Famous last words have always
fascinated me. You may have heard the famous last words of a
redneck: “Hey guys! Watch this!” There is something
meaningful about your last words. We all hope that the last words we say
before we die are powerful, insightful and worthy of remembering; not “Hey
guys! Watch this!”
Some people are recognized by their
last words. If I said “Todd Beamer” you may not remember him but you will
remember his last words as, “Let’s roll!” He was the passenger on Flight
93 that was hijacked on 9/11 who led the other passengers to try to reclaim the
airplane and saved so many lives. Those words give me chill bumps still
today.
Some people say the obvious when they
die. Stan Laurel of Laurel and Hardy fame said, “I’d rather be
skiing.” John Lennon said, “I’m shot.” Spike Milligan said, “I told
you I was ill.” And one of my favorites is General John Sedgewick who
bravely faced the enemy troops on the far side of the field and said, “They
couldn’t hit an elephant at this dist…”
But what about first words? When
a baby says their first word it is a joyful occasion. I understand that
the majority of time a baby’s first word is “dada”. It’s supposedly
easier to say than “mama” for a little one. But whatever it is, it’s big
news to the mom and dad and grandparents. Phone calls are made.
Pictures are taken. Mama writes in the scrapbook.
But have you ever been motivated by a
baby’s first words? Has a baby ever spoken for the first time and your
life was changed forever? Has it ever sent you on a lifelong quest to
repeat what he said? I hope not. You need to get out more if that’s
the case.
We’re not told the first words of baby
Jesus but I have to assume they were pretty much what any baby might have
said. Born of woman, Jesus, who was there at creation and who was and is
and is to come, was born all human and all God. I can’t explain that, of
course, but we believe it. Faith in Jesus as our Savior demands belief in
his virgin birth as all God and all man. And I don’t have a problem with
that.
But this morning I want to look at the
last words of Jesus as He hung on the cross and then His first words to His
disciples after he arose that wonderful Easter morning. His last words
were profound and full of meaning and His first words after defeating death
were profound and full of meaning and should send us on a lifelong quest to do
what He said to do.
Please turn to the Gospel of John in
the New Testament. Matthew and Mark relate that Jesus cried out with a
loud voice just before He died but only John tells us His exact words.
And while some people, in their last moments of life, may say something
ridiculous and out of their head meaningless, Jesus cries out 3 words that
changed everything! He proclaims a simple phrase that literally means the
world has completely changed.
It was a phrase that resulted in the
great curtain in the temple being torn in two. It started an earthquake
and caused rocks to split and caused the nearby tombs to break open and the
dead to walk out alive. I challenge you to find anyone’s last words to be
anything close to as powerful as the words Jesus chose to speak as His
last. Let’s read them in John 19:28-30.
“Later, knowing that everything had
now been finished, and so that Scripture would be fulfilled, Jesus
said,“I am thirsty.” 29 A jar of wine
vinegar was there, so they soaked a sponge in it, put the sponge on a
stalk of the hyssop plant, and lifted it to Jesus’ lips. 30 When
he had received the drink, Jesus said, “It is finished.”With that, he
bowed his head and gave up his spirit.”
“It is finished!” No more
appropriate words have ever been said in death or dying than those. If
you didn’t know better, you might think Jesus was talking about His life; that
He was saying His life was finished. And while it is true that His mortal
life on earth was done, that is not really what He was saying.
According to my concordance, the Greek
word that Jesus proclaimed that we translate as “It is finished” would be
“Tetelestai”. Tetelestai! It is finished. It stands
finished. It will always be finished. And yes, His sufferings were
finished but this word means so much more. Many of the Old Testament
types and prophecies were now fulfilled, and the once-for-all sacrifice for sin
had now been completed. (Wiersbe NT Commentary)
It was a word that would be used by a
servant in that day to tell his master that the work that had been assigned to
him was completed in full. When a priest would examine an animal
sacrifice to verify its worthiness and then make that sacrifice:
tetelestai! When Michelangelo finished the Sistine Chapel ceiling:
tetelestai! When Leonardo da Vinci completed the Mona Lisa: tetelestai! The job I set
out to do or was commissioned to do is finished; completed in full.
But the most
meaningful use of the word for us today and as Jesus would have intended it
would be used by a merchant who had a debt owed to him. When the debtor
came to him and would pay the debt in full, that merchant would give him a
receipt with the word “tetelestai” written across it in bold letters, meaning
this debt has been paid in full; nothing else is needed.
Every now and
then you may clip a coupon for something free at the store. Not very
often and rarely is it anything very expensive but sometimes you may get a free
ice cream cone or small coffee or something if you bring in the coupon and
redeem it. You need a coupon to get your rooty-tooty-fresh and fruity
breakfast at Ihop on your birthday. But if you have the coupon, nothing
else is needed. You don’t have to pay. You don’t have to wash
dishes. You don’t have to do anything else. Just redeem the coupon.
Well, I want you
to know, my dear family, that when Jesus said, “Tetelestai!” He went to God the
Father and said “Here. Here’s the cross as my coupon and I present it
through my sacrificial death to redeem all of mankind. I paid the price
for sin and it is finished! Nothing else is needed. Good works are
not needed. Baptism is not needed. The Lord’s Supper is not needed
nor anything else. It is finished! Tetelestai!”
He did that
because God said that the wages of sin is death. God’s standard for being
able to live eternally in Heaven is perfection so when you say you are a good
person and so you deserve to go to Heaven, you have misunderstood. Oh,
sure, I have lied before. I took God’s name in vain. I looked with
lust but, you know, I’m above average on that stuff. I’m better than
most.
Condemned!
That’s the word God is going to use when you come at Him at the great white
throne and say you are above average. And how else could a just judge
rule? If you have broken the law, you can’t expect a judge to say, “Well,
you have broken fewer than most so don’t worry about it.” But Jesus has
redeemed you like a coupon, buddy. You have been bought with a price; a
great and painful price but it has been paid in full. And all you have to
do is believe.
John 3:36 says, “Whoever believes in the Son has eternal life,
but whoever rejects the Son will not see life, for God's wrath remains on them.” “Whoever believes…”
Jesus said to the Father, “When Billy Graham believes: tetelestai. When
Martin Luther believes: tetelestai. When that punk kid with a bad
attitude and stiff neck and a hard heart named Todd believes: tetelestai!
All he has to do is believe.”
But…the cross was
for nothing; Jesus’ life was wasted and His sacrifice achieved nothing!
If not for Easter! If the story ended there; if Jesus had died and stayed
in the tomb and His corpse had rotted like every other god of every other
religion then we are wasting our time here this morning and every word I have said might as well be in Greek and we
should just all go to the bar and get drunk. What else ya gonna do?
But everything
changed 3 days later. Jesus didn’t faint. He didn’t swoon. He
didn’t sleep. He was dead for 3 days. But on that third day His
eyes opened, His muscles contracted and He walked out. He commanded
the angels when He was on the outside to roll away the stone so people could
see in. And then He told one angel, “You sit there. The Marys will
be here in a few minutes. Tell them I have risen.”
“He has risen!
He’s not here!” When I get to Heaven I want to ask that ol’ angel
how it felt to make that announcement; to say some of the most important words
ever uttered; to say words the meaning of which would change the world forever.
He has risen! Those words cannot be over-estimated.
But as important
as those words are, those are not the words that Jesus wanted to be remembered
for. He didn’t go to the disciples and tell them to just go around
saying, “He is risen.” When Jesus first saw the disciples, the first
thing He said; the most important thing He wanted to be remembered; the most
urgent command He gave is found in Matthew 28. Let’s read Matthew
28:16-20.
Then the eleven disciples went to
Galilee, to the mountain where Jesus had told them to go. 17 When
they saw him, they worshiped him; but some doubted. 18 Then
Jesus came to them and said, “All authority in heaven and on earth has
been given to me. 19 Therefore go and make
disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of
the Son and of the Holy Spirit, 20 and
teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. And surely I am
with you always, to the very end of the age.”
There is just a little bit of this
passage I want to concentrate on real briefly. First, Jesus says, “All
authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me.” The word authority
means the right to use power. The entire Gospel of Matthew stresses the
authority of Jesus Christ. He had authority in His teaching, in His
healing, in his forgiving of sins. He had authority over Satan. He
even delegated authority to the disciples. And here at the end of the
Gospel, Matthew wants to make clear that Jesus has ALL authority.
When Christian Herter was governor of
Massachusetts, he was running hard for a second term in office. One day, after
a busy morning chasing votes (and no lunch) he arrived at a church barbecue. It
was late afternoon and Herter was famished. As Herter moved down the serving
line, he held out his plate to the woman serving chicken. She put a piece on
his plate and turned to the next person in line. "Excuse me,"
Governor Herter said, "do you mind if I have another piece of
chicken?"
"Sorry," the woman told him. "I'm supposed to give one piece of chicken to each person."
"But I'm starved," the governor said.
"Sorry," the woman said again. "Only one to a customer."
Governor Herter was a modest and unassuming man, but he decided that this time he would throw a little weight around.
"Do you know who I am?" he said. "I am the governor of this state."
"Do you know who I am?" the woman said. "I'm the lady in charge of the chicken. Move along, mister."Bits & Pieces, May 28, 1992, pp. 5-6.
When someone has authority, there is
no arguing with that. And if Jesus has authority over all things then it
shouldn’t matter what He tells us to do, where He tells us to go, or what He
tells us to say, we can be obedient without any fear of the consequences.
It’s what the first church depended on. It’s what gave Paul the power to
stand up and preach. It’s what gave Stephen the strength to forgive his
attackers. It’s how Peter slept in prison the night before he was
supposed to be tried and probably killed. If Jesus is in control, what do
we have to worry about?
And the authority of Jesus is what
this church depends on just like the first church. Two Wednesday nights
ago, we finished our video series on witnessing and I said to those who were
here that we would have the opportunity to go out into the community the next
Wednesday and knock on some doors and invite them to church. So, I was
interested to see who would show up the next Wednesday.
I want you to know we had a good group
of people! And it was a group of people who was not real comfortable
doing this. I think most had never done anything like that before but we
had a blast and met a lot of people and made a lot of good contacts. At
every house they didn’t know what was going to happen or who was going to
answer or how they would be treated but I saw faith in the authority of Jesus
Christ that allowed them to do what they were supposed to do, go where they
were supposed to go and say what they were supposed to say!
And whether they thought about it or
not, they were doing their part at that time to fulfill the Great Commission of
Jesus in this Gospel. When Jesus says to “Go and make disciples…” it
literally means, “as you go, make disciples”. As you go, go
intentionally. As you go to the grocery store, as you go to the gas
station, as you go to Dos Chiles after church today, be intentional about telling
others what you know.
Tell others about what Jesus has done
in your life. You don’t have to be an evangelist or a missionary to tell
that. Telling that makes you an evangelist and a missionary. When
Jesus said “tetelestai” on the cross, it was the end of His bodily, earthly
ministry. But it was the beginning of ours. We don’t do it to work
our way to Heaven. We do it because the One who died and was raised again
tells us to.
But look at how Jesus ends this
command. The One who lived a perfect life, died a sacrificial death and
then became the victor over death tells us that wherever we go, whatever we do,
whatever we say, He is with us. The One who is in authority; the One who
defeated Satan and conquered death; the One who deserved to cry out,
“Tetelestai! It is finished” is with us.
Do you know Him today? Do you
have a relationship with Him? I’m not asking if you are a church member
or who your family is what you have done, good or bad. I’m asking if you
have believed that Jesus is God and that He can take away all the guilt and
shame of your sin just by asking Him into your life to be Lord of your life.
You remember the verse I read earlier
from John 3:36 that says, “Whoever believes in the Son has eternal life,
but whoever rejects the Son will not see life, for God's wrath remains on them.” Rejecting the Son, Jesus, in
this life means God’s wrath and the Bible teaches that His wrath results in a
real place called Hell for all eternity.
We are not
guaranteed another breath so come right now and accept the free gift of God’s
grace because then you won’t have to worry if those are your last words because
the first words you will hear in Heaven will be, “Well done, my good and
faithful servant!” spoken by the risen Jesus.
I know you're not always fond of the pop theology found on church marquees. But your door-to-door witnessing project seems to bear out the message seen this past week on such a sign in the Metroplex: "Beware! Jesus is loose!"
ReplyDeleteIndeed, He is loose. The tomb could not hold Him. He overcame the earthly death paid as ransom for our sins.
Yes, in the testimonies of Christ Fellowship witnesses, He is loose, alive, and growing the Kingdom of God in Wise County.
Isn't it glorious?