Friday, April 22, 2011
Jude 3: Teaching and Loving
Jude 3 Beloved, although I was very eager to write to you about our common salvation, I found it necessary to write appealing to you to contend for the faith that was once for all delivered to the saints.
Jude 3 brings us up close and personal with Jude’s love for this church. He, like God, loves this group of people and wants the best for them. In this longing for what is best we find echoes of Jesus who when he saw the crowds and their needs met their needs in an unexpected way, namely, he taught them. We read in Mark 6.34 “When he went ashore he saw a great crowd, and he had compassion on them, because they were like sheep without a shepherd. And he began to teach them many things.” What is best for the people is that Jesus teach them truth. They are like sheep without a shepherd. They have no one to guide them in the way of truth (The failure of the leaders of Israel to shepherd the people fills the Old Testament e.g. Ezekiel 34). Jude, like Jesus, wants the best for these people and the best means shepherding them by teaching them so that their faith is deepened (in terms of knowledge and commitment).
This emphasis on teaching is a powerful reminder in our anti-intellectual culture that we need to know the truth of God to live the faith well. N.T. Wright in his book Scripture and the Authority of God points out that one of the central places to gather this truth is in sermon, “...sermons are supposed to be ‘audible sacraments’. They are not simply for the conveying of information, though that is important in a world increasingly ignorant of some of the most basic biblical and theological information. They are not simply for exhortation, still less for entertainment. They are supposed to be one of the moments in regular Christian living when heaven and earth meet. Speaker and hearers alike are called to be people in whom, by the work of the Spirit, God's word is once again audible to the heart as well as to the ears. Preaching is one key way in which God's personal authority, vested in scripture and operative through the work of the Spirit, is played out in the life of the church.” Wright’s words are somewhat surprising. Little did most of us realize that in the preaching of the Word heaven and earth meet. It’s a good reminder for me, whether preaching or listening, to be attentive and prepared to participate in this awesome time when heaven and earth meet."
Wright’s words are somewhat surprising. Little did most of us realize that in the preaching of the Word heaven and earth meet. It’s a good reminder for me, whether preaching or listening, to be attentive and prepared to participate in this awesome time when heaven and earth meet.
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