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We turn in the Word of God to
Isaiah chapter 35, and then to Luke chapter 5. Let's stand together
to hear the Word. From Isaiah 35, the prophet is
prophesying the future glory of Zion, that there will be a
recovery after the judgment which God has warned about through
His prophet Isaiah. And in the light of that, there
is this call, beginning at verse 3. Strengthen the weak knees
and make firm the feeble... Strengthen the weak hands and
make firm the feeble knees. Say to those who are fearful-hearted,
be strong, do not fear. Behold, your God will come with
vengeance. With the recompense of God, He will come and save
you. And the eyes of the blind shall be opened, and the ears
of the deaf shall be unstopped. Then the lame shall leap like
a deer, and the tongue of the dumb sing, for the water shall
burst forth in the wilderness and streams in the desert. The
parched ground shall become a pool, and the thirsty land springs
of water. In the habitation of jackals where each lay, there
shall be grass with reeds and rushes. A highway shall be there,
and a road, and it shall be called the highway of holiness. The
unclean shall not pass over it, but it shall be for others. Whoever
walks the road, though a fool, shall not go astray. No lion
shall be there, nor shall any ravenous beast go up on it. It
shall not be found there. But the redeemed shall walk there,
and the ransomed of the Lord shall return and come to Zion
with singing, with everlasting joy on their heads. And they
shall obtain joy and gladness, and sorrow and sighing shall
flee away." And from Luke chapter 5, beginning at verse 16, Reading of our Savior Jesus Christ.
So he himself often withdrew into the wilderness and prayed.
Now what happened on a certain day is he was teaching that there
were Pharisees and teachers of the law sitting by who had come
out of every town of Galilee, Judea, and Jerusalem. The power
of the Lord was present to heal them. Then behold, men brought
on a bed a man who was paralyzed, whom they sought to bring in
and lay before him. And when they could not find
how they might bring him in because of the crowd, they went up on
the housetop and let him down with his bed through the tiling
into the midst before Jesus. When he saw their faith, he said
to them, man, your sins are forgiven you. And the scribes and the
Pharisees were not alone. But when Jesus perceived their
thoughts, He answered and said to them, why are you reasoning
in your hearts? Which is easier to say your sins
are forgiven you or to say rise up and walk? But you may know
that the Son of Man has power on earth to forgive sins. He
said to the man who was paralyzed, I say to you arise, take up your
bed and go to your house. Immediately he rose up before
them and took up what he had been lying on and departed to
his own house, glorifying God. And they were all amazed and
they glorified God and were filled with fear, saying, we have seen
strange things today. The grass withers, the flower
fades, the Word of God endures forever. We turn in the Word
of God to Luke chapter 5 and verses 16 to 26. to consider this great miracle
of our Lord Jesus Christ. If you've been here for a while,
you know that I've preached through the Gospel of Mark and sometimes
returned to the Gospel of Mark. And one of the things that you
might notice is some of the similarities between the Gospels. And if your
memory is good, you'll notice that this same narrative actually,
in a manner, falls in Matthew, Mark, and Luke. But we'll be
looking at it again. I remind you of the words of
the Apostle Paul who said, for me to write the same things to
you is not tedious but safe. And there's a reason it's repeated
in the Gospels. It's of utmost importance. And
it is worthy of looking at again and the Lord willing with some
new lessons and applications for the life of the Church of
the Lord Jesus Christ. We're in the section of the Gospel
of Luke, if you're joining with us, where we are still, in a
sense, into the public introduction of our Lord Jesus Christ and
His ministry. Luke here is placing together
a series of narratives that answer the question, who is Jesus Christ? And they can be compared to,
perhaps, a diamond that has many different facets. He is, in a
sense, perhaps with a little bit more information than Mark. Mark is the briefest of the Gospels,
who moves at a very rapid pace. But Luke, in a similar way to
the Gospel of Mark, is presenting a series of narratives. that
very quickly fill out the shape and glory of that diamond, the
glory of Jesus Christ. And to look at His person and
His work again and again from different ways, especially here
in what is still the beginning of His public ministry, and particularly
His ministry in Galilee, the Galilee phase of His ministry.
And one of those facets on the diamond here is going to be revealed
through the healing of the paralytic in Luke chapter 5. This will reveal Jesus Christ
to be unique as a person. The challenge at the heart of
the text is this. In verses 20 and 21, Jesus says
something we'll get back to in a moment. He says, Man, your
sins are forgiven you. And immediately, those who are
the most knowledgeable in the Scriptures in Israel, they're
triggered. They recognize that in those
words, Jesus has said something about His own identity, authority,
and glory, which warrants in their mind a charge of blasphemy. For who can forgive sins but
God alone? They are recognizing that Jesus
is making a claim to deity. That He has within Himself the
prerogative to declare unequivocally, for salvation, the forgiveness
of sins. This in turn, this reality about
the complex person Jesus Christ pulses throughout this whole
text. We're going to see that in a number of ways. First, this
declaration of forgiveness. We'll see it again where we have
Jesus interacting with the scribes and Pharisees. Verse 22, He perceives
their thoughts. And then we'll see it again in
a miracle. The whole text is pulsing with divine power. The
whole text places before you and I, again, a Savior, a powerful
Savior, a unique Savior. To use the language of the Apostle
Paul that we just used in prayer, the one mediator between God
and man. There is no other name. under
heaven, given among men, whereby we might be saved." That this
man, this man Christ Jesus, the God-man, He alone is able to
save. And, if you get to the end of
the text, there's no one like Him. in salvation, not only is
He only able to save, but that the dimensions and glory of this
salvation is unbounded. As a matter of fact, the crowd
will glorify God. They were amazed and filled with
fear saying, we have seen strange things today. So first, the surprising
authority of forgiveness. We begin in verse 16, we'll come
back to verse 16 later in the sermon, but the context is important. Luke, of all the gospel writers,
reminds us most often of the prayer life of our Lord. and
that He was in communion with His heavenly Father. And that
this followed after the cleansing of the leper and that it led
into the healing of the paralytic. And that this was the Son of
God who delighted in fellowship with His Father and would often
go to desolate places to pray, into the wilderness, and that
this sets the tone for and gives some of the context for what
comes immediately afterwards. What comes immediately afterwards
is the following scene. We know that this is in Capernaum
if we compare with the other Gospels. There are some more
details here. There were Pharisees and teachers
of the law watching him teach. The extra details in Luke is
that they had come out of every town of Galilee, Judea, and Jerusalem. He's placing before us something
quite remarkable. At the beginning of Jesus' ministry,
he's baptized. He's now in the public. He's
been preaching in the synagogues. His fame has spread abroad into
every place. Verse 15, the report went out
concerning him. All the more great multitudes came together
to hear. Now it has reached the upper echelons of Jewish society.
And those who had teaching authority and ruling authority Pharisees
and the teachers of the law, they are now sitting by and they
have come from every town. It's not just the masses now. Jesus is under special inspection
by those who know the Old Testament best. The second thing we read
in verse 17 is that the power of the Lord was present to heal
them. I think there's maybe a better
and clearer translation that you might find in the ESV, which
is this, the power of the Lord was with him to heal. But there's
a couple things that are put together here now. We have Jesus
who prays in the wilderness in communion with His Father, who
publicly teaches, who is being examined and we'll see in a moment
challenged concerning His authority. This same Jesus continues to
have the power that He had when He healed the leper, the power
of the Lord who was with Him to heal. These things begin already
to ratchet up a tension in the narrative concerning what will
happen next. And what happens next is quite
remarkable. Then men brought on a bed a man who was paralyzed.
And children, if you're thinking about a bed, This would not be
a bed like your bed. It appears pretty clear from
the end of the text when he took up what he had been lying on
and carried it to his house. Probably isn't like your bed
with the bed frame and a mattress. It would have been more like
some sort of sling or hammock. Here it had ropes on it. It was
something smaller and it was able to lower down through the
tiled roof. We'll read in a moment. But what is very clear is that
this man is on a bed. Because of his illness, he's
paralyzed. He can't walk. He's unable to walk. He cannot
move himself. He requires others to move him.
And those others don't just move him. They are looking for Jesus. The report had went out concerning
him. All the more great multitudes came together to hear to be healed
of him of their infirmities. Verse 15, part of that pressing
crowd is this group. And you can imagine the scene
would have included, if we have the context, many people who
are sick, many people who want to be healed, the inspectors
of the day, the Pharisees, the house is full, it fills into
the street, and everybody is hoping for some sort of audience
with this Jesus Christ, especially those who wanted to be healed.
And here we have a group of men who don't give up. They're so
determined that They bring the man in to lay before Jesus when
they could not find how they might bring him in because of
the crowd. They went up on the housetop, and again, more details
in the Gospel of Luke, they let him down with his bed through
the tiling in the midst before Jesus. So they're tearing the
house apart. They're tearing the house apart, there's no other
way, and they're absolutely determined to get to the place they need
to get to. The man that they have is a paralytic, which means
there's no hope of him being healed any other way. Matter
of fact, it's an interesting ailment because even to the present
day with all of our modern technology, if you sever a spinal cord, for
example, you may have some measure of healing. It remains a traumatic
and lifelong injury that is beyond our ability to wire back together
this complex human body. This is a case of extraordinary
difficulty it would be in our present day. He's paralyzed. Now why he's paralyzed, I don't
know if he actually broke his spinal cord, could be for a lot
of reasons, but this idea of paralysis, neurological disorders,
profoundly difficult and complex. This is the kind of case that
is before the Lord Jesus Christ. However, this seems to have no
effect on these men. They just say, we need to find
him. And we read in verse 20 that they believe that he can
heal without exception. They had faith in the Lord Jesus
Christ. And so, when he saw their faith,
he said to him, man, your sins are forgiven you. You could only imagine if you
went to your doctor. Now, your doctor doesn't have this authority,
but you could only imagine if you went to your doctor because you
were sick with some sort of ailment and he came and gave you the
imaging and he told you that you had some serious disease. And you were waiting to hear
what he said next, and he said, your sins are forgiven you. You
might wonder, what are you doing? And there's a sense of that tension
here in the text. Why is this healer saying these
things? And immediately there's another
problem in the text, in verse 21, from another angle, there's
another group saying, why is he saying this thing? Again,
the friends bring a paralytic, Jesus heals us, forgives his
sins, and those watching, looking to examine his ministry, everybody
is receiving something not expected. What's forgiveness? Have you ever been forgiven?
Do you know how much you need forgiveness? Have you ever been
wronged by somebody? Have you ever asked for forgiveness?
The power of this declaration is staggering. It gets to the
heart of what is wrong with the human condition and what separates
man from man and man from God. This little phrase is the most
important phrase Jesus could have ever uttered over this man.
This is so much bigger than his paralysis, this is so much bigger
than any other problem that you or I could ever have in this
world. Sin is that which offends God, which drove Adam and Eve
out of the Garden of Eden, and the cherubim had the flaming
sword to guard the way of the Tree of Life. And every consequent
sadness, and brokenness, and war, and every tear that you've
ever shed, and every sickness you've ever felt is because of
this thing that lies at the heart of the need for forgiveness,
which is called sin. And we've committed these sins against
God and against other people. And it offends God. It's the
reason for our breach of fellowship with Him. It's why rebels are
estranged from God. And it's why when the Lord Jesus
Christ looked at His broken, shattered body, He could see
far beyond what we see are the effects of sin. And He could
see right to the depths of His heart. And He gave and offered
and proclaimed over him the thing that would give everlasting life. Communion with God. Peace of
conscience. The hope of glory. The final
resurrection. The healing of the body and the
soul in ways beyond our ability and capacity to feel and understand
or even think. He was giving Him His very best.
The very reason He came to die on the cross. Everything that
He came to do encapsulated in one small sentence. Man, your
sins are forgiven you. The intensity of the declaration. There's no conditions here. It's just the prerogative and
glory and power of Jesus Christ to wash it all away, to take
everything away, to bring the account to zero. When He saw their faith, man,
your sins are forgiven you. Here's the one mediator between
God and man, the man Christ Jesus, but who is also the God-man. If you keep reading, the scribes
understood this. The scribes and Pharisees began to reason,
saying. And we need to get the whole context. This reasoning,
if you look at verse 22, was in their hearts. The moment we'll
see that Jesus perceived their thoughts. The reasoning that
we're reading about is the grumbling and complaining that exists in
the human heart, often aimed at the Lord Jesus Christ and
questioning of his personal work and his glory. This is the reasoning
of unbelief. This is when, I might be preaching
this sermon, some of you here would say, listen, I don't know
why Jesus said that your sins are forgiven, and I don't believe
he healed anybody. I don't believe this. It's exactly
what was happening when they heard those words. They said,
this can't be happening. It's not right. He doesn't have
the authority. He can't do it. He's speaking
blasphemy. That's a charge that was worthy
of death in Israel. Who can forgive sins but God
alone? They are saying, you are a mere man without the authority
to make the declaration that you have just made. We know the
Bible. It's the Lord who forgives iniquity
and transgression and sin. That's what He said to Moses
when Moses returned from Mount Sinai. This is what David confessed
in Psalm 32, and this is what David confessed in Psalm 51 and
Psalm 130. This is what Isaiah said in Isaiah
43, that God alone forgives sins. That the one who's been sinned
against, He alone has the capacity to erase the debt, to cancel
the bad account. So what are you doing? As a matter
of fact, They know their Old Testament, and they're fairly
good theologians up to this point. Jesus, however, knew the Old Testament better
than they did. You go back to chapter 2, and Jesus was found after Joseph
and Mary had left Jerusalem for the Passover. It was found after
three days, verse 46, that they found Him in the temple sitting
in the midst of the teachers, both listening to them and asking
them questions. All who heard Him were astonished at His understanding
and answers. So when they saw Him, they were
amazed. And His mother said to Him, Son, why have You done this?
Look, Your Father and I have sought You anxiously. And He
said to them, Why did you seek Me? Did you not know that I must
be about My Father's business? He knows the Word already at
12, better than the scribes and Pharisees. It's hidden in His
heart. He's the author of it, but as
a man, He was the student of it. Filled with the Spirit, He
understood it. He was able to proclaim it. This
is why He could say in the synagogue in Capernaum, the Spirit of the
Lord is upon Me because He has anointed Me to preach the Gospel
to the poor. He knew that He was the Spirit-filled,
Prophet of Prophets, Teacher of Teachers, Preacher of Preachers.
He was speaking with authority. And He knew everything the scribes
and Pharisees knew but better. So what does that mean? I am God Almighty. Man, your
sins are forgiven you. He knew that they were there
watching. He knew what they knew. He said, without equivocation,
I am God Almighty. I have the power to forgive sins.
Why are you reasoning within your hearts Jesus knew who He
was? And here, if you're hearing the
narrative of the life and ministry and power of Jesus Christ, you
are hearing what we call His messianic consciousness, His
understanding of Himself, His unapologetic declaration of His
own glory and saving power. He's not ashamed. He knows who
He is. He believed Himself to be God.
There were no other options. Jesus answers the question also,
what is God like? What is He like? You remember
that He was the one who just withdrew into the wilderness
and prayed. Communion with His Father. He now steps again into
His public ministry, faced by the crowds who He already knows
want to kill Him for His ministry message. He knows He's going
to the cross. His mission. I would have you know the glory
of my Father with whom I just communed. I would have you know
that God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son.
I would have you know that I have come to seek and save that which
is lost. I would have you know that I
am the one with the power and authority to forgive sins. And
I am proclaiming this glory. And so when you come, or come
with your friends in prayer, bringing your deepest needs.
And sometimes when you pray, you know how we pray, we pray
so half-heartedly or confusedly, we don't even know what to ask.
The Bible tells us this, that sometimes we don't know what
to ask. They're asking for healing. Jesus, in generous love and mercy,
gives them salvation. Your sons are forgiving you. There's no, can't you see I'm
busy? Calvin says, this is how we receive
salvation by faith. He goes on to say, and the parents,
there's an application for you as you pray for your children.
I think it's profound. Calvin would say that from this, men
derive advantage even from the faith of others. The faith of
Abraham had advantage to his posterity when he embraced the
free covenant offered to himself and his seed. We must hold a
similar belief with regard to all believers that by their faith
the grace of God is extended. especially to their children
and their children's children, even before they are born. Calvin's
saying something powerful here about believing God and His promises
for salvation and life. He's saying something powerful
to you about the attitude of your heart toward God. When you
ask for mercy in faith, Jesus says, your sins are forgiven. He responds to your deepest need
first. The second thing is here, He's omniscient. He sees and
knows everything. He reads the minds of the scribes. It says
very carefully here that He perceived their thoughts in verse 22. We've
jumped ahead in a sense in the narrative. In verse 21, if you
were there, nothing was happening. As a matter of fact, go back
another verse. You've just heard, man, your
sins are forgiven you. He's still paralyzed. You don't
know, except by the narrator, that these people are thinking
anything. You have no idea what's in their mind, because I don't
know what's in your mind, and you don't know fully what's in
my mind right now. But Jesus knows everything. They were thinking over things,
and He interjects. Why are you reasoning in your
hearts? He knows what's inside them.
He knows everything about them. He's God and He's God alone.
If you go back later on in the Gospel of Luke, this is actually
something that you'll find repeated in the Gospel of Luke a second
time in Luke chapter 9. Then a dispute rose among them
as to who would be the greatest. Then Jesus, perceiving the thought
of their heart, took a little child and set him by him and
said to them, whoever receives this little child in my name
receives me. Jesus, perceiving the thought
of their heart, if you go another place in the Gospel of John,
John chapter 2, but Jesus did not commit himself to them. Passover
feast he was healing and teaching and he didn't commit himself
to the people of Israel at this point because he knew all men
and had no need that anyone should testify of man for he knew what
was in man. Jesus doesn't need to be taught
anything about you. Sometimes, children, you think you might
be able to hide from your parents. You can actually hide from your parents.
If you're a teenager, you can do it even better because you
can drive places and do things and erase your browser on your
phone and do a million things that you can hide. Children,
you remember that little catechism question, does God know all things?
Nothing can be hid from God. Nothing. When I go to this text, I always
ask this question, and it's good to ask it again and again. What
are you thinking right now? What are you thinking about?
What are you reasoning in your hearts? The question of our Savior. Nothing hidden. Ecclesiastes
12. God will bring every work into
judgment. The secret works, the public works. Everything. There's this insanity in the
human condition that we could hide from God. It's like Adam
and Eve trying to go into the trees of the garden in the cool
of the day when the Lord is looking. There's not a way to do this.
As a matter of fact, the books of heaven, when they're open,
Every word, Psalm 139, every word that you spoke before it
was on your tongue, God already knew. He knows the deepest thoughts
and dreams that you have. He knows what you think about.
He knows your mental space and how you use it, what it's divided
up for. He knows every last thing about you. He has this indescribable
power. It's comfort to the believer.
In 1 Samuel 1 and verse 13, you remember Hannah was praying,
and Eli thought she was what? Drunk. Why? Because her lips
moved, but she wasn't saying anything. And then what did she
say? I was praying. How about this? Abraham's servant,
looking for a wife for Isaac. He's telling the story of what
happened, He says that he was praying in his heart. I want
you to understand something about the nature of communion with
God, and what this little phrase says about the nature of how
we relate to God. That there's something within
you, immaterial and spiritual, the inner life of your heart
and soul, which God sees and knows, and mysteriously, you
can think thoughts that God knows. You can offer prayers that only
He knows, and He will hear them. And this has always been the
expectation of the believing people of God, that there's this
beauty and glory of this communion, that even a paralyzed man, if
he was mute, he could offer to Jesus Christ prayers from his
heart, that there's something about the nature of how we are
to relate to God which is contained in the reality of Jesus knowing
our hearts and being able to reach within where no one
else can see. You can do this in prayer. This
is also why preaching has a dialogue effect. Have you ever been under
preaching? I can remember, matter of fact, just a few weeks ago,
Michael Morales was preaching the Tuesday night session at the
Greenville Seminary Conference, and there was a moment in that sermon
where that preaching came with such glory and power, particularly
to my heart. I was talking with a friend I
met afterwards, and for a moment I was undone, and I thought that
God was speaking directly to me. Because He speaks to us by His
Word which cuts to our hearts. The spiritual aspect of human
existence exists for communion with God. Here, Jesus is revealing
it as an act of rebellion which also warns us. But here His power
is shown. Third thing about Jesus. We keep
reading in the text. Why are you reasoning in your
hearts? He knows they're challenging. You know what's interesting?
He also knows, you'll say to His disciples, He knows already here at the
beginning, as we read in John chapter 2, what's in the heart
of man. He knows that this question,
right here, will nail Him to the cross. He knows that this bitter, deep-seated,
rebellious inner life Unmortified will lead him to the cross. It
will one day, out of the abundance of the heart, the mouth will
speak, and then plans are made, and then the cross. He knows
this. And so he challenges the thinking.
Why are you reasoning in your hearts? He does so in a way that
sets up a public showdown. You can only imagine how surprised
you would be if there was a man who could tell you what you were
thinking. But then he challenged that thinking publicly. You think
I blaspheme. Okay, let's make a challenge.
What's easier to say? Your sins are forgiven. You arise, take
up, and walk. And I think, and I've said this before in this
text, this is the nature of the showdown. It is easy to talk. Sins are forgiven. He's still
there. I understand, Jesus is saying,
that what you're saying is that I haven't done anything, that
there is no power, that I'm a blasphemer, that I'm an imposter. You don't
believe. In your hearts is the bitter
root of unbelief. I know. But what if I were to say, rise,
take up your bed and walk? And then He says this little
phrase. And you need to understand that in the next words, perhaps
the greatest glory and power beyond our natural human expectations,
something Jesus says about who He is. If you're going to say,
what is the new revelation in this passage? He says this phrase,
but that you may know that the Son of Man has power on earth
to forgive sins. And here immediately in a moment,
He is saying, I am the one who Daniel prophesied. When He was
watching in the night visions, and behold, one like the Son
of Man, coming with the clouds of heaven, He came to the Ancient
of Days, they brought Him near before Him. To Him was given
dominion and glory and a kingdom that all peoples and nations
and languages should serve Him. His dominion is an everlasting
dominion which shall not pass away, His kingdom the one which
shall not be destroyed." Jesus doesn't just answer. He says,
Son of Man, your sins are forgiven you. And I can say this because
I am the Messiah who will receive dominion over all the earth from
the ancient of days. My Father, with whom I have just
been praying, whose glory I am revealing, whose mission I am
undertaking, that you may know that I am the Son of Man and
that I possess this power. Watch me. Watch me. He said to the man who was paralyzed,
I say to you, arise, take up your bed, and go to your house. No healing? What? No forgiveness,
no power. That's what would happen, right?
Nothing happens? It's over. There's a lot of people
like Benny Hinn and thousands of others in our day who promise
all kinds of power. You take them down. I don't know
if I've said this before in preaching, but it comes to mind now. You
take them down to the local rehab hospital and take an 18-year-old
boy who broke his neck on a motorcycle. And they will run for the dark
like cockroaches. Because there's no power. None. It's a charade. If they had power,
they could empty every hospital in America. It's nothing. It's the kind of
challenge here. You're in the rehab hospital.
He can't walk. He can't move. He's unable. He had to be carried here by
four friends. There's no one in the world, not even today,
the best neurosurgeon that can roll back the damage of the curse
here. But I say to you, arise, take up your bed, and go to your
house." And immediately he arose up before them and took what
he had been lying on and departed to his own house. And listen,
glorifying God, he's singing. I wonder what he was singing.
Maybe he was singing from Isaiah 35. We just read a moment ago.
I'm on that highway of holiness that leads to glory. I have just
experienced that the lame will walk and leap for joy at the
salvation of the Lord when He restores Israel by the Messiah. That's what happened. Power. The tenderness of the Lord Jesus
Christ in communion with His Father as the Son of Man and
the God-Man foreshadowed at a temporal heating. healing and declaring
to all those who hurt and are sad and weep tears and have sin
in their hearts that there's a Savior who's Christ the Lord.
And that when you come to him by faith and look to him for
salvation, in a word, he will give you everything he came to
do by the forgiveness of sins, sealed for us with this miracle. So believe Him. When you believe
Him and believe in Him, this is what He does. Free. I look around and some of you
are profoundly sad in life because of the brokenness of this world
and the weight of the curse. And perhaps that is the reason
why we sometimes run to God when we should be running for the
more fundamental reason, which is our sins. But notice the tenderness
of Jesus. He says, I'll take you because
you believe in my power to save. You look to him and say, Lord
Jesus, you're the son of man. You're the God man. You're the
Messiah redeemer, the only mediator between God, man, the man, Christ
Jesus, Lord, I come to you with all of my problems, including
my sins, and I ask you for help and mercy. And he will say, Your
sins are forgiven you. You do it every day. That's why
we ask for forgiveness every day. We're doing the same thing.
That's how you look to Jesus, the author and finisher of your
faith. You never forget this. You live out of your union with
Him. Central to the Gospel narratives is this idea of, Lord, I believe. And you receive Christ in that
same simple way, by faith. You also declare by this that
there's no one like Him. By believing, you're saying the
opposite of what the scribes say. Who can forgive sins but
God alone? He's a blasphemer. You're saying, no, He's not a
blasphemer. He's the Lord. And that's what you tell other
people about Jesus. He is the stone of stumbling,
the rock of offense. You young people, there's a bunch
of you graduating, you're seniors, you're going off into college,
the world's going to tell you, it's okay if you believe in Jesus
to some degree or in some way. I understand that. That's your
truth. This is my truth. It's not what the scriptures
say. The scriptures say that there is no one like him. That he's God and man. That he
has a ministry of unbounded power. And that he can reconcile you
to a holy God through the forgiveness of sins by the blood of his cross.
And there's no other name under heaven given among men whereby
men must be saved. It's an exclusive gospel. There's no one else, so bow and
worship. This is the battleground. It's
really, if you push away everything that's happening in our culture
right now, but all the moral declension and war, the heart of this battleground
is the question, is Jesus Christ king, yes or no? Is he the son
of God? Is he risen? Is he the Lord of
glory? Is he coming again to judge the
heavens and the earth? Is he the God man? That's the great
offensive question of the age. The text says He is. Finally, He knew His mission.
I said earlier He went to the cross for this. All of this cost
Him His blood, forsakenness, death, to take two things on
Himself. As John said, Behold the Lamb
of God who takes away the sins of the world. And then He bore
our griefs and carried our sorrows. all of the curse in its bitter
sadness, all of the guilt in its infinite weight, He carries
to the cross for you and for me. So that when He's done, we
have His righteousness, we have His forgiveness, and we have
the promise of a new heavens and a new earth in which righteousness
dwells and all sicknesses will be healed. Every tear you've
ever shed, He will wipe them all away. Everything. All. In one person. Jesus Christ. Let us pray. Our God, we thank
You again for this renewed view of Your glory shining in the
face of Your Son. We confess Him to be the Son
of Man. The eternal Son of God. The Word who became flesh. The
forgiver of sins. the minister of mercy, the God
of power. Lord, we confess Him to be unique
and distinct in the complexity of His person as the God-man,
glorious in His mission, powerful in His salvation, unparalleled
in His ability to know even who we are and what we need right
now. Lord, full of tenderness and
mercy, proclaiming and exercising a ministry of the gospel of good
news for sinners flowing from His communion with you, the Father,
echoing into life and light for those who put their trust in
Him. We pray for any who have not here this morning that they
would do so now, and receive the forgiveness of sins and the
promise of all tears washed away. And Lord, we thank you that we
gather here as your people, and that what you do for us is to
feed us again on the bread of life, the Lord Jesus Christ,
in whose name we pray, amen. The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ,
the love of God the Father, and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit
be with you all, amen.
The Gospel of Luke: The Primary Place of Forgiveness
Series Luke
| Sermon ID | 422241246141860 |
| Duration | 41:58 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday - AM |
| Bible Text | Luke 5:16-26 |
| Language | English |
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