April 29, 2001
John 21: 1-18
Children’s Message: "Jesus,
the Face of God"
One night a little
girl was getting ready for bed. As her mother was tucking her in, the little
girl remembered that she had left her favorite teddy bear, "Teddy" in the
playroom. "Mom, I need to get Teddy. He’s my best friend!" Her mother had
been trying to share the Christian faith with her daughter, and so she
said, "I thought God was your best friend, not Teddy." Her daughter replied,
"Teddy has a face."
Sometimes God can seem a bit fuzzy, a faceless
person. From time to time we may all wonder, "What is God really like?"
The Bible has an answer to that question.
What is God like? God is like Jesus. In fact, Jesus
puts a face on God. The Apostle Paul wrote, we
see the "Glory of God in the face of Christ" (II Cor. 4:6). Jesus shows
us what God looks like. God "looks" like Jesus. The Bible says that Jesus
is "the image of the invisible God" (Colossians 1:15). He has made the
invisible God visible. When we look at Jesus, we’re seeing God at work.
And that’s how we know for sure that we are loved by God -- Jesus told
us so! "As the Father has loved me, so I have loved you" (John 15:12).
Let’s pray and give God thanks for sending
us Jesus:
Thank You, God, that You have sent Jesus
to teach us about You, the invisible God. Thank You that Jesus has made
Your love so visible and so real. Thank You, Jesus. Amen.
Sermon:
We study the Bible to see how God works, to see
how God operates in this world. Specifically, we study the Bible to see
how God relates to human beings -- to learn the ways of God, the ways of
God with us. The Resurrection accounts are great resources for this, because
they involve the Risen Christ appearing to stunned, fearful, disbelieving,
and sometimes ambivalent disciples. So these are relevant texts for us.
They’re also important because we live on this
side of Easter. We are Easter people with a Living Savior, not a dead one,
who desires our companionship & our discipleship.
Now, the Gospels are full of Resurrection
appearances. The Risen Christ appears to Mary Magdalene & the another
Mary (in Matthew 28) outside the tomb, he appears to the disciples in the
Upper Room twice, to Doubting Thomas, to the disciples on the Road to Emmaus.
Luke says in Acts 1 that Jesus appeared to the disciples over a period
of 40 days and gave many convincing proofs to them that he was alive. I
Cor. 15 says Jesus appeared to the disciples and later he appeared to more
than 500 believers at one time, "most of whom are still alive to this day,"
writes Paul to the Corinthians.
So there were eye witnesses alive for years
following the Resurrection. It’s one of the reasons why the faith spread
to rapidly & vibrantly. Even when the New Testament was being written
there were still eye witnesses alive to validate and verify the accounts.
(I Cor. 15: 6)
Isn’t that just like Jesus, he appeared
to over 500 believers, but he didn’t bother going to Pilate or Herod or
back to Jerusalem to show off and gloat or make a spectacle of himself
and of our faith. He only made himself known to those who had loved him.
I guess you have to fall in love with him to see him.
Illustration. A young Artist once brought
his painting of Jesus to a master painter named Dore. Dore was slow to
give his opinion of the young painter’s work. Finally he did so with one
sentence: "You don’t love him or you would paint him better."
We can only see Jesus once we give our
hearts to him in love and obedience. Remember what we said last week, to
believe, is to give one’s heart away. The Risen Christ appeared to those
who had given their hearts to him. "Mary" And how he appeared to
them, how related to them . . . just might help us relate to him today.
The thing that stands out in John’s Gospel is that Jesus always attacked at the point of greatest resistance. The Risen Christ was not bashful or shy. He focused in on their resistance and went right after it.
Illustration. I’m sorry to tell an old high
school football story, but the only illustration I could come up with was
the night we played Central Bucks West when I was a sophomore. I did not
see any playing time that night, much to my relief because they were big
and strong and ugly! And they had a guy named Frank Case, 6’5", 255 pounds.
He went on to play for Penn State. But the thing I remember was our gameplan.
Our coach said, "If we’re going to beat West, we’re going to have to deal
with Case." "And so for most of our plays we’re going to run right at him."
"Because if we can’t beat him, we don’t deserve win."
Jesus is a lot like my old coach, he goes
after the strongest opposition. And so Thomas says, "I don’t believe."
And Jesus says, "OK. Fine. Go get Thomas." "Here Thomas, see my hands &
side. Put your fingers here. Stop doubting & believe." He meets him
in his doubt. He goes right at the point of greatest resistance.
So here in John 21 the Disciples have gone
back to fishing. Now that’s a bizarre thing to! If you were friends with
the Messiah and he had just risen from the dead and had commissioned you
to go & tell the whole world, would you go fishing? In John 20, the
previous chapter, he had said to them, "As the Father has sent me, so I
now send you in to the world." And so they we
nt fishing. It may suggest an ambivalence to
the call, or even a certain disbelief about it all. Or it may just be that
they needed a little spending money. Either way, they were not with the
Risen Lord, and so he appears to them on the shore.
Isn’t that just like Jesus, they’re wandering
from their call, and he has to go after them. Like a gentle shepherd he
must nudge them with his crook and bring them back into discipleship. And
so his tactic is, he stands on the shore and says, "Hey boys, have you
caught any fish?" Now, he’s Jesus. - he knows they haven’t caught any fish!
But isn’t that just like Jesus, gently but clearly pointing out to them
the futility of their lives without him.
Then he proceeds to give them some advice
on fishing. Now they had been fishing all through the night and had caught
nothing. They had to be very tired and very frustrated. And I’m sure it
felt so good when some stranger shows up on the shore line and starts giving
them advice. We men love advice especially when we’re tired & frustrated.
And so Jesus says, "Throw your nets on the other side." Isn’t that just
like Jesus, coming in to rearrange our messed up lives, showing us
the way to a better life if only we’d listen.
Each time in these appearances, he meets
them at their point of greatest resistance. He sees their ambivalence -
they’ve gone back to fishing - and so he meets them on the shore line.
He needs to get across to them that he has called them to a new and completely
different life, and so he says to them, "Have you caught any fish?" He
knows that men at work hate to get advice, and they’re going to have to
learn obedience, so he tells them what to do and how to catch fish. Isn’t
that just like Jesus!
But the best part of this chapter, John,
ch. 21, is when Jesus appears to Peter. Three times Jesus asks Peter, "Simon,
son of John, do you love me?" And three times, Peter answers back, "Yes,
Lord. You know that I love you." Peter doesn’t understand at first.
He’s grieved, embarrassed, maybe a little ashamed. But why does Jesus make
him profess his faith three times? Because just days before, Peter had
denied he ever knew Christ, how many times? He denied Christ three
times. Isn’t that just like Jesus, so pastoral here, meeting Peter at his
point of greatest need (his shame, his guilt). Peter is restored, rehabilitated,
recommissioned, reconciled.
By the way, there’s an old legend, we’re
not sure if it’s true or not, but the legend is that Resurrected Jesus
even appeared to Judas, who betrayed him. The New Testament doesn’t tell
us this. It’s a legend from the Early Church. We know that Jesus appeared
to Mary, Thomas, & Peter and the others, but some later said that he
even went Judas to offer him forgiveness. Now if Jesus can appear to Judas,
he can find you, too. He can love you, too. He can forgive you as well.
What is your point of greatest resistance
to God? What is your greatest point of resistance to a deeper spiritual
life? Fear? Ambivalence? Doubt? Busyness? Guilt
or Shame? A certain Sin?
Whatever it is . . . the living Christ
wants to meet you there. These resurrection appearances make it clear that
Jesus is not afraid of what we’re afraid of. He doesn’t run from the things
we run from. Instead he runs to them. He runs to your greatest point of
resistance, the very thing that keeps you from a closer walk. For He knows
that a human soul is like a bone, in that the very place where it breaks,
once fixed & mended, becomes the strongest place. And that’s where
Christ wants to be in your life and mine.
Isn’t that just like Jesus!
Let’s pray.
Lord Jesus Christ our Savior and Redeemer,
we run but you are faster. We hide but you see all things. We doubt you
but you never stop believing in us. Thank you that you meet us on the road
of faith at the very spot where we are stuck. Give us the faith to journey
with you. We give you our hearts and our love this day and forever. Amen.
Rich Knight