"What Does It Mean to Believe in Jesus?"
Twenty-First Sunday after Trinity
October 20, 2013
John 4:46–54

What does it mean to believe in Jesus? As Christians, we believe in
Jesus. It would seem self-evident that we know what that means. Since
today’s Gospel reading Jesus teaches us exactly that, let’s go with
the assumption that we need to understand what it means to believe in
Him. To understand what it means to believe in Jesus is to know that
understanding Him is only part of the equation. There is an aspect of
intellectually grasping that Jesus is true God even as He is true man.
Not that we can understand this. But we can intellectually know that
Jesus is no mere man, that He is truly God, and conversely, that God
actually came in the flesh in the person of Jesus.

But actual faith, belief in Jesus, is not simply intellectual
understanding. If it were, the man in the Gospel reading would not
have started going back home to his son. He asked Jesus to come to his
home in order to heal his son. When Jesus said to him, “Go; your son
will live,” the man went. He believed Jesus. It’s simply not possible
that he understood intellectually how Jesus would bring his son from
imminent death to full restoration. Especially since the man requested
Jesus to come to his son. Jesus simply spoke to the man. Your son is
going to live. You can go to him.

That the man did shows us what faith is. This is what it means to
believe in Jesus. Believing in Jesus is not intellectual
understanding. Nor is it a general notion that God is all-powerful or
that He is loving. It is specific. It is concentrated into one thing,
and that is Christ. To be even more specific, it is God in the flesh.
Jesus is true God and is known to us as the Person who walked this
earth and did things like restore a child to life without even seeing
him or going to him.

The man’s initial request actually was met with a rebuke from Jesus.
Too many people refused to believe in Him unless they witnessed the
miraculous. You won’t believe in Me simply because I say I am who I
say I am. You must see Me do something to prove it, and then you will
believe. But Jesus’ rebuke is not met with resistance or
rationalization. It’s met with a simple plea. Lord, my son is going to
die, please come.

At this, all rebuke is washed away. He does for the father what the
father has requested. His son will live. Jesus will restore his little
boy to a life in which he will play and go to school and eat peanut
butter and jelly sandwiches.

But Jesus did this in a way the man didn’t request. Jesus didn’t go
with the man. He didn’t lay His hands on the boy. He simply told the
man his son would live. And what did this man do? He believed. He went
as Jesus told him. Far from requiring miraculous signs, the man took
Jesus at His word. When he found out exactly when his son began to
recover he was pleased to know that his faith was not in vain.
Everyone in his family believed this simple thing. What was it? It was
the word of Jesus.

This is what it means to believe in Jesus. It is something very
specific. It is not something He does which conforms to our
conditions. It is rather the gift given which He gives by speaking it.
What it actually is is the Word of God that is given. The Word of God
is the Person of Jesus Himself. He is the Word made flesh. The eternal
God became a human being.

The man had heard about Jesus. Jesus had indeed performed some
miraculous signs. I will go to Him and ask Him to come do the same for
my son. Nothing else can prevent him from dying. What the man got was
the Word of God. Jesus stood before Him and spoke to him, “Your son
will live. You can go back to him now.”

The true miracle Jesus performed was speaking faith into that man. He
believed, yes. But his request of Jesus was according to his own
conditions. Jesus dispels him of any such notions. If you are going to
believe, simply believe. Your request is that your son be spared
death. That is all you need. I bring it about simply by bringing it
about, not by corresponding to your conditions.

And because Jesus spoke faith into that man, he believed. He spoke no
further. There were no protestations. No, “Are You sure you won’t come
down to my house, you know, just to make sure he’ll be all right, just
to make sure that there’s nothing more needed like You placing Your
hands on him?” No, the man believed and went home. He found exactly
what Jesus had said.

And of course, Jesus had said it. That’s what it means to believe in
Jesus. It is to take Him at His word. It is not to think that you
somehow have a part in it. Or that there must be certain conditions
placed on it.

This teaches us four things about faith:

First, faith goes to the source. It goes directly to Jesus. It holds
fast to Him. It doesn’t look within. If you are looking within
yourself for some sort of feeling or confirmation, that is not faith.
That is you sinful nature. Your sinful nature looks within. Faith
looks to Christ.

Second, faith receives. Faith is utterly humble, recognizing that of
yourself you are nothing in the presence of Christ. You will never
believe unless you see signs and wonders. Faith does not count on
itself to muster itself up. It simply, and humbly, receives. It hears
the word of Christ and rejoices in it. It doesn’t rejoice in itself.
Look at how wonderful my faith is! It sure is such a good thing I have
strong faith! No, it simply, and humbly, hears Christ. This is nothing
other than flowing out of number one—faith always, always goes back to
the source. It also goes back to Christ and receives Him.

Third, faith is bold. Since faith receives from Christ what Christ
Himself delivers, faith is bold. It has to be! If it’s timid, it’s not
faith. Or at least it’s weak faith. Faith that looks to Christ, that
clings to Christ, that humbly receives what Christ offers, that faith
is bold. Because it simply responds back to Christ what Christ Himself
has delivered in the speaking of His Word and has imparted to you.

Fourth, faith is never alone. It is not static. It is dynamic. It is
alive. It brings along with it acts of love and service and
compassion. It lives itself out in serving others and loving them in
Christ-like love.

That faith is centered in Christ and is authored and perfected by
Christ, as it says in Hebrews, means that it never rests in itself.
No, it is produced by Christ and then sustained by Him. When He gives
you faith, He gives you His Holy Spirit. His Holy Spirit strengthens
you in faith in the Gospel and the Sacraments. How can you be
sustained in faith if you remove yourself from those ways He comes to
you to sustain you in your faith? How can you serve Him if you are not
being equipped by Him in the very means through which He equips you?

In these means the Holy Spirit delivers to you what Christ
accomplished in His suffering and dying on the cross. Faith latches on
to that. This is what it means to believe in Jesus. Amen.

SDG

--
Pastor Paul L. Willweber
Prince of Peace Lutheran Church [LCMS]
6801 Easton Ct., San Diego, California 92120
619.583.1436
princeofpeacesd.net
three-taverns.net

It is the spirit and genius of Lutheranism to be liberal in everything
except where the marks of the Church are concerned.
[Henry Hamann, On Being a Christian]
_______________________________________________
Sermons mailing list
[email protected]
http://cat41.org/mailman/listinfo/sermons

Reply via email to