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Jesus Spoke With Authority
Contributed by Stephen Aram on Feb 7, 2022 (message contributor)
Summary: The modern mind doesn't like to submit to authority, but if you don't recognize Jesus's authority, you don't recognize Jesus.
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Three weeks ago we left off of our series on the early ministry of Jesus as he was walking out of his home town, Nazareth, very much alone, having been violently rejected by the people of the synagogue where he grew up. What a tragic story. We don’t know that he ever went back. If you missed that, there should be copies of my sermon in the rack in the narthex.
But did he give up? No way. He walked east, down the Jezreel Valley, towards the Sea of Galilee. And it wasn’t long before he was teaching on another Sabbath in a different synagogue, in the fishing town of Capernaum. You’ll hear about this town, Capernaum a lot as we go through Luke’s Gospel. He found people who would listen here. He found some real disciples here. This was Peter’s home town. He did many miracles and taught many times here.
This is a very special story for me, because in 1990 I was able to take a tour of Israel. Archeologists have excavated this synagogue. They know right where it was. The synagogue where Jesus taught many times had been destroyed somehow, and a new one was built right on the same site, on the same foundations, with the same dimensions. The walls of the new one fell down years ago, but you could see where they were and I got to walk on the actual stone floor of the second synagogue, built right on top of the stones where Jesus taught. That was awesome. So when I read this story, I was there. I stood where Jesus stood.
Do you know what happened when he taught in Capernaum? Did they run him out of town, too? Let’s find out. Open your pew Bibles to page 62 in the New Testament section. And Lil will come and read it for us. Please stand for the reading of God’s word.
31 He went down to Capernaum, a city of Galilee, and was teaching them on the sabbath. 32 They were astounded at his teaching, because he spoke with authority. 33 In the synagogue there was a man who had the spirit of an unclean demon, and he cried out with a loud voice, 34 `Let us alone! What have you to do with us, Jesus of Nazareth? Have you come to destroy us? I know who you are, the Holy One of God.' 35 But Jesus rebuked him, saying, `Be silent, and come out of him!' When the demon had thrown him down before them, he came out of him without having done him any harm. 36 They were all amazed and kept saying to one another, `What kind of utterance is this? For with authority and power he commands the unclean spirits, and out they come!' 37 And a report about him began to reach every place in the region."
Every part of Luke’s gospel has a purpose. Step by step he’s telling us what we need to know about Jesus. What do we learn about Jesus in this story? What was it about his teaching that caught people’s attention about Jesus? He spoke with authority.
Uh-oh, did you say a bad word in church, ‘authority’? Isn’t authority the word for parents who stifle their children’s individuality? Wasn’t it the king’s authority that we Americans rebelled against when we broke from England, so that we could be free? Isn’t it authority that has blocked opportunities for new ideas in science and the arts? Isn’t authority what regressive control freaks resort to?
Aren’t modern folks supposed to reject authority? You think what you want and I’ll think what I want and we’ll just leave it at that. Authority is so old, so authoritarian.
But the Bible says that Jesus spoke with authority. Jesus was not one of those teachers who says that one guy says this and another says that and you take your pick. It doesn’t matter. Jesus spoke the truth and it really mattered.
And he really claimed a lot of authority. He told his home synagogue in Nazareth that he was the fulfillment of one of the most important Old Testament prophecies. That claims a lot of authority.
He told people that their sins were forgiven. And some of those who were listening said, wait a minute, only God can do that. And they were right. Jesus was acting like God. And do you know why he was acting like God? He was God.
When a storm was about to sink their boat on the Sea of Galilee he just stood up and told the storm to stop, and it stopped. His disciples said, whoa, who is this guy?
One day when people were after him over the authority he took he said something that really ticked them off. He was talking about Abraham, and they said, ‘Yeah right, Abraham lived centuries ago; what do you know about Abraham?’ And Jesus said the strangest thing. He said, “Before Abraham was, I am.” Now that’s very strange English. “Was” is past tense. “I am” is present tense. You’re not supposed to mix tenses like that. What was he saying? One thing he was saying was that he existed before Abraham did. None of us here can claim that. And where have you heard the expression “I am” before? When Moses met God in the burning bush, Moses asked, who are you, when I go tell my family about this, who should I tell them spoke to me? What’s your name? And God said, “Tell them I AM sent you.” When Jesus used that name, “I AM”, some of the people there picked up stones right on the spot to stone him to death for blasphemy. They knew he was claiming to be God. Jesus spoke with authority!