CHURCH

LUTHERAN

Our Savior's of Elderon

5th Sunday in Lent 24           INI               Heb. 5:7-9

Who is Jesus Christ? These next two weeks you’ll  hear a lot about him. Next Sunday is Palm Sunday. Then comes Good Friday. Then comes Easter. This is that time of year when you hear people talk about Jesus Christ.

Unlike Christmas, Easter has escaped the intense commercialism that might sweep away its true spiritual meaning. Unlike Christmas, when school children sing about a fat man and snow, no one really knows what to sing or to do, when Easter arrives.

 After buying some candy and painting some eggs, most people wonder, “Is that it? What’s the deal with Easter?” And so, many wonder about Jesus Christ, and who he is.  Thus, our theme:

 WHO IS JESUS CHRIST?

Who is he? Everyone believes he existed. Unless you are completely uneducated, you know from history that there was such a man named Jesus. Secular historians, people who aren’t connected to the Bible, talk about a Jewish teacher named Jesus who lived in the early first century who upset a lot of people.

He existed. But after that, opinions go in different directions about who he was. Was he really the Son of God? Was there more significance to his death than what meets the eye? Did he really rise from the dead?

You know the answers to these questions. This morning, we want to get rid of any doubt you might have in your mind about who Jesus Christ is.

 This is the fifth Sunday of Lenten, and we have used our Sunday services to rid ourselves of weaknesses and sins in our hearts. Today, if there’s any doubt in your heart about who Jesus is, any confusion, then it’s my prayer    that the words we study this morning will help you understand more clearly who Jesus, this person you are going to hear so much about in the next two weeks.

Our text for today, taken from the book of Hebrews,  talks about the identity of Jesus Christ. To help us remember the content of this section, think of it this way - “the two S’s.”

S #1 is from verse 7: “During the days of Jesus’ life on earth, he offered up prayers and petitions with loud cries and tears to the one who could save him from death, and he was heard because of his reverent submission.”

There’s our first S: submission. Who is Jesus? He was the Son of God, and he submitted to the will of his Heavenly Father. This verse describes Jesus praying to God with loud cries and tears. The picture here is the Garden of Gethsemane.

 Shortly before he was arrested, Jesus looked into the future, and he could see what lay ahead of him – he could see all the suffering and death. It was a terrible thing. And all of it was optional.

Why do you think God keeps you from seeing your future? Perhaps it’s because if we knew that something bad was going to happen, we would lose our minds worrying and stressing over it.

What if God let you see into your future, and you found out that you were going to die a slow and gruesome death tomorrow morning? It would be terrible to know that, wouldn’t it?

That’s what Jesus went through right before he suffered and died for our sins. He could see what lay ahead of him. And it wasn’t just the physical suffering that made him recoil. It was the spiritual suffering he was about to go through because all the sins of the world  were placed on him. He was about to have God the Heavenly Father punish him for the sins of all mankind. Jesus could see this in his future, and it was a terrible thing.

 

He could have bypassed the suffering, if he wanted to. All of it was optional. After all, he was the Son of God. At any moment he could have said, “No, I won’t lower myself to that level. I won’t do that for the human race.”

But he knew that this was the only way to save people from total destruction. And so he submitted to the Heavenly Father, as it says, “Although he was a son, he learned obedience from what he suffered.”

He submitted to betrayal, to the arrest, to the all-night trials, to the beatings, and finally, to the crucifixion. When you ask yourself, “Who is Jesus Christ? Why is he suffering on a cross?” Think of the word “submission.” Of all the words that describe Jesus Christ, perhaps one of the best is the word “submission.” This is how he took your sins away.

There is another “s” in this section that I would like to focus on for today. Verse 9: “And, once made perfect, he became the source of eternal salvation for all who obey him.”

The Greek word for “made perfect” actually means “to complete” or “to finish.” Once Jesus completed his suffering, what happened? He became the source of eternal salvation. There’s your other “s” - source.

 What if there had been some sort of disaster in this part of our country, and all the drinking water had been contaminated? What if there were no stores to buy things from? What if there was no way of transporting water in? There was literally nothing clean to drink. What would you do? Would you drink dirty water just to survive, even though you know it would make you terribly sick? Or would you drink nothing?

Spiritually, that’s the situation our world is in. A terrible disaster has taken place in our world, and that disaster is called the fall into sin. As a result, everything good, everything spiritual, has been contaminated.

There really is no place where a person can find eternal salvation in this world. Millions of people, all over the world, are dying of spiritual thirst.

Where can I find relief from guilt in my life, people wonder. Where can I find a sense of purpose? How can I learn more about this God whom I will someday meet when I die? How can I change my life for the better? Where can I go for these things?

 You can look all you want, you can try various kinds of religions and meditation techniques and philosophies, but none nothing on this earth can provide you with what you really need. Everything is contaminated with sin. Instead of making your soul better, the spiritual options of this world only make your soul worse.

But then, as you know, something big happened  when Jesus submitted to all of his suffering. After he completed everything and rose from the dead, he became the pipeline, the source of salvation, for all who obey him.

That is the second “s” to think about when asking yourself, who is Jesus Christ? He is the source of eternal salvation.

In him, you’ll find relief from your guilt. In him you’ll a sense of purpose, an understanding of who God really is. In him you’ll find the strength and motivation to change your life for the better. He changes it for you.

He is the source of all these things, “the source of eternal salvation.” “Source” is the second “s” to think about as you ponder in your mind who Jesus Christ really is.

Who is Jesus? To many, the story of Jesus might seem quite sad, and quite trivial. A traveling Jewish teacher, unpopular with the religious establishment, is put to death by a tyrannical government. He taught the world to be nice.

But there must be more! And there is. When you realize to what extent he submitted to the Heavenly Father, when you realize that he is the source of eternal salvation, that changes everything. It changed the lives of 11 men, his disciples, from doubting cowards to courageous witnesses.

 It changed the lives of millions of people that have learned about Jesus over the years. May his life and death and resurrection, all these things that happened for you, may they change you as well. Amen.  

5th Sunday in Lent 24           INI               Heb. 5:7-9

Who is Jesus Christ? These next two weeks you’ll  hear a lot about him. Next Sunday is Palm Sunday. Then comes Good Friday. Then comes Easter. This is that time of year when you hear people talk about Jesus Christ.

Unlike Christmas, Easter has escaped the intense commercialism that might sweep away its true spiritual meaning. Unlike Christmas, when school children sing about a fat man and snow, no one really knows what to sing or to do, when Easter arrives.

 After buying some candy and painting some eggs, most people wonder, “Is that it? What’s the deal with Easter?” And so, many wonder about Jesus Christ, and who he is.  Thus, our theme:

 WHO IS JESUS CHRIST?

Who is he? Everyone believes he existed. Unless you are completely uneducated, you know from history that there was such a man named Jesus. Secular historians, people who aren’t connected to the Bible, talk about a Jewish teacher named Jesus who lived in the early first century who upset a lot of people.

He existed. But after that, opinions go in different directions about who he was. Was he really the Son of God? Was there more significance to his death than what meets the eye? Did he really rise from the dead?

You know the answers to these questions. This morning, we want to get rid of any doubt you might have in your mind about who Jesus Christ is.

 This is the fifth Sunday of Lenten, and we have used our Sunday services to rid ourselves of weaknesses and sins in our hearts. Today, if there’s any doubt in your heart about who Jesus is, any confusion, then it’s my prayer    that the words we study this morning will help you understand more clearly who Jesus, this person you are going to hear so much about in the next two weeks.

Our text for today, taken from the book of Hebrews,  talks about the identity of Jesus Christ. To help us remember the content of this section, think of it this way - “the two S’s.”

S #1 is from verse 7: “During the days of Jesus’ life on earth, he offered up prayers and petitions with loud cries and tears to the one who could save him from death, and he was heard because of his reverent submission.”

There’s our first S: submission. Who is Jesus? He was the Son of God, and he submitted to the will of his Heavenly Father. This verse describes Jesus praying to God with loud cries and tears. The picture here is the Garden of Gethsemane.

 Shortly before he was arrested, Jesus looked into the future, and he could see what lay ahead of him – he could see all the suffering and death. It was a terrible thing. And all of it was optional.

Why do you think God keeps you from seeing your future? Perhaps it’s because if we knew that something bad was going to happen, we would lose our minds worrying and stressing over it.

What if God let you see into your future, and you found out that you were going to die a slow and gruesome death tomorrow morning? It would be terrible to know that, wouldn’t it?

That’s what Jesus went through right before he suffered and died for our sins. He could see what lay ahead of him. And it wasn’t just the physical suffering that made him recoil. It was the spiritual suffering he was about to go through because all the sins of the world  were placed on him. He was about to have God the Heavenly Father punish him for the sins of all mankind. Jesus could see this in his future, and it was a terrible thing.

 

He could have bypassed the suffering, if he wanted to. All of it was optional. After all, he was the Son of God. At any moment he could have said, “No, I won’t lower myself to that level. I won’t do that for the human race.”

But he knew that this was the only way to save people from total destruction. And so he submitted to the Heavenly Father, as it says, “Although he was a son, he learned obedience from what he suffered.”

He submitted to betrayal, to the arrest, to the all-night trials, to the beatings, and finally, to the crucifixion. When you ask yourself, “Who is Jesus Christ? Why is he suffering on a cross?” Think of the word “submission.” Of all the words that describe Jesus Christ, perhaps one of the best is the word “submission.” This is how he took your sins away.

There is another “s” in this section that I would like to focus on for today. Verse 9: “And, once made perfect, he became the source of eternal salvation for all who obey him.

The Greek word for “made perfect” actually means “to complete” or “to finish.” Once Jesus completed his suffering, what happened? He became the source of eternal salvation. There’s your other “s” - source.

 What if there had been some sort of disaster in this part of our country, and all the drinking water had been contaminated? What if there were no stores to buy things from? What if there was no way of transporting water in? There was literally nothing clean to drink. What would you do? Would you drink dirty water just to survive, even though you know it would make you terribly sick? Or would you drink nothing?

Spiritually, that’s the situation our world is in. A terrible disaster has taken place in our world, and that disaster is called the fall into sin. As a result, everything good, everything spiritual, has been contaminated.

There really is no place where a person can find eternal salvation in this world. Millions of people, all over the world, are dying of spiritual thirst.

Where can I find relief from guilt in my life, people wonder. Where can I find a sense of purpose? How can I learn more about this God whom I will someday meet when I die? How can I change my life for the better? Where can I go for these things?

 You can look all you want, you can try various kinds of religions and meditation techniques and philosophies, but none nothing on this earth can provide you with what you really need. Everything is contaminated with sin. Instead of making your soul better, the spiritual options of this world only make your soul worse.

But then, as you know, something big happened  when Jesus submitted to all of his suffering. After he completed everything and rose from the dead, he became the pipeline, the source of salvation, for all who obey him.

That is the second “s” to think about when asking yourself, who is Jesus Christ? He is the source of eternal salvation.

In him, you’ll find relief from your guilt. In him you’ll a sense of purpose, an understanding of who God really is. In him you’ll find the strength and motivation to change your life for the better. He changes it for you.

He is the source of all these things, “the source of eternal salvation.” “Source” is the second “s” to think about as you ponder in your mind who Jesus Christ really is.

Who is Jesus? To many, the story of Jesus might seem quite sad, and quite trivial. A traveling Jewish teacher, unpopular with the religious establishment, is put to death by a tyrannical government. He taught the world to be nice.

But there must be more! And there is. When you realize to what extent he submitted to the Heavenly Father, when you realize that he is the source of eternal salvation, that changes everything. It changed the lives of 11 men, his disciples, from doubting cowards to courageous witnesses.

 It changed the lives of millions of people that have learned about Jesus over the years. May his life and death and resurrection, all these things that happened for you, may they change you as well. Amen.5th Sunday in Lent 24           INI               Heb. 5:7-9

Who is Jesus Christ? These next two weeks you’ll  hear a lot about him. Next Sunday is Palm Sunday. Then comes Good Friday. Then comes Easter. This is that time of year when you hear people talk about Jesus Christ.

Unlike Christmas, Easter has escaped the intense commercialism that might sweep away its true spiritual meaning. Unlike Christmas, when school children sing about a fat man and snow, no one really knows what to sing or to do, when Easter arrives.

 After buying some candy and painting some eggs, most people wonder, “Is that it? What’s the deal with Easter?” And so, many wonder about Jesus Christ, and who he is.  Thus, our theme:

 WHO IS JESUS CHRIST?

Who is he? Everyone believes he existed. Unless you are completely uneducated, you know from history that there was such a man named Jesus. Secular historians, people who aren’t connected to the Bible, talk about a Jewish teacher named Jesus who lived in the early first century who upset a lot of people.

He existed. But after that, opinions go in different directions about who he was. Was he really the Son of God? Was there more significance to his death than what meets the eye? Did he really rise from the dead?

You know the answers to these questions. This morning, we want to get rid of any doubt you might have in your mind about who Jesus Christ is.

 This is the fifth Sunday of Lenten, and we have used our Sunday services to rid ourselves of weaknesses and sins in our hearts. Today, if there’s any doubt in your heart about who Jesus is, any confusion, then it’s my prayer    that the words we study this morning will help you understand more clearly who Jesus, this person you are going to hear so much about in the next two weeks.

Our text for today, taken from the book of Hebrews,  talks about the identity of Jesus Christ. To help us remember the content of this section, think of it this way - “the two S’s.”

S #1 is from verse 7: “During the days of Jesus’ life on earth, he offered up prayers and petitions with loud cries and tears to the one who could save him from death, and he was heard because of his reverent submission.”

There’s our first S: submission. Who is Jesus? He was the Son of God, and he submitted to the will of his Heavenly Father. This verse describes Jesus praying to God with loud cries and tears. The picture here is the Garden of Gethsemane.

 Shortly before he was arrested, Jesus looked into the future, and he could see what lay ahead of him – he could see all the suffering and death. It was a terrible thing. And all of it was optional.

Why do you think God keeps you from seeing your future? Perhaps it’s because if we knew that something bad was going to happen, we would lose our minds worrying and stressing over it.

What if God let you see into your future, and you found out that you were going to die a slow and gruesome death tomorrow morning? It would be terrible to know that, wouldn’t it?

That’s what Jesus went through right before he suffered and died for our sins. He could see what lay ahead of him. And it wasn’t just the physical suffering that made him recoil. It was the spiritual suffering he was about to go through because all the sins of the world  were placed on him. He was about to have God the Heavenly Father punish him for the sins of all mankind. Jesus could see this in his future, and it was a terrible thing.

 

He could have bypassed the suffering, if he wanted to. All of it was optional. After all, he was the Son of God. At any moment he could have said, “No, I won’t lower myself to that level. I won’t do that for the human race.”

But he knew that this was the only way to save people from total destruction. And so he submitted to the Heavenly Father, as it says, “Although he was a son, he learned obedience from what he suffered.”

He submitted to betrayal, to the arrest, to the all-night trials, to the beatings, and finally, to the crucifixion. When you ask yourself, “Who is Jesus Christ? Why is he suffering on a cross?” Think of the word “submission.” Of all the words that describe Jesus Christ, perhaps one of the best is the word “submission.” This is how he took your sins away.

There is another “s” in this section that I would like to focus on for today. Verse 9: “And, once made perfect, he became the source of eternal salvation for all who obey him.

The Greek word for “made perfect” actually means “to complete” or “to finish.” Once Jesus completed his suffering, what happened? He became the source of eternal salvation. There’s your other “s” - source.

 What if there had been some sort of disaster in this part of our country, and all the drinking water had been contaminated? What if there were no stores to buy things from? What if there was no way of transporting water in? There was literally nothing clean to drink. What would you do? Would you drink dirty water just to survive, even though you know it would make you terribly sick? Or would you drink nothing?

Spiritually, that’s the situation our world is in. A terrible disaster has taken place in our world, and that disaster is called the fall into sin. As a result, everything good, everything spiritual, has been contaminated.

There really is no place where a person can find eternal salvation in this world. Millions of people, all over the world, are dying of spiritual thirst.

Where can I find relief from guilt in my life, people wonder. Where can I find a sense of purpose? How can I learn more about this God whom I will someday meet when I die? How can I change my life for the better? Where can I go for these things?

 You can look all you want, you can try various kinds of religions and meditation techniques and philosophies, but none nothing on this earth can provide you with what you really need. Everything is contaminated with sin. Instead of making your soul better, the spiritual options of this world only make your soul worse.

But then, as you know, something big happened  when Jesus submitted to all of his suffering. After he completed everything and rose from the dead, he became the pipeline, the source of salvation, for all who obey him.

That is the second “s” to think about when asking yourself, who is Jesus Christ? He is the source of eternal salvation.

In him, you’ll find relief from your guilt. In him you’ll a sense of purpose, an understanding of who God really is. In him you’ll find the strength and motivation to change your life for the better. He changes it for you.

He is the source of all these things, “the source of eternal salvation.” “Source” is the second “s” to think about as you ponder in your mind who Jesus Christ really is.

Who is Jesus? To many, the story of Jesus might seem quite sad, and quite trivial. A traveling Jewish teacher, unpopular with the religious establishment, is put to death by a tyrannical government. He taught the world to be nice.

But there must be more! And there is. When you realize to what extent he submitted to the Heavenly Father, when you realize that he is the source of eternal salvation, that changes everything. It changed the lives of 11 men, his disciples, from doubting cowards to courageous witnesses.

 It changed the lives of millions of people that have learned about Jesus over the years. May his life and death and resurrection, all these things that happened for you, may they change you as well. Amen.5th Sunday in Lent 24           INI               Heb. 5:7-9

Who is Jesus Christ? These next two weeks you’ll  hear a lot about him. Next Sunday is Palm Sunday. Then comes Good Friday. Then comes Easter. This is that time of year when you hear people talk about Jesus Christ.

Unlike Christmas, Easter has escaped the intense commercialism that might sweep away its true spiritual meaning. Unlike Christmas, when school children sing about a fat man and snow, no one really knows what to sing or to do, when Easter arrives.

 After buying some candy and painting some eggs, most people wonder, “Is that it? What’s the deal with Easter?” And so, many wonder about Jesus Christ, and who he is.  Thus, our theme:

 WHO IS JESUS CHRIST?

Who is he? Everyone believes he existed. Unless you are completely uneducated, you know from history that there was such a man named Jesus. Secular historians, people who aren’t connected to the Bible, talk about a Jewish teacher named Jesus who lived in the early first century who upset a lot of people.

He existed. But after that, opinions go in different directions about who he was. Was he really the Son of God? Was there more significance to his death than what meets the eye? Did he really rise from the dead?

You know the answers to these questions. This morning, we want to get rid of any doubt you might have in your mind about who Jesus Christ is.

 This is the fifth Sunday of Lenten, and we have used our Sunday services to rid ourselves of weaknesses and sins in our hearts. Today, if there’s any doubt in your heart about who Jesus is, any confusion, then it’s my prayer    that the words we study this morning will help you understand more clearly who Jesus, this person you are going to hear so much about in the next two weeks.

Our text for today, taken from the book of Hebrews,  talks about the identity of Jesus Christ. To help us remember the content of this section, think of it this way - “the two S’s.”

S #1 is from verse 7: “During the days of Jesus’ life on earth, he offered up prayers and petitions with loud cries and tears to the one who could save him from death, and he was heard because of his reverent submission.”

There’s our first S: submission. Who is Jesus? He was the Son of God, and he submitted to the will of his Heavenly Father. This verse describes Jesus praying to God with loud cries and tears. The picture here is the Garden of Gethsemane.

 Shortly before he was arrested, Jesus looked into the future, and he could see what lay ahead of him – he could see all the suffering and death. It was a terrible thing. And all of it was optional.

Why do you think God keeps you from seeing your future? Perhaps it’s because if we knew that something bad was going to happen, we would lose our minds worrying and stressing over it.

What if God let you see into your future, and you found out that you were going to die a slow and gruesome death tomorrow morning? It would be terrible to know that, wouldn’t it?

That’s what Jesus went through right before he suffered and died for our sins. He could see what lay ahead of him. And it wasn’t just the physical suffering that made him recoil. It was the spiritual suffering he was about to go through because all the sins of the world  were placed on him. He was about to have God the Heavenly Father punish him for the sins of all mankind. Jesus could see this in his future, and it was a terrible thing.

 

He could have bypassed the suffering, if he wanted to. All of it was optional. After all, he was the Son of God. At any moment he could have said, “No, I won’t lower myself to that level. I won’t do that for the human race.”

But he knew that this was the only way to save people from total destruction. And so he submitted to the Heavenly Father, as it says, “Although he was a son, he learned obedience from what he suffered.”

He submitted to betrayal, to the arrest, to the all-night trials, to the beatings, and finally, to the crucifixion. When you ask yourself, “Who is Jesus Christ? Why is he suffering on a cross?” Think of the word “submission.” Of all the words that describe Jesus Christ, perhaps one of the best is the word “submission.” This is how he took your sins away.

There is another “s” in this section that I would like to focus on for today. Verse 9: “And, once made perfect, he became the source of eternal salvation for all who obey him.

The Greek word for “made perfect” actually means “to complete” or “to finish.” Once Jesus completed his suffering, what happened? He became the source of eternal salvation. There’s your other “s” - source.

 What if there had been some sort of disaster in this part of our country, and all the drinking water had been contaminated? What if there were no stores to buy things from? What if there was no way of transporting water in? There was literally nothing clean to drink. What would you do? Would you drink dirty water just to survive, even though you know it would make you terribly sick? Or would you drink nothing?

Spiritually, that’s the situation our world is in. A terrible disaster has taken place in our world, and that disaster is called the fall into sin. As a result, everything good, everything spiritual, has been contaminated.

There really is no place where a person can find eternal salvation in this world. Millions of people, all over the world, are dying of spiritual thirst.

Where can I find relief from guilt in my life, people wonder. Where can I find a sense of purpose? How can I learn more about this God whom I will someday meet when I die? How can I change my life for the better? Where can I go for these things?

 You can look all you want, you can try various kinds of religions and meditation techniques and philosophies, but none nothing on this earth can provide you with what you really need. Everything is contaminated with sin. Instead of making your soul better, the spiritual options of this world only make your soul worse.

But then, as you know, something big happened  when Jesus submitted to all of his suffering. After he completed everything and rose from the dead, he became the pipeline, the source of salvation, for all who obey him.

That is the second “s” to think about when asking yourself, who is Jesus Christ? He is the source of eternal salvation.

In him, you’ll find relief from your guilt. In him you’ll a sense of purpose, an understanding of who God really is. In him you’ll find the strength and motivation to change your life for the better. He changes it for you.

He is the source of all these things, “the source of eternal salvation.” “Source” is the second “s” to think about as you ponder in your mind who Jesus Christ really is.

Who is Jesus? To many, the story of Jesus might seem quite sad, and quite trivial. A traveling Jewish teacher, unpopular with the religious establishment, is put to death by a tyrannical government. He taught the world to be nice.

But there must be more! And there is. When you realize to what extent he submitted to the Heavenly Father, when you realize that he is the source of eternal salvation, that changes everything. It changed the lives of 11 men, his disciples, from doubting cowards to courageous witnesses.

 It changed the lives of millions of people that have learned about Jesus over the years. May his life and death and resurrection, all these things that happened for you, may they change you as well. Amen.5th Sunday in Lent 24           INI               Heb. 5:7-9

Who is Jesus Christ? These next two weeks you’ll  hear a lot about him. Next Sunday is Palm Sunday. Then comes Good Friday. Then comes Easter. This is that time of year when you hear people talk about Jesus Christ.

Unlike Christmas, Easter has escaped the intense commercialism that might sweep away its true spiritual meaning. Unlike Christmas, when school children sing about a fat man and snow, no one really knows what to sing or to do, when Easter arrives.

 After buying some candy and painting some eggs, most people wonder, “Is that it? What’s the deal with Easter?” And so, many wonder about Jesus Christ, and who he is.  Thus, our theme:

 WHO IS JESUS CHRIST?

Who is he? Everyone believes he existed. Unless you are completely uneducated, you know from history that there was such a man named Jesus. Secular historians, people who aren’t connected to the Bible, talk about a Jewish teacher named Jesus who lived in the early first century who upset a lot of people.

He existed. But after that, opinions go in different directions about who he was. Was he really the Son of God? Was there more significance to his death than what meets the eye? Did he really rise from the dead?

You know the answers to these questions. This morning, we want to get rid of any doubt you might have in your mind about who Jesus Christ is.

 This is the fifth Sunday of Lenten, and we have used our Sunday services to rid ourselves of weaknesses and sins in our hearts. Today, if there’s any doubt in your heart about who Jesus is, any confusion, then it’s my prayer    that the words we study this morning will help you understand more clearly who Jesus, this person you are going to hear so much about in the next two weeks.

Our text for today, taken from the book of Hebrews,  talks about the identity of Jesus Christ. To help us remember the content of this section, think of it this way - “the two S’s.”

S #1 is from verse 7: “During the days of Jesus’ life on earth, he offered up prayers and petitions with loud cries and tears to the one who could save him from death, and he was heard because of his reverent submission.”

There’s our first S: submission. Who is Jesus? He was the Son of God, and he submitted to the will of his Heavenly Father. This verse describes Jesus praying to God with loud cries and tears. The picture here is the Garden of Gethsemane.

 Shortly before he was arrested, Jesus looked into the future, and he could see what lay ahead of him – he could see all the suffering and death. It was a terrible thing. And all of it was optional.

Why do you think God keeps you from seeing your future? Perhaps it’s because if we knew that something bad was going to happen, we would lose our minds worrying and stressing over it.

What if God let you see into your future, and you found out that you were going to die a slow and gruesome death tomorrow morning? It would be terrible to know that, wouldn’t it?

That’s what Jesus went through right before he suffered and died for our sins. He could see what lay ahead of him. And it wasn’t just the physical suffering that made him recoil. It was the spiritual suffering he was about to go through because all the sins of the world  were placed on him. He was about to have God the Heavenly Father punish him for the sins of all mankind. Jesus could see this in his future, and it was a terrible thing.

 

He could have bypassed the suffering, if he wanted to. All of it was optional. After all, he was the Son of God. At any moment he could have said, “No, I won’t lower myself to that level. I won’t do that for the human race.”

But he knew that this was the only way to save people from total destruction. And so he submitted to the Heavenly Father, as it says, “Although he was a son, he learned obedience from what he suffered.”

He submitted to betrayal, to the arrest, to the all-night trials, to the beatings, and finally, to the crucifixion. When you ask yourself, “Who is Jesus Christ? Why is he suffering on a cross?” Think of the word “submission.” Of all the words that describe Jesus Christ, perhaps one of the best is the word “submission.” This is how he took your sins away.

There is another “s” in this section that I would like to focus on for today. Verse 9: “And, once made perfect, he became the source of eternal salvation for all who obey him.

The Greek word for “made perfect” actually means “to complete” or “to finish.” Once Jesus completed his suffering, what happened? He became the source of eternal salvation. There’s your other “s” - source.

 What if there had been some sort of disaster in this part of our country, and all the drinking water had been contaminated? What if there were no stores to buy things from? What if there was no way of transporting water in? There was literally nothing clean to drink. What would you do? Would you drink dirty water just to survive, even though you know it would make you terribly sick? Or would you drink nothing?

Spiritually, that’s the situation our world is in. A terrible disaster has taken place in our world, and that disaster is called the fall into sin. As a result, everything good, everything spiritual, has been contaminated.

There really is no place where a person can find eternal salvation in this world. Millions of people, all over the world, are dying of spiritual thirst.

Where can I find relief from guilt in my life, people wonder. Where can I find a sense of purpose? How can I learn more about this God whom I will someday meet when I die? How can I change my life for the better? Where can I go for these things?

 You can look all you want, you can try various kinds of religions and meditation techniques and philosophies, but none nothing on this earth can provide you with what you really need. Everything is contaminated with sin. Instead of making your soul better, the spiritual options of this world only make your soul worse.

But then, as you know, something big happened  when Jesus submitted to all of his suffering. After he completed everything and rose from the dead, he became the pipeline, the source of salvation, for all who obey him.

That is the second “s” to think about when asking yourself, who is Jesus Christ? He is the source of eternal salvation.

In him, you’ll find relief from your guilt. In him you’ll a sense of purpose, an understanding of who God really is. In him you’ll find the strength and motivation to change your life for the better. He changes it for you.

He is the source of all these things, “the source of eternal salvation.” “Source” is the second “s” to think about as you ponder in your mind who Jesus Christ really is.

Who is Jesus? To many, the story of Jesus might seem quite sad, and quite trivial. A traveling Jewish teacher, unpopular with the religious establishment, is put to death by a tyrannical government. He taught the world to be nice.

But there must be more! And there is. When you realize to what extent he submitted to the Heavenly Father, when you realize that he is the source of eternal salvation, that changes everything. It changed the lives of 11 men, his disciples, from doubting cowards to courageous witnesses.

 It changed the lives of millions of people that have learned about Jesus over the years. May his life and death and resurrection, all these things that happened for you, may they change you as well. Amen.5th Sunday in Lent 24           INI               Heb. 5:7-9

Who is Jesus Christ? These next two weeks you’ll  hear a lot about him. Next Sunday is Palm Sunday. Then comes Good Friday. Then comes Easter. This is that time of year when you hear people talk about Jesus Christ.

Unlike Christmas, Easter has escaped the intense commercialism that might sweep away its true spiritual meaning. Unlike Christmas, when school children sing about a fat man and snow, no one really knows what to sing or to do, when Easter arrives.

 After buying some candy and painting some eggs, most people wonder, “Is that it? What’s the deal with Easter?” And so, many wonder about Jesus Christ, and who he is.  Thus, our theme:

 WHO IS JESUS CHRIST?

Who is he? Everyone believes he existed. Unless you are completely uneducated, you know from history that there was such a man named Jesus. Secular historians, people who aren’t connected to the Bible, talk about a Jewish teacher named Jesus who lived in the early first century who upset a lot of people.

He existed. But after that, opinions go in different directions about who he was. Was he really the Son of God? Was there more significance to his death than what meets the eye? Did he really rise from the dead?

You know the answers to these questions. This morning, we want to get rid of any doubt you might have in your mind about who Jesus Christ is.

 This is the fifth Sunday of Lenten, and we have used our Sunday services to rid ourselves of weaknesses and sins in our hearts. Today, if there’s any doubt in your heart about who Jesus is, any confusion, then it’s my prayer    that the words we study this morning will help you understand more clearly who Jesus, this person you are going to hear so much about in the next two weeks.

Our text for today, taken from the book of Hebrews,  talks about the identity of Jesus Christ. To help us remember the content of this section, think of it this way - “the two S’s.”

S #1 is from verse 7: “During the days of Jesus’ life on earth, he offered up prayers and petitions with loud cries and tears to the one who could save him from death, and he was heard because of his reverent submission.”

There’s our first S: submission. Who is Jesus? He was the Son of God, and he submitted to the will of his Heavenly Father. This verse describes Jesus praying to God with loud cries and tears. The picture here is the Garden of Gethsemane.

 Shortly before he was arrested, Jesus looked into the future, and he could see what lay ahead of him – he could see all the suffering and death. It was a terrible thing. And all of it was optional.

Why do you think God keeps you from seeing your future? Perhaps it’s because if we knew that something bad was going to happen, we would lose our minds worrying and stressing over it.

What if God let you see into your future, and you found out that you were going to die a slow and gruesome death tomorrow morning? It would be terrible to know that, wouldn’t it?

That’s what Jesus went through right before he suffered and died for our sins. He could see what lay ahead of him. And it wasn’t just the physical suffering that made him recoil. It was the spiritual suffering he was about to go through because all the sins of the world  were placed on him. He was about to have God the Heavenly Father punish him for the sins of all mankind. Jesus could see this in his future, and it was a terrible thing.

 

He could have bypassed the suffering, if he wanted to. All of it was optional. After all, he was the Son of God. At any moment he could have said, “No, I won’t lower myself to that level. I won’t do that for the human race.”

But he knew that this was the only way to save people from total destruction. And so he submitted to the Heavenly Father, as it says, “Although he was a son, he learned obedience from what he suffered.”

He submitted to betrayal, to the arrest, to the all-night trials, to the beatings, and finally, to the crucifixion. When you ask yourself, “Who is Jesus Christ? Why is he suffering on a cross?” Think of the word “submission.” Of all the words that describe Jesus Christ, perhaps one of the best is the word “submission.” This is how he took your sins away.

There is another “s” in this section that I would like to focus on for today. Verse 9: “And, once made perfect, he became the source of eternal salvation for all who obey him.

The Greek word for “made perfect” actually means “to complete” or “to finish.” Once Jesus completed his suffering, what happened? He became the source of eternal salvation. There’s your other “s” - source.

 What if there had been some sort of disaster in this part of our country, and all the drinking water had been contaminated? What if there were no stores to buy things from? What if there was no way of transporting water in? There was literally nothing clean to drink. What would you do? Would you drink dirty water just to survive, even though you know it would make you terribly sick? Or would you drink nothing?

Spiritually, that’s the situation our world is in. A terrible disaster has taken place in our world, and that disaster is called the fall into sin. As a result, everything good, everything spiritual, has been contaminated.

There really is no place where a person can find eternal salvation in this world. Millions of people, all over the world, are dying of spiritual thirst.

Where can I find relief from guilt in my life, people wonder. Where can I find a sense of purpose? How can I learn more about this God whom I will someday meet when I die? How can I change my life for the better? Where can I go for these things?

 You can look all you want, you can try various kinds of religions and meditation techniques and philosophies, but none nothing on this earth can provide you with what you really need. Everything is contaminated with sin. Instead of making your soul better, the spiritual options of this world only make your soul worse.

But then, as you know, something big happened  when Jesus submitted to all of his suffering. After he completed everything and rose from the dead, he became the pipeline, the source of salvation, for all who obey him.

That is the second “s” to think about when asking yourself, who is Jesus Christ? He is the source of eternal salvation.

In him, you’ll find relief from your guilt. In him you’ll a sense of purpose, an understanding of who God really is. In him you’ll find the strength and motivation to change your life for the better. He changes it for you.

He is the source of all these things, “the source of eternal salvation.” “Source” is the second “s” to think about as you ponder in your mind who Jesus Christ really is.

Who is Jesus? To many, the story of Jesus might seem quite sad, and quite trivial. A traveling Jewish teacher, unpopular with the religious establishment, is put to death by a tyrannical government. He taught the world to be nice.

But there must be more! And there is. When you realize to what extent he submitted to the Heavenly Father, when you realize that he is the source of eternal salvation, that changes everything. It changed the lives of 11 men, his disciples, from doubting cowards to courageous witnesses.

 It changed the lives of millions of people that have learned about Jesus over the years. May his life and death and resurrection, all these things that happened for you, may they change you as well. Amen.5th Sunday in Lent 24           INI               Heb. 5:7-9

Who is Jesus Christ? These next two weeks you’ll  hear a lot about him. Next Sunday is Palm Sunday. Then comes Good Friday. Then comes Easter. This is that time of year when you hear people talk about Jesus Christ.

Unlike Christmas, Easter has escaped the intense commercialism that might sweep away its true spiritual meaning. Unlike Christmas, when school children sing about a fat man and snow, no one really knows what to sing or to do, when Easter arrives.

 After buying some candy and painting some eggs, most people wonder, “Is that it? What’s the deal with Easter?” And so, many wonder about Jesus Christ, and who he is.  Thus, our theme:

 WHO IS JESUS CHRIST?

Who is he? Everyone believes he existed. Unless you are completely uneducated, you know from history that there was such a man named Jesus. Secular historians, people who aren’t connected to the Bible, talk about a Jewish teacher named Jesus who lived in the early first century who upset a lot of people.

He existed. But after that, opinions go in different directions about who he was. Was he really the Son of God? Was there more significance to his death than what meets the eye? Did he really rise from the dead?

You know the answers to these questions. This morning, we want to get rid of any doubt you might have in your mind about who Jesus Christ is.

 This is the fifth Sunday of Lenten, and we have used our Sunday services to rid ourselves of weaknesses and sins in our hearts. Today, if there’s any doubt in your heart about who Jesus is, any confusion, then it’s my prayer    that the words we study this morning will help you understand more clearly who Jesus, this person you are going to hear so much about in the next two weeks.

Our text for today, taken from the book of Hebrews,  talks about the identity of Jesus Christ. To help us remember the content of this section, think of it this way - “the two S’s.”

S #1 is from verse 7: “During the days of Jesus’ life on earth, he offered up prayers and petitions with loud cries and tears to the one who could save him from death, and he was heard because of his reverent submission.”

There’s our first S: submission. Who is Jesus? He was the Son of God, and he submitted to the will of his Heavenly Father. This verse describes Jesus praying to God with loud cries and tears. The picture here is the Garden of Gethsemane.

 Shortly before he was arrested, Jesus looked into the future, and he could see what lay ahead of him – he could see all the suffering and death. It was a terrible thing. And all of it was optional.

Why do you think God keeps you from seeing your future? Perhaps it’s because if we knew that something bad was going to happen, we would lose our minds worrying and stressing over it.

What if God let you see into your future, and you found out that you were going to die a slow and gruesome death tomorrow morning? It would be terrible to know that, wouldn’t it?

That’s what Jesus went through right before he suffered and died for our sins. He could see what lay ahead of him. And it wasn’t just the physical suffering that made him recoil. It was the spiritual suffering he was about to go through because all the sins of the world  were placed on him. He was about to have God the Heavenly Father punish him for the sins of all mankind. Jesus could see this in his future, and it was a terrible thing.

 

He could have bypassed the suffering, if he wanted to. All of it was optional. After all, he was the Son of God. At any moment he could have said, “No, I won’t lower myself to that level. I won’t do that for the human race.”

But he knew that this was the only way to save people from total destruction. And so he submitted to the Heavenly Father, as it says, “Although he was a son, he learned obedience from what he suffered.”

He submitted to betrayal, to the arrest, to the all-night trials, to the beatings, and finally, to the crucifixion. When you ask yourself, “Who is Jesus Christ? Why is he suffering on a cross?” Think of the word “submission.” Of all the words that describe Jesus Christ, perhaps one of the best is the word “submission.” This is how he took your sins away.

There is another “s” in this section that I would like to focus on for today. Verse 9: “And, once made perfect, he became the source of eternal salvation for all who obey him.

The Greek word for “made perfect” actually means “to complete” or “to finish.” Once Jesus completed his suffering, what happened? He became the source of eternal salvation. There’s your other “s” - source.

 What if there had been some sort of disaster in this part of our country, and all the drinking water had been contaminated? What if there were no stores to buy things from? What if there was no way of transporting water in? There was literally nothing clean to drink. What would you do? Would you drink dirty water just to survive, even though you know it would make you terribly sick? Or would you drink nothing?

Spiritually, that’s the situation our world is in. A terrible disaster has taken place in our world, and that disaster is called the fall into sin. As a result, everything good, everything spiritual, has been contaminated.

There really is no place where a person can find eternal salvation in this world. Millions of people, all over the world, are dying of spiritual thirst.

Where can I find relief from guilt in my life, people wonder. Where can I find a sense of purpose? How can I learn more about this God whom I will someday meet when I die? How can I change my life for the better? Where can I go for these things?

 You can look all you want, you can try various kinds of religions and meditation techniques and philosophies, but none nothing on this earth can provide you with what you really need. Everything is contaminated with sin. Instead of making your soul better, the spiritual options of this world only make your soul worse.

But then, as you know, something big happened  when Jesus submitted to all of his suffering. After he completed everything and rose from the dead, he became the pipeline, the source of salvation, for all who obey him.

That is the second “s” to think about when asking yourself, who is Jesus Christ? He is the source of eternal salvation.

In him, you’ll find relief from your guilt. In him you’ll a sense of purpose, an understanding of who God really is. In him you’ll find the strength and motivation to change your life for the better. He changes it for you.

He is the source of all these things, “the source of eternal salvation.” “Source” is the second “s” to think about as you ponder in your mind who Jesus Christ really is.

Who is Jesus? To many, the story of Jesus might seem quite sad, and quite trivial. A traveling Jewish teacher, unpopular with the religious establishment, is put to death by a tyrannical government. He taught the world to be nice.

But there must be more! And there is. When you realize to what extent he submitted to the Heavenly Father, when you realize that he is the source of eternal salvation, that changes everything. It changed the lives of 11 men, his disciples, from doubting cowards to courageous witnesses.

 It changed the lives of millions of people that have learned about Jesus over the years. May his life and death and resurrection, all these things that happened for you, may they change you as well. Amen.5th Sunday in Lent 24           INI               Heb. 5:7-9

Who is Jesus Christ? These next two weeks you’ll  hear a lot about him. Next Sunday is Palm Sunday. Then comes Good Friday. Then comes Easter. This is that time of year when you hear people talk about Jesus Christ.

Unlike Christmas, Easter has escaped the intense commercialism that might sweep away its true spiritual meaning. Unlike Christmas, when school children sing about a fat man and snow, no one really knows what to sing or to do, when Easter arrives.

 After buying some candy and painting some eggs, most people wonder, “Is that it? What’s the deal with Easter?” And so, many wonder about Jesus Christ, and who he is.  Thus, our theme:

 WHO IS JESUS CHRIST?

Who is he? Everyone believes he existed. Unless you are completely uneducated, you know from history that there was such a man named Jesus. Secular historians, people who aren’t connected to the Bible, talk about a Jewish teacher named Jesus who lived in the early first century who upset a lot of people.

He existed. But after that, opinions go in different directions about who he was. Was he really the Son of God? Was there more significance to his death than what meets the eye? Did he really rise from the dead?

You know the answers to these questions. This morning, we want to get rid of any doubt you might have in your mind about who Jesus Christ is.

 This is the fifth Sunday of Lenten, and we have used our Sunday services to rid ourselves of weaknesses and sins in our hearts. Today, if there’s any doubt in your heart about who Jesus is, any confusion, then it’s my prayer    that the words we study this morning will help you understand more clearly who Jesus, this person you are going to hear so much about in the next two weeks.

Our text for today, taken from the book of Hebrews,  talks about the identity of Jesus Christ. To help us remember the content of this section, think of it this way - “the two S’s.”

S #1 is from verse 7: “During the days of Jesus’ life on earth, he offered up prayers and petitions with loud cries and tears to the one who could save him from death, and he was heard because of his reverent submission.”

There’s our first S: submission. Who is Jesus? He was the Son of God, and he submitted to the will of his Heavenly Father. This verse describes Jesus praying to God with loud cries and tears. The picture here is the Garden of Gethsemane.

 Shortly before he was arrested, Jesus looked into the future, and he could see what lay ahead of him – he could see all the suffering and death. It was a terrible thing. And all of it was optional.

Why do you think God keeps you from seeing your future? Perhaps it’s because if we knew that something bad was going to happen, we would lose our minds worrying and stressing over it.

What if God let you see into your future, and you found out that you were going to die a slow and gruesome death tomorrow morning? It would be terrible to know that, wouldn’t it?

That’s what Jesus went through right before he suffered and died for our sins. He could see what lay ahead of him. And it wasn’t just the physical suffering that made him recoil. It was the spiritual suffering he was about to go through because all the sins of the world  were placed on him. He was about to have God the Heavenly Father punish him for the sins of all mankind. Jesus could see this in his future, and it was a terrible thing.

 

He could have bypassed the suffering, if he wanted to. All of it was optional. After all, he was the Son of God. At any moment he could have said, “No, I won’t lower myself to that level. I won’t do that for the human race.”

But he knew that this was the only way to save people from total destruction. And so he submitted to the Heavenly Father, as it says, “Although he was a son, he learned obedience from what he suffered.”

He submitted to betrayal, to the arrest, to the all-night trials, to the beatings, and finally, to the crucifixion. When you ask yourself, “Who is Jesus Christ? Why is he suffering on a cross?” Think of the word “submission.” Of all the words that describe Jesus Christ, perhaps one of the best is the word “submission.” This is how he took your sins away.

There is another “s” in this section that I would like to focus on for today. Verse 9: “And, once made perfect, he became the source of eternal salvation for all who obey him.

The Greek word for “made perfect” actually means “to complete” or “to finish.” Once Jesus completed his suffering, what happened? He became the source of eternal salvation. There’s your other “s” - source.

 What if there had been some sort of disaster in this part of our country, and all the drinking water had been contaminated? What if there were no stores to buy things from? What if there was no way of transporting water in? There was literally nothing clean to drink. What would you do? Would you drink dirty water just to survive, even though you know it would make you terribly sick? Or would you drink nothing?

Spiritually, that’s the situation our world is in. A terrible disaster has taken place in our world, and that disaster is called the fall into sin. As a result, everything good, everything spiritual, has been contaminated.

There really is no place where a person can find eternal salvation in this world. Millions of people, all over the world, are dying of spiritual thirst.

Where can I find relief from guilt in my life, people wonder. Where can I find a sense of purpose? How can I learn more about this God whom I will someday meet when I die? How can I change my life for the better? Where can I go for these things?

 You can look all you want, you can try various kinds of religions and meditation techniques and philosophies, but none nothing on this earth can provide you with what you really need. Everything is contaminated with sin. Instead of making your soul better, the spiritual options of this world only make your soul worse.

But then, as you know, something big happened  when Jesus submitted to all of his suffering. After he completed everything and rose from the dead, he became the pipeline, the source of salvation, for all who obey him.

That is the second “s” to think about when asking yourself, who is Jesus Christ? He is the source of eternal salvation.

In him, you’ll find relief from your guilt. In him you’ll a sense of purpose, an understanding of who God really is. In him you’ll find the strength and motivation to change your life for the better. He changes it for you.

He is the source of all these things, “the source of eternal salvation.” “Source” is the second “s” to think about as you ponder in your mind who Jesus Christ really is.

Who is Jesus? To many, the story of Jesus might seem quite sad, and quite trivial. A traveling Jewish teacher, unpopular with the religious establishment, is put to death by a tyrannical government. He taught the world to be nice.

But there must be more! And there is. When you realize to what extent he submitted to the Heavenly Father, when you realize that he is the source of eternal salvation, that changes everything. It changed the lives of 11 men, his disciples, from doubting cowards to courageous witnesses.

 It changed the lives of millions of people that have learned about Jesus over the years. May his life and death and resurrection, all these things that happened for you, may they change you as well. Amen.5th Sunday in Lent 24           INI               Heb. 5:7-9

Who is Jesus Christ? These next two weeks you’ll  hear a lot about him. Next Sunday is Palm Sunday. Then comes Good Friday. Then comes Easter. This is that time of year when you hear people talk about Jesus Christ.

Unlike Christmas, Easter has escaped the intense commercialism that might sweep away its true spiritual meaning. Unlike Christmas, when school children sing about a fat man and snow, no one really knows what to sing or to do, when Easter arrives.

 After buying some candy and painting some eggs, most people wonder, “Is that it? What’s the deal with Easter?” And so, many wonder about Jesus Christ, and who he is.  Thus, our theme:

 WHO IS JESUS CHRIST?

Who is he? Everyone believes he existed. Unless you are completely uneducated, you know from history that there was such a man named Jesus. Secular historians, people who aren’t connected to the Bible, talk about a Jewish teacher named Jesus who lived in the early first century who upset a lot of people.

He existed. But after that, opinions go in different directions about who he was. Was he really the Son of God? Was there more significance to his death than what meets the eye? Did he really rise from the dead?

You know the answers to these questions. This morning, we want to get rid of any doubt you might have in your mind about who Jesus Christ is.

 This is the fifth Sunday of Lenten, and we have used our Sunday services to rid ourselves of weaknesses and sins in our hearts. Today, if there’s any doubt in your heart about who Jesus is, any confusion, then it’s my prayer    that the words we study this morning will help you understand more clearly who Jesus, this person you are going to hear so much about in the next two weeks.

Our text for today, taken from the book of Hebrews,  talks about the identity of Jesus Christ. To help us remember the content of this section, think of it this way - “the two S’s.”

S #1 is from verse 7: “During the days of Jesus’ life on earth, he offered up prayers and petitions with loud cries and tears to the one who could save him from death, and he was heard because of his reverent submission.”

There’s our first S: submission. Who is Jesus? He was the Son of God, and he submitted to the will of his Heavenly Father. This verse describes Jesus praying to God with loud cries and tears. The picture here is the Garden of Gethsemane.

 Shortly before he was arrested, Jesus looked into the future, and he could see what lay ahead of him – he could see all the suffering and death. It was a terrible thing. And all of it was optional.

Why do you think God keeps you from seeing your future? Perhaps it’s because if we knew that something bad was going to happen, we would lose our minds worrying and stressing over it.

What if God let you see into your future, and you found out that you were going to die a slow and gruesome death tomorrow morning? It would be terrible to know that, wouldn’t it?

That’s what Jesus went through right before he suffered and died for our sins. He could see what lay ahead of him. And it wasn’t just the physical suffering that made him recoil. It was the spiritual suffering he was about to go through because all the sins of the world  were placed on him. He was about to have God the Heavenly Father punish him for the sins of all mankind. Jesus could see this in his future, and it was a terrible thing.

 

He could have bypassed the suffering, if he wanted to. All of it was optional. After all, he was the Son of God. At any moment he could have said, “No, I won’t lower myself to that level. I won’t do that for the human race.”

But he knew that this was the only way to save people from total destruction. And so he submitted to the Heavenly Father, as it says, “Although he was a son, he learned obedience from what he suffered.”

He submitted to betrayal, to the arrest, to the all-night trials, to the beatings, and finally, to the crucifixion. When you ask yourself, “Who is Jesus Christ? Why is he suffering on a cross?” Think of the word “submission.” Of all the words that describe Jesus Christ, perhaps one of the best is the word “submission.” This is how he took your sins away.

There is another “s” in this section that I would like to focus on for today. Verse 9: “And, once made perfect, he became the source of eternal salvation for all who obey him.

The Greek word for “made perfect” actually means “to complete” or “to finish.” Once Jesus completed his suffering, what happened? He became the source of eternal salvation. There’s your other “s” - source.

 What if there had been some sort of disaster in this part of our country, and all the drinking water had been contaminated? What if there were no stores to buy things from? What if there was no way of transporting water in? There was literally nothing clean to drink. What would you do? Would you drink dirty water just to survive, even though you know it would make you terribly sick? Or would you drink nothing?

Spiritually, that’s the situation our world is in. A terrible disaster has taken place in our world, and that disaster is called the fall into sin. As a result, everything good, everything spiritual, has been contaminated.

There really is no place where a person can find eternal salvation in this world. Millions of people, all over the world, are dying of spiritual thirst.

Where can I find relief from guilt in my life, people wonder. Where can I find a sense of purpose? How can I learn more about this God whom I will someday meet when I die? How can I change my life for the better? Where can I go for these things?

 You can look all you want, you can try various kinds of religions and meditation techniques and philosophies, but none nothing on this earth can provide you with what you really need. Everything is contaminated with sin. Instead of making your soul better, the spiritual options of this world only make your soul worse.

But then, as you know, something big happened  when Jesus submitted to all of his suffering. After he completed everything and rose from the dead, he became the pipeline, the source of salvation, for all who obey him.

That is the second “s” to think about when asking yourself, who is Jesus Christ? He is the source of eternal salvation.

In him, you’ll find relief from your guilt. In him you’ll a sense of purpose, an understanding of who God really is. In him you’ll find the strength and motivation to change your life for the better. He changes it for you.

He is the source of all these things, “the source of eternal salvation.” “Source” is the second “s” to think about as you ponder in your mind who Jesus Christ really is.

Who is Jesus? To many, the story of Jesus might seem quite sad, and quite trivial. A traveling Jewish teacher, unpopular with the religious establishment, is put to death by a tyrannical government. He taught the world to be nice.

But there must be more! And there is. When you realize to what extent he submitted to the Heavenly Father, when you realize that he is the source of eternal salvation, that changes everything. It changed the lives of 11 men, his disciples, from doubting cowards to courageous witnesses.

 It changed the lives of millions of people that have learned about Jesus over the years. May his life and death and resurrection, all these things that happened for you, may they change you as well. Amen.5th Sunday in Lent 24           INI               Heb. 5:7-9

Who is Jesus Christ? These next two weeks you’ll  hear a lot about him. Next Sunday is Palm Sunday. Then comes Good Friday. Then comes Easter. This is that time of year when you hear people talk about Jesus Christ.

Unlike Christmas, Easter has escaped the intense commercialism that might sweep away its true spiritual meaning. Unlike Christmas, when school children sing about a fat man and snow, no one really knows what to sing or to do, when Easter arrives.

 After buying some candy and painting some eggs, most people wonder, “Is that it? What’s the deal with Easter?” And so, many wonder about Jesus Christ, and who he is.  Thus, our theme:

 WHO IS JESUS CHRIST?

Who is he? Everyone believes he existed. Unless you are completely uneducated, you know from history that there was such a man named Jesus. Secular historians, people who aren’t connected to the Bible, talk about a Jewish teacher named Jesus who lived in the early first century who upset a lot of people.

He existed. But after that, opinions go in different directions about who he was. Was he really the Son of God? Was there more significance to his death than what meets the eye? Did he really rise from the dead?

You know the answers to these questions. This morning, we want to get rid of any doubt you might have in your mind about who Jesus Christ is.

 This is the fifth Sunday of Lenten, and we have used our Sunday services to rid ourselves of weaknesses and sins in our hearts. Today, if there’s any doubt in your heart about who Jesus is, any confusion, then it’s my prayer    that the words we study this morning will help you understand more clearly who Jesus, this person you are going to hear so much about in the next two weeks.

Our text for today, taken from the book of Hebrews,  talks about the identity of Jesus Christ. To help us remember the content of this section, think of it this way - “the two S’s.”

S #1 is from verse 7: “During the days of Jesus’ life on earth, he offered up prayers and petitions with loud cries and tears to the one who could save him from death, and he was heard because of his reverent submission.”

There’s our first S: submission. Who is Jesus? He was the Son of God, and he submitted to the will of his Heavenly Father. This verse describes Jesus praying to God with loud cries and tears. The picture here is the Garden of Gethsemane.

 Shortly before he was arrested, Jesus looked into the future, and he could see what lay ahead of him – he could see all the suffering and death. It was a terrible thing. And all of it was optional.

Why do you think God keeps you from seeing your future? Perhaps it’s because if we knew that something bad was going to happen, we would lose our minds worrying and stressing over it.

What if God let you see into your future, and you found out that you were going to die a slow and gruesome death tomorrow morning? It would be terrible to know that, wouldn’t it?

That’s what Jesus went through right before he suffered and died for our sins. He could see what lay ahead of him. And it wasn’t just the physical suffering that made him recoil. It was the spiritual suffering he was about to go through because all the sins of the world  were placed on him. He was about to have God the Heavenly Father punish him for the sins of all mankind. Jesus could see this in his future, and it was a terrible thing.

 

He could have bypassed the suffering, if he wanted to. All of it was optional. After all, he was the Son of God. At any moment he could have said, “No, I won’t lower myself to that level. I won’t do that for the human race.”

But he knew that this was the only way to save people from total destruction. And so he submitted to the Heavenly Father, as it says, “Although he was a son, he learned obedience from what he suffered.”

He submitted to betrayal, to the arrest, to the all-night trials, to the beatings, and finally, to the crucifixion. When you ask yourself, “Who is Jesus Christ? Why is he suffering on a cross?” Think of the word “submission.” Of all the words that describe Jesus Christ, perhaps one of the best is the word “submission.” This is how he took your sins away.

There is another “s” in this section that I would like to focus on for today. Verse 9: “And, once made perfect, he became the source of eternal salvation for all who obey him.

The Greek word for “made perfect” actually means “to complete” or “to finish.” Once Jesus completed his suffering, what happened? He became the source of eternal salvation. There’s your other “s” - source.

 What if there had been some sort of disaster in this part of our country, and all the drinking water had been contaminated? What if there were no stores to buy things from? What if there was no way of transporting water in? There was literally nothing clean to drink. What would you do? Would you drink dirty water just to survive, even though you know it would make you terribly sick? Or would you drink nothing?

Spiritually, that’s the situation our world is in. A terrible disaster has taken place in our world, and that disaster is called the fall into sin. As a result, everything good, everything spiritual, has been contaminated.

There really is no place where a person can find eternal salvation in this world. Millions of people, all over the world, are dying of spiritual thirst.

Where can I find relief from guilt in my life, people wonder. Where can I find a sense of purpose? How can I learn more about this God whom I will someday meet when I die? How can I change my life for the better? Where can I go for these things?

 You can look all you want, you can try various kinds of religions and meditation techniques and philosophies, but none nothing on this earth can provide you with what you really need. Everything is contaminated with sin. Instead of making your soul better, the spiritual options of this world only make your soul worse.

But then, as you know, something big happened  when Jesus submitted to all of his suffering. After he completed everything and rose from the dead, he became the pipeline, the source of salvation, for all who obey him.

That is the second “s” to think about when asking yourself, who is Jesus Christ? He is the source of eternal salvation.

In him, you’ll find relief from your guilt. In him you’ll a sense of purpose, an understanding of who God really is. In him you’ll find the strength and motivation to change your life for the better. He changes it for you.

He is the source of all these things, “the source of eternal salvation.” “Source” is the second “s” to think about as you ponder in your mind who Jesus Christ really is.

Who is Jesus? To many, the story of Jesus might seem quite sad, and quite trivial. A traveling Jewish teacher, unpopular with the religious establishment, is put to death by a tyrannical government. He taught the world to be nice.

But there must be more! And there is. When you realize to what extent he submitted to the Heavenly Father, when you realize that he is the source of eternal salvation, that changes everything. It changed the lives of 11 men, his disciples, from doubting cowards to courageous witnesses.

 It changed the lives of millions of people that have learned about Jesus over the years. May his life and death and resurrection, all these things that happened for you, may they change you as well. Amen.5th Sunday in Lent 24           INI               Heb. 5:7-9

Who is Jesus Christ? These next two weeks you’ll  hear a lot about him. Next Sunday is Palm Sunday. Then comes Good Friday. Then comes Easter. This is that time of year when you hear people talk about Jesus Christ.

Unlike Christmas, Easter has escaped the intense commercialism that might sweep away its true spiritual meaning. Unlike Christmas, when school children sing about a fat man and snow, no one really knows what to sing or to do, when Easter arrives.

 After buying some candy and painting some eggs, most people wonder, “Is that it? What’s the deal with Easter?” And so, many wonder about Jesus Christ, and who he is.  Thus, our theme:

 WHO IS JESUS CHRIST?

Who is he? Everyone believes he existed. Unless you are completely uneducated, you know from history that there was such a man named Jesus. Secular historians, people who aren’t connected to the Bible, talk about a Jewish teacher named Jesus who lived in the early first century who upset a lot of people.

He existed. But after that, opinions go in different directions about who he was. Was he really the Son of God? Was there more significance to his death than what meets the eye? Did he really rise from the dead?

You know the answers to these questions. This morning, we want to get rid of any doubt you might have in your mind about who Jesus Christ is.

 This is the fifth Sunday of Lenten, and we have used our Sunday services to rid ourselves of weaknesses and sins in our hearts. Today, if there’s any doubt in your heart about who Jesus is, any confusion, then it’s my prayer    that the words we study this morning will help you understand more clearly who Jesus, this person you are going to hear so much about in the next two weeks.

Our text for today, taken from the book of Hebrews,  talks about the identity of Jesus Christ. To help us remember the content of this section, think of it this way - “the two S’s.”

S #1 is from verse 7: “During the days of Jesus’ life on earth, he offered up prayers and petitions with loud cries and tears to the one who could save him from death, and he was heard because of his reverent submission.”

There’s our first S: submission. Who is Jesus? He was the Son of God, and he submitted to the will of his Heavenly Father. This verse describes Jesus praying to God with loud cries and tears. The picture here is the Garden of Gethsemane.

 Shortly before he was arrested, Jesus looked into the future, and he could see what lay ahead of him – he could see all the suffering and death. It was a terrible thing. And all of it was optional.

Why do you think God keeps you from seeing your future? Perhaps it’s because if we knew that something bad was going to happen, we would lose our minds worrying and stressing over it.

What if God let you see into your future, and you found out that you were going to die a slow and gruesome death tomorrow morning? It would be terrible to know that, wouldn’t it?

That’s what Jesus went through right before he suffered and died for our sins. He could see what lay ahead of him. And it wasn’t just the physical suffering that made him recoil. It was the spiritual suffering he was about to go through because all the sins of the world  were placed on him. He was about to have God the Heavenly Father punish him for the sins of all mankind. Jesus could see this in his future, and it was a terrible thing.

 

He could have bypassed the suffering, if he wanted to. All of it was optional. After all, he was the Son of God. At any moment he could have said, “No, I won’t lower myself to that level. I won’t do that for the human race.”

But he knew that this was the only way to save people from total destruction. And so he submitted to the Heavenly Father, as it says, “Although he was a son, he learned obedience from what he suffered.”

He submitted to betrayal, to the arrest, to the all-night trials, to the beatings, and finally, to the crucifixion. When you ask yourself, “Who is Jesus Christ? Why is he suffering on a cross?” Think of the word “submission.” Of all the words that describe Jesus Christ, perhaps one of the best is the word “submission.” This is how he took your sins away.

There is another “s” in this section that I would like to focus on for today. Verse 9: “And, once made perfect, he became the source of eternal salvation for all who obey him.

The Greek word for “made perfect” actually means “to complete” or “to finish.” Once Jesus completed his suffering, what happened? He became the source of eternal salvation. There’s your other “s” - source.

 What if there had been some sort of disaster in this part of our country, and all the drinking water had been contaminated? What if there were no stores to buy things from? What if there was no way of transporting water in? There was literally nothing clean to drink. What would you do? Would you drink dirty water just to survive, even though you know it would make you terribly sick? Or would you drink nothing?

Spiritually, that’s the situation our world is in. A terrible disaster has taken place in our world, and that disaster is called the fall into sin. As a result, everything good, everything spiritual, has been contaminated.

There really is no place where a person can find eternal salvation in this world. Millions of people, all over the world, are dying of spiritual thirst.

Where can I find relief from guilt in my life, people wonder. Where can I find a sense of purpose? How can I learn more about this God whom I will someday meet when I die? How can I change my life for the better? Where can I go for these things?

 You can look all you want, you can try various kinds of religions and meditation techniques and philosophies, but none nothing on this earth can provide you with what you really need. Everything is contaminated with sin. Instead of making your soul better, the spiritual options of this world only make your soul worse.

But then, as you know, something big happened  when Jesus submitted to all of his suffering. After he completed everything and rose from the dead, he became the pipeline, the source of salvation, for all who obey him.

That is the second “s” to think about when asking yourself, who is Jesus Christ? He is the source of eternal salvation.

In him, you’ll find relief from your guilt. In him you’ll a sense of purpose, an understanding of who God really is. In him you’ll find the strength and motivation to change your life for the better. He changes it for you.

He is the source of all these things, “the source of eternal salvation.” “Source” is the second “s” to think about as you ponder in your mind who Jesus Christ really is.

Who is Jesus? To many, the story of Jesus might seem quite sad, and quite trivial. A traveling Jewish teacher, unpopular with the religious establishment, is put to death by a tyrannical government. He taught the world to be nice.

But there must be more! And there is. When you realize to what extent he submitted to the Heavenly Father, when you realize that he is the source of eternal salvation, that changes everything. It changed the lives of 11 men, his disciples, from doubting cowards to courageous witnesses.

 It changed the lives of millions of people that have learned about Jesus over the years. May his life and death and resurrection, all these things that happened for you, may they change you as well. Amen.5th Sunday in Lent 24           INI               Heb. 5:7-9

Who is Jesus Christ? These next two weeks you’ll  hear a lot about him. Next Sunday is Palm Sunday. Then comes Good Friday. Then comes Easter. This is that time of year when you hear people talk about Jesus Christ.

Unlike Christmas, Easter has escaped the intense commercialism that might sweep away its true spiritual meaning. Unlike Christmas, when school children sing about a fat man and snow, no one really knows what to sing or to do, when Easter arrives.

 After buying some candy and painting some eggs, most people wonder, “Is that it? What’s the deal with Easter?” And so, many wonder about Jesus Christ, and who he is.  Thus, our theme:

 WHO IS JESUS CHRIST?

Who is he? Everyone believes he existed. Unless you are completely uneducated, you know from history that there was such a man named Jesus. Secular historians, people who aren’t connected to the Bible, talk about a Jewish teacher named Jesus who lived in the early first century who upset a lot of people.

He existed. But after that, opinions go in different directions about who he was. Was he really the Son of God? Was there more significance to his death than what meets the eye? Did he really rise from the dead?

You know the answers to these questions. This morning, we want to get rid of any doubt you might have in your mind about who Jesus Christ is.

 This is the fifth Sunday of Lenten, and we have used our Sunday services to rid ourselves of weaknesses and sins in our hearts. Today, if there’s any doubt in your heart about who Jesus is, any confusion, then it’s my prayer    that the words we study this morning will help you understand more clearly who Jesus, this person you are going to hear so much about in the next two weeks.

Our text for today, taken from the book of Hebrews,  talks about the identity of Jesus Christ. To help us remember the content of this section, think of it this way - “the two S’s.”

S #1 is from verse 7: “During the days of Jesus’ life on earth, he offered up prayers and petitions with loud cries and tears to the one who could save him from death, and he was heard because of his reverent submission.”

There’s our first S: submission. Who is Jesus? He was the Son of God, and he submitted to the will of his Heavenly Father. This verse describes Jesus praying to God with loud cries and tears. The picture here is the Garden of Gethsemane.

 Shortly before he was arrested, Jesus looked into the future, and he could see what lay ahead of him – he could see all the suffering and death. It was a terrible thing. And all of it was optional.

Why do you think God keeps you from seeing your future? Perhaps it’s because if we knew that something bad was going to happen, we would lose our minds worrying and stressing over it.

What if God let you see into your future, and you found out that you were going to die a slow and gruesome death tomorrow morning? It would be terrible to know that, wouldn’t it?

That’s what Jesus went through right before he suffered and died for our sins. He could see what lay ahead of him. And it wasn’t just the physical suffering that made him recoil. It was the spiritual suffering he was about to go through because all the sins of the world  were placed on him. He was about to have God the Heavenly Father punish him for the sins of all mankind. Jesus could see this in his future, and it was a terrible thing.

 

He could have bypassed the suffering, if he wanted to. All of it was optional. After all, he was the Son of God. At any moment he could have said, “No, I won’t lower myself to that level. I won’t do that for the human race.”

But he knew that this was the only way to save people from total destruction. And so he submitted to the Heavenly Father, as it says, “Although he was a son, he learned obedience from what he suffered.”

He submitted to betrayal, to the arrest, to the all-night trials, to the beatings, and finally, to the crucifixion. When you ask yourself, “Who is Jesus Christ? Why is he suffering on a cross?” Think of the word “submission.” Of all the words that describe Jesus Christ, perhaps one of the best is the word “submission.” This is how he took your sins away.

There is another “s” in this section that I would like to focus on for today. Verse 9: “And, once made perfect, he became the source of eternal salvation for all who obey him.

The Greek word for “made perfect” actually means “to complete” or “to finish.” Once Jesus completed his suffering, what happened? He became the source of eternal salvation. There’s your other “s” - source.

 What if there had been some sort of disaster in this part of our country, and all the drinking water had been contaminated? What if there were no stores to buy things from? What if there was no way of transporting water in? There was literally nothing clean to drink. What would you do? Would you drink dirty water just to survive, even though you know it would make you terribly sick? Or would you drink nothing?

Spiritually, that’s the situation our world is in. A terrible disaster has taken place in our world, and that disaster is called the fall into sin. As a result, everything good, everything spiritual, has been contaminated.

There really is no place where a person can find eternal salvation in this world. Millions of people, all over the world, are dying of spiritual thirst.

Where can I find relief from guilt in my life, people wonder. Where can I find a sense of purpose? How can I learn more about this God whom I will someday meet when I die? How can I change my life for the better? Where can I go for these things?

 You can look all you want, you can try various kinds of religions and meditation techniques and philosophies, but none nothing on this earth can provide you with what you really need. Everything is contaminated with sin. Instead of making your soul better, the spiritual options of this world only make your soul worse.

But then, as you know, something big happened  when Jesus submitted to all of his suffering. After he completed everything and rose from the dead, he became the pipeline, the source of salvation, for all who obey him.

That is the second “s” to think about when asking yourself, who is Jesus Christ? He is the source of eternal salvation.

In him, you’ll find relief from your guilt. In him you’ll a sense of purpose, an understanding of who God really is. In him you’ll find the strength and motivation to change your life for the better. He changes it for you.

He is the source of all these things, “the source of eternal salvation.” “Source” is the second “s” to think about as you ponder in your mind who Jesus Christ really is.

Who is Jesus? To many, the story of Jesus might seem quite sad, and quite trivial. A traveling Jewish teacher, unpopular with the religious establishment, is put to death by a tyrannical government. He taught the world to be nice.

But there must be more! And there is. When you realize to what extent he submitted to the Heavenly Father, when you realize that he is the source of eternal salvation, that changes everything. It changed the lives of 11 men, his disciples, from doubting cowards to courageous witnesses.

 It changed the lives of millions of people that have learned about Jesus over the years. May his life and death and resurrection, all these things that happened for you, may they change you as well. Amen.5th Sunday in Lent 24           INI               Heb. 5:7-9

Who is Jesus Christ? These next two weeks you’ll  hear a lot about him. Next Sunday is Palm Sunday. Then comes Good Friday. Then comes Easter. This is that time of year when you hear people talk about Jesus Christ.

Unlike Christmas, Easter has escaped the intense commercialism that might sweep away its true spiritual meaning. Unlike Christmas, when school children sing about a fat man and snow, no one really knows what to sing or to do, when Easter arrives.

 After buying some candy and painting some eggs, most people wonder, “Is that it? What’s the deal with Easter?” And so, many wonder about Jesus Christ, and who he is.  Thus, our theme:

 WHO IS JESUS CHRIST?

Who is he? Everyone believes he existed. Unless you are completely uneducated, you know from history that there was such a man named Jesus. Secular historians, people who aren’t connected to the Bible, talk about a Jewish teacher named Jesus who lived in the early first century who upset a lot of people.

He existed. But after that, opinions go in different directions about who he was. Was he really the Son of God? Was there more significance to his death than what meets the eye? Did he really rise from the dead?

You know the answers to these questions. This morning, we want to get rid of any doubt you might have in your mind about who Jesus Christ is.

 This is the fifth Sunday of Lenten, and we have used our Sunday services to rid ourselves of weaknesses and sins in our hearts. Today, if there’s any doubt in your heart about who Jesus is, any confusion, then it’s my prayer    that the words we study this morning will help you understand more clearly who Jesus, this person you are going to hear so much about in the next two weeks.

Our text for today, taken from the book of Hebrews,  talks about the identity of Jesus Christ. To help us remember the content of this section, think of it this way - “the two S’s.”

S #1 is from verse 7: “During the days of Jesus’ life on earth, he offered up prayers and petitions with loud cries and tears to the one who could save him from death, and he was heard because of his reverent submission.”

There’s our first S: submission. Who is Jesus? He was the Son of God, and he submitted to the will of his Heavenly Father. This verse describes Jesus praying to God with loud cries and tears. The picture here is the Garden of Gethsemane.

 Shortly before he was arrested, Jesus looked into the future, and he could see what lay ahead of him – he could see all the suffering and death. It was a terrible thing. And all of it was optional.

Why do you think God keeps you from seeing your future? Perhaps it’s because if we knew that something bad was going to happen, we would lose our minds worrying and stressing over it.

What if God let you see into your future, and you found out that you were going to die a slow and gruesome death tomorrow morning? It would be terrible to know that, wouldn’t it?

That’s what Jesus went through right before he suffered and died for our sins. He could see what lay ahead of him. And it wasn’t just the physical suffering that made him recoil. It was the spiritual suffering he was about to go through because all the sins of the world  were placed on him. He was about to have God the Heavenly Father punish him for the sins of all mankind. Jesus could see this in his future, and it was a terrible thing.

 

He could have bypassed the suffering, if he wanted to. All of it was optional. After all, he was the Son of God. At any moment he could have said, “No, I won’t lower myself to that level. I won’t do that for the human race.”

But he knew that this was the only way to save people from total destruction. And so he submitted to the Heavenly Father, as it says, “Although he was a son, he learned obedience from what he suffered.”

He submitted to betrayal, to the arrest, to the all-night trials, to the beatings, and finally, to the crucifixion. When you ask yourself, “Who is Jesus Christ? Why is he suffering on a cross?” Think of the word “submission.” Of all the words that describe Jesus Christ, perhaps one of the best is the word “submission.” This is how he took your sins away.

There is another “s” in this section that I would like to focus on for today. Verse 9: “And, once made perfect, he became the source of eternal salvation for all who obey him.

The Greek word for “made perfect” actually means “to complete” or “to finish.” Once Jesus completed his suffering, what happened? He became the source of eternal salvation. There’s your other “s” - source.

 What if there had been some sort of disaster in this part of our country, and all the drinking water had been contaminated? What if there were no stores to buy things from? What if there was no way of transporting water in? There was literally nothing clean to drink. What would you do? Would you drink dirty water just to survive, even though you know it would make you terribly sick? Or would you drink nothing?

Spiritually, that’s the situation our world is in. A terrible disaster has taken place in our world, and that disaster is called the fall into sin. As a result, everything good, everything spiritual, has been contaminated.

There really is no place where a person can find eternal salvation in this world. Millions of people, all over the world, are dying of spiritual thirst.

Where can I find relief from guilt in my life, people wonder. Where can I find a sense of purpose? How can I learn more about this God whom I will someday meet when I die? How can I change my life for the better? Where can I go for these things?

 You can look all you want, you can try various kinds of religions and meditation techniques and philosophies, but none nothing on this earth can provide you with what you really need. Everything is contaminated with sin. Instead of making your soul better, the spiritual options of this world only make your soul worse.

But then, as you know, something big happened  when Jesus submitted to all of his suffering. After he completed everything and rose from the dead, he became the pipeline, the source of salvation, for all who obey him.

That is the second “s” to think about when asking yourself, who is Jesus Christ? He is the source of eternal salvation.

In him, you’ll find relief from your guilt. In him you’ll a sense of purpose, an understanding of who God really is. In him you’ll find the strength and motivation to change your life for the better. He changes it for you.

He is the source of all these things, “the source of eternal salvation.” “Source” is the second “s” to think about as you ponder in your mind who Jesus Christ really is.

Who is Jesus? To many, the story of Jesus might seem quite sad, and quite trivial. A traveling Jewish teacher, unpopular with the religious establishment, is put to death by a tyrannical government. He taught the world to be nice.

But there must be more! And there is. When you realize to what extent he submitted to the Heavenly Father, when you realize that he is the source of eternal salvation, that changes everything. It changed the lives of 11 men, his disciples, from doubting cowards to courageous witnesses.

 It changed the lives of millions of people that have learned about Jesus over the years. May his life and death and resurrection, all these things that happened for you, may they change you as well. Amen.5th Sunday in Lent 24           INI               Heb. 5:7-9

Who is Jesus Christ? These next two weeks you’ll  hear a lot about him. Next Sunday is Palm Sunday. Then comes Good Friday. Then comes Easter. This is that time of year when you hear people talk about Jesus Christ.

Unlike Christmas, Easter has escaped the intense commercialism that might sweep away its true spiritual meaning. Unlike Christmas, when school children sing about a fat man and snow, no one really knows what to sing or to do, when Easter arrives.

 After buying some candy and painting some eggs, most people wonder, “Is that it? What’s the deal with Easter?” And so, many wonder about Jesus Christ, and who he is.  Thus, our theme:

 WHO IS JESUS CHRIST?

Who is he? Everyone believes he existed. Unless you are completely uneducated, you know from history that there was such a man named Jesus. Secular historians, people who aren’t connected to the Bible, talk about a Jewish teacher named Jesus who lived in the early first century who upset a lot of people.

He existed. But after that, opinions go in different directions about who he was. Was he really the Son of God? Was there more significance to his death than what meets the eye? Did he really rise from the dead?

You know the answers to these questions. This morning, we want to get rid of any doubt you might have in your mind about who Jesus Christ is.

 This is the fifth Sunday of Lenten, and we have used our Sunday services to rid ourselves of weaknesses and sins in our hearts. Today, if there’s any doubt in your heart about who Jesus is, any confusion, then it’s my prayer    that the words we study this morning will help you understand more clearly who Jesus, this person you are going to hear so much about in the next two weeks.

Our text for today, taken from the book of Hebrews,  talks about the identity of Jesus Christ. To help us remember the content of this section, think of it this way - “the two S’s.”

S #1 is from verse 7: “During the days of Jesus’ life on earth, he offered up prayers and petitions with loud cries and tears to the one who could save him from death, and he was heard because of his reverent submission.”

There’s our first S: submission. Who is Jesus? He was the Son of God, and he submitted to the will of his Heavenly Father. This verse describes Jesus praying to God with loud cries and tears. The picture here is the Garden of Gethsemane.

 Shortly before he was arrested, Jesus looked into the future, and he could see what lay ahead of him – he could see all the suffering and death. It was a terrible thing. And all of it was optional.

Why do you think God keeps you from seeing your future? Perhaps it’s because if we knew that something bad was going to happen, we would lose our minds worrying and stressing over it.

What if God let you see into your future, and you found out that you were going to die a slow and gruesome death tomorrow morning? It would be terrible to know that, wouldn’t it?

That’s what Jesus went through right before he suffered and died for our sins. He could see what lay ahead of him. And it wasn’t just the physical suffering that made him recoil. It was the spiritual suffering he was about to go through because all the sins of the world  were placed on him. He was about to have God the Heavenly Father punish him for the sins of all mankind. Jesus could see this in his future, and it was a terrible thing.

 

He could have bypassed the suffering, if he wanted to. All of it was optional. After all, he was the Son of God. At any moment he could have said, “No, I won’t lower myself to that level. I won’t do that for the human race.”

But he knew that this was the only way to save people from total destruction. And so he submitted to the Heavenly Father, as it says, “Although he was a son, he learned obedience from what he suffered.”

He submitted to betrayal, to the arrest, to the all-night trials, to the beatings, and finally, to the crucifixion. When you ask yourself, “Who is Jesus Christ? Why is he suffering on a cross?” Think of the word “submission.” Of all the words that describe Jesus Christ, perhaps one of the best is the word “submission.” This is how he took your sins away.

There is another “s” in this section that I would like to focus on for today. Verse 9: “And, once made perfect, he became the source of eternal salvation for all who obey him.

The Greek word for “made perfect” actually means “to complete” or “to finish.” Once Jesus completed his suffering, what happened? He became the source of eternal salvation. There’s your other “s” - source.

 What if there had been some sort of disaster in this part of our country, and all the drinking water had been contaminated? What if there were no stores to buy things from? What if there was no way of transporting water in? There was literally nothing clean to drink. What would you do? Would you drink dirty water just to survive, even though you know it would make you terribly sick? Or would you drink nothing?

Spiritually, that’s the situation our world is in. A terrible disaster has taken place in our world, and that disaster is called the fall into sin. As a result, everything good, everything spiritual, has been contaminated.

There really is no place where a person can find eternal salvation in this world. Millions of people, all over the world, are dying of spiritual thirst.

Where can I find relief from guilt in my life, people wonder. Where can I find a sense of purpose? How can I learn more about this God whom I will someday meet when I die? How can I change my life for the better? Where can I go for these things?

 You can look all you want, you can try various kinds of religions and meditation techniques and philosophies, but none nothing on this earth can provide you with what you really need. Everything is contaminated with sin. Instead of making your soul better, the spiritual options of this world only make your soul worse.

But then, as you know, something big happened  when Jesus submitted to all of his suffering. After he completed everything and rose from the dead, he became the pipeline, the source of salvation, for all who obey him.

That is the second “s” to think about when asking yourself, who is Jesus Christ? He is the source of eternal salvation.

In him, you’ll find relief from your guilt. In him you’ll a sense of purpose, an understanding of who God really is. In him you’ll find the strength and motivation to change your life for the better. He changes it for you.

He is the source of all these things, “the source of eternal salvation.” “Source” is the second “s” to think about as you ponder in your mind who Jesus Christ really is.

Who is Jesus? To many, the story of Jesus might seem quite sad, and quite trivial. A traveling Jewish teacher, unpopular with the religious establishment, is put to death by a tyrannical government. He taught the world to be nice.

But there must be more! And there is. When you realize to what extent he submitted to the Heavenly Father, when you realize that he is the source of eternal salvation, that changes everything. It changed the lives of 11 men, his disciples, from doubting cowards to courageous witnesses.

 It changed the lives of millions of people that have learned about Jesus over the years. May his life and death and resurrection, all these things that happened for you, may they change you as well. Amen.5th Sunday in Lent 24           INI               Heb. 5:7-9

Who is Jesus Christ? These next two weeks you’ll  hear a lot about him. Next Sunday is Palm Sunday. Then comes Good Friday. Then comes Easter. This is that time of year when you hear people talk about Jesus Christ.

Unlike Christmas, Easter has escaped the intense commercialism that might sweep away its true spiritual meaning. Unlike Christmas, when school children sing about a fat man and snow, no one really knows what to sing or to do, when Easter arrives.

 After buying some candy and painting some eggs, most people wonder, “Is that it? What’s the deal with Easter?” And so, many wonder about Jesus Christ, and who he is.  Thus, our theme:

 WHO IS JESUS CHRIST?

Who is he? Everyone believes he existed. Unless you are completely uneducated, you know from history that there was such a man named Jesus. Secular historians, people who aren’t connected to the Bible, talk about a Jewish teacher named Jesus who lived in the early first century who upset a lot of people.

He existed. But after that, opinions go in different directions about who he was. Was he really the Son of God? Was there more significance to his death than what meets the eye? Did he really rise from the dead?

You know the answers to these questions. This morning, we want to get rid of any doubt you might have in your mind about who Jesus Christ is.

 This is the fifth Sunday of Lenten, and we have used our Sunday services to rid ourselves of weaknesses and sins in our hearts. Today, if there’s any doubt in your heart about who Jesus is, any confusion, then it’s my prayer    that the words we study this morning will help you understand more clearly who Jesus, this person you are going to hear so much about in the next two weeks.

Our text for today, taken from the book of Hebrews,  talks about the identity of Jesus Christ. To help us remember the content of this section, think of it this way - “the two S’s.”

S #1 is from verse 7: “During the days of Jesus’ life on earth, he offered up prayers and petitions with loud cries and tears to the one who could save him from death, and he was heard because of his reverent submission.”

There’s our first S: submission. Who is Jesus? He was the Son of God, and he submitted to the will of his Heavenly Father. This verse describes Jesus praying to God with loud cries and tears. The picture here is the Garden of Gethsemane.

 Shortly before he was arrested, Jesus looked into the future, and he could see what lay ahead of him – he could see all the suffering and death. It was a terrible thing. And all of it was optional.

Why do you think God keeps you from seeing your future? Perhaps it’s because if we knew that something bad was going to happen, we would lose our minds worrying and stressing over it.

What if God let you see into your future, and you found out that you were going to die a slow and gruesome death tomorrow morning? It would be terrible to know that, wouldn’t it?

That’s what Jesus went through right before he suffered and died for our sins. He could see what lay ahead of him. And it wasn’t just the physical suffering that made him recoil. It was the spiritual suffering he was about to go through because all the sins of the world  were placed on him. He was about to have God the Heavenly Father punish him for the sins of all mankind. Jesus could see this in his future, and it was a terrible thing.

 

He could have bypassed the suffering, if he wanted to. All of it was optional. After all, he was the Son of God. At any moment he could have said, “No, I won’t lower myself to that level. I won’t do that for the human race.”

But he knew that this was the only way to save people from total destruction. And so he submitted to the Heavenly Father, as it says, “Although he was a son, he learned obedience from what he suffered.”

He submitted to betrayal, to the arrest, to the all-night trials, to the beatings, and finally, to the crucifixion. When you ask yourself, “Who is Jesus Christ? Why is he suffering on a cross?” Think of the word “submission.” Of all the words that describe Jesus Christ, perhaps one of the best is the word “submission.” This is how he took your sins away.

There is another “s” in this section that I would like to focus on for today. Verse 9: “And, once made perfect, he became the source of eternal salvation for all who obey him.

The Greek word for “made perfect” actually means “to complete” or “to finish.” Once Jesus completed his suffering, what happened? He became the source of eternal salvation. There’s your other “s” - source.

 What if there had been some sort of disaster in this part of our country, and all the drinking water had been contaminated? What if there were no stores to buy things from? What if there was no way of transporting water in? There was literally nothing clean to drink. What would you do? Would you drink dirty water just to survive, even though you know it would make you terribly sick? Or would you drink nothing?

Spiritually, that’s the situation our world is in. A terrible disaster has taken place in our world, and that disaster is called the fall into sin. As a result, everything good, everything spiritual, has been contaminated.

There really is no place where a person can find eternal salvation in this world. Millions of people, all over the world, are dying of spiritual thirst.

Where can I find relief from guilt in my life, people wonder. Where can I find a sense of purpose? How can I learn more about this God whom I will someday meet when I die? How can I change my life for the better? Where can I go for these things?

 You can look all you want, you can try various kinds of religions and meditation techniques and philosophies, but none nothing on this earth can provide you with what you really need. Everything is contaminated with sin. Instead of making your soul better, the spiritual options of this world only make your soul worse.

But then, as you know, something big happened  when Jesus submitted to all of his suffering. After he completed everything and rose from the dead, he became the pipeline, the source of salvation, for all who obey him.

That is the second “s” to think about when asking yourself, who is Jesus Christ? He is the source of eternal salvation.

In him, you’ll find relief from your guilt. In him you’ll a sense of purpose, an understanding of who God really is. In him you’ll find the strength and motivation to change your life for the better. He changes it for you.

He is the source of all these things, “the source of eternal salvation.” “Source” is the second “s” to think about as you ponder in your mind who Jesus Christ really is.

Who is Jesus? To many, the story of Jesus might seem quite sad, and quite trivial. A traveling Jewish teacher, unpopular with the religious establishment, is put to death by a tyrannical government. He taught the world to be nice.

But there must be more! And there is. When you realize to what extent he submitted to the Heavenly Father, when you realize that he is the source of eternal salvation, that changes everything. It changed the lives of 11 men, his disciples, from doubting cowards to courageous witnesses.

 It changed the lives of millions of people that have learned about Jesus over the years. May his life and death and resurrection, all these things that happened for you, may they change you as well. Amen.5th Sunday in Lent 24           INI               Heb. 5:7-9

Who is Jesus Christ? These next two weeks you’ll  hear a lot about him. Next Sunday is Palm Sunday. Then comes Good Friday. Then comes Easter. This is that time of year when you hear people talk about Jesus Christ.

Unlike Christmas, Easter has escaped the intense commercialism that might sweep away its true spiritual meaning. Unlike Christmas, when school children sing about a fat man and snow, no one really knows what to sing or to do, when Easter arrives.

 After buying some candy and painting some eggs, most people wonder, “Is that it? What’s the deal with Easter?” And so, many wonder about Jesus Christ, and who he is.  Thus, our theme:

 WHO IS JESUS CHRIST?

Who is he? Everyone believes he existed. Unless you are completely uneducated, you know from history that there was such a man named Jesus. Secular historians, people who aren’t connected to the Bible, talk about a Jewish teacher named Jesus who lived in the early first century who upset a lot of people.

He existed. But after that, opinions go in different directions about who he was. Was he really the Son of God? Was there more significance to his death than what meets the eye? Did he really rise from the dead?

You know the answers to these questions. This morning, we want to get rid of any doubt you might have in your mind about who Jesus Christ is.

 This is the fifth Sunday of Lenten, and we have used our Sunday services to rid ourselves of weaknesses and sins in our hearts. Today, if there’s any doubt in your heart about who Jesus is, any confusion, then it’s my prayer    that the words we study this morning will help you understand more clearly who Jesus, this person you are going to hear so much about in the next two weeks.

Our text for today, taken from the book of Hebrews,  talks about the identity of Jesus Christ. To help us remember the content of this section, think of it this way - “the two S’s.”

S #1 is from verse 7: “During the days of Jesus’ life on earth, he offered up prayers and petitions with loud cries and tears to the one who could save him from death, and he was heard because of his reverent submission.”

There’s our first S: submission. Who is Jesus? He was the Son of God, and he submitted to the will of his Heavenly Father. This verse describes Jesus praying to God with loud cries and tears. The picture here is the Garden of Gethsemane.

 Shortly before he was arrested, Jesus looked into the future, and he could see what lay ahead of him – he could see all the suffering and death. It was a terrible thing. And all of it was optional.

Why do you think God keeps you from seeing your future? Perhaps it’s because if we knew that something bad was going to happen, we would lose our minds worrying and stressing over it.

What if God let you see into your future, and you found out that you were going to die a slow and gruesome death tomorrow morning? It would be terrible to know that, wouldn’t it?

That’s what Jesus went through right before he suffered and died for our sins. He could see what lay ahead of him. And it wasn’t just the physical suffering that made him recoil. It was the spiritual suffering he was about to go through because all the sins of the world  were placed on him. He was about to have God the Heavenly Father punish him for the sins of all mankind. Jesus could see this in his future, and it was a terrible thing.

 

He could have bypassed the suffering, if he wanted to. All of it was optional. After all, he was the Son of God. At any moment he could have said, “No, I won’t lower myself to that level. I won’t do that for the human race.”

But he knew that this was the only way to save people from total destruction. And so he submitted to the Heavenly Father, as it says, “Although he was a son, he learned obedience from what he suffered.”

He submitted to betrayal, to the arrest, to the all-night trials, to the beatings, and finally, to the crucifixion. When you ask yourself, “Who is Jesus Christ? Why is he suffering on a cross?” Think of the word “submission.” Of all the words that describe Jesus Christ, perhaps one of the best is the word “submission.” This is how he took your sins away.

There is another “s” in this section that I would like to focus on for today. Verse 9: “And, once made perfect, he became the source of eternal salvation for all who obey him.

The Greek word for “made perfect” actually means “to complete” or “to finish.” Once Jesus completed his suffering, what happened? He became the source of eternal salvation. There’s your other “s” - source.

 What if there had been some sort of disaster in this part of our country, and all the drinking water had been contaminated? What if there were no stores to buy things from? What if there was no way of transporting water in? There was literally nothing clean to drink. What would you do? Would you drink dirty water just to survive, even though you know it would make you terribly sick? Or would you drink nothing?

Spiritually, that’s the situation our world is in. A terrible disaster has taken place in our world, and that disaster is called the fall into sin. As a result, everything good, everything spiritual, has been contaminated.

There really is no place where a person can find eternal salvation in this world. Millions of people, all over the world, are dying of spiritual thirst.

Where can I find relief from guilt in my life, people wonder. Where can I find a sense of purpose? How can I learn more about this God whom I will someday meet when I die? How can I change my life for the better? Where can I go for these things?

 You can look all you want, you can try various kinds of religions and meditation techniques and philosophies, but none nothing on this earth can provide you with what you really need. Everything is contaminated with sin. Instead of making your soul better, the spiritual options of this world only make your soul worse.

But then, as you know, something big happened  when Jesus submitted to all of his suffering. After he completed everything and rose from the dead, he became the pipeline, the source of salvation, for all who obey him.

That is the second “s” to think about when asking yourself, who is Jesus Christ? He is the source of eternal salvation.

In him, you’ll find relief from your guilt. In him you’ll a sense of purpose, an understanding of who God really is. In him you’ll find the strength and motivation to change your life for the better. He changes it for you.

He is the source of all these things, “the source of eternal salvation.” “Source” is the second “s” to think about as you ponder in your mind who Jesus Christ really is.

Who is Jesus? To many, the story of Jesus might seem quite sad, and quite trivial. A traveling Jewish teacher, unpopular with the religious establishment, is put to death by a tyrannical government. He taught the world to be nice.

But there must be more! And there is. When you realize to what extent he submitted to the Heavenly Father, when you realize that he is the source of eternal salvation, that changes everything. It changed the lives of 11 men, his disciples, from doubting cowards to courageous witnesses.

 It changed the lives of millions of people that have learned about Jesus over the years. May his life and death and resurrection, all these things that happened for you, may they change you as well. Amen.5th Sunday in Lent 24           INI               Heb. 5:7-9

Who is Jesus Christ? These next two weeks you’ll  hear a lot about him. Next Sunday is Palm Sunday. Then comes Good Friday. Then comes Easter. This is that time of year when you hear people talk about Jesus Christ.

Unlike Christmas, Easter has escaped the intense commercialism that might sweep away its true spiritual meaning. Unlike Christmas, when school children sing about a fat man and snow, no one really knows what to sing or to do, when Easter arrives.

 After buying some candy and painting some eggs, most people wonder, “Is that it? What’s the deal with Easter?” And so, many wonder about Jesus Christ, and who he is.  Thus, our theme:

 WHO IS JESUS CHRIST?

Who is he? Everyone believes he existed. Unless you are completely uneducated, you know from history that there was such a man named Jesus. Secular historians, people who aren’t connected to the Bible, talk about a Jewish teacher named Jesus who lived in the early first century who upset a lot of people.

He existed. But after that, opinions go in different directions about who he was. Was he really the Son of God? Was there more significance to his death than what meets the eye? Did he really rise from the dead?

You know the answers to these questions. This morning, we want to get rid of any doubt you might have in your mind about who Jesus Christ is.

 This is the fifth Sunday of Lenten, and we have used our Sunday services to rid ourselves of weaknesses and sins in our hearts. Today, if there’s any doubt in your heart about who Jesus is, any confusion, then it’s my prayer    that the words we study this morning will help you understand more clearly who Jesus, this person you are going to hear so much about in the next two weeks.

Our text for today, taken from the book of Hebrews,  talks about the identity of Jesus Christ. To help us remember the content of this section, think of it this way - “the two S’s.”

S #1 is from verse 7: “During the days of Jesus’ life on earth, he offered up prayers and petitions with loud cries and tears to the one who could save him from death, and he was heard because of his reverent submission.”

There’s our first S: submission. Who is Jesus? He was the Son of God, and he submitted to the will of his Heavenly Father. This verse describes Jesus praying to God with loud cries and tears. The picture here is the Garden of Gethsemane.

 Shortly before he was arrested, Jesus looked into the future, and he could see what lay ahead of him – he could see all the suffering and death. It was a terrible thing. And all of it was optional.

Why do you think God keeps you from seeing your future? Perhaps it’s because if we knew that something bad was going to happen, we would lose our minds worrying and stressing over it.

What if God let you see into your future, and you found out that you were going to die a slow and gruesome death tomorrow morning? It would be terrible to know that, wouldn’t it?

That’s what Jesus went through right before he suffered and died for our sins. He could see what lay ahead of him. And it wasn’t just the physical suffering that made him recoil. It was the spiritual suffering he was about to go through because all the sins of the world  were placed on him. He was about to have God the Heavenly Father punish him for the sins of all mankind. Jesus could see this in his future, and it was a terrible thing.

 

He could have bypassed the suffering, if he wanted to. All of it was optional. After all, he was the Son of God. At any moment he could have said, “No, I won’t lower myself to that level. I won’t do that for the human race.”

But he knew that this was the only way to save people from total destruction. And so he submitted to the Heavenly Father, as it says, “Although he was a son, he learned obedience from what he suffered.”

He submitted to betrayal, to the arrest, to the all-night trials, to the beatings, and finally, to the crucifixion. When you ask yourself, “Who is Jesus Christ? Why is he suffering on a cross?” Think of the word “submission.” Of all the words that describe Jesus Christ, perhaps one of the best is the word “submission.” This is how he took your sins away.

There is another “s” in this section that I would like to focus on for today. Verse 9: “And, once made perfect, he became the source of eternal salvation for all who obey him.

The Greek word for “made perfect” actually means “to complete” or “to finish.” Once Jesus completed his suffering, what happened? He became the source of eternal salvation. There’s your other “s” - source.

 What if there had been some sort of disaster in this part of our country, and all the drinking water had been contaminated? What if there were no stores to buy things from? What if there was no way of transporting water in? There was literally nothing clean to drink. What would you do? Would you drink dirty water just to survive, even though you know it would make you terribly sick? Or would you drink nothing?

Spiritually, that’s the situation our world is in. A terrible disaster has taken place in our world, and that disaster is called the fall into sin. As a result, everything good, everything spiritual, has been contaminated.

There really is no place where a person can find eternal salvation in this world. Millions of people, all over the world, are dying of spiritual thirst.

Where can I find relief from guilt in my life, people wonder. Where can I find a sense of purpose? How can I learn more about this God whom I will someday meet when I die? How can I change my life for the better? Where can I go for these things?

 You can look all you want, you can try various kinds of religions and meditation techniques and philosophies, but none nothing on this earth can provide you with what you really need. Everything is contaminated with sin. Instead of making your soul better, the spiritual options of this world only make your soul worse.

But then, as you know, something big happened  when Jesus submitted to all of his suffering. After he completed everything and rose from the dead, he became the pipeline, the source of salvation, for all who obey him.

That is the second “s” to think about when asking yourself, who is Jesus Christ? He is the source of eternal salvation.

In him, you’ll find relief from your guilt. In him you’ll a sense of purpose, an understanding of who God really is. In him you’ll find the strength and motivation to change your life for the better. He changes it for you.

He is the source of all these things, “the source of eternal salvation.” “Source” is the second “s” to think about as you ponder in your mind who Jesus Christ really is.

Who is Jesus? To many, the story of Jesus might seem quite sad, and quite trivial. A traveling Jewish teacher, unpopular with the religious establishment, is put to death by a tyrannical government. He taught the world to be nice.

But there must be more! And there is. When you realize to what extent he submitted to the Heavenly Father, when you realize that he is the source of eternal salvation, that changes everything. It changed the lives of 11 men, his disciples, from doubting cowards to courageous witnesses.

 It changed the lives of millions of people that have learned about Jesus over the years. May his life and death and resurrection, all these things that happened for you, may they change you as well. Amen.5th Sunday in Lent 24           INI               Heb. 5:7-9

Who is Jesus Christ? These next two weeks you’ll  hear a lot about him. Next Sunday is Palm Sunday. Then comes Good Friday. Then comes Easter. This is that time of year when you hear people talk about Jesus Christ.

Unlike Christmas, Easter has escaped the intense commercialism that might sweep away its true spiritual meaning. Unlike Christmas, when school children sing about a fat man and snow, no one really knows what to sing or to do, when Easter arrives.

 After buying some candy and painting some eggs, most people wonder, “Is that it? What’s the deal with Easter?” And so, many wonder about Jesus Christ, and who he is.  Thus, our theme:

 WHO IS JESUS CHRIST?

Who is he? Everyone believes he existed. Unless you are completely uneducated, you know from history that there was such a man named Jesus. Secular historians, people who aren’t connected to the Bible, talk about a Jewish teacher named Jesus who lived in the early first century who upset a lot of people.

He existed. But after that, opinions go in different directions about who he was. Was he really the Son of God? Was there more significance to his death than what meets the eye? Did he really rise from the dead?

You know the answers to these questions. This morning, we want to get rid of any doubt you might have in your mind about who Jesus Christ is.

 This is the fifth Sunday of Lenten, and we have used our Sunday services to rid ourselves of weaknesses and sins in our hearts. Today, if there’s any doubt in your heart about who Jesus is, any confusion, then it’s my prayer    that the words we study this morning will help you understand more clearly who Jesus, this person you are going to hear so much about in the next two weeks.

Our text for today, taken from the book of Hebrews,  talks about the identity of Jesus Christ. To help us remember the content of this section, think of it this way - “the two S’s.”

S #1 is from verse 7: “During the days of Jesus’ life on earth, he offered up prayers and petitions with loud cries and tears to the one who could save him from death, and he was heard because of his reverent submission.”

There’s our first S: submission. Who is Jesus? He was the Son of God, and he submitted to the will of his Heavenly Father. This verse describes Jesus praying to God with loud cries and tears. The picture here is the Garden of Gethsemane.

 Shortly before he was arrested, Jesus looked into the future, and he could see what lay ahead of him – he could see all the suffering and death. It was a terrible thing. And all of it was optional.

Why do you think God keeps you from seeing your future? Perhaps it’s because if we knew that something bad was going to happen, we would lose our minds worrying and stressing over it.

What if God let you see into your future, and you found out that you were going to die a slow and gruesome death tomorrow morning? It would be terrible to know that, wouldn’t it?

That’s what Jesus went through right before he suffered and died for our sins. He could see what lay ahead of him. And it wasn’t just the physical suffering that made him recoil. It was the spiritual suffering he was about to go through because all the sins of the world  were placed on him. He was about to have God the Heavenly Father punish him for the sins of all mankind. Jesus could see this in his future, and it was a terrible thing.

 

He could have bypassed the suffering, if he wanted to. All of it was optional. After all, he was the Son of God. At any moment he could have said, “No, I won’t lower myself to that level. I won’t do that for the human race.”

But he knew that this was the only way to save people from total destruction. And so he submitted to the Heavenly Father, as it says, “Although he was a son, he learned obedience from what he suffered.”

He submitted to betrayal, to the arrest, to the all-night trials, to the beatings, and finally, to the crucifixion. When you ask yourself, “Who is Jesus Christ? Why is he suffering on a cross?” Think of the word “submission.” Of all the words that describe Jesus Christ, perhaps one of the best is the word “submission.” This is how he took your sins away.

There is another “s” in this section that I would like to focus on for today. Verse 9: “And, once made perfect, he became the source of eternal salvation for all who obey him.

The Greek word for “made perfect” actually means “to complete” or “to finish.” Once Jesus completed his suffering, what happened? He became the source of eternal salvation. There’s your other “s” - source.

 What if there had been some sort of disaster in this part of our country, and all the drinking water had been contaminated? What if there were no stores to buy things from? What if there was no way of transporting water in? There was literally nothing clean to drink. What would you do? Would you drink dirty water just to survive, even though you know it would make you terribly sick? Or would you drink nothing?

Spiritually, that’s the situation our world is in. A terrible disaster has taken place in our world, and that disaster is called the fall into sin. As a result, everything good, everything spiritual, has been contaminated.

There really is no place where a person can find eternal salvation in this world. Millions of people, all over the world, are dying of spiritual thirst.

Where can I find relief from guilt in my life, people wonder. Where can I find a sense of purpose? How can I learn more about this God whom I will someday meet when I die? How can I change my life for the better? Where can I go for these things?

 You can look all you want, you can try various kinds of religions and meditation techniques and philosophies, but none nothing on this earth can provide you with what you really need. Everything is contaminated with sin. Instead of making your soul better, the spiritual options of this world only make your soul worse.

But then, as you know, something big happened  when Jesus submitted to all of his suffering. After he completed everything and rose from the dead, he became the pipeline, the source of salvation, for all who obey him.

That is the second “s” to think about when asking yourself, who is Jesus Christ? He is the source of eternal salvation.

In him, you’ll find relief from your guilt. In him you’ll a sense of purpose, an understanding of who God really is. In him you’ll find the strength and motivation to change your life for the better. He changes it for you.

He is the source of all these things, “the source of eternal salvation.” “Source” is the second “s” to think about as you ponder in your mind who Jesus Christ really is.

Who is Jesus? To many, the story of Jesus might seem quite sad, and quite trivial. A traveling Jewish teacher, unpopular with the religious establishment, is put to death by a tyrannical government. He taught the world to be nice.

But there must be more! And there is. When you realize to what extent he submitted to the Heavenly Father, when you realize that he is the source of eternal salvation, that changes everything. It changed the lives of 11 men, his disciples, from doubting cowards to courageous witnesses.

 It changed the lives of millions of people that have learned about Jesus over the years. May his life and death and resurrection, all these things that happened for you, may they change you as well. Amen.5th Sunday in Lent 24           INI               Heb. 5:7-9

Who is Jesus Christ? These next two weeks you’ll  hear a lot about him. Next Sunday is Palm Sunday. Then comes Good Friday. Then comes Easter. This is that time of year when you hear people talk about Jesus Christ.

Unlike Christmas, Easter has escaped the intense commercialism that might sweep away its true spiritual meaning. Unlike Christmas, when school children sing about a fat man and snow, no one really knows what to sing or to do, when Easter arrives.

 After buying some candy and painting some eggs, most people wonder, “Is that it? What’s the deal with Easter?” And so, many wonder about Jesus Christ, and who he is.  Thus, our theme:

 WHO IS JESUS CHRIST?

Who is he? Everyone believes he existed. Unless you are completely uneducated, you know from history that there was such a man named Jesus. Secular historians, people who aren’t connected to the Bible, talk about a Jewish teacher named Jesus who lived in the early first century who upset a lot of people.

He existed. But after that, opinions go in different directions about who he was. Was he really the Son of God? Was there more significance to his death than what meets the eye? Did he really rise from the dead?

You know the answers to these questions. This morning, we want to get rid of any doubt you might have in your mind about who Jesus Christ is.

 This is the fifth Sunday of Lenten, and we have used our Sunday services to rid ourselves of weaknesses and sins in our hearts. Today, if there’s any doubt in your heart about who Jesus is, any confusion, then it’s my prayer    that the words we study this morning will help you understand more clearly who Jesus, this person you are going to hear so much about in the next two weeks.

Our text for today, taken from the book of Hebrews,  talks about the identity of Jesus Christ. To help us remember the content of this section, think of it this way - “the two S’s.”

S #1 is from verse 7: “During the days of Jesus’ life on earth, he offered up prayers and petitions with loud cries and tears to the one who could save him from death, and he was heard because of his reverent submission.”

There’s our first S: submission. Who is Jesus? He was the Son of God, and he submitted to the will of his Heavenly Father. This verse describes Jesus praying to God with loud cries and tears. The picture here is the Garden of Gethsemane.

 Shortly before he was arrested, Jesus looked into the future, and he could see what lay ahead of him – he could see all the suffering and death. It was a terrible thing. And all of it was optional.

Why do you think God keeps you from seeing your future? Perhaps it’s because if we knew that something bad was going to happen, we would lose our minds worrying and stressing over it.

What if God let you see into your future, and you found out that you were going to die a slow and gruesome death tomorrow morning? It would be terrible to know that, wouldn’t it?

That’s what Jesus went through right before he suffered and died for our sins. He could see what lay ahead of him. And it wasn’t just the physical suffering that made him recoil. It was the spiritual suffering he was about to go through because all the sins of the world  were placed on him. He was about to have God the Heavenly Father punish him for the sins of all mankind. Jesus could see this in his future, and it was a terrible thing.

 

He could have bypassed the suffering, if he wanted to. All of it was optional. After all, he was the Son of God. At any moment he could have said, “No, I won’t lower myself to that level. I won’t do that for the human race.”

But he knew that this was the only way to save people from total destruction. And so he submitted to the Heavenly Father, as it says, “Although he was a son, he learned obedience from what he suffered.”

He submitted to betrayal, to the arrest, to the all-night trials, to the beatings, and finally, to the crucifixion. When you ask yourself, “Who is Jesus Christ? Why is he suffering on a cross?” Think of the word “submission.” Of all the words that describe Jesus Christ, perhaps one of the best is the word “submission.” This is how he took your sins away.

There is another “s” in this section that I would like to focus on for today. Verse 9: “And, once made perfect, he became the source of eternal salvation for all who obey him.

The Greek word for “made perfect” actually means “to complete” or “to finish.” Once Jesus completed his suffering, what happened? He became the source of eternal salvation. There’s your other “s” - source.

 What if there had been some sort of disaster in this part of our country, and all the drinking water had been contaminated? What if there were no stores to buy things from? What if there was no way of transporting water in? There was literally nothing clean to drink. What would you do? Would you drink dirty water just to survive, even though you know it would make you terribly sick? Or would you drink nothing?

Spiritually, that’s the situation our world is in. A terrible disaster has taken place in our world, and that disaster is called the fall into sin. As a result, everything good, everything spiritual, has been contaminated.

There really is no place where a person can find eternal salvation in this world. Millions of people, all over the world, are dying of spiritual thirst.

Where can I find relief from guilt in my life, people wonder. Where can I find a sense of purpose? How can I learn more about this God whom I will someday meet when I die? How can I change my life for the better? Where can I go for these things?

 You can look all you want, you can try various kinds of religions and meditation techniques and philosophies, but none nothing on this earth can provide you with what you really need. Everything is contaminated with sin. Instead of making your soul better, the spiritual options of this world only make your soul worse.

But then, as you know, something big happened  when Jesus submitted to all of his suffering. After he completed everything and rose from the dead, he became the pipeline, the source of salvation, for all who obey him.

That is the second “s” to think about when asking yourself, who is Jesus Christ? He is the source of eternal salvation.

In him, you’ll find relief from your guilt. In him you’ll a sense of purpose, an understanding of who God really is. In him you’ll find the strength and motivation to change your life for the better. He changes it for you.

He is the source of all these things, “the source of eternal salvation.” “Source” is the second “s” to think about as you ponder in your mind who Jesus Christ really is.

Who is Jesus? To many, the story of Jesus might seem quite sad, and quite trivial. A traveling Jewish teacher, unpopular with the religious establishment, is put to death by a tyrannical government. He taught the world to be nice.

But there must be more! And there is. When you realize to what extent he submitted to the Heavenly Father, when you realize that he is the source of eternal salvation, that changes everything. It changed the lives of 11 men, his disciples, from doubting cowards to courageous witnesses.

 It changed the lives of millions of people that have learned about Jesus over the years. May his life and death and resurrection, all these things that happened for you, may they change you as well. Amen.5th Sunday in Lent 24           INI               Heb. 5:7-9

Who is Jesus Christ? These next two weeks you’ll  hear a lot about him. Next Sunday is Palm Sunday. Then comes Good Friday. Then comes Easter. This is that time of year when you hear people talk about Jesus Christ.

Unlike Christmas, Easter has escaped the intense commercialism that might sweep away its true spiritual meaning. Unlike Christmas, when school children sing about a fat man and snow, no one really knows what to sing or to do, when Easter arrives.

 After buying some candy and painting some eggs, most people wonder, “Is that it? What’s the deal with Easter?” And so, many wonder about Jesus Christ, and who he is.  Thus, our theme:

 WHO IS JESUS CHRIST?

Who is he? Everyone believes he existed. Unless you are completely uneducated, you know from history that there was such a man named Jesus. Secular historians, people who aren’t connected to the Bible, talk about a Jewish teacher named Jesus who lived in the early first century who upset a lot of people.

He existed. But after that, opinions go in different directions about who he was. Was he really the Son of God? Was there more significance to his death than what meets the eye? Did he really rise from the dead?

You know the answers to these questions. This morning, we want to get rid of any doubt you might have in your mind about who Jesus Christ is.

 This is the fifth Sunday of Lenten, and we have used our Sunday services to rid ourselves of weaknesses and sins in our hearts. Today, if there’s any doubt in your heart about who Jesus is, any confusion, then it’s my prayer    that the words we study this morning will help you understand more clearly who Jesus, this person you are going to hear so much about in the next two weeks.

Our text for today, taken from the book of Hebrews,  talks about the identity of Jesus Christ. To help us remember the content of this section, think of it this way - “the two S’s.”

S #1 is from verse 7: “During the days of Jesus’ life on earth, he offered up prayers and petitions with loud cries and tears to the one who could save him from death, and he was heard because of his reverent submission.”

There’s our first S: submission. Who is Jesus? He was the Son of God, and he submitted to the will of his Heavenly Father. This verse describes Jesus praying to God with loud cries and tears. The picture here is the Garden of Gethsemane.

 Shortly before he was arrested, Jesus looked into the future, and he could see what lay ahead of him – he could see all the suffering and death. It was a terrible thing. And all of it was optional.

Why do you think God keeps you from seeing your future? Perhaps it’s because if we knew that something bad was going to happen, we would lose our minds worrying and stressing over it.

What if God let you see into your future, and you found out that you were going to die a slow and gruesome death tomorrow morning? It would be terrible to know that, wouldn’t it?

That’s what Jesus went through right before he suffered and died for our sins. He could see what lay ahead of him. And it wasn’t just the physical suffering that made him recoil. It was the spiritual suffering he was about to go through because all the sins of the world  were placed on him. He was about to have God the Heavenly Father punish him for the sins of all mankind. Jesus could see this in his future, and it was a terrible thing.

 

He could have bypassed the suffering, if he wanted to. All of it was optional. After all, he was the Son of God. At any moment he could have said, “No, I won’t lower myself to that level. I won’t do that for the human race.”

But he knew that this was the only way to save people from total destruction. And so he submitted to the Heavenly Father, as it says, “Although he was a son, he learned obedience from what he suffered.”

He submitted to betrayal, to the arrest, to the all-night trials, to the beatings, and finally, to the crucifixion. When you ask yourself, “Who is Jesus Christ? Why is he suffering on a cross?” Think of the word “submission.” Of all the words that describe Jesus Christ, perhaps one of the best is the word “submission.” This is how he took your sins away.

There is another “s” in this section that I would like to focus on for today. Verse 9: “And, once made perfect, he became the source of eternal salvation for all who obey him.

The Greek word for “made perfect” actually means “to complete” or “to finish.” Once Jesus completed his suffering, what happened? He became the source of eternal salvation. There’s your other “s” - source.

 What if there had been some sort of disaster in this part of our country, and all the drinking water had been contaminated? What if there were no stores to buy things from? What if there was no way of transporting water in? There was literally nothing clean to drink. What would you do? Would you drink dirty water just to survive, even though you know it would make you terribly sick? Or would you drink nothing?

Spiritually, that’s the situation our world is in. A terrible disaster has taken place in our world, and that disaster is called the fall into sin. As a result, everything good, everything spiritual, has been contaminated.

There really is no place where a person can find eternal salvation in this world. Millions of people, all over the world, are dying of spiritual thirst.

Where can I find relief from guilt in my life, people wonder. Where can I find a sense of purpose? How can I learn more about this God whom I will someday meet when I die? How can I change my life for the better? Where can I go for these things?

 You can look all you want, you can try various kinds of religions and meditation techniques and philosophies, but none nothing on this earth can provide you with what you really need. Everything is contaminated with sin. Instead of making your soul better, the spiritual options of this world only make your soul worse.

But then, as you know, something big happened  when Jesus submitted to all of his suffering. After he completed everything and rose from the dead, he became the pipeline, the source of salvation, for all who obey him.

That is the second “s” to think about when asking yourself, who is Jesus Christ? He is the source of eternal salvation.

In him, you’ll find relief from your guilt. In him you’ll a sense of purpose, an understanding of who God really is. In him you’ll find the strength and motivation to change your life for the better. He changes it for you.

He is the source of all these things, “the source of eternal salvation.” “Source” is the second “s” to think about as you ponder in your mind who Jesus Christ really is.

Who is Jesus? To many, the story of Jesus might seem quite sad, and quite trivial. A traveling Jewish teacher, unpopular with the religious establishment, is put to death by a tyrannical government. He taught the world to be nice.

But there must be more! And there is. When you realize to what extent he submitted to the Heavenly Father, when you realize that he is the source of eternal salvation, that changes everything. It changed the lives of 11 men, his disciples, from doubting cowards to courageous witnesses.

 It changed the lives of millions of people that have learned about Jesus over the years. May his life and death and resurrection, all these things that happened for you, may they change you as well. Amen.5th Sunday in Lent 24           INI               Heb. 5:7-9

Who is Jesus Christ? These next two weeks you’ll  hear a lot about him. Next Sunday is Palm Sunday. Then comes Good Friday. Then comes Easter. This is that time of year when you hear people talk about Jesus Christ.

Unlike Christmas, Easter has escaped the intense commercialism that might sweep away its true spiritual meaning. Unlike Christmas, when school children sing about a fat man and snow, no one really knows what to sing or to do, when Easter arrives.

 After buying some candy and painting some eggs, most people wonder, “Is that it? What’s the deal with Easter?” And so, many wonder about Jesus Christ, and who he is.  Thus, our theme:

 WHO IS JESUS CHRIST?

Who is he? Everyone believes he existed. Unless you are completely uneducated, you know from history that there was such a man named Jesus. Secular historians, people who aren’t connected to the Bible, talk about a Jewish teacher named Jesus who lived in the early first century who upset a lot of people.

He existed. But after that, opinions go in different directions about who he was. Was he really the Son of God? Was there more significance to his death than what meets the eye? Did he really rise from the dead?

You know the answers to these questions. This morning, we want to get rid of any doubt you might have in your mind about who Jesus Christ is.

 This is the fifth Sunday of Lenten, and we have used our Sunday services to rid ourselves of weaknesses and sins in our hearts. Today, if there’s any doubt in your heart about who Jesus is, any confusion, then it’s my prayer    that the words we study this morning will help you understand more clearly who Jesus, this person you are going to hear so much about in the next two weeks.

Our text for today, taken from the book of Hebrews,  talks about the identity of Jesus Christ. To help us remember the content of this section, think of it this way - “the two S’s.”

S #1 is from verse 7: “During the days of Jesus’ life on earth, he offered up prayers and petitions with loud cries and tears to the one who could save him from death, and he was heard because of his reverent submission.”

There’s our first S: submission. Who is Jesus? He was the Son of God, and he submitted to the will of his Heavenly Father. This verse describes Jesus praying to God with loud cries and tears. The picture here is the Garden of Gethsemane.

 Shortly before he was arrested, Jesus looked into the future, and he could see what lay ahead of him – he could see all the suffering and death. It was a terrible thing. And all of it was optional.

Why do you think God keeps you from seeing your future? Perhaps it’s because if we knew that something bad was going to happen, we would lose our minds worrying and stressing over it.

What if God let you see into your future, and you found out that you were going to die a slow and gruesome death tomorrow morning? It would be terrible to know that, wouldn’t it?

That’s what Jesus went through right before he suffered and died for our sins. He could see what lay ahead of him. And it wasn’t just the physical suffering that made him recoil. It was the spiritual suffering he was about to go through because all the sins of the world  were placed on him. He was about to have God the Heavenly Father punish him for the sins of all mankind. Jesus could see this in his future, and it was a terrible thing.

 

He could have bypassed the suffering, if he wanted to. All of it was optional. After all, he was the Son of God. At any moment he could have said, “No, I won’t lower myself to that level. I won’t do that for the human race.”

But he knew that this was the only way to save people from total destruction. And so he submitted to the Heavenly Father, as it says, “Although he was a son, he learned obedience from what he suffered.”

He submitted to betrayal, to the arrest, to the all-night trials, to the beatings, and finally, to the crucifixion. When you ask yourself, “Who is Jesus Christ? Why is he suffering on a cross?” Think of the word “submission.” Of all the words that describe Jesus Christ, perhaps one of the best is the word “submission.” This is how he took your sins away.

There is another “s” in this section that I would like to focus on for today. Verse 9: “And, once made perfect, he became the source of eternal salvation for all who obey him.

The Greek word for “made perfect” actually means “to complete” or “to finish.” Once Jesus completed his suffering, what happened? He became the source of eternal salvation. There’s your other “s” - source.

 What if there had been some sort of disaster in this part of our country, and all the drinking water had been contaminated? What if there were no stores to buy things from? What if there was no way of transporting water in? There was literally nothing clean to drink. What would you do? Would you drink dirty water just to survive, even though you know it would make you terribly sick? Or would you drink nothing?

Spiritually, that’s the situation our world is in. A terrible disaster has taken place in our world, and that disaster is called the fall into sin. As a result, everything good, everything spiritual, has been contaminated.

There really is no place where a person can find eternal salvation in this world. Millions of people, all over the world, are dying of spiritual thirst.

Where can I find relief from guilt in my life, people wonder. Where can I find a sense of purpose? How can I learn more about this God whom I will someday meet when I die? How can I change my life for the better? Where can I go for these things?

 You can look all you want, you can try various kinds of religions and meditation techniques and philosophies, but none nothing on this earth can provide you with what you really need. Everything is contaminated with sin. Instead of making your soul better, the spiritual options of this world only make your soul worse.

But then, as you know, something big happened  when Jesus submitted to all of his suffering. After he completed everything and rose from the dead, he became the pipeline, the source of salvation, for all who obey him.

That is the second “s” to think about when asking yourself, who is Jesus Christ? He is the source of eternal salvation.

In him, you’ll find relief from your guilt. In him you’ll a sense of purpose, an understanding of who God really is. In him you’ll find the strength and motivation to change your life for the better. He changes it for you.

He is the source of all these things, “the source of eternal salvation.” “Source” is the second “s” to think about as you ponder in your mind who Jesus Christ really is.

Who is Jesus? To many, the story of Jesus might seem quite sad, and quite trivial. A traveling Jewish teacher, unpopular with the religious establishment, is put to death by a tyrannical government. He taught the world to be nice.

But there must be more! And there is. When you realize to what extent he submitted to the Heavenly Father, when you realize that he is the source of eternal salvation, that changes everything. It changed the lives of 11 men, his disciples, from doubting cowards to courageous witnesses.

 It changed the lives of millions of people that have learned about Jesus over the years. May his life and death and resurrection, all these things that happened for you, may they change you as well. Amen.