Sunday, June 6th • Beau Bradberry
"And he entered the temple and began to drive out those who sold, saying to them, “It is written, ‘My house shall be a house of prayer,’ but you have made it a den of robbers.” — Luke 19:45-46
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Well, good morning.
Glad that y'all are here with us.
If you've got your Bibles, open up to Luke chapter 19 is where we're going to be as we
continue our study in the Gospel of Luke.
As you turn there, I just want a couple of other things.
If you are a first-time guest, here's what I'd love for you to do.
Find me before you leave here.
I'd love to meet you, learn your name, have a conversation with you.
If you've got any questions about Willow Ridge Church, I would love to answer those.
And so please take the time to do that.
If you are a visitor, I would love to introduce myself and have you introduce yourself to me
today.
Now, as we get into Luke 19, I want to lead off in this.
All right, I'm going to be brief today.
I know some of you are thinking, yeah, right, but I'm going to do my best.
All right, I'm going to do my best to be brief.
And here's the reason why.
We've got Hans and Brandy Ostrom and their family with us.
In fact, if you'll notice on the seats around you, there's a prayer card, hopefully on all
of them, and even some stickers that are there.
And they are missionaries, missionary family that we support as at Willow Ridge Church.
And Hans sent me a message about a month ago where they were going to be here in South
Carolina, which is their home state where they're from.
They were going to be here and wanted to be able to spend some time worshiping with our
congregation and give just some encouragement, some thank yous, some updates on what ministry
is looking like in Canada right now.
I know this last year has been a crazy year for all of us, but when you really look outside
of a lot of where other people were having to go through and deal with in other countries,
we really see that a lot of places are handling this in a harsher way than we are.
The Ostrom family has had to walk through that, not only in ministry, but just in day-to-day
life as they raise their family.
And so we are blessed to have him here, to have them here.
So Hans will be up at the very end.
So, all right, so here's some instructions for you, all right?
So stick with me on this.
I'll preach, close up, we'll sing two songs.
I know that you're thinking at the end of that second song, like, I got to get to San
Jose, all right?
Pause.
Hans is going to come up at the end of that, and then there will be plenty of chips and
salsa for everybody at San Jose's afterwards, I promise.
So just patiently, patiently wait.
So Luke 19, I'll tell a story last night.
Those of you who know me and know me well, you know I love my South Carolina Gamecocks.
And you know that that relationship with my South Carolina Gamecocks is troubled at times.
And I love all things South Carolina sports.
I love all things Gamecocks.
And so right now, if you're not a big sports fan or you're not a big college baseball fan,
you might not realize that right now is the opening weekend of college baseball's postseason.
And so South Carolina is hosting a regional, even though we're not a one seed.
We can get into that later.
All right, but we are hosting.
And last night, we were playing Old Dominion, who is the number one seed in the Columbia Regional.
And it's a tight game.
The score's tied one to one.
Old Dominion lost two to one.
They won two to one, broke my heart.
But in the sixth inning, the game is tied one to one.
And a pop fly is hit.
And a pop fly is hit to the third baseman for South Carolina.
And you can tell the moment that the ball comes off the bat that it is a high pop fly.
Like, this isn't a pop fly that looks like your dad kind of underhanded to you, you know.
Like, this is a pop fly that has just caught the top portion of those metal bats.
And it is shot straight up in the air.
And you see the third baseman.
You see him immediately call it, this is mine.
And then you begin to see him move around and stumble and almost look like he's going to fall.
And then at the very last second, he kind of regathers his base for his feet underneath him.
And then the ball falls about two feet away from his glove before he could grab it.
In my heart, right, as a guy who invests way too much time, energy, and passion into this athletic ability of 18 to 22-year-olds fell apart in that moment, right?
I absolutely lost it because it's a pop fly and he missed it.
He missed it.
He is a D1 college athlete and he missed it.
Now, he didn't miss it because his glove faltered.
I don't know if you've ever had that happen, but sometimes the webbing in your glove can stretch out and literally a baseball can fall right through your glove.
But that didn't happen to him.
He didn't miss it because his glove faltered.
He didn't miss it because another player came up and tripped him up.
If you've ever played baseball or softball, like you know that happens sometimes, right?
You're saying I got it, the other player's saying that they got it, and all of a sudden you collide and you run into each other and the ball falls right there.
That didn't happen either.
He didn't miss it because he had to run a great distance.
This wasn't a dead sprint to shallow left field.
This wasn't a sprint over to the opposing team's dugout and try to stretch at the last moment.
He literally, from the positioning that he started out into the positioning where he was when he missed it, was only a couple feet.
If he'd have done this from the very beginning, he'd have caught it.
So what happened?
I've been watching this team all year.
This third baseman has phenomenal discipline.
He's got phenomenal footwork.
Everything about what he does shows great discipline.
He is a trained Division I athlete.
And as I'm going through all of this within five seconds and trying for God to redeem the moment for me, right?
I heard the announcer come across and say that ball went so high up into the lights that what he was having was a hard time seeing it.
And because he couldn't see the ball clearly, he missed it.
You know, it wasn't because he was lazy.
It wasn't because he didn't want to catch the ball.
It wasn't because he hadn't been trained and people hadn't poured into him.
It's just that in the moment when his eyes were trying to be fixed on the ball, they got lost in something else that consumed him, that took his eyes there.
And then that which he was told, that which he was instructed to have his eyes locked in on, he just simply missed it.
He made an error.
And it ended up not being the reason that South Carolina lost the game, but in the moment, he missed it.
But what in the world does this have to do with anything, right?
I think that there's many people, many people who may be here today, many people who may call themselves Christians,
many people for thousands of years, that when it comes to Jesus and the gospel, they've heard, they've been instructed, they've been taught,
they've been given God's word, but they've missed it.
They've missed it.
I've shared with you guys this so many times, that's the burden of my heart.
We're going to hear a lot about international missions and what God calls us to do and to go out.
Dealing with lost people and sharing the gospel is always complicated and context matters, okay?
And so I've been to places like India and shared the gospel with people who have never heard the name of Jesus before.
And I love that.
And that's filled with its own difficulties in trying to understand and communicate the gospel.
But then I also come back into a culture that if you've never lived outside of South Carolina or Lexington or even the greater part of the area of the United States,
what we refer to as the Bible Belt, that there are people who would culturally align as Christians.
There are people who within surface level behaviors would align themselves with saying that they are a follower of Jesus Christ or I love God or something just in a general statement with that.
But when it comes to Jesus and the gospel, their eyes have been distracted by something else.
And in that moment, they miss it.
They miss it.
And for so many people, I had a conversation with a young man who was visiting our church after the 930 service.
And he came up to me and he was sharing a little bit about who he is and getting to meet him.
And it's a wonderful time to meet him.
And he asked me a question about myself.
And it led me to tell him the journey of me, of being raised in church and for 22 years of my life completely missing it.
Doing the things, going to the camps, making decisions, filling out cards, but yet missing it.
And here's why I think so many people miss it.
And this is what I want us to really work through this morning.
And I'll get going, I promise.
But here's what I mean.
That for so many people, Jesus simply becomes a means to an end.
They're told that hell is terrible and you don't want to go there.
And that's true.
And they're told that Jesus is the way for not going there, which is true.
And then their response, their reaction to that is, well then, if that's bad, if he's the way out of the bad, then I'll take Jesus.
If that's the option, then just give that to me.
And then we walk away from there missing the fullness of the truth of the gospel.
Yes, it is true that hell is not where you want to go.
That hell is eternal punishment within there and destruction.
And that Jesus is the only way to be not there.
That's the truth of it all.
But there's so much more of what the gospel wants to do in our life, of what the gospel wants to transform in us.
And so what I want us to begin to wrap our minds around is we're going to look at a couple things this morning.
Is that the gospel, yes, it changes our eternity.
But the gospel and the work of the Holy Spirit in the lives of men and women who are found in Christ, it changes our today.
Everything about of who we are.
When we are saved by the gospel, our eternal destination is changed.
But also our current lives are transformed and the purpose of what God gives us is changed as well.
Because when men and women and children are changed or saved by the gospel of Jesus Christ,
our eyes and our hearts are open to the fact that we are a sinner who is incapable.
Not who can't figure it out, but who's incapable of saving ourselves.
So what we need is Jesus who saves us, who restores us, who redeems us,
who brings us into relationship with God, who sends us the Holy Spirit, who indwells in us.
I heard a pastor say one time, and I love this and repeat this so many times in my mind,
that God loves you too much to save you from your sin and then leave you in it.
And he wants to restore us so that the person that we were is no longer the person that we are.
And so things in who we are and what we're about begin to change.
Before we get into Luke 19, I just want to read a couple passages to you.
Galatians 2.20.
I've been crucified with Christ as no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me in the life.
I now live in the flesh.
I live by faith in the Son of God who loved me and gave himself up for me.
2 Corinthians 5.17.
Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is the same person that he was before.
No.
If anyone is in Christ, Scripture says he is a new creation.
The old has passed away.
Behold, the new has come.
And so here's my concern for those of us who would culturally just align ourselves and say,
yeah, I'm Christian, right?
Is that if we miss who Jesus is, if we miss what Jesus came to do,
if we miss the commands and not the suggestions of the gospel,
then we ignore all of this, and then Jesus just becomes the means to the end for us.
And our lives are not submitted and surrendered to him in our life, and we miss it.
So I want to ask you this question as we get into this.
Are you missing it?
Are you missing it?
And there's been people who have surrounded themselves around Jesus for thousands of years
who have missed it.
Look at verse 37.
As he was drawing near already on the way down the Mount of Olives,
the whole multitude of his disciples began to rejoice and praise God with a loud voice
for all the mighty works they had seen, saying,
Blessed is the King who comes in the name of the Lord.
Peace in heaven and glory in the highest.
And some of the Pharisees in the crowd said to him,
Teacher, rebuke your disciples.
Verse 40.
And he answered, I tell you, if these were silent, the very stones would cry out.
So I want us to look at one thing, because we've got to work through this,
but just one thing within this.
So the picture that we see is Jesus and the whole multitude of the disciples.
So this is all of them.
And they're walking and they're journeying with Jesus,
and they're celebrating him, what Luke's gospel says,
because of the works they'd seen.
So as they're talking around, they're praising God,
because did you see what Jesus did when he healed that man?
Did you see what Jesus did when he called the dead girl back to life?
Did you see what Jesus did when he cast out the demons?
Do you remember what it's like to see Jesus when he fed the thousands?
Like you've got all of these conversations that are happening and that are taking place,
and the people are celebrating all that God has done.
And this is like this joyous time within him of this.
This is exciting.
They can't believe that this is all going on.
Now let's put this in the context of what is happening.
This is the Passion Week of Jesus headed to the cross.
And so when I read this, it seems a little weird to me.
Because Jesus is headed to die.
And they've been told that.
Jesus has said, I'm going to go die and be buried for three days and we'll rise again.
And he's on his journey to the cross.
And they miss it.
In spite of what Jesus had been clearly telling him, they miss it.
And for many in that crowd, Judas included,
in spite of what Jesus has said,
in spite of what they understand,
in spite of what they've been taught,
in spite of what they've been exposed to,
they think that their journey in Jerusalem is going to be this earthly kingdom
that's going to kick out Rome and reestablish what was there
and go back to the time of David.
And as different members, including Judas,
begin to realize, like, this ain't what's going on,
they're like, well, then we're going to tap out.
And so Judas sees this and realizes this.
He's like, no, 30 pieces of silver, here we go.
Right?
And they miss it.
Because for so many,
Jesus is just a means to their end.
They've missed, take up your cross and follow me.
They've missed, if you love me, then you'll obey me.
They've missed it.
And so for so many of us,
what we want to look at and examine our hearts
when understanding these next two encounters with Christ
is asking that question, have we missed it?
Is Jesus not the daily, the moment,
the second, the very power that we live in,
that we worship, of who we are?
Or is Jesus simply a means to the end?
I filled out a card, I checked a box,
and I did that, and now my eternity's secure.
So this moment has happened,
and that moment will be good,
so I can just kind of live my life,
however I mean through here.
And maybe, if that's the way you think,
maybe we just missed it.
Maybe you just missed it.
And you're going to understand the missing,
and I think by the way that we not only view Christ,
but by the way we view Christ and the way we view sin.
So look at verse 41.
And when he drew near and saw the city,
he wept over it.
I want to pause for a second.
There's been one time in my life
that I've had the opportunity
to have my feet on the ground
and look out over a city.
And it was in Jaipur in India.
And Jaipur is a massive city,
millions of people,
and there's a mountain range that surrounds Jaipur.
And on our very last day,
we drove up to the top of the mountains,
and we stood on the top of the mountain.
There was a palace behind us,
a fortress behind us,
and there was the city out there.
And we stood there,
and we looked out.
And at first,
you're looking at the 5,000-foot view
of the chaos of millions of people.
But then in that moment,
you begin to realize
the vast amounts of lostness that's there.
There's no part of India
that's greater than 2% saved.
No part.
And so you're seeing millions and millions of people
of lostness.
And I remember the impact of that moment.
And then I look here,
and Jesus draws near the city,
and he looks out over it,
and he weeps.
And in a little glimmer of a way
that God gives my heart grace,
I can understand that.
Verse 42, saying,
Would that you,
even you,
have known on this day
the things that make for peace.
But now they are hidden from your eyes,
for the days will come upon you
when your enemies will set up a barricade
around you
and surround you
and hem you in on every side
and tear you down to the ground,
you and your children within you.
And they will not leave
one stone upon another in you
because you did not know
the time of your visitation.
So here's what I want us to get there.
There's so much,
and we can't do it justice this morning,
but so much that I want us to see
and understand is this,
that the first aspect
that we begin to understand
about Christ and sin
and our sin to understand
is the mercy of Jesus.
Jesus looks out over Jerusalem
and the vast lostness that's there
and begins to weep.
He begins to weep
because the fulfillment of Scripture
which will happen,
the physical destruction of Jerusalem
that will come,
and in 70 A.D.,
Rome comes and sacks Jerusalem
and destroys it,
but also within here
is the spiritual destruction
of all those
who didn't see Jesus
for who he was
and what he came to do
because they missed it.
As he walked
and as he talked,
their own agendas
were filled their brains
and consumed them
and they missed who he was
and as Jesus stands over the city
and looks down
and begins to weep
because he's like,
as you're chasing this
and as you're chasing this,
and you're chasing this,
you're missing it
because it's me.
It's me.
It's me.
And I'm here.
And we see the mercy of Jesus.
I don't know.
Jesus had every right
to stand over Jerusalem
and say,
you fools.
Jesus had every right
to stand over Jerusalem
and lavish in the destruction
that would come
because of their disobedience
and the wrath of God
that would happen.
but instead,
he wept.
He wept.
He wept.
And he continued
his journey
to the cross
where he would die.
I think so many of us
miss
Jesus
because we feel
that Jesus
is just this God
waiting to punish us,
to catch us in the bad,
to get,
I knew you were going to do it.
Punishment.
But what we see here
from the heart of the Savior
who would bear the burden
of the sins of the world
is that when he looks out
over the people
who one day say,
Hosanna,
and another say,
crucifying,
he weeps.
And we understand
the mercy of God.
Next thing,
let's look at verses 45 and 46.
It says,
and he entered the temple
and began to drive out
those who sold
saying to them,
it is written,
my house shall be
a house of prayer
but you
made it
a den
of robbers.
So we're going to see
two
what seem to be
contradictory
pieces of Jesus
but they're not.
They're not.
These play
into each other
so we see
the mercy of Jesus
but also we're going to see
the judgment of Jesus
and as we look
and we unpack
scripture
and we understand
that there's
the mercy of God
and the judgment of God
and that the goodness of God
is found in both of those
that I don't want a God
who doesn't bring judgment
because his goodness
and his holiness
is found in it.
And then here
we see the judgment
of Jesus.
And just a little side note
but I think this points
to something else
that we're going to see
in a few weeks.
Sometimes I think
we get wrong
are the physical impression
that we get of Jesus.
I don't know about you
but I grew up in a church
that had like
really pretty
white,
blonde haired,
blue eyed Jesus
in pictures
in their buildings.
You know?
Like I saw that.
And we get this
picture of Jesus
that it always looked like
I mean his hair
was brushed out
perfect, right?
He was this soft,
delicate,
little man.
But I don't think
that's who Jesus was
at all.
And I think
scripture here
points to that.
Jesus walks
into a space,
his space
that others
have claimed
for their own.
He walks over,
he flips over tables,
he drives out people
and no one
does a thing.
Now let somebody
come to your house
and you're sitting
down for dinner
and come up
and turn
your table
up.
Let somebody
show up
to your office
tomorrow
and come
into your
workspace
and clean
your desk
off.
Let somebody
go into
your bank
account
and take
from you
what you
think is
theirs.
How are you
going to react?
And Jesus
walks into
this space
in the fullness
physically
of who he is
and not
through the
power of
a miracle
walking in
the power
of God
though in
this moment
and flips
over the
tables
and everyone
who's in
there,
every person
who sat
there and sold,
every person
who felt like
that was a claim
for themselves,
every person
who lost
money that day,
they just
scattered
because of
the physical
presence of
Jesus
in that
moment.
Now,
here's what I
want to connect
with this
for just a
second.
In just a few
weeks,
here's why I
think this
matters.
Jesus is going
to go out
into the
garden
and Judas
is going to
approach him
and he could
have laid
him down
but he
didn't.
Instead,
he allowed
Judas
to kiss
him on the
cheek
in the
betrayal
and then to
be handed
over
and led
away.
And as I
look through
this,
I think we
begin to see
is more
and more
of God
pointing to
what Jesus
is doing
as Jesus
is living
over obedience
and the
will of
God
as he's
led to
the cross.
But we
see the
judgment of
Jesus.
Jesus comes
in and
attacks three
things in
this moment.
Jesus
attacks
false
religion.
Jesus
steps into
a situation
that is now
religiously
acceptable
by the
leaders who
are there
and we
don't have
the time
to get
into
everything
that is
taking
place
but that
those who
are in
charge
are saying
yeah,
it's
alright,
we can
do this,
we can
live
in
this
and
Jesus
says no,
no,
no,
no,
because it
walks away
from the
standard
because these
aren't
suggestions,
these are
commands.
So stop
living in
what you
want it
to be
and start
living in
what it
is.
And Jesus
attacks the
religion.
And I
think for
some of
us,
the tables
are being
overturned in
our heart
is kind
of asking
us like
are we
walking in
here with
the expectations
of what
we want
trying to
live in
the suggestions
and Jesus
saying no,
no,
no,
no,
it's the
commands
that I
bring before
you.
Jesus
steps in
and attacks
reputation.
You know,
these men
that are in
there,
this is their
business.
This is what
they're known
for.
Jesus says
right here
that they're
a den
of robbers.
I see some
small business
owners in
here.
What if
one of us
got on
social media
and said
your business
is a,
you're a
thief.
You're a
thief.
How would
you respond
to that?
Jesus
steps into
that moment
in their
sin and
attacks the
reputation
that they
have that
have been
built on
their sin
and what it
causes in
that moment
of who
they are.
But also
maybe in a
way that
hits home
for all
of us.
Jesus
jumps in
and takes
out some
financial
standing
and begins
to deal
with the
hearts of
the things
of those
who have
pursued.
And I
don't know
about you
but I
want to
ask you
in your
heart
and your
obedience
and your
drive toward
the Lord
are you
willing to
be a
little
unethical
right?
For
financial
purposes.
financial
gain.
You know
like
what if
Jesus
not what
if
let me
rephrase
that
what if
we
acknowledged
that God
is with
us while
we did
our taxes?
Would we
do them
a little
different?
Would we
be the
person of
integrity
and Jesus
steps in
and brings
the judgment
out?
Jesus
steps in
at these
areas
and says
I'm
going to
examine
this
and this
and this
and flipping
these
over
and we
see the
judgment
of Christ
so in
these two
areas
Jesus
weeps
over the
sin that
has blinded
them
to who
he is
Jesus
attacks
the sin
that is
in your
life
that is
preventing
you from
obedience
and following
him in a
day to day
life
and my
concern is
my prayer
for us
as a
church
my prayer
for us
as a
body
of
people
who
claim
to be
believers
is that
within
this
are there
things
in this
world
that are
causing
us
to not
see
Jesus
for clearly
who he
is
to only
see
Jesus
as a
means
to the
end
and when
Jesus
steps
into
these
small
compartments
of our
life
and says
but I'm
not king
there
and I'm
not king
there
and I'm
not king
there
what is
our
response
to him
is our
response
you're not
going to
tell me
who I
am
as he
weeps
over the
sin
and the
broken
hardness
of the
blindness
that we've
sold ourselves
to
and my
fear is
we miss
Jesus
and close
don't miss
Jesus
don't miss
the joy
of knowing
of eternity
with him
hell is
real
forever
is a
long
time
Jesus
is the
only
way
don't
miss
him
but also
this
if
Jesus
is a
means
to an
end
you
will
miss
the
beauty
of
seeing
your
life
live
through
the
power
of
the
spirit
if
Jesus
is
a
means
to
an
end
you
will
miss
the
old
life
that
has
passed
away
and
experience
the
new
life
that
comes
to
the
gospel
and
then
really
if
Jesus
is
simply
a
means
to
the
end
are
you
even
saved
anyways
let's
pray
Lord we
thank you
for this
opportunity
and time
we could
be here
Lord
thank you
for the
picture
of
what you
show
us
as you
reveal your
heart
more and
more to
us
Lord may
we be
people
say
like Jesus
you're
you're not
just here
for
religious
ritual
we're
not just
here
for what
we can
get out
of it
at the
end
of the
journey
but we're
here
Lord
so that
we can
know you
more
that we
can be
transformed
more
and we
can be
more like
you
and then
Lord what
we have
in that
moment
Lord
is we
can weep
over
cities
as we
look at
the
lostness
of our
friends
and our
neighbors
and our
family members
that we
can weep
over the
lostness
Lord
of those
who are
all over
this world
who don't
have the
hope of
the gospel
many
of whom
Lord
do not
even have
access
to the
gospel
so Lord
may we
be like
Christ
and weep
over them
Lord
before we
walk into
a room
and think
we need to
start turning
over tables
Lord
may we
see the
tables
that
you've
turned
over
may we
Lord
repent
and stop
trying to
put the
pieces of
the table
back together
but instead
walk
toward you
Lord
the beauty
of the
judgment
of what
you bring
us
is your
judgment
comes with
warning
what you're
calling us
to
the life
with you
transformed
by you
so Lord
I thank you
that we
are saved
by grace
through
faith
not something
we deserve
it's not
something that
we earn
but it
comes freely
to us
by you
but Lord
our response
to your
grace
doesn't
end when
we check
a box
or say
a prayer
but Lord
through the
power of
your spirit
may we
respond to
your grace
daily
being
transformed
and made
in your
likeness
it's in
Jesus
name we
pray
amen
church
don't miss
it
don't miss
Jesus
you stand
as we
worship
him
thanks again
for listening
to the
Willow Ridge
Church
weekly
podcast
we hope
that you
enjoyed
listening
to this
week's
message
if you'd
like to
learn more
about who
we are
or explore
additional
resources
visit us
online
at
www.willowridgechurch.com
or by searching
for Willow Ridge
Church on
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