Summary: The guesses of the people about Jesus’ identity give us clues about their perception of His character. Jesus used their grasp of His similarity to John the Baptist, Elijah, and Jeremiah to focus on the authority to bind and loose. They, and He, bound rel

Have you ever needed to find out what somebody else really

thought of you? Do you know what it is like to ask someone

what their opinion is of you – and then you wait for what

seems like an eternity for the answer, and when it comes,

you are still not sure if it is good or bad? Do you know what

that’s like?

I have to write letters of reference occasionally. Employers

and colleges seem to think that if you can get a

commendation from your pastor, you must be all right. Now

when I have to write a letter of reference, I struggle with it.

Do I tell this potential employer the truth, the whole truth, and

nothing but the truth about you? Or do I write some vague

and flowery epistle that says nothing but says it beautifully?

And then, after I have carefully constructed that letter, I

realize that you might end up reading it too. Maybe you did

not agree to keep your file confidential, and you will someday

read what I wrote about you. So I go back and edit the letter

again, just to make sure that if that happens you will not be

upset at me. What have we got here? Me writing what I

think of you, and worrying about what you think of me!

Wow! I believe I will just do what a friend of mine did. He

developed the all-purpose recommendation letter. He would

write, “I cannot speak too highly of this person.” You figure it

out.

One day Jesus took His heart in His hands and put it out

there for the disciples to stomp on. He asked what they

thought of Him. Knowing that they were not likely to be

straightforward about it, He asked them first what other

people were saying. It’s a lot easier to speak about

imaginary other people than it is to reveal our own hearts.

And so He asked, “Who do people say the Son of Man

is?” How am I playing out there, fellows? You have your

ears to the ground. What are they saying about me?

The answers were quick and to the point. They said,

“Some say John the Baptist, but others Elijah, and still

others Jeremiah or one of the prophets.”

Then Jesus pressed the point and asked the personal

question, “All right, But who do you say that I am?” Peter

got it right, as you know. “You are the Christ, the Son of

the Living God.” Peter recognized that Jesus was more

than John the Baptist, more than Elijah, more than Jeremiah.

Far more. But consider this: that even in the mistaken

opinions of the people, there was some truth. The people

saw Jesus as like John the Baptist, like Elijah, like Jeremiah.

Why? What was it about Jesus that reminded them of John?

What did Jesus do that made them think of Elijah? And how

did Jesus resemble Jeremiah? There is much to be learned

from exploring that.

But first, consider this: on the basis of Peter’s confession of

who Jesus really is, Jesus speaks about founding His church

and about giving it authority – the keys of the kingdom. He

says that His church will have two kinds of authority –

binding and loosing. “Whatever you bind on earth will be

bound in heaven, and whatever you loose on earth will

be loosed in heaven.” Fascinating stuff! What does it

mean, this binding and loosing authority?

Today and next week I am going to imagine with you what

there was in people’s guesses about Jesus that led to His

statement about binding and loosing. Something in Jesus

suggested to the people these three men out of Israel’s

history. I believe that each of the three men they guessed at

were binders and loosers. Each of them did something that

bound Satan, that stopped evil; and each of them let loose

God’s liberating Spirit.

Today I am just going to work on binding. What is it that

John and Elijah and Jeremiah each did to bind evil and to

stop it in its tracks? And how do we as followers of Jesus

use His authority to bind evil?

Next week I will work on the other side of the ledger, the

loosing side. Next week I will explore with you how John and

Elijah and Jeremiah let loose God’s liberating Spirit. But

today the theme is “A Prevailing Church: Binding”.

I

First, look at John the Baptist. The people thought maybe

Jesus was John come back to life. After all, it had only been

a short while since John had been killed. And John and

Jesus were cousins, breathing the same spiritual air and

bringing a similar message. Some found it easy to say that

Jesus was John the Baptist come back to life.

Now what did they see in Jesus that reminded them of John?

I suspect they saw in Jesus someone who, like John, would

bind up mere religion. Some saw someone who would strike

at religiosity without righteousness. Neither John nor Jesus

were very patient with pious folks who were soooo religious,

who mouthed all the buzz words, but whose lives did not

exhibit righteousness.

In the Judaism of Jesus’ day there were various groups. In a

way they were like today’s Christian denominations. These

groups of Jews differed from one another on certain key

points, but one thing they all held in common: each group

thought it was right! Each group touted its doctrine, each

group cited its eminent rabbis, and each group claimed to

stand for God’s truth, thank you very much. The Pharisees

were one such group, and they were very zealous about

Sabbath-keeping. It was said that the Pharisees had created

638 laws on Sabbath-keeping alone. In fact, the Pharisees

said that Sabbath-keeping was so important that if, in some

week, all Jews all kept the Sabbath perfectly, then the

Messiah would come. But so complicated was the Sabbath

code that as each Sabbath came and went, and no Messiah

showed up, they would say, “You see! You see! Some

ignorant person out there messed up, and kept us from

getting our Messiah!” The Pharisees were very religious.

They were the kinds of folks who come to church every time

the doors open, the kind who think that being Christian

consists of gathering behind the stained-glass windows day

after day after. We call them church mice! Church mice,

running the halls, nibbling at all the goodies, and running

when there is real work to be done!

But what did John the Baptist say about these Pharisees?

Did he compliment them on their faithfulness? Did he sing

their praises for their careful observance of the Law? He did

not. Not at all. John called them a “brood of vipers” – a

tangle of snakes! John said that they were not bearing fruit.

They had nothing to show for their religiosity. Being religious

had not made them better people. It had only made them

bigger braggarts. John the Baptist bound the evil of mere

religion, religiosity without righteousness.

And so Jesus came along, and said to the same crowd,

"Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! For you

tithe mint, dill, and cummin, and have neglected the

weightier matters of the law: justice and mercy and

faith. It is these you ought to have practiced without

neglecting the others.” Oh, yes, Jesus must have

sounded a lot like John. For Jesus too wanted to bind up

and stop the evil of mere religion. Jesus too wanted to raise

up a generation of authentic people, people who wanted their

lives to matter. Jesus too knew that sitting in worship

services and attending Bible classes and mouthing all the

right slogans – that’s not enough. That doesn’t get it. What

Jesus wants from you and from me are lives that have

integrity, lives that are honest and clean and forthright. What

Jesus wants is obedience.

And what Jesus wants in a prevailing church is that we will

bind evil. That we will teach right living. That we will with

courage fight corruption and sin. That we will be willing to

say “No” to this materialistic culture around us. What Jesus

wants in a prevailing church that calls people to be more

than pew-fillers, but calls them to obedience. I will give you

the keys of the kingdom, and whatever you bind on

earth shall be bound in heaven. In the name of Jesus,

Jesus, greater than John the Baptist, let us to bind and stop

mere religion, religiosity without righteousness.

II

But not only did the people see John the Baptist in Jesus,

they also saw Elijah in Jesus. Elijah, who had lived about

850 years earlier. Elijah, whom tradition said would return

just before the Messiah was to come. What was it about

Elijah that suggested that Jesus might be him? What evil did

Elijah bind that Jesus bound up too?

Do you remember that dramatic scene on Mt. Carmel, where

Elijah confronted 450 priests of Baal and challenged them to

a showdown? Do you remember why they had such a

challenge? Israel’s king, Ahab, had imported foreign religion.

He had married a Canaanite queen, Jezebel, and allowed

her to bring in idol worship. But mind you, this was no

ordinary, garden-variety religion that Jezebel brought in.

This was Baalism, this was a sexually-charged, exploitive,

sensual cult. This was “if it feels good, do it.” Be as immoral

as you like and call it spirituality. The issue with Baalism was

not only that it was the worship of someone other than the

Lord; the issue was also that Baalism was self-indulgence. It

was a good time religion, a pleasure-soaked way of life.

Baalism was materialistic to the core, nothing but yielding to

the whim of the moment. It had in it no moral fiber

whatsoever. The stakes were huge; this thing would destroy

people’s very lives.

And so when Elijah stood on Mt. Carmel to challenge the

priests of Baal, he was binding up that thing in us that always

wants to give over to our gut instincts. He was binding up

that side of us that always wants to find excuses for self-

serving ways. We don’t really want to wait for marriage to

have sex, so we look for somebody who will tell us that purity

is out of date today. We don’t really want to be totally honest

with our taxes, so we look for somebody who will tell us that

the rest of the world owes us a living, so go ahead and trim

on your taxes. We don’t really want to be inclusive in our

churches, so we look for somebody who will tell us that this

church is too European or too African or too something, and

stay away from Takoma! But Elijah would have none of that.

Elijah bound our sinful self-made gods, our idolatry, and cried

out across the centuries, “If Baal – if your pleasure principle

– be God, follow him. But if the Lord be God, then

follow Him.” Elijah bound our wishy-washiness and insisted

that if we are going to follow the Lord, then we follow the

Lord completely. No half-way measures will do.

Oh, I can understand where people saw Elijah in Jesus, can’t

you? I can hear echoes of Elijah in Jesus, when Jesus says,

“You cannot serve God and money, for either you will

love the one and hate the other, or you will hate the one

and love the other.” That sounds like Elijah, binding up

wishy-washiness. Or when Jesus says, “If anyone would

be my disciple, let him deny himself and take up his

cross and follow me.” No double standards, no two ways

about it. Or when Jesus declares, “I am the way, the truth,

and the life; no one comes to the Father but by me.”

Why Jesus, don’t you know that is not politically correct?

Don’t you understand, Jesus, that in America just be sincere

and associate with nice people and don’t rock the boat?

The Unification Church tried to recruit me again this week.

They’ve sent numerous letters, they’ve brought delegations

by here, and this week it was unending phone calls. “Pastor,

we want to do something for the family. We want you and

your wife to come to our meeting and let us bless you. And

we have a gift for you, just for coming.” I tried to be polite; I

really did. But I said, “No, I am not going to lend my support

to anything the Unification Church does.” “Oh, but pastor,

we are all for the same things. We are working for the

family. We all stand for the same things.” And that’s when I

lost my cool. I said, “No, we are not. We are not working for

the same things. I am working for the Kingdom of Christ.

You are working for Sun Myung Moon, and you are offering

Rolex watches, lavish banquets, and pleasure cruises.

That’s idolatry.” But they will call again. Idols are seductive.

Oh no. What Jesus wants from you and me are people who

have bound up self-centeredness and have put it aside.

What Jesus wants from you and me are persons who have

made a choice for discipleship, even when it does not feel

good. What Jesus wants from you and me are hearts that

are willing to do what is right and are able to bind up the

whim of the moment.

And what Jesus wants from a prevailing church is that it will

bind up phoniness and falseness. That we will not be so in a

hurry to gain members that we will sacrifice our soul. That

we will not be so concerned about what is popular out there

that we will fail to be proclaim the Gospel. That we will not be

so worried about having enough money to do what makes us

feel comfortable that we will cut off giving good news to

Jerusalem, Jericho, Judea, and the uttermost parts of the

earth. “I will give you the keys of the kingdom, and

whatever you bind on earth shall be bound in heaven.”

In the name of Jesus, Jesus, greater than Elijah, we are to

bind and the evil of wishy-washy, convenient self-indulgence.

We are to stand for Christ and Christ alone.

III

Who is our only Lord? Jesus. Whom do we serve and no

other? Jesus. Jesus – greater than John the Baptist, but

building on John’s scathing denunciation of religion without

righteousness; Jesus – greater than Elijah, but building on

Elijah’s firm either-or challenge to self-indulgence. The

people saw a lot of John and a great deal of Elijah in Jesus.

But they also saw Jeremiah. Quite a different personality,

Jeremiah. Jeremiah too spoke of an evil to be bound up, an

evil that Jesus took on as well.

Jeremiah is one of my favorite prophets. He is so very

human, and his emotions are right out there on his sleeve.

Jeremiah had a flair for the dramatic, and in so many ways

demonstrated the courage of a spirit-filled heart. Nowhere is

Jeremiah more dramatic and more courageous than in his

Temple sermon. The Temple sermon was delivered in

Jerusalem about 600 BC, on the eve of the city’s destruction

by the Babylonians. The people of the Kingdom of Judah

had grown fat and complacent. They had every confidence

that their Temple would protect them, and that there was

nothing to feel urgent about. Just hang in there, and the

good old Temple, tried and true, will see us through. Worry

about nothing, change nothing, do nothing, and we’ll muddle

through. But Jeremiah rings the alarm bell, loud and clear,

“Do not trust in these deceptive words:’This is the

temple of the LORD, the temple of the LORD, the temple

of the LORD.’ ... amend your ways and your doings, ...

act justly one with another, ... do not oppress the alien,

the orphan, and the widow, ... do not go after other gods

to your own hurt ...”

Jeremiah calls us on our desire to have church the way

we’ve always had it. Jeremiah is binding up our wish to have

a church that serves us. Jeremiah is binding up our push to

have a church that feathers its own nest. Jeremiah is calling

us to mission – to serving the stranger, caring for the

vulnerable, empowering the weak. Jeremiah is binding up

our narrow little vision that sees only what we have always

done and misses what we could be doing.

And if Jeremiah binds that up, how much more does Jesus.

The Jesus who overturned the tables of the Temple

moneychangers, crying out against their selfishness. The

Jesus who sent out His disciples two by two and told them

they would sheep among wolves. The Jesus who taught us

that we shall be judged on our response to the hungry, the

thirsty, the sick, the needy, and the imprisoned. Jesus must

have sounded like Jeremiah, for Jesus is very clear that the

church is here to serve the world. The church is not here for

itself. It is here for the world.

What Jesus wants from you and me is that we be persons of

compassion, weeping over the brokenness of others. That

we become people with purpose, direction, mission. It’s fine

to be a church member; but that does not make you a

caretaker at the mausoleum. It makes you a pioneer blazing

a trail into the wilderness.

Jesus wants a prevailing church. That’s a church that binds

its own selfishness. A church that is far less interested in

enjoying itself than in serving the world. A church that is far

more committed to seeking and saving that which is lost than

it is to keeping its brass polished and its candles burning

properly. Someone reminded us that Jesus was crucified, not

in a cathedral between two candles, but on a town garbage

heap, between two thieves. The church is here for the world.

“I will give you the keys of the kingdom, and whatever

you bind on earth shall be bound in heaven.” In the

name of Jesus, Jesus, greater than Jeremiah, we are to bind

and put a stop selfish churchianity masquerading as

missionary Christianity.

A prevailing church. I pray for a church that will bind evil.

Takoma Park Baptist Church, the times we live in present us

with evil. Will we bind it in the name of Jesus, or will we just

learn to live with it and let things slide? Will we stand for

something, in the name of the Lord Jesus, or will we just play

games and call it church?

We must become a prevailing church. We must bind the

temptation to be merely religious, without any attention to

righteousness.

We must bind the temptation to indulge ourselves and make

our own comfort primary in our church’s life.

And we must bind the temptation to do nothing more than

what we’ve always done. We must learn excellence, we

must learn to give ourselves to ministry, we must get

involved in missions, we must trust one another, and most of

all, we must trust Christ. For He has promised that when we

confess that He is the Christ, the Son of the Living God, then

to us He gives authority, and we will prevail. Nothing can

stop an obedient church – not its enemies, not its foot-

draggers, not its crumbling buildings, not its spotty history,

not even its flawed leadership, of whom I am chief. Nothing

can stop an obedient church; the very gates of hell cannot

prevail. We will prevail. We shall overcome. We have

overcome. In Christ, we shall prevail.