When Blessed Remember the Blesser

Sermon  •  Submitted
0 ratings
· 932 views
Notes
Transcript
Sermon Tone Analysis
A
D
F
J
S
Emotion
A
C
T
Language
O
C
E
A
E
Social
View more →

B. Another roadblock would be that you are convinced that you are only supposed to give thanks for what you can see.
This is where we must understand that there are so many other things besides our pay raise that we can be thankful about.

He took notice of his blessing

He publicly thanked Jesus for the healing

When Blessed, Thank the One who Blessed you

Luke 17:11-19

Naaman healed of leprosy when God thru Elisha told him to go and wash in the Jordan river 7 times.  (2 Kings 5)

Where are the nine – it was fine for them to shout out to Jesus in their time of need and to call on Him, but the minute they were healed they forgot all about the healer.   People often cry out to God in times of crisis and sorrow but as soon as that crisis is over, God goes back in the box.

And the ultimate tragedy is that the nine lepers got the healing, but not the healer; they experienced a miracle but not the miracle worker; they received the gift but didn’t know and love the giver.  It reminds me of the grandson I mentioned at Christmas time, so busy playing with his new train, that he is not really aware of Grandma and Grandpa who came to see him and spend time with him and love him.  Likewise, we, as human beings, can become so busy playing with our little trains of life that we forget the God who has come to visit us, be with us, love us, see us, and watch us.  That’s the real tragedy of the nine:  they missed the true blessing.  That is, they got the miracle but didn’t discover the miracle worker who so enormously blessed them.

Likewise with kids who live in a good home with loving mom and/or dad.  The kids can easily begin to take the blessings and pleasures of their family life for granted.  It becomes no big deal that their parents do all of these wonderful things for them.  It is expected.  It is part of life. 

So also, within the household of faith, we can become used to God blessing and caring for us; we can begin to take God for granted;  we begin to expect his blessings as our God-given rights.   Whereas someone who hasn’t been part of the Faith, they may be deeply grateful to God for the smallest of gifts, for the littlest of his blessings.   When you become very familiar with someone, you often start to take that someone for granted, and that is what we often do with God.  We take God’s blessings for granted.  So it is no surprise to me that it was a foreigner, a Samaritan, an outsider of the religious establishment was the only one who paused....remembered.....and came back to Jesus to say thank you.  The other nine expected God’s blessings.

Leviticus 14
Cleansing From Infectious Skin Diseases

1 The LORD said to Moses, 2 "These are the regulations for the diseased person at the time of his ceremonial cleansing, when he is brought to the priest: 3 The priest is to go outside the camp and examine him. If the person has been healed of his infectious skin disease, [1] 4 the priest shall order that two live clean birds and some cedar wood, scarlet yarn and hyssop be brought for the one to be cleansed. 5 Then the priest shall order that one of the birds be killed over fresh water in a clay pot. 6 He is then to take the live bird and dip it, together with the cedar wood, the scarlet yarn and the hyssop, into the blood of the bird that was killed over the fresh water. 7 Seven times he shall sprinkle the one to be cleansed of the infectious disease and pronounce him clean. Then he is to release the live bird in the open fields. (New International Version)

This passage describes cleansing that one healed of leprosy would have to undergo to be declared clean.

I. The cleansing ceremony for those cleansed of leprosy

A. Two birds—one sacrificed, one set free
B. The sacrificed bird was killed over running water. The running water represented cleansing.
C. The bird and a bundle of cedar and hyssop tied
with scarlet and dipped in the blood of the sacrificed bird.

D. Elements involved in the cleansing of lepers
1. Cedar wood
What is the significance of cedar? According to most commentators, cedar is presented in Scripture as a symbol of imperishable existence. When cedar burns it produces a sweet aroma bringing to mind the sweet aroma of the sacrifice Christ would make on the cross. Cedar is a common wood used throughout Palestine and the Middle East. It is quite possible that Christ was even crucified on a cross made of cedar. In Ezekiel 17, Christ is portrayed as a cedar tree.

Ezekiel 17
22"And the Sovereign LORD says: I will take a tender shoot from the top of a tall cedar, and I will plant it on the top of Israel’s highest mountain. 23It will become a noble cedar, sending forth its branches and producing seed. Birds of every sort will nest in it, finding shelter beneath its branches. 24And all the trees will know that it is I, the LORD, who cuts down the tall tree and helps the short tree to grow tall. It is I who makes the green tree wither and gives new life to the dead tree. I, the LORD, have spoken! I will do what I have said." (New Living Translation)

Cedar thus seems to signify that which is eternal.

2. Hyssop
Hyssop in Scripture is associated with cleansing. In Psalm 51:7, David wrote:

“Purge me with hyssop, and shall be clean…”

Hyssop is a small bushy plant that grows in the Middle East. Oil from hyssop in fact is said to be quite an effective antiseptic and antibacterial agent. Hyssop oil contains 50 percent carvacrol which is an antifungal and antibacterial agent that still used in medicine.

Hyssop thus seems to signify cleansing.

3. Scarlet
Many commentators see this color as symbolizing life. Scarlet is the color of blood. Blood is the source of life. It was the blood of Jesus shed on the cross that would offer cleansing and eternal life.

E. The Leper is sprinkled seven times with the blood from the slain bird.
F. The other bird is set free. This signifies that the leper is set free from quarantine.

II. Christological Significance of this ceremony

A. All sacrifices in the Old Testament point to the ultimate sacrifice of Christ on the cross.
B. We can identify with lepers in that we have a decaying sickness in our lives called sin.
C. Our ailment keeps us quarantined from God
D. Christ is the bird who sacrificed His life so that we could be set free.
E. The elements involved in the sacrifice can remind us of the quality of the sacrifice Christ made for us.
1. The cedar reminds us of the eternal security we have in Christ
2. The scarlet thread reminds us of the blood of Christ shed for our sins
3. The hyssop reminds of the healing we have through the sacrifice of Christ
F. The leper sprinkled seven times reminds us of the completeness of Christ’s atonement for us on the cross. Seven is the number of completion.
G. The bird set free reminds of how we have been set free from the law of sin and death.

Offerings –

# Offering Christology Scripture Reference
Sweet Offerings (acceptable and well pleasing to God)
1 Burnt offering Surrender of Christ for the sake of the world Lev. 1
2 Meal Offering Christ’s perfect obedience to God The Father (Eph 5:2 – Christ’s sacrifice seen as a sweet smelling saovor) Lev. 2
3 Peace Offering Christ as the  Believers’ peace through reconciliation w/ God the Father Lev. 3
Non-Sweet Offerings (Deals with man’s sin and the shame associated w/ it)
4 Sin Offering Substitute of Christ for man’s sin Lev. 4 – 5:13
5 Trespass Offering Christ being offered for all the wrongs done by the sinner to others Lev. 5:14-6:7
       

Related Media
See more
Related Sermons
See more