GCI Equipper

Under-shepherd of Christ

What does it mean to be an under-shepherd under the “good shepherd”?

By Danny Zachariah, Superintendent, Asia

The indelible image of Christ washing the feet of the disciples is a powerful reminder that we are to be servant leaders to our congregations. We learn this by following the example of our good shepherd who set the model for church leadership.

God’s people are referred to as “the flock” (Acts 20:28). Peter specifically exhorts elders of the church to “shepherd the flock of God that is among you …” (1 Peter 5:2). The Lord is identified as a shepherd in Psalm 23. Jesus refers to himself as the “good shepherd” who would take the effort to know and lay down his life for the sheep (John 10:11). Interestingly, “… the Lamb of God called Himself the Good Shepherd — rather than the Good Servant or the Good Fisherman, the Good Carpenter or the Good Stonemason?”[1] muses author, Holly Culhane.

The Biblical metaphor of shepherds tending sheep is clearly endorsed as a leadership pattern for church elders. Peter’s reference to Christ as the “chief shepherd” makes it clear that we are his under-shepherds. How do we understand the role and function of an under-shepherd? A few pivotal ones are highlighted in this short article.

Love and care for the sheep

Jesus leaving the ninety-nine and tending to the one is indicative of how genuinely he cares, even if it is just the one. Simply put, this is relational leadership — a leadership pattern that pursues a relationship of love. Jesus wants to know every person and to make himself known. That care is not superficial. He will not stop even if it means sacrifice on his part.

Jesus’ question to Peter before he asks him to tend his sheep is, “do you love me?” It is that love which should motivate Peter to lead him to the task of feeding the sheep. It is this love that will instill trust in the sheep to follow. Under-shepherds must recognize that a loving relationship with the sheep makes the task a passionate calling — not just an occupation. In this paradigm, the flock never becomes an inconvenience or a project, but a precious mission in loving care. As Mark Adams warns us, “If you love your vision more than you love the people you lead, you might even do them harm, rather than good …”[2]

Feed the sheep

Following Peter’s response, “you know that I love you,” Jesus said,  “feed my lambs.” The obvious intention of Jesus is that Peter’s love for him should extend to the sheep. This love manifests in leading the sheep into spiritual pasture to nurture their spiritual health and wellbeing. Under-shepherds have the crucial responsibility of providing a quality mix of teaching, preaching, pre-marriage counselling, and equipping. Discipling them so they not only gain and grow in knowledge, but also to provide opportunities to translate that discipling into practical participation in the larger ministry of Christ.

Paul expands the function of under-shepherds to include protecting the sheep from predators. Wishing farewell to elders from Ephesus, Paul makes an emotional appeal:

Keep watch over yourselves and all the flock of which the Holy Spirit has made you overseers. Be shepherds of the church of God, which he bought with his own blood. I know that after I leave, savage wolves will come in among you and will not spare the flock. Even from your own number men will arise and distort the truth in order to draw away disciples after them. So be on your guard! (Acts 20:28-31, NIV)

Notice that Paul warns the elders to “keep watch over yourselves … Even from your own number men will arise and distort the truth in order to draw away disciples after them. So be on your guard!” Tying this up with Jesus’ response to Peter, “feed my lambs” — it’s important to understand the inherent danger that under-shepherds might succumb to the temptation of feeding themselves, instead of the lambs! Enough evidence is found in the Bible, both Old and New Testaments, how under-shepherds could corrupt their role and turn against the sheep (Ezekiel 34:1-6, John 10:1-13). The other extreme is when under-shepherds lose focus of their role and become police instead. Joseph Tkach offers sage advice in this matter, “In times past, pastors often did function as moral police. Thankfully, those days are largely gone, except (regrettably) in cults that seek to control their members … If we’re not careful, we can momentarily forget that our calling is to participate with Jesus, the great Shepherd, in his ministry that extends to his sheep the transforming love and grace of God.”[3]

“Shepherd leadership doesn’t replace servant leadership, it deepens it.” This statement, by Culhane, is a good summary of how servant leadership and shepherd leadership works together. This combination promotes healthy leadership, which leads to healthy church.

By loving and feeding the flock, we are participating with Jesus in nurturing the sheep into spiritual wellbeing and making them competent for ministry. Servant and shepherd church leadership enables us to move towards the healthiest expression of the church of Jesus Christ.

[1] Culhane, Holly, Why Shepherd Leadership? Presence Point, presencepoint.com

[2] Adams, Mark, Pastoral Leadership: It’s About The Sheep, kingdomupgrowth.com

[3] Tkach, Joseph, Shepherds, Not Sheriffs, GCI UPDATE, April 2016

A Big Thank You to Our Pastors

October is Pastor Appreciation Month, and we want to acknowledge that our pastors are reflections of Jesus Christ.

By Audie Santibanez, Pastor and National Director, Philippines

We want to take time to share our appreciation for our pastors. Thank you for all you do that we see, and thank you for all you do that we don’t see. God gave you to us to be a GCI pastor and for that we are so grateful.

Pastors, you embody a unique reflection of Jesus Christ, the chief shepherd, and the source of all pastoral care.

In Jesus’ earthly ministry he dignified his disciples, sending them out as his under-shepherds to continue the work of caring for his flock. Similarly, every pastor, whether serving in the formal office of ordained ministry, or gifted with a pastoral calling without the office, is granted dignity by Jesus himself.

Jesus honors our pastors’ faithfulness, standing with them in sermons preached, equipping provided, prayers offered, and moments of comfort offered for healing. Jesus also knows pastor’s struggles and joys, their burdens and blessings, and he walks alongside them in every part of their journey. As under-shepherds, they reflect the Chief Shepherd’s heart, leading not with pride or power, but with humility, care, and love. They remind us that pastoral ministry is not about control but about service, modelled after the example of Christ.

When Jesus ascended, he intended to leave behind a community with a structure and form of good leadership, a community with a ministry shaped on the pattern of his own. While all are called to be disciples and to engage in a ministry of witness to him, some were given special responsibilities and a special commission of pastoral care over his flock.

Just as when the Father sent the Son, the Father himself was at work in his Son’s ministry and so was the Holy Spirit — all were present and active in Christ’s ministry. Christ didn’t act separately. In the same way, the church’s ministry isn’t separate from Christ. Thus, pastoral ministry is Christ’s own personal ministry within the place of the church.

Thank you again, pastors, for your sacred and humble presence and service in the lives of our congregations much like Jesus. Thank you very much for your willing submission to join Jesus in serving the body of Christ. May you find joy and fulfilment as the under-shepherds God has called you to be.

Celebrating in Hope

Nuts and bolts of the Hope Avenue

By Linda Rex, Elder

Our journey in GCI towards Healthy Church includes a deeper understanding of our hope in Christ. Our Hope Avenue team ensures that our Sunday services provide a warm welcome, fellowship, worship, and inspired preaching, which refresh us with the hope of Jesus.

Markers of a healthy Hope Avenue

The Hope Avenue team prepares all aspects of the Sunday service, from parking lot to sanctuary to fellowship hall. The Hope Avenue team works together to welcome, include, and integrate into the life of the church, all those who attend. The fellowship and Sunday service enable each person to meet with, in a personal and united way, our triune God. Renewed with the hope of Jesus, those who attend are sent out with this good news. In this way, the Hope Avenue team shares with Jesus in his divine ministry by the Spirit.

Signs of unhealth

Members of a church with an unhealthy Hope Avenue might not notice new guests, or swarm new people at the door and scare them away. Worse, the pastor may bring attention to guests when they prefer not to be noticed. There is limited or no signage in an unhealthy Hope Avenue, and no one offers to help guests find the restroom, children’s room, snacks, or the sanctuary. Guests are often not told they are welcome to join in the pre-service fellowship or study group. Youth and teens are often ignored. Seniors are not always given the support they need as they move from the parking lot to the sanctuary and back.

An unhealthy Hope Avenue worship service is more focused on the content of the service, the speaker, or singers than on relationship with the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. The service is disjointed and messy because little planning has been done. The music is often more focused on our human experience of God than on worshipping God. An unhealthy Hope Avenue sermon is often teaching a Bible Study rather than preaching about Jesus, who he is and who we are in him. In an unhealthy Hope Avenue service, communion often focuses more on the items on the table than on the body and blood of Jesus Christ.

Re-center our ministry in Christ

The writer of Hebrews reminds us who Jesus Christ is. He is the exact image of our heavenly Father (Hebrews 1:3). Jesus, after his life, death, and resurrection, ascended to sit at his Father’s right hand in glory (Hebrews 8:1; 10:12; 12:2). In Jesus, we are seated in face-to-face union and communion with our Father in the Spirit (Hebrews 17:22, 24; Colossians 3:3). Jesus stands as the true minister in the temple. He is our high priest who offers the things of God to us and our things up to God, perfected in himself (Hebrews 8:1-2; 5:7-10). As the mediator of the new covenant, ratified in his own blood, Jesus stands in our place, on our behalf (Hebrews 9:15). It is in Christ that we are perfected and sanctified “for all time” (Hebrews 10:11-15). This gives us great hope, for all that we offer up to God is welcomed and received with joy in and through Jesus by the Spirit.

Our worship and fellowship as participation

The Hope Avenue is focused on reminding us of who Jesus Christ is. Our place is in his own intimate relationship with his Father in the Spirit. Here, amid the fellowship of Father and Son in the Spirit, we find our hope. This hope we have in Jesus is the basis of our worship and message and fellowship. Our rescue, our redemption, and presence in God’s life, is the work of all members of the Trinity. We worship and praise the one triune God, and each Person within the one being of the Trinity. As we fellowship with one another, we share in the inner life and love of Father, Son, and Spirit. So, we include each person within and without the walls of our church building in this fellowship. Jesus Christ is our hope, the Trinity is our God of hope, and we want each person to experience this hope as we gather. Therefore, as we prepare for and hold our Sunday service, we help each person to see and share in Christ’s own life with the Father in the Spirit (Heb. 10:19-25).

  • How does the way in which we treat guests or new people influence their ability to experience the hope we have in Jesus Christ?
  • Look at your parking lot, your building, your activities, and your worship service from the point of view of a visitor. How easy is it for a new person to figure out where to go and how to participate in pre-church activities or the worship service? What might be done differently to make this process more comfortable for them?
  • What are some ways in which new attendees may be integrated into the life of your church? What are some obstacles that may be standing in the way of this?
  • When your church gathers for pre-church or post-church activities, or activities during the week, who is not an active participant? Is this due to choice, or are they being overlooked or excluded? How might they be included as full participants in the life of the church?
  • Consider your Sunday sermons. Are they merely instructional or are they inspirational? What is the difference? Why is it important to inspire people with the hope we have in Jesus?

Learning to Fight the Good Fight

Most of our fights are not physical.

By Rick Shallenberger, Editor

Several years ago, two friends and I were walking home from a restaurant talking and laughing as we crossed the street. We barely noticed the young men heading in the opposite direction.

We rounded a corner and suddenly my friend James let out a loud “Oof…” and fell to the ground. At the same time, I noticed a large rock rolling on the sidewalk. I whirled around and there were five guys yelling at us in Spanish. One had thrown the rock, which hit James right in the kidney area, and he was hurting. So, I had one friend on the ground, and I quickly pushed the other friend behind me as I faced the guys — trying to figure out what was going on. They were yelling and waving their arms, and one had a big stick that he swung at me and hit my stomach. I yelled at them to stop and asked what the problem was.

One spoke enough English to say we “Americanos” were mocking them. Evidently, when we walked across the street laughing, they assumed we were laughing at them. Then one of the boys jumped forward and slapped me across the face.

At this moment, I wanted to wade into them swinging. I’m a big guy and I knew I could take at least two and maybe three of them, but what about my buddy, who was small in stature, and what about my friend on the ground. Would they hurt him more?

Add to this, we had just come from church — and it didn’t seem right to get into a fight right after church. Yet I also knew Paul said to fight the good fight. Crazy thoughts, I know. All these thoughts and more went through my head in a matter of milliseconds.

I identified the leader — the one holding the stick — made myself as big and tall as I could, looked him right in the eye, and said in an authoritative tone, “Put the stick down and walk away.” I pointed in the direction they should go and kept staring at him. Surprisingly, he put the stick down, gestured to his friends, and they all walked away.

 

I had never wanted to fight more than I wanted to fight that day. I wanted to save face, I wanted to stand up for my friends and myself. But reason prevailed — or I would say, the Holy Spirit gave me the wisdom to make the decision I made. Though admittedly, it was an internal battle.

And I believe that’s more in tune with what Paul was telling his young protégé, Timothy, when he told him to fight the good fight of faith.

When we decided to follow Jesus, we began a journey of faith. We committed to becoming a disciple of Jesus, one who follows his commands, and trusts in him.

When Paul instructed Timothy to fight the good fight of faith, he was telling Timothy that there are times that the journey of faith will be difficult. The journey will sometimes be messy, hard, and harrowing. Paul’s words serve as a reminder that sometimes faith looks like a fight. You will be tempted to jump in swinging, but you have to listen to the Spirit and make choices.

Because this fight Paul is talking about is not about fighting against people; our journey of faith is a fight for goodness, beauty, and faithfulness. Yes, we are fighting against our own broken natures, and against God’s enemies within the spiritual realm. But we are fighting for righteousness, goodness, peace.

Fighting often looks like making the right decision, even if it’s not the easiest decision. It might mean being gentle when we want to be harsh. It might mean choosing love when it would be easier to be selfish. It is choosing good for the sake of the other. The battle is often against our own nature and impulse as we surrender to the nature of the Holy Spirit and put on the mind of Christ.

Fighting well means remaining faithful to Jesus to the very end — regardless of what is thrown up against us.

So how do we remain faithful? Here are two simple suggestions:

  • Read God’s Word every day and ask him to reveal things to us. When we regularly spend time with him, we begin to love what God loves and hate what he hates.
  • Have friendships with people who can encourage you, who pray for you, who love you. Having two or three people in life who can help keep you accountable is a necessary part of our faith journey.

I’ll never know what caused that young man to drop his stick and the others to walk away. I don’t know if suddenly they saw more than three guys. I don’t know if my size and demeaner scared him and he realized he was going to get hurt. I don’t know if he suddenly realized we hadn’t been mocking them. I’ll never know, but I’m thankful I listened to the Holy Spirit.

God helps us fight well — which usually means not fighting physically — even when someone comes at you with a stick. Fighting the good faith means keeping our eyes on Jesus.

Whenever you need to fight well, remember that you do not fight alone. God is with you—and when you draw near to him, he will empower you with the strength you need to finish your faith journey.

As Paul told Timothy, we too are to: “Fight the good fight of the faith. Take hold of the eternal life to which you were called and about which you made the good confession in the presence of many witnesses.”

Ready for an ADVENTure?

Here are some Advent ideas for your congregation/fellowship group.

By Phillip Hopwood, Elder Emeritus, Australia

Celebration and worship are at the heart of communal spiritual formation. Advent marks the beginning of our worship calendar, setting us off on the journey once again, providing a season of opportunity to join together in learning about and responding joyfully to who our triune God is. Advent celebrates the fulfilment of God’s ultimate will to make all things at one with himself through Jesus coming to, and being in communion with, all his creation.

The word advent is derived from the Latin word adventus, meaning “coming,” which is a translation of the Greek word Parousia which is usually related to Jesus’ future coming, but, importantly, it also means “active presence.”[1] Advent focuses on Jesus, the telos, the goal, the beginning, the center and the full end and achievement of all God intends for all things.

Because Advent starts by focusing us on God’s ultimate will and end goal for all things, we can say Advent is “apocalyptic.” We are reminded how all sin, all suffering, injustice, pain, and loneliness — all that is not right in the cosmos, all that opposes God and his love, light, and life has been overcome and will be fully defeated in Christ. We end up focusing on the first step in getting there, the birth of Jesus.

Ideas for celebration, liturgies, symbols

The four weeks of Advent give us time to emphasize and build on themes that can impact us visually, audibly, intellectually and emotively. The commonly used themes for each week are: 1. Hope. 2. Peace. 3. Joy. 4. Love. See our Advent Hack here.

Color

Purple is commonly featured in Advent worship services. it is the color of royalty and the sovereignty of Jesus.  Recently some churches have been using blue as they focus on the color of the sky or the color of the seas.

Advent Candles, Wreaths and Calendars

Four candles, one for each of the four weeks of Advent, are often used to symbolize the continuous, inevitable, victorious, all pervading and conquering light, hope, peace, love and joy that come to us in Jesus through the Spirit. Sometimes the candles are surrounded by a wreath, placed in a spiral ascending to the center where a fifth candle is placed — the Christ candle.

Advent video presentations

Utilizing brief Advent video presentations can help set the scene for Advent worship. Check the Advent videos of GCI’s new series: Jesus Revealed Through the Worship Calendar. Search on the internet to see what else is available.

Advent Bible Studies, Connect Groups, Retreats

You might consider planning extra events or activities that bring members together to celebrate and learn more about this wonderful season? If the gathering brings members and neighbors together in a Love Avenue activity, even better. Some ideas include running an Advent retreat, holding Advent focused connect groups or Bible Studies before or during Advent, in person or on Zoom. Perhaps you could invite other congregations to participate or join in with what others are doing.

Including children

Advent provides opportunities for lots of creative engagement and activities with children. Some ideas include drawing pictures or writing a poem or story symbolizing each weekly theme, making and using an advent wreath and/or Advent calendar. Some families create pockets for each day of the calendar containing small gifts, a card with the RCL readings for each day etc.

More ideas can be found through an internet search. Here are a few to get started with.

Preaching

The RCL texts for Advent lead us through the simple but profound themes of Advent providing a wonderful framework for sermons focusing on our sure hope and giving us reason for peace and joy and building our faith in all that God has done, is doing, and will complete in his Son. In these difficult times, we have the opportunity to preach the themes of hope, peace, love, and joy and how, in the end, in and through Jesus, there will be full and complete justice and peace. Tohu and bohu (Genesis 1:2), chaos and confusion, troubles, pain and loneliness will be no more. God and his love will prevail in the hearts and lives of all.

Songs/Hymns

We can reinforce and celebrate the spiritual meaning of Advent by choosing songs that focus on each week’s theme.

Advent worship ideas and resources

Leading the ADVENTure

With prayerful preparation, thought and teamwork, Advent can be a spiritually formational and transformational experience, reinforced through the knowledge of Jesus having come down to earth to be born as one of us, his presence with us now, accompanied by the hope of his coming fully and finally in the future to make all things right and good.

Come, Lord Jesus, come!

[1] The Theological Dictionary of the New Testament, Abridged in One Volume, pp 791—792.

RCL Resources for 2025

Dear Pastors, Hope Avenue Champions, and Worship Leaders,

As we look ahead to the liturgical year of 2024-2025, I am pleased to share the upcoming pericopes that will guide our worship and preaching throughout the year. You can access the pericopes here, Year C 2024- 2025. In partnership with our Media Team, we are excited to announce that along with the sermon outlines and Gospel Reverb Podcasts, we will once again be producing sermon bumpers to accompany key moments in our worship services. These inspirational videos, aligned with the RCL Sermon Outline packages, will be available for:

  • Advent
  • Christmas
  • Easter Prepartaion (Lent)
  • Easter
  • Ordinary Time (during shifts in pericopes)

These videos are designed to enhance your worship services by providing context and reflection for your congregation.

Important Resources:

  • Marked Dates: Please review the document for the weekly pericopes and specific dates when the sermon bumpers will be released. Share this with your teams to ensure they’re integrated into your services.
  • Cross-Reference Archive: The archive where you can cross-reference GCI resources from previous years in the RCL is still available. These resources delve into interpretations of these same pericopes, offering valuable insights for your worship planning. You can access it here, or from the Equipper issue sidebar under “RCL Resources” each month.
  • Gospel Reverb Podcast: Our Gospel Reverb podcast features episodes that dive deeper into each pericope, offering additional sermon preparation support. We encourage you to tune in for insights that can enrich your messages.
  • Archived Sermon Bumpers: For an example of the sermon bumpers that will be released this year, check out last year’s bumper playlist hereWhen you access the bumpers from the RCL sermon post of the corresponding week, you will be able to download the video to share during your worship gathering.
  • Monthly Communion and Offertory Messages: New this year, each month, we will also be sharing communion and offertory messages that align with the seasonal themes and the pericopes shared. These messages are crafted to bring deeper meaning and connection to your church’s worship experience.

We’re here to support you in creating meaningful and impactful worship experiences.

In partnership and Christ’s love,
Michelle Hartman
Communications Director

Everyone Here Loves You

Every young person in church should know that every person in church loves them.

By Dishon Mills, Pastor, Steele Creek, NC

Recently, I was blessed to have an amazing conversation with one of our youngest members. For those who do not know, three-year-olds are amazing conversationalists. When they speak, there are no agreed upon topics or logical transitions. They just have a type of stream-of-consciousness way of speaking. Whatever pops into their mind comes out of their mouth. After discussing a broad range of topics, the boy asked, “Do you love me?”

Without skipping a beat, I looked him in the eyes and said, “Yes. I love you.” Onlookers may have thought I started to cry, but (ahem) the pollen was really bad that day. Allergies … just allergies. I went on to say, “Everyone here loves you because God loves us.”

He was surprised. “Everyone here loves me?”

I said, “Yes, everyone here loves you. You are surrounded by friends.” He thought about that for a moment before moving on. The conversation went on a little while longer, and then he got interested in something else. Before leaving, he gave me a big hug and the pollen got to me again! Allergies!

The conversation got me thinking, and I asked myself, “Whose job is it to make sure our children know that they are loved?” Of course, loving their children is the major responsibility of a parent. Certainly, those who disciple our young people should communicate their care. But is that it? Is loving children the duty of parents and designated children’s ministers? Or is it the responsibility of the entire congregation?

 

In Proverbs 22:6, we read, “Start children off on the way they should go, and even when they are old they will not turn from it (NIV).” I used to think “the way they should go” referred to behavior discipline and biblical teaching. I no longer think that way. Now, I believe that the best way for any human to go is towards God. He is our ultimate good. And the word that best describes God’s essential nature is love. So, the best thing that we can do for our children is to help them recognize, move towards, and reflect God (Love). We must teach them to walk in the way of love.

That is a job that is too big for just parents and those who serve in the children’s ministry. Raising a child in the way of love is the work of the entire congregation. Otherwise, if only the children’s ministry shows love for the children, what happens when they graduate the program? What happens when they go to college or start working without knowing that those in the church love them? Or, worse yet, what happens when members of the congregation treat them in unloving ways? What incentive does that give them to pursue a deeper relationship with God? This is why I have started to encourage all of our members to verbalize their love for our children. I want each young person to know that everyone here loves them because God loves us. What better way to put them on the path that leads to Jesus?

What would happen if every member of your congregation took a step to proactively communicate to your young people that they are loved? What if we demonstrated for them that God is love? What would that do for our children? I pray that we would find many ways to say everyone here loves you. And I pray that as they get older, they never want to depart from God’s love.

Jon DePue—Year B Propers 26-28, Reign of Christ

Video unavailable (video not checked).

Heb 9:11-14 ♦ Heb 9:24-28 ♦ Heb 10:11-25 ♦ Rev 1:4-8

Our host, Anthony Mullins is joined by Jon DePue to explore the November 2024 sermon pericopes in depth. Jon is the co-author of the book Beyond Justification: Liberating Paul’s Gospel which he co-wrote with Douglas Campbell. He is also the co-host of the YouTube channel Apocalypse Here: Christianity You Can Live With. Jon earned a M. Div. from Duke Divinity in Durham, NC.

 

 


November 3, 2024 — Proper 26 in Ordinary Time
Hebrews 9:11-14

November 10, 2024 — Proper 27 in Ordinary Time
Hebrews 9:24-28

November 17, 2024 — Proper 28 in Ordinary Time
Hebrews 10:11-25

November 24, 2024 — Reign of Christ Sunday
Revelation 1:4-8


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Program Transcript


Welcome to the Gospel Reverb podcast. Gospel Reverb is an audio gathering for preachers, teachers, and Bible thrill seekers. Each month, our host, Anthony Mullins, will interview a new guest to gain insights and preaching nuggets mined from select passages of Scripture in that month’s Revised Common Lectionary.

The podcast’s passion is to proclaim and boast in Jesus Christ, the one who reveals the heart of God, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. And now onto the episode.


Anthony: Hello, friends, and welcome to the latest episode of Gospel Reverb. Gospel Reverb is a podcast devoted to bringing you insights from Scripture, found in the Revised Common Lectionary, and sharing commentary from a Christ centered and Trinitarian view.

I’m your host, Anthony Mullins, and it’s my delight to welcome our guest, Jon DePue. Jon is the co-author of the book Beyond Justification: Liberating Paul’s Gospel, which he co-wrote with Douglas Campbell. He is also the co-host of the YouTube channel and podcast, “Apocalypse Here: Christianity You Can Live With.” (That sounds good.) Jon earned a Master of Divinity from Duke Divinity from right here in beautiful Durham, North Carolina.

Jon, thanks for being with us and welcome to the pod. And since this is your first time. Glad you’re here. We’d love to know a little bit about you, your personal story, and how you’re joining with Jesus these days.

[00:01:30] Jon: Sure, happy to. Thank you for inviting me on, Anthony. And yeah, if we want to go way back. I can narrate my story a little bit.

I grew up in the Des Moines, Iowa area, so I’m a native Iowan. I grew up in a family context that was not particularly religious or specifically Christian. But of course, that’s in the water. My grandparents were quite devout and Pentecostal to be precise. So, in terms of church stuff, it was mostly going to church with them because they lived in the area.

But going to college was the first time that I started interacting with ideas, like seriously interacting with ideas, about faith and God and Jesus and all of that. I went into college and started as a Philosophy major and ended up taking a couple of classes in the Religion department because at that time they were a combined department, Philosophy and Religion, and was struck by what I was reading in an academic setting about God from these ancient thinkers who were writing about God and Jesus Christ.

And I was struck by this sort of story that they were telling about a God of love being revealed in Christ and how that impacts their lives and how they think about reality, how they think about other people, how they think about what it means to be a person. And over the course of my college days, I got to a point where, and I can’t really name a precise moment, but I think I came to a point where I was like, you know what? I think this stuff is true.

So, it became — once an academic exercise in trying to write good papers and get good grades and all of that. But at the same time, it was becoming more and more clear that this stuff was drawing me in, the content of it.

And I’m in the God who is being spoken about by these key thinkers in the Christian tradition, people like Origen, people like Augustine, people like Gregory of Nyssa. All of that stuff was impacting me on a personal level. And yeah, I got to a point where I was comfortable calling myself a Christian and started attending a local Presbyterian church and getting involved there under the mentorship of one of my professors at that college.

It was a little liberal arts college called Simpsons college in Iowa. And toward the end of my time there, I started to feel a sense of call to further study. And I didn’t really know what that meant, but my advisor at my college was a Duke graduate.

And so, he kindly pushed me in that direction. And by kindly he said, you should apply there. And so, I did, and I got into Duke and started studying there at that MDiv program at Duke, trying to find my way through that and ended up, through what’s known as field education, basically interning at various churches in North Carolina specifically the Durham area, Triangle area (Durham, Raleigh, Chapel Hill), and getting involved in churches.

And I started to realize I had a real passion for teaching. In that context, teaching about God in that context and walking people through questions about faith, questions about God and all of that. So, I spent a lot of time in churches, in Christian education sort of settings and loved it so much.

And I worked for several years at a United Church of Christ church in Cary. And I should go back a little bit. I met my now wife at Duke as well, not to overlook that. I met her in a doctoral seminar that I was kindly let into.

[00:06:04] Anthony: That’s usually where it happens — doctoral seminars.

[00:06:05] Jon: Yes, that’s where the romance really sparks.

[00:06:05] Anthony: That’s right, the fire burns.

[00:06:06] Jon: Yeah, that’s exactly right, yeah. Pretty much everyone can relate to that. Yeah, so I worked in at the United Church of Christ Church, called Good Shepherd, in Cary for a long time. Then we ended up — my wife ended up taking a job in Virginia, so we moved to Virginia for a while, and then I ended up getting a job in Indianapolis, and we’ve been all over the place for the past few years.

But my love for teaching and my love for writing about the good news of Jesus Christ, of his love, and (as you said, in our prayer to kick things off) this love that never ends, that can’t be broken by anything we do. That is the sort of driving point for how I think about everything — how I think about other people, how I think about reality.

And that kind of connects back to how I became a Christian in the first place was becoming confronted with this unconditionally loving God revealed in Christ. So that’s my story in a nutshell.

[00:07:16] Anthony: But you said that you wanted to get good grades and I’m assuming you did — you graduated. So, congratulations! And that led you to do some writing. And so, I’m going to ask you about your recently released book, but before I do, I’m going to commit the cardinal sin of podcasting. I’m going to stack three questions into one for the sake of time, but you sound like a smart guy, so I’m sure you can handle it.

First of all, just tell us about the book Beyond Justification. What prompted you to write it? What do you hope readers will get from it? And what do you mean when you say beyond justification?

[00:07:54] Jon: So, to just take these in order. What prompted me to write this with Douglas, specifically. So, Douglas Campbell is a New Testament scholar at Duke, and he was assigned as my advisor at Duke. So, I followed him around like a bad smell for my three years there. I learned tons. I learned so much from him, and I really became persuaded by his kind of approach to specifically Pauline theology and more specifically to his reading or rereading of the book of Romans, especially the front end of Romans, which is a really tricky text — Romans 1-3.

And he wrote this giant book over a thousand pages back in 2009 called The Deliverance of God. And I became a pretty much obsessed with that book and what it was about, the arguments he was making there about how Paul is actually, in Romans 1-3, quoting an opponent and then going on to respond to that opponent that he set up and characterized in a certain way.

And what ends up happening is that Paul becomes really consistent in his thinking about who God is. And especially who God is in Jesus Christ specifically.

So, I was like, this is great, but it’s a thousand pages. It’s also very technical. You need to know Greek to really get it. He’s going through tons of different disciplines, semiotics, philosophy, theology, sociology, and bringing all of these things together in a way that is really intimidating, I think, for the everyday person.

So, after I graduated, my thought was, is there a way to make this stuff that I find personally and spiritually and academically meaningful, powerful and important — is there a way to make this clear for people? Because I want to get this out there, right? So, the impetus was that, trying to make plain some of his arguments in a way that hadn’t really been the case before.

And so how we made that happen was I had to twist his arm into co-authoring the book with me to get him to sign off on it. And we ended up pitching the book to Wipf and Stock, and they picked it up.

What I’m hoping that readers will learn in the process of reading this book — it’s 300 pages, so it’s better than a thousand pages. And it’s accessibly written. It’s in fairly plain language. What I hope readers get out of this is getting more in touch with the God that Paul is proclaiming is revealed in Jesus Christ, who loves and cares for you, even while you were hostile to God, while you were sinful. As Paul says in Romans 5, that God loves you so much that God will never, ever give up on you ever, that love is unending.

So, the main goal of the book is to get people in touch with that reality, I think. Because I think it is reality. It’s the reality that structures everything. Now the subtitle or the title, Beyond Justification, is indicating a couple things, and I can run through these real quick.

Justification gets read in a certain way, traditionally, especially among Protestants; and it’s that you’ve been declared guilty by God because you failed to meet up to God’s expectations for you. So, God looks at you, basically, with a no. God says, no. God is upset with you. And so, God sends Jesus to deal with that problem that God has with you. Christ takes out basically what you deserve on Christ on the cross.

And then through faith alone, you can have access to the good stuff. Basically, God says yes to you finally. And you’re justified in that, through that faith in Jesus Christ. So, Christ steps in, gets what you deserve. You believe in that, you get the good stuff from Christ, and that’s what’s known as justification.

You’re declared righteous at that moment. So that’s the traditional story of justification. What we mean by beyond justification is that’s not really the whole story of what Paul’s doing. And in fact, that particularly retributive, contractual account of justification is exactly what he is arguing against in his gospel.

His gospel of justification is a gospel of life. Justification for him is so tightly connected to the resurrection in his text when he’s actually unpacking his own theology.

Okay, so we’re not unhappy with the word justification. We’re unhappy with the way that it’s been characterized and mobilized and used that kind of gets in the way of really getting in touch with the God of unconditional love.

So that’s what beyond justification is getting at.

[00:13:07] Anthony: Is it fair to say, Jon, that especially in the West, in the way that we have this judicial, legal sense of justification, that we focus our energies there in the church? And what gets lost in that is the beauty of, say, adoption? We’re always talking about justification, which like you said, is contractual, but we miss the covenantal relationship aspect of what the gospel is sharing with us.

Is that fair, and does that come out in your book in any way?

[00:13:40] Jon: That definitely comes out in the book for sure, and I think you’re exactly right. And I think part of the reason why justification has become so centered, or a certain reading of justification gets so centered, is because of the order that Paul’s letters are in our Bibles, to be honest.

Because in Romans, you do get justification language right off the top. And so, if you’re just reading Paul’s letter straight through, you’re probably going to think, yeah, Paul’s all about justification. But if we step back and think where is the center of Paul’s gospel truly? It is all about — you use the language of adoption — it’s all about being involved in a family with God, which is why Paul calls us adelphoi, brothers and sisters. We’re adopted brothers and sisters in a family of loving relationships of Father, Son, Spirit. That’s the heart of Paul, I think, that we need to get in touch with. And I think some of it has to do with the order of the ways that these are written and the ways that these letters have been handed to us.

And that gets solidified, I think, in the West, especially through the sort of western ordo salutis or order of salvation. I think that kind of gets in the way of really getting in touch with what Paul’s [saying].

[00:15:01] Anthony: Yeah. That’s well said. And often when I hear Romans talked about, it’s like we’re driving down the road and we make a pit stop at chapters 1-3 as if that completes the letter. But the letter continues to go and it’s like, where’s 5-8 in this? And chapter 5 is so astounding, and it’s amazing.

Oh, I have confidence that there’s going to be people listening to this that want to get the book. So where can they find it?

[00:15:40] Jon: You can go on Wipf and Stock’s website to order the book or you can go on Amazon as well. There’s now a hardcover version for those bibliophiles who like hardcover books.

[00:15:49] Anthony: It almost sounds like you say that with disdain.

[00:15:53] Jon: No, I want Wipf and Stock to send me one.

But yeah, so really anywhere you can order books, you’ll find it there.

[00:16:06] Anthony: Good. I encourage our readers and listeners to go out there and get it. We’ve been a fan of Douglas Campbell for some time. He’s been a guest on other platforms that we’ve had here. So yeah, that’s awesome.

Let’s move on to the lectionary passages. That’s why we’re here. So, we’ve got four lectionary texts we’re going to be looking at this month. The first passage of the month is Hebrews 9:11-14. I’m going to be reading from the New Revised Standard Version, the updated edition. It is the Revised Common Lectionary passage for Proper 26 in Ordinary Time, which is November 3.

But when Christ came as a high priest of the good things that have come, then through the greater and more perfect tent (not made with hands, that is, not of this creation), 12 he entered once for all into the holy place, not with the blood of goats and calves but with his own blood, thus obtaining eternal redemption. 13 For if the blood of goats and bulls and the sprinkling of the ashes of a heifer sanctifies those who have been defiled so that their flesh is purified, 14 how much more will the blood of Christ, who through the eternal Spirit offered himself without blemish to God, purify our conscience from dead works to worship the living God!

Jon, let’s make this personal. Why? How does it matter to you that Jesus Christ is a greater high priest of the good things that have come?

[00:17:35] Jon: Yeah, this is a great question. And I tend to follow the Torrances on this. I’m sure you know who the Torrance’s are. It’s a family, great family of Scottish reformed theologians.

And here I would lean on one of the lesser known Torrances, James Torrance. Jamie Torrance, who’s the father of Alan and the grandfather of a young theologian, Andrew Torrance. Both Andrew and Alan were kind enough to read the book that I was just talking about, Beyond Justification, and endorse it, kindly. So, I like those guys a lot.

So Christ as the high priest, for someone like James (and I’ve learned a lot from him), Christ is the high priest, is someone who draws people into himself to be a royal priesthood themselves, where we participate in Christ’s priestly status and offer God our whole existence to serve him with heart, soul, mind, and strength.

So, Christ himself is the one true high priest, and this is the only way we’re able to become priestly ourselves, is in him. Without his priestly status as true God and true human, there would be no point of connection there between God and humanity.

So, the priestly status is getting at something so vital for Christians — that it’s only through his priestly status as the true God / human that we’re able to participate in him and therefore in the divine reality.

We would basically just be groping around in the dark without that mediation coming from that high priest who is Christ. So as J. B. Torrance would say, as the high priest Christ worships truly (so Christ is worshiping), we’re enabled to worship ourselves and respond faithfully to God’s will for us through our own ongoing discipleship.

So, Christ worships, in him, we worship, right? There’s that tight connection there. So, it’s significant and it matters because it is only the high priesthood of Christ that enables us to be Christians and to participate in his priesthood, in his worship. And it follows from that, his life, death and resurrection and ascension as well.

And so just a book recommendation here. I’d suggest checking out J. B. Torrance for listeners, J. B. Torrance’s Worship, Community, and the triune God of Grace. That’s been so helpful to me.

[00:20:24] Anthony: No, that’s good. Since you brought up J. B. Torrance, I want to share with you something he said in one of his final lectures to his class. He said,

What we need is not a new doctrine or clear doctrine of the Holy Spirit, we need the Holy Spirit. What we need is not a better Christology, what we need is Christ. What we need is not Trinitarian doctrine, but a relationship with the Trinity. And that is the difference.

And that’s what you’re getting at because Christ is high priesting (if I can turn it into a verb), in this moment, mediating. In this moment, we are participating in that love relationship of Father and Son and the fellowship of the Spirit. Hallelujah. It makes all the difference, right?

[00:21:09] Jon: Absolutely. Yeah. Without it, we’re just lost. We’re stumbling around in the dark.

[00:21:13] Anthony: Well said. What a bloody passage this is. Several mentions of blood and here’s the thing, blood, it’s paradoxical. Blood can mean death and life. It can mean sickness and therapeutic healing, demise and redemption, innocence and judgment. Jon, what should we make of this bloody passage?

[00:21:37] Jon: Yeah. I actually have been persuaded that blood — so we’ve got to remember that Hebrews, for example, is drawing on tons and tons of sacrificial material from the Old Testament sacrificial system. That’s really key to understanding what Hebrews is doing, how it’s using it.

I’ve been persuaded that I don’t think blood in the kind of temple system in the Tanakh or Old Testament or in Hebrews really is referring to death per se or judgment really. I think you’re right about life. And I would add freedom because we’ll get to a passage that has blood connected with freedom as well. My dear friend, Andrew Rillera, who’s a Duke grad, recently wrote a book [Douglas Campbell is co-author] called, Lamb of the Free: Recovering the Varied Sacrificial Understandings of Jesus’s Death, where he goes over a lot of the stuff. But he’s drawing on a lot of material from scholars like Jacob Milgram, Old Testament scholar, David Moffat.

And they’ve really helped me see things a bit more clearly, I think, than I had in the past. So based on their scholarship, and many others, here’s what I think is going on with blood in Hebrews 9 and 10. I think it’s actually functioning in a participatory way.

What do I mean by this? We need to read this verse in context. Within the sweep of Hebrews, we should look back to Hebrews 6:20, where Jesus is called the forerunner there, which cannot indicate that Jesus died instead of us. Instead, he’s dying ahead of us. His blood is something that’s going forward in front of us.

Forerunners don’t do something instead of you, they do something before you go through it, and you’re a part of that. So, what Christ does as the forerunner through his blood, is he’s going to be something that’s emphatically purgative. It’s cleansing; it’s removing all the things that sort of contaminate us.

So, I don’t think we should shy away from blood here based on maybe what we’ve been handed about how it functions in certain traditions of understanding more specifically, namely as a judgment, that we would otherwise deserve or something like that. That Christ’s blood is something that we should have gotten ourselves; we shouldn’t have shed blood instead of Christ.  We should lean into it. I think that Christ’s blood cleanses us and purges us of impurity and ultimately liberates us, it gives us life, even in the midst of what seems like it’s going to end up in death, full stop.

The gospel, I think, says no to that understanding the idea that blood refers to death. Even in the Old Testament, sacrificial system, which (like I said, Hebrews draws on a lot), if we start by thinking that death is referring to, or that blood is referring to death, it’s going to get us off on the wrong foot, I think. The blood functions to purge, in this sense, a sort of heavenly sancta, as the beginning of the passage suggests, it’s not made of human hands, right?

This heavenly sanctum of impurities is not to substitute for a worshiper as a punishment that they would deserve, is to cleanse them, right? So, the logic is just completely different from blood referring to some sort of substitutionary death or something like that.

[00:25:28] Anthony: So unlike when I had to watch “Dexter,” and I looked away because of all the blood, this is where we can look to …

[00:25:29] Jon: We should look to the blood there. Yes. Freedom and life.

[00:25:30] Anthony: Yes. I appreciate what you said.

All right, let’s transition to our next pericope of the month. It’s Hebrews 9:24-28. It is a Revised Common Lectionary passage for Proper 27 in Ordinary Time, which is November 10. Jon, would you read it for us, please?

[00:25:55] Jon: Yes. All right.

For Christ did not enter a sanctuary made by human hands, a mere copy of the true one, but he entered into heaven itself, now to appear in the presence of God on our behalf. 25 Nor was it to offer himself again and again, as the high priest enters the holy place year after year with blood that is not his own, 26 for then he would have had to suffer again and again since the foundation of the world. But as it is, he has appeared once for all at the end of the ages to remove sin by the sacrifice of himself. 27 And just as it is appointed for mortals to die once and after that the judgment, 28 so Christ, having been offered once to bear the sins of many, will appear a second time, not to deal with sin but to save those who are eagerly waiting for him.

[00:26:50] Anthony: So, it seems to me, this passage shines the light on the reality that on our behalf, the anointed One, intercessor, this high priest that you just spoke about is in the presence of God, the Father. And when we think about that, his ascension and his presence with the Father, we may think he’s away from us.

What impact does that have on my life today, on Wednesday? Is there an impact that it should have in our daily following of Christ?

[00:27:21] Jon: Yeah. This kind of gets back to the participatory stuff I’ve been talking about which I love to talk about, as you can probably tell.

[00:27:31] Anthony: And we love to hear about it.

[00:27:32] Jon: Yeah. It should take a lot of pressure off us to get things completely right all the time because we know that there is a high priest who intercedes for us. He’s doing something on our behalf that we can’t do ourselves. It pulls us out of this way of thinking about behaving that we’ve been handed contextually (especially as Western modern people) that we need to do everything and get it right all the time.

We should be able to — this should allow us to relax into the fact that Christ has done all of this wonderful, amazing work for us, and we get to participate in that here and now by responding to it and living our lives in a way that conforms to him and his priestly status as little priests ourselves, right?

So, I would hope, because there are so many anxious Christians, I think, running around thinking that we have to get things right all the time. Am I having enough faith? Am I doing enough good, right? This plagues so many people, I think.

[00:28:50] Anthony: Especially as you think back to the conversation we were having on your book to the first three chapters of Romans, that can be anxiety producing. Oh, yikes!

“All have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God.” How many times have we had that quoted to us? And it’s true, but we need to know the rest of the story, right? Is that what you’re speaking of?

[00:29:00] Jon: Totally. That’s totally right. And I hope that this gives — and liberation is something that I’m really keen on as well, not just participation, but being liberated to make mistakes. We’re going to screw things up sometimes and that’s okay. God isn’t going to retract himself from us. God isn’t going to abandon us.

[00:29:27] Anthony: You know my backstory, huh? We all have the backstory of that, of messing it up.

[00:29:32] Jon: Yeah, but you’re right. Reading certain passages in a certain way, especially something in Romans 1 to 3, is going to push us toward anxiety. The text kind of encourages that on its face, right?

We’ve sinned and fallen short of the glory of God. We’ve made mistakes. We’re under the judgment of God. God’s wrath is on us, right? Of course, we’re going to feel guilty and horrible about that.

But what I think this account of Jesus’ high priestly status does for us is to say, you’re okay. You’re okay. You’re going to mess up. There is going to be accountability when we screw things up, right? But that’s a very different thing than thinking that, for example if you’re a child, your parent is going to abandon you. If you disobey them, your parent is just going to kick you out of the house forever.

With this account of the priestly status of Jesus as the one doing the stuff on our behalf is to say you’re in this close, intimate relationship with this person that’s been established from before all ages for you. That should give us the freedom, the liberty, right? The safety to be people who can mess up sometimes and go back to God with repentance and know for sure that God is not going to give up on you.

[00:31:01] Anthony: Yeah. Ah, that’s well said. And it reminds me when I go to my Father and confess my sins, I’m not seeking a new forgiveness, but reconnecting to the forgiveness I’ve always had in Christ. It’s a returning and a remembering into the life, the divine life of the Trinity.

That’s so powerful because — you again mentioned the Torrances. JB would always talk about. We can’t throw people back on themselves. And that’s what a contractual-style of relationship with God does because, oh what have you done for me lately and how have you messed things up today. And just knowing that we will not be abandoned.

I really appreciated what you said. Your parents don’t throw you out and they’re not better parents than God, the Father.

[00:31:54] Jon: Yeah. Which I think sometimes that’s how some of our theology works is that actually our families are turned out to be better than God. And we don’t want to do that. We don’t want to commit to that kind of theology. But yes, I think that (as Paul would say) God’s loving kindness is what leads us to repentance.

[00:32:13] Anthony: Yes.

[00:32:14] Jon: It’s not anything else.

[00:32:17] Anthony: Amen. Hallelujah.

The text informs us that when Christ appears a second time, he won’t be dealing with sin. That’s good news, right? What’s going on?

[00:32:27] Jon: Yeah, I think what the author of Hebrews is getting at here is that in Jesus’s second coming, it’s not going to be to deal with sin anymore because Christ’s sacrifice is something that’s universally sufficient once for all. I think that’s the key point that the author’s trying to drive home there.

So what’s being emphasized with the second coming is that because what Christ has done is sufficient once for all, when he arrives again, it’s just going to be to bring this sort of heavenly sancta, this heavenly sanctuary type thing, to us who are still alive, namely those who are eagerly awaiting his return.

So, there’s nothing more that sort of needs to be added on to what Christ has already done. So, I think that’s the distinction here. The reason why Christ isn’t coming back to deal with sin anymore for the author of Hebrews is because that’s already been dealt with. We don’t need to worry about that.

That’s dealt with. What needs to be done for the author is Christ bringing this. “heavenly cleanse sancta” to people awaiting.

[00:33:28] Anthony: Yeah, that seems to be an ongoing theme in Hebrews, the sufficiency and supremacy of Christ. There’s nothing to add on. There’s nothing you can bring to God’s table to make it better.

It’s good and it’s done. And let’s respond and liberate and as we join him in what he’s doing, in the activity.

[00:34:13] Jon: That’s exactly right. I think that once we’ve removed kind of your contractual theology (which I like that way of talking about this negative kind of gospel), once we’re freed from that way of viewing things, these texts become much more clear and they become much more powerful for us, right?

Because now what it says is that Christ has done something for you once and for all. You don’t have to contract into this in order for God to love you in Christ, right? That’s already established. Once we removed all the damaging sort of trappings of a contractual, conditional gospel, we’re able to be confronted with this wonderful inclusive, liberative gospel that’s been there all along, but we’ve just kind of missed it a lot of the time.

[00:34:44] Anthony: And therefore, we end up, we don’t have to respond. We want to, it’s just like when you love somebody, you want to lean into that relationship.

[00:34:53] Jon: Yeah, that’s right.

[00:34:54] Anthony: But trusting that — like even repentance (which you mentioned earlier), if it were dependent on my repentance, Jon, it’s puny, it’s anemic. But Jesus’ repentance on my behalf and for me as the man, the forerunner, the vicarious man, he’s done it, and his efforts are enough. And so therefore I do want to repent. I want to say, Hey, ah I want to change my mind on that.

[00:35:25] Jon: That’s right. And it’s such a different logic than this idea that we need to be threatened with something in order to behave well. If there’s not some sort of impending doom that we’re facing, then we can’t want to be involved with God.

No, we want to be involved with God because he is the bringer of life and brings us into this reality that’s all around us. And when we respond to that it’s because we really want to. This is what we’ve been created for, as people, is to be responding to Christ and involved in, as you had said, adopted into this loving family.

[00:36:05] Anthony: Yeah. Wow. Gospel’s good, friends! It turns out it

[00:36:12] Jon: It turns out it is good news. Yes.

[00:36:16] Anthony: Yes, It is good news. Yes. Full stop. Full stop.

Our third pericope of the month is Hebrews 10:11-25. It’s a Revised Common Lectionary passage for Proper 28 in Ordinary Time, which is November 17, and it reads:

And every priest stands day after day at his service, offering again and again the same sacrifices that can never take away sins. 12 But when Christ had offered for all time a single sacrifice for sins, “he sat down at the right hand of God,” 13 and since then has been waiting “until his enemies would be made a footstool for his feet.” 14 For by a single offering he has perfected for all time those who are sanctified. 15 And the Holy Spirit also testifies to us, for after saying, 16 “This is the covenant that I will make with them after those days, says the Lord: I will put my laws in their hearts, and I will write them on their minds,” 17 and he adds, “I will remember their sins and their lawless deeds no more.” 18 Where there is forgiveness of these, there is no longer any offering for sin.

19 Therefore, my brothers and sisters, since we have confidence to enter the sanctuary by the blood of Jesus, 20 by the new and living way that he opened for us through the curtain (that is, through his flesh), 21 and since we have a great priest over the house of God, 22 let us approach with a true heart in full assurance of faith, with our hearts sprinkled clean from an evil conscience and our bodies washed with pure water. 23 Let us hold fast to the confession of our hope without wavering, for he who has promised is faithful. 24 And let us consider how to provoke one another to love and good deeds, 25 not neglecting to meet together, as is the habit of some, but encouraging one another, and all the more as you see the Day approaching.

So, Jon, let’s do a bit of theology here as we talk about sanctification. Verse 14 appears to tell us that Christ has already perfected those who are sanctified. And yet generally, when I hear about sanctification, it’s about the ongoing process of sanctification.

So, my question is it both/and? Or is it reading too much into a single verse or what is it entirely? Help us understand the nature of sanctification.

[00:38:39] Jon: Yeah, sure. In a certain sense, yeah, it’s a both / and.

And from the point of view of our perception in this fallen reality, because we said we’re not perfect in our experience (that’s just empirically true), it appears and is experienced as a process for us in our everyday lives. That’s how we experience it. But the more meaningful reality, I think, objectively is Jesus Christ and what he’s doing.

So, his perfection (I think that’s what Hebrews is getting at), his perfection is our perfection breaking in now, but not fully realized as people still constructed of flesh. We’re still in the flesh until the final consummation of all things when our flesh will be removed, and we’ll get this, what’s known as the soma pneumatikon, the spiritual bodies, right?

And that happens the final consummation of all things when God will be all in all. So, in reality, in the most fundamental sense, we are perfected because Christ is the most fundamental thing about reality. What Christ says about who we are is the most true thing. We have been transformed. We have been raised and seated with Christ at the right hand of the Father.

So, it’s helpful to think about these things in terms of overlapping realities from our point of view, we have one foot in the muck and mire and then one foot in the new transformed reality in Christ. And because we’re still in the flesh, because we’re still involved in this fallen reality, that’s how we experience it. But the most true thing about us is what Christ is saying about us, which is that we are perfected, and that will be fully realized from our point of view in the age to come.

A great work on this would be Jeff McSwain’s on simul sanctification. I think he does a wonderful job explaining this, pulling on Barth and adapting that in certain ways. But that’s how this passage strikes me and how to make sense of it.

[00:40:52] Anthony: Yeah. And just thinking about Barth, I remember his quote. “I was, and I am the old man. I am and I will be the new man.” And I think that speaks to sanctification that what is objectively true, nothing’s going to change that we have been perfected in Christ. And yet in my day-to-day journey, I can see growth. I can see letting down old habits by the Spirit. And both can be true at the same time.

So, I think that’s really helpful, especially there’s so much talk about backsliding in the evangelical church sometimes, to just remember what is already objectively true, what’s already been accomplished for us in Christ.

[00:41:43] Jon: Totally. And I think one way to illustrate this, (that I’ve learned from Jeremy Begbie, who is at Duke; he’s a musician as well as a theologian) is trying to …

[00:42:00] Anthony: And a previous podcast guest. If I may say so.

[00:42:01] Jon: (Oh, nice! Good. I love Jeremy.) … is trying to step into the world of music here, auditory stuff, instead of — we tend to be locked up into kind of visual understanding. So, overlaps don’t really make a lot of sense to us in the [inaudible] because you can’t have two physical objects actually overlap in the same space at the same time, right?

What can do that is actually music. So, if I were to play a, I don’t know, I hate to use death metal as the music of Satan or the fallen world because I love metal. But I’m just, for the sake of this illustration, I could play, if we’re in the same room, I could play a piece of metal music. And that would fill our entire heard space, right?

It would fill all of our auditory space at the same time in the same space. I could play. I don’t know, pick your favorite song, but what should we use?

[00:43:05] Anthony: You know what? I’m a child of the ‘80s, so let’s go “Safety Dance.”

[00:43:10] Jon: Okay. “Safety Dance” is the music of Christ.

[00:43:15] Anthony: I’m really going to be embarrassed. Thanks, Jon, for asking.

[00:43:19] Jon: That’s awesome. So, the “Safety Dance” is the music of Christ. I could start playing that on a different device, right? It would fill our auditory or heard space at the same time that this metal music is playing, right? There’s no real competition in terms of the heard space. They’re existing in the same space at the same time.

We can hear both of them simultaneously, right? One may be louder than the other, right? Like I could blast metal music, and we could play the “Safety Dance” a little bit lower, you can still hear it, right?

So, what it means to be a Christian in our journey of discipleship is trying to get in tune with the “Safety Dance.”

[00:44:03] Anthony: This conversation is going places. I should have said “Enter Sandman” or something.

[00:44:11] Jon: Does that make sense? I think the world of music can get us to understanding how we exist in this overlapping space. And eventually, what happens is the metal music, in the final consummation of all things, it’s no more. Finally. It’s no more.

[00:44:30] Anthony: Oh, that’s so good. I’ve heard Dr. Begbie do several presentations and just play different notes and the beauty of it, but how it works together. They are entirely different when they’re played, but they’re harmonized. It is such a rich way of looking at theology because we tend to be dualistic.

It’s either this or that. And that’s caused so many problems when we think about God. So, to think of it in more of a holistic harmonization is, that’s the way to go.

[00:44:59] Jon: It’s so helpful with thinking about Trinitarian theology, thinking about the hypostatic union as well, thinking about human freedom in relation to God. There’s so many awesome things to tap into in the world of music. So yeah.

[00:45:15] Anthony: Yeah. All right, Jon’s a metal fan, just note to self and keep that in mind as we move forward.

I’d be grateful if you would exegete verses 23 – 25. What does it mean to hold fast to our confession of hope? And maybe just in a practical way, what does it look like to provoke one another to love and good deeds and not neglecting to meet together? Is there a strict way of reading this? Is there more? What’s going on?

[00:45:51] Jon: I think what’s happening here in Hebrews is, especially with the — I’m going to start backwards, starting with the meet together thing. I think there is something wonderful about the way that we’ve been constituted as people; we are fundamentally relational because we’re made in the image of a relational God.

And when we shy away from meeting together — this meaning here, I think “meeting together” in worship context. When we resist that a bit too much, we’re not really living in the way that we’ve been created to live. We’ve been created to be in communion with each other, to meet together.

And that can be difficult. I’m an introvert. I don’t particularly like meeting new people all the time. But I know at the same time, the way I’ve been created is to be in community, to be in relationship. And when we offer ourselves into those spaces of relationship and especially relationships of trust and love, together we become more of who we actually have been created to be. We lean into that.

And I think that’s so important for us, even those of us with certain different personalities and different dispositions, different temperaments. It can be more difficult for some people than others. But I think it’s important at the end of the day.

And I think Hebrews is getting at that provoking one another to love and good deeds, do good deeds. I’m not quite sure how to exegete that language of provoking in a particular way. I think this could be read in lots of different ways. I think provoking could mean, by the way that we’re loving somebody else, by the way that we’re loving one another that could, by the act of doing that, provoke someone else to live in that same sort of way.

Someone could resonate with that. We’re creatures who like to imitate each other, right? We’re creatures who like to emulate what others are doing when we see good things happening, right? And so, I think that’s probably what’s going on here is that we, by the way we live, we can provoke others to do the same sort of thing by how we live, how we speak, how we interact with people.

And this is a good way of thinking about sort of witness to other people, right? It’s not just persuasion. It’s also just by the way that we ourselves are loving and communicating with each other, holding fast to our confession of hope. This is hard, right? It’s probably just as hard as loving people that you don’t particularly like at the moment. Hope’s hard, especially in this world that we live in.

We look around. You read the news; it doesn’t seem like there’s a lot of hope for us. It’s hard. But given that (as we were talking about) we live in this overlapping reality, the most fundamental of which is Christ, holding on to the confession of hope is going to be holding on to that fundamental reality, even when it looks like it’s not there, even when we can barely hear the “Safety Dance,” even when we can barely hear the music of Christ, we know that it’s there and we’re trying to get in tune with that.

So, I think that’s what holding fast to it means. It’s trying to turn up the volume on that music of Christ. And that will lead to ultimately informing how we relate to one another in love. And that will inform of course, our desire, our draw to meet and to be in communion with each other.

So, I think all these are connected, which is why I started the opposite way around.

[00:50:00] Anthony: Yeah. I liked the way you tied it together because there are times when I show up in a space of adopted brothers and sisters where I don’t feel like I’m holding much of anything. And I certainly don’t feel like I have much to provoke others to love and good deeds, but their testimony, they’re bearing witness to the goodness of God helps me hold fast.

So, it’s very much — just scripture itself, we tend to think sometimes me and my Bible, but it’s communal. It’s meant to be read aloud in the body. It’s very much about the communion of the saints and our confession together.

[00:50:53] Jon: And Hebrews here isn’t talking about specifically the Holy Spirit, but the thing that binds us together, again, it’s not something we do.

We have [inaudible] intercessory figure who comes in and binds us together. It’s the Holy Spirit that does this. So, we shouldn’t come into a communal space thinking, Oh, just because I’m having a really crappy day, I can’t be engaged in communion with the people around me.

We have to trust in the reality that’s connecting all of us together. Even when I’m having a bad day, or even when I really, really don’t want to be there, because sometimes I really don’t want to be around people, that something is at work already, drawing us together.

[00:51:36] Anthony: Yes. Yeah, that’s good because even when you’re having that bad day, we have to remember our presence matters.  Your absence, my absence, it makes the community not nearly what it would have been if I’d been there, even on a bad day. So that’s really [inaudible].

[00:51:58] Jon: And that, that just goes back to how we’ve

been created as people. We’re created, we are constituted by our attachments, by our loves, by people, even people we don’t really know, they constitute who we are. Which is a weird thing, especially in our modern Western context, where we think of ourselves as discrete individual subjects, but that is not true.

That is actually a lie. It is a lie that keeps getting spread, that we are autonomous individuals. We are not; we are connected beings.

[00:52:35] Anthony: And boy, how this world would look different if we understood that we belong to one another.

Friends, we’re in the homestretch. We’re at our final pericope of the month. It’s Revelation 1:4-8. It is a Revised Common Lectionary passage for Reign of Christ Sunday, which is on November 24. Jon, read it for us, please.

[00:53:01] Jon: Sure.

John to the seven churches that are in Asia: Grace to you and peace from him who is and who was and who is to come and from the seven spirits who are before his throne, and from Jesus Christ, the faithful witness, the firstborn of the dead, and the ruler of the kings of the earth. To him who loves us and freed us from our sins by his blood and made us a kingdom, priests serving his God and Father, to him be glory and dominion forever and ever. Amen. Look! He is coming with the clouds; every eye will see him, even those who pierced him, and all the tribes of the earth will wail on account of him. So it is to be. Amen. “I am the Alpha and the Omega,” says the Lord God, who is and who was and who is to come, the Almighty.

[00:54:04] Anthony: Amen. And amen. So, if you were preaching this passage to a congregation, your congregation, what would be the focus of your proclamation?

[00:54:11] Jon: Yeah, I’ve been thinking about this a lot. I think I would center in on verse 5. That’s the crux of what I would want to teach about. Of course this could change. I tend to not be too rigid in terms of preparation when I am preaching because sometimes things change. Something’s going on in the community that would change the focus that I would put on it, a certain text, sometimes world events would, all of that.

But just strictly for this exercise, I think verse 5 with the “faithful witness, the firstborn of the dead, and the ruler of the kings of the earth. To him who loves us and freed us from our sins by his blood.”

I think getting into the blood stuff here could be an interesting sermon. Because this is a way to shift how we think about blood because if people have been schooled in this negative understanding of what blood is, that it’s death, that it’s judgment, that it’s this bad, ultimately bad thing — honing in on that blood is actually liberative. What’s going on there is freeing us.

It’s not something that happens to Christ instead of us, right? But that what Christ does as our forerunner, through his blood, is free us. And digging into what that freedom could look like for the community, I think that would be a starting point for me, to think about how to preach this to a congregation

[00:56:02] Anthony: As I’m rereading verse 5, thinking of it as a crux. There’s so much good news shoehorned in there. He is the faithful witness. He is the faithful forerunner, firstborn. He is the faithful ruler. We have so many bad rulers. He’s the faithful one. He loves us. And he doesn’t hold us captive. He freed us. There’s just so much to unearth there in a proclamation heralding of the gospel.

And that really does tie into the question I wanted to ask you next. It’s in terms of liturgical calendar, it’s known as Reign of Christ Sunday or Christ the King Sunday. And we’re recording this episode in September. We’ve got a national presidential election coming up in the U.S.

Just last night, there was a presidential debate. And so, for those listening, prior to that national election, how might the reign of Christ inform us about politics in our lives? Here’s a big one: the way we view people who vote differently than we do? And even the outcome of the election?

I just because that’s on our minds. And you even talked about you adapt the message sometimes. Always from the text, but how it informs what’s happening around us. So, what would you have to say about this?

[00:57:26] Jon: All right. So, you want me to get into this? With hesitation, I will, but I’m not really going to beat around the bush here.

I am both sick of Christian nationalist agendas where it becomes a kind of civic religion, right? I think I can be clear about that.

And I think just as much as I am, the sort of political quietism, or even kind of fideism where it becomes balkanized that results from what’s become a popular Christian slogan: Jesus is Lord; therefore, Caesar is not. Okay, that’s true. Jesus is Lord. The kingdoms of the world are not the Lord in the same way that Christ is. Caesar’s not God. Our presidential candidates aren’t God.

But the payoff, I think, of this other option — not Christian nationalism, but this sort of “Oh, Jesus is Lord, therefore Caesar is not; I can step back a little bit and not worry too much about the politics of the world because God’s in charge. Christ is in charge,” which is true. But it can take us in a couple different directions that worry me a bit. It can lead to one assuming this sort of “both side-ism,” which is different from loving your neighbor. It’s just saying that all these options are equally true or good or understandable.

And this “both sided-ism” is what Jesus really wants. Which tends to just re-inscribe a certain kind of — I mean this in a nonpartisan way, it leads to a sort of re-inscribing of conservatism in a way that says things can’t really change. Okay. That is, Jesus just looks like the sort of average citizen of a modern liberal democracy. Okay.

Secondly, it can lead to a kind of superiority complex, I think, where engagement in real political action in this world, can be looked down on because what really matters is this immaterial kingdom of God; what really matters is that. So, we don’t actually need to concern ourselves with real material realities.

I think that can happen, but we can trick ourselves into thinking that’s what the gospel is about. What I want to alert us to and point us to, in my witness is: what does Jesus, this high priest, talk about all over the Gospels? He talks about money. He talks about material realities of people. He talks about marginalized people. He talks about the poor. If our politics aren’t reflecting a basic concern for the material realities of ourselves and our neighbors, we’re not going to see Jesus there.

Let me say that again, because I really want to make this clear. If our politics aren’t reflecting a basic concern for the material realities of our neighbors, we’re not going to see Jesus there — because that’s what Jesus is concerned with. Always test our political thinking and action in the light of Christ and his concern for the poor and the oppressed.

Now this can open up different options for you. It’s not just saying, Oh, you have to be a socialist to be a follower of Christ, which some people say. I have no time for that either. But what Jesus alerts us to is being concerned with the material realities, the economic realities, the family realities of our neighbors. That needs to drive our political thinking!

We can disagree about how that works out. But if there’s something that occludes, if there’s a political position, or policy, or running platform, that occludes that way of thinking about things, I can’t, in good conscience, be a part of that. I can’t, because I’m trying to get everything — I’m trying to do what Paul would say, to bring everything captive, every thought, even political thought, captive to Christ.

So that’s a starting point. I don’t want to tell people how to vote, any of that sort of stuff, but that’s the starting point, I think.

Now in terms of relating to people who disagree with you, this is tricky, right? I have family members who disagree with me on politics. I have friends who disagree with me on political stuff. What’s important there is you don’t always have to talk about that stuff with them. Normally, the arguments tend to be online or like when you’re not around the person in person, and you’re talking to them.

But when you do engage with someone, you should do so out of a Christ-like way. We have the mind of Christ. So how does Christ interact with people he disagrees with? He can get angry. He can be pretty harsh, but he never gives up or lets go of someone else just because they disagree with him. Anger is okay.

[01:03:47] Anthony: That’s right. And it’s one of the reasons I don’t engage on social media in the political world and other controversial topics because it’s not relational. I mean it can be; I understand that but there are massive limitations.

And it’s amazing how people can bow up when they’re not face to face with you.  I’ve heard people call them Twitter muscles, where you just coming in hard and strong about a subject, but it’s meant to be in relationship, always.

[01:04:22] Jon: So, I would say in terms of disagreements, treat it like any other sort of disagreement. The way to do that is if you have a relationship of trust with someone, you can be real with them about how you’re feeling and about how much you disagree with them. And it can be tense, and it’s going to be because you disagree, probably fundamentally about certain things in politics, right?

But it’s knowing that you’re in a relationship of trust with them, that they constitute who you are, as well, even if you disagree, and you constitute who they are. Love is a part of that too, a huge part.

I wanted to try to be as precise as I could, not beat around the bush, but also bring this back to how we need to be thinking about this in the light of Christ. Always.

[01:05:28] Anthony: Absolutely and I appreciate you going on this thought journey with me because you can’t escape it. The last few national elections, it’s been tough in churches. It’s been very tough on pastors because they’re trying to hold things together when people have really different viewpoints.

And my thinking on it, and this is a very general statement, I really want to be conservative on the traditions and orthodoxy, that we hold fast to our confession of Christ, and I want to be liberal in love.

Like you said, Jesus’ work is comprehensive, and it informs everything that we do, and we see and how we act. As we look on in this passage, thanks be to God. I hear what you’re saying, even as he is Lord, it doesn’t mean that there’s not an impact in our day to day living.

But thanks be to God that he is out in the Alpha and the Omega. He’s the end. He’s the telos. And it makes me think of what Julian Norwich said, “The end is good. So, if it’s not good, it’s not the end.” And as painful as it is right now, and as difficult as these conversations are, and I’m not trying to do escapism here, just thanks be to God that he is the king.

[01:06:46] Jon: And because that should frame how we’re thinking about these things, that ultimate reality. It doesn’t give us a cop out. It frames it, and it should lead us to engaging in the best possible way that we can as Christians.

[01:07:01] Anthony: Yeah. Amen. And amen.

Hey man, we’re just meeting for the first time. I really like you.

[01:07:05] Jon: I like you, too.

[01:07:05] Anthony: I’m thankful for you. I feel so grateful for this conversation. So, thanks for saying yes to something you didn’t really know much about, this podcast. It’s been just an enriching conversation,  and I hope that you found joy in the process.

And I also want to thank our team that makes this podcast possible. Reuel Enerio, our podcast producer, the editor, the one that makes it all sound good. Elizabeth Mullins, the transcriber who captures the fact that I said “Safety Dance” was the song of choice. Oh, I can’t believe that’s going to be documented to live in infamy.

[01:07:40] Jon: Heck yeah. And that rules; you should just stand by it, man.

[01:07:41] Anthony: Oh man, I just listened to it recently and that’s why it came to my mind. It’s synthesized. I just feel horrible about that.

And then Michelle Hartman, who’s our leader of the team. She does such a great job. Those. So, thank you, one and all, for your efforts.

And Jon, again, thank you for being here. As is our tradition on Gospel Reverb, we end with prayer. So, if you would, pray for our listening audience.

[01:08:06] Jon: Absolutely.

Gracious God, thank you for this time to spend with Anthony and to talk about these lectionary texts, to go through them. We ask that what has been said is pleasing to you, and we trust that you intercede for us, and that you have been present with us. Even through these microphones, through our computers, through the internet, we trust that you’re present.

And we are so thankful that you have provided us with a wonderful space and platform to be able to talk to one another about important ideas. And namely about the most important thing, which is Jesus Christ. The one through whom you revealed yourself most fully. The one who never gives up or lets go of anybody ever.

It’s irrevocable, your commitment to us. And we thank you for that. It’s the most precious gift that you are present with us in him. I also pray for those listening to this, that through our conversation, that you would speak a good word to them and to comfort them, to challenge them and to bring them deeper into the truth of God — that is your Son, Jesus Christ. And it’s in his name we pray. Amen.


Thank you for being a guest of Gospel Reverb. If you like what you heard, give us a high rating, and review us on iTunes, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcast content. Share this episode with a friend. It really does help us get the word out as we are just getting started. Join us next month for a new show and insights from the RCL. Until then, peace be with you!

Using Your MAP As A Strategic Guide w/ Hector and Juan Carlos Barrero

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In this episode, our host Cara Garrity interviews Hector Barrero GCI pastor in Bogota, Colombia and his son Juan Carlos Barrero, Hope Avenue Champion in Bogota. Together they discuss how to use your Ministry Action Plan (MAP) as a strategic guide.

We have clearly defined a goal and a vision and a mission, in contrast to the years when we didn’t use a MAP. We had goals, but not specifically targeted towards the Avenues and the ministries. In the past, we used to just plan, for example, for the Hope Avenue. With the Avenues, you now have more opportunities available for people to serve in different ministries, and this developed relationships, more events — everything focused exclusively on making a positive impact on the community, and sharing hope, sharing love, and sharing the faith of Christ.”
Juan Carlos Barrero

Main Points:

  • Share – what was your team’s experience like using your MAP as a strategic guide throughout the year?  01:05
  • What adjustments had to be made? How did you assess when and how this needed to happen? 03:44
  • What rhythms did your team establish to refer back to your MAP as a strategic guide? How often did your reference it? In what ways did it inform your routine ministry activities? 12:21

 

Resources:


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Program Transcript


Cara: Welcome to GC Podcast, a podcast to help you develop into the healthiest ministry leader you can be by sharing practical ministry experience. I’m your host, Cara Garrity, and today we return to our series on process and practices of discernment, strategic planning, and ministry action plans (MAP).

And to do this, let’s welcome back Pastor Hector and Juanca, who helped us kick off the series at the beginning of the year. Thank you for joining us today, Hector and Juanca. We’re very appreciative for your insight that you’ll be sharing with us today.

Hector: Thank you, too, Cara.

Juanca: Hello. Hello. Thank you, Cara. How are you?

Cara: I’m doing well. How are the both of you doing?

Juanca: We’re doing great. Thanks for asking.

Cara: Good. I’m so glad to hear that. And I know we’re coming up towards the end of the year. And like I said, we’re returning to this series on the discernment, strategic planning, and ministry action plans.

So, we want to hear a little bit about how what you shared with us during the first quarter — what it’s looked and how it’s gone for you all. I do want to ask you guys; what difference did using a MAP make for your local church ministries this year?

[00:01:23] Juanca: Yes. So that will be a lot. First of all, we now have a clearer idea of the direction that our church is heading in. We have clearly defined a goal and a vision and a mission in contrast to the years when we didn’t use a MAP, right?

So, we had goals, but not specifically target or targeted towards the Avenues and the ministries. So, this strategy allows us to concentrate on each of the different challenges, events, and necessities that arise. And because of this, we just have a better awareness of all the ministries and the church as a whole.

In the past, we used to just plan, for example, for the Hope Avenue. With the Avenues, you now have more opportunities available for people to serve in different ministries and this developed relationships, more events — everything focused exclusively on making a positive impact on the community, and sharing hope, sharing love, and sharing the faith of Christ.

[00:02:45] Hector: Yes. I would say that we are more focused on things that are clearly a part of our church, giving us the good results. So we have a clear idea on what to do, where to work, and how to bring people to those Avenues.

So, it has been good to have our MAP in this direction.

[00:03:12] Cara: Yeah, that’s so great to hear. And I love how you all say it brought focus and clarity. Because you have had goals in the past, but what the MAP has done is help you to bring that specific focus and clarity and holistic approach to the ministries.

And now, I know one of the things that we can be sometimes worried about or maybe be concerned about when putting together a ministry action plan for a whole year is: we don’t always know what’s going to happen during the year. Right? And maybe things will have to change.

I wonder how did you all discern when and how adjustments maybe needed to be made to your MAP this year?

[00:03:54] Juanca: Okay. There’re always adjustments because of the context, because of a person that was not available, or things change all the time. But in this document that we call the IMAP, in the MAP, we just based on a new document that we created, we generated a very similar document, but it is basically a chronogram that we shared online.

So, we are always detailing all the year’s activities with the date and the person in charge. If some adjustments have to be made this is immediately shared with the leaders. So, in this way, everyone knows what’s happening each month, and it’s easy to change, to share ideas in a fast-paced way, creating an efficient information flow for everyone.

We use, for example, WhatsApp as a platform. That has been crucial for our connectivity due to its promptness in sending messages and ideas towards the goals and agreements, the meetings of every Avenue and the ministries. We have many groups on WhatsApp, each one representing a ministry.

And most of the weeks, weekly there are meetings in each ministry. There’s planning; they gather to pray, to talk about their ministries and their plans and everything. And most of the time they send a summary or like the meeting’s minutes so that everyone knows the agreements or the decisions or the plans. Yeah, everything is adjusted to the context, to the needs, to whatever happens in the year.

And basically, we took the MAP and IMAP documents and put them on a chronogram. We also use Zoom, but WhatsApp here in Columbia, it’s very used in our culture. A lot of people have WhatsApp. And if you are working in X or Y company, whatever company, they have a group on WhatsApp, and they communicate a lot of instructions there.

And so, we are taking advantage of WhatsApp right now. We don’t use a lot of emails. Maybe the emails are used for sending the Equipper or maybe a private matter, a little bit more formal maybe. But it’s always part of adjusting because of the context and all the challenges that arise in the year.

[00:06:47] Hector: Yeah, I would say that WhatsApp is a very easy thing to use. Everybody has a phone, a cell phone, so everybody is able to be very close to the information we send, and it has been a very effective way to communicate what we want. So, Paulina, my wife, and Juan Carlos, who is basically the person who is in charge of all the Avenues, they have an easy way to communicate.

I would say that is something that we are benefiting from the pandemic times, this new way to communicate things. We don’t have to be together all the time in a personal meeting, but through WhatsApp, we are in contact all the time. Everybody can read things, so we are always on the same page concerning messages and ideas and planning.

[00:07:51] Cara: Yes, and what I’m hearing that I think is important for us to keep in mind is that when adjustments are made throughout the year to the ministry action plans and details to even timelines or deadlines, or maybe who will be responsible for something, communication is a really key piece that. That you all have put in place and found the ways that best work for your team to communicate to one another, which in your cases is the WhatsApp, to make sure that you are on the same page. All of the information is available to all the team members on a continuous basis, right? That if any change is made, immediately, the whole team has access to that, and you can quickly communicate one to another so that adjustments can be made in a smooth manner amongst the team with everyone still in the loop.

I think it’s really helpful to think about, that the communication is really important when we have to make adjustments to our ministry action plans throughout the year. That helps us continue to work in that team-based way.

[00:09:05] Juanca: Yeah, two years ago, we started implementing MAP, and we did have an annual plan, but with the MAP, we were able to focus more as we said before in each Avenue.

And so, all the events and the overall planning seem to be more organized using this structure, right? Efficiency. And the vision, for example, was a big change for us. And this was the result of some meetings in which we generated — in a great practice, a conversation that we had — a vision, a new vision.

And so, this new vision is now part of our liturgy or Sunday service. So, after we read a psalm verse from the Bible, every single Sunday, we always read our vision as a church. The whole church reads the vision with the person in charge, for example, of the announcements.

And the vision goes like this:

We are a church that honors God, proclaims the gospel of Jesus Christ, serves the community and grows in faith, hope, and love.

So, we always mention this vision every single Sunday. And if a newcomer, or a person that is visiting us, is present, the person is going to know that we have this vision that involves the three Avenues and that we are focused in proclaiming the gospel of Jesus Christ through the Avenues.

And so, we needed these changes to focus more on developing each Avenue and having a clearer vision and mission for every year.

[00:10:52] Hector: Yeah. Also sometimes, not every Sunday, but sometimes I explain a little bit of each Avenue, how it works. And we invite people to integrate into one of those Avenues, so people know that we are working in certain areas. I explain what is the Love Avenue or the Faith Avenue. So, people get acquainted with things that we are doing and the things that we are working on.

[00:11:27] Cara: Yeah, I really like what you all are saying, that this becomes interwoven in the rhythms of the life of the local church because that’s one of the things that I was going to ask about next.

Sometimes with ministry action plans, we’ll put them together for the year and make these goals, put together a vision and a mission and even put together a timeline and a calendar. But then we never referenced back to it. We don’t use it to inform our routine ministry activities. And what you all are describing that you all have that vision that you all have put together and that kind of as an organizing piece of your local ministries of the church.

So, I would just love if you had more to add about how often did you all as a team refer back to your ministry action plan? And what ways did you make sure that it helped to shape the day-to-day, week-to-week, month-to-month routine ministry activities of your local congregation?

[00:12:43] Juanca: There’s something important that we have to mention, and that is with the MAP, we were able to create a theme for every year. We started two years ago. For example, in 2023 our theme was “Rebuilding the Church.” But this rebuilding the church implies that — this title implies that we needed to organize the church with the new parameters which are the Avenues.

We needed to organize everything focused on the Avenues and in delegating people and ministries and leaders preparing leaders for each Avenue. And at the beginning, it was a little bit of a challenge.

But now this year in 2024, our theme is “Building Together” because we feel that we were able to rebuild quote “the church,” in terms of reorganizing the church in such a way that we contemplated the three Avenues, the pastoral, the faith, love, and hope.

So, in 2024, we are building together from what we did in the year 2023. Yeah, we’re definitely always in a constant change towards, in this case, the great commission in Matthew 28. This is applied in all the Avenues, following these goals, the vision, and the mission that have been created in an agreement with all the brothers and sisters leaders that are attending these meetings in which we discuss everything regarding the Avenues.

[00:14:39] Hector: One thing that motivates me a lot is to see more and more people involved. That’s good because at the beginning it was difficult to invite people to this new way of thinking. But as time went on, more and more people understood what we meant by the three Avenues and more people now are getting integrated into the ministries, different ministries.

So now we have a lot of people working in these Avenues, and I see a lot of people involved, which is very good. It is excellent because to see a lot of people working it gives you a sense of, I’m not alone, a lot of people are working, which is excellent.

Sometimes myself as a pastor, I have to confess, I see the results of people working, and I didn’t know exactly that they were working in things, developing plans, doing things. And I say, this is great. This is great that people are getting the vision, doing things by themselves. But finally, we get all of us together and reach things all of us together.

[00:16:04] Juanca: Yes. In addition to that I will add that it is also, from a different perspective, a challenge to stay, to be stable sometimes because of the liquid society, the liquid modernity that we live in. Everything is changing, people come and go.

It brings to my mind two authors, Gilles Lipovetsky and Zygmunt Bauman. They talk about the liquid society, and it is so real right now. Everything changes. You don’t know what’s going to happen tomorrow. The structures are not that strong. And this is happening on all levels in society and also in the church.

So, we feel that sometimes people are tired because of their jobs. And it brings to my mind a family, for example, that has a graveyard shift. And they’re always tired, and sometimes they’re just absent because they’re so tired. And we have to work, and we have to provide, and there’s a pressure from all of these things. But in spite of that, in spite of all of those challenges, we feel that if we continue down this path, in this path of the three Avenues, and we make them clear for people, so we’re building together, as our theme says.

[00:17:34] Cara: I think that is brilliant using a theme as a kind of practical way to keep at the forefront your goals and the ways that you’re wanting to express your mission and your mission specifically that year because things are memorable, right?

It’s harder maybe day to day to be like, oh, yeah, we set this one goal, and we were going to use this metric to measure it. And on this day, we’re going to do this. But a theme is something that we can connect to. And so, I think that’s great.

And as you guys are saying too, that invitation for people to come in and participate in that ministry of the three Avenues — I think that’s just a wonderful picture of the local ministries of the church, just coming to life in these healthy rhythms, in a way that the ministry action plan is just a helpful tool versus something that helps to serve the life of the church, right? Rather than, it’s not just us just doing something just to check off a box or serving the ministry action plan rather than it serving us.

I think that you guys have shared a really beautiful picture of what it can look like. So, I thank you very much for sharing what that has looked like for you this year.

Are there any other thoughts that you want to share before we close out our time today and then invite you back in for our next mini episode?

[00:19:22] Hector: I would like to mention something. But probably I don’t know how to put it together with the subjects we are discussing right now. But it is our effort to educate our people. We are in the CEM, in Spanish, Centro de Educación Ministerial. And we are preparing new leaders. And this is another activity that is motivating a lot our members, our congregation. They know that we are involved in something that is preparing leaders and pastors for the future, for having in mind new congregations in the future.

This also has motivated those that are already working in the Avenues, and it is motivating also the congregation as a whole. It is so good to have these different, I would say, efforts to bring growth to the congregation; it’s good because I perceive myself, the church, very alive, very enthusiastic with a clear vision with the desire to grow.

And we have Jews involved in these classes, Saturdays in the mornings, and the MTC that we have over here in Bogota. So, I would say I wanted to add that to [inaudible] the Avenues. All of that together is bringing health to the congregation.

[00:21:15] Cara: Yes, thank you, Pastor Hector for adding that because while not every congregation will have an MTC that they’re developing and running in their local congregation, what I think is really important about what you’ve shared and that every congregation can connect to, is this idea of pouring into the next generation, the future generations of leaders, recognizing that the church is alive with a clear vision, as you say.

And for that to motivate the people that are gathering together as the church to participate in Jesus’s ministry. I think that’s a wonderful thing. And as you said, for you guys in Bogota specifically, the MTC is one of the things that helps to bring that motivation to the members because they see specifically and with clarity what you all are doing, what you’re working on, how you are preparing these leaders for the next generation, maybe church planting in the future, things like that.

And I think, again, that comes to the importance of how you all have named clarity and focus and organization and communication as being important pieces of how your team functions, because when a plan or goals or something that you are working on is clear, then that can be motivational, right?

We don’t have that clarity, sometimes it’s not so compelling, right? And so, I really appreciate you sharing that, Pastor Hector. And for our listeners, just because you might not have an MTC, don’t miss out on what Pastor Hector just said, because the future of the church and generations-to-come is something that is applicable in your context.

So, thank you so much. Well, I was just going to close us out for this episode, say a brief prayer for you both, and thank you for your time with us.

[00:23:38] Juanca: Thank you, Cara.

[00:23:39] Cara: No, thank you. I appreciate everything you shared. It’s so insightful. And again, I think it paints us a really compelling picture of what the life of the local church can look like.

So, I’d love to pray for you both and our leaders.

God, I come before you so thankful for Pastor Hector and Juanca. And I thank you for their team of leaders, for Paulina, who also works very closely with them in key leadership, their Avenue champions. I thank you for the ways that they have brought focus and clarity to their local church ministries.

I pray that you would continue to bring them wisdom and discernment as they work together as a team. I pray that you would continue to bring them that excitement, that motivation, that more and more would come to want to participate in your ministries. I pray that your Spirit would invigorate them around this vision that they have articulated.

I thank you so much for what they’ve had to share. And Holy Spirit, I ask you that you would do the same for all of us in our local context what is happening in Bogota — to bring us clarity of vision, willingness and excitement to participate in your ministry. We thank you and we praise you in your holy and precious name. Amen.

[00:25:04] Hector: Amen. Amen.

[00:25:06] Cara: All right. Thank you, guys, again for taking the time to join us today. Listeners, don’t forget to check back next month for the next mini-episode of this series. And until then, take care. Keep on living and sharing the gospel.

Thank you for listening to this episode of GC Podcast. We hope you found this time valuable. We would love to hear from you. Email us at info@gci.org with your suggestions or feedback. And remember, healthy churches start with healthy leaders, so invest in yourself and in your leaders.

 

Sermon for November 3, 2024 – Proper 26

Welcome to this week's episode, a special rerun from our Speaking of Life archive. We hope you find its timeless message as meaningful today as it was when it was first shared.

Program Transcript


Speaking Of Life 3049 | The Jesus Subtext
Greg Williams

Have you ever had a conversation in which the primary communication was not the words spoken? Maybe an exchange with an old friend where you say very little to express your relationship? Maybe a conversation with a rival in which looks and posturing were really what was “said”?

The brief exchange Jesus has with the scribe in Mark 12 is similar. The scribes ask Jesus what the greatest commandment is and Jesus responds:

Jesus answered, “The most important is, ‘Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God, the Lord is one. And you shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind and with all your strength.’ The second is this: ‘You shall love your neighbor as yourself.’ There is no other commandment greater than these.”
Mark 12:29-31 (ESV)

His answer connects to the central prayer faithful Jews prayed every day; it is called the Shema. But the words unspoken say a lot as well.

At least in Mark, the scribes are portrayed as Jesus’ nemesis. They are constantly harping on his behavior and ultimately are instrumental in causing his death.

And yet in this exchange, the scribe actually agrees with Jesus by saying: “You are right, Teacher…”

The conversation surprisingly takes a sharp turn away from the usual antagonistic tone. He agrees with Jesus quickly—where the subtext in most of their conversations is challenging, suddenly there is agreement.

Jesus’ reaction to this agreement is no less surprising:

And when Jesus saw that he answered wisely, he said to him, “You are not far from the kingdom of God.”
Mark 12:34 (ESV)

The Lord knows just when to stop everything and watch the kingdom leaking through, even through a scribe. This conversation stands out against other similar exchanges because there is pause, there is observation, not just a disagreement or debate.

Jesus sees the change coming through this man and proves that the kingdom welcomes everyone as a matter of the heart. Unlike Israel—who at the time who was shutting non-Jews (Gentiles) out—the gospel movement welcomed all—scribes or otherwise—if that person turned even slightly toward Jesus. It was a matter of faith—not social class, not ethnicity nor heritage, that brought someone to believe and follow Christ.

So this exchange—a surprisingly positive response from a scribe excites Jesus. It’s small moments like these showing how Jesus was transforming the world then and still is today.

I’d like to think this scribe who was “not far” from the kingdom made it all the way across. Perhaps this was the beginning of his journey—a brief, patient discussion with Jesus. The same discussion he has had with you.

I’m Greg Williams, Speaking of Life.

Psalm 146:1-10 · Ruth 1:1-18 · Hebrews 9:11-14 · Mark 12:28-34

This week’s theme is extreme faithfulness. In our call to worship psalm, the Lord is praised as both our Creator and our sustainer. The Old Testament story in Ruth echoes the faithfulness of the Lord through Ruth’s speech that expresses her resolute commitment to stay with Naomi. Our reading from Hebrews explodes into descriptive comparisons that exalt the effectual and permanent power of Jesus as our high priest. The Gospel text in Mark records Jesus quoting the Shema (the time-honored Jewish prayer affirming “God is One”), as the foundational commandment that is ultimately fulfilled in Jesus.

How Much More?

Hebrews 9:11-14 NRSVUE

We may not know who the author of Hebrews is or the date in which the book was written, but the message of the book is not lessened to any degree without this knowledge. Because of all the references to the Old Testament, Hebrew Scriptures, and Jewish traditions found in the letter, it becomes fairly apparent that the intended audience was Jewish Christians. Because of this, those of non-Jewish heritage are at a disadvantage in picking up on the many comparisons made using various historically Jewish references in the letter. However, what we do share with the intended audience is what makes this letter relevant for us today. Like those early Jewish Christians, we share the temptation to allow secondary things to slip in and displace our trust in Jesus.

The recipients of Hebrews were a people who had put their trust in Jesus and even endured many persecutions on account of that faith. We too can look back and see a time when we first placed our trust in Jesus as sufficient in and for all things. We too may have given up much and endured a great many disadvantages for doing so. However, we have this letter before us today because the Holy Spirit saw fit that we, like those early Jewish Christians, would need a reminder of the one who is truly worthy of our full devoted and unwavering trust.

We too can slowly drift away from the God who revealed himself to us in Jesus Christ. We too can lose sight of who Jesus is for us and seek to either add something that we think will fill in the gaps, or to turn from him altogether. It is possible as the years roll on in our walk with Jesus that we can fall out of step with growing in our knowledge of him and our faith in him. Maybe that is where you are today. If so, this letter is worth your attention from start to finish. But, for today, we only have four verses to read. Even so, this short snippet of Hebrews will serve to remind us, as the author intends, of the greatness and far surpassing sufficiency of Jesus and his work accomplished on our behalf.

This section alludes to a lot of details that were covered in the ten verses leading up to it. Essentially, chapter 9 begins by revisiting the first covenant and the many regulations contained in it with special attention to the tabernacle and high priest. An important aspect of these regulations is that they were intended for worship. This is a critical filter to consider when looking back through Israel’s history. From the start, God intended to enter into a relationship with Israel. This relationship would be characterized by worship. Israel was to know this God who had called them to himself, and in that knowing, they would respond in worship, which is the only fitting response to a God who is worthy of worship. However, this worship would have to be a mediated worship on account of their sin and guilty conscience.

Their history puts on full display that these people were a sinful, broken, and outright rebellious people. They repeatedly resisted God’s grace and love towards them. As a result, God could not dwell with them directly in all his glory as it would destroy them. So, in his grace, God set up a mediated system of worship that would enable these rebellious people to “stay in the room” with him in a manner of speaking. God was making provision for their worship.

When you look back on all the details and precision that was prescribed by God to build the tabernacle and all that went with it, it becomes clear that God is the one who provided the means for Israel’s worship. They would not need to provide their own worship, sacrifices, and rituals, using their own ingenuity or imaginations like the many pagan religious cults around them. Israel was given very specific instructions on how to worship and how not to. That took all the guesswork out of it, and they need not live in fear that maybe they did not offer up worship that was worthy enough to be accepted. They knew exactly what to offer. This was God’s grace to them and a signpost of the ultimate provision of a mediator who will come to fulfill all that God was doing in Israel for the sake of the entire world.

Today’s text, beginning with verse 11, is going to remind the readers of Hebrews that Jesus is God’s perfect and final provision for our reconciliation with him and for the worship of the Father that we were created for. And it begins with a big fat “But.”

This “But” is to let us know that everything the author was talking about up to this point needs to be held in suspension to hear what will follow. In other words, before we decide to hold onto these other things that we feel are so important for our relationship with God, we need to weigh that against what is about to be presented. And what we are about to see is the author’s attempt to remind us that whatever secondary things we may be tempted to add to our faith, over and against a faith in Christ alone, or even to displace our trust in him altogether, they are insignificant by comparison. Ultimately, what we have in Christ is so much more by comparison and we would be fools to settle for anything less.

But when Christ came as a high priest of the good things that have come, then through the greater and more perfect tent (not made with hands, that is, not of this creation), he entered once for all into the holy place, not with the blood of goats and calves but with his own blood, thus obtaining eternal redemption. For if the blood of goats and bulls and the sprinkling of the ashes of a heifer sanctifies those who have been defiled so that their flesh is purified, how much more will the blood of Christ, who through the eternal Spirit offered himself without blemish to God, purify our conscience from dead works to worship the living God! (Hebrews 9:11-14 NRSVUE)

You notice the name “Jesus” is not mentioned here. The writer of Hebrews has already established that Jesus is the high priest and faithful over God’s house (Hebrews 3:1-6). In today’s text, we can take note of several comparisons the author has chosen to bring to our attention which show how much more Jesus is worthy of our faith than animal sacrifices.

Here the writer of Hebrews mentions several types of animals that were sacrificed. On the Day of Atonement, a goat was slain for the people. The blood of this goat was sprinkled before the mercy seat. The high priest confessed the people’s sins over a second goat, sometimes referred to as the scapegoat, which was then led away into the desert. The Levitical high priest was required to offer a bull as a sin offering for himself and his household. A red heifer was slain (Numbers 19:3-4,) whose ashes was mixed with water which became the “water of separation” for removing ceremonial defilement whether contracted by sin or by contact with death. As this heifer was slain “outside the camp,” Christ was slain outside the city limits of Jerusalem (see Matthew 27:31-34, and Hebrews 13:11,12). The sacrifice of our current high priest completely replaced the sacrificial system.

First, Christ is presented as the new “high priest.” This is being compared to Israel’s high priests and their role in Israel’s history and worship. Something has changed with this high priest. He is a high priest “of the good things that have come.” Every good thing God was seeking to accomplish through Israel’s history has now culminated in Jesus Christ. This is now a present reality, not just a future expectation, namely, the very good thing of entering into eternal life. This is a life characterized by an undefiled relationship with God, which has been established and has been completely mediated to us in Jesus Christ. The high priests of Israel’s history never did that, they only pointed to it.

Second, in Jesus we now have a “greater and more perfect tent” compared to the Old Testament tabernacle and temple. One of the debates regarding the date Hebrews was written deals with whether the letter was written before or after the destruction of the Jerusalem temple. However, considering how the author here is describing Jesus as the “greater and more perfect tent” it is safe to conclude that whether the temple was still standing or not is immaterial. It would be obsolete by comparison anyway. There is no longer a need for the specific place that contained the “holy of holies” where the high priest would atone for Israel’s sins. Jesus is the one who “tabernacled” among us (John 1:14) and he is, in his person, our atonement.

Third, Jesus has secured our reconciliation through his sacrifice “once for all.” Unlike the other high priest who had to come year after year to offer the “blood of goats and calves,” Jesus provides himself as the blood offering that obtains our “eternal redemption.” There is no further need of any sacrifice to be made. The shedding of blood for redemption is settled, once for all time, in the saving blood of Jesus Christ.

Finally, the author builds on this comparison of Jesus’ sacrifice compared to the sacrifice of goats, bulls, and heifers to establish that it is only in Christ’s sacrifice of himself that our conscience from dead works is purified. And all this has the intended goal of bringing us “to worship the living God.” God’s purposes have been established in Jesus. He is now the mediator of our relationship with his Father. He is now our true worship leader who leads us to know and enjoy God forever.

And did you notice how this was carried out? “who through the eternal Spirit offered himself without blemish to God…” The entire triune God is involved in the provision of our redemption and purified conscience. Like in Israel’s history, God again has provided for the people’s worship.

Here is a quote from T. F. Torrance in, Atonement, that speaks beautifully on this issue of our consciences being purified in Christ and will serve as a point of closure for our passage today:

It is because in Jesus Christ the voice of the judge is identical with the voice of our high priest, because the very voice that condemns us is also the voice that freely forgives us, that Jesus Christ by his atonement purges our sinful conscience. … Under the Old Testament liturgy there is remembrance (anamnēsis) of sin in every repeated act of sacrifice, but here in the new covenant there is no remembrance of sin at all, and so the conscience is purged of its guilty consciousness by the sprinkling of the blood of Chris upon it, as it is liturgically expressed. … [So] our conscience with him is altered from enmity to peace. But this purging of a guilty conscience means also the sanctification of the believer; that is to say, the believer is put in a relation of holiness to God, and so is dedicated or consecrated to God as a worshipper. By taking away guilt from their conscience Christ sets the believer free in a relation of rightness to the holy God and before him so they may worship him properly and freely. (p. 92)

In the coming weeks, we will hear the author of Hebrews making more staggering claims to how much more we can trust Jesus over anything else we may be tempted to rely on. Perhaps what we must deal with is the immensity of the good news we have in Jesus Christ — the good news that we may at times think is too good to be true. Thankfully the Holy Spirit has inspired authors such as the one who penned the letter of Hebrews to remind us of what is true. Jesus is truly above and beyond all that we ever need or could possibly desire. The more we can grasp that, or be grasped by him, the easier it will be to let go of all those secondary things that amount to less than nothing. He and he alone is worthy of all praise and glory.

This week, spend time in worship thanking the Father for the Son, thanking the Holy Spirit for continually pointing us to the Son, and thanking the Son for being our perfect high priest.

Amen!

Jon DePue—Year B Proper 26

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November 3, 2024 — Proper 26 in Ordinary Time
Hebrews 9:11-14

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Program Transcript


November 3, 2024 — Proper 26 in Ordinary Time

Anthony: Let’s move on to the lectionary passages. That’s why we’re here. So, we’ve got four lectionary texts we’re going to be looking at this month. The first passage of the month is Hebrews 9:11-14. I’m going to be reading from the New Revised Standard Version, the updated edition. It is the Revised Common Lectionary passage for Proper 26 in Ordinary Time, which is November 3.

But when Christ came as a high priest of the good things that have come, then through the greater and more perfect tent (not made with hands, that is, not of this creation), 12 he entered once for all into the holy place, not with the blood of goats and calves but with his own blood, thus obtaining eternal redemption. 13 For if the blood of goats and bulls and the sprinkling of the ashes of a heifer sanctifies those who have been defiled so that their flesh is purified, 14 how much more will the blood of Christ, who through the eternal Spirit offered himself without blemish to God, purify our conscience from dead works to worship the living God!

Jon, let’s make this personal. Why? How does it matter to you that Jesus Christ is a greater high priest of the good things that have come?

Jon: Yeah, this is a great question. And I tend to follow the Torrances on this. I’m sure you know who the Torrance’s are. It’s a family, great family of Scottish reformed theologians.

And here I would lean on one of the lesser known Torrances, James Torrance. Jamie Torrance, who’s the father of Alan and the grandfather of a young theologian, Andrew Torrance. Both Andrew and Alan were kind enough to read the book that I was just talking about, Beyond Justification, and endorse it, kindly. So, I like those guys a lot.

So Christ as the high priest, for someone like James (and I’ve learned a lot from him), Christ is the high priest, is someone who draws people into himself to be a royal priesthood themselves, where we participate in Christ’s priestly status and offer God our whole existence to serve him with heart, soul, mind, and strength.

So, Christ himself is the one true high priest, and this is the only way we’re able to become priestly ourselves, is in him. Without his priestly status as true God and true human, there would be no point of connection there between God and humanity.

So, the priestly status is getting at something so vital for Christians — that it’s only through his priestly status as the true God / human that we’re able to participate in him and therefore in the divine reality.

We would basically just be groping around in the dark without that mediation coming from that high priest who is Christ. So as J. B. Torrance would say, as the high priest Christ worships truly (so Christ is worshiping), we’re enabled to worship ourselves and respond faithfully to God’s will for us through our own ongoing discipleship.

So, Christ worships, in him, we worship, right? There’s that tight connection there. So, it’s significant and it matters because it is only the high priesthood of Christ that enables us to be Christians and to participate in his priesthood, in his worship. And it follows from that, his life, death and resurrection and ascension as well.

And so just a book recommendation here. I’d suggest checking out J. B. Torrance for listeners, J. B. Torrance’s Worship, Community, and the triune God of Grace. That’s been so helpful to me.

Anthony: No, that’s good. Since you brought up J. B. Torrance, I want to share with you something he said in one of his final lectures to his class. He said,

What we need is not a new doctrine or clear doctrine of the Holy Spirit, we need the Holy Spirit. What we need is not a better Christology, what we need is Christ. What we need is not Trinitarian doctrine, but a relationship with the Trinity. And that is the difference.

And that’s what you’re getting at because Christ is high priesting (if I can turn it into a verb), in this moment, mediating. In this moment, we are participating in that love relationship of Father and Son and the fellowship of the Spirit. Hallelujah. It makes all the difference, right?

Jon: Absolutely. Yeah. Without it, we’re just lost. We’re stumbling around in the dark.

Anthony: Well said. What a bloody passage this is. Several mentions of blood and here’s the thing, blood, it’s paradoxical. Blood can mean death and life. It can mean sickness and therapeutic healing, demise and redemption, innocence and judgment. Jon, what should we make of this bloody passage?

Jon: Yeah. I actually have been persuaded that blood — so we’ve got to remember that Hebrews, for example, is drawing on tons and tons of sacrificial material from the Old Testament sacrificial system. That’s really key to understanding what Hebrews is doing, how it’s using it.

I’ve been persuaded that I don’t think blood in the kind of temple system in the Tanakh or Old Testament or in Hebrews really is referring to death per se or judgment really. I think you’re right about life. And I would add freedom because we’ll get to a passage that has blood connected with freedom as well. My dear friend, Andrew Rillera, who’s a Duke grad, recently wrote a book [Douglas Campbell is co-author] called, Lamb of the Free: Recovering the Varied Sacrificial Understandings of Jesus’s Death, where he goes over a lot of the stuff. But he’s drawing on a lot of material from scholars like Jacob Milgram, Old Testament scholar, David Moffat.

And they’ve really helped me see things a bit more clearly, I think, than I had in the past. So based on their scholarship, and many others, here’s what I think is going on with blood in Hebrews 9 and 10. I think it’s actually functioning in a participatory way.

What do I mean by this? We need to read this verse in context. Within the sweep of Hebrews, we should look back to Hebrews 6:20, where Jesus is called the forerunner there, which cannot indicate that Jesus died instead of us. Instead, he’s dying ahead of us. His blood is something that’s going forward in front of us.

Forerunners don’t do something instead of you, they do something before you go through it, and you’re a part of that. So, what Christ does as the forerunner through his blood, is he’s going to be something that’s emphatically purgative. It’s cleansing; it’s removing all the things that sort of contaminate us.

So, I don’t think we should shy away from blood here based on maybe what we’ve been handed about how it functions in certain traditions of understanding more specifically, namely as a judgment, that we would otherwise deserve or something like that. That Christ’s blood is something that we should have gotten ourselves; we shouldn’t have shed blood instead of Christ.  We should lean into it. I think that Christ’s blood cleanses us and purges us of impurity and ultimately liberates us, it gives us life, even in the midst of what seems like it’s going to end up in death, full stop.

The gospel, I think, says no to that understanding the idea that blood refers to death. Even in the Old Testament, sacrificial system, which (like I said, Hebrews draws on a lot), if we start by thinking that death is referring to, or that blood is referring to death, it’s going to get us off on the wrong foot, I think. The blood functions to purge, in this sense, a sort of heavenly sancta, as the beginning of the passage suggests, it’s not made of human hands, right?

This heavenly sanctum of impurities is not to substitute for a worshiper as a punishment that they would deserve, is to cleanse them, right? So, the logic is just completely different from blood referring to some sort of substitutionary death or something like that.

Anthony: So unlike when I had to watch “Dexter,” and I looked away because of all the blood, this is where we can look to …

Jon: We should look to the blood there. Yes. Freedom and life.

Anthony: Yes. I appreciate what you said.


Small Group Discussion Questions

  • What are some secondary things we are tempted to put our trust in over, or in addition to, Jesus?
  • How is Jesus “much more” than Israel’s former high priest?
  • How is Jesus “much more” than the tabernacle or temple?
  • How is Jesus a “much more” sacrifice for our sins?
  • Why do you think our relationship with God and worship are bound together?

Sermon for November 10, 2024 – Proper 27

Welcome to this week's episode, a special rerun from our Speaking of Life archive. We hope you find its timeless message as meaningful today as it was when it was first shared.

Program Transcript


Speaking Of Life 3050 | Like Kin
Jeff Broadnax

When I was 18 years old, I met someone who would change my life for the better. Here’s the catch: we couldn’t have been more different as people.  John was a white man from Great Britain; I was a black kid from Cincinnati, Ohio. He was old enough to be my father, and I played more basketball in one weekend than he had his entire life. I called July 4th Independence Day; he called it Rebellion Day. But we both loved the Proverbs and we both called Jesus, Lord.

John would regularly stand up on my behalf to tear down manmade barriers that tried to keep me from being who God destined me to be. Over the next 30 years, we would transcend cultural norms and become family despite our racial, ethnic, and generational differences.  

In America, the pandemic and political or racial tensions of recent months have made it easy to feel disconnected or fragmented from others. It’s been hard to stay connected with people close to us and even harder to connect with those who might be different. But discovering how God can help people move from fragmented to family is an important practice that we should look at more closely.

One biblical example of an outsider becoming family can be found in the book of Ruth. The story begins with the Israelite family of Elimelech and Naomi who left Judah and moved to Moab with their two sons to escape a famine. They lived there a long time; their sons grew up and decided to marry two Moabite women, Orpah and Ruth.

The relationship between Israel and Moab was complicated and broken.  Relational betrayals had left spiritual scars and historical animosity between them. These differences could have very easily created a fracture in the relationship between Naomi and her daughters-in-law.

The story takes a sad turn when the father Elimelech and the two sons become sick and die, leaving three widows and no children behind. Naomi urges the two daughters-in-law to go back to their families and remarry, and Orpah does. But Ruth insists on staying with Naomi, even leaving Moab and her family to go back to Judah with Naomi. Ruth works hard to find food for the two of them until Naomi realizes there is a distant relative named Boaz who could marry Ruth as part of Israel’s legal system to care for widows. Boaz marries Ruth, and she bears a son named Obed. Let’s read how Naomi’s friends celebrated Obed’s birth:

Then the women said to Naomi, “Blessed be the Lord, who has not left you this day without next-of-kin; and may his name be renowned in Israel! He shall be to you a restorer of life and nourisher of your old age; for your daughter-in-law who loves you, who is more to you than seven sons, has borne him.”  
Ruth 4:14-15 (NRSV)

This son was the grandfather of King David and part of the lineage of Christ.

The foreign woman Ruth was an outsider, not part of Israel’s culture or religion, but God chose to include her in Jesus’ ancestry. In a society where sons were prized, the Israelite women praised the outsider Ruth, saying that she was better “than seven sons” (v. 15). Ruth’s love for Naomi was widely recognized and appreciated, and Ruth became like kin to Naomi, regardless of their religious and cultural differences.

This example of love and kinship between two women from different cultures can instruct us today. Because God saw fit to include an outsider in Jesus’ heritage, we understand that love transcends differences.

Family isn’t just restricted to blood relatives. Because of Christ’s Divine love, we are united into one human family.

Filled with the Spirit, may you have the heart of the Father to love one another, including the outsider, and embrace our diverse representation of the imago Dei (the image of God). 

I’m Jeff Broadnax, Speaking of Life.

 

Psalm 127:1-5 · Ruth 3:1-5; 4:13-17 · Hebrews 9:24-28 · Mark 12:38-44

This week’s theme is one sacrifice, one Savior for all. In our call to worship psalm, humankind’s efforts are accounted as vain apart from the Lord. Our section in Ruth recounts Naomi’s instructions to Ruth, the marriage of Boaz and Ruth, and the birth of their first son, Obed, all displaying the Lord’s provision and redemption. Our continued reading from Hebrews compares the repetitive offerings and sacrifices made by Israel’s priest with the sufficient offering and sacrifice of the Lord given once for all to secure our salvation. The Gospel reading from Mark records Jesus’ own comparison between the scribes and a poor widow to warn of those who exalt themselves at the expense of others.

Once For All

Hebrews 9:24-28 NRSVUE

Earlier in Hebrews, the author was making some comparisons between Christ and the Levitical priesthood where Jesus comes out “much more” superior in many ways. Today, it may appear we are having a re-run of that theme because today’s text will revisit many of the same comparisons. Only this time, it will advance them even further, in case we need another dose. We shouldn’t be too surprised at this repetition as the entire letter of Hebrews attempts to paint a string of contrasts between our great high priest Jesus with the sacrificial system of atonement and all that went with it. All of these provisions in Israel’s history were also to serve to point to the redeeming work that ultimately is accomplished in Jesus Christ. Today’s text will serve to sum up these previous contrasts by using the image of Christ’s heavenly, final, and effective intercession for sinners and the good news of forgiveness. So, let’s dive in and see how much more we can gain in seeing Jesus as our true, once for all, high priest.

We will look at four realities that are given to us in Jesus as our high priest as evident in the passage. We see the first one in the first verse:

  1. Christ is in heaven interceding for us.

For Christ did not enter a sanctuary made by human hands, a mere copy of the true one, but he entered into heaven itself, now to appear in the presence of God on our behalf. (Hebrews 9:24 NRSVUE)

To get behind the author’s meaning, we need some understanding of what the original audience of Hebrews would have already assumed. They already had a good understanding of ancient Israel’s ritual practices for atonement that took place during the Exodus well before the building of any temple in Jerusalem. Specifically, the place of worship at that time was a tent constructed with an inner sanctuary called the holy of holies. This is where the high priest would enter once a year to offer sacrifices. He would have to offer sacrifices first for himself and then for the sins of the people. What is interesting is how the author refers to this sanctuary and its sacrificial system in this verse as “a mere copy of the true one.” This system was to point to a future and deeper reality. It was not the real thing, but a sign of that which was to come.

The “true one” or real thing is noted as not being “made by human hands,” rather, Christ “entered into heaven itself.” There is far more going on here than ever took place in the earthly tabernacle or temple of Israel’s sacrificial system. We are assured that this is not a copy of something else that we are still waiting for. We have arrived at the original holy of holies. This is the heavenly tabernacle where Jesus serves as our high priest in the actual presence of God. This means he is making intercession for you and me in the throne room as we speak. In a way, we could say that God’s presence was dwelling in the former holy place of the tabernacle and temple, but not in the same way Jesus is being described here. God was present, but more as an extension of his heavenly presence. But Jesus is the new tabernacle who is in the very presence of God in heaven, and all “on our behalf.” That’s the reality as hard is it might be to believe. We have a perfect high priest who is interceding for us in heaven to the Father.

Next, we will go further in showing some points of contrast between Jesus as high priest and the ancient sacrificial system of Israel. As we look at these contrasts, we will also encounter our next two realities given to us in Jesus as high priest.

  1. Christ’s priestly work is “once for all.”

Nor was it to offer himself again and again, as the high priest enters the holy place year after year with blood that is not his own, for then he would have had to suffer again and again since the foundation of the world. But as it is, he has appeared once for all at the end of the ages to remove sin by the sacrifice of himself. (Hebrews 9:25-26 NRSVUE)

Jesus’ work as high priest is unique, unrepeatable, and completely effective. The phrase “once for all” is the author’s way of expressing the absolute finality of Christ’s work. God has spoken his word in Jesus Christ his Son, and there is nothing more that needs to be said. A modern author may say, “When God sent Jesus, he dropped the mic.”

Perhaps we need to address the sensibilities we may have towards the idea of Jesus’ bloody sacrifice. We may feel that we are too sophisticated culturally for such outdated and barbaric rituals. Yet do we not still sacrifice each other? How often are people used as scapegoats for one’s own wrong and guilt? This can happen in families, communities, nations, and even churches. If we can convince ourselves that it’s that “other” person or group of persons that is to blame for all my shortcomings, then we can ease our conscience and feel justified. Many historical atrocities have been committed over this very dynamic of sacrifice. As we see the “once for all” pronouncement of Jesus’ sacrifice, we can all breathe a sigh of relief that this insane cycle of sacrificing one another for the sake of our own consciences has come to an end.

We can come to the foot of the cross together to receive the forgiveness and justification that Jesus provides in his own self-given sacrifice. There is no need to point the finger at someone else when Jesus has already taken it all upon himself for our sakes. In addition, in light of Jesus’ fully effective work of forgiveness and reconciliation, we can boldly confess our sins to Jesus our intercessor. We do not have to hide in fear that once our sins are discovered, we will be tossed aside. Jesus died for our sins, not to toss us aside, but to save us by “tossing our sins aside,” by which we mean, completely and utterly removing and destroying them and giving us the righteousness that alone belongs to Christ. He has set us free to live in his freedom to love and worship the Father.

  1. The arrival of Jesus and his self-offering usher in “the end of the age.”

And that brings us the third reality that Jesus has now ushered in “the end of the age.” This phrase means that Jesus’ coming in the Incarnation and dying for our sin signals that all of salvation history has reached its end in him. Jesus has done everything necessary for our salvation, and we can live in it as we anticipate its consummation in Jesus’ return. And that leads us to the final reality expressed in the last two verses remaining.

  1. Christ is returning.

And just as it is appointed for mortals to die once and after that the judgment, so Christ, having been offered once to bear the sins of many, will appear a second time, not to deal with sin but to save those who are eagerly waiting for him. (Hebrews 9:27-28 NRSVUE)

At the end of our passage today, we see a shift in the author’s presentation. Up till now, the author has been comparing and contrasting Jesus and his work with that of Israel’s priesthood and sacrificial system. Now he finds a similarity to draw from using what all humans experience and what Jesus experienced on the cross — death. Drawing from this similarity, the author makes the argument that just as all people die “once” and then pass to another stage, like “judgement” in our case, so Jesus also experienced death “once” and will now pass into the next stage of his work.

This final stage will not be about judgment as he has already dealt with sin with his first coming. His second coming rather will be about salvation for “those who are eagerly waiting for him.” This section then concludes on a note of hope. Even though we would already say we are “saved,” we know that there is more to come. In this present evil age, we have not yet fully been brought into all that God intends for his good creation. As we look around our world and observe and experience all the pain and brokenness that has ensued from our rejection of God’s grace, in Christ, we can believe the goodness of God and his good provision for our salvation in his Son, and we can “eagerly” wait for him. We know we have moved from that which is passing away into the reality forged for us in Jesus Christ. This reality stands in such contrast to what we often are tempted to cling to. However, we are growing to see that Jesus is so much more than any of these mere imitations. In Jesus, we have the real deal once and for all.

Call to action: Talk to God about any fears, doubt, shame, or guilt you are still dealing with, and ask him to help you leave it at the cross. Ask him to help you understand and live in the reality of who Christ is and what he has done for you. And ask God to provide opportunity for you to share the good news about Jesus’ “once for all” sacrifice with someone who is living in their own fear, shame, doubt, or guilt. His sacrifice enables them to rise in worship to our one true high priest.

Jon DePue—Year B Proper 27

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November 10, 2024 — Proper 27 in Ordinary Time
Hebrews 9:24-28

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Program Transcript


November 10, 2024 — Proper 27 in Ordinary Time

Anthony: All right, let’s transition to our next pericope of the month. It’s Hebrews 9:24-28. It is a Revised Common Lectionary passage for Proper 27 in Ordinary Time, which is November 10. Jon, would you read it for us, please?

Jon: Yes. All right.

For Christ did not enter a sanctuary made by human hands, a mere copy of the true one, but he entered into heaven itself, now to appear in the presence of God on our behalf. 25 Nor was it to offer himself again and again, as the high priest enters the holy place year after year with blood that is not his own, 26 for then he would have had to suffer again and again since the foundation of the world. But as it is, he has appeared once for all at the end of the ages to remove sin by the sacrifice of himself. 27 And just as it is appointed for mortals to die once and after that the judgment, 28 so Christ, having been offered once to bear the sins of many, will appear a second time, not to deal with sin but to save those who are eagerly waiting for him.

Anthony: So, it seems to me, this passage shines the light on the reality that on our behalf, the anointed One, intercessor, this high priest that you just spoke about is in the presence of God, the Father. And when we think about that, his ascension and his presence with the Father, we may think he’s away from us.

What impact does that have on my life today, on Wednesday? Is there an impact that it should have in our daily following of Christ?

Jon: Yeah. This kind of gets back to the participatory stuff I’ve been talking about which I love to talk about, as you can probably tell.

Anthony: And we love to hear about it.

Jon: Yeah. It should take a lot of pressure off us to get things completely right all the time because we know that there is a high priest who intercedes for us. He’s doing something on our behalf that we can’t do ourselves. It pulls us out of this way of thinking about behaving that we’ve been handed contextually (especially as Western modern people) that we need to do everything and get it right all the time.

We should be able to — this should allow us to relax into the fact that Christ has done all of this wonderful, amazing work for us, and we get to participate in that here and now by responding to it and living our lives in a way that conforms to him and his priestly status as little priests ourselves, right?

So, I would hope, because there are so many anxious Christians, I think, running around thinking that we have to get things right all the time. Am I having enough faith? Am I doing enough good, right? This plagues so many people, I think.

Anthony: Especially as you think back to the conversation we were having on your book to the first three chapters of Romans, that can be anxiety producing. Oh, yikes!

“All have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God.” How many times have we had that quoted to us? And it’s true, but we need to know the rest of the story, right? Is that what you’re speaking of?

Jon: Totally. That’s totally right. And I hope that this gives — and liberation is something that I’m really keen on as well, not just participation, but being liberated to make mistakes. We’re going to screw things up sometimes and that’s okay. God isn’t going to retract himself from us. God isn’t going to abandon us.

Anthony: You know my backstory, huh? We all have the backstory of that, of messing it up.

Jon: Yeah, but you’re right. Reading certain passages in a certain way, especially something in Romans 1 to 3, is going to push us toward anxiety. The text kind of encourages that on its face, right?

We’ve sinned and fallen short of the glory of God. We’ve made mistakes. We’re under the judgment of God. God’s wrath is on us, right? Of course, we’re going to feel guilty and horrible about that.

But what I think this account of Jesus’ high priestly status does for us is to say, you’re okay. You’re okay. You’re going to mess up. There is going to be accountability when we screw things up, right? But that’s a very different thing than thinking that, for example if you’re a child, your parent is going to abandon you. If you disobey them, your parent is just going to kick you out of the house forever.

With this account of the priestly status of Jesus as the one doing the stuff on our behalf is to say you’re in this close, intimate relationship with this person that’s been established from before all ages for you. That should give us the freedom, the liberty, right? The safety to be people who can mess up sometimes and go back to God with repentance and know for sure that God is not going to give up on you.

Anthony: Yeah. Ah, that’s well said. And it reminds me when I go to my Father and confess my sins, I’m not seeking a new forgiveness, but reconnecting to the forgiveness I’ve always had in Christ. It’s a returning and a remembering into the life, the divine life of the Trinity.

That’s so powerful because — you again mentioned the Torrances. JB would always talk about. We can’t throw people back on themselves. And that’s what a contractual style of relationship with God does because, oh what have you done for me lately and how have you messed things up today. And just knowing that we will not be abandoned.

I really appreciated what you said. Your parents don’t throw you out and they’re not better parents than God, the Father.

Jon: Yeah. Which I think sometimes that’s how some of our theology works is that actually our families are turned out to be better than God. And we don’t want to do that. We don’t want to commit to that kind of theology. But yes, I think that (as Paul would say) God’s loving kindness is what leads us to repentance.

Anthony: Yes.

Jon: It’s not anything else.

Anthony: Amen. Hallelujah.

The text informs us that when Christ appears a second time, he won’t be dealing with sin. That’s good news, right? What’s going on?

Jon: Yeah, I think what the author of Hebrews is getting at here is that in Jesus’s second coming, it’s not going to be to deal with sin anymore because Christ’s sacrifice is something that’s universally sufficient once for all. I think that’s the key point that the author’s trying to drive home there.

So, what’s being emphasized with the second coming is that because what Christ has done is sufficient once for all, when he arrives again, it’s just going to be to bring this sort of heavenly sancta, this heavenly sanctuary type thing, to us who are still alive, namely those who are eagerly awaiting his return.

So, there’s nothing more that sort of needs to be added on to what Christ has already done. So, I think that’s the distinction here. The reason why Christ isn’t coming back to deal with sin anymore for the author of Hebrews is because that’s already been dealt with. We don’t need to worry about that.

That’s dealt with. What needs to be done for the author is Christ bringing this. “heavenly cleanse sancta” to people awaiting.

Anthony: Yeah, that seems to be an ongoing theme in Hebrews, the sufficiency and supremacy of Christ. There’s nothing to add on. There’s nothing you can bring to God’s table to make it better.

It’s good and it’s done. And let’s respond and liberate and as we join him in what he’s doing, in the activity.

Jon: That’s exactly right. I think that once we’ve removed kind of your contractual theology (which I like that way of talking about this negative kind of gospel), once we’re freed from that way of viewing things, these texts become much more clear and they become much more powerful for us, right?

Because now what it says is that Christ has done something for you once and for all. You don’t have to contract into this in order for God to love you in Christ, right? That’s already established. Once we removed all the damaging sort of trappings of a contractual, conditional gospel, we’re able to be confronted with this wonderful inclusive, liberative gospel that’s been there all along, but we’ve just kind of missed it a lot of the time.

Anthony: And therefore, we end up, we don’t have to respond. We want to, it’s just like when you love somebody, you want to lean into that relationship.

Jon: Yeah, that’s right.

Anthony: But trusting that — like even repentance (which you mentioned earlier), if it were dependent on my repentance, Jon, it’s puny, it’s anemic. But Jesus’ repentance on my behalf and for me as the man, the forerunner, the vicarious man, he’s done it, and his efforts are enough. And so therefore I do want to repent. I want to say, Hey, ah I want to change my mind on that.

Jon: That’s right. And it’s such a different logic than this idea that we need to be threatened with something in order to behave well. If there’s not some sort of impending doom that we’re facing, then we can’t want to be involved with God.

No, we want to be involved with God because he is the bringer of life and brings us into this reality that’s all around us. And when we respond to that it’s because we really want to. This is what we’ve been created for, as people, is to be responding to Christ and involved in, as you had said, adopted into this loving family.

Anthony: Yeah. Wow. Gospel’s good, friends! It turns out it

Jon: It turns out it is good news. Yes.

Anthony: Yes, It is good news. Yes. Full stop. Full stop.


Small Group Discussion Questions

  • What difference does it make for us to see the reality that Jesus is in heaven interceding for us?
  • What difference does it make for us to see the reality that Christ’s priestly work is a “once for all” work?
  • What difference does it make for us to know that we are living in the “end of the age?”
  • What difference does it make for us to know Jesus is returning?

Sermon for November 17, 2024 – Proper 28

Welcome to this week's episode, a special rerun from our Speaking of Life archive. We hope you find its timeless message as meaningful today as it was when it was first shared.

Program Transcript


Speaking Of Life 3051 | The Underdog’s Tale
Greg Williams

One of the most famous story plots in history is the tale of the underdog. From the oldest story of the slave who turns out to be royalty, to the modern sports movie about the unlikely heroes who never let go of their dreams—we resonate with those on the bottom. A narrative about a child of privilege who simply goes on to be an adult of privilege would be less interesting than a grocery list.

There has to be loss, risk—a tightrope the underdog finally makes it across into the promised land. This story resonates with all of us no matter our background.

Hanna, the mother of the prophet Samuel, was one of these biblical underdogs. She suffered from barrenness, which was a great stigma in the ancient world. When she was finally blessed with a child she sang her famous prayer:

The bows of the mighty are broken, but the feeble bind on strength. Those who were full have hired themselves out for bread, but those who were hungry have ceased to hunger. The barren has borne seven, but she who has many children is forlorn.
1 Samuel 2:4-5 (ESV)

The underdog theme, the upside down-ness of God’s miraculous work runs throughout it. The weak become the strong; the barren are pregnant; the poor are brought from the back alleys to the head table.

Throughout redemptive history, this story appears again and again. God confounds our strata of who matters, who’s important, who’s powerful. The underdog becomes the superhero.

The same kind of song is picked up centuries later by another underdog:

he has brought down the mighty from their thrones and exalted those of humble estate; he has filled the hungry with good things, and the rich he has sent away empty.
Luke 1:52-53 (ESV)

This is the Magnificat, the song Mary sings early in her pregnancy with Jesus. She’s an unwed teenage mom from a country backwater—she couldn’t be more of an underdog! And she becomes the most famous woman in history, and God uses her to confound the world.

And so we see that still at work in our lives. God uses the least likely to break his kingdom into the world. How many times have we been thrown off by a child or a person with special needs and reminded of life’s fragility and beauty? How many times have we seen God speak through a person who seems to offer nothing else?

God, not only loves the underdog, but through the centuries he often plays his song of life through the least likely instruments—are we listening?

I’m Greg Williams, Speaking of Life.

 

1 Samuel 2:1-10 · 1 Samuel 1:4-20 · Hebrews 10:11-14, (15-18), 19-25 · Mark 13:1-8

This week’s theme is a heart of faithfulness. For our call to worship response this week we have Hannah’s prayer of praise as recorded in 1 Samuel 2. The Old Testament text goes back to the beginning of 1 Samuel where Hannah prays to the Lord to redeem her barrenness with a male child. We conclude our journey in Hebrews where Christ is envisioned as exalted to the right hand of God, laying the foundation for a response of true faithfulness. In the Gospel reading from Mark, we are encountered with Jesus’ apocalyptic vision that portrays a turbulence of cosmic proportions preceding the end of time.

Confident Living

Hebrews 10:11-25 NRSVUE

Today we will bring to conclusion our journey in Hebrews by visiting once again more proclamations by way of contrast of the far superior and effective mediation of Jesus as our high priest. But, in addition to touching on some of those running themes, this passage will then offer our five responses in light of all we have been learning through the book of Hebrews. But first, the author of Hebrews is going to offer a few more concluding and summative comments about Jesus being our high priest.

And every priest stands day after day at his service, offering again and again the same sacrifices that can never take away sins. But when Christ had offered for all time a single sacrifice for sins, “he sat down at the right hand of God,” and since then has been waiting “until his enemies would be made a footstool for his feet.” For by a single offering he has perfected for all time those who are sanctified. (Hebrews 10:11-14 NRSVUE)

The author presents us with another contrast. This time of the Levitical priest “standing” and offering sacrifices “again and again” are compared to Jesus who is sitting “at the right hand of God” after offering a “single sacrifice for sins.” Those two contrasts emphasize how much greater and more effective Jesus is as our high priest and what he has accomplished compared to the former sacrificial system. The fact that the Levitical priests are “standing” and repeatedly offering sacrifices tells us that their sacrifices were not effective in atoning for sins. They could never sit down after completing their task because their task was never completed. They would just have to do it all over again, and again. The author is clear that their sacrifice “can never take away sin.” This also should make it abundantly clear then that none of our sacrifices will ever amount to atonement from our own efforts.

There is no sacrifice we can make to accomplish what we all so desperately need—reconciliation with God. However, Jesus has come as our high priest, who offers himself as the only perfect, “for all time” sacrifice. His sacrifice only needs to be offered once, and then Jesus’ work is finished. That’s why the author can speak of Jesus sitting “at the right hand of God.” He has completed the task that was effectual for our redemption, reconciliation, and restoration. The passage also lets us know that Jesus is now waiting “until his enemies would be made a footstool for his feet.” Jesus has set in motion the complete and final victory over all sin, death, and evil. There is no other place we should look for such a salvation and deliverance.

The author then follows this up by quoting a well-known promise from Jeremiah 31:31-34 that helps us see that Jesus, with his single offering, has “perfected for all time those who are sanctified.”

And the Holy Spirit also testifies to us, for after saying, “This is the covenant that I will make with them after those days, says the Lord: I will put my laws in their hearts, and I will write them on their minds,” and he adds, “I will remember their sins and their lawless deeds no more.” Where there is forgiveness of these, there is no longer any offering for sin. (Hebrews 10:15-18 NRSVUE)

Notice that what has been accomplished in Jesus is not just some external ritual similar to what was taking place in Israel’s sacrificial system. No, Jesus has accomplished an inward change that will make all the difference. He has made a change at the level of our hearts and minds. Jesus has gotten to the root of the problem. Not only that, but Jesus has also secured an eternal forgiveness for sins. They will never be remembered again. What a wonderful promise to see fulfilled in Jesus’ work of reconciliation. That’s our present future in Christ: perfectly cleansed, purified, and set on a whole new basis of righteousness never to return to our fallen state. Our communion with the Father is restored and all the enmity and rebellion that once marked our sinful hearts and minds is forever forgiven and forgotten.

We are reminded this a new reality created in Jesus Christ. For those who have put their trust in Jesus and the new reality he has created for us, we will begin to live out the reality in ways that are fitting to the reality. And that is what the author will now address. Since Jesus has accomplished for us what no other “high priest” or “mediator” could ever do, we can now live according to that beautiful truth.

Therefore, my brothers and sisters, since we have confidence to enter the sanctuary by the blood of Jesus, by the new and living way that he opened for us through the curtain (that is, through his flesh), and since we have a great priest over the house of God, let us approach with a true heart in full assurance of faith, with our hearts sprinkled clean from an evil conscience and our bodies washed with pure water. Let us hold fast to the confession of our hope without wavering, for he who has promised is faithful. And let us consider how to provoke one another to love and good deeds, not neglecting to meet together, as is the habit of some, but encouraging one another, and all the more as you see the Day approaching. (Hebrews 10:19-25 NRSVUE)

This section rightly begins with “Therefore” since the author is about to list five things we should do in light of the new reality Jesus has brought us into. Notice how the author sums up all that he has been saying about Jesus as a reason that we can “have confidence.” The author begins on a note of certainty, hope, and joy because of who Jesus is as our high priest. The word “confidence” in Greek carries the idea of a freedom in speech. It connotes outspoken speech and frankness which is open to public scrutiny. This confidence entails courage, boldness, and a fearless joy.

During the time of this writing, slaves would not exercise any freedom of speech that displayed such a confidence. In Roman society, that confidence would only belong to the “free” members of Rome. But when you know you belong to Jesus, who has overcome the world and whose enemies will eventually all become a footstool for his feet, the tongue is freed to speak boldly. You can speak boldly of the new reality that all must bow their knees. When you do not have the confidence to speak freely, you know at that point you’re not really free. But Jesus has set us free by his atoning work. He has set us free by bringing us into the very presence of the life of God. This is the ground for the confidence the author claims that “we have.”

The writer of Hebrews also brings to mind the “new and living way” that has now been opened. Christ’s way to the Father is “new” because only he opened it by his death. The sanctuary has been opened in a “living” way because his resurrection has made the way enduring. This stands in contrast with the temporary, ineffectual rituals of the priests with animals who were killed and then remained dead.

In this confidence, grounded on the love of God, we are given five responses to make together. Note that the author’s exhortation is not only written in the first person, which expresses his personal interest in his readers, it is written inclusively, showing his solidarity with the reader in the faith. Here are five “let us” imperatives:

  1. Let us approach with a true heart.

Since Jesus has kept Jeremiah’s promise, we can trust his “true heart,” which he shares with us, and not fear drawing near to God. We are assured that our hearts have been “sprinkled clean from an evil conscience and our bodies washed with pure water.” There is nothing keeping us from approaching the throne of God with Jesus as our high priest.

  1. Let us hold fast to the confession of our hope.

Notice the focus on speech. The confidence we are given in Christ frees our tongues to confess, or to agree with what is true. We are to “hold fast”, maintaining spiritual consistency, and never fear speaking up for what is true, even in the face of censoring persecution. When you know how the story ends, you never have to conform your speech to fit those who are spinning false narratives, no matter the consequences that may come by confessing such hope.

  1. Let us consider how to provoke one another to love and good deeds.

Not only do we live in staggering confidence, but we aim to stir up that confidence in others. This is a confidence that not only speaks but also demonstrates that speech in “good deeds.” These are outward actions that will also point to the reality of the reconciliation accomplished in Christ.

  1. Let us not neglect meeting together.

This is another act of freedom born out of confidence. This is the only imperative that is a negative, or a command of what not to do. It illustrates the importance placed on face-to-face relationships habitually gathered together around the Word. We are meant to share with one another the good news accomplished in Jesus Christ, and we do this communally as a fitting witness of the communion of the Father and Son that we have been brought into by the Spirit.

  1. Let us encourage one another

This last one is what the author has been trying to do through the whole book of Hebrews. The author aims to encourage the readers to grow in their faith, hope, and love that has been mediated to us in Jesus Christ our perfect and effective high priest. They were to treat the future expectation of the approaching day of Christ’s return as a certainty. Especially when the world seems bent on stamping out the light and truth, we need the constant encouragement that can only be offered by other fellow brothers and sisters in Christ.

With that, we have concluded our journey in Hebrews. The argument has been made for us to place our trust fully in the only high priest who has brought us reconciliation and redemption. This is a life lived in confidence. This is the triune life given to us by our Lord and Savior, our mediator, and high priest.

Call to action: Spend time with Father, Son, and Spirit this week talking about these five imperatives. Ask God to guide you to closer relationship with him and with other believers. Trust him and live in confidence.

Jon DePue—Year B Proper 28

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November 17, 2024 — Proper 28 in Ordinary Time
Hebrews 10:11-25

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Program Transcript


November 17, 2024 — Proper 28 in Ordinary Time

Anthony: Our third pericope of the month is Hebrews 10:11-25. It’s a Revised Common Lectionary passage for Proper 28 in Ordinary Time, which is November 17, and it reads:

And every priest stands day after day at his service, offering again and again the same sacrifices that can never take away sins. 12 But when Christ had offered for all time a single sacrifice for sins, “he sat down at the right hand of God,” 13 and since then has been waiting “until his enemies would be made a footstool for his feet.” 14 For by a single offering he has perfected for all time those who are sanctified. 15 And the Holy Spirit also testifies to us, for after saying, 16 “This is the covenant that I will make with them after those days, says the Lord: I will put my laws in their hearts, and I will write them on their minds,” 17 and he adds, “I will remember their sins and their lawless deeds no more.” 18 Where there is forgiveness of these, there is no longer any offering for sin.

19 Therefore, my brothers and sisters, since we have confidence to enter the sanctuary by the blood of Jesus, 20 by the new and living way that he opened for us through the curtain (that is, through his flesh), 21 and since we have a great priest over the house of God, 22 let us approach with a true heart in full assurance of faith, with our hearts sprinkled clean from an evil conscience and our bodies washed with pure water. 23 Let us hold fast to the confession of our hope without wavering, for he who has promised is faithful. 24 And let us consider how to provoke one another to love and good deeds, 25 not neglecting to meet together, as is the habit of some, but encouraging one another, and all the more as you see the Day approaching.

So, Jon, let’s do a bit of theology here as we talk about sanctification. Verse 14 appears to tell us that Christ has already perfected those who are sanctified. And yet generally, when I hear about sanctification, it’s about the ongoing process of sanctification.

So, my question is it both/and? Or is it reading too much into a single verse or what is it entirely? Help us understand the nature of sanctification.

Jon: Yeah, sure. In a certain sense, yeah, it’s a both / and.

And from the point of view of our perception in this fallen reality, because we said we’re not perfect in our experience (that’s just empirically true), it appears and is experienced as a process for us in our everyday lives. That’s how we experience it. But the more meaningful reality, I think, objectively is Jesus Christ and what he’s doing.

So, his perfection (I think that’s what Hebrews is getting at), his perfection is our perfection breaking in now, but not fully realized as people still constructed of flesh. We’re still in the flesh until the final consummation of all things when our flesh will be removed, and we’ll get this, what’s known as the soma pneumatikon, the spiritual bodies, right?

And that happens the final consummation of all things when God will be all in all. So, in reality, in the most fundamental sense, we are perfected because Christ is the most fundamental thing about reality. What Christ says about who we are is the most true thing. We have been transformed. We have been raised and seated with Christ at the right hand of the Father.

So, it’s helpful to think about these things in terms of overlapping realities from our point of view, we have one foot in the muck and mire and then one foot in the new transformed reality in Christ. And because we’re still in the flesh, because we’re still involved in this fallen reality, that’s how we experience it. But the most true thing about us is what Christ is saying about us, which is that we are perfected, and that will be fully realized from our point of view in the age to come.

A great work on this would be Jeff McSwain’s on simul sanctification. I think he does a wonderful job explaining this, pulling on Barth and adapting that in certain ways. But that’s how this passage strikes me and how to make sense of it.

Anthony: Yeah. And just thinking about Barth, I remember his quote. “I was, and I am the old man. I am and I will be the new man.” And I think that speaks to sanctification that what is objectively true, nothing’s going to change that we have been perfected in Christ. And yet in my day-to-day journey, I can see growth. I can see letting down old habits by the Spirit. And both can be true at the same time.

So, I think that’s really helpful, especially there’s so much talk about backsliding in the evangelical church sometimes, to just remember what is already objectively true, what’s already been accomplished for us in Christ.

Jon: Totally. And I think one way to illustrate this, (that I’ve learned from Jeremy Begbie, who is at Duke; he’s a musician as well as a theologian) is trying to …

Anthony: And a previous podcast guest. If I may say so.

Jon: (Oh, nice! Good. I love Jeremy.) … is trying to step into the world of music here, auditory stuff, instead of — we tend to be locked up into kind of visual understanding. So, overlaps don’t really make a lot of sense to us in the [inaudible] because you can’t have two physical objects actually overlap in the same space at the same time, right?

What can do that is actually music. So, if I were to play a, I don’t know, I hate to use death metal as the music of Satan or the fallen world because I love metal. But I’m just, for the sake of this illustration, I could play, if we’re in the same room, I could play a piece of metal music. And that would fill our entire heard space, right?

It would fill all of our auditory space at the same time in the same space. I could play. I don’t know, pick your favorite song, but what should we use?

Anthony: You know what? I’m a child of the ‘80s, so let’s go “Safety Dance.”

Jon: Okay. “Safety Dance” is the music of Christ.

Anthony: I’m really going to be embarrassed. Thanks, Jon, for asking.

Jon: That’s awesome. So, the “Safety Dance” is the music of Christ. I could start playing that on a different device, right? It would fill our auditory or heard space at the same time that this metal music is playing, right? There’s no real competition in terms of the heard space. They’re existing in the same space at the same time.

We can hear both of them simultaneously, right? One may be louder than the other, right? Like I could blast metal music, and we could play the “Safety Dance” a little bit lower, you can still hear it, right?

So, what it means to be a Christian in our journey of discipleship is trying to get in tune with the “Safety Dance.”

Anthony: This conversation is going places. I should have said “Enter Sandman” or something.

Jon: Does that make sense? I think the world of music can get us to understanding how we exist in this overlapping space. And eventually, what happens is the metal music, in the final consummation of all things, it’s no more. Finally. It’s no more.

Anthony: Oh, that’s so good. I’ve heard Dr. Begbie do several presentations and just play different notes and the beauty of it, but how it works together. They are entirely different when they’re played, but they’re harmonized. It is such a rich way of looking at theology because we tend to be dualistic.

It’s either this or that. And that’s caused so many problems when we think about God. So, to think of it in more of a holistic harmonization is, that’s the way to go.

Jon: It’s so helpful with thinking about Trinitarian theology, thinking about the hypostatic union as well, thinking about human freedom in relation to God. There’s so many awesome things to tap into in the world of music. So yeah.

Anthony: Yeah. All right, Jon’s a metal fan, just note to self and keep that in mind as we move forward.

I’d be grateful if you would exegete verses 23 – 25. What does it mean to hold fast to our confession of hope? And maybe just in a practical way, what does it look like to provoke one another to love and good deeds and not neglecting to meet together? Is there a strict way of reading this? Is there more? What’s going on?

Jon: I think what’s happening here in Hebrews is, especially with the — I’m going to start backwards, starting with the meet together thing. I think there is something wonderful about the way that we’ve been constituted as people; we are fundamentally relational because we’re made in the image of a relational God.

And when we shy away from meeting together — this meaning here, I think “meeting together” in worship context. When we resist that a bit too much, we’re not really living in the way that we’ve been created to live. We’ve been created to be in communion with each other, to meet together.

And that can be difficult. I’m an introvert. I don’t particularly like meeting new people all the time. But I know at the same time, the way I’ve been created is to be in community, to be in relationship. And when we offer ourselves into those spaces of relationship and especially relationships of trust and love, together we become more of who we actually have been created to be. We lean into that.

And I think that’s so important for us, even those of us with certain different personalities and different dispositions, different temperaments. It can be more difficult for some people than others. But I think it’s important at the end of the day.

And I think Hebrews is getting at that provoking one another to love and good deeds, do good deeds. I’m not quite sure how to exegete that language of provoking in a particular way. I think this could be read in lots of different ways. I think provoking could mean, by the way that we’re loving somebody else, by the way that we’re loving one another that could, by the act of doing that, provoke someone else to live in that same sort of way.

Someone could resonate with that. We’re creatures who like to imitate each other, right? We’re creatures who like to emulate what others are doing when we see good things happening, right? And so, I think that’s probably what’s going on here is that we, by the way we live, we can provoke others to do the same sort of thing by how we live, how we speak, how we interact with people.

And this is a good way of thinking about sort of witness to other people, right? It’s not just persuasion. It’s also just by the way that we ourselves are loving and communicating with each other, holding fast to our confession of hope. This is hard, right? It’s probably just as hard as loving people that you don’t particularly like at the moment. Hope’s hard, especially in this world that we live in.

We look around. You read the news; it doesn’t seem like there’s a lot of hope for us. It’s hard. But given that (as we were talking about) we live in this overlapping reality, the most fundamental of which is Christ, holding on to the confession of hope is going to be holding on to that fundamental reality, even when it looks like it’s not there, even when we can barely hear the “Safety Dance,” even when we can barely hear the music of Christ, we know that it’s there and we’re trying to get in tune with that.

So, I think that’s what holding fast to it means. It’s trying to turn up the volume on that music of Christ. And that will lead to ultimately informing how we relate to one another in love. And that will inform of course, our desire, our draw to meet and to be in communion with each other.

So, I think all these are connected, which is why I started the opposite way around.

Anthony: Yeah. I liked the way you tied it together because there are times when I show up in a space of adopted brothers and sisters where I don’t feel like I’m holding much of anything. And I certainly don’t feel like I have much to provoke others to love and good deeds, but their testimony, they’re bearing witness to the goodness of God helps me hold fast.

So, it’s very much — just scripture itself, we tend to think sometimes me and my Bible, but it’s communal. It’s meant to be read aloud in the body. It’s very much about the communion of the saints and our confession together.

Jon: And Hebrews here isn’t talking about specifically the Holy Spirit, but the thing that binds us together, again, it’s not something we do.

We have [inaudible] intercessory figure who comes in and binds us together. It’s the Holy Spirit that does this. So, we shouldn’t come into a communal space thinking, Oh, just because I’m having a really crappy day, I can’t be engaged in communion with the people around me.

We have to trust in the reality that’s connecting all of us together. Even when I’m having a bad day, or even when I really, really don’t want to be there, because sometimes I really don’t want to be around people, that something is at work already, drawing us together.

Anthony: Yes. Yeah, that’s good because even when you’re having that bad day, we have to remember our presence matters.  Your absence, my absence, it makes the community not nearly what it would have been if I’d been there, even on a bad day. So that’s really [inaudible].

Jon: And that, that just goes back to how we’ve

been created as people. We’re created, we are constituted by our attachments, by our loves, by people, even people we don’t really know, they constitute who we are. Which is a weird thing, especially in our modern Western context, where we think of ourselves as discrete individual subjects, but that is not true.

That is actually a lie. It is a lie that keeps getting spread, that we are autonomous individuals. We are not; we are connected beings.

Anthony: And boy, how this world would look different if we understood that we belong to one another.


Small Group Discussion Questions

  • What were some repeated themes in this section of Hebrews that you remember from the previous chapters in Hebrews?
  • What stood out to you in the contrast between the Levitical priest and Jesus as the high priest?
  • What connection did you see between confidence and freedom of speech?
  • Which of the five ways to live in confidence stood out to you the most and why?

Sermon for November 24, 2024 – Reign of Christ

Program Transcript


Christ the King Sunday

 Imagine knowing the end of the story before it unfolds. As we come to the end of our worship calendar for the year, we celebrate the victory that Jesus has already secured for us. His kingdom will reign forever, and this truth illuminates our path like the first light of dawn. And next week, we begin again with the anticipation of Advent, marking the start of a new liturgical cycle.

Christ the King Sunday is a significant feast that emphasizes the sovereignty and lordship of Christ over all creation. From the towering mountains to the vast oceans, all of nature proclaims his majesty.

Throughout history, kings and queens have ruled over nations, but their reigns are temporary and limited. In contrast, the reign of Christ is eternal and encompasses all of heaven and earth.

Today, on Christ the King Sunday, we celebrate the culmination of the Christian liturgical year. Throughout the seasons, Jesus is at the center of it all: entering our world in Advent, ministering to all people in Epiphany, saving us in Easter Prep, rising in glory at Easter, sending the Spirit at Pentecost, and building his church in Ordinary Time. This day marks the end of our journey through these seasons and brings us to a crowning conclusion: Jesus is King.

Our journey through the seasons, and everything in between has led us to this moment. Each season has prepared us to recognize and honor Jesus not just as our Savior, but as our King.

The Reign of Christ Sunday serves as a reminder that Jesus’ authority extends over every aspect of our lives and all of creation. He invites us to reign with him in eternity, sharing in his glorious kingdom.

Christ’s kingship is not bound by cultural or geographical boundaries. He is the King of kings and Lord of lords, reigning over every nation and every people.

As we gather to worship and honor Christ the King, we are united in our recognition of his ultimate authority and our commitment to follow him. Together, we acknowledge his reign and look forward to his eternal kingdom.

As we celebrate Christ the King Sunday, let us come together in worship, lifting our voices and hearts to the One who reigns supreme over all.

Grace to you and peace from him who is and who was and who is to come, and from the seven spirits who are before his throne, and from Jesus Christ, the faithful witness, the firstborn of the dead, and the ruler of the kings of the earth. To him who loves us and freed us from our sins by his blood, and made us to be a kingdom, priests serving his God and Father, to him be glory and dominion forever and ever. Amen. Look! He is coming with the clouds; every eye will see him, even those who pierced him; and on his account all the tribes of the earth will wail. So it is to be. Amen. “I am the Alpha and the Omega,” says the Lord God, who is and who was and who is to come, the Almighty.
Revelations 1:4b-8

Psalm 132:1-12, (:13-18) · 2 Samuel 23:1-7 · Revelation 1:4b-8 · John 18:33-37

This week’s theme is reign of Christ. In our call to worship psalm, we recall God establishing the Davidic dynasty. The Old Testament text in 2 Samuel records David’s last words which herald God’s everlasting covenant. A fitting passage from Revelation will praise Jesus as the everlasting king who is coming to establish his eternal kingdom. The Gospel text from John ironically displays Jesus as the real King in the confrontation between Jesus and Pilate.

He is Coming

Revelation 1:4-8 NRSV

Today marks the last day of the Christian calendar before we start over with Advent. For a while now, we have been journeying through the season known as “Ordinary Time” or simply “The Season after Pentecost.” Today, that season comes to an end with a special day called Reign of Christ Sunday or Christ the King Sunday. Our passage for the day will take up that theme. Our whole journey from Advent, Christmas, Epiphany, Lent, Easter, to Pentecost and everything in between, arrives at today’s crowning conclusion: Jesus is king.

For our text today, the lectionary does not disappoint in its choice of a passage that unabashedly proclaims the authority and reign of one who is King of kings and Lord of lords. However, we will only be getting our feet wet in today’s text as it serves as part of the introductory remarks to open the book of Revelation. Not only that, but the portion we are assigned is the author’s greetings to the readers that takes the form of a prayer. So, in a way, we are ending the year by barely beginning this theme of Jesus’ kingly rule. But perhaps that sets the tone as we begin Advent and a new cycle of the Christian calendar. We should take today’s passage as a reminder that all our passages going forward, as well as the conclusion of this year should be read in light of the reigning King Jesus. We may only touch on this theme today, but we will have a whole new year to unpack who this king is and what he has done for us in establishing his kingdom. But for today, let’s get started with this regal theme imbedded in John’s address to his readers.

John to the seven churches that are in Asia: (Revelation 1:4a NRSVUE)

We begin with the author identifying himself to those he is writing — the seven selected churches that are in Asia Minor. There is little question about who the author is and who his intended audience is. But what may escape our attention is the context under which this letter was being written. John had been exiled to the island of Patmos. As the disciple who wrote the Gospel of John, he is now a much older and weathered disciple who has been banished to this remote and forgettable rock surrounded by the sea. He is here alone, removed from the usual fellowship of brothers and sisters he once enjoyed. No more singing praises in worship with those who shared his faith, hope, and love. Now, John’s only companions are the cold grey stones of an island carrying out Caesar’s decree of banishment. His only greeting comes as crashing waves and the occasional feathered friend who has ventured off course. It is here that John writes his apocalyptic message to the seven churches in Asia.

If you remember previous messages from Hebrews, which we heard from the book of Hebrews, the confidence we are given in Christ frees our tongue to declare the truth, the reality, regardless of the cost it may bring to us. In this letter, we are seeing a disciple who had done just that. John has not been cast away on Patmos because he was some unruly criminal. His only crime was speaking the truth. Somewhere along the way, those in power of the monstrous beast known as the Roman Empire had grown fearful of John’s message. His message was about some “king of the Jews” that had somehow gathered a following, even though they had this king crucified and put to death. If there is one thing empires of power fear, it is any threat to their power. John and his message of Jesus and his soon coming kingdom was such a threat. Power brokers must always keep control of the running narrative that insures their power. The gospel was certainly a narrative that did not fit the mold. So, John needed to be banished, and he was. But is that not a hidden testimony that the King, whom John spoke of as alive and reigning, is truly alive and reigning?

The very attempt to snuff out the gospel message by banishing John to Patmos became the means of producing this very book that we are reading today. In fact, the book of Revelation is one of the most blatant critiques of the powers of this present evil age, including the many empires that have come and gone, like Rome. John’s use of apocalyptic devices freed his pen to employ the images around him to unleash a barrage of empire crushing insight along with an unapologetic declaration of their demise. It seems like Rome’s attempt to silence and censor John had the opposite result. But we shouldn’t be surprised because John is declaring the Word of God as the one who gets and is the last word. So, if you choose to read further into John’s wonderful book of Revelation, keep in mind the staggering pronouncements that are being made under the nose of Caesar, statements that could cost you your life in the worse way. However, John is not intimidated or deterred. His age is renewed by the Spirit who empowers him. He writes on.

Grace to you and peace from him who is and who was and who is to come and from the seven spirits who are before his throne, and from Jesus Christ, the faithful witness, the firstborn of the dead, and the ruler of the kings of the earth. (Revelation 1:4b-5a NRSVUE)

John wastes no time in making King Jesus central to his letter. Unlike the “peace” promised by Rome, and insured by its military might, Jesus is the one who brings grace and lasting peace as he is the one who was here far before Rome was even an idea. He is the one in charge even during Rome’s height of power, and he will be here long after Rome settles into the dust of its collapse. On top of that, John writes some fighting words that would send some Roman rulers into fits of rage if they knew what was being written. Specifically, John gives us three descriptions of Jesus that put in question any authority in Rome that would pretend to be his rival.

First, Jesus is “the faithful witness.” With the word “witness” carrying the meaning of “martyr,” we have the double understanding that Jesus is the faithful one who gave his life to reveal the heart of the Father and reconcile us to him. This would be an encouragement to those who were experiencing persecution at the hands of the Romans and to those who were being martyred. Jesus was the “faithful” witness, because all things that he heard of the Father he faithfully communicated to his disciples. And he faithfully taught the way of God in truth.

Second, Jesus is “the firstborn of the dead.” By Jesus’ resurrection, he has become the first who has risen from death, sharing his victory so others can as well. Here again, this can serve as a particular jab at the Roman cross that aimed to kill Jesus. The worst that Rome could throw at Jesus had no lasting effect. Jesus went right through it all the way to the throne.

Third, and this is the most obvious affront to the Roman rulers, Jesus is “the ruler of the kings of the earth.” That’s a serious note for the theme of our day and a serious offense to any kings who see themselves as answering to no one. No matter how unruly, arrogant, and self-serving a ruler may become, they are still accountable to the true King. No ruler escapes this reality.

Now that John has given us some descriptions of who Jesus is, he will now tell us a few things about what he has done.

To him who loves us and freed us from our sins by his blood and made us a kingdom, priests serving his God and Father, to him be glory and dominion forever and ever. Amen. (Revelation 1:5b-6 NRSVUE)

First, it is noted that Jesus “loves us and freed us from our sins by his blood.” If Jesus is truly the King of kings and Lord of lords, it is certainly good news to know that this king actually loves us and demonstrates that love by giving himself for us. Here is a king very unlike any king we have ever witnessed in our world. Most kings will parade the propaganda that they only do what is in their subjects’ best interest, but history has shown otherwise. The rulers like we saw in the Roman Empire cared only for their own power and advancement, and they will readily throw you off a cliff if you threaten their pursuit of self-exaltation. This doesn’t mean all rulers are evil or commit even close to this kind of abuse. But thank God there is a king who rules over the good and bad rulers alike. And praise God that Jesus is more for us than we are for ourselves. He will pay any price to gain our freedom, even from our self-imprisonment.

Second, he has not only freed us from our fallen state, but he has also elevated us to the status of “priests serving his God and Father.” Jesus is a king who does not mind sharing with us all things. As our Ordinary Time journey in the book of Hebrews made clear, Jesus is our high priest who leads us into worship. Jesus brings us into the throne room to share in worshiping his Father by the Spirit.

Now John will make the proclamation that will be of great encouragement and hope for those who place their trust in King Jesus. At the same time, it will cause a time of wailing for those who do not want to give up their own illusions of power and control.

Look! He is coming with the clouds; every eye will see him, even those who pierced him, and all the tribes of the earth will wail on account of him. So it is to be. Amen. (Revelation 1:7 NRSVUE)

This King of kings is coming back. And it will not be a private return, as “every eye will see him,” and John adds, “even those who pierced him.” It seems he wants to be clear that the Empire’s participation in Jesus’ crucifixion will not go unaccounted for. In short, those who have rejected the Lord will wail on account of seeing that Jesus was the true King all along. They will wail for the foolishness of not placing their trust in him. This points to the opportunity to place our trust in him now. John has boldly proclaimed who Jesus is as the true and soon coming King. More importantly, he has told us that this King is not like the kings we dread in our times. He is good and he is for us more than we are for ourselves. But there is no room for us to be king of ourselves and be in the room where Jesus rules. And there is no room where he doesn’t rule. So, as we come to the end of this cycle in the liturgical year, we are reminded that all is well when we put our trust in King Jesus. He is coming, and we will not be disappointed.

Now that the prayer has concluded with an “Amen”, the Lord God makes a proclamation of his own:

“I am the Alpha and the Omega,” says the Lord God, who is and who was and who is to come, the Almighty. (Revelation 1:8 NRSVUE)

This is the same statement made at the beginning of our chosen text today. So, everything in between is bookended with this statement that the Lord God is eternal and stands as ruler even over time. There is no king or earthly ruler or any other thing in all creation that could possibly rival that claim. So, we are left to conclude the year with the invitation to once again turn to the one who is turned toward us in Jesus Christ. We are invited to once again place our trust in the Lord who is faithful to us from beginning to end. This is our Lord God who is Almighty indeed.

Call to action: As we end the liturgical year and face the beginning of another, it’s a good week to spend time in prayer asking God to reveal to us those areas where we lack trust so they can be healed, and to help us trust him as the one and only King of kings and Lord of lords.

Jon DePue—Year B Reign of Christ

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November 24, 2024 — Reign of Christ Sunday
Revelation 1:4-8

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Program Transcript


November 24, 2024 — Reign of Christ Sunday

Anthony: Friends, we’re in the homestretch. We’re at our final pericope of the month. It’s Revelation 1:4-8. It is a Revised Common Lectionary passage for Reign of Christ Sunday, which is on November 24. Jon, read it for us, please.

Jon: Sure.

John to the seven churches that are in Asia: Grace to you and peace from him who is and who was and who is to come and from the seven spirits who are before his throne, and from Jesus Christ, the faithful witness, the firstborn of the dead, and the ruler of the kings of the earth. To him who loves us and freed us from our sins by his blood and made us a kingdom, priests serving his God and Father, to him be glory and dominion forever and ever. Amen. Look! He is coming with the clouds; every eye will see him, even those who pierced him, and all the tribes of the earth will wail on account of him. So it is to be. Amen. “I am the Alpha and the Omega,” says the Lord God, who is and who was and who is to come, the Almighty.

Anthony: Amen. And amen. So, if you were preaching this passage to a congregation, your congregation, what would be the focus of your proclamation?

Jon: Yeah, I’ve been thinking about this a lot. I think I would center in on verse 5. That’s the crux of what I would want to teach about. Of course this could change. I tend to not be too rigid in terms of preparation when I am preaching because sometimes things change. Something’s going on in the community that would change the focus that I would put on it, a certain text, sometimes world events would, all of that.

But just strictly for this exercise, I think verse 5 with the “faithful witness, the firstborn of the dead, and the ruler of the kings of the earth. To him who loves us and freed us from our sins by his blood.”

I think getting into the blood stuff here could be an interesting sermon. Because this is a way to shift how we think about blood because if people have been schooled in this negative understanding of what blood is, that it’s death, that it’s judgment, that it’s this bad, ultimately bad thing — honing in on that blood is actually liberative. What’s going on there is freeing us.

It’s not something that happens to Christ instead of us, right? But that what Christ does as our forerunner, through his blood, is free us. And digging into what that freedom could look like for the community, I think that would be a starting point for me, to think about how to preach this to a congregation

Anthony: As I’m rereading verse 5, thinking of it as a crux. There’s so much good news shoehorned in there. He is the faithful witness. He is the faithful forerunner, firstborn. He is the faithful ruler. We have so many bad rulers. He’s the faithful one. He loves us. And he doesn’t hold us captive. He freed us. There’s just so much to unearth there in a proclamation heralding of the gospel.

And that really does tie into the question I wanted to ask you next. It’s in terms of liturgical calendar, it’s known as Reign of Christ Sunday or Christ the King Sunday. And we’re recording this episode in September. We’ve got a national presidential election coming up in the U.S.

Just last night, there was a presidential debate. And so, for those listening, prior to that national election, how might the reign of Christ inform us about politics in our lives? Here’s a big one: the way we view people who vote differently than we do? And even the outcome of the election?

I just because that’s on our minds. And you even talked about you adapt the message sometimes. Always from the text, but how it informs what’s happening around us. So, what would you have to say about this?

Jon: All right. So, you want me to get into this? With hesitation, I will, but I’m not really going to beat around the bush here.

I am both sick of Christian nationalist agendas where it becomes a kind of civic religion, right? I think I can be clear about that.

And I think just as much as I am, the sort of political quietism, or even kind of fideism where it becomes balkanized that results from what’s become a popular Christian slogan: Jesus is Lord; therefore, Caesar is not. Okay, that’s true. Jesus is Lord. The kingdoms of the world are not the Lord in the same way that Christ is. Caesar’s not God. Our presidential candidates aren’t God.

But the payoff, I think, of this other option — not Christian nationalism, but this sort of “Oh, Jesus is Lord, therefore Caesar is not; I can step back a little bit and not worry too much about the politics of the world because God’s in charge. Christ is in charge,” which is true. But it can take us in a couple different directions that worry me a bit. It can lead to one assuming this sort of “both side-ism,” which is different from loving your neighbor. It’s just saying that all these options are equally true or good or understandable.

And this “both sided-ism” is what Jesus really wants. Which tends to just re-inscribe a certain kind of — I mean this in a nonpartisan way, it leads to a sort of re-inscribing of conservatism in a way that says things can’t really change. Okay. That is, Jesus just looks like the sort of average citizen of a modern liberal democracy. Okay.

Secondly, it can lead to a kind of superiority complex, I think, where engagement in real political action in this world, can be looked down on because what really matters is this immaterial kingdom of God; what really matters is that. So, we don’t actually need to concern ourselves with real material realities.

I think that can happen, but we can trick ourselves into thinking that’s what the gospel is about. What I want to alert us to and point us to, in my witness is: what does Jesus, this high priest, talk about all over the Gospels? He talks about money. He talks about material realities of people. He talks about marginalized people. He talks about the poor. If our politics aren’t reflecting a basic concern for the material realities of ourselves and our neighbors, we’re not going to see Jesus there.

Let me say that again, because I really want to make this clear. If our politics aren’t reflecting a basic concern for the material realities of our neighbors, we’re not going to see Jesus there — because that’s what Jesus is concerned with. Always test our political thinking and action in the light of Christ and his concern for the poor and the oppressed.

Now this can open up different options for you. It’s not just saying, Oh, you have to be a socialist to be a follower of Christ, which some people say. I have no time for that either. But what Jesus alerts us to is being concerned with the material realities, the economic realities, the family realities of our neighbors. That needs to drive our political thinking!

We can disagree about how that works out. But if there’s something that occludes, if there’s a political position, or policy, or running platform, that occludes that way of thinking about things, I can’t, in good conscience, be a part of that. I can’t, because I’m trying to get everything — I’m trying to do what Paul would say, to bring everything captive, every thought, even political thought, captive to Christ.

So that’s a starting point. I don’t want to tell people how to vote, any of that sort of stuff, but that’s the starting point, I think.

Now in terms of relating to people who disagree with you, this is tricky, right? I have family members who disagree with me on politics. I have friends who disagree with me on political stuff. What’s important there is you don’t always have to talk about that stuff with them. Normally, the arguments tend to be online or like when you’re not around the person in person, and you’re talking to them.

But when you do engage with someone, you should do so out of a Christ-like way. We have the mind of Christ. So how does Christ interact with people he disagrees with? He can get angry. He can be pretty harsh, but he never gives up or lets go of someone else just because they disagree with him. Anger is okay.

Anthony: That’s right. And it’s one of the reasons I don’t engage on social media in the political world and other controversial topics because it’s not relational. I mean it can be; I understand that but there are massive limitations.

And it’s amazing how people can bow up when they’re not face to face with you.  I’ve heard people call them Twitter muscles, where you just coming in hard and strong about a subject, but it’s meant to be in relationship, always.

Jon: So, I would say in terms of disagreements, treat it like any other sort of disagreement. The way to do that is if you have a relationship of trust with someone, you can be real with them about how you’re feeling and about how much you disagree with them. And it can be tense, and it’s going to be because you disagree, probably fundamentally about certain things in politics, right?

But it’s knowing that you’re in a relationship of trust with them, that they constitute who you are, as well, even if you disagree, and you constitute who they are. Love is a part of that too, a huge part.

I wanted to try to be as precise as I could, not beat around the bush, but also bring this back to how we need to be thinking about this in the light of Christ. Always.

Anthony: Absolutely and I appreciate you going on this thought journey with me because you can’t escape it. The last few national elections, it’s been tough in churches. It’s been very tough on pastors because they’re trying to hold things together when people have really different viewpoints.

And my thinking on it, and this is a very general statement, I really want to be conservative on the traditions and orthodoxy, that we hold fast to our confession of Christ, and I want to be liberal in love.

Like you said, Jesus’ work is comprehensive, and it informs everything that we do, and we see and how we act. As we look on in this passage, thanks be to God. I hear what you’re saying, even as he is Lord, it doesn’t mean that there’s not an impact in our day to day living.

But thanks be to God that he is out in the Alpha and the Omega. He’s the end. He’s the telos. And it makes me think of what Julian Norwich said, “The end is good. So, if it’s not good, it’s not the end.” And as painful as it is right now, and as difficult as these conversations are, and I’m not trying to do escapism here, just thanks be to God that he is the king.

Jon: And because that should frame how we’re thinking about these things, that ultimate reality. It doesn’t give us a cop out. It frames it, and it should lead us to engaging in the best possible way that we can as Christians.

Anthony: Yeah. Amen. And amen.

Hey man, we’re just meeting for the first time. I really like you.

Jon: I like you, too.

Anthony: I’m thankful for you. I feel so grateful for this conversation. So, thanks for saying yes to something you didn’t really know much about, this podcast. It’s been just an enriching conversation, and I hope that you found joy in the process.

And I also want to thank our team that makes this podcast possible. Reuel Enerio, our podcast producer, the editor, the one that makes it all sound good. Elizabeth Mullins, the transcriber who captures the fact that I said “Safety Dance” was the song of choice. Oh, I can’t believe that’s going to be documented to live in infamy.

Jon: Heck yeah. And that rules; you should just stand by it, man.

Anthony: Oh man, I just listened to it recently and that’s why it came to my mind. It’s synthesized. I just feel horrible about that.

And then Michelle Hartman, who’s our leader of the team. She does such a great job. Those. So, thank you, one and all, for your efforts.

And Jon, again, thank you for being here. As is our tradition on Gospel Reverb, we end with prayer. So, if you would, pray for our listening audience.

Jon: Absolutely.

Gracious God, thank you for this time to spend with Anthony and to talk about these lectionary texts, to go through them. We ask that what has been said is pleasing to you, and we trust that you intercede for us, and that you have been present with us. Even through these microphones, through our computers, through the internet, we trust that you’re present.

And we are so thankful that you have provided us with a wonderful space and platform to be able to talk to one another about important ideas. And namely about the most important thing, which is Jesus Christ. The one through whom you revealed yourself most fully. The one who never gives up or lets go of anybody ever.

It’s irrevocable, your commitment to us. And we thank you for that. It’s the most precious gift that you are present with us in him. I also pray for those listening to this, that through our conversation, that you would speak a good word to them and to comfort them, to challenge them and to bring them deeper into the truth of God — that is your Son, Jesus Christ. And it’s in his name we pray. Amen.


Small Group Discussion Questions

  • What difference can it make to start each year and each day with the knowledge and reminder that Jesus is King of kings and Lord of lords?
  • How does Jesus’ person and character compare to the earthly kings and rulers that we are accustomed to?
  • How does Jesus’ rule and actions compare to our earthly kings and rulers?
  • In the context of proclaiming him as king, why is it important for John to tell us that Jesus loves us and gave himself for us?
  • What encouragement can we share with one another regarding the fact that Jesus is coming back?