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The Day Jesus Lost His Crowd
John 6
Jump to: Part 2
Churches put a lot of
emphasis on drawing a crowd.
Jesus did not.
I've never known a
preacher whose church was in decline who wasn't insecure about it, no
matter the reason for it.
Usually a pastor blames himself for it, and sometimes he
is to blame.
Jesus had His big
attendance days, but
His overall trend was advancement through decline - and in
today's text we see one of several times when Jesus lost His crowd.
v. 66
Let's read together John six six six!
What a change has
occurred since the beginning of this chapter, where we see a great crowd
walking toward Jesus...now they are walking away.
Jesus was surrounded by a huge throng and not long after He has
only His 12 disciples...and He knows one of them is a devil!
Oh how fickle people
can be. Oh how shallow many
people's commitment is.
Notice the progression:
v. 15
They want to make Him a king.
v. 41
murmur = undercurrent of criticism.
They are talking bad about Him behind His back.
v. 52
strove = all out verbal warfare
by v. 66 they have
left the building.
This all happens
within a few hours' time.
It's one thing to
follow the Lord in exciting times when crowds are filing in and it
doesn't cost you anything, but it is another thing entirely to follow
Jesus when it demands a sacrifice.
That's when you find out what your faith really consists of in
depth and reality.
One of the
difficulties of full time ministry is watching
once faithful people turn
away and follow God no more.
2 Timothy 4:10
For Demas hath forsaken me,
having loved this present world...
He was Paul's right
hand man, and walked away from it all.
The pull of the world is strong, but when our faith is tested it
is pass or fail.
"A faith that fizzles before the finish was faulty
from the first."
1 John 2:19
They went out from us, but
they were not of us; for if they had been of us, they would no doubt
have continued with us: but they went out, that they might be
made manifest that they were not all of us.
1. Those
who fought.
v. 41
These Jews fought against Jesus' direction.
They get their murmuring honestly from their ancestors who could
always find the negative in any situation.
Some people are
humbly grateful...others are just grumbly hateful!
What do you do with
those who can only brighten a room by leaving it?
Maybe what one lady did in response to her husband's griping:
Poem:
He didn't like the
casserole
And he didn't like my
cake.
My biscuits were too
hard...
Not like his mother
used to make.
I didn't perk the
coffee right
He didn't like the
stew,
I didn't mend his
socks
The way his mother
used to do.
I pondered for an
answer
I was looking for a
clue.
So I turned around
and smacked him...
Like his Mother used
to do.
Why are they
complaining in our text?
Because Jesus said He was the bread from heaven.
v. 42
"Who does he think he is?"
But who is really the
father? God!
Jesus is the only baby ever born who was older than His mother
and the same age as His Father!
2,000 years later
this is still the big question on the planet.
Who is Jesus
Christ? A good man
or the God man? A prophet,
a teacher, or the bread sent down from heaven like manna?
This is a pivotal
question - it will determine how
your life goes - what your priorities and values are - and it will
determine where you will spend eternity!
This is a paramount
question - no more important
question to answer than this, and giving no answer is giving an answer
of no.
This is a perennial
question - it isn't going away,
it will hound you until the day you die, and then it will finally be
answered on the day when every knee bows and every tongue confesses
Christ as Lord!
Who is Jesus Christ?
They didn't believe His claims, and so they fought with Him.
v. 47-52
No longer are they talking behind His back...they are now
criticizing to His face.
They are now challenging Him publicly.
Jesus introduces a
brand new word: 'flesh' at
the end of v. 51. He will
use this word 6 more times before this dialogue is ended.
This is Jesus' announcement of
In 3:16 He said I
will die for the world.
In chapter 10 He said
I will lay down my life for my sheep.
In chapter 11 He said
I will die for the nations.
In chapter 15 He said
greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down His life for His
friends.
This is God our
substitute...and the One who came
in flesh came to give that flesh in trade for ours to save us!
v. 52
The idea of eating human flesh is offensive to them.
They are misunderstanding a spiritual truth by taking this
literally. This is the
fourth time they have done this in John's gospel.
In chapter 2 Jesus
said 'destroy this temple and three days later I will raise it up.'
He wasn't talking about their church, but His flesh.
In chapter 3 told
Nicodemus he had to be born again, and Nicodemus said, I can't go back
inside momma again? It was
another fleshly misunderstanding.
In chapter 4 Jesus
told the woman at the well to drink of the living water and she didn't
realize what He meant. It
was a spiritual water, not physical.
All of these took Jesus' illustrations literally and
misunderstood the spiritual point.
Jesus was saying that
just as you take food and water into your physical body and it brings
you physical life you must take my flesh and blood into you spiritually
to bring you spiritual life.
This is a message of commitment - the difference between
believing with just your head and believing with your heart.
Jesus is talking
about receiving Him into your innermost being.
And I say today on the authority of God's Word that people who
are truly born again are not just those who believe a set of facts in
their head or pray a prayer with their mouth...rather, they are those
who receive Jesus Christ into their innermost being.
"Believe IN the Lord
Jesus?" No!
"Believe ON the Lord Jesus Christ and thou shalt be saved!"
v. 47
'on'
'Believe on' contains
the idea of commitment.
This group wasn't willing to make that commitment.
As long as He is working miracles and feeding them He was fine in
their eyes, but once you ask for a person's heart...for commitment, you
risk losing your crowd!
This first group fought with Him...
2. Those
who fizzled.
v. 60
These are recent 'converts' now who are calling this a 'hard
saying'
It's not as though
they couldn't understand it, but rather that they couldn't stomach it.
They were offended.
They stumbled at this teaching.
They didn't want to follow this teaching.
It's not palatable.
And so in cafeteria style they take the parts they like and leave the
parts they don't care for.
Jesus is asking a
difficult thing of them...He asks for a real commitment, and it's not as
lovey dovey as they want their leader to be.
And so they fizzle out on Him.
ill.--I counseled a
guy recently who said he was saved, but saw nothing wrong with sleeping
with his girlfriend. He's
been in churches a lot, and sat under much preaching, and I have to ask,
have we watered down the gospel to the point that people believe they
should just pray a prayer and let God give them good things and save
them from bad things? That
boy's not saved. I'm not
saying you give up bad things in order to be saved, but that when you
make the COMMITMENT to Christ to be saved He will change you heart and
help you give up bad things!
You know there's a
lot of preachers today teaching forgiveness without real repentance and
I have to point out that they draw quite a crowd!
I'll be the first to
admit that repentance without faith is works salvation and is wrong.
But on the other hand, faith without repentance is empty and
meaningless...and doesn't save anyone!
Jesus is the way, the
truth and the life. Yet
even though He is the way they didn't want to follow.
Even though He's the truth they didn't want to believe it.
Even though He's the life they didn't want to receive it...not
that way! They saw the
demands of discipleship were too great.
Was Jesus
disappointed? No.
In order to be disappointed you must expect one result and get
another. But Jesus knew all
along what was in their hearts.
v. 64
Jesus knew!
"A faith that fizzles
before the finish was faulty from the first."
Some fought with Him, some fizzled on
Him...
3. Those
who followed.
v. 66-69
'to whom shall we go?'
If you walk away from
Jesus Christ you walk away from everything that matters.
In Christ we have a
love that can never be fathomed; a life that can never die; a
righteousness that can never be tarnished; a peace that can never be
understood; a rest that can never be disturbed; a joy that can never be
diminished; a hope that can never be disappointed; a glory that can
never be clouded; a light that can never be darkened; a happiness that
can never be permanently interrupted; a strength that can never be
enfeebled; a purity that can never be defiled; a beauty that can never
be marred; a wisdom that can never be baffled; and resources that can
never be exhausted.
To whom shall we go?
Where else are you gonna receive what Jesus gives?
Just commit your life to Him!
It's a real commitment, but it is not too difficult.
I say that life is most difficult when we insist on carrying the
weight of sin and suffering its consequences!
His yoke is easy, and His burden is light!
If He said we had to
be crucified to go to heaven we would do it.
If He said we had to do good works to receive His gift of life,
we would do them. If He
said we had to do very hard things in order to know Him I would hope we
would be willing to do those things.
But in actuality He did the hard part, and just asks for us to
believe AND receive all that He is and give to Him all that we are.
Just make that simple commitment!
The Day Jesus Lost His Crowd, pt. 2
John 6:53-58
Last time:
Churches put a lot of
emphasis on drawing a crowd.
Jesus did not.
Jesus had His big
attendance days, but His overall trend was advancement through
decline.
"A faith that
fizzles before the finish was faulty from the first."
You know there's a lot
of preachers today teaching forgiveness without real repentance and I
have to point out that they draw quite a crowd!
-----
Ladies, next week is
Mother's Day, and I'd like to take a survey.
Raise your hand if you know what 'selective hearing' is.
You can say, "Take out the trash" or "Pick up your clothes" and a
man cannot hear it. You can
use the same tone and volume and say, "Would you like some ice cream"
and be heard, no problem.
"Would you like to go upstai...YES!"
Unfortunately, many
who claim to be followers of Christ have selective hearing...they hear
only what they want to hear...things they agree with, that don't
challenge them too deeply. A
man of God can preach two truths from the same Bible but one is heard
and the other is ignored...selective hearing.
The crowd in chapter 6
has selective hearing. It
was a big crowd who came to see miracles and be fed, and join in the
'hip' trend of the day. But
Jesus wanted to see who was serious and so He preached on commitment and
many departed. It doesn't
mean they weren't saved, though undoubtedly many of them were only in it
for what they could get out of it.
vv. 53-54
This is so contrary to the 'easy-believism' which is so common
today. What does the Bible
really mean when it tells us to 'believe' and be saved?
James 2:19
Thou believest that there is
one God; thou doest well: the devils also believe, and tremble.
Believing in the head
is called 'mental assent.'
It is just believing the facts.
Like the demons in...
Matthew 8:29
...What have we to do with
thee, Jesus, thou Son of God?
Even the demons know
Jesus to be who He claims to be, but they certainly aren't saved.
It is demonic faith.
And James tells us
faith without works is dead...a
dead faith. Works give
evidence of salvation. It's
not the root, but the fruit...and Jesus said we are known by our fruit.
The person with dead faith has only had an intellectual
experience. In his mind he
knows facts about salvation, but in his heart he has never truly applied
these things with a personal commitment.
He knows the right words, but cannot back them up with works.
True faith brings life, and the characteristics of life are
growth and fruit!
Matthew 7:21-23
21 Not every one that saith unto
me, Lord, Lord, shall enter into the kingdom of heaven; but he that
doeth the will of my Father which is in heaven.
22 Many will say to me in that
day, Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied in thy name? and in thy name
have cast out devils? and in thy name done many wonderful works?
23 And then will I profess
unto them, I never knew you: depart from me, ye that work iniquity.
This is a
deceptive faith, when you do
works and think you are saved because of that.
We need the real thing
-- a dynamic faith.
This touches the complete man... mind, heart, and will.
It must go from the head to the heart, and on to the hand.
This happens thru making a real commitment -- which means true
repentance being part of your faith in Christ.
You are turning FROM sin and TO Jesus!
Demonic faith only
affects the mind, understanding the facts of salvation.
You know ABOUT Jesus but don't know Him personally.
It has nothing to do with the heart.
ill.--if I asked you
if you know the President you could say yes, because you know about him
and who he is. But do you
know him personally? Would
you like to?
A dead faith may
involve the heart but doesn't reach the hand.
You may have prayed a prayer for salvation, and may have even
cried as the decision affected you emotionally.
It reached the heart but not the will.
If there's no surrender and commitment involved it isn't full,
dynamic faith.
Deceptive faith does
works, so the will is involved.
The hand takes action, but it is not real and rooted in the
heart. It's motive is doing
works in order to be a good person and earn salvation instead of being
rooted and grounded in the heart.
'Believe' and 'commit'
are synonymous in the Biblical sense.
A person may say they have decided to be saved, but if it results
in no change, no fruit, and no desire to go in the right direction the
Bible gives us little encouragement about the reality of that decision.
Vance Havner, "I
didn't understand much about trusting Jesus, but I understood one thing,
and no theologian had to explain it to me.
I understood that I was under new management.
That was perfectly clear.
I had a new Lord. I
believe that the sad state of Christians in churches today is due to a
cheap believism that doesn't believe and a cheap receivism that doesn't
receive. After all, the word
Savior is found only 24 times in the NT, and the word Lord is applied to
Jesus 433 times."
-----
Does this passage
teach transubstantiation?
No. [Discuss]
If the elements became
literal flesh and blood, then what we would have would not just be a
symbolic remembrance, but a sacrifice, and that would be heresy and
blasphemy against our once smitten Savior.
Hebrews 10:12, 14
12 But this man, after he had
offered one sacrifice for sins for ever, sat down on the right hand of
God;
14 For by one
offering he hath perfected for ever them that are sanctified.
There is no saving
virtue in the elements. It's
a symbolic remembrance of the once and for all sacrifice Jesus made and
then He said, It is finished, and it is indeed finished, and He's no
longer on that cross...the crucifix is grotesque, Christians are to live
in the light of the empty tomb!
Transubstantiation was
invented by Catholic leaders in around A.D. 1200.
So for more than a millennium the church got along fine without
it. Martin Luther said in
1520, it's a monstrous word for a monstrous idea.
If Jesus was talking
about the Lord's Supper in this passage, then it would mean you have to
partake in order to be saved, and you do not.
Also, Jesus makes it
clear that He is speaking spiritually, not literally.
v. 63
Further, 'eat my
flesh' and 'drink my blood' are in the aorist tense, which means, "Do it
one time." It's a once and
for all partaking, not to be repeated.
As we partake, it is a
time of reflection. We are
looking back and looking forward.
1 Corinthians 11:26
For as often as ye eat
this bread, and drink this cup, ye do shew the Lord's death [looking
back] till he come [looking forward].
As we look back we
remember that though salvation is free, it was not cheap.
The bread symbolizes His broken body and the cup is picture of
His blood shed for us.
We not only look back
but forward. "Till he come"
At the last supper Jesus
told the disciples I won't partake of this with you again until we are
together in my kingdom.
Wouldn't it be
wonderful if the next time we partook it was in heaven with Jesus?
Did you know you can
find communion in your OT?
Passover! And that first
time the children of
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