Wednesday, March 19, 2025

Sermon for 3/19/25: Midweek Lent 2 (Salutary Gift series)


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The Words of Institution
Luke 10:25-37

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

When I teach the Catechism, I tell my students that the Words of Institution are where they find out if they’re Roman Catholic, a generic Protestant, or a Lutheran. It all has to do with how we receive the words Jesus speaks to create this Sacrament. Do you believe that Jesus is present in the Lord’s Supper, but that the bread and wine are gone? Then you are Roman. Do you believe that Jesus is only spiritually present in the Lord’s Supper? Then you are a Protestant. But if you take Jesus at His Word—if you believe that Jesus is truly, physically present in and under the bread and wine of the Lord’s Supper—then you are a Lutheran. And that really does matter, because it is a matter of faith. Do you take Jesus at His Word? Or must this fit into your reason and strength? And if you don’t believe Him in this, where can you believe Him?

Bruised, beaten, and helpless, the man who had fallen among thieves lay on the roadside. He was half dead, needing rescue and healing. If help had not come soon, he would surely have perished. A priest and a Levite walk by on the other side of the road. They ignore the plight of the helpless, dying man. But then comes this Samaritan: a foreigner of mixed race and religion, despised by the Jews. When he sees the poor, wounded man, Luke says that he had compassion. He was moved in the gut, the same way Jesus was moved at the sight of people who were suffering. The Samaritan wastes no time in helping the injured man, immediately binding up the man’s wounds, pouring on oil and wine. He places him on his own animal and takes him to an inn. The Good Samaritan doesn’t stop there. He places the man into the care of the innkeeper, gives him some money for expenses, and promises to repay the innkeeper upon his return.

My brothers and sisters in Christ, if this was just a lesson in morality, a story to remind Christians what they should do for others, then that would not leave us much in the way of comfort, would it? After all, we do not live this way, and we should love our neighbor this way. But more than that, with this parable Jesus paints a beautiful portrait of your salvation. He shows you just how desperate your condition was on account of sin, and He shows the gift of healing He has come to bring. The other man in the parable provides a picture of all the fallen sons of Adam. Wounded by sin, beaten by the devil’s attacks, robbed of our good standing with God, we, too, were “dead in the trespasses and sins.”

Like this man, we were helpless and destitute. Left to ourselves, we would have most certainly perished eternally. Eternal death and damnation are a just reward for our sins. Who could help us? Could the Law? Could Moses raise us up from spiritual death to life? The parable would seem to suggest that this is not so. The priest and the Levite represent Moses and the Law of Sinai, which do not heal but only kill. The Law is good; the commandments are pure. But they cannot help or heal the wounded and beaten sinner.

So along comes this foreigner from heaven called Christ. Like the Samaritan, He is hated by the world. He was despised and rejected by men, a Man of sorrows and acquainted with grief. But He came anyway. The Son of God saw your wretched state and had compassion. He did what the Law could not do: He has bound up the wounds of sinners. He has carried your sins and griefs and sorrows to the cross. And with His stripes—by His wounds, by His death at the hands of sinful men—you are healed.

The healing medicine of Christ’s forgiveness was first applied to you in your Baptism. As you were buried and raised with Christ, your Savior began His good work of healing and restoration in you. For like the man fallen among thieves, “…You were washed, you were sanctified, you were justified in the name of the Lord Jesus and by the Spirit of our God.

But the cancer of your sin continues to rear its ugly head. You need ongoing treatments. And this is why your loving Savior has brought you into the inn of His Church and placed you into the care of His called shepherds. In this way, He continues to do for you what He began in your Baptism. He continues to apply the healing medicine of His forgiveness, life, and salvation to your souls. And He does this in a unique and special way in the Lord’s Supper. In this salutary gift, the same Christ who healed every disease among men, the same Christ who bound up the brokenhearted, the same Christ by whose stripes we are healed—He comes and does for you what He did for so many wounded souls in the Gospel. You come to the Lord’s Table, wounded by your sins, helpless and in need of mercy and healing. Jesus sees your miserable condition and has compassion. He comes to weak and weary sinners and gives to you the healing medicine of His crucified and risen body and blood. Like the Samaritan in the parable, Christ binds up your wounds and pours on you the oil and wine of His good Spirit, to comfort wounded consciences.

This healing medicine of Christ’s body and blood is truly the medicine of immortality. Whoever receives this medicine, trusting in its power and benefits, truly has eternal life. Whatever illnesses and ailments you now endure, these will no longer annoy in the life to come. The healing that Christ has begun here will be brought to completion at the day of the resurrection.

So what about you? Do you need consolation? Do you have a wounded conscience? Have you lived as if God did not matter and as if you mattered most of all? Are you plagued by sin and the temptations of the devil? Then this medicine of our Lord’s body and blood is for you. It is for your healing and sanctification. Jesus tells you this in His own Word, and you can believe Him.

We give thanks to God during this Lenten season that, through this salutary gift, Christ’s healing hand reaches out to us and heals us. “Take and eat!” “Drink of it all of you!” “This is my body.” “This is my blood.” “For you.” “Do this!”  These are the words of your Great Physician, your Good Samaritan, Jesus Christ. Listen to Him! Heed His words! Receive the medicine He has for you. In the name of the Father and of the Son (+) and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
         

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

Sunday, March 16, 2025

Sermon for 3/16/25: Second Sunday in Lent C


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A Fox, Vipers, and the Lamb


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

Jesus was on His way to Jerusalem. We remember that, at the Transfiguration, the subject of the discussion among Jesus, Moses, and Elijah, was His coming departure: the things He would suffer and do to accomplish the redemption of the world. At this point, Jesus was in a region ruled by King Herod. And as the Lordtraveled from village to village, He continued to teach and preach =concerning the Kingdom of God that was in their midst.

“At that very hour, some Pharisees came and said to Him, ‘Get away from here, for Herod wants to kill you.’” As we heard last week, Satan ceased his temptations, waiting for an opportune time. But in the meantime, the devil had others to do his bidding. And the Pharisees were all too willing to do the devil’s dirty work.Were these Pharisees really concerned about our Lord’s welfare? Or were they just trying to move Jesus toward Jerusalem, where it would be easier for them to kill Him? Perhaps there was some danger from Herod. After all, Herod had carried out the brutal execution of John the Baptist. But these Pharisees were engaged in gross hypocrisy. At the same time they were warning Jesus about Herod, Mark tells us they were plotting with supporters of Herod to do away with Jesus. They were no friends of Jesus. They were using such threats to serve their own evil purposes. They despised Him. They wanted Him to go to Jerusalem. 

Our Lord’s answer made no reference to the hypocrisy of the Pharisees, though He certainly knew it for what it was. But He expressed His contempt for Herod and any danger which that sly old fox might present. He had come by his evil ways honestly, for Herod’s father had slain the innocents in Bethlehem, trying to get at the child Jesus. The Savior had faced all of this before, and He was not about to be deterred from what He had come to do. 

Jesus wanted Herod to know, and the Pharisees, too, that He would continue His work, and that there was time frame in which it would all be done. And then, on the “third day,” which is surely no coincidence, He would bring His entire work to completion. It would be finished. The death and resurrection to which He was headed would not be accomplished to satisfy Herod’s whim, but as Jesus and the heavenly Father had determined in eternity. And so, He must continue His journey to Jerusalem, for it was there that the faithful prophets of God met their end.

And then the Lord spoke of the city He loved: “O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, the city that kills the prophets and stones those who are sent to it! How often would I have gathered your children together as a hen gathers her brood under her wings, and you would not! Behold, your house is forsaken. And I tell you, you will not see me until you say, ‘Blessed is He who comes in the name of the Lord!’” It was a cry of great love, but also one of excruciating emotional pain. Jerusalem, the city of peace, as its name indicates, killed the very men sent by God to preach that peace. Jesus desired her salvation. He had sought to love and protect her like a mother hen gathers her chicks beneath the protection of her wings, sheltering them from the hawk that is circling above. Even so, this people belonged to Him. He wanted them to be His own. But they did not want Him! Are there more tragic words than these? Jerusalem rejected Him, the One who came to save them. And now, the result of their rejection was pronounced. Their house would be left desolate; their city destroyed. Only those who would acknowledge Jesus as Lord, who would call Him “blessed,” would see Him again as Savior. The rest were doomed to destruction.

As we see the Savior on His way to Jerusalem, we are witnesses to His boundless love. His love is shown in the self-sacrificing way in which He is determined to go there, knowing full well what must happen to Him there. His love is even directed toward those who would reject Him and bring upon themselves their eternal destruction. 

Nothing from this story is different today, really. Satan still mounts his opposition, and he still has plenty of willing servants to do his bidding, even some within the Church. There is still opposition to the saving work of Jesus, those who insist that His journey to Jerusalem was useless. And still Jesus comes; He stretches out the arms of His Church, with the promise of peace and eternal life to all who will believe it.

The question is, do we believe it? Or are we part of the opposition? Do we know that peace to be ours? Or are we plagued with the doubt? What is the answer? Where do we find it? The answer is in repentance; it is in the acknowledgment that we have all too often been the opponents and the doubters. But repentance also opens the door to peace and to the life of the resurrection Jesus would have us live. And as the seal of His promise, He offers you His body and blood, a sacrifice though which He obtained that peace in the forgiveness of sins. Be fed, and be an opponent no longer. Be nourished, and doubt no more. Receive these gifts of life and salvation. Have the peace that will never end. In the name of the Father and of the Son (+) and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.


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


Wednesday, March 12, 2025

Sermon for 3/12/25: Midweek Lent 1 (Salutary Gift series)


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The Nature of Holy Communion

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


The Lord delivered His people Israel from the bondage of slavery in Egypt. It was a time of great rejoicing as the Lord delivered His children from Pharaoh, bringing them across the sea on dry ground and washing away Pharaoh’s army. It was a day of victory, a day of release for the captives. God had shown strength with His arm and given the sons of Jacob a new beginning as His chosen people. 

It would not take long, though, before that new beginning was spoiled, just as it didn’t take long for Noah and his family to spoil the new beginning after the flood. The people began to wonder how they would survive out in the wilderness. Like newborn babes, hungry for nourishment, the newly redeemed Israelites soon began to notice their hunger pangs. But instead of inquiring of the Lord, instead of trusting in Him to provide for them, they began to grumble against Moses and Aaron. “Oh, that we had died by the hand of the LORD in the land of Egypt, when we sat by the pots of meat and when we ate bread to the full! For you have brought us out into this wilderness to kill this whole assembly with hunger.” 

The people were hungry. They were in a wilderness, without food or water. They thought that they had it better back in Egypt as slaves. But the Lord was merciful, slow to anger, and abounding in love. He promised to rain down bread from heaven for them so that they could eat and be satisfied. The Lord heard their grumbling, and though they deserved to die, He responded with love: “At twilight you shall eat meat, and in the morning you shall be filled with bread. And you shall know that I am the LORD your God." And that is exactly what happened. God was faithful to His promise. In the evening, quail came up and covered the camp; in the morning, the dew settled. And when the dew had gone up, there was a fine substance on the ground. Moses told them, “This is the bread which the LORD has given you to eat.” 

This was bread from heaven. God provided it to ease their physical hunger. He fed His newborn children so that they would not go hungry in the wilderness and die. But it didn’t sustain them forever. They still died eventually. It offered no lasting benefits. And there was a reason for that: this miraculous feeding was meant to teach them something about what God would do in the future.This was a sign, the full significance of which would not be revealed until the coming of Jesus. St. John records for us our Lord’s own interpretation of these events: “I am the bread of life. Your fathers ate the manna in the wilderness, and are dead. This is the bread which comes down from heaven, that one may eat of it and not die. I am the living bread which came down from heaven. If anyone eats of this bread, he will live forever; and the bread that I shall give is My flesh, which I shall give for the life of the world.”

So this miraculous feeding of the Israelites pointed to the coming of the Christ and the gifts of salvation that He would bring. In the fullness of time, God would rain down bread from heaven once again for His people. He would give them His Son, who is Himself “the bread of God…who comes down from heaven and gives life to the world.” Christ is the new and greater manna, for He does not come merely to satisfy your physical hunger. He comes to satisfy those who “hunger and thirst for righteousness.” He alone can satisfy the hunger of your souls. Whoever eats of this bread—whoever eats of Jesus Christ—will live forever, for His flesh and His blood nourish and strengthen the soul unto eternal life. 

“Lord, give us this bread always,” begged the disciples. And so He does. Every time you gather around His gifts of Word and Supper, Christ feeds you with heavenly manna, just as He fed the Israelites in the wilderness. He feeds you with holy food, as we just sang: 

We eat this bread and drink this cup,
Your precious Word believing
That Your true body and Your blood
Our lips are here receiving.

As you feast on His body and blood for the forgiveness of your sins, the Lord gives you the spiritual nourishment that your souls need for the journey. Jesus knows that you need such nourishment. He knows that the journey through the wilderness of this world is long and difficult. He sees your daily battle with your sinful flesh. He knows your physical ailments. He knows you grumble at the gifts He gives, just as the children of Israel did long ago. There is a part of you—a sinful part—that thinks that what God has done for you is not good enough. There is a part of you that longs to return to your spiritual Egypt, to the captivity of your sins. But He is merciful. He is slow to anger. He abounds in loving faithfulness. He does not want you to faint or grow weary. And so He comes, week after week, inviting battle-weary sinners to commune at His Table, until you finally reach the heavenly Promised Land. 

Now is not the time to grumble, to long for the days of your captivity as Israel once did. Now is not the time to complain that God means to harm you. Now is not the time to worry that you might not appreciate this salutary gift if it is offered too frequently. Now is the time to receive in faith the gifts our Lord wants to give. Luther tells us in his Large Catechism: “…By Baptism we are first born anew. But…there still remains the old vicious nature of flesh and blood in mankind. There are so many hindrances and temptations of the devil and of the world that we often become weary and faint, and sometimes we also stumble. Therefore, the Sacrament is given as a daily pasture and sustenance, that faith may refresh and strengthen itself so that it will not fall back in such a battle, but become ever stronger and stronger.”

This is manna from heaven, life-giving bread, given and shed for you for the forgiveness of sins. That is your spiritual sustenance as you wander through the wilderness of this world. That is the Lord’s salutary gift to you—a gift that is undeserved, to be sure, but one that comes from your loving and faithful Lord. In the name of the Father and of the Son (+) and of the Holy Spirit. Amen. 


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


Wednesday, March 05, 2025

Sermon for 3/5/25: Ash Wednesday (Salutary Gift series)


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Heavenly Treasure
Matthew 6:1-6, 16-21

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

         

Jesus told His hearers in the Sermon on the Mount, Lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where neither moth nor rust destroys and where thieves do not break in and steal.” That’s why we are here this evening: to receive heavenly treasures from our Lord Jesus Christ—to hear His Word; to receive the forgiveness of our sins; to receive life and salvation in His body and blood. And we need these treasures precisely because they are the gifts our Old Adam fears most. “Poor miserable sinners” that we are, we seek earthly treasures: money and possessions, the acclaim of our bosses and teachers—really anything other than those things that draw us near to our loving God. We turn away from the gifts that edify and nourish our souls.

That is what sin really is: a turning away from God and His gifts, relying on what we can get or do for ourselves. This means that repentance is turning away from ourselves, our self-centeredness, our wants and desires and what we think is best, and receiving in their place our Father’s gifts again. God gives and we receive.

That’s how it has been since the beginning. God made everything. He created a perfect world for His children. But they turned away from His gifts: gifts of life, of good and abundant food, of each other in marriage, of being in His image, of a right relationship with Him. They turned away from all that to the allure of getting something for themselves. And the result of turning away from God and His gifts was death.

But God would not leave it at that. Death would not have the final word. Our Father’s answer to them, His response to their turning away, was that He gave again. While the residue of the forbidden fruit was still on their breath, while they were still ashamed because of their nakedness, He gave to Adam and Eve the promise of a Savior, a Seed of the woman to crush the head of the satanic serpent

With all this in mind, consider the Holy Gospel we heard tonight. Consider how it speaks of taking the gifts of God and turning them into something they were never intended to be. Righteousness is a gift of God. Prayer is a gift of God. Helping others is living out the forgiveness we have received by sharing it with others. So what happened? The Pharisees, like all sinners, took these gifts and perverted them into opportunities for themselves: the chance to be seen, to be praised, to get the admiration of others. They turned the life of faith into a three-ring circus. Repentance was needed. 

So what about us today? Do we fall into the same trap? Do we turn away from the gifts of God to something else? We want to say no; we want to deny it with all the indignation we possess. But the truth? The truth is that we do. We turn away from God’s gift of Absolution: instead of repenting and confessing, we try to justify ourselves, to explain and excuse our actions, to blame others for our sin. We turn away from the gift of God’s Word: we believe what the world says, instead of clinging to what God said is true; we judge things by what seems right to me rather than by what God said. We turn away from the gift of Baptism: instead of clinging to our identity as children of God, we measure our value by the numbers in our bank accounts, by our positions on the corporate and social ladders, by what our grades are, by what the world thinks is important.

And we turn away from the gift of our Lord’s Body and Blood. Sometimes we claim that Jesus made a mistake in using bread and wine as the elements, seeing how gluten makes some people ill, seeing how addicts can be harmed by the intake of any alcohol. Sometimes we claim that it can be offered too frequently, because taking it more often might make it seem less special somehow. And sometimes, we forget that the body and blood of Jesus is our family meal, meant to bring us together in the fellowship of this Table. We refuse to live as the Communion of saints, a family.

So tonight the cry goes out once again: Repent. Be reconciled to God.” Turn away from the decaying wealth of this world to welcome His gifts. Receive Christ again, for the Father “made Him who knew no sin to be sin for us, that we might become the righteousness of God in Him.” Christ was made sin for you. He became your turning away. He cried from the cross, My God, My God, why have You forsaken me?” Instead of turning away from us as we deserve, the Father turned away from His sinless Son. In place of forsakenness, we are given Christ’s righteousness, a true heavenly treasure.

That is our focus as we journey to our Lord’s cross again this year. Tonight—starting tonight—turn back. Turn back to Christ. Turn back to His gifts. Receive the love, the forgiveness, the life, the hope, the strength, the comfort, the promises, and the joy you need. Receive Him, for He is here: present in His Word, present in His body and blood, for you. He is your Treasure that endures forever. In the name of the Father and of the Son (+) and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
         

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

Sunday, March 02, 2025

Sermon for 3/2/25: Transfiguration of Our Lord (c)


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Jesus Alone

Luke 9:28-36

 

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

 

 

Peter, James, and John would have been pleased to stay on the Mount of Transfiguration with Moses and Elijah. But they wanted nothing to do with the place called Calvary. Calvary was where the blood of the Son of God was to be shed; where the Lamb, provided by the Father for sacrifice, bore our sins to death; where God was revealed and seen not in glory, but in His humble, bloody, dying mercy. To their shame, they wanted none of that. And yet, Moses and Elijah came to the Mount of Transfiguration in the only way that men do: by means of death. There is no other way. In this, we are all the same: all will die. Even those still living at the return of our Lord will have either died in Holy Baptism and go on to eternal life, or they will die eternal death.

Peter did learn. It was hard. He wept bitter tears of shame and of sorrow. The muscles built up on the Sea of Galilee, the brawn and the street smarts, the plans and schemes and ways with men—they all fell away to nothing when faced with God’s glory. Peter was afraid. His strength failed again when faced with our Lord’s willingness to suffer and die for men who hated Him. In the face of that great love, Peter could see just how far he had fallen, how awful were the things he had done, how disgusting were the things he had said and thought, how terrible were the lies he had told, how false and shameful was his bravado. The eyes of the Lord fell on Him. The cock crowed, and Peter wept.

For whom does the cock crow? It crows for Peter, yes, but it also crows for you. Betrayers and cowards, self-serving, conniving, depraved—we are all heirs in this way of Peter, of James and John, of David and Adam. Look in the mirror and ask yourself how cheaply you will sell your soul. Will you at least have the decency of Peter to be afraid? Do you really think you can fool God as you have fooled men? Do you dare to challenge God and risk His wrath and anger? Is it not enough to weary men; will you weary God as well? Why should God put up with you? Aren’t you more self-willed, unpredictable, even disobedient, than any dog that ever lived? Weep bitter tears. Turn from yourself, and turn to Christ.

And then, arise and do not be afraid. Why should God put up with you? He will do so because He is good, because His mercy endures forever. He will do so because He promised to be your God and to love you; and, unlike men, God does not lie. Arise, and see Jesus only! Your own transfiguration is coming. Be focused not upon yourself but upon His unfailing love and promise. He went to that horrendous death like a Lamb to the slaughter, without complaint. But He did not go against His will. He went in perfect love, in complete obedience, with nothing more than the desire to make you His. He knew this was the cost. He knew what it took to bring Peter and James and John, Moses and Elijah, David and Nathan, even you, to Himself, and to His Father in heaven. He was always willing to pay that price. He did not hesitate. He endured all of hell’s fury to wipe away Peter’s tears and your tears. It is worth it to Him. You are worth it to Him. And He regrets none of it. His life for you is pure and undefiled. Hell cannot stop Him. Death cannot hold Him, and it will not hold you.

He has made you His once again. His atoning death, His justifying resurrection, and His life-giving ascension was His exodus from this world. It is also your exodus. He leads you out of death’s shadow and slavery and into the promised land enjoyed now by Moses and Elijah, by Peter, James, and John, and, indeed, by all the saints of God.

So, arise, and do not be afraid. Our God is more patient with you than you are with your pets, or your children, or even with yourself. His love is not stopped by your guilt. His Law does not return to power simply because you have sinned. He has provided the Lamb for the sacrifice. There is nothing more to pay, no sins left to be atoned for, nothing so bad or painful that it cannot be overcome. And He has placed His name on you. He is well-pleased with you. And he provides this day for your nourishment and strength, for your courage and your loyalty: His body and His blood. Do not be afraid. Eat and drink. Rejoice and rest. He knows what He is doing. He is loving you in Christ, and that love will never stop. In the name of the Father and of the Son (+) and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.

 

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

Sunday, February 16, 2025

Sermon for 2/16/25: Sixth Sunday After the Epiphany


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Blessing and Woe

Luke 6:17-26

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

 

There is simply no getting around it. Jesus declares the poor and hungry, the weeping and reviled, to be blessed; and woe to the wealthy and satisfied, the happy and popular. In other words, things are not as they appear. Those who are successful in the world are not necessarily blessed by God; those who seem to suffer all misfortune may, indeed, possess His eternal favor.

Wealth surely has its share of temptations. To gain riches, one might resort to all sorts of sinful practices: ignoring spouse and children, worshiping the job, taking credit for the work of others, just to name a few. The road to wealth is littered with all kinds of ways that make it necessary to ignore the Lord’s commandments. And once wealth is achieved, things seldom get better. Those who have riches are likely to put their trust in them, rejecting the grace of God. Or they may spend so much time with their luxuries that they have no time for the Lord and His Word. And those who fall prey to the temptations of riches will certainly face God’s wrath.

The Lord has said repeatedly that His message of sin and grace will be rejected by the world. So it was for the prophets and the apostles and the early Church; so it is for us now. One who enjoys immense popularity with the world has likely gained that popularity by being less than faithful to Christ and His Word; the one who is rejected is far more likely to be the faithful one!

But you and I know that it’s not quite that easy. Some are poor because, frankly, they are just too lazy to hold down a job or because they have done some incredibly foolish things that have cost them their livelihood. Likewise, some who are hungry may well have destroyed their chance at success by poor work habits or even criminal behavior. Some mourn and are sad because they have completely ruined their lives by their choice to indulge in all sorts of sinful behavior. Some people are unpopular because the are rude, irritating, or obnoxious.

Only Jesus has has been perfect in all that He does, of course. He alone has been perfectly poor and hungry, mournful and hated. St. Paul writes: “You know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ that, though He was rich, yet for your sake He became poor, so that you by His poverty might become rich.” Taking on human flesh was not enough humiliation. He stepped even lower in that. He was born into poverty. He became even more poverty-stricken when He exchanged His perfect righteousness for our sin at the cross, suffering the judgment of God there for us.

Luke tells us: “Jesus, full of the Holy Spirit, returned from the Jordan and was led by the Spirit in the wilderness for forty days, being tempted by the devil. And He ate nothing during those days. And when they ended He was hungry.” Not only did Jesus go hungry, but He did so in the midst of constant temptation by the devil. And throughout those forty days, Jesus remained perfectly sinless so that He might remain the perfect sacrificial Lamb.

John tells us that Jesus wept at the death of His beloved friend, Lazarus, for He knew the wages of sin. Likewise, He wept over Jerusalem, because she had rejected God’s Word and persecuted and even killed the Word’s prophetic messengers. He grieved the sinfulness of man and mourned death, so much that He willingly died in our place.

And was Jesus reviled? Listen to the crowds: “Crucify Him!” “His blood be on us and on our children.” He was so hated that the crowd demanded the release of an insurrectionist while the holy Son of God was put to death. At the cross He was rejected by men for our sin, forsaken by the Father in heaven. Perfect in His love, He prayed that the Father would forgive them all.

Hear this good news of woes and blessings: The Savior takes away from you, and the Savior gives. The Savior takes away your sin and suffers its woes on the cross. He becomes the perfect Sacrifice whose blood is shed for your forgiveness. But even as the Savior takes away your sin and woe, He credits you with His holiness. He shares His merit with you so that you would be holy and blameless in the eyes of God. That is why St. Paul wrote to the Galatians: “I have been crucified with Christ. It is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me. And the life I now live in the flesh I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave Himself for me.” If Christ dwells in you with the forgiveness of sins, then He brings with Him all of the blessings He has earned for you.

And you can be sure that Christ is with you. When you were baptized, you were joined to His death and resurrection. By His Word that is preached and taught, the Word made flesh dwells with you. And at His Supper, He delivers His holy body and blood for you to eat and drink for the remission of your sins. Christ dwells with you, and so every blessing of His is yours.

If you will seek perfection by being poor enough, or sad enough, or enough of anything, you will face only woe. But blessed are you, for your Savior, Jesus, has been perfectly obedient in your place; He covers you completely with His saving merits. Blessed are you, for you are forgiven all your sins: in the name of the Father, and of the Son (+), and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.

 

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

Sunday, February 09, 2025

Sermon for 2/9/25: Fifth Sunday After the Epiphany (c)


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Sinners in the Presence of God
Isaiah 6:1-8 (9-13)

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

Sometime about 750 years before Jesus was born, a man named Isaiah received a revelation from the Lord God Almighty. God brought this man into the heavenly Temple and right to the very throne of heaven itself. And so, Isaiah stands before the Maker of heaven and earth—or, as we confess in the Athanasian Creed, “the Uncreated, the Incomprehensible, the Eternal.” No sinner can look directly into the face of God and survive; Isaiah knew it. Even Moses was not allowed to see the face of God. And yet, there stood Isaiah in God’s divine presence.

It is not an easy or comfortable feeling, to realize that you are a sinner in the presence of God. This isn’t some random NFL official who can seemingly be paid off with a bribe or a town that tickets speeding drivers and is satisfied with a fine. God is the righteous, incorruptible Judge, and we have no defense before Him. The Judge has just one sentence to pass for sinners: death.

Isaiah was one of God’s chosen people when the Lord brought him into the heavenly Temple. Still, Isaiah remained a sinner, and he knew it. “Woe is me, for I am undone! Because I am a man of unclean lips, and I dwell in the midst of a people of unclean lips; for my eyes have seen the King, the Lord of hosts.” Isaiah had nothing to offer God to stay the arm of judgment and wrath—no good work, no sacrifice, nothing. His continued existence in the very Presence of God was due solely to the mercy and grace of God in Christ Jesus.

You have come here this day to the House of God, to this sanctuary which is consecrated to the Lord. You have come here to be in the very Presence of the Lord God. But you are no less a sinner, no less unclean than Isaiah. You dwell in the midst of a people of unclean lips. Do you realize what you have done by appearing here and seeking to be in His Presence? Do you understand what you have said when you added your “amen” to the Invocation? You have called upon the name declared unto you on the day of your Baptism: the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. And in doing so, you have left yourself open to His righteous judgment.

Here today, in the Presence of God, you made confession of your sin. You have nothing to offer God to stay the hand of condemnation and wrath—no good work, no sacrifice, nothing. You can only plead “guilty.” Your continued existence here and now in the very Presence of God is due solely to the mercy and grace of God in Christ Jesus.

This guilty plea has a strange and unexpected result. After Isaiah confessed his sin, one of the Lord’s angels, one of the messengers, flew to Isaiah, having in his hand a live coal which he had taken with the tongs from the altar. And he touched Isaiah’s mouth with it and said: “Behold, this has touched your lips; your iniquity is taken away, and your sin purged.”

It worked the same way this morning. After you confessed your sin, one of the Lord’s messengers, one of Christ’s under-shepherds, announced to you, “Almighty God in His mercy has given His Son to die for you and for His sake forgives you all your sins. As a called and ordained servant of Christ, and by His authority, I therefore forgive you all your sins in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit.” Instead of requiring a live coal be touched to you, the Word of God is sufficient to remove the iniquity of your sin. The sacrifice of Christ on the cross is enough. Instead of the righteous sentence of death, we are shown mercy and are given a full pardon.

Now, with all our sins removed as far as the east is from the west, with all our transgressions forgotten by the God Who knows all things, we are ready to enter into His Presence, where we are permitted to sing the Sanctus: “Holy, Holy, Holy, Lord God of power and might; Heaven and earth are full of Your glory.” Then, for those who are prepared, one of God’s messengers takes the very Body and Blood of Christ. He places it in your mouth and says, “Take and eat: the Body of Christ, given for you.” “Take and drink: the Blood of Christ, shed for you.” It has touched your lips. Just as it was when the water applied to you with the Word in Holy Baptism, just as it is with the holy word of Absolution, so it is with the Lord’s Supper: your iniquity is taken away; your sin is purged.

It’s no coincidence that we find Isaiah in the middle of a worship service. You see, that’s what heaven is all about. Every image we have of heaven in Scripture is of the hosts of heaven gathered around the divine Presence to worship God. Whether it’s Isaiah in his book, the angels as they appear to the shepherds in Luke, or John in his Revelation, the hosts of heaven are in the midst of worship, praising God for what He is and what He has done and continues to do for His people. Whether we sing “Holy, Holy, Holy, Lord God of Sabaoth,” or “Worthy is Christ, the Lamb who was slain,” or “Glory to God in the highest, and peace to His people on earth,” as we did this morning, we are joining in the hymns of heaven in praise to God. When we gather at the altar to receive the body and blood of our Savior, we gather “with angels and archangels and with all the company of heaven.” We have gathered here in the name of the Triune God, invoking His holy name, and even as Jesus promised, where two or three are gathered in His name, He is in our very midst! We stand here in His presence to receive His gifts. We stand in the presence of God in this place, and, by His grace, we live.

Like Isaiah, you have been chosen by God. He has called you by name, and He has forgiven you by the power of His name. You need not fear to be in the presence of the righteous God, for your sins have been forgiven, and you have been freed to do the work for which God has chosen you. He will continue to grant you peace in His presence from now unto eternity. In the name of the Father and of the Son (+) and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.

 

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

Sunday, February 02, 2025

Sermon for 2/2/25: Fourth Sunday After the Epiphany (c)


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Understanding

I Corinthians 13:1-13

 

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

 

 

Though we do not always understand the ways of God, the way of faith is to calmly trust Him. We walk by faith, not by sight. And that faith leans on the Word of the One who cannot lie, whose love for the world has been clearly shown in the saving gift of His Son. Though we cannot always comprehend, much less explain, the ways of God, we know that everything He does and all that He permits to come our way will serve as a blessing to us. So St. Paul directs us to that day when we will understand these things. “For now we see in a mirror dimly, but then face to face. Now I know in part; then I shall know fully, even as I have been known.”

St. Paul, that great apostle of the Lord, did not always possess the knowledge needed to solve every problem he faced. At times it seemed as though evil forces were in control; he was hindered in the very work the Lord had given him to do. The same has been true of the children of God of every age. Abraham was commanded to sacrifice Isaac, his only son. Job, a man who feared God and hated evil, saw his children and possessions taken from him, and his body covered with boils and sores. Joseph was sold into slavery in Egypt. Truly, God’s ways are past finding out. His thoughts are not our thoughts. His ways are not our ways.

The same experience is ours today. We cannot understand why God often permits His faithful children to weep while the ungodly laugh and prosper. We cannot understand why one child of God spends a lifetime in suffering while another enjoys continuous health. We cannot understand why parishioners advance in age and are weary of life and long for the hour of deliverance from this world of sin and sorrow, while a young child can be quickly and even tragically taken from this life. We cannot understand why Christians often struggle mightily and seem to get nowhere, while the children of the world gain wealth and power so easily. There is so much that is beyond our comprehension.

So it is not surprising that many a faithful soul asks, “Why does God deal with me this way?” This side of eternity, there is not always a satisfying answer to be found. Now we know only “in part.” But what we do know, we know with certainty! All of God’s dealings with us are just and right; indeed, they are His ways of love and mercy. As St. John declared in the Book of Revelation: Great and marvelous are your works, Lord God almighty! Just and true are your ways, O King of the saints!”

Short-sighted mortals that we are, we must learn to trust God in all His ways. Our life here is not the end; it is only the beginning of our existence. Here we are learning only those first elementary truths of the great counsel of God: “...Now we see in a mirror dimly... Now I know in part.” Can a child in kindergarten grasp and understand all the intricacies of algebra or physics? Of course not. But as years pass into maturity, that child grows in knowledge and understanding. And by the grace of God, as years pass, we also make some progress in understanding the wisdom and ways of God. As we grow in age and experience, we begin to see with more clarity that the seemingly aimless ways of God have a definite end in sight; all things come from and return to the love and mercy of our heavenly Father.

Faith and confidence in God is strengthened through trial and testing. We learn to look beyond death and the grave, to rejoice increasingly more in the hope of the eternal blessing that is ours. And though the ways of God remain beyond our understanding, we eventually come to realize that this should not trouble us. We have a loving Father who never seeks to harm or hurt—a Father who has our eternal good in mind.

When we are tempted to complain about our lot, let us turn our eyes to that midnight scene in the Garden of Gethsemane, where our Savior knelt in agony, already bearing the burden of the sins of the world. He cried out in agony. But His anguished cry was tempered with prayer: “Father, not My will, but Yours be done.” If we will but go from day to day with that same confidence in the Father’s will, we will begin to see the preparation for heaven that occurs even in the darkest days: a greater patience, a more perfect trust, a longing and desire for “the courts of the Lord.”

We are moving toward understanding because our faith rests on the promise of the One who is the Truth—the One who has redeemed us from sin, death, and the power of the devil—so that we would be the children of God, heirs of His heavenly glory. That is what we will ponder again in the coming season of Lent. As we walk with our Lord again to His suffering, death, and resurrection that wins for us life eternal, we will find reason again to rejoice that the Day is coming, when we will see for ourselves those glories of the life to come through Christ our Lord. For now, we can only wonder. But then we will see Him face to face. “For now we see in a mirror dimly...Now I know in part; then I shall know fully, even as I have been fully known.” In the name of the Father and of the Son (†) and of the Holy Spirit.  Amen.

 

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

 

Sunday, January 19, 2025

Sermon for 1/19/25: Second Sunday After Epiphany


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Wine for You

John 2:1-12

 

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

 

 

The clock was ticking. His short ministry had begun, the battle with the devil had been joined, and Jesus was slowly making His way to Jerusalem. He had not yet gathered all of His disciples. He still had much to do. He was not in Cana for pleasure. He never really went anywhere for pleasure. He was there to serve, to fulfill the Law, to endure temptation, to suffer. His hour had not yet come, but the countdown had begun. For Jesus, being baptized by John was not at all unlike being diagnosed with a terminal disease. He had been given a death sentence in the Jordan River and had only three years to live. So His time was short, and yet here His mother comes to Him with trivialities. What concern was it of His if some wedding party was not quite as spectacular as the planners had hoped?

His answer to Mary was direct—some might even say He was rude. “What does this have to do with Me?” In other words, “I have more important things I need to be doing.” And did they really need more wine? Rare indeed is the man who actually needs more wine, nor by that time were they likely to appreciate it. So whatever it was Mary was hoping for, it seemed that she was denied. Jesus simply told her that her concern was not His at that moment, her request unimportant in the face of His looming betrayal, suffering, and death.

But her response to His rebuke could not have been better. She believed that, despite His seeming rejection of her concern, He would help; He would rescue her and the wedding couple in some way, because that is who Jesus is. That is what He does. He is always rescuing people.

Despite the rejection, she believes that nothing of her concern is really outside her Son’s concern; she believes that no request she makes is trivial; she believes that He hears and answers every prayer. So in faith, she gave the servants the best piece of advice the world has ever heard: “Do whatever He tells you.” And what a surprise He had in store for them! He gave them wine like the world has never known—and more than they could ask or imagine.

God gives His gifts for us to enjoy them. He never gives them with the idea that we will send Him a thank you note or build a statue, nor does He do these things for His pleasure, or because it makes Him feel good to help us. He does them for us, because we have need of them, and because He would see us enjoy the life He has given us. He was not in Cana to enjoy Himself. He was there to give of Himself, to give His blessing, and even to provide wine.

And to this day we rightly pray to Him, just as Mary did. We may not ask for wine as she did, but our prayers echo hers. “Lord, this life is hard. I am tired. I am weak and frustrated. Sometimes I am sad and at other times just plain mad. Lord, I wish that I was happier than I am, and more content, that my spouse was more understanding and would pay more attention to me, that my job was easier, that I wasn’t hassled by people who don’t think I am doing it very well. Lord, I need more wine.”

While God may not always answer the prayers the way we want Him to, He never ignores those whom He loves, those for whom He laid down His life. He will do what is good and right. He may well surprise you. So pray away in boldness and confidence. Nothing is insignificant to Him if it is important to you. And if He holds out for now, don’t despair. He provides what He knows you need now, and He knows what you need for eternity. He withholds no necessary gift from you. He provides “all [you] need to support this body and life,” and He provides all you need for eternal life with Him.

God is good. He knows what you want. He knows what you need. He is good and He knows what is good. He will not fail you. You will have pleasures amidst your temptations and frustrations and heartache. You will have wine, and your heart will be glad. In the meantime, while you wait for His goodness, remember Mary’s charge: “Do whatever He tells you.” And what He tells you is this: “Take and eat. Drink of it, all of you. Do this in remembrance of Me.” Eat the holy body of Jesus and drink His precious blood for the forgiveness of your sins and the strengthening of your faith. Return to your Baptism as you feel sorrow over your sins. Hear the Word of Absolution and have the balm of His resurrection applied generously to your heart. Your Father loves you. He has made you His own child in Holy Baptism. He even sent His Son to be the sacrifice that makes you His.

The servants knew who it was who turned the water to wine. The disciples saw it and believed. They knew who was and is responsible for joy and gladness, and indeed for all the gifts enjoyed by men. It is Mary’s unassuming Son, Jesus, lover of your soul, the One who is truly good, the One who fulfilled the Scripture in their hearing. The servants knew. The disciples believed. God grant that we would be numbered among them and receive His gifts with joy and thanksgiving. In the name of the Father and of the Son (+) and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.

 

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

Sunday, January 05, 2025

Sermon for 1/5/25:The Epiphany of Our Lord (observed)


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Gifts
Matthew 2:1-12

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

 

The Magi went to the logical place, don’t you think? Where else would they go but Jerusalem, the royal city? But they arrived at the party all dressed up and on time, only to find that there was no party. No one seemed to know about this newborn King. So the Magi were confused. “Where is He who has been born King of the Jews?” And to the astonished faces around them, they added: “For we have seen His star in the East and have come to worship Him.”

When word reached Herod that important visitors had come from Eastern lands, asking about the birth of a new King of the Jews, he was understandably troubled. And he was not alone, we are told. All Jerusalem was troubled with him. And some things never change, for the coming of Jesus in human flesh and blood is a troubling thing for those who want to be their own kings, who want to have the say over what they do and how they live. Jesus comes as King. "You can't tell me what to do. You're not my mom!" Or this one: "My body, my choice." The patriarch Jacob had prophesied of Him long before: “To Him shall be the obedience of the people.” None may call Him Lord and then do as they like without consequence.

Herod was troubled, and Jerusalem with him. But Herod knew where to turn. He called in the chief priests and scribes to ask them where the Christ was to be born. Scripture gave the answer: in Bethlehem of Judea, that insignificant little village whose only claim to fame was that it was the birth place of King David, as the prophet Micah had foretold hundreds of years earlier.

It is significant that the star alone did not lead the Magi to Christ. In the end, they needed the Word of God to tell them where to look. And the same is true for us, too: we do not find Christ in beautiful sunsets or mountain peaks shimmering with snow. Yes, those are all His, to be sure, and they declare His glory. But He will only be found in the Word that He has given: in the Holy Scriptures His Spirit has inspired, and in the Gospel Sacraments where His gifts of life and salvation are delivered.

And how magnificent the grace of God is! After giving them the Word that pointed directly to where the Child was, He added the star again. This time it came and stood right over the place where the Child would be found. And considering what they found, they needed this confirmation. When they got there, they found the poorest of circumstances: a teenage mother with a little baby wrapped not in the silk and velvet of royalty, but in the simplest and most common of materials. Here was the long-promised King of the Jews. Were they disappointed that this King they had sought from so far should be an utterly wretched and ordinary peasant baby?

No. They closed their eyes to what they saw, so that the eyes of their hearts might be fastened on what God’s Word said. They believed, contrary to what they saw. They believed that what God had said was true, that the star had not led them astray, that here was the Babe whose goings forth were from ancient days, even from eternity. They believed that this was the promised King who had come to be the Savior of all people. They believed and placed their hope and confidence in Him. And so they fell down on their knees before the holy Child and worshiped Him! They brought out their gifts and offered them to Him. Gold confessed His kingship, His divine magnificence and glory. Incense confessed that He Is true God, the One who hears the prayers of His people as they rise to Him like incense. And myrrh confessed that He would die as the sacrifice for the sins of all. His whole life was set out before Him in these gifts!

Here is the One who was given for us, to be the bearer of our sin, the sacrifice of atonement for us, so that we might stand before the Father without stain or blemish, a people eternally loved by Him. He came to give us all. And so we desire to give to Him. The wise men brought gold, frankincense, and myrrh. What can we give Him? An old Christmas hymn says, “Ah, dearest Jesus, holy Child, make Thee a bed, soft, undefiled, within my heart, that it may be a quiet chamber kept for Thee.” Such is the prayer of those who renounce their own rights over their lives and entrust everything to Him. And with Him, that is the way it must be. There can be no half-hearted or compromised discipleship. We are all either “wise men” who fall down in worship before the Christ; or we are Herod, out to do away with the King, so that we might retain control over our lives.

Epiphany is the day of gifts! And this Epiphany, to you is given again the gift of forgiveness for all those times you have played the part of Herod and have killed in your heart the voice of Him who calls you away from sin to live under His kingship. He says to you: “Come, My child, and be my own and live under Me in My kingdom in everlasting righteousness, innocence, and blessedness. Receive the gifts I have won for you at the cross.” And what will you say to that kind invitation of your King? May your answer be to make the lifelong journey, departing from your own selfish and sinful desires, living and walking in the gift of the righteousness you received in the waters of Holy Baptism, until finally you come to rest in the arms of your Savior. Then you, too, will truly be filled with exceedingly great joy. In the name of the Father and of the Son (+) and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.

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