No Room For Indifference
A Sermon On:
Matthew
11: 1-24
Revelation
3: 14-22
PREPARED BY
KEN GEHRELS
PASTOR
CALVIN CHRISTIAN REFORMED CHURCH
NEPEAN, ONTARIO
You know, I'm really not quite sure what to do. On the one hand I know that the Lord has called me to preach His Word, and to do it with boldness. But there are occasions, and this is one of them, where I really hesitate, because of what it says.
Like today's reading. I'm not too sure what you'll do with it. As you'll see, it's one of the most un-Canadian of all bible passages. Today's scripture message will rub raw against every Canadian nerve bundle in our bodies.
So remember - I'm just the messenger. Don't shoot!
I want to come back in a moment to explain why I believe this to be such an un-Canadian passage. But consider, first, the situation of John the Baptist. He'd had a season of bold preaching, where people responded in droves. They repented of sinful lifestyles and dedicated themselves to a new purity and boldness in serving the Lord. Things reached a high point when John was able to announce the entrance of Jesus - the Messiah that all Jews had been expecting for centuries. Jesus, said John, was the Anointed Servant of the Lord who would right wrongs, set captives free, remove fear and despair, and bring new glory to God's people.
Things are very different now.
Jesus had gone on a preaching mission. John had been arrested for calling
the King on his immoral behaviour. Laying in a dark, damp cell in a desert
fortresses, John only heard snippets of Jesus' work.
And he waited. Waited. Waited.
The weeks went by and Herod was still on the throne. Self-serving Pharisees
still ran the religious scene with a very short leash. Hated Roman soldiers
still oppressed the people everywhere.
And doubt grows in John's heart.
Yes - doubt.
Even in the heart of this most courageous prophet, one praised by Jesus
as being a solid and forceful man who had advanced the Kingdom of God,
a seed of doubt was sown, and began to germinate.
John cared. He cared and fervently hoped that Jesus would be the Saviour.
But now, with the deck stacked against him, he wasn't so sure anymore.
Which is why he reached out, seeking a lifeline for his faith.
Which Jesus gives, freely and immediately.
Without any condemning words - you notice that, right?
Jesus turns to those who overheard the conversation between him and
John's messengers and gives high praise to John.
John was in a season of spiritual wrestling - and Jesus was there for
him.
The season of wrestling - some of you know it, don't you?
The times you wonder if it is indeed true that God sees you or cares.
The times you wonder whether Jesus really forgives you.
The times you pray and wonder if they rose past the ceiling.
The times you question if God exists, at all.
If you're struggling, don't give up.
If doubt has a headlock on you, don't despair!
For, as with John, so it will be with you.
Jesus has all the time in the world for people who are seeking, searching,
wondering, not sure but looking, uncertain and asking.
I know that sometimes when you come into a church, perhaps this morning
here at Calvin, and everything looks really good. The organist is playing
up a storm. People singing from their hearts. Families sitting together.
Smiles. Handshakes and prayers.
It all looks good.
Except on the inside - you're just not so sure. You wish you could
be, but you're not. Doubt keeps knocking on the door. Spiritual discouragement
seems like a grey February cloud that doesn't blow away. Faith feels like
a dim light with a battery that's almost empty.
If that's you, then let me say just this -- Jesus has got all the time
in the world for you. It's for people like you that the prophet Isaiah
wrote these words about Jesus:
"A bruised reed He will not break.
And a smouldering wick He will not snuff out." [Is 42.3]
For those who struggle - there's all kinds of time and divine patience.
BUT............
Ah, there's always a "but" somewhere, isn't there?
Notice how Jesus changes gears in verse 16. He's taken the time to
send a message of encouragement back to doubting John. And He has sung
the praises of John. But then Christ slams things into overdrive.
Instead of gentle words, He pours out a torrent of condemning words.
Instead of hope, He issues a statement of judgement and doom.
He pictures people as a group of fickle children who didn't want to
play the happy games with the flute, and didn't want to play the solemn
games, either.
Jesus slams those who in one moment stood with arms crossed critiquing
John's austere methods of bringing the message of God, and in the next
breathe wagged a finger against Jesus' easy-going, free-spirited party
approach to life and ministry.
Nothing was good enough for them.
For such people Jesus isn't prepared to waste even a second.
Those who watch His miracles with indifference.
who hear the words He speaks, and file them for "future consideration."
who shrug their shoulders and say, "Sure..... whatever."
easy going, middle of the road, take it or leave it kind of people
- words of Holy denouncing are aimed straight at their heart.
Matthew 11 records prophetic warnings against spiritual indifference.
It is a broadside against complacency and half-hearted spiritual attitudes.
And that's what I was referring to earlier when I said
that this has to be one of the most uniquely un-Canadian passages anywhere
in the Bible.
We've got to be one of the most laid-back nations on earth. Not much
rattles our chain. We shrug our shoulders at just about everything.
"Ah...... whatever" could quite easily be our national motto.
Except, maybe, for a concern here in town about whether Tugnutt can
keep his goals against average below 2.0.
Hard to get Canadians too terribly worked about much of anything.
And that sort of middle-of-the-road, second gear momentum carries over
into the Canadian faith scene far too easily and quietly.
It's an attitude that seeps like toxic waste into the hearts of millions
of Canadians, leaving them satisfied with running on low spiritual octane
and no desire to fill up on super.
Recently I was talking to someone from Africa who has come to do mission
work in Ottawa. He shared how he found this town to be spiritually difficult
to work in. People sit back very complacently.
Not too ready to get off the fence.
Not too interested in deep spiritual commitment.
Phrase often heard is - "Let's not get too worked up about this. OK?"
Often in church circles people are willing to express concern for areas
of the globe that have never heard the gospel. What will happen to them
on the day of final judgement, they wonder.
If we are really willing to take Jesus at His word, to be serious about
what He says, then it's time that conversation changes. It's time we start
getting really concerned about cities that have a church on every corner
- the ones that
have heard the gospel.
Areas like Ottawa-Carleton - That hear the gospel with feet up on the
coffee table, bag of chips and remote in hand.
Because if there is anything that stirs divine impatience,
it is spiritual indifference among those who hear the gospel.
Indifference - hear me - something very different from
doubt.
Doubt is that state of not being sure, of looking for answers, struggling
to find a way out, of striving and searching.
Indifference shrugs the shoulders and says, "Ah..... it can wait.
Doesn't really matter anyway."
Indifference is the attitude of the clock puncher or office fossil with
5 years left till retirement who's just putting in time. Honestly, tell
me:
Do you want to work with a colleague like that?
Indifference is the teacher who uses the same class notes year after
year, repeating the same projects, and never exploring new material.
Do you want to be in her class?
Indifference is the spouse who never buys flowers or other tokens of
affections, who couldn't be bothered saying, "I love you"...... "Whadya'
want? I said it when we got married and until you hear different that holds."
Do you want to be in that kind of relationship?
Compare that to passion -
The passion of an employee who loves her work and gives her innovative
best.
The passion of a teacher who reaps joy from seeing students learn and
grow
The passion of a lover who gives his all to his soul mate.
The passion of a Sens fan who gets in the face of a Leaf heckler.
Spiritual passion -
You can see it in the desire of a believer who eagerly desires to learn
more about the Word of God. Christian Education never ends.
You see it in the heart of the one who talks about and longs for the
return of Jesus Christ.
You see it in the person who longs to come to worship and spend intimate
time with her Lord, to sing and pray and meditate in His presence.
You see it in the person who rejoices when a sinner is snatched from
the jaws of hell and converted onto the road to eternal life.
That's spiritual passion. It's not necessarily noisy, or filled with hype, or gregarious in its expression. It may look very different in different types of people. But you know it when you encounter it.
Compare that to spiritual indifference -
You see it in one for whom coming to the Holy Table of the Lord really
doesn't matter.
You experience it in the presence of one for whom there is no concern
over the conversion of sinners.... even their own friends or relatives.
You see it in the ones for whom worship is best when it's impersonal,
quick and not too intense.
Talking about Jesus just can't get them excited.
Want a barometer of spiritual passion or indifference?
When you fill out your tax return check your line on charitable giving
- Does it tell you something?
Take a few moments and do a time audit - what gets most of your attention?
Before talking about not bothering to take part in education for your soul
- whatever shape that education takes - or you don't need so much worship,
just ask: How much is expressly devoted to Jesus each week?
When you have to make an important moral decision, where do you turn?
Most of all - when you're alone, what goes on in the spiritual recesses of your being? Like in marriage, passion often shows itself best behind closed doors.
My friends, we are entering the season of Lent. Today is the first Sunday
in that season. Lent is the time that the Church traditionally devotes
to spiritual self-examination, sacrifice and recommitment.
It is a serious time that will peak on Good Friday when in a sombre
service we will commemorate the greatest Passion of all --
The passionate love that God had for this world -- so deep that He
sent His one and only Son to die on a cross, so that whoever would believe
in Him would not perish but have everlasting life.
Jesus Christ is not indifferent to you and me.
His love for us is fiery, jealous and hugely passionate.
Here's one time where that now thankfully worn-out word fits -
extreme.
There's no love like it.
In His holy passion Jesus desires believers with a holy burning passion
for Him - one that never stops and says, "Whoa, that's enough. Don't
want to get carried away here, you know."
His holy passion has lots of room for doubters.
He can even tolerate those of unbelief.
Better that than lukewarm assent to faith.
Like tea - it tastes great hot, and is refreshing ice cold.
But lukewarm it's awful stuff.
After Jesus returned to heaven He gave a vision to the apostle John. In that vision He dictated a letter to a particular church. It is a letter that Canadian Christians do well to take note of. I'm going to close by reading it. Let's listen -carefully - and take a long hard look inside as we do.
This morning, Christ has the last word:
God's Yes, the Faithful and Accurate witness, the First of God's
creation, says:
I know you inside and out, and find little to my liking. You're
not cold, you're not hot- far better to be either cold or hot! You're stale.
You're stagnant. You make me want to vomit. You brag, 'I'm rich, I've got
it made, I need nothing from anyone,' oblivious that in fact you're a pitiful,
blind beggar, threadbare and homeless.....
The people I love, I call to account - prod and correct and guide
so that they'll live at their best. Up on your feet, then! About face!
Run after God!
Look at me. I stand at the door. I knock. If you hear me call and
open the door, I'll come right in and sit down to supper with you. Conquerors
will sit alongside me at the head table, just as I, having conquered, took
the place of honour at the side of my Father. That's my gift to the conquerors!
Are your ears awake? Listen. Listen to the words of the Spirit blowing
through the churches." [Rev 3.14-22 The Message]