Introduction
Luciano
Pavarotti, one of the greatest operatic tenors of our time, passed
away one week and two years ago today.
He was known for his generosity, performing many benefit concerts
for those in need. If he had been asked to sing a private concert
for the President of the United States—for an audience of one—I'm
sure he would have considered it an honor. Proverbs says "Do
you see a man skillful in his work? He will stand before kings."
(Prov. 22:29) But do you know that when Pavarotti sang
sometimes he was nervous? Once early in his career he was nervous
and so clutched a handkerchief in his hand to wipe away his
perspiration. That handkerchief became his trademark.
Though
he was willing to sing for both great and small, rich and poor
alike, what do you think Pavarotti would say if you and I walked up
to him and taunted him, "So Pavarotti, you think you're the
greatest tenor of all time? Prove it! Sing for us!" He'd
say, "You don't deserve the honor."
We
so easily trivialize God's work of salvation. When Jesus healed
the man with a withered hand who was unable to work, that man could
work again. When Jesus healed the man who was blind and mute, and
what is more—was possessed by a demon—that man was made whole,
could see his Savior with his own eyes, and give praise to God with
his lips. Jesus wasn't performing little magic tricks for your
entertainment. He brought man's salvation, for the glory of God.
Outline.
What do you want from Jesus Christ? When you come to Him in this
worship service? When you come to Him in prayer? Jesus shows you
the right things to seek in this passage. We'll consider it
under these headings:
You
Want a Miracle v. 38
But
Do You Want the Resurrection? vv. 39-40
But
Do You Want Repentance? v. 41
But
Do You Want Faith? v. 42
Body
You
Want a Miracle v. 38.
First, you want a
miracle. Admit it!
Everybody does. Sometimes we say "If I could just see Jesus heal
a man or make someone rise from the dead, I would never forget it!
If God would just heal me now, I would serve Him the rest of my
life." Have you ever said that? Matthew tells us in v. 38,
Text
38
Then some of the scribes and Pharisees answered him, saying,
"Teacher, we wish to see a sign from you."
What
is a sign? The meaning of signs. "We
wish to see a sign from you." They mean, "We want to
see a miracle. We heard you just healed a man but we didn't see
it. Do it again! This time for the camera! If you really are
the Son of God, prove it!" They want to see a miracle. But
they ask for what they term a "sign." A sign is more than
just a supernatural act. It is a supernatural
revelation that carries a message from God. It's
proof that God's word is true. The Pharisees wanted
Jesus to prove by a sign that He had authority to change the OT
religion which was established by signs. These scribes and
Pharisees were the ones from Missouri, the "Show Me" state.
They say, "Show me."
God
approves of signs. It's
not as if asking for a sign was a bad thing; God
approves of signs.
Gideon asked for a sign (Judg. 6:17), God gave Hezekiah one
unsolicited (Is. 38:7, 8), and rebuked Ahaz for refusing to ask
for one (Is. 7:11). Circumcision and baptism, Passover and the
Lord's Supper, are signs. The rainbow, the plagues, the
Sabbath, the budding of Aaron's rod, the parting of the Jordan
and twelve stones to prove it, the sun's shadow going back ten
steps, and the virgin birth of Christ—these were all signs.
Christ Himself is "a
sign
to be opposed...that the thoughts of the hearts of many will be
revealed." (Luke
2:34) Christ performed many
signs—many miracles—throughout His ministry (John 4:54; 6:14;
12:18), but the greatest sign of all would
be His resurrection from the dead. When the Jews asked, "‘What
sign
do you show us for doing these things?' Jesus answered them,
‘Destroy
this temple, and in three days I will raise it up.'"
(John 2:18-19)
But
you shall not put the Lord your God to the test.
God
approved of signs, but "you
shall not put the Lord your God to the test."
(Matt. 4:7; Deut. 6:16) God does not answer to you. You
answer to Him. These scribes and Pharisees wanted Jesus to
answer to them. They wanted to test Him, and to find some way to
accuse Him, as Luke 11:16 makes explicit. They sound so
polite, but in reality they're setting a trap. Jesus had
performed hundreds of miracles already! Why did they need
another one?
When
I was in Uganda I presented the gospel to a woman who wouldn't
believe it because, she said, "I have AIDS. Can your God heal
me of AIDS right now?" This was just an excuse; it wasn't a
real question. She was setting a trap. What she really meant
was that she knew my God wasn't going to heal her today, so she
doesn't need to believe the gospel or do anything about it.
Nevertheless God gives a real answer to her question—the answer
is that Christ is risen from the dead, and one day will raise
believers from the dead, giving them new bodies and putting them
in a new heavens and new earth where there is no AIDS, no
mourning or crying or pain.
But
Do You Want the Resurrection? vv. 39-40.
You want a miracle, but
do you want the resurrection?
It is the greatest sign of all; the greatest proof anyone needs.
This is what Jesus means by "the
sign of...Jonah."
Text
39
But he answered them, "An evil and
adulterous generation seeks for a sign, but no sign will be given
to it except the sign of the prophet Jonah.
40
For just as Jonah was three days and three nights in the belly of
the great fish, so will the Son of Man be three days and three
nights in the heart of the earth.
The
scribes and Pharisees, and their whole generation of men, even we
today, are "an evil and adulterous
generation." Listen to me, don't ask God to prove He's
worthy of your devotion when you're doing what is evil in His
sight, and when you have no more devotion than an adulterous
spouse. With the same lips you bless God now and curse your
brother tomorrow. You set your minds on things above in church,
then fill it with filth on TV and the Internet. You pray "Lead
us not into temptation" but when you are in temptation you don't
pray. We sinners are "an evil and
adulterous generation." And we say to Jesus, "If you
will only show me a miracle now, I will give you my undying
devotion the rest of my life." He's under no obligation to
prove His faithfulness to you. But out of His marvelous grace He
has given you, and even these wicked questioners, the greatest
proof of His power over sin, of His power over death, in the
resurrection of Jesus Christ.
To
these scribes and Pharisees Jesus says, "You want a miracle?
I'll give you one. This one's for you, bud. I'll spend
three days in the grave, just like Jonah spent three days in the
heart of the sea. Jonah came out of the sea by the power of God
and when he spoke five Hebrew words the men of Nineveh fell to
their knees, tore their clothes and put dirt on their head crying
out ‘Oh God, have mercy on me, a sinner!' But what will you
do when I rise from the dead? Will that sign mean anything to
you?"
The
fact Jesus wasn't in the grave for three nights is nothing to
worry about, because Christ is using synecdoche, referring to the
parts to indicate the whole; referring to three nights and days to
indicate three days.
Neither
should the fact that Christ mentions neither Jonah's nor Jesus'
rising from the dead should not distract you from his purpose.
Christ only mentions that Jonah was in the belly of the great fish
for three days and three nights—but is that the most important
thing you remember from the story of Jonah? Do you not remember
that though the waters closed in over him to take his life, though
the gates of Sheol nearly closed him in, God brought up his life
from the pit, and the fish spit him out upon dry land? (Jonah 2:2,
5, 6, 10) God saved Jonah's life! Then He sent Jonah to
preach to the Ninevites, "You are about to lose your life!—at
the hand of the God who just saved mine." And what did the men
of Nineveh say? "Let everyone turn from
his evil way and from the violence that is in his hands. Who
knows? God may turn and relent from his fierce anger, so that we
may not perish." (Jonah 3:8-9) They were about to
die but God saved their lives. You would die for the evil of your
sins, "but God shows his love for us in
that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us."
(Rom. 5:8) And when Jesus rose from the dead He proved
once and for all that God can give you eternal life.
The
greatest sign is Christ's resurrection. You want a miracle,
but do you want the resurrection?
But
Do You Want Repentance? v. 41
You want a miracle on your terms, but do you want the miracle God
provides? One of the greatest miracles God works in a man's life
is to bring him to repentance. This is what God worked in the men
of Nineveh.
Text
41
The men of Nineveh will rise up at the judgment with this
generation and condemn it, for they repented at the preaching of
Jonah, and behold, something greater than Jonah is here.
When
you come to Jesus Christ, what do you want from Him? Do you want
a magic trick? Or do you want your salvation, and the glory of
God? Here in v. 41 Jesus tells you to seek from Him the grace of
repentance. The right response to Jesus, to the gospel, and to
Christ's resurrection, is repentance.
Do
you really want repentance? There is a great difference between a
true Christian and a false Christian; between a faithful Christian
and an unfaithful Christian. When God tells you you have to honor
your father and mother, stop hating, stop lusting, stop lying,
stop stealing, do you say in your heart of hearts, "No, I want
to keep on sinning"? Or do you say "I really do want to stop
sinning"? The Christian says "I want to stop sinning." The
Christian says like Zacchaeus, who had stolen from people for
years, "If I have defrauded anyone of
anything, I restore it fourfold." (Luke 19:8)
"Even though it hurts me, I will stop doing what is evil, and do
what is right." When a man turns from a life of sin "to
live the rest of the time in the flesh no longer for human
passions but for the will of God" (1 Pet. 4:2), it
is a miracle. It is not the miracle you would have asked for
before God began to work in your heart. But now that you believe
in Him, ask Him to give you more and more of this grace of
repentance.
But
Do You Want Faith? v. 42.
The Pharisees found no place in their hearts for repentance. Nor
did they have faith. Jesus shames them by showing them a small
picture of what they would do if they had faith in Jesus Christ, by
reminding them of the Queen of Sheba. You want a miracle, but
do you want faith?
Text
42
The queen of the South will rise up at the judgment with this
generation and condemn it, for she came from the ends of the
earth to hear the wisdom of Solomon, and behold, something
greater than Solomon is here.
The
Ninevites repented and the Queen of Sheba listened, but the
Pharisees will neither repent nor believe. The Queen of Sheba
came from the ends of the earth to hear Solomon, but sometimes
even Christians with a Bible already in their hand hardly care to
hear the words of Jesus. Behold, He stands at the door of your
heart and knocks! The Queen came uninvited, but Christ invites
you to come. Solomon was wise, but Christ is wisdom itself. The
Queen sought earthly wisdom, but Christ gives eternal salvation.
Do
not let wicked Nineveh and unbelieving Sheba experience more of
repentance and faith than you who stand in the full light of the
glorious day of the gospel of Jesus Christ. It is through faith
as the receptive instrument and repentance as the fruit of saving
faith that God miraculously applies to you the redemptive
benefits of the miracle of Christ's resurrection. Viewed
through the world's eyes we too easily trivialize the greatness
of these miracles. We want to see someone healed. We want to see
bread from stones, angels swooping down to catch Jesus when He
falls. We want to see something amazing! But we so easily
think Christ's resurrection, repentance and faith are nothing.
We think they aren't miracles. But faith can move mountains,
just as the Queen of Sheba was moved to come from the ends of the
earth. And repentance changes the whole course of a man's life
from today until the day he dies. These are
miracles—greater miracles than a merely physical healing (John
5:20, 24; 14:12)—and they spring from the greatest miracle of
all, the resurrection of Jesus Christ.
Christ
is a far greater prophet, with a far greater message, than Jonah;
Christ is a far greater king, with a far greater wisdom, than
Solomon. Jesus Christ is the name above all names. But until God
opens your eyes to the greatness of Jesus Christ, and of the
miracle of salvation through faith in Him, you remain blind to
these things. John tells us, "Though he
had done so many signs before them, they still did not believe in
him." Why? Because "they could
not believe," for God "has
blinded their eyes and hardened their heart, lest they see with
their eyes, and understand with their heart, and turn, and I would
heal them." (John 12:37, 39, 40) There is a man
in Caney who said "You can't prove to me that Christ rose from
the dead." But Christ says to him and to you, "My
resurrection is proof that I alone have the power to save
you from your slavery to sin, by giving you repentance and faith;
opening the eyes of the blind, and setting the prisoner free."
Conclusion
So
you want a miracle. But do you want the resurrection? Do you want
repentance? Do you want faith? Salvation by repentance and faith
in the resurrection of Jesus Christ is a pearl of great price; we
should forsake all else if only to have this one thing. We should
be ashamed where our repentance and faith fall short, and even
admit we don't deserve the honor of receiving these miraculous
works in our unworthy selves. But so graciously Christ "was
delivered up for our trespasses and raised for our justification"
(Rom. 4:25), for our salvation, and the glory of God. These
are the miracles you should want, above all others—God's wisdom
through faith and repentance by the power of Christ's
resurrection. "Jews demand signs and
Greeks seek wisdom, but we preach...Christ the power of God and the
wisdom of God." (1 Cor. 1:22, 24)
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