Sunday, July 15, 2018

Sermon for 7/15/18: Seventh Sunday After Trinity

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Not By Bread Alone

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


How is it that the multitude that came to hear Jesus found themselves so utterly unprepared for basic bodily needs? How is it that they were drawn out three days without food and would have died of hunger on the way home? Jesus was certainly aware of what was happening. He did not warn them. He gave them no lectures on earthly wisdom and preparations. After all, it was not sinful pride and self-reliance that has caused this situation at all. They were caught because He who feeds the birds of the air and fishes of the sea had purposely drawn them out. It was His words, His teachings, that caused them to forget all other things. His words and His teaching were responsible for the seemingly hopeless situation.
And in this very context, as the responsible party, our Lord tells the disciples: “I have compassion on the multitude.” But how? Why did He not tell them before it was too late? A hundred days’ wages would not buy sufficient bread. How can such a crowd be satisfied? God in His wisdom turns the world’s wisdom on its head. His compassion is not some bleeding heart sympathy, but a sincere and lasting love, a genuine concern for the ongoing reality and eternal fate of mankind. This compassion caused our Lord to place these hearers into such dire straits. There in the desert, with grumbling bellies and too far from home to return, they know their helplessness. The hunger that gnaws at the 4000 is the mark of death. They must eat or they will die. There is no place for them to turn. They cannot provide for themselves. They are helpless.
The words of Jesus—words that lifted the crowd out of this mundane existence so much that they forgot all other things—now seem to turn on them. Now more than ever they realize their frailty, their inability, their weakness. In contrast to the serenity of Jesus and His perfect obedience, their guilt shows forth like a beacon in the dark of night. And so it is that the Lord provides, as the Lord always does, and by His grace and mercy they realize it and give thanks for it.
We are the frailest of God’s creatures. We cannot reliably eat raw meat; we cannot draw nutrition from grass. We are the only animal on earth requiring clothing for survival. Despite all that, we are also the proudest of His creatures. While the donkey knows his master, we rebel against the goodness of God. We think ourselves good and wise, when the truth is that we are nothing of the sort. We boast in our supposed common sense. But our street smarts quickly evaporate in the middle of the night when the car breaks down in a bad part of town and the cell phone is dead. Our vaunted common sense is evident in our blasphemy towards God’s creation in the name of love: our failed marriages, our troubled and gender-confused children, our murder of the unborn, our blind acceptance and approval of everything our Lord names as sinful and harmful.
My brothers and sisters in Christ: repent. Be emptied of yourself and your sinful pride. Feel the hunger pangs that cannot be satisfied by earthly bread. Turn to the God of compassion, the God who provides the Ram in the thicket that takes our place. Find in Him the peace the world cannot give. Rest in the forgiveness of sins, for you are precious in God’s eyes. There is nothing for you to do. Your King serves you a Feast in this wilderness: His very body and blood, given and shed for you. He is the Bread of Life, the Living Water, and He gives you His righteousness, innocence, and blessedness. Lose yourself in His words and promises. Let this be your sustenance and joy all the days of your life, for our Lord will gladly supply all you need—both for this life, and for the life of the world to come. 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.

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