It may be that there are some here this evening who have not been
with us through the earlier meetings of this conference.
Therefore, for their benefit, I may say that we have been led in
this season to give our attention anew to the great matter of the
Holy Spirit as the Spirit of Divine anointing for the believer in
Jesus Christ. We have looked at this matter from various
standpoints, and pursued it along various lines.
And so this evening, in this closing gathering, we are coming
back to this great basic passage, which has been read here, from
the gospel by Luke chapter 4, Jesus visiting Nazareth, entering
the synagogue, and the attendant, evidently knowing Him as
belonging to and having been brought up in that town, passes to
Him the roll with the Prophecies of Isaiah inscribed upon it. And
He took it, and unfolded the roll, and working in the unfolding
toward that point in those prophecies, which we know as chapter
61. And then He began to read: "The Spirit of the Lord is upon Me,
because He anointed Me to preach good tidings". And so this evening we are to be occupied with the anointing in
relation to the "Good Tidings"; what we call "the gospel".
Now, as
you see, Luke puts this incident very early in the ministry of
Christ. It would seem that the Lord had visited Capernaum, perhaps
He had taken in Cana of Galilee, but had come very soon to
Nazareth. Luke in his record is wanting to make clear that the
Lord Jesus, in His great ministry, preaching and teaching at the
very beginning, the very first sermon that He preached, struck the
note of grace. The whole subsequent score, the great harmony of
the gospel, would be tuned to that key-note: grace!
It was Luke's particular object to record the gospel of grace. He
differs from the other writers of gospels, particularly in that
matter. Matthew will give us the gospel of the kingdom; it's not a
different gospel, but it has that particular aspect of the kingdom
of God, the kingdom of heaven. Others will have their own
particular object in writing, but Luke knew quite well what he was
after. And so his gospel, in a peculiar way, is tuned to this
great initial key-note - grace! It's Luke that alone writes of the
Prodigal Son, a great, great story of grace; of the lost sheep, of
the lost coin, and sets over the whole of this gospel, "The Son of
Man is come to seek and to save that which was lost". It's the
gospel of grace. And so he puts the Lord Jesus here, as at the
beginning, and gives us this: "The Spirit of the Lord is upon Me,
because He hath anointed Me to preach good tidings."
Grace is here - it's mentioned actually in that word once - but
it is there in the original language covered by another English
translation: "to proclaim the acceptable year of the Lord", which
many of you will know in the original text is: "the year of
grace", the year of Divine grace, the grace of the Lord! That is
what comes out here particularly. This is a sermon on the grace of
God by Luke, made the foundation of all the ministry and work of
the Lord Jesus, and declared to be the object of the
anointing, the thing for which Jesus was anointed. The
anointing of the Spirit then, has as the object: grace, grace! For
this dispensation, which is "the year", the year which
began when Jesus came, and will end when He returns. It's a long
day; it is proving to be much longer than anybody expected! It is
not a day of hours, but a day of centuries. Nevertheless, bounded
by a beginning and an end, between those two. The character of
this dispensation in which you and I live, this "day", is grace. Good
news as to the grace of God.
Well, to begin with, Jesus said that He was anointed to preach
good tidings. Grace is proclaimed and grace is proclaimed with a
mighty context. There's a two-fold background to this declaration
of the Lord Jesus, under the direction of the anointing Spirit.
Firstly, there is the background of Isaiah chapter 56 [Editor's
note: TAS meant chapter 61]. Now, if you turn back to that
chapter from which this prophecy is taken, you will find that its
connection there, its literal and actual connection that is of
this very prophecy. And it is the prophet Isaiah, who in the first
place is speaking of himself; he is not in the first instance
thinking of the coming Messiah. He is saying of
himself: "The Spirit of the Lord is upon me,
because He" (the Lord) "hath anointed me to preach good
tidings". Isaiah was the preacher of the gospel then. But you
notice the setting. The setting there was the ending of the
captivity of the Lord's people in Babylon. For seventy long, weary
years, they had been in exile... because, because of their sin.
After long pleadings, and entreaties, and warnings, and
beseechings, they still went their way.
The prophet said: "All we like sheep have gone astray; we have
turned every one to his own way". Because of their persistence in
that "own way", not the way of the Lord, at last the threatened
judgement had fallen on them; they had been carried away into
exile, into bondage. And there, according to the prescribed time,
they languished for seventy years. And, whatever may have been
true of some who may have settled down and sought to make the
best of the situation, or even to have a good time with all that
Babylon could offer, there were those who never did so. There was
a considerable body of those exiles who longed for home, "This is
not home; we are in a foreign country. This is not the place to
which we belong. Yes, you may say that we are romancing about
'home', that it is not all that we, in exile imagine it to be,
nevertheless, it's home! And we are away from home; this is not
our life." A little glimpse into how they felt is given us in such
words as these: "We hung our harps upon the willows, and said,
'How can we sing the songs of Zion in a strange land?'" No song,
no song in a strange land. A people in bondage; a people in
weakness. A people deprived and stripped of everything that was
really theirs by the will of God; bruised in spirit, imprisoned in
body, blinded by frustration and disappointment, with an eternal
longing in their hearts: "Oh, to get back home!"
The day came. The dawn of a day broke and a sound is heard like a
trumpet call. The prophet is crying, "The Spirit of the Lord is
upon me... the Lord hath anointed me to preach good tidings."
What are the good tidings? "He's sent me to proclaim release to
the captives, the recovering of sight to the blind, to set at
liberty them that are bruised, to proclaim the year of grace of
the Lord!" And can you imagine what those captives felt like? As
with that morning they heard the cry: "The day of your release has
come - the day when you can go home! You can have all that for
which your heart has longed these many years - you can go! You are
free!" That's the first background that Jesus takes up, and says:
"Yes, but My good news is even better than that! This world is
like that - you men and women are like that; you are exiles from
your heavenly home, far from your heavenly home, far from the
Father's house. You are in bondage and captivity. The god of this
age hath blinded your eyes. You're in a pitiable plight, more
pitiable even than those exiles in Babylon. But listen! I have
come with good news! I have come with good news! This is the year
of the Lord's release; this is the year of grace!" That's the
gospel that He was anointed to preach.
That's the first of the two backgrounds of this wonderful first
sermon of the Lord Jesus. And before I pass from that, I want to
remind you that He said: "This day, this day is
this fulfilled" - this day! "In your ears, it's fulfilled". While no doubt literally He was referring to that
particular Sabbath day in the synagogue at Nazareth, spiritually
it ushered in the day of this thing, this very thing for mankind.
The day has come for the release.
But there's a second background, familiar to many of you. It's
the background of the great festival in Israel, known as the Year
of Jubilee. Once every fifty years in the life of Israel, a great
festival took place, and it lasted for a whole year. During the
fifty years, many a tragedy had been enacted, many a dark shadow
had come in to spoil and blight the lives of the people. Here is a
poor family, unable to meet its liabilities and pay its debts, and
so, under the law this thing could be exacted in some way, a
mortgage could be taken on their property; their inheritance of
fields could be taken away and used to raise the crops and pay
their debts and they get nothing out of it. A son in a family
could be taken and put to forced labour and get no wages, to pay
the debt. Things like that, and a lot more things like that, could
happen; people during the fifty years were having that sort of
experience. And then, the fiftieth year!
The Year of Jubilee
What happened? With the first streaks of dawn, that first day of
the Year of Jubilee the trumpets of Jubilee were sounded! And
those who kept the sons in bondage, had to go and say to them:
"You can go home! You can go home, I can keep you no longer; it's
the Year of Jubilee. It's the year of release; I have no longer
any power to keep you - go home!" Use your imagination - the
family at home, on this festal morn, preparing the home, and
scanning the horizon for the return of that son who'd been kept as
a hostage against their debt. Many a home, many a broken family
mended that day. And the lawyer has to write across the Deed of
Mortgage: "Cancelled!" and send it to the poor people whose
inheritance had been taken away. All that sort of thing was
happening all over the land; it was the Year of Jubilee! All
slaves must be released! All properties must be returned!
Everything under judgment must be freed! And listen: what's that
sound? The keys are turning in the cells of prisoners, and gates
of the prison courts are being opened, and the jailers are saying:
"You can all go now, it's the Year of Jubilee!"
That's the background that the Lord Jesus takes up, and says:
"You think that was good news to the land, to those homes, to
those people? Good news? When they heard those Trumpets of
Jubilee, do you think they rejoiced? Indeed they did! But I've got
a better gospel than that even! The gospel, the Good News that I
have come to preach, to proclaim, is better than the return from
Babylon's exile, and better even than the Year of Jubilee! It is
the gospel of the grace of God, of eternal salvation. Yes, He's
anointed Me to preach good tidings to the poor." The poor... it
was a bad thing to be poor in Israel; the creditor could come and
take away your son, take away your home, take away your land. It
was a bad thing to be poor... "to preach good tidings to the
poor... He has sent Me to proclaim release to the captives, the
recovering of sight to the blind, to set at liberty them that are
bruised, to proclaim the year of grace of the Lord." So it's
proclaimed with a tremendous background, isn't it? But, and I
don't think that I'm reading anything into this, what the Lord
Jesus really did mean, and what it has proved to mean in
this long-drawn-out day is, that what came with Him by the
anointing was a better thing than Israel had in getting back to
the land and leaving Babylon, and a better thing even than they
had in their Year of Jubilee once in fifty years. Fifty years may
be a life-time, but it's not eternity! What He came to
give was eternal salvation.
We could dwell long upon the details, of course, the prisoners,
and the blind people, and bruised people, and poverty - they all
have a spiritual counterpart. But, the sermon is not finished.
It's not finished. Suddenly, a strange, strange turn in the course
of His discourse carries us away back, away back into ancient
Israel to the days of the two great prophets Elijah and Elisha.
And He says, as we have read: "Of a truth I say unto you, there
were many widows in Israel in the days of Elijah, and the heaven
was shut up for three years and six months, when there came a
great famine over the land. Unto none of them was Elijah sent, but
only to Zarephath in the land of Sidon, unto a woman who was a
widow". I wonder what Elijah would think about that? I don't know
whether he knows about it now, he did appear with Moses on the
Mount of Transfiguration - he may know more than we think he does!
But I'm quite sure, that if he knew, or when he does know,
he will get a bit of a surprise that the Lord Jesus took up that
incident and used it in this way. What would Elijah say? "Well,
yes, it was a terrible day that followed my declaration, 'There
shall be no rain upon the earth by the space of three years and
six months' - a terrible time. And there were many, many poor
widows in Israel, but the Lord would never let me go to any of
those widows to help them! But one day, one day, the Lord told me
to go right outside of the land of Israel altogether, to the land
of Sidon, to a poor woman who was a widow. I had to go." Well, we
know what happened there. Elijah would say: "I never realised what
I was doing at that time! What was I doing? What was the meaning
of it in God's mind?" Why, the Lord Jesus has uncovered the hidden
meaning of this. In the land of Israel, in the land of Israel is
the place where they think that they have a right to everything -
of course they are the people! They are the
people! They have the oracles. They have the revelation. They have
the commandments; they have all that which God gave at Sinai...
you see? They've got it all; they are the people who have a right
to everything! Self-satisfied, self-important - under judgment
because of their pride, their arrogance. They, therefore, are not
suitable subjects for grace.
You'll never know the grace of God if you have any kind of spirit
or mentality like that - you've got to be like a poor widow, a
poor widow who is regarded as an outsider - and you will know
grace then. Now that's a discovery for Elijah even, that he was
enacting, under the direction of the Spirit of God, he was
enacting the gospel of grace in this sense that it is to
those who are aware of their need, really conscious that
if they are going to get anything at all, it will have to be the
grace of God! "Tis mercy all, immense and free." Only people who
have no sense whatever of merit in themselves, of right to
anything at all, can speak like that: "Tis mercy all, immense and
free"! And it was a poor widow in the land of Sidon who came to
know the gospel of the grace of God.
But the Lord Jesus doesn't finish there: "There were many lepers
in Israel in the days of Elisha the prophet". Elisha had the
anointing, he could, by the anointing, have cleansed all the
lepers in Israel, but he wasn't allowed to go to one of them. It
was in Israel, it was in Israel when Israel was not in a state to
know the grace of God. But there was one man who was a foreigner,
an outsider altogether; not in Israel: Naaman the leper! And just
to him was Elisha sent; or he, alone, an outsider, was cleansed of
his leprosy by Elisha.
You see, the Lord Jesus is putting enormous emphasis upon this!
The gospel is the gospel of grace! On the one side, you
have no place in this acceptable year of the Lord, this year of
the Lord's release, this year of grace, with all that it means,
you have no place in it. If you can still hope to find what you're
after in any other direction than the grace of God, you're simply
ruled out! On the other side, if you are such as the widow of
Zarephath or Naaman the Syrian, who is led and governed by this
sense of poverty and sinfulness, you're the candidate for the
gospel, the good news of the grace of God. And I think Elisha
would be a bit surprised if he knew what he did over
Naaman the Syrian was going to be taken up by the Lord Jesus
centuries after, and used as an illustration of the grace of God -
that he was enacting the gospel of grace.
It's proclaimed; it is illustrated and set forth in this vivid
and forceful way by the Lord Jesus. But such is the heart of man
(and, dear friends, how, how it is borne out there in Nazareth...
here it is) He is, by the anointing, proclaiming the good news,
the gospel of grace, the Year of Jubilee, the Year of the Lord's
release - they are not prepared to number themselves with the
poor, and the blind, and the imprisoned, and the needy ones. They
still stand on their religious dignity as the people, with
the result that they reject Him who brought the good news
of grace, and would destroy Him! Would destroy Him! Such is the
heart of man... that's what men will do. They may go to church
every Sunday, and in their religion say: "God be merciful unto us!
God be merciful to me a sinner", and you meet them immediately
afterwards, and you say: "Hello, you miserable sinner!" - see what
will happen to you! Oh no... not having that! You see? That's what
happened there.
He was trying to make them see on the one side, that they were
needing the grace of God - they were needing the grace of God. And
on the other side, that the grace of God had come to them that
very day in His Person. But, their blindness is so great,
and their imprisonment so strong... their exile from God so far,
that they will take the very Messenger of grace and destroy Him if
they can. Grace rejected.
I am not surprised, I am not surprised that Nathanael said: "Can
any good thing come out of Nazareth?" That's Nazareth! That's
Nazareth. But even there, marvel of marvels, He who knew His own
native town, He who knew the state of things there, He who knew
those people; He who knew their pride, their prejudice, and their
bigotry - He who knew it... He had lived there thirty years - He
knew it! He knew it. And this very sermon shows that He knew it,
shows that He knew it - He made that the place of His first
preaching of the grace of God. Marvellous, isn't it? Marvellous!
We would say: "That's the place to be left. Never go there
preaching good news; they won't have it, they won't have it!
Indeed, you'll find that they will more than reject it, they'll
reject you!" Nevertheless... the Son of God knew when He came into
this world what a reception He would have: "He came unto His own,
and they that were His own received Him not". He knew when He came
here that He would not be received. But He came! But He came, "Tis
mercy all, immense and free".
But that's not the end of the story. I'm sorry that it's broken
up in this way. The end of the story? Oh yes, they led Him to the
brow of the hill whereon their city was built that they might
throw Him down headlong, "He came to Capernaum, a city of
Galilee... He was teaching on the Sabbath day. And there was in
the synagogue a man which had a spirit of an unclean demon..." you
know the rest. You know the rest, how does this really finish?
There? Like this: "There went forth a rumour concerning Him in
every place of the region round about"!
Grace has been proclaimed. Grace has been illustrated. Grace has
been rejected.... But that's not the end. Here, grace is
triumphant at last! It is triumphant at last. There in Capernaum,
grace triumphs. A poor devil-ridden, dominated creature,
delivered! The people marvelling, marvelling at this. The
fame, a rumour of Him went through all the region! What kind of a
rumour do you think it was? Ah, if you look into this, you'll say:
"You see, what they marvelled at was grace, grace. Coming from His
lips: grace. Coming from His hands: grace. Coming from His
presence: grace!"
"The Spirit of the Lord is upon Me, because the Lord hath
anointed Me to preach good tidings to?" Those who need
grace - that's what it amounts to! To those who need it? Ah, no,
those who know they need it! Their only hope is the grace
of God!
"The year of grace". "The year of release". "The year of
Jubilee"!
Dear friends, that, that is the effect of the anointing, the
effect of the anointing. The Holy Spirit has assumed the
responsibility for
that! The gospel of the grace of God. If you and I come
under the Holy Spirit's action, we shall ourselves be children of
the grace of God, and we shall be those whose supreme note, to
which all life is tuned, is: Grace, grace, marvellous grace!