Sunday, July 20, 2008

Lesson # 12 | MARK 6:1-13 | DEALING WITH REJECTION

I.  Greetings:

 

II. Introduction:

            All of us face rejection in one form or another in our lives.  It seems to be a part of life.  We need one another and get dependent on one another, and yet not everyone is very faithful or understanding.  Some of you today have even been rejected by the very people you would have least expected it from.

            Q  Who are the people who can hurt us the most if they reject us? 

               An = It is often those most close to us.

            Note:  We often feel horrible when we are rejected.  We usually become angry or we begin to blame ourselves.  We often think, if we were just somehow better, we would not be rejected.

            Q  Do you think Jesus, the perfect man, ever faced rejection? 

               An = Remember, Jesus was fully human as well as fully God, and so like all humans He too faced such things.  He too, experienced and faced rejection.

 

III.  Jesus is Rejected:  Mark 6:1-6.

   A.  The Stigma of Ordinariness:  An Excuse for Unbelief.

>>>> Have someone read Mark 6:1-3.

            Q  Why did they reject Jesus? 

               An =  See Mark 6:3 and >> re-read Mark 6:3 for them.  They did not recognize Jesus for who He was.  What seemed to throw them off was Jesus' ordinariness.  They failed to penetrate the "veil of ordinariness".  Jesus was a blue-collar worker. 

            Funny, some things never change.  People still look down on blue-collar workers, as simple ordinary folks.

            Q  Do you ever feel ordinary?  Is it wrong to feel so?

            Note:  In Jesus' time manual labor in the Greco-Roman world invited scorn. 

            In addition, "son of Mary" could possibly refer to charges of born out of wedlock. 

            Whether that was implied or not, it is certain His parents were not special.  They knew His family.  He could make no claim to fame from His humble, blue-collar worker, home.

            Note:  It is OK to be ordinary.  It is OK to be just you. 

            Note:  One more thought from these verses:  Do not be ashamed of humble beginnings.  Do not be ashamed of ordinariness.  Almighty God had ordinary, blue-collar, parents.  It seems to me that God could have given His Son any parents in the world, but He chose Mary and Joseph.

            Notice that Jesus will not be ashamed or embarrassed.  Let us see what He will say.

   B.  Jesus' Response:  Mark 6:4

>>>> Have someone read Mark 6:4

            Q  What is Jesus saying here?  What does He mean?

               An = The prophet is not heard at times because he is too familiar.  Jesus says the problem is not Him, but the hearers.

            RQ Do we do that today?  Do we miss the voice of God because it comes through a person or method too familiar to us?

               Note:  Do we fail to listen to what God really wants of us because the mouth piece is our parents, a relative, a person we know well, or even our children?  We need to be able to see the truth because it is the truth, not because the messenger is someone special, mysterious, fashionable, or politically correct.

            Truth is truth whether on the lips of Moses or Balaam' s donkey.

            Some of you are fighting the will of God and you invalidate the message because you can charge the messenger with ordinariness.

   C.  The Results of Their Rejection:  Ministry Hindered.  Mark 6:5-6

>>>> Have someone read Mark 6:5-6.

            Q  What does Mark 6:5 mean?  Why were there few miracles?

               An =  Why couldn't Jesus do more miracles there?  Let me suggest a few reasons. 

            1)  Miracles without faith would reduce Jesus to a "pagan" miracle worker, not a redeemer.  He would be like a Santa Claus, not the One who was there to bring them to a whole new standard of living, a whole new conception of life, a higher value system.

            2)  There were no limits to His power, but the privation was due to their unbelief, it excluded them from the full dynamic disclosure of God's grace.  Miracles are not here to impress us but lead us to faith in the Son of God.

            Q  Is God's full disclosure of grace blocked here?  Is it blocked in us? 

            Q  Is there blessing from God that others can receive but not us?

            Q  Is our church or nation rejecting Jesus?  How? 

               An = Again, see Mark 6:3.

   D.  Jesus' Rejection Is Forewarning of Our Own.

            Note:  Even Jesus was rejected, we must expect the same where the gospel advances.

            Q  Did Jesus stop?

               An = No, and the proof is in 6:6b and 6:7. 

            1)  He kept preaching, Jesus did not quit His ministry at this point.  He kept on preaching, kept on teaching.  He did not give up on those who rejected Him.

            2)  He sent out the twelve.  He starts a whole new strategy and multiplies and expands the work.

 

IV.  Sending Others:  A Response to Rejection.  Mark 6:7-13.

   A. The Sender Gives Authority. 

            Note:  When Jesus was rejected He did not give up.  He kept preaching, and He began a new tactic:  He sent others besides Himself to preach.

>>>> Have someone read Mark 6:7.

            Q  In Mark 6:7 what did Jesus give the disciples?

               An = He gave them authority over demonic powers.

            Q  Did it really happen?

               An = It did and the proof of their received authority is in 6:12-13.

>>>> Read Mark 6:12-13.  They preached repentance, cast out demons, and healed the sick.

            Q  Do we do this today?  Do we see miracles and even want to preach repentance?

            Note:  Remember He who sends has power.  If it is truly Him that sends us, then we need to remember that He can give such authority.

   B. The Manner of the Sending:  Mark 6:8-11

>>>> Have someone read Mark 6:8-9.

            Q  What does this mean?  List the things He says to do.

               An = Take nothing for the journey except a staff:  no bread, bag, money, or extra clothes.  In other words travel light.  Go expecting God to provide for you.

               Note:  They were to have light resources.  Perhaps our willingness to be vulnerable leads to power. 

            Q  Are all modern missions today to be like this one?

            Note: According to verse 7, they were sent out in twos.

            Q  Why do you suppose He did this?            

               An = I would think it would be easier to have someone with you on such a risky adventure.  It is easier to handle tough times with a good friend or a good spouse.  Perhaps another part of the answer is found in Deuteronomy 17:6. 

>>>> You read to them Deuteronomy 17:6.  There were two of them witnessing to them.  Maybe they would be heard or listened to better because there was two of them.

>>>> Have someone read Mark 6:10-11

            Q What does 6:10 mean?

               An = Perhaps it refers to stability?  See how the disciples too were going to experience rejection, see 6:11.  However, they were to be:  1)  above suspicion and therefore not out for money, 2)  free of all care, 3) to understand they needed not resources, but His power.              Jesus had told them that all they needed was Jesus' commissioning, and they had lacked nothing.  What this also could imply is that we error when we commission ourselves or think the commissioning of man can be more important than the true commissioning and authority from Jesus Himself.

            Q How are we not vulnerable today? 

               An = Do we feel like we have to have all the resources lined up and under our control before we do what God has called us to do?  I know I am very often like this.  I want some measure of control over the future of my efforts at ministry.

            Q What is the Lord saying to us today?

            Q Do we want His authority?

            Note:  If we do we must also accept His vulnerability.

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