Jesus, The Chief Cornerstone 4-15-26 AM

I.            Rejected by nations, but chosen by God.

a.     In its context, Psalm 118 is part of a series of psalms that began in 113 as songs of deliverance.

b.     Notice how the psalm begins and ends (Ps. 118:1, 29).

          i.      Israel has been surrounded, opposed and pressed hard.

          ii.      Despite all that, God had rescued Israel.

          iii.      This was probably written sometime after the return from exile.

c.      This psalm is shows Israel as the rejected stone.

d.      The nations looked at Israel and saw a weak, small, vulnerable nation.

e.      God did not see it that way.

          i.      The nations saw insignificance – God saw His covenant people.

          ii.      The nations saw weakness – God saw His people as a means to display His glory.

          iii.      The nations saw something easy to pass by – God saw something He had chosen.

f.       This is the story of Israel from the beginning.

          i.      Always rejected by others but chosen by God.

          ii.      De. 7:7-8.

g.     Psalm 118 shows us that what the world rejects may be very precious in the eyes of God.

h.     Psalm 118 describes conflict, pressure, and rescue.

          i.      The Psalmist says they were surrounded by their enemies (vs. 10-12).

          ii.      They were pushed hard (vs. 13).

          iii.      Yet, they were upheld by the Lord.

          iv.      Then comes the great reversal of fortune in verse 22: the rejected stone becomes the cornerstone.

          v.      Verse 23 tells us this was the Lord’s doing and caused in awe in the eyes of His people.

i.      For us today, this matters because we are still tempted to value things by the way the world values them.

         i.      We can believe that being applauded means being right.

         ii.      Which in turn leads us to believe that being rejected means being wrong.

         iii.      God’s word teaches otherwise.

j.      Jesus told His disciples that the rejection of the world leads to acceptance by the Father (Matt. 5:10-12).

         i.      This goes against everything the world teaches.

         ii.      We are to go for the loudest cheers and the greatest ovations.

         iii.      God says that is not so.

k.     Faithfulness may look small or worthless to the world, but it is precious to God.

l.       Obedience may be unpopular and still be exactly where God’s favor is found.

m.    David, in 1 Samuel 16, is a fitting illustration.

          i.      Samuel was sent to anoint one of Jesse’s sons.

          ii.      David was not the obvious choice.

          iii.      His own father left him with the sheep so the other sons could come.

          iv.      Remember what God told Samuel (1 Sam. 16:7)?

          v.      David was overlooked by men, but chosen by God.

n.      This is what Psalm 118 is celebrating.

o.      Israel’s story was not meant to end with Israel.

p.      It only points forward to the true and greater rejected Stone.

II.            Raised by God, but rejected by the builders.

a.      Jesus took this passage and applied it to Himself (Matt. 21:33-46).

            i.      Beginning in verse 33, there is recorded the parable of the wicked servants, or tenants.

            ii.      Matthew 21:33-41.

            iii.      Jesus then asks the Jewish leaders what the owner will do.

            iv.      The Jewish leaders knew exactly what the owner would do.

            v.      Jesus then applies the parable using Psalm 118:22-23 (Matt. 21:42).

b.      In that moment, Jesus identifies Himself as the rejected Stone.

            i.      The religious leaders knew exactly at whom Jesus was pointing (Matt. 21:45).

            ii.      They had been entrusted with the stewardship of God’s people, but were rejecting the very Son sent by the Father.

c.       This point is not simply that Jesus was rejected.

d.      The point is that the rejection of Jesus is part of the very pattern Psalm 118 had already announced.

e.      In this sense, Israel was a type of Christ – Israel’s rejection by the nations pointed to the future rejection of Jesus by His own people.

f.        The cross was man’s verdict – the resurrection was God’s verdict.

g.      The leaders cast out Jesus – the Father raised up Jesus.

h.      The builders rejected the Stone – the Father made Him the Cornerstone.

i.        An extremely important thing to understand here is that we will never truly know Jesus if we only listen to the crowd.

           i.      Human opinion is not the final authority on Christ.

           ii.      The people who should have clearly recognized Him rejected Him most violently.

j.        The Stone men rejected is the Savior God raised.

k.      This parable is a warning to us today.

           i.      The tenants thought they could keep control if the Son was out of the way.

           ii.      Instead, their rejection exposed their rebellion and brought judgment.

l.        The warning is clear: rejecting the Son never removes His authority.

m.    When we see Jesus as the rejected and raised Stone, we are forced to answer a very personal question: What does that mean for those who come to Him?

III.            Relied on by the church to be built together on Him.

a.      Peter gives us a beautiful answer to this personal question in 1 Peter 2:4-5.

b.      Did you see the same pattern as Psalm 118?

           i.      Jesus is rejected by men, but chosen and precious in the sight of God.

           ii.      This is Psalm 118 fulfilled in Christ.

c.       Peter adds something very important to this.

           i.      As we come to Christ, we ourselves are being built together.

           ii.      Jesus is not just the cornerstone; He is the One around Whom the whole spiritual house is formed.

           iii.      The church is not a collection of isolated rocks lying near each other.

           iv.      The church is the spiritual house being built together around Christ.

d.      Christianity is not merely personal, but also corporate.

          i.      We are not lone wolves leaning on Jesus.

          ii.      We come to Him and are added to His people (Acts 2:47).

          iii.      We are built together because we are built on Jesus.

e.      Herein lies an extremely important lesson we need to make sure we learn and pass on to others.

f.       What is important to remember is that the cornerstone does not adjust to the stones that are added to it: the stones are aligned to the cornerstone.

           i.      We don’t reshape Christ around our preferences.

           ii.      We align ourselves to Him.

g.      His truth sets the line; His character sets the pattern; His gospel sets the center.

h.      When we align ourselves to Him, we are not only strengthened individually, we are fitted together as His people.

i.        In 1 Peter 2:4-5, Christ is the living Stone, rejected by men, but chosen by God.

           i.      Believers are living stones because we share in His life and are joined to Him.

           ii.      Together, we are being built into a spiritual house.

j.        Peter’s point is that the identity, unity, and worship of the church all depend on Christ.

k.      What this means for each of us is that we cannot build a stable life apart from Jesus and we can’t build a healthy congregation apart from Jesus.

l.        We must build our beliefs, our families, our hope, and our place in His church on Jesus and Him alone.

m.    Since we are being built together, this also means we need one another.

           i.      Again, there are no lone wolves and Jesus.

           ii.      It is Jesus forming a people, a spiritual house, with every stone set in relation to Hm.

n.      When we rely on Jesus, He builds us together.

o.      Jesus closed the Sermon on the Mount with this idea of building on the right foundation didn’t he? (Matt. 7:24-27).

p. Coming to Christ is what turns scattered lives into a spiritual house.

Next
Next

Dedication Of The Sanctuary 3-8-26 PM