Recognizing God's Presence: A Call to Transformation

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And he looks at Jerusalem and he weeps on Palm Sunday. We know the celebration that was happening when they saw Jesus coming in. But right after that passage, there's a verse that says, because you didn't recognize that God was with you. It's the last part of this one verse that I remember as a new Christian. That verse freaked me out. It scared me. [00:06:59] (31 seconds)


And really, as I thought about that, I'd hear about the Pharisees and the high religious people and how they missed God being in their midst. They missed Jesus as the Messiah. And I'd almost feel bad for them, feel sorry for them. Except for one thing as I went through that whole process. Because you didn't recognize that God was with you. That's a frightening concept. [00:07:30] (35 seconds)


But I thought, you know, how is that fair for those Pharisees? They didn't get it. And so they're doomed forever. Ever. Eternity in hell. Because they missed Jesus as the Messiah. Does that seem fair? I mean, what if Jesus had come with like a different vibe? Instead of showing up in this obscure little place as a baby wrapped in cloths from a manger, laid in a trough, what if he had a, you know, a more impressive entrance? [00:08:05] (34 seconds)


And then 4,000 years later, he shows up, and he's not at all what they expected. They missed Jesus. And I think the thing that freaks me out about that, or used to freak me out about that, is that I thought, what if I miss him? What if he comes today? He shows up in my life in some small, obscure way, and I miss Jesus just like these religious leaders did. And I'm not a religious leader. What if I miss him too? Could I stumble into eternity because I didn't see the signs? [00:09:33] (46 seconds)


It's not about getting the memo. It's not about missing the note that comes to you about who he is. It's not that those men, those Pharisees, those religious leaders, couldn't see Jesus. It's that they wouldn't see Jesus. They didn't, what the Scripture says, is they did not recognize him. Because he was like a stranger in the crowd. They refused to admit what was staring them in the face. And deep down, they knew. They knew who Jesus was. [00:10:32] (40 seconds)


Knowing it and taking responsibility for what we know, those are two completely different things at the opposite ends of the spectrum. We can know a lot. But until we take responsibility for what we know, it doesn't mean a thing. That's why the Bible actually says, you are responsible for the word that you take in. If you read your Bible on a daily basis, everything that you read and you comprehend and take in, you're responsible for that information from that point forward. [00:12:16] (32 seconds)


But I remember a line in there that says, Batman is the hero that we needed, not the one we wanted. Guess what? For these Pharisees, Jesus was the Messiah that they needed, but he wasn't the one that they wanted. They pushed back against him. It wasn't that they didn't recognize who Jesus was. They just didn't like who he was. Where are we along that spectrum of belief? He wasn't the Jesus they wanted. [00:13:37] (38 seconds)


And the big one, that's what I want to talk about today. It's basically the chapter of John 11. It's the raising of Lazarus. Lazarus. John 11. It's not in the slides, Kirsten. We know the story. He was from Bethany. That's just where he was coming from when Frank started reading that scripture. The village of Mary and her sister Martha. [00:14:39] (28 seconds)


And Lazarus gets sick and they send word to Jesus your friend is sick and he's going to die please come and Jesus waits for a day no, he waits for three days no, he waits for four days before he comes to visit and see about Lazarus and he has a little interchange in John 11 with his disciples before he gets there book note that put that on your phone as a note to read a little bit later, it won't take you but five minutes to read that chapter and it's interesting here's the thing he hangs out for four days before he goes to see Jesus why? [00:14:47] (42 seconds)


And when we do it the right way and God has first place and then our wife or husband or our kids come in second place and everything else kind of falls in place, then life is good even when it's not. It doesn't lead to death. I mean, back in the Old Testament, as I was thinking about this, God didn't mess around with idol worship, did he? I mean, the punishment was so harsh and strict. Why? Not because God's mean. [00:31:08] (38 seconds)


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