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Monday, February 20, 2017

Salvation: Touched by the Angel



If it is not about Jesus, it is not about anything.”

[Motto of the Fountain of Life Church]


Given as a sermon to the New Life in Christ fellowship of Cambridge, Ohio on 12/31/16 and to the Fountain of Life congregation of Washington, PA on 1/1/17.

Sermon Purpose Statement:  To compare traditional views of salvation with a Trinitarian view.

Sermon Seeds:  

A.  Adam’s humanity:  we are aware of each other; we participate with one another.
B.  Jesus’ humanity:  We are conscious of each other; we participate in one another
C.  The Angel of the Lord (examples: appearing to Hagar in Genesis 16:7; to Moses in Exodus 3:2; to Zechariah in Zech. 1:12) was the pre-incarnate Son of God)

Due to dietary and ritual cleanliness laws, Old Testament Israel became a closed nation and closed culture and therefore, they began to believe that salvation was for the Jews alone.  Yet David writes 1000 years before Jesus in Psalm 67:1-2: “May God be merciful to us and bless us and cause his face shine upon us, that thy ways may be known on earth, your salvation among all nations5-6:  Let the people praise thee…then shall the earth yield her increase: and our God will bless us.”   

The nations were the Gentiles…us; you and me.  And what is that Salvation?  That the earth may yield her increase.  Salvation is physical wellbeing.

Wonderful scripture verses are found in Isaiah 9:1-3; 6.  The prophet writes 750 years before Jesus that “By the way of the sea, beyond the Jordan, in Galilee of the Gentiles, the people who walked in darkness have seen a great light:  those who dwell in the land of the shadow of death, upon them a light has shined.  Thou hast multiplied the nations, and not increased the joy:  they joy before thee according to the joy in harvest, and as men rejoice when they divide the spoil…For unto us a child is born and unto us a Son is given…and His name will be called Wonderful, Counselor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace.  And of the increase of His government and peace there will be no end.”   Isaiah included gentiles in salvation.  Here salvation is through the great light, the Prince of Peace.  Salvation yields joy.  What is the joy? The joy is harvest and peace.  Salvation is physical wellbeing.   

Let us look at an admittedly superficial, yet workable summery of the Old and New Testament concept of salvation.  The Old Testament concept of salvation was a chosen people, people getting right with God; getting reconciled so they could live in the promised land.  Getting to the covenant land of promise was the goal; living in the promised covenant land was the salvation. 

 The law/the temple was the mechanism which made the promised land possible.  Good behavior equaled reward equaled physical wellbeing.  This Old Testament view is nice news; it is not the Good News.

I was a religious New Testament Christian for 40 years.  For 40-years salvation meant called out ones getting right with God; getting reconciled so they could live in Paradise.  Getting to heaven was the goal, living in heaven was the salvation.  Christ/Baptism was the mechanism which made Paradise possible.  Good behavior equaled reward equaled spiritual wellbeing.   This New Testament view is nicer news; it is not the Good News.

Well then, considering these traditional views, what did the New Testament change from the Old Testament? A physical reward was changed to a spiritual one.  The physical land was upgraded to spiritual heaven.  The tool to get there was changed from the law/Temple to Christ/Baptism.  They reflect the same mind set: use the right tool, do good, be rewarded.   Can this be all there is?  

The common view shown above is that humanity is defective and a tool is needed to fix us before God will or can accept us; can save us.  That tool was once the law.  Today that tool is Christ.  But the Trinitarian theology shows that the Good News is that Christ is not the tool for salvation.  Christ is Salvation.  Salvation is Christ.  Salvation is not a goal.   Salvation is not a process.  Salvation is Jesus Himself.  Salvation is what Jesus is and what we are in Him. 

The life and work or Jesus Christ may be viewed through the lens of a judge, bringing law, obedience, guilt and punishment; or through the view of a Father bringing love, mercy, grace and forgiveness.  These views discuss the “how” of salvation.  We may also accurately view the life and work of Jesus through another focus, a Trinitarian one.  That focus is the “why” of salvation.  We explore the why question by looking at the ultimate purpose and plan of the Father for us as revealed in the Bible.   

God’s purpose for us is the “why” of salvation.  Why are we?  The answer to this question is the Good News.  It is the concept of God for us, not God against us, not using us.  The ultimate purpose of God for us is personal; it is not an academic exercise.  What about that plan?  Was the ultimate plan of God that Jesus would be slain from the foundation of the world to forgive our sins?  The fact the Jesus died on the cross indicates that his death was part of that plan. 

There are two intriguing questions. Concerning the ultimate purpose of God, if Adam had never sinned, would the cross have been necessary; to have Jesus die for non-existent sin?  The logical answer seems to be, no.  But a far more intriguing question transcends the question of sin itself.  Concerning the ultimate purpose of God for us is, if Adam had never sinned, would Christ have become man?  If God’s plan was that man remain an intelligent creature; just a working part of His creation; just offering sacrifice, just tending the Garden of Eden, just naming the animals; then the answer is no.  Adam’s humanity was sufficient for that.   

 But if God had a grander plan, then the answer to that that question becomes the Good News of the gospels.   And that answer is a resounding, YES!  Yes!  From the foundation of the world, Jesus intended to become incarnate man; to assume our humanity into Himself; and to give His humanity to us and for us. 

If Adam never sinned our humanity would not have become broken.  However, if Adam never sinned we would still have Adam’s humanity.  Adam did not participate in perichoresis (* see NOTE on perichoresis below) with the divine being.  We need Jesus’ humanity to participate in perichoresis with Him and the Father and the Spirit.  And the ultimate plan of God is for us to have that type of perichoretic relationship with the Trinity.

Consider that there was a time when we were not.  We were not-being and we were powerless to be.  Consider the insignificance of the ant under our feet.  We were infinitely less significant than that ant.  Then by a deliberate act of love, we were called out of nothing, created and given life.  We were creatures and a part of what he created.  But he made us to be more than another working part or another cog in his universe.  Consider what he did.  Psalm 139:14, “And were fearfully and wonderfully made”; Hebrews 2:7, He crowned us with glory and honor”.  He made us more than working parts.  Nonetheless, with Adam’s humanity, we remained distinct individuals; isolated minds.  In our fleshly Adamic form, we are unable to totally participate in the life of any other being; unable to participate in the life of a diving being.  For the intimate relationship, which God desires with us, our Adamic natures, even if sinless, are incompatible with His.  We might say that our human natures are too fragile to intimately accept His infinite almighty nature.  And therein lies the plan of God for us.   

Our purpose is not existence for the sake of existence.  Our purpose is to have a deep, personal relationship with the God who loves us.  How do we know this?  God, in fact, is moving to make our natures compatible.  

 Let us look at reconciliation. 

Webster’s New World 4th Ed defines the word reconcile:  1.  To make friends again or win over to a friendly attitude.  2. To settle (a quarrel, difference, etc.)  3.  To make (arguments, ideas, texts, accounts, etc.) consistent, compatible, etc.; bring into harmony.  4.  To make content, submissive, or acquiescent (to) / to become reconciled to one’s lot.  This is how finite creatures relate to each other; how they reconcile.  It is for harmony and wellbeing.

In the bible we find reconcile used in the same sense as this secular definition.   

Strong’s Concordance 1259diallasso:  to change thoroughly, i.e. (mentally) to conciliate: - reconcile 
 
Matt 5:24:  First be reconciled to your brother: 

Strong’s 2644 katallasso:  to change mutually, i.e. (fig.) to compound a difference:  reconcile.


1 Cor 7:11:  remain unmarried or be reconciled to her husband.  This finite marital transaction is a very personal, intimate type of relation; it is a type of the personal relation that God wants with us.

But we also find  deeper meanings.


The Divine Father, if you will, reaches down into our vocabulary and touches the word reconciliation and changes it, deepens it, adds a divine dimension to it; a dimension which the dictionary lacks; a dimension which requires for its existence the touch of a divine hand to energize it.


Strong’s 604 apo katallasso – to reconcile fully

Col 1:21:    wicked works, yet now hath he reconciled.  This far exceeds an accountant reconciling numbers on a balance sheet.  This is dealing with sin against God.  This far exceeds dealing with dishonest dealings between men.                                          

Strong’s 2643 Katallage (figurative) adjustment, i.e. restoration to (the divine) favor: - atonement, reconciliation(-ing).

2 Co 5:18: "hath given to us the ministry of reconciliation" – God touches the word.  He is involved and he elevates reconciliation between individuals to a ministry for entire peoples.

Heb. 2:17:  "make reconciliation for the sins of the people"  - He touches it and reconciliation becomes efficacious for the sins of people.  God is involved therefore this reconciliation transcends finite interaction between men.


Strong’s 2644 katallasso:  to change mutually, i.e. (fig.) to compound a difference:  reconcile.

Rom 5:10:  "reconciled to God by the death of his son".  This is God for us.  This is an infinite interaction.  The divine touches the finite.   
  
 2 Cor 5:18:  "of God who hath reconciled us to himself."  Here we are not reconciled with someone while both retaining isolated individuality, but reconciled to someone, joined intimately to someone.  This is intimate.  The divine is touching the finite.

2 Cor 5:20:  "in Christ’s stead, be ye reconciled to God".  Here we are not reconciled with, but reconciled to someone and that someone is divine.  This is intimate.   The divine is touching the finite and the finite changes.

Through this reconciliation, the Holy Spirit makes his dwelling with men. 


1 Corinthians 3:16 - "Do you not know that you are a temple of God and that the Spirit of God dwells in you?"

1 Corinthians 6:19 - "Or do you not know that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit who is in you, whom you have from God, and that you are not your own?"


2 Corinthians 6:16 - "Or what agreement has the temple of God with idols? For we are the temple of the living God; just as God said, "I WILL DWELL IN THEM AND WALK AMONG THEM; AND I WILL BE THEIR GOD, AND THEY SHALL BE MY PEOPLE"

Romans 8:11 - "But if the Spirit of Him who raised Jesus from the dead dwells in you, He who raised Christ Jesus from the dead will also give life to your mortal bodies through His Spirit who dwells in you."


John 16:13 - "But when He, the Spirit of truth, comes, He will guide you into all the truth; for He will not speak on His own initiative, but whatever He hears, He will speak; and He will disclose to you what is to come."


Philippians 2:5 -  "Let this mind be in you which was in Christ Jesus".  To me, this is the most intimate scripture in the entire Bible, in the entire catalogue of human literature.  A union of minds requires a far more intimate connection than any other.  A union of minds is a permanent union.  It is not passing of transitory.  The mind is the seat of our emotions, our beliefs, our identity as persons.  A union of our identities is intimate to the highest degree.  This is the vicarious humanity of Jesus in action.  His entering into a union with our own identity. 

Beloved of Christ, all these verses are literal, they are not figurative.  As unbelievable as that sounds, it is true.  It is the Good News.   God the Holy Spirit is inside us.  Jesus is living inside us.  And the Good news is that we are living in Jesus.  Ephesians 2:6 – And hath raised us up together, and made us sit together in heavenly places in Christ Jesus.  Yes, beloved, we (you and I), even now as you hear this or read this, are seated at the throne of God the Father - because Jesus is there, and we are in Jesus.  That is His vicarious humanity.  Without it, we are still on earth with nowhere else to go.  Jesus ascended into heaven and sits at the right hand of the Father, so states the Apostles’ Creed.  Where Jesus is, we are.  Where we are, Jesus is.  We can’t escape him.  And to paraphrase by Theologian Dr. John McKenna, “Jesus will not be who he is without us.”  We have been part of His eternal plan since before the foundation of the world. 

We know that Jesus died for our sins.  He died for us.  That is the vicarious death of Christ.  It shows that He died in our place.  He took our broken humanity to the cross for us.  But He did not leave us empty.  The vicarious life of Jesus shows that he lives His righteous humanity in our place.  He not only exchanged His righteousness for our guilt, He exchanges our broken lonely alienated humanity with His righteous humanity and intimate life with the Father.  We are touched by the infinite.

Consider the power of this transaction, touched by the infinite.   Leviticus 11-15 outline laws of cleanliness.  For example, whoever touches the carcass of a camel will be unclean.  Haggai 2:12-13 shows that holy flesh touching oil or wine cannot make them holy.  But an unclean man touching oil or wine can make them unclean.  See how Jesus turns this upside down. 
   
Mark 1:40-42,And there came a leper to him, beseeching him, and kneeling down to him, and saying to him, If thou wilt, thou canst make me clean.  And Jesus moved with compassion, put forth his hand, and touched him, and said unto him, I will; be thou clean.  And as soon as he had spoken, immediately the leprosy departed from him, and he was cleansed". 
 
A mere touch from the divine changes us.  

In closing we ask, who are you?  What gives you your identity?  Are you who you think you are?  Are you who they think you are?  Who are you, really?  Ask 1000 people and most will say, “I am a man,” I am a woman,” I am American, Asian, European, a father, a mother, a baker, a mechanic.  Their identity is their sex, their race, their occupation.  How many of those 1000 will say that, “I am a child of God’?  How many know that our true identity is that we are children of God?  You, beloved, may rightly and justly call God “Abba” Father.  You are rightly and justly a brother and friend of Jesus; you are an intimate son of the Father.  You are a dwelling place for the Holy Spirit.  Your salvation is not a place, not a feeling.  Your salvation is Jesus Himself.   

You are touched by the Angel. 



*Note:  Perichoresis is a Greek term used to describe the triune relationship between each person of the Godhead. It can be defined as co-indwelling, co-inhering, and mutual interpenetration.  Concerning the Trinity, the individuality of the three persons are maintained while each person shares in the life of the others.  Trinitarian theology shows that the Trinity is not closed.  It is not intended to be limited to three persons.  Jesus, through his vicarious humanity, assumes mankind into himself, and at the same time dwells with us individually.  Through Jesus, man’s destiny is to share in the intimacies of perichoresis.



Rev. George Relic, Assistant Pastor, Fountain of Life Church

2021 Old National Pike, Washington, PA 15301

A congregation of Grace Communion International

724-583-9217, george2050@atlanticbb.net



Friday, February 10, 2017

The Transfiguration:Jesus the Radiance of God

 "And Jesus was transfigured before them, and his face shone like the sun, and his clothes became dazzling white."Matt:17:2


The Apostles of Jesus had spent nearly two and a half years as his inner circle  of  Disciples, they had heard him preach the Gospel of the Kingdom of God, they witnessed the deliverance  of many and the power which Jesus so willingly used to heal and to restore the sick and downtrodden, yet through it all they seemed to miss the point of his divine identity.

Atop the Mountain 

Jesus chose three of the Disciples to which he would give them just a glance of who he was, so that in the coming weeks and mounts they could encourage the others and affirm to them the reality of the divine nature of their Lord. 

  While retreat at Caesarea Philippi, which was located at the foot of Mt. Hermon, Jesus takes St.Peter, St. James and St. John atop the mount and it is there that the glorious divine truth is disclosed to the three Disciples.

"Six days later Jesus took with him Peter, James, and his brother John and led them upon a high  mountain alone " Matt:17:1


At the mountain top, it is here, that  the glory of their Lord is revealed to them, in power and in an unmistakable way,  and not only to they, but to all who would come to believe in Jesus. Here  , before their eyes,  their Lord is transfigured and seen in the glorious radiance which he would receive  again trough his resurrection. Jesus is transfigured before them. 

The Radiance 

"and Jesus was transfigured before them; and his face shone like the sun, and his garments became as white as light" (2)

These Disciples see the Holy truth as to who Jesus is, they are in truth seeing Jesus as the glorious Son of God by whom we are given the purest revelation as to who God is. All that the great God has to reveal to us Jesus shows us. All of the glory of the divine Holy Trinity is found in Jesus. 

"in these last days has spoken to us in his Son" Heb:1:1a

Jesus is the  living embodiment of the glory of God , the very divine radiance which has shown for all eternity. 

"And Jesus is the radiance of his glory and the exact representation of his nature" (1:3a)

This glorious display before the Disciples  also hearkens to the dawn of creation and the conformation that Jesus as God's eternal Son is the Second Person of the Holy Trinity and the very one by whom all things have been made and are upheld even to this very hour. 

"through whom also he made the world" (2c) and " up holds all things by the word of his power" (3c)

Out of the Darkness

In Jesus we see God's Holy glory, as the very God who brought all things into being, the one who at the very creation shined the divine light of God out of the chaotic darkness. St. Paul speaks of this very thing  as the supernatural light of God breaking through the darkness of the world and illuminating our hearts and minds  shining in full strength the divine truth of who Jesus is, the very Son of God. 

"It is God who commanded the light light to shine out of the darkness, has shone in our hearts to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ" 2Cor:4:6  


His Face Shone Like the Sun

What St. Paul, is telling us is , that the very one who brought all things into being leads us through the spiritual darkness of ignorance regarding the person of Jesus. Out of this darkness the light shines forth with power and glory  with glorious truth of Jesus, that he is God's Son, leading us to worship and to praise our God.

We , like the Disciples upon the Mount of Transfiguration, have had Jesus' son ship revealed to us seeing his face in glory, we are seeing what the Prophet Moses desired to see, the Prophet upon the mountain wished to see the glory of the Lord .

" and Moses said "show me your glory" Ex:33:18

Seeing His Back

This is the same very same glory which the Apostles witnessed there upon the Mount of Transfiguration of Jesus.  Even as Moses sought this divine disclosure, the Lord would only permit him but a faint glimpse of the his divine self. 

"And he said "I myself will make all my goodness pass before you, and I will proclaim the name of the Lord before you" (19a)

Moses receives the affirmation from  the Lord that he will be permitted but a glimpse of the Great God's Holy person , but only his back.  This tells us that there would be but a partial revelation of the Great God to be seen upon the mount with Moses, God's face would not be revealed.

"But the Lord said"you can not see my face" Then the Lord said "There is a place near me where you may stand  upon a rock. When my goodness passes by you , I will put you into the cleft in the rock and cover you with my hand  until I pass by. Then I will remove my hand and you may see my back; but may face must not be seen"(20-23)

Seeing the Face of God

What Moses,  so earnestly sought , was  not fully revealed and seen until the Disciples acceded the Holy Mountain with their Lord Jesus;  and there the face of God was seen in glory in it's holy radiance. Moses could not see the face of God because the Lord had not yet assumed the very face of humanity through the incarnation of the Second person of the Holy Trinity, the Eternal Son of God.

 The Great God has come to us in the person of Jesus. This is to say that when we read the Old Testament  portion of  the Holy word of God we are like Moses seeing the back of God, it is glorious bit not the full glory we see in Jesus found in the New Testament. This makes the Old Testament  the incarnation anticipated and the New Testament the incarnation fulfilled.  

Jesus is the Face of God upon which we might gaze and see the glory of the Great God, we no longer look upon his back  as did our spiritual predecessors having only a partial revelation of the Holy God, we rather have been given the fullest possible disclosure of who God is in and through the incarnation of Jesus.   

We believers in Christ are,  like the Disciples who witness the radiance of the face of Jesus in the Transfiguration seeing the express image and divine revelation of the Great God in the holy person of Jesus.   St. Peter wrote of this very truth which we Christians experience  when he penned his second general Epistle to Christians , but  not just to believers two thousand years ago , but to believers  in all and every age. St.Peter noted that this glorious Transfiguration came with confirmation of the Father that Jesus is  Holy Son of God.

"For Jesus received honor and glory from God the Father when the voice  from the Majestic God said to Jesus "This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased". And we ourselves heard this voice fro  Heaven when we were with Jesus on the Holy Mountain" 2Pet:1:17-18 .  

God the Father is telling us more than about his relationship with Jesus, he is in truth,  speaking of his relationship with us. The Father is telling us that in Christ we are able to experience knowing him as our very own Father. The Transfiguration of Jesus and the divine declaration out of Heaven is an invitation to any and all to enter into that SonShip with God all through Jesus alone. 

We can come to understand what Jesus spoke to St.Phillip when he asked our Lord to "show us the Father". Our Lord answered St.Phillip  "Don't you know me Phillip? have I not been with you such a long time and you do not yet know me?" 

What our Lord is telling St.Phillip and all believers  is that the Father is revealed to us through himself, when we come to look upon Jesus, we are seeing the Father.

"he that looks upon me is seeing the one who sent me"John:12:45  

This is true for believers through out the ages , that when we come to Jesus in prayer, the study of the Holy Scripture or when we gather together in worship we are looking upon Jesus and in so doing we are seeing the Father. It is as if , we have ascended the lofty summit of the Mount of Transfiguration and there as we look upon our Lord Jesus he is transfigured in the eyes of our hearts and minds  we see the radiance and the express image of the Father in it's most perfect way, we see the glory and the light which shines out of the darkness, the same light which was shown at the creation, the pure radiant light of holiness that beckons us to come to our  God, the Holy Trinity, and to know his unconditional divine love for us all, the love which calls us to be Children of God all through Jesus, and in Jesus we  see the eternal truth which Moses desired of the Lord on the mountain top , and the ancient prophets so dearly sought to know and to experience that    "Jesus is the radiance of his glory and the exact representation of his nature" . 

This is what the Disciples and we  see there with Jesus upon the Mount of Transfiguration, we see in the Face of our Lord  Jesus the divine radiance of God.

Benediction: May we each and all see in the face of our Lord Jesus the image and exact representation of the Great God, the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit today, tomorrow and forevermore.Amen  


Rev. Todd Crouch, Pastor 
The Fountain of life Church a Congregation of Grace Communion
2101 Old National Pike,  Washington, Pennsylvania, 15301   www.gcfountainoflife.org 

The Fountain of Life is heard on the RKP Radio Network 1710 and 1670 AM in Washington and North Franklin ,and 1790 AM in the Arden Fair Grounds area of Washington Pennsylvania, and on 1710 AM in Bentleyville and Monongahela, Pennsylvania. And online around the world at www.rkpradio.com 
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"If It Is Not About Jesus, It Is Not About Anything"



Wednesday, February 8, 2017

Jesus Rebukes the Storm



If it’s not about Jesus, it’s not about anything

Motto of the Fountain of Life


In January, following the Epiphany, the liturgical calendar features Jesus’ activity on the Sea of Galilee where he calmed the winds and waves.  During our last visit we looked at the turn the world upside down statements made by Jesus at the Sermon on the Mount in Matthew 5-6-7

SPS:  To follow Matthew’s chronology beyond the Sermon on the Mount and see if he had an organized purpose to it.  To provide background of the events and people involved in Matthew’s presentation.

The Sermon on the Mount, as reported in Matthew chapter 5-7 may well have taken place on a gently sloping hill a little south of Capernaum.  St. Matthew presents chapters 8 and 9 together as a continuation of the action which followed the Sermon event.  It is not important to St.Matthew if the events were simultaneous or not.  He puts them together for a purpose to present Jesus as the Messiah to the Jewish readers and hearers of his evangel. 

In the sermon on the mount, Jesus uses a rabbinic formula “You have heard it said.”  Then the rabbi would comment on the saying.  However, Jesus does not comment on a saying.   He says, But I say to you.  And it came to pass, when Jesus had ended these sayings, the people were astonished at his doctrine.  For he taught as one having authority, and not as the scribes” Matt. 7:28-29.

The beatitudes radically overturn the law concept that the punishment must meet the crime.  Again, Jesus takes the common acceptable attitude and turns it on its ear.  Go the extra mile, turn the other cheek, love your enemies.  Jesus is turning upside down all the respected, accepted modes of behavior.     

His sayings are unlike anything ever heard.  And when he leaves the mouth of the Beatitudes, “great multitudes followed him.  Matt 8;1.   At the least, Jesus aroused their curiosity.  But what are people to make of these new teachings of the young rabbi from Nazareth?  Are they just nice thoughts or nice sentiments of a nice man?  St.Matthew crafts his gospel story to prove that the words of Jesus are far more than just another philosophical or moral system.  There is weight, there is power behind Jesus’ words.  Jesus is not just a nice young rabbi.  He is the Christ, the King of Israel, the savior.  And as such, his words are the words of the Christ that the entire Old Testament pointed too and to the Christ that nation of Israel was called to expect as a son of Juda, the promised son of David. 

After giving this manifesto of the kingdom in chapter five and six, St.Matthew records Jesus working a dozen or more miracles in chapter 8 and 9.  These manifestations of power are not those of a nice young rabbi.  They are the manifestation of the Christ of God, the son of David, the long-awaited savior of Israel. 

We will look at the first six of these miracles and comment somewhat on the calming of the storm.  We review them from the perspective of the multitude who followed Jesus down from the mountain.  And we are faced with a crisis in our lives when we come face to face with the real Jesus.  Can a nice young rabbi do these things?  Who is he?  Who can do these things?  We have heard the word; we now see the power.  Our crises is that of recognizing who he is and accepting him or not. 

1.        Healing the leper:  Jesus touches him.   This was considered beyond the pale.  People fled from them.  Lepers themselves hid their faces from people.  They were unclean.  It you touched one, you were unclean had had to present yourself to the priest.  It was beyond human disease at its worse.  It was un-clean.  Yet He touched him.  Jesus did not become unclean.  He reversed it and, the leper became clean after the touch of Jesus.    Healing is for the outcast.
2.       Healing the centurion’s servant.  This was done from a distance.  There was no laying on of hands.  Jesus’ healing is not limited by distance.    Healing is for the slaves.  His power is over the physical.
3.       Healing Peter’s mother-in-law.  He touches her.  Healing is for the free.
4.       Casting out demons:  The former healings were physical.  This is the supernatural realm of spirits.
His power is over the supernatural.
5.       Calming the storm:  This is the realm of nature and natural forces.   His power is over nature.
6.       Casting out demons from the two demoniacs at Gergesenes.   Jesus’ commands, his power cannot be outnumbered or opposed.    

Jesus displays his power in all these areas.  St.Matthew does not list them in a chronological order but in a logical order showing easy movement from area to area; a movement which is impossible for an ordinary human. 

Jesus calms the storm:  Background

The Sea of Galilee is about 13 miles long and 8 miles wide.  That is somewhere near 64 acres.  It was known for sudden and raging storms.  It was a major source of fish, much of which was processed, cured and sold as far away as Rome.  Possibly seven Apostles were fishermen.  Scripture identifies St.Peter, and St.Andrew, St.James and St. John.  Multiple sources indicate that thee other Apostles made their living on the sea.  St.Nathaniel, St.Philip and St. Thomas.  They were very familiar with the intricacies of life and labor on the Sea of Galilee. 

During Jesus’ time, Galilee may have had between 2 to 3 million inhabitants.  But they were far from all being Jewish.  The Israelite population was carried away in captivity to Assyria by Tiglath-pileser and replaced by pagan immigrants.  The predominant mixture of Gentile races eventually changed the worship of Judaism and for the same reason the Galilean accent and dialect were noticeably different than that of the southern Jews.
 
Galilee itself produced some of the most tenacious opposition to Roman occupation.  The Zealots were founded by Judas the Galilean of Acts 5:37.   Galileans were unpopular if not outright distasteful to the Roman rulers.  But the Jews of Judea to the south found Galileans extremely repugnant.  The Jews of Judea held that Galilean interpretation and practice of Jewish law made Galileans not much better than apostates.  Galileans held the Pharisees to be moral policemen and them battled them over the use of olive oil, dietary laws and the celebration of festivals.  Southern Jews viewed Galileans as ignorant, uncultured, earthy and crude.  Jesus no doubt spoke with the Galilean brogue, as did St. Peter Mark 14:70.  Jesus’ accent most likely intensified the dislike which the Jews of purer blood and purer orthodox tradition had for Galileans in general.        

Matt 8:23-27:  "And when he was entered into a ship, his disciples followed him.  And behold, there arose a great tempest in the sea, insomuch that the ship was covered with the waves:  but he was asleep.  And his disciples came to him, and awoke him, saying, Lord, save us:  we perish.  And he saith unto them, why are ye fearful, O ye of little faith?  Then he arose, and rebuked the winds and the sea:  and there was a great calm.  But the men marveled, saying, What manner of man is this, that even the winds and the sea obey him?"

They were fearful of the storm.  Since they were seasoned sailors It must have been bad.
They were astonished at the calm.  They had never seen such a change in the weather.  It was not natural.  He slept as a human does.  It was real sleep. Not pretend.  The disciples did not know what to do.  They faced the storm with the best of their natural ability, yet that was not enough.  They had seen Jesus perform several miracles.  It seems natural that they would turn to Him for salvation.  How does he save?  He commanded as a god does.  There was no prayer, there was no request for intercession.  He commanded.  He addressed the elements, the wind the waves and he commands them directly…and they obey.  Whatever the disciples expected Jesus to do to save them, perhaps that was not it.  Elijah and Elisha worked miracles, great miracles.  Yes, even Jesus worked prior miracles.  But a demonstration of power on this scale had never been seen since Moses parted the Red Sea.  Moses predicted that one day Israel again would see a profit like Moses.  It is absolutely no wonder that the apostles marveled [Mark 4:41 adds that they feared exceedingly] and asked “What manner of man is this, that even the winds and the sea obey hum?”

The storm at Galilee shows Jesus so very clearly as the God-Man.  The storm at Galilee and the other miracles show that Jesus has the power to enable the ethic of the Sermon on the Mount.  This is so important to our salvation.  The storm at Galilee show what Jesus does.  God is what He does.  Knowing Jesus as God can be as simple as seeing what he does.  The Nicene Creed as amended in A.D. 381 at the First Counsel of Constantinople reads:  "Jesus Christ…true god of true god…(He) was made flesh by the Holy Ghost, of the virgin Mary:  and was made man.” 

Conclusion:  Adam as our corporate head led all humanity into sin.  Jesus is God.  God, the creator of all has the power to forgive the sins of all his creatures.  Jesus, the new Adam, led all humanity into righteous. Amen.    


Rev. George Relic, Assistant Pastor, Fountain of Life Church
2021 Old National Pike, Washington, PA 15301
A congregation of Grace Communion International
724-583-9217, george2050@atlanticbb.net


Given as a sermon at:Lansing,Oh and Cambridge, O. 1/30/16, Washington,Pa. 1/31/16