one with the little man on it."

In this secular society in which the cross is still a scandal for many, it is my supreme privilege to declare the message which is the heartbeat of our faith. In our own Methodist Book of Discipline, Article XX reads as follows: "The offering of Christ once made, is that perfect redemption, propitiation, and satisfaction for all the sins of the whole world, both original and actual, and there is none other satisfaction for sin but that alone."

Our own Bishop Ken Carder has written this: "In the life, death and resurrection of Jesus the Christ, God did everything necessary to overcome all that separates us from God, from our true selves, and from one another.”

Finally, hear the scripture, I Peter 3:18: "For Christ died for sins once for all, the righteous for the unrighteous, to bring you to God."

As you can tell from your sermon outline, there are two messages from our texts which I have the joy of declaring. The first is this:

Salvation Is Available To All.

God desires that everyone be saved. That includes O.J. Simpson, Susan Smith, and Timothy McVeigh. Verse 4 of our Timothy text reads: "God desires everyone to be saved and to come to the knowledge of the truth."

What is salvation? It means that the disease of sin working in me is brought under control. I am restored to right relationship with God, myself, and other people. My eternal residence in heaven is assured. I am changed into a useful instrument for God. Salvation includes all of that.

We are in the center of Memphis, a place of spectacular beauty and crippling poverty, a city that includes both burgeoning wealth and deep discord. The greatest single need in Memphis is the Gospel.

Can we find enough common ground with Memphis so as to offer the Gospel to everybody? It's tough because we're much whiter, more affluent, and more traditional than most of Memphis. But just think of our potential for Christ if we could become more hospitable for different types of people.

Just suppose we could triple our number of recovery groups for wounded persons who are discovering here that the grace of God is that glue which heals all broken people, including the divorced, the abused, and the addicted.

Just imagine if even 5 percent of our membership were African American! What possibilities that would open for mission and reconciliation. What if we could plant some house churches in some of the most difficult areas of the city? Couldn't these be outposts of Christ Church? There is no law that says you have to be present at 4488 Poplar Avenue to be part of Christ Church.

Wouldn't it be wonderful if homosexual persons could perceive clearly that we care for them deeply as fellow human beings. We all are sinners saved by grace; the only ways in which we differ are the symptoms of that sin. Can't we assure all persons that we won't beat them over the heads with their sin? You know, God cleans his fish after he catches them. After a person enters into an intimate love relationship with God through Jesus Christ, that person with God's help will change anything in order to keep that relationship going and growing. Can't we assure all persons that they are welcome here regardless of lifestyle or socio-economic status or race? The Gospel is for everybody.

The second message I am privileged to declare is this:

Salvation Was Purchased by the Blood of Jesus Christ, The Lamb of God.

In the Revelation text is this description of the Lamb of God In verse 9: "You were slaughtered and by your blood you ransomed for God saints from every tribe and language and people and nation."

Throughout Old Testament times, lambs were offered as sacrifices for sin. Jesus came as the perfect Lamb of God whose death on the cross became the all-sufficient sacrifice for all time, for all believers. When John the Baptist saw Jesus coming to him at the Jordon River, John said, "Behold the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world."

That wonderful retired bishop, Earl Hunt, has declared: "I do not consider myself first of all either a preacher or a bishop. I am primarily a sinner saved by grace, one for whom Jesus Christ died."

He continues: "The early Methodists believed profoundly that a human being without God is a lost person. To them sin was as basic as life itself and common as collard greens in Georgia."

Now, I can just hear the experts saying, "Brother Bill, don't talk that way to baby-boomers. They are in church to have their egos propped up and caressed, not to be told they are sinners."

My response is that the truth will set us free. If you never face your diagnosis, you'll never find a cure. Just imagine that you have had your annual physical examination and the doctor found a cancerous tumor. But he decided that he would not tell you because the news might upset you or distract you from your busy schedule. So, he keeps his discovery a secret and prescribes for you vitamin B tablets, exercise, and books on positive thinking. Once the truth was known, you would sue him for malpractice.

You should sue me for malpractice if I don't remind us occasionally that we are all sinners who apart from a personal relationship with Christ will go straight to hell. Now here is the good news: Jesus Christ, the Lamb of God, has been sacrificed for our sin. If we repent and trust in him as Savior and Lord, all of our sin is washed away. The living Christ- Spirit saturates and transforms us. Our places in heaven are reserved and guaranteed.

But, you ask, how did the death of Jesus Christ atone for the sins of the world? There are several metaphors in the Bible used to describe atonement--ransom, substitution, expiation, and sacrifice. But the full meaning of the cross over-reaches all of them.

On Calvary a great supernatural deed was done, but I'm afraid to trust my little mind and limited vocabulary to describe the mystery. The cross is vastly bigger than our ideas about it. Though I can't comprehend it completely, I have been saved by it.

Listen to the way our Methodist founder John Wesley expressed it: "The Methodist trusts in Christ alone for his salvation. The Methodist knows that the blood of Jesus has cleansed him from all sin. Through Christ and Christ alone the Methodist has received forgiveness for his sins."

The best illustration of the cross is a story told long ago by that great British preacher, Charles Hadley Spurgeon. The radio newscaster Paul Harvey tells this story each year before Easter. Spurgeon was walking the streets of London deep in thought when he saw a young street boy. The lad was carrying an old, bent birdcage. Inside was a tiny field sparrow. Spurgeon stopped the boy and asked him what he was going to do with the bird.

"Well," the boy said, "I think I'll play with it for a while, and then when I'm tired of playing with it- I think I'll kill it." He made that last comment with a wicked grin.

Moved with compassion for the bird, Spurgeon asked, "How much would you sell me that bird for?"

"You don't want this bird, mister," the boy said with a chuckle. "It's just a bloody field sparrow." But then he saw that the old gentleman was serious. "You can have this bird for two pounds," he said slyly. Two pounds at that time would be worth more than a hundred dollars today--an astronomical price for a bird worth only pennies. Spurgeon paid the price, and let the bird go free.

The next morning, Easter Sunday morning, an empty bird cage sat on the pulpit of the great Metropolitan Tabernacle where Spurgeon preached. "Let me tell you about this cage," Spurgeon said as he began the sermon. Then he recounted the story about the little boy and how he had purchased the bird from him at a high cost.

Then with great seriousness Spurgeon said, "I tell you this story because that's just what Jesus did for us. You see, an evil specter called sin had us caged up and unable to escape. But then Jesus came up to sin and said, 'What are you going to do with those people in that cage?'

"'These people?' sin answered with a laugh. 'I'm going to teach them to hate each other. Then I'll play with them until I'm tired of them--and then I'll kill them.'

Jesus asked, "'How much would it cost to buy them back?' "with a sly grin, Sin said, 'You don't want these people, Jesus. They'll only hate you and spit on you. They'll even nail you to a cross. But if you do want to buy them, it'll cost you all your tears and all your blood--your very life!’”

Spurgeon concluded, "That, ladies and gentlemen, is just what Jesus did for us on the cross. He paid the ultimate, immeasurable price for all who would believe, that we might be free from the inescapable penalty of death."

You have just heard the heartbeat of the Gospel, the best news that has ever warmed the hearts of humanity. If you have never personally received the sacrifice of the Lamb of God, come down front in just a moment, kneel here, and whisper to Christ these words: "I a sinner receive you as Savior and will follow you as Lord."

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by Bill Bouknight