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Jesus, A
Friend Of Sinners
By: Dr. Jack Hyles
"The Son of man
is come eating and drinking; and ye say, Behold a gluttonous man, and
a winebibber, a friend of
publicans and sinners!" Luke 7:34.
Every Christmas I have a
little habit that I enjoy. On Christmas day I take some remembrances, presents
and maybe some
fruit and candy down to our Rescue Mission. I spend an hour or so with these
fellows. We just gather around, have a few games, chat, talk about their
past,
their lives and their children, etc. A few years ago when I was at the Mission
at Christmas something was said that I haven't forgotten. I spent a little
while with the men. As I recall, we had a little question-answer game.
If they
got the question right, they got a certain gift. As I left the Mission, one
of the fellows who had been there for awhile told one of the new men, "That's
Brother Hyles. He's our friend."
I got to thinking about
that as I drove home. I believe I'd rather have had him say that than, "He's our pastor," or
"He's our preacher." He's our friend. I am your friend, fellows,
because I too am a sinner and Someone Who never sinned offered his friendship
to me.
Think about this for a minute.
Our Lord, until His birth, had never been around sin. Only one time had
anybody ever
sinned in the presence of our Lord. That was when Satan sinned before the
world was created, and he was cast with his angels out of Heaven. Our Lord
had never before been around a sinner. he fellowshipped with the Father.
He had
had nothing to do with sinners. In John 17:5 He spoke to the Father, "Glorify
Thou Me ... with the glory which I had with Thee before the world was." What
was it ? The fellowship with the Father. He was ministered to by the angels
and praised by the saints in Heaven. He had seen sin only once. From eternity
past, to the foundation of the world, until Bethlehem, Jesus had seen sin only
once. Then strangely and suddenly, He was thrown into sin. I mean, He lived
with sin, though He never sinned. His entire life was occupied with sin from
Bethlehem, and it will be so until the rapture. Think of it! He, through Whose
lips never came a bad word, into Whose mind never lingered an evil thought,
Whose feet never trod a sinful path, Whose eyes would not even as much as look
on sin, and Whose fellowship had been only with the Father and with angels,
suddenly is thrown into an occupation dealing with sin. That biography of our
Lord, from Bethlehem to the rapture, divides into three distinct eras.
I. He Was Numbered With the
Transgressors.
This part of Jesus' life started at
Bethlehem and ended at Calvary.
At His birth He was numbered with the
transgressors. Mary, His mother, and Joseph, His foster father, were coming to
Bethlehem. Why were they coming to Bethlehem? They came to register their
names. A census was being taken. It says in the English language that they
were going to Bethlehem to be taxed. That is not quite correct. A census was
conducted and each person had to go to his own capital city. Jesus in His
birth was registered in Bethlehem. He was numbered with sinners.
The very fact that He was circumcised
numbers Him with sinners. Circumcision was a rite administered to people
because of their sins, admitting that one was a sinner. Forgive me for being a
bit blunt here, but the clipping of the wasted skin pictured that the
Christian ought not to have sin in his life. We ought to be circumcised from
sin, if you please. He was numbered with the transgressors. Our Lord, by the
fact that He was circumcised, showed the race that He was identifying Himself
with us: Jesus, a friend of sinners.
In Luke 5:27-29, Matthew,
the tax collector, had just been converted. He decided that he wanted everybody
to
hear about his new-found faith in Christ and about his new-found Saviour. So
Matthew had a meal and called all the publicans and sinners together. He
said, "Folks, I want you all to know that I am resigning my position. I am leaving
everything to follow Jesus Christ. I want you to know Jesus." Jesus was
there at that feast with a crowd of the most motley people you ever saw in
your
life. There is Jesus sitting there, perhaps, at the head of the table.
"Well," said the Pharisees, "He's
a friend of sinners. He eats with sinners!"
I am glad He is. I am glad
He does. I am glad He was willing to eat with sinners. Our Lord said, "The whole hath no
need of a physician. The sick people need a doctor. I am the Great Physician.
Here are the sinners. They need Me." Our Lord defended the fact that He
was a friend of sinners.
In Luke 7:36 Jesus went
to the house of a Pharisee to eat. The Bible says while He was there a
woman, "which was a
sinner," came to the house and brought an alabaster box of ointment. She took
that expensive ointment and anointed the Saviour. You recall that Judas
Iscariot said, "Wait a minute! That could have been sold for a great price
and could have been given to feed the poor."
Our Lord said, "The
poor you have with you always."
I want you to notice that our Lord was
eating in the house of a Pharisee and was defending a lady whom the Bible says
was a sinner.
In Luke 15:2 again Jesus
was accused of being a friend of sinners. Our Lord tells the parable of
the lost coin, the
parable of the lost sheep and the parable of the lost boy. He said, "If a lady
has a coin and she loses it, she will look until she finds it. If a shepherd
has lost a sheep, he will leave the ninety and nine and go out into the
highways and hedges and find the one and bring back the lost sheep. If a son
goes off and is away in sin, when he comes home, the father will say, 'Oh,
kill the fatted calf. Put a ring on his finger, shoes on his feet, and a robe
on his back. My son who was gone has now returned. He was lost but now is
found!" The one son who was home, got mad and said to his dad, 'You never did
pay me that much attention, and I never did leave.'" Jesus was simply
showing that He was a friend of the fallen one.
Jesus was a friend of the blind Bartimaeus
beside the road, a Nicodemus at midnight, a fallen lady at noon day, and
Zaccheaus, with whom He went home to eat.
In John 4, the disciples
were out to MacDonalds to get some Kosher hamburgers. (They had sold only
about one
million back in those day.) Jesus said, "I think I'll sit here on the well." A
little lady who was living in adultery came to the well. She was living with
a
man to whom she was not married. She had had five husbands. Jesus sat on that
well and talked to her. Oh, Jesus was a friend of sinners. He loved her. He
cared for her. Criticized though He was, He was always helping sinners.
Even when He was on the
cross, suffering as no man has suffered, He saved a thief. He was numbered
among the
transgressors, dying between two thieves. He said, "Today shalt thou be
with Me in Paradise."
That is why we have our
rescue mission. We want to be like Jesus, a friend of sinners. That is
why we have a class for
retarded children. That is why we have buses. Many of these bus kids who come
from far and near have never been to church before. They don't know how
to
behave. When they come up here to the baptistry and I'm going to baptize them,
some of them are almost doing the breast stroke while are coming in the
water.
As I start to baptize them, I go back and they go forward. I have to grab them
quickly and take them backward. They do not know how to behave. All over
this
building, while we are here in this auditorium, hundreds of bus kids from over
here in Chicago are here. I know some are little hoodlums. I know what
they
do. Thirteen of them got into the ladies rest room and locked the door. Some
say words they should not say. I know that we sometimes have to disarm
them.
In some departments there are crayola marks. Once I thought, "Oh my, I'm
embarrassed!" Then I thanked God and said, "No, I'm not embarrassed! Thank
God, this church is a friend of sinners!" I'll tell you what. I know how
we can have a real nice church. I know how we can have it so that no one will
pull a switchblade knife on a Sunday school teacher and nobody will lock
himself in the rest room. I know how. We can do just like most churches do
and not be a friend to sinners.
Dwight Moody went to Chicago
and started a Sunday school class of poor kids. One day he was walking
down the street and
saw a kid that had been absent for a few weeks. Mr. Moody said, "Hey, kid, you
weren't there last Sunday." The boy ran down the street and Mr. Moody pursued.
The fellow ran down the street and opened a door of an apartment house and ran
upstairs. Mr. Moody got there just before the door went shut. He ran in the
door and ran up the stairs. The little kid opened the door of his apartment
and ran inside. Mr. Moody went into the apartment before the door shut, but
the young fellow crawled under the bed. Mr. Moody got him by the foot and
pulled him out from under there and said, "You didn't come to Sunday school
last Sunday. I want to see you." About that time the father came in.
He said, "What's going
on here?"
Mr. Moody said, "My name is Dwight Moody."
"Oh," he said, "you must be 'crazy Moody!" Why was he crazy?
He ran after sinners! Other churches did not want their carpet dirty. Other
churches did
not want their walls soiled. I know of churches who never have a sinner kneel
at the altar, drunkards made sober, harlots made pure or bus kids made right.
Do you know that we have about a dozen of our bus kids studying right now for
the ministry? We have many of our little bus kids in Christian colleges. They
were little urchins like a lot of the rest of them are.
I want there always to be at least one
church in the Chicago area where people are friends to sinners, to the down
and out, the high, the low, the rich, the poor. Look at the crowd this
morning. I wish you could stand here. There are people out here that run great
businesses, and there are people out here that don't know how they're going to
get home after church.
We have folks here that
will drive home in Cadillacs, and we have folks here in this room who do
not have a way to get
home. We have little ladies who will walk through slush and snow for miles
because they don't have a car. We have folks who will go home today and
will
eat a turkey dinner, and we have folks here this morning who will go home and
sit down to an empty table. We have folks in this building who are PhD's.
yet,
we have people here this morning who when they sign their names, have to sign
it with an "X". We have all kinds of people here in our church.
One of my greatest blessings has been when I stand here in the pulpit on
Sunday mornings
and look at the altar. One morning I noticed a deacon beside a poor little
bare-footed fellow. That deacon is one of the vice-presidents of the Conrad
Hilton Hotel chair. There was a deacon who owns a realty company kneeling
beside some little poor girl that had long, straight, limp hair and wore
dirty
clothes and tennis shoes. I watch men of all walks of life, these deacons of
our church, as they deal with these poor little boys and girls. None of
them
felt the task was beneath their dignity. I have thought so often, that is what
the Saviour did. That is what it's all about!
Some little ones were brought
to Jesus, and the disciples said, "We're not going to run a bunch
of bus routes here in Jerusalem."
Jesus said, "Don't
keep little children away."
"But they'll mess up
our service."
"Let the little children
come on."
Our Lord is a friend of sinners.
"I know, but He eats
with sinners. He runs with Pharisees. He has been to Zacchaeus' house.
Look at Him with Matthew and
all those dirty publicans. He eats with sinners!"
Our Lord says, "Yes,
I am numbered with the transgressors."
II. He Bore Our Sins.
The second part of His life started at
Golgotha. He had been beaten so that you could not even tell that He was a
human being. He was bearing His cross up the hill of Calvary. When he got to
the top of the hill, they put His body on the tree. They put nails through His
hands and feet. Jesus, the perfect, sinless, spotless, lamb without blemish,
was nailed to the tree. Why? To show us how to die? No! No! To show us how to
be a pacifist? No! No! Why was He nailed to the tree? He died to bear the sins
of many.
Remember that fallen woman at the well?
Jesus took her adultery off her and put it on His record. Remember that
publican, Matthew? Jesus took the sins of Matthew and put them to His own
record. He took the robbery of the dying thief and entered robbery on His own
record. The pride of the Pharisee was put on His own record. Jesus, Who never
had a dirty thought, became an adulterer. He, Who never took one thing that
was not His, became a thief. He, Who never had mistreated anybody or pulled a
wicked deal, became an extortioner. He was the humble, meek, lowly one of
Galilee.
With your sins and mine
on His own body, against His own record, I think He said, "There is one place where I can look.
My own family has forsaken Me; My own race has forsaken Me; My own synagogue
has forsaken Me; My own disciples have forsaken Me; My beloved Peter has
forsaken me; Judas, the treasurer, has forsaken Me; man has forsaken me, but
there's One Who will not forsake me-the Father. He always looks down and
smiles upon Me." Jesus looked up to see the Father, but there was no smile on
His Father's face. In fact, His Father wasn't even looking at Him. All He
could see was the Father turning away. Jesus said, in so many words, "Father,
I expected My nation to forsake Me; I expected My synagogue to forsake Me;
but
Father, my God, my God, why has Thou forsaken Me?"
Do you know why? It was for sinners! Jesus
of Bethlehem, Who had never sinned, suddenly became numbered with
transgressors. He died for sinners. He paid the penalty for you and me. He
paid the price for your wicked sins and mine. He became our substitute for sin
on the cross.
III. He Began to Make Intercession for
Sinners.
Jesus is back in Heaven. He is now where no
sin ever enters. He is back where He doesn't have to be associated with
sinners anymore. He is back with the Father. He has sat beside the well with a
fallen woman. He has eaten with a Pharisee. He ate with Zacchaeus. He was a
friend of sinners and He was numbered with the transgressors, but now He is
back in Heaven again. He will not have to be bothered about sin, but He is! He
is interceding for sinners. He sits on the right hand of the Father.
You have heard me tell the
story about the little boy who went to church and heard his dad preach.
He came back home and
said to his father, "Isn't God wonderful?"
The father asked, "Why?"
"Because He's left-handed
and does everything with His left hand."
"Who said that?"
"You said it in your
sermon."
"What? I said that
God does everything with His left hand?"
Yes, Jesus is sitting this morning at the
right hand of the Father.
Dr. L. C. Stuart is a preacher who was
wronged by the courts of our land and wrongfully indicted for murder. They
tried him and gave him fourteen years in the penitentiary. We appealed the
case. Our church raised over $25,000 to employ a famous attorney to represent
Dr. Stuart. They told me that this attorney had lost only four cases in his
career. We felt so confident.
I was in a motel room in
Wichita, Kansas, when they called long distance and said, "The trial
is all over and we lost. Dr. Stuart is back in prison."
I went outside and wept.
Then suddenly I clapped my hands and jumped up and down and said, "Praise
God!"
You say, "Why?"
The Attorney Who represents this sinner has
never lost a case! Jesus-my attorney, my lawyer, my advocate, my daysman, my
intercessor, my mediator-has never lost a case! He is at the right hand of the
Father and is pleading for sinners.
Let me see if I can show
you something this morning . Once a year in the life of Isreal, in the
seventh month of the year,
the tenth day of the month, there was what was called the "Day of Atonement."
It is near our October 10. Annually the high priest would take off his royal
garment and sacrifice an animal. Then he would take the blood of that
sacrifice, walk inside the Holy of Holies (where no one else could go but he,
and he but once a year), and sprinkle that blood on the mercy seat. Then he
would come out and shout, "It is finished!" What did that mean? It
meant that the high priest had laid aside his royal rode and had offered a
lamb for the
sins of the people. He had gone in to pay the penalty for the sins of his
people. Then he came out and announced that God had accepted it.
That is what Jesus did.
He laid aside His royal robe of Heaven. He Who was never around sin, He
Who was in the image of
the Father, He Who was the fullness of the Godhead bodily, laid aside His
royal robes and took upon Himself flesh like ours. He walked with sinners.
He became a lamb, and on the cross He became that lamb offered upon the
altar. He
took His blood and sprinkled His blood on the mercy seat in Heaven. Then on
the cross He said, "It is finished!" Sin had been paid for!
Someday when Jesus comes again, He will put
on His royal robe as King of Kings and Lord of Lords. What is it all about!
Jesus-our High Priest, our Lamb, He Who never heard a sinful word, He Who
never spoke an evil word, He Who never thought an evil thought, He Who never
trod an evil path-suddenly gave His entire life for sinners. He was a friend
of sinners. He died for sinners. He intercedes for sinners.
When I came to Hammond,
I was apprehensive. The first day I was in my office, the secretary called
me on the telephone and
said, "Someone wants to see you." I invited the man in. He was the most
obnoxious man I have ever seen. I have never seen anybody as dirty and as
filthy. He walked in and I talked with him. I told him about Jesus and knelt
to pray with him. As I knelt to pray, I saw Psalm 8:4 on the wall of my study,
"What is man, that thou art mindful of him? and the son of man, that Thou
visitest him?" That poor old bum off of the street received Christ. I
wondered if he were sincere, but I took it as a lesson from God that He wanted
me to
work with sinners while I was here.
A few weeks and months passed. David and I
went to a rescue mission one night to preach. (I think David was six years of
age at the time.) Right before I preached, a man stood up and played the
guitar and sang a solo. I knew I had seen the man somewhere. They introduced
him as the Assistant Superintendent of that rescue mision. I had seen him
somewhere. Suddenly it dawned on me! That was the man who came to my office
the first day I was here. I had won him to Christ. I had given that man a suit
of clothes; he had on the trousers that I gave him. He was Assistant
Superintendent of that rescue mission. Months had passed and he was still
serving God.
I preached that night on
Psalm 8. I went home, and David went to bed. I was sitting in the living
room. I heard a call: "Dad? Hey, Dad? Could I talk to you?" (The
lines of communication have always been open between David and me.)
I said, "Sure, son."
Dave came down to the living
room and said, "that was a good sermon tonight, Dad."
"Thank you, son."
"Wasn't it good about
that man that got saved?"
"Yes, it was."
"Dad, I want to be
saved too."
I won David to Christ that night. There was
a rescue mission man and my own six-year-old boy, both sinners, both needing
the same thing. That's what you need. Jesus is the friend you need.
Jesus is the friend you need, Such a friend
is he indeed; He Who noteth every tear, He will banish every fear; Jesus is
the friend you need.
"What a Friend We Have in Jesus." "There's
no Friend to me Like Jesus." He is a friend of sinners!