When Jesus Blew the Apostles’ Minds (John 4)

I recently read John 4 again. It is an altogether delightful story! Without offering any description of her features, John manages to bring the Samaritan woman to life for his readers. She is intelligent, quick-witted, tough, assertive, yet somehow vulnerable. But perhaps you don’t remember the story very well, so let me summarize it.

Jesus had been in Judea but decided to return to his home base in Galilee (in the north). For some reason, “he had to go through Samaria.” A traveler from Judea to Galilee could cut many miles off the trip by cutting through Samaria, but Jewish people frequently took the longer route to avoid contact with the despised Samaritans. (More about this below.) But for some reason, Jesus “must needs” (KJV) go through Samaria.

He and his disciples arrived outside the village of Sychar and stopped at an ancient well that was purportedly dug by the patriarch Jacob. Jesus waited there while his disciples went into the village to buy food. While they were gone, a woman from the village came to fill her water jars, and Jesus engaged her in conversation—to her great surprise.

Any other Jewish teacher – pretty much any other Jewish person – would have sat quietly or even removed himself from her neighborhood. Jews felt a hearty dislike of Samaritans and vice-versa. But Jesus didn’t merely engage the woman in conversation. He didn’t say, “A mighty hot streak of weather we’ve been having.”

When the woman saw him, she would have realized that he was a Jew. As she lowered her container into the well, she would have kept an eye on him. You can’t trust a Jew, she would be thinking.

How surprised she was when he spoke to her. And she was even more surprised by what he said. The NIV softens his words to make them more polite: “Will you give me a drink?” In Greek, it does not sound nearly so nice: “Give me a drink!”

The woman came right back with a question: “You are a Jew and I am a Samaritan woman. How can you ask me for a drink?” Jews did not associate with Samaritans. They would not eat with them and, heaven forbid (and they were sure heaven had) that they should use a cup or plate or spoon that a Samaritan had previously used. Samaritans were unclean. They had cooties, as the boys said when I was in elementary school. And if you drank from a Samaritan cup, you’d have them too.

The back and forth in the conversation that follows is lively and realistic. When Jesus broaches the subject of the woman’s family situation (he tells her to get her husband and come back), the woman nimbly changes the subject by raising an ecclesial point of contention between Jews and Samaritans. It appears that she was trying to lead Jesus off into the tall weeds of theological controversy, where she might just lose him.

But Jesus never gets lost. He volleyed back the woman’s words with a profound truth about the nature of God and the nature of authentic worship. She pivots once more with what was meant to be a conversation-ending statement: “When Messiah comes, he’ll explain everything.”

That’s when Jesus did something totally unexpected. He told this Samaritan that he was the Messiah. It is astounding. He had not even told his disciples this. The first person to whom Jesus revealed his messianic identity was not just a Samaritan, but a Samaritan woman. Some rabbis considered it disgraceful even to speak to a Jewish woman in public, but Jesus told this Samaritan woman who he really was.

It was then that the disciples returned and were startled to find Jesus talking with a Samaritan woman. The woman, suddenly surrounded by Jewish men, left immediately for the village. But she was not gone long, and when she came back, she brought a crowd of Samaritan men. She had told them about Jesus, wondered aloud if he really could be the Messiah, and talked them into going to the well with her. Once they met Jesus for themselves, they believed in him.

All of this is extraordinary enough, but what happened next blew the apostles’ minds. The Samaritans invited Jesus to stay with them, and Jesus accepted for himself and for his disciples. They preceded to spend the next two days in a Samaritan village. They ate Samaritan food off Samaritan plates, using Samaritan utensils—spoons that had once been in Samaritan mouths were now in theirs!

We need to understand that as good Jewish boys, the apostles were raised to despise Samaritans. If their parents knew that little Jimmy and Johnny were sleeping on Samaritan bedrolls, eating at Samaritan tables, and drinking from Samaritan cups, they would have a stroke. When the disciples heard the Samaritans’ invitation, they would have assumed that Jesus would decline. They must nearly have fainted when he accepted!

Hadn’t the Samaritans sent terrorists to desecrate the Jewish temple and defile it at Passover? (To be fair, the Jewish ruler had previously sent armed forces to destroy the Samaritan temple on Mt. Gerizim, but that story was not repeated around Jewish dinner tables.) Hatred between first century Jews and Samaritans rivaled the hatred between Jews and Palestinians today. Yet here was Jesus, enjoying Samaritan hospitality and expecting his disciples to do the same.

There is so much we can learn from this story, but I am thinking today about the prejudice and suspicion of others that existed in Samaria in the first century and in Sacramento today. Had Jesus become incarnate in 21st century America instead of 1st century Israel, one wonders if he might not take his MAGA cap-wearing midwestern disciples into the home of an undocumented immigrant for a meal and a game of Dominoes, or his CSNBC-watching followers to share a meal and family devotions with a home-schooling, Trump-voting, family of ten.

What he would not do is allow his followers to hate, demean, and traduce their fellow-disciples. Not for a minute. Not for the “sake of the country.” Not for anything.

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The Call of Abraham (Genesis 12)

If you prefer to read the sermon rather than watch, let me know in the comments section, and I will add your email to my mailing list.

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I Wasn’t Seeing Myself Accurately

(You Probably Aren’t Either)

A few months ago, our church held a photo shoot after service for the purpose of updating our website. Most of the photos were candids, though a few were posed. It was at least a month before I saw the pictures and, when I did, I was surprised by what I saw … of myself.

I’ll explain that presently, but first I should say that I do not often see pictures of myself – there are no paparazzi chasing after me. When someone does take a picture of me, it is usually head-on. On the day of the photo shoot, I was only in a couple of pictures and one of them was taken from the side.

I was surprised to see how bent over I am. My shoulders are hunched, my head sticks out from my body in a way that reminded me of a vulture – definitely not a good look for a pastor. People might start calling me Quasimodo behind my curving back.

I should have known. A few years ago, after seeing me do pushups, my wife suggested that a chiropractor might have helpful suggestions regarding my back, which was not straight. The chiropractor had me doing wall angels (I am still doing them—or trying to do them), and it was more painful than any of the other exercises in my routine. Trying to press the small of my back into the wall, along with the back of my neck and skull, made me lightheaded.

When I moved to Elkhart, Indiana to pastor the California Road Missionary Church, I stood in the gym and looked up at the basketball rim. I said to one of the men, “That’s more than ten-feet high.” He countered, “I helped put that up, and we measured it.” I passed it off – clearly, he was mistaken – but I didn’t forget it. Six months later, I carried a tape measure to the gym and measured it for myself. It was exactly ten feet off the floor. I could hardly believe it. I had been so sure.

Now, I think I understand. When I was 6’5”, basketball rims didn’t look so far up there. Now, with my back slowly curving toward the floor, the basket looks further away.

That explains something else too. Whenever I meet a tall man and learn that he is 6’5” or 6’6”, it seems to me that he must be taller than that, since he is taller than me. Like I say, I should have known. But I didn’t. I assumed that I was standing as tall as ever. But I wasn’t.

Something similar happens on both the moral and the spiritual plane. Take the spiritual. We assume that we are as near to God as we have ever been, but there are times when he feels far away, like the basketball rim seems to me. Usually, we pass it off as nothing—a mere misperception.

We also overlook our moral failures – nothing big, of course – and tell ourselves that is not who we really are. And because we don’t see ourselves as others see us – especially as God sees us – we assume that nothing has changed.

We need people to do what my wife, and then our photographer/church friend did for me: show us the truth. They don’t need to chastise us. (At least, let us hope they don’t.) They simply need to help us see.

But before we ask our loving brothers and sisters to show us what they see, we should go to our loving Father and ask him to show us what he sees. He won’t show us everything; that would be more than we could bear. He will only show us what we need to see to take our next steps in company with him.

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When Adam Jumped into an Abyss (Genesis 3)

Adam fell, and we are still tumbling. What will stop our headlong plunge? This sermon looks at our problem of good and evil and what God is doing to help us.

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The Dull Point of the Apostolic Band

(With apologies to my favorite apostle)

Of the twelve apostles, I think my favorite is Philip. Perhaps it is because I most identify with Philip. Peter is bold, brash even, and strong. John is deep. He sees through mysteries and love wells up deep within him. Andrew is a people person: he makes friends easily and it is natural for him to talk to them about Jesus. These were extraordinary men and they formed the apostle’s inner ring.

Philip never made it into the inner ring. He was not bold like Peter, deep like John, or gregarious like Andrew. Philip was – or seemed to be – the dull point of the apostolic band. In John chapter 6, Jesus and his disciples have gone on a mini-vacation. They needed a getaway after the shocking death of John the Baptist. They crossed the lake and made camp in a back country spot where they could catch their breath, grieve, and recuperate. But the vacation ended suddenly when a crowd of thousands (probably headed to Jerusalem for Passover) descended on them, looking for Jesus.

When evening came, Jesus surprised the apostles by asking Philip where they could get enough bread to feed the crowd. In amazement, Philip blurted out, “Two hundred denarii worth of bread would not be enough for each of them to get a little.” Poor, confused Philip was completely in the dark about what Jesus intended.

In John chapter 12, Philip appears again. He is (apparently) standing around when some Greeks who had come to Jerusalem for the Passover approached him (possibly because of his Greek name) with a request: “We want an interview with Jesus.” Poor, confused Philip did not know what to do. Should he take them to Jesus? Or should he ask Jesus if he would agree to see them? (But Jesus had once told Philip and the other apostles to “go only to the lost sheep of Israel.”) Uncertain about how to proceed, Philip went and asked Andrew.

In John 14, we find a muddled Philip in the upper room on the eve of the crucifixion. Jesus has just told him and his friends that he is “the way, and the truth, and the life.” He then assures the apostles that they know and have seen the Father. This is when poor, confused Philip says what might be the silliest thing anyone says throughout the Gospels: “Lord, show us the Father, and that will be enough for us.”

What was Philip thinking? “Just bring Almighty God, the Creator of heaven and earth, the maker of all things, visible and invisible, the Ruler of all, the rider of cherubim, the one whose glory the heaven of heavens cannot contain—just bring him into this room so we can see him. It need only be for a moment. That will be enough for us.”

Jesus – did he roll his eyes? – responded: “Don’t you know me, Philip, even after I have been among you such a long time? Anyone who has seen me has seen the Father. How can you say, ‘Show us the Father’?”

Philip was always slow to catch on. He was probably the apostle who said, “I don’t get it,” after a joke’s punchline had been delivered and St. Peter was laughing his head off. What could a guy like that bring to the apostolic band? What was he even doing there?

He was there, among the apostles, because Jesus wanted him there. In John’s Gospel, the story that introduces Philip immediately follows the story of Jesus’s meeting with the brothers Andrew and Peter. An observant reader might notice that the word “to find” is used five times in these two stories within the space of five verses. Andrew finds Peter and tells him that “we have found the Messiah.” Philip finds Nathaniel and gives him the same message.

But what interests me most – what I love about this passage – is that when it comes to Philip, Jesus does the finding. He goes looking for Philip and then calls him to follow him (John 1:43). Philip is the only disciple that Jesus is explicitly said to seek out. Jesus didn’t go looking for Philip because he was a genius, or a natural born leader, or because the apostolic band couldn’t get along without him. He went looking for Philip because he wanted him.

And he wants us too, though we are as poor and confused as Philip—and more so in my case. His incarnation – life, death, and resurrection – is Jesus looking for us. He did not come to find talent that was too good to pass up, but “to seek and to save what was lost(Luke 19:10). And why go through all that trouble? Because he wanted us.

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In the Beginning

The beginning sets the stage for all that God has done and will do. (Perhaps Eliot was right: “In my beginning is my end.”) This sermon explores the Beginning, and we discover what creation tells us about the Creator.

If you prefer to read a sermon manuscript (not a transcript, so there will be differences from what I actually said), please let me know.

He made birds and streams sing, waves and waterfalls crash. The wind croons; the oceans roar; the leaves on a billion trees dance, and all creation keep time to the music.

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Want to Know God Better? Do This

Martin Bucer, who had left the Church of Rome in protest, wrote: “We agree with our adversaries in this, that the justified person must necessarily live righteously. We agree likewise that they will perish eternally, who do not perform good works.”

Peter Martyr said, “We must know that faith cannot be void of good works.”

Martin Chemnitz wrote “that he [God] requires from them [Christians] good works.”

In a sermon, John Calvin declared that “the gift of good works … shows that we have received the Spirit of adoption.”

I quote these particular theologians in the hope of emphasizing the importance of good works without going off onto a rabbit trail of theological controversy. These men were all early reformers who fiercely denied that good works could save a person, yet insisted that good works are integral to the Christian life. The Bible itself says a great deal about good works and their importance, but before going into that, it may be helpful to clarify what is meant by “good works.”

I do not mean what St. Paul sometimes meant by “works”: the performance of practices prescribed by the Law of Moses (e.g., Galatians 2:16). These are what might be called religious good works: circumcision being first among them, but also including adherence to dietary laws and the keeping of holy days (think weekly Sabbaths, high Sabbaths, and special days). When Paul argues against “works,” it is these kinds of “works” he has in mind.

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Here, when I speak of good works, I am thinking of actions that are inspired by faith and expressed in service to God Titus 3:8; James 2:14-26). These could include, for example, a “religious” duty like going to church, but might also include taking a meal to a fellow church member who has lost a spouse, giving cash to an unemployed acquaintance, or helping the proverbial little old lady across the street. These are acts of love, and they are of great consequence in the lives of believers. Martin Bucer – as strongly opposed to a salvation-by-works doctrine as Luther himself – would say that people who do not perform such good works will perish eternally!

Across the theological spectrum, it is agreed that good works should characterize the follower of Jesus. It is, therefore, appropriate to ask ourselves if good works characterize us. What are we doing that is inspired by faith and expressed in service to God? What acts of love have we engaged in recently?

There are dozens of times in the New Testament when we are enjoined to do good/beautiful works or when such works are closely linked to a believer’s life. We are told that people will glorify God because of our good works (Matthew 5:16; 1 Peter 2:12). By doing what is good, we are protected from wasted and unproductive lives (Titus 3:14). God himself has prepared good deeds for us to do (Ephesians 2:10), and doing them will lead to a harvest (Galatians 6:9). A believer’s good works are the visible manifestation of what would otherwise be an invisible faith (James 2:18).

One text, often overlooked in a discussion about good works, is Colossians 1. Interceding for the believers in Colosse (vv. 9-12), Paul prays that they will please the Lord in every way, and then proceeds to list some of those ways. First on the list: “bearing fruit in every good work” (Colossians 1:10).

What comes next, “growing in the knowledge of God,” is closely connected to “bearing fruit in every good work” by the conjunction “and” (καὶ). Paul seems to intentionally link a growing knowledge of God with an engagement in fruit-bearing good works. Every believer who has ever done one of the “good works which God prepared in advance for us to do” has known God better because of it.

Want to know God better? Do the good works he prepared in advance for you to do. The equation goes like this: Doing good works God selected for you = knowing God better and more intimately.

A few verses later in Colossians 1, we see the other side of this equation. In English versions, this is easily missed, but it stands out in Greek. In verse 21, Paul reminds the Colossians that they were once alienated from God and their thinking was hostile toward him “in your evil works” (literal translation).

We get to know God better by doing the works he wisely chose for us to do. In Paul’s language, we “grow in the knowledge of him.” But we will grow in our alienation from, and hostility toward, God if we do the evil works God does not want us to do. Either way, the “works” we do play an important role in our relationship with God.

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The Story of the Bible (as told on the Emmaus Road)

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Heads Up

I just wanted to let you know that I started a sermon series this week I’m calling Wide Angle. In it, we’ll explore the big picture of the Bible, how it fits together, and what difference that makes for us. Over the years, I have heard the refrain, “I can’t understand the Bible,” many times. This is an effort to help people – including me – understand the Bible in a way that helps us live out its good news.

I’ll be posting the first sermon, an introduction and overview based on Luke 24 (the Emmaus Road passage), later in the week. Hope you enjoy. And if you would prefer to read the sermon rather that watch/listen, let me know.

Shayne

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This Year, Punch Up Your Resolution

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I haven’t made a New Years resolution in years—maybe ever. I’ve always thought: “Why make a resolution? Just do what you know you’re supposed to do.” Besides that, I’ve known many people who make resolutions but only kept them for a week or two.

That is because people usually resolve to do something they really don’t want to do. Of course, they want the result – being thinner, being stronger, being more knowledgeable – but they don’t want to do what it takes to get there: diet, exercise, and read. Sitting on the sofa, eating chips, and watching TV is much more comfortable. If we actually wanted to diet (rather than lose weight), wanted to work out (rather than be strong), wanted to read (rather than be smart), our resolutions might have more effect.

Even though I have not made New Years resolutions in the past, I am making one this year. I resolve to complain less and continue doing so until I do not complain at all. I think I am a natural complainer. It’s always been easier for me to see what is wrong in a given situation than to see what is right. That inclination, whether instilled by nature or by nurture (or both), makes it easy for me to complain.

I walk out of a church service, thinking the preacher took forty-five minutes to say what he could have said in ten. My wife and I get in the car and before we leave the parking lot, she has commented on the “good sermon.”

Well, I’ve had enough of it. I want to stop complaining – not just because people don’t like to be around complainers (though they don’t), but because I don’t like complaining. And because St. Paul says, “Do all things without grumbling and complaining” (Philippians 2:14). He also said, “And do not grumble, as some of them did—and were killed by the destroying angel” (1 Cor. 10:10-11) I’m not looking over my shoulder for that angel, but grumbling seems like a very unhealthy habit.

So, I’ve resolved to stop it. How am I going to keep that resolution when so many other people fail to keep theirs—many of them stronger and more capable than me?

For one thing, I am going to write my resolution out and keep it where I can see it. Writing does something to us that merely thinking does not. I am going to write my resolution in a similar fashion to the resolutions that a young Jonathon Edwards wrote for himself (http://www.jonathan-edwards.org/Resolutions.html). He prefaced them this way: “Being sensible that I am unable to do anything without God’s help, I do humbly entreat him by his grace to enable me to keep these Resolutions, so far as they are agreeable to his will, for Christ’s sake.”

Over the space of a few months, Edwards wrote 70 resolutions. The first is this: “Resolved, that I will do whatsoever I think to be most to God’s glory, and my own good, profit and pleasure, in the whole of my duration, without any consideration of the time, whether now, or never so many myriads of ages hence. Resolved to do whatever I think to be my duty and most for the good and advantage of mankind in general. Resolved to do this, whatever difficulties I meet with, how many soever, and how great soever.” The 70th and final resolution is this: “Let there be something of benevolence, in all that I speak.” 

My resolution is this: “With God’s help, I resolve to complain less and continue doing so until I do not complain at all. When I fail – and realize it – I will confess my failure and stop.”

To make this resolve stick, I will recruit the help of family and friends. I will, for example, ask my wife to point out to me when I am complaining and, if necessary, point out to me when I am attempting to justify my complaint. Perhaps I need a second resolution to listen graciously and gratefully when I am rebuked for complaining.

If you are making a resolution this year, why not punch it up a bit? Write it out and put it where you will see it. When you stop seeing it in that place (which will happen), move it to another place. Then enlist help from people who love you. Ask them to alert you to those times when you go back on your resolution.

As long as you are making a resolution, why not make it stick?

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