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Sermon Who is Jesus – part 3
Luke 4:14-17 + 7:11-16 + Isa 61:1-4
Luke sees Jesus as the gracious healer of the marginalised and today I want to
talk about how Jesus can mend a Broken Heart
So let’s look at Jesus in Luke’s Gospel. Last week we looked at Mark’s Gospel,
the week before Matthew. Luke’s gospel gives us the fullest account of Jesu’s s
life and it is the only one that has a sequel – part 2 if you will in Acts.
Jesus had just returned from the wilderness and the Mount of Temptation where
he had struggled with Satan and faced temptation and had not bowed to
compromise. The Bible says that Jesus returned in the power of the Spirit to
Galilee. His fame was spread abroad and he began to teach in the synagogues.
On the occasion of our text we find Jesus in the synagogue quoting the famous
passage from Isaiah the prophet that spoke of a great Messiah who would come
and heal and deliver the people of God who were held captive by sin and the
devil. Jesus read this great text and sat down and said, “This scripture is now
literally fulfilled.” Jesus quotes directly from the prophesy in Isiah where 3
messages where delivered:
1. His message was first of all to proclaim the good news of the gospel
Secondly to “Heal the broken hearted and Set the captives free.”
Third, “To set the captives free and give sight to the blind.”
I want to focus on the second purpose of Jesus ministry this morning paying
particular attention to the words he came to Heal the broken hearted.
Let me read you this letter ….
Antoine Leiris, a journalist at France Bleu, declared that he and their baby son
would not live in fear of terrorists
In the tragic note, titled 'You will not have my hatred' he wrote: "On Friday
evening you stole the life of an exceptional person, the love of my life, the
mother of my son, but you will not have my hatred.
"I don’t know who you are and I don’t want to know, you are dead souls. If this
God for whom you kill blindly made us in his image, every bullet in the body of
my wife is a wound in his heart.
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"So no, I will not give you the satisfaction of hating you. You obviously want it,
but to respond to hatred with anger would be to give in to the same ignorance
that made you what you are.
"You would like me to be scared, for me to look at my fellow citizens with a
suspicious eye, to sacrifice my liberty for security. You have lost. The same
player still plays.
"I saw her this morning. At last, after nights and days of waiting. She was as
beautiful as when she left on Friday evening, as beautiful as when I fell head
over heels in love with her more than 12 years ago.
"Of course I am devastated with grief, I grant you this small victory, but it will
be short-lived.
"I know she will be with us every day and we will find each other in heaven
with free souls which you will never have.
What a truly amazing man – one who clearly has a faith- One who will not let
this terrible tragedy of the loss of his wife destroy his life. Neither will he let
hatred of the murderers take a hold in his life. He can only do that if he has
Jesus to help him.
Jesus was sent by God to live on this earth for a specific purpose – to save the
world so that the world can be reconciled to Him. When we see the violence in
our world today we surely must acknowledge that we need Jesus more than ever
in our lives. This is the time of Advent – where we celebrate His birth but we a
wait His coming again so that the full glory of God’s Kingdom can come about.
Jesus left heaven to come to this world with the express purpose in mind of
healing broken hearts. He was born in a manger, wrapped in poor man’s rags,
walked among us and ministered among us and was mocked, and whipped and
hung on a cross to suffer, because he loved you and me enough to want to save
us and mend our broken hearts. Amen
With this in mind, I want you to consider this morning that we as church have a
ministry that has been handed down to us through our saviour. It is the ministry
of helping to heal broken hearts. It is the ministry of pointing people to the only
one who can heal a broken heart…. the KING OF KINGS AND LORD OF LORDS,
OUR LORD JESUS CHRIST.
How do we mend a broken heart?
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I. First by Considering the Great Need All Around Us
It is recorded that Jesus healed 31 times in the Bible – indeed 1/5
th
of the
Gospels are about Jesus’ healings. He healed demonic issues, fever, ’blindness,
skin disease, immobility. He healed with compassion and by faith and by touch,
command and prayer.
But in this story in Luke we see Jesus go beyond healing – he brings a young
man to life.
The Bible says that when Jesus saw the multitudes he was moved with
compassion.
Broken hearts are found in all classes of people. No one is exempt from the
possibility of experiencing a broken heart. Take the mother of the dead son in
Nain – when he saw her his heart went out to her – don’t cry he said and he
touched the young man and commands him to get up – the young man sat up
and he began to talk.
The word broken hearted in our text literally means to be pressed down upon by
calamities. To heal those hearts who are broken down upon by a sense of
sinfulness or affliction. The next line explains the purpose in healing broken
hearts…”To preach deliverance to the captives…to set at liberty them that are
bruised.
To set free from being bruised means to literally be set free from the pressure of
the problem and give them consolation.
We have all experience brokenness – whether through the illness or death of a
loved one. I see it many times when praying for people who are very sick or
going to see family preparing to bury they love ones . It is so heart-breaking
seeing their broken hearts. But often when I see broken hearts I also see broken
hearts mended time and again because people do TAKE their BURDENs TO THE
LORD AND LEAVE IT THERE!
When Jesus first entered this world…the first sound he heard was of weeping….
It was the wail of those mothers in Bethlehem mourning over their children.
From the manger to the cross he was surrounded by sorrow. “He was a man of
sorrows, acquainted with grief.”
He cried over Jerusalem…. He wept at the grave of Lazarus…He too was
acquainted with tears and grief.
We know that he is weeping alongside Antione and all those who lost loved ones
in France and in Mali and with all those who have been lost in war.
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II. Secondly, To heal a broken heat one needs to commit the Problem to
Jesus who Expressly Sent by God to Mend broken hearts
Look at the words, “He hath sent me” - Jesus did not fail in His mission and
Jesus will not fail me or you.
He wants to mend our broken hearts this morning. If you will trust Him he will
not fail you.
God sent Moses with a mission of deliverance to deliver 3 million people who
were captive and broken hearted. He had no general, he had no armies…He did
have a speech impediment…but he would not fail because the spirit of the Lord
was upon him.
NOW DO THINK FOR A MOMENT THAT GOD’S OWN SON WOULD FAIL YOU IN
YOUR GREATEST TIME OF NEED. “He is the GREAT PHYSICIAN,” He wrote the
book on mending broken hearts.
II. CHRISTIANS HAVE A BLESSED HELP IN MENDING BROKEN HEARTS
YOU DO NOT HAVE A BURDEN SO HEAVY THIS MORNING THAT CHRIST CANNOT
CARRY. BRING YOUR BROKEN HEART TO THE LORD.
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