[Propertalk] Fwd: Sermon Resources for October 26 - Part 1
Joe Parrish
joeparrish at compuserve.com
Sat Oct 25 08:43:35 EDT 2014
Sermons for Proper 25
Matthew 22:34-46 – “The Two Most Important Questions a Christian Can Answer”
Matthew 22:34-46 – “Last Impressions”
Matthew 22, the sermon title “The Two Most Important Questions a Christian Can Answer”
Isidor Isaac Rabi, a Nobel Prize winner in Physics, and one of the developers of the atomic bomb, was once asked how he became a scientist. Rabi replied that every day after school his mother would talk to him about his school day. She wasn't so much interested in what he had learned that day, but how he conducted himself in his studies. She always inquired, "Did you ask a good question today?"
"Asking good questions," Rabi said, "made me become a scientist."
In order to ask a good question I think you need to have noble motives behind the question. You have to want to know the truth. The Pharisees, by contrast, already had the answers to their questions. They felt they already knew the truth. How many times have we had it in for someone, asking a question designed to trap them? We do it to our loved ones all the time. In a moment like this we are not trying to learn; we are trying to injure.
The Pharisees come to Jesus once again with a question designed to do damage to the reputation of Jesus. And once again Jesus proves he is equal to the task. Teacher, which commandment in the law is the greatest? Now, even though this question was used to test Jesus, it is nonetheless an important question. Perhaps in the life of Israel at that time it was THE most important question. But Jesus had a question of his own. A question, which signified that the times were changing; a new theological season had come. He put this question to the same Pharisees who had tested him: “What do you think of the Messiah. Whose son is he?”
These were the two most important questions of that era and my friends they are the two most important questions of our time. Let us consider…
1. Which Commandment Is the Greatest?
2. What Do You Think of the Messiah?
The rest of this sermon can be obtained by joining Sermons.com athttp://www.sermons.com/signup
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Matthew 22, for the sermon titled Living “Last Impressions”
Last week we spoke of the power of “first impressions.” From a chronological standpoint, Paul’s “First Letter to the Thessalonians” was his first written words that have come down to us. It is the “first impression” of a life of Jesus discipleship written in the New Testament.
In this week’s gospel text from Matthew, we have a kind of closing bracket to that “first impression,” a bookend “final impression,” a last word from Jesus to the various Temple authorities. We have the third and final confrontation with those whom Jesus encountered as soon as he entered Jerusalem for his final visit into the Temple in Jerusalem.
His first encounter was with the Herodians (who were egged on by the Pharisees) when he was grilled about the question of paying taxes to Rome.
His second encounter was with the Sadduccees where his views on resurrection and eternal life were sized up and audited.
Now in this third encounter Jesus is confronted by what appears to be an organized, formal assembly of Pharisees. These were those Jewish authorities who were most devoted to imbedding the force and focus of written Torah law into the fabric of every jot and tittle of everyday life.
The Pharisees had cataloged a list of 613 commandments or laws, which all faithful Jews should follow. But these 613 laws were also divided into those that were “weighty” and those that were “light.” “Thou shalt not commit murder” was one of the “Big Ten.” Written by the hand of God on stone at Sinai, this commandment was definitely weighty. Making a fire on the Sabbath, striking up some firelight, that was definitely “light,” and in an emergency, absolutely expendable. The Pharisees’ question to Jesus was tried to get him to name which of the most “weighty” commandments were the “hefty, hefty, hefty” ones. What commandment was #1, the big boss with the hot sauce.
Jesus’ response was his “final word,” his “last impression” in this series of Temple confrontations…
The rest of this sermon can be obtained by joining Sermons.com athttp://www.sermons.com/signup
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Two Hands
Lewis L. Austin, in This I Believe, wrote: "Our maker gave us two hands. One to hold onto him and one to reach out to his people. If our hands are full of struggling to get possessions, we can't hang onto God or to others very well. If, however, we hold onto God, who gave us our lives, then his love can flow through us and out to our neighbor."
Lewis L. Austin, This I Believe
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Staying in Line
At the entrance to the harbor at the Isle of Man there are two lights. One would think that the two signals would confuse the pilot. But the fact is, he has to keep them in line; as long as he keeps them in line, his ship is safe. It is the same with these commands of Jesus: love of self, the love of God, and love others. When we keep them in line, we remain safe and well in the channel of the Christian life.
Jerry L. Schmalemberger, When Christians Quarrel, CSS Publishing Co., Inc.
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