Tuesday 28 September 2010

Call the next witness - 5.The Witness of Abraham (26/9/10)

The Witness of the Father

Sunday 26 September 2010

The fifth part of the ‘Call the next witness’ series at Cafe Church.

John 8: 31-38, 48-59

Despite it being Back-to-Church Sunday we were continuing with the theme of 'Call the next witness'.

The outrage of the Jews was about Jesus' assertion that they were not free. They regarded their ancestry as freedom enough (although of course the Jews had been slaves in Eygpt, Babylon, and at that time, to the Romans).

Jesus, of course, is speaking about a freedom from Slavery to sin. Abraham is not an ancestral get-out.

Sin is something of a joke word in our society. Yet it resonates with all people - we all have an innate sense of wrongs we commit - what in reality is an action against God. The breaking of God's law of love leads to guilt, fear and death.

Following Jesus, however, is about 'continuing in his word', which in turn sets us free, and "if the Son sets you free, you will be free indeed" (v.36). This is a freedom to be truly ourselves, who we really are. Jesus goes on to say that "whoever keeps my word will never see death" (v.51). This is as plain a promise of eternal life as one could imagine.

So plain, indeed, the Jews react passionately, accusing Jesus of being demon possessed. Once again they look to Abraham for their benchmark - he was dead, their great Father. So if he, the one chosen by God, noone else could expect to be exempt from the requirement to face death.

Of course, there is a sad irony here. For Jesus in promising life to us who believe, he knew that he would have to also chose death - when his life was such that it was not a requirement.

The most profound verse in Jesus response to the Jews accusation of madness is his reference to Abraham's hope: "Your ancestor Abraham rejoiced that he would see my day; he saw it and was glad" (v.56). Abraham knew that his standing with God was purely a consequence of his FAITH, not in an inherent goodness. And the Jews mistakenly assumed that God imputed this same righteousness onto all Jews, by virtue of their racial credentials. In fact, Abraham knew that faith alone saves - faith in God. And Jesus has alluded to this - faith in him, and an adherence to his words - it is this that saves.

Abraham is testifying in his life that one would come who would bring righteousness to all men, and that righteousness is not ours, but Jesus', and we receive this as a free gift as we have faith. Jesus has mentioned elsewhere that prophets and righteous people longed to see him (Matt. 13:17).

The inheritance the Jews longed for was not to come through the law/the seed (the geneaological line) but in FAITH (Romans 4:13).

Application: I wonder whether this is a straight reminder to obey Jesus' words - to follow and walk in his way, rather than other religious leaders, however much they might be examples. This is a real challenge - do I daily seek to encounter and follow Jesus knowing that in him is true freedom.

The second challenge is the degree to which I can see how the ENTIRE Old Testament looks to Jesus!

And finally, am I pointing to this freedom, or do I get caught up in the worry of freedom of economic, social, conscience, speach, poverty, war, abuse or famine. These are noble concerns for anyone - and freedom for those oppressed in these areas is a calling on all Christians. But above these present concerns is the biggest battle of all - the freedom of our souls. Have I sworn allegiance to Jesus, and am I seeking to make this freedom known.

For truly, a society that is freed from sin, is a society free from all the terrors listed. Do I work to bring this sort of societal transformation? Do I point all I know to Jesus?

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