Life contains many distressing realities. One distressing reality arises when we
try to protect someone we care about from danger. When we see a dangerous
situation, warn the person, and he or she reacts by (a) seeing no danger and (b)
ignoring our concern, we are genuinely distressed. That situation is a recipe for
disaster.
Years ago we took a good friend to visit our families. My mother wanted to take
us on a long wilderness hike to a unique place called Virgin Falls. Virgin Falls is a
waterfall where there is no stream, no river. The water flows out of a huge rock cave
at the top of a mountain, falls over a rock ledge, and disappears over a hundred feet
below at the base of the ledge.
The only way to get to Virgin Falls was to walk a trail through wilderness
woodland for several miles. As we walked the trail, our son Kevin led the way.
Suddenly he took a long leap, turned around, and shouted, "Snake!" Stretching across
the path was a copperhead, a poisonous snake. Our friend laughed like it was a big
joke designed to scare him. Because the snake was the color of the trail, and because
our friend was not accustomed to watching for snakes, he could not see it.
It took all our powers of persuasion to convince him not to continue walking and
step on the snake. The danger was very real, but, to him, there was no danger.
- The frustration we experience when we try to help someone and have our
concern rejected is devastating.
- Without exception, every adult here knows that frustration.
- Sometimes it is a very dear friend who misunderstands and rejects our help.
- Sometimes it is a spouse who misunderstands and rejects our help.
- Sometimes it is our child who misunderstands and rejects our help.
- Sometimes it is our parent who misunderstand and rejects our help.
- Sometimes it is our Christian brother or sister who misunderstands and
rejects our help.
Most of the teens here know that frustration, and you teens who have not
yet experienced this frustration will.
- Typically, teens know how to care about a peer's well being deeply.
- Typically, teens are committed to "being there" for a struggling peer.
- Typically, teens commonly grasp the concept of unconditional love.
- The combination of those awarenesses definitely will produce the experience
of seeking to help someone who refuses to be helped.
God knows that frustration of trying to help those who reject His concern;
having helpfulness rejected is far more than a mere human experience.
- God worked for thousands of years to produce the perfect means for us to
deal with our most serious problem, the problem that easily destroys us.
- That serious problem that seeks to destroy each of us is the evil within us.
- God worked for thousands of years to provide us a means of escaping evil.
God even sent Jesus as flesh and blood into our world to show us how to
escape evil's destruction.
- The people Jesus lived among could have and should have understood what
he was trying to do, but they did not.
- Basically, they considered Jesus the problem instead of the solution.
- The understandings Jesus shared came directly from God, but those
understandings were "too different"--many people could not even think the
way Jesus thought.
- Just days before his execution, Jesus voiced his frustration, the frustration of
(a) wanting to help people escape destruction, (b) of having the ability to
provide that escape, and (c) of the people not seeing the danger.
- See if you can hear his frustration:
Matthew 23:37-39 Jerusalem, Jerusalem, who kills the prophets and stones those who are sent
to her! How often I wanted to gather your children together, the way a hen gathers her chicks
under her wings, and you were unwilling. Behold, your house is being left to you desolate! For I
say to you, from now on you will not see Me until you say, "Blessed is He who comes in the
name of the Lord!"
Reflect on Jesus' frustration with us when we ignore his help, when he spreads his
wings to cover us, and we refuse to take shelter. Reflect on this by singing. As you
sing, focus on the words. First, we will sing a song that should touch the hearts of
those who "go through motions." Second, we will sing a song that should touch tender
hearts. Then we will sing our gratitude and awareness. The song leader will lead these songs
from the pew. The words of each song will be on the screen.
792 "My Eyes Are Dry"
794 "Unto Thee O Lord"
801 "Where No One Stands Alone"
Jesus used a well known image then that many of today have never known.
- Baby chicks are hatched with several forms of awareness including these
two: awareness of the need for protection, and awareness of the meaning
of mama's warning clucks.
- Baby chickens have no awareness of the dangers of a hawk, but hawks love
to eat baby chickens.
- Were it merely a contest between baby chickens and hawks, the hawks
would win 100% of the time.
- But mama hen knows about hawks.
- Mama hen recognizes a hawk soaring above looking for a meal.
- When mama hen is aware that a hawk is near, she begins clucking.
- Her short feathers stand on end making her appear bigger than she is.
- She moves in a slow strut ruffling her wings and clucking her warning,
letting all her chicks run under her for refuge.
- She literally places herself between the soaring hawk and her babies.
Jesus wanted to do the same thing for the people of Israel and the
inhabitants of Jerusalem.
- He wanted to shelter them from danger.
- He wanted to rescue them, to make their destruction unnecessary.
- He wanted to deliver them from the consequences of Israel's past
faithlessness.
- But faithlessness won; they would not listen to him.
Do you listen to his warnings? Do you keep yourself under his protection?
- Jesus wanted to do the same thing the hen did.
- The hen placed herself between the danger and her chicks.
- Jesus wanted to place himself between the danger and the residents of
Jerusalem.
- Jesus wants to place himself between the danger and you.
That is what Jesus did for us when he died on the cross: he placed himself
between us and the evil that will destroy us.
- He literally died to give us the opportunity to live.
- Only his blood can rescue us from the destruction of evil.
To me, most people misunderstand God's joy at Jesus' birth.
- God knew long before Jesus' birth the only way evil could be defeated was
through Jesus' death and resurrection.
- When the heavenly hosts declared to the shepherds the night of Jesus' birth,
(Luke 2:14) "Glory to God in the highest, And on earth peace among men with whom He is
pleased,"
what was that about?
- It was about God keeping His promise.
- It was about finding peace in the shelter of the one who would die for us.
When we, in our minds and hearts, see Jesus dying on the cross, we see an
disturbing, repelling sight. There is nothing appealing about a dying body on a cross.
But when we see in the dying Jesus our rescue, our shelter from evil, the
complete meaning of his dying body on the cross changes.
Jesus knows the danger threatening to destroy you and calls you just as the
mother hen calls her chicks when there is danger. Do you hear him calling? How do
you react?