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Becoming Like Jesus
By Pastor Samuel Chess
Grace Emmanuel Church
Port St. Lucie, Florida
Up the Stairway to
the Cross
When we come to Easter we
want very much to celebrate the resurrection of Jesus. With out the
resurrection, the death of Christ would have no significance. We
will not fail to celebrate that theme next year. However, if we are
not careful we can talk about the triumphal entry on Palm Sunday and
move on to the resurrection on Easter Sunday and miss what 1/3 of
the four gospels are all about. Only two of the Gospels mention the
events of Jesus Birth even though the incarnation of God into human
form is a once in an eternity event.
The resurrection, is
described in just 3 verses in the Bible:
Matthew 28:2-4 NIV 2 There
was a violent earthquake, for an angel of the Lord came down from
heaven and, going to the tomb, rolled back the stone and sat on it.
3 His appearance was like lightning, and his clothes were white as
snow. 4 The guards were so afraid of him that they shook and became
like dead men.
There are exactly 21 other
verses in the Bible in all four gospels describing the approach to
the empty tomb and the angel.
One third of the Gospels
are devoted to the events leading up to and the crucifixion of Jesus
Christ!
Less than one week of Jesus
life, what we call the passion week, fills up hundreds of verses in
the Gospels.
The most sophisticated
religious system of all time couples with the most powerful
political empire up to that point to bring one man to death and you
get the sense throughout the whole thing that that one man is
orchestrating the whole thing even though he is the victim of it.
It was he who designed the
religious system of laws under which he would eventually be
condemned. It was he who allowed the Romans into power to bring
about his sentence of death. The same Roman system would allow the
story of his resurrection to spread to the whole world within a few
short years
I. Steps to the
Salvation of the World
The events of the passion
week are carefully laid out. If you have a Bible with paragraph
heading they will be broking into very distinct sections…
Triumphal Entry, Last
Supper, Betrayal by Judas, Garden of Gethsemane, The Trials, Jesus
death on the cross, Resurrection. Each of these is a distinct step
toward your salvation. The fact that they are so carefully spelled
out means we shouldn’t skip lightly over them. I see each on as part
of a stairway moving toward Jesus taking our sins on himself and I
want us to walk up that stairway today pausing just briefly to look
at what is on each step. I want to especially point out some things
that are maybe a bit different than we normally look at.
A) Step One: The Triumphal
Entry
I have preached whole
messages on Palm Sunday about this event:
Matthew 21:8-10 NIV 8 A
very large crowd spread their cloaks on the road, while others cut
branches from the trees and spread them on the road. 9 The crowds
that went ahead of him and those that followed shouted, "Hosanna to
the Son of David!" "Blessed is he who comes in the name of the
Lord!" "Hosanna in the highest!" 10 When Jesus entered Jerusalem,
the whole city was stirred and asked, "Who is this?"
Even the Pharisees said:
John 12:19 NIV 19 So the
Pharisees said to one another, "See, this is getting us nowhere.
Look how the whole world has gone after him!"
Again I ask, who were these
people? This was Passover time. Everybody was coming to Jerusalem
for the feast, including Jesus and the disciples. This crowd that
were chanting that Jesus was coming in the name of the Lord were
coming to Jerusalem with him after seeing him raise Lazarus from the
dead. How do we know?
John 12:17-18 NIV 17 Now
the crowd that was with him when he called Lazarus from the tomb and
raised him from the dead continued to spread the word. 18 Many
people, because they had heard that he had given this miraculous
sign, went out to meet him.
His fans were not the
people from Jerusalem but probably the Galileans who had experienced
his ministry. Mathew says that some were the lame and the blind, and
children who showed up repeating the refrain once he got into the
city.
Inside Jerusalem were
people who were steeped in their religious cloaks who would yell
crucify him within days. As he crossed the crest of the hill the
cries of Hosanna stop because another sound begins. Jesus is crying!
Luke 19:41 NIV 41 As he
approached Jerusalem and saw the city, he wept over it.
I don’t think this picture
is quite like we often make it out to be…
If you had been a Roman
centurion called to the east side of Jerusalem to check on a unruly
disturbance what would you have seen? You would have seen a man,
followed by a group of peasants from the sticks some of whom were
blind, and lame, shouting at a man sitting, not on a stallion, but
on a forlorn donkey and in spite of the shouting of the people the
man was looking at the city and crying.
It wouldn’t stop the people
in the city from killing him a few days later. It wouldn’t cause
most of them to believe he was the Christ come to take away the sins
of the world. Even his disciples who had spent three years with him
would all forsake him before the week was over…One would betray
him…one would deny him. Jesus wept.. for the sinful hearts of the
people around him and for all of us who would follow them.
B) Step Two: The Last
Supper
The tension is mounting… In
spite of Jesus comments the last few weeks about dying in Jerusalem
none of the disciple believe that to be true. They are convinced
that somehow that language is figurative and what Jesus is really
going to do is become King and set up an earthly kingdom, defeating
Roman power and they will all be Jesus lieutenants.
Some are a little disturbed
by that crying, donkey riding thing, coming into town but Jesus
words to them during his private sermon during their Passover meal
raise their hopes to a frenzied level .
As he reads the account of
the Exodus as the Passover host where God delivered the Israelites
from the power of Egypt, their minds were very possibly substituting
Rome for Egypt. He would deliver them as Moses delivered Israel. He
used electrifying phrases in his sermon…
John 16:33 NIV 33 "I have
told you these things, so that in me you may have peace. In this
world you will have trouble. But take heart! I have overcome the
world."
And I confer on you a
kingdom, just as my Father conferred one on me, so that you may eat
and drink at my table in my kingdom and sit on thrones, judging the
twelve tribes of Israel. (Luke 22:29-30 NIV)
Then he embarrasses them
all by getting down and washing their feet. They couldn’t understand
him. What kind of a Messiah was this who talked like a conqueror one
minute, then acted like a servant the next!
C) Step Three: The Betrayal
In the midst of this
intimate evening with his closest friends Jesus dropped a
bombshell…One of the twelve men gathered around him, one who’s feet
he just washed, would that night betray him to the authorities… They
all grew bug eyes in disbelief then began to interrogate each other.
Surely, not me.. They said in turn.
Jesus answered, "It is the
one to whom I will give this piece of bread when I have dipped it in
the dish." Then, dipping the piece of bread, he gave it to Judas
Iscariot, son of Simon. As soon as Judas took the bread, Satan
entered into him. "What you are about to do, do quickly," Jesus told
him, (John 13:26-27 NIV)
Who was this jerk who
betrayed him? Some seedy lowlife who the Pharisees went straight to
because he was the one with the lowest character? No…. At some point
the religious authorities had approached him, offering him money to
sell out our Lord. How many of the other disciples had they
approached as well. How many of them had actually considered whether
they would actually rather have 40 pieces of silver then a
relationship with a Messiah who seemed to constantly waiver between
strength and weakness.
Judas wasn’t the lowlife
among them… he was the one they chose to be their treasurer. We
didn’t choose Bob Rule to be our treasurer because he was the least
trustworthy among us. We chose him because he was the most
trustworthy. In the last supper seating arrangement, Judas was close
enough to Jesus to be dipping out of the same bowl, a sign of
honored position. When Jesus said someone was going to betray him I
wonder how many of the others were honestly wondering if they were
going to give in to what they had been tempted to do. I don’t know
that Judas was prepared to carry through with the deal until Jesus
washed his feet. In scripture it falls directly afterwards…. Somehow
the picture of Jesus washing his feet as a servant made the decision
in Judas mind that any hope of this man being the long awaited
Messiah was over. Even when Jesus handed him the dipped bread he
could have refused it, but he made a choice and…
As soon as Judas took the
bread, Satan entered into him.
He wasn’t the only one who
left… Before the night was over, when the disciples discovered that
Jesus kingdom led to a cross instead of a throne, everyone of them
slunk off into the darkness.
Yet when Jesus met Judas in
the Garden with a lynch mob he addressed him as “friend”.
The other disciples
deserted them but he still loved them. Peter denied him, but he had
a special place for him in his kingdom work. He would have just as
freely forgiven Judas if he had lived. Judas died unwilling to
accept the forgiveness of sins Jesus was paying for..
Peter, humiliated but still
open to Jesus forgiveness went on to lead a Revival in Jerusalem
that eventually reached Rome and then the ends of the earth.
D) Step Four: The Garden of
Gethsemane
From an upstairs room in
Jerusalem full of the strong smell of lamb and herbs and unwashed
bodies they head to the cool garden atmosphere of the olive groves.
Everybody is at peace… except Jesus:
They went to a place called
Gethsemane, and Jesus said to his disciples, "Sit here while I
pray." He took Peter, James and John along with him, and he began to
be deeply distressed and troubled. "My soul is overwhelmed with
sorrow to the point of death," he said to them. "Stay here and keep
watch." Going a little farther, he fell to the ground and prayed
that if possible the hour might pass from him. (Mark 14:32-35 NIV)
Usually when Jesus prayed
he wanted to be away from other people including the disciples. He
didn’t want any human being distracting him from his Heavenly
Father.
This time it’s different…
This time he wants and asks for human support from his friends. It’s
almost as if now he can’t bear to be left alone in the presence of
his heavenly Father. When they acted uninterested and fell asleep he
acted genuinely hurt.
A great struggle was
underway…These are not cute little formal prayers. This is Jesus
wrestling with what he is getting ready to do. He’s getting ready to
take on his sinless self all of the sins of the world.
He withdrew about a stone's
throw beyond them, knelt down and prayed, "Father, if you are
willing, take this cup from me; yet not my will, but yours be done."
An angel from heaven appeared to him and strengthened him. And being
in anguish, he prayed more earnestly, and his sweat was like drops
of blood falling to the ground. (Luke 22:41-44 NIV)
Jesus wasn’t powerless
here… he had twelve legions (72,000) angels available to him if he
wanted to stop the action, wipe out the Romans and set up an earthly
kingdom like his disciples wanted him to.
Had he done so there would
be no church history, no church at all, no reason for the future of
mankind to even go on… human history would probably have come to a
halt. America would never have been discovered and you would never
have been born. All of this was within Jesus power if he had decided
to skip the personal sacrifice and trade away the messy future of
redemption.
The cross, for Jesus, was
not a detour on the way to the kingdom, it is the kingdom come. It
is the reason for Jesus birth.. It’s existence was certain before
Adam and Eve were created into this newly created world.
E) Step Five: The Trials
We are fascinated by
trials, how many of our TV shows are about people trying to defend
other people who have done wrong, or not done wrong? What stands out
in Jesus trials is not his great defense but his complete lack of
defense. Nobody rose to Jesus defense, not one religious leader, not
one concerned friend, Jesus didn’t even try to defend himself. Even
the Heavenly Father was strangely quiet.
Amazingly, there wasn’t
enough evidence to convict him….. Even trumped up witnesses couldn’t
get there story straight so Jesus purposely and deliberately gave
them everything they needed to put him to death.
But Jesus remained silent.
The high priest said to him, "I charge you under oath by the living
God: Tell us if you are the Christ, the Son of God." "Yes, it is as
you say," Jesus replied. "But I say to all of you: In the future you
will see the Son of Man sitting at the right hand of the Mighty One
and coming on the clouds of heaven." Then the high priest tore his
clothes and said, "He has spoken blasphemy! Why do we need any more
witnesses? Look, now you have heard the blasphemy. (Matthew 26:63-65
NIV)
To Pilate….So Pilate asked
Jesus, "Are you the king of the Jews?" "Yes, it is as you say,"
Jesus replied. (Luke 23:3 NIV)
Just as he is ready to be
killed he openly declares himself to be the Messiah. He had turned
down many chances to do so up to this point. If he had done so
earlier he might not have reached this point of being so alone with
no one at his side.
He didn’t declare himself
the Messiah until the danger of just founding a religion was past!
F) Step Six: Jesus Death on
the Cross
Imagine the shame of God’s
Son stripped naked, flogged, spit on, hit in the face, pierced with
a crown of thorns:
Mockery
illustration<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<
Legions of angels waited
his command, one word and they could end the whole ordeal.
That word never came….
Others words did:
I thirst… from the one who
created gallons of wine in his first miracle
My God, My God, why have
you forsaken me… the only time Jesus ever addresses God as anything
other than Abba or Father
It is finished! We’re told
what Jesus cried out at the end…we’re not told what the heavenly
Father cried as as his beloved son gave up his life in exchange for
yours and mine.
We are told exactly what
happened in that instant:
God made him who had no sin
to be sin for us, so that in him we might become the righteousness
of God. (2 Corinthians 5:21 NIV)
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