10-3-21 Grace-Tucson Sermon

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Mark 9:38-50 [Pentecost 19]

Pastor Ron Koehler

Grace—Tucson, AZ

October 3, 2021

In the name of our Savior Jesus, dear friends, What has been your biggest battle in life? What have you worked at and worked at to overcome? Oh, we begin the battles right away in life, don’t we? We don’t even remember our first fights—learning to speak and potty training. School struggles are very real for some here and a memory for others—figuring out how to make and keep friends, math or grammar or history. Later on, college courses already in high school, adapting to different and difficult ways of teaching at a university, resisting new temptations. Maybe it has been wrestling with how to put up with and get along with coworkers or the boss. If you’ve battled addiction—drugs or alcohol or pornography or something else, you know how tough it is to conquer those! And even then, it’s usually a matter of counting the weeks, or months, or years of conquering because you know it is a life-long battle. Oh, there are lots of things we could mention. Each of us knows our own battles—the ones we wage in our minds, the ones we have to talk through, the ones that require us to take action. But this morning, we talk about the battle that is common to us all—and the toughest war we will wage: the one against our sinful flesh. God says that we are all sinful from conception and birth, and that this sin corrupts everything about us for as long as we live in this world. When we know this and are then confronted with a God that demands better—perfection even—we begin to see the battle taking shape. Our sinful flesh is pitted against God’s demands. When we hear about God’s love for us in Jesus and we trust that, we then want to take on that challenge, to conquer the sinful flesh and live for God. But, How do We Conquer Our Sinful Flesh? In the gospel for today, we hear Jesus, the one who does everything well, giving instruction and encouragement to his disciples. There was an incident that triggered this. Like a child in school saying, “Teacher! Teacher! Emily is messing with the papers on your desk!” the disciples were tattling on someone who was using Jesus’ name to exorcise demons. They had tried to stop him because they didn’t think it was right. And like the teacher explaining that Emily was actually helping her, Jesus told his disciples that this person was fine doing this, because he did it with faith in him. The guy wasn’t part of the “team” of disciples, but he was on Jesus’ side. While their concern for Jesus and his name was good, their actions toward the man and their pride in themselves were tainted with sin. And so, Jesus taught them to watch what they were doing, address their sin, and live as God would have them live. We easily find applications for us today in those three things Jesus taught his disciples: Do the Good Things—Get Rid of Sin—Live as God’s People.


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