Sermon Tone Analysis
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Luke 4:38-44 (Evangelical Heritage Version)
38Jesus got up, left the synagogue, and went into Simon’s house.
Simon’s mother-in-law was suffering from a high fever.
They asked him to help her.
39He stood over her, rebuked the fever, and it left her.
Immediately she got up and began to serve them.
40As the sun was setting, they brought to him all who were sick with various diseases.
He laid his hands on every one of them and healed them.
41Demons also came out of many people, crying out, “You are the Son of God!”
He rebuked them and did not allow them to speak, because they knew that he was the Christ.
42When it was day, he went out to a deserted place.
The crowds were looking for him.
They went up to him and were trying to prevent him from leaving them.
43But he told them, “I must preach the good news of the kingdom of God to the other towns too, because that is why I was sent.”
44And he continued to preach in the synagogues in the land of the Jews.
Rebuked
I.
Rebuke.
It’s an interesting word.
The dictionary definition says that “rebuke” means “to criticize sharply; to reprimand.”
Criticize sharply, reprimand, or rebuke imply something one person does to another.
Have you ever rebuked someone?
I would imagine you have.
At times, rebuking another person is a good and right thing to do.
Paul said it in today’s Second Reading.
“All Scripture is God breathed and is useful for teaching, for rebuking, for correcting, and for training in righteousness” (2 Timothy 3:16, EHV).
With words like “teaching” and “correcting” and “training in righteousness” surrounding the word “rebuking,” we realize that this kind of rebuking is God-pleasing.
There are times that rebuking is not so good.
Jesus once explained to his disciples that he would have to suffer and die.
The disciples didn’t understand yet, at that time, how necessary for their own salvation Jesus’ suffering and death were, so: “Peter took him aside and began to rebuke him” (Mark 8:32, EHV).
Reprimanding or criticizing Jesus doesn’t seem to be a very wise course of action, does it?
II.
Perhaps at times you and I are tempted to fall into the same trap as Peter.
It is easy to reprimand or criticize Jesus.
Oh, you might think that is something you would never, ever do.
Is it really so far fetched?
You reprimand and rebuke God every time you think you know better.
Have you ever chosen to ignore parts of God’s Word because what they said didn’t match what society has taught you is right to expect—and even demand?
Have you ever been one of those Paul talked about in the Second Reading? “There will come a time when people will not put up with sound doctrine.
Instead, because they have itching ears, they will accumulate for themselves teachers in line with their own desires.
4They will also turn their ears away from the truth and will turn aside to myths” (2 Timothy 4:3-4, EHV).
Paul had just told Timothy that all of the Bible is important and useful.
That’s what he means here by “sound doctrine.”
Everything God has to say is good and right and important.
None of it is to be ignored.
None of it is to be shunted to the side as if God didn’t know what he was talking about.
Yet lots of things the world accepts as normal behaviors violate what God says is right and just.
Perhaps you look at the world as being so much more enlightened than it was in Bible times; some of those things God spoke against were only for those people and those times; they don’t apply to us anymore.
Itching-ear disease is pervasive and destructive.
In reality, itching-ear disease is you simply slapping God in the face and rebuking him for daring to say something you disagree with.
How about the rebuking of inanimate objects?
You probably have done it.
Do you rebuke your car?
Maybe when the car won’t start you criticize it sharply and reprimand it.
That doesn’t change the fact that it won’t start.
Do you rebuke the weather?
Maybe.
Maybe you don’t like the cold and the snow the way some of us do, and you rebuke it.
Your rebuke changes nothing.
The cold and the snow keep coming until the warm front moves through and the weather changes.
Do you rebuke a sickness or a fever?
Maybe.
But it isn’t going to make your fever go away.
III.
The word “rebuke” in today’s Gospel just jumped off the page to me when I read the text early in the week.
It jumped off the page because of the way the word is used here.
Jesus rebuked an inanimate object.
Back to ways we might have tried ineffectually to rebuke inanimate objects.
There were no cars when Jesus walked this earth, so he never rebuked a car for failing to start.
But the other two are striking.
Jesus did rebuke the weather.
Out on the boat when the disciples were terrified of the storm that threatened to capsize their vessel, Jesus rebuked the wind and the waves—and the storm stopped immediately.
Then there is the case of sickness.
“Simon’s mother-in-law was suffering from a high fever.
They asked him to help her.
39He stood over her, rebuked the fever, and it left her.
Immediately she got up and began to serve them” (Luke 4:38-39, EHV).
Jesus rebuked the fever.
And it left her.
There was no wait for the ibuprofen to kick in and take effect.
There was no gradual recovery in a hospital bed before she could get up with some assistance and leave.
It left her.
So quickly that she was immediately able to go about her normal routine.
She began to serve Jesus and his disciples.
After Peter’s mother-in-law had been healed, “As the sun was setting, they brought to him all who were sick with various diseases.
He laid his hands on every one of them and healed them” (Luke 4:40, EHV).
While Jesus didn’t rebuke these other diseases the healing continued.
No disease the people brought to him was any match for Jesus’ power.
“Every one of them” was healed.
While that’s quite a display of power, the next verse is perhaps even more striking than the rebuke of weather and disease.
“Demons also came out of many people, crying out, ‘You are the Son of God!’
He rebuked them and did not allow them to speak, because they knew that he was the Christ” (Luke 4:41, EHV).
While the demons were speaking the truth, they spoke the truth to misrepresent Jesus and what he had come to do.
This Jesus would not allow.
His rebuke had the same effect as his rebuke of the fever.
Jesus’ rebuke has the power of God—the demons could do nothing other than to obey his command.
It wasn’t the first time.
Just before our text he had driven a demon out of another man.
When the people saw it: “They were all filled with awe and began to say to one another, ‘What is this message?
With authority and power he commands unclean spirits, and they come out!’” (Luke 4:36, EHV).
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