What
We Believe about Jesus
3. His Message
March 21, 2004
by John M. Buchanan,
Pastor
Psalm 139:1–12
Luke 15:1–3, 11–32
* * *
Startle
us
again,
O
God,
with
your
amazing
grace.
We
come
here
today
out
of
busy,
noisy
lives.
We
come
to
be
still
together
and
to
hear
a
different
word.
So
speak
the
word
you
have
for
us
and
give
us
faith
to
know
again
your
love
for
us
and
for
all
your
children,
in
Jesus
Christ
our
Lord.
Amen.
Martin
Marty
is
a
distinguished
historian
and
scholar.
He
writes
a
lot
about
a
lot
of
topics:
books,
essays,
columns.
When
the
Wall
Street
Journal
or
the
Encyclopedia
Britannica
need
someone
to
say
something
that
is
sensitive
and
thoughtful
about
religion,
more
often
than
not
they
call
Marty.
So
two
months
ago,
Marty
commented
on
Mel
Gibson’s
The
Passion
of
the
Christ
(Sightings,
9
February
2004).
He
titled
his
column
“Not
My
Passion.”
Marty
doesn’t
think
much
of
the
film—wonders
why
conservative
Catholics
and
evangelicals
who
normally
are
opposed
to
violence
in
films
find
it
fine
if
Jesus
is
in
one
and
suggests
that
the
preponderance
of
blood,
gore,
brutality,
and
torture
is
so
overwhelming
that
the
real
questions—“What
is
this
about?
Why
is
this
happening?
What
is
going
on
here?”—get
lost.
He
doesn’t
plan
to
see
Mel
Gibson’s
The
Passion
of
the
Christ.
“In
Holy
Week,”
Marty
wrote,
“I’ll
be
listening
to
Bach’s
“Passion,”
singing
about
“was
there
ever
grief
like
thine?”
but
not
in
the
belief
that
the
more
blood
and
gore
the
holier.”
So
last
week,
as
I
was
thinking
about
this
whole
big
conversation
and
this
sermon,
I
sat
in
my
seat
at
Symphony
Center
to
listen
to
George
Frederic
Handel’s
Messiah,
all
two-and-one-half-hours
of
it
(which
means
that
it
lasts
about
as
long
as
Mel
Gibson’s
movie,
if
you
add
in
the
previews
and
the
time
you
spend
in
line
waiting
for
popcorn
and
a
diet
Coke).
What
a
gift!
What
a
miracle!
It
is
strong
and
delicate,
passionate
and
gentle,
boisterous
and
quiet.
Before
the
Hallelujah
Chorus,
near
the
end
of
Part
I,
there
is
an
alto
and
soprano
aria,
“He
Shall
Feed
His
Flock
Like
a
Shepherd.”
It’s
my
favorite
part
actually.
The
two
voices
never
sing
together,
but
each
beautifully,
elegantly
announces
the
familiar
but
amazing
idea
that
Messiah,
the
one
who
died
and
rose
again,
the
one
who
shall
reign
forever
and
ever,
is
like
a
shepherd
who
gently
leads
and
feeds
his
sheep.
It
always
gets
to
me—and
it
did
again
Tuesday
night,
and
part
of
it,
I
think,
was
that
the
film
The
Passion
of
the
Christ
simply
ignores,
misses
this
point
altogether:
the
shepherd
finding
the
lost
sheep,
leading
the
sheep.
In
fairness,
Gibson
does
not
set
out
to
tell
the
entire
story
of
Jesus.
I
wish
he
had.
Because
the
whole
story
is
important.
In
Braveheart,
he
tells
the
story
of
William
Wallace,
Scottish
patriot
and
martyr,
describes
the
political
and
social
background,
makes
the
English
look
at
least
as
dreadful
as
the
priests
in
the
Passion
but
takes
care
of
Wallace’s
torturous
execution
in
a
few
minutes,
not
two
excruciating
hours.
Novelist
Mary
Gordon,
a
devout
Catholic,
writes,
“If
you
take
the
Passion
out
of
its
context,
you
are
left
with
a
Jesus
who
is
much
more
body
than
spirit;
you
are
presented
not
with
the
author
of
the
Beatitudes
or
the
man
who
healed
the
sick
but
with
a
carcass
to
be
flayed”
(New
York
Times,
28
February
2004).
David
Denby,
in
the
New
Yorker,
observes
that
there
is
nothing
in
the
movie
of
“the
electric
charge
of
hope
and
redemption
Jesus
brought
into
the
world
.
.
.
none
of
the
heart-stopping
eloquence,
startling
ethical
radicalism,
and
personal
radiance.”
John
Petrakis,
writing
in
the
Christian
Century,
said
that
while
Gibson
claims
simply
to
be
following
scripture,
he
doesn’t
use
enough
of
it—no
teacher,
healer,
no
Good
Shepherd,
no
God
in
the
movie
who
follows
the
lost
to
the
farthest
limits
of
the
sea
and
into
hell
itself,
as
Psalm
139
so
beautifully
announces,
no
prodigal
father
who
simply
will
not
stop
loving
and
pursuing
his
children
until
they
are
safely
at
home
again.
If
I
could
know
only
one
thing
about
Jesus
other
than
that
his
death
on
the
cross
was
somehow
for
me,
it
would
be
a
story
he
told
one
day
about
God
and
about
the
human
condition
and
what
God
does
about
it.
It’s
called
the
Parable
of
the
Prodigal
Son,
and
he,
the
young
son,
gets
all
the
press,
but
the
subject
is
really
the
father.
He
is
the
real
prodigal.
You
know
the
story.
Religious
legalists
have
been
criticizing
Jesus
for
associating
and
eating
with
the
wrong
kind
of
people:
sinners,
tax
collectors,
outcasts.
Jesus
doesn’t
argue.
Instead
he
tells
a
brilliant
little
story
about
a
man
and
two
sons.
The
characters
are
unforgettable.
The
younger
son
does
the
unthinkable:
essentially
says
to
his
father,
“Old
man,
I
can’t
wait
for
you
to
die.
Give
me
my
part
of
your
estate
now”—which
is
what
the
father
does.
No
questions
asked.
The
young
son
takes
the
money
and
runs
and
spends
it
all
on
what
Jesus
delicately
calls
dissolute
living.
When
the
young
man
is
broke,
he
takes
a
job
feeding
hogs,
an
abhorrent
job
for
a
Jew.
And
then
“he
comes
to
himself.”
This
is
not
great
moral
breakthrough.
This
is
a
hungry,
exhausted
boy
who
remembers
where
there
are
clean
sheets
and
three
meals
a
day.
He
rehearses
his
speech,
crafts
and
refines
it—“I’m
no
longer
worthy
to
be
your
son;
just
treat
me
like
a
hired
hand,
but
let
me
come
home”—goes
over
and
over
the
speech
on
the
road
until
he
comes
within
eyesight
of
home.
His
father
sees
him
coming.
Actually
the
old
man
is
out
there
every
day,
morning
and
evening,
scanning
the
horizon,
watching,
waiting,
hoping.
He
sees
the
unmistakable
figure
of
his
son,
the
walk,
the
carriage
he
knows
so
well,
his
child,
coming
home!
And
he
does
the
most
extraordinary
thing,
something
his
neighbors
would
regard
as
almost
embarrassing.
He
hikes
up
his
robe
and
runs
down
the
road.
In
that
culture,
men
of
his
station
don’t
run.
They
wait
in
dignified
patience.
This
father
is
so
overjoyed
he
runs.
His
son
sees
him
coming,
starts
to
make
his
well-rehearsed
speech,
but
can’t
get
it
out
because
his
father’s
arms
are
around
him
and
his
father’s
kisses
and
tears
of
joy
are
on
his
cheeks.
Finally
he
says
it:
“I
have
sinned;
I
am
not
worthy.”
The
old
man
doesn’t
even
hear
it.
He’s
busy
now,
planning
the
celebration:
best
robes,
ring,
new
sandals,
fatted
calf.
“My
son
was
lost
and
is
found.”
The
third
character
we
recognize,
oldest
child,
elder
brother.
I’m
one.
We’re
the
ones
new
parents
practice
on.
We’re
the
ones
who
get
to
watch
later
while
our
younger
siblings
benefit
from
all
the
patience
and
grace
and
generosity
and
freedom
our
parents
had
not
yet
learned
when
we
showed
up
and
which
we
taught
them.
Most
of
our
presidents
were
eldest
children.
Many
ministers,
too.
Maybe
it’s
because
we
think
we
have
to
fix
all
the
things
our
younger
siblings
mess
up
and
break.
In
any
event,
this
older
sibling
is
a
classic:
hard
working,
responsible
to
a
T.
Maybe
he
didn’t
see
his
brother
return
and
the
amazing
encounter
on
the
road.
Maybe
he
did.
He
does
what
firstborns
do:
he
keeps
on
working.
But
he
hears
the
music
and
laughter
now
and
it
is
too
much
for
him.
He
can’t
go
in
and
join
the
celebration
and
enjoy
the
party.
And
for
a
second
time
the
father
leaves
the
house
and
goes
out
to
find
a
lost
child:
this
one
lost
in
his
own
self-righteousness
and
pride.
“All
these
years
I’ve
been
loyal
and
steadfast
and
you
never
gave
me
a
goat.”
But
“this
son”—notice
the
sarcasm,
the
hurt—“this
son”
of
yours
who
“wasted
your
money
with
prostitutes.”
He’s
the
one
who
brings
up
the
subject
of
sex;
the
father
ignores
his
speech
as
well.
“Son,
you
are
always
with
me;
all
that
I
have
is
yours.
But
we
have
to
celebrate;
your
brother
was
dead
and
is
alive,
was
lost
and
has
been
found.”
There
is
a
startling
concept
of
God
in
this
story:
a
God
who
comes
after
the
lost,
waits
patiently
watching,
but
at
the
first
opportunity
runs
down
the
road
to
welcome
the
lost
home
again,
leaves
the
party
to
find
and
recover
the
ones
who
are
in
self-imposed
exile.
It’s
a
radical
theology,
but
it
is
actually
not
new.
It’s
as
old
as
the
Psalter,
Israel’s
hymnbook.
Jesus
knew
the
Psalms:
memorized
them
as
a
child,
recited
and
sang
them.
He
knew
these
amazing
words:
Where can I go from your spirit?
If I ascend to heaven you are there;
If I make my bed in hell, you are there. (Psalm 139)
In
addition
to
a
God
of
justice
and
righteousness,
Israel
experienced
a
God
of
unconditional
love
who
never
gives
up
and
never
stops
pursuing
lost
children.
So
the
cross,
on
which
he
will
later
die,
becomes
a
symbol
of
that
love
that
will
go
anywhere
to
find
us—even
there.
Words
will
never
encompass
all
the
meaning
of
his
death.
He
died
for
us.
His
suffering
was
for
us.
One
idea
is
that
his
death
is
the
necessary
payment
for
our
sin.
It’s
in
the
Bible:
“The
Lord
has
laid
on
him
the
iniquity
of
us
all
and
with
his
stripes
we
are
healed.”
That
is
profoundly
true.
But
what
is
equally
true
is
that
Jesus
shows
us
a
God
of
love
who
comes
running
down
the
road
to
welcome
us
home.
The
love
comes
before
the
confession.
The
young
son
doesn’t
get
to
apologize
before
he
receives
his
father’s
forgiveness.
Another
profoundly
radical
word:
God’s
love
and
forgiveness
come
even
before
we
say
we’re
sorry.
That
is
hard
for
us.
We
can
get
our
minds
around
this
notion
of
forgiveness
if
there
is
proper
penitence,
remorse,
penance,
or
at
least
a
proper
apology.
But
this
is
different.
This
is
a
forgiving
love
that
doesn’t
wait
for
an
apology
but
reaches
out
to
the
lost.
This
is
a
love
so
profound
that
it
inspires
profound
repentance:
repentance
not
in
order
to
receive
forgiveness,
but
repentance
that
comes
out
of
the
very
depths
of
the
soul
because
forgiveness
has
already
been
given.
And
this
wonderful
story
suggests
that
part
of
the
truth
about
the
human
condition
is
in
the
word
lost.
For
most
of
our
history
we
have
been
thinking
about
sin:
sin
as
disobedience,
original
sin,
sexual
sin,
sin
as
pride,
sin
as
willfulness,
“total
depravity,”
our
theological
ancestors
called
it.
“Jesus
came
to
save
us
from
our
sins.
Jesus
died
to
forgive
our
sins,
wash
away
our
sins,”
we
say.
But
the
truth
is
we
have
more
problems
than
sin.
We
get
lost.
We
stray—from
our
best
intentions,
our
promises,
our
loves,
our
commitments.
We
stray
from
our
own
better
selves
and
from
God,
and
we
get
lost.
And
the
good
news
is
that
God
doesn’t
give
up
on
us
but
follows
us
and
comes
after
us
and
wants
to
welcome
us
home.
Henri
Nouwen,
Dutch
priest,
popular
teacher
and
writer
before
he
died
recently,
wrote
a
wonderful
book
on
the
Prodigal
Son.
Actually,
it
is
a
personal
meditation
on
Rembrandt’s
masterpiece
“The
Return
of
the
Prodigal,”
which
hangs
in
the
Hermitage.
In
the
painting,
the
son
is
kneeling
in
front
of
his
father,
an
elderly,
dignified
man.
The
father’s
hands
are
placed
on
his
son’s
shoulders.
Nouwen
noticed
that
one
hand
was
masculine,
but
the
tapered
fingers
on
the
other
hand
were
decidedly
feminine,
and
concluded,
if
there
were
ever
any
doubt,
that
the
father
is
really
a
symbol
of
God’s
love,
which
is
both
paternal
and
maternal
and,
most
important
of
all,
a
love
that
everyone
of
us
desperately
needs.
When
Nouwen
first
saw
Rembrandt’s
masterpiece,
it
was
at
the
end
of
a
long
and
arduous
journey.
Nouwen
was
tired,
exhausted
from
his
demanding
schedule
of
traveling
and
lecturing,
and
he
wrote
about
the
painting
that
it
“brought
me
into
touch
with
something
within
me
that
lies
beyond
the
ups
and
downs
of
a
busy
life,
something
that
represents
the
ongoing
yearning
of
the
human
spirit,
the
yearning
for
a
final
return,
a
sense
of
safety,
a
lasting
home.”
And
then
Nouwen
became
confessional
in
a
way
most
of
us
can
understand:
“the
question
is
not
‘How
am
I
to
find
God?’
but
‘How
am
I
to
let
myself
be
found
by
him?’
Not
‘How
am
I
to
know
God?’
but
“How
am
I
to
let
myself
be
known?’
Not
‘How
am
I
to
love
God?’
but
‘How
am
I
to
let
myself
be
loved
by
God?’
God
is
looking
into
the
distance
for
me,
trying
to
find
me,
longing
to
bring
me
home.
.
.
.
Can
I
accept
that
I
am
worth
looking
for?”
(pp.
100–101).
Two
writers
who
think
deeply
about
their
own
spiritual
journeys
have
helped
and
inspired
me
for
years,
not
only
because
of
their
eloquence,
but
also
because
of
their
honesty.
Kathleen
Norris,
who
hadn’t
been
to
church
for
years
and
hadn’t
thought
much
about
it,
started
attending
her
grandparents’
Presbyterian
church
in
Lemon,
South
Dakota.
Norris
remembers,
“I
came
to
understand
that
God
hadn’t
lost
me,
even
if
I
seemed
for
years
to
have
misplaced
God.”
Older
mentors
nudged
her
gently,
she
remembers,
and
one
said
to
her,
“If
you
don’t
feel
as
close
to
God
as
you
used
to,
who
do
you
suppose
moved?”
(Amazing
Grace,
p.
3).
And
Frederick
Buechner,
who
had
virtually
no
official
religious
experience
or
affiliation,
trying
to
be
a
writer
in
New
York
City
and
not
doing
very
well,
walked
into
a
Madison
Avenue
Presbyterian
church
one
Sunday
morning
because
he
had
nothing
better
to
do,
heard
George
Arthur
Buttrick
preach,
and
later
wrote,
“At
the
end
I
am
left
with
no
other
way
of
saying
it
than
what
I
found
was
Christ—Or
was
found.
It
hardly
seems
to
matter
which”
(The
Sacred
Journey,
p.
6).
If
I
didn’t
know
anything
else
about
Jesus
other
than
his
death
on
the
cross,
I
would
want
to
know
this:
the
story
he
told
one
day
about
a
father
and
two
children
and
the
father’s
unconditional
love
for
both
of
them,
the
forgiveness
that
preceded
any
confession,
the
father’s
amazing
grace
that
comes
down
the
road,
goes
out
into
the
field,
the
amazing
grace
of
God
that
comes
to
wherever
we
are,
whatever
road
we
walk,
whatever
field
we
till,
and
invites
us
to
come
home.
And
that
is
also
what
is
going
on
when
Jesus
Christ
suffers
and
dies.
It
is
more
than
the
settling
of
an
account,
the
satisfaction
of
justice.
It
is
love,
the
love
of
God
going
all
this
way,
all
the
way
into
hell
itself
for
us,
experiencing
the
last
moment
of
our
mortality
because
of
that
unconditional
love.
And
I
like
to
think
that
as
he
died
he
remembered,
“Whither
shall
I
go
from
your
spirit?
If
I
make
my
bed
in
hell,
you
are
there.
If
I
take
the
wings
of
the
morning
and
settle
at
the
farthest
limits
of
the
sea,
even
there
your
right
hand
shall
hold
me
fast.”
Have
you
ever
been
lost,
really
lost,
and
then
wonderfully
found?
It’s
a
silly
little
story
and
it
happened
a
very
long
time
ago,
but
I
do
think
of
it
every
time
I
hear
this
parable.
I
was
just
six.
We
had
moved
to
a
new
house
in
a
new
neighborhood
and
a
new
school.
I
was
in
first
grade.
The
school
was
five
blocks
away—straight
up
a
hill
two
blocks,
turn
left
two
blocks,
right
one
block
and
there
it
was:
D.
S.
Keith
School.
My
mother
walked
with
me
a
practice
run
or
two,
then
walked
with
me
on
Monday
morning
and
as
she
left,
told
me
again
how
to
find
my
way
home.
Well,
I
took
a
wrong
turn—turned
left
instead
of
right—and
became
utterly,
absolutely
lost,
so
lost
I
can
still
remember
it.
Nothing
looked
familiar.
I
knew
I
was
further
and
further
from
home.
I
was
scared,
and
I
probably
was
crying
although
I
don’t
remember
that
part.
What
I
remember
was
my
father’s
whistle,
the
high
tune
he
whistled,
when
he
got
off
the
bus
after
work,
to
let
us
know
he
was
home,
and
then
I
do
remember
seeing
him
at
the
bottom
of
one
of
those
endlessly
steep
hills,
looking
for
me,
and
I
do
remember
what
that
felt
like
to
be
found
and
safe
and
home.
And
I
do
believe
that
Jesus
reveals
a
God
who
comes
to
each
of
us
like
that.
But
Jesus
didn’t
finish
the
story.
The
elder
brother
is
still
outside
when
the
story
concludes.
And
maybe
it’s
because
he
wants
you
and
me
to
finish
the
story
in
our
own
lives
(see
Barbara
Brown
Taylor,
The
Preaching
Life:
The
Prodigal
Father)—to
allow
ourselves
to
be
found
and
forgiven
and
loved
by
him,
to
walk
into
the
banquet
hall
and
take
our
seat
at
the
table.
God’s
child,
home
and
safe—forever.
Amen.
Amen.