
2 Corinthians 3:7-8 “Now if the ministry that brought death, which was engraved in letters on stone, came with glory, so that the Israelites could not look steadily at the face of Moses because of its glory, fading though it was, will not the ministry of the Spirit be even more glorious?”
Moses brought his people a message engraved on stone. That is how his “ministry” was given. You might say it was “monumental” from the beginning, these two tombstones he carried down the mountain with the commandments carved on them. The process of receiving the law required Moses to meet with God very nearly face to face, and standing in God’s presence like that made Moses’ face shine with such an unearthly glow that the rest of his people were afraid to go near him when he first came down the mountain.
But for all their glory, these commandments, and the ministry they represented, were easily broken, both literally and figuratively. You remember that when Moses came down the mountain with the two stone tablets the first time, the people were involved in worshiping the golden calf idol. In his anger Moses threw the tablets down and broke them. After he had dealt with the idolatry issue, he had to go up the mountain again to receive two more from God.
Since then, we still chisel them onto stone monuments and fight about where you can put them, but the commands themselves are as fragile as if they had been chiseled on egg shells. Everyday good people break them. Bad people break them. Powerful people break them. Ordinary people break them. Consider how common cussing has become in our time. I can’t figure out why the television censors bleep the words they do anymore, because the ones they allow are plenty obscene. People seem to forget that God had something to say about the words you pair with his good name.
Look at social media and the things people post about celebrities, politicians, and other public figures, like God never had anything to say about your neighbor and false testimony about him. What ever happened to honoring your parents, and others in authority? When did God ever say it was okay to replace being happy your neighbor did well, and made a lot of money, with envy, resentment, and coveting his good fortune?
By contrast, the ministry of the gospel–the ministry Paul was given, the ministry we have been given–may not look so glorious in how it is given. Yet Paul suggests, “…will not the ministry of the Spirit be even more glorious?” When we deliver our message, there are no lightning and peals of thunder. The ground doesn’t shake. Our faces don’t shine like we got too close to a nuclear reactor.
You don’t know my friend Regan. One day when she was in grade school she began talking to her friend about Jesus, and then explained baptism to her, and then baptized her friend right there in the backyard swimming pool. It didn’t make the news.
You’ve never heard of Jill McKinley. She grew up in a Jewish family, and when she got to college she didn’t like many of her Christian classmates, who made her feel like a target. But her roommate treated her like a friend. After several months of giving her respect and love, the opportunity finally came to talk about faith. Today Jill is a Christian, an evangelist, and a leader in her congregation, but there was nothing flashy about her roommate’s Christian conversations.
Neither you nor I know what will happen if we show up at a new neighbor’s door and invite them to church, or talk a little about what we believe. But we know Jesus and the way to heaven. Maybe we could say something about him. We may not look or sound like much. My voice doesn’t rumble when I speak. My face may shine a little from sweat on a hot day, but I wouldn’t call it glorious. Yet with simple words the Spirit has all he needs to capture another heart for God.
Our ministry, our words, are more glorious than you think, not because of our stuttering, stammering attempts to talk. The very Spirit of God, the third person of the Trinity, is at work invading hearts, wooing and winning souls, in a miraculous way that goes beyond all investigation. They are glorious, because of the saving message they contain.







