Last Pentecost, 24th
Nov 2013; New Hope Col.
1-11-20; Lk 23:33-44
“No Matter Who Is President,
Jesus is King”
I. The
Lord is King Over All the Earth
In the
fall of 2012, as we approached the election, I often saw the saying, “No matter
who is president, Jesus is king” on Facebook.
That was a good thing to be reminded of.
The United States is a nation with a wide variety of viewpoints and
concerns, and we may be more divided in our hopes and ideas of how to make
those hopes real than at any time in the last 150 years. We who know Christ must remember that he is
the one who is in charge and that our hopes do not finally rest in this nation,
as wonderful as it is, but in the Lord Jesus and his eternal Kingdom.
If you
have taken world history in high school or college, you know that the history
of the world is the rise of one nation after another, followed by the fall of
that nation as one stronger than it arises.
In biblical lands, the Assyrian Empire was followed by the Babylonian
Empire, which was followed by the Greek Empire under Alexander the Great. That was followed by the Roman Empire, which
began five centuries before Christ, took over the entire Mediterranean world
and a great deal of Europe and lasted until five hundred years after
Christ. Meanwhile, Chinese dynasties
rose and fell, and the Great Wall was built to keep out invaders – who came in
nevertheless because they could find traitors to open the gates for them. We know also of empires in the Americas, in
Africa, and in India. Every empire felt
proud and strong for a time, but even in their most glorious days they were not
the ultimate power. That honor belongs
to the Lord Jesus, who is the Lord of history, to whom all nations must bow and
all rulers must give answer.
The
Bible, from one end to the other, proclaims that God is sovereign, and that
even the hearts of kings are in his hand.
Psalm 145:13 says, “Your kingdom is an everlasting kingdom, and your
dominion endures throughout all generations.”
Paul writes in 1 Tim 6:15-16, “[H]e who is the blessed and only
Sovereign, the King of kings and Lord of lords, who alone has immortality, who
dwells in unapproachable light, whom no one has ever seen or can see. To him be
honor and eternal dominion. Amen.” These
are but two of the many verses that speak of God’s rule over the world and over
history. He is king, he always has been
king, and he always will be king.
Our
reading from Colossians tells us that Jesus is king – and that we who trust in
him belong to his kingdom. We read the
glorious verses of Col 1:12-16, in which
Paul prays, “May you be strengthened with all power, according to his glorious
might, for all endurance and patience with joy, giving thanks to the Father,
who has qualified you to share in the inheritance of the saints in light. He has delivered us from the domain of
darkness and transferred us to the kingdom of his beloved Son, in whom we have
redemption, the forgiveness of sins.”
In God’s
astonishing mercy, we have been moved from Satan’s kingdom, “the domain of darkness,”
into Christ’s own Kingdom. He himself
has qualified us to be in that Kingdom, so we need not fear judgment or
rejection. The Lord Jesus has accepted
fully all who rely upon him and not themselves.
We belong not to the kingdom of darkness, but to the Kingdom of Light.
II. A
Kingdom Open to Anyone
We learn
some wonderful things about the Kingdom in today’s Scripture readings. Looking at the Gospel reading from Luke, we
see that the Kingdom is open to anyone.
The story of the crucifixion of Jesus Christ tells us that two thieves
were crucified along with Jesus, and that they mocked Jesus, telling him that
if he was who had claimed to be, then he should show it by rescuing them all
from the hideous and shameful death of the cross, a torture reserved for those
who had rebelled against Rome.
But one
of the thieves noted how Jesus behaved in this dreadful situation – Jesus did
not curse those who had beaten him and nailed him to the cross. Indeed, he had offered them forgiveness for
treating him as they did while they were nailing his hands to the cross beam. The thief saw a calm mind and a caring heart,
and he began to change his mind about his fellow sufferer. Verses 39-41 say, “One of the criminals who were hanged railed at him, saying,
‘Are you not the Christ? Save yourself and us!’
But the other rebuked him, saying, ‘Do you not fear God, since you are
under the same sentence of condemnation? And we indeed justly, for we are receiving the due reward
of our deeds; but this man has done nothing wrong.’”
The man knew he had done wrong, and
that his punishment was richly deserved.
He had concluded that Jesus was innocent – indeed, that he was not only
innocent, but a divine King. In verse
42, he asked Jesus, “Jesus, remember me when you come into your kingdom.” Here is a man who has
admitted his wrongdoing. He has the
opportunity to repent, but there is nothing he can do in the way of good works,
obedience to the Law, and any deed to merit God’s blessing and acceptance. He simply confesses his need and his desire,
to be in God’s Kingdom.
Jesus
made a reply that assured the man of his acceptance: “Truly, I say to you,
today you will be with me in Paradise.”
What welcome words were those! The
man was transferred from the “dominion of darkness” to “the kingdom of [God’s]
beloved Son.” As I said, the repentant
thief could do nothing to merit God’s favor – he simply appealed to the mercy
of the Lord Jesus. That appeal is
entirely in keeping with what our passage from Colossians says. Paul does not rejoice that the Colossian
Christians have worked their way from the dominion of darkness to the Kingdom
of the Son – rather, he rejoices that God the Father has transferred them from
death to life, from the realm of Satan to the Kingdom of God’s own Son.
Salvation
is God’s action. He transfers us from
the realm of death to his own Kingdom.
His action is based not on our earning our way into his Kingdom, but in
our admitting our need, our abandoning our own agendas, and our throwing
ourselves upon his mercy. Jesus did not
tell the repentant thief, “I am thankful for your change of heart, but it’s too
late; you need to do something more than just repent.” Rather, Jesus said “Today you will be with me
in Paradise.” Salvation is God’s action,
not our own. To be saved means relying
upon God and not ourselves.
III. A
Kingdom Open to Anyone But Not Including Everyone
Two
criminals were crucified with Jesus that first Good Friday. One appealed to Jesus to remember him when he
came into his Kingdom – and was immediately assured that he would be with Jesus
that very day in Paradise. What about
that other criminal? Was he brought into
the Kingdom?
There is
no evidence that he was. He apparently
continued to mock Jesus, sneering at his ministry and claims to kingship. If Jesus really were the Messiah the mocking
thief thought, why would he allow himself to be executed by the Romans? It was the Messiah’s job to get rid of the
Romans, but if the Romans were getting rid of him, then he could not be the
Messiah. The other thief wanted
practical, immediate results, and when they did not come, he maintained his
taunting distance.
One of the
hardest things to understand about sin is that sin is not simply ignoring God’s
commands, so that we do what he has told us not to do or fail to do what he has
commanded us to do. Rather, sin is a
rebellion against the King of the Universe.
Sin is an attitude before it is an action; it is standing before the God
of Heaven and Earth and telling him, “You’re not the boss of me!” This attitude stands behind the disobedience
involved in sinful actions. Indeed, a
person can be largely obedient to God, but be obedient for reasons other than
God being wise Father and rightful King.
Some people obey God because it suits their purposes. Some people obey God because their aim is to
butter him up or impress him or otherwise get him to do something they want done
but lack the power to do themselves.
Some people obey God because they want to earn their own place in
Heaven. Such people often wind up as
Pharisees, who think that they are better than others, but who are blind to the
depth and reality of their rebellion against the King of the Universe.
We enter
the Kingdom only by God’s mercy. We are
incapable of earning our way into the Kingdom because we cannot even begin to
know the depth of our rebellion against God.
We cannot correct what is wrong with ourselves. C. S. Lewis once said that no man knows how
bad he is until he tries very hard to be good.
Since God does not grade on the curve, but rather expects perfect
obedience, we simply cannot do enough to merit his acceptance.
The
second thief maintained his rebellion, and so remained in the dominion of
darkness. When he died, the yawning
doors of hell closed behind him forever.
Such is the nature of sin, however, that he would rather endure the
miseries of hell than be confronted with the undeniable rule and reign of God,
for his heart was locked in rebellion.
The
Kingdom of God is a Kingdom which is open to anyone, yet which will not include
everyone. Only those who admit their
need, lay down their rebellious heart, and cast themselves upon the mercy of
God will enter the Kingdom. As someone
once said, “One thief was saved, so that no one will despair of God’s mercy –
but only one, so that no one will presume upon that mercy.”
IV. Our
Goal: to Live as a Citizen of Heaven Even When On Earth
The
repentant thief was promised that that day he would enjoy Paradise in the
company of his King, Jesus Christ. He
died within a few hours. We who are here
this morning are people who have come to Jesus in the same way as that
repentant thief – but we are alive. While no one is promised tomorrow, we are not
on a cross about to die, and we have a reasonable expectation of waking up
tomorrow and the day after. So what are
we to do? Do we simply go about our
business as we please, or does trusting in King Jesus have any implications for
our daily lives?
As the
passage in Colossians says, God has “delivered us from the domain of darkness
and transferred us to the kingdom of his beloved Son.” We who love Jesus are his subjects, and as
members of his Kingdom, it is our privilege and responsibility to live as his
obedient subjects. We have surrendered
our rebellion and agreed to recognize Jesus as King – and not only to recognize
him, but to love him and find our delight in obeying him.
As
subjects of the eternal King and members of his Kingdom, our ultimate loyalty
belongs to him, and our lives are to be lived in light of that loyalty. When I was growing up in the Presbyterian
Church, someone said that there are three words that summarize the Christian
life: guilt, grace, and gratitude. We
recognize and confess our guilt, confessing to God our need for his mercy. In his grace, the Lord extends his mercy to
us, based on the death of Christ – as our Colossians reading says, the Lord
used the death of Christ “to reconcile to himself all things, whether on earth
or in heaven, making peace by the blood of his cross.” From that point on, we live in gratitude for
what God has done, obeying him in recognition of his great mercy and love, and
joyfully following his leadership to honor him.
Guilt, grace, gratitude.
The New
Testament was written to explain those three words and how they are all
centered on the Lord Jesus – and a good bit of the New Testament is dedicated
to talking about how we may live in such as way as to honor and bless the Lord
Jesus, our King. There is no way I could
capture all that on one Sunday morning, so I won’t even attempt it.
But I
will take a few moments to say that living as a subject of King Jesus has two
basic dimensions: an inner dimension and an outer one. In Col. 1:9-10, just before our reading for
today begins, Paul says, “from the day we heard, we have not ceased to pray for
you, asking that you may be filled with the knowledge of his will in all
spiritual wisdom and understanding, so as to walk in a manner worthy of the
Lord, fully pleasing to him, bearing fruit in every good work and increasing in
the knowledge of God.” Paul says that we
are to grow in knowledge, which is part of the inner dimension, and to “bear
fruit in every good work,” which is of course the outer dimension.
We are
citizens of the Kingdom of Heaven, and we are to live according to our
citizenship. God is to have our ultimate
loyalty, even though there are many things that clamor for our loyalty. We can often recognize the lure of things
that are attractive but also clearly evil and selfish – but usually God’s
strongest competitors are good things.
Money is a good thing, in its place.
Authority is a good thing, in its place.
Pleasure is a good thing, in its place.
Patriotism is a good thing, in its place. All these things are excellent, as long as
they are servants but not masters. Part
of living in a way that honors the Lord Jesus as Lord is to use these elements
of life in a way that reflects that, as good as they are, none are in the place
of ultimate loyalty. We can use them to
honor Christ. That is the inner dimension
of being a subject of King Jesus, having hearts that view things around us from
his values.
The
outer dimension is what we actively do to reveal and to extend the Kingdom of
God to those around us. I'm a Facebook
friend of Bryan Bywater and of a number of you all – and as I have read the
posts about what New Hope does for so many people, I have been humbled and
delighted. Especially given the size of
the congregation, it is an amazing set of ministries you are part of, and which
show the heart of the King at work through you.
I am sure that as you seek to love others in Jesus’ name, you keep
seeing other needs and other things that could be done – and you think, “Maybe
we could be part of that, too.” You are
using money, authority, and other potential idols as servants of King Jesus, and
that is a wonderful thing. God is at
work in you and through you.
I do not
know what other things the Lord Jesus may have in mind for you, in terms of
anything concrete. I do know, however,
that his goal is that he be King of your heart and King of your actions. He has been, is, and will be at work both
within you and through you to make his kingship real in your heart and revealed
in your lives. That is his ongoing work
of grace in all those whom he has transferred from the dominion of darkness to the
Kingdom of Light through his Son.
We
belong to a kingdom that transcends time and that transcends space. Men and women of ages past belong to it, men
and women today belong to it, and, should the Lord delay his return, men and
women of untold generations will belong to it – not only in the United States,
but all around the world. We are part of
a kingdom of millions upon millions who know and love the Lord Jesus.
In 1958, a U.S. soldier
wandered the streets of Berlin to see the sights. Despite the bustling new life
in parts of the city, reminders remained of the destruction of World War II.
Walking through a residential area one evening, across the cobblestone street
he saw an open space edged with flowers. In the center stood the stone front of
what had been a church. The building was no longer there, but the rubble had
been cleared away in an attempt to fill the empty space with a little park. The
former church's main door was shaped in a Gothic arch, and over it was carved
into the stone in German: HEAVEN AND EARTH WILL PASS AWAY BUT MY WORDS WILL NOT
PASS AWAY.
As he stepped through the
arch where the doors had once been, of course he wasn’t inside anything. What was once a place of worship had been
reduced to a patch of stone pavement and open sky. Not so with the Door – Jesus Christ! As we step into Christ, we enter into his
unshakable, eternal presence. It cannot
be reduced; it can only be experienced – forever.
To our
eternal King, ruler of heaven and earth, be glory now and forevermore. AMEN.