Sermon

Cutting Room Floor: Ecclesiastes 7:15-8:1

The hardest part of being a preacher isn’t trying to fill your sermons with more content but having to cut things out to make sure that you don’t preach for 2 hours! Unfortunately, I had to cut a few things from my sermon this past Sunday morning that I want to quickly discuss here.

Firstly, I want to expound upon something that I was only able to briefly touch on during the first point of my message. Solomon writes something that hits very close to home in Ecclesiastes 7:21-22, “Do not take to heart all the things that people say, lest you hear your servant cursing you. Your heart knows that many times you yourself have cursed others.” Be honest: have you ever eavesdropped on a conversation that you weren’t meant to hear or secretly looked at a loved one’s text messages to see what they are saying about you? We’ve all done something like this because we want others to think that we’re great and only say nice things about us. Is it bad to care what others think about you? Not at all; it would be foolish of me to not give any thought to what my wife, close friends, and mentors think of me. Caring about what others think isn’t bad; obsessing over and being controlled by what others think is bad and destructive. If your identity is tied up in public opinion then your worth will go on a topsy-turvy roller coaster ride on a daily basis. Instead, your identity and worth should be wrapped up in what your God says about you. He says that you are His son or daughter (1 John 3:1-2). He says that you are loved no matter what (Rom. 8:38-39). He says that you are His workmanship and destined to accomplish great things for His glorious kingdom (Eph. 2:10). What would happen if we began to care more about what God says about us than what other human beings say about us? Our lives would change and we would be much happier. Solomon wants us to understand that the wise don’t get easily offended or constantly obsess over what others may say because they are secure and comfortable in their own skin. The wise man or woman doesn’t get bent out of shape when others say rude things about them because they know how often they’ve said rude things out of turn about others as well.

Secondly, Solomon seems to go on a strange tirade in vs. 26-28, “And I find something more bitter than death: the woman whose heart is snares and nets, and whose hands are fetters. He who pleases God escapes her, but the sinner is taken by her. Behold, this is what I found, says the Preacher, while adding one thing to another to find the scheme of things - which my soul has repeatedly, but I have not found. One man among a thousand I have found, but a woman among all these I have not found.” Okay, what in the world is Solomon talking about here and why does he seem to be roasting the female population? If you read about the life of Solomon, it becomes very clear that he had romantic relationships with a lot of women (700 wives and 300 concubines) and a lot of them didn’t go very well. He sinfully chose to pursue relationships with pagan women who ensnared him in the worship of false gods and led him down the wrong path. All throughout the books of Proverbs, Solomon warns his male readers to avoid the temptress and to not fall prey to a woman’s beauty without paying attention to her inward character. Simply put, in these verses Solomon is emphasizing the sad reality that he has not come across many wise people of either gender. Wickedness and sin abound among men and women alike. He ends this chapter by saying, “See, this alone I found, that God made man upright, but they have sought out many schemes,” (7:29). Men are not better than women and women are not better than men. Man or woman, we have all strayed away from the Lord and are in desperate need of His saving grace.

Cutting Room Floor - God's Sovereignty and Man's Responsibility are Not in Opposition to Each Other!

Cut for time, but this illustrates how God’s sovereign will does NOT negate man’s choices.

God's sovereignty and man's responsibility are not opposites! They somehow work in perfect harmony

The ultimate Biblical example: the cross. Who killed Jesus? Was it the Romans? The Jews? God, according to Isaiah 53?

The answer is: All of the above. It was God's plan from the beginning, but men, by their own choices, carried it out and were guilty of killing the Son of God – as God ordained they would. 

It can give you a headache trying to figure it out, or you can say, “That’s how God says it is, and we can’t fully explain it. So I’ll just believe Him. After all, He is God, and I am… not!”

Cutting Room Floor: What kind of wine did Jesus make out of the water?

This controversial question goes with the sermon “Knowing His Glory”.

There is so much controversy among scholars about what kind of wine Jesus created. Well, obviously, I wasn't there to taste it. All I know is it was the best wine, according to the master of the feast, the headwaiter.

Some scholars say it was just excellent wine, yes it had alcohol in it as all wine does, and

Yes some say it was unfermented, because God wouldn't create something spoiled, that is fermented. –

SO what’s the definitive answer? I really think the debate itself completely misses the point of the passage itself!  

Here’s the point of the text: It was JUST WATER ONE SECOND AGO – now IT'S WINE. And as I pointed out in the sermon, there were many profound reasons that Jesus chose this as His first miracle. Any debate over the alcohol content, pardon the pun, is fruitless.

Cutting Room Floor: Why did Jesus reference angels in His talk with Nathanael?

This goes with the sermon “Making Him Known”, but didn’t make the final cut.

Jesus told Nathanael: And he said to him, “Truly, truly, I say to you, you will see heaven opened, and the angels of God ascending and descending on the Son of Man.” (1:51). Like Jacob (Israel), Nathanael would eventually come to the same conclusion: “Surely the Lord was in this place, and I did not know it." But why THIS reference? How do angels play into Jesus’ ministry? The reality was that angels WERE there, in so many key moments!

Regarding Jesus’ birth, how was it announced? By angels!

After Jesus’ temptation, who ministered to Him? Angels!

At Jesus’ tomb, who was there? Angels again!

And when Jesus ascended back to the Father in Heaven, who was there to remind the disciples that He would come again? If you guessed an angel, you are a winner!

This helps make sense of why Jesus used that reference with Nathanael, the guileless Israelite!