28 March | I See Dead People

Do you see dead people?

Back in 1999, the haunting movie The Sixth Sense was released.
In it, a distressed young boy named Cole (played by Haley Joel Osment) talks to a child psychologist, Malcolm (played by Bruce Willis).

Cole: I see dead people.
Malcolm: In your dreams?
Cole shakes his head.
Malcolm: While you’re awake?
Cole nods.
Malcolm: Dead people like, in graves and coffins?
Cole: Walking around like regular people. They don’t see each other. They only see what they want to see. They don’t know they’re dead.
Malcolm: How often do you see them?
Cole: All the time. They’re everywhere.

Several times the Gospels share moments when Jesus visibly and audibly laments at what he sees. He too is disturbed. All around him are people walking, walking just like regular people, only seeing what they want to see. Not knowing that they are dead in their sins.

Luke’s Gospel records one such occasion, when Jesus becomes distressed as he sees the city of Jerusalem on the horizon. Jesus’ words reveal he sees a city doomed.
And when he drew near and saw the city, he wept over it, saying, “Would that you, even you, had known on this day the things that make for peace! But now they are hidden from your eyes. For the days will come upon you, when your enemies will set up a barricade around you and surround you and hem you in on every side and tear you down to the ground, you and your children within you. And they will not leave one stone upon another in you, because you did not know the time of your visitation.” (Luke 19:41–44)

Jesus’ weeping and the heavy words in Luke 19 as he declared all that Jerusalem was meant to be, the peace and hope it represented, it was not. Anyone hearing Jesus’ pronouncement of impending destruction should have been alarmed, since Jerusalem had already been destroyed once before due to her sin. Nearly 600 years before Jesus’ arrival, Jerusalem was overtaken by Babylon and its precious temple burned to the ground. Jesus’ description of Jerusalem’s impending future uses imagery from that previous destruction (see Psalm 137, which laments Babylon’s cruelty as they destroyed Jerusalem).

Jesus sees the city God had brought back from the ashes of its first destruction, rebuilt with the temple, with people returned, all as he had promised (e.g. Jeremiah 29:10–14). Looming on the skyline, Jesus sees the city God promised he would bring his king to, the king who would establish peace for both that city and the nations:

Rejoice greatly, O daughter of Zion!
Shout aloud, O daughter of Jerusalem!
Behold, your king is coming to you;
righteous and having salvation is he,
humble and mounted on a donkey,
on a colt, the foal of a donkey.
I will cut off the chariot from Ephraim
and the war horse from Jerusalem;
and the battle bow shall be cut off,
and he shall speak peace to the nations;
his rule shall be from sea to sea,
and from the River to the ends of the earth. (Zecheriah 9:9–10)

Jesus’ entry into Jerusalem is this moment. Luke 19 records Jesus coming down the Mount of Olives towards the city of Jerusalem on a donkey (vv 29–40). With his choice of transport, Jesus makes it clear that he is the long-awaited promised king.

At the time, many of his disciples seem to understand. They lay garments down, wave palm leaves, and sing from psalms that praise God’s king (vv 35–38; Ps 118). From one point of view this is a triumphant moment. From another, it is anti-climactic. Yes, a crowd of disciples rejoice loudly at the entrance of the king, but relative to the expectation bound up with this famous city of God, there is an eerie quietness. All is silent—except for the Pharisees demanding the Jesus parade must be stopped (v 39). Upon arrival at the pinnacle of Jerusalem, the temple, no one welcomes God’s king.

This is the moment!
But simultaneously, tragically anti-climactic!

Jerusalem, the city set up for peace, under the gravity of her sin has squandered her second chance and does not recognise Jesus her king when he enters.

This moment of anti-climax in Jerusalem reflects the anti-climax of humanity in the biblical story. Humanity – that’s all of us – is deeply stuck in sin and death. We humans don’t see our sin. We don’t think we’re sinful. We don’t really think anything is going to happen to us before God. Like Jerusalem past and further past, humanity faces the judgement of God.

This is a huge problem, but we’re walking around thinking everything is normal. We are walking around dead.

Since The Sixth Sense was released 25 years ago, I think it’s okay to reveal the twist. The psychologist Malcolm thinks he is dealing with a young boy traumatised by seeing dead people who speak to him, and he is right, but in the end, we also learn that all along Malcolm has been walking around like a regular person, only seeing what he wants to see, not knowing he is dead!

We don’t see it either.

Only by God’s grace do we develop a ‘sixth sense’. We need God to reveal and make known to us that we’ve been dead in our sins and need to be saved by Christ’s work.

Ephesians 2:1–5 says:

And you were dead in the trespasses and sins in which you once walked, following the course of this world, following the prince of the power of the air, the spirit that is now at work in the sons of disobedience—among whom we all once lived in the passions of our flesh, carrying out the desires of the body and the mind, and were by nature children of wrath, like the rest of mankind. But God, being rich in mercy, because of the great love with which he loved us, even when we were dead in our trespasses, made us alive together with Christ—by grace you have been saved.

Only Luke’s Gospel includes Jesus’ distress and grief as he sees Jerusalem. Jesus saw people as they truly are, and this broke his heart. Jerusalem was a city full of people so dead and numb they missed the day of God’s visitation that would bring them peace.

At the end of Luke’s Gospel, after Jesus’ death and resurrection, Luke tells us that Jesus stands again in the city. There he says to his disciples, “Peace be with you” (Luke 24:36). Explaining his death and resurrection, he commissions them to proclaim this gospel of the kingdom to Jerusalem, to the rest of the world, preaching God’s forgiveness of sins (Luke 24:45–47).

 

As we approach Easter, reflect on Jesus approaching Jerusalem and weeping over it.

Do you have a “sixth sense“?

  • Who do you see?
  • How do you see them?
  • Have they become regular-looking to you?
  • Do you see them from an earthly point of view?
  • Do you see them as Jesus sees them?

Grief, empathy and compassion will flow from us, as more and more, we see people as Jesus saw them.

Our pray for individuals and our city and our motivation to proclaim the gospel expands as we see people the way Jesus did.

  • What can you do to proclaim the peace of forgiveness and grace this Easter?

28 March | Passover Song by Urban Doxology feat. IAMSON

Passover Song
from Bread for the Journey by Urban Doxology

lyrics

VERSE 1
Oh my mind looks back to the last great night
When my God searched for the blood
When He saw the red resting on the post
Then my God passed over us

PRE-CHORUS
Can you hear the children sing?
To the mighty King of Kings

CHORUS
They say I am covered, I am covered
For my God passed over me
I’m alive today and my sins erased
For the blood has covered me

VERSE 2
We prepared to march out of Pharaoh’s reach
Oh we dressed and ate in haste
When the hour came God delivered us
Then we were no longer slaves

PRE-CHORUS
Can you hear the children sing?
To the mighty King of Kings

CHORUS
They say I am covered, I am covered
For my God passed over me
I’m alive today and my sins erased
For the blood has covered me

VERSE 3
How can I forget on that great day
When the Christ died for the world
He became the lamb living sacrifice
Freeing every boy and girl

PRE-CHORUS
Can you hear the nations sing?
To the mighty King of Kings

CHORUS
They say I am covered, I am covered
For my God passed over me
I’m alive today and my sins erased
For the blood has covered me

CHORUS 2
Salvation! Salvation!
Jesus bled and died for me
I’m alive today and my sin’s erased
For the blood has covered me
For the blood has covered me
For the blood has covered me

 

credits
from Bread for the Journey, released February 21, 2016
Passover Song © 2013, Orlando Palmer
Lyrics: Orlando Palmer
Music: Orlando Palmer
Arranging/Programming: Orlando Palmer
Lead Vocals: Orlando Palmer
Background Vocals: Jessica Fox, Orlando Palmer
Drums: Oscar “OJ” Palmer
Bass: Brandon Lane
Guitar: Logan Jones
Cello: Stephanie Barrett
Engineer: Orlando Palmer, Jarius Wilson

27 March | We Will Feast In The House Of Zion

We Will Feast in the House of Zion (Canyon Sessions) | Sandra McCracken

WE WILL FEAST IN THE HOUSE OF ZION (CANYON SESSIONS)

We will feast in the house of Zion
We will sing with our hearts restored
He has done great things, we will say together
We will feast and weep no more

We will not be burned by the fire
He is the Lord, our God
We are not consumed by the flood

Upheld, protected, gathered up

We will feast in the house of Zion
We will sing with our hearts restored
He has done great things, we will say together
We will feast and weep no more

In the dark of night, before the dawn
My soul, be not afraid
For the promised morning, oh how long
Oh God of Jacob, be my strength

We will feast in the house of Zion
We will sing with our hearts restored
He has done great things, we will say together
We will feast and weep no more

Every vow we’ve broken and betrayed
You are the faithful One
And from the garden to the grave
Bind us together, bring shalom

We will feast in the house of Zion
We will sing with our hearts restored
He has done great things, we will say together
We will feast and weep no more
Weep no more

 

Written by Joshua Moore & Sandra McCracken
Song: We Will Feast in the House of Zion
Artist: Sandra
McCracken Album: Devotion (Canyon Sessions)
© 2015 Integrity Worship Music (ASCAP), Paper News Publishing (ASCAP) (adm at IntegratedRights.com), joshmooreownsthismusic (Admin. by Music Services, Inc.)

celebrating easter

“We [celebrate Easter] knowing that at any time a suicide bomber can come and disrupt our service, our worship, our praying.

Then I think:
Will it really be disrupted,
or will I be sent into the fullness of worship?”

~A former Muslim & a mother of two, now following Jesus

26 March | Cleansing the Temple

Mike Moyers, Cleansing the Temple, 2014
An abstract oil painting based on the story of Jesus cleansing the temple from the Gospel of John. It is an abstract expression depicting a righteous storm against injustice and the chaos that is stirred when grace confronts sin. The painitng also explores the cleansing of the heart. The human body is often referred to as “God’s Temple.” This painitng expresses the internal struggle that occurs when God’s grace “turns the tables” on the sin in our hearts.

26 March | A Very Full Tuesday

In the Gospels, there are over 50 specific days that describe the life of Jesus. Sometimes it is only a single incident, but the Tuesday of Holy Week is recorded in detail.

Mark 11:20 tells us that it was on the next day that Jesus explained the cursing of the fig tree that had occurred on Monday. Jesus then spent much of Tuesday in the temple courts (where the day before He had “cleansed” this place; Mark 11:15); when His authority was challenged, He taught a parable concerning the lack of repentance among the leaders of Israel (Matthew 21:28–32) and then a second parable of their desire to rid themselves of the heir – who, of course, is Jesus (21:33–44).

Jesus then gave a third parable, this time of a banquet, illustrating the rejection of Christ’s invitation and His provision for others (Matthew 22:1–14). Then he responded to additional questions by the Pharisees, Herodians, and Sadducees (22:15–40). Jesus finally asked them a couple of key questions: “What do you think about the Messiah? Whose son is he?” (22:41–46). Then we have the series of “Woe Oracles” that were given to the national leaders (23:1–19).

Jesus then  called attention to the widow’s gift of two small copper coins (Luke 21:1–4), and then finally, to the disciples, He predicted the destruction of the temple and end of the world in His well-known Olivet Discourse (Matthew 24:1–25:46; Luke 21:5–38).

Now that was a very busy teaching Tuesday! And throughout this day, Jesus was speaking and pointing to what was coming.

On this Tuesday of Holy Week, why not take some time to read the passages noted above and ask yourself these questions:

  • What is my response to Jesus?
  • Have I responded to His gracious invitation to dine with Him?
  • Do I believe what Christ taught, and am I living for Him?

Then when this Friday comes, it will be a Good Friday because you’ll appreciate in a deeper way that Jesus went to the cross for you.

25 March | Monday

Advent can be described as an ascent to light.

Holy Week, by contrast, moves us in the opposite direction – a descent into darkness. Even though we, by faith and hindsight, might see past the darkness of Good Friday to the bright dawn of Easter morn, we are invited to enter imaginatively into this time, suspending our foreknowledge of the Resurrection so that we, like Mary at the foot of the cross, may stand in solidarity with all those who know of no such hope, and for reasons that may surprise us.

The story that we live in, the Christ story, is not a story about good sense. It is a mystery to be pondered, not a problem to be solved, or a calamity to be avoided. Our orientation is to be that of prayerful, patient attention.

During Holy Week, the tempo of our attention slows to a walking pace as we, with Jesus, turn our face towards Jerusalem, that puzzling city where political sense and practicality is celebrated and love is religiously opposed. We enter into the passion of Jesus who, after three years of active ministry throughout Galilee, suddenly and surprisingly turns passive (which is the archaic meaning of ‘passion’). He is no longer commanding seas, no longer healing limbs, no longer challenging powers. Instead, he becomes increasingly mute and passive as he allows himself to be humiliated and led where no one would ever wish to go.

So what then should our attitude and posture be as we enter reflectively into this week? John’s Gospel gives us a hint in its reference to Mary, the mother of Jesus with these simple words: “Near the cross of Jesus stood his mother” (19:25).

Also standing nearby was the beloved disciple. His and Mary’s shared helpless suffering creates a new kinship – a new family. There is a profound mystery here that, while I cannot explain it fully, I suspect has something to do with the inbreaking of the “kin-dom” of God which is the strange promise of a crucified Messiah.

In the face of hopelessness and loss, let love overcome our grief. With Mary and the beloved disciple stand near the cross. Ponder these things in our own hearts and bear with patience the sorrows that the fruit of our compassion and love will transform into communion and joy.

24 March | Palm Sunday

Most of us are familiar with the words that are often attributed to the Roman Emperor Julius Caesar, “Veni. Vidi. Vici.” I came. I saw. I conquered. That is the way of imperial rulers (in all ages) in the pursuit of power and control. Earthly kings enter a city with great fanfare, military might, and a ruthless oppression of opposition. They ride in on mighty steeds (or armor-reinforced vehicles). Attired with armour and weaponry. They come to kill and destroy all who would block their path to victory and power.

The way of Jesus is different.

He enters Jerusalem on a common donkey, a beast of burden used to carry or haul everyday goods. His entrance is humble. He comes. He sees. He is conquered by the very people he wants to set free. Far from ruthless, his first act upon arrival is to weep over a city that doesn’t care that the Son of God has come. His “triumphal” entry will meet the twist of irony in his crown of thorns and his throne of execution. And those who celebrated and worshipped his arrival and pledged to follow him – even those closest to him – fall away.

24 March 2024 | Lent | Michael Bells

Thank you for joining us on-line!
OCC is made up of people who are meeting in-person and who are meeting on-line.

Remember we are currently showing the video of the service on a week’s delay. The video goes live at 8:00am.

So this video is from Sunday 17 March 2024 but is being shown on 24 March 2024. Pastor Mike is speaking both online and in person at OCC.

God calls all of us into his presence:

He calls us to be together both with him and with one another;
He calls us to wait with and for him;
He calls us to serve & bless others – those who are part of God’s kingdom and those who have not yet responded to God’s grace.
As you prepare to watch our service video, we encourage you to take a few moments…

Get your coffee or tea. Settle in, be still…
Take some deep breaths… in and out… breathe.
Invite the Lord to make himself present with you as you watch – he is with us.

after the morning service

6:30pm youth