Posts Tagged 'Calling'

LUKE, PART 3

 

Catching Men

In Dr. Luke’s history of the life of Jesus, he is indefinite as to time. As we look at how He called His disciples, for the second time incidentally, the first incident, the calling of Simon Peter, is unique to Luke; it has no parallel in the other Gospels.

1. Peter, 5:1—11

Gennesaret is another name for the Sea of Galilee. Jesus met His future “rock,” Simon Peter, right where Simon Peter lived and worked, and the first three verses illustrate, among other things, Jesus’ practical wisdom. Here was a very popular rabbi who had great crowds of people following Him, hanging on His every word. These crowds were so large that they were starting to cause Jesus problems. So Jesus did the most practical thing He could do:

He got into one of the boats, the one belonging to Simon, and asked him to put out a little from shore. Then he sat down and taught the people from the boat. (verse 3)

Our Lord ran out of land to stand on, so He grabbed a boat, launched out into the Sea of Galilee a few feet, and preached from the boat. It was a genius idea; He was free from the pressing crowd and the water and surrounding cliffs would act like a natural amphitheater, amplifying His voice so the crowd on the shore could hear Him. But not only that, of the two boats Jesus had to choose from, He chose the one that belonged to the very man He was wanting to become His disciple.

Peter was a professional fisherman, but not all that successful. Apparently he and his helpers had been out all night fishing and not caught a single fish. They must have heard Jesus teaching the crowd on the shore, and Peter must have been surprised when Jesus turned His attention to his fishing problem:

When he had finished speaking, he said to Simon, “Put out into deep water, and let down the nets for a catch.” (verse 4)

It was another genius idea! Perhaps somewhat reluctantly, Peter followed Jesus’ practical idea and he caught a bunch of fish. In fact, they caught so much fish, the net started to fail and his boat started to sink. That says a lot about Peter’s nets and his boats, but it also says something about Jesus: when He tells you to do something, just do it! You’ll miss out on a lot if you don’t. Don’t ever doubt the Word of God, but if you do, do what it tells you to do anyway because you will always come out ahead of where you would have been otherwise.

In verses 6—11, Dr. Luke, the historian, stresses three main points in his narrative. First, we read about this great catch of fish. This isn’t the last time in His life that Jesus shows His knowledge of the fishing industry; a similar thing will happen a few years later, in John 21. Jesus, in fact, seemed to have an uncanny knowledge about all things pertaining to fish. One time He actually directed Peter to catch the one fish in the whole Sea of Galilee that had a gold coin in its mouth (Matthew 17:24—27)! It always pays to do what He tells you, literally.

Second, this miracle touched Peter and moved him greatly. It actually caused him to see his life as it truly was:

When Simon Peter saw this, he fell at Jesus’ knees and said, “Go away from me, Lord; I am a sinful man!” (verse 8)

For the first time, Peter referred to Jesus as “Lord.” So with this one miracle, three things were accomplished: Peter’s business prospered, Peter saw himself in an accurate light, and He saw Jesus in an accurate light. In the presence of a holy God, a sinful man always trembles. This reminds us of what happened to the prophet Isaiah when God called Him to his prophetic ministry:

Woe to me!” I cried. “I am ruined! For I am a man of unclean lips, and I live among a people of unclean lips, and my eyes have seen the King, the LORD Almighty.” (Isaiah 6:5)

We may wonder why this encounter moved Peter so much. Peter had, just in the previous chapter, witnessed a great miracle at the hands of Jesus; He healed Peter’s mother-in-law right in Peter’s own home (Luke 4:38, 39)! It’s because the miracle of the fish met Peter right where he lived; in the sphere of his life that was his very own and that he considered himself an expert in.

Third, is what Jesus said to Peter after the miracle catch:

Then Jesus said to Simon, “Don’t be afraid; from now on you will fish for people.” So they pulled their boats up on shore, left everything and followed him. (verses 10, 11)

Here was the most important moment in Peter’s life; the turning point that would change everything for “the rock man.” From this point onward, Peter’s main vocation would change. He would always be a fisherman, but now his main duty would be “catching people.” Peter had been catching fish in order to kill. Now, he will be catching people in order to impart life. And this Peter did. It took a while, but on the Day of Pentecost Peter preached a sermon and caught 3,000 people in the net of the Gospel. And that was only the beginning.

2. Levi (Matthew), verses 27, 28

The calling of the tax collector is mentioned in all three Synoptics and comes after Jesus had encountered a variety of interesting people: demon-possessed people, a leper, and a paralyzed person. All these people had been set free from their suffering. Now Jesus comes to a tax collector, arguably the most evil person on earth. When Jesus first met Levi, Levi is seen engaging in his nefarious occupation: confiscating money from people on behalf of the government.

Of all people, the Jews hated tax collects or publicans the most of all. These people symbolized everything that was wrong with Israel during the time of Jesus. Every time they had to pay their taxes, the people were reminded that they were not truly free; they were living under the heavy thumb of Rome.

Follow me,” Jesus said to him, and Levi got up, left everything and followed him. (verses 27b, 28)

This was a major risk for Jesus, given the visceral hatred the people must have had for Levi, or Matthew. But Levi had to make a choice. As a tax collector he may have been hated by everybody, but he cried all the way to the bank. In choosing to follow Jesus, he would have to give up his lucrative business. Peter, James and John, when they followed Jesus, didn’t give up their careers. But for Levi, it was a must. And he did.

3. The team, 6:12—17

Verse 12 is vague, which is the way the good doctor liked to write history. This is actually the “third stage” of Jesus’ disciple-calling. We met some of these disciples earlier when Jesus went to Jerusalem, and later on while He was strolling along the Sea of Galilee, He called them to follow Him. They actually went back to fishing, at which time He called them again:

So they pulled their boats up on shore, left everything and followed him. (Luke 5:11)

Now we come to the “third stage.” Out of an unknown number of disciples, Jesus will handpick a dozen to become His apostles.

One of those days Jesus went out to a mountainside to pray, and spent the night praying to God. (verse 12)

Why would the Son of God pray all night? Jesus was about to make a very important choice, and He needed to spend time praying before making that choice. If the God’s Son found it necessary to spend considerable time in prayer before making an important decision, how much more important is it for us to do the same thing? Much heartache and backtracking could be avoided if we followed our Lord’s example here.

Out of all the people following Him, Jesus ended up choosing 12.

You did not choose me, but I chose you and appointed you so that you might go and bear fruit—fruit that will last—and so that whatever you ask in my name the Father will give you. (John 15:16)

Of the 12, one turned out to be a traitor, another denied Jesus but later repented, and they were always arguing among themselves. The Lord believed it was essential to pray an entire night before choosing these men. God does not always choose the people we would choose, but the people God chooses are always the ones perfectly suited to do His work:

But God chose the foolish things of the world to shame the wise; God chose the weak things of the world to shame the strong. (1 Corinthians 1:27)

4. Requirements for discipleship, 9:23—27; 57—62

Following Jesus isn’t all gravy, and Jesus never presented it that way. These are among the most significant sayings of Jesus. Following Jesus involves the following:

  • A follower of Jesus must always be second to Jesus. Jesus must always be first. The will of Jesus must always come first.
  • A follower of Jesus must deny himself. This means that a follower of Jesus will depend on Jesus for everything. It doesn’t necessarily mean giving up food or music or something you really enjoy doing; it’s much deeper than that. Denying yourself means recognizing that the demands of Christ must always take priority over anything else in life.
  • A follower of Jesus must “take up his cross.” This means simply a full, total surrender to Jesus Christ. It means dying to self; being crucified with Christ (Romans 6:6; Galatians 2:20). Bonhoeffer once said:

Discipleship means adherence to the person of Jesus, and therefore submission to the law of Christ which is the law of the Cross.

  • A follower of Jesus must be determined to follow Jesus no matter what. “Let him deny” and “take up” are both in the aorist tense, meaning a full conversion and full consecration. “Follow” is the present tense of continuous action, emphasizing a lifelong duty of ever single believer.

There is clearly a price to pay when you follow Jesus.

No one who puts a hand to the plow and looks back is fit for service in the kingdom of God.” (verse 62)

In this group of verses, three characters with three responses to following Jesus are introduced.

  • The first character (verses 57, 58) professes the utmost willingness of follow Jesus. But a quick commitment is usually a shallow commitment. Jesus saw into the man’s heart and saw a selfish motive. Anyone who wants to follow Him must not do so for earthly gain (Matthew 8:18—22).
  • The second character (verses 59, 60) manifested a great deal of unwillingness. This man received a personal call from Jesus, planned on responding to that call, but had other things to do first. Jesus stressed to this man that his present call was more important than anything else.
  • The last character (verses 59, 60) said he wanted to follow Jesus, but wanted permission to do something else first. This man actually volunteered his services to the Kingdom of God, but wanted to postpone his work for Christ until his social obligations had been performed. Jesus is teaching here, as He had previously, that serving God must always come first; there are no exceptions.

The cost of following Jesus is steep. If we don’t put the needs of Jesus above everything else, no matter how important those “other things” may in fact be, we are not fit to follow Him. Once we put our hands to the plow in the Kingdom’s field, we are not to keep looking back.

The “Christian life” is really a life of discipleship. It is an all-or-nothing proposition; there are not “part-time” followers of Christ. Just as there is only One Way to heaven, there is only one path to get there: the path of discipleship.

(c)  2011 WitzEnd

A SURVEY OF THE MAJ0R PROPHETS, 5

Rembrandt's Jeremiah

The Calling, Jeremiah 1:1—19

While most students of the Bible love the book of Isaiah and consider him to be the prophetic voice of the Old Testament, Jeremiah is thought to be the foremost Old Testament prophet.  Jeremiah was the most personable of the prophets; we know more about him than any other.  With good reason Jeremiah is known as “the weeping prophet,” for he witnessed the downfall and exile of his people, literally from the window of his home.  Not only are his writings intense and interesting, the man himself was remarkable; he is often credited by historians with the survival of his people after the Fall of Jerusalem in 586  BC.

The book of Jeremiah is longer than Isaiah or Ezekiel, and the Minor Prophets combined still fall short of Jeremiah’s length.  So significant are the writings of Jeremiah that some scholars consider them to be the most significant in the Old Testament.   Not so much for the prophecies, but for the window on the decline and fall of the Judean kingdom, is this assessment made.   Jeremiah’s theology had influenced the theological thinking of his and subsequent generations and also inspired the writing of some Apocryphal books, including “The Letter of Jeremiah” and “The Book of Baruch.”

1.  Introducing the prophet and his times, verses 1—3

1 The words of Jeremiah son of Hilkiah, one of the priests at Anathoth in the territory of Benjamin. 2 The word of the LORD came to him in the thirteenth year of the reign of Josiah son of Amon king of Judah, 3 and through the reign of Jehoiakim son of Josiah king of Judah, down to the fifth month of the eleventh year of Zedekiah son of Josiah king of Judah, when the people of Jerusalem went into exile.

These first three verses make up the title and preface to the scroll containing what we commonly refer to as the Book of Jeremiah.  These verses serve three functions, in that they:

  • Identify the writer.  The book contains the “words of Jeremiah.”  The word “Jeremiah” most naturally means “the Lord shoots” or “the Lord hurls.”  Exactly how this name relates to the prophet is open to speculation, however, given the nature of the times in which he lived, it is possible to see a connection between the prophet’s name and the pointed character of his divine utterances to a sinful nation.  Jeremiah’s name could also indicate the nature of his ministry; being literally thrown into his tumultuous times to deliver stern words of judgment and prophecy.   Beyond his name, we learn that his father was a man by the name  Hilkiah and that his hometown was Anathoth.  There is some debate as to Hilkiah’s lineage, but scholars point to the fact that Jeremiah’s family was made up of priests because Anathoth was a priestly city as far back as the days of Joshua.  In fact, it is likely that Hilkiah was part of the family of Abiathar, David’s priest, and if this the case, then Jeremiah himself was directly related to Eli, who was the high priest during the days of Samuel.
  • Initiation of the writer.  Clearly, Jeremiah began his prophetic career at God’s initiative:  “the word of the Lord came to him.”  If the Bible teaches us anything about the call of God and God’s redemptive plans for man, it is that God always takes the initiative.  Every good thing in one’s life and in the world is the result of prevenient grace; the “grace that goes before.”  Jeremiah did not summon God’s permission to speak for him words he thought the people needed to hear; it was God who called for the prophet to speak words God knew the people needed to hear.   God was the Prime Mover behind the life and work of Jeremiah.
  • History of the writer.  It helps our understanding of all the prophets if we understand that they ministered during periods of history described elsewhere in Scripture.  For example, the Major Prophets, including Jeremiah, can be woven into the historical books from 1 Samuel through 2 Chronicles.  If you read those books, you can get good idea of what Israel and/or Judah was like, especially in the years just prior to the fall of Judah and their Exile.  Only a handful of the prophets (Haggai, Zechariah, and Malachi) ministered during the years following the Exile, and their history is covered in Ezra and Nehemiah.   As far as Jeremiah is concerned,   he began his ministry during the reign of godly king Josiah, king of Judah, probably around 626 BC and continued until the end of Zedekiah in 586 BC, when Jerusalem finally fell to the Chaldeans.

Jeremiah’s ministry, then, lasted at least 20 years, although some scholars estimate his prophetic ministry to have gone on for almost half a century.  That is a long to work with a broken heart.

2.  Jeremiah’s call, verses 4—7

The word of the LORD came to me, saying,

5 “Before I formed you in the womb I knew you,
before you were born I set you apart;
I appointed you as a prophet to the nations.”

6 “Ah, Sovereign LORD,” I said, “I do not know how to speak; I am only a child.”   7 But the LORD said to me, “Do not say, ‘I am only a child.’ You must go to everyone I send you to and say whatever I command you.

Verse 4 is brief, only 9 words long, but it describes the very heart of the prophet’s life.  Jeremiah’s call to ministry did not come as the result of a startling, life-changing vision, as in the case of Isaiah, but rather simply by hearing God’s Word.  It was more than just hearing “word of the Lord,” though, for verse 4 indicates a “divine-human confrontation” (Paul Gray), where the Lord came very close to Jeremiah.  The prophet does not say he saw God, but the inference is that God’s presence was as real and as definite to Jeremiah as His Word was.  What a contrast to the transcendent appearance of God to Isaiah!   Here is the manifested presence of God changing direction of Jeremiah’s life.   What is interesting in this group of verses is that despite the weighty and undeniable presence of the Almighty that moved Jeremiah into a specific area of ministry, Jeremiah never lost his identity; he may have been absorbed into God’s presence, yet he remained the man he was born; notice the Lord knew Jeremiah, the person, even before he was born.

We notice how definite God was in His choice of Jeremiah and we compare that to how unsure Jeremiah was in accepting the call.  The vividness of Jeremiah’s call is seen in the Lord’s use of the transitive verbs:  I formed you…I knew you…I set you apart…I appointed you as a prophet among the nations.  Here we see the strength of God’s claim on the man, and that claim was before any other relationship or duty or obligation.   That is a pretty definite claim!    We see very clearly, again, God’s sovereign choice of an individual to perform a specific task, and we also see a coupling of God’s foreknowledge and the preparation of His chosen one.  God says “I sanctified you,” meaning that the Lord had been preparing Jeremiah for his work even before the call came to him.  Those whom God calls He equips and prepares; no one need ever fear serving the Lord.

Jeremiah, however, in characteristic style, objects, believing he is unworthy of the task set before him.  The awesome presence of the Lord served to magnify Jeremiah’s native weaknesses.  All through his writings we see this humble spirit shining through.  Jeremiah was not rebelling against God’s expressed wishes, he simply could not conceive of being able to carry them out effectively.  This reminds us of how Moses reacted when he was told to go back to Egypt and lead his people out—

Moses said to the LORD, “O Lord, I have never been eloquent, neither in the past nor since you have spoken to your servant. I am slow of speech and tongue.”  (Exodus 4:10)

But the Lord, in grace and understanding, firmly brushed aside young Jeremiah’s objections.  Jeremiah was probably only at most 20 when his call came, but God makes it clear that he is His only choice to take His message to the people.  In verse 5 God indicates that He had chosen and ordained Jeremiah to do this work and in verse 7 He further tells the young man that he will go and preach what God wants him to.  We can only imagine how Jeremiah felt when he realized that from this moment on his life would no longer be his own; that the call of God upon his life was inescapable and undeniable.  That Jeremiah would go was already seen in the mind of God from eternity past.

3.  Jeremiah’s confidence, verses 8—9, 17—18

8 Do not be afraid of them, for I am with you and will rescue you,” declares the LORD.  9 Then the LORD reached out his hand and touched my mouth and said to me, “Now, I have put my words in your mouth.”

17 “Get yourself ready! Stand up and say to them whatever I command you. Do not be terrified by them, or I will terrify you before them. 18 Today I have made you a fortified city, an iron pillar and a bronze wall to stand against the whole land—against the kings of Judah, its officials, its priests and the people of the land.”

God never makes a mistake in choosing His servants.  He empowers all He calls and provides more than enough encouragement for them.  Verse 8 must have been the greatest encouragement to Jeremiah:  the promise of God’s continued presence.  Nothing gives a believer more confidence than knowing God is near to them in good and bad times.  The word “rescue” probably tipped Jeremiah off to the fact that his ministry would not be an easy one; he would need rescuing, but that should not be a source of fear for the prophet’s help would come from God Himself.  In the New Testament, Paul fleshes out this thought and applies it to all believers, not just prophets—

The weapons we fight with are not the weapons of the world. On the contrary, they have divine power to demolish strongholds.  (2 Corinthians 10:4)

Of course, the prophet Isaiah wrote these very encouraging words at the most difficult of times—

No weapon forged against you will prevail, and you will refute every tongue that accuses you. This is the heritage of the servants of the LORD, and this is their vindication from me,” declares the LORD.  (Isaiah 54:17)

Jeremiah had a tremendous promise:  God would preserve him no matter what came his way, and not only that, God would give Jeremiah the moral courage he would need and also words he would need.  The touching of the prophet’s mouth indicates a spiritual experience he had in God’s presence.  The strength of that experience would propel Jeremiah forward, speaking God’s word in confidence.  In fact, God would remain so close to Jeremiah and Jeremiah would remain in God’s presence so that the words Jeremiah said would be the same words God would say if He were there in the flesh!  Now that is a close relationship!

Verses 17 and 18 near the close of the chapter further serve to show how the Lord will protect Jeremiah and  how the Lord has called, commissioned, and equipped the man to do the work.  As unworthy as Jeremiah thought he was, he was able to do the difficult work solely because of the power of God on his life.  When we think about the time in which Jeremiah lived, we realize how hard this job was.  In the next point, we will look at the brutal content of the prophet’s message, but consider this:  all of God’s prophets by now had passed from the scene.  Hosea, Joel, Amos, Micah, Nahum and Isaiah were all gone.  Zephaniah and Habakkuk may have still been alive, but their time had past.  Ezekiel and Obadiah were contemporaries with Jeremiah but their ministries didn’t start until his was over, Daniel was just a boy when Jeremiah was called and he also wouldn’t start prophesying until long into the Babylonian captivity.   Right now, at the time he was called, Jeremiah was a man standing alone; there was no one else doing what he was about to do.

4.  The message and the response, verses 14—16; 19

14 The LORD said to me, “From the north disaster will be poured out on all who live in the land. 15 I am about to summon all the peoples of the northern kingdoms,” declares the LORD.
“Their kings will come and set up their thrones
in the entrance of the gates of Jerusalem;
they will come against all her surrounding walls
and against all the towns of Judah.

16 I will pronounce my judgments on my people
because of their wickedness in forsaking me,
in burning incense to other gods
and in worshiping what their hands have made.

This was the basic message Jeremiah was to give; it is a stern message of impending judgment.  Who loves the preacher of judgment?  The answer is NOBODY!   The sole purpose of Jeremiah’s call was to pronounce judgment upon his people.  This is the kind of evangelist who never gets invited to speak at anybody’s church.  Jeremiah’s people and country, who had been so patient in the past, had finally passed the point of no return; their accumulated transgressions had tipped the scales of divine judgment and their day was almost over.  The hour of God’s horrible judgment had come, and Jeremiah was to be an “overseer” of God’s plan.  How awful it must have been for this man.  Verse 10 serves as a kind of summary of Jeremiah’s message and commission—

See, today I appoint you over nations and kingdoms to uproot and tear down, to destroy and overthrow, to build and to plant.

Though he preached in Judah, his message encompassed all nations around him.  The purposes of God in Jeremiah’s ministry would be two-fold:  destructive and constructive.  His ministry would bear witness to the destruction of nations, including his own, but also he would preach the preservation of the promise of God that would be fulfilled some time in the future.

This must have been a baffling and difficult message for Jeremiah to comprehend and preach.  Like any devoted believer and citizen of what was the Land of Promise, the thought that it would torn from God’s people was unthinkable.  And yet, the horrendous future of Judah was a result of the stubborn rebellion of God’s people.  Generations and generations of Jews had continually jabbed a thumb in God’s eye, and after a long line of prophets had come and gone, Jeremiah is left with the final message, and it was a message seemingly devoid of all hope.

But like all messages from the Lord, Jeremiah’s would have a spark of hope buried beneath the bleakness.  Though Judah and other nations would see destruction and be overthrown, the refining fires of suffering and sorrow could result in a turning away from sin and disobedience.  This has always been the “strange side” of a loving God; often His plan of redemption seems to involve the most terrible things, like death and destruction.  Yet there is a universal law at work even in God’s plan:  some things must die in order for others to live.  Evil must be banished in order for good to thrive.  Man’s hands must be made to let go of all that is evil so that they may be free to receive what is good.  The old, wicked, and rebellious Judah must be done away with so that a remnant may return and rebuild.  What was true of ancient Judah is true of every man, woman, and child who has ever lived.  Romans 6:6 personalizes what Jeremiah wrote about on a national scale—

Knowing this, that our old man is crucified with him, that the body of sin might be destroyed, that henceforth we should not serve sin.  (KJV)

Jesus Christ died on the Cross so that those who identify themselves with Him may live.  There is that universal law:  One died, so that many could live. That is the good news of the Gospel.

Conclusion

Jeremiah was a faithful prophet; he preached an unpopular message to people who wanted nothing more than to see him dead.  Despite that, Jeremiah wept for his people because he knew what the future held for them.  But God was also faithful to His prophet; He kept him safe through it all.  Yet Jeremiah was never isolated from the threats and the emotion of knowing what was to come; perhaps that was what kept Jeremiah going.   The sadness and sorrow Jeremiah felt was nothing compared to what his people would live with because of their sin.  Maybe the prophet hoped that his words could change but one life.

We can’t help but think of Christ, who, like Jeremiah, came and ministered to people who eventually hung Him on a tree.  Yet even knowing what awaited Him, Jesus never held back from declaring the message His Father gave Him because as bad as the experience of Cross was, it eventually came to an end for Jesus.  The experience of Hell, on the other hand, will never end for those who stubbornly refuse to hear the message and repent.

(c)  2010 WitzEnd

Studies in Mark’s Gospel, Part One

The Beginning

1. Background Information

Mark’s Gospel is different in character from the others. That’s not a profound statement because each of the four Gospels is different from the others even though they cover the same historical events. John, of course, is really different from the other three; the other three often lumped together as “the Synoptics.” Each Gospel is concerned with the Person of Jesus Christ but from different perspectives: as a the Son of God; as the Son of Man; as the Son of David, the Jewish Messiah. But Mark is different because He does not present Jesus as the Son of God, though he does not deny it. He does not present Jesus as the Son of Man, even though it’s obvious He is in Mark’s Gospel. He does not present Jesus as the Jewish Messiah, even though Mark clearly knows that He is. Mark presents Jesus as the Servant, in particular, the Servant of God bearing His Word to lost men.

(a) Mark the man

Although this Gospel is anonymous, it is almost certain it was written by John Mark, the son of a wealthy woman named Mary, who was likely a widow and whose home served as a gathering place for many of the early disciples after the founding of Church in Acts 2.

Mark traveled with Paul and Barnabas, to whom he was related, to Cyrus. There was a falling out between Paul and Mark, and Mark returned to Jerusalem (Acts 12:25; 13:13; 15:37-39). Sometime later, however, Mark became a trusted minister of the Gospel and again traveled with Paul and Peter (2 Timothy 4:11; 1 Peter 5:13).

According to Church tradition, Mark referred to himself when he related this incident in 14:51-52—

A young man, wearing nothing but a linen garment, was following Jesus. When they seized him, he fled naked, leaving his garment behind.

Although there is no Biblical evidence that this young man was John Mark, the fact that the very early Church accepted it as fact makes the possibility that it was highly likely.

(b) Date and purpose

Although there is some debate, it is likely that Mark wrote his Gospel, probably for non-Jewish Roman readers, very early in the life of the church, perhaps as early as the 50’s. This early date is based on the belief that Luke and Acts were written before the death of Paul (64 AD), and that Mark, one of Luke’s sources, was written earlier.

We often lump the four Gospels in with Acts and refer to these first five books of the New Testament the “historical books” detailing the life and times of Jesus and of the early Church. This is an apt description, but does not go far enough. Although Mark does not state his purpose as John did in his Gospel (John 20:31), it seems clear the recording historical facts was not the main reason, although they are historically reliable.

John Mark caught a glimpse of Jesus that changed his life. Whether he saw and heard Jesus in person, or whether he learned of Jesus from men like Peter and the other eyewitnesses, something about the Man from Galilee grabbed hold of his heart and mind, and Mark was compelled to tell others about a man called Jesus, who had engaged Satan, sickness, and sin in a mortal combat to the death and emerged a the Victor. And so this man, once a failure and a disappointment in the ministry, wrote down and preserved for all time His story, told in the present tense, as though it were happening before his very eyes. Things happen fast in Mark’s Gospel; the sentences are short and he uses the words “immediately,” “at once,” and “also” many times to move the story of Jesus along at breakneck speed and in great detail.

1. The unstoppable kingdom, 1:14—15

After John was put in prison, Jesus went into Galilee, proclaiming the good news of God. “The time has come,” he said. “The kingdom of God is near. Repent and believe the good news!”

The kingdom of God cannot not be stopped. The death of John the Baptist at the hands of Herod Antipas, though tragic, was the catalyst for Jesus to begin His public ministry. We are told that John was “put n prison.” That term means literally “handed over to another” and is the same term used of Jesus and His betrayal, for He too was “handed over” and given to His enemies.

As is his custom, Mark’s account is very brief, stating that Jesus simply went to Galilee preaching. Though brief, Mark’s point is clear: John’s ministry had ended and Jesus’ had begun. The content of Jesus’ first sermon, according to Mark, was “the good news of God,” that is, “the Gospel.” The Gospel is good news; in fact, it is the best news ever, for God is its author and its object.

Jesus further said, “The time has come.” The word rendered “time” is not the usual chronos (space and time) but kairos, meaning “an opportune time” or “a decisive moment.” In other words, John the Baptist had completed his work, Jesus was about to begin His and all this happened at exactly the right time in God’s plan.

Our Lord preached “the kingdom of God is near.” Cranfield:

The kingdom of God has come close to men in the person of Jesus Christ, and in his person it actually confronts them.

Jesus preached “repent,” meaning a “radical change of mind” is the correct response to the Gospel message. John also preached repentance, but it was mixed with judgment. Jesus preached repentance but mixed it with faith in the Word.

2. The calling of the four fishermen, 1:16—20

As Jesus walked beside the Sea of Galilee, he saw Simon and his brother Andrew casting a net into the lake, for they were fishermen. “Come, follow me,” Jesus said, “and I will make you fishers of men.” At once they left their nets and followed him.

When he had gone a little farther, he saw James son of Zebedee and his brother John in a boat, preparing their nets. Without delay he called them, and they left their father Zebedee in the boat with the hired men and followed him.

The calling of the first disciples is a natural sequence of events; the message was preached, now Jesus must gather together men He can trust to take that message to others.

The first four called disciples included:

· Peter, the impetuous one, who would become the leader of the Twelve, and who is mentioned in single list of the Apostles

· Andrew, Peter’s brother, who is always seen bringing people to Jesus

· James, Zebedee’s son, the first to be martyred (Acts 12)

· John, his brother, the disciple whom Jesus loved.

Mark says nothing of a previous encounter these men had with Jesus (John 1:35-42), but rather introduces the story in a very casual manner, Jesus was out for a walk on the beach. It was a busy place, for the lake was small and it was the center of the fishing industry. Simon and Andrew were putting in day’s work when Jesus called them. This is always the way God works: He meets people in the midst of everyday life, when you least expect Him to. Jesus deals with people where they live. God does not exist or operate in a void; He operates in the real world, where we live. Jesus said it best:

The kingdom of God is near.

It was Jesus who took the initiative; He called them to move from being mere fisherman to fishers of men. That should not be taken as a blanket statement that every single follower of the Lord will become great soul-winners. In fact, all the disciples had different talents and abilities. Some were not great preachers, others were great preachers but could do little else. All followers of the Lord are called to serve in whatever capacity the Lord puts them. But notice that Jesus did call them to do something; this is the true purpose of discipleship.

Christ calls men, not so much for what they are, as for what He is able to make them become. (Swift)

Mark records that they followed “at once.” Their hearts had already been prepared to accept the call to full time service.

A short distance further down the beach, Jesus ran into another pair of fishermen, fixed their broken fishing equipment. It is interesting that the first pair of fishermen were seen actively fishing, while these two were putting their nets in order. Promptly, Jesus called them, these sons of Zebedee. To be a follower of Jesus was by invitation only and reminds us to what John wrote in his Gospel—

You did not choose me, but I chose you and appointed you to go and bear fruit—fruit that will last. Then the Father will give you whatever you ask in my name. (John 15:16)

There is something about the call of James and John worth noting. Jesus called them and they went immediately, leaving their father in the boat mending the nets. This decision of theirs is remarkable, even though their hearts had been prepared to make it by an event that happened over year earlier (John 1:35-51). We see the price some pay for the privilege of discipleship, in this case, the eventual severing of all family ties.

3. The rest of the story

If we had only account of the calling of these men, we might be given to think they acted in a rash or thoughtless manner. But the fact is, these men were called a total of three times before they forsook all to follow Christ:

1. In John 1:35-51, these men were called in a general sense, but they did not stay with Jesus at this time, they went back to their fishing.

2. In Luke 5:1—11, we discover that after this calling in Mark, they again went back to their fishing.

3. The last call of Jesus to these men is recorded in Mark 3; Matthew 10; and Luke 6. We find them fishing again, and we read of this exchange between Peter and Jesus—

“Go away from me, Lord; I am a sinful man!” (Luke 5:8)

Perhaps Peter was saying out loud what the other three fishermen were thinking; that they were failures and sinners and didn’t deserve to be called by God to do anything. Fortunately for them, and for us, Jesus didn’t give up. And the third time these men yielded their hearts and wills to Him.

There is something encouraging about that. We have this exalted view of people who we perceive as “great servants of God,” whether they are preachers, Bible teachers or pastors. The reality is, the call to serve Christ is never easily answered, even though the answer itself is obvious.

(c)  2009 WitzEnd

Isaiah’s Transforming Vision

A Study of Isaiah 6

There is some controversy as to the correct place of chapter 6 within the chronology of Isaiah’s life and ministry. There are those who suppose that chronologically the Book of Isaiah really begins with verse 6, and that the prophet’s ministry began at the death of King Uzziah. My own view is that this was not the beginning of Isaiah’s work as a prophet. In Isaiah 1:1 we read that he prophesied during Uzziah’s reign:

The vision concerning Judah and Jerusalem that Isaiah son of Amoz saw during the reigns of Uzziah, Jotham, Ahaz and Hezekiah, kings of Judah.

The vision we read about in chapter 6 came to Isaiah while he was already engaged in the ministry as a prophet. This vision is what Ross Price referred to as a “transforming vision…that deepened his spiritual life and insights.” This is a perfect example of a man of God, working for God, and growing spiritually at the same time. This should be an encouragement to any believer who feels inadequate in doing the work of the Lord. Whom God calls, He enables. We wish that enabling would take place before we start about the work, but often God wants us to step out in faith, realizing our own weaknesses and shortcomings as we serve Him. When we need Him, He comes to us, as He did to Isaiah.

1. Some background information

Chapter six opens with a funeral; the funeral for a truly great king, King Uzziah. Some commentators believe that Uzziah was the last great king the southern kingdom of Judah ever had and that at his death, the glory of the Lord was no longer to be seen.

In his 52 years on the throne, Uzziah did a number of remarkable things: he subjugated the Philistines, the Arabians and the Ammonites. Under his rule, the nation experienced God’s blessing in the form of great prosperity. Delitzsch wrote, “The national glory of Israel died out too with King Uzziah and has never recovered to this day.”

As great as he was, however, Uzziah was under a death sentence because of something that happened in 2 Chronicles 26:16-21.

But then the strength and success went to his head. Arrogant and proud, he fell. One day, contemptuous of God, he walked into The Temple of God like he owned it and took over, burning incense on the Incense Altar. The priest Azariah, backed up by eighty brave priests of God, tried to prevent him. They confronted Uzziah: “You must not, you cannot do this, Uzziah—only the Aaronite priests, especially consecrated for the work, are permitted to burn incense. Get out of God’s Temple; you are unfaithful and a disgrace!”

But Uzziah, censer in hand, was already in the middle of doing it and angrily rebuffed the priests. He lost his temper; angry words were exchanged—and then, even as they quarreled, a skin disease appeared on his forehead. As soon as they saw it, the chief priest Azariah and the other priests got him out of there as fast as they could. He hurried out—he knew that God then and there had given him the disease. Uzziah had his skin disease for the rest of his life and had to live in quarantine; he was not permitted to set foot in The Temple of God. His son Jotham, who managed the royal palace, took over the government of the country. (The Message)

It was a time of national crisis. There was the appearance of outward prosperity, but inward there was much corruption. The king spent the final days of his life in seclusion. The young prophet must have been disillusioned and the future of the empire loomed large in the mind of both the people and the prophet. It was during this very bleak time that God stepped in and gave Isaiah the vision that would take the prophet far above the wreckage of his earthly hope; Isaiah was given a glimpse of the unspeakable glories of God and of Heaven, and what he saw would change his life and his message. From now on, Isaiah would realize that the hope of earth rested in God Himself.

2. The Woe of Condemnation, verse 5

“Woe to me!” I cried. “I am ruined! For I am a man of unclean lips, and I live among a people of unclean lips, and my eyes have seen the King, the LORD Almighty.”

We are told in various places in Scripture (Exodus 33:20; Matthew 5:8, for example) that only the holy see God and live. The fact that the prophet saw God and lived to write about indicates the estimation God had of His prophet. But, at the same time, there was work to be done on Isaiah’s heart.

G.W. Grogan observed,

The theme of divine holiness is of towering importance to Isaiah. This man of God could never forget the disclosure of transcendent purity he encountered…

When we come face to face with the absolute holiness of God, regardless of what He thinks of us, we can’t help but come face to face with our utter unholiness. When in the presence of God, we realize we are nothing. In the Hebrew Isaiah’s statement is slightly different: I am struck dumb. What can one who is nothing say in the presence of One in whom is everything? The light of the glory of God reveals the inner man, which is given expression through speech. Isaiah saw his true self and couldn’t join in the heavenly chorus of “Holy, holy, holy” until the Lord cleansed him.

Job had a similar experience. God Himself declared that Job was “perfect and upright,” yet we read this in Job 42:5-6,

My ears had heard of you but now my eyes have seen you. Therefore I despise myself and repent in dust and ashes.”

In the KJV, Job says that he “abhors himself.” The light of God’s presence reveals things about ourselves we don’t like. Even Paul, after he encountered the risen Lord, he no longer saw himself as a self-righteous Pharisee, but as a sinner, lost and in need of salvation.

Isaiah, having seen what true worship is, became painfully aware of the imperfection of his devotion and the condition of his people. The leprous condition of their king was merely a picture of the true spiritual condition their own leprous lives.

3. The Lo of cleansing, verse 7

With it he touched my mouth and said, “See, this has touched your lips; your guilt is taken away and your sin atoned for.”

To continue serving God after the death of Uzziah, Isaiah needed to be cleansed. It is the God of burning holiness Himself who did the work. Isaiah did nothing, except receive what God had provided. Some believe the burning coal was symbolic of Jesus Christ.

There is an interesting parallel between what happened to Isaiah and what happened to the believers gathered on the Day of Pentecost. In that instance, they were all touched by the Holy Spirit, evidenced by a flame settling on each person. Here, one of the seraphims touched a burning coal to the prophet’s lips, making him fit to carry on his ministry. Price makes this observation, “Calvary provided a Pentecost for every uncleansed believer.” Indeed, pardon and purity are part and parcel of what God does for us through Jesus Christ.

The apostle Paul one time came face to face with his own wretched condition, even while preaching the Gospel:

What a wretched man I am! Who will rescue me from this body of death? (Romans 7:24)

Like Isaiah, Paul needed something only God could provide. Paul’s cry of desperation came, not as a lost sinner, but as a mighty man of God! The great lesson of Isaiah and Paul is this: living for God can only be accomplished by divine grace.

4. The Go of commission, verse 9

He said, “Go and tell this people…

Before we get to Isaiah’s call, we read a very interesting thing in verse 8:

“Whom shall I send? And who will go for us?”

Many Christians have never felt as though they had been called of God to do anything. Even with a world of lost sinners dying all around them, so many believers have never felt “the call” to do anything about it! Of note is that Isaiah’s call didn’t come until after he had been cleansed by God. This is significant. Of course, he had been serving God prior to this, we would call him “born again,” yet he had not experienced this deeper relationship with God. He had never been made suitable for the task God had in mind for him. This is, I think, a great need within the church today. Our pews are full of people who have professed Christ and are serving Him, yet they have never experienced a total cleansing because they have never experienced this deeper relationship. Those who gathered in the Upper Room experienced it, Isaiah experienced it. God can and does bless His Word, even when it is given out by those flirting with sin. But imagine how much more effective our work for Him would be if we allowed Him to touch our lips with his supernatural fiery coals!

Of special note, as well, is the the fact the entire Trinity is involved in this cleansing of Isaiah. Notice the “we.” Isaiah heard the call, he responded, and was made fit for the new work to which God was call him.

Verse 9 begins the strange commission. At first reading, Isaiah’s message sounds harsh and mean. But God is not mean; His Word is light that reveals the hardness of man’s hearts, the blindness of man’s eyes, and the deafness of man’s ears. The light of God’s Word reveals the exact state a man is in. Isaiah is being called by God to take the light of God to a people in darkness. In reading God’s message to His people, is it any wonder why Isaiah needed to be cleansed and made fit? One can preach about the love of God after having experienced it, but one cannot preach repentance and holiness until one has been cleaned from the inside out, as Isaiah had been.

Conclusion

Isaiah’s commission would not be an easy one. Like our Lord, Isaiah suffered for the sake of his message. In frustration, the prophet cried out, “Who has believed our report?” (53:1) and “I spread my hands all the day unto a rebellious people” (65:2). His was a lonely life, and a life filled with great sorrow, as he watch the nation he served and loved going down under God’s judgment because of the stubbornness of the people’s hearts. Isaiah was to become the messenger of doom to an obdurate people, and only a small fraction of the population would be saved. Isaiah couldn’t do what he did for all those years had he not been made fit but the Spirit of God. He preached, he witnessed, he suffered, he died. Yet the seed Isaiah scattered in tears still bears a harvest to this very day.


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