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THERE IS NO
ONLINE SERMON FOR JUNE 17TH
PLEASE ENJOY LAST SUNDAY'S SERMON (POSTED BELOW)
In Search Of Faith
That
Amazes Even Jesus
Luke 7: 1-10
(Sermon by Pastor Michael D.
Schultz 06/10/07)
INTRODUCTION:
Oh, for a faith that will not shrink… People
have been singing those words for 224 years now, but for much longer
than that, people have wanted to be able to trust in Christ in such a
way that they are unmoved by crises, unshaken by disasters, unaffected
by things that would easily dismantle most people. If I could get
a faith transplant, I believe it would be nice to have Abraham’s faith.
When told by God to sacrifice his only child Isaac whom he loved
enormously (through whose family Jesus would be born), Abraham was
standing on Mt. Moriah, knife drawn over his son, trusting what?
Trusting that God would have to raise Isaac back to life after the knife
was plunged into him, because God had promised through Isaac Jesus would
come as a blessing for all people. I could go for a faith like that.
How about you?
Only twice did Jesus ever single someone out as
having great faith – the Gentile woman who was happy to have crumbs of
grace that fell off the table after the Jews had received grace from
God, and this Gentile army officer who lived in Capernaum. Since
Jesus praised the centurion’s faith as he did, every one of us ought to
take a close look at this man and say or sing the prayer, “Lord, give us
such a faith as this.” Today we’re going -
In Search Of Faith
That Amazes Even Jesus
It’s a search that will result in finding what
we’re looking for. So as I list off four noteworthy things about
the centurion’s faith, your task during the sermon will be to listen and
to understand how it will happen that your trust in the Lord can have
those same features.
Notice first that the centurion had a faith that
was totally unselfish. Whatever his own needs may have been, his
request was for someone else, a servant who was very dear to him.
Concern for others was what his faith had always been about, and people
knew it. He was a Gentile convert to the Jewish faith and with his own
funds he had had a church building constructed for them. That’s highly
remarkable all by itself.
Notice second what happened after he’d heard
about Jesus being the Messiah people were looking for. He
approached the Jewish elders in his congregation and asked them to go
ask Jesus to heal his servant. No “maybe he can’s,” no, “well, it
surely couldn’t hurt’s,” – “Jesus is the promised Savior. As such, he
can certainly heal my servant.” His amazing faith was fixed on Christ.
Notice third how profoundly humble he is.
Upon hearing that Jesus was on his way, he sent a second group of
friends to stop Jesus. “I’m a mere man and, Jesus, you’re the Son of
God. I’m not worthy to have you come into my house or to appear before
you myself.” You’re thinking about how your faith in the Lord can have
these same features, remember? Where does humility like that come from?
Notice finally how the centurion’s faith was
implicitly attached to Jesus’ word. Why did he trust that all Jesus
needed to do was say the word? Because he’d come to know what divine
authority was all about. If he followed his superiors’ orders and his
soldiers carried out his orders merely because that’s how things are in
the military, then all Jesus has to do is say the word and it will
happen, because that’s how things are with the Savior who came from
heaven!
Now it’s our turn. It’s time for this true,
historical event to make a difference for you and me. If we’re in
search of faith like this, a faith that amazes even Jesus, where
does it come from, faith that is totally unselfish, fixed on Christ,
profoundly humble, and implicitly attached to Jesus’ word? It comes
from this: When the centurion looked inside himself, he didn’t like what
he saw. To be more accurate, God had convinced him that he couldn’t
like what he saw. That’s where our search for this kind of faith has to
start.
It is not pretty. We have to use words like
twisted, corrupt, warped, depraved, worthless. If we’re ever going to
have an amazing faith in Christ, we have to see how incredibly
incorrigible and sinister and dirty we are. Our guilt has a stench
more foul than a landfill. Our sin makes God sick to his stomach and
burning with rage, because it’s the opposite of the four things we’ve
featured – selfish, fixed on ourselves, arrogant and uninterested in
what God has to say. It is so “not us” to see ourselves this way that
the only way we will is when the power of the Holy Spirit has changed us
to see ourselves this way.
When he has done this, he moves the camera from
pitiful us to our beautiful Savior. It’s what the centurion saw in
Jesus – do you see it? After his own siblings dismissed him and most
people had rejected his message, Jesus was crushed to be betrayed by a
close friend, and deserted and denied by the rest. In extreme dismay
but willingly he took God’s curse on everyone upon himself. Alone
he carried the cross, alone he was condemned for everyone’s sin, alone
he died as payment for all sin. Then, to prove that all his pain and
suffering were for you, he returned to life and returned to heaven,
never to die again, always to be an advocate for you.
This faith of the centurion at which Jesus
marveled – it comes flooding into you when after not liking what you see
in yourself and knowing that God hates it, God lets you see something
else. He lets you look at Jesus and see yourself – not a sinner,
holy and pure, precious to God.
You want this man’s faith, one that even Jesus
called great? It is not unattainable. It is not a faith that
only people in the Bible can have. It is beating in your heart when you
a sinner look at Jesus the Savior and hear God say you are not a sinner
to him. The Holy Spirit who had to use his power to make you hate what
you see in yourself used even more of his power to make you fall in love
with what you see in Jesus – all your sin washed away and a God who
embraces you and will not let you go.
You have the centurion’s faith as people who
trust in Jesus. Now trust in him as well for the ability to be
unselfish, for the faith that stays fixed on Christ, for the kind of
genuine humility that recognizes what a great God has done for you, and
for the energizing confidence that, to meet your every need, all Jesus
has to do is say the word. That all comes as a package deal because God
gives such a faith as this. He does!
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