Sunday, June 16, 2013

Prompts to Sin and Salvation



My focus today is on Luke 7:47-48 – “Her sins, which are many, are forgiven – for she loved much. But he who is forgiven little, loves little.” And He said to her, “Your sins are forgiven.”
Let us pray … Grace and peace to you from God our Father and from the Lord Jesus Christ (Rom 1:7b). …
An unwelcome encroachment of technology: … Prompts. There are prompts for English or Spanish, to reach the directory or to leave a message. There are command prompts in DOS and Windows, Linux and UNIX. But today’s prompt is the question, “What prompts you?” We’ll ask that question to 3 people in today’s readings. … What prompted David, the preachers from Jerusalem and Jesus? Finally, like the woman who sinned, what prompts you?
First, sin prompted David. I am sure you are familiar with the story of David, Bathsheba and her husband, Uriah, a soldier under David’s command. If not, sometime this week, read Second Samuel.
Each new section of Samuel begins with storybook phrases: After the king was settled in his palace.Then King David went in and sat before the Lord.  … In the course of time. … The words that open the story of David, Bathsheba and Uriah, “In the spring, at the time when kings go off to war, David sent Joab out with the king’s men and the whole Israelite army. They destroyed the Ammonites and besieged Rabbah. But David remained in Jerusalem.”
One notices that David, who personally led his armies to victory over the Arameans, Moabites, Edomites and others, now has the luxury of sending others to fight so he can stay home in the king’s palace. God blessed David with victories and now, his chosen one to lead Israel, could rule safely while others fought for him. Yet, as we soon discover, rather than being grateful to God, David takes God’s blessings for granted.
One evening sin entered David’s heart, and rather than checking his temptation, he submitted to his desires. Sin prompted David to send for Bathsheba. That one sin triggered an avalanche of deception, abuse of power and murder.
Our story is not simply the sin of one man, but the sin of a beloved king of a favored nation at the peak of power, illustrating that temptation touches powerful rulers and the common man, including me.
When I ponder what prompted David to sin, do I reflect on how I hide one sin by layering it with others? Do I cover my anger, jealousy or pride with deceptive lies? Moreover, if I am in a position of power – (And who is not?) – do I top off that first sin act with just one more so that no one will discover my dastardly deed? Like David, rather than checking my desires, do I submit to them? Do take God’s blessings for granted as David once did?
Of course, David cannot hide his sin from God. As David sent for Bathsheba, the Lord sent for Nathan. As David’s plot trapped Uriah, Nathan’s parable snares the king and extracts self-judgment. David sits in judgment of the rich man, invoking God’s wrath upon this scoundrel. When Nathan exclaims, “You are the man!” David, rebuked for his sins, admits, “I have sinned against the Lord.”
David’s sin, as a man, military leader, king and God’s beloved, was despicable. He offended Uriah, who lost his life; Bathsheba, who lost her husband; and God, whom David took for granted. God gave David every blessing in life, and in turn, he took God’s gifts as if he earned them outright.
For his sin, David is punished with his own anger. Ironically, his four-fold punishment of the rich man who stole the poor man’s lamb resulted in the premature deaths of his first four sons. Yet, God remained faithful. Our merciful God forgave David of his sins.
We turn the page from Samuel to Galatians, which was Martin Luther’s pet epistle because he found in “Paul’s rejection of justification by works” support for his rejection of “salvation by good works”.[i]
We ask what prompted the preachers from Jerusalem to preach another gospel. … Pastor Henke’s sermon from June 2 on Galatians succinctly summarized the Law and Gospel. Recall his story about the man mired in mud, unable to escape his situation by obeying Buddha or Confucius. Only by Jesus climbing into the mud with the man, that is, God Incarnate coming to man – Christ’s  death and resurrection – Christ’s sacrifice – was he saved.
This was the Gospel Paul preached when he was in Galatia: that one is saved only through what Jesus Christ did for us. Unfortunately, along came preachers from Jerusalem who claimed that Paul taught a truncated form of the Gospel. These Jerusalem preachers taught that justification is incomplete without observing works of the Law. They claimed that Paul left them without the guidance of the Jewish Law – all 613 commandments plus certain observations – and that they needed to do these things to avoid falling into sin. Besides, they claimed, in Jerusalem real apostles observe religious feasts and food laws.
Naturally, Paul railed against their doctrine, and reminded the Galatians that as one born a Jew, he knew the Law. Paul correctly taught that a strict observance of the Law would not lead anyone to salvation.
Only God – through what He did in Christ – prompted in Paul the proper response. After he met the Risen Lord and put his faith in Him, Paul died to the Law. He had to die to the Law so that he could put his faith in Jesus Christ. This is what Paul wants his fallen away followers of Christ to do. Die to the Law and put your faith in Christ the Risen Lord. Be prompted not by the Law but by faith.
Believe me that no matter how much effort you put into something – the Law, your job, your hobby, your passion – your ROI will always be less than your original investment. Don’t believe me? Believe my friend, Shawn Banks. Shawn is a successful executive and a scratch golfer. Shawn and I golfed numerous times, and he once told me something that applies to golf and anything else we do.
“No matter how much you put into golf, you only get so much back. But no matter how much you put into God, you always get back more than you put in.”
I think if the Galatians golfed, Paul could have used that line on them. You can observe the Law religiously, but only faith in Christ will lead to salvation.
That brings me to my third point. What prompted Jesus? … What prompted Jesus to do anything? Love. He is Love Incarnate, what else prompts him? So, what prompts him to dine at the home of a Pharisee? That is easy enough to answer.
Imagine for a moment that you are able to look into the home of Simon the Pharisee on a Friday evening around sundown. [ii]  We are looking at a Sabbath Seder. For Simon the Seder meal is an opportunity for an invited guest to teach. Simon has invited Jesus as the guest of honor to teach because he thinks Jesus might be a prophet. Jesus taught in their synagogues and in the homes of other Pharisees. The question is: would Simon and his Pharisee friends agree with Jesus’ teaching?
Jesus’ teaching moved one woman so deeply that even though Pharisee table laws banned her from eating with them because she was unclean that did not stop her from honoring Jesus.
While today’s text does not state that she had previously heard Jesus, Luke implies that the woman was responding to Jesus’ earlier proclamation of God’s forgiveness.[iii]
Greeting Jesus as the most honored guest, she is so overcome with gratitude for God’s forgiveness that she begins to weep. Losing perspective of her situation, she literally lets her hair down, and violates the social mores of her culture by anointing Jesus. Unlike Simon, this woman truly welcomes Jesus as a prophet from God who has come to forgive the worst of sinners.
At this, Simon begins to question, even doubt, that Jesus is a prophet. Yet, precisely when Simon doubts, Jesus begins to teach … about God’s mercy and forgiveness.
Simon answered Jesus’ question correctly. The debtor who owed an insurmountable amount loved the lender more. Then, he turns to the woman and explicitly forgives her sins. While Simon and his invited guests debate Jesus’ teaching, He dismisses her in peace. Imagine the tumult!
The irony is that during a meal where forgiveness and fellowship are offered, the invited but unrepentant guests reclining to eat with Jesus do not receive forgiveness and exclude themselves from his fellowship, while the uninvited guest comes as a repentant sinner and receives Jesus’ forgiveness and welcomes his fellowship.
Our Lutheran founders addressed this passage in Article IV of the Apology of the Augsburg Confession stating that the woman came to Jesus, believing that she should seek the forgiveness of sins from Christ. This is the highest way of worshipping Christ.”[iv]
The lesson for the Pharisees, the early Church and us is that to be present at the Lord’s Table and to eat with Him means that we accept Him as well as his gifts of forgiveness and fellowship.
In the Apology, we read that it is because of the woman’s faith that she “receives the forgiveness of sins, even though love, confession, and other good fruits ought to follow.”[v] In other words, honor God for his mercy and respond to others in kind.
Honor God for his mercy and respond to others in kind. That leads me to my last question: what prompts us?
Do we honor God for his mercy? If so, how do we honor God for his mercy? We will never get the chance to wash Jesus’ feet with our tears and dry them with our locks, but hopefully when we confess our sins to begin our worship, we do so sincerely, and accept God’s mercy gratefully.
But what about that second part of the statement from the Apology? As a forgiven sinner, how do I respond to others in kind?
How do I respond when my life is lived in a world that demands increased profits and test scores? Where we compete for the top spot in the job market and the line up? How do I respond to others in kind when life is about making the boss and bottom line look good? Closer to home, how do I respond to neighbors and family? As a forgiven sinner and family member, how do I respond to others in kind?
Last Monday, I spent 5 hours cutting trees. At one o’clock, I quit to shower and come to JW Anthony’s funeral. On the drive, I called Cindy and told her what I did – and then remarked, “It’s all for you.” At this, she chuckled. “It’s true,” I said. “Everything I do is about you. My life is about you.” Then I paused and asked, “And your life is about me, isn’t it?” She chuckled again and agreed … But it is true, is it not? Our lives as husbands and wives should be about our spouses. And when our children – no matter what their age – witness this, they see that the foundation blocks of a solid marriage are supported by the footer of forgiveness. Couples who honor God for his mercy respond to others in kind beginning with one another and radiate love to their children, family members, friends and fellow worshippers. That is our response to the loving-kindness to God’s mercy.
But what happens when – as Pastor Henke mentioned last week – when your life is reduced to rubble? Then what?
Those of you who read Donna Pyle’s story in the spring issue of the Lutheran Woman’s Quarterly could not help feel for her. Donna’s life was on course for smooth sailing. The Holy Spirit brought her to faith, and she was serving him joyfully through her marriage, her career, the LWML and her writing. Yet it soon became clear that the Lord was going to give Donna the opportunity to look at her life and her faith in a way she never expected.
In December 2009 when she discovered that her husband was leading a secret double life, her life changed forever. She recalls it as “’the day the F5 tornado hit my marriage.’ … The divorce demanded Donna take another look at her world, her past, her present, and future. For starters, after 19 years, she was now on her own.”
In addition to adjusting everything – from where to live, how to manage finances and time, to changing wills and estate planning, there was the emotional turmoil. She was so angry that she put a phone through the wall and then discovered that she was no good at repairing sheet rock. “I just felt disbelief and overwhelming sadness at the senselessness of what had happened,” she said. “My heart was shredded. I didn’t have it in myself to forgive. It took God working in me and through me. And the most wonderful thing that came out of the divorce is my complete understanding of the need for forgiveness.”
Many are surprised when Donna shares her story of divorce and forgiveness because it doesn’t fit in today’s culture. She doesn’t hold anything against her ex-husband. She says, “There is such a revenge mindset in our culture, but there is no benefit in that whatsoever.”
Donna now writes and makes presentations on faith, and encourages Christian women to re-examine their Bible study. She had no idea what awaited her before or after the day that F5 tornado ripped through her life and destroyed her marriage. Only God’s grace keeps her going. … God’s grace keeps her going. …
So, let’s sum up. First, your sins are not so grave that God cannot forgive you. Second, you will never achieve salvation by following a law, an eight-fold path or five principles. Finally, Good News: God calls you to experience divine mercy, to honor Him and to love others even when they reduce your life to rubble because God’s grace will keep you going. … May God’s grace keep you alive in the Spirit, and … May the peace of God which surpasses all understanding, keep your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus (Phil 4:7).


[i] Brown, Introduction to the New Testament, 467
[ii] Just’s Commentary on Luke, 322ff.
[iii] Just, 329
[iv] Kolb, The Book of Concord, 144.
[v] Ibid.

Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Patience



Our fruit of the day is patience. So, bear with me.
Lord God, may Your Word pass from the ear to the heart, from the heart to the lip, and from the lip to the life that, as You have promised, Your Word may achieve the purpose for which You send it; through Jesus Christ, our Lord. Amen.
Text – Matthew 18: 21-35
21Then Peter came to Jesus and asked, “Lord, how many times shall I forgive my brother or sister who sins against me? Up to seven times?”
22Jesus answered, “I tell you, not seven times, but seventy-seven times.
23 “Therefore, the kingdom of heaven is like a king who wanted to settle accounts with his servants. 24 As he began the settlement, a man who owed him ten thousand bags of gold was brought to him. 25 Since he was not able to pay, the master ordered that he and his wife and his children and all that he had be sold to repay the debt.
26 “At this the servant fell on his knees before him. ‘Be patient with me,’ he begged, ‘and I will pay back everything.’ 27 The servant’s master took pity on him, canceled the debt and let him go.
28 “But when that servant went out, he found one of his fellow servants who owed him a hundred silver coins. He grabbed him and began to choke him. ‘Pay back what you owe me!’ he demanded.
29 “His fellow servant fell to his knees and begged him, ‘Be patient with me, and I will pay it back.’
30 “But he refused. Instead, he went off and had the man thrown into prison until he could pay the debt. 31 When the other servants saw what had happened, they were outraged and went and told their master everything that had happened.
32 “Then the master called the servant in. ‘You wicked servant,’ he said, ‘I canceled all that debt of yours because you begged me to. 33 Shouldn’t you have had mercy on your fellow servant just as I had on you?’ 34 In anger his master handed him over to the jailers to be tortured, until he should pay back all he owed.
35 “This is how my heavenly Father will treat each of you unless you forgive your brother or sister from your heart.”

I chose this passage to talk about patience because the patience Paul speaks of in Galatians 5 has little to do with sitting in traffic or waiting in line at the check-out, for your favorite team to win a championship or your in-laws to change their opinions or tastes. The patience of Paul has more to do with living in community with other Christians and how forgiven sinners must learn how to emulate God’s mercy.
As staff, we have been viewing and discussing a video series entitled “The Significance of Values in Shaping Culture.” The speaker states, “Healthy cultures never happen by accident. They are created. … And the number one force that shapes your culture is your values.”
Patience is one of the values that should shape our culture. Along with the love, joy, peace and the other fruits, patience is one of the values that shaped the diverse population of the early church.[i] When you think of the social barriers that should have divided people in Galatia or Corinth or Rome or Jerusalem, what unified them was Christ. They were all forgiven sinners through the grace of Christ and they could live together. However, to do so meant that they had to practice living the fruit of the Spirit.
Because it is so easy to fall out of relationship even with people we like, the Holy Spirit is necessary to keep us together. In order to practice long-suffering forgiveness or to be patient with one another, we cannot rely simply upon our frail humanity. We dispose ourselves to God and let His grace lead us in order to live by the Spirit (5:16).
You know, Paul’s writing of the fruit of the spirit comes to us from Galatians – the letter we have been hearing on Sundays. Paul combats the false teaching of the preachers from Jerusalem. They insisted that Christians follow the Torah, Jewish customs and religious feasts as part of God’s plan of salvation. The Law has its purpose, but Christians are to live according to the Spirit. Christians are to take on the approach of Jesus to the Law, which was a reversal of how the religious authorities approached it.
To freely receive God’s mercy – the Gospel – requires a total response of the whole person, that is, loving God with one’s heart, mind and soul, and one’s neighbor as oneself. As one who has received God’s mercy, I am called to demonstrate my grasp of that gift by extending it to others – to be merciful as my heavenly Father is merciful.
Extending mercy or patience toward a fellow believer means that I live each moment in the Spirit, which is not always easy given my fallen nature. Moreover, because God calls all to Himself through Christ, as believers, we are to spread the Gospel to those who have not yet accepted Christ. When they reject the Gospel for the moment, we ask God for patience – that we may endure this long-suffering until they do accept the Good News of salvation through Christ. Therefore, patience is more an act of the Spirit living in me than me doing anything. … However, that does not release me from taking personal responsibility to practice patience or any Christian virtue that enhances our experience of living in community with fellow Christians.
Derek Jeter practices the double play 10,000 times every spring until he can do it naturally. Practicing patience or any fruit of the spirit until I can do it naturally and as gracefully as Derek Jeter is not a work on my part to achieve salvation or even satisfaction. It is my response to a loving and merciful God who showed the depth of his love by taking all the sins of the world to the cross and redeemed us. I cannot duplicate Christ’s loving act of salvation, but I can conform to the Gospel and live according to the Spirit.
May the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, keep your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus (Phil 4:7).


[i] BS Childs, 686.