Fourth Sunday after Epiphany – January 28, 2024

Mark 1:21-28

When the unclean spirit encounters Jesus…the spirit cries out:

  • “Have you come to destroy us?”
  • Jesus was teaching something new…in a new and authoritative way.
  • The people were probably all wondering:
  • “Has Jesus come to destroy what we know and bring us something new?”
  • The unclean spirit…confronted with Jesus’ authority…was afraid of being destroyed.
  • When Jesus commanded the unclean spirit to leave the person…the unclean spirit put up a fight.
  • Verse 26 says: “And the unclean spirit…convulsing him and crying out with a loud voice…came out of him.”

 

We do not talk much about unclean spirits and demons in the Lutheran church…or in American Christianity in general.

  • But not believing in demons has hardly eradicated evil in our world.
  • And…even if we do not call them unclean spirits or recognize demons in our midst.
  • We all have had the experience of something destroying us.

 

We really do not know what the New Testament means when it speaks of casting out evil spirits.

  • Is it referring to mental and emotional illness?
  • Would physical problems with unusual manifestations such as epilepsy have been considered demonic in a pre-scientific world?
  • Most scholars are convinced that this is the nature of so-called demon possession in the Bible.
  • It refers to people who are suffering from mental…emotional or even physical problems that cause them to act differently from the norm.

 

Like I said…all of us have times in our life when we are confronted with problems and emotions that overwhelm us.

  • We visited a monastery in Greece… many years ago… perched high on a cliff several hundred feet in the air.
  • The only way to reach the monastery was to be suspended in a basket which was brought to the top by several monks.
  • The monks pulled the basket up with ropes and pulleys.

 

The ride up the steep cliff in that basket was terrifying.

  • I became exceedingly nervous about halfway up as I noticed that the rope by which I was suspended was old and frayed.
  • With a trembling voice I asked the monk who was riding with us in the basket how often they changed the rope.
  • The monk thought for a moment and answered matter-of-factly:
  • “Whenever it breaks.”

 

There have been times in my life when…emotionally…I have been suspended in that basket.

  • I was at the end of my rope and feared it would break.
  • Perhaps you have had that experience too.
  • There is comfort in knowing that we have a friend who can heal brokenness of any kind…
  • Whether it is physical…emotional or spiritual.

 

But here’s the thing I really want to say:

  • Out of the womb…before we do anything wrong and before we do anything right…
  • God has named us and claimed us as God’s own.
  • But immediately…other things try to tell us who we are and to whom we belong.
  • They all have a go at telling us who we are.
  • But only God can do that.
  • Everything else is temptation.
  • And so…I would propose to you that demons are defined as anything other than God that tries to tell us who we are.

 

Before we had a chance to do anything at all…God looked at us and saw that we were good.

  • God loved us and called us his own.
  • So many things in this world try to tell us we are something else.
  • That we are not precious…that we are not good.
  • Those lies are the destroyer in our soul.
  • In the presence of Jesus…those lies will quake in their boots.

 

What is it the world is telling you about yourself today?

  • Is it that you have not done enough?
  • Or…that you have messed up so much you cannot be forgiven?
  • Or…that the world is telling you everything is just fine right now…when really God is calling you to dig deep and make some changes.
  • Whatever it is…all those falsehoods are cast out in the presence of Jesus.
  • Seeing what is real…changes everything.

 

In the presence of Jesus…the truth that we are beloved children of God will win out over whatever the world tells us about ourselves.

  • Those lies may not go down easily.
  • They may hold on and put up a fight.
  • But…the love and truth of Jesus will cast all those things out.
  • We just need to bring them into the light.
  • Jesus casts out the things that destroy.

 

The unclean spirit recognized Jesus’s authority.

  • The Greek word for “authority” comes from the word that means “out” or “from” and from the word that means “to be.”
  • Authority is about who gave you being…or about who sent you.
  • The unclean spirit recognized the source of Jesus’ authority:
  • “I know who you are…the Holy One of God.”
  • The crowd gathered around Jesus recognized that he taught with authority.
  • But it was the unclean spirit that recognized where the authority came from.
  • It was from God.

We live in a noisy world with a lot of voices trying to convince us to listen to them.

  • They might speak in a way that makes us think they have authority.
  • But where does their authority come from?
  • We need to exercise discernment.
  • Just because a voice is loud does not make it right.

 

We ask that Jesus cast out anything that tries to tell us we are anything less than God’s children.

  • We ask that we have discerning ears so that we recognize the voice and leading of God.
  • We ask that we live our lives in such a way that others will see God at work through us.