Jesus Makes the Impossible Possible

Luke 18:18-30

18 A certain ruler asked him, “Good teacher, what must I do to inherit eternal life?”

19 “Why do you call me good?” Jesus answered. “No one is good—except God alone. 20 You know the commandments: ‘You shall not commit adultery, you shall not murder, you shall not steal, you shall not give false testimony, honor your father and mother.’”

21 “All these I have kept since I was a boy,” he said.

22 When Jesus heard this, he said to him, “You still lack one thing. Sell everything you have and give to the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven. Then come, follow me.”

23 When he heard this, he became very sad, because he was very wealthy. 24 Jesus looked at him and said, “How hard it is for the rich to enter the kingdom of God! 25 Indeed, it is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for someone who is rich to enter the kingdom of God.”

26 Those who heard this asked, “Who then can be saved?”

27 Jesus replied, “What is impossible with man is possible with God.”

28 Peter said to him, “We have left all we had to follow you!”

29 “Truly I tell you,” Jesus said to them, “no one who has left home or wife or brothers or sisters or parents or children for the sake of the kingdom of God 30 will fail to receive many times as much in this age, and in the age to come eternal life.”

Jesus Makes the Impossible Possible

Have you ever seen or heard this word before?

Adynaton

Adynaton is the Greek word for impossible. It is also a rhetorical term for a specific kind of turn of phrase. Even if you don’t the term, I’m sure you know several examples of it – “The Maple Leafs will win the Stanley Cup… when pigs fly.” “Alberta’s premier will have a 100% approval rating… when hell freezes over.” I’m particularly partial to the Bulgarian version, “That’ll happen… когато прасето в жълти чехли се качи на крушата (when the pig in yellow slippers climbs the pear tree).”

Using an adynaton is a colloquial way to talk about something that is virtually, if not literally, impossible. Jesus used an adynaton in our Gospel for today when talking about heaven. He said,

“Indeed, it is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for someone who is rich to enter the kingdom of God.”[1]

What are the chances that a camel could fit through the eye of a needle? Pretty low. So low, in fact, that the disciples immediately asked,

“Who then can be saved?”[2]

Think about the man at the center of this story. Luke introduces him as “a certain ruler.” We don’t know his name. We don’t where he came from or what he ruled over, but you don’t toss a word like “ruler” around willy-nilly. This was a very important person with a prominent position in society. The people who were there that day would have known him, if not personally at least by reputation.

By his own admission, this certain ruler was an upstanding citizen. He was the rare example of a politician you would want to use as a role model for your children. He didn’t sleep around. He wasn’t a bully. He was honest, both in the way he talked to people and in the way he dealt with them. He was a faithful son to his parentsand a productive member of society. He had the respect of the people around him.

So, when Jesus said that this man had a snowball’s chance in hell of going to heaven, the people were understandably surprised. “If this guy can’t get into heaven, then who can?”

It is a fair question – one that I can completely understand asking – but it was the wrong question, and the fact that the disciples asked it showed that they were just as misguided about heaven as this rich young ruler was.

Do you remember his initial question?

“Good teacher, what must I do to inherit eternal life?”[3]

It’s not wrong to desire eternal life. That’s the promise that God holds out to us. We heard all about it last week. We should desire eternal life.

It’s not bad to call Jesus good. Even though Jesus gives this guy grief for calling him “Good teacher” (“Why do you call me good? No one is good – except God alone.”[4]), Jesus isn’t really talking about himself. He is not trying to get this rich young ruler to admit that Jesus is God and should be called good; he is trying to get this rich young ruler to really think through whether he is good. So he tests him,

“You know the commandments: ‘You shall not commit adultery, you shall not murder, you shall not steal, you shall not give false testimony, honor your father and mother.’”[5]

If the rich young ruler thought that he was a good person, he would say exactly what he did,

“All these I have kept since I was a boy.”[6]

Not only did this rich young ruler think that he was a good person, he actually thought that the 10 Commandments were child’s play, e.g. “Oh, c’mon Jesus! Give me a real challenge – one that’s worthy of a reward like heaven.”

To which Jesus said,

“You still lack one thing. Sell everything you have and give to the poor.”[7]

And Luke tells us that when the rich young ruler heard these words, he became very sad, because he was very wealthy.[8]

It was not wrong for this rich young ruler to desire eternal life. It was not bad for him to call Jesus good. It was bad for him to think that he was good. It was wrong for him to think that there was anything he could do to inherit eternal life. It would be wrong for you to think that too.

Would you consider yourself a good person? That’s kind of a tricky question as a Christian, isn’t it? We live in a wicked world. We see so many good examples of bad people. Whether they are malicious in their actions or just foolish with their decisions, it is easy to imagine ourselves to be at least a little bit better than average.

Maybe you’ve been a Christian your whole life. You committed the 10 Commandments to memory when you were a kid. You wouldn’t dream of breaking them. Or maybe you became a Christian later on in life. You used to make bad decisions, but not anymore! You’re above that now. You know better than most how bad that life is and how much better it is to put that behind you.

Even if it would be tacky to call myself a good person, it sure is tempting to think it. You might even be tempted to think that you’re a better person than this rich young ruler. I know I’m not a very wealthy man. I could wipe out my entire financial portfolio just trying to buy one of the cars that’s in the parking lot right now. If I’m not careful, I might read a passage like this and be relieved that I’m not rich, because I might think that it’ll be that much easier for me to go heaven. It’s only hard for rich people to go to heaven, right? They’re the camels trying pass through the eye of a needle. They’re the pigs trying to climb pear trees in yellow slippers.

But that’s not what Jesus is saying. Jesus doesn’t single out rich people as if they are the only people who will find it hard to get to heaven based on what they do. Jesus talks about wealth because that was this man’s hang up. What’s yours? What one thing could Jesus pick out of your life to pin you to wall? What is the one thing that Jesus could tell you to cut out of your life that would make your face fall and cause you to walk away sad?

Go sell your cabin at the lake. Then come follow me.

Don’t drink another drop of alcohol. Be sober, especially on Saturdays so you can worship with a clear mind on Sundays. Then come follow me.

Don’t look at another person with lust in your heart. Enable the safe search function on your phone. Then come follow me.

Go apologize. Let go of the anger you’re indulgently holding onto. Then come follow me.

It’s not just the rich who have a snowball’s chance in hell of going to heaven. It’s every one of us… if we think that we get to heaven by being good people… if we think there is something we can do to inherit eternal life…

I don’t know about you, but the more I learn about God and the more I look at myself the worse I feel about myself. The older I get the more I regret. I’d be terrified to be called on the carpet by Jesus like this rich young ruler was, and to imagine which one of many things I lack that he would bring to light.

But as harsh as this feels and as impossible as it seems, Jesus says something even more unbelievable:

“What is impossible with man is possible with God.”[9]

It is literally impossible for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle. It just as impossible for a pig to sprout wings and fly, as it is for them to wear yellow slippers and climb pear trees. It is literally impossible for any of us to go to heaven because of anything that we do. But what is impossible for us is possible with Jesus.

Heaven is not a prize we earn. It is a gift we are given. Heaven is the reward that Jesus earned by doing so many impossible things. The eternal Son of God became a mortal human being. A full-blooded man, who faced every temptation that you and I could ever experience, led a perfect, sinless life. The almighty, immortal God allowed himself to be put to death on a cross. A dead man came back to life by his own power. A righteous God who upholds justice will not punish you for any of your wrongdoing. A sinner like you will go to heaven and inherit eternal life, because God loves the unlovable and because Jesus makes the impossible possible.

On our own, we would stand a snowball’s chance in hell of going to heaven. But because of Jesus eternal life is his gift of love to you. You don’t have to be good. You should still try, but that’s not where our confidence comes from. Jesus has done the impossible. He is the one who gives us hope. He is the one who has forgiven your sin and soothes your guilt so that you don’t have to live in endless regret.

But more than that, he even enables and invites you to follow him – falteringly as that may be. That was his promise,

“Truly I tell you, no one who has left home or wife or brothers or sisters or parents or children…” or cabin on the lake, or junior varsity volleyball career, or Sunday morning hangovers… “for the sake of the kingdom of God will fail to receive many times as much in this age, and in the age to come eternal life.”[10]

Heaven is not a prize we earn. It is a gift we are given, because Jesus has made the impossible possible. Now may we learn to leave our sin behind, as best as we can, and follow him. Amen.


[1] Luke 18:25

[2] Luke 18:26

[3] Luke 18:18

[4] Luke 18:19

[5] Luke 18:20

[6] Luke 18:21

[7] Luke 18:22

[8] Luke 18:23

[9] Luke 18:27

[10] Luke 18:29,30

Jesus Loves Me, This I Know

1 John 5:13-15

13 I write these things to you who believe in the name of the Son of God so that you may know that you have eternal life. 14 This is the confidence we have in approaching God: that if we ask anything according to his will, he hears us. 15 And if we know that he hears us—whatever we ask—we know that we have what we asked of him.

Jesus Loves Me, This I Know

Can you finish this sentence: “Jesus love me, this I ____.”

Jesus Loves Me is one of the most popular Christian songs of the last 160 years. It was written all the way back in 1860 by Anna Bartlett Warner and has been sung in Christian homes, by Christian children, ever since. It’s Hymn 584 in our hymnal, in case you were wondering.

I think the thing that makes Jesus Loves Me so powerful and popular is that it expresses such a simple and yet still very strong confidence in the love of Jesus. Miss Warner didn’t write, “Jesus loves me, this I think.” She didn’t write, “Jesus loves me, this I hope/wish.” She wrote, “Jesus loves me, this I know.”

Would you rather hope that you’ll have chicken wings for dinner tonight, or know that you will? I know that I’m going to have chicken wings tonight, and that makes me so much happier than if I just hoped we would. Would you rather wish that your mother would get better and come home from the hospital, or know that she will? Of course, you’d rather know!

There is certainty with knowledge. Knowledge can give you conviction and courage and confidence. Knowledge can empower and embolden you. But it all depends on what you know. Today, I want to look at the three verses of our second reading from 1 John 5. Three times in those three verses the Apostle John uses the word “know,” and each time he tells us a truth that empowers, a truth that gives us confidence and courage and conviction. First, John says:

I write these things to you who believe in the name of the Son of God so that you may know that you have eternal life.[1]

If you are a Christian, chances are that this statement seems pretty basic to you. But, even if you are a Christian, the thing you have to remember is how rare this kind of faith is and how profound its promise is.

John was writing this letter at a time when Jesus was not universally regarded as the Son of God, even in Christian circles. In fact, there was a group of Christians in John’s day who were very enthusiastically suggesting that Jesus was just a man. He was inspired by God. He was blessed by God. He was God’s chosen spokesman. But he was just another man.

What would that do to your faith, if you didn’t know for a fact that Jesus was the Son of God? If Jesus was just human like you and me, then he would be sinful like you and me. He would be capable of error and mistake. We couldn’t trust him when he says, “I tell you the truth…” We would have to corroborate his claims with what other people said, and maybe correct him if other people seemed to contradict him.

Worst of all, though, if Jesus were just a sinful, error-prone human like you and me, then what would that mean about his death on the cross? If Jesus were just a human, his death might have been symbolic; it might have been a martyrdom that inspired other people to do something, but Jesus’ death itself wouldn’t have accomplished anything.

But if Jesus really is the Son of God – as he claims and as you believe – then that changes everything. Then we can trust him and believe what he tells us, but even more than that, it would mean that his death on the cross is far more than symbolic; it did actually accomplish something. John tells us what that “something” is:

I write these things to you who believe in the name of the Son of God so that you may know that you have eternal life.[2]

This is God’s promise to you. This is what God wants you to know – not to think or wish or hope. He wants you to know that you have eternal life. And notice the way John puts it, “…that you have eternal life,” not that you will have eternal life – not that you could have eternal life if you live this life right, not even that you have to wait for Judgment Day to receive it – but that it is yours right now.

Your eternal life has already begun! The moment you believed in Jesus you received a life that will never end. Because of his sacrifice on a cross 2,000 years ago, you will live with him forever in heaven. Your life will never truly end even though you may die. That is a certainty and a confidence that God wants you to know in your heart.

It is also a truth that the devil wants you to doubt. There are events in our lives and voices in our minds that make us question even a fundamental Christian truth like this.

You attend the funeral of a family member and see their lifeless body in the casket or a box of ash on a stand and you wonder, “What happened? Where did they go? What happens after death?” You go to school or you listen to most of the voices in society and you’ll hear a lot of people believe that this life is it; when you die, it just fades to black. You might even hear some of your friends scoff and make fun of you for believing in life after death – as if you are a child believing in fairy tales. They want you to believe that it’s a waste of time to think about the afterlife. You should be focusing your attention on this one.

And that’s true, to a degree. We don’t want to be so heavenly minded that we are of no earthly good. But the promise of having eternal life even now drastically effects the way we live this life. If I know that I have eternal life, then that makes me just a little less afraid of the things that threaten my life.

A pastor in Milwaukee just a few years older than me died this week on his morning commute into the office. Life can be cut short in a second. We are not guaranteed anything. And yet, because I know that I have eternal life in Jesus, I won’t be disappointed if my race ends early or if a family member’s does, because they’ll be in heaven where someday we will not only be reunited, but we will live with our God in safety and peace forever.

If I know that I have eternal life, then that makes me just a little less afraid of the things that threaten to make my life less enjoyable. Sickness and disease are temporary – a tiny, infinitesimal fraction of our eternal timeline. Discomfort and depression are too, and so are poverty and pain and problems, socially, physically, emotionally. Because I know that I have eternal life in Jesus, there’s light at the end of the tunnel no matter how dark it may be today.

It's such a simple sentence and one that we could gloss over in a second, but it’s also a truth that we will know and we will enjoy forever:

I write these things… so that you may know that you have eternal life.[3]

John’s next two “know” statements are related:

This is the confidence we have in approaching God: that if we ask anything according to his will, he hears us. And if we know that he hears us – whatever we ask – we know that we have what we asked of him.[4]

If it wasn’t enough to know that you have eternal life, Jesus also gives you the confidence to know that God hears you when you pray now and to know that he gives you whatever you ask according to his will.

Does this mean that we should stop our service right here and all pray to become billionaires and that God promises to make it happen? Does this mean that all we have to do is to name what we want and claim it in prayer and God will be compelled to give it to us?

At first glance it might feel that way, but that’s not quite the promise God gives you here. He says, “if we ask anything according to his will, he hears us.”[5] In other words, if we ask for something that God wants, then he will give it to us. The trick is knowing what God wants.

Christians can spend their whole lives searching out God’s will for specific situations in their lives. Whom should I date/marry? What career path should I choose? Which house should I buy? What medical decision do I make? The problem is that God never answers those questions specifically.

You can flip through every page of the Bible, but you will never find a passage that tells you specifically who to marry. You can analyze every sentence, but you will never find a hidden message that tells you the secret to financial success.

What you will find, though, if you read every page of the Bible, is the kind of person you should marry and the kind of person you should be in your marriage. What you will learn, if you analyze ever sentence, is the secret to contentment regardless of the balance of your bank account.

God may never give us specific answer for the specific circumstances of our lives, but he does give us guidelines and parameters; he does give us direction and tells us what not to do. And he promises here that he will not withhold any good thing we ask for according to his will. To put it another way, God will always give you everything you pray for that he knows is for your good.

So, when I’m worried about the kinds of things that could threaten my life or threaten to make my life less enjoyable, not only do I have the promise of eternal life, I have the promise that God is listening and that he cares about what I’m going through right now and that I can turn to him in prayer and know that he will give me exactly what is best for me in that moment.

There are so many things in this life that we do not know. There are so many reasons to be afraid or anxious or apprehensive. John gives you three reasons to be courageous, convicted and confident: you know that you have eternal life, you know that God hears you when you pray, you know that God gives you whatever you ask according to his will.

So seek out God’s will in his Word. Accept his invitation and pray, about anything and everything. But above all, believe in the name of the Son of God and know – don’t wish, don’t hope, know – that Jesus loves you and he always will. Amen.


[1] 1 John 5:13

[2] Ibid

[3] Ibid

[4] 1 John 5:14,15

[5] 1 John 5:14