Sunday, April 21, 2024

Sermon for 4/21/24: Fourth Sunday of Easter (series B)


CLICK HERE for the sermon audio.

CLICK HERE for the service video.

Hear and Follow

John 10:11-18

 

ALLELUIA! CHRIST IS RISEN! He is risen indeed! Alleluia!

 

 

On this side of glory, our faith lives alongside of doubt. The devil doesn’t need to plant it in us. He just needs to water it. Jesus says, “My sheep know My voice. They follow Me.” But it doesn’t take much to get us thinking: “Do I really know His voice? Am I really following Him?” Doubt wants proof. How much have we done? Can we be recognized in this world by our love? The truth is, we can’t. Sinners that we are, we have blended all too well into the ways of the world. After all, it seems much easier to get forgiveness from a seemingly distant God rather than deal with the mockery and hatred of the world around you. You have not been good enough. Your life does not show your faith so much as it shows your sin. So repent. Turn away from your sin.

Yes, repent…but then tell doubt and the devil to shut up. Jesus is the Good Shepherd. He lays downs His life for His sheep. He has met His Father’s wrath. He pays for your sins, your doubts. There is no one left to accuse you. You are righteous because Jesus has declared you to be so. He has substituted His life for yours. He has risen from the dead for your justification. He is the Good Shepherd. He didn’t only defeat death by His death; He also rose again to usher you into the green pastures of heaven, to bring you home. He loves you. You know His voice. You hear it now. You love it.

It seems strange to us, but doubt is actually evidence of faith. Your doubts are the pinpricks of conscience. As your faith in Christ grows, you become ever more aware of your sins and the weakness of your faith. Doubt is evidence that the state of your soul means something to you. Doubt is evidence that you are engaging the enemy inside yourself. If you were not engaging the enemy, you would not care. You would feel no worry about it.

If this is a hard word for lay people to hear, it is torture for pastors. No faithful pastor in Christendom can hear our Lord’s words about hirelings and not squirm. Every faithful pastor knows he does not live up to his own preaching. Every pastor has counted the cost. Every pastor has considered how we might package the message to be successful and make the people like us. The spirit indeed is willing. But the flesh? The flesh knows who writes the checks, and the pastor likes to be able to feed his family. As a pastor who has been forced to leave a congregation, I can tell you that it can be a challenge for me to say the things that are hard for you to hear; even so, that is what I am Called to do—both by God, and by you. It is no easy task, and it is only by the grace of God that any sinful man can serve in this overwhelming office.

But of course, this doesn’t hard saying apply only to the clergy. You have all stood up here at the front of the sanctuary and have made promises you haven’t kept. You have promised to suffer all, even death, rather than fall away from the one true faith. Imagine that! You’ve made huge, impossible promises at Confirmation, at your weddings, at the baptism of your children. This hireling bit applies in the first place to pastors, to be sure, but it doesn’t stop there. When the wolf comes, baring his teeth at terrified sheep, the hirelings also run away from their wives, children, and neighbors, and the Church. It’s not just the pastors who squirm at these hard words.

But when we recognize that our faith is challenged and tested; when we recognize that Satan is seeking to devour us like the sheep we are; when we recognize that we have failed to live and believe as we should; it is especially then that we cling to the powerful grace of God. Jesus is our Good Shepherd. The promises of God are not dependent on perfect sheep, but a Good Shepherd who is faithful, a Good Shepherd who has made a promise that cannot and will not be broken, a Good Shepherd who cleanses you in Himself. Nothing can separate you from the love of God—not your sins, your failures, your imperfect faith, your broken vows, nor even your doubts. He has placed His promise upon you, baptizing you into His Name, placing that name on your forehead and your heart. He would have you be part of His flock. Death has no claim upon you. Hell has no way to hold you. You are His sheep, clean and pure by grace. He loves you. He laid down His life you. He comes to you in His Holy Supper. He feeds you with Bread from heaven in His very Body; He washes you anew in His Blood, which He pours out for you.

You are His sheep. You hear His Voice. You love it. You love Him. You desire to be with Him. Even in the midst of your doubts, amidst your struggles against the fallen flesh, you love Jesus. You rejoice in this forgiveness because you know your Shepherd and He knows you. That is why you are here. You are His sheep. And you need fear no evil, for He is Your Good Shepherd. ALLELUIA! CHRIST IS RISEN! He is risen indeed! Alleluia!

The peace of God which passes all understanding will keep your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus always.  Amen.   

Sunday, April 14, 2024

Sermon for 4/14/24: The Third Sunday of Easter (series B)


CLICK HERE for the sermon audio.

CLICK HERE for the service video.

Believe with Your Ears, Confess with Your Lips
Luke 24:36-49

ALLELUIA! CHRIST IS RISEN! He is risen indeed! Alleluia!

Jesus opened the minds of the disciples to understand the Scriptures: how He Himself was the fulfillment of everything written in the Law and the Prophets; how He must suffer and die, and then He must rise again, so that the forgiveness He died and rose to win would be proclaimed to all nations. And then He told the disciples, “You are witnesses of these things.” To be a witness is a big deal. It’s a big deal because you had to be where something happened to be a witness. You had to see and hear the event for yourself. Only then can you reliably testify about what happened, about what you saw and heard. A witness doesn’t have second-hand information; in fact, a court of law will not accept second-hand information, because a witness sees for himself, and he testifies about what he has seen and heard. Only then may all who hear him know what truly happened. That’s also how it works when it comes to the Truth about Jesus. The Holy Spirit inspired the men who saw with their own eyes the life, teachings, miracles, death, resurrection, and ascension of Jesus to share with the world what they had heard and seen.

The truth is, you have not received the charge from Jesus to be a witness of what He did and taught. You can’t be a witness; you weren’t there. You didn’t see Jesus with your own eyes or hear Him with your own ears as He taught in the Temple, as He shone on the mountain, as He hung on the cross. You can only receive from the apostles what they saw and heard. With that being said, while you have not witnessed with your own eyes the events in the Holy Land 2000 years ago, you are no less blessed than those who did witness these events, for you are blessed to receive their eyewitness accounts. In fact, as Jesus reminded us last week, “Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have believed.” Jesus attaches a special blessing to faith without sight.

One special blessing you have received because you believe without being an eyewitness is that our Lord has made you a confessor. The Truth which the disciples heard directly from the mouth of Jesus, you have heard it from them; now you repeat what you have heard. You make a confession of the Truth. You confess what you believe on the basis of eyewitness testimony. This is what we will do here in the Creed this morning. Everything our Savior taught the disciples; everything the disciples have passed on to the Church from what they have heard and seen; we, the people of God, His Church, are privileged to confess all of it. We confess with first-century Christians who were martyred in the Coliseum; we confess with St. Ambrose, St. Augustine, St. Athanasius—and a whole bunch of other saints whose name don’t begin with the letter A; we confess with Martin Luther; we confess with CFW Walther; we confess with all the people who have been members of St. Paul’s over its 100-year history; we confess with all the Christians of all times and places. We confess that Jesus is Lord. We confess that our Lord Jesus was born of the Virgin Mary. We confess that He suffered the wrath of God which we deserve in our sin. We confess that He died our death. We confess that He rose from the dead on the third day. We confess that He ascended to sit at the Father’s right hand. We confess that He is coming again. We stand where God has placed us; we stand before the world; we spit in the face of Satan himself and confess the Truth as we have received it. “Here I stand; I can do no other. God help me!”

As important as it is for us to receive the testimony of faithful witnesses, it’s just as important to confess faithfully what we have received. We confess because people need to hear the message of Jesus Christ and the forgiveness of sins. That was true in the days after Jesus rose, and it is still true today. You don’t come to the Divine Service to fulfill some obligation to God. You don’t even come to praise God, although that is certainly a fruit of what happens here. You come because you are a sinner in need of forgiveness, in need of nourishment for your faith. You come to church to hear the message of life and peace in Christ. You come because you need that message as desperately as you need air to breathe. And so do your family, your friends, your neighbors, and your world. Have you shared the message with them? How then shall they call on Him in whom they have not believed? And how shall they believe in Him of whom they have not heard? And how shall they hear without a preacher?

 

The question is often asked: “How will the Church grow?” That certainly ought to concern us all. But there are no fancy tricks, no nifty advertising that will do that job. Leave the slick marketing to the world. In order for the Church to grow, the Church must be centered in Jesus Christ and the good news of forgiveness, life, and salvation. So if you believe that Jesus is your only true source of hope in this life of heartache and pain, you cannot help but tell others about Him. You confess the Truth as you have received it. And once you confess the Truth, then you, too, can be a witness. You can tell everyone about the hope that is within you because of how Jesus has worked in your life. You can tell your friends that Jesus has forgiven your sins. You can tell your neighbors that Jesus has made you His own child in the waters of Holy Baptism. You can tell the world that Jesus is present with you as you deal with the heartaches and tragedies of your life. You can tell them all that Jesus has come to dwell in you by feeding you with His own body and blood. As you receive His holy Supper, He will lead you to remember with joy and gratitude everything He has done for you. This is what will overcome all doubt and fear so that you can open your lips to confess His name and sing His praise, no matter what the world throws at you.

You don’t see Jesus in front of you like those disciples. But that’s okay. In fact, it’s a blessing, because it means you don’t have to see to believe. You can trust that, wherever the Word of God is preached and His Sacraments are given out, He is surely there. He is right here, right now, in our midst; He comes to give you life and hope and peace. Believe this, and then confess it: for the sake of His holy name, for your sake, and for the sake of all who need to hear this wonderful good news. ALLELUIA! CHRIST IS RISEN! He is risen indeed! Alleluia!

 

The peace of God which passes all understanding will keep your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus always.  Amen.   

Sunday, March 31, 2024

Sermon for 3/31/24: The Resurrection of Our Lord (series B)


CLICK HERE for the sermon audio.

CLICK HERE for the service video.

Looking for Jesus

Mark 16:1-8

 

Alleluia! Christ is risen! He is risen indeed! Alleluia!

 

 

Do not be alarmed. You seek Jesus of Nazareth, who was crucified. He has risen; he is not here. See the place where they laid him. The young man in the white robe told the ladies at the grave the Good News! Death is defeated; Jesus is alive. Yes, He was crucified for sinners. But it would all have been for nothing if He hadn’t risen from the dead! The Apostle Paul tells us, If Christ has not been raised, your faith is futile and you are still in your sins. Then those also who have fallen asleep in Christ have perished. If in Christ we have hope in this life only, we are of all people most to be pitied. But in fact Christ has been raised from the dead, the firstfruits of those who have fallen asleep.Jesus is alive! His resurrection means that He really did pay for your sins. It is true that “the wages of sin is death.” Jesus, the sinless Son of God, died because He had your sins on His shoulders. Now He is alive. Your sins are gone, left buried in the tomb. Jesus has accomplished your salvation. He paid the price for your sins. He has defeated death. Jesus, who was crucified, is risen. You won’t find Him in the grave. He is alive forevermore.

“Go and tell His disciples and Peter”—yes, tell Peter, who of all the disciples especially needs to hear this Good News—”that [Jesus] is going to Galilee and they will see Him there, just as He said.” What about you? Where are you looking for Jesus? Where shall you find Him? Look no further. He is right here, present in His church. Don’t go looking in His empty tomb. Don’t go looking in the Holy Land. Instead, look in the places where He has promised to be. Look here at the font, where His water and Word washes sinners, making us spotless, covering us with the sparkling robe of His own perfect righteousness. Listen for His voice in the Word of Holy Absolution and the preaching of your pastors. See Him raised from the dead in His own body and blood, given and shed for you to eat and drink at His holy altar. Right here, in His Church, “where two or three are gathered in His name,” Jesus is present. And right here—present in His Church: present in the preaching of His Word; present in water, bread, and wine combined with His Word—He is delivering His forgiveness for all your sins. He is giving you His victory over sin and death.

So the angel tells the women to go tell the disciples. They run off and do it, right? Not quite. St. Mark says they were frightened and didn’t tell anyone because they were afraid. Oh, sure, later it all came out. But right away, they were still overcome by fear. That’s us. Today we just heard that Jesus is alive! He was dead and now He’s risen. So what? Do we go back to business as usual? Do we go back to arguing with and hating others? Do we go back to cursing the government and those the Lord has given to keep us safe? Do we go back to lusting and fornication and coveting and stealing? Do we go back to doing the things we do as if Jesus isn’t alive at all? The greatest triumph the world has seen, and we will yawn and go our merry way, with the same sins at work in us. Jesus rose from the dead. Does that mean anything? Does it make a difference? Or do we do what we’ve always done? A Lutheran pastor named Ken Korby once wrote, Nobody is going to go to hell because of his sin. Nobody. Those who are in hell—God have mercy that none of us is there—will be there because they don’t believe the Lamb. Simple as that. And it’s hard to go to hell, because you have to get over the dead body of God’s Son to get there. So repent! Repent of living as if the stone still holds the grave closed. Repent of living as if Jesus was still dead!

St. Paul calls us to eat “the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth.” That’s why you are here today: to be purged of your old leaven of sin and to have new life. That’s exactly what your Baptism, Holy Absolution, and the Lord’s Supper give you. Your Baptism has raised you from the death of sin, and you are a new creation. You hear your pastor say with our Lord’s command, “I forgive you all your sins,” and you are returned to your Baptism, your sins taken away, removed from you as far as East is from West. In the Holy Supper, the very body and blood of Christ casts out from you all that is sinful and selfish, and you are fed and nourished in the faith. Christ’s body and blood are the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth. Your sins, whatever they are, are buried in that tomb forever. There is no need to go and drag them back out! In His death and resurrection, Jesus has taken care of them once and for all.

The Good News, which eventually overcame the women’s fear and sent them shouting what they had heard, is the same Good News by which the Spirit works in you to love God and your neighbor. Your sins have been put away by our Lord’s death. They were buried with Him, and only Jesus came out of the tomb. Our Lord Jesus Christ is alive! Your sins are done and gone. And Jesus, who has defeated death, promises that sin and death have been defeated for you forever. Alleluia! Christ is risen! He is risen indeed! Alleluia!     

 

The peace of God which passes all understanding will keep your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus always.  Amen.

Friday, March 29, 2024

Sermon 3/28/24: Maundy Thursday


CLICK HERE for the sermon audio.

CLICK HERE for the service video.

“Do This…”
I Corinthians 11:23-32

Grace to you and peace from God our Father, and from our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. Amen.

It must be one of the chief ironies of Christianity that the Lord’s Supper, where we are most intimately united with Him and with each other, has been the center of controversy from the very beginning. The place where there should be the most unity—the very body and blood of Jesus—has become the center of division. But this should not be a surprise, for when the words of our Lord are set aside, there will be only lack of clarity. St. Paul laments the sad divisions at Corinth and says, “There must also be factions among you, that those who are approved may be recognized among you.” Factions are caused when people hold to their own opinions rather than the Lord’s words. Apart from His Word, there can be no unity. To paraphrase Luther, they would make this Sacrament the Christian’s supper rather than the Lord’s Supper.

There came a time the history of the Church when the Lord’s Supper was redefined to be “the unbloody repetition of the sacrifice of Christ.” The Roman Church teaches even today that the body and blood of Christ are offered by the priest to God the Father as payment for the sins of the living and the dead. At the time of the Reformation—and still today—some argued that the words of Jesus can’t possibly mean what they say; they believe that the bread simply represents or symbolizes our Lord’s body which is in heaven, and that the wine represents His blood shed on the cross. Both opinions depart from the clear words of the Lord Jesus; both cause division in the Church. But as we already heard, divisions in the Church over the Lord’s Supper are not new.

The Epistle for Maundy Thursday speaks to this situation. There were some in Corinth who saw the Lord’s Supper to be something other than the gift of the body and blood of Jesus, given to sinners to eat and drink for the forgiveness of our sins. They had transformed the Lord’s Supper into their own party. No longer were His body and blood being confessed as the gifts that they are. No longer were the gifts of His body and blood at the center of the congregation’s life. They would eat and drink, but the Corinthians were no longer partaking of the Lord’s Supper.

We sinners always seem to give a higher priority to our own notions and opinions about what we need rather than what the Lord promises to give. In the Lutheran Church, our public confession of what we receive in the Holy Supper cannot be faulted; after all, we confess exactly what our Lord Jesus says concerning the Supper He instituted. Perhaps our biggest concern, the false notion we cling to most, is that the Supper might become less special if we offer or receive it too often—as if the body and blood of Jesus can be anything but “the highest good” for us, even if we received it every day. But Paul does not begin with his own opinion. Unlike so many in today’s churches, he does not consider it a matter of indifference what one believes regarding the Lord’s Supper. Instead Paul begins with what the Lord had given to him. He says: “For I received from the Lord that which I also delivered to you: that our Lord Jesus on the night in which He was betrayed took bread; and when He had given thanks, He broke it and said, ‘Take, eat; this is My body, which is for you; do this in remembrance of Me.’ In the same manner, He also took the cup after supper and said, ‘This cup is the new testament in my blood. This do, as often as you drink it, in remembrance of Me.’“

These words tell us what the Sacrament is. “It is the body and blood of our Lord given under the bread and wine for us to eat and drink.” The Words of Institution are the Lord’s gift, His invitation to receive what He gives in the means that He gives it. He tells us exactly what it is He gives to us—His body, hidden in and under bread; His blood, hidden under wine; and the forgiveness He died to win for us—and then He invites us to partake of it. It is on the basis of these words from our Lord Jesus Himself that Paul goes on to deal with the problems at Corinth.

In the Sacrament we are given our Lord’s body and blood. The very body that was conceived by the Holy Spirit and born of the Virgin Mary is given into our mouths. The very blood He shed to redeem us is the means of forgiveness which now flows into our bodies. The Lord’s body and blood proclaim to you the complete forgiveness of all your sins—and it does so each and every time you partake of it, no matter how many times you partake of it. As you eat and drink at the Lord’s Table, you confess Jesus Christ to be “the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world.” We may bring no contradiction of Him and His words to His altar.

This Sacrament does not depend on us; it depends on the Lord Jesus who established it: on the Word He speaks to make it what it is and to make it give what He says it gives. It is not your faith which makes the Sacrament what it is. All who come to the altar and who partake of the Supper receive Christ’s body and blood, whether or not they believe what Jesus says about it. That is why Paul goes on to warn the Corinthians that those who partake of the Supper in an unworthy manner are guilty not of bread and wine, but of Christ’s body and blood. This is why we practice Closed Communion—it’s not because we hate or feel we are better than our fellow Christians, but rather out of love for them and concern for their spiritual welfare.

We do give attention to faith—but not because our faith establishes the presence of Christ in the Sacrament. Rather, it is only in right faith that we may partake of the Savior’s body and blood in a way which is salutary and beneficial. Therefore, Paul says, “Let a man examine himself, and so let him eat of the bread and drink of the cup.” There is only one way to worthily eat and drink of the Lord’s Supper, and that is with faith in the words of Him who is the Host and Donor. The Catechism says it well: “He is truly worthy and well prepared who has faith in these words: ‘Given and shed for you for the remission of sins.’“ Thanks be to God, who by His Holy Spirit grants us such faith. Thanks be to God, who feeds us here with the body and blood of Jesus for the forgiveness of our sins. In the name of the Father and of the Son (+) and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.     

Wednesday, March 20, 2024

Sermon for 3/20/24: Midweek Lent 5 (Psalm 22 series)


CLICK HERE for the sermon audio.

CLICK HERE for the service video.

“He Has Done It”
Psalm 22:25-31

Grace to you, and peace from God our Father and from our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ. Amen.

It is not too much to say that the entire Passion of our Lord and its outcome is pictured in the words of Psalm 22. The Psalm begins with those words of distress and despair: My God, my God, why have you forsaken me? As we said before, for that brief time, it was necessary that the Father hide Himself from His Son so that the Son’s hellish suffering would be genuine. Then Jesus identifies His own utter humility by calling himself a worm, one who was scorned and despised, so that He might endure what was necessary to turn aside the Father’s wrath against the sin of all mankind. We are then told of His suffering, the excruciating pain and absolute helplessness as He bore that wrath. Last week we heard how deliverance finally came, and Jesus could commend Himself with certainty into the hands of His gracious Father. Now, finally, the Psalm ends with a look beyond. What was the point of all the suffering, the humiliation, the anguish, and the deliverance? What the psalmist commends to us is a continuing remembrance of the faithfulness of our God in delivering His Son, but also in delivering us from sin and death through His Son. It is a reminder that we must always keep this faithfulness of God before our eyes.

This portion of the Psalm takes us beyond the crucifixion. Jesus has been delivered from His enemies; even death itself could not hold Him. As St. Paul told the Romans, “[He] was declared to be the Son of God in power according to the Spirit of holiness by His resurrection from the dead.” Life had returned! And the return to life enables the Son to praise His glorious Father among the people of God. Jesus says, My vows I will perform before those who fear Him. In those days, the paying of vows included a feast to which many were invited. And this is exactly what our Lord has done. The Holy Supper which He instituted on the night before His crucifixion would be the remembrance, and His apostles and the pastors who followed after would continue this remembrance, as it is to this day. St. Paul reminds us, As often as you eat this bread and drink the cup, you proclaim the Lord's death until He comes.

The Psalm continues, The afflicted shall eat and be satisfied; those who seek Him shall praise the Lord! Who are the afflicted? Certainly the sick and destitute are afflicted, along with those who suffer and those who mourn. But there is an affliction which surpasses all of these: the affliction of sin and the death that sin deserves. These are the very afflictions our Lord bore to the cross. But out of His suffering comes relief and the answer to our afflictions. All who are burdened by sin can eat and be satisfied. His word of forgiveness refreshes and satisfies us as we “read, mark, learn, and inwardly digest it.” But even more to the point, the very body and blood given and shed for the remission of sins is served to us as the great Feast of forgiveness, life, and salvation. And this Feast on earth is merely a foretaste of the heavenly Feast yet to come, where, as the Psalmist tells us, “hearts live forever” in the presence of the Lamb of God who has taken away this sins of the world and opens the kingdom of heaven to all believers.

The Psalmist goes on to say, All the ends of the earth shall remember and turn to the Lord, and all the families of the nations shall worship before You. Truly, all the world knows what the Savior has done. Even those who hate the Gospel know about it. Even those who would not even for a second entrust their souls to Jesus know what He has done. But the memory of the Church is completely different. For the Church, to remember is to participate. We listen every year to the retelling of those saving events, and they become as real to us as the original because they are as real. We do not need to be transported back in time. We don’t need to be there. The great saving benefits of Christ are brought to us in His Word and Sacraments. Receiving what His passion offers us requires us to travel no farther than the altar, for here the same body given and blood shed for the forgiveness of sins is offered and given to those who live in faithful remembrance of what the Son of God has done. This same remembrance, which has gone before us in time, will go on as long as life is lived on earth, as long as the Church remains.

Even scoffers and unbelievers will have no choice but to remember what Jesus has done. Before Him shall bow all who go down to the dust, even the one who could not keep himself alive. They will bow before the One who purchased their lives from sin and destruction. Great and small, haughty and humble—all will acknowledge that Jesus gave His life for them. On the Last Day, as St. Paul writes, “Every knee should bow, in heaven and on earth and under the earth, and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father.”

And in the end, every generation shall serve Him by remembering and telling every new generation what our loving Lord has done. Even those not yet born, to the very end of days, shall know and remember and confess what Jesus has done: bearing our sins to the cross in our place, dying the death we deserved, and then rising again to win for us new, eternal life. The work is complete. “Tetelestai,” Jesus cried out: “It is finished!” This “one little word,” as Martin Luther said in his most famous hymn, has felled Satan. Death has been destroyed. The graves will be empty. And we will remember for all eternity and praise our God for all that our Lord Jesus has won for us, for indeed, “He has done it.” In the name of the Father and of the Son (+) and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.

The peace of God which surpasses all understanding will guard your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus always. Amen.

Wednesday, March 13, 2024

Sermon for 3/13/24: Midweek Lent 4 (Psalm 22 series)


CLICK HERE for the sermon audio.

CLICK HERE for the service video.

Not Far Off After All
Psalm 22:19-24


Grace to you, and peace from God our Father and from our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ. Amen.

There’s an old and not-so-nice story about a father who is teaching his son about trust. The father has his son stand on a kitchen counter and then says to him, “Jump, and Daddy will catch you.” His son says to him, “No, you won’t. You’ll let me fall.” “I’ll catch you!” the father insists. “Just jump!” The son says, “But Daddy, I’m scared!” The father replies, “Don’t you trust your Daddy, son? I promise I’ll catch you.” This went back and forth for a few minutes, the father holding out his hands to his son, and the son scared of what his father will do either way. Finally the son lifts his eyes toward the ceiling in surrender and says, “Okay, Daddy. Here I come.” The son gathers himself and takes a mighty leap towards his father. As soon as his son’s feet leave the counter, the father steps back, and he watches as his son hit the floor hard. The son, crying, says, “You promised, Daddy. You promised you’d catch me.” The father replies, “This will teach you not to trust anybody.”

          I have no idea whether or not this is a true story—I hope it’s just a tale told to scare children—but it brings forth the point. We are conditioned from an early age to doubt everyone. If it’s not a story like this, then it’s a story of betrayal, a time when a friend or brother did something wrong and then blamed you for it. Maybe it’s the teammate that missed the last-minute shot. Maybe it’s the parent that forgot about the piano recital. Or it could be the mentor who said what you didn’t want to hear. It doesn’t even necessarily have to be a cruel action. But we take these things very personally, and eventually we think that the only person we can rely on is ourselves.

          At first glance, the Psalm that we have been looking at these past four weeks seems like another story of a trust betrayed. The Son of God is hanging on the cross, dehydrating, bleeding, suffocating, dying. The taunt earlier from the antagonists was this: He trusts in the Lord; let Him deliver him; let Him rescue Him, for He delights in Him! The innocent, sinless Son of God cries out for that rescue, that deliverance, and yet He remains nailed to that cross. The Son of God was seemingly betrayed by His own Father! Is there nobody that can be trusted? Can we not trust even God? Is it true that He merely “watching us from a distance,” as Bette Midler would claim?

          Up to this point in the Psalm, we see the psalmist crying out for deliverance for his body and his soul. But you, O Lord, do not be far off! O you my help, come quickly to my aid! And up to this point, we have no indication at all that God was even listening to these pleas. But then the whole tone of the Psalm changes. We see the psalmist singing the praises of the Lord. Why the sudden change?

          Looking at our Lord as He hung upon the cross, it’s not immediately obvious what has happened. But if you look closely, you see the change in attitude there, as well. Look at what He says there. First He cries out to the Father, “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” He cries out that He is thirsty. He is making very human pleas for help and deliverance. But at the end we see Him finally crying out, “Into your hands I commend my spirit.” This is no longer a cry for help, but a cry that He has been delivered, and that, through Him, we have been delivered. Jesus knows that He has not been betrayed by the Father, or else He would not be able to commit His spirit to the Father. The Father has not betrayed Him. The Father knew was necessary all along, and He did exactly what was necessary all along.

          You can see it in the Psalm. It says, “He has not despised or abhorred the affliction of the afflicted.” What was the affliction of Jesus? He was afflicted by our sin. We were the cause of Christ’s affliction on the cross. Were it not for us, there would be no reason for Him to be on the cross. He had no sin of His own to atone for; He hung there for our sake, bearing all our sins, suffering the wrath of God which humanity had earned in our sin—the wrath we so rightly deserved.

Have we been betrayed by God? No, never: not His Son, and certainly not us. Even in the darkest moment, even in the pain and suffering of Jesus Christ, even when He rightly should have done so, God did not turn away from us. He has not hidden His face from Him, but has heard when He cried to Him. He never turned away from His Son, and He has not hidden His face from us. “O Lord, do not be far off.” And He’s not. He is not watching us from a distance, leaving us to wallow in our own filth, leaving us to bear our shame and scorn. Thanks be to God, for He is always near to us. He is always with us, bringing us the comfort of sins forgiven, bringing us the joy of eternal life in His presence. In the name of the Father and of the Son (+) and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.

The peace of God which surpasses all understanding will guard your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus always. Amen.

Wednesday, March 06, 2024

Sermon for 3/6/24: Midweek Lent 3 (Psalm 22 series)


CLICK HERE for the sermon audio.

CLICK HERE for the service video.

The God Who Suffers
Psalm 22:12-18


Grace to you, and peace from God our Father and from our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ. Amen.

The Nicene Creed was forged in the fires of heresy, in demonic attempts to separate God from man and man from God in the person of Jesus. The Reformation was a battle fought centuries later on the same ground: first when Luther opposed the Roman church, who in practice denied that the death and resurrection of Jesus applied salvation to penitent sinners, and then Luther and his colleagues had to fight battles against those within Protestantism who denied that Jesus was present in His flesh and blood in the bread and wine of the Holy Supper. Every attack on the true Christian faith is an attempt by the enemies of Christ to discredit His one Person in two Natures and thus discredit His saving work. So if we are to understand this Psalm correctly in this season of Lent, we must confess that Jesus Christ is both God and Man in one Person. We must confess that this God-Man suffered and died to pay the blood debt of all mankind. And we must place all our comfort and find all our hope in His work for us and our salvation.

This particular portion of our Psalm describes our Lord’s intense suffering: physical, emotional, and spiritual suffering all at once. His enemies are described as strong, vicious bulls, ready to crush the Victim they encircled, making escape impossible. They are described as roaring, ravenous lions, seeking to devour their Victim. Imagine what fear must come upon someone facing those circumstances. As a Man, our Lord felt all the danger and horror of the situation. All of the enemies of Christ in all their demonic malevolence face off against our Jesus, with Satan, that roaring lion, seeking to devour both Him and us. To defeat and devour the Son of God would be an unparalleled victory.

The sufferings our Lord endured were awful in the extreme. We will never comprehend how awful they were. He was “poured out like water.” His sufferings brought Him weakness and a sense of utter helplessness that would completely overwhelm anyone. The excruciating pain that accompanied His crucifixion made Him feel as though His bones were “out of joint.” Imagine as best as you can what it would have been like to hang on the cross, and all your weight was supported only by the nails in your hands and feet. It is no wonder His heart became like melted wax within His breast. His strength was completely dried up. You might recall how He cried out from the cross, “I thirst,” as He lacked the moisture to keep His tongue from sticking to His jaw. He was ready to be laid into “the dust of death.”

But even then, note the confession from His lips: “You lay Me in the dust of death.” Even in this grave situation, our Lord confesses that it is the Father who controls all that comes upon His Son. We just heard these words from Isaiah 53: Surely He hath borne our griefs, and carried our sorrows: yet we did esteem Him stricken, smitten of God, and afflicted. But He was wounded for our transgressions, He was bruised for our iniquities: the chastisement of our peace was upon Him; and with His stripes we are healed. All we like sheep have gone astray; we have turned every one to his own way; and the Lord hath laid on Him the iniquity of us all.His enemies surround Him, ready to pounce. Even those who should have pitied Him only gaze heartlessly upon Him. They gloat over Him, their eyes feasting with delight on what they have done to Him. Indignity upon indignity is heaped upon our Lord’s outstretched arms and shoulders. Even His clothes were divided among His enemies. The Man was overwhelmed. But all of this is told to us to bring comfort to us, because it was the Father who heaped all of this upon His own Son instead of upon us.

 

If it were a mere man being described here, then, as St. Paul said, We are of all people most to be pitied.” If Jesus is only a man who suffers, then—at best—He alone can benefit from His suffering; there is no blessing therein for us. If it is only a man who suffers, then it is best that we turn our eyes away from Him and gather what little comfort we can from the fact this His suffering is not ours…at least, not yet. But what truly sets apart the sufferings of Jesus is that it is not only a man who suffers; it is a Man who is also God. And since that is the case, suffering is transformed.

It is like a scale and weights. On one side are all the sins of the world; on the other side is all the sufferings of men. The burden of human sin is so heavy that the sufferings of mankind have no effect. But when the sufferings of the God-Man are placed in the balance, the burden of sin is lifted away! When we are surrounded by the enemies of our soul, when there is no escape to be seen, we need not fear. When Satan seeks to devour us, we know that, to get to us, he must first deal with Jesus. When our sufferings are so extreme that we wonder whether or not we can beat them, we know with certainty that they are momentary, that they cannot be compared with the glory which awaits us with the One who suffered in our place. When we look upon Him whom our sins have pierced, we are seeing the One who said, And I, when I am lifted up from the earth, will draw all people to myself.” And seeing Him, we know that He has drawn us in faith.

When we confess the Nicene Creed, it can no longer be a dry, lifeless reciting of the faith it sometimes seems to be. It will be a remembrance and a thanksgiving for the life-giving and life-sustaining work of our Lord Jesus, which we find in these words: who for us men and for our salvation came down from heaven and was incarnate by the Holy Spirit of the virgin Mary and was made man; and was crucified also for us under Pontius Pilate. He suffered and was buried. And the third day He rose again according to the Scriptures…” God grant that this thanksgiving would always be the mark of our confession of faith. In the name of the Father and of the Son (+) and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.

The peace of God which surpasses all understanding will guard your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus always. Amen.

Thursday, February 29, 2024

HYMN: Exult, O Saints, in Christ the Lord


I’ve been writing hymn texts for about 15 years now. There are times when they seem to pour out of me, and I can write six in a week. And there are times when I haven’t written one in months and I begin to think I’m never going to write another. I haven’t written many since September of 2022–obviously that was an enormous turning point in life—and the move to a new location and the start of a new position with a new congregation hasn’t made that any easier.

But then I started reading a book this week called The Joy of Eternal Life by Philipp Nicolai, translated by Matthew Carver. If the Nicolai name sounds familiar, it’s because he is one of the greatest hymn writers ever. He was not prolific, but what he lacked in quantity he made up for in quality. “Wake, Awake, for Night Is Flying” (LSB 516) is the quintessential End Times hymn, recounting our Lord’s parable of the wise and foolish virgins in Matthew 25:1-13. And “O Morning Star, How Fair and Bright” (LSB 395) is a wonderful Epiphany text which also points us to the resurrection at the Last Day. Anyway, this book discusses “what eternal life is and how Christians are made ready for it” (from the back cover). So far I’ve only made it through the introduction, but even that was enough to inspire me to write. 

So here is a text based on Nicolai’s introduction. It started as a Long Meter Double text, but there are only three LMD hymns in Lutheran Service Book, and I’ve already used the one I like once, and I’d prefer not to do that again unless I have to. So I divided the stanzas in half with a little editing, and I made it into a Long Meter text, set to the tune DEUS TUORUM MILITUM, which is used in Lutheran Service Book for “From God the Father, Virgin Born” (LSB 401). If anyone wants to write an original tune, either LM or LMD, I won’t argue. *wink* As always, feedback is love.


Exult, O Saints, in Christ the Lord


1. Exult, O saints, in Christ the Lord

Who won for us the great reward

Of life eternal. We shall stand

Within the glorious fatherland.


2. There we shall see with endless joy

The One whose blood did death destroy,

The One who crushed the serpents head

To raise the blessed and holy dead.


3. Our God will banish all our fears

And wipe away all anguished tears.

And joyful song for each complaint

Shall spring from every gladdened saint


4. In New Jerusalem we’ll dwell 

With Jesus, our Immanuel.

The angels there shall call us “blessed”

Who find in Christ our endless rest.


5. The Lord our God will surely come

To bring His faithful children home.

He hears our moaning, sighing prayer

As we our griefs and burdens bear.


6. What we must suffer for a time

Cannot compare with bliss sublime

Which soon will be revealed in us:

Deliverance most glorious.


7. O Satan, world, and trials, begone!

Our Savior, Jesus Christ, has won!

For us His holy blood was shed,

And we shall rise, the faithful dead.


8. O wondrous life, for us prepared

Who in the tribulation dared

To cling to Christ with every breath,

By faith to struggle unto death.


9. Rejoice, O earth! Be glad and sing

To Christ, our risen Savior King!

In You is perfect grace revealed.

By You are heaven’s gates unsealed.


10. Your name is ours; Your righteousness

Is now our spotless, radiant dress.

Bring us to our eternal home.

We pray, Lord Jesus, quickly come!



LM (88 88)

DEUS TUORUM MILITUM (LSB 401)

Eternal Life; End Times; Tribulation