This sermon introduction discusses the importance of knowing someone's name as the first step in showing love towards them, as part of a new series called "Love Has A Name".
Today we begin a new 3-week series called Love Has A Name. And to open our time together today, I want to ask you to think about how it feels when someone says your name.
Learning a name is often the first step to beginning a new friendship or relationship. It is the entry point into someone’s life, the doorway if you will. And from that initial point, a relationship can grow.
You can see how, Love starts with a name.
There’s something powerful about knowing and remembering a person’s name. When someone knows your name, it makes you feel loved, noticed, and seen.
When someone knows and remembers your name it gives you worth, it gives you value.
And a name represents a person’s story… Who they are… Their past... good and bad… Their successes… and screw ups... Their background, upbringing, occupation… who their parents are… A person’s name… and their story… it matters.
And the best news? Jesus knows your name, He knows your story, and He loves you.
Love starts with a name.
Jesus and Zaccheus - Luke 19:1-10
“He entered Jericho and was passing through. And there was a man called by the name of Zaccheus; he was a chief tax collector and he was rich.”
At the beginning of our passage we see Jesus passing through the city of Jericho. We’re told about a man there, Zaccheus, who collected taxes for a living. As a tax collector, he would overtax and steal money from his own people. And as a result, (to put it nicely) the man wasn’t very well-liked. In fact, he would have been despised, loathed, and ostracized.
Now get this, we’re told that he wasn’t just a tax collector, but he was the chief tax collector. Not just a jerk, the chief jerk! So, in summary, he’s the chief jerk, despised by his fellow countrymen. Oh, and by the way, he’s rich because of his job. Even more reason not to like him.
Somehow this man knew about Jesus coming to town, and Zaccheus really wanted to see him. He wanted to see Jesus.
“Zaccheus was trying to see who Jesus was, and was unable because of the crowd, for he was small in stature.”
But there was a problem: The man was really short. Very short. He’s a “wee little man.” And because of it, he can’t see over the crowd to see Jesus when Jesus comes into town.
So Zaccheus has an idea. Listen to this;
“So he ran on ahead and climbed up into a sycamore tree in order to see Him, for He was about to pass through that way.”
Problem solved right?
“When Jesus came to the place, He looked up and said to him, ‘Zaccheus, hurry and come down, for today I must stay at your house ... View this full sermon with PRO Premium