What does it mean for Jesus to be the Lord of the Sabbath? Are we more focused on rules than on grace? How can we shift from being faultfinders to hope dealers in our community? Join us as we explore Jesus' authority over religion and its transformative power. Let's dive in together!
Well, good morning. How you doing today?
>> Good morning.
>> Hey, it's great to be with you. If you
have a Bible, I invite you to take it
and open it to Matthew's Gospel, chapter
12. We're going to be looking at about
the first 14 verses in our continuing
series on the miracles of Jesus today.
Before we get there, I just want to say
a good word. Isn't Pastor DJ doing an
amazing job,
man?
He is crushing it. God is using him.
It's hard to believe this is his first
pastor and he leads with such wisdom and
grace and so thankful for him and so uh
appreciative of your fellowship in that.
Hey, let's stand if we could in
reverence to the rigging of God's word.
Beginning in Matthew 12:1, it says, "At
that time Jesus went through the grain
fields on the Sabbath. His disciples
were hungry and began to pick some heads
of grain and eat them. When the
Pharisees saw this, they said to him,
"Look, your disciples are doing what is
unlawful on the Sabbath." He answered,
"Haven't you read what David did when he
and his companions were hungry? He
entered the house of God, and he and his
companions ate the consecrated bread,
which was not lawful for them to do, but
only for the priest. Or haven't you read
in the law that on the Sabbath the
priest in the temple desecrate the day,
and yet are innocent? I tell you that
one greater than the temple is here. If
you had known what these words mean, I
desire mercy, not sacrifice, you would
not have condemned the innocent. For the
Son of Man is Lord of the Sabbath. Amen.
And going on from that place, he went
into their synagogue, and a man with a
shriveled hand was there looking for a
reason to accuse Jesus. They asked him,
"Is it lawful to heal on the Sabbath?
And he said to them, "If any of you has
a sheep and it falls into a pit on the
Sabbath, will you not take hold of it
and lift it out? How much more valuable
is a man than a sheep? Therefore, it is
lawful to do good on the Sabbath. And
then he said to the man, "Stretch out
your hand." And so he stretched it out
and was completely restored, just as
sound as the other. But the Pharisees
amazingly went out and plotted how they
might kill Jesus. Father, I pray you
might bless the preaching and the
teaching of your word this morning as we
dive into the 12th chapter of the Gospel
of Matthew. We pray in Jesus' name.
Amen. And amen. You may be seated.
Uh well, we're in the middle of this
series, kind of getting to the end of
this series on the miracles of Jesus.
And today we look at the miracle of the
healing of this man with a withered
hand. But the real point, if you dive
into Matthew 12, the real point of this
passage isn't the healing of a man with
a hand that had a trouble, but it is his
interaction with the Pharisees and the
fact that they were upset that Jesus
performed a miracle on the Sabbath. It's
a key thought we'll get started with
here. The most needed miracle in this
passage wasn't was the hearts of the
Pharisees, not the hand of the man.
This passage is also a snapshot, if you
will, of the three types of people that
are on any in any church on any given
Sunday. You say, "Pastor, only three
types." I mean, I've pastored for 40
plus years. There are a lot of types of
people in church. Amen. Uh there are
crazy people in church. How many you
know there's crazy people in church? If
you didn't know that, you're probably
the crazy person. So, uh, we'll talk to
you later. I have policies about just
about everything in life, in ministry.
And one of my policies is don't argue
with crazy because crazy does not know
when he or she has lost the argument.
All right? So, just let that be some
help for you. When you're in line at
Safeway or Fries or Costco, don't try to
argue with Crazy cuz doesn't know when
they have lost the argument. There are
tired people in church. Any tired people
in church today? Yeah, please try to
stay awake till the very end. I would
appreciate that very much. There are
troubled people in church. People come
to church with all sorts of troubles and
problems and heartaches. There are
hurting people in church. And there are
hopeful people in church. But when you
boil it all down, there are really only
three basic groups of people that attend
church on any given Sunday. And I think
it's described for us in this story in
Matthew 12. First of all, unfortunately,
we have to start with the fact that
there are faultfinders
in church. There are people that come to
church in judgment and criticism. They
come to church and look for all the
reasons why they shouldn't come back
next week or that others they don't like
shouldn't come back next week. That's
really what's going on with the
Pharisees. In Jesus's day, it was these
Pharisees that sought to find fault in
every little thing that Jesus did. But
if I could make the transition from this
time of scripture to our time today, in
our day, I'm convinced that it is the
super relligious that want to impose
their rules and their preferences on
everyone else instead of themselves. Uh,
I uh grew up in the South. I grew up in
Oklahoma. We call that the South. It's
really not very south. It's more
Midwest, but we don't want to be
associated with Kansas. All right. So,
uh, I grew up in Oklahoma and moved out
here when I was 40 years old to start a
church in northern Peoria.
But it wasn't until I got here that I
began to realize how legalistic the
church culture that I grew up in was. Uh
I think our motto was we don't smoke or
chew or go with girls that do. Uh that
that's kind of the the motto of an
Oklahoma Baptist boy.
And and I don't want you to get me wrong
here. uh it is okay to and we ought to
hold up biblical standards for people in
their lives. But what's not okay is to
make our own personal preferences more
important than the scriptures. That's
exactly what is happening here with the
Pharisees. They had taken the law that
God had graciously given us uh regarding
Sabbath in the Old Testament. But they
had built law upon law and rule upon
rule and preference upon preference upon
preference till it got so weighty and so
difficult that it was almost impossible
for anyone to fulfill their preferences.
Now let me give you a key thought and
then I want to substantiate it with a
story or two. Here's the key thought.
The faultfinders,
they do not come to church in grace.
They come to church in judgment.
They come to church looking for things
to point out in other people's lives.
Not in grace, but in judgment. And most
of the time, they are trying to defend
their personal preferences.
not scripture, but their personal
preferences of what church ought to be
like. Unfortunately, I had a occasion to
be reminded of this just a week and a
half ago when a guy came to me from one
of our other locations and said,
"Preacher, I'm leaving this church."
That's always a fun conversation.
And I was very kind to him. He's a nice
gentleman. And I said, "Sir, why why are
you leaving the church?" and he listed
several reasons, but number one on his
list was, "I'm leaving the church
because the music is too loud."
He went on to tell me that for the past
several months, he'd been carrying in
his pocket a decimal reader measuring
the volume of the music.
I you you can't tell me that he was
coming with a heart ready to worship the
Lord of glory
>> while at the same time measuring the
volume of the room.
You see, he was coming whether he
realized it or not at the time. And
actually, it might be good that this man
finds another place that he can go to
where he doesn't come in judgment. I
pray that happens. But he was coming in
judgment, not in grace.
Phariseaical churchgoers will always
place personal preference over lost
people. But get this, the church was
never intended to be a showcase for
saints, but a hospital for sinners.
going in judgment instead of grace,
making personal preferences priority.
Specifically in this passage, it was the
rules and laws that the Pharisees had
placed on the Sabbath that they were
trying to defend,
heavy, almost impossible rules. One uh
rabbi would later write, "Heal on
another day, but not today.
do good on another day, but not today.
But Jesus would say the Sabbath is for
men, not men for the Sabbath. And so
these faultfinders have all been telling
Jesus, and we've seen it over and over
again in this series, the miracles of
Jesus. They've been trying to tell Jesus
what to do, or in most cases, what not
to do. You've ever noticed faultfinders
really want to focus on what not to do.
The do not do list instead of what to
do. The first thing they'd been telling
Jesus was don't claim to forgive sin. We
saw that in this series back in Matthew
chapter 9 when Jesus heals the paralytic
man. But before he does, he says, "Son,
your sins be forgiven you." And they
said, "What sort of blasphemy is this
that you claim that you can forgive
sin?"
Now, faultfinders in the church today
aren't as bold as that. What they do,
however, they will try to tell us what
sins Jesus can forgive.
Uh, have you ever noticed that the ultra
relligious crowd are also willing to
accept grace for their personal pet
sins, but not willing to extend grace to
other people's personal pet sins. For
instance, I've been dreaming about lunch
all day. I'm going to go home and
probably practice some gluttony, but I'm
okay with it.
That's my sin.
but we don't extend grace to others.
But it even goes farther than that. Not
only do they tell Jesus, don't claim to
forgive sin, but they tell him don't
consort with sinners. In Matthew chapter
9, uh there is this interesting dialogue
beginning in verse 10 says, "While Jesus
was having dinner at Matthew's house,
many tax collectors and sinners came and
ate with him and his disciples. And when
the Pharisees saw this, they asked his
disciples, "Why does your teacher eat
with tax collectors and lowly sinners?"
On hearing this, Jesus says, "It is not
the healthy who need a doctor, but the
sick, but go and learn from what this
means. I desire mercy, not sacrifice."
He has said this over again in Matthew
12. I desire mercy, not sacrifice. He's
trying to drive a point here into the
heart of this phariseaical crowd. For I
have not come to call the righteous but
sinners.
The goody tooth shoes crowd doesn't like
it when people far from God show up for
church on Sunday.
They they want to protect their
environment
from such intrusions.
And yet Jesus, one of the chief
criticism for him and many scholars and
theologians believe it was the very
thing that got him crucified was he was
a s friend of sinners.
And I'm so so thankful that Cross Church
has a reputation not only here but in
all of our locations of being friends
with sinners, people that are far from
God who need to hear the wonderful
lifechanging message of Jesus Christ.
Uh we have at one of our locations
there's a gentleman who uh comes to
church every Sunday and I attend there
often uh wearing women's clothing
and he is in need of the gospel of Jesus
Christ to transform his life and to
assure him of who he is his identity in
Jesus Christ.
We had a couple in that church that came
to our location pastor there and said,
"Either he or she goes or we go."
You know what we said? Bye.
See you.
Wouldn't want to be you
and probably
resources left with that family.
But I want us to be a church. And you
have a great reputation of that here in
Phoenix that is welcoming to people who
who need the gospel because it's not the
healthy that need the doctor, right? It
is the sick and people far from the
Lord.
Pastor DJ mentioned earlier that we are
getting ready to launch Cross Church
Mayor and and Pastor Ly doing such a
great job there. They're actually
already reaching people. And one of the
people that they have reached that has
become like our best evangelist in mayor
is a guy by the name of Phil. Let me
tell you about Phil. Phil's an
ex-convict
who just got off parole and he's our
best evangelist and one of our hardest
workers and he's there every Sunday and
he works all through the week on the
building and he's there.
Phil came up to me after our Let's Go uh
one of our campaign initiatives in
Surprise. He drove all the way down from
mayor for it and and uh he came up to
me. He said, "Preacher, one of the
things that I really regret from
prison." I'm like, "Oh, this is going to
be good." Uh that I didn't do in prison
is I didn't get knuckle tattoos.
I'm like, "I'm with you, bro. Man, I
since always regretted that." He said,
"I I I I can I have your permission to
do something?" And I'm like, "What,
man?" He said, "Can I have your
permission to tattoo let's go on my
knuckles?"
And I had a couple of thoughts. I'm
like, "One, I'm not the person you need
to be asking. That's your wife." All
right.
Clear it with her.
And then here's how my brain works. I'm
like, "Yeah, but there's not enough
letters and let's go, even with an
apostrophe,
uh, for it to make sense, but if you
want to do it, go for it." And so he
sent me a couple weeks later this
picture.
That's Phil.
Let's go. I I didn't factor in the ring
finger, so it kind of works.
But I pray more people like Phil,
wishing they'd got knuckle tattoos,
will be in our rooms
and hear the gospel of Jesus Christ and
be saved.
Uh, I shared this key thought that and I
need to
kind of brace you for it. I I shared
this about five or six years ago when I
was preaching weekly at our surprise
location.
And um
well, I'll just tell you and then I'll
give you the
the buffer for it. Uh I I really think
we need more cussing in the lobby.
Now, I didn't fully explain that when I
said it the first time and a family in
our church got mad and left the church
over it.
I I can make people mad so easily in
life. I think I can walk across the
parking lot and 10 families will
probably leave the church. So, I'm
sorry, DJ. Uh there'll be less here next
week. Um
but what I I don't literally mean that
we need you to be cussing in the lobby.
I I if you are, we'll probably say,
"Hey, man. Could you tone that down?
Maybe talk a little better." What I do
mean is we need more people that that's
their culture and they're just far from
God and they don't know the rules of
church life and they're just coming here
for the help that the gospel can give.
Yeah, in that sense, we do need more
cussing in the lobby.
Yet Jesus
is going to continue to push these
Pharisees just like I'm pushing against
the faultfinders in the room today.
They've been telling Jesus, "Don't claim
to forgive sin." They've been telling
Jesus, "Don't consort with sinners." And
then they were telling him, "Don't break
our rules." Basically, that's all it was
about the Sabbath. Don't break our
rules. Now, can you imagine the audacity
of these Pharisees trying to tell the
Lord of glory to obey their rules?
Well,
and yet Jesus
will move ahead
with his face set toward the cross,
unalterably convinced that it is always
right to do good.
and they would continue to plot to try
to kill him.
In every church, unfortunately, even in
the most gracefilled church that I
believe our church is,
you will attract some faultfinders
who want to put a stake in the ground on
their personal preferences
more than sharing the gospel with people
far from the Lord.
There's a second group of people in the
room, and I don't want to overlook this
group either. The brokenhearted.
The brokenhearted are pictured in this
man with a messed up hand, deformed and
looked down upon, probably unable to
hold down any steady job in a very
agrarian culture.
He needed help and received it from
Jesus Christ.
Some of you are like that man today. You
come not with a broken hand but a broken
heart
and your world is crushing around you.
I I want you to know three things today.
First of all, I want you to know that
Jesus sees you.
I think these Pharisees had forgotten to
see the man with a withered hand. They
had grown accustomed to him. They had
pushed him to the side. They had
marginalized him.
But I want you to know that no matter
what's going on in your life today,
Jesus sees you.
Even more than that, I want you to know
that Jesus loves you.
He loves you so much that he left heaven
and came to earth, lived a sinless life,
was crucified on the cross because he
loves you. For God so loved the world
that he gave his only begotten son that
whosoever believe in him should not
perish but have everlasting life. Jesus
loves you. You say, "You don't
understand how dark and desperate and
deadly my sin has been." Listen, there
is no sin that will cause Jesus to blush
and act surprised.
He knows you.
He sees you. He loves you.
And let me just say also, he can help
you.
Jesus can take your broken heart and
mend it together with his love and
grace. He for can forgive you of all
your sins, separating it as far as the
east is from the west and remember it no
more. Jesus
can help you today.
How many you like a good road trip?
Anybody in the room like a good road
trip to come up on summer vacation
travels? Uh me and my wife love a good
road trip. Now, I'll just say this. We
like a good road trip a lot better since
we don't have kids in our house,
but I fly over the country all the time
and and and to me it's more of a
headache to go park at uh Sky Harbor and
take the tram, go through security, get
on the plane, find a rent car. Uh you
know the drill, man. Just to get in the
car.
>> No kids in the car. Let me remind you
that that's a part of this good road
trip deal. So, me and my wife are
getting ready for a road trip this week.
On Thursday morning, I'm getting we're
getting up early Thursday morning and
we're driving to all places, the
vacation destination of the world,
Oklahoma.
The raving wheat, it sure smells sweet.
And the wind comes sweeping down the
plains. All of it. And uh we're going
back. My my dad has been sick with
cancer for a good long time. and we're I
try to get back as much as I can during
this season of sickness in his life and
truth in advertising. I'm also playing
in a golf tournament while I'm there.
But uh uh primary reason we're going is
to to see our family. And so Thursday
morning, we'll get up and we'll drive
15 beautiful scenic hours after we get
out of Flagstaff all the way across flat
high desert of Arizona into the
beautiful land of enchantment known as
New Mexico. I don't know how they came
up with that term. Uh
through the panhandle of Texas and
Oklahoma for 15 hours. We've been saving
up for some time. We've got about
$12,000 for gas money and we hope that
that'll get us all the way there and
back. We may get stuck in Amarilla on
the way back.
I love a good road trip. And I want to
just for a moment take you on a little
road trip today. It's what we call in
Christian circles the Roman road. And if
you're here and brokenhearted, far from
God, let me take you on this little road
trip. There's se several little rest
stops along the Roman road. The first
rest stop is Romans 3:23.
For all have sinned and come short of
the glory of God. That's true of every
single person that's ever breathed the
breath of this planet's air. We are all
sinners by nature and by choice. We've
all broken God's law at some point in
some way. Even the Pharisees had, though
they wouldn't admit it.
The second stop, rest stop on the Roman
road is Romans 6:23. The wages of that
sin is death, but the gift of God is
eternal life through Jesus Christ our
Lord. And it's such good news to know
that uh we have an opportunity to be
saved. But good news is not good news
without some bad news first. And the bad
news is is the wages of our sin is death
and hell. If I get what I deserve today,
God knows that I would get eternity
separated from him.
And then the last rest stop is my
favorite because we're almost to
Oklahoma now is Romans 10:13.
That whosoever shall call upon the name
of the Lord shall be saved. And this
morning, no matter how dark and
desperate and deadly and dangerous your
sin may be, if you will repent of that
sin and call upon his name, the
scripture clearly says you can be
forgiven of that and you can be
eternally and forever saved.
Well, there's a third group of people in
any church. There are the faultfinders.
They are the brokenhearted.
But then thirdly, you say, "Well, I
don't see the third person in this
story." Well, don't miss the person of
Jesus. And I call these the hope
dealers.
Jesus represents that. And since I've
probably made everybody mad at some
point in this sermon this morning, I
want to say we need more dealers in
church.
Not necessarily drug dealers. We need
more. I don't know where your mind was
at. I'm talking about hope dealers in
church this morning. Now, some would say
that hope is not a strategy.
But I dare to disagree.
When it comes to our eternal faith, it
is all that we have, our blessed hope.
So, let me give you this closing
thought. Be like Jesus and lift people,
not your own legalism.
Be an encourager.
Be a lifter.
I teach uh this past uh spring, I've
been teaching every Wednesday night when
I'm in town to a men's group in
Surprise, and I've told them this
several times, and I I I just believe it
so passionately that all of us in this
room have a superpower.
And your superpower
is encouragement.
There is nothing that will lift the
hearts of people in your life any more
than an encouraging word. For you
parents, if you want to see your kids
fly to new heights, just start
encouraging them like never before.
If you lead somebody at a job this week,
encourage them and watch them excel in
their performance.
If you want more out of your spouse,
start bragging on her or him.
That's why I bragged on DJ this morning.
I'm just hoping to get a little more out
of him.
It's a superpower
that we have. And as you engage in being
a dealer of hope,
let's continue to make it all about the
mission.
Not about keeping our personal
preferences intact, but making Jesus
known as the old hymn would say, "Rescue
the perishing, care for the dying. Jesus
is merciful, and Jesus will save." Let's
pray together. Heads are bowed and eyes
are closed for just a moment.
Some of you are here or maybe watching
online
that you come to this message with a
broken heart.
You're far from God. As a matter of
fact, if you would spend if you were to
die this very moment, you would spend
eternity separated from God. But it
doesn't have to be there and it doesn't
have to be that way.
I encourage you to take the last rest
stop on the Roman road in our road trip
this morning
and call on his name and he will save
you. And if you're here and that's where
you're at in life and
you need some help from the Lord,
myself or Pastor DJ will be back during
this next song by the I said yes corner
to my left, your right. We'd love to
share with you how you can have hope in
Jesus. And if you're watching online,
you'd like that same help, you can text
to 9400,
all one word, I said yes. And someone
from our church will reach out to you
this week about your decision to need to
follow Jesus. Father, thank you for this
day. Thank you for this morning. Thank
you for these people who've been
wonderful to engage with and share with.
I find in this room a lot of hope
dealers, few faultfinders, mostly hope
dealers. And I pray that we continue to
deal that hope to a world that
desperately needs it. It's in Jesus
name. Amen. Let's stand in worship.