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ACTS: The Early Church Initiative - Volatility and Nobility

7/14/2019

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Last we left Paul, he was sharing the Gospel of Jesus in the city of Philippi. A time in his mission work that is filled with amazing stories:
 
About a woman named Lydia who heard that there was more to life than some riches and expensive clothing – that Jesus died to clothe her in the divine riches of eternal righteousness.
About a young slave girl who was also possessed by a demon. Paul met her, and by Jesus’ power that spirit was driven away from her giving her FREEDOM from evil itself.  
About a jailer who lived his life in fear at the hands of the Roman government. After hearing Paul sing hymns when he was in prison and not escaping when an earthquake freed him, the jailer asked about the reason for his confidence – and heard about how Jesus gives FREEDOM from fear, because he conquers everything: sin, guilt, and even death.  
 
Today we’re going onto the next part of the missionary journey. Surely, there are more amazing stories in store, right?
 
Before we begin, let’s pray: O Lord, strengthen us by the truth, your Word is truth. Open our eyes to see what you want us to see, our ears to hear what you want us to hear and our hearts to believe what you would have us believe. Amen.
 
I. The Volatility of Thessalonica
 
Acts 17 describes where Paul journeys next: When Paul and his companions had passed through Amphipolis and Apollonia, they came to Thessalonica, where there was a Jewish synagogue. (17:1)
 
If you look on a map, Philippi was in the middle of Macedonia about 30 miles from the coast. Paul left and headed about 30 miles to Amphipolis which was along the coast. From there, he went another 30-some miles to Apollonia along the coast. Finally, he gets to Thessalonica, another leading city of the ancient world.
 
Paul went into the synagogue, and on three Sabbath days he reasoned with them from the Scriptures, explaining and proving that the Messiah had to suffer and rise from the dead. “This Jesus I am proclaiming to you is the Messiah,” he said. (17:2-3)
 
A few notes:
 
The Synagogue was the worship center for the local Jews. Since Paul was a Jew, it was a logical place to start because he would immediately have a connection with them: “You’re from the North Side of Jerusalem? So is my aunt. They’ve got good Matzah balls there. What are your thoughts on the Jerusalem Mudcats upcoming baseball season?”
 
Once making a connection, he reasoned from the Scriptures. The Old Testament (the same one that we have today) had already been collected and was read every Sabbath in worship. These people knew about God. They knew about the Messiah. They knew about the prophecies of the Messiah in the Old Testament.
 
That’s where Paul started. He used the Scriptures to explain and prove that the Messiah had to suffer and rise from the dead.
 
Maybe he read from Psalm 22, a Scripture written around a thousand years before Jesus: 
 
My God, my God, why have you forsaken me? (v.1) A message attributed to the Messiah and quoted verbatim by Jesus on the cross.
I am a worm and not a man, scorned by everyone, despised by the people. (v.6) Jesus was despised. That’s why they put him on the cross.
All who see me mock me… “He trusts in the Lord,” they say, “let the Lord rescue him” (v.7-8) Which is exactly what the people said to Jesus as he hung on the cross.
I am poured out like water. (v.14) Which is what happened to Jesus after they plunged a spear into his side.
My tongue sticks to the roof of my mouth. (v.15) Jesus gets thirsty and receives a drink of vinegar wine soaked into a dirty old sponge.
They pierce my hands and my feet. (v.16) Which is what happens in a crucifixion with nails and what happened to Jesus.
 
And then Isaiah 53, about 600 years before Jesus:
We considered (the Messiah) punished by God, stricken by him, and afflicted. (v.3)
But he was pierced for our transgressions…Again, Jesus was crucified.
He was crushed for our iniquities… In his crucifixion, Jesus died as his lungs were crushed.
The punishment that brought us peace was on him. (v.4) And crucifixion was the capital punishment of the Roman empire.
He was cut off from the land of the living. (v.8) That meant the Messiah would die. Jesus died.
But after he has suffered, he will see the light of life. (v.11) That meant the Messiah would rise. Jesus rose.
 
And that’s not the only one. Look at Psalm 16:
You will not let your faithful one see decay. Faithful Jesus didn’t see decay. Three days later, his body’s blood was pumping again!
You make known to me the path of life. For Jesus, his path went out a stone sized, grave door.  
 
After three weeks of Paul’s teaching, some Jews believed.  
So did some Greeks. 
Some… were jealous. (v.5)
 
Who does this guy think he is? Telling us what the Scriptures say. I’ve been studying it my whole life!
And we’re supposed to follow this Jesus? Some carpenter? Nah-uh. I look more religious than him before I’ve had my morning coffee.
And don’t tell me I’m a sinner.
Don’t tell me that I need a Savior.
I am my own savior.
I’m good enough.  
 
So, here’s what they did:
 
They rounded up some bad characters from the marketplace: Hooligans, a few gang members, a couple of drunks from the bar, some guys who like to fight.
They formed a mob. “Be sure to scream and shout obscenities as we march through the city. There’s no better way to prove morality than obscenities!”
They started a riot in the city. Breaking flowerpots, knocking down lamp posts, setting a few bushes on fire.
They rushed to Jason’s house (a new convert and friend of the missionaries) in search of Paul and Silas to bring them out to the crowd. But when they did not find them, they dragged Jason and some other believers before the city officials, shouting: “These men who have caused trouble all over the world have now come here, and Jason has welcomed them into his house. They are all defying Caesar’s decrees, saying that there is another king, one called Jesus.” (v.5-7)
 
In short, the city was thrown into turmoil. (v.8)
 
Hmm…
Not exactly the incredible reaction of Philippi.
Why the volatile reaction?
 
(1) God’s Holy Word + Unholy Hearts = a Volatile Reaction
 
Chemicals mixed with other chemicals cause some interesting reactions.
There’s the classic science fair volcano mixture of baking soda and vinegar – it leads to a bubbling eruption.
Hydrogen peroxide and potassium iodide produce this brightly colored toothpaste big enough for an elephant.
Place some gummy bear into a tube of potassium chlorate and suddenly the gummy bears will be dancing at a late-night disco club.
 
Here’s the truth:
When God’s holy Word mixes with unholy human hearts, there is a volatile reaction.
 
Think about it.
Sin is opposed to good.
God is good.
Therefore, sin is opposed to God.
 
And…
Sin comes from sinful heart.
Sin is still opposed to God.
Therefore, sinful hearts are opposed to God.
 
And quite frankly…
God is opposed to sin.
 
That’s what happened in Thessalonica. God’s holy Word connected with their hearts and there was a volatile reaction.
 
Now you might be thinking:
Good thing I don’t have an unholy heart.
My heart…is pure?
 
But…
Has it ever happened like this:
 
You’re sitting down for your morning coffee.
You open your phone.
You’re doing some quiet reading in the morning. 
 
Then…
Something convicts your heart.
A Bible reading.
A social media post.
An email from Pastor…
 
And…?
Explosion.
 
Don’t tell me that I’m sinning sexually. That’s my business.
Stop showing me my greediness. You don’t know what you’re talking about.
Don’t tell me to forgive. You don’t know what I’m going through.
Stop calling out my unbelief. I’ll believe what I want to believe, when I want to believe it.
 
When God’s Holy Word mixes with unholy human hearts, there is a volatile reaction.
And if there’s a volatile reaction in your heart…
Then, there’s unholiness there, too.
 
(2) A Volatile Reaction does not Invalidate God’s Word
 
Even though the Thessalonians formed a mob and rioted, it didn’t invalidate God’s Word.
They were still sinners.
They still needed a Savior.
Jesus still was that Savior.
 
He still lived.
He still died.
He still rose triumphantly.
 
No amount of “raising a stink” can invalidate the truth of God!
 
I remember my wife once told me that I had a stain on my shirt. Because it was an expensive shirt that I liked a lot, I got upset. I told her. “No, it isn’t. It’s just fine.”
She said, “Umm…no there’s a stain.”
 
I said, “The shirts ok. I can wear it.”
She said, “No, there’s a stain.
 
I said, “Just leave me alone.”
She said, “I can do that. But the stain will still be there.”
 
If no amount of my complaining and volatility invalidates the truth of a common ketchup stain, then, no amount of our complaining and volatility invalidates the truth of God’s Word.
 
(3) A Volatile Reaction Cannot Stop God’s Word
 
When the mob made their way to ransack the place where Paul and Silas were staying, they weren’t there. Maybe they were out at the grocery store to pick up a few onions for soup that night.
 
But this was no coincidence:
God was keeping his Word safe.
 
When Paul and Silas do leave, God’s Word doesn’t. Jason and the other new believers remain and keep sharing the message of God’s Word:
God’s Word can’t be stopped.
 
Here’s the truth:
You can whine and complain all you want, but you won’t be able to stop God’s Word.
Because the Gospel comes from God.
People can’t stop God.  
Because…it’s God!
 
In fact, your volatile reaction?
The only thing that is does stop?
Your salvation.
 
II. The Nobility of Berea
 
The volatility didn’t stop the Gospel. That night, the believers sent Paul and Silas away to Berea. On arriving there, they went to the Jewish synagogue. (v.10) They weren’t downtrodden. They didn’t quit. They didn’t give up. They brought the Gospel to the next town and did the exact same thing.
 
And there’s still a reaction. Only this time, the reaction is a bit different: Now the Berean Jews were of more noble character than those in Thessalonica, for they received the message with great eagerness and examined the Scriptures every day to see if what Paul said was true. (v.11)
 
Paul’s sermons must have affected them similarly. (They were sinners too.)
 
Only instead of rioting, they began reading.
Instead of forming a mob, they formed a nice collection of highlights in their Scriptures.
Instead of ransacking the host’s home, they ransacked the collection of scrolls.
 
The Messiah was supposed to suffer? I don’t know about that. That seems wrong, yet…That’s what God’s Word says.
The Messiah would be rejected? How could people do that? I don’t know if that’s true, yet…That’s what God’s Word says.
The Messiah would rise from the dead? That’s impossible. It can’t happen, yet…That’s what God’s Word says…
 
It must be true.
 
Here’s a key truth:
Careful Examination of God’s Word Confirms Its Truth.
 
Because God’s Word comes from God.
God is truth.
His Word is truth.  
 
The truth is that the Messiah would suffer; Jesus did.
The truth is that the Messiah would die; Jesus did.
The truth is that the Messiah would rise; Jesus did – eyewitnesses confirm it!
 
The truth is that the Messiah would take away our sins; Jesus did.
The truth is that the Messiah would remove our guilt; Jesus did.
The truth is that the Messiah would defeat death; Jesus did.
 
The truth is that the “whoever believes in Jesus will not perish but have eternal life…”
The truth is that the if you believe, you will have eternal life.  
 
When you think about it, there there’s just as much a volatile reaction in Berea as there was in Thessalonica.
Just…different.
 
Because as they study God’s Word…
Doubt goes up in smoke.
Fear is exploding into thin air.
The power of the devil is destroyed.
Grief evaporates.
 
This is the power of Jesus.
This is the power of his Word.  
 
III. What Now?
 
(1) Don’t Assume that You are Right-Side up
 
Toy Story 4 just came out about two weeks ago; I think it’s ok to give a spoiler…for Toy Story 1. It’s about a space toy named Buzz Lightyear who thinks he’s a real spaceman. Even though the other toys tell him: “The blinking light isn’t a laser. You aren’t in contact with the intergalactic space fore. You can’t fly.” Buzz doesn’t believe.
 
Until about halfway through the movie, when a younger sister gets ahold of him, dresses him up in dolly clothes and refers to him as “Mrs. Nesbitt”. Then, his world is turned upside down. Even though he’s been wrong the whole time. He is a toy and that’s the truth.
 
When the Thessalonians were in the middle of their uproar, they said about Paul, “He’s turning the world upside down.” That’s interesting language. Because they were right in assuming that their world was being flipped.
 
Only…
It wasn’t being flipped upside down.
But…right-side up.
 
Don’t be a Thessalonian.
Don’t be Buzz Lightyear.
Don’t assume that you’ve got your life perfectly together so that when God’s Word tells you differently, you assume that it’s being ridiculous.
 
Your heart is sinful; not God’s.
 
He’s right side up.
Because he’s right.  
Always.
 
(2) Ignore the Gut Reaction
 
Sometimes you might do something based on a gut reaction:
 
I got a feeling about this guy, so I’ll say yes to a date.
My gut is telling me to go ahead and say yes to that job.
My gut is telling me that…I probably shouldn’t eat a 13th hot dog.
 
In some instances, it’s fine.
But when it comes to God’s Word.
And it tells you to do something you don’t like.
 
Don’t trust your gut.
Your gut is part of sinful you.
Trust his Word.
 
Be nice to my enemy? My gut is telling me not to. But God’s Word says YES. I’ll do it.
Say that racist thing? My gut is telling me it’ll be funny. But God’s Word says DON’T so. I’ll forget it.
Sex with that person I’m not married to! My gut…my whole body is telling me yes, but God’s Word says WAIT. I’ll wait till marriage.
 
Ignore the gut reaction and follow God’s Word.
Because God’s Word comes from God.
And God – is holy.
 
(3) Be a Berean
 
Did you know the Bereans are the only group of people during the missionaries’ journeys that the Holy Spirit guides Luke to say about them: “NOBLE?” It’s a compliment, one directed at them because when they heard Paul speak and were unsure about his message, they didn’t trust their GUT.
 
They trusted God’s Word.
 
They didn’t trust a scientist.
They didn’t trust a friend.
They didn’t trust an article on Facebook.
They didn’t trust a tweet.
They didn’t trust a blogpost.
They didn’t trust what society says is acceptable.
 
They trusted God’s Word.
 
So, they examined it. The implication?
It was more than just a 10-second read.
It was more than just “Alexa, tell me if this is a good thing or a bad thing?”
It was more than just a 30-second perusal of #IsThisSinASinOrNot?
 
They examined God’s Word.
They poured over it.
They spent about as much time trying to decide if Jesus is Messiah or not as you might spend trying to decide if the critics really liked the ending to Game or Thrones or not.
 
They spent time examining God’s Word…
And it was worth it.
 
I met someone recently. He asked if we could meet because one of our church members had directed him to talk with me. We met up for coffee and he explained that he had been an atheist for most of his life. Then, some things happened that made him question whether he was on the right path. He examined various teachings:
 
Buddhist.
Hindu.
Judaism.
Islam.
 
But when he got to the Bible.
When he began reading God’s Word.
When he started reading the Gospel,
 
He believed.
 
As he was talking to me, he was talking to me as a believer – I didn’t do anything. He simply “examined the Scriptures” and…
An amazing reaction.
 
Doubt destroyed.
Faith created.
Salvation was his.
 
God’s Word is powerful. Trust Jesus.
There’s nothing more noble. Amen.  

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Prophecies of Isaiah: Good News

12/17/2017

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Today is the Kids’ Christmas program which is the one time a year that the kids get to do the main part of the worship service. They’ll be in charge of teaching the message – granted, it’s the same message that I’d teach – only a lot cuter. (Maybe it’s the beard).

To be fair: It will be cute.
The girls will be wearing cute little dresses.
The boys will be wearing cute little sweaters.
The singing will be cute – cuter if it’s offkey.
And it’ll be cute when that one kid shouts the entire program.
 
It will certainly be a cute program.
But you need to approach this as more than cute.

Isaiah 61 says this, “The Spirit of the Sovereign LORD is one me, because the LORD has anointed me!” Focus in on that word “Anointed.” Back in the day Israelites would anoint people with oil in order to identify them being appointed to a special position. They’d pour oil on the head of the future king. Oil on the head of the general. Oil on the head of prophets.  

Here someone is anointed. But not with oil.
Here someone is anointed, but not by another human.
Someone is anointed with the Holy Spirit by God Himself.

What kind of a job do you have when you are anointed – not with oil – but with the Holy Spirit himself?

The LORD anointed me…To preach good news. (v.1)

Hmmm…
Does this not seem a bit strange?

Because I would think that if God had a message for me it’d probably be less pleasant:
I saw what you did earlier.
I saw that fight with your wife.
I heard that foul language.
I know what you did last Christmas.
I know all of you filthy, guilty, no good, very bad sins that you have done.
And when people do wrong – I do much worse than coal in a stocking.

 
No. Not good. At all.
 
Did you know this isn’t the only time this passage is in the Bible?
In fact, 700 some years after this passage was prophesied…Jesus preached a sermon on this very passage.

It wasn’t very long.
One sentence only.  
He said this, “The LORD has anointed me to preach good news. Today this Scripture is fulfilled in your hearing.”  

In other words:
I am the anointed.
I’m the One on whom God poured His Holy Spirit.
I’ve got the good news.

 
I will perfectly when you can’t.
I will die innocently in your place.
I will rise triumphantly for the forgiveness of all your sins.

This is good news.
Good news from God.
Good news from God to you.
Good news Jesus taught his disciples.
Good news that his disciples wrote down.
And years later, 2017 even, here we are looking at it – God reveals it to us.
It’s like unwrapping a gift all over again.
 
Good news.

What is that good news?
A half-off sale at Macy’s?

No. Much deeper than that.
Take a look at how Isaiah says it next:
 
God has anointed me…
…To preach good news to the poor, To bind up the brokenhearted, To proclaim freedom for the captives, to release the prisoners, To comfort all who mourn. (61:1-2)

And you might be looking at that and thinking:
 
I’m feeling pretty poor. It is Christmas season. Hopefully by the end of this service my bank account will grow a couple hundred.
And I’m feeling broken hearted – I’ve been dealing with this divorce for a while now. It’d be nice to be reunited with my loved ones.
And I’ve got a cousin in prison. He’s been there long enough. Can you release him please?
And this will be my first Christmas without Grandma. Can you bring her back?
 
If you think that’s what Jesus is talking about, that’s too physical. Too earthly. Jesus came to deal with the spiritual. He speaks about the heavenly.

Which is WAY better.

To the poor – Jesus says, “Here is priceless treasure that money cannot buy: a luxurious penthouse in heaven and the golden jewelry of forgiveness to adorn your neck.”
To the brokenhearted – God says, “I’m sorry they left. But I won’t.  I will always love you. And I will always be faithful to you. And I will never leave you.”
To the captives – God says, “That addiction will not overpower you! It does not own you. I own you!”
To the prisoners – God says, “You are free. Don’t let that guilt imprison you anymore! You are free because you are forgiven.”
To the believers who mourns – God says, “I know what it’s like to spend Christmas apart from a loved one. My Son actually…and He. But 3 days later…he came back to life. And because he lives, your loved one will live; and you will live too.”
 
Good news, right?
Really good news.
 
And I love the last way Isaiah describes it in verse 2 “To proclaim the year of the LORD’s favor,” and this is not just talking about Christmas Day. No. The day the Lord brings us home with Him. The day of His grace. This is more than, “Hey, it’s Christmas Day, you can open up the presents underneath the tree.” No. Under the tree you find God’s grace. Under the tree you find His forgiveness. Under the tree you find your Lord’s love for you.
 
Isaiah in this passage loves describing how wonderful this good news is. And now he gets into three word pictures.

In verse 3, “to bestow on them a crown of beauty instead of ashes, the oil of gladness instead of mourning, and a garment of praise instead of a spirit of despair.”

Look at the first one, “A crown of beauty.” Have you ever worn a crown before? Like an actual crown? To wear an actual weighted crown with gold and jewels, that would be impressive.

Have you worn ashes before? Sweat and grime, not very pretty.

What’s the point?

As humans, we know what it’s like to sit around in ashes – in our sin, in our yuck, in the wrong we’ve done, and in our guilt. And Christmas comes as a reminder of it.
 
But the good news of Jesus…God comes around and places a golden crown of righteousness on your head. He removes all of the dust, all of the dirt, all of the ashes, cleans you up, and there you are – royalty. You’re a part of God’s kingdom now.
 
The oil of gladness instead of the oil of mourning. Oil was used back then a way of appearing better than you were. We cover ourselves with sadness (oil of mourning) as we’re sinful, but Jesus covers us with the oil of joy (gladness). Words of forgiven. Words of love. Words of in my kingdom.
 
And “a garment of praise instead of a spirit of despair.” Spiritually speaking, our clothes have holes in them. Not holy, but full of holes. Spiritually speaking, we’ve got sin after sin after sin! And here God comes along and He covers us with His garment of praise. He covers you and me and all the sins and all the stains and no one can see them. Before God’s eyes they are nonexistent.
 
A garment of praise! That changes our lives, right? That’s why we’re singing “Joy to the World” at Christmas instead of “Gloom to the World.” “Joy to the World” because of what Jesus has done.
 
And here’s the result “They will be called oaks of righteousness, a planting of the LORD for the display of His splendor.” (vs. 3)
 
Oaks are strong. Oaks are large. Oaks grow nice and tall. Oaks are sturdy. Raleigh is the “City of Oak Trees.”
Do you ever feel like an oak of righteousness, spiritually speaking? Do you ever feel like that, “Man, I am strong! Nothing can sway me at all! My faith is great!”
 
I don’t. I feel more like Charlie Brown’s Christmas tree. Not very strong.
 
But Jesus says, “I will make you oaks of righteousness.” God says this; this message will build you up. If you go a little farther in Isaiah, verse 11, it says, “For as the soil makes the sprout come up and a garden causes seeds to grow, so the Sovereign Lord will make righteousness and praise spring up before all nations.” Part of the way He does that is by turning you into an oak of righteousness. He fills us with forgiveness, His gospel, again and again and again. He grows our faith and continues to grow our faith.
If you’re feeling like you aren’t an oak of righteousness, then you need to get into His Word, and He will continue to grow your faith. He says, “That’s how I view you already, allow me to make that faith vibrant in your life.” So, suddenly like an oak tree you stand tall and you stand firm, no matter what happens.
And then – His praise will spring before all nations!

How do oaks spring up everywhere? Well they plant their little acorns and more oaks spring up!

And leads us to our final big truth today. Here’s what God tells us this Christmas:

As an oak of righteousness, you’ve got Good News. We’ve got Great News to share.

Share that Good News!

Share that Good News with anyone who doesn’t know it – family member, friend, Starbucks Barista – anyone! God will make it grow; that’s not up to us. Plant that acorn as an oak tree of righteousness.

That’s who you are and that’s what you do! Share it!
This is the message of Jesus.
This is the message of Christmas.
It’s more than cute.
It’s life-changing.
It’s amazing.
 
May God implore than on our hearts this Christmas and always.

Amen. 
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Prophecies of Isaiah: The Reign of Light

12/10/2017

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Today we are continuing our sermon series on Isaiah’s Christmas prophecies. Last week we learned how the virgin birth makes the Messiah unmistakable. Jesus is THE Messiah, THE Anointed One. THE Savior.

And maybe you took that truth home and thought, “Cool! What does that do for me? My bank account is still low. My job still stinks. My family life is NOT awesome. And to be honest – some pretty awful stuff happened to me this week.”

Today we are taking a look at a prophecy that talks less about who the Messiah is, but what the Messiah has to offer. Before we do that, join me in prayer: O Lord, strengthen us by the truth; your Word is the truth. Open our eyes to see what you want us to see; open our ears to hear what you want us to hear; open our hearts to believe what you would have us believe. Amen.
 
I. The Darkness that Was

The lesson for this morning is from Isaiah 9. A bit of context:  The year is 733 B.C. and after years of warnings, years of rebukes, and years of trying to call the people of Israel back to faith…God has just brought judgment.

Armies have overtaken Israel.
War has overrun the land.
Most cities have been destroyed.

People are dead.  
Houses are burned.
Families have been broken apart.
 
In short, things weren’t very merry and bright. 

But now that destruction has come, Isaiah doesn’t respond with “I told you so.” Not at all. Chapter 9 is not about gloom. Look at what Isaiah prophesies: “There will be no more gloom for those who were in distress. In the past he humbled the land of Zebulun and the land of Naphtali, but in the future he will honor Galilee of the nations.” (9:1)

Take a look at Zebulon and Naphtali on an Old Testament map. They are on the north east side of Israel. They have the wonderful blessing of being located right next to the Sea of Galilee, being located right near some great fishing and having some very fertile farm land. But they also had the less the wonderful blessing of being the very first bit of land that invading countries from the East would attack.

And attack they did. This land was known for being the sight of some gruesome battles and some terrible Israelite losses. Hence: “In the past God humbled the land of Zebulon and Naphtali.”
 
 But in the future. “In the future he will honor Galilee of the nations.”
 
Fast forward 770 years. Same area of Galilee, only there isn’t war going on anymore. It’s the Pax Romana – the peace of Rome. There aren’t any battles. There aren’t any sword fights. There isn’t any bloodshed.

But to one man – there’s still war.

Meet John the Baptist.
He’s a soldier, but not the traditional kind.
Instead of armor, he wears camel skin.
Instead of MREs, he eats bugs.
Instead of a sword, he wields the law of God.

Because he’s not battling the Assyrians.
He’s battling sin.
 
John looks around at the crowds. Sin is everywhere.

Sin is what is ruining that family’s relationships. She yells at him; he yells at her and the kids yell at each other because they can’t deal with the anger.
Sin is what ruined that booze smelling guy in the corner – he did a horrible sin and he can’t deal with it; so, he drinks and drinks and piles up more sins and more sadness.
Sin is what ruined that lady’s life. The one by herself. She cheated on her husband. She cheated with her best friends’ husband. Now? She’s been ostracized.
Sin is even what ruined those nice, churchy looking guys – Their failures and their inadequacies are too much for them to admit; so they wear fancy robes and drip oil into their beards  – just so their outward appearance can distract them from the inward awful.
 
Sin is the real reason for darkness.
So, John fights.

Repent!
Repent every last one of you.
Repent of sin.
Repent of trespassing.
Repent of vileness.
Repent of harassing.

Repent of hatred.
Repent of lust.
Repent of gossip.
Repent of sloth.

Repent of addiction.
Repent of pride.
Repent of racism.
Repent of lies.
 
Repent of sin.
Put up a fight.
Come out of the darkness.
Come into the light.
 
And people listen. They repent.
But…

“Now what? We can stop doing the sin…maybe… but our guilt is still there. There is no way to get rid of it. There’s no way to make up for it. I can quit doing the sin, but the guilt of what I’ve done. That’ll stay with me. It’ll overpower me. It’ll overcome me. Like a cloud of gloom, it will consume me.”

And John can’t help. At least not personally. Because you see when John looks at sinners, he also sees himself.
No good.
Sinner.
Unable to help.
 
But then…
One day…

As he stands on the banks of the Jordan River, in the land of Galilee, in the very spot that Isaiah prophesied about, at the very spot where John had seen sinner after sinner after sinner, John sees someone else.
John sees someone different.
John sees the Light.

“Look! The Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world.” (John 1:29)
 
And:

The people walking in darkness have seen a great light.
On those living in the land of deep darkness a light has dawned. (Isaiah 9:3)


Galilee is where Jesus began his preaching ministry. It’s where he did all sorts of miracles. It’s where he battled the darkness of sin with the precious words of the light.

And that’s good news.
 
II. The End of Darkness

Have you ever been to a harvest party? I’m not just talking about the modern, city slicker equivalent where we drink pumpkin spiced lattes and wear flannel – but a real harvest party! Where after weeks of tilling, planting, irrigating, weeding, hoping for rain during drought and praying for a break during flood season, harvest comes, and you celebrate! You eat some corn dipped in butter. You drink some wine. You play toss the hay bale because there’s nothing to worry about anymore!
 
Awesome.
 
Or have you ever been to a plunder party? After years of fighting, years of sweating, years of sleeping in the dirt and cuddling in the mud, finally you conquer the city! Then, the spoils – the gold, the silver, the comfy chair, the fancy robes, the giant legs of ham and bags of delicious Doritos that were theirs are now yours!

Awesome.

Or have you ever been to a “I’m-not-wearing-a-yoke-and-puling-a-heavy-cart-anymore” party? Because a yoke is that big old wooden thing that they put on oxen so that they can’t go anywhere without pulling the giant load behind them. It’s tiring. It’s annoying. It’s awful. But when that is released, and you are finally free!

Awesome.

But none of that compares to what Jesus did for us.

After years of toiling in sin and guilt and shame, Jesus provides a harvest of righteousness.
After years of fighting and losing to temptation, Jesus provides the plunder of eternal life us.
After years of being burdened by guilt and shame and impossible demands of God’s law, Jesus removes that yoke. And sets us free.

Awesome.

6 For to us a child is born. (of a virgin – we’ve identified him) It’s Jesus.
To us a son is given. As in a gift. As in he came for us! As in his life is for us. As in his death is for us.
And the government will be on his shoulders. He’ll be in control after he comes.

Not sin.
Not evil.
Not temptation.
Not death.
Not whatever awful thing it is that scares you.

The One who is control is the One who loves you.
The One in control is the One who died for you.
The One in control is the One who conquered sin and death for you.

Darkness is not in control.
The One who conquered the darkness is in control.
 
III. The Reign of Light
And what’s the kingdom like under his control?  What’s it like to live under the king of Light?  Isaiah gives the answer in verse 6-7 by giving this king some Divine Titles. Let’s examine each:

(1) Wonderful Counselor
 
When you hear the word counselor, there’s really two definitions that you might think of. (1)  The Counselor who sits in a chair and strokes his beard and says, “That’s interesting.”  (2) an advisor in the king’s court who tells the king when to attack, when to defend, and when to hold a fancy party. This is the definition that we’re dealing with.

Which is very interesting. Because Jesus has already been identified as king and now he’s been identified as counselor too.  He’s being identified as his own right-hand man.


Humans would do well to take note. Because we tend to think of ourselves as God’s right-hand men and women. As if we’re Jesus’ own spiritual advisors:

Jesus, I know you have everything under control, but you should probably give me a bigger Christmas bonus then everything will be fine.
Jesus, if you really knew what was best, you’d heal Aunt Clara in time for the holidays.
Jesus, if you really wanted to make a righteous judgment, you’d give that guy a lump of coal.


Listen.
You don’t give counsel to the Wonderful Counselor.
You take counsel.
 
Because no one knows better than the one who knew enough to Creator this incredible world.
No one knows better than the one who knew exactly what it took to save it.
No one knows better than to guide your life than the one who knows where it will end up.
                   
(2) Mighty God
 
I was at my gym the other day for a competition. There was a section of the competition (in which I didn’t compete at all) where people did powerlifts. Where they lifted barbells loaded with weight over their heads.

And when I got there, there was a barbell that had three 45-pound plates on each side of the bar. 90, 180, 270 plus the 45-pound bar = 305 pounds. And I thought – that’s a bit too much. Who’s going to lift that? Who’s going to be able to power clean that? Is this a mistake?

Nope. Some guys walks over, takes a breath and throws it into the air!
Easy.

Jesus is MIGHTY GOD. That means he’s a lot like a powerlifter. In fact, he’s THE Powerlifter.
No matter how big your sin is.
No matter how big your sin was.
No matter how much it has weighed you down.
No matter how much it is weighing you down.
Jesus can lift it. And he did. In fact, he lifted it up and dragged it through the streets of Jerusalem and carried it to the cross.

And if you think your problems are too heavy for him to deal with?
Think again. He’s MIGHTY GOD!

Trust him.
 
(3) Everlasting Father
 
A couple of weeks ago I noticed that the batteries in this microphone were getting a bit old. But when I went to the closet to check for batteries we didn’t have any. So, we bought some new ones and switched brands. Good idea. The last brand that we had would last for about one Sunday of preaching – or 2 services. The new set? It’s still going strong.

Jesus is like that. He’s still going strong. He keeps going and going and going and going…and always will go.

And remember he’ll be going for you! Because look at the second part. The word Father does not point to a Trinitarian, theological controversy, but to the reality that believers are God’s children.

Always.

And he’s not a Father that runs off.
He isn’t tainted by sin.
He doesn’t get drunk.
He doesn’t slap mom around.
He doesn’t hurt or harm you in any way.

He loves you.
He cares for you.
He disciplines you – sure – but He does so with your eternal interests in mind – aka—that one day you’ll come home.

(4) Prince of Peace
Because unlike how a lot of royalty are portrayed in current shows like REIGN and GAME OF THRONES, Jesus isn’t about violence. He isn’t about blood, violence, political gain and power – not even dragons rampaging the village.

Jesus is different. He doesn’t break peace to bring war.
He brought war to bring peace.
He fought sin. Beat sin. Violently beat it on the cross. And rose triumphantly in order to bring you peace with God.
You don’t have to worry that your God is going to enact divine judgment on you.
Not when you believe in Him as your Savior.
Because then you have peace.  
 
WHAT NOW?

“Repent!”
That’s John the Baptist’s cry. That’s the cry of Scripture. That’s what God, our King is imploring you.

Don’t just hear it today. Take a moment. Meditate. Turn from sin!
 
Because what we tend to do is choose a sin that we don’t struggle with and repent: “I repent of getting together with a group of teenagers to gossip!” That’s not repentance.

Look at your life. What do you struggle with? Where do you lose the battle? Where have you given up fighting? Where is there darkness?

Repent.
Cry out to God for help.
And trust Him.

Because REPENT is a 180. It’s not a 90 degree turn from sin to another sin. But from sin to trust in your Savior. Trust in the Messiah. Trust in the Wonderful Counselor, the Mighty God, the Everlasting Father, the Prince of Peace.

And when you trust, well:

You walking in darkness have seen a great light.
On you living in the land of deep darkness a light has dawned.

 
Amen.
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Prophecies of Isaiah: The Virgin Birth

12/3/2017

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Picture
Today we are beginning a 3-part sermon series on Isaiah’s Christmas prophecies. The goal is to take a break from the gift wrapping, the shopping, the wreath making, the tree decorating, cookie baking, cookie eating, and Netflix Christmas Special watching…to meditate on the peace-giving truth that God’s original Christmas gift for us – Jesus – was a gift he had planned for centuries before it ever happened.
 
Before we dig in with our first prophecy, join me in prayer: O Lord, strengthen us by the truth; your Word is the truth. Open our eyes to see what you want us to see; open our ears to hear what you want us to hear; open our hearts to believe what you would have us believe. Amen.

I. The Reason for Messiah ​

All of these prophecies that we will looking at are a special breed of prophecy. Something called Messianic Prophecies. That means that these prophecies aren’t prophecies about what you’ll get for Christmas, who the Bowl Selection committee will put in which bowl game, or how Stranger Things will end, but they are prophecies about who the Messiah will be. 

Which leads to the question: Who or what is the Messiah? And why do I care?

In the very first book of the Bible, the origins of the universe are explained by God’s himself. In it, a wonderful earth is described.
 
An earth without pain, an earth without sadness, an earth without hangnails, car exhaust or holes in the Ozone layer.
An earth without broken toys the day after you give kids gifts at Christmas, Starbucks cards that run a zero balance.
An earth without spoiled eggnog in the back of the fridge.
An earth without cancer, racism or mass shootings at a Jason Aldean concert.

An earth without error.
An earth without sin.
An earth of perfection.

And part of that perfection involves two human beings – Adam and Eve.
And part of that perfection involves granting these human beings the ability to show love to their Creator by not eating from the tree in the middle of the garden.

And Adam and Eve listen…
They have fun peeling and eating bananas.
They enjoy seeing how can get to the end of a carrot first. 
They play the game where they toss soybeans into each other’s mouths.

Until one day.
A talking snake come by.

And he says, Did God really say you can’t eat from the tree? He’s lying. You won’t die. You’ll just become like him. He’s just jealous of you. Trust me. The fruit will be good.
 
And Eve looks at the snake.
And Eve looks at Adam.
And Adam says:
 
I don’t know Eve. On the one hand, we could listen to God, the one who created us and gave us this wonderful, painless, sinless, deathless world to exist in.
On the other hand…it’s a talking snake.


And they make their choice.
And it isn’t God.  
And in making that choice, everything God warned them about happens.
The world changes from a place without…to a place with.


A place with pain.
A place with sadness.
A place with sin and discord and racism and terrorism and evil and death.

But when God goes to find Adam and Eve – he doesn’t yell at them. He doesn’t punish them. Not at first.
First, he offers words of hope: Devil, I will put enmity between you and the woman; between your offspring and hers. One of them, will cross your head and you will strike his heel.

This is the Messiah.
This is the Anointed One.
This is the one who will beat Satan. In fact, that’s our definition of Messiah. Write it down: Messiah is one who would crush Satan’s head and his evil work.

The Messiah is the Savior.

II. The Importance of Getting It Right

Therefore, the Messiah is really, really important. It would be a shame to identify him incorrectly.

I come from a family of four kids and we were blessed to have a good number of presents under the tree. But sometimes – be it because it’s easier or be it because it’s cute – each one of the kids would have a gift that was exactly the same size. In other words, my mom got the kids each a very similar present.

Unfortunately, because my mom had to wrap so many gifts she didn’t always identify them correctly.

For instance: One year my younger sister opened her “set of four” present to reveal a Lion from the Wizard of Oz ornament. I immediately got pretty excited. The Lion was her favorite character and mine was the Scarecrow. I loved him a lot. We watched a lot of Wizard of Oz and I had learned all of his movements during the “If I only had a brain” song. Hopefully that wasn’t because we had a lot in common.

So, I was expecting the Scarecrow. Only to get to my same shaped box, rip the wrappings to shreds to reveal: Glinda the Good Witch? Wrong present.


That’s why mom immediately began using differently wrapping paper for different kids with name tags written in bold ink on them. Never again would a present get a mistaken identity.  

God thought similarly. With much grander and more eternal consequences.
Because if anyone gets the Messiah wrong…
If they put their trust in someone who doesn’t have the ability to crush Satan, sin and death…
If we get got the Messiah wrong, then there is no salvation.
There is only a yielding to evil and death…The Bible calls that hell.
 
Because the stakes were so eternally high God provided us with something called the Messianic Prophecy. A prophecy is a word from God about the future. Messianic prophecy is the word from God about the future messiah.   There are no shortage of these prophecies. Scholars agree that there are over 300 prophecies in the Old Testament.
Since we are preparing for Christmas, let’s look at a few that deal specifically with his birth.

(1) Prophecy of Lineage

The first prophecy was spoken by God to a guy named King David around 1000 B.C. God said this to David “I will raise up your offspring to succeed you, one of your own sons…and I will establish his throne forever.” (1 Chr. 17:11-12) Granted. David had a son named Solomon. Solomon became king. But Solomon did not reign…forever. That’s a reign tenure that’s reserved only from the Messiah.

And Solomon died, so it wasn’t him.

This teaches our first important truth about the Messiah. He would be a descendant of David. Somewhere on David’s family tree…somewhere below him…eventually the Messiah would come.

Which is helpful, because it means that if someone claims to be the Messiah but isn’t of David’s bloodline, he isn’t the Messiah.
This effectively rules me out.
Actually, anyone not Jewish.

(2) Prophecy of Birthplace

But it’s only so helpful. Because David had 19 sons. Meaning there were 19 possible routes for the Messiah to come from in just that one generation. Fast forward three generations and it would have quadrupled! A couple hundred years and the possibilities of hundreds of thousands!

So…another prophecy to help trim it down. But you Bethlehem…though you are small among the clans of Judah, out of you will come for me one who will be ruler over Israel whose origins are from of old from ancient times. (Micah 5:2)
Again – ruler of Israel “origins of old from ancient times…” This is talking about the Messiah.

Micah is a prophet a decent amount of time after David. So, his new prophecy tells us – it isn’t anyone who lived before Micah. In addition, it trims it down even farther for us. The Messiah will not only be of David’s line, but he will live in Bethlehem. If a person is of David, but moved far away from Bethlehem – maybe a summer abroad in Ancient Rome, it won’t be him. Or if a woman moved away to college: “Israel State in Jerusalem,” got married and had a child there, her son would NOT be the Messiah.

Again, this is helpful. Bethlehem isn’t a huge town.
But still, over the generations, there’s thousands of options.

(3) Prophecy of the Virgin Birth

Enter the prophet Isaiah. God uses him to reveal a prophecy that really narrows down our search for the Messiah: “The virgin will be with child and give birth to a Son.” (Isaiah 7:14)

Nowadays science is pretty amazing. If a family is unable to have a child, there are some science ways to make it happen. They just take the two parts that are necessary, combine them in a test tube and…a baby! It’s not fool proof, but it works. Ethics aside – the reality is that a baby can happen for a single mom from using a donor in this way.

But that technology wasn’t around at the time of Isaiah.
It wasn’t around until the last 50 years.
And even so - you still need the two parts – the word virgin implies only egg.
Nothing else.

This means three very important things about Isaiah’s prophecies:   
  1. He’s predicting the impossible! For this to happen an absolute miracle has to take place. Unlike the David’s Line prophecy – not miraculous – and Born in Bethlehem prophecy – not miraculous – this one takes a legitimate miracle to happen. It takes God’s divine power to intercede.
  2. The impossible is planned! Because it wasn’t going to be random. It wasn’t as if God was going to watch some boy’s life and see how he always says his “please” and “thank yous,” holds doors for women and won the local Bethlehem spelling Bee and says, “This one looks good enough. I’ll choose him as Messiah.” No. God was going to directly intervene to start the life of the Messiah! He would know who he was the WHOLE TIME.
  3. The impossible is unmistakable! Because no one has ever had their life start like this. With the exception of Adam and Eve who are NOT the Messiah and are in fact part of the reason we NEED a Messiah – no one has ever been born of a virgin. We’ve all got moms and dads. Some know both of them well. Some are estranged. Some we don’t even call mom or dad anymore – but we all have biological moms and dads.

    In fact, everyone in human history has had a mom and dad. Even the “Special” ones:

Every king of Israel had a mom and dad. 
Every President had a biological mom and dad. 
Every Olympian has had a biological mom and dad. 
Even Coach K has a biological mom and dad. 
Everyone in human history has a biological mom and dad. 
Everyone. 
Well. 

Except…

​III. The Unmistakable Fulfillment

About 600 years after the prophet Isaiah makes his prophecy, there is this one girl. She’s from the line of David. She’s about 16-17 years old. She’s engaged to be married.
And she can’t wait for the wedding. She’s been planning with her mom and dad to make sure there are the right kind of flowers, to make sure they order the right kind of wine, to make sure that they have the chicken cordon bleu or roast duck option. She’s excited to be a princess. She’s excited to start a family.
As she’s hanging her father’s laundry out to dry, she grabs one of his white sheets and spins.
She twirls.
She places it behind her head and imagines her train as she walks in to her wedding day.
She imagines her wedding night as she walks in to her husband’s room to be intimate with for the very first time.
And she’s imagining.
And twirling.
And suddenly…a voice.
Mary!
She’s startled. Did someone see her dancing?

It repeats: Mary!
And as it repeats, a light starts to grow before her eyes. It’s not the sun – the sun doesn’t do that – not so quickly. She falls to the grounds and recognizes the figure of a man within the light. She had heard about these – messengers of God.
An angel.

She falls to the grounds.
He speaks:
Do not be afraid, Mary; you have found favor with God. You will conceive and give birth to a son, and you are to call him Jesus. He will be great and will be called the Son of the Most High. The Lord God will give him the throne of his father David, and he will reign over Jacob’s descendants forever.  (Luke 1:30-33)
And Mary is humbled.
And Mary is amazed.
And Mary is…confused.

How will this be? I am a virgin. I…haven’t done what’s necessary to have a baby.

The Holy Spirit will come on you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you. So the holy one to be born will be called the Son of God. (v. 35)
Aka. It will be a miracle.

Then, the angel leaves.
Mary is a bit nervous.
For a while, she wonders if it’s a dream. She hopes it’s a dream – she doesn’t want to lose Joseph and she doesn’t want the shame that her family will give her.
But then, she’s putting on weight.
And she’s buying bigger clothes.
And soon its unmistakable.

She is the virgin mother of the Messiah.  

IV. For Real?

Now, maybe you are a skeptic. Maybe you think that’s impossible.
Maybe you think that Mary just made it all up because she didn’t want to be embarrassed as the woman pregnant out of wedlock.
You know – because crazy woman who said that God put the baby there – is better.

But keep in mind three important things that help to prove the reality of the virgin birth:

1. What Joseph goes through.

I say Joseph as opposed to Mary because Mary doesn’t have a choice in the matter.
But when Joseph finds out about what happened, he takes a moment.
He goes home. He actually makes a plan to break off the engagement, because he can’t deal with an unfaithful spouse. But he wants to do so quietly because he still loves Mary.

But then he doesn’t.
He doesn’t because an angel told him not to divorce Mary.

Think about that – he could have left her! He could have had the whole of his village on his side: “That no good Mary.” He could have been the one in the ‘break up’ that everyone sided with and surely another woman would be his soon.

Instead, he chooses to stay engaged and be ridiculed right along with her.

Why?  

Because he believed what the angel told him.
This child was the Messiah.

2. The other prophecies.

Because remember – This isn’t the only prophecy that is fulfilled in Mary’s boy.
Mary is also of the line of David.
But they aren’t from Bethlehem! They live in Nazareth.
True.
Except. About a month before Mary gives birth, Caesar Augustus, the Roman emperor, issues a decree that he wants to take a Census of the entire Roman world in order to see how many people he is emperor over. In order to take the census, he demands all people under his ruler to return to their place of origin.

So, Joseph and Mary have to leave Nazareth.
They have to go to their place of origin.
And where is their place of origin?

Bethlehem. Just like the prophecy said.

3. Other miracles surrounding Jesus.

Because the virgin birth isn’t the only one.
Angels appeared to Mary and Joseph.
Mary’s cousin, Elizabeth, who was over 80 years old – well beyond childbearing years – became pregnant with John the Baptist.
An angel caused Elizabeth’s husband to be mute for the 9 months of her pregnancy because of his doubts.
There was the star in the sky for the wise men to follow.
The angels that appeared to sing the shepherds glory.

Oh yeah…and when the baby grew up?

He died on the cross. Publicly.
He rose from the dead. Publicly.
These people wrote these miracles down for us.
They also wrote down the virgin birth for us.

If all those other miracles are true, this one is too.

So…

V. What Now?

1. Pay Attention

God went out of his way to get your attention with this prophecy and fulfillment. Because God used an event unlike any event ever in human history.
He didn’t say, “The Messiah will one-day wear flannel.”
Or, “One day the Messiah will be wearing some skinny jeans and have a man bun.”
He said, “The Messiah will be born of a mom…and that’s it.”
 
God used an extraordinary event to point to the Savior so that you didn’t miss it!

It’s like one of those Christmas light villages with the really big pop up Santa, reindeer that flash to the beat of Trans-Siberian orchestra and a mortgage invested in the light display. It’s crazy. It’s awesome. It’s screams: NOTICE ME!

The Virgin Birth is the over the top, exuberant, blinking Christmas light display of Messianic prophecies.
It’s God screaming PAY ATTENTION!

Because Jesus is the Messiah.
He is the only one that can save you from this world of sin and death.
Not yourself.
Not some other god.
Not some other religion.

It’s Jesus alone.
 
2. See God!

Because look what’s in that manger. The prophecy from Isaiah ends like this: “The Virgin will be with child and give birth to a Son and will call him Immanuel.” (Is. 7:14)

Immanuel is a pretty neat name. Scripture tells us that Immanuel is Hebrew for “God with Us.” Although don’t think of it simply as a name with a meaning.  It’s a name that says its meaning.
Ima is the Hebrew word “with.”
Nu is the Hebrew word “us.”
El is the Hebrew word “God.”

In English it’d be like naming your child “GodIsWIthUsLiterallyInTheFleshRightNowInThisChild.” All one word. Besides meaning that the kid will need a very long driver’s license, it also means this child, isn’t just a child.

He’s God himself.

Which means your God is not God who dwells far off!  
He’s not the Force.
He’s not a Big Bang.
He’s not an impersonal, divine wrathful king.

He saw the pain that was in this world.
He saw the sin.
He saw the death.

And He didn’t run from it.
He ran to it.

He came to earth and experienced the pain, the suffering, the sadness, even death itself --- on a most painful instrument of death!
In order to fulfill prophecy.
In order to fulfill purpose.
In order to save you.


3. Stop Looking Elsewhere for Your Messiah

Because maybe you are nervous this Christmas.
Maybe you are nervous Christmas won’t be that great.
Maybe you are looking for something to give you a bit more confidence…
A bigger paycheck.
A positive health result.
A good visit with family.
If you only have the right toy for your kid…
If you only have the right topper on the tree…
If you only have the right cookies on the table…then!
Christmas will be saved!

And I’ll be saved.
For a moment.
From my painful past.
From my daily struggles.
From this sin filled world.

But what happens when the toy is the wrong toy?
What happens when the cookie is burnt?
What happens when that family gathering is a disaster?
And now…instead of escaping this sin filled world – you just have more awful memories of it!

Stop looking in this world for your Messiah.
Look at something out of this world.
Look at something that has to be from out of this world.

Look at the baby born of the virgin.

He.
Will.
Save.
You.

Amen. 
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Gethsemane Lutheran Church
1100 Newton Rd.
Raleigh, NC 27615
  • About Us
    • Our Vision
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