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Sunday, January 13, 2013

1/13/13 - Epiphany 2 - Ephesians 3:14-21

FAITH GOES BEYOND KNOWLEDGE

A World That Breeds Skepticism

            1 out of every 5 retirees over the age of 65 in this country has been a victim of a financial scam...  Since 1968, when the International Olympic Committee started drug testing regularly, 139 athletes have been caught using performance enhancing drugs during the Olympic Games and have been stripped of their medals...  In 2010 a human resources association found that over 53% of people lie on their résumés...  No wonder we grow up to be suspicious!  People lie, people cheat, people deceive, and sometimes people are just plain wrong.  And so we’ve learned over the years to be skeptical and wary about what we read or hear.  And now we’re just used to it.  When you use a credit card at the store the clerk might ask to see your ID just to make sure that your name matches the one on the credit card - and we think nothing of it.  When you read something in the newspaper you might do some research of your own to make sure they got the facts right.  When you get advice from a doctor it is not out of the ordinary to get a second or even a third opinion.  Because even when someone has good intentions, they are not always correct.  And so it pays to be skeptical in this world.  It’s worth the extra time and effort to check things out a little more in depth than simply taking someone’s word for it.

            We want proof, don’t we?  We want clear information laid out in front of us that supports what we have heard or seen or experienced.  And if, by our investigation, we find that something doesn’t quite add up or something is out of line or something is missing, we immediately refuse to believe what someone else has claimed because our intelligence and our knowledge and our research have led us to a different conclusion.

We Submit God’s Word to Logical Tests

            And that’s a healthy practice.  It’s God-pleasing to use the abilities and the resources and the common sense our Lord has given us to evaluate things in this world.  We run into problems, though, when we apply that same kind of thinking to the Bible.  We get into trouble when we take God’s Word through a variety of logical tests, when we compare what God’s Word says with our intelligence and our knowledge and our experience.  Because when something doesn’t quite add up or when something is out of line or when something is missing, we have difficulty buying into what God clearly says.

            Let’s use a few examples: Jesus says in the Bible that he is with us to the very end of the age.  And we have read that and we have heard that and we want to believe that.  But there are times when it seems like Jesus is nowhere around.  And our observation is: “I’m alone!  There is no one here to help me.  There is no one here to support me.  There is no one here to back me up.  I am completely on my own.  There is no doubt about it!”  Our knowledge is contending with the clear words of God.  They contradict each other and one of them will have to win.  Which one will it be?

            God also says in his Word that we are to pray to him and that he listens to our prayers.  But then we pray and we pray and we pray for something and nothing happens.  So our experience says: “Prayer doesn’t work!  There’s really no need to keep on praying if the Lord isn’t going to answer me!”  Our experience is contending with the clear words of God.  They contradict each other and one of them will have to win.  Which one will it be?

            God says in his Word that he loves us and that he works everything out for our good because he loves us.  But then we think back to all of those horrible experiences that we have gone through and we can’t think of one good thing that resulted from them.  And then we have to go through another terrible experience in the future, and every single part of it seems to be bad as well.  And our intelligence says: “God’s promises don’t add up!  If God really did love me, if God really did make sure that all things would work out for my good, then why are these things happening to me?  What doesn’t he prevent them from happening?  Why doesn’t he stop them from happening?  I can’t see how a loving God would permit these awful things to happen to someone he supposedly cares about!”  And our intelligence contends with the clear words of God.  They contradict each other and one of them will have to win.  Which one will it be?

            Unfortunately, it is our intelligence or our experience or our knowledge that sometimes wins out, don’t they?  Because God’s Word doesn’t makes sense or it doesn’t seem right or it doesn’t add up and we become frustrated with the Lord and start to doubt whether or not these things are really true at all.  And in the end we actually end up trusting our minimal intelligence over the unfathomable intelligence of the almighty God!  We actually end trusting our few decades of experience over the few thousand years of experience of the eternal God!  We actually end up trusting our pitifully small bank of knowledge over the inexhaustible knowledge of the all-knowing God!  Now that doesn’t make sense!  Why would we ever put stock into what we think over and above what God knows?  Because we are that sinful.  We are that corrupt.  We are that arrogant as to think God’s will and God’s plans have to match up exactly with what we expect to happen, and if they don’t, well then God must be wrong.  Because we certainly can’t be wrong!  We certainly are never mistaken!  It must be God who is at fault!  It must be the Lord who doesn’t really know what he’s doing!
       
Faith Goes Beyond Knowledge

            As the apostle Paul wrote his letter to a congregation in the city of Ephesus, he knew that their intelligence and their experience and their knowledge would be in sharp disagreement with God’s Word, just like ours is still today.  And so when he prays for them in this letter, he doesn’t pray that their intelligence would increase or that they would be able to learn from their experiences or that their knowledge of earthly things would be built up over time.  Instead Paul prays for their faith through the power of the Holy Spirit.  I pray that out of his glorious riches he may strengthen you with power through his Spirit in your inner being, so that Christ may dwell in your hearts through faith.”  Paul prays this prayer because faith trumps intelligence; faith overrules experience, and faith goes beyond knowledge. 

            Intelligence says: “It doesn’t make sense!”  But faith, worked by the power of Holy Spirit through the Word of God, says “It doesn’t have to.”  Experience says: “That has not proved to be true in the past!”  Faith, worked by the power of Holy Spirit through the Word of God, says “It is true nevertheless.”  Knowledge says, “There is not enough proof!  There is not enough evidence!  There is not enough support to substantiate these claims!”  Faith, worked by the power of Holy Spirit through the Word of God, says “I don’t need proof.  I don’t need evidence.  I don’t need anything else to substantiate God’s claims other than God’s Word.”  Faith is knowing that something is true even though you cannot see it, even though you cannot explain it, even though you cannot fully understand it, and even though you cannot logically figure it out.  Faith takes God at his Word even when everything else is screaming at you not to. 

            But faith isn’t a feeling.  And it’s not an opinion either.  Faith is a belief based on fact.  The facts are found in God’s Word.  And the faith to believe those facts is worked in our hearts through that same Word.  And so when your intelligence says to you, “It doesn’t make sense that God would forgive you; why would he bother with someone like you?”  Your faith can say, “He forgives me anyway because he says he does through Jesus’ death on the cross.”  And when your experience says, “It doesn’t seem like the Lord has loved you in the past after all that he’s put you through…”  Your faith can say, “I know that he loves me because that is what he has promised me in the Bible.”  And when your knowledge says, “Maybe this whole Christianity thing is just a hoax.  Maybe you aren’t going to go to heaven because heaven isn’t really there.  Maybe you’ve been tricked to believe in this Jesus like so many people are tricked to buy into a lot of things nowadays.”  Your faith can say, “I know Jesus is real.  I know he is both true God and true man.  I know that he lived on this earth as a perfect human being, died in my place, and rose from the grave to solidify his victory.  And I know that I will end up in heaven because God himself has guaranteed in his Word that whoever believes in Jesus will be saved.”  Intelligence is relative.  Experience can be interpreted different ways.  Knowledge is sometimes wrong.  But faith is strong, not because you are strong, but because the one in whom faith believes is strong.  Faith is confident, not because you are confident in yourself all the time, but because the words in which faith believes are trustworthy.  Faith is sure, not because you are always so stable, but because the love of God on which faith leans never fails.
         
Faith Believes How Wide, Long, High, and Deep Christ’s Love Is

            And I pray that you, being rooted and established in love, may have power, together with all the saints, to grasp how wide and long and high and deep is the love of Christ, and to know this love that surpasses knowledge.”  This is Paul’s prayer for the Ephesians and it’s his prayer for us: that we would grasp this love of Christ that surpasses knowledge.  And Faith is really the only thing that could grasp the love of Christ, isn’t it?  Your intelligence laughs at Christ’s love!  Your experience scoffs at Christ’s love!  Your knowledge instantly dismisses Christ’s love!  But your faith “grasps” Christ’s love like nothing else can.  Only the faith that the Lord has given me could believe that no matter how wide I have opened myself up to the temptations of this world, Christ’s love is wider.  Only faith could believe that no matter how long my rap sheet of sins grows every day, Christ’s love is longer.  Only faith could believe that no matter how high I have built my tower of arrogance and disregard for God’s Word, Christ’s love is higher.  Only faith could possibly believe that no matter how deep I’ve dug that hole for myself over the years, Christ’s love is deeper.  Christ’s love is deeper, higher, longer, and wider than any sin of any sinful person on this earth.  And I believe that.  Not because it makes sense to my intelligence, not because it lines up with past experience, not because it satisfies my knowledge.  I believe that but because the Holy Spirit has worked faith in my heart through the Word of God.  “And I pray that you, being rooted and established in love, may have power, together with all the saints, to grasp how wide and long and high and deep is the love of Christ” for you too.

            In this world of skeptics and scoffers, in the world of liars and cheaters, in this world of uncertainties and inconsistencies, faith in the Word of God is a powerful thing, isn’t it?  But that faith that you now have in your Savior is not because you chose to believe.  Your intelligence and experience and knowledge wouldn’t choose Jesus.  It wasn’t even because you wanted to believe.  Your intelligence and experience and knowledge want nothing to do with Christ.  You have faith right now because God wanted you to believe and through his Word he convinced your heart that, despite everything else, what he has done and what he has said and what he has promised is true.  That is a powerful Word of God to convince you of that!  And thanks to the Holy Spirit that is a powerful faith that now rests in your hearts.  It is your most precious gift.  It is your most prized possession.  Because through it your Lord will take you home.

            Amen.

“Now to him who is able to do immeasurably more than all we ask or imagine, according to his power that is at work within us, to him be glory in the church and in Christ Jesus throughout all generations, for ever and ever! Amen.”  - Eph. 3:20-21

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