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Ephesians 2:8-9

Through Faith!

It’s a constant theme in the Bible that a saving relationship with God is one that is solely based on faith. It’s not just faith or belief in God’s existence; it’s faith in His goodness as well. I think that’s the author’s point in Hebrews 11:6. He writes, “And without faith, it is impossible to please him, for whoever would draw near to God must believe that he exists and that he rewards those who seek him.” This too is the point that James makes when he remarks that belief in the existence of God is not saving faith, even the demons believe that God exists. The demons are God’s enemies and hate him, yet they believe he IS! We must trust that He’s a loving, caring, and forgiving God who will reward those who honestly want to find Him.

This comes down to the understanding and acceptance of what He did for us in the person of His son, Jesus Christ. Christ is the most profound expression of love imaginable. To receive Christ and accept God’s grandest expression of His love is what it means to believe. A saving faith in Jesus Christ is a faith that sees Him as he was meant to be seen. This is what Paul meant when he told the Philippian Jailor in Acts 16, “Believe in the Lord Jesus Christ, and you will be saved.” To believe in Jesus Christ is to understand God’s attitude toward us. God’s greatest command to love Him is only possible when we grasp the truth of how much he loves us.

Faith is the conviction of God’s goodness and positive disposition towards us; after all, God “so loved” the whole world, including me, that He sent His son to die for me. Faith is a non-meritorious system of understanding the connection between God and man. Paul made it clear to us in Ephesians 2:8-9. Paul writes, “It is by grace you are saved, through faith. It is not of works, lest a man should boast. It is a gift from God.” Everyone actually has faith. Everyone believes in something and trusts in something. Everyone has faith in something—faith in some religion, faith in one’s self, faith in fate, faith in evolution, faith in mankind. Even the atheist has faith in his own reason. We have different IQs, but we all have faith. The idiot has faith; the genius has faith. There is no particular value in faith. It is the object of our faith—Jesus’ death on the cross—that saves us. Only He has the power to forgive our sins and give us eternal life. Salvation is through faith, not feeling. It is through faith, not through fiction. But there is only one real faith that works for time and eternity. True faith is faith in the one true God—the God who made us, who will judge us, and who has paid the price to save us.“It is by grace you are saved, through faith…” Ephesians 2:8

Luke 19:1-10

No Matter How Small!

Today is my 78th birthday! Thank you, thank you! Still, I often feel very insignificant in this world after all this time. It seems to get worse the older I get and the less that I contribute to the world. The world population has just reached about 8 billion people, and it’s very easy to feel like one doesn’t matter in this huge, complex world. Looking up at the stars is majestic for sure, but it’s also a reminder of our “smallness” in such a vast universe. Even driving in traffic can create a sense of insignificance in the world. I was stuck at a traffic light on 90th and Dodge one day. As I remember it, it took 3 light changes for me to get to make my left turn. Do I really matter in a world of so many people and in such a vast universe? I believe that’s the way Zacchaeus felt.

In Luke 19, we read the story of this “little man.” He couldn’t see over the crowds to get a glimpse of Jesus. Verse 3 says it’s “because he was too short…” The word for “too short” is actually one used for a physical disability. It’s used in non-biblical concepts for the extremely short people who have the malady of dwarfism or are called midgets. Zacchaeus had an overwhelming sense of his insignificance in a world of people who were all bigger than him. He was a little person in a huge world. It’s really easy for us all to feel that way. I can relate to Zacchaeus, can’t you?

The story goes on to tell us that this little guy climbed up into a sycamore tree with branches that arched over the spot where Jesus was going to walk in order to see what the crowds were all fascinated by. Verse 5 says, “But when Jesus got to that place, he looked up…” I imagine Jesus’ eyes meeting his eyes! What a wonder! Of all the “big” people in the crowds, Jesus noticed him. I believe God moved the writers of the Bible to give us this story to teach us one of the most important lessons about God and our insignificance in a vast world. That principle is, “No matter how small I am, or no matter how small I feel, Jesus notices me!” I love the old hymn based on Luke 12, where Jesus tells his listeners that God doesn’t overlook a single person. In verses 6 and 7, it says in the Message translation, “God never overlooks a single sparrow. And he pays even greater attention to you, down to the last detail – even numbering the hairs on your head.” Jesus made this apparent to Zacchaeus, and God wants to communicate this same truth to us. The religious leaders in the crowd were disturbed that Jesus was going to be with a sinner, but Jesus explained that it was for people like Zacchaeus, the small, lost, insignificant people in the world, that he came into the world. “For the Son of Man came to seek and to save the lost.” Luke 19:10

Isaiah 43:1, 49:15-16

Jesus Knows Me!

As I’ve been studying through the story of Zacchaeus, I’ve found some real encouraging principles for my life. Yesterday, I considered the fact that no matter how small I am, Jesus notices me, and God pays attention to me. Although I’m only one person out of 8 billion on the planet at this time, I’m a very important person to God.  I’m a VIP. Someone once said that if you were the only person on the earth, God would have still sent His son. And His son, Jesus, would have come and died for you all the same! God pays attention to the sparrows. His “eye is on the sparrow, and I know he watches me.” He not only watches and pays attention to me, but he also knows me and every part of me.

When Zacchaeus climbed up into the tree, and Jesus walked under him, the text tells us that Jesus “looked up.” He noticed him. But more importantly, he said, “Zacchaeus.” He called him by name! Now, how did Jesus know this little man’s name? I expect that the Son of God knows each of us by name. I would also expect that Jesus may have been quoting Isaiah 43:1. It says, “But now thus says the LORD, he who created you…he who formed you… Fear not, for I have redeemed you; I have called you by name. You are mine.” Later in Isaiah 49:15-16, God asks a probing question. “Can a mother forget her nursing child? Can she feel no love for a child she has borne? Even if that were possible, I would never forget you! See, I have engraved your name on the palms of my hand.” In church, one Sunday, we had the nail-pierced hands of our lord displayed as a graphic around the worship center. It reminded me of this verse. There’s another verse in Isaiah; also, it’s the very cry of Isaiah for everyone to hear the messianic message that he brings. He says, “Listen to me…and give attention… you peoples… The LORD called me from the womb, from the body of my mother. He named my name.”

As our church grew I would often struggle to know everyone’s name. It used to be I knew everyone. But things have changed, most important of which, I’m getting older! But I know I’ve offended more than a few people by calling them by the wrong name. I hate it when I do that because I know how good I feel when people remember me and can call me by name. I hope you let God speak to you from the story of Zacchaeus. I hope you can hear him say to you, no matter what anyone says, no matter how easily we’re forgotten by others, no matter how lost and alone you might feel, God pays close attention to you. God calls you to him by name! He knows everything about you and wants you to draw close to him. Jesus said, “Come to me (Chuck, Kathy, etc), and I will give you rest.” John tells us, “The sheep hear his voice, and he calls his own sheep by name and leads them out.” John 10:3

Luke 19:1-10, Revelation 3:20

Jesus Wants Me!

From the story of Zacchaeus, we learn that love and acceptance is what changes us. Another biblical principle that comes to us from the story of Zacchaeus is that no matter what I’ve done, Jesus wants me. I have an album by Brenda Lee in my oldies but goodies collection. The title song is “I Want to Be Wanted.” That’s a true emotion for every human being who ever walked on the face of this earth. We all want to be wanted. Zacchaeus is no different. I’m sure I don’t need to go into too much detail explaining how bad this little man was. Everyone seeks to find meaning and purpose in life. We all look for it in our relationship with others in our society in one of three ways or a combination of several ways. First, we might look at our appearance! The magazines and TV in our country broadcast the faces of the beautiful, but most of us are just normal-looking people as far as the world is concerned. I expect Zacchaeus was even less than that. If we fail in appearance, especially in our teenage years, we’ll find acceptance from others through our achievements. We might turn to affluence if we aren’t as bright as others or can’t produce in the athletic arena. Money will buy you anything, right? Our world often lives by the golden rule: he who has the gold rules! My son Chuck gave me a secular principle based on Paul’s comments about love. He said, “These four things remain: faith, hope, love, and money. But the greatest of these is money…” It will buy anything, right? Absolutely not! The great apostles of the ’60s, John, Paul, George, and Ringo, had one thing right: “Can’t buy me love!”

Zacchaeus was a wealthy man, but he was despised and hated by his community. He worked for the occupation forces of Rome. I wonder if it wasn’t his physical handicap that prevented his access to the temple courts and the religious rituals of Israel. As an outcast he was just plain “unacceptable” in oh so many ways. But He was another lost soul. He had no meaning and no purpose in life just like many in the world today. His wealth didn’t make him happy, and when Jesus came around, he wanted to check him out. Jesus stops and notices him amongst all the people in the crowds. Jesus notices you. Jesus called him by name. Jesus knows your name. Jesus then called Zacchaeus. He said, “Hurry and come down, for I must stay and dine with you at your house today…”

As simple as this little story is, I hope you let God tell you that no matter what you’ve done, he wants you! The world may reject you! You may not be the most beautiful person in the world. But Jesus wants to fellowship with you. He wants to hang around you! You might not be the greatest at any activity in the world. You may not have accomplished a whole lot in this world, but Jesus wants to hang around you. The final book in the Bible explains this. Jesus says, “I stand at the door and knock. If you hear my voice and open the door, I will come in and eat with you and you with me.” (Revelation 3:20)

Luke 19:1-10

Love Changes Me!

There are many self-improvement programs in the world today. You can increase the power of your mind and improve your memory. You can exercise and improve the shape of your body. You can learn public speaking and learn how to win friends and influence people. You can learn how to invest your resources to improve your bottom line. There are many, many programs to help us improve ourselves. I’m all for improving myself! Lord knows I need an awful lot of improvement in many areas of my life. But when it comes right down to it, it’s how I see myself that really matters most. In order to become a better person, I need to see a better person. This is the message that Jesus brought to Zacchaeus.

Jesus noticed him. Of all the people in the crowds where Jesus walked, he noticed him. I can’t point out often enough the truth that this teaches me. Of all the people in the world, over 7 billion, no matter how small I am, God notices me! God notices you! But he also knows me and you. Just as Jesus called Zacchaeus by name, so too does Jesus call us by name! No matter how anonymous we feel in this world, we are intimately known and loved by God. Further, no matter what we’ve done in life, God wants us. I love to present the good news to people about God’s love expressed to them on the cross of Calvary. I love to tell people that through faith in Jesus Christ, God forgives all their sins. Sometimes, someone will say to me, “Well, that’s easy for you to say. You don’t know what I’ve done.” I like to remind them that although that’s true, God knows it all. And He wants you anyway. There are no skeletons in anyone’s closet as far as God is concerned.

When this truth sank into Zacchaeus’ mind and heart, the bible tells us that he received Jesus into his life “joyfully,” and then he exclaimed, “Behold, Lord, the half of my goods I give to the poor. And if I have defrauded anyone of anything, I restore it fourfold.” I’ve heard sermons from this passage on the necessity of giving to the poor and returning things that we’ve stolen. To me, that totally misses the point. It’s the joyful reception of God’s love and acceptance that made Zacchaeus want to be a better person. God’s love taught Zacchaeus how much he mattered to God and that love and acceptance are what changed him and made him want to become all that God saw in him. Exercise “profits little,” Paul said. But that phrase means that it does profit some. The word little means “for a short time.” But life changes as a result of understanding how much I mean to God on and on. We must see ourselves through the eyes of God’s love. Paul tells us in 1 Corinthians 13:8 about the importance of love above everything else. It is one of the three things that will never end. Faith and Hope are the other two, but Paul concludes with the fact that Love is the greatest. I believe it’s because the other two are based on love. If love ends, so too do the other two. But Paul says, “But love will last forever…” 1 Corinthians 13:8

Luke 40:43

The Reality of My Mortality

There are some interesting principles that we can learn about “salvation” that come from the conversation between the two thieves on the crosses beside Jesus. One of them screams at Jesus to prove who he is by saving himself and them, too. I sometimes think I do a similar thing. I insist on God doing something for me or proving himself to me by giving me something that I want in the here and now or showing me some kind of sign. The other thief accepted his fate and expressed his faith in who Jesus was before dying. Before he died, he said some things to the unbelieving thief. The first thing he said in the conversation recorded in Luke 40:43 is, “Don’t you fear God even when you have been sentenced to die?”

I’m hard-pressed to understand how a dying felon can still have no fear of God. Yet many, many, many people enter eternity without the fear of God. With this frame of mind, the last thought he had was of what he was leaving behind. His whole being, purpose, and significance are in the here and now. He can’t think beyond his own wants and needs. Furthermore, he just doesn’t want to. Save me from this world’s troubles! Save me from this world’s pains! This life and this world are all I have, and I can’t bear to let them go. He’s like the drunk being thrown out of the bar by the bouncer. He grabs ahold of everything on the way and begs to be allowed to stay and have another drink. Many people get drunk on the pleasures, possessions, and powers offered in this world and can focus only on those things. But the wise old owl faces the truth of his mortality and realizes what the wisest old owl in the world once said. At the end of Ecclesiastes, Solomon, who had experimented with absolutely everything this world had to offer, concluded, “When all has been heard, fear God and keep his commandments, for this is the whole duty of man. For God will bring every deed into judgment, with every secret thing, whether good or evil.”

Yes, the fear of God, especially in view of our mortality and accountability, is an essential ingredient for salvation. Without it, we’re left only with the present, disappointing, unsatisfying, callous world with all its devious pleasures and possessions. But with the fear of God in our hearts, we can come to grips with the reality of our mortality and face God with confidence, expecting not the fleeting joys of this life but the everlasting pleasures in a place called “paradise” in the next life. I’m going with that! The author of the book of Hebrews, 9:27, tells us, “It is appointed for man to die once, and after that comes the judgment.”

Luke 40:43

Repent and Believe!

One commentator wrote, “There is no repentance without the fear of God. We must recognize that, more than anything else, sin is an offense against the holiness of God. A confession that acknowledges sin without fearing God is a false confession that falls short of true repentance.” The question that the good thief asked the bad thief on the cross was, “Don’t you fear God, even when you’re dying?” Of course, there was no fear of God there, just a lust and passion to hold on to this life. But the good thief adds a powerful second statement in his dialogue. He says in Luke 40:43, “we deserve to die for our sins.” It’s the sincere repentance like that of the prodigal son who runs away from his father but then returns and falls at his father’s feet and says, “father, I have sinned.”

I’m stunned that there has been so much uproar against public figures who make bold proclamations of their faith. I’ve heard that such a proclamation is a death knell for those in Hollywood. Christian faith, they argue, should be kept to yourself.  In the society we live in, it’s perfectly acceptable for homosexuals in society to have “gay pride parades” where they flaunt many disgusting and disgraceful manners and lifestyle convictions. They are celebrated by the world and even given Golden Globe Awards for situation comedies that promote it. Further, the moral convictions of the media have allowed full exposure to such an extent we actually have to block content to protect our children. Many secular concepts are given legitimate press and even positive reviews for their public presentations. But if a Christian quarterback kneels on the sidelines and bows his head in prayer, there is outrage! Focus on the family can air a very tasteful, beautifully produced, 30-second commercial during a professional football game, and the reaction, measured by the comments on YouTube and facebook, demands that the media censor all religious content.

I believe the reason for this is that biblical Christianity is a worldview that calls us to face the reality of our mortality and accountability to a God who made us for a purpose. It calls everyone! It involves, first of all, recognition of my sinfulness, and that’s not a popular thing in this world. Throughout the centuries, Christians have been vilified, pulverized, and crucified. I hope you notice that the saving faith of the thief on the cross began with the confession, “We deserve to die for our sins.” Death comes to all men and women! But as I mentioned, it’s the thing we’d rather not deal with. We would rather run from it and focus on the here and now and demand whatever gods may be to suit our needs and meet our desires in this life, like the first thief on the cross who demanded that Christ prove himself in the here and now by exempting him and his co-thief from the consequences of the sin he is unwilling to admit. John the Baptist brought a simple message to the world. It was, “The kingdom of God is at hand; repent and believe in the gospel.”

Luke 40:43

All In The Same Boat!

One of the thieves on the cross next to Jesus called for Jesus to save them and prove he was God’s Son. The good thief on the cross rebuked his partner in Luke 40:43 by saying “don’t you fear God even when you’re dying? We deserve our sentence of death, but this man hasn’t done anything wrong.” In any situation in which we cannot save ourselves, we need someone who hasn’t found themselves in the same predicament. If we fall into a pit with others, there is no way we will be able to help each other out. But if there’s someone who has not fallen into the pit, they are in a position to save us. Another way to say it is that we’re all in the same boat, adrift on the ocean of sin, and we’ll never be able to pull ourselves out. We need a savior!

All of us have fallen into a deep pit of sin. No matter how hard we may want to, or no matter how hard we may try, we cannot save each other. The best thing we can do is make the pit a little more bearable. But what usually happens is that we blame each other for being in the pit, accuse each other, and judge each other. In Chapter 4, verse 12, James tells his reader that living like that in the “sin pit” is no way to live with each other, primarily because “He is the only one who is able to save…” He then asks the other sin-pit dwellers, “Who are you to judge your neighbor?” The thief on the cross is right about himself and his friend’s situation, but he is also right about ours. We are in the sin pit and deserve our judgment. We all need a savior, and there is only one person who “hasn’t done anything wrong.” Peter agrees with James. He’s quoted as saying in Acts 4:12 (Notice the same reference as James 4:12), “And there is salvation in no one else, for there is no other name under heaven given among men by which we must be saved.” There is no one in the world of whom it can honestly be said “he has done nothing wrong.” We’ve all fallen in, and we can’t get out. But He hasn’t fallen, and He can help us out. The three children thrown into the fiery furnace in the book of Daniel said to the executioner, “…the God who we serve is able to save us…”

But in order to save us from the Pit, not only was it essential for Christ not to have fallen into that pit of sin himself, but he also needed the wherewithal to get us out of our pit. When the good thief acknowledged his guilt and came to grips with the justice of his destiny, he then acknowledged Jesus’ innocence and perfection. He then said to Jesus, “Lord, remember me…” It is the fact that He is Lord that qualifies Him to act as Savior. That is why Scripture says, “Everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved” (Romans 10:13). Jesus could not be Savior if He were not Lord. The writer of the book of Hebrews reminds us, “He is able to save to the uttermost those who draw near to God through him…” Hebrews 7:25

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