3-17-19 Grace-Tucson Sermon

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Pastor Timothy Patoka 1 Sunday In Lent: March 17, 2019 Jesus Resolutely Goes To Jerusalem Luke 13:31-35 st

1) Resolute Though Rejected 2) Resolute To Gather When you make a decision, how long does it stay in effect? Most decisions we make generally don’t go on for a long time. Where you decide to go out to eat or buy your groceries is quickly forgotten by other decisions you need to make. The decision to repair your car or renovate your house is put on hold until either it needs it or you have a stack of money burning a hole in your pocket. Yet there are some decisions we resolutely make which we do not easily change or forget about. Maybe it’s your continued resolution to make Tucson your seasonal or permanent home in light of our recent wintry weather. Although I, like many, complained about how cold it got, people in most parts of our country would have considered it quite desirable for March. Or perhaps it’s a resolute decision that will determine the rest of your future – which college will be your alma mater, which job field will bear your mark, or which person will be your spouse until one of you passes away. The thing about these resolute decisions is that once we make them, we do not intend on changing them easily, if ever. Jesus too made a number of decisions. Many were minor decisions that have been lost to history. But a good number were resolute ones that he was not going to ever change. As we’ll see from our handful of verses from Luke chapter 13, Jesus had resolutely decided that he was going to Jerusalem one last time no matter what because that is where he would carry out his goal to be our Savior. As he journeyed to Jerusalem to accomplish that wonderful goal, he would face rejection from all sides. Yet we give thanks for Jesus’ resolute decision to be our Savior because he would also resolutely decide to gather us under his wings. 1) Resolute Though Rejected It’s while Jesus is on his way south from Galilee to Jerusalem one last time that some Pharisees come to him with a surprising request. They tell him, “Leave, and go away from here, because Herod wants to kill you.” (Luke 13:31b) Even though Jesus was already on his way out of Herod’s kingdom by going to Jerusalem, it wasn’t fast enough. King Herod and the Pharisees had had enough of Jesus and wanted him gone. But even in Jerusalem, where Jesus was going, he was going to face more rejection! Why might all these people reject Jesus? We know that King Herod was not a good role model. When John the Baptist called him out for adultery, King Herod arrested and later beheaded him (Matthew 14:1-12). King Herod did not want to be subject to anyone or anything. So he rejected Jesus by rejecting God’s law. The Pharisees refused to listen to Jesus and correct their religious teaching. They would rather continue teaching what man has to say about God 1


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