September 20, 2020 Grace - Benson & Vail Sermon

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September 20, 2020 - Matthew 18:15-20 Sermon - Grace-Vail and Grace-Benson Is it worth the trouble, or not? We’re constantly answering that question by what we’re willing to invest energy and time and attention into, and what we’re not. Is it worth it to point out to a loved one that their behavior is not right with God? Or is it easier to just not go there? Save yourself the potential fight, the probable relational damage, the interruption of what could be a peaceful day. Often, for selfish reasons, we decide it’s not worth it to try to turn a person from a path of walking away from God, and try to get them on a path of walking toward God. Jesus says, that’s more than laziness, it’s failing in a crucial part of the calling he has given you. You are meant to care about the people around you and impact them for good. You won’t do it perfectly, but you are called to show up. When you do, there is a reward, maybe not right away, but a reward all the same when you do the tough work of confronting someone in their sin to turn them back to God. We need the encouragement, resources, and trust to interact with others in this way. We look to Matthew 18 for what we need. To care for people as Jesus desires, you need to start by seeing the people around you as your brother, your sister. Despite the foolish and harmful things people do, which Jesus sees better than you do, he still places an incredibly high value on them. Earlier in this conversation with his disciples recorded in Matthew 18 he gave a powerful reason not to despise anyone that God has put in your life. Jesus said in Matthew 18:10, “Their angels always see the face of the heavenly Father.” How much value does the Father place on people if he assigns his angels to constantly watch over them? If someone had a super-tough bodyguard who was also super-smart and had all the latest tech at his disposal, you’d say, “that kid has someone who cares about them.” That’s how God views everyone around you. He cares about them enough to assign angels. He wants you to care about them enough to confront them when they sin. Notice how it says, “If your brother sins,” not “if you notice that your brother sins.” This implies that you are paying enough attention to your brother to know if and when he is sinning. You’re not so disconnected from your brother that you don’t even notice. Instead, you are so attuned to the word of God on the one hand, and attuned with the people around you on the other hand that you notice when they sin and respond to spiritual danger to protect and help them. You see value in the people around you, and value in their relationship to God. You also need to see sin not just a minor thing, but as a path of destruction. The word for sin means to miss the mark. Sin is failing to live up to the glory of your maker, failing to live as you were designed to live. Sin is acting against your nature. If you put diesel in a gas engine, it will not run well. If you do not pay your electric bill, they will turn off the electricity, probably not all at once, but eventually, you will not have a life in which all the possibilities of electricity in your home are available to you. Sin acts against your own nature, and it harms the nature of others as well, and can become an eternally permanent condition. Jesus showed how serious he is about sin earlier in this conversation when he mentioned if you cause someone else to sin; it’d be better to have a millstone around your neck and jump into the sea. He said that if your hand causes you to sin, you’d be better off cutting it off. Same things with a foot or an eye. Jesus spoke this way because he knew: your sin is able to lead you to hell forever.


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September 20, 2020 Grace - Benson & Vail Sermon by gracelutheransaz - Issuu