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There Is One Lord Series
Contributed by David Owens on Feb 12, 2024 (message contributor)
Summary: For Jesus to be our Savior, He must also be our Lord. The Lordship of Jesus in our lives is lived out in view of God's ownership and our discipleship. The Lordship of Jesus is not a burden, but is our blessing, provision, and protection.
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A. As you know, we are in a sermon series about the 7 ones that equal unity.
1. God wants His people to be unified and the 7 ones are the things that unite us.
2. So far in our series we have discussed the one body, the one Spirit, and the one hope.
3. Today, we want to talk about a subject that is one of the most challenging and most offensive of the 7 ones – there is one Lord.
B. Why would I call it the most challenging and offensive of the “ones”?
1. Because everyone might agree that there is one Lord, but they want the one Lord to be them, not someone else, and for many, certainly not Jesus.
2. The truth of today’s sermon is really very simple: Jesus is the one Lord and that means He’s in charge; He’s the Master; He’s the King.
3. The apostle Paul clarified this truth clearly when he wrote to the Corinthians about eating food sacrificed to idols, he wrote: 4 About eating food sacrificed to idols, then, we know that “an idol is nothing in the world,” and that “there is no God but one.” 5 For even if there are so-called gods, whether in heaven or on earth—as there are many “gods” and many “lords”— 6 yet for us there is one God, the Father. All things are from him, and we exist for him. And there is one Lord, Jesus Christ. All things are through him, and we exist through him. (1 Cor. 8:4-6)
4. I like the way that Paul contrasts the many “gods” and many “lords” (lower case) with the one “God” and one “Lord” (upper case).
a. In truth, there are many lower case “gods” and “lords” – these lower case “gods” and “lords” include everything from the government, to our bosses, our parents, our spouses, ourselves, our addictions, including our cellphones.
5. Bob Dylan was right when he famously sung “you’re gonna have to serve somebody.”
a. The chorus of his song says:
But you’re gonna have to serve somebody, yes indeed,
You’re gonna have to serve somebody,
Well, it may be the devil or it may be the Lord,
But you’re gonna have to serve somebody.
b. If the only choice were between serving God and serving the devil, then most of us would quickly choose God.
c. But Satan, the great deceiver and the father of lies, has convinced many that we don’t have to serve anyone, and that we can do as we please.
d. But make no mistake about it, if we don’t choose to serve God, then we are serving Satan.
e. If we are self-serving, then we are ultimately Satan-serving.
6. Here’s the other thing that makes this truth so offensive to some – Jesus is Lord whether I believe in Him or not, or whether I think He is the Lord or not.
a. My lack of belief in Jesus or my failure to acknowledge His lordship has no impact on the fact that Jesus is Lord.
b. Similarly, I might refuse to believe that Joe Biden exists as a human being or refuse to acknowledge that he is the President of the United States.
1. But my lack of faith and acknowledgement doesn’t change the truth that he exists and that he is president.
c. Similarly, I might refuse to believe that gravity exists or that it is in control of things on our planet.
1. But my lack of faith in gravity doesn’t change the truth that when I jump off the roof gravity will bring me crashing to the ground.
C. In addition to the fact that this truth is offensive to many, it is also challenging for all of us.
1. What makes it so challenging is our struggle to allow someone else to be our Lord or boss.
2. One of the most important issues that must be settled in every person’s life is the question of “Who’s the Boss.”
3. And the truth is that God is “the boss” and the sooner we allow Him to be our boss the better off we will be.
D. So, what does the Bible say about God being the “boss” and Jesus being the “one Lord?”
1. When Paul wrote saying that there is one Lord and that Jesus is that one Lord, this doesn’t imply that God in general is also not addressed in Scripture as the Lord.
2. In the Old Testament, God is referred to as Lord hundreds of times and the word that appears is usually the word Adonai – which means Lord or Master and always appears in the plural and possessive cases which points to the “three-in-one” Godhead.
3. Another word for Lord that appears in the Old Testament and is always in all capital letters is the word YHWY or Jehovah, which is the personal name for God that describes His eternal, self-existence, “I AM.”