Texts: Isaiah 2:1-5; Ephesians 2:11-22
WHEN I WAS A FRESHMAN IN college, I met a guy at a party who introduced me to the concept of world citizenship. He said he was working with a group who were lobbying the UN to make my hometown of Kansas City a "city of the world." Somehow, the very mention of this filled me with excitement. There was something so big and thrilling about the idea, something larger and grander and more hopeful than anything I'd conceived of before, and the thought that I myself might be involved in it made it all the more amazing.
Well, nothing came of this plan as far as I know, and it's been a long time since I thought that humanity united under a single human government is a good thing. Still, there's something inherently appealing about the idea of human oneness and unity. How wonderful it would be-- No barriers, no conflicts, just perfect communication and peace between man and man.
But that's not how things are in this world. In fact, it seems like parties, opinion groups, and factions are more polarized and more in opposition than ever before in human history. You probably have friends you don't talk to much any more because every time you get together, you end up in an argument about some issue or other. With some people you can't even talk about the weather without things getting political! It wouldn't be so bad if people would stick to evidence and facts, but the dividing walls of hostility are erected so high and so thick things too often end up in name-calling and insults. So we stay in our own camps with that figurative wall standing between us, and human oneness is only a dream-- if we think it's a good thing at all.
With the way things are today, it should give us perspective on the polarization between the Jews and the Gentiles in the Roman world, as we read in St. Paul's letter to the Ephesians. But their conflict concerned more than current issues; it cut to the heart of created reality, for was over who or what should be worshipped as the true God and what that deity requires of us as humans.
This question is way bigger than the debate over, say, global warming or government-run health care. In such matters let us take our stands based on the facts as we know them, but allow that more information may prove us to be wrong. But in this matter of Jew vs. Gentile-- or, rather, Jew vs. pagan, the Scriptures leave us in no doubt as to who was and is right, or at least, more right, in this conflict. The Jews absolutely were, before the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ, the only people on the face of this earth who worshipped the true Lord and Creator of the universe, while the gods of the pagans were useless idols. The Jews were the only ones who'd been given His laws to follow, the only ones whom the Lord had made His people through solemn covenant, the only ones to whom He had powerfully revealed Himself with unshakeable promises of blessing. And although the prophets spoke of a Messiah to come who would somehow bring benefit to the nations as well, they were also clear that it was through Israel alone that this Savior would come. When it came to the divisions between Jews and pagans, it was not a matter of each side giving up a little on the human level and coming to a friendly compromise. Compromise was something Israel could not do and remain Israel. For whenever Israel compromised with the Gentile nations, that's when they got into deep trouble.
No, as Paul writes in verse 12, time was when we who were born Gentiles were
separated from Christ [that is, the Messiah of Israel], alienated from the commonwealth of Israel, and strangers to the covenants of promise, having no hope and without God in the world.
In fact, for many centuries the dividing wall of hostility was a necessary barrier to preserve Israel from total disobedience and dissolution before the Messiah could come. It was essential that the pagans and their evil influence be kept at a safe distance from the commonwealth of Israel, and the further off the better. But, Paul says, the time has come for the dividing wall to be taken down. Better than that, the time has come when it has been taken down, and the two indeed have become one.
How? By us holding interfaith councils and agreeing that all religions lead to the same god? By us avoiding controversial subjects and just talking about puppies and kittens and blue balloons instead?
No. It took Jesus Christ Himself to break it down and bring Jews and Gentiles together. For as we see in verses 14 and 15,
He is our peace, who has made us both one, and has broken down the dividing wall of hostility, by abolishing in his flesh the law of commandments and ordinances . . .
Now when we read that Jesus has "abolished . . . the law of commandments and ordinances," we might conclude that the Jews were wrong all along and we can indulge in and celebrate all sorts of immoral behavior and do it with Jesus' blessing. That'd save a lot of arguments, for sure! But we'd be wrong if we did. For Paul has just finished, up in verse 10, saying that God has created-- recreated, actually-- us in Jesus Christ for good works. And all the Scripture tells us that a godly life is the only way to please our Creator. So what is this abolition?
In such a case, it helps to look at the original Greek. The word translated "abolish" literally means "down-un-acting" and, in the case of this verse, scholars interpret it as "made ineffectual or powerless; nullified; invalidated." So what was the law considered to be effectual or valid for previous to Christ? Well, the Jews looked to keeping the Law as an effectual and valid way to please God and be justified in His presence. And that is what Moses had said by the Spirit in Leviticus, "The man who does these things will live by them"-- that is, have life, peace, and fellowship with the Lord of life. But by the same Spirit he also said in Deuteronomy, "Cursed is everyone who does not continue to do everything written in the Book of the Law." And who can live up to that? The Jews never could. Certainly the Gentiles could not. We cannot. The Law which reflected the holiness of God only served to prove how unholy we all were. But in His flesh-- in His perfect obedience in life and His sacrificial death on the cross, Jesus fulfilled the commands of the Law in our place and set it aside as the way to peace and fellowship with God.
And as Paul writes in verse 13, in Christ Jesus we (and we're included with the Gentile Ephesians here) who were far off from Israel and alienated from God's promises have been brought near by the blood of Christ, shed for us all on Calvary's cross. In Christ the vision of Isaiah is fulfilled, when the nations would miraculously stream up to Mount Zion and know peace walking in the ways of the God of Jacob.
I've heard that outside the United Nations building in New York there's a sculpture called "Let Us Beat Our Swords into Plowshares," frankly taking its title from the verses from Isaiah 2 that read,
They shall beat their swords into plowshares,
And their spears into pruning hooks.
In other words, let's bring about peace on earth. Well, people, if you're trying to achieve that by what goes on in that building, good luck. You'll be at it a long, weary time. No, the Scripture is clear: Man cannot end hostility: Our peace is Jesus Christ and Jesus Christ alone. In Him is the one and only peace that can make Jew and Gentile one and create one new man out of the two warring peoples. It took the Son of God made Man to make peace between God's covenant people and those who before had been excluded from His covenant, and He did it by His atoning death.
But His death accomplished even more. As wonderful as it was that Jesus should make one people out of the warring human factions of Jew and Gentile, He also reconciled humanity to Almighty God.
And we all needed reconciliation to God. Because as we can read in Ephesians 2:3, by nature-- fallen human nature-- we are all children of wrath. In our natural sinful state we are at war with God and God is at war with us. But in Christ and through Christ and because of Christ, by the power of the Holy Spirit, God who is rich in mercy chose us in love to be saved through Him. And so now, as verse 16 says, He has reconciled both groups "to God in one body through the cross, bringing the hostility to an end."
But how does this come to be true for you and me? Verse 18 answers that question: it is the work of the Holy Spirit who gives us access to the Father through Jesus Christ our mutual Lord. By His gracious work we're no longer illegal aliens who deserve no amnesty; God Himself as in Psalm 87 has declared us to be born citizens of the heavenly Zion and by Christ His living Word it is so. In Jesus we are made fellow-citizens with the saints-- and by that Paul would have meant the holy men and women of faithful Israel-- and members of the household of God. In Christ the earthly nation of Israel is redeemed and rebuilt together with the elect Gentiles into the spiritual Zion, founded upon the apostles and prophets with Jesus as the head and cornerstone. The dividing wall has been broken down, and in its place one building rises under His power. Together we are that building, and it is no ordinary house: it is a holy temple intended for the dwelling place of God in the Spirit.
I hope you have a sense of how beautiful this is! But beyond that I want us all to understand the power these beautiful truths must have for our lives in this fallen world.
First of all, we were not saved to be lone-wolf, individualized Christ-followers. Back up in verse 11, the apostle begins this passage with the word "therefore." In the previous verses he was reminding us of our salvation in Christ and God's will for our lives in consequence of that. But we are not on our own. God raised us up in Christ to be incorporated into one holy people by the ministry of one Spirit. It is absolutely false that you can be a perfectly good Christian without being part of Christ's church. Membership in Christ's church is a fundamental part of what you were saved for. Indeed, everyone who has been reconciled to God in Jesus Christ is a member of His Church whether he or she is able to sit in a pew or not. Therefore, let us support and build up and act in love towards one another, for Jesus Christ is our peace. In Him and in the power of His Spirit we can demonstrate that we are one new man, as we look out for the good of on another just as we would for ourselves.
Second, we cannot take our position as citizens of the heavenly Zion for granted, as something that simply comes with our living in our particular time and place. No, for if things had kept on going as they had for hundreds of years, we who are not ethnic Jews would have remained strangers and aliens, unforgiven sinners, with no hope and without God in the world. It is by grace you have been saved, just as it is by grace that the Jews who believe in Jesus as their Messiah have by grace come to know that reality. This should give us all a sense of humility before God and a heart of compassion towards our unsaved pagan neighbors. For we were once as they are, and the blood of Christ that brought us near to God will, in His mercy, one day bring them in as members of the household of faith, too. So let us conduct our lives in the power of the Spirit so Christ indeed will be seen in us, that through us others might also be reconciled to the God who made them.
This brings us to the third and final truth I believe we should take from our Scripture readings today. Despite our compassion, there will always be plenty of people around us who are perfectly content to be without God in this world. We Christians, they charge, are the ones who are unenlightened. Indeed, when we conduct ourselves as citizens of God's holy nation and stand up for His righteousness in this world, we will be reviled as fools, bigots, even as enemies of humanity. It can be hard living as a Christian in this world, the way things are going. It may threaten your position, your income, and your reputation. But you are members of Christ's one holy nation, and our heavenly citizenship takes precedence over all other loyalties. Yes, let us be good Americans, good members of our political parties, good trade union members, good service club members, good members of our families. But when any direction or practice or mindset of our nation, party, union, club, yes, even of our own families contradicts the will and nature of God as we know it from His revealed Word, He calls and commands us to stand firm in the Spirit and hold fast to the truth of Christ.
It won't be easy, but we can do it. We can do it because we are God's one new people through His one Holy Spirit. And the one peace we rest in is Jesus Christ Himself. He is the Peace that will always last and never fail. He has already accomplished the cosmic work of making peace between Jew and Gentile, and between both of us and God. And so we can find our peace in Him, no matter what our conflict with the world may be. Rejoice, Church of God! We are His people, bought with His blood and brought together by His Spirit. We are God's holy temple, His dwelling place on earth, and He will see to it that His temple, His spiritual Zion, stands forever, to the glory of His name.
Showing posts with label unbelief. Show all posts
Showing posts with label unbelief. Show all posts
Sunday, June 30, 2013
Sunday, June 2, 2013
What Is God For?
Texts: Isaiah 40:18-31; Ephesians 1:3-14
I'M SURE YOU'D HEARD that tornados hit the Oklahoma City area again Friday night. We prayed for the victims during our prayers this morning, for those who were hurt, for those who lost property, for those who lost loved ones. But we know that as sure as this world turns there are going to be tornados in the Midwest in the spring, and sure as that world is fallen and sinful, there will be those who use that fact as an excuse to insult and mock God and those who believe in Him.
If you ever want to get totally fed up with that, go online and read the comments after any news article about any natural disaster. You'll have people writing that tornados and floods and hurricanes prove that God could not exist. If the disaster takes place in the Bible Belt, they'll say with great glee that God must be punishing those stupid Christians, or insist that the disaster shows God can't be relied on, since He didn't come through as expected and protect His believers from loss and harm.
What can you say to such people? Assuming they'd even begin to listen? As believers in the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, we can say that if that's the kind of god they believe in, these scoffers and mockers are right, because that kind of God doesn't exist. If they think God is the Great Vending Machine in the Sky that's there to make sure our lives remain prosperous and comfortable, providing we drop in a few dollars worth of good works from time to time, that's a figment of the human imagination and it should be made fun of.
Atheists and people who believe in other religions have a distorted view of what we Christians think about who God is and what He is for. No surprise. The real problem is that too many Christians-- or people who call themselves Christians-- carry around the same false ideas about God and live their lives according to those false ideas.
It's gotten so bad that studies have shown that the majority of Christian teenagers-- and many, many Christian adults as well, don't really believe in classic Christianity; they hold to a religion that's been called Moralistic Therapeutic Deism. This modern faith says yes, there's a god, of some sort: that's the Deism part. What this god is really like in him or itself doesn't really matter, the thing that matters is that he or it is benevolent and kind and well-meaning towards human beings and wants them to be happy, however they define happiness. If I'm a believer in Moralistic Therapeutic Deism, I'd tell you this deity expects people to be nice and fair to other people, but he pretty much leaves it up to each person to decide what niceness and fairness is. And so when I'm nice and do nice things, I can expect to be rewarded with this god's protection and favor. That's Moralism. And the most desirable way for him to reward and protect me is for him to solve all my problems, get rid of all the trouble, turmoil, and stress in my life, and make my sojourn here on earth comfortable and uncomplicated. That's the Therapeutic part. This god-- this false god-- makes no demands for his own sake; what he's for is to make me feel good about myself. Otherwise, what good is he?
Brothers and sisters, is that what God is for? Is that the deity we should be raising our children to pray to and depend upon? Does the god of Moralistic Therapeutic Deism bear any resemblance to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ? What do the Scriptures say?
The Lord God had a lot to say about Himself in chapter 40 of the prophecy of Isaiah. We read that God is incomparable and unique. He is high and holy. To Him, people are like grasshoppers and the whole expanse of heaven is like a tent you might live in on a camping trip. Governments and rulers reign only as long as He allows them; the mere breath from His mouth sweeps them away like chaff. He marshals the stars and maintains them in their courses; nothing is outside His rulership or beyond His control-- and that would include tornados, floods, and hurricanes.
Does that sound like the spineless god of Moralistic Therapeutic Deism, that deity who is at our beck and call, that we obligate and control by our good works? Not in the least. However, the Lord certainly is benevolent and merciful towards His people Israel. He assures them that their trouble is known to Him. He reminds them that He is the God who gives strength to the weary, even when the young and the strong are collapsing by the roadside. He tells them that those who hope in the Lord will
. . . renew their strength.
They will soar on wings like eagles;
they will run and not grow weary,
they will walk and not be faint.
Is this like the therapeutic relief so many expect from God these days?
No, not really. For as we've seen, the modern expectation is that God is supposed to be good to me for my good. The eternal reality is that God is good for His own glory. And it is not our good, moralistic works He wants, it's putting our hope in Him; that is, our total dependence on His greatness and power.
But maybe that's just the Old Testament talking. Many people will tell you that the God of the Old Testament and the God of the New Testament are two different beings. Or maybe that the Old Testament writers got God wrong, and all this business about His holiness and majesty can be discarded; what we really want to concern ourselves with is His love and affection and how wonderful it makes us feel.
And the New Testament does tell us how much God loves us. But so does the Old. And the Old Testament does tell us about God's glory and majesty. But so does the New. Both parts of God's holy Scriptures tell us who God is and what He is for. And what it all says together might be a surprise to the self-satisfied atheists who comment on news websites and YouTube videos, and to many Christians as well.
What did we read in Paul's letter to the Ephesians? Who is God, and what is He for?
First of all, He is the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, to Whom all praise is due. Jesus Christ the Son of God is the One who died to take away our sins by the express purpose and will of His Father in heaven. No concept of God that leaves out Jesus Christ the God-Man can claim any kind of reality. Beside the triune God of the Scriptures there is no God.
This same God has blessed us in the heavenly realms with every spiritual blessing in Christ. No, we are not promised an easy life on this earth. God never says He will divert tornados to keep His people out of their path, or always let us have the job we want, or grant us continual good health and prosperity on this earth. What He does promise, what He is for, is our sharing in His very nature through Jesus Christ our Lord. He's for us knowing union with Him: tasting a little of it now in this life, but enjoying it perfectly in the life to come.
We who believe in Jesus were chosen for this. Before the creation of the world, St. Paul writes, God chose us-- not to be privileged, not to be perpetually safe and secure, not even to be serene and without turmoil in our minds-- but to be holy and blameless in His sight. I don't know about you, but I know that in myself I am not holy and blameless in the sight of God. I suspect you know the same about yourself. So has God's choice failed, or are we outside His choice? Not at all, for it is in Christ and Christ alone that we lose our guilt before God and deserve to stand in His holy presence, and God has ordained, He has predestined us to be in Christ, to be adopted as His very sons and Jesus' own siblings. Being in Christ! Sharing in His nature and His union with the Father! You can't get more holy and blameless than that.
And what for? God does it all for and according to His good pleasure and will. Just think, God is pleased when His elect people are joined in union with His Son Jesus Christ! But see, it is God's will and pleasure that come first, not ours. If the it were left us to us to determine what would be the highest good for ourselves and the universe, how shabby and shallow that good would be! But God has done everything according to His will, not ours, that His glorious grace might be praised as it deserves.
This grace is not some vague benevolence, it is that salvation He has granted us in Jesus Christ, His beloved Son. It is the redemption we have in Christ's blood and the forgiveness of our sins. The modern world isn't too big on the concept of sin: if people talk about sin at all, they define it as things like eating chocolate or not approving of any and all sexual relationships or praying in a public school. But according to the riches of God's grace lavished on us in His wisdom and understanding, the blood of Christ purchased for us forgiveness of real sins, the ones that had us under God's righteous wrath and kept us from fellowship with Him.
What is God for? God is for working out the mystery of His will-- again, according to His good pleasure. Not just His will to save us but more than that, His will to exalt His Son Jesus Christ to the highest place, bringing all heaven and earth together under the sole headship of Christ.
And yes, God is for us. He is for us in Christ. He is for us because He is first and foremost for Himself, for the purpose of His will. God's purpose for us is that we might be for the praise of His glory. By birth, by sin, by our natural bent we were not for God and we did not want to serve Him. We were for our own glory, and we expected Him, if He existed, to serve us.
But by the power of the gospel preached to us God changed our hearts and turned them away from our own purposes and raised them up to love and appreciate His. God gave us His Holy Spirit so we can know by fellowship with Him that the spiritual blessings promised to us are faithful and secure. God has promised us an inheritance in Christ, and the Spirit is our guarantee that it surely will be ours. When? When all God's chosen possession, His predestined saints, shall have been redeemed.
That day surely will come, and as it does, what is God for? Again, He is for the praise of His glory. If God were an ordinary human like you or me, this would be obnoxious. Insufferable. How full of himself that person is! we'd say. But God is God: High, majestic, holy and incomparable. He is no vague deity whose sole purpose is to tell us what good children we are and make things all better for us. He is worthy of all praise, honor, and glory; He acts and operates according to the highest wisdom, understanding, and might. He has not left the welfare of the universe up to us and our sinful wills; rather, His good and gracious will works everything out to His good pleasure, and we can know that in His good pleasure we will receive everything we need for hope, purpose, and fulfillment in Him.
What is God for? God is for Himself, and therefore in Christ God is for you. Even in the worst of times, even when your life has been flattened and the mockers of God and the mockers of His people are shouting their insults and lies at full volume, you can have faith that the true God, the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, is your Help and Redeemer. What He chooses nothing can discard; what He predestines nothing can change; what He wills, nothing can sway from His purpose. Trust in Him, for He who is the Creator of the world also raised Jesus Christ from the dead, and He will do for you all His has promised, to the praise of His glory. Amen.
I'M SURE YOU'D HEARD that tornados hit the Oklahoma City area again Friday night. We prayed for the victims during our prayers this morning, for those who were hurt, for those who lost property, for those who lost loved ones. But we know that as sure as this world turns there are going to be tornados in the Midwest in the spring, and sure as that world is fallen and sinful, there will be those who use that fact as an excuse to insult and mock God and those who believe in Him.
If you ever want to get totally fed up with that, go online and read the comments after any news article about any natural disaster. You'll have people writing that tornados and floods and hurricanes prove that God could not exist. If the disaster takes place in the Bible Belt, they'll say with great glee that God must be punishing those stupid Christians, or insist that the disaster shows God can't be relied on, since He didn't come through as expected and protect His believers from loss and harm.
What can you say to such people? Assuming they'd even begin to listen? As believers in the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, we can say that if that's the kind of god they believe in, these scoffers and mockers are right, because that kind of God doesn't exist. If they think God is the Great Vending Machine in the Sky that's there to make sure our lives remain prosperous and comfortable, providing we drop in a few dollars worth of good works from time to time, that's a figment of the human imagination and it should be made fun of.
Atheists and people who believe in other religions have a distorted view of what we Christians think about who God is and what He is for. No surprise. The real problem is that too many Christians-- or people who call themselves Christians-- carry around the same false ideas about God and live their lives according to those false ideas.
It's gotten so bad that studies have shown that the majority of Christian teenagers-- and many, many Christian adults as well, don't really believe in classic Christianity; they hold to a religion that's been called Moralistic Therapeutic Deism. This modern faith says yes, there's a god, of some sort: that's the Deism part. What this god is really like in him or itself doesn't really matter, the thing that matters is that he or it is benevolent and kind and well-meaning towards human beings and wants them to be happy, however they define happiness. If I'm a believer in Moralistic Therapeutic Deism, I'd tell you this deity expects people to be nice and fair to other people, but he pretty much leaves it up to each person to decide what niceness and fairness is. And so when I'm nice and do nice things, I can expect to be rewarded with this god's protection and favor. That's Moralism. And the most desirable way for him to reward and protect me is for him to solve all my problems, get rid of all the trouble, turmoil, and stress in my life, and make my sojourn here on earth comfortable and uncomplicated. That's the Therapeutic part. This god-- this false god-- makes no demands for his own sake; what he's for is to make me feel good about myself. Otherwise, what good is he?
Brothers and sisters, is that what God is for? Is that the deity we should be raising our children to pray to and depend upon? Does the god of Moralistic Therapeutic Deism bear any resemblance to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ? What do the Scriptures say?
The Lord God had a lot to say about Himself in chapter 40 of the prophecy of Isaiah. We read that God is incomparable and unique. He is high and holy. To Him, people are like grasshoppers and the whole expanse of heaven is like a tent you might live in on a camping trip. Governments and rulers reign only as long as He allows them; the mere breath from His mouth sweeps them away like chaff. He marshals the stars and maintains them in their courses; nothing is outside His rulership or beyond His control-- and that would include tornados, floods, and hurricanes.
Does that sound like the spineless god of Moralistic Therapeutic Deism, that deity who is at our beck and call, that we obligate and control by our good works? Not in the least. However, the Lord certainly is benevolent and merciful towards His people Israel. He assures them that their trouble is known to Him. He reminds them that He is the God who gives strength to the weary, even when the young and the strong are collapsing by the roadside. He tells them that those who hope in the Lord will
. . . renew their strength.
They will soar on wings like eagles;
they will run and not grow weary,
they will walk and not be faint.
Is this like the therapeutic relief so many expect from God these days?
No, not really. For as we've seen, the modern expectation is that God is supposed to be good to me for my good. The eternal reality is that God is good for His own glory. And it is not our good, moralistic works He wants, it's putting our hope in Him; that is, our total dependence on His greatness and power.
But maybe that's just the Old Testament talking. Many people will tell you that the God of the Old Testament and the God of the New Testament are two different beings. Or maybe that the Old Testament writers got God wrong, and all this business about His holiness and majesty can be discarded; what we really want to concern ourselves with is His love and affection and how wonderful it makes us feel.
And the New Testament does tell us how much God loves us. But so does the Old. And the Old Testament does tell us about God's glory and majesty. But so does the New. Both parts of God's holy Scriptures tell us who God is and what He is for. And what it all says together might be a surprise to the self-satisfied atheists who comment on news websites and YouTube videos, and to many Christians as well.
What did we read in Paul's letter to the Ephesians? Who is God, and what is He for?
First of all, He is the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, to Whom all praise is due. Jesus Christ the Son of God is the One who died to take away our sins by the express purpose and will of His Father in heaven. No concept of God that leaves out Jesus Christ the God-Man can claim any kind of reality. Beside the triune God of the Scriptures there is no God.
This same God has blessed us in the heavenly realms with every spiritual blessing in Christ. No, we are not promised an easy life on this earth. God never says He will divert tornados to keep His people out of their path, or always let us have the job we want, or grant us continual good health and prosperity on this earth. What He does promise, what He is for, is our sharing in His very nature through Jesus Christ our Lord. He's for us knowing union with Him: tasting a little of it now in this life, but enjoying it perfectly in the life to come.
We who believe in Jesus were chosen for this. Before the creation of the world, St. Paul writes, God chose us-- not to be privileged, not to be perpetually safe and secure, not even to be serene and without turmoil in our minds-- but to be holy and blameless in His sight. I don't know about you, but I know that in myself I am not holy and blameless in the sight of God. I suspect you know the same about yourself. So has God's choice failed, or are we outside His choice? Not at all, for it is in Christ and Christ alone that we lose our guilt before God and deserve to stand in His holy presence, and God has ordained, He has predestined us to be in Christ, to be adopted as His very sons and Jesus' own siblings. Being in Christ! Sharing in His nature and His union with the Father! You can't get more holy and blameless than that.
And what for? God does it all for and according to His good pleasure and will. Just think, God is pleased when His elect people are joined in union with His Son Jesus Christ! But see, it is God's will and pleasure that come first, not ours. If the it were left us to us to determine what would be the highest good for ourselves and the universe, how shabby and shallow that good would be! But God has done everything according to His will, not ours, that His glorious grace might be praised as it deserves.
This grace is not some vague benevolence, it is that salvation He has granted us in Jesus Christ, His beloved Son. It is the redemption we have in Christ's blood and the forgiveness of our sins. The modern world isn't too big on the concept of sin: if people talk about sin at all, they define it as things like eating chocolate or not approving of any and all sexual relationships or praying in a public school. But according to the riches of God's grace lavished on us in His wisdom and understanding, the blood of Christ purchased for us forgiveness of real sins, the ones that had us under God's righteous wrath and kept us from fellowship with Him.
What is God for? God is for working out the mystery of His will-- again, according to His good pleasure. Not just His will to save us but more than that, His will to exalt His Son Jesus Christ to the highest place, bringing all heaven and earth together under the sole headship of Christ.
And yes, God is for us. He is for us in Christ. He is for us because He is first and foremost for Himself, for the purpose of His will. God's purpose for us is that we might be for the praise of His glory. By birth, by sin, by our natural bent we were not for God and we did not want to serve Him. We were for our own glory, and we expected Him, if He existed, to serve us.
But by the power of the gospel preached to us God changed our hearts and turned them away from our own purposes and raised them up to love and appreciate His. God gave us His Holy Spirit so we can know by fellowship with Him that the spiritual blessings promised to us are faithful and secure. God has promised us an inheritance in Christ, and the Spirit is our guarantee that it surely will be ours. When? When all God's chosen possession, His predestined saints, shall have been redeemed.
That day surely will come, and as it does, what is God for? Again, He is for the praise of His glory. If God were an ordinary human like you or me, this would be obnoxious. Insufferable. How full of himself that person is! we'd say. But God is God: High, majestic, holy and incomparable. He is no vague deity whose sole purpose is to tell us what good children we are and make things all better for us. He is worthy of all praise, honor, and glory; He acts and operates according to the highest wisdom, understanding, and might. He has not left the welfare of the universe up to us and our sinful wills; rather, His good and gracious will works everything out to His good pleasure, and we can know that in His good pleasure we will receive everything we need for hope, purpose, and fulfillment in Him.
What is God for? God is for Himself, and therefore in Christ God is for you. Even in the worst of times, even when your life has been flattened and the mockers of God and the mockers of His people are shouting their insults and lies at full volume, you can have faith that the true God, the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, is your Help and Redeemer. What He chooses nothing can discard; what He predestines nothing can change; what He wills, nothing can sway from His purpose. Trust in Him, for He who is the Creator of the world also raised Jesus Christ from the dead, and He will do for you all His has promised, to the praise of His glory. Amen.
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, July 1, 2012
"But They Laughed at Him"
Texts: 1 Corinthians 1:18-25; Mark 5:21-43
PEOPLE LAUGH AT GOD THESE days. How absurd that anyone should believe in a Deity we've probably "just made up in our own heads." We reply that our God could be seen and heard and felt when He lived on earth as the Man Jesus Christ, but the unbelieving world thinks that's a terrific joke. How could a man be God in human flesh?! How could one Man's death deal with the problem of our sins?! Most hilarious of all, where do we Christians get off saying that people have any sin problem in the first place? People laugh at Jesus, and they laugh at us.
Maybe if we could go back in time and walk with Jesus in Roman-occupied Israel, we'd find that nobody laughed at God like that. Everyone would respect Jesus and take Him seriously. After all, Jesus was the Messiah, the Holy One of God. And as His disciples, people would respect us take us seriously, too. No one would dare to laugh, or say that Jesus-- or we ourselves-- was a fool.
But we know that's not true. We know it from our Scripture readings this morning. Just as now, people in the 1st century had no trouble laughing at Jesus and laughing at Christians. Why? Because from this fallen world's point of view, Jesus seemed to go about His work in a very foolish way. He didn't do things the way that was prescribed or expected. Not even the religious people approved of what He did and why He did it. Jesus deliberately went around turning things upside down.
Now, not always. In our reading from St. Mark's gospel, we see Jesus surrounded by a large crowd. That's the way it was supposed to be--the famous rabbi, with the crowds hanging onto His every word. And suddenly through the throng comes the respected Jairus, a ruler of the local synagogue, beseeching Jesus' help. The man's little daughter is dying-- please, Rabbi, come and heal her. Ah, yes, the high and respected ones look up to Jesus. That's right. And Jesus goes with the man to heal his daughter. That's the way it's supposed to be, too. And the pressing crowds enthusiastically come along.
But what's this? Suddenly Jesus stops dead, looks around, and asks, "Who touched my clothes?" Even His disciples think this is an odd thing for Him to say. Good grief, Lord, the people are all crowding against You! Why ask who in particular touched Your clothes? Jesus' modern detractors would say this proves He wasn't really God, because God knows everything, so Jesus should have known who had touched Him. They fail to comprehend what God gave up to become a Man, and so they laugh.
But that day in the crowd by the Sea of Galilee, nobody was laughing. They waited, and out of the crowd crept a woman who fell at Jesus' feet. You can imagine the whispers that would have flown from ear to ear. "Heavens! Isn't that Hannah bat Itzak? Doesn't she have some sort of bleeding trouble?" "How dare she appear in public?" "How dare she touch the Rabbi, even His clothes!" Then, "Blood! Blood! Unclean blood!" Nobody's pressing around Jesus anymore. They've all drawn themselves and their garments back, lest they be rendered ceremonially unclean, just like this afflicted woman.
And under the Old Covenant law they were right. Back then our worthiness to approach God in worship depended upon our following certain rules of ritual cleanliness. Why isn't Jesus following the Law and avoiding this woman? Doesn't He know her history? And even if He didn't before, He does now, because she tells Him of her twelve years of bleeding and suffering and isolation. Does He draw back in horror? No! Jesus looks on her with compassion and says, "Daughter, your faith has healed you. Go in peace and be freed from your suffering." Sorry, Jesus, it doesn't make sense!
Besides, Jesus, what about poor Jairus and his dying child? Even while Jesus was still talking to the woman, men from the synagogue ruler's house came and reported that his daughter was dead. No call for Jesus to come now. Maybe if He'd ignored that unclean creature He would have been on time, but now, forget it.
But Jesus won't forget it. He tells the grieving father, "Don't be afraid; just believe." What an odd thing to say! But Jairus doesn't laugh. He goes with Jesus, along with Peter, James, and John, back to his home where his daughter lies dead. Already at the door the hired mourners are at work, weeping and wailing in honor of the dead child. Jesus, really, isn't it too late?
But our Lord says, "Why all this commotion and wailing? The child is not dead but asleep."
But they laughed at Him. From every reasonable point of view, they had a right to laugh at Him. You didn't need to be a professional mourner in that day to know what a dead body looked like. The girl was dead. Enough with the sick jokes, Rabbi. You make us laugh.
But Jesus isn't working from human reason. He's working from the wisdom of God. He isn't bound by the limitations of human strength, He's filled with the strength of God. Jesus isn't controlled by the powers of death, He Himself is the everlasting Life of God. He can confound all human expectations. Taking the child by the hand, He commands, "Talitha, koum!" or, in English, "Little girl, I say to you, get up!" And this twelve-year-old child gets up, walks around fully alive, and ready for something to eat.
What? Who is this who by the speaking of His word can restore life in what was dead?
It is Jesus Christ, the Son of God and Son of Man. He is the Savior of Israel and hope of the nations, great David's greater Son. He came in fulfillment of all the ancient prophecies, but even those who claimed to be waiting for Him didn't recognize Him when He came and laughed at Him as a fool.
In Jesus' day, good religious Jews were expecting God to act to save them, through a human Messiah. But God chose to come to earth Himself, as the Man Jesus Christ, fully human and fully God. Can our human minds get around how this can be? No, but the mind of God can and did make it happen. And so Jesus lived and served among us, and demonstrated His full humanity by accepting our limitations. He was willing to be like us, getting hungry, thirsty, and tired. He accepted that at times His Father would hide some things from Him, such as the identity of the woman who deliberately touched Him in the crowd. But He was also eternal God, with power over life and death, whose very clothes carried the power to heal those who reached out in faith.
But then Jesus was hung on a cross and killed. Now where was the glorious divine kingdom He was supposed to bring? The Romans mocked and the Jewish authorities scoffed. They laughed at Him as He hung there. Where were all His godlike pretensions now?
But we know what happened on the third day. God the Father vindicated His Son by raising Him from the dead. God had the last laugh. What a reversal! See all the wisdom and disdain of the world turned upside down!
But amazing as the resurrection is, as much as it upsets everything we assume about the way things are supposed to be, the cross of Christ challenges our worldly assumptions even more. For as St. Paul says in his first letter to the Corinthians, to those who are perishing-- that is, to all who do not believe in Jesus Christ-- the message of the cross is foolishness. For what was a Roman cross but a mark of defeat, death, and shame? To be hung on a cross meant disgrace and weakness, the end of everything you stood for and the end of you. But God in Christ took that shameful instrument and made it the only sign of the world's hope, glory, and life. The only sign, I say, because God in His wisdom and power has ordained that only through the cross of Christ can anyone anywhere gain access to Him and enjoy life everlasting.
The unbelieving world laughs at this. It laughed in Paul's day and it laughs in ours. Everybody knows you're in charge of your own salvation, say those who are perishing. First century Greeks insisted that intellectual enlightenment was the way to union with God. The Jews of that day were waiting for Jesus to do a miraculous sign that would come up to their standards. Make all the Romans suddenly drop dead in the streets, perhaps. And in our time, it's common wisdom that if there is a God you please Him by obeying the rules and making sure your good deeds outweigh your bad! You're laughed at if you say otherwise.
But God our Father steadfastly points all mankind to Christ and Him crucified. All the derision, all the disdain of the world cannot change the eternal fact that it's only through the broken body and blood of Christ that anyone at all can be saved. Just as Jesus took the corpse of Jairus' daughter by the hand and called her spirit back into her, so the Holy Spirit of Christ entered into us while we were dead in trespasses and sins. He raised us up in God's strength and enlightens our minds with God's wisdom.
And so, brothers and sisters, the world may laugh at Jesus and it may laugh at you, but let the cross of Christ be your unchanging message and your eternal hope. On this good news we take our stand unshaken, even when so much that is good is being torn down and denigrated, even when laughter at the crucified Christ comes from the heart of the church.
But what if those who laugh and scorn are those we love? What if our friends and family call us fools and worse for trusting a dead and risen God? We do them no favors by compromising God's truth to make them feel better about their worldly wisdom. Stand firm in Christ; love them, pray for them, be always ready to give a reason for the divine hope that is in you. Remember, there was a time when you, too, couldn't believe that Christ's death was enough to save you, maybe a time when you didn't think you needed to be saved. The Holy Spirit made you wise with the wisdom of God; He can raise and enlighten and enliven those you care for, too.
Jesus Christ came to earth as God in human flesh, to die and rise again that we might be raised by the power of God. The Supper here spread confirms this reality to and in us. Come to our Lord's Table and eat and drink unto eternal life. And laugh, brothers and sisters, laugh, no longer in derision, but in holy, exalted, and overflowing joy. Amen.
PEOPLE LAUGH AT GOD THESE days. How absurd that anyone should believe in a Deity we've probably "just made up in our own heads." We reply that our God could be seen and heard and felt when He lived on earth as the Man Jesus Christ, but the unbelieving world thinks that's a terrific joke. How could a man be God in human flesh?! How could one Man's death deal with the problem of our sins?! Most hilarious of all, where do we Christians get off saying that people have any sin problem in the first place? People laugh at Jesus, and they laugh at us.
Maybe if we could go back in time and walk with Jesus in Roman-occupied Israel, we'd find that nobody laughed at God like that. Everyone would respect Jesus and take Him seriously. After all, Jesus was the Messiah, the Holy One of God. And as His disciples, people would respect us take us seriously, too. No one would dare to laugh, or say that Jesus-- or we ourselves-- was a fool.
But we know that's not true. We know it from our Scripture readings this morning. Just as now, people in the 1st century had no trouble laughing at Jesus and laughing at Christians. Why? Because from this fallen world's point of view, Jesus seemed to go about His work in a very foolish way. He didn't do things the way that was prescribed or expected. Not even the religious people approved of what He did and why He did it. Jesus deliberately went around turning things upside down.
Now, not always. In our reading from St. Mark's gospel, we see Jesus surrounded by a large crowd. That's the way it was supposed to be--the famous rabbi, with the crowds hanging onto His every word. And suddenly through the throng comes the respected Jairus, a ruler of the local synagogue, beseeching Jesus' help. The man's little daughter is dying-- please, Rabbi, come and heal her. Ah, yes, the high and respected ones look up to Jesus. That's right. And Jesus goes with the man to heal his daughter. That's the way it's supposed to be, too. And the pressing crowds enthusiastically come along.
But what's this? Suddenly Jesus stops dead, looks around, and asks, "Who touched my clothes?" Even His disciples think this is an odd thing for Him to say. Good grief, Lord, the people are all crowding against You! Why ask who in particular touched Your clothes? Jesus' modern detractors would say this proves He wasn't really God, because God knows everything, so Jesus should have known who had touched Him. They fail to comprehend what God gave up to become a Man, and so they laugh.
But that day in the crowd by the Sea of Galilee, nobody was laughing. They waited, and out of the crowd crept a woman who fell at Jesus' feet. You can imagine the whispers that would have flown from ear to ear. "Heavens! Isn't that Hannah bat Itzak? Doesn't she have some sort of bleeding trouble?" "How dare she appear in public?" "How dare she touch the Rabbi, even His clothes!" Then, "Blood! Blood! Unclean blood!" Nobody's pressing around Jesus anymore. They've all drawn themselves and their garments back, lest they be rendered ceremonially unclean, just like this afflicted woman.
And under the Old Covenant law they were right. Back then our worthiness to approach God in worship depended upon our following certain rules of ritual cleanliness. Why isn't Jesus following the Law and avoiding this woman? Doesn't He know her history? And even if He didn't before, He does now, because she tells Him of her twelve years of bleeding and suffering and isolation. Does He draw back in horror? No! Jesus looks on her with compassion and says, "Daughter, your faith has healed you. Go in peace and be freed from your suffering." Sorry, Jesus, it doesn't make sense!
Besides, Jesus, what about poor Jairus and his dying child? Even while Jesus was still talking to the woman, men from the synagogue ruler's house came and reported that his daughter was dead. No call for Jesus to come now. Maybe if He'd ignored that unclean creature He would have been on time, but now, forget it.
But Jesus won't forget it. He tells the grieving father, "Don't be afraid; just believe." What an odd thing to say! But Jairus doesn't laugh. He goes with Jesus, along with Peter, James, and John, back to his home where his daughter lies dead. Already at the door the hired mourners are at work, weeping and wailing in honor of the dead child. Jesus, really, isn't it too late?
But our Lord says, "Why all this commotion and wailing? The child is not dead but asleep."
But they laughed at Him. From every reasonable point of view, they had a right to laugh at Him. You didn't need to be a professional mourner in that day to know what a dead body looked like. The girl was dead. Enough with the sick jokes, Rabbi. You make us laugh.
But Jesus isn't working from human reason. He's working from the wisdom of God. He isn't bound by the limitations of human strength, He's filled with the strength of God. Jesus isn't controlled by the powers of death, He Himself is the everlasting Life of God. He can confound all human expectations. Taking the child by the hand, He commands, "Talitha, koum!" or, in English, "Little girl, I say to you, get up!" And this twelve-year-old child gets up, walks around fully alive, and ready for something to eat.
What? Who is this who by the speaking of His word can restore life in what was dead?
It is Jesus Christ, the Son of God and Son of Man. He is the Savior of Israel and hope of the nations, great David's greater Son. He came in fulfillment of all the ancient prophecies, but even those who claimed to be waiting for Him didn't recognize Him when He came and laughed at Him as a fool.
In Jesus' day, good religious Jews were expecting God to act to save them, through a human Messiah. But God chose to come to earth Himself, as the Man Jesus Christ, fully human and fully God. Can our human minds get around how this can be? No, but the mind of God can and did make it happen. And so Jesus lived and served among us, and demonstrated His full humanity by accepting our limitations. He was willing to be like us, getting hungry, thirsty, and tired. He accepted that at times His Father would hide some things from Him, such as the identity of the woman who deliberately touched Him in the crowd. But He was also eternal God, with power over life and death, whose very clothes carried the power to heal those who reached out in faith.
But then Jesus was hung on a cross and killed. Now where was the glorious divine kingdom He was supposed to bring? The Romans mocked and the Jewish authorities scoffed. They laughed at Him as He hung there. Where were all His godlike pretensions now?
But we know what happened on the third day. God the Father vindicated His Son by raising Him from the dead. God had the last laugh. What a reversal! See all the wisdom and disdain of the world turned upside down!
But amazing as the resurrection is, as much as it upsets everything we assume about the way things are supposed to be, the cross of Christ challenges our worldly assumptions even more. For as St. Paul says in his first letter to the Corinthians, to those who are perishing-- that is, to all who do not believe in Jesus Christ-- the message of the cross is foolishness. For what was a Roman cross but a mark of defeat, death, and shame? To be hung on a cross meant disgrace and weakness, the end of everything you stood for and the end of you. But God in Christ took that shameful instrument and made it the only sign of the world's hope, glory, and life. The only sign, I say, because God in His wisdom and power has ordained that only through the cross of Christ can anyone anywhere gain access to Him and enjoy life everlasting.
The unbelieving world laughs at this. It laughed in Paul's day and it laughs in ours. Everybody knows you're in charge of your own salvation, say those who are perishing. First century Greeks insisted that intellectual enlightenment was the way to union with God. The Jews of that day were waiting for Jesus to do a miraculous sign that would come up to their standards. Make all the Romans suddenly drop dead in the streets, perhaps. And in our time, it's common wisdom that if there is a God you please Him by obeying the rules and making sure your good deeds outweigh your bad! You're laughed at if you say otherwise.
But God our Father steadfastly points all mankind to Christ and Him crucified. All the derision, all the disdain of the world cannot change the eternal fact that it's only through the broken body and blood of Christ that anyone at all can be saved. Just as Jesus took the corpse of Jairus' daughter by the hand and called her spirit back into her, so the Holy Spirit of Christ entered into us while we were dead in trespasses and sins. He raised us up in God's strength and enlightens our minds with God's wisdom.
And so, brothers and sisters, the world may laugh at Jesus and it may laugh at you, but let the cross of Christ be your unchanging message and your eternal hope. On this good news we take our stand unshaken, even when so much that is good is being torn down and denigrated, even when laughter at the crucified Christ comes from the heart of the church.
But what if those who laugh and scorn are those we love? What if our friends and family call us fools and worse for trusting a dead and risen God? We do them no favors by compromising God's truth to make them feel better about their worldly wisdom. Stand firm in Christ; love them, pray for them, be always ready to give a reason for the divine hope that is in you. Remember, there was a time when you, too, couldn't believe that Christ's death was enough to save you, maybe a time when you didn't think you needed to be saved. The Holy Spirit made you wise with the wisdom of God; He can raise and enlighten and enliven those you care for, too.
Jesus Christ came to earth as God in human flesh, to die and rise again that we might be raised by the power of God. The Supper here spread confirms this reality to and in us. Come to our Lord's Table and eat and drink unto eternal life. And laugh, brothers and sisters, laugh, no longer in derision, but in holy, exalted, and overflowing joy. Amen.
Sunday, November 27, 2011
Last Things First
Texts: Isaiah 64:1-9; Corinthians 1:3-9; Mark 13:24-37
WHAT IS OUR HOPE as Christians? What is the goal and object of our faith?
To hear some people talk, you'd think it was to make us nicer, more fulfilled individuals, with better marriages, families, and careers in this life. And with higher self-esteem, too. In such an understanding of Christianity, the Baby in the manger at Bethlehem is a nice encouragement, but the Son of Man coming again to judge all humanity is not to be thought of at all. After all, in this world we're taught to put first things first. But the Apostle Paul, in his first letter to the Corinthians, isn't interested in the teaching of this world. After he greets the saints, about the first subject he mentions is the second coming of their Lord and ours, Jesus Christ. Hear what he says in verses 7 and 8:
. . . [Y]ou do not lack any spiritual gift as you eagerly wait for our Lord Jesus Christ to be revealed. He will keep you strong to the end, so that you will be blameless on the day of our Lord Jesus Christ.
The church in Corinth was eagerly waiting for Jesus Christ to be revealed. And so they stood in the tradition of the true people of God, for this is the object of our Christian faith: that the great day of the Lord will surely come, when Christ will return as King, the heavens and the earth will be made new, and we will enjoy the kingdom of God in all its perfection. These things-- The end of the age, the second coming of Christ, the Judgement, and so on-- are known as the Last Things. And St. Mark, St. Paul, St. Peter, St. John, and all the New Testament writers follow their Master Jesus in urging us Christians to keep Last Things first.
But why?
Because when we keep our focus on the second coming of Christ, we keep our eyes on God's goal for all creation, and when we keep our eyes on God's goal for all creation, we maintain and strengthen our hope in Christ, even in the midst of the troubles and worries of this world.
And we need hope in this world. Not the hope that consists in wishful thinking, but the firm and sure hope that depends upon a promise made by Someone we can trust now and into all eternity. In our Gospel reading from St. Mark, our Lord Jesus declares that the time will come when
. . . men will see the Son of Man coming in clouds with great power and glory. And he will send his angels and gather his elect from the four winds, from the ends of the earth to the ends of the heavens.
Jesus calls Himself the Son of Man in this discourse. And thus the disciples know that He is the coming King the prophet Daniel saw in his vision of the Last Things in Daniel 7. But more than that, the title "Son of Man" tells us that it will be His own human Self, Immanuel, the Child born of Mary who rose from the tomb, who will sit on the throne of God. And He is God, for the angels are His, and it is His to command them to "gather his elect" from wherever they may be. That's us, who by the grace of God, have been called by the Holy Spirit into faith in our crucified and risen Savior, all of us in every time and place who have been washed clean by His blood.
But not all of humanity shares this hope. Not everyone knows that their eternal happiness depends on their keeping Last Things first.
Some don't believe there will be any Last Things at all. I heard an interview the other night with a man they called an expert on the subject of the Apocalypse. He admitted that cultures all over the world for the past three thousand years have had prophecies and stories that someday the world as we know it will be destroyed and then made new. But, he said, all that was false; it was never going to happen. No, he said, all talk about the end times is just a way for priests and rulers and others in authority to keep people focussed on some future state of perfection, instead of working and maybe fighting and rebelling to make things perfect here and now.
What do we say to such a man and those who believe like him? Do we let him undermine our hope, so we stop keeping Last Things first? He quoted the famous atheist Richard Dawkins, to the effect that it's only some outgrown evolutionary stage that makes people look forward to a end to this age and the birth of one that is new. Do we tie ourselves in knots trying to prove Richard Dawkins wrong? There are people who have the gift of apologetics, and God strengthen them as they exercise it. But there's something even better we can show. When we speak of the second advent of our Lord and the end of this age, we're not just passing along some gut feeling or old tribal legend. No, we are quoting the very words of the Son of God. This Man told His disciples that He would be crucified by the authorities during His next visit to Jerusalem, and that three days later, He would be raised from the dead. You could say it was inevitable that Jesus would be crucified sooner or later. But no mere man, not even the wisest and cleverest, can say that He will rise again-- and actually do it. It is not in the power of any ordinary man to make such a thing happen.
But Jesus our Lord foretold His resurrection and it did happen, not in myth, not in legend, but in real history, under the authority of a Roman bureaucrat named Pontius Pilate. When Someone like that tells us that He certainly will return and that by His power death and hell will flee away, you can believe Him. Heaven and earth will pass away, but His words will never pass away.
But others, while they may believe this world will end someday, aren't looking forward to it in hope. They can't imagine a better existence than they might achieve in this present age, and the idea of living in fellowship with the Son of God means nothing to them. Why would they keep Last Things first? Any second advent of Christ would ruin their whole day!
And indeed, when we think of our sin, and the judgement to come on the world, how should creatures like us hope and pray for the day of the Lord? In Isaiah 64 God's people plead that He would come save them in their day of distress.
Oh, that you would rend the heavens and come down,
that the mountains would tremble before you!
They look forward to the Lord taking vengeance on His enemies and theirs--
[C]ome down to make your name known to your enemies
and cause the nations to quake before you!
But there's a problem. God's people have been acting like His enemies themselves. True,
[the Lord] comes to the help of those who gladly do right,
who remember your ways.
But Israel has not gladly done right. They've continued to sin against Him. "How then," Isaiah asks in behalf of the nation, "can we be saved?"
What do you do when the One who is your only hope is also the One you most need to fear? Not because God is some kind of abusive father, but because we have been like adult children who have taken advantage of and robbed and harmed and disgraced Him. For know this, this passage in Isaiah is not simply about an incident in the history of ancient Israel, it also describes our position before God when we forget Him and go our own way. In our selfishness and idolatry even our attempts at righteousness are like filthy rags. How can we who neglect to call on the name of the Lord, who fail to lay hold on God and His goodness find hope in the coming of Christ? Why should we want to put Last Things first?
Because the Lord our God is our Father. He is our Father because like a potter He has formed and made us. But even more, He is our Father because He has remade us in the image of His Son Jesus Christ. To cite St. Paul in 1 Corinthians again, thanksgiving can be made for us because of the grace that has been given us in Christ Jesus. In our sins we were ragged and filthy, we blew away like dried-up leaves. But in Christ we "have been enriched in every way." Perhaps not in the material ways this passing world values, but in speaking and knowledge, in ways that build one another up in the faith of the Gospel of Christ.
Or have we? This was true of the Corinthians. Whatever problems they may have had in other areas, they recognised and used the spiritual gifts God had given them. Paul is saying that God the Father will keep them strong and faithful in the use of these gifts, so they might be blameless on the day of our Lord Jesus.
God has given us gifts by the Holy Spirit to serve Him in the Church as well, till Christ comes. You do not need to take a spiritual gift inventory to find out what yours is. Whatever the Holy Spirit is urging you to do, and you know it's the Holy Spirit's urging because it is confirmed by the Word of God, do it!
This is what our Lord means by saying in Mark that we're like servants a master going on a trip has put in charge of various jobs to do while he's away. So let's do them! Let's put Last Things first by loving our neighbor with food and clothing and shelter. Let us tell them that Jesus died for them just like He did for us, and invite them to church where they can hear the saving good news of eternal life in Him. Let us do our daily work in ways that benefit others and glorify God, the Master Workman over all. Let us live holy and gracious lives in the midst of this perverted and wicked world, so that when Jesus comes again we will have no cause to feel ashamed.
Jesus says, "Keep watch!" So live the life He has given you on earth to His praise and glory, always with an eye open and an ear tuned to His footstep at the door. He may come tomorrow; He may for His good purpose delay another thousand years. But it is the promise of Christ's second advent that gives all our work in this world its meaning and gives our earthly existence its hope. This life is not one endless grind of things going on the way they always have; it has a purpose and a goal. Christ came into this world as the Baby of Bethlehem to bear our sins and keep God's righteous commands for us the way we never could. He will come again as the glorious Son of Man to gather His own that we may be with Him forever.
Live in this blessed hope. By His Spirit's power, serve Him in all you do. And always remember to put the Last Things first.
To hear some people talk, you'd think it was to make us nicer, more fulfilled individuals, with better marriages, families, and careers in this life. And with higher self-esteem, too. In such an understanding of Christianity, the Baby in the manger at Bethlehem is a nice encouragement, but the Son of Man coming again to judge all humanity is not to be thought of at all. After all, in this world we're taught to put first things first. But the Apostle Paul, in his first letter to the Corinthians, isn't interested in the teaching of this world. After he greets the saints, about the first subject he mentions is the second coming of their Lord and ours, Jesus Christ. Hear what he says in verses 7 and 8:
. . . [Y]ou do not lack any spiritual gift as you eagerly wait for our Lord Jesus Christ to be revealed. He will keep you strong to the end, so that you will be blameless on the day of our Lord Jesus Christ.
The church in Corinth was eagerly waiting for Jesus Christ to be revealed. And so they stood in the tradition of the true people of God, for this is the object of our Christian faith: that the great day of the Lord will surely come, when Christ will return as King, the heavens and the earth will be made new, and we will enjoy the kingdom of God in all its perfection. These things-- The end of the age, the second coming of Christ, the Judgement, and so on-- are known as the Last Things. And St. Mark, St. Paul, St. Peter, St. John, and all the New Testament writers follow their Master Jesus in urging us Christians to keep Last Things first.
But why?
Because when we keep our focus on the second coming of Christ, we keep our eyes on God's goal for all creation, and when we keep our eyes on God's goal for all creation, we maintain and strengthen our hope in Christ, even in the midst of the troubles and worries of this world.
And we need hope in this world. Not the hope that consists in wishful thinking, but the firm and sure hope that depends upon a promise made by Someone we can trust now and into all eternity. In our Gospel reading from St. Mark, our Lord Jesus declares that the time will come when
. . . men will see the Son of Man coming in clouds with great power and glory. And he will send his angels and gather his elect from the four winds, from the ends of the earth to the ends of the heavens.
Jesus calls Himself the Son of Man in this discourse. And thus the disciples know that He is the coming King the prophet Daniel saw in his vision of the Last Things in Daniel 7. But more than that, the title "Son of Man" tells us that it will be His own human Self, Immanuel, the Child born of Mary who rose from the tomb, who will sit on the throne of God. And He is God, for the angels are His, and it is His to command them to "gather his elect" from wherever they may be. That's us, who by the grace of God, have been called by the Holy Spirit into faith in our crucified and risen Savior, all of us in every time and place who have been washed clean by His blood.
But not all of humanity shares this hope. Not everyone knows that their eternal happiness depends on their keeping Last Things first.
Some don't believe there will be any Last Things at all. I heard an interview the other night with a man they called an expert on the subject of the Apocalypse. He admitted that cultures all over the world for the past three thousand years have had prophecies and stories that someday the world as we know it will be destroyed and then made new. But, he said, all that was false; it was never going to happen. No, he said, all talk about the end times is just a way for priests and rulers and others in authority to keep people focussed on some future state of perfection, instead of working and maybe fighting and rebelling to make things perfect here and now.
What do we say to such a man and those who believe like him? Do we let him undermine our hope, so we stop keeping Last Things first? He quoted the famous atheist Richard Dawkins, to the effect that it's only some outgrown evolutionary stage that makes people look forward to a end to this age and the birth of one that is new. Do we tie ourselves in knots trying to prove Richard Dawkins wrong? There are people who have the gift of apologetics, and God strengthen them as they exercise it. But there's something even better we can show. When we speak of the second advent of our Lord and the end of this age, we're not just passing along some gut feeling or old tribal legend. No, we are quoting the very words of the Son of God. This Man told His disciples that He would be crucified by the authorities during His next visit to Jerusalem, and that three days later, He would be raised from the dead. You could say it was inevitable that Jesus would be crucified sooner or later. But no mere man, not even the wisest and cleverest, can say that He will rise again-- and actually do it. It is not in the power of any ordinary man to make such a thing happen.
But Jesus our Lord foretold His resurrection and it did happen, not in myth, not in legend, but in real history, under the authority of a Roman bureaucrat named Pontius Pilate. When Someone like that tells us that He certainly will return and that by His power death and hell will flee away, you can believe Him. Heaven and earth will pass away, but His words will never pass away.
But others, while they may believe this world will end someday, aren't looking forward to it in hope. They can't imagine a better existence than they might achieve in this present age, and the idea of living in fellowship with the Son of God means nothing to them. Why would they keep Last Things first? Any second advent of Christ would ruin their whole day!
And indeed, when we think of our sin, and the judgement to come on the world, how should creatures like us hope and pray for the day of the Lord? In Isaiah 64 God's people plead that He would come save them in their day of distress.
Oh, that you would rend the heavens and come down,
that the mountains would tremble before you!
They look forward to the Lord taking vengeance on His enemies and theirs--
[C]ome down to make your name known to your enemies
and cause the nations to quake before you!
But there's a problem. God's people have been acting like His enemies themselves. True,
[the Lord] comes to the help of those who gladly do right,
who remember your ways.
But Israel has not gladly done right. They've continued to sin against Him. "How then," Isaiah asks in behalf of the nation, "can we be saved?"
What do you do when the One who is your only hope is also the One you most need to fear? Not because God is some kind of abusive father, but because we have been like adult children who have taken advantage of and robbed and harmed and disgraced Him. For know this, this passage in Isaiah is not simply about an incident in the history of ancient Israel, it also describes our position before God when we forget Him and go our own way. In our selfishness and idolatry even our attempts at righteousness are like filthy rags. How can we who neglect to call on the name of the Lord, who fail to lay hold on God and His goodness find hope in the coming of Christ? Why should we want to put Last Things first?
Because the Lord our God is our Father. He is our Father because like a potter He has formed and made us. But even more, He is our Father because He has remade us in the image of His Son Jesus Christ. To cite St. Paul in 1 Corinthians again, thanksgiving can be made for us because of the grace that has been given us in Christ Jesus. In our sins we were ragged and filthy, we blew away like dried-up leaves. But in Christ we "have been enriched in every way." Perhaps not in the material ways this passing world values, but in speaking and knowledge, in ways that build one another up in the faith of the Gospel of Christ.
Or have we? This was true of the Corinthians. Whatever problems they may have had in other areas, they recognised and used the spiritual gifts God had given them. Paul is saying that God the Father will keep them strong and faithful in the use of these gifts, so they might be blameless on the day of our Lord Jesus.
God has given us gifts by the Holy Spirit to serve Him in the Church as well, till Christ comes. You do not need to take a spiritual gift inventory to find out what yours is. Whatever the Holy Spirit is urging you to do, and you know it's the Holy Spirit's urging because it is confirmed by the Word of God, do it!
This is what our Lord means by saying in Mark that we're like servants a master going on a trip has put in charge of various jobs to do while he's away. So let's do them! Let's put Last Things first by loving our neighbor with food and clothing and shelter. Let us tell them that Jesus died for them just like He did for us, and invite them to church where they can hear the saving good news of eternal life in Him. Let us do our daily work in ways that benefit others and glorify God, the Master Workman over all. Let us live holy and gracious lives in the midst of this perverted and wicked world, so that when Jesus comes again we will have no cause to feel ashamed.
Jesus says, "Keep watch!" So live the life He has given you on earth to His praise and glory, always with an eye open and an ear tuned to His footstep at the door. He may come tomorrow; He may for His good purpose delay another thousand years. But it is the promise of Christ's second advent that gives all our work in this world its meaning and gives our earthly existence its hope. This life is not one endless grind of things going on the way they always have; it has a purpose and a goal. Christ came into this world as the Baby of Bethlehem to bear our sins and keep God's righteous commands for us the way we never could. He will come again as the glorious Son of Man to gather His own that we may be with Him forever.
Live in this blessed hope. By His Spirit's power, serve Him in all you do. And always remember to put the Last Things first.
Sunday, May 4, 2008
Who Can Accept It?
Oh! Do I mean May Day, when labor unions in other countries and people of a certain political persuasion like to march in parades and celebrate their power and ideology?
Noooo . . . !
Maybe I’m talking about the old-fashioned May Day, when young men and maidens dance around the Maypole and you leave baskets of flowers secretly at your neighbors’ doors?
Noooo . . . !
Well, last Thursday was the National Day of Prayer. Am I asking how you celebrated that?
Closer, but still, no.
I’d like to know how you celebrated this past Thursday, which was Ascension Day.
Or did you miss it altogether? If you did, you’re not alone. A lot of Christians, maybe most of us, especially we Protestants, tend to overlook celebrating the Ascension of our Lord Jesus Christ.
It’s not just that Ascension Day always comes on a Thursday. It’s also that the Ascension of our Lord itself is a hard idea to grab hold of, hard to get our minds around. We’re like the disciples out there on the Mount of Olives, gaping up into heaven where our Lord has gone, totally unable to understand what has happened and what it all means.
But it’s not God’s will that we should be left wondering what the Ascension of Christ means, or what it means for us. He has given us His Word that it means more for us than we can ever know.
Here again is what the Scripture says in the Acts of the Apostles:
‘So when they met together, they asked him, "Lord, are you at this time going to restore the kingdom to Israel?"
‘He said to them: "It is not for you to know the times or dates the Father has set by his own authority. But you will receive power when the Holy Spirit comes on you; and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem, and in all Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the earth."
After he said this, he was taken up before their very eyes, and a cloud hid him from their sight.’
Some skeptics claim the Ascension was just a plot device made up by the early Christians to get Jesus "off the stage," so to speak. I’d like to boldly assert to you today that "getting Jesus off the stage" of this earth in such a manner was entirely necessary. And that it was according to God's plan for our salvation.
For the physical Ascension of Christ shows that Jesus was a real Human Being with real flesh. He wasn’t a ghost, He wasn’t a phantom, He wasn’t an idealized figment of the disciples’ imagination. Even after He rose again, Jesus was a Man you could see and touch and sit down and enjoy a meal of bread and fish with. He wasn’t going to fade away, or peter out, or dematerialize, He physically had to leave.
His ascension also assures us that Jesus remains a human being, and He remains so for us.
A few years ago I was sitting in a college dining hall eating lunch, and we got to talking about theology. A younger student asked me, "What did Jesus do with His human body when He went back to heaven?"
And by the Holy Spirit-- it had to be the Holy Spirit--it hit me like a ton of bricks: He took it with Him! Our Lord Jesus Christ was taken up to His Father the way the disciples saw it happen, because the human body He took on when He was conceived in the womb of the Virgin Mary, the body that hung on the cross, the body that was raised and glorified on the third day, Jesus keeps forever! What’s more, He keeps that body for our sake, so that He can always be our Mediator with God. Right now there is a glorious Being of human flesh and blood, a deathless Man sitting on the throne of the universe!
What's more, Jesus taking His physical glorified body into heaven means that human flesh is acceptable in the sight, in the presence of almighty God! One day we, too, will be raised with bodies like the glorified body Jesus now has. And we will be able to stand in the presence of God in those resurrected physical bodies, acceptable to Him!
How Jesus took His human body with Him is something we cannot know. But God allowed the disciples to witness enough to know that it was true. God sent His angels, the two men dressed in white Luke speaks of, to confirm to them that just as Jesus went bodily into heaven, He will return bodily as well.
The Ascension of our Lord is a fitting close to His earthly ministry. But it isn’t merely that. It’s also the final sign and miracle of that ministry. It puts the seal on Who He is and His love and grace towards us all.
A man who’d merely been reanimated, like in some TV show, would have to remain on this earth. The Son of God who has been raised from the dead, He has the right and ability to return in the flesh to heaven.
In John’s gospel, we read part of a sermon Jesus preached in the synagogue in Capernaum, shortly after He’d fed the 5,000 on the other side of the Sea of Galilee. The true bread of life, He tells the people, was not the loaves he’d broken for them on the hillside. It wasn’t the manna that God gave the people of Israel in the wilderness centuries before. The true bread of life is Jesus’ own flesh.
"Very truly I tell you," Jesus says to us, "unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink his blood, you have no life in you. Whoever eats my flesh and drinks my blood has eternal life, and I will raise them up at the last day."
St. John records that many of the disciples were offended by this. They said, "This is a hard teaching. Who can accept it?" They knew Jesus wasn’t advocating cannibalism-- heaven forbid! What bothered them was His claim that His human flesh was the means, the conduit of eternal life. They rebelled at the idea that this ordinary-looking Man claimed, as He said in verse 57, to have been sent by the Father in heaven. Jesus asserted that He participated in the eternal, undying life of God, and He promised to give that eternal life to anyone who participated in His flesh.
These disciples, the ones who turned back from following Him, couldn’t believe it. They refused to believe it. The Rabbi Jesus of Nazareth? Sent directly from heaven by Almighty God? Preposterous! Him? The Giver and channel of eternal life? Unthinkable!
Jesus didn’t back down. He brought their grumbling into the open and said, "Does this offend you? Then what if you see the Son of Man ascend to where he was before!"
Jesus promises the sign of His Ascension as proof that He is who He says He is. It’s a guarantee that He can do what He says He can do, when He claims that His flesh will give us eternal life.
Who is He?
He is the eternally-begotten Son of the Father, co-creator of all that is, eternal Wisdom from on high, almighty God. Jesus came from heaven and had every right to go back there.
Jesus Christ the Son of Man returned bodily to His Father in heaven, and by doing that, He proved that all He did was done in the power of God, the power He shared with the Father before anything was made.
What has He promised He can do?
He’s promised to give us eternal life through His flesh, in the power of the Holy Spirit.
We might think Jesus is speaking of Holy Communion in this sixth chapter of John. Not quite. Actually, Holy Communion and Jesus’ words here in John 6 are both speaking about the same reality: the life-giving power of the body and blood of our Lord Jesus Christ, broken on the cross for our sins and risen for our restoration. Jesus says that if we want eternal life, we have to feast on Him, even-- as the Greek words say-- munch on Him, chew on Him, take Him into us totally. There’s no other way to have eternal life.
But how can we feed on Christ? Well, St. Augustine was one of the great Church fathers. Centuries and centuries ago he came up with a phrase that’s hard to improve upon. He said, "Believe, and you have eaten."
"Believe, and you have eaten." Believe that Christ’s body was broken for you, to turn aside the wrath of God that you deserved. Believe that His blood was poured out like wine to refresh your soul and make you new and clean in the sight of God. Believe, and feast upon the gift of Himself that He gives.
Jesus ascended into heaven to make these great and precious gifts available to you, right now. On earth, even as a resurrected Man, Jesus could only be local. He could only be with one group of his disciples at a time. But as He tells us later on in John’s gospel, "It is for your good that I am going away. Unless I go, the Counselor [that is, the Holy Spirit] will not come to you; but if I go, I will send him to you."
As long as Jesus remained physically on this earth, the power and presence of the Holy Spirit remained focussed in Him. But we need His Spirit in us, working in our bodies, our minds, our souls! As Jesus says in verse 63 of our text, "The Spirit gives life; the flesh [that is, mere human effort on our part] counts for nothing." Jesus had to ascend to where He was before to make the life-giving power of His crucified and glorified flesh available to all people everywhere.
This is the will of God the Father in heaven. For as Jesus says in verse 65, no one can come to [Him] unless the Father has enabled him. When the Holy Spirit brings us to feast on our Lord Jesus Christ, God the Father is glorified in His Son.
Which for you and me means that God wants you to receive the food that is His Son’s crucified body. He wants you to drink your fill of the wine that is Jesus’ blood. He is eager for you to receive the eternal life that comes from the God-Man Jesus Christ, alone. God wants to lift you up to the throne of grace, where Jesus sits even now interceding for you. God wants you to participate in the community of joy and fulfilment that is the one holy, blessed, and undivided Trinity, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. God gives you all these gifts and brings you into His love by Jesus Christ, His ascended Son, true God and true Man forever more.
Your ascended Lord is your food and drink, and He will never be taken away from you. Whatever happens in your life, whatever hardship or suffering you may go through; even if you should experience physical hunger, you will never lack what you truly need; you will never be famished or forsaken. Jesus says to you, "Whoever eats my flesh and drinks my blood has eternal life, and I will raise them up at the last day."
The sad thing is, even today people reject Jesus, the Bread of heaven. They say, "This teaching about Jesus being the only way to eternal life, it’s too hard. It’s narrow and intolerant. Who can accept it?"
The truth is, unless the Father changes our hearts and draws us to Himself, none of us can accept it. In our own sinfulness, acting from our own corrupt flesh, we turn our backs on the Lord who would save us. But Jesus Christ Himself nourishes and revives us by the death and resurrection of His human body. He raises us to heaven by His glorious ascension. He enables us to accept His word and feed on Him in Spirit and truth.
Accept His word of life now, by the power of the Holy Spirit, working in you, giving you life. Accept it by the mercy of God the Father, who calls you to Himself. Accept it in the strength of your Lord Jesus Christ who died, rose, and ascended into heaven for you. Feed on Him with thanksgiving, for He offers you His flesh as real food and His blood as real drink.
Simon Peter said, "Lord, to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal life! We believe and know that you are the Holy One of God!"
No other Lord. No other Bread. No other Life. Christ alone is the Son of God and Son of Man who has ascended where He was before! Believe in Him and eat. Be raised up with Him and live. And give Him praise and glory, with God the Father in the unity of the Holy Spirit, now and forever. Amen.
__________________________
Preached for Ascension Sunday, 2008
Preached for Ascension Sunday, 2008
Sunday, April 8, 2007
Why It Matters What Happened
Texts: 1 Corinthians 1-8, 12-20; Luke 19:28-44
IT NEVER FAILS. It just never fails. We just CAN’T get to Easter without some so-called expert coming up with some amazing new so-called evidence that Jesus really wasn’t who the Bible says He is and that He didn’t really rise from the dead.
This year it came early. This year, we got the TV program alleging that archaeologists had actually found the dusty bones of our Savior-- and the bones of His family as well. That’s the truth, according to film makers Simcha Jacobovici and James Cameron: Jesus’ bones are going down to dust in a rock-cut tomb outside Jerusalem, along with the bones of His wife (Mary Magdalene, of course!) and His mother and His brothers and His cousins and His aunts.
Yeah, right. And I’m the Easter Bunny.
True, legitimate scholars wasted no time proving Cameron and Jacobovici wrong. It’s true there’s a tomb they found back in 1980 with common names like "Yeshua" and "Mariam" and "Yose" on them. But the evidence doesn’t fit what archaeologists know about how burials were done with various classes of people back in Jesus’ day. And it contradicts what we know about Jesus and His earthly family from the Gospels. And the Gospels are the earliest eye-witness accounts. They’re what scholars call "primary sources," and if an historian or other scholar won’t pay attention to primary sources, he’s no historian or true scholar at all.
James Cameron and Simcha Jacobovici aren’t historians or scholars. They don’t even claim to be. They’re film makers. But they still wanted people around the world to believe their story about Jesus never being raised from the dead, about Jesus’ body still being in the tomb.
Does that shock you? It shouldn’t. It’s just unbelievers acting like unbelievers.
We could have a real good time this morning going over all the reasons why Cameron and Jacobovici are wrong. If you want to know about that, I can put you in touch with some resources that prove their conclusions are in error. But today, on this glorious Feast of the Resurrection, let’s look instead at why anyone would want to prove Jesus never rose from the dead, and then why it matters so much to us that He really did.
In our reading from 1 Corinthians 15, St. Paul tells us that Christ’s death and resurrection are of first importance to us and our Christian faith. If Jesus is not risen from the dead, we’re telling lies about God to say He was, and God’s wrath will be upon us. If Jesus is not risen, our faith is futile and we are still in our sins.
. . . . Oh, yes. There it is. That annoying four-letter word: "Sins." Jesus didn’t die and rise to prove He could, He died to pay the terrible price for our sins and He rose to give us changed, new, godly lives. His death was a thunderous judgement upon the selfishness, the greed, the lust, the unrighteous anger, the idolatry of every last one of us. And His resurrection life given to us is proof that we all need to change. The lives we got when our mothers birthed us aren’t good enough for God. We have to have the risen life of Jesus Christ in us, or be forever condemned.
But it’s not just obvious unbelievers like Cameron and Jacobovici. Before the Holy Spirit brings us to Christ, we all resent being told we’re sinners. We all reject the idea that we have to be given a new life, or else die. It’s of first importance to all the unbelieving world to reject the truth and power of the resurrection and try to prove the New Testament wrong. It would allow them to go on thinking they’re okay just the way they are. It allows them to hang onto their self-image as wonderful people.
But wishing won’t make it so. As St. Paul says, "Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures." Our sins could only be covered by the blood of God’s own innocent Son. And, "He was raised on the third day according to the Scriptures." Eternal life for us could only come from Him. The world may not choose to believe it, but, as the Holy Spirit says, "Christ has indeed been raised from the dead, the firstfruits of those who have fallen asleep."
In St. Luke’s account of that first Resurrection morning, we read that Peter and the rest of the disciples didn’t believe the Good News the women brought. Peter went to the tomb anyway, just in case. But when he saw it was empty, he still didn’t believe. He just went away, wondering to himself what had happened.
It hits me that if that’s all the Gospels had to record, it would make sense for us to try to find the tomb of Jesus Christ-- though if Christ is not risen, nobody today would even care or know about Him any more. Why believe the women? In Jesus’ day, their testimony women would have counted for nothing in a court of law. Maybe they were just deluded! And an empty tomb and folded graveclothes are not conclusive proof that a very dead Man has been raised bodily from the grave.
But we know the story does not end there. When we read this history in St. Luke, we have that delicious sensation of knowing more than the people in that long-ago garden did. We want to say, "Peter! Peter! We can tell you what happened! Jesus really is risen! Just wait! In a few minutes you’ll meet Him face to face, yourself! In a few hours, He’ll come and greet you and all the disciples in person! Rejoice in what has happened, Peter! Christ is risen indeed!"
An empty tomb that morning can be argued against. But Jesus appeared alive among them, time after time. He appeared to Peter, then to the Twelve, then later at one time to over five hundred reliable witnesses, most of whom were still alive when Paul wrote 1 Corinthians in AD 55. You can believe them and the accounts they left behind. If you don’t believe them, you may as well not believe anything that history tells us.
I know there are people cannot yet believe that Jesus has been raised. They don’t want to be cheated or fall for something that might not be true. They want reliable proof, and they’re willing to be shown it.
But if you positively will not believe the word of Scripture, very likely it matters to you that what happened that day was not the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead. Your self-esteem; your whole sense of self depend on it not being true.
But even more it matters to us Christians that He rose that day.
If Christ were not raised, what are we doing here? You want to do nice things for your fellow humans? Go join the Kiwanas Club! You want to embark on a campaign of personal moral improvement or strengthen your marriage? Read any book by Dr. Laura Schlesinger! The Church-- all of us gathered here today and all of us gathered in the Spirit throughout the world-- the Church isn’t about making us nice, helpful, prosperous, fulfilled people! It’s about proclaiming the Good News of Jesus Christ risen from the dead. It’s about bringing new birth to others and together living lives that will prepare us to live with Him forever in Eternity. If the Christ you worship is not risen, He can’t help you after you die. For as Paul says, "If only for this life we have hope in Christ, we are to be pitied beyond all men." If Jesus is not risen, give it up! Quit the church! Why knock yourself out to be helpful and good? You’ll just moulder in the grave anyway!
But Christ has indeed been raised from the dead, the firstfruits of those who have fallen asleep. Jesus’ physical resurrection gives us a free sample of what we’re going to get when we rise from the dead and get our new bodies, too. More than that, Christ’s physical resurrection is the first portion of a glorious offering He’s going to make to His God and our God, His Father and our Father. He offered those firstfruits going on two thousand years ago. The rest of the offering will be lifted up to God when we-- all we who believe in His name-- are raised up bodily at the Last Day, when we will be just like Him and God will accept us as worthy in His sight.
Our hope is not just for this world, it is also for the world to come. It matters deeply that we can trust with our minds as well as with our hearts that Jesus Christ is risen, indeed.
And if it matters to us, it matters more to Almighty God. For that is really why it matters what happened that April morning around 30 AD. The resurrection of Christ glorifies His Father in heaven. Our resurrection with Christ displays God’s love, honor, and grace. It brings Him eternal praise. It vindicates His righteousness and utterly defeats Death and the Devil, our enemy and His.
The resurrection of Jesus Christ is for us. But ultimately, it’s about God. And so we give our Father glory, honor, and praise for what He has done for us in our Savior Jesus Christ. We renounce all sinful ways that contradict the new life He has given us through His Son. We pray diligently for lost souls like James Cameron and Simcha Jacobovici, and especially for unbelievers who may be our co-workers, our neighbors, or members of our own families, that Christ’s resurrection light will dawn upon them, and they, too, will be saved. And we look forward to the great Day when our own bodies will be transformed to be like the resurrection body of Jesus Christ; to whom with the Holy Spirit and God the Father be all power, riches, wisdom, and strength, glory, honor, and blessing. Alleluia, amen!
[Preached at the main service, the Feast of the Resurrection, A.D. 2007]

This year it came early. This year, we got the TV program alleging that archaeologists had actually found the dusty bones of our Savior-- and the bones of His family as well. That’s the truth, according to film makers Simcha Jacobovici and James Cameron: Jesus’ bones are going down to dust in a rock-cut tomb outside Jerusalem, along with the bones of His wife (Mary Magdalene, of course!) and His mother and His brothers and His cousins and His aunts.
Yeah, right. And I’m the Easter Bunny.
True, legitimate scholars wasted no time proving Cameron and Jacobovici wrong. It’s true there’s a tomb they found back in 1980 with common names like "Yeshua" and "Mariam" and "Yose" on them. But the evidence doesn’t fit what archaeologists know about how burials were done with various classes of people back in Jesus’ day. And it contradicts what we know about Jesus and His earthly family from the Gospels. And the Gospels are the earliest eye-witness accounts. They’re what scholars call "primary sources," and if an historian or other scholar won’t pay attention to primary sources, he’s no historian or true scholar at all.
James Cameron and Simcha Jacobovici aren’t historians or scholars. They don’t even claim to be. They’re film makers. But they still wanted people around the world to believe their story about Jesus never being raised from the dead, about Jesus’ body still being in the tomb.
Does that shock you? It shouldn’t. It’s just unbelievers acting like unbelievers.
We could have a real good time this morning going over all the reasons why Cameron and Jacobovici are wrong. If you want to know about that, I can put you in touch with some resources that prove their conclusions are in error. But today, on this glorious Feast of the Resurrection, let’s look instead at why anyone would want to prove Jesus never rose from the dead, and then why it matters so much to us that He really did.
In our reading from 1 Corinthians 15, St. Paul tells us that Christ’s death and resurrection are of first importance to us and our Christian faith. If Jesus is not risen from the dead, we’re telling lies about God to say He was, and God’s wrath will be upon us. If Jesus is not risen, our faith is futile and we are still in our sins.
. . . . Oh, yes. There it is. That annoying four-letter word: "Sins." Jesus didn’t die and rise to prove He could, He died to pay the terrible price for our sins and He rose to give us changed, new, godly lives. His death was a thunderous judgement upon the selfishness, the greed, the lust, the unrighteous anger, the idolatry of every last one of us. And His resurrection life given to us is proof that we all need to change. The lives we got when our mothers birthed us aren’t good enough for God. We have to have the risen life of Jesus Christ in us, or be forever condemned.
But it’s not just obvious unbelievers like Cameron and Jacobovici. Before the Holy Spirit brings us to Christ, we all resent being told we’re sinners. We all reject the idea that we have to be given a new life, or else die. It’s of first importance to all the unbelieving world to reject the truth and power of the resurrection and try to prove the New Testament wrong. It would allow them to go on thinking they’re okay just the way they are. It allows them to hang onto their self-image as wonderful people.
But wishing won’t make it so. As St. Paul says, "Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures." Our sins could only be covered by the blood of God’s own innocent Son. And, "He was raised on the third day according to the Scriptures." Eternal life for us could only come from Him. The world may not choose to believe it, but, as the Holy Spirit says, "Christ has indeed been raised from the dead, the firstfruits of those who have fallen asleep."
In St. Luke’s account of that first Resurrection morning, we read that Peter and the rest of the disciples didn’t believe the Good News the women brought. Peter went to the tomb anyway, just in case. But when he saw it was empty, he still didn’t believe. He just went away, wondering to himself what had happened.
It hits me that if that’s all the Gospels had to record, it would make sense for us to try to find the tomb of Jesus Christ-- though if Christ is not risen, nobody today would even care or know about Him any more. Why believe the women? In Jesus’ day, their testimony women would have counted for nothing in a court of law. Maybe they were just deluded! And an empty tomb and folded graveclothes are not conclusive proof that a very dead Man has been raised bodily from the grave.
But we know the story does not end there. When we read this history in St. Luke, we have that delicious sensation of knowing more than the people in that long-ago garden did. We want to say, "Peter! Peter! We can tell you what happened! Jesus really is risen! Just wait! In a few minutes you’ll meet Him face to face, yourself! In a few hours, He’ll come and greet you and all the disciples in person! Rejoice in what has happened, Peter! Christ is risen indeed!"
An empty tomb that morning can be argued against. But Jesus appeared alive among them, time after time. He appeared to Peter, then to the Twelve, then later at one time to over five hundred reliable witnesses, most of whom were still alive when Paul wrote 1 Corinthians in AD 55. You can believe them and the accounts they left behind. If you don’t believe them, you may as well not believe anything that history tells us.
I know there are people cannot yet believe that Jesus has been raised. They don’t want to be cheated or fall for something that might not be true. They want reliable proof, and they’re willing to be shown it.
But if you positively will not believe the word of Scripture, very likely it matters to you that what happened that day was not the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead. Your self-esteem; your whole sense of self depend on it not being true.
But even more it matters to us Christians that He rose that day.
If Christ were not raised, what are we doing here? You want to do nice things for your fellow humans? Go join the Kiwanas Club! You want to embark on a campaign of personal moral improvement or strengthen your marriage? Read any book by Dr. Laura Schlesinger! The Church-- all of us gathered here today and all of us gathered in the Spirit throughout the world-- the Church isn’t about making us nice, helpful, prosperous, fulfilled people! It’s about proclaiming the Good News of Jesus Christ risen from the dead. It’s about bringing new birth to others and together living lives that will prepare us to live with Him forever in Eternity. If the Christ you worship is not risen, He can’t help you after you die. For as Paul says, "If only for this life we have hope in Christ, we are to be pitied beyond all men." If Jesus is not risen, give it up! Quit the church! Why knock yourself out to be helpful and good? You’ll just moulder in the grave anyway!
But Christ has indeed been raised from the dead, the firstfruits of those who have fallen asleep. Jesus’ physical resurrection gives us a free sample of what we’re going to get when we rise from the dead and get our new bodies, too. More than that, Christ’s physical resurrection is the first portion of a glorious offering He’s going to make to His God and our God, His Father and our Father. He offered those firstfruits going on two thousand years ago. The rest of the offering will be lifted up to God when we-- all we who believe in His name-- are raised up bodily at the Last Day, when we will be just like Him and God will accept us as worthy in His sight.
Our hope is not just for this world, it is also for the world to come. It matters deeply that we can trust with our minds as well as with our hearts that Jesus Christ is risen, indeed.
And if it matters to us, it matters more to Almighty God. For that is really why it matters what happened that April morning around 30 AD. The resurrection of Christ glorifies His Father in heaven. Our resurrection with Christ displays God’s love, honor, and grace. It brings Him eternal praise. It vindicates His righteousness and utterly defeats Death and the Devil, our enemy and His.
The resurrection of Jesus Christ is for us. But ultimately, it’s about God. And so we give our Father glory, honor, and praise for what He has done for us in our Savior Jesus Christ. We renounce all sinful ways that contradict the new life He has given us through His Son. We pray diligently for lost souls like James Cameron and Simcha Jacobovici, and especially for unbelievers who may be our co-workers, our neighbors, or members of our own families, that Christ’s resurrection light will dawn upon them, and they, too, will be saved. And we look forward to the great Day when our own bodies will be transformed to be like the resurrection body of Jesus Christ; to whom with the Holy Spirit and God the Father be all power, riches, wisdom, and strength, glory, honor, and blessing. Alleluia, amen!
[Preached at the main service, the Feast of the Resurrection, A.D. 2007]
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"Remember What He Told You"
Text: Luke 19:28-44
AT MY WEEKDAY JOB AT THE architecture firm, there’s a guy named Steve who’s the computer drawing expert. He’s considered to be the best CAD (that stands for "computer aided drafting) operator in the firm, and he holds classes from time to time for the rest of us.
Last fall, it was my turn, along with a couple of guys who like me only draw by hand. We had maybe three sessions, then I went back to doing my usual hand drafting the next few months.
Until late February, that is. That’s when I got pulled onto a job that was all being done on the computer. I got thrown into computer drafting headfirst, and didn’t do too badly for what I had to get done. But I kept running up against difficulties where I couldn’t make the program do what I needed it to. And I’d go round to Steve’s desk and say, "Steve, how do I get all my lines to show up when I print?" Or, "Steve, how do I make my drawing the right scale?"
And more often than not, Steve the CAD expert would say, "Don’t you remember what I told you? It’s in your notes!"
When he says that, there’s no point arguing that he’s lived with computer drafting programs every day for the past ten-fifteen years, but this is the first time I’ve had to use one. No, I didn’t remember what he told me! How was I supposed to remember? Last October it didn’t mean anything to me!
That’s how our hearts and minds work. If you enjoy a certain body of knowledge or skill, it’s constantly real to you and you keep it in mind. But if an idea confronts you that’s disconnected to your everyday reality, you won’t remember it or grasp it, no matter how many times it’s repeated to you.
That’s what it was like for the two Marys, Joanna, and the other holy women and for Peter and the other disciples that first Resurrection Sunday morning. During His ministry Jesus had kept on telling His disciples that after He was put to death, He would assuredly rise again. But that statement meant nothing to the disciples. It didn’t compute. Jesus might as well have been banging a pot, for all the sense His words had made to them.
So it’s daybreak, and the women approach the tomb. They fully expect Jesus’ dead body to be there. And when it isn’t, it makes no sense! Then two young men in dazzling white appear-- One more thing they couldn’t take in!
But as the women hide their faces in terror, the angel voices penetrate their confusion. The angels say, "Why do you look for the living among the dead? He is not here, he is risen! Remember how He told you, while He was still with you in Galilee: The Son of Man must be delivered into the hands of sinful men, be crucified, and on the third day be raised again."
St. Luke records that now, the women did remember. By the power of the Holy Spirit the truth of the resurrection broke into their reality and made itself at home. Now they remembered what Jesus had said about rising again! Now Jesus’ words about rising again were rich and full of meaning. They were exactly what those grief-stricken, downcast women could use.
Thank God, the angels at the empty tomb were not like my colleague Steve. When Steve says, "Don’t you remember how I told you?" he’s exasperated, because I’m wasting his time. But the angels say, "Remember how He told you?" and the phrase holds out comfort, compassion, and new hope.
Of course the women hurry and tell the rest of the disciples. Jesus has risen again, just like He said He would! But the good news of Christ’s resurrection is still gibberish to the others. Luke says, "They did not believe the women, because their words seemed to them like nonsense."
We’d be the same in their place. Think how shocked and frightened they were. What a pall of despair must’ve oppressed them in that room! Think-- no, feel the misery those men and women had! Their Lord had been crucified. Their hope and the hope of Israel and all the world had been lacerated and hung on a Tree! If you’d felt like that, the Good News that first Resurrection Day wouldn’t have been good news, it would’ve been meaningless noise.
And I’d say Peter felt most desperate and miserable of them all. Not only was Jesus dead, but the last time Peter saw Him, he’d sworn up and down that Jesus wasn’t even somebody he knew!
Peter’s very desperation drives him to the tomb to see for himself. But he comes, he looks, and he goes away. All Peter can do is wonder to himself what has happened.
And there our reading ends.
But we know what had happened! Jesus was raised from the dead, and we give testimony to that this Easter Sunday and every Sunday of the week! The very fact that we are gathered here to worship Him is proof of the fact that the tomb of Jesus was empty and stays that way to all eternity.
But you and I, like the women, like the other disciples, like Peter, we all go through times when the resurrection of Christ seems to have no meaning for us. Times of trouble and grief, when our feelings overwhelm us and the words of preachers like me seem like empty sounds.
That’s why it’s dangerous to try to prove Christ is risen by what we feel in our hearts. Our hearts are fickle and tell us all sorts of lies. No, believe His word, for it is constant and true.
Believe His Holy Spirit, who helps you understand what the Bible says. Read it, hear it, and, remember how He said-- He would be raised again. We know Jesus lives because the Holy Spirit speaking through the Scriptures tell us so, and from start to finish the Scriptures give glory to Him.
Jesus is risen, whether we feel He is or not. Jesus is risen, despite the claims of false religion and false science. Jesus’ word is faithful and true, He is alive even now, and we never need to give in to confusion and despair again.
So rejoice on this morning and every morning! Remember always what Jesus your Lord told you: He died for you, He is risen for you, and that is the plain, meaningful, and wonderful truth.
All praise to you, Lord Christ! Alleluia, amen!
[Preached at the sunrise service, the Feast of the Resurrection, A. D. 2007]

Last fall, it was my turn, along with a couple of guys who like me only draw by hand. We had maybe three sessions, then I went back to doing my usual hand drafting the next few months.
Until late February, that is. That’s when I got pulled onto a job that was all being done on the computer. I got thrown into computer drafting headfirst, and didn’t do too badly for what I had to get done. But I kept running up against difficulties where I couldn’t make the program do what I needed it to. And I’d go round to Steve’s desk and say, "Steve, how do I get all my lines to show up when I print?" Or, "Steve, how do I make my drawing the right scale?"
And more often than not, Steve the CAD expert would say, "Don’t you remember what I told you? It’s in your notes!"
When he says that, there’s no point arguing that he’s lived with computer drafting programs every day for the past ten-fifteen years, but this is the first time I’ve had to use one. No, I didn’t remember what he told me! How was I supposed to remember? Last October it didn’t mean anything to me!
That’s how our hearts and minds work. If you enjoy a certain body of knowledge or skill, it’s constantly real to you and you keep it in mind. But if an idea confronts you that’s disconnected to your everyday reality, you won’t remember it or grasp it, no matter how many times it’s repeated to you.
That’s what it was like for the two Marys, Joanna, and the other holy women and for Peter and the other disciples that first Resurrection Sunday morning. During His ministry Jesus had kept on telling His disciples that after He was put to death, He would assuredly rise again. But that statement meant nothing to the disciples. It didn’t compute. Jesus might as well have been banging a pot, for all the sense His words had made to them.
So it’s daybreak, and the women approach the tomb. They fully expect Jesus’ dead body to be there. And when it isn’t, it makes no sense! Then two young men in dazzling white appear-- One more thing they couldn’t take in!
But as the women hide their faces in terror, the angel voices penetrate their confusion. The angels say, "Why do you look for the living among the dead? He is not here, he is risen! Remember how He told you, while He was still with you in Galilee: The Son of Man must be delivered into the hands of sinful men, be crucified, and on the third day be raised again."
St. Luke records that now, the women did remember. By the power of the Holy Spirit the truth of the resurrection broke into their reality and made itself at home. Now they remembered what Jesus had said about rising again! Now Jesus’ words about rising again were rich and full of meaning. They were exactly what those grief-stricken, downcast women could use.
Thank God, the angels at the empty tomb were not like my colleague Steve. When Steve says, "Don’t you remember how I told you?" he’s exasperated, because I’m wasting his time. But the angels say, "Remember how He told you?" and the phrase holds out comfort, compassion, and new hope.
Of course the women hurry and tell the rest of the disciples. Jesus has risen again, just like He said He would! But the good news of Christ’s resurrection is still gibberish to the others. Luke says, "They did not believe the women, because their words seemed to them like nonsense."
We’d be the same in their place. Think how shocked and frightened they were. What a pall of despair must’ve oppressed them in that room! Think-- no, feel the misery those men and women had! Their Lord had been crucified. Their hope and the hope of Israel and all the world had been lacerated and hung on a Tree! If you’d felt like that, the Good News that first Resurrection Day wouldn’t have been good news, it would’ve been meaningless noise.
And I’d say Peter felt most desperate and miserable of them all. Not only was Jesus dead, but the last time Peter saw Him, he’d sworn up and down that Jesus wasn’t even somebody he knew!
Peter’s very desperation drives him to the tomb to see for himself. But he comes, he looks, and he goes away. All Peter can do is wonder to himself what has happened.
And there our reading ends.
But we know what had happened! Jesus was raised from the dead, and we give testimony to that this Easter Sunday and every Sunday of the week! The very fact that we are gathered here to worship Him is proof of the fact that the tomb of Jesus was empty and stays that way to all eternity.
But you and I, like the women, like the other disciples, like Peter, we all go through times when the resurrection of Christ seems to have no meaning for us. Times of trouble and grief, when our feelings overwhelm us and the words of preachers like me seem like empty sounds.
That’s why it’s dangerous to try to prove Christ is risen by what we feel in our hearts. Our hearts are fickle and tell us all sorts of lies. No, believe His word, for it is constant and true.
Believe His Holy Spirit, who helps you understand what the Bible says. Read it, hear it, and, remember how He said-- He would be raised again. We know Jesus lives because the Holy Spirit speaking through the Scriptures tell us so, and from start to finish the Scriptures give glory to Him.
Jesus is risen, whether we feel He is or not. Jesus is risen, despite the claims of false religion and false science. Jesus’ word is faithful and true, He is alive even now, and we never need to give in to confusion and despair again.
So rejoice on this morning and every morning! Remember always what Jesus your Lord told you: He died for you, He is risen for you, and that is the plain, meaningful, and wonderful truth.
All praise to you, Lord Christ! Alleluia, amen!
[Preached at the sunrise service, the Feast of the Resurrection, A. D. 2007]
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