We have a leak on our roof. The rain comes down through a circular vent that was installed through the shingles and OSB without a line of caulk to protect the space surrounding it. My first attempt at fixing it (cover the area with tin foil) only worked until the tin toil blew off the roof. (About 2 days) On my second attempt, I went up to the roof with a caulking gun that I had loaded with roofing tar. I took that tar and did a nice circle around the opening. Case closed. (Julianna, man do you have handy husband.)
But that wasn’t it. It was still leaky. I went back to the roof, but couldn’t find an opening, so I decided to approach it from the other side. I went up into our crawl space attic, maneuvered around the insulation and shined a tiny flashlight up to the hole from the other direction. Sure enough! There were a few tiny little holes that were still allowing water into our place. So, I picked up the caulking gun, pressed it against the holes and… …Nothing. I tried again. …Nothing. I pumped it a solid 7 or 8 times more until… Well… Apparently, I had forgotten to open up the top of the caulking tube. As a result, it busted out the back and all over my hands. That tar was messy. I scrubbed. I used soap. I used a second kind of soap. I used a third kind of soap. It was messy. Today we’re starting our sermon series called MESSY. It’s all about something that’s the spiritual equivalent of tar all over your hands: something called sin. Something that can get all over your life, all over your relationships, and all over your relationship with God. Today we just wanted to identify what sin is and how we deal with it. But before we begin, a prayer: 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. What is Sin? The Scripture that we’re looking at today is from the book of Mark. Mark is a guy who was an eyewitness to Jesus’ life. So, it’s likely that he was there for the event that we’re taking a look at today. Listen to what happens: As Jesus started on his way, a man ran up to him and fell on his knees before him. “Good teacher,” he asked, “What must I do to inherit eternal life?” (Mark 10:17) This story is actually recorded in two other places of Scripture. In Matthew’s version, we learn that he was a young man. (Mt. 19:20) In Luke’s version, we learn that he was a ruler. (Lk. 18:18) In all of the stories, we learn that he was rich. So, here’s what you need to understand… This guy was impressive. He was the kind of guy who worked hard throughout his life. Maybe he was first chair trumpet, captain of the soccer team and the homecoming king all while graduating Cum Laude with three sets of honor cords. The kind of guy that was no stranger to inheritance. His grandpa’s 401k. His dad’s H&R Block business. He was…. The kind of guy with a family boat house on Lake Gaston. The kind of guy who’d gotten on Shark Tank and received a royalty deal from Mr. Wonderful. The kind of guy who’d be an Instagram influencer – literally paid by companies — just to include a shot of himself drinking a Coca-Cola on his next social media post. He was successful. But… He also knew that none of this stuff was eternal life. The assets would eventually run out. The Lexus would stop running. The six pack of abs would eventually fade to fat…then dust. But he had earned everything else in his life. Hence the question: Good teacher, what must I do to inherit eternal life? Jesus responds: Why do you call me good? There is no one good, but God alone. (v.18) Understand what Jesus is saying: God is good. And eternal life is God’s. Then eternal life must be good. And since God is good. And his commands are God’s. Then, his commands are good. And since eternal life is good. And God’s commands are good. To get to eternal life, one simply needs to do the good that your good God commands you to do: Do not murder. Murder bad. It isn’t good. Don’t do it. Do not commit adultery. Unfaithfulness is bad. It isn’t good. Don’t do it. Do not steal. Theft is bad. It isn’t good. Don’t do it. Do not give false testimony. Lying is bad. It isn’t good. Don’t do it. Do not defraud. Gossip is bad. It isn’t good. Don’t do it. Honor your Father and Mother. Disrespect is bad. It isn’t good. Don’t do it. Do the good things. You inherit eternal life. Do the bad things. You won’t. TRUTH: Sin is the MESSINESS of OPPOSING God. It’s like eating healthy. If you’re trying to eat healthy, then food is either good for your body or good for your taste buds. For instance… Carrot mush. Good for your body, not for taste. Deep friend Carrot Cake. Good for taste, not for body. Bran Flakes. Good for body. Frosted Flakes. Good for taste. Kombucha. Good for body. Vanilla Dr. Pepper. Good for taste. Brussel sprouts. Good for body. Doritos. Good for taste. Brussel sprout flavored Doritos? Not good for either. Let’s make sure that it’ll never happen. Sin and God are like that. They are in opposition. What’s good for sin is not good for God. What’s good for God is not good for sin. II. Sin is Messy And one of the reasons that God has assigned the sinful things as sin is because sin causes all kinds of messiness in our lives. Thinks about it: (1) Sin Messes up Relationships Just consider some of the sins that Jesus mentions here. Stealing? It messes up your relationship with the friend you stole 20 bucks from. Gossip? It messes up your relationship with the person who finds out you have been gossiping about them. Adultery? It messes up your relationship with your spouse, with the person you’re commit adultery with, with the spouse of the person you’re committing adultery with, with your parents, with your spouse’s parents, with your parents of the person you’ve committed adultery with, with the parents of the spouse of the persons you’ve committed adultery with, with your siblings, with your siblings in law, with their friends, with your friends, and, God forbid, any children that are in the mix. Now you might say: Only if I get caught! Is that really true? Because even if you don’t get caught stealing, the relationship with your friend is affected because now you have to think of ways to lie to your friend and remember the lies that you said in order not to get caught. And even if you don’t get caught by the person you’re gossiping about, the people you’re gossiping to hear what you’re saying, recognize what you’re doing, and are making mental notes to keep you at a distance. And even if you don’t get caught in adultery, you quickly find yourself nitpicking and complaining about any minor offense from your spouse because you need to soothe your conscience and come up with tangible reasons to tell yourself: “It’s ok what I’m doing.” Sin messes up relationships with others. (2) Sin Messes Up Self Image Because what happens when you sin? You don’t usually feel good about you it. You feel anxious. You feel sad. You feel guilty. And here’s the thing, when people say things like “You’re such a good person.” You nod and accept, but deep down there’s this little voice that says: “If they only knew…” They wouldn’t call me good. They’d call me -- unfaithful. Liar. Addict. Jerkface. Sinner. Which leads to our next issue… (3) Sin Messes Up Your Relationship with God It’s Back to Church Sunday. One thing I’ve been doing this week is reaching out to people who used to worship here but haven’t in a while. Just a simple message telling them that we missed them and would love for them to return. In the process, I invited one friend of mine. And the person responded: “I’ll think about it.” So, I followed up yesterday and asked if they might make it? They said they didn’t have a car. I said, “We could give a ride.” They responded: “I don’t think I can get up that early.” I said: “The last service is at 11 am.” Finally, they said: “Pastor, I can’t come, because life is mess right now. I need to get it together first. I can’t let God see me like this. I’m too guilty.” How sad. Sin drives people apart from God. It causes us to distance ourselves from him. We miss out on knowing we have his protection. We miss out on being uplifted by his love. We miss out on hearing about his incredible plan for us. We just kind of drift…away. But none of this worries our impressive young man. When he hears Jesus’ answer, he’s feeling pretty good. Because Jesus mentioned a bunch of commands, that he hasn’t broken. He hasn’t murdered. He hasn’t committed adultery. He hasn’t lied. He’s done good. He says to Jesus: All these I have kept since I was a boy. (v.20) Jesus looked at him. Jesus loved him. Jesus spoke to his heart: One thing you lack. Go, sell everything you have. Sell your 401k. Sell your internet business. Sell your stock in Disney. Sell your 70” HD TV. Sell your XBOX. Sell your Coach Handbag. Sell your Air Jordans. Sell your season tickets. Sell everything. And give to the poor. To the homeless. To the impoverished. To the elderly man who can’t afford healthcare. To the guy at the I-540 on ramp asking for change. To the immigrant who can’t get a job because of the way he looks. And you will have treasure in heaven. Then, come follow me. (v.21) But the young man didn’t follow Jesus. His face fell. He grew sad. He turned and left. Because you see, Jesus had exposed his sin. Did you catch it? He loved earthly treasure more than heavenly treasure. He loved STUFF more than the CREATOR of stuff. He broke the 1st Commandment: You shall have no other gods. He did bad. He wasn’t good. But more intriguing than the young man’s response, is what Jesus says next. How hard it is for the rich to enter the kingdom of God!... It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for someone who is rich to enter the kingdom of God. (v.23,24) Have you ever seen a camel before? It’s a big old animal. The average camel is 6 feet tall at the shoulder, 7 feet tall at the hump. It weighs about 1500 pounds. The eye of a needle? It’s much tinier. It’s so tiny because it is designed for only a thread to pass through it. I don’t have a camel with me. (The Greensboro Zoo wouldn’t get back to my request to borrow one) But I do have this stuffed camel. And this needle. Note: No matter how hard I smush it. No matter how hard I jam it. No matter how hard I push it. It is impossible for this stuffed camel to go through the eye of this needle. It is impossible for a real camel to go through the eye of a needle. And it is impossible for a rich young man earn his way through the gates of heaven. In fact, it is impossible for anyone to earn their way into the gates of heaven. Because…Sin. (4) Sin Messes Up Our Entrance into Heaven Heaven is a good place. Heaven is a divinely good place. It is a place without any sin. And if you’ve got sin on you… If you’ve got a big sin… If you’ve got a little sin… If you’ve got any sin… Then… …it is impossible for you to earn your way into heaven. III. The Solution Jesus’ disciples are shocked all this. Because this impressive young gentleman, who had earned all varieties of accolades in his lifetime, wasn’t able to earn the accolade of heaven. If he wasn’t getting in, then… What about us? Because he’s got it together, we don’t. He’s impressive; we’re not. He’s got everything going for him; not us. He was the Bill Gates, the Mark Zuckerberg, the Elon Musk. If he wasn’t getting in, then… Who can be saved? (v.26) Listen to Jesus’ response: With humans, this is impossible. But not with God; with God all things are possible. (v.27) Do you get it? Heaven is impossible for any being with sin to earn. But God? He doesn’t have any sin. God? He doesn’t struggle with wrong. God? He isn’t messy…at all. (1) Sin hasn’t MESSED UP God Unlike all of the rest of us, God is sinless. He’s still good. He doesn’t do wrong. He doesn’t have any mess on his eternal being. He remains pure. You won’t catch God in the fellowship area after church gossiping about that one guy. You can’t Google for God’s criminal record because he doesn’t have any. You won’t find photos of God from 2011 on Social Media in which he’s engaged in lewd activity. You won’t find any racists tweets that have been deleted from God’s account. God is incorruptible. God is perfect. God is sinless. Sin hasn’t messed up God. And it never will. Which is big news. HUGE news. Because it means (2) God is the ONE to Clean the Mess Up Think about it: When I had that tar all over my hands, one of the worst things that could have done would be to try and wipe it off by rubbing my dirty hands together. (It’s what I did), but it failed miserably. Messy hands cannot clean up messy hands. Sinful hands cannot clean up sinful hands. But God’s hands aren’t dirty. God’s hands aren’t messy. God’s hands are holy. God’s hands are pure. God’s hands are divine. God is the one to clean the mess up. God is the one to clean YOUR mess up. He is the ONLY one to clean your mess up. He had to act. And he did. Back to the story. Peter is the name of one of Jesus’ disciples and he is having a hard time believing that he can’t earn heaven. So, he says to Jesus this: “WE have left everything to follow you.” (v.28) Remember? That’s what you told the young man to do. That’s what we did. Granted, we didn’t have as much as he did, but we still left it. We are following you. Does that count for something? Look at Jesus’ response: Truly I tell you…no one who has left home for me and the Gospel will fail to receive a hundred times as much in this present age…and in the age to come eternal life. (v.29-30) Isn’t that strange? Jesus just promised Peter eternal life. Why? It wasn’t because Peter could earn it. He couldn’t. It wasn’t because Peter was perfect. He was a sinner. It was because Peter followed Jesus. But why would that work? Because… Jesus is God. (3) The MESSINESS of Sin is Removed by Jesus He is God come into this messy world. He is God dealing with the messiness of humanity. He is God who suffered a messy, bloody death at the hands of humans on the cross. But when he died. He took the messiness of your sins with him. He took the messiness of your guilt to the cross. He through the messiness of your sins into the grave…and the stone door was slammed shut. And there they remained. Jesus and our sins in the grave. One day. Two days. Three days. And… On the third day? Jesus came out alive. But our sins? They stayed there…dead. Understand: Jesus has removed the messiness of your sins. In Jesus you are clean. In Jesus you are messiness-less. In Jesus, you are forgiven. It’s amazing. It’s incredible. You might think - It’s impossible. All the sins I have. All the ways I’ve made a mess of it. All the messiness in my heart. It’s impossible. For humans… But not for God. God specializes in the impossible. Like rising from the dead. He did the visually impossible to prove the invisibly impossible He did the visually impossible: rising from the dead, to prove the invisible impossible: removal of all the messiness of your sins. IV. What Now? Follow Jesus. It’s what the rich young man didn’t do. Follow Jesus. It’s what the poor disciples did do. Follow Jesus. And it’s what God is calling you to do: Follow Jesus. It’s the way out of your sinful mess. Follow Jesus. It’s the way out of your messy guilt. Follow Jesus. It’s the way out of this messy world to place where there’s never any mess… I was once called to a hospital room late at night. The elderly man I went to see was in grave condition. He was hooked up to a breathing machine. He was unable to move. His eyes were red and there were purple splotches creeping up his neck. But when I got there…whatever brightness could come to his eyes, did. Pastor, I’m so glad you’re here. Pastor, I’m not gonna last much longer. Pastor, I’ve been thinking about my life. About how I messed things up with my wife. About how I messed things up with my children. About how I messed…things…up. But…as big of a mess up as I was… I know it’s not too big of a mess for Jesus. Because ain’t nothing too big of a mess for Jesus. He was right. And he is right with Jesus. Follow your Savior friends. He’ll fix your eternal mess and bring you to eternal life. Amen.
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