On
Valentine’s Day we all heard the news of an event that is becoming far too
frequent in our nation—another school shooting—this time in Florida. I, perhaps
like you, have become very frustrated with our politicians and their lack of
action on gun control. But what I am even more concerned about is the thought
that we, all of us, may be growing numb to these sorts of events.
One thing
is certain—and that is that there is one person who is not numb to all of this.
And that is our Lord Jesus Christ. I believe he is weeping right now over what
is happening in our country. He is weeping because he loves us, all of us, but
especially the children. We see that love displayed in our passage for today
from Mark 10:13-16. Listen for God’s word to you….
People were bringing little children to him in order that he might
touch them; and the disciples spoke sternly to them. 14 But when Jesus saw this, he
was indignant and said to them, “Let the little children come to me; do not
stop them; for it is to such as these that the kingdom of God belongs. 15 Truly I tell you, whoever
does not receive the kingdom of God as a little child will never enter
it.” 16 And he took them up in his
arms, laid his hands on them, and blessed them.
When were the children
brought to Jesus? The Teacher had just finished answering the Pharisee’s question:
“Is it lawful for a man to divorce his wife?” Jesus has just made it
unmistakably clear that what God has put together no man must break apart. He
has said that, “Whoever divorces his wife and marries another, commits adultery
against her, and if she divorces her husband and marries another, she commits
adultery.”
Now, what
has this got to do with the story of Jesus and the children?... A lot! Divorce
is extremely harmful to children and Jesus certainly knew this. First, Jesus
secures the importance of the family structure with father and mother. Then in
this passage Jesus indicates the tremendous worth of children themselves by
receiving them into his arms. Without proper structure and nurture, these
children, who hold such a special place in the master’s heart, will be damaged.
Who brought the children to
Jesus? It was
perhaps common in Jesus’ day for parents to bring their children to the Rabbi
of the synagogue that he might bestow a blessing upon them. So perhaps the
children were brought to Jesus for this reason. The text says that “they were
bringing the children that he might touch them.” Whoever brought them simply
wanted the powerful touch of this wonder-working prophet to be upon their
children. And as the account shows, Jesus gave the children more than what was
asked for.
Where were the children
brought to Jesus? They were brought to him while he was in the house, as we discover
from the preceding verses. This is a living illustration of Deuteronomy 6:6-7.
“And these words which I command you this day shall be upon your heart; and you
shall teach them diligently to your children and shall talk of them when you sit in your house, and when
you walk by the way, and when you lie down, and when you rise.” When we teach
our children the Scriptures, the whole goal should be to lead them to Jesus.
This can be done at any available time. The secret is in finding the teachable
moment.
The children were
also brought to Jesus while he was in the way. He was, at this time in the way
going to the cross. It was on the cross that he would shed his blood so that
the sins of these children, of their parents, of all of us, would be washed
whiter than snow. As you know, the word “dear” really means valuable or
expensive. These children are dear to Jesus because he is about to pay the
greatest price to buy them back from slavery to sin.
How were the children brought to Jesus? Obviously, they were brought physically.
But secondly, we need to notice that they were brought continually. The verb in
this sentence refers to a continuous action in the past: “They were bringing.”
How can we bring our children to Jesus
today? We cannot bring
them to Jesus physically, but we can do something far better. We can bring them
to Jesus spiritually by the power of the Holy Spirit. We can do this by sharing
Scripture with them. If the Bible is an important part of our lives, then our
children will learn to love the Bible too.
We can also bring
our children to Jesus by praying with them and for them. Henrietta Mears, who
for many years led the Christian Education Department of the Hollywood
Presbyterian Church, was introduced to Jesus as a young child by her mother who
prayed with her. One morning, Henrietta happened to get up very early and she
peeked through her mother’s bedroom door, only to find her mother on her knees
by her bedside and moving her lips silently. Henrietta wondered what in the
world her mother was doing. Her mother invited her to come and pray with her
and her mother allowed Henrietta to pray with her every morning from that time
on, whenever she got up early enough to do so.
We also need to
pray for our children; we need to
pray more than we preach. My parents had one simple prayer for each of their
six children: that we would come to know Jesus and accept him as Lord and
Savior of our lives. As far as I know, God has honored that prayer in my life
and in the lives of my siblings.
Do you pray for
your children and for your grandchildren if you have them? If you don’t have
children of your own, what about praying for someone else’s child? I had a
friend in San Diego for whose children I prayed for many years and she told me
that was a great comfort to her.
Bringing our
children to Jesus involves putting them totally into his hands and trusting
them completely to his care. It does not mean we give up our job as parents,
but it does mean that we must not cling to our children. We must let them go
spiritually into Jesus’ hands as we will one day have to let them go
physically.
A poignant
example of this is contained in the story of Hannah in the Hebrew Scriptures.
Hannah was one of the wives of Elkanah, but she was disgraced in the culture of
that time because she was barren. Hannah prayed that the Lord would give her a
child and she promised that if the Lord would do that, then she would give that
child to a lifetime of service in the Lord’s house.
Well, God did
answer Hannah’s prayer and Hannah kept her end of the bargain. When she took
her child to the tabernacle to give him to Eli the priest, she said these
beautiful words: “For this child I prayed; and the Lord has granted me my
petition which I made to him. Therefore, I have lent him to the Lord; as long
as he lives, he is lent to the Lord.” This child grew up to become the great
prophet Samuel. Would that we too would get into the habit of “lending” our
children to the Lord.
Now let’s take a look at the disciple’s
response to the children.
Those who are close to Jesus sometimes have huge blind spots in their lives,
just like the rest of us. We all probably have a bit of a tendency to major in
minors; we pay too much attention to things that don’t really matter, and so we
fail to see what is essential to our master’s purpose. This was the problem of
the disciples; they failed to see how the children could be anything but a
nuisance to Jesus. They must have thought: “He doesn’t have time.” “The teacher
has no energy to spend on children.” “What can it be worth to him to waste his
time on them.”
Before we condemn
these uncaring, preoccupied disciples, let us remember how much we are like
them. We too hinder the children from coming to Jesus whenever we devalue
children in thought, word or deed, whenever we do not prepare appropriate
programs for them in our church. Some children are hindered from coming to
Jesus because we make church a boring, dry, exclusively adult activity. In
short, whenever we do not consider the worth and needs of the children around
us, we may be hindering them from coming to Jesus and finding in him their
Savior and Lord.
I believe Jesus
is pained in the heart when he sees the callousness, the aloofness, with which
we so often treat his little ones. It fills our Lord with nothing short of
anger. Jesus is upset when we, like his first disciples, have spent such a long
time with him, yet we still do not discern his desire to reach out and touch
people of all ages.
Though we as
disciples may fail, still Jesus sees the children’s need; he sees their worth;
he proclaims it in action and in words. He opens his arms saying: “Let the
children come to me. Stop holding them back! My kingdom is especially for
them.”
The disciples
must have thought, “What does he mean the kingdom of God is for such as these?
These little children can’t even understand the simplest of the parables. How
can they possibly receive something they can’t understand?”
Actually, it was
the disciples who did not understand—that what the children could not
comprehend with their minds, they could receive with their hearts.
In response to the disciples, Jesus makes
one of the most wonderful statements in all of the Gospels. He says that a person cannot get into
God’s kingdom unless that person receives the kingdom like a child.
Does that sound
impossible? How can we become children again and have a child’s receptivity
once we have become adults?
Well, if this
sounds like an invitation to do the impossible, we should not be surprised.
Jesus seemed to specialize in the impossible. He told a paralyzed man to pick
up his bed and go home. (Matthew 9:6) He told his bewildered disciples, when he
sent them out on their first mission, to heal the sick, raise the dead, and
cast out demons. (Matthew 10:8) He called to Peter across a stormy stretch of
water: “Come to me!” (Matthew 14:29) He called to a dead man who had been in
his tomb for four days: “Lazarus come out!” (John 11:43) Clearly, Jesus’
ministry was not normal, not run-of-the-mill. He settled for nothing less than
extraordinary.
The most
startling thing, however, is not Jesus’ expectation placed on normal human
beings, but the fact that he gives those same ordinary human beings the power
to do his will. Jesus of Nazareth, beyond the strength of any other religious
leader who has ever lived, can soften hardened hearts and make them receptive
as children to his love.
But what does
Jesus mean by: “You must receive the kingdom of God like a child or you shall
not enter it”? For the answer to that question, we must look at the way in
which children receive.
First, children receive totally. The true child holds nothing back but
rather ventures all. The child can do this because he or she has no concerns
about who is watching; he or she does not care what onlookers think; there is
no thought of being embarrassed.
Perhaps you have
refused to give your whole life to Jesus because you are afraid that someone
may think you are crazy. So what? What have you got to lose? As Jim Elliot
said, “He is no fool who gives what he cannot keep, to gain what he cannot
lose.” Why not be a fool for Jesus?
Secondly, children receive thankfully. They are not afraid to express joy and
gratitude. When children really like something, they let you know. It is
questionable whether we have ever really received Jesus if we have never
thanked him for his indescribable gift.
Tim Hansel used
to tell the story of teaching students in a public high school many years ago.
One day he got so frustrated with his students that he wrote on the blackboard
in two-foot high block letters: A…P…A…T…H…Y. One student turned to the other
and asked, “Apaaathy. What’s that mean?” And the other student replied, “Who
cares?!”
If we are to
receive the kingdom of God like children, apathy must be replaced with bubbling
gratitude and joy. If we don’t have an expressive thankfulness toward Jesus,
something is desperately wrong with our spirituality.
Thirdly, children receive the kingdom in a
timely manner. Children
live in the here and now. The action verbs of their daily living come only in
the present tense. Many people refuse to come to Jesus and receive him because
they want to put it off until “a more appropriate time” in the future.
There is no time
but now as far as God is concerned.
A couple of weeks
ago I was contacted by a journalist for a website called “Fatherly”. She wanted
to interview me for a series they have entitled “My Father The________”. Others
in the series have included the children of people like Muhammed Ali and John
Wayne. I was happy to grant an interview.
The journalist,
Lizzy Francis, said that she had no religious background whatsoever. And she
was fascinated with my father’s seemingly spur-of-the-moment decision to follow
Jesus Christ at a Billy Graham tent meeting.
After talking
with Lizzy about some of the circumstances that contributed to my father’s
decision, I said: “I am so glad he made that decision to follow Jesus that day,
because if he had not, I might never have been born.”
As Paul says, “now is the
acceptable time; see, now is the day of salvation!” (2 Corinthians 6:2)
And as the writer to the Hebrews says, “today, if you hear
God’s voice, do not harden your heart.”
Respond to Jesus in this Kairos moment, this Now moment, just
like a child.
Finally,
children receive the kingdom of God tenderly. They are not afraid at all to
express the love they feel for Jesus. I remember one little boy in a church I
served who was never afraid to ask his friends or anyone he met: “Hey, do you
love Jesus?”
That’s the kind of child God wants us to be—unafraid,
unabashed, in our love for Jesus.
Picture the scene: Jesus holding out his arms, calling the
children to himself. They run to him in playful, receptive, tender adoration.
They are taken up in his arms and they can feel the power of Jesus’ strong yet
gentle love. A moment later they are released from his tough but tender grip,
though they long to linger in his presence for just one more moment. They
return to their parents—to their simple, ordinary childhood ways—but somehow,
they will never be the same, for they have just received the greatest gift of
all: the touch of blessing.
Perhaps you are here today, and you have heard this story
before, the story of Jesus receiving the children, but you still find it hard
to believe that Jesus would receive you. “Sure, Jesus can love the children,” you
say, “What is not to love about little children? They are so pure and innocent.
But then there’s my life,” you say, “I’m messed up. I’ve blown it time and time
again. It’s impossible for the tangled web of my life to be straightened out.
Impossible for me to start fresh, like a child.”
Let me just remind you one more time: Jesus specializes in
the impossible. Next week we are going to hear the disciples ask Jesus: “Then who can be saved?” And
Jesus will look at them and say, “For mortals it is impossible, but not for
God; for God all things are possible.”
Jesus
also says to you today, “anyone who comes to me
I will never drive away.” (John 6:37)
Allow me to close today with a poem by Myra Brooks Welch that
my father often recited from memory….
It was battered and
scarred, and the auctioneer
Thought it scarcely worth
his while
To waste much time on the old violin,
But held it up with a smile.
To waste much time on the old violin,
But held it up with a smile.
“What am I bidden, good
folks,” he cried,
“Who’ll start the bidding
for me?”
“A dollar, a dollar.” Then two! Only two?
“A dollar, a dollar.” Then two! Only two?
“Two dollars, and who’ll
make it three?”
“Three dollars, once; three dollars, twice,
“Three dollars, once; three dollars, twice,
Going for three…” But no,
From the room, far back,
a grey-haired man
Came forward and picked
up the bow;
Then wiping the dust from
the old violin,
And tightening the
loosened strings,
He played a melody pure
and sweet,
As a caroling angel
sings.
The music ceased, and the
auctioneer,
With a voice that was
quiet and low,
Said: “What am I bid for
the old violin?”
And he held it up with
the bow.
“A thousand dollars, and
who’ll make it two?
Two thousand! And who’ll
make it three?
Three thousand, once;
three thousand, twice,
And going and gone,” said
he.
The people cheered, but some of them cried,
The people cheered, but some of them cried,
“We do not quite understand.
What changed its worth?”
Swift came the reply:
“The touch of the master’s
hand.”
And many a man with life
out of tune,
And battered and scarred
with sin,
Is auctioned cheap to the
thoughtless crowd
Much like the old violin.
A “mess of pottage,” a
glass of wine,
A game — and he travels
on.
He is “going” once, and
“going” twice,
He’s “going” and almost
“gone.”
But the Master comes, and
the foolish crowd
Never can quite
understand
The worth of a soul and
the change that is wrought
By the touch of the master’s
hand.
Comments