Wednesday, April 23, 2014

Jonathan Cho's Message - Easter 2014: Redeemed

Redemption in Jesus’ Crucifixion
Luke 23: 26-56
Key Verse: Luke 23: 34 
“Jesus said, “Father, forgive them, for they do not know what they are doing.” And they divided up his clothes by casting lots”

The crucifixion paints a tragically beautiful picture of Jesus’ character of unconditional love, understanding, and compassion. It reveals the passion and the beauty displayed through his sacrifice on the cross. It captures a moment when Jesus fully displays his character before the people he loves. It gives the meaning of Jesus’ ministry and the cross, and most of all his forgiveness and sacrifice through his death. It also stresses that we ourselves must take the step to accept Christ’s forgiveness and death to fully be transformed and become born again as a Christian. At the same time, it’s important to remember how human Jesus was and how much he felt just like us, weak and vulnerable. Yet Jesus redeems us, and that is why this conference is about redemption.
        But what is redemption? When I think of redemption, I think of Chuckie Cheese’s. I used to go to Chuckie Cheese’s all the time, and whenever I played the games I always thought of getting tickets for the prizes on the wall. I would play the games for the white and green tickets all day and then redeem them by getting the prizes. To get the prizes though, I would always have to know how many tickets they cost before actually playing. Just like the prizes on the wall, Jesus gave his life to redeem our lives, to purchase our lives, from the grip of death. However instead of tickets, Jesus used his life to get the prize of our lives.  Redemption is about us first being, lost, flawed, imperfect and then this perfect God giving us his one and only son to buy us from our death and free us from our guilt. Through this message, let’s ponder what redemption really means through the crucifixion.

 Part 1: Jesus’ compassionate and sacrificial character verses 26-31
Before reflecting on the start of this passage, it is important to first reflect on what has happened to Jesus before his crucifixion. Jesus was flogged to a point where he was physically unrecognizable. Jesus, in his trial and flogging, remained virtually silent when given the offer to defend himself, only answering vaguely to Pilate’s question one time. His silence up to this point reveals how prepared he was to die, not defending himself against the harrowing accusations of the people he loved and provided for. I can’t imagine how broken his heart must have been at that moment. The people that he invested so much of his time into ended up giving him up for crucifixion; his heart break must have only increased when they decided to release Barrabbas, a hated criminal and a murderer, instead of him. Jesus was probably both physically exhausted and emotionally exhausted. However, Jesus remained the picture of silence, grace, and utter sacrifice. 
At the start of the passage, even in Jesus’ condition, he was still able to touch the life of Simon of Cyrene. After Simon was seized and made to carry the cross, him and his family later accepted Jesus and became influential Christians in the early church. Jesus’ silent and sacrificial suffering must have been so beautiful and so moving at that moment that a man who probably didn’t even get the chance to properly speak to Jesus was so moved that he and his entire family were changed. Jesus’ character of sacrifice is further exemplified in his address to the weeping women following him; he was able to totally ignore his own pain and see the pain of the women. He directed them first in verse 28, “Daughters of Jerusalem, do not weep for me; weep for yourselves and for your children”, warning them and illustrating his concern for these people regardless of the burden he held. He knew of the pains that were to come upon them soon, detailing how they would feel in verses 29-30. A woman’s treasure of having a child would be robbed of them, so much so that they would desire that mountains would fall on them and that the hills cover them to hide both their shame and even stop their existence. This was foreshadowing the events that would soon to happen when Jersualem would be under siege and the women would eat their children in order to survive. Jesus felt a compassion for them and warned them of the coming times out of love. Even before his death, taking our burden of sin, Jesus was still focused on the people around him.

III.              Part 2: Jesus’ Crucifixion verses 32-43
It is noted that Jesus was being crucified with two criminals. Not only was Jesus wrongly accused, but he was grouped unfairly with murderers and criminals of the highest order. He was then placed in the middle, verse 33 noting that there were criminals surrounding him, “one on his right, the other on his left”. The rulers purposefully did so to shame Jesus even more, making it seem as if his actions were the most egregious of all the criminals. Along with this shame, Jesus also had to endure great pain. Crucifixion literally nails the feet and the hands to a cross and places the victims upright. Physically in this position, not only were the victims in terrible pain from being pierced in the body, they couldn’t even breathe without pulling themselves up, making their deaths slow, agonizing, and terrifying. Such pain caused a new word to be made since it could not be captured by any words that existed currently, this word is “excruciating”. Jesus was forced to then look upon the people that he had so loved and had apparently loved him watch it happen without so much as batting an eye. When I think about it in this way, I can feel my heart hurt. Can you imagine loving a person so much that you would cry for them when they made mistakes, teach them and heal them with all of your time, strength, and mind? Only then to only have that ripped away from you when this person turns on you and gives you the most utterly painful and gut-wrenching punishment to have ever been invented to this day? Even having one person do that to you, although I hope without the physical torture part, would destroy you completely. However, Jesus experienced this thousandfold when he saw many of his past followers watching him die on the cross without so much as a word of protest. I can’t imagine what he must have felt. It’s important to remember again that Jesus is human, he has the same emotions as us and has the same hardships as us. He is perfect, but he is not invincible. That’s what makes him so powerfully true to humankind. That’s why my heart breaks. However, despite this, right after Jesus has been crucified and is hanging on the cross, he says, and can we read it together, in verse 34: “Jesus said, Father, forgive them, for they do not know what they are doing.
I believe that there is great truth in that we do not know what we are doing. In high schools, I see everyday examples of how fallen man is without Jesus. Recently, a classmate of mine and two of his friends got into huge trouble selling and doing drugs. One of them, whom I have known from my freshman year, got arrested and expelled from school. The other got his car impounded. However, the last case is, to me at least, the most visibly tragic. This student had a full ride scholarship to the college of his choice, yet when he was caught there was a possibility and still is a possibility that the scholarship will be rescinded. At that moment his future was threatened. Not only would he be in debt if he didn’t receive the scholarship, future jobs and potential schools could easily disregard him for his criminal past. He was smart and capable, but he did not know what he was doing. He did not know what kind of consequences would come from his actions. Just like him and the Hebrew people who crucified him, before Christ we are in sin that’s cost is unfathomable to us. Even more so than legal consequences, these types of sins lead to eternal consequences, which is hell. Although most of us here are not as extreme as my example, we each have had our own failures and sins that have in some way brought us down. For me, pride has been often my downfall. My competitive spirit and the pride that came with it has brought me down when I was less than others or when I failed, and I have often tried to rely on my own strength regardless of my awareness that I should have first looked to Jesus rather than fallen to my pride. I was unaware of the error in my sin in the moment, yet through the guidance of often times my mother, I was reminded of the error and downfall of my pride. I think that without Jesus’ assurance of his forgiveness and how insignificant the world was in comparison, I would have fallen into despair like many of my classmates long ago. Looking beyond myself, everyday on the news there are mentions of murders, shootings, and stories that are seeded with sin. It has been that way since the first time someone wrote down a historical account. The holocaust, the two world wars, religious and racial genocides have all shown how ugly the world can be. So then why would a perfect God, clean, pure, and blameless, ever think of associating with ugly, sinful, hateful humans? However, of course within Jesus’ declaration he proclaims his forgiveness from these sins that we might not even know about or cannot overcome by our own strength.
 Not only is it a proclamation, it is Jesus’ plea to God to forgive us and give us his mercy; he didn’t beg out of duty. He genuinely felt the tragedy of mankind at that moment, and it overrode all of his human emotions, and he was compelled to ask God to forgive them. Redeemed. Redemption comes first when we are forgiven, but that part is so simple because we are forgiven the moment we declare our belief. It has already been done. He took upon himself my selfishness, greed, laziness, faults, errors, and mistakes in that moment when he interceded for all of mankind and asked God “forgive them, for they do not know what they are doing”. In our ignorance, Jesus took over and healed us, so very simply, and so very powerfully.
Yet at that moment, humanity showed again its ugly side. Right after Jesus’ plea to God in verse 34, it immediately says “And they divided up his clothes by casting lots”. These people felt no remorse, no compassion; they ignored him completely. Their greed overcame, illustrating again how desperately we need to be redeemed or else our ugliness will just keep showing. Then they went even further to mock Jesus saying “He saved others; let him save himself if he is God’s Messiah, the Chosen one”. If Jesus had been prideful at that moment, surely he could have had angels save him and destroy all of the mockers around him, but he didn’t. His job was not yet finished, and his love allowed him to wait till its glorious completion. Even the soldiers around him mocked him. Pilate had ordered a sign that said “This is the king of the Jews” to be placed above him, creating a deep irony of truth yet at the same time a light-handed mockery of his position. Then the criminal next to him insulted Jesus in verse 39, “Aren’t you the Messiah? Save yourself and us!” This man was most likely bitter against his own position, frustrated against the pain that he felt. Although we can pity him, then again this man probably ‘deserved’ such a punishment. Here Luke paints an important picture of the Christian decision. First, we are forgiven. It’s simple, easy, and we don’t have to do anything. But, then the criminals complete the imagery of what happens to those who reject such forgiveness and those who accept. A light of hope for humanity appears when the other criminal rebukes his fellow criminal, saying in verse 40-41 “Don’t you fear God,” he said, “since you are under the same sentence? We are punished justly, for we are getting what our deeds deserve, But this man has done nothing wrong” In other gospels, this man was described as a robber. He must have stolen something fairly large to have been crucified. Circumstances in his life probably led him to this point. Perhaps a bad family life led to hitting the streets, stealing a thing or two from the local lamb vendors, probably getting him into more and more trouble. Maybe when he was stealing, he ended up accidentally killing a man in the process. Maybe he was just in the wrong place at the wrong time. Whatever it was, this robber felt deep and genuine remorse. He felt the weight of his errors and his sins, and I think he earnestly repented of them when he acknowledged that he deserved the punishment he was receiving. Despite his terrible sin, he was completely accepted. Let’s read what Jesus said to this criminal in verse 43 “Jesus answered him “Truly I tell you, today you will be with me in paradise”. IN the last minutes of this man’s life, his utterance of repentance and acceptance of Jesus immediately granted him entrance into paradise. This is Jesus’ redemption; Jesus completely redeemed this man from his guilt, agony, and death. This man must have at this moment felt so free. Again, that’s powerfully beautiful. In this world, struggle seems to be the epitome of life. From day one, I have struggled in school to do my best, struggled to win the love of my friends, struggled to fit in, struggled to maintain my own identity as a Christian in the midst of temptation and trial. However, through Jesus we don’t have to struggle. In our hearts, all we say is “yes Jesus you are my Lord and you are my Savior”. Like I said, although we should struggle to maintain our identity as Christians, once we have accepted all we have to do is believe and we are saved. All sin then washes away, and we are wiped clean. How simply profound. When I fail, which I often do, whether to temptation or laziness, or both, it only takes a prayer to God and peace comes to me. No matter what I do. The peace I feel is redemptive and empowering. It only takes a prayer, a talk to God, an affirmation of who he is to me. Although again I fail even after this, it does not matter as long as I repent and recognize my own error. There is no condemnation in sin for Jesus has already died for us. He has died for me, and he has died for you.

 Part 3: Transformation in Christ, Verses 44-56  
Jesus’ death changed the laws of nature by causing a darkness to come over the whole land at noon. For about 3 hours the world was covered in darkness. This means Jesus mostly likely endured this great pain for about 3-4 hours, not including the pain from his flogging before. Then suddenly, seen in verse 45, the curtain of the temple was torn in two. This is symbolic of God opening his dwelling place through Jesus’ death and sacrifice to all people’s, not only the select priests and people chosen to go in and dwell with God. Jesus is not selective, he is not picky. He opens his heart and forgiveness to all types of people. At that moment, he took on the sin of the world and was cut off from God. He then died, crying out “Father into your hands I commit my spirit”. He then breathed his last. Luke is unique in this sense. Rather than ending painfully or centering it only on Jesus himself, his entire account, from beginning to end, always remains about the people he intercedes for. The daughters of Jerusalem, the people who crucified him, the criminals, etc. In the end it remains about his mission and not about himself. It’s hard to imagine how much Jesus suffered for us. It takes a deep meditation and study to even partially comprehend it, but it is impossible to fully do so for he suffered willingly and knowingly. He made no protest but did it all in his will. This must have been evident because moments later a Roman centurion, a man with no understanding of God, praised him and said “Surely this was a righteous man”. Here Jesus causes transformations; this soldier may have been one of them who mocked him and cast lots. But suddenly he was changed, a new man. All those who saw “beat their breasts and went away”. There was no victory for them in Jesus’ death. In the end, only Jesus can overcome the power of death.
Transformation always occurs powerfully when accepting Jesus Christ. A member of the council who had not consented to their decision and action, named Joseph of Arimathea, stepped forward to ask for Jesus’ body. Although Luke does not touch upon it for a long time, this man who was unable to do anything to stop the injustices against Jesus was now able to build up his courage to ask Pilate himself for Jesus’ body. He even gave up his own tomb that he made for himself to Jesus, giving him the proper reverence that he deserved. To this day, people are being transformed from their own tragic and defeated past to a new and redeemed life. All it takes is acceptance of Jesus Christ’s death on the cross for us. (I have witnessed such transformation myself. Some of you may have or may have not heard of this, but I very personally witnessed Joseph Horvath’s transformation from a man very much lost to a man who found his own purpose and self. Before Joseph accepted Christ, I remember that he was depressed, pale, struggling, and very much confused. He talked about counseling, taking medicine, etc. Yet just months later at the HBF Easter Conference, he was totally changed. The next week he was completely full of Christ, talking about him, reading about him, learning about him. He was freed, so much so that he wanted to speak of it all the time. He was very much a new man. That’s the power of accepting Christ, changing a man from defeated to triumphant.)
For me, I have heard story after story of people accepting Christ in a whirlwind of emotions and tears from the moment I attended my first UBF conference. Always I heard of some kind of sudden shift in someone’s life where everything changed for them and their eyes were opened. Even in the bible, characters always seem to have pivotal moments when they suddenly attain a new life direction and have purpose in God. I have always wanted that seemingly simple but massive change. I’ve always wanted that moment where I broke down and cried to God and completely repented of my sins. However, this sudden change never came. There were moments when I felt close, but I never felt that huge paradigm shift that occurs so often in stories of Christians. I’ve always wanted that moment where the world suddenly changed and along with it me. Through this desire, I began to question myself. I asked myself, what is being saved? Am I saved? How is one really saved? I knew that I believed: I knew that I loved God: I knew that I wanted to know Jesus so personally that I would break down in tears. Then why did I seem so different? Doubt crept into my heart, and honestly it does to this day. It seemed so complex all of a sudden. Salvation seemed like a huge puzzle that was waiting for me to solve, and I just seemed to be missing that one piece of the puzzle. I believe that doubt was sowed by Satan, attempting to move me away from struggling for Christ. However, this passage changed my own perception. Redemption is not something that comes from my effort. It first comes from Jesus and his death on the cross. The only thing I need to do is accept it. Acceptance is not always easy. Especially in my own generation, there is a tendency to question every move that doesn’t seem to be backed up by some logical reason. However, over time I have come to learn that logic is never the final answer. Often times I have to reach beyond what I can see and to simply accept truths to fully find an answer. Faith is the greatest boundary breaker to any obstacles that separate man from achieving greater truths. All I need is to take, even daily, that one step towards saying, “Jesus, you died for my sins” and truly believe it. That belief in the simplicity of the gospel truth is what the crucifixion screams to me. That’s the only step that we need to take. Although it’s a struggle, I know now to forget any preconceived notion of what I see around me but rather take Jesus as my own and take him in my own way. Something that I remembered that encouraged me was I remembered Anna Toh talking about her sister’s experience of accepting Christ. Although Anna had that emotional moment that I talked about, she mentioned that her sister over time gradually found herself in Christ throughout her life. God can easily come in a gentle whisper just as he comes as earthquakes and fires, as Elijah found out in his own time. God is very personal and there is no one way to meet him personally.  To me, I think God is like that gentle whisper. I can feel myself growing in him, and although I don’t know if I’ll ever have that moment I have desired, I am sure in his promise and sacrifice that I am redeemed. I do not need that moment to be assured of his death on the cross for me and my own belief in him.    Now then, I want to ask you, what does redemption mean to you? Do you believe that you are truly redeemed? Are you able to say truly that you have accepted Christ? I think those are the questions that are so very important to answer and to struggle to find an answer. I earnestly pray that you can, perhaps even through this conference, find your own way to personally accept Christ and find redemption in Christ. Let’s pray.

Monday, April 21, 2014

Dare 2 Share

Friday, April 19 - Saturday, April 20

HBF Goes to Dare 2 Share!
Desperation Band leads Praise

On our way there

We have arrived!

Lunch time/ Free time!

Visiting Harper College to learn about Campus Evangelism!

"Now when Daniel learned that the decree had been published, he went home to his upstairs room where the windows opened toward Jerusalem. Three times a day he got down on his knees and prayed, giving thanks to his God, just as he had done before."

-Daniel 6:10-

At Dare 2 Share, HBF was challenged in a few ways: in our faith, in our beliefs and in the way we live our lives. The theme of Dare 2 Share this year was "Reverse". We learned about how to be Daniels in this generation and live a lifestyle that is "reverse" to those that are around us. After hearing the Gospel message clearly preached throughout the different meetings, we were also challenged to live our lives in Reverse. We were also presented with a prayer challenge to pray like Daniel did- 3 times a day- for 30 days. A few of our HBFers rose up to this challenge. We also were able to visit Harper College which was very close by to our venue (Sears Centre, Hoffman Estates). We were blessed to hear Missionary Daniel Sohn and John Huber talk to us about what it is like to go fishing on a college campus and about campus evangelism in general. 






Esther Ahn's Message - Easter 2014: Redeemed

Jesus, the King

Key Verse Luke 19:38
“Blessed is the king who comes in the name of the Lord! Peace in heaven and glory in the highest!”

Tonight we will be learning about who Jesus is, the different responses we have to Jesus, and Jesus’ love. I hope that we can all open our hearts and our minds during this conference. Before we begin, let’s pray.

Part 1: Who Jesus Is (28-36)
                First, Jesus shows us his sovereignty. Let’s look at verses 28-31. As Jesus and his disciples were on their way to Jerusalem, Jesus sends a couple of his disciples to town to get him a colt. But this is no ordinary colt. Miriam Pierce, can you please stand up and read verses 30-31 for us? “Go to the village ahead of you, and as you enter it, you will find a colt tied there, which no one has ever ridden. Untie it and bring it here. If anyone asks you, ‘Why are you untying it?’ tell him, ‘The Lord needs it.’” Jesus was so specific that he told them where to find the colt, and he even quoted its owners from the future. Verse 32 reads that “Those who were sent ahead went and found it just as he had told them.” Everything happened just as Jesus had prophesized. No one knows what they’re going to do or who they’re going to talk to in the next hour, yet Jesus is able to quote someone from the future. And the best part is, is that this wasn’t his first or last time prophesizing what was going to happen. Earlier in Chapter 19, Jesus predicts his betrayal in the parable of the Ten Minas. Verse 27 says, “But those who did not want me to be king over them- bring them here and kill them in front of me.” Jesus knew that there would be people who would reject him and put him on the cross, way before most of the disciples were even thinking about his death.
                Second, Jesus is the promised Messiah. Let’s look at verses 35-36. Most of us who have studied this passage before know that Jesus coming in on a donkey signifies his humility and his status as an unpretentious God. However, Jesus riding on a donkey is so much more significant. Zachariah 9:9 says, “Rejoice greatly, O Daughter of Zion! Shout, Daughter of Jerusalem! See your king comes to you, righteous and having salvation, gentle and riding on a donkey, on a colt, the foal of a donkey.” Jesus wasn’t just riding a donkey, he was riding a donkey and fulfilling prophesy of the coming Messiah that was predicted hundreds of years before he was even born. Jesus was the king that all of the people were waiting for. They were in need of a king who would fight for them, provide for them, and save them from their sin. Jesus was the Messiah that everyone needed and still needs today.
                Why do we need a king like Jesus? Well, we are all human, and we are powerless to our sin. We are all helpless sinners looking for someone or something to save us. We are people looking for someone to fight for us, provide for us, and save us from our sin. The only person who can do that for us is Jesus, the powerful, and loving king.
Part 2: People’s response to Jesus (37-40)
                John Lee, can you please stand up and read verse 37 for us? “When he came near the place where the road goes down the Mount of Olives, the whole crowd of disciples began joyfully to praise God in loud voices for all the miracles they had seen.” Some of you may be wondering, “what miracles?” So let’s take a minute to review what miracles Jesus had done. In Luke’s gospel, Jesus healed a man with leprosy (ch 5), forgave and healed a paralyzed man (ch 5), healed the centurion’s servant (ch 7), raises the widow’s son from the dead (ch 7), calms the storm (ch 8), heals a demon possessed man (ch 8), feeds the 5000 (ch 9), and does many many more amazing miracles. Jesus’ life was filled with miracles because he was fulfilling prophesy but more importantly, he was expressing his love for us, and he was giving the people in those situations opportunities to strengthen their faith.
Let’s all read verse 38 together, “Blessed is the king who comes in the name of the Lord. Peace in heaven and glory in the highest!” Jesus’ disciples were so happy to know that he was the king they were waiting for, and he was there with them. God was using this time to fulfill his promises and to reveal his love and hope for the people who were waiting for the Messiah.
                Each and every one of us have a driving force in our lives. It’s a passion in our hearts that decides every one of our actions and thoughts. It’s the driving force in our lives. Most people may have an idol or a sin that is sitting on that throne in their hearts. Others might not know what it is yet. Some idols can be popularity and success or money or it might even be nothing at all. You might not have any motivation or hope in your life. Personally, I think I am sitting on the throne in my heart. Every choice I make is in the interest of making myself happier. I am also very self-reliant and I don’t like to tell other people about my struggles. I think in my head that I can do everything by myself. In reality, I am obviously a sinner with a lot of flaws so my choices aren’t always the right ones and they usually make my life harder. I think my own pride and self-reliance has made it hard for me to give up the throne in my heart to Jesus. We are all set on the road of hardship and struggle. And without Jesus, we can’t get off that road to destruction. When we look back to the passage, we see that these people clearly had Jesus sitting on the throne of their hearts, and they welcomed Jesus and praised him. Romans 10:9 says “That if you confess with your mouth, “Jesus is Lord,” and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved.” All we need to do is welcome Jesus in our hearts and believe that he was raised from the dead for us.
                Now that we’ve seen the disciple’s response, let’s take a look at the response of the Pharisees. Let’s look at verse 39. Verse 39 says “Some of the Pharisees in the crowd said to Jesus, “Teacher, rebuke our disciples!” The Pharisees were on the attack. These guys were experts of the bible, but they were blind to the fact that the person that they had been studying about their whole lives was right in front of their faces. They told Jesus to rebuke his disciples for calling him a holy king. That is kind of twisted. So Jesus comes to save the people. The people are happy and they celebrate. The Pharisees tell Jesus to tell the people to stop praising him. That’s kind of like if after Harry Potter defeated Voldemort and he and his friends were celebrating and then Malfoy came up to Harry and told him to tell his friends to stop being happy. Let’s think about that for a second…. For those of you who like it in more simple terms, Jesus says it perfectly. Joanne Lee can you stand up and read verse 40 for us? “I tell you,” He replied, “if they keep quiet, the stones will cry out.” Someone or something on earth will always be praising God. If not the disciples, then even the inanimate stones will cry out in praises for God’s glory. And in a bigger picture sense, even if the people don’t praise God, it doesn’t change the fact that Jesus is still King.
                To be completely honest, I don’t think I can declare Jesus as my king because my heart is already occupied. Being so focused on myself and my own ability, my heart is not completely open to Jesus. For me, the first step is to let go of my own passions so that Jesus can become my new passion.


Part 3: Jesus’ response to all people (41-44)
                Jesus has one response to all people. Let’s read verse 41 altogether. “As he approached Jerusalem and saw the city, he wept over it.” Jesus loves you to the point where he is ready to die for you. When Jesus saw Jerusalem, he cried because he knew just as he knows now, that it is inevitable that people will turn away from him.  Jesus knew this and out of compassion he cried, and later he would eventually die for us. Jesus is the all-powerful God and he is our sovereign Lord yet he is still merciful.
Jesus was the ultimate example of a good friend. He was misunderstood by a lot of people, but he was still able to have unconditional love for everyone he met. I think about how much I disregard people who I don’t like. If I don’t get along with people, I usually just ignore them and hate them forever. But Jesus was so loving that he was able to cry for the people who would kill him and reject him. When I read about his tears, it made me think about the last time I cried for someone else. I went to a funeral a couple weeks ago and I cried a lot. But I realize that those were tears for me. I was sad. I don’t think I have ever sympathized with someone to the point where I cried for them. So, knowing that I haven’t cried for someone, it’s hard to imagine me dying for someone else. I think the one person who has the most perfect and truly unconditional love is Jesus.

                Let’s read verses 42-44.  “and said, “If you, even you, had only known on this day what would bring you peace—but now it is hidden from your eyes. The days will come upon you when your enemies will build an embankment against you and encircle you and hem you in on every side.  They will dash you to the ground, you and the children within your walls. They will not leave one stone on another, because you did not recognize the time of God’s coming to you.” One day, you and I will face Jesus as our judge or we will face him as our savior. Which will it be for you?

I hope that you will all think about this question and really dig down deep to find who or what is in your heart, and how you can open your hearts to Jesus.

One Word: Jesus the King

Sunday, April 20, 2014

Joseph Wang's Message - Easter 2014: Redeemed

Jesus Prays at the Mount of Olives
Luke 22: 39-46
Key verse: 44
And being in anguish, he prayed more earnestly, and his sweat was like drops of blood falling to the ground”


When I was younger, prayer was a song I would sing before meals. It went something like: nahl-mah-dah oo-ree eh-geh yang-shik-eul joo-shi-neun It was something I did without a second thought. Outside of meals, prayer also became habitual. I would have to think about what I had to say and talk about in my prayer but in the end I would be repeating the same things over and over again. But as I grew older I learned that prayer is something very meaningful and important. In our passage this morning, we will learn about the importance of prayer and how through earnest prayer we can submit our will to God’s will.


In verse 39, Jesus goes out as usual to the Mount of Olives with the twelve disciples. Prior to them going to the Mount of Olives, Jesus had eaten with the disciples for the Passover feast. But this was no longer a time of celebration, it was now time for prayer as this was the night before Jesus would be handed over to be crucified. When they arrived at the Mount of Olives, Jesus knew that he was going to be taken away soon and thus the temptation he faced was even greater. Let’s read verse 40 together. “On reaching the place, he said to them, “Pray that you will not fall into temptation.” It almost sounds weird that this is the advice Jesus would be giving his disciples. Pray that you will not fall into temptation? Jesus was about to be nailed on the cross, yet he was still worrying about the spiritual condition of his disciples. Jesus knew that at this time, Satan was going to attack them. He was going to do his best to make Jesus’s road to the cross the most humiliating and painful process possible. Jesus would face the temptation of quitting and rejecting the divine plan God had sent out for him. The disciples would face the temptation of running way, of denying Jesus, and of losing all faith in him. As Esther mentioned last night, how can we have Jesus as the king of our heart when something else rules over it? We cannot let these temptations overcome us but instead, we must defeat them. It is only through prayer, and not our own ability, that we can defeat our temptations. Prayer is the ultimate weapon we have against the temptations we face on a daily basis. We know that Jesus is the perfect man. How much more should we be praying earnestly when even the son of God would turn to his father when he was tempted?


Verse 41 and 42 says “He withdrew about a stone’s throw beyond them, knelt down and prayed. Father, if you are willing, take this cup from me, yet not my will, but yours be done.” He withdrew from the disciples to pray in solitude and he knelt down in prayer, a true form of humility and worship to God. He prayed, “Father, if YOU are willing, take this cup from me. Yet not my will, but yours be done.” Jesus walked among us on this earth as a humble man. Jesus was not unsusceptible to sin however what separates us from Jesus is that he never gave into the temptations he faced. At this time, Jesus knew that his spiritual purpose from God was to die. In the previous passage Jesus tells his disciples to drink from the cup which contained his blood, representing his sacrifice. In the Old Testament, the Lord made the wicked drink from the cup he had mixed. The cup of the Lord contained all the wickedness, pain, beatings, and sin in the world. Everything Jesus would have to face when being crucified. When Jesus was praying to his father, what he was most worried about wasn’t the fact that he would have to carry the cross. Previously he had told his disciples multiple times that he would die, he had never shied away from the fact that he would die. What Jesus did not want was the relationship between him and his father breaking away. They had a loving relationship but now he felt that God was abandoning him. It’s like our own relationships with our parents. We know our parents sincerely and dearly love us but sometimes they have to punish us and discipline us. But this punishment that Jesus would have to go through was unwarranted, Jesus had done nothing wrong and this punishment would be like none we will ever face in our lives. Zechariah 13:7a prophecies, “Awake, sword, against my shepherd, against the man that is close to me!” Declares the Lord Almighty. “Strike the shepherd, and the sheep will be scattered.” God would strike his own shepherd, "the man who is close to me," and the sheep would be scattered. Now a sword is an instrument designed to cut, to separate. I think that explains why here, for the first time in the ministry of Jesus, we have a sense of division between Jesus and the Father. The sense of separation is manifested when Jesus says, "Not my will, but yours be done." He was battling between his human will and God’s will, but he never rejected God’s will. Instead he prayed to accept God’s will for him. Many times we say, “If it’s God’s will I’ll do such and such.” However, when God’s will is revealed we make excuses. “It’s not the right time or that’s not God’s will” and we reject his plan. However, Jesus’ act of prayer at the Mount of Olives clearly shows us that we must accept God’s plan for us in an act of submission. When we do so, it is not a defeated life, but a victorious life. When we live a life where we submit to God, it seems boring and hard. It may feel like we go through all these struggles and restrictions for no reason but in the end it’s a life where we can bear real fruit. In the end, this is the best life. The struggle to overcome our will is something we face every moment of everyday. So how can we live in complete submission to God? The key to Jesus’ victorious life was that he prayed, reverently, honestly and earnestly.


In verse 43 it says, “An angel from heaven appeared to him and strengthened him.” While Jesus was praying and struggling with the cup that was yet to come, an angel from heaven came and strengthened him. The angel was an act of encouragement from God and strengthened Jesus both mentally and physically in his time of struggle. God did not remove Jesus’s cup of suffering, instead he helped him and strengthened him to take the cup. He strengthened Jesus to endure the suffering. God purifies and strengthens our faith through struggles and suffering. If you’ve ever tutored someone, sometimes you want to do their homework for them because they just don’t understand it. You want to go straight to the answers and skip the question. But that doesn’t help the student. They must learn to struggle with the problems or concepts so that they will learn and grow. In the same way, any time we face struggles in life, when we pray, God does not necessarily take these struggles away. But he strengthens us so that we can overcome the struggles we face.


Let’s read verse 44 together. “And being in anguish, he prayed more earnestly, and his sweat was like drops of blood falling to the ground.” The verse here says that Jesus was in anguish. In anguish, Jesus prayed earnestly. Jesus prayed so earnestly that his sweat was like drops of blood falling to the ground. Anguish is severe mental or physical pain, something that is deeply distressing. The cup was yet to come for Jesus, can you imagine walking to your own death? Take a minute and envision that in your head. You will be chained up, flogged, beaten and spit on every step you take, and in the end you will be crucified. There was the mental pain, of the division between him and his father, of Judas betraying him, and of his disciples denying him.This is why Jesus was in anguish. And so, he prayed earnestly, fervently. Jesus prayed so that he could accept the will of God absolutely and the struggle to do this resulted in drops of sweat rolling down his face like blood. Jesus was struggling so hard to do something impossible; to entirely subdue his human desire. But his earnest prayer to let go of his own desire and accept God’s desire for him is what won the battle.


From Jesus we learn how to pray. It begins with coming to God, alone and in humility, in order to present our requests to him. We see that Jesus knelt down before God in prayer, showing his reverence. When Jesus came to God in prayer, he was honest in his struggle. He shared what was on his heart to God in sincerity. Then it progresses to listening to God’s answer in submission. The essence of prayer is denying our own human desires by God’s help and that results in us obeying God’s will. Prayer also provides strength. Jesus prayed when the flesh was weak, and even through agony, through drops of sweat rolling down his face like blood, he stood firm and carried out the will of the Lord. He was completely transformed through prayer. In Jonathan’s message we’ll see that even in Jesus’s last breath he carries out his resolution to follow and obey God’s plan for him. He says, “Father, into your hands I commit my spirit.” This was not a sudden shift of attitude from Jesus, it was the fruit of his earnest prayer on the mount of olives. Sometimes we make excuses to not pray because we’re too busy, or we have too much work.. But we see that Jesus’s earnest prayer led him to a firm resolution to follows God’s will to his final breath.


It’s always been a struggle for me to accept God’s will. Even in my senior year I tend to deviate towards thinking about myself. What college will I like the best? Where can I learn the most? I become fixated on my own desires and instead of praying I turn to other sources. I ask my friends or teachers advice. It’s not wrong to do that, but they can only give me so much advice or information. What I am reminded about in this passage is the importance of turning to God. I should pray to submit my own desires to God and accept his plan for me. The questions I should be asking are: what college does God want me to go to? Where can I learn about him and grow in him the most? The hardest part of prayer for me was to honestly submit to him and share my struggles. My own pride made it hard for me to admit that I did not know of my direction nor future. I pray that I can submit my will to God’s will in daily and earnest prayer.


Let’s read verse 45 and 46 together. “When he rose from prayer and went back to the disciples, he found them asleep, exhausted from sorrow. “Why are you sleeping?” He asked them. “Get up and pray so that you will not fall into temptation.” When Jesus came back to the disciples, he found them sleeping. They were sleeping in defeat, because they could not overcome their sorrow. They had just learned there would be no kingdom on Earth, Jesus would be taken away from them and killed, and instead of praying like Jesus had told them to, they succumbed to their sorrow in sleep. Jesus woke them up and once again told them to pray so that they will not fall into temptation. When we follow Jesus, the temptations we face are very real. We are constantly tempted to turn away from the path of following Jesus and instead give in to the desires of the flesh. It comes in the form of entertainment, of laziness, anything that turns us away from the Lord.


When I first accepted Christ about a year and a half ago, I was transformed into someone who just went through the motions of church & prayer to sincerely wanting to know Christ more. But even now, it has not been easy. It has been a war between my human desires and God’s desire. There have been many times I have strayed from his path due to my fun-seeking desire and laziness. It’s so easy to skip HBF and hang out with friends or ignore our responsibility for our own pleasure. However, these temporary joys do nothing for us.  Jesus shows us that the path of the cross, the path of God is followed in earnest prayer. This was the key to Jesus’ victorious life on to the cross. Jesus shows us how to pray: to pray reverently and humbly, to pray honestly, and to pray submitting our will to God. It is only through prayer that we can resist our own desires.  Let’s come to Jesus humbly. Let’s pray in repentance, pray for forgiveness, and pray that we can fight the good fight and always accept God’s calling for us, just as Jesus did. Let’s read the key verse, verse 44 together. “And being in anguish, he prayed more earnestly, and his sweat was like drops of blood falling to the ground.”





Friday, April 4, 2014

"The Gospel" - Eric Ludy

At our praise night tonight, we watched this 11 minute video which clearly presented the Gospel in order to set our minds on Easter. 


Thursday Meeting for Dare 2 Share

Hello Everyone!

HBF will be meeting this next Thursday April, 10th at 7:00pm before Dare 2 Share next Friday.
We will be going over details and pray for our Easter plans.

See you  all there!