Promise (Foundations #3) – Group Questions

What has been the most memorable promise someone has ever made to you? How did it change your behaviour or the course of your life?

Do you agree that God’s most basic response to human rebellion is one of grace and promise? How might the Christian Churches bring this to better reflection in their mission and ministry?

God’s promise of restoration is directed to 1) the human heart, as he promises to deal with human sin and rebellion 2) human relationships, as he promises to reconcile people to one another, and 3) all created reality, as he promises the new heavens and the new earth.

* Which of these areas has tended to receive the most focus in Christian teaching? Does this perceived emphasis reflect the fullness of the Bible’s teaching?

* How could Christians and the Christian Church conduct themselves differently so as to address this perceived imbalance?

God’s plan of salvation is as concerned with physical realities as it is with spiritual realities.

* How does this truth challenge or comfort you?

* What challenges does this present to you church, or to how you live as a follower of Jesus?

Who, in your experience, has been the greatest example of how the message of Jesus brings holistic transformation to all of life?

Promise (Foundations #3)

How God answers human rebellion

Isaiah 65:17-25

IStock 000015168047Medium
Credit: iStockphoto

So far in this series we have seen

1. How God created the universe, and it was very good.

2. How humanity rejected God, rebelling against his love and goodness through Adam and Eve’s act of defiance.

Today we will see

3. How God answers that rebellion. As we do, we may well find ourselves challenged and surprised.

– – – – – – – – – – – – – –

Let’s start with a promise:

I was a young boy, maybe 5 years old. My mother had to take me to the family doctor to get a needle: I suppose it was some form of immunisation. There was a problem: I hate needles, and my mother was probably not too good at dealing with freaked out children.
But she had a stroke of genius the week before I was to have that fateful appointment.
She walked me into the paper shop – that’s what we used to call the newsagent in the town I was born – and pointed up on one of the shelves. It was blue ray gun that looked something like this. It was a young boy’s dream toy. The 1963 version of a light sabre.
I looked at that ray gun, and imagined the fun I could have with it. I may even have believed that with such a weapon I could keep my older sister in line. My imagination was held with my mother’s promise: ‘if you don’t make a fuss about the needle, you will get that ray gun…’

Pifco side edit

In that moment of parental genius, my mother did something divine: she saw a person gripped with fear and foreboding, and spoke a promise which drew them toward a better reality.

The Power of God’s Promise

This is how promises work: they capture our heart and point us to something better.

It happens when a man slips a diamond on the finger of his fiancé.

It happens when two people sit down and plan the holiday of a lifetime.

It happens when a young couple puts a deposit on their first home.

A promise will meet us where we are and direct our vision toward something better.

The greatest promise of all happened in Eden. Humanity was trapped in their own rebellion from God. Overcome with fear, they hid from God instead of trusting him.

What was God’s core reaction to that rejection? By core reaction, I mean the response which best expresses the character of the Lord? Our answer is seen in how God spoke right into that rebellion, and challenged it with a promise:

“…I will put enmity between you and the woman, and between your offspring and hers; he will crush your head, and you will strike his heel.”” (Genesis 3:15, NIV)

Yes, human rebellion has its consequences. Grief, tears, pain, death and separation from God. What we need to see is how in the thick of all that, this gracious God set about his work of restoring his people and his world.

If you want to understand anything about God, this is where you start: God’s most basic inclination, his most basic response to human fall and rebellion is to draw people out of chaos and into his love life and grace. His promise draws a fearful and fallen humanity toward a better reality. He would send a deliverer, a Messiah, to crush the head of evil once and for all.

God’s most basic inclination, his most basic response to human fall and rebellion is to draw people out of chaos and into his love life and grace.

The Bible is really the story of God bringing this promise to fulfilment. The ancient writings of the Old Testament tell us how God opens the eyes of humanity to their own need and how he started to bring this rescue about.

We learn how he chose a relatively weak and insignificant people and formed them into the nation of Israel. Their call was to show what life was like when people lived in relationship with this God of promise.

We hear the manifesto for this fledgling nation in Ex 19:

“Now if you obey me fully and keep my covenant, then out of all nations you will be my treasured possession. Although the whole earth is mine, you will be for me a kingdom of priests and a holy nation…” (Exodus 19:5–6, NIV)

The distinctive character of this nation living with God would be expressed as they lived by his commands (Exodus 20).

Israel’s history however, shows how they failed in their task. Despite his doubtless grief and anger at his people’s sin, God keeps working to bring his promise to reality.
He keeps calling his people back to life. While it is true that he meets them where they are, he refuses to leave them that way. He draws them into change and transformation. Despite their continued failing, and times where they are exiled and disciplined, he never breaks his word. He remains faith to his promise to deal with their rebellion, to restore them and their world.

The question that really interests us today is ‘What sort of restoration would this be? What does this promise entail?’

The Old Testament has many different voices and a rich texture of answers to that question. The most breathtaking vision of how this promise would come to fulfilment is found in the book of Isaiah.

Writing some 700 years before the birth of Jesus Christ, Isaiah presents such a vista of hope and transformation that we can scarcely believe it. This is not because it seems untrue, but because it is so all encompassing and universal in its scope. Isaiah mentions three contexts in which God’s restoration will be seen.

First: God will act to reconcile humanity to himself. He will do this by dealing with the core problem of humanity: the rebellious disposition of the human heart.

“Come now, let us settle the matter,” says the LORD. “Though your sins are like scarlet, they shall be as white as snow; though they are red as crimson, they shall be like wool.” (Isaiah 1:18, NIV)

How will that happen?

Isaiah says this rescue will come through one identified as ‘The Servant of the Lord.’ This servant will become a sacrifice. He will take on the form of an abject, innocent man who willingly suffers for the wrongs of his people (Isaiah 53:3-6).

Second: Not only does God promise to reconcile people to himself, his act through his servant will have such magnitude that it will will impact on human relationships and reconcile people to each other. Relationships will be healed and the human heart transformed to such an extent that evil and injustice and violence will ultimately be overcome (Isaiah 61:1-3).

Third: (as if the first two contexts were not enough) Isaiah’s panorama of promise widens to something absolutely stupendous. How? Well, we know that creation groans with the weight of sin and the smell of the fall. We see this in natural disasters, in animal predation and environmental imbalance. We see it in unjust societal structures, in broken communities, abusive institutions, in warfare and genocide. Isaiah, however, points us to a new day when the servant’s actions will not only change human hearts and human relationships, his work of rescue will transform all created reality (Isaiah 65:17, 19, 25).

This is what Isaiah is saying: People will be reconciled to God. People will be reconciled to one another. People will be reconciled to their environment, society will be healed, and the brokenness of our universe will ultimately be overcome.

There’s the promise: God will act – through the servant – whom Christians understand to be Jesus – to rescue people and their world from their rebellion and all its consequences.

The scope of the promise

What are we to make of all this? If we are trying to come to terms with the core realities of Christianity, with the central truths of who Jesus is, what does Creation – Rebellion – Promise mean?

The first implication is that God – and his plan of salvation – is as concerned with physical realities as much as spiritual realities. In fact, they cannot be separated. One is not more important than another.

Some may be surprised about this. They have focussed so long on heaven and ‘spiritual things’ that there is hardly a thought to this world or the crying needs of people in it. The truth is that the kind of spirituality which elevates spiritual above physical, soul above body, heaven above earth, does not have its roots in the Bible, but in ancient Greek philosophers like Plato. But because western culture has been built on this foundation, people almost automatically understand that ‘spiritual’ things are more valuable to God than physical. Isaiah’s words challenge our assumptions as much as the work of the servant will transform our culture.

We do need to take care, however. We do not know all the detail of what the new heavens and the new earth will be like. And we should take great care with the symbolism and imagery employed by Bible writers. Will lions really eat straw like an ox? We don’t really know, but we do understand Isaiah’s intention: the sort of animal violence typified in the lion’s hunt will be a subject of a beautiful and radical transformation in the new heavens and the new earth which the servant will bring.

There are simply so many passages in the Bible which speak of a new world, a recreated and transformed reality where heaven and earth are reunited, that we cannot ignore them.

A second implication follows from the first: Christian ministry and mission is one of word and deed. Christians cannot seek to address spiritual matters while at the same time ignoring the physical needs of the world around them. Similarly, Christians cannot simply address physical needs of their world without also addressing the spiritual situation of people and society.

We observe this very clearly in Jesus’ ministry, where he not only taught the crowds who followed him, and saw them as sheep without a shepherd, he also fed them. Jesus addressed then whole person in his ministry. His church should do the same.

This is why when Jesus opens his ministry he not only talks about pardon from sin and rebellion, but of transformation of people and their world.

““The Spirit of the Lord is on me, because he has anointed me to proclaim good news to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim freedom for the prisoners and recovery of sight for the blind, to set the oppressed free, to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favour.” Then he rolled up the scroll, gave it back to the attendant and sat down. The eyes of everyone in the synagogue were fastened on him. He began by saying to them, “Today this scripture is fulfilled in your hearing.”” (Luke 4:18–21, NIV)

This is why James the apostle says:

“What good is it, my brothers and sisters, if someone claims to have faith but has no deeds? Can such faith save them? Suppose a brother or a sister is without clothes and daily food. If one of you says to them, “Go in peace; keep warm and well fed,” but does nothing about their physical needs, what good is it? In the same way, faith by itself, if it is not accompanied by action, is dead.” (James 2:14–17, NIV)

And it is why Paul sees the work of Jesus on the cross as not merely impacting the human soul, or matters of faith, or religious ideas. He sees Jesus’ work as impacting the entire cosmos:

“The Son is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn over all creation. For in him all things were created: things in heaven and on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or powers or rulers or authorities; all things have been created through him and for him. He is before all things, and in him all things hold together. And he is the head of the body, the church; he is the beginning and the firstborn from among the dead, so that in everything he might have the supremacy. For God was pleased to have all his fullness dwell in him, and through him to reconcile to himself all things, whether things on earth or things in heaven, by making peace through his blood, shed on the cross.” (Colossians 1:15–20, NIV)

The Impact of Promise: We Are a People of Hope

Perhaps the greatest implication is that God’s people are people of real hope! Christianity is a world affirming, creation redeeming faith. Christians are people who are not just thinking about the Bible, but because they are thinking about their world and the community in which they live.

Christians are people who don’t just have faith in their head and their hearts, they have faith in their hands. A Christian is not simply someone with religious ideas, or someone who has made some deep commitments. A Christian is someone who is active in living out their faith. Someone in whom the transformational work of Jesus is coming to increasing expression in their behaviour, their actions, their words.

This is why at Gateway Community Church we have three core areas of our vision and mission: we want to grow transformed disciples, we want to build a new community of people, and we want to take the positive and transformational change of the gospel into our local community. If we fail on any of those three counts, we actually fail the mission of God and we fail to be his people of promise.

Christians are not simply people who believe the bible, but because they believe the Bible they are also deeply troubled that

there are 30 million slaves in our world today

average life expectancy of indigenous people is some 10 years below that of other Australians

some of the most vulnerable people have no right to legal support or process even in our own courts

• there are people in our own community who struggle to heat their homes and put a square meal on the table

So, yes, we look at our world and it is not hard to sense the fall all around us. But God’s promise in Jesus meets us where we are and draws us toward a more glorious reality. It is a promise expressed in the Christmas Carol “O Holy Night”

A thrill of hope! The weary world rejoices, for yonder breaks a new and glorious morn!

Did you know that? Because God is faithful to his promise, a new day is dawning!

Did you know that this is how God answers human rebellion?

Yes, there are consequences to this rebellion, and those consequences are dire. But God’s promise of a new and glorious morn is greater and more powerful than any threat of death or any penalty or curse of sin. This promise tells us One will come who will redeem us and our world from the curse of the law and from the ugly stain of our own rebellion.

There’s the promise, right there! And we are thrilled to hear that at the core of this God’s heart there is not retribution or anger or the rage of a despot, but something wonderful:

“This is how God showed his love among us: He sent his one and only Son into the world that we might live through him. This is love: not that we loved God, but that he loved us and sent his Son as an atoning sacrifice for our sins.” (1 John 4:9–10, NIV)

Here is the miracle: through the lens of the Old Testament, we see God’s first promise in Genesis 3:15 narrow, and come to sharp focus on a nondescript stable. A young mother had just laid her baby in a manger for his bed. And sharper still, thirty years later, as this son, naked again, is laid on the rough timber of a cross, and then suffers hell for his people and their world.

Why?

Because our God keeps his promises. And when his world is broken, he must act according to his nature, and get to work putting it all back together again.

Rebellion (Foundations #2) Group Questions

Group questions relevant to Rebellion – Foundations #2

Grab a newspaper or read an internet news channel – which stories show there is something wrong with our world?

Read Genesis 3

Referring to verses 1-7, what was so bad about eating from a tree which God had created good anyway?

What was the initial response of God to Adam & Eve’s actions? What does this tell you about the God we worship?

Can you think of any New Testament passages which underscore this core desire and emotion of God for fallen and rebellion people?

Read Gen 3:15 & 20 – what do these tell you about God’s ultimate plan for his world?

How would you answer those who say that the fall is merely symbolic, or a myth?

Col 1:15-20 points us to Jesus Christ as the One through whom God will restore his creation and reconcile it to himself. How does this impact on how you see your world?

How does this passage change the way you look at God?

What difference will it make in they way you live?

Foundations – #1 Creation – Small Group Questions

Foundations – #1 Creation

Gen 1 – 2:3

Home Group Study Questions

“Creation is as historically real as the history of the Jews and our present moment of time. Both the Old and the New Testaments deliberately root themselves back into the early chapters of Genesis, insisting that they are a record of historical events” – Francis Schaeffer

• Comment

What accounts for the pressure to read Genesis 1 through the eyes of 21st Century evolutionary ideology?

• What are the best ways to counter this pressure?

Do you think it is possible for a person to be a Christian and still accept evolution?

Which has the greater authority: western science or the Bible? Are there ever instances where we should accept the voice of science over what the Bible says?

Read Col 1:15-23. What reason would Paul have had to start this section with an assertion grounded in the eternal nature of Christ?

“If God is creator, you as a creature are accountable to him” What are the key implications of this reality?

What advantages are there in referring to creation when sharing the Gospel with others?

Foundations #1 – Creation

[This is the first in a series of sermons outlining the basic Christian message. The Foundations series is being presented at Gateway Community Church from June 2014]

Reading: Genesis 1:1 – 2:3

In the beginning…

There are seven Hebrew words which lay claim to our lives:

בְּרֵאשִׁ֖ית בָּרָ֣א אֱלֹהִ֑ים אֵ֥ת הַשָּׁמַ֖יִם וְאֵ֥ת הָאָֽרֶץ׃

Bereshit bara Elohim et’ ha’shamayim w’et h’aretz

These are first seven words of the Old Testament. They are the most profound explanation of who we are, and where we have come from. They are the ground of all we now about God, our world, and what God is doing in our world.

If we want to understand Christianity, if we want to have the best foundation to understand the message of Christianity, this is where we start.

In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth.

From a Christian point of view, there is no other way to understand the universe than to say ‘God created it’.

We all know there are differences of opinion here. Six day creation. ‘Long day’ creation. Theistic evolution. Full on evolution. And a myriad other positions across that spectrum.

Just so I make myself perfectly clear, I want to make the following statements very directly.

• I am a card carrying creationist

• I am not a theistic evolutionist

• There is no way to harmonise the larger scheme of evolution with the Biblical assertion of creation.

• Creation is not a myth. It is reality

Creation is as historically real as the history of the Jews and our present moment of time. Both the Old and the New Testaments deliberately root themselves back into the early chapters of Genesis, insisting that they are a record of historical events

– Francis Schaeffer

Having said that, we need to understand some important things about Gen 1. The author of Genesis wrote so the people of his day would understand their origins. Genesis is ancient writing for an ancient people.

The implications are obvious. The author did not intend for his writings to be understood in 21st Century scientific categories. If he did, his writings would not have been understood by his original hearers. So we need to be careful about reading our science and our 21st Century worldview back into these words.

There is great pressure to do this. Many Christians want to prove that creation is scientifically defensible. And while it’s good to understand these verses as best we can, when we try to force them into western scientific categories, we admit that unless we can do that, they are open to question. And by doing that we make God’s word dependent on western scientific theory.

God’s word, however, stands above science. Ultimately, science cannot contradict God’s word, because if there is any truth in the world, any truth at all, it is because the God of truth has put it there. And where we cannot harmonise what science says with what God says, we continue to seek answers, but also admit the failings of our own minds.

Competing views of creation are not inventions of our secular age. They have always been there. Even when these words were first written, the Canaanite peoples also challenged the truths in Genesis 1. Those other creation stories saw the world coming into existence through cooperation between the various gods, or it involved conflict among them; the world coming into being as a result of arguments and fights among the gods.

In contrast, Genesis 1 tells the Israelites that it actually came into being as a result of the cool, planned, systematic, sovereign activity of God so that “the heavens and the earth” are one “cosmos,” one coherent whole.

In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth.

This we believe.

But if it’s all we believe, we only have a portion of the story.

Accountability

The Bible gives us an additional angle: God did this work of creation through his Son, through Christ.

So it’s not just creation that messes with our independent mindset. It’s also that the divine Son, even before he took on humanity, is the agent of creation.

The Bible says

“In the past God spoke to our ancestors through the prophets at many times and in various ways, but in these last days he has spoken to us by his Son, whom he appointed heir of all things, and through whom also he made the universe.” (Hebrews 1:1–2, NIV)

“The Son is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn over all creation. For in him all things were created: things in heaven and on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or powers or rulers or authorities; all things have been created through him and for him.” (Colossians 1:15–16, NIV)

“In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. He was with God in the beginning. Through him all things were made; without him nothing was made that has been made.” (John 1:1–3, NIV)

God created the universe through his Son.

There is a confronting implication to this: As creatures we are accountable to our Creator.

Think of it this way: when you’re at work, to whom are you accountable?

So, if the boss says “I want you to do this today” you have to do it. You’re not free to do whatever you want, even though it might be a smashing good idea. Of course not. Your responsibility is to do what the boss says.

Or imagine you have a car, and you’re down at the river, and you think, “I’m sick of driving on these roads, I want to drive in the river.” So you drive down the boat ramp, and away you go. Or, down you go. Unless you are driving one of these [amphibious Lotus Esprit – from the 1977 James Bond film, “The Spy Who Loved Me”]…

Here’s the point: You must use the car within its specifications. If you don’t, you could wreck your car. And you might die.

In the same way that you are accountable to the boss: he owns the workplace, and your accountable to do what he says by reason of the fact that you are his employee,
so also: You are accountable to God. He created you. He created your world. He created your universe. It belongs to him. You belong to him. You are on his time, and in his place.

Also, in the same way that you must use your car in accordance with its specifications, you are called to live and operate according to the maker’s instructions. According to what God says. Otherwise you could wreck your life, or die, or both.

God is creator, and you are accountable.

Very few people enjoy coming face to face with this truth. But their lack of enjoyment, or even their rejection of that truth does not determine whether that truth is true. You don’t have to understand or accept something to make it true.

Like gravity. You don’t have to understand it, or even believe it to make it real. I don’t get the physics. But every time I step onto a plane, I know that things work to keep the plane in the air. And if foursome crazy reason, the next time I am on a plane, I go crazy and jump out, it won’t matter whether I believe in gravity or whether I understand it, I will still end up a mangled blob on the ground.

Like gravity, creation is an objective reality. It is true whether you accept it or not.

When Paul spoke to the philosophers on Mars Hill, he presented objective realities. Few people accepted what he said. Others mocked. It made no difference to the truth expressed.

“The God who made the world and everything in it is the Lord of heaven and earth and does not live in temples built by human hands.” (Acts 17:24, NIV)

“God did this so that they would seek him and perhaps reach out for him and find him, though he is not far from any one of us. ‘For in him we live and move and have our being.’ As some of your own poets have said, ‘We are his offspring.’” (Acts 17:27–28, NIV)

Hope

So: God is Creator. The first implication is that you are accountable.

There is a second implication to this truth.

Because this sovereign God created the heavens and the earth, because he rules them, we can have hope that things are not random and out of control. God’s creative act brought order and beauty out of chaos.

I know there is the additional question of, when God’s work of creation was ‘very good’, how come it is not very good now?

Why are there natural disasters, human violence and corruption, disease, pain, and grief. I will start to address these questions next week.

But for now, there is comfort that this same creator God is still working to bring order out of chaos. His plan is to restore his creation and humanity to its perfect and glorious state. That is a wonderful hope.

You don’t have to be a particularly religious person to see that there’s something wrong with the world, and that it should be better.

You don’t have to be particularly negatively minded to know that there’s something wrong with your life, that not all things are right with you, that you should be better, or different, to what you are. Sure, we might have a sense of powerlessness about being able to change, or grow, or do things differently. But that does not stop us yearning for it.

The Good News is we can call on this creator God, on the Son through whom we, our world, and everything in it were created, for help.

Christ the light can shine into our darkness.

If your life is dark and desolate, if your life is out of control, if there is no light in your life, but only darkness, and there seems to be no hope — turn to this Creator God!

Christ the Creator, can bring order out of our chaos.

If your life is a mess, if things are upside down, if everything has gone to custard, you can call out to this God who created all things through His son.

Call out to the Son for help.

Call out for him to bring order to your life.

If Jesus Christ can bring order to a formless creation, he can do the same in your life, can’t he?

This is his work. This is what he loves to do!

That is good news!

And it comes through Christ the Creator!

In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.

Today, God seeks to re-create your life. In Jesus he has the desire, the power, and the opportunity to do so. The very same power that flung the stars out into the unfathomable, expanding universe while orchestrating life in the irreducible complexity of the cells of your body will act on your behalf when you turn to him (Kent Hughes).

Knowing what we do, it sounds almost unbelievable that the Creator of the universe would give any thought to you, your life, your future, your needs.

But this is what he says.

“Come near to God and he will come near to you. Wash your hands, you sinners, and purify your hearts, you double-minded.” (James 4:8, NIV)

“…Jesus declared, “I am the bread of life. Whoever comes to me will never go hungry, and whoever believes in me will never be thirsty … All those the Father gives me will come to me, and whoever comes to me I will never drive away.” (John 6:35–37, NIV)

He will turn your night into day through his word.

He will reorder your broken life through his word.

He will bring form out of chaos through his word.

New Series – Foundations 2014

Foundations 2014 Postcard  lite2

This is a new series of sermons I am writing to give people an overview of Christianity. It is intended to be an introduction, not an exhaustive treatment. My prayer is that these will be an encouragement to readers, and possibly even helpful for those who might need to present a sermon somewhere and not have the time to prepare anything.

More than happy to receive feedback or questions. I do not claim the last word. We are all learners, and I am happy to learn about God’s goodness and grace with you.