Kingdom Come - Saved to be Sent - Jason Paredes
When we don’t care about the harassed and helpless, we’ll do nothing to tell them about the hope and peace found in Christ, which is stinging hypocrisy since someone told us about the very hope we’re keeping to ourselves. Since Christ stepped into our pain and healed us through the cross, we are indebted to him. So, we must accept his call and let him send us to bring peace and healing to others. Our faith in the gospel compels us to go! (2 Corinthians 5:14-15)
Takeaways:
- This podcast episode emphasizes the importance of compassion in viewing people, advocating that we should see beyond inconveniences to their underlying struggles.
- The speaker reflects on personal failures in loving others adequately, illustrating the need for humility in ministry and interpersonal relationships.
- Listeners are encouraged to engage in prayer as a foundational step in their spiritual journey, emphasizing the significance of calling upon God for laborers.
- A pivotal message conveyed is that Jesus sends us out not when we feel ready, but rather to prepare us through the act of going out into the world.
- The speakers highlight the significance of being interruptible, drawing parallels between their own experiences and the compassionate nature of Jesus.
- Finally, the episode urges believers to actively share the gospel, stressing that receiving grace necessitates sharing it freely with others.
Transcript
Grab your Bibles. We're going to learn more about this kingdom that's come. The Gospel of Matthew, chapter nine. We're going to pick back up in verse 35, Matthew 9. 35.
Those of you who are joining us as guests, we are just going through the Gospel of Matthew chapter by chapter, verse by verse, working our way through. But this particular morning, I'm going to go ahead and confess to you. This isn't how I was supposed to start the sermon this morning.
And the Lord brought conviction to me and said, no, you got to tell him.
So I was praying this morning, and the Lord very clearly said, jason, that message that you wrote that you're about to preach, it's for you, it's not for them. I'm going to preach to you a message that is really all about God preaching to me, because I am royally failing in this particular message.
I'm going to share with you.
The Lord this morning was humbling me, bringing me back to a place of remembrance of what I bring to the table, which isn't much, and what the Lord can do if I would just humble myself before him. So I struggle with what we're going to be talking about, and the Lord had to beat down my pride. He did it in multiple ways.
One was during my time of journaling and prayer, which was meaningful. I'll share with that in a second. The second thing, though, was through a text I got from my wife as I was driving up.
Bible reading. It's Proverbs:Nothing else. I texted back to my wife and said, I must be a very righteous man. She wrote, for reals. That's what she wrote. So God just reminded me, humbling me.
All you're bringing is a bunch of gray hair into this thing and a Bible and give them. Give them me, don't give them you. Here's what the Lord is doing. He's revealing to me an area of failure.
I don't like to admit this to you, what I'm about to admit to you, because I'm not supposed to struggle with this. But I don't love people the way I should love people. There are far too many moments when I view people, again, don't hold your tomatoes.
I view people as inconveniences, intrusions and interruptions. I'm a Pastor, like, my calling is to shepherd the flock of God. And there are times when I just.
People get in the way of what I'm trying to accomplish.
You ever been driving and you're going at cruising speed and then all of a sudden a car pulls in front of you just to slow down, and then you're like, middle finger, stay down, stay down. Come on. No, I'm a Christian. I don't do that kind of thing. But that's intrusion. Like, what are you doing? Get out of the way.
You're late to something and all of a sudden somebody comes and says, hey, I got this issue, Pastor, can you pray for me? I'm like, oh, okay, yeah, sure. Yes. How can I pray for you? And I view a person in need as an intrusion. And it's horrible.
Sometimes it's my own family, my own children. I'm about to go out, full dress to go mow, and I'm in my shorts and shoes, and my beautiful daughter Jovi will run up, hey, Daddy, do my shoes match?
You know, come on, baby. I'm about to go outside the door. Ask your sister, she'll tell you.
It's a don't bother me right now, I'm busy mindset that I just carry with me all the time. And I just this morning the Lord said, jason, that's horrible. You don't view people the way I view people.
And because you don't view people the way I view people, you'll never be able to minister to people the way I want you to minister to people. And he's calling me out and he's showing me, here's where Jesus is, here's where you are.
And I have a feeling that as he humbles me, some of you in this room will be humbled along with me. Maybe I'm just praying for that Some of you will be humbled along with me. But we're gonna let Jesus do the humbling.
Going back to the Gospel of Matthew, chapter nine, verse 35, we're gonna pick up and finish up chapter nine. Here's what it says.
It says, and Jesus went throughout all the cities and villages, teaching in their synagogues and proclaiming the gospel of the kingdom and healing every disease and every affliction. When he saw the crowds, he had compassion for them because they were harassed and helpless like sheep without a shepherd.
Then he said to his disciples, the harvest is plentiful, but the laborers are few. Therefore, pray earnestly to the Lord of the harvest to send out laborers into his harvest. Alright, so here's what you got, you got Jesus now.
And he's saying, I want you to know what I've been doing this whole time, actually. Verse 35, chapter 9, verse 35 is the bottom slice of bread when there was a first slice of bread to make a sandwich.
That came back in chapter four, verse 23, where it says almost the exact same thing verbatim. Jesus is saying, I came to preach, teach and cure and heal every disease and sickness. Says then 4:23 says that again in 9:35.
And you know what he does in between that? He preaches, he teaches, and he heals every affliction. Chapters five, six and seven are the Sermon on the Mount.
He's preaching and teaching at the highest level possible. Chapters 8 and 9, he's healing every affliction, he's casting out demons, he's healing the sick, he's raising the dead.
I mean he's doing all kinds of stuff. He's preaching, teaching and healing. But now in this passage, it tells us the reason why. And this is where Jesus and I get real different.
Jesus was not doing this work so, so that people would check him out like, aren't I amazing? Look at me. He wasn't doing it for self glory or self attention. He was doing it out of love.
It says that Jesus saw the people and he had compassion on them because they were harassed and helpless like sheep without a shepherd. By the way, that phrase harassed and helpless is an idiom in Greek. You could probably best translate it. He saw them.
They looked chewed up and spit out by the shepherds who should have cared for them.
In other words, life was so broken, so heavy, so out of control that they were just, they would just spit out on the floor, half dead, hopeless, helpless, overwhelmed, at the end of their rope, nowhere to turn. He looked out and that's what he saw. He didn't see intrusions and inconveniences and interruptions. He saw people and he had compassion for them.
By the way, that word compassion in Greek, it's an interesting word. It's born from the Greek word bowels or intestines. It literally means he was sick to his stomach over the pain that he saw.
When he looked out over them, it hurt him in the deepest level of his gut to look at them. We would say it broke his heart to look out there and see them harassed and helpless and broken and suffering on the floor, chewed up and spit out.
That's what drove Jesus to do what he did. And I look at how I view people and they get in the way they slow me down. I got things I'm trying to accomplish.
And I realize how dissonant my view is of the people around me and how glorious Jesus view of people around him was. But God is trying to give you and me a gift, because I have a feeling there are some of you in this room, maybe a little Type A like I am as well.
And you got your mission, you got your vision, you got your goal. You're after it. And either the people are helping you or they're in the way. Did you ever notice how interruptible Jesus was?
Here's the savior of the stinking world, and he stops for a bleeding woman who touches his garment and say, all right, stop the whole parade. Someone touch me. Always interruptible. Why? Because the people were the mission. He looked out there and saw them harassed and helpless.
They weren't in the way. That's why he came. And he says to us, here's what I want you to know.
People, my people, my disciples, as I have loved them, I want you to love them, too. He's about to do something. This is a hinge point in the whole Gospel of Matthew. So up to this moment, Jesus has been doing all the work.
He's the one doing the preaching, the teaching, and the healing from chapters five all the way to chapter nine, the very end of it. Now he's about to say, I want you now to pick up the mantle and do what I've been doing. I'm not gonna accomplish this mission on my own.
I'm handing it off to you to pick up the reins and to do what I've been doing, preaching and teaching and healing every affliction and every disease. I want you to do what I've been doing, and I want you to love how I've been loving. I'm gonna give you three points this morning.
Here's the first point. It's the gift of compassion. Compassion allows us to see people as harassed and helpless and not as intrusions or inconveniences.
He's trying to give you and me a gift through compassion, to look out and actually see people the way they are. And I want you to know all around you are people who are harassed and helpless, chewed up and spit out.
It's that grumpy neighbor who always seems angry. And what you don't realize is that one of his children is suffering with cancer right now, and his whole life is shattered.
And you think he's just grumpy, but he's harassed and helpless, and you get angry with him or you can go love on him or that kid in the school who keeps on bullying somebody else. That a parent. You just want to go tell that little kid and his parents what to do.
You don't realize that his parents just got divorced and his whole life is in shambles, and that little boy is harassed and helpless and overwhelmed, that he doesn't know what to do with it. So he bullies somebody else.
So we can look at them and we can see intrusions and complications, interruptions, or people who are harassed and helpless. And Jesus says, look at them with compassion, see their brokenness. This is what I stink at. I confess to you.
I don't look at where people are and why they're hurting. And therefore, my heart doesn't love. And if my heart doesn't love, I don't do the mission of God. He's calling us out this morning.
Look at them the way I see them and love them. And then he's going to tell them in just a moment and take up my mission to them. But he starts in an incredibly simple way. He starts with prayer.
Did you notice that? He says.
And he said that after his heart is breaking over them, after he's feeling the gut of his stomach, he says, calls the disciples, says, therefore, pray to the Lord of the harvest. By the way, that's Almighty God the Father. And ask him to send out laborers into the harvest. He said, the harvest is already plentiful.
Send out laborers, workers into the harvest. And I believe this is something that we're supposed to take literally.
Now, we could wait until Wednesday to do it, but I don't want us to wait until Wednesday. I want us to do it right now, to actually take Jesus literally.
So we're put a little pause on the sermon, and we're going to turn this worship service into a prayer gathering. So here's what I invite you to do. In just a moment, you're gonna find three or five people around you. You're gonna huddle up. And I'd encourage you.
Don't worry about wasting time on introductions. Just come together and start praying. And you're gonna pray for three things. You're asking the Lord to send workers into three places.
One, locally, ask the Lord to raise up workers to go to the people who live next to you in your apartment or on your block, or people who work in the cubicle next to you, people who shop in the store that you do or go to the restaurant. This city that we live in, pray for God to send workers to tell them the good news.
Of the gospel, then two nationally, don't just pray for our country. Pray for God to send workers to our country. Because the answer to our country isn't politics, it's the gospel.
And so we need to be praying for God to raise up church planners who would take the gospel to more and more places in our nation, but not just this nation, to the ends of the earth. We need to pray for God to send workers to the unreached, unengaged people groups who haven't even heard the name of Jesus yet.
So those three things, locally, nationally, internationally, we're gonna pray for God to raise up laborers. So I wanna invite you, just you can pop up around your house, stand around, grab three or four other people, and let's make this a prayer gathering.
Spend just two or three minutes. And then when that time is over, I'll pray for us and lead us on to the next thing. So go ahead and move around and do that now. Lord, thank you.
Thank you that you hear our prayers. Thank you that you can hear all our voices at the exact same time.
Your word tells us we're supposed to make your house a house of prayer for all nations. Thank you that we get to obey your scripture this morning. Thank you that you will send workers simply because we've asked.
Oh, God, we praise your holy name in Jesus name that we pray. Amen. Amen. Praise God. Listen, as you make your way back to your seat, thank you. Thank you for letting us do this. By the way, if you enjoyed that.
Every Wednesday night we pray and we do a lot of this kind of thing. If you didn't enjoy it, come anyway on Wednesday night and learn how to enjoy it, because it's a lot of fun.
Prayer is one of those things that you learn by doing. And so one of the reasons why we don't like it is because we don't feel good at it. Good news is you don't have to be good because God is good.
We just lift up our prayers, as imperfect as they are to him. And that that means right now, this morning, some of you lift up some very shaky prayers that the unshaken God will answer.
And so we're going to see him actually raise up workers. But I want to go ahead and forewarn you. Jesus is a little tricky on this one because he has a habit of making you the answer to your own request.
Oh, you pray for workers. How about you? In fact, that's exactly what he does with the disciples.
When you keep on moving to chapter 10, what you're going to see is him say, hey, disciples, I want you to go ahead and answer your own prayer request. Look at verse 10. I mean, excuse me, verse one of chapter 10, it says.
And he called to him his 12 disciples and gave them authority over unclean spirits to cast them out and to heal every disease and every affliction.
The names of the twelve apostles are first, Simon, who was called Peter, and Andrew, his brother, James, the son of Zebedee, and John, his brother, Philip and Bartholomew, Thomas and Matthew the tax collector, James the son of Alphaeus and Thaddaeus, Simon the Zealot and Judas Iscariot, who betrayed him. These 12 Jesus sent out. I'm going to pause there for a moment.
I can 100% guarantee you that the vast majority of you in this room, when you read that list, all you focus on is, is the name of the 12 disciples, the 12 apostles.
Like, some of you are so nerdy, you memorize the names of the twelve apostles because you think somehow you're going to get, like, special bonus points in heaven if you can name them all. We focus on the names of the 12. And that's actually not the point. I mean, you need to know the names.
It's cool to know the names and see they're real people. But that wasn't what he was doing. That's not why Matthew put their names here.
He put their names here to show what Jesus is doing in the turning point of the gospel. You can see it in a couple of ways. One of the first ways you see it is in how Matthew lays them out.
I don't know if you notice this, but he lays them out in pairs. You'll see the word, and between the couplets, it starts off Simon, who's called Peter, and Andrew, his brother.
Then it says James, the son of Zebedee, and John, his brother, Philip and Bartholomew, Thomas and Matthew, and. And. And what he does is he gives six couplets. And here's the reason why Jesus sent people out two by two.
These are the six mission teams that he's sending out. And he's telling them how they went out in teams. That's why he's given the names that way.
Another way, though, that you can tell what he's doing here is not so much just giving his names, but sending them out is because of what they're called. Back in verse 2, it says that the names of the 12 apostles are these. That's the first time the word apostle is used in the New Testament, by the way.
And the word apostle is an interesting Greek word, it comes from apostolos. That's not that difficult. Apostolos becomes apostle. Just a transliteration. It doesn't take rocket science to figure that out.
But in English, you don't see what you would see very quickly in Greek. So the word apostolos comes from the Greek word apostelo. I mean, that makes sense. You can see the connection.
An apostolos is somebody who has been apostelo Ed. Well, apostelo means to send. So literally, if you were to. You were to translate it in verse 2, the names of the 12 sent ones are these.
And then he gives the 12 names. And then in verse 5, it says, and these 12 Jesus aposteloed he sent out.
So often we focus on the 12 and think about their position like the 12 pillars of the Church, the foundational ones. But did you know that his main point in here wasn't to show us who are just set apart to be the pillars of the Church?
He's telling us how he's passing off his mission. And by the way, he doesn't stop with these 12. You go to the book of Luke. He sends out 72 people, two by two, to go do the exact same mission.
By the time you get to the end of the Gospel of Matthew, he sends out all his disciples and says, go make disciples of all nations. He's ascending God and he's sending them out. Did you know that there are people in the Bible who are called apostles? Who are not these 12?
There's at least four where the Bible calls them apostles. Paul is probably the best well known, calls him the Apostle Paul. But Barnabas was also called an apostle. Sometimes the ESV is tricky.
On this one, it'll call it a messenger instead of apostle. But the Greek word is apostolos. He's called an apostle. You also have Titus, who's called an apostle. And you have Epaphroditus.
All four of those are called apostles. Which shows us he wasn't just talking about the 12 original ones. He was talking about anybody who was sent. His point here is the function.
They are being sent out to take the Gospel of Jesus Christ. This is why it actually says that he calls them. In verse one, interesting. Verse one, it says, and he called to him his 12 disciples.
What's so intriguing to me is that it sounds like there are all these disciples out there somewhere. And he goes, okay, I pick you, and I'll pick you, and I'll pick you. I'm calling you to me.
But actually, the 12 were already with him following around, he had already been bringing them to himself.
Every scholar I studied believes that this is actually referring to a more technical like commissioning service, a calling service where Jesus has these 12 and he lays hands on them and commissions them with his authority. That's why it says, and he gave them authority to do the very miracles that he was doing. He's calling them to go out.
By the way, I want you to know this. No rabbi in Jesus time did it this way. Every rabbi had a pattern. It's kind of like getting a PhD.
Like you gotta do your years, you gotta write your dissertation, you gotta, you got to defend it. And then when you've done all that, then you are given the mantle. You can go out and teach and do your thing. That's how rabbis worked.
They would call apprentices or disciples to them. Those disciples would have to memorize everything that that rabbi taught.
He would have to show that he has been trained well and he would just sit and spectate the whole time.
And at the very end of all of his training, if he had everything memorized and he passed all the tests, then that rabbi would send him out to be a rabbi.
Jesus has a commissioning service at the very beginning of his ministry and he calls them out when they have no idea what they're doing and says, good luck, take my authority with you. That's how he does it. Which means these poor trembling disciples have no idea what they're doing. They're like, are you sure?
I'm a hillbilly from backwoods Galilee, Jesus, I don't know what I'm supposed to do. Alright, it's okay. You got my authority. Just go. Here's what I want you to understand about Jesus. Here's the second point I want you to write down.
Jesus doesn't send us out when we're ready. Jesus makes us ready by sending us out. It's completely opposite of what you would normally think.
Oh no, if I want to go share the gospel with somebody, I got to be trained better. I'm going to go on a mission trip. I got to go to seminary or something like that. I got to memorize my Bible a bit more.
I didn't even memorize the Sermon on the Mount. Jason, I can't go on a mission trip. I can't share my faith with somebody. They might ask questions too hard. I'm not ready.
Jesus doesn't send you out when you're ready. He actually makes you ready by sending you out.
So if you feel completely unqualified, praise God, you're right where you need to be to be sent out by Almighty God. That's exactly what he does with these disciples. Bunch of hillbillies from backwoods Galilee. And he says, I'm sending you out.
That's verse five through 15 is their first mission. They go out onto being the answer to their own prayer immediately. Let's look at the first half of it. Pick it up in verse 5.
These 12 Jesus sent out instructing them, go nowhere among the Gentiles and enter no town of the Samaritans, but go rather to the lost sheep of the house of Israel and proclaim as you go, saying, the kingdom of heaven is at hand. Heal the sick, raise the dead, cleanse lepers, cast out demons. You receive without paying, give without pay.
Now, I want to put a little pause button there for a moment because I want to deal with something that troubled me for a long time when I read this particular passage. So Jesus says, all right, I'm giving you instructions. You're going to take the Gospel. Go out there, the Gospel of Peace.
Just make sure you don't tell the Samaritans and the Gentiles only go to the Jewish people. I think sometimes we read the Bible and we don't stop and actually consider the implications of it because we don't want it to bother us.
But that should bother you. Like, what in the world is Jesus doing being so exclusionary here? Like, everybody needs the Gospel of peace.
Why is he saying, only go to the Jewish people? There are other times Jesus did some things that are pretty questionable until you understand why he's doing them.
Like telling a Gentile woman, like, oh, I'm not. The food is only for the Jewish people, not for you gentile dogs. These are things that Jesus said, you're going, bro, what's going on?
You got to look hard at these and understand why he's doing what he's doing. The same thing with the Gentile woman. Jesus ultimately was just testing her faith to see if she would still believe.
And here he's not saying, I don't want Samaritans and Gentiles to have the Gospel. All this is is Jesus strategy.
He's saying, I'm a Jewish Messiah and a Samaritan, and a Gentile won't understand a Jewish Messiah, but he would later go to the Samaritans and to the Gentiles.
In fact, if you read the Gospel of John, it says he intentionally passes through Samaria, finds a woman at a well who's a Samaritan and shares the gospel with the Samaritan people. So he's going to take the Gospel to the Samaritans. At the end of Matthew already mentioned it.
He said, go therefore and make disciples of all nations. He wants the Gentiles to have the gospel. But he knew if he was going to start, he had to start with the Jewish people.
This is the same strategy Paul had, by the way. He said to the Jew first, and then to the Gentile, start with the base. Who can understand a Jewish Messiah?
So Jesus says, go to the Jewish people first. But he also says, and when you go, heal the sick, cleanse the leper, cast out the demon, raise the dead. Why?
Because they ain't going to believe you're with the Messiah if you don't have the power of the Messiah. You see, Jesus knew this.
He knew that every single Jew was expecting the Jewish Messiah to come to earth with the power of heaven, sent down as the long awaited son of David, who would bring the power of heaven to earth. And so that's why Jesus did the miracles he did.
This wasn't some cheap parlor trick to say, check me out, I can shoot lightning bolts from my eyeballs and webs from my hands. Like he's. He's not trying to impress the people, he's trying to show them I am the Messiah who's come down with the power of heaven.
And then when he sends his disciples out, the sent ones, he says, you're gonna have to take my power with you or they're not gonna. They're not gonna believe you are coming on behalf of the Jewish Messiah. So here's my power.
Heal the sick, cleanse the leper, cast out the demon, raise the dead. I don't want you to miss what Jesus just said.
He said to a bunch of uneducated hillbillies, you're going to go out and you are going to heal the sick. All they've been doing at this point is watching Jesus. And now he's going, you're going to go out and you're going to cleanse the leper.
You're going to go cast out a demon. You're going to raise somebody from the dead. You little hillbilly, you. You're going to go do it because you have my authority.
That should blow your mind that Jesus would give his authority to people like these first 12 disciples. By the way, one of them was a man named Judas Iscariot. And he still gave that authority. Here's what this means for us today.
When you feel inadequate for the mission of God, praise God, because you're going to depend on his power, not your own power. And he's saying to you, I'm going to give you my authority and my power because you go in my name. We should expect the same thing from God.
In fact, it's missionaries who are overseas to see the most miraculous work of God because they're going in the name of King Jesus. And Jesus himself said in John chapter 14, because I go away, the Spirit, the same Spirit that's in me is going to come to you.
And greater works than me will you do when the Spirit comes. If it wasn't just the 12 apostles that he gave this power to, he gives them to the 72 later.
He gives them to all his disciples later so that we can be his messengers, the sent ones who go out in the power of God. This is why we don't have to be afraid. Yes, we feel inadequate. Yes, we don't have answers. No, we don't know if they're gonna be healed or not.
But we pray over them. And God does miraculous works. And people see the power of heaven come down and they believe that's the hope that we have.
We have the power of Christ because we are the sent ones. But I do have to temper that. It is absolutely true.
God is going to give you unprecedented power when you go on a mission that you would never see somewhere else. But that doesn't always mean when people see the miracles from heaven, they are going to believe. We talked about this last week, by the way.
The Pharisees saw all the miraculous healings of Jesus and they still said, nope, that can't be real. You must come from the Prince of Demons. There are going to be people who don't believe.
If Jesus is about to send his 12 out of as sheep among wolves, and he says some of you are gonna. Some of them are gonna believe, some aren't. So here are my instructions of what to do. And that's where it finishes up in verses 9 through 15.
So let's finish up the passage this morning. Picking back up verse nine.
He says, acquire no gold or silver or copper for your belts, no bag for your journey, or two tunics or sandals or a staff for the laborer deserves his food. In whatever town or village you enter, find out who is worthy in it and stay there until you depart. As you enter the house, greet it.
And if the house is worthy, let your peace come upon it. But if it is not worthy, let your peace return to you.
And if anyone will not receive you or listen to your words, shake off the dust from your feet when you leave that house or town. Truly, I say to you, it will be more bearable on the Day of Judgment for the land of Sodom and Gomorrah than for that town.
We're going to finish that. I want to go ahead and confess to you a second part I struggled to understand when I first read this.
It was that whole thing about, go to somebody who's worthy, and if you find somebody who's worthy, let your peace rest on them. But if they're not worthy, take your peace back. What does that mean, to be worthy? You know, they're given an assignment.
Don't take a bunch of money with you and all these things. You're gonna live off the hospitality of the people that you're going to be with. He says, go and look for people who are worthy.
So it was incredibly important they understood what they were looking for when they were looking for somebody who was worthy. So what does it mean to be worthy for them? Did it mean that they had a big enough house where they could sit in there?
They had enough money to put food on the table because they were supposed to live off hospitality? Was it wealth? Was that what made them worthy? No, no, not at all. Well, was it their Jewishness?
I mean, if they were a good enough Jew, if they went to celebrate the Passover every single year and all the festivals and they tried to obey the law of Moses, it was if they were a good Jew, Is that what made them worthy? No, or he wouldn't need the message of the gospel if that's what it was. What made them worthy? It was one thing, actually.
Verse 14 gave the clue to it that I hadn't seen before.
It says in verse 14, if anyone will not receive you or listen to your words, shake off the dust from your feet, and right there you get the clue of what it means to be worthy. To be worthy simply means you receive the message of the gospel with faith. They will listen.
Which, by the way, in Greek, that word listen also means obey. You will let the message of the gospel come in, and you will obey the message of the Gospel. That's what makes a person worthy.
He's saying, if you want the peace of Christ, you have to receive the Gospel of Christ, and that will make you worthy. But if you reject the gospel, then you are not worthy.
Now, I want you to know this runs in the face of everything you have been taught in this world about what makes a person worthy. This world tells you the size of house you live in that makes you worthy. How fast your car drives, that's what makes you worthy.
How nice your clothes are, how successful you are at work, what kind of extreme vacations you take, what kind of physical health you're in, how well your children turn out. These are the things that show you whether you're worthy or not. And it's a bunch of hogwash. Those things do not make you worthy.
Now there's some of you smart enough to baptize some new ideas and think that this will make you worthy. If I go to church, that'll make me worthy.
If I give money to the church or to the poor, if I serve others, if I start memorizing scripture, if I read my Bible daily, if I do all the spiritual disciplines, that'll make me worthy. If the good outweighs the bad, I'll just make sure that there's more good than bad in my life. Maybe that'll make me worthy.
And I want you to know that will actually keep you from being worthy. The Bible calls all that effort self righteousness, and it says it is filthy rags in the sight of God.
It is our tempts to be worthy that keep us from becoming worthy. Let me tell you the message of the Bible. All have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God.
There is no one righteous, not even one, including this preacher up here on this stage. None of us are worthy. There is one human being who has ever been worthy on this planet, and his name is Jesus.
The only ones who have obeyed the Father, done what was good, have been worthy. And the whole message of the gospel is that Jesus was worthy in our place. Why there's a baptistry that says Jesus in my place, Cristo en mi lugar.
Because he was worthy in our place. And then we come and confess, I am not worthy. I have failed you, God. I have been unworthy. And I can never make myself worthy. And so here's what I do.
I throw myself at your feet, Jesus. I put my unworthiness on you, Jesus, because when you were on the cross, you paid the price of somebody who's unworthy.
You took my unworthiness on your shoulders and you let yourself be crucified so it could be paid for. And then you handed me in your resurrection, your worthiness. And all I have to do is receive it by faith. That's the message of the gospel.
You have to be unworthy in order to become worthy. As Christ comes inside you, that's the only way to receive the peace of Christ. He says, if Somebody is worthy.
If they will receive you and your message, then bring them my peace. But if they are not worthy, in other words, they don't receive the message. Shake the dust off your feet. Take your peace with them. They can't have it.
I believe there are some of you in this room. There are some of you who are worshiping with us online. And you desperately need the peace of Christ. Your life is in shambles.
I was talking about harassed and helpless. You're going, that's me.
I'm overwhelmed by my circumstances, by my life, by my addictions, by my depression, by my anxiety, by my fears, by my brokenness, by my relationships, by my work, by my failures. I'm just overwhelmed by all of it. You have no peace of Christ.
And he says, I want to give you a peace that surpasses understanding, the peace of Christ that will guard your heart and mind in Christ Jesus. Let me tell you how that peace comes. It comes when you finally say, I'm not worthy of it, only Jesus is. And so I cast my unworthiness on him.
I receive his worthiness and I invite Christ to come into me. And when Jesus Christ, the spirit of Christ, comes in you, you become worthy. The Father looks at you. He sees his son. He says, here's my peace.
You can have it. Here's what I believe. I believe those messengers went into the towns, that he sent them two by two. And they knocked on doors.
And some of those people said, we don't want your message around here. Go away. And some of those people said, I open up the door, come on in and eat with me. And me with you. I want you to know there's something else.
Jesus said. Revelation, chapter 3, verse 20. He said, I stand at the door and I knock.
Whoever hears my voice and opens the door, I will enter into him and eat with him. And he with me. Jesus said, don't force yourself into those homes. If they're worthy, go in. If they're not, don't.
And Jesus will not force himself into your heart, even though he's what you most need. All he'll do is stand at the door and knock. I believe he's knocking on the door some of your hearts right now. And you have a choice to make.
You can say, not right now. Not a convenient time for me. Or you can swing that door open and say, jesus, come in. Come in and change me. Give me your peace.
That baptistery, that's the way you swing open the door. It's a symbol of faith. The old you, dead and buried Unworthy.
And you're raised up worthy, not because of you, but because Christ did it in your place. I believe some of you need to find the worthiness that comes in Christ and the peace of Christ this morning. I'm about to give you a moment to do it.
But you're going to have to decide before I do. There's one last thing I want to say before we finish up. And here's what it is.
Every single one of you in this room who has been born again, who has believed in Jesus Christ and been saved by the way. There have been so many people who've expressed their faith in Christ over these last few years. Many of you in this room have done so.
Some of you have been believers for a long time. You've believed in Jesus. You have been saved by the grace of Almighty God.
But there are some of you, perhaps many of you, who've come under the false idea. Praise God. He saved me.
Now I'm just gonna coast through life until I make it to heaven in the end and completely miss the whole reason why he saved you. He didn't just save you for pie in the sky when you die. That's not why you were redeemed. You have been saved in order to be sent.
That's your the mission is why he saved you, so he could get you ready and send you right back out. That's actually what verse eight, the second half of it was talking about.
So profound a teaching, you miss it in the English translation because sometimes it talks about money, but it says literally in Greek it's four words, but you have to do five in English. Freely you received, freely give. That's what it says in Greek. Freely you receive, freely give.
He's talking a little bit about money, but he's talking about so much more than that. He's saying, freely you have received the Gospel of Jesus Christ, the redemption that I bring, my authority and my power.
If you have received it freely, give it freely. Don't hold it to yourself. And yet so many of us hold it to ourselves.
Third last point, I want you to write down, if you don't mind, and it's a heavy one the Lord has been breaking my heart over. Here's what it is. Few things sting the heart of God more than people who have freely received the gospel but do not freely give it.
Few things sting his heart more. He weeps over the selfishness of his people who freely receive the gospel of Jesus Christ and say, that's enough.
I don't have to tell anybody else about it. There was somebody who took the gospel. To every single one of you who are believers in Jesus Christ, there was some messenger who was sent to you.
Maybe it was a mom and dad who shared the gospel or a grandparent who shared the gospel. Maybe it was a Sunday school teacher. Maybe for some of you, I got to be the messenger, a pastor who shared the gospel.
Maybe you grew up in a different country and there was a missionary who brought the gospel or a different city, a church planner brought the gospel to you, but somebody took the gospel to you.
And how hypocritical, how dastardly, how horrible would it be to have somebody come to us with the gospel and say, thank you for changing my eternity. Now I'm not telling anybody else about it. We have been saved to bear the message and we must obey.
It's time for us to become the answer to our own prayer. We've been praying for God to send people to the people around us. Workers, it's time for us to say, here I am. Send me.
I need to go tell everybody the good news that I found out. It's time for us to be willing. Now, here's what I want you to know. The moment you say yes, you're going to immediately feel inadequate.
Now, I want to remind you what I said before. He didn't send you out. When you're ready, he makes you ready by sending you out. You just need to say yes.
Now, one of the best ways for you to be trained by going out is to do it in partnership with other believers. That's why our summer mission trips are so beautiful. We have a number of mission, some on the field already in San Diego and in Puerto Rico.
We have a whole team going to Houston this afternoon. And we got teams, all 322 people this summer going out on mission from our church. It's an incredible way.
You go over there and you learn how to share your faith and you learn what it means to be a gospel presence, and you come back more prepared. But there are plenty of you going, well, I forgot to sign up for that, so maybe next year. I got good news for you.
I knew that about 10% of our people go on mission, which means about 90% of you don't have that experience. And so we wanted to create the mission team, wanted to create an opportunity for you locally to go on mission this summer.
So I want you to do me a favor. I want every one of you who has a phone to pull it out for just a moment. And you can either scan the Connect code on the seat back in front of you.
Or you can just go to fielder.org connect it'll take you to the same place just like you see up there on the screen. Phil.org connect and when you go there, at the very top of it, you're gonna see something that says be sent locally.
And so when you go there, you open it and there it'll take you to a page that looks like this. It'll have some info that you'll fill out, but if you scroll down, it'll give you different ways that you can move off.
There's seven different things that you can do this summer with descriptions about it.
And then you get to the bottom and then there's a list of 14 different dates over the summertime that you can say, I want to be sent locally this summer. I want to experience this with somebody else. Now I want to warn you, the band has come out because we're about to sing a song.
Now I mentioned this earlier. I'm going to say it again. There's a great chance for hypocrisy because you're going to be saying, send me, send me.
Then you're going to go, but not locally. I don't know, Lord, I. I can't do that. And I just don't want you to say send me and then not be willing to be sent. Cause that's hypocrisy.
So maybe before you start singing this song, unless you're one of those going on the mission trip, I guess you're already set. But if you're not one of those, maybe what you need to do is to check at least one of those boxes. You can check all 14.
And by the way, if you check a box, that doesn't mean you're going on this thing. It just means you want more information about it. So you're gonna get an automated email for however many boxes you check about that.
And a leader will reach out to you to see if they can help you get the info you need. But maybe you need to check at least one box before you try to stand up and say send me. To make sure that you're not being hypocritical about it.
And so I wanna give you a moment, maybe it's what you need to do and just make that decision and then you can join the song. But one last thing, in fact, I wanna invite you to stand up right now if you will. I'm invite the prayer team down front.
There are some of you in this room. And as I was Talking about being overwhelmed, chewed up and spit out by life and circumstances and heaviness and depression and all that. That's you.
You're saying, I feel like I'm harassed and helpless. I need help. I want to remind you, Jesus has compassion for you. He sees you.
He sees your pain, he sees your struggle, he sees your issue, and he wants to meet it because he cares and he can do something about it. And we know our God is moving.
Last Sunday, we had so many people come forward for prayer, and we were starting to get back reports of the miracles taking place. I had a sister come up to me and say that they prayed. We prayed for our daughter, her daughter who had cancer.
And they came back and all the reports were, cancer's gone. Praise God. He moves that way. I was standing next to somebody on Wednesday night when we had a prayer time, and I got to hear him being prayed over.
And the gentleman said that he. When he walked up, he couldn't turn his neck, prayed over him, and immediately he could turn his neck. God is answering prayers. Reggie was sharing.
There was somebody who came up who couldn't lift his shoulder this high, prayed over him, asked him to lift it, and he lifted his arm all the way up. God is doing this kind of stuff, real miracles, and it's not a show, it's not a spectacle.
He's not doing it because we're trying to get on YouTube somewhere. So we're doing this because he wants to show he's a compassionate messiah who has power from heaven.
So if you need him to move, there's nowhere else you need to be but down front receiving prayer, asking for God to move. And we want to pray over you in whatever needs you have.
But most importantly, if he's knocking on the door, if he's saying, come believe in me, trust in me, you got to open your door to him and say, jesus, I invite you in, and we'll help you take the step of baptism. Whether it's today or another day, we want to help you. You got to come before you sing, make sure you've taken your step to be sent.
I encourage you to respond right now as the Lord is telling you.