Jump Start # 4018
Matthew 9:10 “Then it happened that as Jesus was reclining at the table in the house, behold many tax collectors and sinners came and were dining with Jesus and His disciples.”
Baxter in one of his books states, “Often, in the Scriptures, there is a world in a word, in the color of an adjective, the tense of a verb, the turn of a preposition.” Such could be said of our passage today. Jesus had just called Matthew, the tax collector, to come and follow Him. What an odd mixture of political differences Jesus brought together. Common fishermen, a religious zealot and now one who worked for the Romans, a tax-collector. So different and likely having very little interest in each other now joined together by the Lord.
Jesus comes to the home of the tax collector. He is there for dinner, something the fishermen, and the zealot would never do. Other tax collectors are there. Other social misfits are there. The text calls them “sinners.” Later our Lord would go to the home of the chief tax collector, Zacchaeus.
The little three word phrase, “in the house,” carries more than just location. It can mean, “at home.” We know what “at home” means. Gone on a long trip, even a vacation, there is no place like home. Coffee just tastes better from your own cup at your own table. Homes sweet home, we call it. Even though your home may need updating and there are tons of “to-do” projects, it is your home. The college student looks forward to coming home on Spring Break. Grandkids love roaming through grandma’s house and seeing all the treasures she has.
At home carries the idea of being comfortable. We understand the opposite of that. It is to be out of place, uncomfortable. Many years ago, I went to India for three weeks to preach. I was never “at home” there. The smells, the customs, the food, the music, the culture, the language was so different. I wasn’t comfortable. I wasn’t “at home.”
Jesus was comfortable in the home of a tax collector. He was “at home” there. And, in just about every setting, Jesus seemed to be “at home.” Being a carpenter Jesus was “at home” on the water. Being from tiny Nazareth, He was at home in Jerusalem. He was “at home” with crowds. He was “at home” with social outcasts such as Samaritans, tax collectors and centurions. He was “at home” with the diseased, crippled, hurting and hopeless.
Jesus coming from Heaven would have never dealt with the things He did on earth. Yet, He seemed comfortable. And, more than that, Jesus had a way to make others feel comfortable around Him. Unholy in the presence of Holy. Imperfect in the presence of the Perfect. Confused in the presence of the Truth. This is why we find all sorts of people coming to Jesus. The hurting. Centurion. Canaanite woman. Parents. Religious leaders. They could talk to Jesus. They wanted to be around Jesus.
Now, here are some thoughts for us here:
First, as comfortable as this world is, we must remember this is not our home. Becoming too comfortable here lessens our desire to be with our Father in Heaven. This is hard because this is the only world we have ever known. We have nothing to compare this with. But, there are constant things that plague us from being comfortable here. The wickedness of our times, the indifference to our God, the thirst for all things wrong, makes us cry, “Come, Lord Jesus.”
Second, it is very important that we make the guests to our worship services comfortable. For many, it’s so different than what they have ever witnessed before. Our worship is not a performance. Our God is upon the throne, not a stage. What we say to our guests, our expressions upon our faces, welcomes them or it says loudly, “What are you doing here?” Guests may not dress the way you think they should. They may come with drink bottles. They likely may not have a Bible in their hand. Help them. Give them one. Invite a guest to sit with you. Don’t smother them with thousands of personal questions that would make one feel uncomfortable. Remember, the goal is for them to be “at home,” with us. Smiles. Kindness. Helpful.
Third, we need to be “at home” with our Lord. Comfortable with God. Comfortable with talking to our Father. Comfortable with His word. Comfortable with knowing His will. Comfortable with His presence. Decades and decades of reading that Bible ought to make you feel very comfortable. You know where to find hope and promises. You know what pages will comfort you. You know how to find answers.
At home. One day we will be at home, Heaven. Jesus was “in the house” at Matthew’s place. Jesus was comfortable.
Roger
