“Defeating the Status Quo” (Conclusion)
In the first century “life as usual” for the people of Israel included poverty, illiteracy, hunger, sickness, and being under the thumb of the Roman empire. “Life as usual” is what we mean by the status quo, and for Israel the status quo was depressing, to say the least. But then Jesus came, and through his teaching and healing and feeding the hungry, he overcame many of the most negative elements of the status quo. Then he was put to death on the cross, but what followed his violent and humiliating death brought about the greatest reversal of the status quo the world has ever seen. In what ways did the resurrection of Jesus defeat the status quo?
I When we look at the Passion Story, we see, first, that Jesus said No to the status quo of lying to protect oneself.
II When we look at the Passion Story, we see, second, that Jesus said No to the status quo of hating those who hate us.
III When we look at the Passion Story, we see, third, that Jesus said No to the status quo of separation.
IV Finally, when we look at the Passion Story, we see, finally, that Jesus said No to the status quo of ______________.
A. There is no better illustration of what status quo means than the human m_________________ rate. The Latin term status quo literally means “the state i_____ w______________.”
1. We are all on a journey toward ____________.
2. Sartre said that there is no ____________ from this life with its inevitable death sentence. He called us “beings t___________ death.”
3. The more we try to hold on to each day, the ______________ each day seems to slip away.
B. There is only one foundation that can enable us to die in __________________, and that foundation is the resurrection of Jesus.
1. Oftentimes, at Easter, we talk about all the historical evidence for the resurrection of Jesus, but the most obvious evidence is staring us in the face: that evidence is ___________.
2. There was no Christian ______________ and there was no Christian ________________ before the resurrection of Jesus.
3. Christianity was only a tiny movement when Jesus died, and when he died his followers looked for ________ to __________ into to escape the same fate Jesus had experienced, and that fate was being _________ to a cross.
4. If Jesus had not walked out of the tomb, there would have been nothing powerful enough to t_________________ the fear of a tiny ragtag band of followers into the w_________________ force that Christianity is today.
V When the status quo is changed, it does not take long until the ________ change becomes the _________ status quo. But here is what is so amazing about Jesus: the changes he brought about are still just as profoundly r____________ today as they were two-thousand years ago.
03-22-20 Kevin Goins - The Church's Ministry of Healing, part 1
03-14-20 Kevin Goins - Message to the Congregation
03-01-20 Kevin Goins - Anatomy of An Illness, part 2
02-23-20 Kevin Goins - Anatomy of An Illness
02-16-20 Kevin Goins - the Discipline of Fasting, Conclusion
02-09-20 The Discipline of Fasting, Part 3
02-02-20 Kevin Goins - The Discipline of Fasting, Part 2
01-26-20 Kevin Goins - The Discipline of Fasting
01-19-20 Kevin Goins - What we must do to hear from God
01-12-20 Kevin Goins - Paul's Helping Resolutions
01-05-20 Jennifer Bliss Criswell - Making the Magi's Story Our Story
12-29-19 Kevin Goins - Celebrating Advent in the Right Direction
12-22-19 Kevin Goins - Making Simeon's Story Our Story
12-15-19 Kevin Goins - Making the Christmas Story My Story with testimonies
12-08-19 Kevin Goins - Making Mary's Story My Story
12-01-19 - Kevin Goins - Making the Shepherd's Story Our Story
11-24-19 Kevin Goins - The Benefits of Ingratitude
11-17-19 Kevin Goins - Wisdom is Fabulous! Part 3
11-10-19 Paul Gieschen - Living Water vs. Broken Cisterns
11-03-19 Kevin Goins - Our City, Our Calling
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