Saturday, October 20, 2012

Nine Meditations and a Sermon...from Armenia


Nine Meditations and a Sermon… from Armenia

On my teaching visit to Armenia, the first half of October 2012, I shared a small "meditation" each morning, for nine mornings, with the students and staff at the seminary, and also preached a few times, in churches on Sundays as well as the seminary's weekly chapel services. So I thought I'd share with you here (just as if "you were there!") some of what I regaled the Armenians with. First, the morning meditations, all on the Epistle to the Romans. Before that, however, a word of clarification: In some of these meditations, I use a phrase, "Israel-fanatics". By this term I intend nothing in the least connection to today's state of Israel or political controversies over it. I am talking strictly about the "judaizers" of Paul's time, the faction of Hebrew-Christian "missionaries" from Jerusalem who insisted on a Law-and-Israel-based Gospel, relegating Jesus to the status of mere channel to the "higher good" of perfect Law observance and, thereby, inclusion in the family of Abraham. I believe the term "Israel-fanatics" fairly well sums up what was ultimately wrong with their "gospel" and their theological "horizon".  

1. ROMANS  10:1-13


Today and in the coming mornings I want to take a look at the thinking of the apostle Paul, how he saw everything "fitting together" in the great, theological, universal scheme. We'll be looking specifically at the things Paul writes from chapter 10 to nearly the end of "Romans".  Let's begin by reading Romans 10:1-13 (read).

Here Paul is talking about what I'll call the "categorical Gospel". Salvation is for all, but only on one basis: the Gospel. The Gospel is the message of that salvation. A definite message requiring a definite response (read vv. 9-10 again). If you respond right, you will be saved. God won't accept a different response—no, not even zeal for the law (v. 4), because "Christ is the end of the law…."

There is one cross, one Savior, and so there is one Gospel, and it is a powerful Gospel (v. 13)… "everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved." Powerful enough for everyone.

Redemption required the accomplishment of a feat that we would have to call impossible—that one man could carry all the world's sin and destroy it by his own death. And rise from the dead. Impossible! But Jesus Christ really did it. He did the impossible. That is why we cannot do any great feat to accomplish our salvation: in the first place, it's impossible for us; in the second place, He already did it. An already realized salvation can't be realized again.

So what's left? What's left to us who are incapable of realizing salvation, and wouldn't have to even if we could (because it's already been done)? What can we do? Believe. It's not only what we must do; it's the only thing we can do. And this is what Paul's talking about when he emphasizes the "word" in verse 8, the "word" that is near and living and strong and saving, the word that is Christ Himself.

Usually in the NT, "the word" means the Gospel, what we preach. But here it seems to have two meanings: it is the word of faith that is proclaimed but it is also the "word of faith" that is confessed (read v. 9). The only thing you can possibly do in response to God's accomplishment of the "impossible" is… believe, accept, concur, confess and embrace it.

The Gospel is categorical, absolute, leaves no room for other options or alternatives. There's no "third way". Paul is categorical: God has done this; now, you choose. I realize this is an unfashionable message in a "postmodern" world, but this categorical Gospel is the supreme revelation of God's absolute love. "Absolutes" are anathema to postmodernism, but God will never apologize to anyone for His absolute love and what He did in that love. Postmodernism prides itself on "inclusiveness" and the quest for "justice".  Well, like nothing else in heaven or earth ever could, the cross of Christ has included us all in the justice of ultimate atonement, and his Gospel presents all the free gift of life. This is the "Categorical Gospel" that Paul knew as coming from the Throne of heaven itself and ultimately defining all people and all times with a single, piercing, perfect light. This is the same Gospel, the same order of reality, that we take our stand on today, for the Lord Jesus Christ and His glory.

2. ROMANS 10:14-21


(First, read vv. 14-15) 

Usually, the preacher reads these two verses with the goal of stimulating Christians to share the Gospel. That, of course, is a valid application of the verses. But it's worth it to examine the context more deeply. Remember that, here, Paul is discussing the spiritual condition of the Jewish nation, and the question is: is God fair? Has He abandoned His chosen people? Or has, even, the Jewish nation's rejection of Jesus shattered God's plan of redemption? In this context, Paul asks this whole series of questions (read 14-15 again).

What do these questions mean in this context? I think Paul is saying that, in a certain sense, nothing has changed. That's why he quotes Isaiah! The "plan of redemption" hasn't changed but been consummated in Christ. The "Word" was always preached, in one way or another. It was preached by the prophets who called Israel to repent and return to God. Now, the prophetic word has become the Word of Christ, which is preached to all people, both Jews and Gentiles. By God's wisdom, now all people have the opportunity to make a choice, for or against the "Word of faith", the "categorical Gospel".

So it's no longer a question (you see what Paul is getting at?) of God's relationship to one nation; the witness is universal. That's why Paul quotes Psalm 19 here in verse 18: (read Psalm 19:1-6) And God warned about all this and foretold the reaction of the nation (read v. 19). Through the prophet Isaiah God foretold the revelation of his majestic, magnanimous grace and redemption to the whole world (read v. 20). And finally Paul applies stern words from the prophet Isaiah to the Israel of his own day (read v. 21).

And that means what – a final judgment? End of the story? Absolutely not. Even these severe words reflect grace, because they remind us that God was working with this "disobedient and obstinate people". When the text says "disobedient and obstinate people", that's a realistic assessment of human beings, but when it says "All day long I have held out my hands", that's a powerful revelation of the grace of God, a grace that has now exploded onto the universal stage and included us all in one, all-embracing appeal. We are all in the same boat.

For the Israel-fanatics of Paul's time, however, that wasn't good enough. They still wanted Israel to be the focus and aim of the Gospel. But for Paul, the fact that all of us, Jew and Gentile, are in the same boat, with the opportunity to know Christ, Who really is the focus and aim of the Gospel—for Paul, that was grace and glory!

3. ROMANS 11:1-15


Revolutionary events in history bring confusion and fear and many other reactions. Paul lived at such time. The historical "Jewish" faith suddenly exploded into a universal Gospel, embodied in the person of Jesus Christ. It's hard for us now to really feel how new and shocking this was.

Yesterday I mentioned "Israel-fanatics"—these were Jewish believers in Jesus as Messiah, but they understood Messiah's task as converting the world to Judaism, as they understood it. These were the preachers who caused so much trouble in Galatia.

And, probably, they were accusing Paul of insulting the Jewish nation and blasphemy against God's law. And, probably, when Paul writes this epistle, he is to a large degree refuting those accusations.

In verse one, we read a categorical "no"! God hasn't "rejected" Israel. But the fundamental reason is, God hasn't "rejected" any  nation. The Gospel isn't a Gospel of rejection; it's a Gospel of reconciliation! God's faithful remnant comes from all nations, including the Jews.

(Read verses 1-5)

But no matter which nation we're talking about, the conditions are the same for all (read v. 6).

And this truth was especially difficult for the Jewish nation at that time to  accept (read verses 7-10)

Paul talks about a "spirit of stupor" (v.8). I think this is true of any nation, of every nation. Each nation has that certain thing of its own that blocks the Gospel's light, that fights against the Gospel's force and authority. For one nation, it might be religion; for another, fear; for another, money; for another, hatred.

But, there is always a remnant for God. And in everything God is pursuing His redemptive purpose. This is what Paul is saying in verses 11-15 (read). He sees God's redemptive purpose even in Israel's stumbling. Salvation itself was purchased at the price of rejection! Man can't do anything that will stop God from going ahead with His glorious intention. This is why their falling is "riches" to the world—not because we rejoice at their unbelief. No, it's because the living God always overcomes evil by making it the opportunity for His greater glory.

4. ROMANS 11:13-24


When I was reading verse 13, my eyesight "slipped" and I saw it wrong, and the result was rather comical. Paul says (in the NIV), "I am talking to you Gentiles. Inasmuch as I am the apostle to the Gentiles, I…." But what I saw was, "I am talking to you Gentiles inasmuch as I am the apostle to the Gentiles"! I confess to laughing. As if Paul were saying, "You know, I'm only talking to you because that's my job (and if I had my druthers, I wouldn't be)." Of course, that's not what Paul said at all, and it was just a momentary visual slip, probably due to bad lighting (I can't imagine what else it might be).

But you know what? There is truth in the "mistaken" version I first saw there. Paul really is communicating with the Gentiles, in Gentile language, using Gentile terms, because he's the apostle to the Gentiles. I know that seems a simple, obvious statement, but I don't think we even begin to understand what kind of emotional, psychological effort was required of Paul to do that. Loving his own nation and grieving over their disbelief, Paul nevertheless invested his life completely in the Gospel to the Gentiles. That means, in a way, Paul was always a foreigner, a stranger, never completely "one of them", always exiled from the environment that formed his earliest attachments and joys. A man without a homeland.

Yes, indeed, Paul is talking to the Gentiles because he's an apostle to the Gentiles. He died to himself and became anything that Christ wanted him to be.

Most biblical scholars say that we don't know who wrote the epistle to the Hebrews. They say it can't be Paul because the whole style of the epistle is radically different from Paul's epistles. But for myself personally, having studied "Hebrews", having reflected on its theological horizon, its fundamental vision, I've come to the conclusion that Paul could have written it. And the explanation for the radical differences in style can be put this way: "I'm writing to you Gentiles as a Gentile; I'm writing to you Hebrews as a Hebrew." I believe Paul was capable of that—even to sound like two different men in his style and terms, but always communicating one, unchangeable (categorical!) truth about the new life and world of the Spirit which we have entered by Christ's grace.

(Read vv. 14-16) 

Yesterday, or the day before, I talked about how God's plan always moves forward. You can't stop it. But it would be a terrible mistake to think this means God is continually leaving the past in the past, like a trail of bread crumbs: separate, isolated pieces fading and disappearing in the distance behind us. No. Time and God's purposes aren't like that, like a trail of bread crumbs. They're more like a train—a train that has a front, middle and caboose, but all the parts are moving together, constantly connected, to their destination. Today, you and I are moving on to our destination in God's plan. The day of Pentecost is moving to its destination, the resurrection, the cross, the birth of Christ, the exile in Babylon, the vision of Isaiah, the songs of David, the Exodus from Egypt, God's covenant with Abraham, the Great Flood, the death of Abel, the Fall in the Garden, the day of Creation, all, all are moving together, like a great connected train, to their destination in God's plan.

(Read verse 16 again)

If the root is holy, so are the branches. It's all one tree. What God did in Abraham, Sarah, Moses, Ruth, David, Esther, Jeremiah, all of that is here, right now, in us, growing in its meaning and moving toward its realization in eternity.

And that's why it was just crazy, ridiculous, to accuse Paul of anti-Semitism. I mean, besides the fact that he was a Jew himself (!), but even more importantly, Paul recognized "Israel's" true meaning in Christ. And I don't need to tell you how Paul felt about Christ. Paul loved God's Israel immeasurably more than the "Israel-fanatics" did, because he understood the meaning of Israel better than they did. And he knew that the meaning leads, finally, for all of us, to this: (read 2 Corinthians 3: 17-18).

5. ROMANS 11:17-21

 (Read the text)

Faith in Christ is incompatible with arrogance.   Verse 20: "you stand by faith". You don't stand by your works, you don't stand by your education or your history or social status—you stand by faith

Therefore, do not be arrogant… but be afraid.

"The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom."

As soon as we are arrogant, two things happen: 1) we are putting our faith in ourselves, and that is not the faith that saved us, and 2) we are not fearing the Lord or hoping upon Him. To put it in simple terms, we're not living like Christians!

And that, essentially, is what Paul's talking about here: if a Christian life doesn’t bear any resemblance to the source and root of a Christian life, something is wrong. This is the historical lesson for us from Israel (read Romans 10:3). 

There is a principle here that is universal, that is much bigger than simply the question of Israel. Paul's talking about Israel, of course, because that was the question at the moment. But the spiritual principle applies to all people at all times. It's not only Israel that can be cut off, so that the Gentiles might be grafted into the tree. Europe can be cut off and Africa grafted in. America can be cut off and China grafted in. The Orthodox world can be cut off and the Hindu world grafted in. South Korea can be cut off and North Korea grafted in! (Read Romans 10:20)

"Do not be arrogant… but fear."

Now, you might say all this sounds like we're saying the Kingdom of God is a little room somewhere with only so much square footage and any time somebody new wants to come in, somebody else has to get out! No, of course not. We're simply recognizing, as Paul seems to, that, in history, it seems each nation has its "time", its "shot at it". We certainly see this in terms of empires and various nations' "golden eras"; the same can be true spiritually.

Europe was the first geographical recipient of the Gospel after the Near East; the entire continent was ultimately transformed as a result. Today, the great cathedrals of Europe are simply money-making tourist sites. Yet the Gospel is sweeping powerfully through Africa, and, I think, through China, too.

"Do not be arrogant, but be afraid."

"Remember, you were bought with a price."

Salvation is salvation, not a birthright.

But let me correct the last statement: Salvation is  a birthright. Salvation is the birthright of the Firstborn from the dead, the Head of the Church, the firstfruits of the new creation, Jesus Christ. It is His birthright, his treasure by right… and ours as long as we remain in Him….

"Do not be arrogant, but be afraid." 

"For God has bound all men over to disobedience, so that he may have mercy on all." (v. 32)

6. ROMANS 11:25-32

(Read text)

Today I want to talk about a mystery.

Israel has experienced a partial hardening until the full number of Gentiles come in. Then the apostle says, "And so…." That is, "therefore", "consequently", "as a result": SO all Israel will be saved. All Israel will be saved because the full number of Gentiles will come in. How can we understand this?

There's only one way. We have to understand it in agreement with what the apostle says elsewhere. Remember, we're trying to understand Paul's way of thinking here; we want to see Paul's theological horizon. So, when Paul says, "All Israel will be saved", this doesn't contradict his thought perfectly well expressed elsewhere; all of it expresses one theological horizon. 

In Romans 9:6-7, for example, Paul says (read verses). In other words, this Israel which will "all be saved" is defined by the heart, not by genealogy. 

In any case, common sense tells us Paul can't possibly mean that mere Jewish descent constitutes a get-into-heaven-for-free ticket; otherwise, that would include Judas, and Caiaphas, and, by the way, all those false gospellers from Jerusalem who were causing so much trouble in Galatia, the ones Paul pronounced "anathema" on. 

It would automatically include, too, the Hebrew Christians addressed in the epistle to the Hebrews, who were teetering on the edge of rejecting Jesus and going back to their traditional Judaism. Yes, it would include them regardless of their final decision on this presumably critical question—which would make us doubt why the issue was so critical…. Why all the fuss, warning these Hebrew-Christians not to abandon Jesus when, anyway, "all Israel will be saved"? Doesn't "Hebrews" then become a meaningless epistle?

But of course we understand that that can't be the sense of Paul's words. Paul never preached a Gospel that said, "Believe in the Lord Jesus Christ and you will be saved… or, if you're Jewish, you're automatically in, anyway, so it doesn't matter." You can study the New Testament "24/7" and you won't find that "gospel" there.

What Paul is thinking when he says "All Israel will be saved" is quite obvious. We see it first, right here in this statement that all Israel will be saved because the full number of Gentiles must be saved. We see it secondly in Paul's teaching in chapter nine, that they are not all Israel who are born from Israel. In God's final plan the word "Israel" denotes a state of heart, not a genealogy. And, thirdly, we see it intrinsically in the revelation of Christ: we see it when the Magi from the east come to worship the King of the Jews, foreshadowing the ultimate fulfillment of the prophet's words, that all the nations will flow to Jerusalem to worship the Lord and be fed by His teaching.

At the end of "Galatians", after Paul's fiery argument against the judaizers, after his passionate theological demonstration that all who are in Christ are now Abraham's spiritual children, the apostle closes with these words (Gal. 6:16), "Peace and mercy to all who follow this rule, even to the Israel of God." "Even"—that means, "specifically"… "to wit". You know what "Israel" Paul is talking about here; it can only be the "Israel" he has just spent his tears and sweat and blood to defend against the false gospellers, the Israel that lives in Christ—in Christ who, above all, has fulfilled in Himself everything that Israel means; in Christ, who finally became the faithful Son, who endured the temptation in the wilderness, who demonstrated perfect "khesed ve emet", love and faithfulness, towards His Father.

He is the SON, the ISRAEL whom the Father called out of Egypt; He is the Vine and we are the branches; He is the mystery, and He is the only star on Paul's theological horizon. And He is the reason why, in Him, "all Israel will be saved".  

(Conclude by reading 11: 33-36).

7. ROMANS 12:1

(In this morning meditation there was a collision, happily anticipated by me, between three languages: English, Armenian and Russian, leading to a sorting-out I did not in the least shy away from; indeed, I took the bull by the horns and ventured my own, slightly radical solution. Yes, it did raise a few eyebrows….)

 (Read verse)

Again, we're trying to get inside the thinking of Paul. So, when he says, "Offer your bodies as living sacrifices", why does he say that? Let's look at the immediate context and try to catch Paul's train of thought, what's led him to say this just now. In other words, why is this the right thing to say right here, right now?

I see three elements coming together that ignite, that spark such a passionate appeal from Paul. The first element is very simple. Paul has just said (11:36), "For from him and through him and to him are all things. To him be the glory forever! Amen." So, all  things belong to God. So, of course offer up your bodies, your lives, because they belong to God! He knows best what to do with everything He has made; that includes, of course, us. And He will  do it, to His glory and our joy.

The second element is a little less simple: "in view of God's mercy". It's in light of God's mercy, which Paul has painstakingly explicated and unfolded for pages and pages already. It's in view of this mercy, in response to this mercy, we should offer our bodies as living sacrifices to God. God's mercy spared us the wages of sin—by not sparing His only Son. God's mercy gives us His Son and, with Him, freely gives us all things. God's mercy grafts us into the holy tree, and makes us a people who were not a people. God's mercy will bring us into a new creation, into the glorious freedom of the children of God and the redemption of our bodies. This is all what Paul has just been thinking about for pages and pages now. And now the most instinctive and spontaneous and sanest thing the apostle can possibly say is, "in view of all that…" what's left—except to surrender yourselves unreservedly to God's glorious will?

The third element is the least simple of all. Why ought we to offer our bodies as living sacrifices? Because it's our "spiritual act of worship". Yes, I know that in your Armenian Bibles it's says "verbal" [in Armenian, it's a word that looks something like "word-ly"] where my English Bible says "spiritual". And as you know, the Russian Bible says, "reasonable," or "rational," service of worship. Now isn't that intriguing? "Verbal", "spiritual" and "rational". Why in the world would three languages translate the same Greek text so differently? Surely Paul used a word there that has one meaning!

Well, here's the problem. The Greek adjective there comes from the noun "logos", which, as you know, means "word". That's why your Armenian Bibles say "word-ly". Now, this adjective can mean "logical" (notice logos?) or "reasonable" or "rational", but fundamentally it refers broadly to that which makes us human and not animals; it's our capacity to think, to respond to God, to choose the good; it's our human capacity to know the divine source of our existence. It's the Latin ratio, the Greek logos, that makes us man.

So, while the Armenian translation says "word-ly", and the Russian says "rational" and my English version says "spiritual", I will dare to suggest my own translation, and I will say "human".

Offer your bodies as living sacrifices because it's the human thing to do.

It is the human thing to do in the highest sense of the word "human". It's the human thing to do because, as Paul says elsewhere, we are being raised to the stature of a new man in Christ—in Christ who loved us and gave Himself for us. The perfect, ideal Human Being, Jesus of Nazareth, expressed His humanity through total self-surrender. Now Paul says, "You, too, offer yourselves completely to God, because it's the perfect human thing to do." It's rational, it's spiritual, it's what makes you a child of God and not a tree or a butterfly… even though trees and butterflies are very nice. But trees and butterflies are not the lords of creation. Only the lords of creation can freely surrender themselves and everything they have to the Supreme Lord, in joyful reflection of the Supreme Lord's own self-surrender for them.

I think Paul would have loved to start this epistle with this, for "12:1" to have been "1:1" in the Epistle to the Romans. But for his readers and their "issues" he had to work through a lot of other stuff first. This, however, is where Paul lived. This is the starting point and the destination of the Christian life:

"Be real people and joyfully surrender yourselves to the Lord of all in gratefulness for the indescribably wonderful thing He has done for you."


8. ROMANS 12: 2-21


Yesterday we were talking about a Greek adjective, "logikos", which the apostle Paul used to characterize our rational, spiritual, human act of worship, i.e., to surrender yourself to the will of God.

Now, I take what Paul says next as a confirmation of my interpretation (read verses 2-3).

Notice the emphasis on the mind? Your mind must be renewed. Earlier, Paul said that a new life  is the whole purpose for our baptism into Christ (read Romans 6:4). This renewed life must start in the mind, in the part of us that carries God's image—the logos. And then our whole life will be transformed, from the inside out. Notice the process that Paul describes in these first verses of chapter twelve. You sort of have to read it backwards to follow the progression: if your mind is renewed, then you will be transformed; if you are transformed, then you won't conform to the world anymore, and then you'll really be living out the full sense of your humanity, which is to worship God in love and holiness.

And that is why, as a mature child of God, you can begin making choices.

Choices. That's what the apostle is talking about when he says, "then you will be able to test and approve what God's will is—his good, pleasing and perfect will."

And here I want to bring together various things I've been talking about in Armenia, whether in my sermons or my lectures. In our course on the Gospel of Matthew, we've been looking at the Sermon on the Mount, where Jesus calls the nation to give up everything they're used to, not to depend anymore on the social, religious trappings that shape their world, and, figuratively speaking, to get on Jesus' ship, where He is the captain, and the power that moves that ship is a new kind of righteousness, a righteousness that exceeds even the righteousness of the Pharisees, because it's a transcendent quality of righteousness. Yesterday, in my chapel sermon, I talked about the people, or assembly, of Jesus—they are born by the power of Christ's resurrection, and the eyes of their hearts are illuminated by a revelation from the Father in heaven.

Okay, this is wonderful. But how do they live? What do they do? What are their rules? What is the structure of their society? What is the format for their interrelationships as the people of God?

In a certain sense, there are no rules. That's what it means that we're not under the Law. That's what it means, in Romans 8:14, that "those who are led by the Spirit of God are the sons of God." Instead of rules, there is a new power to know and choose the way of life. "Then you will be able to test and prove what God's will is—his good, pleasing and perfect will." In chapters 12, 13 and 14, Paul gives not so much a set of rules as much as a description, a description of those who really have offered themselves as living sacrifices to God, who have been transformed, whose righteousness comes from the new world of the Messiah and His Spirit. In short, he tells us, this is what the life of the Kingdom will look like, if you are really living it.

(Read Romans 12:3-21)


9. Romans 12-15

I see from the clock that we have about 20 minutes, which should be enough for us to do a deep study of chapters 12, 13, 14 and 15! J Well, not really. We're going to take a quick  look and try to encapsulate what Paul is saying here….

In chapter 12, verse 3, Paul says, "by the grace given to me", and these are very significant words. It is by the grace given to him that the apostle commences to draw a portrait of the "Jesus people", showing how the inner life of the Kingdom manifests its own order and laws through them.

In chapter 13, the key concepts are "debt" and "expectation". With intense anticipation of meeting Christ, our priority is to define what we owe to whom, and not to waste time or energy on what's useless and meaningless. Our highest debt is love.

In chapter 14 (see, I said we'd be moving quickly), Paul describes the strong believer. The strong believer isn't the one who keeps the longest list of rules, but the one who does everything with a pure conscience before God and a heart of love towards people. "Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God", and, seeing God, and seeing what God is doing, the strong believer will be able to do what God does, just as Christ said, "The things I see my Father doing, those I do."

God never wastes His time, so Paul says in chapter 14: Don't waste your time on meaningless, trivial controversies, but (14:19), "…make every effort to do what leads to peace and to mutual edification."

And now, in chapter 15, Paul continues to discuss the strong believer. He addresses the strong believer directly (each of us might wonder, "Is he talking to me?"). And Paul doesn't flatter or molly-coddle the strong believer. Quite the opposite, "to whom much is given, of him much is required." Paul orders the strong believer to reach for still greater heights of self-sacrifice.

(Read 15:1-4)

In verse 3, Paul quotes Psalm 69:9. Let's read it in the psalm (read). You notice, of course, that this is the same verse quoted in the Gospels, about Jesus' cleansing of the Temple. Everybody knows about the first half of this verse, but fewer know about the second half. If we want to embrace one half of that verse, however, and know the "zeal of your house", then we have to embrace the other half, receiving the insults that fall on our Lord. Great zeal comes at a great price. A high calling offers high rewards, but it demands complete sacrifice… which is, of course, what Paul was talking about way back in 12:1. If the truth of 12:1 isn't fundamental to our lives, then we almost shouldn't waste our time reading chapters 13, 14 and 15, because they present an impossible standard.

But, as the epistle to the Hebrews says, "we think better things of you, brethren!", and Paul, in verses 5-13, radiates hope and positive expectations. He talks repeatedly about hope… and glory. After all, it is Jesus Christ who is building His Church. (Read 15:5-13).

Our hope is in Christ who is in us, who dwells in us by the Spirit of God. We have every possibility of being strong. And Paul points to the fruit and outcome of our strength, which will be praise and exultation in the glory of God and His kingdom.

SERMON: "Where is the harvest?"

This sermon was delivered in the Baptist central church in Yerevan at their "Harvest Holiday" service.

 (Read Matthew 16:17-18)

The word "church" appears rarely, quite understandably, in the Gospels. I say "understandably" because, basically, it's too soon to be talking about the Church, in any post-Pentecost sense, certainly in any way that we think about it now. When Jesus mentioned His "Church" to twelve disciples on the dusty roads of 1st-century Palestine, what could that have meant to them?

The word Jesus used was most likely a Hebrew, or Aramaic, word that sounded something like "q'hal", a word denoting an assembly, a congregation of people. This word had a history  to the Jewish people, a history Jesus' disciples would naturally and immediately have thought of, a history and meaning that Jesus knew his disciples would think of, and, therefore, a meaning that Jesus actually wanted them to "get". And that's why I think we need to "get" that meaning, too.

When Jesus' disciples heard, "I will build my 'q'hal'", they must have associated the word with God's work in Israel's past. There are very specific, deep, powerful lessons from this word in biblical history.

"Q'hal" referred to the people of God, the congregation or assembly of God. The people of Israel in the wilderness, when Moses was leading them—they were the q'hal of God. In other words, the first "church" of God was the Israelite nation. The disciples knew that. And Jesus knew that they knew that. Therefore, the Lord chose this word in order to say something amazing, something theologically explosive to them.

When this man, Jesus of Nazareth, says, "I will build my q'hal', my congregation, my people-of-God," immediately in the minds of these Jewish men the question comes up, "Who is this? How can he say such things? Who can the people of God belong to but… God?"

Yes, the statement "I will build my church" derives its sense and power, first of all, from the Old Testament and, precisely because of that, reveals Jesus as not only man, but God.

And we can understand very well why the Lord speaks such powerful words at just this moment: because this is a powerful moment. Peter has just recognized Jesus as the Christ and Son of God, and Jesus has said to him that it's not flesh and blood but the Father in heaven who showed this truth to Peter, and for that reason, Simon Peter will be called the "rock". What has happened here? A revelation from heaven has illuminated a man's eyes of faith, so that he knows and receives his Savior and Lord. This truly is the rock and foundation of Christ's Church. This is how every living stone is added to the spiritual temple of the living God.

And what more does the Lord say about this people, His Church? He reveals, in powerful terms, the amazing thing God is preparing to do with this new "q'hal", this new people of God. Jesus says, "And the gates of hell will not prevail against it."

Once, Joshua led God's people through the river Jordan into the promised land. And the walls and gates of Jericho came tumbling down before the power of God. But now, the Lord Jesus Christ says He will lead His people, the nation of God, across the river of death—He will go first, tasting death and the judgment of sin, and before the power of His resurrection the gates of death itself will come crashing down, and He will lead His q'hal into the promised land.

In the words which Christ uses at this moment, there is deep meaning, a meaning which reaches into the past, into what God has done, and applies it prophetically to the future, to what God will do. Now, the nation of God is not Israel in the wilderness, but the disciples of Jesus. The enemy is not Jericho but death. And the power that destroys this enemy doesn't come through the blast of trumpets and the people's shout, but through the resurrection of Jesus Christ. And the gates of death cannot stand before this greater Joshua, and they will not stand before the nation following Him into the promised land.

But who are these people, this "q'hal", which Jesus will "build"? Well, to begin with, they are nonbelievers! Did you know that God's people are nonbelievers? Of course, you'll tell me, "No, God's people are believers!" To which I'll say, "Yes, of course they are. But they're also non-believers."

Why? Because God, in His eternal foresight, knows all the non-believers today who will be believers, who will be members of His holy nation. The final, ultimate Church, in all her fullness, includes many who are today unbelievers.

Who are they? Where are they? What are they doing right now? Well, they're everywhere. At the moment they might be walking in the park, or drinking at a bar, they might be laughing with friends, or fighting with their spouses, they might be weeping at a funeral or celebrating a wedding, they might be sick in a hospital, they might be dreaming about their future, or regretting their past. They might be thinking about God, or trying not to think about God. But wherever they are and whatever they're doing, they are part of the Church that will be, part of God's great harvest.

Where is this harvest of God, the total "q'hal", Jesus' congregation who will finally march in victory over the shattered walls of death? Let's quickly look at some biblical portraits of God's "harvest" waiting to be found.

(Read Acts 3:1-8)
The harvest of God is waiting, like this crippled man, waiting for help—maybe hoping for money, or medicine, but waiting for some kind of answer, never imagining the ultimate answer God has for them….

(Read Acts 14:8-10)
The harvest of God is waiting, already with a kind of faith in their hearts, waiting for the light of the Gospel to bring that faith to life….

(Read Matthew 8:5-13)
The harvest of God is waiting for the word of power and authority, and when they hear that voice, they'll know it's the Lord. But they've got to hear it first….

(Read Luke 19:1-10)
Sometimes the harvest of God is waiting in a tree… like an apple, or a peach, or a plum, or… Zacchaeus! Waiting to hear the voice that says, "I know you; I've always known you, and now it's time for you to let me into your house, into your heart…."

(Read Luke 7:36-39)
The harvest of God is waiting with tears, waiting to repent and to hear the words that mean everything, "Your sins are forgiven…."

And now let's look at just one more biblical "portrait" of the Church, a portrait that doesn't seem very flattering at first, but be patient. (Read 1 Corinthians 6:9-11) "Such were you", the apostle says. The emphasis is on the past tense: you were such people. But now, in the present, "you have been washed, you have been sanctified, you have been justified." What kind of power could do a miracle like that? It is the resurrection power of the second Joshua, the power that tears down the ramparts of sin and death and opens a new world to the people of God.

A final glance today at a biblical picture of God's harvest, His church. (Read Revelation 22:17) Today's people of God, the Bride, invites the future people of God to come, to come in and complete the number, to fill the ranks of the Church that Jesus Christ is building. We issue the invitation in the power of the Spirit and the power of the resurrection. We don't know who they are, the harvest still out there waiting today, but we know they will come, because Christ will build His Church, and our labor in this harvest cannot, will not be in vain.