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Jesus: The Suffering Servant – Sermon #1 Mark 1:1-8 THE BEGINNING OF THE GOSPEL Intro: Matthew begins his Gospel by sharing
the genealogy of Jesus. He feels the need to prove that Jesus is a Son of
Abraham and a Son of David. Luke begins by talking about the events which lead
up to the birth of the Lord Jesus. John’s Gospel starts out in eternity past
reminding us that Jesus is God in the flesh. Mark does not start out by talking
about the Lord’s heritage or His birth. Mark’s desire is to present Jesus as a
servant and a servant does not need a genealogy. Mark begins by jumping right
into the action. Mark’s first sentence serves as a title to
the book and it serves to plunge us immediately into the earthly ministry of
Jesus. Mark is going to share with his readers the good news concerning who
Jesus is and what He did while He was here. Mark calls the Lord “Jesus
Christ, the Son of God. The name “Jesus is the
Greek transliteration of the Hebrew name Joshua. It means Jehovah
is Salvation. Jesus is a human name and it reveals the reason
Jesus came into this world. Jesus came into this world to save lost sinners, Matt. 1:21; Luke 19:10. The name
“Jesus
declares His Person. He is called “Christ. This
identifies Jesus as the Jewish Messiah, or the
Anointed One. The name Christ declares His
Position. Jesus is pictured as the One Who will deliver His people from
their enemies. Then Mark raises the stakes. He calls
Jesus “the Son of God. Mark lets us know in very clear terms
that he is writing about a man, Who is no ordinary man. He is writing about a
man Who is God in the flesh, John
1:1, 14. The name “Son of God declares His
Power. So, this title declares four important
truths regarding Jesus. 1. He is
truly human He has a human name Jesus. 2. He is
truly divine He is the promised Messiah. He is the Son of God. 3. He is
truly unique He is both humanity and deity in one Person. 4. He is
the true source of Good News Jesus alone is the source of salvation! We have Mark’s introduction of the book
that bears his name. Let’s begin the process of moving through these verses. We
will consider the beginning of the ministry of Jesus as Mark writes about the
man who was sent to prepare the way for the coming of the Lord Jesus Christ.
Today we are going to take a few moments to look at the ministry of John the
Baptist. I. v.
2-3 JOHN AND HIS MANDATE (Ill. In ancient
times, kings often sent people ahead of them to prepare the way for their
coming. The forerunner had two primary duties. First, he was to make certain that the
roads were passable. There were to be no delays when the king passed through.
He was to have a clear, open route through the kingdom. Second, the forerunner was let the people
know that the king was coming. He was to go along the route before the king
came through and he was to tell the people to get ready for the king. John the Baptist fulfilled both duties
seen in the ancient forerunner. He came to this world with a divine mission. John
was given a heavenly mandate, which he fulfilled while he was here. Let’s
examine his mandate. Verses
2-3 also tell us that John was the fulfillment of two important
Old Testament prophecies. 1. Isaiah
40:3 The voice of him that crieth in the
wilderness, Prepare ye the way of the LORD, make straight in the desert a
highway for our God. 2. Malachi
3:1 Behold, I will send my messenger, and he
shall prepare the way before me: and the Lord, whom ye seek, shall suddenly
come to his temple, even the messenger of the covenant, whom ye delight in:
behold, he shall come, saith the LORD of hosts.) A. v. 2 It Involved Preparation John
cleared the way for the coming of the Lord by appealing directly to the people.
The Jewish religious leaders had long ago forgotten the common man. John came
preaching to the people, calling on them to repent because the Lord, the King
was coming to deliver His people. B. v. 3 It Involved Proclamation John
was a lone voice against the dead legalism of the Jews. He was a hard preacher
in a dark day and God used him to touch a generation. (Note: John the Baptist preached during a period when the
Jewish religion had become nothing more than dead orthodoxy. Legalism and
ritual ruled the day. The Jews were in desperate need of a spiritual revival.
The Gentiles had given up on religion and viewed most religious beliefs as
superstition and foolish tales. Both groups needed just what John preached: the
Truth! We are living in similar day! Many
churches have abandoned the great doctrines of the Bible to preach either a
message rooted in humanism or legalism. People are either never challenged
regarding their sins or they are beaten down with the Word of God. There is a great need for men of God in
our day who will stand up, open their Bibles, open their mouths and preach the
Word of God. Jesus is coming soon! Where are the forerunners who are preparing
the way of the Lord and proclaiming His return? Preachers, our mandate is that
same as the one John the Baptist received. We are to preach the Word, 2 Tim. 4:2.) II. v.
4-5 JOHN AND HIS METHODS A. v. 4b John’s Preaching John was a
preacher! He came telling men of the need for repentance. His message was a
message of confrontation. John came confronting sin and calling on people to
repent. The word repentance means a change of mind that results in a change
of action. The people had sinned and John called on them to change
their minds regarding sin. John was calling on them to clean up
their lives in preparation for the advent of Jesus! He was saying, “The
Lord is coming! The Savior is coming! You need to straighten out your crooked
hearts. You need to get the way into your heart prepared for the coming of the
Lord. John’s message was also a message of
change. John told the people that their “repentance would result in
the remission
of sins. The word remission means forgiveness
or pardon of sins as though they had never happened. John told the
people that their repentance would result in Gods forgiveness! (Note: That is the message we need in our world today! Where
are the preachers who are preaching about repentance and remission of sin? Most
preachers are too busy stroking people’s egos and tickling their ears. They are
too busy building their crowds, and their own religious empires. We need men of God in this day that will
lift up their voices and thunder out against sin! We need men who will not
allow position, prestige, prosperity or popularity stand between them and the
proclamation of the truth. We need preachers who will tell people the truth! I
know how hard it is to preach the truth to the people who determine what kind
of house you can buy or what kind of car you can drive, but they must be told
the truth! People need to know that the only way to
Heaven is through the Person of the Lord Jesus Christ. People need to know that
sin kills. People need to know that there is a real Hell to shun and a real
Heaven to gain. People need to know that God still looks for repentant hearts
and changed lives. People need the truth! Not everyone wants to be lulled to sleep by
the weak, anemic preaching of this day! Some people still want to hear the
truth. Some people still want to be confronted by the facts of the Word. Those
people want to be fed. The rest, those who do not want to hear the truth, need
to be confronted! There are plenty of people out there who will not hear the
truth. The Bible tells us that it will be this way in the end times, 2 Tim. 4:3-4. The
need for a prophet of God like John the Baptist has never been greater than it
is right now! Pray for the men who still carry the mail for the glory of God!) B. v. 4a John’s Practice John did
something else that was unusual in his day, he baptized Jews. People in that
part of the world had been practicing baptism for a long time. When a Gentile
became a Jewish convert, that person would baptize themselves as a symbol of
their changed life. Baptism was not new, the way John used it was. John did not baptize people to make them
right with God. The phrase “preach the baptism of repentance for the
remission of sins does not mean that people were being baptized to
have their sins forgiven. They were being baptized because their sins had
been forgiven. They went to John and were immersed into the river Jordan to
declare publically that their lives had been changed by the power of God. They
were baptized to give glory to the God Who had forgiven their sins and made
them whole. In other words, this baptism was about a change of life! (Note: That is still what baptism represents. People are not
baptized to be saved; they are baptized because they have been saved. Baptism
is a picture of a person dying to the old life of sin and rising again to a new
life of holiness. By the way everyone who comes to Jesus and
is saved by His grace will be a new creature, 2 Cor. 5:17. They will live a new kind of life. They will
have new desires. They will be different. Jesus changes every life He touches!) C. v. 5 John’s Power We are told that
many of the people living in that region came to John the Baptist to be baptized.
These people made a break with their past and were changed by the power of God.
Someone has estimated that as many as 300,000 people may have been baptized by
John and his disciples. Here’s the point, these people traveled
some 20 miles on foot. When they arrived where John was, he treated them like
they were Gentiles. It must have shaken them to their core! Here was this
preacher telling them that they were no better than the Gentiles. When they
were confronted with their sins, they saw their sins and they repented. When
they did, God forgave them! John just preached the Word of God and God
honored His Word. People responded to the preaching of the Baptist and they
came to him confessing their sins and turning from their sinful lifestyles. Of course, not everyone was happy with
John’s ministry. The Pharisees and Sadducees came to see what the fuss was all
about. They came to criticize John and his message. When he saw them coming, he
rebuked them for their hypocrisy and called on them to repent also, Matt. 3:7-10. They refused
John’s plea and continued on in their sins. (Note: We are living in hard times spiritually. There is a
trend toward seeker friendly, feel good religion. Preachers who call sin what
it is and who call for people to repent are getting fewer by the day. But, we
are still operating in a time when God will bless His Word. If His Word is
preached as it is written, God will honor that Word, Isa. 55:11. People still need to be told they are sinners.
People still need to be confronted with the need for genuine repentance. People
still need to be shaken from time to time! So, don’t despair if Calvary Baptist isn’t
like the church down the road. Don’t worry when they call us old-fashioned and
out of step. Let them make fun of our preaching, our singing, our shouting and
our worship. God still meets with us and that is all that really matters! Every
now and then He will pass by and bring with Him the fragrance of glory. Every
now and then He will speak to some lost soul and they will come to Jesus and be
saved. Every so often He will call some wayward saint of God home to Jesus. He
is still working. He is still honoring His Word. Therefore, we need to stay the
course and carry on for His glory until He comes!) III. v. 6
JOHN
AND HIS MANNER A. His
Fashion John did not wear the fine robes that adorned the bodies of
the Pharisees and the Sadducees. He did not gravitate toward the finer things
in life. His clothing was a rough as his message. He was a man of the desert
and he dressed like a man of the desert. He was out of step in his fashion
sense. B. His
Food He shunned the fine foods of the palace and favored the foods of
the desert dweller. He got his honey out of the rocks and lived on such things
as he could trust the Lord to provide. He was a common man who did not seek after
the allurements and attractions of this world. By the way, his diet was
balanced. Locusts are protein and honey is carbohydrates. John was a balanced
man who was satisfied with the basics of life. (Ill. John’s manner
was as unusual as his message. John the Baptist was an odd man, even in his own
day. Imagine how this man must have appeared to the people who saw him. He was
a Nazarite, Luke 1:15. That
means that his hair and his beard had never been trimmed. Nazarites often
carried their beards in sacks around their waist to avoid stepping on it. Their
hair was braided into seven braids and hung down their backs, touching the
ground. (Ill. How would we react if John came to preach in our church?) He stepped out of the wilderness dressed
in the rough garments of a prophet. He came to the people of Israel with the
same spirit of confrontation that dwelt in Elijah 800 years earlier. He came
preaching with power! In fact, John was so unusual that he was never invited to
preach in the Temple and synagogues. They had no use for a man like him! They
did not want to be confronted. They did not want their little apple cart to be
upset. They had it made and they did not want some weirdo to destroy the little
religious empire they had constructed. John came with a strange appearance. He
came with a strong message. He was out of step with his times, but God was with
him. God used John the Baptist in an amazing way to carry out a powerful
ministry. If John teaches us anything today, he
teaches us the truth that we do not have to fit in with this world. He teaches
us that it is all right to be different. We can dress different. We can talk
different. We can live different. And, it does not mean that we are weird; it
simply means that we have a desire to walk with the Lord and honor Him. It’s all right if you don’t live as the
world lives. It is all right if you do not do the things the world does. It is
all right if you don’t drink, cuss, do drugs or run wild. It is all right if
you go to your marriage bed a virgin. It is all right if you go to church three
times or more a week; pay your tithes; go to Sunday School and live like a
saint. It is all right if you shout, pray and witness. It is all right to be
different if Jesus has made you different! And, if He has saved your souls, He
has done just that, Ill. John 3:3, 7.
We should never allow this world to force
us into its mold, Rom. 12:1-2.
We should yield ourselves to the Lord, separate from this world, 2 Cor. 6:17, and allow Him to
mold us into His image! Never be ashamed of who you are and never be
ashamed of who you are not!) IV. v. 7-8
JOHN AND HIS MESSAGE (Ill. These verses
give us the content of John’s message. He did not preach to build up his name
and his reputation. John preached to point people to another. He preached to
point men to Jesus. These verses tell us what John the Baptist’s message was
all about.) A. v. 7 The Message Of A Humble Servant
John the Baptist was a bold preacher. He thundered out against sin and called
for people to repent. But, when he began to talk about Jesus Christ, John
became a very humble preacher. He tells the people who heard him preach that
compared to Jesus, he was a nobody! He tells them that he isnt even worthy to
do the job of the lowest household slave. John says, I am nothing, but He is
everything! John says, I didn’t come to call people to me; I came
to point people to Him! That is a humility that is lacking in these
days. This highlights one of the reasons people
refuse to deal with their sins. People often compare themselves to the wrong
standard. If you look around, you can always find someone who lives worse than
you do. You can hold them up and say, “See, compared to this person, I don’t look
too bad. That may be true, but if you honestly compare your life to
Jesus Christ you would see how bad you really are. The people were flocking to John. He had
the ear of the nation. He had the people eating out of his hand. But, when John
saw Jesus, John saw how needy John was! When John saw Jesus he saw that John
was nothing and Jesus was everything. That is why John was willing to step
aside so that Jesus might shine, John
3:30. That is why John magnified Jesus! He knew
that if people could just see Jesus they would see themselves as they really
were. If they saw themselves as they really were, they would see their need of
Jesus. They would want Him to be their Savior and Lord. So, John pointed men to
Jesus. That’s the message people need in this
day! If people could ever see Jesus, whether they were saved or lost, they
would have a desire to humble themselves before Him. They would willingly bow
to Him in salvation, surrender and service. B. v. 8 The Message Of A Holy Savior John
also told them that when Jesus came He would do a spiritual work in their
hearts. You see, John was using a material element, water, to baptize their
bodies. Jesus would use a spiritual element, the Holy Spirit, to baptize their
souls. John was taking them and placing them under the water in a symbol of
their repentance. Jesus would take them and He would wash their sins away in
His blood and He would give them a new life. John was not calling people to religion.
They had enough of that. John the Baptist was pointing people to a Savior Who
could save their souls, forgive their sins and change their lives. By that way,
Jesus can still do those things! All those who come to Him by faith will be
saved, changed and forgiven. And, it is as easy as calling on Him by faith, Acts 16:31; Rom. 10:9, 13. Conc: The message John the Baptist
preached was an unusual message. He did not preach to gain the favor of men. He
did not preach to grow a great ministry. He did not preach to attract a crowd.
He preached a simple message about a wonderful Savior named Jesus. He preached
a simple message about the need for people to deal honestly with their sins. He
preached a message that those people needed to hear and he preached a message
that we need to hear as well. Has the Lord spoken to you through this
message? Do you sense the need to come to Jesus to be saved? If so, you can. If
you will come to Him and repent of your sins and call on Him by faith, He will
save your soul, forgive your sins and change your life. Maybe you have walked away from the Lord
and are not as close to Him as you once were. You can come home! God allows
second chances. Maybe you have become self-conscious about
the way you have been taught. Maybe you are hearing the siren call of the
modern churches calling you away from the old paths. If you need to come and
get some things settled with God, you can do that. Whatever the needs may be today, they can
and will be met by the Lord Jesus, if you will bring them to Him! |
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