8-28-22 Grace-Tucson Sermon

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Luke 14:1, 7-14 Pentecost 12 C

Pastor Ron Koehler

Grace-Tucson, AZ

August 28, 2022

If I ask you right now to think about what it must have been like to be Moses, what comes to mind? Maybe something like this: “What an amazing thing to see a burning bush and hear God speak through it!” “How sweet would it be to raise your hand, and the water of the Red Sea parts!” “Oh, to be the object of God’s attention after you smashed his handwritten Commandments on the ground—not good!” Those would be great choices, but because of today’s lesson, I’m thinking of this from Numbers 12: Now the man Moses was very humble, more humble than anyone else on the face of the earth (v.3). That’s in the book of Numbers. Let’s see, the first books of the Bible are…Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy. Do you know who wrote those? Moses. Moses wrote Numbers! Moses wrote: Now the man Moses was very humble, more humble than anyone else on the face of the earth. Now, if you don’t know how Moses tried desperately to get out of being the leader of God’s people and how he pointed out his own flaws, you might think him to be the most arrogant, not the most humble! I’m wondering how the humblest man felt about God making him write that. Did Moses argue? Did he fight it? Did he secretly write something else only to find that the divine eraser was taken to it, and he had to start over? I imagine that it was absolute torture for the truly humble Moses to record for all of history that he was more humble than anyone on earth! Moses was the man that the Jews—and especially the Pharisees—absolutely revered! Isn’t it interesting then that these Pharisees we encounter this morning had zero humility?! They couldn’t have been more opposite from their hero! Sadly, they didn’t realize it. But the dinner invitation they extended to Jesus gave them the opportunity to learn a lesson in humility, a hard truth: Everyone who exalts himself will be humbled, and whoever humbles himself will be exalted.” Looking in on the dinner party gives us the chance to learn too. The Lessons in Humility today are those taught to the Pharisees, the one taught by looking at Christ, and the lessons for our lives. Lessons in Humility 1. In Humility, the Pharisees Were to Put Others First The Pharisees were the super-religious—not priests, but laypeople burning with zeal for God’s law, knowledgeable about it, and meticulously living it. They truly felt that they were special because of this and better than everyone else. And they put that passion and devotion on display for everyone to see. So, when a leader of the Pharisees—the highest-level follower of Moses and Scripture’s laws invites you to dinner, it is a high honor! You might wonder how Jesus got an invite, because they didn’t like him—not even a little. What they were doing, they had done before—watching him closely to see what he would do and say and trying to trap him in his words. But Jesus was watching them too.


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