A Sermon On:
PREPARED BY
KEN GEHRELS
PASTOR
CALVIN CHRISTIAN REFORMED CHURCH
NEPEAN, ONTARIO
On December 17th Associated Press reported
a new revolution begun by Prince Claus of the Netherlands. He was set to
deliver a speech, but somehow became highly irritated by his tie. Frustrated
to action he pulled it off and tossed it aside. It immediately began a
European revolution of sorts for male freedom - freedom from that ridiculous
piece of fabric choking the bloodflow from the brain and oxygen from the
lungs. Men all over Europe soon emulated Claus.
A proper fit - would have been a simple
solution. And yet it's amazing how many people have trouble finding it.
I'd bet a coffee and donut that if Mr.Rosen stood in the lobby after service,
he'd have to order alterations for many of us guys. Women, too.
A proper fit - go without and it can irritate,
or worse. Try spending a day in a pair of jogging shoes a half size too
small. The blisters will tell you.
A proper fit. When you don't have it the
results can be awful.
As pastor one thing I run into again and
again is people that are stressed, burdened and tired. People who live
for the weekend, when they can get away from it all and head to the cottage
or to Florida. Who look at you with desperate, dark eyes when you even
begin to hint at asking them to pitch in with a project of some sort.
Can you relate to that?
Perhaps, then, these words from Jesus will
ring true -
Weary, burdened, looking for rest - is
that you?
Now I can't speak for you, but I'm a confirmed
cityslicker - could relate to Billy Crystal in the movie by that name.
Totally clueless in a cattle barn. So when Jesus speaks in his agricultural
society about this yoke-thing, I need to be brought up to speed.
There's lots today that don't fit well.
Things far more important than neckties. And guess what - we're not alone.
Jesus ran into a lot of people that were also ready to collapse; people
whose emotions, minds and spirits were stretched to the limit -- blistered
- because life didn't fit properly.
"Take my yoke upon you and learn from me....for
my yoke is easy and my burden is light...."
Well-fitting: If Prince Claus wore a well-fitting
shirt and tie, he wouldn't have shocked his crowd. Well-fitting skates
mean you can be on the Canal all morning. A properly-fitted job description
make it a joy to go to work in the morning.
Sharon, my wife, is a dress-maker by trade.
Works from the home, doing a lot of alterations for people. This is "Judy",
her executive assistant, who can be adjusted and padded to look just like
the client. The dress or suit is then plopped on her, pinned, tucked, hemmed
and whatever in order to fit right. Then when the wedding or other event
comes, the client can wear it in complete comfort and confidence - looking
great and feeling good, without a worry. Because the garment is tailored
just right - made to measure - the best fit possible.
Jesus offers those around Him a life that
is easy, made to measure, the best fit possible. Join me in reading the
part of the Bible which describes that offer:
Harry Rosen, the famous men's clothier,
just shrugged his shoulders and said, "Why doesn't he just get a shirt
and tie that fit properly?"
And it's not just in clothes. What's it
like to sit in art class when you've got no creative sense at all? Or in
band, when you're tone deaf?
Or attempting gymnastics, when you've
got no sense of balance. That's me. I remember gr.12 gym class. I'm 6'2".
Weighed about 180 at the time (ah to be young again!). My gym teacher was
this little wee guy, maybe 5'6". He was spotting us as we did handsprings
over the box horse. I went for it. Only didn't develop quite enough momentum
and stopped, feet straight up in the air. Wobbled a bit....... and came
down sideways. Right on top of the teacher.
Closest I came to hearing a Christian
High School teacher swear in class.
Never even attempted the rings. I valued
my life too much.
Gymnastics and me didn't fit.
When you try to share a marriage with
someone whose spiritual direction and inclination is completely the opposite
of yours. When you try to carry on a lifestyle that your income can't sustain.
When they downsize your workplace and leave you with the responsibilities
that at one time were shared by three people - a set of shoes that no single
person could ever properly wear - and stuff keeps falling off your desk
all over the place. Or the only work you can find is something totally
outside of your area of training - something for which you have 10 thumbs.
A lousy fit - How do you end up feeling?
Stress leaves. Treatment for burnout.
Troubled marriages. Sexual disfunction.
"Come to me, all you who are weary and
burdened, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn from
me, for I am gentle and humble in heart and you will find rest for your
souls. For my yoke is easy and my burden is light." [Matthew 11.28-30]
The offer of rest sound good?
Not just a chance to sleep in on Saturday,
but where your mind has a chance to come down out of overdrive; where you
can relax about tomorrow's agenda or what the next phone call will bring.
Maybe you've seen pictures, or managed
to actually touch one at Upper Canada Village. The yoke is a device that
was put over the neck to allow a heavy load to be pulled. You'd put a yoke
over the neck of a horse to pull a wagon, or the necks of a team of oxen
in order to pull a plow. A person would have a long yoke hanging around
their neck and off the shoulders, with a bucket on each end, coming back
from the well.
With a good yoke a huge weight can be
supported. Much work can be done. But it has to fit right. A poor-fitting
yoke is no better than playing basketball in poor-fitting gym shoes. You
simply can't carry on for long.
He offers an exchange to them - to take
their chaffing, poor-fitting life and replace it with something made to
measure.
My yoke is easy -- The original word Jesus
spoke in the Aramaic language means something like "well-fitting." A properly
fitted harness and yoke allowed the ox to pull the plow all day without
pain or injury. A well-fitting yoke makes the load, the burden being pulled
or carried, feel light.
My yoke fits well, says Jesus.
There's all kinds of stuff in these passages
that could preoccupy us.
I want to stick to our theme - a life
with the best fit possible.
Jesus describes two examples of a life
that rubs raw, that doesn't wear well but instead wears out; two groups
of people he saw that were running themselves ragged, and weighing down
the lives of others.
The first is described in v.25 - the life
of the affluent and the educated who thought they had life all figured
out. Without going into a lengthy background explanation let me simply
say that Jesus isn't trying to slam those of you with your PhD. He's talking
about people who think that with their logic, their learning, their managerial
skills and their personal charm they can sort life out, keep a strong handle
on what's going on, control their future and guide their destiny. They
can control their place on earth, and keep their relations with heaven
tuned up.
"No way," says Jesus. "It won't work."
You can try to tailor your own life, make
things fit, create your boxes and cram your agenda and plans in those boxes.
You can try to impress others, and try to impress God with your abilities.
But eventually it will all fall apart. It'll unravel. The glue of self-control
will eventually let go.
The other group of people that Jesus has a real problem with are those that try to control the lives of others. The example He uses is a religious one. Synagogue leaders who got all preoccupied with rules, expanding on those rules, and keeping them. Even at the expense of human life and healing. They had laid down 39 laws about what constituted work on the Sabbath. Huge expectations for their followers. Incredible burdens.
We don't have to stretch real far to identify
with either situation.
Take the first one - trying to control
life, planning, cramming the agenda full, impressing the boss or the shareholders,
jumping through the hoops in the academic world. Ah - the stories you can
tell each other. The blisters you've endured. Sometimes it really hurts,
doesn't it?
Reported earnings a little lower than
expected and investors drop your shares like a hot potato.
Fail to put out full time in overdrive
and you can forget the promotion.
You manage well at work and feel like
finally security is around the corner, when the email pops up -- a reorg
with significant downsizing is on the way.
Or you go to the gym to keep in shape......
and then the shadow shows up on the xray.
Or the second situation, where others dump
expectations on us. We've seen, ad nauseam, news reports of religious situations
where people have been chewed up and spit out. From the deadly David Caresh
and Jim Jones horrors, to the life-crippling pains of boarding schools
and betrayed trusts. Some of you have experienced sectarian religious groups
that tightly managed the lives of their members, haunted by the crippling
fear that someone, somewhere in their community, might be happy - demanding
certain behaviours, and ostracizing those who dare to question.
Ill-fitting life situations. Heavy yokes.
They are but two examples.
There are other yokes, other life situations
we try to wear, that really don't wear well. That will blister our souls,
break our minds, damage our hearts and relationships, jeopardize our eternal
futures.
Canadian society today wears the yoke of
relativism. That's the attitude which says, "What works for you - good.
But that may be not good for me. It may be true for you and false for me.
You may remain a virgin till marriage. But not me. And both are OK What's
true is only what's true for you. Nothing more." Which seems to work OK
for a while until you run smack into something you wish wasn't true....
but was. Like STDs and AIDS in the face of those who argue against the
one man - one woman - for a lifetime creed. Or selfish people who find
themselves getting took rather than taking.
There is the yoke of entertainment. Some
years ago Neal Postman wrote the book, Amusing Ourselves To Death. Our
number one concern, says Postman, is being entertained. Good looks, celebrities,
commercials, big sporting events - these are the centre of our lives. If
you doubt that, remember what was the big front page picture on Thursday's
Citizen? Shania - her tickets were the hottest items in town this week.
Even when rating would have us believe that Young Country makes most people
gag. And what happens when Brydon even hints at moving the Sens out of
town?
But eventually the thrill wears off, the
money runs out, the body just can't do it anymore......... and then what?
What has a life of chasing good feelings, good times, and quick thrills
left you?
What's been rubbing you raw?
Jesus says, quite simply - "Come to me."
He's not wanting us to try and impress
Him with how well we can handle the challenges of life, or how many religious
hoops we can jump through.
He just wants us to come - the way we
are.
Instead of getting sidetracked into the deadly thinking that ultimately there are no right's and wrong's, he says "Let me show you the eternal rock-solid bottom line of the Universe -- what's been around for eons, and will be for ever - real, depend on it, solid truth."
Instead of trying to fill our lives with feel-good hoopla, a fix today that wears off and demands an even bigger fix next week, Jesus just says, "Come, let me satisfy you."
If you take a moment to look at the stuff
that wears us out, that threatens to break us, most of the time it is stuff
revolving around doing, getting, trying, building, impressing, producing,
controlling.
How much of that stuff really fits well?
In a way that lasts? That you can keep up with for the long haul?
How much of that will still be there when
you're 80 years old?
How much of that matters when they're
wheeling you into the operating room?
Or when you're taking your newborn home
from hospital?
Or when you're standing beside an open
grave?
Oh - don't get me wrong. There is doing,
going, producing, getting, giving that has a real and proper place in life.
But only in the right place. And in the right amount.
But first things first. You gotta get
the basics right.
Like in dressmaking - if the fabric is
no good, and the basic cut is off, or if you use the wrong pattern, it
doesn't matter what accessories you plop onto the outfit. It will still
be no good.
Jesus says - "Come to me and let me suit you up in the basics of a life that fits right. Let me strap you into a life that'll work - that'll hold together for the long haul -- right into eternity."
"For I am gentle and humble in heart."
He's not out to suck us dry, to get what
He can from us and then drop us by the side of the road. He doesn't leave
us on probation, ready to cut us out if we don't put out.
The Bible says that because He's lived
the human life, Jesus knows what it's like to be in our shoes. Been there.
Done that. Wearing the scars. Sitting now in heaven, in remarkable divine
gentleness His greatest desire is to get us into contact with our Creator
Father in Heaven, keep us in contact with Him, and one day draw us home
to live with Him forever.
We have nothing to prove with Him.
And nothing to fear.
What He offers is not an enslaving shackle.
Rather - He offers a committed relationship
with us.
Ancient Jews often spoke of yokes in the
context of being committed to something. If you were committed to the ancient
Jewish law code, people talked of you as carrying "the yoke of the Law."
The yoke Jesus offers is that of a committed
relationship with us.
In other places in the Bible we hear Him
say:
Surely, I am with you always.
I will never leave you or forsake you.
I will not leave you as orphans.
That's commitment.
It's the commitment we see in this season of Lent as we remember, front and centre, the suffering of Jesus on the Cross. His commitment to going all the way to death in order to remove the huge roadblock of human sin - the roadblock that stood in the way of our getting into the Family of God, becoming children of the Heavenly Father.
One more thing about a yoke. I've seen
two kinds of yokes. One is the single yoke. One animal in front, doing
all the pulling, while the owner stands behind with one hand on the reins,
other on a whip.
The other kind of yoke fits two animals.
Side by side pulling the load. That's the sort of yoke I want you to think
of when you read this passage.
Jesus isn't going to stand back, whip in
hand, to see how you perform. Rather, the one who is gentle and humble,
who says "Surely I am with you always" straps himself in the same yoke
that He calls you to put on. He walks right beside you. Helps bear the
strain. Takes over when you can't do it and need a bit of a break.
Remember the "Footprints" poem?
And He'll stay in that yoke. Even when you're 80. He'll be there. Even in the operating room - He's there. When you bring your first child home - He's there for those midnight feedings. And then - when finally, death unstraps you from the yoke, He'll be there to usher you to the place of eternal rest in heaven's glory.