18-06-17 John 5 - 1-18 Trust in The Son, Not in Tradition
18-06-17 John 5 - 1-18 Trust in The Son, Not in Tradition
18-06-17 John 5 - 1-18 Trust in The Son, Not in Tradition
John 5:1-18
I. Introduction:
A. Connected with experience:
People usually get heart broken every February (and we know why). But as a Filipino, does January break your heart? As a
Filipino Christian, does January break your heart? It should! Because every January we display to the world one of the biggest
idolatrous feasts with over a million people participating—the Feast of the Black Nazarene. (Share my experience and discussion
with a person who believes in this (at first he responded but in the end he muttered tradisyon ko na ito… panata ko na ito…
nakasanayan ko na ito). It’s heart breaking because he was willing to trust in tradition (statue), na maniwala sa kung ano’ng
nakasanayan na, instead of the real Jesus as revealed in Scripture.
Picture: Feast of the Black Nazarene
II. Body
A. The Healing on Sabbath (vv. 1-9)
-Jesus was at Capernaum in Galilee (Healed an official’s son: 2 nd sign; Water to Wine 1st sign; makes this healing a 3rd sign) to
Jerusalem (seat of Jewish faith) for a feast
-unknown feast: ex. named- Passover (6:4), Tabernacles (7:2), Dedication (10:22)
v. 2-3 “…by the Sheep Gate a pool… called Bethesda… in these lay a multitude of invalids”
-a small opening at the temple’s northern wall
-“house of mercy, house of grace, house of outpouring”; north of the temple, pool with 5 roofed colonnades
-disabled people flocked the area (superstition: an angel stirred the pool first to enter will be healed *v. 4
Picture: PGH, public hospital (many sick people in the ward, some lying on foams along the floor)
Transition: out of the many invalids in the area, we are told that…
3. The tipping point (v. 9b) “Now that day was a Sabbath”
-a day of rest from one’s employment for physical and spiritual refilling (Ex. 20:8-11)
-rabbis developed man-made laws that made Sabbath burdensome, forbidding certain activities that were not expressly
mentioned in OT Scripture (Oral tradition, Mishnah)focused on law obedience rather than rest
-(Jesus knew this) Jesus deliberately healed on a Sabbath to make a statement: the warped Sabbath tradition with its man-made
stipulations (is not binding-not God’s Word, not God’s intention).
-in a grander scheme, He went on to work (to heal) on a day tradition forbids Him to because He wants to show that He is greater
than this man-made rule
-1st GUIDEPOST: HOW did Jesus show that He’s greater than tradition?
-His words, not a superstition/tradition can heal
-He healed on a Sabbath (disregarding the prohibition of an unbiblical tradition)
-His statement: “I do not bow down to man-made traditions, because I am greater than these”
-Clarification: not a story about healing or an encounter per se; the miraculous signmeant to drive a point, challenge
people’s reliance on tradition especially of the Jewish leaders hope that they will let go of it and cling instead to Jesus
PICTURE- We need not look far, many Filipinos trust in traditions instead of God’s Son as revealed in Scripture. (ex. The black
Nazarene, wearing of talisman, babies with red cloth protection against evil spirits)
PROBLEM: Are all traditions wrong? As evangelicals, we still follow certain traditions (Christmas, Holy Week, creeds). As Filipinos
we celebrate birthdays, Chinese New Year, fiestas. Not all traditions are wrong. But those that expressly go against clear
teachings of the Bible are (Nazarene vs idolatry; Chinese New Year vs sovereignty; fiestas vs Biblical saints).
-Someone may insist that tradition and Scripture are at par, after all these are passed on to us by our forefathers. We stand our
ground and say No. Scripture alone (Sola Scriptura)final arbiter of faith and conduct (2Tim 3:16). Tradition is okay if it
reflects rather than contradicts Scripture. Tradition is subservient to Scripture—the Jesus revealed in Scripture is Supreme
over all man-made rules and regulations.
RESTATE: Jews believed that tradition (Sabbath) is supreme… but Jesus showed that He is greater, 1) How? When he nullified it
through His healing. Now, the Jews are about to discover our 2 nd guide post 2) WHY is Jesus greater than tradition?
2nd GUIDEPOST: WHY is Jesus greater than tradition? Because He is the Son of God (God/Divine) and as the Father (being God)
continuously works to sustain the universe, so does the Son—Fully Man but also fully Divine!
III. Conclusion
RESTATE: We have seen that Jesus is greater than tradition:
a) How did He show this? He, not tradition healed. By healing even on a Sabbath tradition (He’s not bound by man-made laws)
b) Why is He greater than tradition? Because He is God’s Son (Divine); Lord of the Sabbath
c) What does this mean for us? We have to rely on Him rather than on traditions, rituals, rules or laws first, for our salvation, even
for our sanctification, even for our glorification. Trust in the Son, not in tradition!
Applications:
1. OTHERS: What will you do when you have friends or relatives who practice certain traditions that go against Scripture?
-Condemn them? Be adversarial? Consider them Heretics?
-Suggestion: look at these as springboards for Gospel presentation Why do you follow this tradition? What benefit do you
get from it? How do you reconcile it with Scripture?
-Just be genuinely interested, helping them question their own beliefs.
-and when the opportunity comes, present Christ who is your living hope!
2. CHURCH: As a church, have we scrutinized our practices in light of the Scripture? (Evangelism trust is on a tool?
Discipleship trust is on a program or a method? Calendar of activitiesSacred, unbendable)
-We are the Body of Christ, and it is but proper to rely on Him wholly as we fulfill His ministries
-His measure of success is not only statistics motives, faithfulness, hearts
-We pray that there will be more people (caution: that we should not be consumed by numbers, but that our attitude should
be even if God will not add to our numbers, as long as He desires to use us still, we will be here, we will remain faithful)
3. SELF: How about your personal traditions? Sometimes we don’t notice it but they can come in statements and beliefs like:
-Ganito na talaga ako, ganito na ang attitude ko so I just live with it!
-Ay siya? Ayaw niya talaga ang spiritual discussions. So I don’t bother starting one.
-These statements reveal that our trust is on the status quo, how we perceive things.
-Have we forgotten that the God who changed you and me is the same God who changed the murderer and persecutor by the
name of Apostle Paul? If He can turn a murderer into a missionary; He can transform you also!
-Or have we forgotten that we are no different from the people we think are uninterested in the Gospel? Before the Spirit’s
work, we didn’t care at all about God! If He is able to do the miracle in us, He can, even in those we consider “lost causes.”
-Friends, where do we place our trust? If in anything other than Jesus (tradition, people, work, ministry, finances) it’s dangerous.
-Remember repentance? It’s actually a call to turn away from anything claiming lordship over our lives and to surrender to Jesus,
believing that He alone can forgive, cleanse and reconcile you to God by His death and resurrection (not traditions, not good
works, not institutions)
-Trust in the Son, not in tradition (whatever form it takes).