Archive for August, 2009

Sermon Notes for Jonah Chapter 4

The Mission and Call of God For His People: Jonah Chapter 4

Preached by Pastor Caleb Mayberry @ Harambee Church on August 30th, 2009

 

Intro

Upon finding out that the Ninevites were not going to be judged, we see Jonah’s deep hatred for the Ninevites is revealed when he complains to God.  In the final chapter we will see how Jonah’s and our anger is rooted in pride and self-righteousness and how this blinds us to our own dependency on grace and renders our hearts incapable of compassion.  Moreover we see that character of God is in stark contrast to the anger and pouting of Jonah.  We see that God actually desires grace and mercy over that of judgment and it is from his gracious character that God seeks to teach Jonah about compassion.

 

From the Head…

I want to make three key points from the text in Jonah Chapter 4. First, that man’s hate and anger is rooted in pride and self-righteousness.  Second, that our pride blinds us to our own dependency on grace and renders our hearts incapable of compassion.  And Third, that God’s grace is dispensed liberally to even the ones we hate.

 

1.     Our pride and self-righteousness is revealed in hatred and anger.

Verse 1 states that it displeased Jonah exceedingly, or it also has the idea that what God did was exceedingly evil.  In other words, Jonah felt God did not do the right thing.  Jonah believed in his anger that he was more advanced in his view of righteousness than God.  Is this not pride?  Is Jonah not thinking more highly of himself than he ought?    

 

Questions for reflection: Who are you angry at and why?  Are you better than them?  Are we quicker to anger than God? The Bible says that God is slow to anger and abounding in steadfast love.  How do you measure up?

 

2.     Our pride blinds us to our own dependency on grace and renders our hearts incapable of compassion

Pride, self-righteousness, and anger are a barrier to mission because it goes counter to the gospel.  Jonah has just been blatantly disobedient to a direct command that he heard from God.  Disobedience to God’s word was what got Adam and Eve kicked out of the garden and stained humanity with sin.  And so Jonah is just as guilty as Adam and any other sinner that has come after him.  But instead of Jonah perishing in the belly of the fish and being cast forever away from the presence of God, God graciously hears Jonah’s plea for mercy and gives him another chance.  However Jonah’s heart was still very wicked.  Though he demonstrated some measure of faith in obeying God’s command the second time, his heart was clearly not in alignment with God’s.  Jonah still felt that his people were superior to the Ninevites and that they deserved nothing but judgment.  Because of Jonah’s pride that fueled his hate and anger, he was unable to have compassion because somehow he believed that he deserved God’s grace where the Ninevites did not.  Once we start to pick and choose who deserves or doesn’t deserve God’s grace, then we’ve absolutely misunderstood the gospel, because the good news is that Christ died for the UN-deserving!  God gives grace to the UN-deserving.  This is the definition of grace, unmerited favor.  No one deserves it, yet God in his love generously bestows it.

 

3.     God’s grace is dispensed liberally to even those we hate

We see in this chapter a glimpse into God’s compassionate heart.  God pitied the City of Nineveh.  He called it a great city, for there were many people and many resources, but they were wasting it all in opposition to God.  And so God announced judgment upon them, but he did so in a way that demonstrated that his ultimate purpose was not judgment but of their salvation.  God cared about the Ninevites.  God had been personally working on the Ninevite people to prepare them for this time of salvation.  Even though they were evil.  Even though they were enemies of Israel, God’s chosen people.  Even though years later they would return to their evil ways.  God still loved them and he purposed to choose them at that time for salvation rather than judgment regardless of whether we think God is right in doing so. 

 

…to the Heart

But not only is God gracious to save those we hate, God is also gracious to expose us of our own hate and lack of compassion.  God not only was working on a plan to save 120,000 people from destruction, but he was also, in the mean time, working to reveal the hatred and sin in the heart of Jonah.  Why did God choose Jonah?  Was Jonah the only man that could do the job?  Not at all.  God could have sent anyone down there to call out against the city, but he chose Jonah.  Why?  Because God wanted more of Jonah’s heart.  God knew that Jonah was harboring some serious pride and hate that God wanted to deal with.  Hate and pride are very destructive.  And just as God did not desire the destruction of the Ninevites, he also didn’t want Jonah to be destroyed in his hatred and pride.  So God chose Jonah for the task, at least in part, as an exercise in sanctifying his heart.  God cares not only about obedience, but he cares about the attitude from which we obey.  God loves us enough to put us in situations that test where our hearts are at with God.  He did this with Jonah and he is doing it with us today.  What situations has God put you in to reveal sin in your heart?  Where have you been too quick to judge?  Who do you find difficult to forgive?  How is God showing you his compassion and to whom are you in turn expressing it to?  Our hearts matter to God, so we need to repent of our sinful attitudes and turn to Jesus and acknowledge that we are sinners in desperate need of God’s grace.  I think in our humility God will give us hearts to love even those we hate.

Whole Foods fans decry CEO’s health care views – boycott coming?

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/32471153/ns/us_news-washington_post/

Wow…some folks are considering boycotting Whole Foods because the CEO stated that health care is not an intrinsic right.  Really?  Does that make any sense at all?  Whole Foods is about providing high quality organic and whole foods that benefit the general health and well-being of the community.  The CEO’s views about health care policy do not change the mission of Whole Foods.  Or do people spend their paycheck at Whole Foods to support social policies in addition to expensive food?

Satan’s Secret Weapon: Listening to Sermons

I enjoy listening to sermons.  God-exalting, Jesus-loving, bible-preaching sermons.  And they are great sermons, preached by some of the best handlers of the Word in the West today.  But something came to the surface that I sort of knew all along.  I was seeking to satisfy my desire for entertainment in sermons.  If Satan cannot get us with the usual sex, money, and power, then surely entertainment is one of his weapons of choice.  Why?  Because it’s very stealthy.  It can be cloaked in such an appealing light.  What’s wrong with popping in your favorite action thriller on DVD?  Or what’s wrong with catching up on the latest news?  Or what could be better than listening to a series of great sermons by the likes of John Piper or Tim Keller? 

I love to hear the best communciators, the most fiery preachers,  and the most elogquent orators.  I’ve been amazed by the new knowledge that I’ve learned in the scriptures.   I’ve even often been convicted of sin through the many sermons that I’ve listened to.  And yet, if I’m honest with myself, I’d rather listen to sermons than go knock on the door of my neighbor to get to know him, because it’s much easier.  Listening to sermons takes no effort.  It’s a pleasurable way of passing the time.  It’s like my “Christian” movie of choice.  They’re interesting, funny, emotionally stirring, and yet just like movies, often forgettable, and almost never actionable.   Not that the sermons are bad at all, only my ears and heart are. 

I know there are things that God has gifted me in.  I want to teach, preach, and write more, and for me listening to sermons has been one of the ways in which I’d prefer to seek entertainment rather than exercise the gifts God has given me.  It’s so easy to justify listening to sermons or reading up on Christian topics because we think if we’re doing something related to Christianity, then we must be doing the will of God.  But we must examine our hearts to see if our desire is nothing more than the thirst for entertainment cloaked in acceptable Christian themes.  Does not God judge us according to our deeds?  Or will we receive our heavenly rewards on the basis of how many theologically sound sermons we listened to or watched?  Let us be honest and confess our sins of entertainment-driven procrastination.  Let us grab hold of Jesus’ promise to build his kingdom through his church and boldly assume the role that he’s given us in his body to accomplish the work that he’s prepared before hand for us to do.