One Thing - 2

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One Thing - 2
Introduction
I want to introduce you to two groups of people. Both of these groups are adequately represented here in this room today. You will fit into one of these two groups.
The first group of people are not perfect people, but they are all convinced that Jesus Christ rose from the dead, and they have made a personal commitment to follow him. They don’t always live up to this commitment fully, but they are serious about growing in their faith. These people find themselves in a daily battle with what the Bible calls ‘sin.’ It is a struggle but they are finding that God is helping them through this life. They are deeply convinced that at the point of their death, their souls will go to Heaven into the presence of Jesus. Plus, they are convinced that at some future point in history, Jesus will return to judge the world and take those people who have faith in him back to Heaven. These people are all different from each other, but they have all made a similar life commitment to know, serve, and follow Jesus Christ.
Video
The other group of people are those who represent another point of view. These are not perfect people either, but they represent people who have had a bad experience with religion. Many of them have seen hypocrisy in the church and that has made it difficult for them to put their faith in Jesus Christ. Some have spent a lot of time in church. They’ve been in youth groups, they've heard sermons. They been brought along to church by parents and grandparents. Yet, they have not come to the point of making a personal commitment of faith to Jesus.
Video
TS - Last week we began a new series walking through a key passage in . The first few verses of that chapter establish for us the gospel, the good news of Jesus’ death, burial, and resurrection. That truth is the One Thing to devote our lives to. To live our lives for. To center our lives around. Why? Because this Good News is what saves us. We are sinners, but Jesus, by his death, burial, and resurrection, has enabled us to be forgiven and granted eternal life.
At this point in 1 Corinthians, Paul, a leader in the first century church, after now establishing the Good News of Jesus, drills a bit deeper into this and focuses in on the resurrection of Jesus from the dead. This is the hinge pin of Christianity. Remove the resurrection and it all falls apart. The faith of Christianity stands upon, our hope is built upon, this truth that Jesus has risen from the dead. We believe in that. We hope in that.
The first thing I want to do today is speak to the first category, those who believe Jesus Christ is risen from the dead and who have made a commitment to follow him. I want to ask you this question: what if you are wrong?
What if Jesus Christ really is not risen from the dead? When it comes to this central claim of Christianity - Jesus’ resurrection from the dead - either he did or he did not. So I want us to look honestly at this first scenario - the theoretical possibility that Jesus did not rise from the dead.
Some people are so addicted to religion that they will tell you that even if Christianity is not true, the Christian faith is still the best way to live. Maybe you’ve heard someone say something like this or maybe even said it yourself: “Even if it turned out that Jesus did not rise from the dead and there was no such place as heaven, I would not regret living the Christian life.”
I understand why people say that. But please understand this: The Bible absolutely disagrees with that position.
- “And if there is no resurrection, ‘Let’s feast and drink, for tomorrow we die!’”
- “And if our hope in Christ is only for this life, we are more to be pitied than anyone in the world.”
TS - If Christ is not risen from the dead, you who believe that he has are to be pitied more than anyone. Paul will give us four reasons for this rather startling conclusion:
If Christ is not risen…
OUR FAITH IS USELESS
- “And if Christ has not been raised, then your faith is useless…”
Useless. You think your faith will deliver something to you, but if Christ is not risen, it does not. It can not.
Christians build their lives around the conviction that, if you have faith in Jesus, God does something in your life and makes you a new person and will eventually welcome you into eternal life. But the Bible is quite clear on this point - if Christ is not risen, it is all just an illusion. You have trusted a lie and staked everything on something that is nothing. You talk about trusting Jesus, but if Jesus is not risen, there is no Jesus to trust.
When drug companies test out a new drug, they run tests on two groups of people. They give one group the real drug, the other group gets an identical looking pill, but it’s a placebo. Sugar. Nothing, no substance. Never revealing which group has which pill.
They do this for a very specific reason. They know the mind is powerful, and some people feel better just because they have swallowed a pill. They believe this even if the pill has no substance that can actually change them. It’s all in their minds.
If Christ is not risen, Christians are those who took the fake pill. This is just one big placebo effect. You are confessing some change in your life that is not really there. Such faith does nothing for you except within your own mind.
Christians claim that faith saves them. But if Christ is not risen, faith does nothing outside of your own head. You are merely playing a mind game.
All that has happened to you this this: church music has made you more cheerful, Christian friends have made you more hopeful, and a brighter outlook on life has made you more thankful.
If Christ is not risen, all they think God has done is nothing more than a figment of their own imagination, and that is sad.
2. WE ARE STILL GUILTY OF OUR SINS
- “And if Christ has not been raised, then your faith in useless and you are still guilty of your sins.”
Our culture is overwhelmed with new spiritualities and religious ideas. This is the most important question to ask of any religion or spiritual idea- how does it deal with your sins?
This is important because Christians are worried about their sins. It is why you’ve placed your faith in Jesus. For you, sin is an issue. But if Christ is not risen, you have staked your eternal destiny on a man, it turns out, died 200 years ago. And he can do no more for you than Julius Caesar or Alexander the Great.
And really, your problem is even worse because by your profession of faith inJesus, you have actually added to your sins. If Christ is not risen, people like you have been praying to Almighty God in the name of a man who died 2000 years ago. You have established that Jesus is God in the flesh. That’s blasphemy. You have put a man in place of God. Frankly, it would have been better for you, in regards to sin, to have lived a completely secular life.
3. WE HOLD ON TO A FALSE HOPE
- “In that case, all who have died believing in Christ are lost!”
Many of you have stood at the graveside of a loved one. Those who claim faith in Jesus have drawn comfort from the conviction that the person they love is now in the loving presence of Jesus.
The Bible is brutally honest here. If Christ is not risen, that is a false hope. Because if Jesus wasn’t raised, there is no hope whatsoever that anyone else is going to make it to eternal life. They are, if Christ is not risen, simply lost. Gone. And you are living in denial.
Some people might think that false hope is better than having no hope at all. The truth is that false hope is the saddest thing in the world. That is the point C.S. Lewis makes in his book A Grief Observed. Every person who has been by the bedside of a loved one and has seen them rally only to then decline knows the devastating power of false hope.
The Bible is saying here that, if Christ is not risen, Christian are to be pitied more than all others because you’ve staked your lives on a hope that will ultimately prove to be false. There cannot be any worse way to live than that.
4. WE ARE WASTING OUR LIVES
- “And if our hope in Christ is only for this life, we are more to be pitied than anyone in the world.”
Paul must have written these words with much passion. He had personally paid a very high price for following Jesus.
- I have worked harder, been put in prison more often, been whipped times without number, and faced death again and again. 24 Five different times the Jewish leaders gave me thirty-nine lashes. 25 Three times I was beaten with rods. Once I was stoned. Three times I was shipwrecked. Once I spent a whole night and a day adrift at sea. 26 I have traveled on many long journeys. I have faced danger from rivers and from robbers. I have faced danger from my own people, the Jews, as well as from the Gentiles. I have faced danger in the cities, in the deserts, and on the seas. And I have faced danger from men who claim to be believers but are not. 27 I have worked hard and long, enduring many sleepless nights. I have been hungry and thirsty and have often gone without food. I have shivered in the cold, without enough clothing to keep me warm. 28 Then, besides all this, I have the daily burden of my concern for all the churches. 29 Who is weak without my feeling that weakness? Who is led astray, and I do not burn with anger?
This was his life. Why? This man was a brilliant academic. He could have led a comfortable life as a lecturer in a rabbinic school with a great salary and the respect of the Jewish community. Why did he endure all this? For the sake of Christ.
So Paul is saying: if Christ is not risen, I’ve endured all of this for the sake of a dead man and a lost cause. The Christian life is so hard that if Jesus is not risen, it simply isn’t worth the effort. You have fought battles with sin and you need never have bothered. You have prayed and it was like sending letters that never arrived. You have given money you could have saved and enjoyed. You have served countless hours for a cause that is worthless.
That is what Paul is saying here. He says it all with great honesty. There is no special pleading. No, “we must keep the church going at all costs. We must build the kingdom.” Christianity stands or falls on its claim that it is true. If it is not true, integrity demands that we shut the whole thing down.
TS - and now having painstakingly, brutally, made his point clear that everything stands or falls on whether or not Jesus was raised from the dead, he declares this:
- “But, in fact, Christ has been raised from the dead.”
Notice he does not paint this second scenario as a possibility. He declares it as fact. And I’m going to do the same today. Yes, if Christ is not raised, it all falls apart and we would certainly be the most to be pitied. But this is the declaration from God to us…Christ has indeed been raised from the dead! Jesus was crucified, dead and buried, and on the third day he rose from the dead. The tomb is empty.
So to you Christians, here is what this means for you:
YOUR FAITH HAS SUBSTANCE
You are not believing in nothing. You’ve placed your trust in one who lives. When you pray he hears you. When you worship him, it brings joy to his heart. You have placed your trust in the living Lord Jesus Christ, and those who trust in him will never be put to shame.
2. YOUR SINS ARE FORGIVEN
Jesus died for our sins. What Jesus did on the cross was big enough, great enough, to cover all our sins and the sins of everyone who will place their trust in him.
3. YOU HAVE REAL HOPE
It means that when you talk about heaven, you are talking about something that is going to happen, for you are going to be with Jesus forever.
4. COSTLY SACRIFICE IS THE GREATEST INVESTMENT OF YOUR LIFE
- “So, my dear brothers and sisters, be strong and immovable. Always work enthusiastically for the Lord, for you know that nothing you do for the Lord is ever useless.”
TS - so now let’s talk to those of you who identify with the position of not yet having placed your trust in Jesus. To you who are still tossing around questions in your mind. To those standing at a distance from Jesus. To you, I say this - Christ has indeed been raised from the dead! That means…
UNBELIEF IS USELESS
If faith was just a mind game, then to take a position of unbelief would be reasonable. But since Christ is risen, unbelief is unreasonable.
2. YOU ARE STILL GUILTY OF YOUR SINS
Christ is risen. That means you are going to have to stand one day in front of the judgment seat of Christ. You are accountable to the Lord who made you. Your sins and guilt could be washed away, but they are not because you have refused to trust in Jesus.
3. YOU HOLD TO A FALSE HOPE
Those who take this position of unbelief are cherishing the hope that there are no consequences for their unbelief. That is a false hope. He is risen.
4. YOU ARE WASTING YOUR LIFE
This is perhaps the greatest tragedy for those who live in unbelief. Their lives are wasting away. The risen Christ comes to every person and offers the greatest opportunity of their lives. You can invest in eternity. Instead, in unbelief, you waste your life on temporary things.
Conclusion
Those who stand at a distance from the risen Christ are more to be pitied than anyone in the world. You need to make the move today.
Believe/Repent/Confess/Baptize
If you do, your faith will not be useless, it will be the strongest thing in your life. Your sins will be forgiven as you repent of them and are baptized into Christ. You will have the hope and certainty of eternal life. And you will begin to grasp the greatest opportunity of your life - to follow and serve Jesus.
Hi, I’m Pete.  I’ve been a Christian for five years, and I don’t find it easy to live out my faith, because I don’t always want to go God’s way.  So there’s a struggle inside of me.  But I do know Christ is with me, so I keep pressing on.
Hi, my name is Jane.  I’ve 45 years old.  I have been attending churches for years, but it never really made a difference in my life until last year.  A friend told me that if Christ is alive then there must be a possibility to know him.  That was the start of a new adventure of faith.
Hi, I’m Todd.  When I look back on my life I can see there was a lot Christ needed to straighten out.  I was a self-centered person, and there was clutter in my life.  When I came to faith in Christ five years ago, I discovered God could give me a new start and the strength to change.
Hi, I’m Mary.  I’ve been serving the Lord for 40 years, but the best part of my life still lies ahead.  Being a Christian has helped me look to the future, because God promises eternal life with Christ to all who believe.
Hi, I’m Dave.  I’ve been coming to church for about 10 years, and I enjoy it.  I’ve heard a lot of sermons, but I’ve never felt I needed to make a commitment.
Hi, I’m Joanne.  I’m here because it’s Easter and some friends invited me, but I don’t find church easy.  I have a lot of questions about faith, and I don’t see how anyone can suggest that only people who follow Jesus will be in heaven some day.
Hi, I’m Steve.  I’ve spent a lot of time thinking about the end of the world and whether there’s anything after death.  I’ve come to the conclusion that no one can really know.  I don’t have a lot of time for organized religion, but my personal belief is if you do your best to do a good job, you don’t have to worry.
Hi, I’m Susan. I’m comfortable with my life right now. There may come a time when I need Jesus in my life, but that time is not now. I don’t want to make a commitment that will tie me down. I want to be free to make my own decisions.
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