Hope for the Weary

Hope is Here  •  Sermon  •  Submitted
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We were created by God to live with a healthy cadence in life. However, far too many of us are living without margin in every area of our lives. We fill our calendars. We can’t say no. We live with a harmful drive to achieve. We have lost hope that it will slow down anytime soon. Jesus offers us such a gift in saying that he has come to give us rest. This rest is found in a grace that does not demand that we jump through all the hoops or get everything right. The rest that Jesus offers is an unmerited favor for anyone who comes to Him. This grace is best experienced in community. We can learn from Jesus as we learn from one another. When we do Church with one another, we lift one another up, we protect one another’s boundaries, and we carry one another’s burdens.

Notes
Transcript
Sermon
I want to welcome everyone on this Back to Church Sunday. Today, there are churches all over the country that are making an intentional effort to invite their communities to join them for worship. Coming off a year when many churches have not been able to worship in person the way they would like to, an invitation to get back to church is such a powerful opportunity.
The church is made up of its people. It is not about a building; it’s about a collection of individuals who have trusted Jesus with their lives and choose to support one another in the journey. When we come together like this, we find hope. We find a hope that empowers us to overcome anything life can throw at us.
So, with that said, welcome to church today! You are a part of something bigger than yourself, and you are here for a reason.
Today we begin a brand-new series called Hope Is Here. I would argue that the greatest need we have in our lives, after the year we have experienced, is a sense that there is hope in the world. Some of us have experienced great loss this year, and it has been troubling. This year has caused some of us to doubt our faith and the things we used to hold tightly. Some of us feel broken because of the pain in our country and in our world. Can we all just agree that we are in need of hope?
Main Teaching
Story: As we get started I’m reminded of a story about a man attending a little league baseball game. The kids were all on the field or in the dugout, playing their hearts out. It was only the first inning, and the score was already 16 – 0. One team was losing in a landslide. The man walked up to the dugout of the losing team and asked one little boy if he was discouraged by the score. Had he lost hope? The little boy looked at him, a little puzzled, and said, “Why would I be discouraged? We haven’t even gotten up to bat yet. There is always hope!”
That is one way to look at the challenges that we face in life. The Church throughout history has had the audacity to have hope in the face of trouble. It stems from the victory of the resurrected Jesus Christ. When things looked the darkest for Jesus, as he hung on the cross, he knew it was far from over. The tomb would not be the end, he would defeat death and come back to life. With this as the Church’s backdrop, there is always reason for hope.
In the Gospels, Jesus was always offering hope to those around him. Whether it was a crippling disease, an oppressive government, a physical or spiritual hunger, or an evil attack, Jesus would meet people right where they were. The characters in the scriptures knew that if Jesus was there, then hope was there too.
POINT #1 – LIFE IS HARD
There are times when we need a reminder that there is hope. Life’s circumstances have a way of leaving us hopeless. I would argue that there is nothing in life that can steal our hope more than when we find ourselves weary, tired, or worn out. I would imagine that there are many in the room/online today who know exactly what this feels like. Waiting for a diagnosis, paying off bills, saving a marriage, enduring Covid-19, and trying to grow spiritually. It is times like this when we feel like we cannot keep going and all we want to do is give up.
It’s like the famous NFL coach Vince Lombardi once said, “Fatigue makes cowards of us all.
Jesus was aware of the tendency of people to shoulder heavy burdens and for this to cause them to lose hope. Jesus spoke to his followers about John the Baptist’s faithfulness in the midst of prison and the questions he was asking about Jesus’ identity. He was losing hope about whether or not Jesus was indeed the Messiah, and if his work had been in vain. In light of this, Jesus speaks these words.
READ Matthew 11:28-30
Matthew 11:28–30 ESV
Come to me, all who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you, and learn from me, for I am gentle and lowly in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.”
Jesus is doing a couple of things here in this passage.
First, he is acknowledging that life is heavy. We live life without margin. We are hard on ourselves. We work hard to keep up with others around us and we get weary. Jesus is normalizing this for us. We should not feel bad when we feel crushed by burdens. We should not feel like failures. When we do, we often shy away from going to God for help, and we avoid being vulnerable with others as well. But Jesus tells us that if we are weary, we should come to Him.
It’s an invitation.
Second, Jesus offers us a solution. He tells us to exchange our yoke for another. A yoke is a wooden harness that a farmer would attach to livestock to plow a field or to pull a cart. The yoke would help keep the livestock safe as they worked and would help the animal submit to the farmer. There were some people in Jesus’ audience who were submitting to a way of life that was law-based and was hard to live up to. It was religious and legalistic. It was performance-based and driven by the need to succeed.
The yoke he was offering was one of grace, mercy, compassion, and love. One yoke causes people to become weary. The other causes people to find peace. He invites us to remove whatever yokes we have had around our necks and to place his yoke upon us, because it is easy, it is light, and it will give us rest.
POINT #2 – IS YOUR YOKE CRUSHING OR LIFEGIVING
Jesus offers hope for the weary by reminding us that our value is not found in how well we hold it together when things get tough or how we compare to the people around us. Our value comes from the love that he has for us and the grace he gives.
Story: I can illustrate how you can tell which type of yoke you have around your neck by how you respond in difficult situations. Last Wednesday, Sarah and I decided to change out the expired water filter located within our kitchen fridge. Each of one of us had a single duty. Mine job was to shut off the water and Sarah’s was to empty out the fridge and exchange the filter. I guess she has two jobs, but regardless I manage to shut down the hot water and neglect the cold water value. You can figure out the rest. Water shot out everywhere! I had not on the yoke of Jesus that gave rest to my soul. I had the yoke of Austin which brought out a wild oxen in the kitchen, stomping around until everything was back in order. Needless to say, it was a very weary situation indeed to be in. It wasn’t until we gathered our thoughts prayed together after our conflict that the yoke of Jesus was applied to us once again.
Perhaps can related my story and you find yourself weary today, whether because of circumstances you cannot control or situations that you are responsible for, I want to offer you hope today. I want to offer you hope for a better tomorrow, hope for true purpose, hope for a clean slate, and hope for peace and rest.
It is found in Jesus. Because when he is here, hope is here.
What is interesting about Jesus’ illustration about a yoke is that a wooden yoke would not be typically worn by a single cow, it would have been in tandem with a second cow. They would work together to pull and plow.
The reason that Back To Church Sunday is such an important weekend each year is that we find hope when we recognize that we don’t have to do life alone. The rest that we find in Christ is best experienced alongside others.
POINT #3 – THE CHURCH CARRIES ONE ANOTHER’S BURDENS
Paul is writing to the church in Galatia about the importance of living in community with one another. He is making his comments in light of the struggle that it is to avoid sin in life, but he makes a statement that when lived out puts us in line with the invitation of Christ to live his way.
READ Galatians 6:2
Galatians 6:2 ESV
Bear one another’s burdens, and so fulfill the law of Christ.
To live in line with the way of Jesus is to be willing to meet the needs of others. When we see someone else in the Church who is weary or burdened, we come to their aid with joy because it is in doing so that we offer hope to them. Burdens come in all shapes and sizes. Some burdens are self-inflicted. We can help shoulder these burdens by offering grace, forgiveness, and a willingness to help navigate a better way. Some burdens happen to us: a divorce we did not ask for, a sickness that was unexpected, a job loss that is devastating. In these instances, we can carry each other’s burdens by being a listening ear, by bringing a meal, or by meeting a financial need.
Story: One of the most powerful ways the church was been making a difference in the life of our community comes from our food distributions. I remember when one gentlemen who lived in Ubly told me that he was unable to work because he contracted covid-19. Around his neck was the oxygen tubes that assisted him to breath. His appreciation of what the church was doing could be heard in his voice. It was a sigh of relief that his weariness was unburden because of the generosity of the people of Ubly Christian. This single man experience hope for a day, food in his fridge and people who cared about him.
What is it that could be said about every one of the churches who are taking part in this Back to Church Sunday? Wherever there is a lack of hope in our community, we are there to carry the burden. Because when Christians are here, Jesus is here, and when Jesus is here, hope is here.
Here is the good news: When we love one another in this way, we fulfill the most basic law that Jesus required. We love God with our whole heart, and we, in turn, love our neighbors as ourselves. Jesus said all the law of the prophets hung on those two things. That sounds like hope to me. A hope that no matter where we find ourselves today, Jesus offers us rest and peace, and we don’t have to go it alone.
Conclusion
When we invest in the relationships God gives us within the Church, we find help in living within our margins. Sometimes we need someone to help us say “no.” No to the things that occupy our time, occupy our attention, or occupy our resources. Sometimes we need someone to remind us that we are loved by God and that is enough. Sometimes we need someone to help us slow down and rest in the grace of God.
So, are you weary today?
Are you burdened by life?
Come to Jesus and find rest. You don’t have to do this life alone. We are in this together and that gives us hope.
Jesus is here, and when Jesus is here, hope is here.
PRAY
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