Sunday, August 05, 2018

Sermon for 8/5/18: Tenth Sunday After Trinity

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


Our Lord took up our flesh and became human like us. He knew hunger and thirst and grief. At the very least, he buried St. Joseph, His step-father and caretaker. He knew also betrayal from friends, prejudice, and irrational hatred. He knew all the sorrows, pain, and losses of men. But the worst of all this was not when they stretched out His arms and bent back His wrists to drive nails through His flesh. It was not being hoisted up so that He had to lift Himself up and tear at those nails for each breath. Even as His life ebbed away among the jeering and the blasphemy, what hurt most was that He was rejected by those He loved. They did not want His gifts.
They did not seek the things that make for peace: nails and thorns, scourge and spear. The great irony is that the chief priests and scribes sought to destroy Jesus. They could not stand His teaching. They knew it was true. They knew He spoke with authority. There was nothing contrary to Moses or the prophets. No one could argue with Him. He even slipped through their traps of logic and ethics. Nor could they dispute or deny his miracles. They could not find any moral failure in Him at all. Imagine a man in whom there was no sin, in whom there was no error, who was going about helping people, healing them. Why would you want to destroy Him? Because He was perfect and they were not. Because His Word cut at their hearts, it endangered their place in society. He called them to give up their lives, and they didn’t want to. He held up the Law as a standard, and they knew they had failed. They were guilty and ashamed. The accusations were too true and too many and they knew the Law would destroy them. So they sought to destroy it. They sought to destroy Jesus in order to be free of the Law, free of God’s demands, free of accusations and the curse.
Here is the irony: it worked. They meant it for evil; He meant it for good. They did it in hate; He suffered it in love. They did it so that they could sin without judgment or punishment; He did it to forgive their sins and create in them a new heart and life for God. The things that make for peace—nails and thorns, scourge and spear, two cruel logs hoisting the Word of God up from the earth—this satisfied the demands of Justice. He suffered being forsaken by the Father to draw all men to Himself. “Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do.” There is the peace that passes all understanding.
Now is the hour of visitation for you. No one knows what the future holds. Repent. Amend your ways and your doings. God has good things for you. Don’t trust in the lying words of your heart, words which tell you, “Calm down. Don’t be so hard on yourself. You’re not half as bad as some others.” Remember Jerusalem and repent. Your sins are many and frequent. Call upon God. He will hear your voice. Confess. Ask for forgiveness. Cast your burden upon Him. He will sustain you. Swing open the doors of your lips and Christ will enter in, whip in hand, to drive out everything with which you have defiled yourself. His Body and His Blood will purge your soul and cleanse your heart. He is long-suffering, patient, gracious, and merciful. He loves you. He will redeem your soul in peace. He will save you and your children, gathering you to Himself and covering you with the wings of His Holy Spirit. This great, suffering God has always loved you. He never holds a grudge. It is not too late. He wants you even now and is eager to be your God and dwell within you. Jesus, alive forevermore and at the right hand of God, is your Advocate and Defender. He is your peace. 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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