The Day Jesus Came to Church
Mark 1:21-34
Jerry Davison
Mark 1:33 is one of my favorite
verses in all of scripture. In one short, simple sentence, Mark captures the
profound effect that the presence of Jesus can make when He "enters the
house."
So why don't the majority of churches in North America & Western Europe experience this phenomenon? Why doesn't "the whole city gather at the door" of our meetings? To answer that question, we have to understand why this particular town had gathered at this particular door...
Jesus was there!
So why don't the majority of churches in North America & Western Europe experience this phenomenon? Why doesn't "the whole city gather at the door" of our meetings? To answer that question, we have to understand why this particular town had gathered at this particular door...
Jesus was there!
Back in verse 21, Jesus "entered the synagogue."
The first thing that happened is that Jesus showed up to church! Unless we are
gathering specifically and intentionally to meet with God, then church is a
waste of time. If Jesus is not there, don't bother coming. Yet how many
so-called “Christian” churches do not experience – nor would they welcome – the
present, active intervention of Christ Himself?
In our current church culture, we have become so good at "doing church" -- with all its programs and strategies, carefully marketed to specific demographic subsets -- we have no need for God to show up at all. I fear that most churches don't even miss Him! A gathering of believers exists for one reason only: to encounter the living presence of a Holy God in corporate worship. In other words, to experience His glory. As Matt Chandler says, "Church is a lousy hobby." If we are not meeting with God, let's lock the door and turn off the lights and go home. But let's don't pretend we are actually a church if Jesus is not there.
In our current church culture, we have become so good at "doing church" -- with all its programs and strategies, carefully marketed to specific demographic subsets -- we have no need for God to show up at all. I fear that most churches don't even miss Him! A gathering of believers exists for one reason only: to encounter the living presence of a Holy God in corporate worship. In other words, to experience His glory. As Matt Chandler says, "Church is a lousy hobby." If we are not meeting with God, let's lock the door and turn off the lights and go home. But let's don't pretend we are actually a church if Jesus is not there.
The Word is the Ultimate Authority
In verse 22, Mark says that the
people there were "amazed at His teaching; for He was teaching as one having authority,
not as the scribes." The root word of authority is author. Who knows
more about a book than the one who wrote it? Who has the final say about the
plot, the characters, the setting, and the ending? Who is the authority? The
author! Standing before them was The Author of THE Story. The Word Made Flesh
was teaching His own Word to them. No wonder it carried such weight! As oppose
to the scribes, whose job it was to meticulously copy the text, paying careful
attention to every line, letter, and punctuation. Could it be that they could
not see the Word for the words? They were merely copiers of a manuscript; Jesus
was the Author, the source, the very Word Himself.
If our churches are to attract the whole city to gather at our door, Jesus must be there, and His Word must be the Ultimate Authority over every area of our lives. It must be taught without our own thoughts and opinions mixed into it. It must be allowed to speak with its full voice and take us to the mat with its full weight, every single Sunday. Only the inspired scriptures have the power to teach, reprove, correct, train us in righteous, and equip us for every good work. (2 Tim. 3:16)
If our churches are to attract the whole city to gather at our door, Jesus must be there, and His Word must be the Ultimate Authority over every area of our lives. It must be taught without our own thoughts and opinions mixed into it. It must be allowed to speak with its full voice and take us to the mat with its full weight, every single Sunday. Only the inspired scriptures have the power to teach, reprove, correct, train us in righteous, and equip us for every good work. (2 Tim. 3:16)
True Spiritual Need is Exposed, Confronted, and
Dealt With
Inevitably, the unapologetic
preaching of the authoritative Word of God will flush out the Enemy's hidden
activities. In verse 23, a man in the
synagogue with an unclean spirit cried out, "What
business do we have with each other, Jesus of Nazareth? Have You come to
destroy us? I know who You are-the
Holy One of God!" Ironically, the demon recognized Jesus when the
religious leaders did not! Jesus then rebukes the demon and casts him out of
the man. This simple confession from a demon should be the foundation of all
our repentance – “I know Who You are -- and I understand what that means!” What
else do the scriptures mean when it says “The fear of the Lord is the beginning
of wisdom”? (Ps. 111:10, Prov. 1:7 and 9:10)
Now, am I suggesting that we have demon-possessed people attending our churches today? I don’t know; maybe we do! We may even have a few as pastors from what I have seen in some churches! But the principle here is that when Jesus shows up at church, and His Word is preached with full authority, then the true spiritual nature of our deepest needs is exposed, confronted and corrected. Our struggle is not against mere flesh and blood, Paul says. It is spiritual in nature, not merely physical, mental, or emotional, and therefore requires a spiritual solution. (Eph. 6:12-18)
Now, am I suggesting that we have demon-possessed people attending our churches today? I don’t know; maybe we do! We may even have a few as pastors from what I have seen in some churches! But the principle here is that when Jesus shows up at church, and His Word is preached with full authority, then the true spiritual nature of our deepest needs is exposed, confronted and corrected. Our struggle is not against mere flesh and blood, Paul says. It is spiritual in nature, not merely physical, mental, or emotional, and therefore requires a spiritual solution. (Eph. 6:12-18)
Our churches are filled with
people who live under the oppression of dark spiritual forces who constantly
discourage, deceive, diminish, distract, and seek to destroy any work of God in
them or through them. We have to stop relying on the wisdom of the world’s best
thinking, stop applying merely superficial approaches to deep spiritual
problems. This is so important that God mentioned it twice to the prophet
Jeremiah in 6:14 and 8:11: “They offer superficial treatments for my people’s mortal wound. They
give assurances of peace when all is war.” Felt
needs preaching and programs will not cut it. We will have to recognize that we
have a very real Enemy and stand ready to do battle in spiritual warfare,
through prayer, the Word of God, and the power of the Holy Spirit.
God is Glorified
When Jesus’ presence is in a
church, God’s Word is preached unapologetically and authoritatively, and people
start getting set free and lives start changing, word is bound to get out.
Verse 28 says that “His fame spread
everywhere throughout all the surrounding region…” Notice it was Jesus’
fame, not the synagogue’s. We must be more interested in building His Kingdom
than drawing a crowd. We never want to make the mistake of the citizens of
Babel in Genesis 11 and try to “make a name for ourselves” at the expense of
God’s glory. When a church is more interested in God’s glory than its own, it’s
time to order more chairs!
Homes and Families are Transformed
From the church, it moves into
the home and the family. In verse 29,
Mark tells us, “Immediately after they came out of the synagogue, they came into the house of Simon and
Andrew, with James and John.” Now follow this progression: The glorious
presence of Christ is manifested at the church meeting, His Word is boldly
preached with authority, it exposes the true spiritual nature of our deepest
need and satisfies it, lives are radically changed, word gets out and begins
impacting the surrounding community… then the presence of Jesus moves from the
church house into OUR house. Once Jesus entered the synagogue, He then moves
into the homes of His followers and begins healing and changing their families!
It is important to note, it was the men of the house who brought Him in!
One significant phrase to notice
in this story is in verse 30. Simon’s mother-in-law was sick and feverish, “and
immediately they spoke to Jesus about her.” Once Jesus moves into our
homes and families, prayer takes hold and Jesus’ power is released and
activated in response. “And He came to her and raised her up, taking her by the
hand, and the fever left her, and she
waited on them.” (v. 31) The sure sign of a life that has been touched and
healed and changed by Jesus is joyful, willing, service to Him and to His
followers. No one asked her to serve them. Jesus didn’t demand it: “You’re
healed! Now go fix me a sandwich!” No! The text is clear, her grateful, voluntary response to His healing touch
was to place herself at His disposal, and to lovingly serve those who follow
Him.
People Bring Others to Jesus
What happens next? “They began bringing to Him
all who were ill and those who were demon-possessed.” (v. 32) The people
began inviting their family, friends, neighbors, co-workers, classmates…
ANYONE! People began bringing others to Jesus. No clever church marketing. No
expensive mailers or billboards. No gimmicks or circus antics to attract those
who want to be entertained. The people were the invitation. “Come and see what
Jesus did for me! He can do it for you to!” When Jesus is in the house and His
Word is clearly preached, lives get changed and word spreads, and the church
members themselves begin bringing the lost, the broken, the desperate to Jesus
without a marketing strategy or intensive witnessing program. But listen… this
is key… Evangelism was NOT the primary focus; it was God’s glory! When God is
honored and worshipped authentically, people cannot help but hear about Jesus.
Evangelism isn’t a program or an emphasis; it is the inevitable overflow of
God’s manifest presence in a community of faith!
The Whole City is Impacted
Which
brings us full circle back to Mark 1:33: “And the whole city had gathered at
the door.” Not to build our church, or draw a crowd, or make a name for
ourselves, but because Jesus is there, His Word is boldly and uncompromisingly
proclaimed, lives were transformed by His power, and His name was glorified!
Forget the latest trend in church planting. Forget the strategies, the
marketing, the conferences that tout the latest model. If we want to see a city
changed by the power of God, Mark 1: 21-32 tells us how.