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Transplanted Heart
Topic: #476 of 545 for Sermons on Jesus' Ministry
Scripture:
John 13:1-13:17
Sermon Series: Learning to serve in a Service-less Age
Denomination: Salvation Army
Date Added: January 2008
Audience: Believer Adults (31 - 49)
Keywords: none (Suggest a Keyword)
Among the extraordinary feats of history is the medical process of heart transplants. It is the actual procedure of removing a diseased heart from a patient and replacing it with the heart of a deceased donor. A surgeon would perform the transplant procedure on a patient who has a diseased heart, there is no other treatment available, and the person is at risk of dying.
There are many causes that bring a person to this critical medical need. Potentially among those causes would be unhealthy eating patterns and lack of self-care practices.
Today we begin a series of eight messages on “Learning to serve in a Service-less Age”. The title is unfriendly. Immediately every one of us has a planted image in our minds of what it means to learn to serve in a service-less age. Whatever image we have framed in our minds, we can be sure of one thing – to live that life we will need to undergo a spiritual heart transplant. Ours is a world that invites unhealthy practices that our humanity has ingested into our psyche and it encourages self-interest practices. If we hope to live a healthy life after this eight week series, we must begin with the reality that we’re looking at heart surgery. The alternative is to merely go through the motions of church and Bible message and eventually, die.
As with any medical procedure there is a process for the end result. There is the prep. This stage is the analysis of the conditions existing prior to surgery. We then move toward the procedural problems or that point in the surgery where complications sometimes occur and the patient is at risk. When surgery is successful, the final stage is the post-op. Here we see healing, health and follow-up to a normal and productive life.
Let’s get started. First,
1. The Prep
If you knew this was your last day on earth, how would you fill the time? A website asked people this question. Here’s a few answers.
* Be with my wife and kids
* I will restitute my ways, preach a good message to people around me and conduct a night vigil
* Confess my sins and then I’d go to sleep
* Treat myself to the best food ever. And take some sleeping pills and doze off
* I’ll pray to God to extend my stay for 75 more years!
Jesus was going through the roughest night of his life. Verse 1…
Jesus never had any personal aspirations of longer life, confessed sins or eating binges. His only desire was to demonstrate the strongest, deepest love possible for his followers, his friends, before he died.
“Just before the Passover feast” (v1) is an interesting phrase that John placed strategically in this passage. Before we can have any true “Passover” experience there must be the transplanting of the human heart – not the fist-sized organ in our bodies pumping blood through our veins but the deeper side of us that pumps purpose, values and beliefs; it is that part of us that knows it needs to face the real me to becoming a better me against the knowledge that my purpose is to glorify God in the whole of my living. The focus must always be about him. It is a process that John also speaks of when he said in 3:30 of Jesus, “He must become greater, I must become less.”
Before surgery, the medical team sterilizes the outer skin of the body that is about to be surgically opened and operated on. The patient and surgeon go through a scrub-down process for sanitation needs. Before any true
There are many causes that bring a person to this critical medical need. Potentially among those causes would be unhealthy eating patterns and lack of self-care practices.
Today we begin a series of eight messages on “Learning to serve in a Service-less Age”. The title is unfriendly. Immediately every one of us has a planted image in our minds of what it means to learn to serve in a service-less age. Whatever image we have framed in our minds, we can be sure of one thing – to live that life we will need to undergo a spiritual heart transplant. Ours is a world that invites unhealthy practices that our humanity has ingested into our psyche and it encourages self-interest practices. If we hope to live a healthy life after this eight week series, we must begin with the reality that we’re looking at heart surgery. The alternative is to merely go through the motions of church and Bible message and eventually, die.
As with any medical procedure there is a process for the end result. There is the prep. This stage is the analysis of the conditions existing prior to surgery. We then move toward the procedural problems or that point in the surgery where complications sometimes occur and the patient is at risk. When surgery is successful, the final stage is the post-op. Here we see healing, health and follow-up to a normal and productive life.
Let’s get started. First,
1. The Prep
If you knew this was your last day on earth, how would you fill the time? A website asked people this question. Here’s a few answers.
* Be with my wife and kids
* I will restitute my ways, preach a good message to people around me and conduct a night vigil
* Confess my sins and then I’d go to sleep
* Treat myself to the best food ever. And take some sleeping pills and doze off
* I’ll pray to God to extend my stay for 75 more years!
Jesus was going through the roughest night of his life. Verse 1…
Jesus never had any personal aspirations of longer life, confessed sins or eating binges. His only desire was to demonstrate the strongest, deepest love possible for his followers, his friends, before he died.
“Just before the Passover feast” (v1) is an interesting phrase that John placed strategically in this passage. Before we can have any true “Passover” experience there must be the transplanting of the human heart – not the fist-sized organ in our bodies pumping blood through our veins but the deeper side of us that pumps purpose, values and beliefs; it is that part of us that knows it needs to face the real me to becoming a better me against the knowledge that my purpose is to glorify God in the whole of my living. The focus must always be about him. It is a process that John also speaks of when he said in 3:30 of Jesus, “He must become greater, I must become less.”
Before surgery, the medical team sterilizes the outer skin of the body that is about to be surgically opened and operated on. The patient and surgeon go through a scrub-down process for sanitation needs. Before any true
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