Texts: Romans 4:1-25; John 6:22-29
TOMORROW IS LABOR DAY, WHEN we celebrate the efforts and accomplishments of America's workers. So it was appropriate that recently the actor Ashton Kucher should give an audience of young people a strong exhortation about the value and necessity of hard work. He was speaking at the Teen Choice Awards, and among other things, he said, "I've noticed throughout my life that Opportunity looks a lot like hard work." His point was that nobody should sit around passively and then complain when opportunity to get ahead seems to pass them by. Hard work is essential, and the kids need to get that through their heads while they're young, and save themselves a lifetime of disappointment and misery.
That's how it operates in this world, "under the sun," as Solomon put it in Ecclesiastes. You get what you work for, and if you don't work, you don't get. And if you can work but refuse to, and by dint of welfare and handouts you do get, you're settling for way less than second best, and when the handouts run out, you'll be sunk. It's the way things are.
But there's a sphere where all these facts are stood on their heads. Where to stop working is virtue, where to keep on working is to do evil, where being willing simply to reach out and receive good things we don't deserve is to be the happiest of all.
St. Paul speaks of this condition in our reading from the fourth chapter of his letter to the Romans. Now, in the Bible, context is everything. So we need to remember that prior to this, up to the first part of chapter 3, the Holy Spirit has convicted us all, Jews and Gentiles alike, of unrighteousness before God. The Jews have the Law of Moses written on tablets of stone; they don't obey it. The Gentiles (and all mankind, really) have the natural law of God inscribes on their hearts, and they suppress it and break it, too. So we're all in the position where the law has declared us all guilty. God has brought us to this position so that, as Paul writes in 3:19-20,
. . . [E]very mouth may be silenced and the whole world held accountable to God. Therefore, no one will be declared righteous in his sight by observing the law; rather, through the law we become conscious of sin.
The law of God, whether it's the written law given through Moses or our inward sense of right and wrong, describes the work, the big job we have to do in order to please our Lord and Creator. Ultimately, whether we acknowledge Him or not, God is our Boss, and if He wants to fire us, there's no place else to go.
And even if we feel we want to do what is just and right and do the work God requires, every day we're putting ourselves more in His disfavor. We're like incompetent workers who not only don't do our jobs, but even when we're trying our best we break the machinery and alienate the customers and embezzle our employer's funds. When it comes to achieving favor with God, our hard work doesn't work. This is how it is when we depend on ourselves to gain and maintain our own righteousness by obeying the law.
But the good news, as Paul tells us in the last part of Romans chapter 3, is that God Himself has done all the hard work for us through His Son Jesus Christ. His blood shed on the cross makes everything right between us and our divine Employer: We are justified in His sight. His death paid the price to buy us back out of slavery to sin: In Jesus Christ we are redeemed. His sacrifice of Himself propitiated the wrath that God rightly had directed against us for our sin: He has settled the our sin debt for us and it will never be held against us again.
Jesus Christ did all this for us when He died on Calvary, and His resurrection proves that God accepted His work. But how do we make the work of Jesus Christ our own? Do we do it by laboring really hard to love God and our neighbor, so we'll deserve the favor of Christ?
Well, think of the words of Jesus Himself as recorded in the sixth chapter of John's gospel. The day before He had fed the 5,000-plus on the east side of the Sea of Galilee. Then somehow He'd transported Himself to the Capernaum side of the lake, though everyone had seen the disciples go off in the only boat they had without Him. Even though they didn't necessarily know Jesus had walked most of the way across on the water, they certainly were sure that this Rabbi was a special representative of God and they weren't going to lose hold of Him. They were racing around, working hard not to lose hold of Him.
But as Jesus says, "You are looking for me, not because you saw miraculous signs but because you ate the loaves and had your fill. Do not work for food that spoils, but the food that endures to eternal life, which the Son of Man will give you." He seems to be agreeing with the idea we all have, that spiritual blessings, like earthly ones, have to be earned by our own efforts. So of course the representatives of the crowd ask Jesus, "What must we do to do the works God requires?"
Now, they knew the Law. And they knew God expected them to keep it. But maybe, just maybe Rabbi Jesus would give them some wonderful new tip so they could keep it.
And Jesus says simply, "The work of God is this: to believe in the one he has sent."
That's it. If they or we want to gain eternal life, if we want to appropriate the work of Christ on the cross for ourselves, we must not work. We must let God do all the work and simply receive the gift of salvation by faith in Christ alone. Our work has no place in God's plan to make us right with Him. In fact, to insist on working for it ourselves is to imply that Jesus and His death aren't good enough for us.
But if you've read your Bible and knew about the patriarch Abraham, you might be inclined to object. Wasn't Abraham justified by his works when he obeyed God and left Ur and then Haran to go to the land of Canaan? Didn't God reward him for his deed when he was willing to sacrifice his son Isaac on Mount Moriah? Abraham pleased God by his works, didn't he? and aren't we to be sons of Abraham and follow in his footsteps?
Not so fast, Paul says in Chapter 4. How was it actually that Abraham pleased God? The Apostle quotes Genesis 15:6: "Abraham believed God, and it was credited to him as righteousness." It was by faith and faith alone that Father Abraham was accepted as righteous before God!
And is the righteousness that God credited Abraham by faith the heritage only for the circumcised, that is, the Jews? No, because God created that faith in him and accepted that faith before the sign of circumcision was even given. The important thing is not whether we are Jews or Gentiles, the important thing is that God does His work in us and credits righteousness to us by faith. To walk in the footsteps of Abraham, Paul argues in verse 12, is to receive by faith the work that God has done for us and to live our lives trusting that God has done everything necessary for us to be accepted by Him. Just as Abraham looked forward to Christ and trusted in the work He would do, we look back on the saving work Jesus completed and trust that it is enough and more than enough, apart from anything we could accomplish.
But--! But--! Don't we have to do something to be Abraham's true heirs? The other day I heard that some television host was arguing that if you don't think the impending national healthcare law is a great thing you can't possibly be a real Christian. The radio host who passed this story along thought this was ridiculous on political grounds. As Christians, we first and foremost have to reject this statement on spiritual grounds. We are Christians through being accepted by God in Jesus Christ, and that was due to no work of kindness of ours, public or private. For as our reading says, "It was not through law--" [And the law is largely about how we should be kind to one another] "--Not through law that Abraham and his offspring received the promise that he would be heir of the world, but through the righteousness that comes by faith."
But let's say it were possible for someone to receive the new heaven and new earth God promises by his or her hard work trying to love God and neighbor. If that were the case, Paul says, "faith has no value and the promise is worthless." But we've already seen that doing our best to please God-- that is, following the law-- doesn't get us anywhere. It only puts us deeper into God's righteous wrath.
But being right with God through faith is an entirely different story. For one thing, it's totally inclusive. For it says in verse 16;
Therefore, the promise comes by faith, so that it may be by grace and may be guaranteed to all Abraham's offspring-- not only to those who are of the law [that is, ethnic Jews], but also to those who are of the faith of Abraham. He is the father of us all.
This is totally countercultural! The culture says-- what is that song from The Sound of Music? It goes something like
Nothing comes from nothing,
Nothing ever could;
So somewhere in my youth or childhood
I must've done something good.1
Human culture says it's all about work and rewards. But the promise of God comes to us who are dead in trespasses and sins, who are totally helpless and can't do a single solitary thing to work our way to eternal life. And see! He makes us alive in Christ! Our God is the God who does call something out of nothing by the power of His Word, and He does it every time the Holy Spirit plants faith in Jesus Christ into a lost sinner, like each of us were before He gave us new life in Christ.
Our God is the God who "calls things that are not as though they were." And when He speaks, those things spring into being! How do we know this is true in time and space and not just in theory? Well, says Paul, look at the whole history of the birth of Isaac. Both Abraham and Sarah were as good as dead where it came to having children. They totally didn't have it in them. But God had promised him a son from his own loins by his wife Sarah herself and no surrogate. God in His mercy maintained and repeated this promise even after the fiasco with Hagar and her son Ishmael. And without wavering Abraham believed that the Lord indeed would give him his own begotten son by Sarah. He had faith that God had the power to do what He had promised, and this faith was "credited to him as righteousness."
So what does this mean for us as we go about our lives as children of God living in an ungodly world? First, we must resist the Devil's lie that God requires more of us than faith in the finished work of His Son Jesus Christ, or that faith itself is some kind of a work we do, and not itself the gift of God.
We must stand firmly against the world's conception that being a Christian is about doing good deeds, and the more good deeds you do, the better Christian you are. Yes, God does want us to walk in the footsteps of our Father Abraham, who acted on the divine promises he believed. But our actions and our work do not make us his children or children of the living God. That all comes by grace through faith in Christ alone.
And we must utterly reject the falsehood that creeps upon us when we're depressed or in a bad situation, the nasty little voice that suggests we're not good enough to be saved by the blood of Christ, or worse, that somehow the blood of Christ isn't strong enough to save a wretch like you or me. If we were good, we wouldn't need saving! And the promise of God in Jesus stands firm and strong. His cross is more than sufficient to save us from all our sins.
For what does the Apostle say at the end of our reading from Romans?
The words "It was credited to him" were written not for him [Abraham] alone, but also for us, to whom God will credit righteousness-- for us who believe in him who raised Jesus our Lord from the dead. He was delivered over to death for our sins and was raised to life for our justification.
In the sphere of this world, by all means, work as hard as you can at the vocation God has called you to. But in the sphere of the world to come, stop struggling, stop your fruitless working, put down your tools and come with empty hands ready to receive. The Son of Man gives you the food that endures to eternal life, and He gives you the faith you need to take it from His hand. By His grace, may you cease your labors and rest forever in Him. Amen.
____________________________________________
1 By Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein, 1959
Showing posts with label faith. Show all posts
Showing posts with label faith. Show all posts
Sunday, September 1, 2013
Sunday, April 7, 2013
"He Has Made His Light Shine Upon Us"
Texts: Psalm 118:14-29; John 20:19-31
CHRIST IS RISEN! ("He is risen indeed!")
What a wonderful piece of good news! This is what we believe and what we confess, the truth by which we are saved: That Jesus Christ died for our sins, and was raised in glory on the third day.
At least, I hope that is what we believe. It's what we hope everyone we know and love believes. But we can't take that for granted. These days, people believe all sorts of things about life that aren't true. They believe it's okay to give in to sin, even that it should be celebrated and given special rights. They believe that there are all sorts of ways to gain eternal life. They believe that truth is what they think it is, instead of what God says it is.
And they refuse to believe what is true. The fact that God is the Creator and has the right to make the rules for creation. The fact that sin is offensive to Him and we need a Savior to take away our sin and make us acceptable to Him. The fact that Jesus Christ alone is that Savior, and outside of Him we have no hope now or in eternity.
There's a good chance most of us here have been Christians for years. Maybe even from childhood. It's hard for us to understand why it isn't obvious to others that Jesus Christ is Lord of life who is risen from the dead.
But our reading from the Gospel according to St. John reminds us that believing in Christ as our risen Savior is not automatic or obvious. It wasn't even automatic or obvious to those who walked with Jesus as His closest disciples. In verse 19 of chapter 20 we find them huddled together behind locked doors. They're afraid of the Jewish authorities. Sure, Mary Magdalene and the other women have brought the news that Christ is risen. Peter and John have even been to the tomb and found it empty. But they don't believe it. As far as they're concerned, Jesus was still dead and their turn to die might come next.
And then there's Thomas, who declares frankly that he won't believe it unless he sees the resurrected Christ in person and can probe His crucifixion wounds.
All these men had walked with Jesus and seen what He could do. All of them had heard Him say He would rise again. All of them had heard testimony-- testimony from witnesses they should have believed--that their Lord had returned gloriously from the dead. But they did not believe. They could not believe. As human beings with human limitations, it was impossible for them to believe. But why?
First, for the same reason the unbelieving world rejects the truth of the resurrection today; the same reason that we too once didn't believe in Jesus risen: Because their minds were still blinded by sin.
The Scriptures tell us that we are all born dead in trespasses and sins. Our eyes are closed to the vision of God and what's more, we like it that way. We prefer to create our own worlds, our own reality, our own rules for right and wrong. We want to be our own gods and our own saviors-- if we think we need to be saved from anything in the first place. As Jesus said in chapter 3 of John's Gospel, unless we are born again from above by the power of the Holy Spirit, we cannot see the kingdom of God. Unless God Himself intervenes in our spirits, we prefer darkness and won't come into the light for fear our evil deeds will be exposed.
But there's another reason why the disciples, why we human beings as human beings cannot believe in the risen Christ. It's because God has reserved the right of converting us to Himself. The new birth comes only from above. Becoming a child of God isn't something that can happen by human desire or initiative, but solely because God gives a person that right. God the Father must reveal to us who Jesus is, the Christ of God. Spiritual truths are discerned by spiritual means only, by the power of God's Holy Spirit. God has ordained that it should be this way, so the glory for our salvation and our growth in holiness should remain where it belongs, with Him alone.
And so here are the disciples in the 20th chapter of St. John, hiding and refusing to believe that Jesus had been raised until He Himself came and stood among them, alive, risen from the dead. "Peace be with you!" He said. He showed them His hands and side, where they could see the wounds of the nails that fastened Him to the cross and the spear that pierced His body. They saw, they believed, they were overjoyed.
We could say they believed because they saw the physical evidence. And to some extent this is so. In recent centuries many unbelieving scientists and lawyers, both atheists and men of other faiths, have looked at the historical, legal, and medical evidence for and against the resurrection of Jesus Christ. They've had to conclude that it really happened, that the gospel accounts are true. However-- accepting the facts intellectually didn't lead all of them to believe in the resurrection of Christ and its power in their lives. With some, yes, God used the physical evidence to open their spiritual eyes and bring them to saving faith and joy. But for many others, having to accept the earthly reality of Christ risen has led to disappointment, anger, and rejection. Their sin blinds them, and God in His sovereign will has not chosen that they should see His light and believe.
It is not the mere sight of a crucified man walking around alive that convinced the disciples that evening. That could be explained away. Rather, it is Jesus Himself who shines His light to bring belief and joy to His fearful followers. By His resurrection power He overcame the locked doors. He overcame the disciples' locked, fearful minds, and demonstrated that indeed it was He Himself standing in their midst. Result? Saving belief. Reaction? Joy!!
But what of Thomas' reaction when they tell him the good news? He demands physical evidence in order to believe, and you can be sure that he doesn't believe the physical evidence is there.
When you read Thomas' other statements in the Gospel of John, you'll see that his doubt does not arise from scientific skepticism. Rather, Thomas is kind of a fatalist. He's the one, when Jesus spoke of returning to the suburbs of Jerusalem to raise Lazarus, "Let us also go, that we may die with him," because Jerusalem was the last place Jesus should go if He wanted to stay alive. You've probably known people like Thomas. They expect the worst, and the best pleasure they get out of life is being right when it happens.
Not everyone who rejects the truth of Christ does so because they feel the facts are against it. There are also people like Thomas who feel they can't believe in the good news of Jesus risen because it is good news. Nothing so wonderful could possibly have happened. Even if it had, it couldn't possibly make any difference to them. No, it's a cruel, rotten world, they tell themselves, it even killed the best and holiest Man who ever lived, and you may as well accept that's the way things are.
Can people who disbelieve due to emotional hurt change their minds on their own? No, they can't. Thomas couldn't, our unbelieving friends and neighbors can't, and we couldn't ourselves.
But then Jesus came and stood among His disciples, including Thomas the sad doubter. Miraculously, by His divine resurrection power He came, despite the doors that again were locked. He knew Thomas' thoughts without being told. He repeated the very words Thomas had spoken earlier in the week, saying, "Put your finger here; see my hands. Reach out your hand and put it into my side. Stop doubting, and believe." And miraculously, by the divine light of revelation, Thomas was thoroughly convinced. He did not make the physical test of Jesus' wounds. He didn't need to. His spiritual eyes were opened, he believed, and confessed the truth about who Jesus was and who Jesus was to him. "My Lord and my God!" he exclaimed. God used the earthly sight of Jesus risen to work faith in Thomas' heart.
But Jesus tells him. "Blessed are those who have not seen, yet have believed." To whom is our Lord referring? I was moved to research the Greek of this saying, and discovered that it can literally be translated "Blessed are the ones not having seen, yet having believed." But the words "having seen" and "having believed" are in a tense that is not limited by time. In other words, the action of not seeing, yet believing, that Jesus speaks of can happen in the past, in the present, or in the future. Brothers and sisters, the blessing of knowing and believing in Christ risen for you is for you now, and for all whom God shall call to believe the message preached and recorded by His faithful apostles. It is the blessing and gift of God that we should believe, for He has shined His light upon us and called us out of darkness and doubt.
God has raised Jesus Christ from the dead and we are raised from death and sin in Him! How shall we respond? With joy! By falling at His feet and confessing, "My Lord and my God!" By singing with the Psalmist who wrote Psalm 118, for he spoke as a prophet and looked forward to the ultimate salvation that would be found in God's own Son, the Messiah Jesus.
For the Lord is our strength and our song, He himself is our salvation. He has made us righteous, and so we celebrate His victory over sin and death, not only on Easter Sunday but every Lord's Day of the year and all the days in between. His right hand has won this great victory, the Lord has done this mighty thing, bursting forth from the grave.
And so in Him, we will not die, but live. We will proclaim the wonders of what Christ has done, no matter who believes us or not, for our sins are forgiven; they no longer will lead us to death.
In Christ we can enter the gates of righteousness. We can go into God's royal presence and give Him the thanks He deserves. We can go where only the righteous may go, because Jesus Christ the Righteous One has gone before us and credited us with His goodness and holiness and made us acceptable to God. He has answered our cry and has forever become our salvation.
The Psalmist refers to the stone the builders rejected that became the capstone. This harks back to the building of Solomon's temple. But it harks forward to Jesus Himself, who made it clear that He is the stone that was rejected. Unbelief in Him did not start in this modern age, oh, no! And unbelief did not and does not keep the Lord God from making His Son the capstone of all His plans for humanity. He indeed has exalted Jesus Christ to the highest position of majesty and power, and His work is marvellous in our eyes. This day of salvation, He alone has made it: let us rejoice and be glad in it!
Because Jesus is risen and because God has caused us to believe in the power of His resurrection, we can cry out, "O Lord, save us!" and know that He can and He will. We can pray for success in walking in His ways, and know that His Spirit is with us so we can do just that. Blessed is Jesus Christ who comes in the name of the Lord! Forever let His Church bless Him! And we can bless Him and not reject Him, for the Lord is God, and He has made His light to shine upon us.
He brings us near to worship Him, where before we wanted to worship all sort of false gods; especially, we wanted to worship ourselves. By the grace of Jesus Christ crucified and risen from the dead, He is our only God, and we will give Him thanks; He is our God and we will exalt Him.
Brothers and sisters, it can be hard living as a Christian in this world. So many refuse to believe in our risen Savior, and people can be so noisy and aggressive in their unbelief. What a temptation for us just to lock the doors and hide, like the disciples did in those early days. But we shall not be afraid and we won't hide. Rather, we can have confidence in the power of God to shed His light upon this dark world and trust Him to enlighten the hearts He has chosen. Remember what you were before He shined His light on you, and know that the hardest heart is not too hard for Him. Let us lovingly and faithfully tell others that Jesus Christ is alive from the dead and let God do His work through His word.
Will they believe our message? Maybe, maybe not. All that is up to God alone. But what ever happens, we can have faith that the Lord is good, for His love for us in Christ endures forever. Give thanks to Him, give thanks, for Jesus Christ is risen!
(He is risen indeed!)
Alleluia, amen!
CHRIST IS RISEN! ("He is risen indeed!")
What a wonderful piece of good news! This is what we believe and what we confess, the truth by which we are saved: That Jesus Christ died for our sins, and was raised in glory on the third day.
At least, I hope that is what we believe. It's what we hope everyone we know and love believes. But we can't take that for granted. These days, people believe all sorts of things about life that aren't true. They believe it's okay to give in to sin, even that it should be celebrated and given special rights. They believe that there are all sorts of ways to gain eternal life. They believe that truth is what they think it is, instead of what God says it is.
And they refuse to believe what is true. The fact that God is the Creator and has the right to make the rules for creation. The fact that sin is offensive to Him and we need a Savior to take away our sin and make us acceptable to Him. The fact that Jesus Christ alone is that Savior, and outside of Him we have no hope now or in eternity.
There's a good chance most of us here have been Christians for years. Maybe even from childhood. It's hard for us to understand why it isn't obvious to others that Jesus Christ is Lord of life who is risen from the dead.
But our reading from the Gospel according to St. John reminds us that believing in Christ as our risen Savior is not automatic or obvious. It wasn't even automatic or obvious to those who walked with Jesus as His closest disciples. In verse 19 of chapter 20 we find them huddled together behind locked doors. They're afraid of the Jewish authorities. Sure, Mary Magdalene and the other women have brought the news that Christ is risen. Peter and John have even been to the tomb and found it empty. But they don't believe it. As far as they're concerned, Jesus was still dead and their turn to die might come next.
And then there's Thomas, who declares frankly that he won't believe it unless he sees the resurrected Christ in person and can probe His crucifixion wounds.
All these men had walked with Jesus and seen what He could do. All of them had heard Him say He would rise again. All of them had heard testimony-- testimony from witnesses they should have believed--that their Lord had returned gloriously from the dead. But they did not believe. They could not believe. As human beings with human limitations, it was impossible for them to believe. But why?
First, for the same reason the unbelieving world rejects the truth of the resurrection today; the same reason that we too once didn't believe in Jesus risen: Because their minds were still blinded by sin.
The Scriptures tell us that we are all born dead in trespasses and sins. Our eyes are closed to the vision of God and what's more, we like it that way. We prefer to create our own worlds, our own reality, our own rules for right and wrong. We want to be our own gods and our own saviors-- if we think we need to be saved from anything in the first place. As Jesus said in chapter 3 of John's Gospel, unless we are born again from above by the power of the Holy Spirit, we cannot see the kingdom of God. Unless God Himself intervenes in our spirits, we prefer darkness and won't come into the light for fear our evil deeds will be exposed.
But there's another reason why the disciples, why we human beings as human beings cannot believe in the risen Christ. It's because God has reserved the right of converting us to Himself. The new birth comes only from above. Becoming a child of God isn't something that can happen by human desire or initiative, but solely because God gives a person that right. God the Father must reveal to us who Jesus is, the Christ of God. Spiritual truths are discerned by spiritual means only, by the power of God's Holy Spirit. God has ordained that it should be this way, so the glory for our salvation and our growth in holiness should remain where it belongs, with Him alone.
And so here are the disciples in the 20th chapter of St. John, hiding and refusing to believe that Jesus had been raised until He Himself came and stood among them, alive, risen from the dead. "Peace be with you!" He said. He showed them His hands and side, where they could see the wounds of the nails that fastened Him to the cross and the spear that pierced His body. They saw, they believed, they were overjoyed.
We could say they believed because they saw the physical evidence. And to some extent this is so. In recent centuries many unbelieving scientists and lawyers, both atheists and men of other faiths, have looked at the historical, legal, and medical evidence for and against the resurrection of Jesus Christ. They've had to conclude that it really happened, that the gospel accounts are true. However-- accepting the facts intellectually didn't lead all of them to believe in the resurrection of Christ and its power in their lives. With some, yes, God used the physical evidence to open their spiritual eyes and bring them to saving faith and joy. But for many others, having to accept the earthly reality of Christ risen has led to disappointment, anger, and rejection. Their sin blinds them, and God in His sovereign will has not chosen that they should see His light and believe.
It is not the mere sight of a crucified man walking around alive that convinced the disciples that evening. That could be explained away. Rather, it is Jesus Himself who shines His light to bring belief and joy to His fearful followers. By His resurrection power He overcame the locked doors. He overcame the disciples' locked, fearful minds, and demonstrated that indeed it was He Himself standing in their midst. Result? Saving belief. Reaction? Joy!!
But what of Thomas' reaction when they tell him the good news? He demands physical evidence in order to believe, and you can be sure that he doesn't believe the physical evidence is there.
When you read Thomas' other statements in the Gospel of John, you'll see that his doubt does not arise from scientific skepticism. Rather, Thomas is kind of a fatalist. He's the one, when Jesus spoke of returning to the suburbs of Jerusalem to raise Lazarus, "Let us also go, that we may die with him," because Jerusalem was the last place Jesus should go if He wanted to stay alive. You've probably known people like Thomas. They expect the worst, and the best pleasure they get out of life is being right when it happens.
Not everyone who rejects the truth of Christ does so because they feel the facts are against it. There are also people like Thomas who feel they can't believe in the good news of Jesus risen because it is good news. Nothing so wonderful could possibly have happened. Even if it had, it couldn't possibly make any difference to them. No, it's a cruel, rotten world, they tell themselves, it even killed the best and holiest Man who ever lived, and you may as well accept that's the way things are.
Can people who disbelieve due to emotional hurt change their minds on their own? No, they can't. Thomas couldn't, our unbelieving friends and neighbors can't, and we couldn't ourselves.
But then Jesus came and stood among His disciples, including Thomas the sad doubter. Miraculously, by His divine resurrection power He came, despite the doors that again were locked. He knew Thomas' thoughts without being told. He repeated the very words Thomas had spoken earlier in the week, saying, "Put your finger here; see my hands. Reach out your hand and put it into my side. Stop doubting, and believe." And miraculously, by the divine light of revelation, Thomas was thoroughly convinced. He did not make the physical test of Jesus' wounds. He didn't need to. His spiritual eyes were opened, he believed, and confessed the truth about who Jesus was and who Jesus was to him. "My Lord and my God!" he exclaimed. God used the earthly sight of Jesus risen to work faith in Thomas' heart.
But Jesus tells him. "Blessed are those who have not seen, yet have believed." To whom is our Lord referring? I was moved to research the Greek of this saying, and discovered that it can literally be translated "Blessed are the ones not having seen, yet having believed." But the words "having seen" and "having believed" are in a tense that is not limited by time. In other words, the action of not seeing, yet believing, that Jesus speaks of can happen in the past, in the present, or in the future. Brothers and sisters, the blessing of knowing and believing in Christ risen for you is for you now, and for all whom God shall call to believe the message preached and recorded by His faithful apostles. It is the blessing and gift of God that we should believe, for He has shined His light upon us and called us out of darkness and doubt.
God has raised Jesus Christ from the dead and we are raised from death and sin in Him! How shall we respond? With joy! By falling at His feet and confessing, "My Lord and my God!" By singing with the Psalmist who wrote Psalm 118, for he spoke as a prophet and looked forward to the ultimate salvation that would be found in God's own Son, the Messiah Jesus.
For the Lord is our strength and our song, He himself is our salvation. He has made us righteous, and so we celebrate His victory over sin and death, not only on Easter Sunday but every Lord's Day of the year and all the days in between. His right hand has won this great victory, the Lord has done this mighty thing, bursting forth from the grave.
And so in Him, we will not die, but live. We will proclaim the wonders of what Christ has done, no matter who believes us or not, for our sins are forgiven; they no longer will lead us to death.
In Christ we can enter the gates of righteousness. We can go into God's royal presence and give Him the thanks He deserves. We can go where only the righteous may go, because Jesus Christ the Righteous One has gone before us and credited us with His goodness and holiness and made us acceptable to God. He has answered our cry and has forever become our salvation.
The Psalmist refers to the stone the builders rejected that became the capstone. This harks back to the building of Solomon's temple. But it harks forward to Jesus Himself, who made it clear that He is the stone that was rejected. Unbelief in Him did not start in this modern age, oh, no! And unbelief did not and does not keep the Lord God from making His Son the capstone of all His plans for humanity. He indeed has exalted Jesus Christ to the highest position of majesty and power, and His work is marvellous in our eyes. This day of salvation, He alone has made it: let us rejoice and be glad in it!
Because Jesus is risen and because God has caused us to believe in the power of His resurrection, we can cry out, "O Lord, save us!" and know that He can and He will. We can pray for success in walking in His ways, and know that His Spirit is with us so we can do just that. Blessed is Jesus Christ who comes in the name of the Lord! Forever let His Church bless Him! And we can bless Him and not reject Him, for the Lord is God, and He has made His light to shine upon us.
He brings us near to worship Him, where before we wanted to worship all sort of false gods; especially, we wanted to worship ourselves. By the grace of Jesus Christ crucified and risen from the dead, He is our only God, and we will give Him thanks; He is our God and we will exalt Him.
Brothers and sisters, it can be hard living as a Christian in this world. So many refuse to believe in our risen Savior, and people can be so noisy and aggressive in their unbelief. What a temptation for us just to lock the doors and hide, like the disciples did in those early days. But we shall not be afraid and we won't hide. Rather, we can have confidence in the power of God to shed His light upon this dark world and trust Him to enlighten the hearts He has chosen. Remember what you were before He shined His light on you, and know that the hardest heart is not too hard for Him. Let us lovingly and faithfully tell others that Jesus Christ is alive from the dead and let God do His work through His word.
Will they believe our message? Maybe, maybe not. All that is up to God alone. But what ever happens, we can have faith that the Lord is good, for His love for us in Christ endures forever. Give thanks to Him, give thanks, for Jesus Christ is risen!
(He is risen indeed!)
Alleluia, amen!
Sunday, October 14, 2012
Newborn from God
Texts: Romans 6:1-17; John 3:1-14
IN A LITTLE WHILE WE WILL BAPTISE H-- A-- B--, infant son of H-- and D-- B--. I was told that H-- was born on the 15th of this past August, so he's not quite two months old. Once this child was not even thought of, but now he's a little person living here among us. Even in these past two months he's growing, developing, and gaining strength. What will he look like when he's big? What will he be able to do?
We marvel at the glory of human life, especially when we find it packaged in a little child. But human life is not enough.
And what a miracle H-- is! If anything on this earth could be called miraculous, it's the birth of a newborn child. We know from science how minuscule we all start out in our mothers' wombs, but somehow the genetic coding works together and a new human being is born! And now, see how intricate, how delicate, how marvellously-formed a tiny baby is!
A child like this is indeed is an earthly miracle. But earthly miracles are not enough.
And think of the spirit in this child, already manifesting itself. Here is a new soul with all its dreams and possibilities ahead of it. How can we look upon a infant like this and not be inspired to contemplate the mysteries of life and the universe and beyond?
Certainly, the human spirit is an amazing thing. But the human spirit is not enough.
All this is not enough, for we know from Scripture-- and from the testimony of our own hearts-- that we are not what we should be or what we were created to be. We are sinners who fall short of the glory of God. We treat God, our neighbor, and ourselves in ways we ought not, and we fail to give God and our neighbor the honor and consideration they deserve. St. Paul in our passage from Romans 6 speaks of people who would insult the grace of God by using it as an excuse to sin all the more. He needs to command even Christians not to let sin reign in our mortal bodies. So wonderfully formed our bodies are, with tremendous capabilities and strengths, but we have to be warned not to use them as instruments of wickedness. Paul urges us not to let sin be our master, to stop being slaves to sin-- and by this we understand that having sin as our master is the ordinary condition of human life. It's the problem we were born with and still struggle with, no matter how old or how young we are. Because we are sinners, our lives lead to death, our miracles are fleeting, and our spirits end in frustration. All our human glories are not enough.
But maybe (some might say), but maybe all this about sin is just Paul the Apostle talking. After all (people say), Paul didn't want anybody to have any fun. He just obscured the real Jesus-- the kind, loving, gentle, inclusive, all-accepting Jesus who'd never lower anybody's self-esteem or judge them or make them feel there was anything about them that God couldn't like.
Oh, really? That's an imaginary Jesus people make up in their own heads, and not the Christ of the Bible. We can read what Jesus Himself said about the natural condition of humanity. In John 3:18-20, He says,
[W]hoever does not believe [in Jesus the Son of Man] stands condemned already because he has not believed in the name of God's one and only Son. This is the verdict: Light has come into the world, but men loved darkness instead of light because their deeds were evil. Everyone who does evil hates the light, and will not come into the light for fear that his deeds will be exposed.
"Men loved darkness instead of light because their deeds were evil," says Jesus, the Son of God. Not some men, but all men, and that includes us women, too. It just comes naturally for us to do what is bad and wrong and to try to hide our guilt in the darkness, away from the righteous judgement of the holy God. We are born with sin as our master and condemnation is what we naturally deserve-- Jesus has said so. The tiniest child, the most aged, venerable senior, all of us come into this world as children of darkness and not as children of light.
So what must we do? Try harder? Aspire to please God by acts of charity and service? No, for even our best and kindest acts are polluted and degraded by selfish motives. No matter how much we try, we fail to meet the standard of goodness set by God's own righteousness. It's beyond human capability for anyone by his or her own efforts to have eternal life and not perish under the judgement we so properly deserve.
Human life, human spirit, and earthly miracles are not enough. We need divine life and the Holy Spirit, given to us by heavenly miracle. It's not enough for us once to have been newborn-- we need also to be newborn from and by and through God.
When Nicodemus, the member of the Jewish ruling council, came to Jesus by night, he wondered whether Jesus' presence marked the coming of the kingdom of God. The coming of the kingdom was an event all good Jews eagerly awaited. Jesus has been doing miraculous signs in Judea and Galilee, and Nicodemus recognizes by this that Jesus is a teacher sent from God, and the Lord is with Him. Plainly, the next question is, "Rabbi, are You the Messiah, and will we see You inaugurating the kingdom of God very soon?"
Nicodemus was expecting the time when God would fulfill all His covenant promises to His chosen people, an unending time of blessedness and joy for those who belonged to Him, with a simultaneous experience of punishment and woe for the enemies of God and Israel. To a great extent, Nicodemus and his good Jewish countrymen were right. But it's more than that. The kingdom of God also has to do with the condition of every human heart. Is God our Sovereign and Master-- or will we continue to be enslaved by sin? Jesus gets right to the point: In order to see the kingdom of God-- that is, to be able to experience it, live in it, and enjoy the eternal life that only God can give-- it wasn't enough to have been born of the bloodline of Jacob. No, "No one can see the kingdom of God unless he is born again."
For Nicodemus this is such a bizarre thing for Jesus to say that he tries to imagine an adult man crawling back into his mother's womb and having her deliver him all over again. Absurd and impossible!
But Jesus is not talking about anything natural or anything of this earth. This new birth is from first to last an act of God by the power of the Holy Spirit. In order to participate in the kingdom of God, we must be newborn from God. Jesus says, "I tell you the truth, no one can enter the kingdom of God unless he is born of water and the Spirit." Elsewhere in John's gospel the Evangelist records how Jesus promised the Samaritan woman living water that would become a spring welling up to eternal life. When He preached at the Feast of Tabernacles Jesus spoke of "streams of living water flowing from within" those who believed in Him, by which He meant the Holy Spirit, which believers would receive. Repeatedly in Scripture water, especially flowing, running water, is used as a means of physical cleansing and refreshing, and as a symbol for spiritual cleansing and revival. John the Baptist baptised people in the Jordan River, so they might be ready to accept the Messiah when He might be revealed to Israel. Behind the physical element of water stands a powerful truth about what God does in the human heart so each of us can be fit and ready to see the kingdom of God.
And you and I can't do or be a single thing to bring the kingdom of God to us, or to make ourselves clean enough to see and enter it. Jesus won't allow Nicodemus or us to delude ourselves. We must have a spiritual rebirth, and that can happen only by the will and pleasure of the Holy Spirit Himself, who is God. Can you or I control the wind? No, we only see its influence and feel its force. And so it is with the new birth from above-- it's totally up to God and His sovereign will.
But we can take heart. "For God so loved the world, that He gave His only-begotten Son, that whosever believes in Him shall not perish, but have everlasting life." God has provided the way for us to be born again and to have the life and Spirit that is more than enough. Jesus Himself is the way, and as we believe in Him through the work of the Holy Spirit, we pass from life to death, from condemnation to adoption as sons, from darkness into light.
Baptism is God's divinely-ordained sign and seal of this tremendous heavenly reality. We take a common element, water, plain old H2O, and as we in faith invoke the name of God: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, our Lord promises to apply His promises to us and our children. Our Christian baptism is our initiation into new and eternal life-- because, St. Paul says (again, in Romans, chapter 6), our baptism into Jesus Christ is our baptism into His death. In John 3:14 and 15, Jesus says that "Just as Moses lifted up the snake in the desert, so the Son of Man must be lifted up, that everyone who believes in him may have eternal life." By this He looks towards the death He was to suffer on the cross for the forgiveness of our sins. His death washed away the guilt and stain of our sins in His own blood, and in the waters of baptism we are symbolically plunged into the blood of Jesus, that we might arise cleansed and purified and worthy to enter the kingdom of God.
No one who refuses to come to God through the medium of Christ's atoning death will see life. But if we are united with Him in His death, as Paul says, we will certainly also be united with Him in His resurrection. With Christ in death, with Christ in newborn life-- this is our hope and our glory.
But we also rejoice that when we are baptised into Christ, our old sinful self stays dead so we are no longer slaves to sin. Oh, yes, that old sin nature still hangs around within it us, nagging us and tempting us to go back to what we used to be. But now that we have been baptised into Christ, we are no longer what we used to be. We are newborn from God-- truly innocent, truly perfect, truly holy-- because we have been united with Jesus Christ, the truly innocent, perfect, and holy one.
As we baptise H-- A--, we express our faith that God will do for him what He has promised in Jesus Christ. He is only a tiny child, and will not be able to express his faith in Christ as His Lord and Savior for many years. But it was in our very helplessness that God took the initiative to revive and quicken us and raise us up in the power of the Spirit so we might call Jesus Master and Lord. The Word of God written will teach H-- about Jesus and His death for him, and through the ministry of Christ's church as you surround him with your love and godly example, this child will come to acknowledge and confirm the blessing of newborn life God gives to him and all of us in Christ. Young or old, whether you are a recent convert or a long-standing pillar of the Church, let us reaffirm our own baptisms, and humbly accept the what God has done for us through the death and resurrection of our Lord Jesus Christ. For God so loved you that He gave His only-begotten Son, that if you believe in Him, you will not perish, but have everlasting life. By His sovereign grace you are reborn into eternal life. God has done it, let us receive it, and praise His name forever and ever. Amen.
IN A LITTLE WHILE WE WILL BAPTISE H-- A-- B--, infant son of H-- and D-- B--. I was told that H-- was born on the 15th of this past August, so he's not quite two months old. Once this child was not even thought of, but now he's a little person living here among us. Even in these past two months he's growing, developing, and gaining strength. What will he look like when he's big? What will he be able to do?
We marvel at the glory of human life, especially when we find it packaged in a little child. But human life is not enough.
And what a miracle H-- is! If anything on this earth could be called miraculous, it's the birth of a newborn child. We know from science how minuscule we all start out in our mothers' wombs, but somehow the genetic coding works together and a new human being is born! And now, see how intricate, how delicate, how marvellously-formed a tiny baby is!
A child like this is indeed is an earthly miracle. But earthly miracles are not enough.
And think of the spirit in this child, already manifesting itself. Here is a new soul with all its dreams and possibilities ahead of it. How can we look upon a infant like this and not be inspired to contemplate the mysteries of life and the universe and beyond?
Certainly, the human spirit is an amazing thing. But the human spirit is not enough.
All this is not enough, for we know from Scripture-- and from the testimony of our own hearts-- that we are not what we should be or what we were created to be. We are sinners who fall short of the glory of God. We treat God, our neighbor, and ourselves in ways we ought not, and we fail to give God and our neighbor the honor and consideration they deserve. St. Paul in our passage from Romans 6 speaks of people who would insult the grace of God by using it as an excuse to sin all the more. He needs to command even Christians not to let sin reign in our mortal bodies. So wonderfully formed our bodies are, with tremendous capabilities and strengths, but we have to be warned not to use them as instruments of wickedness. Paul urges us not to let sin be our master, to stop being slaves to sin-- and by this we understand that having sin as our master is the ordinary condition of human life. It's the problem we were born with and still struggle with, no matter how old or how young we are. Because we are sinners, our lives lead to death, our miracles are fleeting, and our spirits end in frustration. All our human glories are not enough.
But maybe (some might say), but maybe all this about sin is just Paul the Apostle talking. After all (people say), Paul didn't want anybody to have any fun. He just obscured the real Jesus-- the kind, loving, gentle, inclusive, all-accepting Jesus who'd never lower anybody's self-esteem or judge them or make them feel there was anything about them that God couldn't like.
Oh, really? That's an imaginary Jesus people make up in their own heads, and not the Christ of the Bible. We can read what Jesus Himself said about the natural condition of humanity. In John 3:18-20, He says,
[W]hoever does not believe [in Jesus the Son of Man] stands condemned already because he has not believed in the name of God's one and only Son. This is the verdict: Light has come into the world, but men loved darkness instead of light because their deeds were evil. Everyone who does evil hates the light, and will not come into the light for fear that his deeds will be exposed.
"Men loved darkness instead of light because their deeds were evil," says Jesus, the Son of God. Not some men, but all men, and that includes us women, too. It just comes naturally for us to do what is bad and wrong and to try to hide our guilt in the darkness, away from the righteous judgement of the holy God. We are born with sin as our master and condemnation is what we naturally deserve-- Jesus has said so. The tiniest child, the most aged, venerable senior, all of us come into this world as children of darkness and not as children of light.
So what must we do? Try harder? Aspire to please God by acts of charity and service? No, for even our best and kindest acts are polluted and degraded by selfish motives. No matter how much we try, we fail to meet the standard of goodness set by God's own righteousness. It's beyond human capability for anyone by his or her own efforts to have eternal life and not perish under the judgement we so properly deserve.
Human life, human spirit, and earthly miracles are not enough. We need divine life and the Holy Spirit, given to us by heavenly miracle. It's not enough for us once to have been newborn-- we need also to be newborn from and by and through God.
When Nicodemus, the member of the Jewish ruling council, came to Jesus by night, he wondered whether Jesus' presence marked the coming of the kingdom of God. The coming of the kingdom was an event all good Jews eagerly awaited. Jesus has been doing miraculous signs in Judea and Galilee, and Nicodemus recognizes by this that Jesus is a teacher sent from God, and the Lord is with Him. Plainly, the next question is, "Rabbi, are You the Messiah, and will we see You inaugurating the kingdom of God very soon?"
Nicodemus was expecting the time when God would fulfill all His covenant promises to His chosen people, an unending time of blessedness and joy for those who belonged to Him, with a simultaneous experience of punishment and woe for the enemies of God and Israel. To a great extent, Nicodemus and his good Jewish countrymen were right. But it's more than that. The kingdom of God also has to do with the condition of every human heart. Is God our Sovereign and Master-- or will we continue to be enslaved by sin? Jesus gets right to the point: In order to see the kingdom of God-- that is, to be able to experience it, live in it, and enjoy the eternal life that only God can give-- it wasn't enough to have been born of the bloodline of Jacob. No, "No one can see the kingdom of God unless he is born again."
For Nicodemus this is such a bizarre thing for Jesus to say that he tries to imagine an adult man crawling back into his mother's womb and having her deliver him all over again. Absurd and impossible!
But Jesus is not talking about anything natural or anything of this earth. This new birth is from first to last an act of God by the power of the Holy Spirit. In order to participate in the kingdom of God, we must be newborn from God. Jesus says, "I tell you the truth, no one can enter the kingdom of God unless he is born of water and the Spirit." Elsewhere in John's gospel the Evangelist records how Jesus promised the Samaritan woman living water that would become a spring welling up to eternal life. When He preached at the Feast of Tabernacles Jesus spoke of "streams of living water flowing from within" those who believed in Him, by which He meant the Holy Spirit, which believers would receive. Repeatedly in Scripture water, especially flowing, running water, is used as a means of physical cleansing and refreshing, and as a symbol for spiritual cleansing and revival. John the Baptist baptised people in the Jordan River, so they might be ready to accept the Messiah when He might be revealed to Israel. Behind the physical element of water stands a powerful truth about what God does in the human heart so each of us can be fit and ready to see the kingdom of God.
And you and I can't do or be a single thing to bring the kingdom of God to us, or to make ourselves clean enough to see and enter it. Jesus won't allow Nicodemus or us to delude ourselves. We must have a spiritual rebirth, and that can happen only by the will and pleasure of the Holy Spirit Himself, who is God. Can you or I control the wind? No, we only see its influence and feel its force. And so it is with the new birth from above-- it's totally up to God and His sovereign will.
But we can take heart. "For God so loved the world, that He gave His only-begotten Son, that whosever believes in Him shall not perish, but have everlasting life." God has provided the way for us to be born again and to have the life and Spirit that is more than enough. Jesus Himself is the way, and as we believe in Him through the work of the Holy Spirit, we pass from life to death, from condemnation to adoption as sons, from darkness into light.
Baptism is God's divinely-ordained sign and seal of this tremendous heavenly reality. We take a common element, water, plain old H2O, and as we in faith invoke the name of God: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, our Lord promises to apply His promises to us and our children. Our Christian baptism is our initiation into new and eternal life-- because, St. Paul says (again, in Romans, chapter 6), our baptism into Jesus Christ is our baptism into His death. In John 3:14 and 15, Jesus says that "Just as Moses lifted up the snake in the desert, so the Son of Man must be lifted up, that everyone who believes in him may have eternal life." By this He looks towards the death He was to suffer on the cross for the forgiveness of our sins. His death washed away the guilt and stain of our sins in His own blood, and in the waters of baptism we are symbolically plunged into the blood of Jesus, that we might arise cleansed and purified and worthy to enter the kingdom of God.
No one who refuses to come to God through the medium of Christ's atoning death will see life. But if we are united with Him in His death, as Paul says, we will certainly also be united with Him in His resurrection. With Christ in death, with Christ in newborn life-- this is our hope and our glory.
But we also rejoice that when we are baptised into Christ, our old sinful self stays dead so we are no longer slaves to sin. Oh, yes, that old sin nature still hangs around within it us, nagging us and tempting us to go back to what we used to be. But now that we have been baptised into Christ, we are no longer what we used to be. We are newborn from God-- truly innocent, truly perfect, truly holy-- because we have been united with Jesus Christ, the truly innocent, perfect, and holy one.
As we baptise H-- A--, we express our faith that God will do for him what He has promised in Jesus Christ. He is only a tiny child, and will not be able to express his faith in Christ as His Lord and Savior for many years. But it was in our very helplessness that God took the initiative to revive and quicken us and raise us up in the power of the Spirit so we might call Jesus Master and Lord. The Word of God written will teach H-- about Jesus and His death for him, and through the ministry of Christ's church as you surround him with your love and godly example, this child will come to acknowledge and confirm the blessing of newborn life God gives to him and all of us in Christ. Young or old, whether you are a recent convert or a long-standing pillar of the Church, let us reaffirm our own baptisms, and humbly accept the what God has done for us through the death and resurrection of our Lord Jesus Christ. For God so loved you that He gave His only-begotten Son, that if you believe in Him, you will not perish, but have everlasting life. By His sovereign grace you are reborn into eternal life. God has done it, let us receive it, and praise His name forever and ever. Amen.
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Sunday, August 19, 2012
Persevering Through Faith
Texts: Psalm 16; Hebrews 10:19-25, 35-39; 11:1-6; 12:1-3
HERE'S SOMETHING SHOCKING: I didn't watch much of the Olympics. It's not that I didn't care, it's just that I don't have a working TV since the government switched everything to digital. But even without being glued to the screen, I was aware of the accomplishments of our U.S. team and the other athletes who competed. Talk about drive and determination! Talk about pushing through against all odds and reaching the goal! Those athletes were perfect illustrations of what it means to persevere.
"Perseverance." We don't use that word much in everyday speech, but it's an excellence principle for life. It means to keep on keeping on. To never give up. To maintain confidence and "just do it," despite all the obstacles in the way. The entire Letter to the Hebrews is about perseverance, about focussing singlemindedly on one goal and not letting anything get in the way of our achieving it. This goal is beyond anything earthly or temporal; no, set before us is the glory and joy of the heavenly kingdom of Jesus Christ our Lord, which we will enter fully when He comes again at the last day. Reaching that goal involves living every day as witnesses to the grace of Jesus Christ, in our behavior, in our decisions, in how we treat one another, in what we say about who Jesus is and His will for the world. It's like being an Olympic athlete in training to win the gold. Focus. Dedication. Perseverance.
But bad things happen in this life. We run into opposition when we confess Jesus Christ as the only Lord. Often it's uncomfortable and inconvenient to live the Christian life God has marked out for us. It can be damaging, even dangerous. Does God really expect us to keep standing on His word and following Christ in situations like that? Is it all up to us to grit our teeth and keep going? Or has He Himself provided us a way for us to stay the course and persevere? The Letter to the Hebrews gives the answer to this last question as a resounding Yes. God has provided a way, and we need to take it, if we want to receive the reward He has promised.
This letter was originally written for 1st century Jewish Christians who were shaking in their confidence in Christ. Trouble and persecution were tempting them to give up on Jesus as their Messiah and Lord. Why not go back to Judaism? After all, the Jews were protected under Roman law. As a Jew you got a special religious exemption: you didn't have to worship Caesar; you were free to practice your religion according to the books of Moses. Why take on more difficulty? Wasn't the Old Covenant good enough after all? Why not decide Jesus was just one more of the prophets, and live in peace?
The writer spends the first nine and a half chapters demonstrating that the Old Covenant was not good enough; in fact, God had given it only to lead up to the New Covenant in Jesus Christ. The prophets were not good enough-- they were sent to speak of Him. Angels were not good enough-- they are Christ's servants and our servants for His sake. Moses and the Law were not good enough-- Jesus God's Son is the true Builder of God's house. Keeping the seventh-day Sabbath was not good enough-- Jesus alone is our true Sabbath rest and He's what the Sabbath observance was all about. The animal sacrifices in the Tabernacle and Temple were not good enough-- the blood of bulls and goats could not permanently cover sins, that was done only by the blood of the sinless Lamb of God shed on the cross. The whole priesthood in the line of Aaron was not good enough-- it took a unique, eternal High Priest in the order of Melchizedek to offer the one true and perfect sacrifice of atonement, even Jesus Christ our Mediator. None of these Old Testament types and shadows were sufficient to save the Jews or anybody from their sins. Only Jesus Christ the righteous one was worthy and able to do what we needed to present us holy and righteous before the face of almighty God. We really need a Savior, and He's the Savior we need. That was true for those Hebrew Christians and it's true for us today.
Do you believe that? I hope and pray so, for everything that follows is based on the facts of who this Jesus is and what He has done.
So in chapter 10, verse 19, our writer draws the logical conclusion. He begins, "Therefore, brothers, since we have confidence to enter the Most Holy Place by the blood of Jesus . . . " Every Jew would know what the writer was referring to. The Most Holy Place, or as the King James Version puts it, the Holy of Holies, was that room in the Tabernacle and later, in the Jerusalem Temple, where the Ark of the Covenant was housed. The High Priest (and only the High Priest) would enter it only once a year, on the Day of Atonement, to obtain forgiveness for the sins of the people. But the Most Holy Place spoken of here is not anything on earth, it is the very throne room of God. And now it's not the blood of an animal that justifies entry, but the blood of Jesus. And now it's not only the High Priest who is allowed to come into the presence of God, it's all of us whom the blood of Christ has covered. Formerly, it was a fearsome thing even for the High Priest to enter the Holy of Holies; now we all can have confidence to come before our Lord and God, because Jesus Himself is our great priest over the house of God. Because of who He is and what He has done, we have every reason to persevere in devotion and service to Him until we taste the wonders of His kingdom.
Understand this! The goal and meaning of human life is blissful fellowship with the God who created us. Our sin got in the way, but by the blood of Christ we can walk right in to the presence of God and trust that His forgiveness is ours! Unfortunately we don't have time this morning to explore all the rich Old Covenant imagery the author presents to us. But see these words he uses. In verse 22 he urges us because of Christ to draw near to God in full assurance of faith. In verse 23 he encourages us to hold unswervingly to the hope we profess. Verse 24 incites us to spur one another on toward love and good deeds. All these words hammer home the message that we can keep moving on in the Christian life, and we keep moving on because we can trust in Jesus who has saved us. So don't give up! Keep on keeping on as the Day of Jesus' return approaches! Persevere!
We did not read verses 26-31; they warn us against turning our backs on Christ as if His death meant nothing. Verses 32-34 reminded the Hebrews how God had enabled them to stand strong in the face of earlier persecution and should remind us that what we have done for His sake once, He will enable us to do again.
So in light of all this (as we pick up in verse 35), let us not throw away our confidence. "You need to persevere so that when you have done the will of God you will receive what he has promised" (verse 36).
But let's be clear about this word "confidence." If we don't watch it, we might think it's some feeling or effort we make in ourselves. Like telling somebody to keep their chin up. No. It's not ourselves or our cheerful attitude we confide in, it's Jesus Christ whose blood enables us to enter the Most Holy Place of the throne room of God. He's the One we can trust, He's the One in whom and through whom all God's promises to us will be fulfilled.
And here's some essential encouragement: The time of struggle and trial will not be forever. The day is coming when Jesus will return as the righteous Judge of the world, and all things will be put right. Meanwhile (as the writer quotes the prophet Habakkuk in verse 38), God's righteous one-- that's you, who have been cleansed by the blood of Christ-- will live by faith. By faith we do not shrink back and stop trusting Jesus; for to do so is the deserve destruction. No, by God's grace we are those who believe-- who keep on believing-- and are saved.
Faith is the key to our perseverance. But what is this faith? Ask people these days, and you'd think it was some kind of force. Or again, something we ourselves gin up. But the writer won't let us come away with this false impression. No, he spends the entirety of chapter 11 giving us illustrations of what faith in God is. We read only a few of those examples this morning, and what I want us to look at is this: That in every case faith means identifying God as trustworthy and living our lives based on that fact, even when the evidence of His reliability is not immediately before our eyes.
"Faith," says 11:1, "is being sure of what we hope for and certain of what we do not see." Our hope is in the return of Christ and the joy we will share in Him in His kingdom. Is this a fantasy we've made up in our heads? No! We can be sure of it, because we have good and reliable evidence of the power of Jesus Christ, first and foremost in His resurrection from the dead. It really happened. Even though we didn't witness it ourselves, we can still trust in His promise to raise us, because He kept His promise that He Himself would rise from the dead.
Again (verse 3), by faith we understand and confess that God made the universe by command of His word. We have confidence in His nature and His power, that He was able to make everything we see and touch and enjoy out of nothing.
Then in verse 6, we read "Without faith it is impossible to please God, because anyone who comes to Him must believe that He exists and that He rewards those who earnestly seek Him." That should be obvious, right? After all, why bother to please a being whom you don't believe to exist? And why try to please a being who doesn't care about being pleased?
The odd thing is, there are people who think they can be good without God. They have some vague idea of what is Just or Right, but they refuse to identify that with Him who is just and righteous. So in the end they are left to their own human conceptions of what is good. But there is no true good in this world without it being anchored to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. Faith has an object and a goal, and that goal is the triune God.
And so, after the great account of the Old Testament saints who lived and died trusting in God and His promises, we come to chapter 12. If we didn't understand before what perseverance means, if we were in any doubt about the object and focus of our faith, the writer makes it clear here. "Let us fix our eyes on Jesus," he writes in verse 2, "the author and perfecter of our faith." Jesus is the goal we run towards and He's the One who enables us to run at all.
Something about verse 1, however: The "great cloud of witnesses" mentioned here. Are they sitting in the heavenly stands cheering us on as we run the race marked out for us? No. The cloud of witnesses are those who, like the saints of chapter 11, lived and died testifying to the greatness and faithfulness of Jesus Christ. They are the martyrs, if you will, who ran their races before us and won the crown of life that is promised also to us if we persevere.
And we can persevere, for we run trusting in Jesus Christ and what He has accomplished for us. Our faith itself is His doing-- He is its author-- He originated it and established it in us. He is its perfecter-- He will bring it and us to the final goal of eternal life in Him.
And He'll do this is in spite of the difficulties and disasters of this life. For see what Jesus Himself endured: The cross, with its pain, shame, and degradation. But He kept His eyes on the goal of pleasing God and the joy that would bring. He is now enthroned as Victor in the great race. Sure, we will have opposition from sinful men. What do we expect, when we consider how they treated our Lord? So let's not grow weary or lose heart.
When I was a kid in elementary school, I'd walk home through the grounds of a nearby private girls' high school. One day I picked up a strip of paper, maybe 3" x 12", an art class calligraphy exercise it was, and on it was lettered the motto, "Never lose sight of your goal, and it won't lose sight of you." To a 5th grader this seemed very profound, and I took it home and taped it to my bedroom wall. It stayed there for years, till I got to thinking, "Wait a minute, how can a goal keep sight of me or not, either way?" After all, a goal is only a concept, not a person.
But when it comes to persevering in the Christian life, this motto is very true. For our goal is a Person. Our goal, our object, the course we run and the One who keeps us running our course, are all Jesus Christ our living and victorious Lord. We can trust in Him, all our confidence and assurance are in Him, and through faith in Him, we will persevere.
HERE'S SOMETHING SHOCKING: I didn't watch much of the Olympics. It's not that I didn't care, it's just that I don't have a working TV since the government switched everything to digital. But even without being glued to the screen, I was aware of the accomplishments of our U.S. team and the other athletes who competed. Talk about drive and determination! Talk about pushing through against all odds and reaching the goal! Those athletes were perfect illustrations of what it means to persevere.
"Perseverance." We don't use that word much in everyday speech, but it's an excellence principle for life. It means to keep on keeping on. To never give up. To maintain confidence and "just do it," despite all the obstacles in the way. The entire Letter to the Hebrews is about perseverance, about focussing singlemindedly on one goal and not letting anything get in the way of our achieving it. This goal is beyond anything earthly or temporal; no, set before us is the glory and joy of the heavenly kingdom of Jesus Christ our Lord, which we will enter fully when He comes again at the last day. Reaching that goal involves living every day as witnesses to the grace of Jesus Christ, in our behavior, in our decisions, in how we treat one another, in what we say about who Jesus is and His will for the world. It's like being an Olympic athlete in training to win the gold. Focus. Dedication. Perseverance.
But bad things happen in this life. We run into opposition when we confess Jesus Christ as the only Lord. Often it's uncomfortable and inconvenient to live the Christian life God has marked out for us. It can be damaging, even dangerous. Does God really expect us to keep standing on His word and following Christ in situations like that? Is it all up to us to grit our teeth and keep going? Or has He Himself provided us a way for us to stay the course and persevere? The Letter to the Hebrews gives the answer to this last question as a resounding Yes. God has provided a way, and we need to take it, if we want to receive the reward He has promised.
This letter was originally written for 1st century Jewish Christians who were shaking in their confidence in Christ. Trouble and persecution were tempting them to give up on Jesus as their Messiah and Lord. Why not go back to Judaism? After all, the Jews were protected under Roman law. As a Jew you got a special religious exemption: you didn't have to worship Caesar; you were free to practice your religion according to the books of Moses. Why take on more difficulty? Wasn't the Old Covenant good enough after all? Why not decide Jesus was just one more of the prophets, and live in peace?
The writer spends the first nine and a half chapters demonstrating that the Old Covenant was not good enough; in fact, God had given it only to lead up to the New Covenant in Jesus Christ. The prophets were not good enough-- they were sent to speak of Him. Angels were not good enough-- they are Christ's servants and our servants for His sake. Moses and the Law were not good enough-- Jesus God's Son is the true Builder of God's house. Keeping the seventh-day Sabbath was not good enough-- Jesus alone is our true Sabbath rest and He's what the Sabbath observance was all about. The animal sacrifices in the Tabernacle and Temple were not good enough-- the blood of bulls and goats could not permanently cover sins, that was done only by the blood of the sinless Lamb of God shed on the cross. The whole priesthood in the line of Aaron was not good enough-- it took a unique, eternal High Priest in the order of Melchizedek to offer the one true and perfect sacrifice of atonement, even Jesus Christ our Mediator. None of these Old Testament types and shadows were sufficient to save the Jews or anybody from their sins. Only Jesus Christ the righteous one was worthy and able to do what we needed to present us holy and righteous before the face of almighty God. We really need a Savior, and He's the Savior we need. That was true for those Hebrew Christians and it's true for us today.
Do you believe that? I hope and pray so, for everything that follows is based on the facts of who this Jesus is and what He has done.
So in chapter 10, verse 19, our writer draws the logical conclusion. He begins, "Therefore, brothers, since we have confidence to enter the Most Holy Place by the blood of Jesus . . . " Every Jew would know what the writer was referring to. The Most Holy Place, or as the King James Version puts it, the Holy of Holies, was that room in the Tabernacle and later, in the Jerusalem Temple, where the Ark of the Covenant was housed. The High Priest (and only the High Priest) would enter it only once a year, on the Day of Atonement, to obtain forgiveness for the sins of the people. But the Most Holy Place spoken of here is not anything on earth, it is the very throne room of God. And now it's not the blood of an animal that justifies entry, but the blood of Jesus. And now it's not only the High Priest who is allowed to come into the presence of God, it's all of us whom the blood of Christ has covered. Formerly, it was a fearsome thing even for the High Priest to enter the Holy of Holies; now we all can have confidence to come before our Lord and God, because Jesus Himself is our great priest over the house of God. Because of who He is and what He has done, we have every reason to persevere in devotion and service to Him until we taste the wonders of His kingdom.
Understand this! The goal and meaning of human life is blissful fellowship with the God who created us. Our sin got in the way, but by the blood of Christ we can walk right in to the presence of God and trust that His forgiveness is ours! Unfortunately we don't have time this morning to explore all the rich Old Covenant imagery the author presents to us. But see these words he uses. In verse 22 he urges us because of Christ to draw near to God in full assurance of faith. In verse 23 he encourages us to hold unswervingly to the hope we profess. Verse 24 incites us to spur one another on toward love and good deeds. All these words hammer home the message that we can keep moving on in the Christian life, and we keep moving on because we can trust in Jesus who has saved us. So don't give up! Keep on keeping on as the Day of Jesus' return approaches! Persevere!
We did not read verses 26-31; they warn us against turning our backs on Christ as if His death meant nothing. Verses 32-34 reminded the Hebrews how God had enabled them to stand strong in the face of earlier persecution and should remind us that what we have done for His sake once, He will enable us to do again.
So in light of all this (as we pick up in verse 35), let us not throw away our confidence. "You need to persevere so that when you have done the will of God you will receive what he has promised" (verse 36).
But let's be clear about this word "confidence." If we don't watch it, we might think it's some feeling or effort we make in ourselves. Like telling somebody to keep their chin up. No. It's not ourselves or our cheerful attitude we confide in, it's Jesus Christ whose blood enables us to enter the Most Holy Place of the throne room of God. He's the One we can trust, He's the One in whom and through whom all God's promises to us will be fulfilled.
And here's some essential encouragement: The time of struggle and trial will not be forever. The day is coming when Jesus will return as the righteous Judge of the world, and all things will be put right. Meanwhile (as the writer quotes the prophet Habakkuk in verse 38), God's righteous one-- that's you, who have been cleansed by the blood of Christ-- will live by faith. By faith we do not shrink back and stop trusting Jesus; for to do so is the deserve destruction. No, by God's grace we are those who believe-- who keep on believing-- and are saved.
Faith is the key to our perseverance. But what is this faith? Ask people these days, and you'd think it was some kind of force. Or again, something we ourselves gin up. But the writer won't let us come away with this false impression. No, he spends the entirety of chapter 11 giving us illustrations of what faith in God is. We read only a few of those examples this morning, and what I want us to look at is this: That in every case faith means identifying God as trustworthy and living our lives based on that fact, even when the evidence of His reliability is not immediately before our eyes.
"Faith," says 11:1, "is being sure of what we hope for and certain of what we do not see." Our hope is in the return of Christ and the joy we will share in Him in His kingdom. Is this a fantasy we've made up in our heads? No! We can be sure of it, because we have good and reliable evidence of the power of Jesus Christ, first and foremost in His resurrection from the dead. It really happened. Even though we didn't witness it ourselves, we can still trust in His promise to raise us, because He kept His promise that He Himself would rise from the dead.
Again (verse 3), by faith we understand and confess that God made the universe by command of His word. We have confidence in His nature and His power, that He was able to make everything we see and touch and enjoy out of nothing.
Then in verse 6, we read "Without faith it is impossible to please God, because anyone who comes to Him must believe that He exists and that He rewards those who earnestly seek Him." That should be obvious, right? After all, why bother to please a being whom you don't believe to exist? And why try to please a being who doesn't care about being pleased?
The odd thing is, there are people who think they can be good without God. They have some vague idea of what is Just or Right, but they refuse to identify that with Him who is just and righteous. So in the end they are left to their own human conceptions of what is good. But there is no true good in this world without it being anchored to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. Faith has an object and a goal, and that goal is the triune God.
And so, after the great account of the Old Testament saints who lived and died trusting in God and His promises, we come to chapter 12. If we didn't understand before what perseverance means, if we were in any doubt about the object and focus of our faith, the writer makes it clear here. "Let us fix our eyes on Jesus," he writes in verse 2, "the author and perfecter of our faith." Jesus is the goal we run towards and He's the One who enables us to run at all.
Something about verse 1, however: The "great cloud of witnesses" mentioned here. Are they sitting in the heavenly stands cheering us on as we run the race marked out for us? No. The cloud of witnesses are those who, like the saints of chapter 11, lived and died testifying to the greatness and faithfulness of Jesus Christ. They are the martyrs, if you will, who ran their races before us and won the crown of life that is promised also to us if we persevere.
And we can persevere, for we run trusting in Jesus Christ and what He has accomplished for us. Our faith itself is His doing-- He is its author-- He originated it and established it in us. He is its perfecter-- He will bring it and us to the final goal of eternal life in Him.
And He'll do this is in spite of the difficulties and disasters of this life. For see what Jesus Himself endured: The cross, with its pain, shame, and degradation. But He kept His eyes on the goal of pleasing God and the joy that would bring. He is now enthroned as Victor in the great race. Sure, we will have opposition from sinful men. What do we expect, when we consider how they treated our Lord? So let's not grow weary or lose heart.
When I was a kid in elementary school, I'd walk home through the grounds of a nearby private girls' high school. One day I picked up a strip of paper, maybe 3" x 12", an art class calligraphy exercise it was, and on it was lettered the motto, "Never lose sight of your goal, and it won't lose sight of you." To a 5th grader this seemed very profound, and I took it home and taped it to my bedroom wall. It stayed there for years, till I got to thinking, "Wait a minute, how can a goal keep sight of me or not, either way?" After all, a goal is only a concept, not a person.
But when it comes to persevering in the Christian life, this motto is very true. For our goal is a Person. Our goal, our object, the course we run and the One who keeps us running our course, are all Jesus Christ our living and victorious Lord. We can trust in Him, all our confidence and assurance are in Him, and through faith in Him, we will persevere.
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Sunday, August 7, 2011
The Call of Faith
Texts: Roman 10:4-17; Matthew 14:22-33
OUR GOSPEL READING FROM ST. MATTHEW this morning recounts one of the most famous miracles our Lord Jesus ever performed. People who have no idea what Jesus actually preached or taught know about Jesus walking on the water. Whether they believe it or not, they know that this is reported about Him. Jesus Christ walked across the surface of the Sea of Galilee.
Do you ever wonder why Jesus did this miracle? Maybe we just think, "He did it because He's Jesus and He could." Well, yes, Christ did have the power literally to put nature under His feet. But our Lord never did miracles simply to make a sensation or, heaven forbid, to pass the time. He always performed His signs and wonders for a specific purpose: to make people wonder who He is, and to give them-- to give us-- true signs that He is who He says He is. The miracles of Jesus call people to saving faith in Him as the only-begotten Son of God, so they will put their faith in Him.
Verse 22 begins, "Immediately, Jesus . . . " Immediately after what? Jesus has just fed ten to fifteen thousand people (5,000 men, plus women and children) with five little loaves and two puny fishes. He has just demonstrated divine love for needy humanity. What would you think if you were a member of the crowd? St. John tells us about that. They wanted to make Jesus an earthly king. Hurray, a continuing source of free food! Theirs was not saving faith.
What about the disciples? The feeding miracle would begin to tell them who and what Jesus was, but the lesson was not yet complete. After all, they might've thought that He was just a great prophet, and God merely multiplied the loaves and fishes through Him. After all, the disciples were good Jews, and good Jews just don't go around declaring that a Man they eat and drink and camp out with is Almighty God come in the flesh. Jesus knows that the call of saving faith needs to be more compelling still.
So, "Immediately, Jesus made the disciples get into the boat and go on ahead of him to the other side" of the lake. He knew what He was going to do and what the circumstances had to be for Him to do it. He allowed them to get a good distance away from shore. It was still daylight when He sent them away, and by evening, the Greek text says the disciples were already many "stadia" from land. A stadion is about 300 yards, so "many stadia" would be a mile, two miles, or more, well into the heart of the sea. Meanwhile, Jesus went up onto a mountainside to pray. We are not told what He shared with His heavenly Father, but we may certainly believe that He prayed for His disciples and their response to what they were about to see.
And still the boatful of disciples is out on that water, with the strong wind blowing strongly and the waves slamming the sides. They couldn't make any headway. They were tired, frustrated, and fearful. At last, during the fourth watch of the night (that is, between 3:00 and 6:00 AM), they spy a human figure approaching them on the water. Their eyes tell them it's Jesus, but their minds cannot believe. Tell me, do you blame them? An apparition is gliding towards you, illuminated only by the pale light of the moon and stars, you're exhausted already: wouldn't you conclude that you were seeing a ghost? The disciples cried out in fear, and so would you and I.
But in mercy and love Jesus immediately calls out, "Take courage! It is I! Don't be afraid." He calls them to have faith in Him, that it is really He, to have faith that He comes in comfort and help, and not to bring dread and fear. Even in this extraordinary situation, with Jesus demonstrating His power over nature by walking calmly and smoothly on the surface of the tossing waves, He is still Jesus, the One who saves us. Even while we are fearing for our lives in the tumult of the sea, He is still the Lover of our souls. Be not afraid. Call to Him in faith!
And Peter, blessed Peter, responds to Jesus' call to faith with a faith-filled call of his own. He says, "Lord, if it's you, tell me to come to you on the water."
And Jesus says, "Come." And Peter comes. And miracle of miracles, Peter walks on the water, too.
But something happens. Peter sinks. Jesus rescues him and says, "You of little faith, why did you doubt?"
Faith in Jesus and in Who He is is central to this episode. It is central to the passage we read from Paul's letter to the Romans. Everything in life and death depends on the call of faith and our responding in faith to that call. But what is faith? Especially, what is Christian faith or trust in Jesus Christ?
Faith is greatly misunderstood these days. To hear some people talk, you'd think it was some kind of substance you could measure out by the pound or by the yard. Or it's something we have to gin up in ourselves by working and straining at it, like developing our muscle strength or lung capacity. Or that faith is a feeling. And if we're feeling negative or sad about something, that shows that we have no faith about it.
And certainly there are places in Scripture that seem to support some of these ideas. We've just heard how in our Matthew passage itself Jesus laments that Peter is of "little faith." Other places, like in Romans 14, St. Paul speaks of those whose faith is "weak." Somebody who takes Scripture on hearsay, or gives it the once-over-lightly, it's not surprising they'll get the idea that faith is some sort of commodity or capacity that we have to come up with. That's true for immature Christians and nonbelievers alike.
But we are sons and daughters of the kingdom of God (Amen?), and we are called to read our Bible closely, in the light of the Holy Spirit. And when we do, we see that saving faith is never an end in itself. Faith is always in something, or rather, in Someone, and it always leads to action. Saving faith is the attitude of heart and mind that says, "I trust Jesus to keep on being who and what He claims to be, and I'm going to act like I believe in Him, whether I feel like it or not." That is the faith that calls us out of death, darkness, and sin by the power of Christ crucified and risen again. That is the faith that continually calls on the crucified Christ to keep on leading us to righteousness, light, and life, now and into eternity.
So you see what happened to Peter that night on the Sea of Galilee. He started trusting in his feelings of fear instead of relying on Christ. He started staring at the terrible effects of the wind instead of keeping his eyes on Jesus, Who'd already proven that He's the Lord of all nature. Jesus says Peter is of "little faith" because he started out well-- he began by trusting in Christ-- but his response of faith only went so far. "Why did you doubt, Peter?" Jesus asks. "I didn't change. I am still the same. You began by trusting in Me; go on doing it!"
This is Jesus' call of faith to us to us as well. He died and rose again from the dead, a far greater miracle than walking on water: Yes, certainly, we can trust Him to raise us. Matthew reports that Jesus and Peter both climbed into the boat, the wind suddenly died down, and faith found its response in the disciples. They worshipped Jesus, saying, "Truly, you are the Son of God."
This is what the miracle of Jesus walking on the sea was for. It was to make all His disciples understand who Jesus is so we will call out in faith to Him. And that includes us. He sounds the call of faith in our ears and expect us to respond with faith that goes on trusting Him, no matter what.
But how? St. Paul helps us in his letter to the Romans, chapter 10. The whole point of Romans is that we human beings must be rescued from the effects of our sin, or we're doomed. Without righteousness that equals the righteousness of God, we deserve His judgement. Typically, we humans try to overcome this problem by keeping the rules. Nations and cultures in different times and places have differed about the details of the rules and how strictly you have to keep them, but people pretty well agree that it means being kind and unselfish and not murdering other people and not taking stuff that isn't yours. But God got hold of the Jews and laid out the rules in writing. It's called the Law of Moses, and as Moses says (Paul quotes him in verse 5), if you do the commandments, by them you will live. To live is to prosper on this earth and find salvation in God's kingdom in heaven.
But who of us can claim we have "done" the law? Doing the law means keeping all of it! And there we were, breaking the commandments of God as infants in our cribs! We were selfish, grabby, angry without cause, wanting our wants and needs to be satisfied and be blown to anyone else. We destroyed our chances of earning life and salvation before we even could be taught what the law says. How could we gain the righteousness God requires?
We can obtain the righteousness that comes by faith. This righteousness is not up to us, and faith is not up to us. We don't have to climb up into heaven to bring the holy Jesus down. We don't have to dig down into the grave to bring Him up from the dead. No, Jesus in His own power and authority has come down from heaven, He's taken flesh, and become a Man like we are, except without sin. Jesus, in His own power and authority, has risen up from the grave and ascended to the right hand of God the Father Almighty on high. He has accomplished all this for us. He has demonstrated once and for all that He is the Son of God, He is Lord, and He Himself puts the word of this truth into our mouths and into our hearts.
By His word He calls us to faith in Him, so that we can gladly proclaim, "Jesus is Lord!" We were not witnesses of Jesus' miracles and resurrection like the disciples were, but even without that, He Himself makes it possible for us to believe the truth that God has indeed raised Him from the dead. He calls us to faith in Himself, the Resurrected One. Not in some false Christ, not some ghost or mirage or figment of our imaginations, but in Him, the God-Man who even now sits in heaven in His glorified physical flesh.
It is now the same for everyone, Jew or Gentile: "Everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved." We call on Him (Paul makes it clear) because the Lord has first moved us to believe in Him. Like Peter getting out of that boat, we trust Jesus for our salvation because the Holy Spirit has already given birth to saving faith in our hearts. We believe and we go on calling on Him in faith, no matter what storms may arise in our lives and no matter how absent God may seem. Why? Because Jesus is Who He is and has called us to faith in Him.
But, Paul asks, how can anyone call on Jesus if they don't yet believe in Him? And how can they come to believe in Him if they've never heard of Him?
Brothers and sisters, this is the great evangelical imperative of the Christian church. God knows those who are His own. He has chosen them for salvation before the creation of the world. But He uses the preaching of the gospel of Christ and Him crucified to call His elect to saving faith. As verse 17 puts it, "Faith comes from hearing, and hearing by the word of Christ."
Sometimes we think, "Oh, if I could just see one of Jesus' miracles in my own life, then I could really believe." But do you not see what a great miracle you are living right now? Jesus found you, a lost, rebellious, hell-bound sinner, without hope and without God in this world. And someplace, at some time, the word of Christ's death and resurrection was preached to you, and the Holy Spirit opened up your heart to believe the good news. Faith was born in you and you responded by saying, "Jesus, Lord, I believe." The Son of God who brought you from darkness to life is capable of bringing you through every storm and struggle of your life. You know He is trustworthy: Simply walk and live in that trust, no matter what the winds and waves may do. Your faith is not in yourself or your feelings, it is not even in your faith: Your faith is in the Lord Jesus Christ, the Son of God. Trust in Him and you will never, ever, be put to shame. Amen.
OUR GOSPEL READING FROM ST. MATTHEW this morning recounts one of the most famous miracles our Lord Jesus ever performed. People who have no idea what Jesus actually preached or taught know about Jesus walking on the water. Whether they believe it or not, they know that this is reported about Him. Jesus Christ walked across the surface of the Sea of Galilee.
Do you ever wonder why Jesus did this miracle? Maybe we just think, "He did it because He's Jesus and He could." Well, yes, Christ did have the power literally to put nature under His feet. But our Lord never did miracles simply to make a sensation or, heaven forbid, to pass the time. He always performed His signs and wonders for a specific purpose: to make people wonder who He is, and to give them-- to give us-- true signs that He is who He says He is. The miracles of Jesus call people to saving faith in Him as the only-begotten Son of God, so they will put their faith in Him.
Verse 22 begins, "Immediately, Jesus . . . " Immediately after what? Jesus has just fed ten to fifteen thousand people (5,000 men, plus women and children) with five little loaves and two puny fishes. He has just demonstrated divine love for needy humanity. What would you think if you were a member of the crowd? St. John tells us about that. They wanted to make Jesus an earthly king. Hurray, a continuing source of free food! Theirs was not saving faith.
What about the disciples? The feeding miracle would begin to tell them who and what Jesus was, but the lesson was not yet complete. After all, they might've thought that He was just a great prophet, and God merely multiplied the loaves and fishes through Him. After all, the disciples were good Jews, and good Jews just don't go around declaring that a Man they eat and drink and camp out with is Almighty God come in the flesh. Jesus knows that the call of saving faith needs to be more compelling still.
So, "Immediately, Jesus made the disciples get into the boat and go on ahead of him to the other side" of the lake. He knew what He was going to do and what the circumstances had to be for Him to do it. He allowed them to get a good distance away from shore. It was still daylight when He sent them away, and by evening, the Greek text says the disciples were already many "stadia" from land. A stadion is about 300 yards, so "many stadia" would be a mile, two miles, or more, well into the heart of the sea. Meanwhile, Jesus went up onto a mountainside to pray. We are not told what He shared with His heavenly Father, but we may certainly believe that He prayed for His disciples and their response to what they were about to see.
And still the boatful of disciples is out on that water, with the strong wind blowing strongly and the waves slamming the sides. They couldn't make any headway. They were tired, frustrated, and fearful. At last, during the fourth watch of the night (that is, between 3:00 and 6:00 AM), they spy a human figure approaching them on the water. Their eyes tell them it's Jesus, but their minds cannot believe. Tell me, do you blame them? An apparition is gliding towards you, illuminated only by the pale light of the moon and stars, you're exhausted already: wouldn't you conclude that you were seeing a ghost? The disciples cried out in fear, and so would you and I.
But in mercy and love Jesus immediately calls out, "Take courage! It is I! Don't be afraid." He calls them to have faith in Him, that it is really He, to have faith that He comes in comfort and help, and not to bring dread and fear. Even in this extraordinary situation, with Jesus demonstrating His power over nature by walking calmly and smoothly on the surface of the tossing waves, He is still Jesus, the One who saves us. Even while we are fearing for our lives in the tumult of the sea, He is still the Lover of our souls. Be not afraid. Call to Him in faith!
And Peter, blessed Peter, responds to Jesus' call to faith with a faith-filled call of his own. He says, "Lord, if it's you, tell me to come to you on the water."
And Jesus says, "Come." And Peter comes. And miracle of miracles, Peter walks on the water, too.
But something happens. Peter sinks. Jesus rescues him and says, "You of little faith, why did you doubt?"
Faith in Jesus and in Who He is is central to this episode. It is central to the passage we read from Paul's letter to the Romans. Everything in life and death depends on the call of faith and our responding in faith to that call. But what is faith? Especially, what is Christian faith or trust in Jesus Christ?
Faith is greatly misunderstood these days. To hear some people talk, you'd think it was some kind of substance you could measure out by the pound or by the yard. Or it's something we have to gin up in ourselves by working and straining at it, like developing our muscle strength or lung capacity. Or that faith is a feeling. And if we're feeling negative or sad about something, that shows that we have no faith about it.
And certainly there are places in Scripture that seem to support some of these ideas. We've just heard how in our Matthew passage itself Jesus laments that Peter is of "little faith." Other places, like in Romans 14, St. Paul speaks of those whose faith is "weak." Somebody who takes Scripture on hearsay, or gives it the once-over-lightly, it's not surprising they'll get the idea that faith is some sort of commodity or capacity that we have to come up with. That's true for immature Christians and nonbelievers alike.
But we are sons and daughters of the kingdom of God (Amen?), and we are called to read our Bible closely, in the light of the Holy Spirit. And when we do, we see that saving faith is never an end in itself. Faith is always in something, or rather, in Someone, and it always leads to action. Saving faith is the attitude of heart and mind that says, "I trust Jesus to keep on being who and what He claims to be, and I'm going to act like I believe in Him, whether I feel like it or not." That is the faith that calls us out of death, darkness, and sin by the power of Christ crucified and risen again. That is the faith that continually calls on the crucified Christ to keep on leading us to righteousness, light, and life, now and into eternity.
So you see what happened to Peter that night on the Sea of Galilee. He started trusting in his feelings of fear instead of relying on Christ. He started staring at the terrible effects of the wind instead of keeping his eyes on Jesus, Who'd already proven that He's the Lord of all nature. Jesus says Peter is of "little faith" because he started out well-- he began by trusting in Christ-- but his response of faith only went so far. "Why did you doubt, Peter?" Jesus asks. "I didn't change. I am still the same. You began by trusting in Me; go on doing it!"
This is Jesus' call of faith to us to us as well. He died and rose again from the dead, a far greater miracle than walking on water: Yes, certainly, we can trust Him to raise us. Matthew reports that Jesus and Peter both climbed into the boat, the wind suddenly died down, and faith found its response in the disciples. They worshipped Jesus, saying, "Truly, you are the Son of God."
This is what the miracle of Jesus walking on the sea was for. It was to make all His disciples understand who Jesus is so we will call out in faith to Him. And that includes us. He sounds the call of faith in our ears and expect us to respond with faith that goes on trusting Him, no matter what.
But how? St. Paul helps us in his letter to the Romans, chapter 10. The whole point of Romans is that we human beings must be rescued from the effects of our sin, or we're doomed. Without righteousness that equals the righteousness of God, we deserve His judgement. Typically, we humans try to overcome this problem by keeping the rules. Nations and cultures in different times and places have differed about the details of the rules and how strictly you have to keep them, but people pretty well agree that it means being kind and unselfish and not murdering other people and not taking stuff that isn't yours. But God got hold of the Jews and laid out the rules in writing. It's called the Law of Moses, and as Moses says (Paul quotes him in verse 5), if you do the commandments, by them you will live. To live is to prosper on this earth and find salvation in God's kingdom in heaven.
But who of us can claim we have "done" the law? Doing the law means keeping all of it! And there we were, breaking the commandments of God as infants in our cribs! We were selfish, grabby, angry without cause, wanting our wants and needs to be satisfied and be blown to anyone else. We destroyed our chances of earning life and salvation before we even could be taught what the law says. How could we gain the righteousness God requires?
We can obtain the righteousness that comes by faith. This righteousness is not up to us, and faith is not up to us. We don't have to climb up into heaven to bring the holy Jesus down. We don't have to dig down into the grave to bring Him up from the dead. No, Jesus in His own power and authority has come down from heaven, He's taken flesh, and become a Man like we are, except without sin. Jesus, in His own power and authority, has risen up from the grave and ascended to the right hand of God the Father Almighty on high. He has accomplished all this for us. He has demonstrated once and for all that He is the Son of God, He is Lord, and He Himself puts the word of this truth into our mouths and into our hearts.
By His word He calls us to faith in Him, so that we can gladly proclaim, "Jesus is Lord!" We were not witnesses of Jesus' miracles and resurrection like the disciples were, but even without that, He Himself makes it possible for us to believe the truth that God has indeed raised Him from the dead. He calls us to faith in Himself, the Resurrected One. Not in some false Christ, not some ghost or mirage or figment of our imaginations, but in Him, the God-Man who even now sits in heaven in His glorified physical flesh.
It is now the same for everyone, Jew or Gentile: "Everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved." We call on Him (Paul makes it clear) because the Lord has first moved us to believe in Him. Like Peter getting out of that boat, we trust Jesus for our salvation because the Holy Spirit has already given birth to saving faith in our hearts. We believe and we go on calling on Him in faith, no matter what storms may arise in our lives and no matter how absent God may seem. Why? Because Jesus is Who He is and has called us to faith in Him.
But, Paul asks, how can anyone call on Jesus if they don't yet believe in Him? And how can they come to believe in Him if they've never heard of Him?
Brothers and sisters, this is the great evangelical imperative of the Christian church. God knows those who are His own. He has chosen them for salvation before the creation of the world. But He uses the preaching of the gospel of Christ and Him crucified to call His elect to saving faith. As verse 17 puts it, "Faith comes from hearing, and hearing by the word of Christ."
Sometimes we think, "Oh, if I could just see one of Jesus' miracles in my own life, then I could really believe." But do you not see what a great miracle you are living right now? Jesus found you, a lost, rebellious, hell-bound sinner, without hope and without God in this world. And someplace, at some time, the word of Christ's death and resurrection was preached to you, and the Holy Spirit opened up your heart to believe the good news. Faith was born in you and you responded by saying, "Jesus, Lord, I believe." The Son of God who brought you from darkness to life is capable of bringing you through every storm and struggle of your life. You know He is trustworthy: Simply walk and live in that trust, no matter what the winds and waves may do. Your faith is not in yourself or your feelings, it is not even in your faith: Your faith is in the Lord Jesus Christ, the Son of God. Trust in Him and you will never, ever, be put to shame. Amen.
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Sunday, May 22, 2011
Christ's Resurrection and You: A Building Not Made with Hands
Texts: 2 Corinthians 4:13 - 5:10; Luke 24:36-49
ON THE WHOLE, I'M GLAD the rapture of the saints didn't happen last night at 6:00 PM. There's so much more on this earth I want to see and do and accomplish. But if Harold Camping had been right, and even now we were standing in the presence of our Lord Jesus Christ, I would possess something I so grievously lack right now. And that's a full sense and knowledge of the splendour, the goodness, the graciousness, the beauty, the holiness, the indescribable greatness of what my great God and Saviour did for me when He died on the cross and rose again for my sake.
To know Jesus Christ and the life-giving power of His resurrection is the most marvellous, desirable thing you and I can ever experience. There is no end to the benefits we derive from Him! We've seen these past weeks how Jesus' resurrection enabled us to be adopted as children of God. How by it we are brought into His new covenant and brought into the nurture of our mother, the Church. How Jesus rose again to strip off our old filthy sinful natures and clothe us instead in our new selves, which is the shining glorious garment of His righteousness and love. How amazing is Jesus Christ our Lord, who was crucified for our sins and rose that we might live His life forever! How glorious and splendid are all His gifts to us! Just thinking about them, we should be in a continual state of rapture all day long!
But you know how it is, and so do I. The good things of this world, and its troubles as well, hang like a curtain between us and the jaw-dropping vision of Christ and His resurrection benefits. It's not that we don't believe that Jesus rose again, it's just that other stuff is so present and so pressing, His resurrection and what it means to us isn't something that we consciously dwell on day after day. It's for Easter Sunday, and maybe a week or two thereafter. Good to know about, but not exactly relevant to what we're dealing with now.
At least, that's how it seems. It seems that way too with our own resurrection, the one St. Paul so eloquently writes about in 1 Corinthians 15. That's for the future, sure, for the day when Jesus really comes back. But that doesn't seem to be happening real soon. And in the meantime, I'll wager that none of us goes around with a secret smile and a little skip in our step because we, too, someday will have a glorious immortal body like the one Jesus Himself rose in. I don't say this is the way we should be; it's just a fact of our human nature that it's woefully easy for us to get distracted from heavenly things and forget what we have and Whose we are. It's especially easy when the distractions have to do with poor health, or poverty, or advancing old age, or the approach of death, for ourselves or those we love. Who can think of their bodily resurrection when we have so much on our minds?
But in the fourth and fifth chapters of his second letter to the Corinthians, Paul-- speaking by the Holy Spirit-- reveals that those very everyday difficulties and distractions should be signposts and reminders that point us ever and again back to our blessed hope of personal resurrection through Jesus Christ our Lord. Not only that, but our very weakness serves to show the great power of God in Christ. As Paul says earlier in chapter 4, we carry the magnificent good news of Christ died and risen around in clay jars, "to show that this all-surpassing power is from God and not from us." And so, as our Epistle reading today begins, "‘I believed; therefore I have spoken.'" This is a quotation from Psalm 116:10, where the psalmist has been lamenting his neediness, his trouble, his nearness to death, and what he speaks of in this quoted verse is of his great affliction. He brings his distress to God in faith that God is One who hears and heals and restores. And so Paul evokes that same spirit of faith in us, but we have an even greater reason to hope in God than the psalmist did. For we know that He who raised Jesus Christ from the dead will also raise us with Jesus and He'll present all of us together to Himself, in His very presence.
This is our resurrection hope! This is the gospel grace that even today is reaching more and more people, that thanksgiving may overflow to the glory of God!
We hold this hope in light of-- perhaps I should say, in contrast to-- the very unhopeful situations we find ourselves in day after day. Because we trust in the One who raised the Lord Jesus from the dead, because we trust that He will also raise us with Him, we do not lose heart.
And it can be so easy in this world to lose heart. We don't have to be suffering persecution for our faith; ordinary ageing and illness will do it. We look in the mirror and see the wrinkles and we think, "Wait a minute, when did that happen? I don't feel that old!" Or worse, we gaze upon the pale form of a sick loved one languishing full of tubes in a hospital bed, and we know how true it is that our outer nature, our present physical bodies, are indeed wasting away. But the resurrection life of Christ is even now working its revival in you and me, if indeed we are trusting in the One who raised Jesus Christ from the dead and who will also raise us. Even now, He is renewing our inner nature, the new self in Christ, day by day.
We might want to say to Paul, "Hey, you call what I'm going through a ‘light momentary affliction.' What do you know about the cancer I'm suffering? Paul, how can you minimize my parent's congestive heart failure? Paul, people are calling me a hatemongering bigot for standing up for traditional gospel truth. How can you call that kind of affliction ‘slight'?"
Oops, scratch that one. Paul knew a lot about being afflicted for the sake of Christ. In fact, go back to verses 8-12 of chapter 4 of 2 Corinthians, or skip over to chapters 11 and 12, and you'll see that if any one had sufferings and afflictions, if anyone in Church history knew what it was like to have his outer nature wasted away, it was the Apostle Paul. But he kept his eyes on the resurrection we're all promised in Christ Jesus. And therefore he could say that if our present bodily troubles were put in a scale with the glory that will come to us in the resurrection, the glory that's coming to us will far outweigh them all.
In fact, our present troubles go to contribute to the glory that is to be. How can this happen? Disease and trial and suffering aren't virtuous in themselves. But as we set them in contrast to the resurrection that is to come; especially, as others see our resurrection hope in contrast to what we're going through here on this earth, we glorify our risen Lord, who has promised to share His glory with us. So, as Paul says, our focus is no longer on how we see things to be in this troubled world; rather, we fix our eyes on what is unseen and eternal.
That is, what is unseen for now. The unbelieving world may say, "Yes, you're looking at what's unseen, all right, because there's nothing there." We reply, "No, there is something there, beyond the curtain of this failing earthly life. There is Someone there, who walked this earth and lived and died and rose again for me, and one day I will see Him face to face and know that He is realer and solider and more weighty than anything that can be looked upon in this temporary world."
Now, I need you to bear with me for a moment, because I'm going to inject something personal, and I don't want it to take away from the glory that belongs to the Scripture or to Jesus Christ, the Lord of Scripture. It's just that I find it ironic-- or maybe appropriate-- that this passage speaks of looking and seeing. You know about my eyesight, how I often have to wear two pairs of cheaters to read. That's annoying, but I manage. But in the past couple of days I've noticed some symptoms that may have serious implications for my eyesight, that may even require surgery. I tell you this by way of confession, to admit that when I found this out I didn't feel too full of thanksgiving. It can be really hard to keep your focus on things eternal when your imagination is telling you you might not be able to see things earthly for much longer.
It's been said that the preacher can't preach to him or herself. Maybe not, but the Apostle can preach to the preacher, and Paul has preached to me that whatever happens when I go in to see the eye doctor, the renewal of Jesus Christ is still taking place in me day by day, whether I feel like it or not. And age-related things like this only go to remind us that this body we live in is like a tent. Paul was thinking of the dwelling tents of the wandering Bedouins of the desert; we might think of a tent on a camping trip. Either way, there comes a time when those things get wet and waterlogged and worn and full of holes. There is no way they can be compared with our own solid house at home. In the same way, our present bodies are wearing out. But by the resurrection power of Jesus Christ, God Himself has prepared for us an eternal house in heaven, a building not made by human hands. Of course it's not made by human hands! For our eternal home, our resurrection bodies, are established on the foundation of Christ's resurrection itself, and no mortal had anything to do with that.
The Scripture says that now we groan, longing to be clothed with our permanent heavenly dwelling. We have to understand that that is truly our longing. Some people, even Christians, think the goal is to get rid of this earthly tent, our physical bodies, and just fly away as a spirit, naked and free. That may be great Greek philosophy, but it is not the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ. No, we do not want to be found naked before God. We must not stand before Him as bare unclothed spirits. In fact, we can not. We must be clothed with the heavenly dwelling that God has prepared for us for us, in order for us to know the eternal life that swallows up our mortality.
Because, brothers and sisters, that is why God made you-- so you might be clothed, surrounded, protected, and made at home in the resurrection body He has prepared for you. No matter what happens to you in this life, that new and heavenly body will be yours; you can believe that because God has given you the Holy Spirit as a guarantee on the purchase. He witnesses to our hearts through the Word that Jesus Christ truly did die for us, that His resurrection was for us, and that we can take Him at His word when He promises that where He is, we will be also.
And so, Paul says, things are actually switched around for us. Our earthly natures say, "Give me as much time here on earth in this body as possible. I'm in no hurry to go!" But the Spirit keeps us looking towards what we don't yet see, and He makes us eager to see it. He makes us long to move out of the temporary home of this tent and move permanently into our forever home with the Lord. The Spirit of God makes us confident that we shall indeed some day be forever at home with the Lord, clothed in the glorious bodies He has prepared for us.
Does this confidence give us the right to be so heavenly-minded we're no earthly good? Not at all. Here on this present earth or later on in eternity, our aim and pleasure should be to please Him who did not please Himself, but gave Himself up to save us all.
Does our future hope lead us to conclude that this present life is meaningless, just a waiting room for heaven, as it were? No, because we do have our future hope, we strive so that when we appear before the judgement seat of Christ, the things we have done in this present body will please Him and earn us His favor and reward.
Jesus Christ is risen; He is risen indeed. Not as a ghost, not as a disembodied spirit, but as a gloried Man of touchable flesh and bone. And we will be like Him, on that day when He truly returns and gathers His saints to rejoice with Him around His throne.
That day is coming. Someday we will be there, and we will at last feel the glorious weight of the splendor and majesty of our Lord Jesus and His finished work for us. Whether the time is long or short, do not lose heart. Make it your goal to please Him. And whatever you may be going through now, whatever now causes you to groan with longing or grief, keep your eyes focussed on Jesus Christ, the one who was dead, and see, He lives again. He is your resurrection, He is your life, and in Him you will live and find shelter forever more.
ON THE WHOLE, I'M GLAD the rapture of the saints didn't happen last night at 6:00 PM. There's so much more on this earth I want to see and do and accomplish. But if Harold Camping had been right, and even now we were standing in the presence of our Lord Jesus Christ, I would possess something I so grievously lack right now. And that's a full sense and knowledge of the splendour, the goodness, the graciousness, the beauty, the holiness, the indescribable greatness of what my great God and Saviour did for me when He died on the cross and rose again for my sake.
To know Jesus Christ and the life-giving power of His resurrection is the most marvellous, desirable thing you and I can ever experience. There is no end to the benefits we derive from Him! We've seen these past weeks how Jesus' resurrection enabled us to be adopted as children of God. How by it we are brought into His new covenant and brought into the nurture of our mother, the Church. How Jesus rose again to strip off our old filthy sinful natures and clothe us instead in our new selves, which is the shining glorious garment of His righteousness and love. How amazing is Jesus Christ our Lord, who was crucified for our sins and rose that we might live His life forever! How glorious and splendid are all His gifts to us! Just thinking about them, we should be in a continual state of rapture all day long!
But you know how it is, and so do I. The good things of this world, and its troubles as well, hang like a curtain between us and the jaw-dropping vision of Christ and His resurrection benefits. It's not that we don't believe that Jesus rose again, it's just that other stuff is so present and so pressing, His resurrection and what it means to us isn't something that we consciously dwell on day after day. It's for Easter Sunday, and maybe a week or two thereafter. Good to know about, but not exactly relevant to what we're dealing with now.
At least, that's how it seems. It seems that way too with our own resurrection, the one St. Paul so eloquently writes about in 1 Corinthians 15. That's for the future, sure, for the day when Jesus really comes back. But that doesn't seem to be happening real soon. And in the meantime, I'll wager that none of us goes around with a secret smile and a little skip in our step because we, too, someday will have a glorious immortal body like the one Jesus Himself rose in. I don't say this is the way we should be; it's just a fact of our human nature that it's woefully easy for us to get distracted from heavenly things and forget what we have and Whose we are. It's especially easy when the distractions have to do with poor health, or poverty, or advancing old age, or the approach of death, for ourselves or those we love. Who can think of their bodily resurrection when we have so much on our minds?
But in the fourth and fifth chapters of his second letter to the Corinthians, Paul-- speaking by the Holy Spirit-- reveals that those very everyday difficulties and distractions should be signposts and reminders that point us ever and again back to our blessed hope of personal resurrection through Jesus Christ our Lord. Not only that, but our very weakness serves to show the great power of God in Christ. As Paul says earlier in chapter 4, we carry the magnificent good news of Christ died and risen around in clay jars, "to show that this all-surpassing power is from God and not from us." And so, as our Epistle reading today begins, "‘I believed; therefore I have spoken.'" This is a quotation from Psalm 116:10, where the psalmist has been lamenting his neediness, his trouble, his nearness to death, and what he speaks of in this quoted verse is of his great affliction. He brings his distress to God in faith that God is One who hears and heals and restores. And so Paul evokes that same spirit of faith in us, but we have an even greater reason to hope in God than the psalmist did. For we know that He who raised Jesus Christ from the dead will also raise us with Jesus and He'll present all of us together to Himself, in His very presence.
This is our resurrection hope! This is the gospel grace that even today is reaching more and more people, that thanksgiving may overflow to the glory of God!
We hold this hope in light of-- perhaps I should say, in contrast to-- the very unhopeful situations we find ourselves in day after day. Because we trust in the One who raised the Lord Jesus from the dead, because we trust that He will also raise us with Him, we do not lose heart.
And it can be so easy in this world to lose heart. We don't have to be suffering persecution for our faith; ordinary ageing and illness will do it. We look in the mirror and see the wrinkles and we think, "Wait a minute, when did that happen? I don't feel that old!" Or worse, we gaze upon the pale form of a sick loved one languishing full of tubes in a hospital bed, and we know how true it is that our outer nature, our present physical bodies, are indeed wasting away. But the resurrection life of Christ is even now working its revival in you and me, if indeed we are trusting in the One who raised Jesus Christ from the dead and who will also raise us. Even now, He is renewing our inner nature, the new self in Christ, day by day.
We might want to say to Paul, "Hey, you call what I'm going through a ‘light momentary affliction.' What do you know about the cancer I'm suffering? Paul, how can you minimize my parent's congestive heart failure? Paul, people are calling me a hatemongering bigot for standing up for traditional gospel truth. How can you call that kind of affliction ‘slight'?"
Oops, scratch that one. Paul knew a lot about being afflicted for the sake of Christ. In fact, go back to verses 8-12 of chapter 4 of 2 Corinthians, or skip over to chapters 11 and 12, and you'll see that if any one had sufferings and afflictions, if anyone in Church history knew what it was like to have his outer nature wasted away, it was the Apostle Paul. But he kept his eyes on the resurrection we're all promised in Christ Jesus. And therefore he could say that if our present bodily troubles were put in a scale with the glory that will come to us in the resurrection, the glory that's coming to us will far outweigh them all.
In fact, our present troubles go to contribute to the glory that is to be. How can this happen? Disease and trial and suffering aren't virtuous in themselves. But as we set them in contrast to the resurrection that is to come; especially, as others see our resurrection hope in contrast to what we're going through here on this earth, we glorify our risen Lord, who has promised to share His glory with us. So, as Paul says, our focus is no longer on how we see things to be in this troubled world; rather, we fix our eyes on what is unseen and eternal.
That is, what is unseen for now. The unbelieving world may say, "Yes, you're looking at what's unseen, all right, because there's nothing there." We reply, "No, there is something there, beyond the curtain of this failing earthly life. There is Someone there, who walked this earth and lived and died and rose again for me, and one day I will see Him face to face and know that He is realer and solider and more weighty than anything that can be looked upon in this temporary world."
Now, I need you to bear with me for a moment, because I'm going to inject something personal, and I don't want it to take away from the glory that belongs to the Scripture or to Jesus Christ, the Lord of Scripture. It's just that I find it ironic-- or maybe appropriate-- that this passage speaks of looking and seeing. You know about my eyesight, how I often have to wear two pairs of cheaters to read. That's annoying, but I manage. But in the past couple of days I've noticed some symptoms that may have serious implications for my eyesight, that may even require surgery. I tell you this by way of confession, to admit that when I found this out I didn't feel too full of thanksgiving. It can be really hard to keep your focus on things eternal when your imagination is telling you you might not be able to see things earthly for much longer.
It's been said that the preacher can't preach to him or herself. Maybe not, but the Apostle can preach to the preacher, and Paul has preached to me that whatever happens when I go in to see the eye doctor, the renewal of Jesus Christ is still taking place in me day by day, whether I feel like it or not. And age-related things like this only go to remind us that this body we live in is like a tent. Paul was thinking of the dwelling tents of the wandering Bedouins of the desert; we might think of a tent on a camping trip. Either way, there comes a time when those things get wet and waterlogged and worn and full of holes. There is no way they can be compared with our own solid house at home. In the same way, our present bodies are wearing out. But by the resurrection power of Jesus Christ, God Himself has prepared for us an eternal house in heaven, a building not made by human hands. Of course it's not made by human hands! For our eternal home, our resurrection bodies, are established on the foundation of Christ's resurrection itself, and no mortal had anything to do with that.
The Scripture says that now we groan, longing to be clothed with our permanent heavenly dwelling. We have to understand that that is truly our longing. Some people, even Christians, think the goal is to get rid of this earthly tent, our physical bodies, and just fly away as a spirit, naked and free. That may be great Greek philosophy, but it is not the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ. No, we do not want to be found naked before God. We must not stand before Him as bare unclothed spirits. In fact, we can not. We must be clothed with the heavenly dwelling that God has prepared for us for us, in order for us to know the eternal life that swallows up our mortality.
Because, brothers and sisters, that is why God made you-- so you might be clothed, surrounded, protected, and made at home in the resurrection body He has prepared for you. No matter what happens to you in this life, that new and heavenly body will be yours; you can believe that because God has given you the Holy Spirit as a guarantee on the purchase. He witnesses to our hearts through the Word that Jesus Christ truly did die for us, that His resurrection was for us, and that we can take Him at His word when He promises that where He is, we will be also.
And so, Paul says, things are actually switched around for us. Our earthly natures say, "Give me as much time here on earth in this body as possible. I'm in no hurry to go!" But the Spirit keeps us looking towards what we don't yet see, and He makes us eager to see it. He makes us long to move out of the temporary home of this tent and move permanently into our forever home with the Lord. The Spirit of God makes us confident that we shall indeed some day be forever at home with the Lord, clothed in the glorious bodies He has prepared for us.
Does this confidence give us the right to be so heavenly-minded we're no earthly good? Not at all. Here on this present earth or later on in eternity, our aim and pleasure should be to please Him who did not please Himself, but gave Himself up to save us all.
Does our future hope lead us to conclude that this present life is meaningless, just a waiting room for heaven, as it were? No, because we do have our future hope, we strive so that when we appear before the judgement seat of Christ, the things we have done in this present body will please Him and earn us His favor and reward.
Jesus Christ is risen; He is risen indeed. Not as a ghost, not as a disembodied spirit, but as a gloried Man of touchable flesh and bone. And we will be like Him, on that day when He truly returns and gathers His saints to rejoice with Him around His throne.
That day is coming. Someday we will be there, and we will at last feel the glorious weight of the splendor and majesty of our Lord Jesus and His finished work for us. Whether the time is long or short, do not lose heart. Make it your goal to please Him. And whatever you may be going through now, whatever now causes you to groan with longing or grief, keep your eyes focussed on Jesus Christ, the one who was dead, and see, He lives again. He is your resurrection, He is your life, and in Him you will live and find shelter forever more.
Sunday, July 12, 2009
24-Karat Faith
Texts: 1 Peter 1:3-16; Mark 6:6b-7, 12-29 5:21-43
WHEN I WAS IN FIFTH GRADE I decided when I was grown up I’d go to Africa and be a missionary. I imagined myself suffering hardship in the jungle, facing down a fearsome witch doctor, maybe being taken captive by cannibals (I’d been watching too many cartoons) and being in danger for my life, all in defense of the faith. Oh, yes, it seemed really romantic and exciting, the idea of suffering and maybe even dying for the cause of Jesus Christ.
But one evening I was up in my bedroom contemplating this. And I got into one of those silly poses kids do, and slipped and knocked my nose with my knee. Hard. Good golly, that hurt! It hurt so bad I could hardly stand it.
And that was the end of my missionary ambitions. I figured, if I could hardly deal with the pain of my own knee hitting my nose, how could I remain faithful if those cannibals started poking me with their spears?
Now that I’m grown I can laugh at my childish ideas about foreign missions. But today’s Scriptures bring out my real error, and it wasn’t just my ignorance about Africa and its people. My real mistake was focussing on my potential sufferings and my potential glory, instead of on the suffering and glory of my Lord Jesus Christ. I was thinking how I would win the victory over evil forces in this world, instead of rejoicing over the great salvation my Savior and God had already won for me.
I doubt that I’m alone. That’s how a lot of us picture of facing persecution for the faith. We imagine how we’re going to successfully stand up against it-- or maybe we dread how we might fail. We see ourselves as heros in the war against the world and the devil-- or we hope Jesus will let us stay behind the lines and not get into the fighting at all. But as Mark and Peter both remind us, in the war of God vs. Satan and good vs. evil, the true focus isn’t on us and what we will do, it’s on Jesus Christ and what He has done for us. Yes, we will benefit from what He has done. We will receive praise, glory, and honor when Jesus Christ is revealed. But our victory will be ours only because first it is His.
But perhaps you think this has nothing to do with you. Maybe you’re sure you’ll never face persecution for the sake of Jesus Christ at all. I suppose, compared to what our brothers and sisters in Muslim and Communist countries are going through, we have nothing to complain of. But Christian persecution isn’t only having somebody put a knife to your throat and yelling, "Deny Jesus Christ or I kill you!" The spiritual battle against us is much more subtle than that, and if we don’t recognize our little skirmishes and cling to Christ and His benefits in them, we’ll certainly fail when more severe tests come our way. If you belong to Jesus Christ you face persecution for His sake every day, and the battle isn’t merely against the world and the devil, it’s against our own fears and desires as well.
The Apostle Peter notes in verse 6 of our reading that now on this earth we may have had to suffer grief in all kinds of trials. The implication is that if we haven’t already, we soon will. This word "all kinds" in the Greek literally means "many colored." Some griefs and troubles are screaming red like fire, some are pale gray like ash. They are all part of our warfare against this world, the Devil, and our own indwelling sin. We don’t like them, we aren’t called to go after them, but God in His sovereign will allows them as the means to test and purify our faith in Him, so it will come through like pure, 24-karat gold.
Persecution for Christ’s sake is inevitable, since we’ve been born again, we’re new creatures, and what we are will always be at war with what we used to be. Don’t imagine that your part in the battle will always be clear cut and dramatic. For then you won’t recognise a trial of faith when it comes.
We see how trivial, how pedestrian the battle can be in our reading from Mark’s gospel, where he tells us about the martyrdom of John the Baptist. This is the man Jesus Himself called the greatest of those born of woman, and the culmination of the Law and the prophets. If anybody, you’d think John would go to his death in some glorious spiritual last stand.
But no. John is beheaded and his head served up like some exotic dish because of the everyday earthly lust and spite of one woman, Herodias, an amateur dance performance by her daughter Salome, and the lust, pride, and political fear of Herodias’ brother-in-law and unlawful husband, King Herod. Herod had put John away in prison so he couldn’t go around the countryside reminding the people of how he, Herod, was violating God’s law in running off with his brother’s wife. But he had no desire to torture or execute John for his message. Mark tells us Herod feared John, he was puzzled at him, but he liked to listen to him. We have no reason to believe that John in prison did not keep on proclaiming that the kingdom of God was at hand, that the Messiah had arrived, and that people should repent and obey the law of God. Being in prison was a form of persecution, of course. But from Herod’s point of view, he wasn’t standing against the Jewish faith when he imprisoned John; no, it was simply the best thing he could do politically. And when it came time for John to die, there was no crisis, John did nothing specific to make Herod behead him, it was just one more of those everyday situations when human selfishness wanted its way and nothing was going to stop it.
It’s the same with us, disciples of Jesus Christ who bear His name. Your struggles and trials as a Christian will most likely not be spectacular. Those who oppose you may not have any idea they’re causing you to suffer for Christ’s sake at all. But you should be aware of it. Think of those times when you feel pressure to compromise what is right because your boss thinks it’s good for business. Think of situations where a little voice inside tells you to give God the glory for something good that had happened to you, but you hear your own voice taking credit for it yourself, because you don’t want to seem "too religious." Call to mind those times when popular opinion on certain political and moral issues goes against the will of God as revealed in the Scriptures, and you’re ridiculed or called a bigot when you stand up for what you know to be the truth. These are the trials of your faith in Christ, allowed so it will come out more pure than 24-karat gold.
Think, too, of those times when pressure from other people isn’t involved at all, when the grief is in your own situation. Some of you may be struggling with financial hardship at this time, even unemployment or impending bankruptcy. You may have learned that you or someone you love is facing a deadly or painful chronic disease. How is your faith in Jesus Christ? Does this trial make you rely on Him and His faithfulness all the more? Does it make you search out the depths of His love for you and move you to love and trust Him for all you are and all you will have? Or does your trouble cause you to doubt Christ and His benefits-- or even, sometimes, to forget Him altogether?
These kinds of grief seem so ordinary and earthbound, hardly anything to do with being a Christian at all! But these everyday trials are the beginning of the refinement process for your faith, and if your faith turns out to be only 2-karat gold or no gold at all, where will you be when the ultimate trials come?
And they will come. Already our Congress is contemplating legislation that would make it hate speech for Christians to stand up for Biblical moral principles. Already in countries like Great Britain and Canada Muslim sharia law is allowed to hold sway in some areas, and Muslim leaders declare it’s their goal that sharia be in force throughout the world.
What shall we do about it? Expect the government to rescue us? Certainly, whatever we can do as citizens we should do, just as St. Paul appealed to his Roman citizenship whenever the time was right. But we must never expect the United States government or any other human institution to stand between us and the persecutions that will come because we bear the name of Jesus Christ. They will come, they must come, "so that your faith-- of greater worth than gold, which perishes even though refined by fire-- may be proved genuine and may result in praise, glory, and honor when Jesus Christ is revealed."
It is Christ who brings us through the fire and Christ alone. His heavenly Father and ours has given us new birth into a living hope in Him, through Christ’s resurrection from the dead. This hope is not like the earthly wishing that says, "I hope it rains before my flowers die" or "I hope I get a new job before I start missing mortgage payments." This hope is in the person and work of the deathless Son of God. It teaches us to look beyond our earthly troubles to the sure and solid inheritance He has won and preserves in heaven for us.
Our brother Peter reminds us that no matter what happens, in this life we are shielded through God’s power until the coming of the salvation that is ready to be revealed in the last time. Individually we have already been saved and justified through the shed blood of Jesus Christ, and when our Lord comes in glory and takes us to Himself, His work of salvation will be perfected in us and in all creation and the total victory will be His.
Even now we see the evidence of that coming victory. We see it when the Spirit of Christ in us enables us to do things we thought we never could and certainly never could without His aid. We see it when we find ourselves coming to the assistance of someone we have feared, not through compulsion but out of Christian love. Maybe you’ve taken a stand for Christ and you were nervous about it, but then you found it wasn’t so hard after all, and you found yourself caring about the person you were speaking to and wanting them to know Jesus and receive His heavenly inheritance, too. Maybe you said No to that business compromise or refused to be depressed by the current economic situation, because the Holy Spirit had filled you with the inexpressible joy He gives in Jesus Christ. This is the power of Jesus Christ working in you.
Jesus’ apostles witnessed the first fruits of Christ’s victory over sin and Satan when Jesus sent them out in His name to preach repentance, to heal, and to drive out demons. His power in them was so great that King Herod thought John the Baptist had been raised from the dead. Herod thought that when John’s headless body was buried, the Baptist and the power that was in him were dead and gone. But the power of God manifest in Jesus Christ our Lord can never die. Our hope in Him is living and sure, and our inheritance in Him can never perish, spoil, or fade.
24-karat faith trusts totally in Jesus Christ and what He has done for us. God our loving heavenly Father permits griefs and trials and persecutions in our lives , to prove to us and the world that our faith is not in ourselves or our own boldness, not in human systems or governments, but in Christ alone. 24-karat faith maintains us in an attitude of obedience to God, focussed on Him and His will, confiding only in Him.
To this goal, Peter admonishes us to prepare our minds for action. Be sure that grief and trials will come to you, some because you belong to Jesus, some simply because of your human condition. Meet them as one who belongs to your faithful God and Saviour, Jesus Christ. Study God’s word; know what He has done for your ancestors in the faith, so you also may be ready to meet trouble honorably and courageously in the strength Jesus gives. Set your hope on the grace He gives you even now, grace that will be fulfilled when He is revealed in glory. Through Him you can renounce the ways of Herod, Herodias, and Salome-- through Him you can stop being impelled and hemmed in by your fears and desires and instead live free in the holiness of Almighty God.
It was easy for me to give up my grade-school dream of being a Christian missionary because it really wasn’t about Christ at all. The truth was that I’d recently started at a new school, some of the kids were picking on me, and I figured that if I was going to suffer persecution, I may as well do it in a good cause. But now I understand that my mission field back then wasn’t someday in Africa, it was right there, right then, on that school playground.
And now my mission field and yours is wherever we are and in whatever situation we might be. Our field of battle is wherever the world, the devil, and our own sin set themselves up against the Kingdom of God. Our faith will come through the fire like 24-karat gold, because Jesus who died and rose again empowers us, protects us, and keeps our heavenly inheritance secure for us. Trust in Him like Peter, believe in Him like John, for He is your risen Lord and your gracious, living Hope.
To Him be all glory, honor, and praise, with God the Father in the power of the Holy Spirit, now and forever, amen.
But one evening I was up in my bedroom contemplating this. And I got into one of those silly poses kids do, and slipped and knocked my nose with my knee. Hard. Good golly, that hurt! It hurt so bad I could hardly stand it.
And that was the end of my missionary ambitions. I figured, if I could hardly deal with the pain of my own knee hitting my nose, how could I remain faithful if those cannibals started poking me with their spears?
Now that I’m grown I can laugh at my childish ideas about foreign missions. But today’s Scriptures bring out my real error, and it wasn’t just my ignorance about Africa and its people. My real mistake was focussing on my potential sufferings and my potential glory, instead of on the suffering and glory of my Lord Jesus Christ. I was thinking how I would win the victory over evil forces in this world, instead of rejoicing over the great salvation my Savior and God had already won for me.
I doubt that I’m alone. That’s how a lot of us picture of facing persecution for the faith. We imagine how we’re going to successfully stand up against it-- or maybe we dread how we might fail. We see ourselves as heros in the war against the world and the devil-- or we hope Jesus will let us stay behind the lines and not get into the fighting at all. But as Mark and Peter both remind us, in the war of God vs. Satan and good vs. evil, the true focus isn’t on us and what we will do, it’s on Jesus Christ and what He has done for us. Yes, we will benefit from what He has done. We will receive praise, glory, and honor when Jesus Christ is revealed. But our victory will be ours only because first it is His.
But perhaps you think this has nothing to do with you. Maybe you’re sure you’ll never face persecution for the sake of Jesus Christ at all. I suppose, compared to what our brothers and sisters in Muslim and Communist countries are going through, we have nothing to complain of. But Christian persecution isn’t only having somebody put a knife to your throat and yelling, "Deny Jesus Christ or I kill you!" The spiritual battle against us is much more subtle than that, and if we don’t recognize our little skirmishes and cling to Christ and His benefits in them, we’ll certainly fail when more severe tests come our way. If you belong to Jesus Christ you face persecution for His sake every day, and the battle isn’t merely against the world and the devil, it’s against our own fears and desires as well.
The Apostle Peter notes in verse 6 of our reading that now on this earth we may have had to suffer grief in all kinds of trials. The implication is that if we haven’t already, we soon will. This word "all kinds" in the Greek literally means "many colored." Some griefs and troubles are screaming red like fire, some are pale gray like ash. They are all part of our warfare against this world, the Devil, and our own indwelling sin. We don’t like them, we aren’t called to go after them, but God in His sovereign will allows them as the means to test and purify our faith in Him, so it will come through like pure, 24-karat gold.
Persecution for Christ’s sake is inevitable, since we’ve been born again, we’re new creatures, and what we are will always be at war with what we used to be. Don’t imagine that your part in the battle will always be clear cut and dramatic. For then you won’t recognise a trial of faith when it comes.
We see how trivial, how pedestrian the battle can be in our reading from Mark’s gospel, where he tells us about the martyrdom of John the Baptist. This is the man Jesus Himself called the greatest of those born of woman, and the culmination of the Law and the prophets. If anybody, you’d think John would go to his death in some glorious spiritual last stand.
But no. John is beheaded and his head served up like some exotic dish because of the everyday earthly lust and spite of one woman, Herodias, an amateur dance performance by her daughter Salome, and the lust, pride, and political fear of Herodias’ brother-in-law and unlawful husband, King Herod. Herod had put John away in prison so he couldn’t go around the countryside reminding the people of how he, Herod, was violating God’s law in running off with his brother’s wife. But he had no desire to torture or execute John for his message. Mark tells us Herod feared John, he was puzzled at him, but he liked to listen to him. We have no reason to believe that John in prison did not keep on proclaiming that the kingdom of God was at hand, that the Messiah had arrived, and that people should repent and obey the law of God. Being in prison was a form of persecution, of course. But from Herod’s point of view, he wasn’t standing against the Jewish faith when he imprisoned John; no, it was simply the best thing he could do politically. And when it came time for John to die, there was no crisis, John did nothing specific to make Herod behead him, it was just one more of those everyday situations when human selfishness wanted its way and nothing was going to stop it.
It’s the same with us, disciples of Jesus Christ who bear His name. Your struggles and trials as a Christian will most likely not be spectacular. Those who oppose you may not have any idea they’re causing you to suffer for Christ’s sake at all. But you should be aware of it. Think of those times when you feel pressure to compromise what is right because your boss thinks it’s good for business. Think of situations where a little voice inside tells you to give God the glory for something good that had happened to you, but you hear your own voice taking credit for it yourself, because you don’t want to seem "too religious." Call to mind those times when popular opinion on certain political and moral issues goes against the will of God as revealed in the Scriptures, and you’re ridiculed or called a bigot when you stand up for what you know to be the truth. These are the trials of your faith in Christ, allowed so it will come out more pure than 24-karat gold.
Think, too, of those times when pressure from other people isn’t involved at all, when the grief is in your own situation. Some of you may be struggling with financial hardship at this time, even unemployment or impending bankruptcy. You may have learned that you or someone you love is facing a deadly or painful chronic disease. How is your faith in Jesus Christ? Does this trial make you rely on Him and His faithfulness all the more? Does it make you search out the depths of His love for you and move you to love and trust Him for all you are and all you will have? Or does your trouble cause you to doubt Christ and His benefits-- or even, sometimes, to forget Him altogether?
These kinds of grief seem so ordinary and earthbound, hardly anything to do with being a Christian at all! But these everyday trials are the beginning of the refinement process for your faith, and if your faith turns out to be only 2-karat gold or no gold at all, where will you be when the ultimate trials come?
And they will come. Already our Congress is contemplating legislation that would make it hate speech for Christians to stand up for Biblical moral principles. Already in countries like Great Britain and Canada Muslim sharia law is allowed to hold sway in some areas, and Muslim leaders declare it’s their goal that sharia be in force throughout the world.
What shall we do about it? Expect the government to rescue us? Certainly, whatever we can do as citizens we should do, just as St. Paul appealed to his Roman citizenship whenever the time was right. But we must never expect the United States government or any other human institution to stand between us and the persecutions that will come because we bear the name of Jesus Christ. They will come, they must come, "so that your faith-- of greater worth than gold, which perishes even though refined by fire-- may be proved genuine and may result in praise, glory, and honor when Jesus Christ is revealed."
It is Christ who brings us through the fire and Christ alone. His heavenly Father and ours has given us new birth into a living hope in Him, through Christ’s resurrection from the dead. This hope is not like the earthly wishing that says, "I hope it rains before my flowers die" or "I hope I get a new job before I start missing mortgage payments." This hope is in the person and work of the deathless Son of God. It teaches us to look beyond our earthly troubles to the sure and solid inheritance He has won and preserves in heaven for us.
Our brother Peter reminds us that no matter what happens, in this life we are shielded through God’s power until the coming of the salvation that is ready to be revealed in the last time. Individually we have already been saved and justified through the shed blood of Jesus Christ, and when our Lord comes in glory and takes us to Himself, His work of salvation will be perfected in us and in all creation and the total victory will be His.
Even now we see the evidence of that coming victory. We see it when the Spirit of Christ in us enables us to do things we thought we never could and certainly never could without His aid. We see it when we find ourselves coming to the assistance of someone we have feared, not through compulsion but out of Christian love. Maybe you’ve taken a stand for Christ and you were nervous about it, but then you found it wasn’t so hard after all, and you found yourself caring about the person you were speaking to and wanting them to know Jesus and receive His heavenly inheritance, too. Maybe you said No to that business compromise or refused to be depressed by the current economic situation, because the Holy Spirit had filled you with the inexpressible joy He gives in Jesus Christ. This is the power of Jesus Christ working in you.
Jesus’ apostles witnessed the first fruits of Christ’s victory over sin and Satan when Jesus sent them out in His name to preach repentance, to heal, and to drive out demons. His power in them was so great that King Herod thought John the Baptist had been raised from the dead. Herod thought that when John’s headless body was buried, the Baptist and the power that was in him were dead and gone. But the power of God manifest in Jesus Christ our Lord can never die. Our hope in Him is living and sure, and our inheritance in Him can never perish, spoil, or fade.
24-karat faith trusts totally in Jesus Christ and what He has done for us. God our loving heavenly Father permits griefs and trials and persecutions in our lives , to prove to us and the world that our faith is not in ourselves or our own boldness, not in human systems or governments, but in Christ alone. 24-karat faith maintains us in an attitude of obedience to God, focussed on Him and His will, confiding only in Him.
To this goal, Peter admonishes us to prepare our minds for action. Be sure that grief and trials will come to you, some because you belong to Jesus, some simply because of your human condition. Meet them as one who belongs to your faithful God and Saviour, Jesus Christ. Study God’s word; know what He has done for your ancestors in the faith, so you also may be ready to meet trouble honorably and courageously in the strength Jesus gives. Set your hope on the grace He gives you even now, grace that will be fulfilled when He is revealed in glory. Through Him you can renounce the ways of Herod, Herodias, and Salome-- through Him you can stop being impelled and hemmed in by your fears and desires and instead live free in the holiness of Almighty God.
It was easy for me to give up my grade-school dream of being a Christian missionary because it really wasn’t about Christ at all. The truth was that I’d recently started at a new school, some of the kids were picking on me, and I figured that if I was going to suffer persecution, I may as well do it in a good cause. But now I understand that my mission field back then wasn’t someday in Africa, it was right there, right then, on that school playground.
And now my mission field and yours is wherever we are and in whatever situation we might be. Our field of battle is wherever the world, the devil, and our own sin set themselves up against the Kingdom of God. Our faith will come through the fire like 24-karat gold, because Jesus who died and rose again empowers us, protects us, and keeps our heavenly inheritance secure for us. Trust in Him like Peter, believe in Him like John, for He is your risen Lord and your gracious, living Hope.
To Him be all glory, honor, and praise, with God the Father in the power of the Holy Spirit, now and forever, amen.
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