Getting over ourselves
Matthew
9:35 Jesus
went through all the towns and villages, teaching in their synagogues,
preaching the good news of the kingdom and healing every disease and sickness.
36 When he saw the crowds, he had compassion on them, because they were
harassed and helpless, like sheep without a shepherd. 37 Then he
said to his disciples, "The harvest is plentiful but the workers are few.
38 Ask the Lord of the harvest, therefore, to send out workers into his
harvest field." 10:1 He called his twelve disciples to him and gave
them authority to drive out evil spirits and to heal every disease and
sickness. 2 These are the names of the twelve apostles: first, Simon
(who is called Peter) and his brother Andrew; James son of Zebedee, and his
brother John; 3 Philip and Bartholomew; Thomas and Matthew the tax
collector; James son of Alphaeus, and Thaddaeus; 4 Simon the Zealot
and Judas Iscariot, who betrayed him. 5 These twelve Jesus sent out
with the following instructions: "Do not go among the Gentiles or enter
any town of the Samaritans. 6 Go rather to the lost sheep of Israel .
7 As you go, preach this message: 'The kingdom of heaven is near.' 8
Heal the sick, raise the dead, cleanse those who have leprosy, drive out
demons. Freely you have received, freely give. 9 Do not take along
any gold or silver or copper in your belts; 10 take no bag for the
journey, or extra tunic, or sandals or a staff; for the worker is worth his
keep. 11 "Whatever town or village you enter, search for some
worthy person there and stay at his house until you leave. 12 As you
enter the home, give it your greeting. 13 If the home is deserving,
let your peace rest on it; if it is not, let your peace return to you. 14
If anyone will not welcome you or listen to your words, shake the dust off your
feet when you leave that home or town. 15 I tell you the truth, it
will be more bearable for Sodom and Gomorrah on the
day of judgment than for that town. 16 I am sending you out like
sheep among wolves. Therefore be as shrewd as snakes and as innocent as doves.
17 "Be on your guard against men; they will hand you over to the
local councils and flog you in their synagogues. 18 On my account
you will be brought before governors and kings as witnesses to them and to the
Gentiles. 19 But when they arrest you, do not worry about what to
say or how to say it. At that time you will be given what to say, 20
for it will not be you speaking, but the Spirit of your Father speaking through
you.
Last
week the Lord blessed and challenged us with around 100 kids ages 3-13 for our fourth
New Hope Lutheran Soccer Camp. Each day we taught the kids various dribbling
moves like step-overs, v-pulls, hook
turns, pull backs, scissors and the Maradonna. The kids were probably thinking
what you’re thinking: “You’ve got to be kidding! What are all those things? I
can never learn all those moves. Impossible! I can’t do that!” But the coaches
and their assistants were able to help them and train them so that over time
they could accomplish great things.
(Although we basically taught the 3-4 year-olds, “This
is a soccer ball. There’s the goal. And don’t pick the dandelions.” And they were
probably thinking: “You’ve got to be kidding!”)
You’ve got to be kidding! I think that had to be one
of the first thoughts to race through the minds of the twelve disciples when
Jesus told them what He was sending them out to do. Did you hear that list?
Heal the sick, raise the dead, cleanse lepers and drive out demons. Sure, they
had seen Jesus do these things, but ... we can’t do that!
Well, they were right. They had to learn what every
pastor has to learn and what every Christian has to learn: to get over
yourself. It wouldn’t be them doing these things. It wouldn’t be anything in
them that would qualify them or enable them or empower them to be disciples or
apostles. Not their learning, their scholarship, their leadership, their
charisma, their dashing good looks, or anything else in them. All those things
are good and useful, but it is only the power and authority of Christ that would
accomplish these things. The very power and authority Christ had given to them.
But first they had to learn to get over themselves, to get over their doubts
and fears, and do what had been given them to do ... and have Christ work
through them. Then they would accomplish great things.
They needed to watch Jesus. As He went through all the
towns and villages, Jesus saw shepherd-less sheep who were on their way to
hell, and He was determined to rescue as many of them as possible. He
compassionately reached out to their souls which were held captive by sin.
Jesus saw them as prisoners of Satan and under the death sentence of hell.
Without Him, they were hopeless and helpless.
Jesus wanted His disciples to share in His vision and
work. He wanted them to have the same compassion and passion for saving lost
souls. He wanted them to pray for more workers. They would then be the answer
to their own prayers as Jesus called them into His ministry of the Word.
God would accomplish great things through these
disciples. But it wouldn’t be anything personal that would win souls for
Christ. As if to emphasize this point, Jesus continues with a description of
how they are to go, and what its going to be like out there. Don’t take any
supplies, He says. Rely on what you are given. I am sending you out as sheep in
the midst of wolves. You will be arrested. You will be dragged into courts. You
will be flogged. It just keeps getting worse and worse! First, a list of
impossible tasks to do, and then do them in the midst of an impossible
situation. What had they signed up for? Discipleship never seemed so …
impossible … so deadly.
Precisely. For if they are to be followers of Jesus,
where are they following Him to? The cross. They, too, must die. They must get
over themselves (or in other words, die to themselves), so that they live in
Christ. In Him and His Word alone. Relying solely on Him. For it is His work,
not theirs. His Word, not theirs. His authority, not theirs. His mission and
harvest, not theirs. And the less of them and the more of Him, the better.
Last Saturday, I poured water over a little girl’s
head at her baptism. On Monday, I preached for the funeral for the son of our
members. On Wednesday night, three adults joined our congregation through adult
confirmation. I will be meeting soon with some members to do family counseling,
pre-marriage counseling and counseling for addictions. The only way any of that
work is a benefit to anybody is that the only tool I have in my pastoral
toolbox is my Bible – the Word of God.
So Jesus sends out the twelve with nothing else but
His Word. He is teaching them that they are unable to do any of this on their
own. Great things will be accomplished only as Christ and the Holy Spirit work
in them and speak through them. They only needed to go.
Pastors need to learn this, as well. We need to learn
to get over ourselves. For we are not in control. The Word and work and power
are Christ’s. Our church is growing, not because of anything in the pastor –
because he’s so eloquent or energetic or good looking or tall – but it is only
by the grace of God, the power of His Word, the strength of His sacraments and
His blessing upon this congregation.
As pastors, we need simply to do what we are given to
do, speak what we are given to speak, and give what we are given to give. God
alone grants the growth, gives faith, and changes hearts and lives. No pastor
can do these things. Only the Word and power and authority of Christ can use
water to cast out demons and raise a person dead in sin to a new life. Only the
Word and power and authority of Christ can heal those who are leprous and sick
with sin through the words of absolution and forgiveness. Only the Word and
power and authority of Christ can cause bread and wine to become the very body
and blood of Jesus to feed and strengthen Christians with the faith and
forgiveness we need for this life. Only the Word and power and authority of
Christ can fill preaching with the power to grab hold of hell-bent sinners on
the road to hell and turn them in repentance toward the pathway to heaven.
Pastors need to learn: “I can’t do that!” And no amount of learning,
scholarship, leadership, charisma, or dashing good looks will be able to change
that. Those things are good and useful, but cannot take the place of the power
and authority of Christ.
But not just disciples, apostles, and pastors need to
learn this – so do you. You as the priesthood of the baptized. You have not
been given the same task list as the disciples or pastors, but the list Jesus
has given all of you sounds just as impossible: Love your enemies; pray for
those who persecute you; turn the other cheek; don’t worry; don’t judge; give
to the needy; be a perfect father, mother, son, daughter, husband, wife,
worker, friend, neighbor and citizen; pray for the ministry of the Word,
support this ministry work with your offerings, and be involved in doing this
work – all while carrying your cross.” To which our response should be: “You’ve
got to be kidding! We can’t do that!”
In reality, we’re not even close to doing these
things. We hate our enemies, forget to pray, do good mostly to those who can do
good back to us, fill up our lives with worry and concerns, and take the easy
way out. Satan wants us to regard any kind of increase of ministry support in
our prayers, time or offerings as being a horrible burden that we ought to
avoid. Plus, we are far, far from being perfect in any area of our life. And
the kicker is that despite all this sin and failure, how often don’t we have
the audacity to look around, filled with pride, and think: “I’m not doing so
bad!” Friends, the road to hell is a crowded one indeed.
All of us need to get over ourselves. And if pride is
to be full of ourselves, then it is repentance that empties us of ourselves.
Repentance is the road of discipleship that takes us to the cross and kills us.
To confess that we are that bad. We are the persecutors, not just the
persecuted. We are the wolves who bite and devour one another. We put people on
trial in our own courts with laws and standards of our own making, and sit as
our own one-man judge and jury. We don’t drag people before kings – we take on
that role ourselves, with our condemning thoughts and words, assuming the worst
about others, and taking delight in our superiority. We keep the gospel to
ourselves, either by bigotry or selfishness or complacency or just plain
laziness. Yes, Jesus sent the disciples out as sheep among wolves because He
sent them to people like us.
But if Jesus sends apostles and pastors to people like
us, it is because He came for people like us. Jesus sends them to us to give
Himself to us. For He is the Lamb of God who came into the midst of a world of
sinful wolves. He came into this world with nothing as God wrapped in human
flesh and then wrapped once more in swaddling clothes. He came to heal the
sick, bind up the broken-hearted, preach the Gospel and be the Shepherd for
lost sheep.
Jesus is the One hauled before Governor Pilate and
King Herod. He was the One flogged by men and then devoured by death on the
cross, that in His resurrection from that death, He defeats all that defeats
us. Death, disobedience, the devil and damnation – all swallowed up in Christ’s
victory. His life becomes our life. Jesus changes us from wolves into sheep and
sanctifies sinners into saints through the resurrecting forgiveness of our
sins. He shakes the dust off His feet when people reject Him, but He gives His
three-fold blessing of peace upon those who welcome Him.
You’ve prayed it thousands times: “Thy kingdom come.”
Let’s encourage one another to mean it. Jesus’ Kingdom comes when we not only
believe in Jesus Christ ourselves but also share the message so clearly and
warmly that another lost soul comes to faith as well.
All Jesus’ sheep will be gathered into His fold. His Kingdom
will come. He will accomplish that either with us or without us. He doesn’t
need us, but He does want to use us. He graciously wants to give us the
privilege of being involved in this all-important work – work with blessed
results that will last into eternity. And the first thing He asks us to do is
exceedingly simple and will cost us nothing but a little of our time. He tells
us to pray for workers for His harvest field. In response to our prayers, He
will provide them.
And our Lord’s first way of answering our prayers is
to send us out into the spiritual harvest fields. We become the answer to our
own prayers.
Realize that God doesn’t expect everybody to be able
to lead like Joshua or preach like Peter or pray like Paul. But he does expect
you to use the gifts that you have been given and make use of the opportunities
He sends. He wants you to plant the seeds for His harvest, call to the lost and
wandering sheep, and support ministry work with your time and offerings.
I have coached soccer at WLS for the past 10 years. By
the end of the soccer season, the players are always amazed at what they can
now do. They can’t perform every move or make every pass or shot perfectly, but
they are better. More confident. Able to do the things they couldn’t do before.
(Although some are still picking dandelions.)
The same is true for us. Like Jesus’ disciples – because
Jesus is with us and training us – we are able to begin to do things we could
never imagine doing before. Maybe not everything. And certainly not perfectly.
But now we find ourselves helping, serving, sharing, loving, praying,
forgiving, believing, trusting, evangelizing. And why can we do all these
things? Because we are getting over ourselves and relying solely upon Christ.
Amen.
Watch the sermon on YouTube of Getting over yourselves.
Watch the sermon on YouTube of Getting over yourselves.
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