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Come Behold the Wondrous Mystery, Part 2

Summit Life / J.D. Greear
The Truth Network Radio
December 12, 2023 9:00 am

Come Behold the Wondrous Mystery, Part 2

Summit Life / J.D. Greear

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December 12, 2023 9:00 am

Have you ever had one of those moments when you’re singing along with a song that you’ve heard a million times before, but all of a sudden something clicks, and you realize what the lyrics are actually about?

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Today on Summit Life, Pastor J.D. Greer is getting to the heart of the Christmas story. This Christmas, I want the mystery of the Incarnation to overwhelm you, to just overwhelm you, to see it with those eyes, to feel it, that what He was doing, He was doing for you. As the Son of God, He could feed 5,000, but as the Son of Man, He became hungry so that He could say to you and to me, I'm the bread of life. Whoever comes to me will never hunger. Welcome to Summit Life with Pastor J.D.

Greer. As always, I'm your host, Molly Vidovitch. We're so glad that you're back with us today as we journey one step closer to Christmas Day. OK, so have you ever had one of those moments when you're singing along with a song and you know every word, every guitar riff? You've heard it a million times, but all of a sudden something clicks and you realize what the song is actually about? Well, a similar thing can happen with familiar Bible stories like the Christmas narrative. Today, Pastor J.D. is urging us to look at the Christmas story with fresh eyes so we can discover the true wonder of God becoming man. He is teaching from a first century song recorded in Colossians chapter one, verses 15 to 20.

Let's join him now. This that you're about to look at is a Christmas song. You see, scholars tell us that what Paul does in verse 15, halfway through this chapter in Colossians, is he breaks into a song. We're going to go through it line by line because in it, Paul gives one of the clearest descriptions of who Jesus is. In short, his answer, Jesus is God. He's going to say it in a half a dozen different ways. We'll go through it line by line and then he's going to at the end turn it around and say all this that he did, he was doing for you. And then he is going to persuade us that in all things, Jesus ought to be preeminent in our lives.

And I'm going to give you a few ways that he should be preeminent. Starting in verse 15, he is, Jesus is the image of the invisible God, invisible. God is invisible. He is spirit.

Human eye cannot see him. So the question is, how can he be known? How can he be perceived by us? Well, Jesus was the image, the icon of God. He was the representation of God. If Jesus were not fully God, then he would not be the exact representation. We are made in the image of God.

Jesus was the image of God. He goes on, he is the firstborn over all creation. Firstborn in Hebrew culture could be one of two things. It could mean literally the firstborn, or it could also be a position where you are the one who is going to receive the inheritance. Well, in this case, clearly firstborn refers not to Jesus being the first thing God created, but it means the position that God gave to him.

I'll show it to you. Look at how the verse continues. Verse 16, for by him, by Jesus, all things were created in heaven and on earth. He was the creator. He created all things visible and invisible, whether thrones or dominions or rulers or authorities, all things were created through him and for him. Jesus is in the position of firstborn. All creation was made by him and for him, which means, listen, that in the creation, what you are looking at or what you are smelling, if you will, is the perfume of the creator.

You are getting a sense of the artistry of the artist. Verse 17, he is before all things and in him, all things hold together. At the center of the universe, at the center of our creation is a God who is so core to it and so central that all things hold together in him. Paul would say this, in him, we live and we move and we have our being. Whether you're a Christian or not, that's true.

To be present in him is to be harmonious with all of creation and with your creator. He's the firstborn. It's all by him. It's all for him. It's all about him. He was there at the beginning. He writes the story in the middle.

He's going to be there at the end. Verse 18, and he is the head of the body, the church. He is the beginning, the firstborn from the dead.

Two ideas Paul gives you here. The first one, he's the firstborn from the dead. In Jesus, we get a glimpse of what we and all of creation are going to be like in the future. You know, Jesus, when he was here on earth, they said that he was not physically impressive.

He was just very average. But when he was resurrected from the dead, he was glorious and he was beautiful and he could fly and he could walk through walls. And that gives you a picture of what God is making you in the new creation and what God is making all of the new creation. He's also the head of the body, which means that he is the source of this new life so that the closer we get to him, the more that his life is going to flow into us.

Paul is showing you that if you want this resurrection life, this firstborn from the dead life in you, he's the head of the church, you want to have it in you, then you've got to be connected to the head so that the closer you are to him, the more you'll see the effects of him in your life. Verse 19, for in him, all the fullness of the Godhead was pleased to dwell. Fullness is the word pleroma. Pleroma, and what it means is that God is not a pie. God's not a pie that's divided into Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.

Listen, this will blow your mind if you think about it for longer than three seconds. In Jesus, the fullness of the Godhead was. In the Father, the fullness of the Godhead was.

In the Spirit, the fullness of the Godhead was. That means in the Father is the Spirit and the Son. In the Son is the Father and the Spirit. In the Spirit is the Father and the Son. You think about that, but they're separate.

I don't know how that works. Each of them has the fullness of the Godhead existing eternally in three persons. Each of them has the fullness of the Godhead in it. All I know is that Paul is trying to say that if I am in Christ, then the fullness of God dwells in me. And that amazes Paul, and it should amaze you. Verse 20, and through him to reconcile all things to himself, whether on earth or in heaven, making peace by the blood of his cross.

Has any other government agency ever done that? Where it takes the traitor, it takes the rebel, and in addition to trying to bring them back, it actually pays their debt? That here is the king of the universe taking the rebellious traitor race, taking upon himself the affliction for their sin and dying for it. And he did it himself. Jesus was God. God was the one that was doing that. Why?

Listen, you can't miss this. So that he would be in all things preeminent. God would not let anybody else stand as a substitute for my sins if he wanted to be preeminent, not that creative thing. Here's a verse that the Greer family is learning. Psalm 130, verse four.

It's a verse that my whole family is learning. There is forgiveness with you that you might be feared. There's forgiveness with you that you might be feared. Question, according to that verse, why did God forgive you? You might be tempted to say, well, because he loves me. Because he wanted me to be with him for eternity, and those are good answers elsewhere in scripture. But according to that verse, I asked my kids, why is there forgiveness?

Why did God forgive you? That God might be properly feared. Don't let the word fear trip you up, because fear is not like you're terrified so much as, think of it how you relate to the sun. If you get out of right relationship to the sun, you get too far or get too close, you either burn up or you'll freeze.

But if you're in right relationship to the sun, it's life and peace. God forgave us so that for all of eternity, we would know we would be scared to death to be out of fellowship with him because we know that in him is eternal life and to know him is to know eternal life. That's King David's way of saying, and in all things he might be preeminent. Now watch how Paul makes it personal. And you, you who were once alienated and hostile in mind doing evil deeds, you he is now reconciled in his body of flesh by his death in order to present you holy and blameless and above reproach before him.

Paul says, this is mine. All this that he did, he did for me, he did it for you. And that makes him burst into praise.

It makes him write songs. See, that's what I want for you. I want you to sit in stunned awe of who Jesus is and not just who he is in a doctrinal sense, but who he is in a relational sense, because you see that what he was doing, he was doing for you and then let all of your life flow as a response to that. Your spiritual life will never take off until doctrine becomes dynamic relationship, until verses become voices that God is speaking to your heart. And when that does, I pray that he will become preeminent in at least four areas with us, four areas in your life.

You may wanna jot these down. Number one, may Christ be preeminent in our worship. Paul cannot talk about these things without breaking into a hymn of praise. Worship for him was not something he worked up to once a week, came in, sang some songs, went home. What he did, in fact, on the weekend when he worshiped with God's people was an overflow of just the saturated nature of his heart, that he's just so overwhelmed at what God had done for him in the incarnation of the cross that he can't help but just at any point you tap into him, he's just gonna burst with praise. See, this Christmas, I want the mystery of the incarnation to overwhelm you, to just overwhelm you, to see it with those eyes, to feel it, that what he was doing, he was doing for you. As the son of God, he could feed 5,000, but as the son of man, he became hungry so that he could say to you and to me, I'm the bread of life.

Whoever comes to me will never hunger. As the son of God, he turned water into wine. As the son of man, he was thirsty so that he could say to me and to you, whoever thirsts, let him come to me and drink.

The water that I will give him will become in him a well of water springing up into eternal life. As the son of God, he spoke the worlds into existence. As the son of man, he grew weary so that he could say to you and to me, come unto me, all you who are labor and are heavy laden and I will give you rest. As the son of God, he dwelled in the palaces of glory. As the son of man, he was born into a stable. He grew up in poverty. He had no place to lay his head so that he could promise me and you an inheritance that could never be taken away.

He took the stable so that he could promise me a place with many mansions. As the son of God, he was adored by angels in the perfections of holiness. As the son of man, he was condemned by Pilate in the filthiness of the Roman court. He was scourged by whips and scorned by man because God was making him who knew no sin to become sin for me so that I could become the righteousness of God in him. And Paul sees that in the incarnation and Paul sees that though Jesus, listen, though he looked weak in the incarnation, which he did, Paul lifts his eyes in this passage to when Jesus is coming again and he says he is not coming again as one who is weak. At his first coming, Jesus was born in a stable.

At his second, he'll come riding on the clouds. Paul looks upward and he said, he's coming again and every eye is gonna see him this time and they're all gonna fall immediately on their faces in worship. But I, Paul says, have no reason to fear.

I have no reason to fear because at his first coming, he came to bear my judgment and stand in my place so that at his second coming, there will be no condemnation for those of us who are in Christ Jesus and nothing that could separate us from the love of God in Christ. How does that not make you burst into worship? One of our songwriters here, Matt Papa, wrote it this way. Come behold the wondrous mystery. In the dawning of the king, he the theme of heaven's praises robed in frail humanity. In our longing, in our darkness, now the light of life has come. Look to Christ who condescended, took on flesh to ransom us. What a foretaste of deliverance.

How unwavering our hope. Christ in power resurrected as we will be when he comes. Paul said, you, you were once alienated. I was once alienated. He's reconciled me and his body of flesh through death that I would be holy and blameless and above reproach before him.

All this was for me. The joy of the Christian life is found in worship, period. And I don't mean that you just get into the songs that we sing here. In fact, that's one of the very minor parts of worship. I mean the worship that consumes you so that you are overwhelmed continually with the majesty and the glory of what God has done so that everything else in life pales in comparison to the treasure that you have in Jesus. The joy in Christianity is not found in successfully completing the assignments. The joy in Christianity is not found in how much you know, how much you learn. The joy in Christianity is not getting the gold star at your church for being our best volunteer.

The joy in Christianity is found when you overflow with worship where your eyes cannot help but fill with tears when we talk about the glory of what God did when he came after you who were his enemy to rescue him and he put the fullness of himself into you. Thanks for being with us today. We'll return to our teaching in just a moment.

But before we do, I wanted to ask you to look ahead to 2024 for just a moment. Here at Summit Life, our eyes are always looking ahead for opportunities to bring the greatest kingdom impact. And you can join us in amplifying the gospel message in your neighborhood and the world by praying for our brothers and sisters in Christ who are planting churches around the globe. Or maybe you become a prayer partner, praying for those who hear the gospel for the first time on this program. Or maybe it's by joining with us as a gospel partner so we can share Summit Life broadcasts in more communities every day. And when you become a partner, we'll send you our 2024 daily planner that includes a one-year Bible reading plan. It includes one New Testament and one Old Testament chapter per day and focuses on some of the teaching passages and books of the Bible that you'll hear taught on Summit Life in 2024.

Consider partnering with us in the new year by giving us a call at 866-335-5220 or you can visit jdgrier.com. Now let's return to our teaching. Once again, here's Pastor JD.

Number two, may Christ be preeminent in our affections. When the almighty God comes into the life of a human being, there is a life quake because there is something so massive and so glorious about God, listen, that everything else in your life becomes fundamentally different because of the treasure and the power of what you now have in God, which is why when I'm talking to a college student and college students are not the only ones who say this, but I've heard it certainly a lot from him and one of them will say something to me like this, well, I'm thinking, yeah, I've thought about becoming a Christian, but you need to have to give up having sex before you get married. There is something about that statement that is so absurd to me that I almost don't want to answer it.

But basically, let me give you what I say. I'm saying, okay, let's say that you got a rare disease. You got a rare disease and death is certain. You will die within a week. There is a cure for this disease, but the one condition is that you cannot eat chocolate. What person is gonna look back at that and say, oh, that's terrible.

Oh, this is, oh, I just hate this. No, in light of the fact that it's saving your life, chocolate seems like a trifling thing for you to give up. When you think about the infinite God coming into your life and His joy for eternity being shed abroad in your soul and you're complaining about some dumb little thing like you can't have sex before you get married as if that were a condition on which you would know the God of the universe, that just shows me you don't understand at all the value of God. Because when you understand His value, there is nothing on earth that you would want to hold on to if it would keep you from Him. In light of Him, everything changes.

Believer, when He is in your life, it's so massive that in light of His presence in your life, everything in your life changes. Even things like your pain. Pain hurts.

I mean, it never gets not painful. But when you have the treasure of God in your life, it ceases to be devastating. You know, the analogy I've used with you is this. It's like if you found out you inherited $100 million and then your car broke down. And you're like, you know, you don't get mad about your car breaking down. You're like, who cares? I'll buy a fleet of cars.

I'll buy a car company. If you understand the value of God, then yes, when things happen in life, they're painful. Sometimes you weep through them, but they're not devastating. They're not devastating because of the treasure you possess in God. The way I've explained it to you, how much you believe the gospel is measured by your ability to be joyful in all things. How much you actually believe the gospel is measured by your ability to be joyful in all things.

If pain devastates you, that doesn't mean that your pain, I'm not trying to be callous toward it and say it doesn't hurt, but I'm just saying that there is a treasure that makes everything on earth seem a little bit trifling in light of the glory that he has given to us. Number three, may Christ be preeminent in our objectives. I got a call on Thursday from a pastor friend. It's one of their staff members that went overseas to live as a servant of Jesus Christ in a place in the Middle East.

It's very hard to reach. Was shot and killed on Thursday. Shot, cold blood, killed because of what he was doing. He said this has been very difficult for their church as you would imagine. He said, but the one thing we know, he told us this many times before he left, was that he realized that the story that God was telling on earth was much bigger than his story. And if his role, this guy's name was Ronnie, if Ronnie's role in this story was living or dying, it did not matter to him because he knew that in 100 years what would matter is what King Jesus was doing on earth and he was honored to be a part of that story. That Christ was supreme, preeminent in his objectives. Whether living or dying in all things, I'm just here to give glory to God.

What I want for you is for you to re-see your life and see everything in it, the pain, the blessing, to see everything of it through the lens of what if Christ was preeminent in this objective? The analogy I've used with this one over the years is this, it's like a movie. In a movie there's major characters and minor characters. If your life were a movie, who would the major character be?

For most of us it would be us. God, when you come to him, offers you a chance to become a part of his movie where you're a minor character. Now what happens to minor characters?

This is kind of the bad news maybe. What happens to the minor characters is not really that significant because there's what's gonna happen. If your story's about you, then at the end of your life when those credits roll, that's the end.

Half a dozen people in your family will clap and say what an awesome person they were and they'll tell a bunch of lies about you and me and then that'll be it. But if my story's been wrapped up in Jesus, it goes on through the ages and it never ends and the credits never roll because it's his story and so I will gladly become a minor character in his. I want him to be preeminent in your objectives, in your pain. I want you to say the point of my pain is not getting better necessarily. The point of my pain is giving glory to God and I can do that maybe by getting better.

I can do it by suffering well. If you're blessed, if you're in prosperity, I want you to look through the lens of that prosperity and say maybe God gave this not for my story but for his. Here's a little thing the Greer family does at Christmas. It's one of our traditions. We say that the largest Christmas gift ought to be given to Jesus. You don't have to be your tradition. I'm not saying that's not the Bible but for us it just helps us remind ourselves that at Christmas we should not be preeminent of all times. So we say let's make sure we all give money. Let's make sure that the largest monetary gift given at Christmas is given to the one who it is about.

I want you to see your life that way. In all things he'd be preeminent. Number four, and very quickly, may Christ be preeminent in our church. May he be preeminent in our church. May the focus never be on us, always on him. Guys, real quick, how does this happen?

How does this happen? I've thought about that this week. How could Christ be preeminent in our church? I hope it's reflected in the way that I preach because my desire when I preach, I don't always do a good job of this but my desire is not to point you to me.

It's to point you to Jesus. I don't want to stand up here and make you think that I'm something that I'm actually not. Where you walk out of here saying, I want to be like JD. You don't want to be like JD.

Ask Veronica, right? I don't want you to compare yourself to me because you won't do anything trying to imitate me because A, the person you're trying to imitate probably doesn't exist. And B, the point is not whether you're a bigger or lesser sinner than me. The point is there's a savior who has rescued me and is working in me and is putting a broken person back together and he can put you back together. So I'd much rather you be thinking about him than about me. So as often as I talk about successes in my life, I want to tell you about failures because I want to point you to the one who is the rescuer, not someone who is a model. We think about this summit church and how we plan.

We want him to be preeminent. By the way, that's why we try to plant so many churches. You realize this, planting churches does not help our bottom line. Are we aware of that?

These churches don't give back to us. But see, we know that it's not about the name of the summit. It's about God's kingdom. That's why we want each other churches to succeed in our area because we don't want the summit church's name.

That's not what's going to save Riley Durham. It's Jesus's name. And God is my witness. Listen, if God wants to do that by prospering another church, if he wants to grow another church at the expense of ours, let it come.

Who cares? If somebody else increases and we decrease, then let God be praise because it's his name, not ours. There's not salvation found in the summit's name. It's found in Jesus's name. So God help us if we ever put the focus on us and not on him.

I'll close with this. John Wesley, one of the preachers of the Great Awakening, founder of the Methodist movement, three, 400 years ago. John Wesley was a missionary and a theologian, yet not a Christian yet. He thought he was a Christian, but see, it's very possible to be very religious, to know a lot of things, to do a lot of things for God, but to never have really met God personally.

Wesley describes his conversion like this. He said, my friend was trying to get me to a church service with him on a Tuesday night. I didn't want to go. I'd already gone, you know, three to thrive, Sunday morning, Sunday night, Wednesday night, already done that.

So I didn't want to go on Tuesday night, but he persuaded me. And when I got there, the preacher that night was not preaching a sermon. He was reading Martin Luther's preface to his commentary in the book of Romans. Now talk about a stem winder of a sermon, right?

Reading a commentary written like 500 years ago. Listen to what Wesley says. Yet about 8.45 PM, while Luther was describing the change, which God works in the heart through faith in Christ, I felt my heart strangely warmed. I knew that I trusted Christ and Christ alone for my salvation. He had come for me and an assurance was given me that he had taken away my sins, even mine and saved me from the law of sin and death, my sin for me.

That's conversion. That's where the verse becomes a voice. That's where doctrine becomes a dynamic relationship for what God did in history.

He did for you. Have you heard that voice? Have you felt that presence? Where doctrine becomes a dynamic relationship, a powerful picture of what following Jesus truly looks like. Have you experienced that? If not, we'd love to help you begin that journey today.

Send an email to requests at jdgrier.com or call 866-335-5220. Pastor JD, as we look ahead to a new year, I know a lot of people are setting goals for themselves, whether that's a financial goal or a health goal, whatever it is. Do you have any thoughts for our listeners as they're kind of looking ahead and making these plans? Yeah, Molly, time is the one resource that at least humanly speaking is not renewable. No matter what you do, you cannot add time. We all, no matter where we are in life, get the same amount of time every day. And so what you want to do is make the most out of that time, just like God will hold us responsible for how we use our treasure and our talents.

He also holds us responsible for how we steward our time. And so to help you in the pursuit of the wise use of time, we put together something special for you. It's a day planner, an agenda.

Call it whatever you want. It's a tool designed to assist you in structuring your days so that you accomplish what you want to accomplish and so you have maximum impact. We've even put a Bible reading plan into it this year that's going to help you maintain what I would consider to be the most vital spiritual discipline. Don't let this opportunity slip through your fingers. Head on over to jdgreer.com slash donate today so that you can secure this valuable resource. With your generous gifts, we can continue to expand to new stations across the country, transforming hearts and lives as people dive deeper into the gospel with us. Be sure to ask for a copy of the 2024 Summit Life Planner when you give an end of year gift today by calling 866-335-5220. That's 866-335-5220.

Or request the planner when you give online at jdgreer.com. I'm Molly Vidovitch, and tomorrow we're continuing our series called God With Us, talking about what it really means to experience God's blessing. That's Wednesday on Summit Life with J.D. Greer. Today's program was produced and sponsored by J.D. Greer Ministries.
Whisper: medium.en / 2023-12-12 10:14:09 / 2023-12-12 10:26:32 / 12

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