1995 Issue 8 - Sermon on Luke 4:31-44 - The Authority and Power of the Preaching of Jesus Part 3 - Counsel of Chalcedon

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  • 8/12/2019 1995 Issue 8 - Sermon on Luke 4:31-44 - The Authority and Power of the Preaching of Jesus Part 3 - Counsel of C

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    '([ r ; u t I r a r i ~ cnro

    J:rtfuer

    af tIre

    J:na:cfrhtg

    of 3}el iUl i

    Luke 4:31-44

    (43-44) The Preaching of

    the Kingdom o God by Jesus

    "But He said to them, 'I

    must

    preach the kingdom o

    God to

    the

    other cities alsoJor was sent for

    this purpose.' And He kept

    on

    preaching

    in

    the synagogues ofludea."1

    The Redemptive Work

    o

    Christ Included Preaching

    J $)lS

    Christ

    came to seek

    and

    to save

    those who are

    lost

    by

    ACCOMPllSHlNG

    their eternal

    salvation in His

    own life, death

    and

    resurrection

    and by

    PREACHING

    the gospel of

    the kingdom of

    God to them,

    i.e., that the

    saving power and reign of God is

    operative in Christ among mankind

    because

    of

    His own redemptive

    work Mk. 1:14-39. Mark, as well

    as Luke, brings this out clearly: In

    Mk. I :15 the content of Jesus'

    preaching is comprised of the

    following emphases: "The time is

    fulfilled,

    and the kingdom of God is at

    hand;

    repent and

    believe the

    gospel.

    In Mk. 1:21 Jesus went into the

    synagogue in Capemaum on the

    Sabbath "and began to teach." In Mk.

    1:22 we see that "they were amazed

    at his

    teaching; for he was teaching

    them

    as one

    having

    authOrity, and

    not

    as the stribes." In Mk. 1:27 His

    hearers were amazed at the power

    of

    His spoken Word--- What s this? A

    new teaching

    with

    authority He

    commands even the unclean spirits

    and

    they obey him. In Mk. 1:38-39 Jesus

    is specific in defining a part of His

    mission to the world---to preach the

    gospel--- And He

    said to them,

    'Let us

    go somewhere else to the towns nearby,

    in

    order that

    may

    preach

    there

    also;

    for that

    s

    what I came out for.'

    And

    He

    went into their synagogues throughout

    all Galilee,

    preaching

    and casting out

    the demons."

    The point should be obvious:

    Jesus Christ came to earth to serve

    sinners by preaching the gospel of

    the kingdom to them. He was sent

    by God, not only to accomplish the

    gospel, as our

    PRIEST,

    and to

    administer the gospel, as our KING;

    but also to preach the gospel, as our

    PROPHET. Jesus Christ is THE

    Preacher of the gospel

    par

    excellence. n many ways, He is the

    only Preacher

    of

    the gospel, Whose

    preaching is effective in the saving

    of

    sinners, the transforming of lives

    and the reforming of societies.

    Our

    preaching

    is totally

    powerless

    toward those

    ends

    without His

    preaching.

    He

    preaches with

    incomparable

    anthority,

    unfathomable wisdom

    inescapable persuasion,

    irresistible pow er

    and

    thorough

    penetration

    ..

    THE COUNSEL of Chalcedon September, 1995

    The resurrected Christ preaches

    to the church and world today by

    two closely related instruments: His

    Word

    and

    His Spirit. Christ

    preached His inerrant, verbal

    revelation to us through His Holy

    Spirit-inspired Apostles, (including

    those with apostolic approval),Jn.

    16:13f; 20:221. His apostles bore

    His imprimatur, being inspiredwith

    His Spirit, and having His promise

    that HE would send them His Spirit

    to teach them, In. 14:26. This is

    why Paul could say that Christ, Who

    revealed the truth to him, Gal. 1:16,

    now speaks through him, Rom.

    10:14,

    having

    "combined

    Spirit-produced

    thoughts with

    Spirit-produced

    words,"'I Cor.

    2: 12f. Christ

    also preaches

    His revealed

    Word into the

    hearts and

    lives of His

    people

    through the

    faithful

    preaching

    of

    His Word by

    ministers of

    the gospel and the faithf)ll witness

    of

    His church,

    Lk.

    10:1-20; I Thess.

    2:13; II Tim. 4:17; I Pet. 4:10f;

    Rom. 10:14; Rom. 15:8-9, 15-16,

    17-19; Rom. 16:25-27; Eph. 2:17.

    The Central Theme o

    Jesus' Preaching is the

    Kingdom o

    God

    For

    an explanation

    of

    the

    kingdom of God, see 4., pg. 4, in

    the introduction of the outline On

    Luke 4:14-30, "The Startling

    Preaching of]esus in Nazareth."

    And remember the following

    emphases in His teaching on the

    Kingdom of God:

    First, the kingdom of God is the

    manifestation of the sovereign rule

    of God in power and grace which

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    established a new order of

    righteousness and blessedness in

    history in and through Jesus Christ

    in fulfillment of God's covenant

    promises, which will progressively

    triumph over all opposi tion in

    history, and which

    will

    be

    consummated at the end of history

    in the second coming of Christ.

    Second, the kingdom of God

    comes in the person and work of

    Jesus Christ.

    Third, the kingdom of God is

    God-centered and God-given. As

    God-centered, it

    is

    basically viewed

    as the r e l ~ t i o n

    of

    the rule of God,

    involving the g10rification of His

    holy name and the performance of

    His righteous will

    on

    the part of

    men; only then can it be a kingdom

    or

    realm in which men participate in

    divine blessings. In congruity with

    its God-centered character, it

    is

    God-given; it depends for its

    realization

    upon

    the sovereign grace

    of

    God.

    If

    God's rule is to be

    established, He must mercifully

    bring it to pass. Because it is a reign

    o

    righteousness

    it

    can never be

    brought about through the initiative

    and as a cooperative action o

    men. - Stonehouse.

    See

    Luke 12:32

    and 22 :29f. So, the Kingdom of

    God

    is

    GOD'S RULE and GOD'S

    GIF T.

    Fourth, the kingdom is a gift of

    the Father

    'S

    good-pleasure, but as it

    comes in the midst of the world, it

    comes as a rule of righteousness,

    demanding absolute righteousness

    ofits subjects, and this includes the

    application, in a thoroughgOing

    fashion, of the principle of

    stewardship in all

    of

    one's social

    relationships. It is necessary to

    stress, however, that this feature is

    somewhat inferential and secondary.

    The primary feature of the gospel,

    without which the other is

    meaningless, concerns the tidings

    of

    the crucified and risen Savior in

    whose name repentance and

    remission of sins were to be

    proclaimed, Lk. 24:46f. The

    realization of the kingdom was

    therefore inconceivable without the

    accomplishment

    of

    the Messiah's

    task, and the fulfillment

    of

    the

    mess

    i

    anic mission gave assurance

    of

    the coming of the kingdom.

    Stonehouse.

    Fifth, the kingdom which Jesus

    preaches and brings near is the

    kingdom which lay in the future in

    the perspective of the Old

    Testament, pointing to the unity and

    continuity of the O.T. and the N.T.

    The Messianic king

    is

    the

    represeniiihve ofJehovah.

    Sixth, the kingdom of God

    is

    not His destiny nor His abstract

    right to rule---His sovereignty---it is

    the actual realization of His sway.

    Vos.

    Seventh, the kingdom of God

    is

    the actual exercise of the divine

    supremacy in the interest of the

    divine glory, Mat. 6:10,33; Mk.

    12;34. --- The thr

    ee

    principal

    spheres in which the divine

    supremacy works toward this end

    are the sphere of power, the sphere

    of

    righteousness and the sphere

    of

    blessedness. - Vos.

    Eighth, the exercise of Divine

    supremacy in the sphere of power is

    prominent in the O.T., and is

    emphatic in Jesus' teaching and

    miracles.

    Ninth, faith in Christ is the

    counterpart of God's kingdom as

    power. First, the miracles are

    beneficent, saving acts, Which have

    the result of making them an

    exhibition

    of

    the divine grace and

    evoking in the recipients the mental

    state of trust. This, however,

    important though it be, should not

    receive the main stress. -- What is

    unique to the miracle is the

    assertion of absolutely divine

    supernatural power. The efficient

    cause of the mi racle is something

    that man can contribute nothing to,

    because it is wholly

    dependent

    on

    the putting forth of the direct

    supernatural energy of God. --- In

    this dependence on the

    omnipotence and grace of God lies

    the

    religiOUS

    rationale

    of

    faith. Faith

    is the practical (not purely

    reasoning) recognition on the part

    of

    a man that the saving work

    of

    the

    kingdom

    is

    exclusively a divine

    work. - Vas.

    Tenth, the exercise

    of

    Divine

    supremacy in the sphere

    of

    righteousness is a concept common

    to hath a .

    Tand

    NT According to

    Scriprure, 'righteousness' is that

    wh

    ich agrees with and pleases God,

    and exists for His sake, and can only

    be adjudicated by Him. He

    is

    first

    of

    all, and above all, the interested

    Person. --- Righteousness is from

    God as its source, it exists for God

    as its end, and it

    is

    subject to God as

    the ultimateJustifier. - Vos.

    Eleventh, inseparably connected

    to Christ's teaching

    on

    the kingdom

    is His teaching

    on

    repentance. Just

    as faith is the counterpart of the

    power-aspect of Christ's kingdom,

    SO repentance is the counterpart of

    the righteousness-aspect. However

    this demand of repentance as

    essential to par.ticipation in the

    kingdom is in no way meritorious.

    The specific nature of biblical

    repentance is the

    COMPREHENSIVENESS OF THE

    TURN AROUND OF MIND AND

    LIFE. It is 'after-sorrow',

    or

    reversal

    o

    consciousness or

    redirection of the life upon an

    opposite goal, with regard to the

    . whole content of the ethico-religious

    life. --- ...the new direction of life

    which the repentance hrings ahout,

    (by God's grace), finds its

    explanation in the absolute and

    September 1995

    TH

    COUNSEL o Chalcedon

    :;

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    exclusive subjection of the whole life

    with all its desires and purposes to

    God."- Vas.

    Twelfth, the exercise of Divine

    supremacy in the sphere of

    blessedness connects God's

    sovereignty and Gcd's blessedness

    eschatologically. "It is inherent

    in

    the eschatological conception

    of

    things that the final, perfect order of

    things shall also be the order of

    things produc tive of the supreme

    state of happiness. --- The

    blessedness conferred

    by

    and

    with

    the kingdo m can be classified under

    the heads of a negative and of a

    positive blessedness. There are

    three principal ideas, that of

    salvation, that of sonship and that of

    life."- Vas.

    Thirteenth, the five chief

    characteristics

    of

    the kingdom

    of

    God are that it is theocratic,

    dynamical (powerful), messianic,

    future, and present.

    Fourteenth,

    the kingdom of God

    has, not

    only

    a temporal-future

    character, it also has a

    universal cosmic character. .. the

    idea of the

    kingdom

    of heaven

    implies the participation of all

    created life in the coming of the

    kingdom, to which especially

    resurrection

    and

    RE-creation also

    belong in the most essential sense of

    the word. --- The whole of the

    revelation of God in the O.T. and in

    Jesus preaching is based on the

    fundamental

    fact of the creation of

    heaven

    and earth by God. The earth

    is

    the

    Lord's. --- This is

    why

    the

    coming

    of the kingdom,

    as

    the

    re-assertion of God's right and glory,

    also consists in the redemption and

    restoration of life, in a material as

    well

    as

    in

    a spiritual sense. Because

    God is God, i.e., the God of the

    revelation, the creator of heaven and

    earth, the Holy One who has

    committed Himself

    to

    Israel in His

    promise

    and covenant, the

    proportions

    of the kingdom are

    universal . So long as the world does

    not

    answer

    its purpose

    and

    is

    subject to death, God's glory will be

    veiled, His name will

    not

    be

    hallowed, and the prayer for the

    coming of the kingdom will not be

    answered." - Ridderbos. See Romans

    S:19f.

    Fifteenth, in Christ the kingdom

    of God has come, Mk. 1:15. "The

    threshold of the great future has

    been reached, that the door has

    been opened, and that the

    prerequisites of the realization of the

    divine work of consummation re

    present; so that now the concluding

    divine drama can start. --- t is clear

    that here, Lk. 4:1S,19, the time of

    the great fulfillment is represented

    as having definitively started."

    Ridderbos

    Sixteenth, the kingdom of God

    advances through history

    triumphantly, gradually,

    progressively, and certainly, until it

    exercises global dominion and fills

    the earth with the glory of the

    knowledge of the Lord,

    with

    all

    opposition to the rule of God put

    down, I Cor. 15:24f; Mat. 13:31-33.

    Seventeenth, the kingdom of

    God will be consummated and come

    in total perfection, bringing with its

    perfection physical resurrection and

    cosmic renovation, I Cor. 15:24f; I

    Pet. 3.

    The Lord

    Jesus hrist

    was

    Sent

    to Earth to

    dvance is

    Kingdom

    Through

    His Preaching

    Throughout

    theWorld

    Luke's emphasiS in this early

    portion of his narrative of the

    Galilean Ministry of Jesus must not

    be missed: The kingdom of God

    comes with all its power,

    righteousness and blessedness into

    human hearts and human societies

    through the Word of Christ and His

    preaching of that Word into the

    hearts and lives of people through

    the witness and preaching of His

    church.

    The

    law and the prophets

    were

    6

    THE COUNSEL of Chalcedon September,

    1995

    until John:

    since that tirne

    (the Good

    News oj)

    the kingdorn ofGod s

    preached,

    Luke 16:16. --- "In other

    words, in the preaching of the

    gospel has been realized that which

    was only an expectation in the law

    and

    the prophets. --- The preaching

    of the gospel is no less a proof than

    the miracles that the kingdom of

    heaven has come." - Ridderbos.

    Jesus' preaching of the gospel is

    charged with omnipotence: It gives

    what t announces. Jesus causes to

    happen

    what

    He preaches.

    In

    His

    Word

    He

    gives the salvation

    He

    defines. t accomplishes all that He

    pleases, Isaiah 55. The word of

    Jesusis at the same time the power

    ofJesus. His proclamation of the

    kingdom on earth and through His

    church

    is the manifestation

    of

    the

    kingdom. The kingdom comes in

    the preaching ofJesus.

    Praise God

    for

    a preached Christ

    and for

    a

    preaching Christ

    'Luke 4:44 has "synagogues of

    JUDEA" and Mark 1 :39

    has

    "synagogues throughout GALILEE.

    Is this a contradiction? No Luke

    is

    not in

    error, nor is

    he

    introducing

    confusion into his narrative, and

    here's why:

    A

    survey

    of

    Lukan

    usage easily demonstrates that the

    designation,

    Judea' signifies 'the

    land of the Jews,' that is Palestine as

    a whole. (Thus Herod is described

    as king ofJudea in 1 :5,

    and

    Galilee

    is specifically included within Judea

    in 23:5; Acts 10:37.) There is, then,

    no contradiction or confusion in

    Luke. But there is the difference

    that

    at this point he does not confine

    the ministry of]esus so strictly as

    Mark to the bounds

    of

    Galilee,

    but

    allows himself, in the midst of his

    narration ofJesus' ministry in

    Galilee, to take note of the broader

    sphe re of His preaching." -

    Stonehouse , THE WITNESS OF

    LUKE

    TO CHRIST, pg. 96.

    (TO BE CONTINUED)