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Sermon For The Fourth Sunday After Epiphany - Year B
Deuteronomy 18:15-20; I Corinthians 8:1-13; Mark 1:21-28
"The Authority of Jesus"


READING:  Deuteronomy 18:15-20; I Corinthians 8:1-13; Mark 1:21-28
SERMON :  "The Authority of Jesus"

Rev. Richard J. Fairchild
b-or04se
    
Today I want to remind you about who God is and who Jesus is.

This may seem like a strange topic, 
         after all we here are Christians - or at least we try to be,
          and we know a lot about both God and about Jesus,
             yet, be that as it may, I want you to listen to what
                 I say today and consider what you believe and who you
                    believe as you strive to walk in the way of God,
                        the way of truth, faith, and obedience.

The simple fact is that many of us Christians often approach God,
we often relate to God, without any real thought about who he is.

We pray to God as we would talk to a loving Parent who cannot deny
         to his children anything that they want,
          and we call upon God as if he was a store keeper,
          a store keeper whose job it is to give to all who ask
             the kind of blessings that we both need and desire.

That is good as far as it goes, God is like a loving Parent,
         and God does give us those blessings we both need and desire,
          but, having said this, our knowledge of God often does not
             go far enough.

Familiarity with the giving and forgiving side of God has, in some
senses, bred a kind of ignorance.

We tend to forget the sheer size of God,
         we tend to forget the awesome power of God,
          we tend to forget the absoluteness of God,
             and truly, in the long run, 
                 all too many of us forget what the bible calls 
                    the beginning of wisdom:
                        we forget the fear of God.

The Fear of God is not very fashionable today.

Many of us have come to believe that Hell is simply a metaphor,
         a description of the pain & suffering we experience here & now,
          and others have convinced themselves that God's judgements
             are always good ones - good in the sense that God will
                 not punish us for our sins or make us pay for our
                    transgressions if we believe in him and in Jesus.

Indeed, almost all of us have become so familiar with God's mercy,
         that we have forgotten the significance of that mercy,
          we have forgotten that God is to be feared and respected,
             we have forgotten that with God there is judgement,
                 we have forgotten the demanding Holiness of our God,
                    and as a result - we have become foolish
                        while thinking ourselves to be wise.
Over and over again the scriptures say:  The fear of God is the
                                         beginning of Wisdom.

Think on it: The fear of God is the beginning of wisdom.

In the reading from Deuteronomy today Moses reminded Israel of one
of its earlier encounters with God's awesome power and presence.

He reminded the people of how,
         as a result of their encounter with God at Mount Horeb,
          they had asked God to appoint him as a prophet
             and promised to obey all that God told him to tell them.

There at the foot of the mountain where the elders and all the
         leading men of the tribes of Israel had gone to wait 
          for Moses to bring them the Word of God,
             they had heard God's voice come out of the darkness while
                 the entire mountain blazed with fire,
                    and they had become afraid - 

In their fear the people had said to Moses:
         "Today we have seen that a man can live even if God speaks
         to him. But now, why should we die?  This great fire will
         consume us and we will die if we hear the voice of the Lord
         our God any longer.  Go near and listen to all that the Lord
         our God says.  Then tell us whatever the Lord our God tells
         you.  We will listen and obey."

And Moses had said in reply:
         "The Lord heard what you spoke to me and the Lord has said
         to me: "I have heard what this people said to you. 
         Everything that they said was good. Oh, that their hearts
         would be inclined to fear me and keep all my commandments
         always, so that it might go well with them and their
         children forever!"

Moses also said to them:   "Do not be afraid: God has come to
                           test you, so that the fear of God will
                           be with you to keep you from sinning.
 
The truth about God is that he has authority and he has power.
And further  - the fear of God is the beginning of wisdom.
                 - the fear of God is with us to keep us from sinning.

To their credit the people of Israel feared God.

When the people of Israel saw the power of God,
         a power revealed in the smoke and the cloud,
          a power revealed in the plagues upon Egypt,
             and in the destruction of the armies of Pharaoh,
                 they feared, and they were thankful to God.

And when the people of Israel heard God's voice come out of
         the darkness and the fire at Mount Sinai,
          they again feared him - and God approved of that fear.

And God, having approved of that fear, in his kindness
         appointed Moses as the one to speak for him to his people,
          he appointed Moses as a mediator, as a prophet,
             as one who was to proclaim all his words to the people 
                 so that they might obey those words and live.

Living, and living well, is what our faith is all about.
But who, my friends, can meet God face to face and live?

Even Moses himself could only listen to his voice,
         and even Moses, that Holy man, when he desired to see God,
          could only be given a glimpse of God's back,
             because to look at God face to face is to die.

God's goodness is so tremendous,
         his Holiness so total,
          that no evil can exist near it,
             
As the Sun gives its light for us to see but blinds us if
         we look directly at it,
          so God is so strong and so good that we cannot meet him face
             to face in this life and survive.

Thus Moses was made the spokesman for God, 
         he was made the prophet of God, a man with God's authority,
          because Israel needed such a prophet if it was to hear the
             word of God and live as God wanted and desired them to
                 live.

We too, my friends, need a prophet, if we are hear the word of God
         and live the life he intends.
          and God, in his mercy towards us, 
             has given us such a prophet.

And as we heard today in Deuteronomy, he promised through Moses to
raise up a another prophet like Moses from among us.

The word of God to Moses, the word meant for us was this:

         I will raise up for them a prophet like you from among their
         brothers.  I will put my words in his mouth and he will tell
         the people everything that I command him.  If anyone does
         not listen to my words that the prophet speaks in my name,
         I myself will call him to account."

Jesus is that prophet.

He came so that we might hear the word of God,
         and be able to meet God through him,
          and live.

When he first walked upon the face of this earth,
         the very first time he spoke in public,
          at the synagogue in Capernaum,
             the people recognized his authority,
                 they understood that he was special,
                    that he did not teach like others,
                        and they were amazed by him.
                           
They began to suspect that he was the promised prophet
and within a very few days they called him that.

Jesus had the authority of God, the authority of a prophet -
          and as that first account of Jesus' ministry also shows us,
          demons immediately recognized that authority and they
             responded to his command to depart from those that they
                 afflicted - -  calling Jesus as they did so:
                  "The Holy One of God".

Evil listened to Jesus,
Evil fled at the command of Jesus.
Evil feared Jesus.

Who do we respond too?  Who do we listen to?  Who do we fear?

Many of us listen to false prophets,
         we listen to those who tell us over and over again that
          God is not to be feared,
             and that we can do this thing or that thing,
                 and not worry about the consequences.

We listen to those who tell us with half truths and outright lies,
         that we do not need to obey every word of his Son,
          and that we do not need to believe in Him to be saved.

We listen to those who tell us that we do not need the church 
         that Jesus established through Peter,
          and that we can please God and be saved
             even when we stay at home and mock those who strive
                 to be faithful by worshipping in God's house.

We listen to those who tell us God does not judge his children,
         even though the Scriptures clearly reveal that God judges 
          those he loves and punishes those whom he favours.

We listen to false prophets who declare that God has said this and
         that to them -- even though their words about God contradict
          all that was said by both Moses and Jesus.

Some of us are like those at Corinth,
         those whom Paul rebuked.

We listen to people who speak of new truths,
         and when we hear their words about the spirits around us,
          or about how their souls have gone on trips to heaven,
             or about how we do not die and get raised, 
                 but instead are reincarnated,
                    we feel as we listen to this gibberish
that we have encountered a new and better wisdom
and we allow this so-called knowledge to blind us to the word that
Jesus not only taught, but also demonstrated.

Jesus is the Holy One of God,
         He is God's Son,
          and he came to show to us what we cannot see without
             his help.

He came to show us how to please God,
         He came to speak God's word to us,
          a word that gives life when obeyed,
             but promises death when ignored.

Who do we fear?
Who do we respond too?
Who do we listen to?

Jesus has the authority of God,
         He is our prophet and our mediator,
          He is the one who allows us to meet God and yet live.
             He is the word of God's uncompromising love,
                 a love that is both tender and compassionate,
                 and tough and strict.

Do not allow anyone to deceive you.

We can be friends of Jesus,
         Jesus can and does dwell in all those who sincerely call upon
         his name,
          and his love, the love of God, is meant to set us free.

But remember as well that the love Jesus proclaimed is godly love.
         
It is a love that casts out demons,
         a love that is willing to punish so that it might heal,
          a love that teaches so that it might bestow life
             and warn of death.

As I quoted two weeks ago about Caesar so I might quote about
Jesus:   He who rebels against the authority is rebelling
         against what God has instituted, and those who do so
         will bring judgement on themselves.

Brothers and sisters: do not be soft-minded about God.
         God is to be feared,
          and the prophet he has appointed for us is to be heard
          and obeyed - so that we might not sin.

Do not listen to the false prophets,
         those who tell you that love will forgive all,
          and that your soul is safe no matter what you believe or do.

The word of God that has come to us through Jesus is the word that
has always been proclaimed "Repent and believe in the good news of
God's kingdom"  

Repent and believe; and all will go well with you for God, the God
to be feared and respected, so spoke through Moses, and through
Jesus our Saviour and our Lord.  AMEN


copyright - Rev. Richard J. Fairchild 1997 - 2006
             please acknowledge the appropriate author if citing these sermons.



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