Pastor Aaron preaches a powerful sermon on what Jesus has commanded us to do, “Go, therefore, and make disciples of all the nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit” Matthew 28:18-19.
You can listen to the whole service, music and all or watch the sermon.
Last Sunday we sang our tradition Christmas Hymns. I love these old songs and thought I would share them with you. As you listen to these hymns, please remember the reason for them. To give praise, honor and glory to Christ Jesus, our Savior, Lord and King. Merry Christmas!
Today we are at the bottom of John 4 and Jesus has finished His work with the people of Sychar. We left off last week with the scripture telling us “Many more believed because of His word” (John 4:41). It is telling that with our Savior doing the work of the Father, many but not all believed, because of His word. Darkness lives in the hearts of men. We see it every day in our society. It is the same now as it was back then. And we have the unparalleled luxury of having a complete Bible that we can read and know what God wants of us.
For most of our history man could not read, or if he could, the Bible was available only to the Church. The Church at the time was Catholic and they didn’t want you to read the bible. In fact they would quite often burn you at the stake for preaching what the Bible actually said and did so with great regularity. This started in the early 11th century when 1022 people who were considered heretics, were burned at the stake. This continued until the late 1700’s when they switched over to hanging people. The Catholic church is still not a fan of you actually reading the bible.
My point in this is, we have it so easy to know what God wants of us. Most everybody can read and has a Bible in their possession. Nobody is burning you at the stake for your Faith. We live in a golden age of wealth, comparatively, and knowledge and up until the last 2 months, mostly free of persecution for that faith.
The people of Sychar had none of those things. They came with the knowledge of their ancestors, which turned out to be mostly wrong, but came to the well to hear a man who turned out to be God, and many of them listened and believed. Not all, but many. God wants none to be lost but knows the darkness that lives in men’s hearts. Jesus, when He was here, said the path is narrow and few find it. (Matthew 7:1) Therefore work out your salvation with fear and trembling. (Philippians 2:12) Don’t be content with sitting in your pew and letting salvation slip away from you. Many people have spent their whole adult lives going to church, most of the time, happy to let the preacher say what they say, but never doing anything about it themselves. Faith without works of the Spirit is a dead Faith. (James 2:26)
After 2 days, Jesus leaves the people of Sychar and heads to Galilee. (John 4:43) The Galileans receive him, not for what He has said, but because they have seen what He did, for they were at the Jerusalem Passover Feast. (John 4:43)
From Matthew Poole’s Commentary, we get this insight:
When he came not to Nazareth, but to some parts of Galilee, the Galilaeans entertained him hospitably; and this they did because of those miracles they had seen wrought by him at the passover feast, where Christ was, John 2:1-25. For these Galilaeans, though they lived at a great distance from Jerusalem, yet were observant of the law which commanded all the males of the Jews to be present at that solemnity. The Samaritans saw no miracle, but believed Christ upon his word. The Galilaeans also received Christ, but their seeing of his miracles at the feast is given as the cause of their receiving him; their faith was not so noble as that of the Samaritans. Blessed (saith our Saviour) are they who have not seen, and yet have believed.
The people of Sychar never saw what the Galileans did, but believed. These Galileans politely accepted this Rabbi into their midst, but mostly out of respect for His entertainment value. Everybody loves to see a miracle happen before them. It will give them something to talk about for days. These Jews had head knowledge of what Jesus had done, but their cultural arrogance of them being descendants of Abraham, kept that knowledge from getting to their heart. Pride of self and arrogance of who you belonged to. Look at the news and see the same thing.
Jesus testified that a prophet has no honor in his own country. (John 4:45) The Samaritans had accepted Him as Lord. His own people, the Jews, tolerated Him as an entertainment venue.
Jesus travels on to Cana of Galilee, where His first miracle occurred. We know it as the wedding where the water got changed into wine. Here we find a royal official had heard that Jesus was in the area and went to seek him out. This royal official had a son who was sick in Capernaum. (John 4:46)
The map gives you a pretty good reference as to where Samaria, Cana and Capernaum are in relation to each other. Lots of walking but not that far apart.
Here we find God working out His Providence in a Jew, who if everything had been going fine, would not have bothered much to seek out Jesus. Most of us would think of somebody who we know and has a sick kid, we feel sorry for him, but are kinda glad it is him not us. His bad luck to have to have a sick kid. And if we are the incurious type, that’s as far as it goes. Some of us would ponder what did this guy do to have this kind of bad luck? A sort of karma type thing. This is how the secular world works. We don’t acknowledge God working in our lives and some of us might have entertained thoughts of not being real happy at a God that would let bad things happen in this world. I’ve got news for you, God is not real happy with you and your disbelief.
The way things work is this: God, through Providence, Grace and Mercy will test us. James says this, “Count it all joy, my brothers, when you meet trials of various kinds, for you know that the testing of your faith produces steadfastness. And let steadfastness have its full effect, that you may be perfect and complete, lacking in nothing.” (James 1:2-4)
A very good example of testing comes from Genesis. After these things God tested Abraham and said to him, “Abraham!” And he said, “Here am I.” He said, “Take your son, your only son Isaac, whom you love, and go to the land of Moriah, and offer him there as a burnt offering on one of the mountains of which I shall tell you.” (Genesis 22:1-24)
Another example of something that just happened to a friend of ours back in Kansas. This friend had a lovely wife who was a believer. She went to sleep one night and never woke up again. She was in her late 30’s and left a family and friends in shock with the sudden realization that none of us knows the span of our days. Why God chose this woman and this time, we do not know. But we do know that God works out all things for His Glory and our good. She was called home and we are left with a hard lesson of where God is in our lives and how we would use this hard lesson to further our faith, convict us of where we have strayed, and strengthen us in our Love of the Lord. Live each day like it could very well be your last and then ponder on how that would change how you live.
This royal official had a son that was sick. Because of the love for his son, he sought out the only person that would have the effect he was looking for. (John 4:47) Love conquers all, including this Jew’s reluctance to consider Jesus as the Messiah. (1 Corinthians 13:4-7)
Jesus gives the royal official a firm lesson, for He knows the hearts of men. “Unless you people see signs and wonders, you simply will not believe.” (John 4:48) Another test and at this point the royal official is ready to take his head knowledge and apply it to his heart. He tells Jesus to come before my son dies. (John 4:49). As Jesus sees into men’s hearts and sees the change that occurred and knows that this guy’s heart is now involved, He does what only Jesus could do, He heals his son. “Go; your son is alive.”
And the man believed and left to go back home and see his son. As he was going home, he met slaves that told him his son lives. (John 4:51) He inquires at what time did my son recover? They told him “Yesterday at the seventh hour the fever left him.” (John 4:52) His heart knew that when Jesus said “Your Son Lives” it did indeed happen at that moment and he believed as did his entire household. (John 4:53)
This was the second sign that Jesus performed when He had come from Judea into Galilee. (John 4:54)
So, what did we learn from this lesson? God will test you, to see if you are wheat or weed. Sometimes this test comes at a cost to you, would you learn the lesson needed any other way? If it takes a test, and it did with me, I pray that you will be tested mightily, so that you would truly believe. Remember what was said in Revelation 3:16 ‘So because you are lukewarm, and neither hot nor cold, I will spit you out of My mouth.
I do not want you to be spit out of God’s mouth. I want you to get off the dime and truly enjoy the Grace and Mercy of God’s Love and not let your salvation slip past you by inaction and not totally accepting Jesus as Lord and Savior. The Joy of Salvation is worth the cost. You’ll have to trust me on that. Now go out and serve your King!
This Sunday was the last one before Christmas, and because of that, the old familiar hymns were brought out. Pastor Aarons sermon was on Matthew 2:1-12, also very familiar. A good service in which we praised our Lord.