Monday, April 14, 2025

Sermon and Announcements April 13

 

CERRO GORDO CHURCH OF THE BRETHREN

April 13

 

It’s Sunday but Monday is Coming!

Mark 11: 1-11,15-19

 

Today is Palm Sunday, the first day of Holy Week. The most important week on the Christian calendar and I would say the most important week in the history of the world. This morning’s message is entitled “It’s Sunday, but Monday is Coming”. Cathy probably remembers this but the message title comes from something we heard on the radio program, Focus on the Family about 40 years ago.

 

On this episode James Dobson had a man by the name of Anthony Campolo on. He retold something that he had been a part of maybe earlier that year maybe years earlier. I believe it may have been at a Good Friday service at a black church. There were several speakers at this service and he was the next to the last speaker, by the way I believe he was the only White speaker at this service. He spoke for a while and when he stepped away from the microphone, he spoke to the Pastor who was going to close out the service and asked do you think you can top that?

 

Apparently at some Black Churches they aren’t bashful when they feel the Lord is really moving thru them. This Black minister told Tony Campolo to sit down and listen and for the next half hour to hour he repeatedly hit one message It’s Friday Sundays a comin. That’s a long-winded way of telling this is where the inspiration for this message title came from. Unlike the message Antony Campolo retold which tells the victory story for all who believe this one goes a completely different direction.

 

I believe everyone here this morning knows today is what all of Christianity calls Palm Sunday. I have told this story from the pulpit before and I am sure most all of you have heard and read the story of Palm Sunday many times before.

To briefly revisit it once more it is all about Jesus and his disciples going to Jerusalem to celebrate with thousands of other Jewish people, what was the most important day on their calendar at this time.

While the disciples didn’t know this Passover would be different than any they had celebrated before they soon realized this fact. Jesus was traveling into Jerusalem and the closer and closer they got more and more people lined the road. Many of them laid their coats on the road as Jesus drew near others cut branches from the trees and laid them on the road, a sort of red-carpet welcome.

 

We read that once Jesus arrived, he immediately went to the temple but because it was late he actually left Jerusalem and went to Bethany to spend the night. Bethany was only a short distance from Jerusalem and he had many friends there including Mary, Martha and possibly even Lazarus whom he had raised from the dead.

 

When he woke up the next day he went back to the temple in Jerusalem and was outraged at what he saw. In the outer courts of the temple people were selling animals and other things for people to provide the Priests for sacrifices. Leading up to the Passover celebration it would have been common for people to offer sacrifices for their sins to be in a right standing with God for the Passover celebration. What was completely wrong was the buying and selling within the temple grounds. I can’t help but think Jesus was mad at everyone involved. First of all, the Priests who not only allowed it to happen and probably were profiting from what was being sold. Next, he was mad at the sellers for, in all likelihood, ripping off the people by over charging them.

 

Finally, he was probably mad at the people buying because they should have known better than to be both lazy and casual in the way they got the sacrifices that were to be offered on their behalf. So, what did Jesus do when he saw this happening? He drove all of those involved out of his Father’s house. Saying this “My house will be called a house of prayer for all nations, but you have made it a den of robbers.”

 

So, in a way, all of the excitement of Sunday changed to hatred in the matter of a few minutes. In many ways he angered most of the Jews in the city in one brief moment in time. None more than the chief priests and teachers of the temple. To the point that we read that they began to look for a way to kill Jesus.

 

From this point on events began to happen at lighting speed as more and more people were stirred up to not only be against Jesus but literally hate Jesus and want him dead. As we celebrate Holy Week, may we remember it was Palm Sunday but Monday was coming. This is an example of how good intentioned people can be deceived into doing things that they would never have believed could happen. In just a few short days the ones who lovingly welcomed Jesus into Jerusalem were calling for his death.

This would be a truly tragic event if it weren’t for the fact that God the Father had a plan to not only redeem those who participated in these tragic events but all of those for generations forward who will receive Jesus as Lord and Savior. In ways so much more than happened when Joseph’s brothers sold him into slavery, we should be encouraged by the plan God had through Jesus where it says in Genesis 50:20 “what man intended for evil, God intended for good.” As we remember the events of Holy Week beginning with Palm Sunday, it is true that it is Sunday Monday is coming but more than that, by the end of the week we can celebrate what Anthony Campolo shared from his time at that black church 40 years ago. The truth that by the end of Holy Week it will be Friday but Sundays a comin.

 

May each of us in our own ways take some time to reflect on all of the life changing events that happened this most Holy Week. The most important week in the history of the world. May we praise God for offering the perfect sacrifice fulling realizing all the events allowed to happen before Easter Sunday, Resurrection Sunday to take place.

After all what Satan and man intended for God made sure ended for good.

Pastor Larry


Announcements:

Sunday School 9:00

Tuesdays 9:30 Bible Study

 

Today Snacks due for college care packages—we know of 6.

April 17 6:00 pm Love Feast here

May 4 Walt Wiltschek wil be with us for worship; we will have a potluck dinner afterwards for all.

 

--Please sign up to give a children’s message during worship and/or in the nursery during the sermon.

 


 

First Sundays: Food Bank donations

Pastor Larry Traxler (217) 454-2362

 

 

Keep in Your Prayers

Family of Evelyn Eads; Vallen (Tracy’s granddaughter); Pat Creviston; Stacie Warren; Doris Morganthaler; Nancy Fansler; Ruth Siburt; Dorthea Wood; Mike and Kathy Gentry; Steve Needham; Larry Traxler; Nancy Gorrell; Nora Hanaver; Ron and Kathleen Petersen; Doug Larrick; Louis & Carol Sulwer; Shirley & Carroll Clarkson; David and Jan Bower; Debbie Garvey Leibrock; Adiline Young; Mayo and Darlene Hanaver; many unspoken requests; victims of shootings and of natural disasters; shut-ins; the Nigerian church; the Haitian church; the CoB in the Democratic Republic of Congo; those in the middle of war and violence; military and other services and their families; Brethren Volunteer Service workers; Disaster project workers

District Prayer Calendar: Spend time in quiet reflection and rejoice in the hope of resurrection.

 

 

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