Wednesday, April 22, 2009

VOICE OF THE PROPHET #2


Isaiah 11-12
April 26, 2009
with Adam Waters



Yesterday was NFL DRAFT DAY… every year, scouts look at college prospects to try and find the best players for their team, their system, their needs…. But every once in awhile, a player is labeled the team’s Savior… he liberate us from all of our losing seasons… Bengals fans? How many Messiah’s have you had over the years? Akili Smith… Ki-Jana Carter…Peter Warrick…OR if you’re not a Bengals fan, who can forget Ryan Leaf? Or how many presidents were supposed to “change W-DC?”

Remember Isaiah’s Focus
• Judgment is not a bad thing because it is from the hand of God.
• Hope in the future is not beyond reach.
• God’s holiness must be encountered and dealt with in our lives.
• God’s holiness brings life!
• In that day (11:6,10,11 – 12:1,4), when Messiah comes, everything be changed…

THE Prophet’s VOICE
Life from death…
• Isaiah 11:1-5
• See the example of Messiah: not tainted by human motives, but pure.
• Comes from the Spirit
• Comes from obedience

Life in the Father…
• Isaiah 11:6-9
• God is constant
• Looks upside down
• Is powerful it can heal anything!
• And full… because of Messiah.

Life in community…
• Isaiah 11:10-16
• Messiah provides a way back…
• Has peace from God alone.
• Has unity from God alone.
• Has purpose from God alone.

Life in celebration…
• Isaiah 12
• Brings joy to the lips of the hurting.
• Brings shouts to God’s people.
• Overflows with praise to the Father.

GOD IS HOLY... Isaiah's conversion to a holy man took place in the very throne room of God. Ours take place through the power of the Messiah.

Saturday, April 18, 2009

VOICE OF THE PROPHET begins...


PROPHET #1
April 19, 2009
with Adam Waters

You cannot force someone to love you… have you ever tried? Children… girl/boyfriend… spouse… coworker… parents… others.


Intro Isaiah
• E.PETERSON says that prophets have 2 functions… (#1) They work to get people to accept the worst as God’s judgment (not a religious catastrophe or political disaster). If what seems like the worst is God’s judgment, then it can be embraced for God is good and intends for our salvation. So judgment (though maybe not what we want or anticipated) can never be the worst for it is the work of God to set the world and/or us right. (#2)They work to get people who are beaten down to open themselves up to hope in God’s future. In the wreckage of exile, death, humiliation and sin, the prophet ignited hope, opening lives to the new work of salvation that God is about at all times and everywhere.
• Isaiah chooses to play these 2 things out in relation to God’s holiness. When we enter into God’s holiness (Is. 6), it changes us. We are forced to deal with our darkest parts and cannot help but react. Holiness forces a decision: do we love God and follow or do we turn our backs and run because holiness is too difficult to deal with.
• As we study Isaiah, we will see God’s holiness brings judgment, comfort and hope.

THE Prophet’s VOICE
God’s Heart is Broken ~ Isaiah 1:1-17 (MSG)

• The church had lost focus on listening to God.
• The church had lost focus on sacrifice.
• The church had lost focus on worship.
• The church has lost focus on loving others.

Destruction is Certain ~ Isaiah 5:8-30 (NLT)
1. For those who are dishonest in business.
2. For those who care more about the party than the holiness of the Father.
3. For those who challenge the Father with their sin.
4. For those who twist the truth.
5. For those who think they are smarter than the Father.
6. For those who ignore the standards of the Father.

Hope? (MSG) Isaiah 1:18-20 ~ "Come. Sit down. Let's argue this out." This is God's Message: "If your sins are blood-red, they'll be snow-white. If they're red like crimson, they'll be like wool. If you'll willingly obey, you'll feast like kings. But if you're willful and stubborn, you'll die like dogs." That's right. God says so.

• You are going to find that Isaiah knows about God’s holiness… and he’s consumed with speaking out God’s voice to us, so that we have to deal with that purity.
• But, he is ridiculously focused on the redemption of God’s people too… and he is constantly weaving the story of Jesus through the Father’s words.
• You must have a relationship with the Father.
• You cannot get there without a relationship with Jesus.
• If you refuse relationship, it all ends in death (Romans 6:23).
• Just because you are forgiven, doesn’t mean you’re in a relationship with God. Just because you know Jesus has ransomed you, doesn’t mean you’ve chosen to obey, listen and repent.
• God has chosen not to force love on us. What have you chosen to do?

Sunday, April 12, 2009

VOICE OF THE TEACHER #11

Mark 16
April 12, 2009
with Adam Waters

Do you know the story of the boy who cried wolf… Reading to your kids can sometimes get monotonous as you remember every word of their stories… have you ever heard a story so many times that you got tired of it?
Let me ask this a different way: How many of you have every risen from the dead?
It seems like sometimes at Easter, I hear the preacher get up and begin to tell the story of Jesus… and the audience eyes begin to glaze over. “I’ve heard this before.” “I’ve got a ham going for when the family comes over after service.” “What’s this got to do with my life in 2009? I’m out of work. I’m broke. My kids are a mess. My dad’s in the hospital… so what that Jesus came back to life in 30AD!” and we are at the crossroads of ever wanting to listen again to another sermon… but you’re here today! And I want to tell you something: Jesus brought himself back from the dead AND IT MATTERS!

What happened at the resurrection?
· First, Jesus brought himself back to life… that’s sweet! He entered into the place furthest from his light, holiness and life & said, “I win here too!”
· Second, Jesus made it official that he had the power to conquer all the death in your own life—physical and spiritual.
· Finally, if that’s true friends, that means that you have the ability to NOT BE DEAD! Do you get it? Jesus paved the way for all of us to be resurrected. He paid the ransom for you and I to not face death. He turned us from exist-ers into ALIVE people. He redeemed us in order that we might become HIS RESURRECTED CHURCH!

THE TEACHER’S VOICE ~ His charge to his resurrected church…
Mark 16, Matthew 28, Luke 24, John 20-21, Acts 1
GO…
· Mark 16:15, Matthew 28:19, Luke 24:47
Make disciples
· Mark 16:16, Matthew 28:19, Luke 24:47, John 21
Teach people the truth about me…
· Mark 16:15, Matthew 28:19-20, Luke 24:48
Be powerful…
· Mark 16:17-18, Matthew 28:20 (also 10), Luke 24:49 (also 10), John 20:22-23, Acts 1:8
Why will this work?
1. I’m going with you! (Matthew 28:18, Luke 24:47)
2. I’m in charge (Matthew 28:18, Luke 24:47)… it’s my authority.
3. I’m alive (Acts 16:1-8)…

We must tune our ears to a different station…
We are challenging you to live like what God has to say actually matters!
If what he is saying matters, then we need to realize that Jesus has resurrected!
And HE HAS resurrected us… and as the RESURRECTED CHURCH, we are to powerfully take this message of life to the WORLD!

VOICE OF THE TEACHER #10

Mark 14-15
Thursday, April 9, 2009
with Matt Johnson

Mark 14:1-11 -
Jesus anointed with perfume.
Disciples angry over wasted wealth.
Judas goes to betray Jesus.

Mark 14:12-26
Passover meal with disciples.
Points out betrayal.
Institutes new covenant.

Mark 14:27-31, 66-72
Jesus predicts that Peter will deny him 3 times.
Peter says he’ll follow him to the death.
Peter finds himself in the courtyard of the leading Priest and denies any association with Jesus.

Mark 14:32-42
Jesus takes the group to pray at Mount of Olives.
Leaves them to pray on their own while he goes to pray.
Jesus prays one last time to ask God to take the burden of the cross.
He returns to the disciples, but they keep falling asleep.
The spirit is willing, but the body is weak.

Mark 14:43-52
Judas continually kisses Jesus.
Jesus arrested.
Peter cuts off ear of servant of high priest.
Jesus calls to light the fact that he’s arrested under the cover of night.
Disciples scatter.

Mark 14:53-65
Jesus taken to home of high priest.
They try in vain to get witnesses against Jesus, but no one has stories that match.
Finally they ask Jesus if he is the son of God.
He responds – I am!
High priest freaks, they begin the abuse.

Mark 15:1-15
Priests take Jesus to Pilate, who questions Jesus.
Jesus is quiet before Pilate.
Pilate offers Jesus or Barabbas.
Crowds, stirred by the Priests, call for Barabbas to be released.
Jesus released by Pilate to be flogged and then crucified.

Mark 15:16-32
Soldiers mock him with purple robe and crown of thorns.
Simon forced to carry the cross piece because Jesus could not continue.
Jesus was crucified.
Soldiers gambled over his clothes.
Crowd mocks him, telling him to come off the cross if he’s so capable.

Mark 15:33-41
Darkness falls over the earth.
Jesus cries out to God, why have you forsaken me?
Jesus took last breath, curtain at temple torn from top to bottom.
Roman officer recognizes Jesus as son of God.

Mark 15:42-47
Joseph asks for Jesus’ body.
Pilate surprised that Jesus is already dead.
Jesus buried in a tomb that belonged to Joseph.
Women saw location of tomb.

If we read through the account of the events of the cross with honest and open eyes, we find ourselves smack in the middle of it. We’re there betraying Christ for what amounts to an insignificant sack of coins that would quickly run out. We’re there at the table, saying “I’ll stick with you forever…” only to deny him a few hours later or run away at the first sign of trouble. We’re there falling asleep when we should be praying. We’re there in the crowds, shouting “Crucify Him” because he hasn’t met our expectations.

You know, it’s great that we’ve got scripture that gives us accounts of real people like the disciples. It puts a name and a face to the issues that we struggle with, and we relate to their struggles, their faith, and their failures. The problem is, sometimes we get so caught up in looking for us in scripture, that we miss Him. We miss the point of the book – to tell us about God! What’s he saying and doing in the middle of the story? If we really pay attention, we can hear the voice of the teacher in the events of the cross.

Did you hear the voice of the teacher?
Maybe it was lost in the story of the events of the cross that we hear so often. Maybe it was lost in the brutality of the suffering of Jesus. Maybe you missed it, but it was there! It’s been there all along as we’ve been following the Gospel of Mark...

“The healthy don’t need a doctor, the sick do. I’ve come to call sinners, not those who think they are already good enough.”

“For even I, the son of Man, came here not to be served, but to serve others and to give my life as a ransom for many!”

It’s here, in this text too… do you hear it yet?

“This is my blood, poured out for many, sealing the new covenant between god and his people.”

It’s there in the midst of it all. Jesus is still teaching, still correcting, still doing everything that he can to make sure that his kingdom is understood. Even with the burden of the cross weighing so heavily on his mind, in his final encounters with his disciples he’s still working to equip them with the knowledge of the kingdom that they need.

His kingdom is about him first, not social justice. We can too easily spend so much time “doing good” for Jesus that we miss him. Pay attention to him first!

His kingdom is about looking at the world through Jesus lenses first. He didn’t abolish Passover, He instituted communion. A remembrance not of temporary freedom from Egypt, but of eternal freedom from sin.

His kingdom is about being submissive in prayer. God, please help me with this, but God, ultimately I want what you want!

His kingdom is about being ok with silence. In the face of accusations and temptations, Jesus did not find it necessary to defend himself to the masses.

In the midst of it all, in the cries, in the shouts, in the whispers, and ultimately in the silence, the voice of the teacher is singular and focused – “For God so loved the world that he gave his only son, that who ever believes in him will not die, but will have eternal life…”

Can you hear it yet?

SHMILY (see how much I love you) Story...

Sunday, April 05, 2009

VOICE OF THE TEACHER: part 9

Mark 13
April 5, 2009
with Adam Waters


In the movie “Big Daddy,” with Adam Sandler it cracks me up when they waste the birthday surprise for his friend on him. He says, “Did you waste the Good Surprise on me?” This week I got a good surprise.

Every once in awhile, we get surprised again when we read Scripture. I had a little of that this week when I read our text. Matt Johnson and I flip-flopped our preaching dates, so I got to get reacquainted with this passage. The thought of Jesus prophesying the destruction of Jerusalem in 70AD seems almost foreign to me at first. He was so focused on His Father’s Kingdom and His mission to redeem the universe that it seemed strange that He had such a soft spot for this city… not surprising though. It had been the epicenter of worship of the Lord God for a long time. He knew that the light the Jews were supposed to be to the world was about to get shifted (remember chapter 12 when the vineyard owner was going to give care over to new tenant-farmers!). Jesus knew that Jerusalem would never again look like it did during His lifetime. Everything was getting ready to change as God’s Spirit would shift from operating through Israel’s prophets that lived and breathed in this central land area for the world to blowing in and out of God’s people all over the world.

Today, I want us to unpack this surprising text together and make it relevant for 2009. As you read it, Jesus’ description of the lead up and destruction of Jerusalem seems like it doesn’t have much to say to you and me, but there are some realities that are as true today as they were 2,000 years ago…

READ Mark 13 (whole chapter)

THE TEACHER’S VOICE
Historical Truths  Jesus, sitting on a hill looking with love on Jerusalem.
1. The temple/Jerusalem were destroyed in 70AD by the Romans.
2. The apostles were persecuted. Look at the book of Acts!
3. The Dome of the Rock was built on the site of the Temple. (637AD Muslims invaded the Byzantine Empire and from 685-691 built the DOR to compete with the splendor of monuments set up by other religions. There it STILL stands)
4. There has been centuries of war (still going on…) over the land of Israel.
5. Many have said and done things in the Lord’s name that were false. (EX: crusades, witch hunts, inquisitions, fundraisers, etc.)

Modern Application  “Don’t let anyone mislead you!”
Verses 5, 23, 33 and 37 implore us to watch out that the mystery of our future doesn't distract us from following Jesus' VOICE!
• War, natural disasters, famines and the persecution of the saints are a natural part of what God expected to happen. (13:1-13)
God never expected for the country of Israel to last… his people yes (v20), but not the nation. (13:14-20)
God expected/still expects that His Name will be misused, but we are to pay attention to HIS Voice. (13:21-31)
• Jesus gave us this teaching, so that we would prepare… for He expects us to be ready for His return. (13:32-37)
Matthew 25 "Story of the Bridesmaids" implores us to stay alert and awake for Christ's triumphal RE-entry!

We must tune our ears to a different station…
We are challenging you to live like what God has to say actually matters!
If what he is saying matters, then we need to realize 2 things:
o History never surprises our heavenly Father.
o History should never surprise us!

As followers of Jesus we must walk around with a different perspective... hopeful in trials... anticipatory not fearing the future!