A God who never “walks it back”
John 6:60 On hearing it, many
of his disciples said, "This is a hard teaching. Who can accept it?"
61 Aware that his disciples were grumbling about this, Jesus said to
them, "Does this offend you? 62 What if you see the Son of Man
ascend to where he was before! 63 The Spirit gives life; the flesh
counts for nothing. The words I have spoken to you are spirit and they are
life. 64 Yet there are some of you who do not believe." For
Jesus had known from the beginning which of them did not believe and who would
betray him. 65 He went on to say, "This is why I told you that
no one can come to me unless the Father has enabled him." 66
From this time many of his disciples turned back and no longer followed him.
67 "You do not want to leave too, do you?" Jesus asked the
Twelve. 68 Simon Peter answered him, "Lord, to whom shall we
go? You have the words of eternal life. 69 We believe and know that
you are the Holy One of God."
Today we come to the
conclusion of Jesus’ teaching in His Bread of Life sermon in John chapter 6. We
began in the wilderness with Jesus feeding the 5,000. Then we moved with Jesus
across the Sea of Galilee into the village of Capernaum. Now Jesus ends His
teaching in the Capernaum synagogue.
Apparently, the
people who followed Jesus across the sea continued asking Him questions about
eating and teaching. But then we hear that after this day, that stopped. John
records that “from this time many of his disciples turned back and no longer
followed him.” Many who were following Jesus walked away.
Why? Well in their
own words they said, “This is a hard teaching. Who can accept it?” What had
Jesus told them? He told them that He was not going to be their Bread King
(John 6:34-35). He told them that His Father is the One who had granted the
Israelites manna in the dessert (6:32). He taught that they had to believe in Him
in order to have eternal life (6:40). He opened their eyes to see that He was
the One who had seen God the Father and He would be ascending to see the Father
again (6:46). He caused them to argue among themselves when they thought they
were to cannibalize Him by eating His flesh and drinking His blood (6:52).
It wasn’t that Jesus’ words were
too hard to understand. The people understood full well what He was saying. Neither
their knowledge of Old Testament history nor their intelligence on applying it
to their lives was the issue. This was a faith issue. These words of Jesus were
too hard to accept; too hard to believe. These particular words of Jesus were
too different. That He had come down from heaven. That He is God’s Son. That
their flesh as descendants of Abraham meant nothing. That instead they must eat
the flesh of Jesus by faith in order to have everything. These words must
certainly have been too offensive. Many walked away.
Notice
what does not happen here. Jesus doesn’t “walk it back.” That’s a phrase that
has become popular recently. When politicians or comedians or athletes or media
personalities say something that creates an uproar or offends someone, they “walk
it back.” They try to explain what they said in terms that are more acceptable;
they try to soften it, take the edge off, become a little more vague; all in an
attempt to try to settle things down. “I didn’t really mean it that way.” “You
misunderstood what I was saying.” “My statement was taken out of context.” That’s
“walking it back.”
But
Jesus doesn’t walk anything back from what He said. You might think He would
want to, especially given that many of His disciples are leaving. But, no. He
doesn’t say, “You misunderstood me.” Or, “You took it out of context.” Or, “You
only heard the edited version.” He doesn’t tone it down. He doesn’t try to
explain Himself further or make His teaching more acceptable, more palatable.
That’s
because He meant what He said.
But
Jesus wasn’t just offensive to the people in the Capernaum synagogue. His Words
still offend people today. He offends men when He calls them to be leaders in
their homes and not spiritual wimps. He offends women when He calls them to be
submissive and trusting of their husbands to make the right decisions. He
offends children when He teaches them to respect their parents, even when their
parents are mean or absent. Closed communion, baptizing infants, the Holy Trinity,
God’s design for marriage, humility, confessing of sins, etc. These are all offensive
to us in our liberal, tolerant, accepting society. These are all offensive to
our own arrogant sinful nature.
Those
teachings of God make many grumble today just like in Jesus’ day. Those
doctrines are just not popular or mainstream. Those things make people get up
and walk away today.
I’ve
had people walk out of adult confirmation class because of fellowship
discussions. I’ve noticed people walk out of church when God called
homosexuality a sin. I’ve seen people walking out of counseling when God called
their choices “sinful.” Saddest of all is that I’ve even witnessed people walk
out of their faith when God’s Word no longer matched their thinking.
That
can happen to any of us. At any time we can be like the people in the synagogue
who grumbled; like the disciples who stopped following Jesus; like Judas who
continued to follow so He might betray Jesus. At any point, when we allow our
feelings to be the starting point, or our wisdom to be the influencing factor,
or our happiness to be the goal, then we are in danger of walking away from
Jesus.
But
truth is never a popularity contest. Jesus isn’t trying to get elected as
Savior or leader of Israel. He isn’t trolling for votes. He isn’t changing His stance
at every interview trying to gain more followers.
Our
sinful nature and our unbelieving world wants Jesus to walk any of it back …
all of it back.
Jesus
doesn’t walk back on His meaning in order to gain followers. He doesn’t walk
back on His words to appear less offensive. Jesus isn’t concerned with
popularity. He is concerned with truth, with life, and with eternal salvation.
Jesus
did not walk back from an incarnation of humbling Himself to take human flesh
into His divine nature. He did not walk back from receiving a sinner’s baptism
in the Jordan River. He did not walk back from confronting the father of lies
in the desert. He did not walk back from the scouring or the thorny crown or
the tears, the agony, or the wrath of His heavenly Father. He did not walk back
from death on a cross. Though many walked away from Him, He would not walk away
from doing any of these things.
Just
as Jesus did not walk away from any of the sin He had to take upon Himself, nor
does He walk away from you, the sinner. You have come here after another week
of wallowing in your sin. Another week of failing to do what you should have
done – failing to love God and serve your neighbor. Another week of doing what
you should not have done – loving and serving yourself. Another week of
half-truths and parsed words to get what you want. Another week of unclean
desires, wicked thoughts, grudges and bitterness. You’ve come here to this
Racine synagogue after marinating in your sins.
You
walk in here like a bum off the streets of hell … and your Savior does not walk
back from you. Instead, He has been waiting at the door for you. He embraces you
with His love. He welcomes you back as a lost brother or sister. He kisses you
with forgiveness. He washes you from head to toe in His living waters. He
invites you to the Feast He has prepared for you. He came into this world for
you and He’s still coming for you. And there’s no place that He’d rather be
than right here, right now.
That
kind of liberal use of His love is offensive to many. They grumble that God
accepts murderers and child molesters and prostitutes and dead-beat dads and alcoholic
mothers and … and … you into His Kingdom. What is your response to this liberal
love combined with conservative doctrine? You can walk away like so many had or
you can be like Peter. He heard the same words everybody else heard, but He
accepted them with humble faith. He gave one of the most beautiful confessions
of faith that you will ever hear.
When Jesus asks His disciples, “You
do not want to leave too, do you?” Peter answers, “Lord, to whom shall we go?”
(John 6:67) Peter was convinced he had found something he could get nowhere
else. What had Peter already heard Jesus say by this point?
Peter heard Jesus teach Nicodemus
that unless a person is born again of water and the Spirit, he cannot enter the
Kingdom of God. He heard Jesus announce the Samaritan woman at Jacob’s well
that His words were like living water. He saw Jesus heal a man with a shriveled
hand on the Sabbath, sticking it to the Pharisees. He watched in awe as Jesus
stood in the boat and calmed the stormy sea. He witnessed Jesus driving out
demons and raising a dead girl back to life. The words that Peter heard from
Jesus had power and they had life. Peter knew in his believing heart that he
could hear words like that nowhere else. That’s why Peter confessed to Jesus, “You
have the words of eternal life. We believe and know that you are the Holy One
of God” (John 6:68-69).
If you haven’t figured it out by
now, Jesus doesn’t change. He is the same yesterday, today and forever. He
words are eternal. His teachings are life-giving. He isn’t going to walk it back
on anything He has said or done.
That means you can have one of two
reactions. You can be like so many of the disciples who grumbled and walked
away from Jesus. Or you can be like Peter who heard those same wonderful,
offensive words and accepted them by faith.
Jesus will never, ever walk it back.
He is faithful to His Father and steadfast for you. And so His calls goes out
still today – don’t walk away, repent. Don’t walk away, listen. Don’t walk
away, believe. Hear His words of eternal life. To walk away is to walk back to
sin and death. To stay is to walk back to your baptism and remember your
adoption there as a child of God. To stay is to walk back to the mercy promised
you in absolution. To stay is to walk back to the communion rail to eat His
flesh and drink His blood.
Where else are you going go? Jesus
alone has the words of eternal life. Amen.
Comments
Post a Comment