Friday, January 27, 2023

ON TOP OF THE MOUNTAIN

 


Have you ever taken a ride on the Duquesne Incline? You should do that sometime. We took our grandchildren there at the end of December. The Duquesne Incline is the top tourist attraction in Pittsburgh, and it only costs a few dollars to ride from bottom to the top where you have a gorgeous view of Pittsburgh.

I mention that because in our Gospel today (Matt 5:1-12), Jesus went up the mountain to teach his disciples and all who gathered around him. Do you know why Jesus went up the mountain to teach? It’s where God taught his people.

God spoke to Abraham on the mountain (Gen 22). God called Moses to the mountain and gave him the Ten Commandments on stone tablets (Exod 24). In Isaiah, God said that all peoples will flow to the mountain of the Lord’s house (ch 2). Scripture tells us that God can make the mountains shake, melt and disappear (Ps 18; 87; Isa 54).

In the New Testament, we read of how Jesus was tempted on the mountain by the devil (Matt 4:8-9). On another mountain, Jesus was transfigured, that is, he turned dazzlingly white, as he spoke to Moses and Elijah (Mark 9). Jesus went to the mountains to pray (Luke 6:12). He even went to Mount Olive (Matt 24:3).

When you are at the top of the mountain, you can see so much that it makes you think how small the world is. It makes me think of how tiny I am, and how awesome God is. It makes me think how small my ideas and opinions are, and how great God’s Law and Gospel are.

The next time you have a chance to look down from a mountain, remind yourself of all the times we read about mountains in the Bible and how people, including Jesus, went there to listen to God teach them how to love Him and others. With that, let us pray.

 Heavenly Father, from whom all fatherhood in heaven and earth is named: Bless all children, and give their fathers and mothers the spirit of wisdom and love, so that the homes in which they grow up may be to them an image of Your Kingdom, and the care of their parents a likeness of Your love. We pray in the Name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit. Amen.

Wednesday, January 25, 2023

Beatitudes

 


God’s grace, peace and mercy be with you. My sermon is entitled The Beatitudes’ M’s, and my focus is on our Gospel (Matthew 5:1-12) Let us pray. Heavenly Father, the psalmist wrote, “I rejoiced when they said to me, ‘Let us go to the house of the Lord.’” Now that our feet are standing within your gates, we rejoice to hear your Word. As we listen, may your Spirit enlighten our minds and move our hearts to love deeply as Jesus loved. This we pray to you, Most Holy Trinity. Amen.

I am planning a trip to Poland in 2024, and have started again studying the Polish language, which is terribly difficult. Like all languages, even the alphabet differs from ours. There is no Q, V or X, unless it is a foreign word, such as X-ray. Now, there is a history of every language, and that brings me to the letter M.

Has anyone told you the history of the letter M? It all started with the Egyptians, who used it as a picture sign of water in their hieroglyphics. Through different peoples and languages in the Middle East, the letter took on different forms, until the Greeks got ahold of it. They gave it a symmetrical, balanced form, and named it mu. The Romans took the sign without change into Latin. From Latin the capital letter M came unchanged into English.

I open this sermon with the letter M because in our Gospel for today, M’s are abundant. The last verse of chapter four tells us that multitudes followed Jesus. The setting for the Sermon is a mountain. He taught his disciples when he opened his mouth. He proclaimed blessed those who mourn, the meek and the merciful. Allow me then to first focus on that mountain setting; then on those who are blessed; and finally, its meaning for us today.

First, the mountain. Chapter four tells us that Jesus spent time in the wilderness where he was tempted by Satan. After that, he heard that John had been arrested, so he withdrew to Galilee, where he began to preach and call his first disciples (Peter, Andrew, James and John). He began to preach in the synagogues, proclaim the kingdom of God, and heal people in the bonds of sickness, seizures and demons. It is at this point that people start to follow him.

Chapter five tells us that Jesus saw the crowds, went up the mountain and sat down. What are we to think of this? Modern readers may gloss over this sentence. Christians may see Moses in it, but then miss Matthew’s point. Jesus does not appear simply as a new Moses. Jesus is the God who once spoke to Moses and to his people. The Sermon on the Mount is the message which God promised to kings and prophets and yet hidden from them is now revealed to the apostles (3:17).[1] God teaches us (disciples) from the mountain.

The story continues. By telling us that after he sat down, his disciples came to him or gathered around him, Matthew makes an impressive and deliberate formal distinction between the crowds and Jesus’ disciples. Imagine that on this mountain, Jesus’ disciples are close to him, and the crowds are further down the slope. It is like observing a conversation between a great teacher and his students in a large auditorium or stadium. The students or disciples are closer and can engage in a dialogue with the teacher. We are sitting in the peanut gallery and cannot engage in that dialogue. Yet that does not mean that the teaching is not for us. The lesson is also meant for us, not only for the students. Because the crowd is gathered on the mountain with Jesus, his teaching is also meant for them.

The crowds hear Christ’s words and understand his claim to authority. They are astonished that he taught with such authority, but that does not mean that the crowd accepted his claim. It meant that the crowd only recognized that Jesus was convinced that he had authority.[2] The disciples did believe, and after the Sermon, some new disciples emerged from the crowd (8:18-22). Now, before I move onto what Jesus taught, keep in mind that verse two is the beginning of Jesus’ teaching, and verse one of chapter 26 is when he finished his teaching, making the entire Gospel of Matthew Christianity’s first catechism.

In this opening section of the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus spoke the word ‘blessed’ nine times. The definition of beatitude means the state of utmost bliss or happiness. The Greek word, Makários, is actually a name meaning happy, fortunate or blessed. The Greek philosopher, Aristotle, said that children are said to be happy because they are full of hope. St. Paul wrote to the Romans, “For we were saved in this hope, but hope that is seen is not hope; for why does one still hope for what he sees? But if we hope for what we do not see, we eagerly wait for it with perseverance” (8:24-25).

Happiness is the last end of human life. We do not possess this end already, but we hope to possess it. We hope to obtain happiness as we move towards it. Our movement implies action, and we need to be moved by the Holy Spirit who helps us obey and follow Christ.[3] So, when you hear the word ‘blessed’, think happiness and hope.

Today, I am only going to cover a few of the Beatitudes. Since my sermon is entitled Beatitudes’ M’s, I chose to cover only mourn, meek and merciful. Normally, we do not think that people who are mournful, meek or merciful are happy, and the Beatitudes strike many people as odd. What then did Jesus mean that these people are blessed?

Let’s start with mourning. Here, it does not mean people who have suffered a loss, but rather those who recognize and acknowledge the presence of sin and evil in their own lives, in the church and in the world around them. The disciples were called to know, even when Jesus was in their midst, that they should expect the presence of evil and sin.

Martin Luther once wrote that as a Christian, “you will soon find out what it means to mourn and be sorrowful. … You will be hindered and hemmed in on every side, so that you will suffer enough to make your heart sad.”[4] In Luke, we read how Jesus he entered the synagogue in Nazareth on the sabbath and read a passage from Isaiah (Luke 4:16-19). Following that quote, Isaiah’s words continue to tell us that through the Suffering Servant, God would grant to those who mourn a beautiful headdress instead of ashes, and the oil of gladness instead of mourning (Isa 61:2-3). We read in Corinthians of Paul’s mourning, “I fear that when I come again my God may humble me before you, and I may have to mourn over many of those who sinned earlier and have not repented of the impurity, sexual immorality, and sensuality that they have practiced” (2 Cor 12:21). It is, therefore, important to read v. 4 as Matthew and the other Evangelists intended, that is, they did not shy away from stating that in the present, people are mourning because of the existence of sin and evil, but in the future, they will be comforted by God. So, if you know that God will indeed keep his promise and comfort you, you can and should mourn that the presence of evil in your life is real, and that our hope lies only within the Risen Christ.

Let’s move on to meek. When you hear the word meek, you probably think of someone who is docile, mild or submissive. You may recall that student in your class who did not fight back when bullied or harassed, or that elderly person who shies away from boisterous neighbors. Like the first Beatitude, “poor in spirit,” the term meek or lowly does not refer to an activity or an attitude, but to a condition or status. Jesus used the term to refer to himself as lowly and gentle (11:29), and Matthew citied Isaiah’s passage when he wrote of Jesus’ entry on a donkey into Jerusalem, which reminds us that Jesus was gentle and lowly (21:5).

The Greek sense of meek is one who is in need of deliverance, and often it is contrasted with those who are wicked. We read throughout the Psalms that God’s people are in need of deliverance.[5] We read of David’s meekness in Psalm 132:1, “Be mindful, O Lord, of David and his great meekness.” Psalm 37 encourages God’s people not to be afraid because other people enjoy the power and prosperity of evildoers. “In just a little while, the wicked will be no more; though you look carefully at his place, he will not be there. But the meek shall inherit the land and delight themselves in abundant peace” (10-11).

The point here is that the meek are people who are unable to help themselves because they suffer from the oppression of evildoers or Satan. The salvation or deliverance promised and fulfilled by Jesus is not some disembodied existence of the soul (or pie in the sky when you die), but a hope that is creational and eschatological. “We see our own weaknesses, the product of human failings. … Our rivals have the same weaknesses.”[6] In other words, God will make all things new for there will be a Judgement Day.[7] With that light on the horizon, the lowly are already saved, already blessed.[8]

From meek to merciful. The best example in Matthew that demonstrates how mercy looks is the Parable of the Unforgiving Servant (18:21-35). The first servant, who is shown mercy by his master to whom he owes an insurmountable debt, refuses to show mercy to another servant who owes him a fraction of his own debt. The forgiven servant has the second servant jailed until he repays his debt. Hearing of this, the master is angry, and then has the first servant rightly condemned and cast into an insufferable and tortuous prison. If the master’s mercy had its desirable effect, it would not only have forgiven the first debtor, but would also have transformed him into a forgiving person. It did not, and so the debt remained.

Jesus, who is perfect mercy, empowers his disciples, who are united to him, to be merciful. Once God’s mercy has entered into your heart, it reemerges and is passed to another sinner. Merciful describes Jesus’ disciples. Being merciful shows the transforming power of discipleship and of Jesus’ call to faith to all people. Since Jesus himself is perfect mercy in the flesh, you cannot become a disciple of Jesus without beginning to show mercy in a new way.

Verse 7 reminds Jesus’ disciples – and us – to identify with Jesus. It also promises the final blessing and merciful forgiveness at the Last Judgement. The message is this: Those who belong to Jesus have begun to be merciful, and are blessed, and on the Last Day, will receive mercy in all its fulness.[9] John Chrysostom once wrote, “Human mercy and divine mercy are not the same thing. As wide as the interval is between corrupted and perfect goodness, so far is human mercy distinguished from divine mercy.”[10] The mercy that the merciful receive will be greater than human mercy; it will be divine mercy.

Now for our last M, meaning. A study of the Beatitudes can lead to many applications. You can apply them to your business or customer service. The Beatitudes can influence managers and leaders. I found articles on the Beatitudes presented by contributors at The Hoover Institute, Harvard Business School and Pepperdine Law School. I am sure we can apply the Beatitudes to any walk of life, and we should.

Applying the Beatitudes to your life is not so that you become a better version of you. Rather, it is you knowing that you mourn, that you are meek, and that you are called to be merciful. As I was writing this sermon, I reflected upon the people I visited at home, hospital and rehab centers during the week of January 8. I told each of them this: You are the meek. You have no power like presidents or other politicians, athletes or executives. Other people control your life and you are just managing to stay alive and remain steadfast to your Savior, your Deliverer, our Lord Jesus Christ.

What I said to them, I say to you. You mourn. You are meek. You are merciful. As mournful people, you recognize the existence of sin and evil in the world and in your own life. That is why you come here. You confess your sins and ask God and Church for pardon and absolution.

As meek people, in your state and condition of life, you know that you control only so much of the world around you. You don’t control the war in Ukraine or the iron fist of Communist China. There is nothing you can do about the price of gas or eggs. That is why you read Scripture – because you see that those who seek worldly power have their limits, but those who seek first the Kingdom of God understand the unlimited love-power of God.

As merciful people, you know how God has been merciful to you, and in turn, you show mercy to others, whether they are parents, caregivers, children, neighbors or strangers. You are not perfectly merciful, which is why you come here – to be with other imperfect saints who take and eat the true Body and Blood of Christ and are nourished by that act.

My friends, as I said earlier, Matthew is the first Christian catechism. Catechesis always has a beginning and a final examination which ensures that one desiring to be Christian understands how to live the Faith. The final examination is chapter 25, particularly The Separation of the Sheep and Goats.

If you want to hear the King say, “Come, you who are blessed by my Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world,” and you are wondering when you saw the Lord hungry, thirsty, as a stranger, naked, sick or in prison, be prepared for the King’s answer: “Truly, I say to you, as you did it to one of the least of these my brothers, you did it to me.” In itself, that should be enough motive for any of us seeking happiness. May the peace of God that surpasses all understanding, keep your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus. Amen.



[1] Jeffrey A. Gibbs, Matthew 1:1-11:1. St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House (2006), p. 229, footnote 11.

[2] Ibid., p. 399.

[3] See Thomas Aquinas on The Beatitudes: https://www.newadvent.org/summa/2069.htm

[4] Gibbs, p. 243.

[5] See Psalm 36:10-11; 146:5-6; 149:4.

[6] Phil Lawler, “Our Rivals May Not Be as Powerful as We Think,” www.catholicculture.com, January 18, 2023.

[7] Matthew 19:28-30; 25:31-32.

[8] Gibbs, p. 244.

[9] Ibid, p. 247.

[10] Thomas C. Oden, Ancient Christian Commentary on Scripture: New Testament Ia, Matthew 1-13. Downers Grove IL: InterVarsity Press (2001), p. 85.

Friday, January 20, 2023

Lumen Christi!

 


Have you ever walked in the dark? Most of the time, even in the middle of the night when we get up and walk into another room, we can see a little bit because we have a nightlight or a flashlight. If you are like me, you need that because you do not want to step on your dog.

A few years ago, I was on a mission trip to Ecuador. It is a small nation in South America and the equator runs through it. That’s why it’s called Ecuador. Our group went to a church service in a remote village. The church looked like a picnic pavilion. It had a concrete floor and a roof, but no solid walls. It did not have electricity. When we arrived, it was daylight, but soon became dark. Someone distributed candles so we could see. When we left, we had to use the flashlights on our phones to see where we were walking.

I mention that moment in my life because in our reading today (Isa 9:1-4), we heard, “The people who walked in darkness have seen a great light; those who dwelt in a land of deep darkness, on them has light shone.” Isaiah was talking about the people of Israel. In Egypt, they were under the darkness of slavery. They did not remember or never knew God. Then God sent Moses to them, and through Moses, God brought his people into the light of freedom.

His words also told everyone what Jesus Christ would do for all people, including us. Before we were baptized into Christ Jesus, we were people living under the darkness of sin. Before the grace of Christ touched our lives, all we knew was self, sin and Satan. Now, like the people of Israel, we are freed from the darkness of that slavery, and live together as brothers and sisters of the Lord. With that, let us pray.

Heavenly Father, from whom all fatherhood in heaven and earth is named: Bless all children, and give their fathers and mothers the spirit of wisdom and love, so that the homes in which they grow up may be to them an image of Your Kingdom, and the care of their parents a likeness of Your love. We pray in the Name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit. Amen.

Wednesday, January 18, 2023

United in Christ

 


God’s grace, peace and mercy be with you. My sermon is entitled United We Stand In Christ, and my focus today is on 1st Corinthians (1:10-18), with a special emphasis on verse 10. Let us pray. Heavenly Father, the psalmist wrote, “I rejoiced when they said to me, ‘Let us go to the house of the Lord.’” Now that our feet are standing within your gates, we rejoice to hear your Word. As we listen, may your Spirit enlighten our minds and move our hearts to love deeply as Jesus loved. This we pray to you, Most Holy Trinity. Amen.

“For united we stand, Divided we fall, And if our backs should ever be against the wall, We'll be together, together, you and I.” “United We Stand” was recorded in 1970 by The Brotherhood of Man, it was their first hit, peaking at #13. Recorded by over 100 different artists, it became a patriotic and spiritual anthem during the post 9/11 recovery. Taken literally, the lyrics convey two lovers who tell each other that no matter what hardships come their way, they will always be together. In general terms, it relates a message of strength in unity.[1] 

Had Paul thought of it, he would have used the song to rally Christians in Corinth, but The Brotherhood had not yet written the song, and when sung in Greek something gets lost in translation. Since 1st Corinthians is read for the next few weeks, it offers us an opportunity to examine relationships, specifically Paul’s relationship with a divided church and relationships in a divided church or family today. That’s the bad news. The good news is that Paul applied the Gospel to the Church at Corinth, and we can apply it to relationships with church members so that we can stand united in Christ.

First, Paul’s relationship with a divided church. The word, division comes from the Latin dividere, meaning to force apart or remove. In modern English, division means to partition or to separate. Surprisingly, these first Christians who were united to Christ, His Church and other church members through baptism – through Christ’s salvific suffering, death and resurrection – the Gospel – chose to remove themselves from these divinely ordered relationships. Reflect for a moment on the powerful relationships created through baptism, and then ask yourself what could prompt people to remove themselves from those relationships. The answer is Satan and sin separate us from God and one another. Corinthian church members willingly separated themselves according to who baptized them.

Over the next few weeks, we will hear how these divisions carried over into other areas of Church life. Paul will address their lack of appreciation of the Lord’s Supper, their misunderstanding about Christian Resurrection and other issues.

Today, we find such relationships in divided churches and families. Of course, we sometimes divide ourselves into political parties or groups that wear Penn State’s sky blue and white or Pitt’s blue and gold. We have never been united in the United States of America. Before the Revolutionary War, the Christian Church was divided over American Independence.[2] Politics and football aside, we know many issues divide people in Church and family; some seriously. Topping that list is money.

Few, if any, congregations regardless of denomination have gone unscathed by financial improprieties,[3] even churches with a clean audit experience tension over money.[4] Research shows that arguing about money is the top predictor of divorce.[5] We have as many reasons for arguing about money as we do opinions, but basically it is because we have a sinfully emotional attachment to money, and we don’t trust some people in our families who control the purse strings or want to control them.

If you ponder that thought, you will see that our sinful divisions over money carry over to other areas of life, particularly, a lack of love for members of our families and the Church, and a misunderstanding of God’s will for us and our Church.

Sometimes, we have good reason not to trust people we love. If the person is an addict, chances are she or he is going to take your money because addicts love drugs more than people. In one of the churches I served, a woman I knew informed me that she and her husband were divorcing because she could no longer tolerate what his cocaine addiction was doing to them. After consoling her, I advised her to withdraw all her money from their accounts and deposit everything into a new account. She declined that advice because she trusted her husband enough that she didn’t think she had to do this. The next week she called me and furiously informed me that her soon-to-be ex-husband cleaned out their accounts.

So, while there is good reason to remove ourselves from the danger of sinful situations and protect ourselves from those who can harm us, when it comes to removing ourselves from sacred unions – baptism, communion, marriage – we should really pray about our choice and ask God for the grace to guide us to do His will.

Paul realized he was dealing with new Christians. In essence, he founded the Church at Corinth. He spent 18 months teaching and preaching before embarking on missionary work elsewhere. Wherever he journeyed, he snuggled his newborn Christians close to his bosom – sort of the way parents and grandparents snuggle with infants.

In dealing with the Corinthian Christians, Paul knew to apply the Law, but he also knew that he had to apply the Gospel. In his opening verses, Paul addressed the members as those sanctified in Christ Jesus.  Next, he affirmed their spiritual gifts. He gets into that in chapter 13. Then, Paul insisted that the Holy Spirit must transform their behavior.

Maybe the Corinthians did not fully realize what it meant to receive the Gospel of Jesus Christ – the good news that the Son of God came as one of us, taught mercy and lived a sinless life, healed the sick and forgave the sinner, gave us His Body and Blood, suffered and died on the Cross, rose from the dead after three days, offered us peace, and before ascending to His Father, promised us the Holy Spirit as He instructed us to baptize and teach. The Gospel had the power to transform their behavior and their relationships. For that reason, Paul could instruct the Corinthians, “Let there be no divisions among you. … Be perfectly united in mind and thought.”

If they were perfectly united in mind and thought, if they stood united in Christ, if their unity came through faith in Christ, then through prayer and acts of loving kindness, they would remain united, not divided.

 Unfortunately, we do not know what happened in Corinth. I would love to stand here and tell you that they lived happily ever after, but the truth is that Christians have become accustomed to divisions in our faith and in our families. Even when we agree on the Articles of Faith and accept the Book of Concord, we agree to disagree.

If we look at the history of events that we observed last week, we realize how contentious Christians once were and still are. Last Monday, we observed the birthday of Reverend Martin Luther King, and history tells us that not all Christians agreed with his ideas. On Friday, the Annual March for Life recalled the Supreme Court’s ruling on Roe v Wade, which legalized the killing of multi-millions of unborn babies since January 22, 1973. Even with last year’s overturn of that ruling, it is estimated that the number of abortions that occur annually will only decrease to 700,000. The March is also the world’s largest human rights demonstration. Now, some churches whole-heartedly support abortion on demand, but if Christians cannot agree on the fundamental issue to respect and revere human life at all stages, how will we ever expect church members and family members to be united in mind and thought? So, we must pray for those seeking, providing and promoting abortions that they instead seek, provide and promote life within the traditional family.

Fortunately, there is hope. There is the Gospel, as powerful today as it was during the life of the Apostle Paul, whose conversion to the Faith we celebrate on January 25th. If the Gospel is at work in your life, as it was in Paul’s, so is daily prayer. Research shows that daily prayer heals marriages. It’s difficult to be estranged from someone if authentic Christian prayer and the power of the Gospel are part and parcel of your daily life.

Praying for family members can help overcome divisions and unify us. Praying for church members can help us overcome divisions and unify us. Do I pray for church members daily? Do I take home the bulletin and pray for the individuals listed in it? Do I believe that praying for church members will help us overcome divisions and unify us? My friends, the Gospel contains the power to reunite us with God and each other. Perhaps if Christians in Corinth thought of this, Chloe’s people would have reported only good news to Paul. The good news for us is that that power is still available.

This week, instead of tuning into every minute of the NFL playoff coverage, tune into the power of the Gospel, and feel what real champions feel. Know in your heart that when we are in Christ, united we stand, and united we fall – on our knees to offer Our Father true praise and worship. … When we are united in Christ, the peace of God that surpasses all understanding, keeps our hearts and minds in Christ Jesus. Amen.



[2] Mark A. Noll, America’s God: From Jonathan Edwards to Abraham Lincoln. New York: Oxford University Press, 2002. pp. 116ff.

[3] Walter Pavlo, “Fraud Thriving In U.S. Churches, But You Wouldn't Know It.” Forbes, November 18, 2013. http://www.forbes.com/sites/walterpavlo/2013/11/18/fraud-thriving-in-u-s-churches-but-you-wouldnt-know-it/ 

[4] View “Church and Synagogue Security News,” http://blog.congregationalsecurityinc.com/

[5] “Divorce Study: Financial Arguments Early In Relationship May Predict Divorce,” Huffington Post, July 16, 2013. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/07/12/divorce-study_n_3587811.html

 

Friday, January 13, 2023

SHARE GLAD NEWS

 


Do you think you could stand in front of a group of people and talk about what God has done for you? Most adults have a hard time doing that. It is not because they do not know what God has done for them. It is because they are afraid to stand in front of people and talk, which is called ‘public speaking.’

Some adults are more afraid of public speaking than anything else, but we can overcome or conquer our fears and try an activity that we once were afraid of doing. By now you have learned how to ride a bike. Maybe you learned how to swim or started playing the piano.

In our Psalm today (40:1-11), we read, “I have told the glad news of deliverance in the great congregation; behold, I have not restrained my lips, as you know, O Lord. … I have spoken of your faithfulness and your salvation.” King David knew all that God did for him and he put his words into a poem.

David knew that God protected him when he faced Goliath. He knew that God watched over him when King Saul tried to kill him. He knew that God was on his side when his son, Absalom, tried to overthrow him. He thought about the times God saved him, and told everyone all the good news.

Telling others what God did for you may take some time. Start today by thinking of one small thing God did for you. God gave you a strong body and a sharp mind. God gave you health and loving parents, a sense of humor and athletic talent. Think of those things every morning and evening, and start to share them with your family members, and then a friend. After that, you can share glad news with everyone.

However and whenever you share glad news of what God did for you, it will please God. God loves you and you love God, and people should know that. Share that with others.

Heavenly Father, from whom all fatherhood in heaven and earth is named: Bless all children, and give their fathers and mothers the spirit of wisdom and love, so that the homes in which they grow up may be to them an image of Your Kingdom, and the care of their parents a likeness of Your love. We pray in the Name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit. Amen.

Wednesday, January 11, 2023

Check Your Vision

 


God’s grace, peace and mercy be with you. My sermon today is entitled Vision, and my focus is our readings (Isaiah 49:1–7; 1 Cor. 1:1–9; John 1:29–42a). Let us pray. Heavenly Father, the psalmist wrote, “I rejoiced when they said to me, ‘Let us go to the house of the Lord.’” Now that we are within your gates, we rejoice to hear your Word. As we listen, may your Spirit enlighten our minds and move our hearts to love deeply as Jesus loved. This we pray to you, Most Holy Trinity. Amen.

Vision has various meanings depending upon its context. When I am with my optometrist, vision is about the health of my eyes. When I am gazing into a clear night sky, vision is about constellations. When we met with our contractor, vision is about how we saw the house we wanted him to build. When young people choose a career path, vision is how they see themselves now and in the future as teachers, engineers, financial managers, medical professionals or welders.

Vision involves the eye and the imagination. It involves knowledge and experience. Vision includes what I see before me now, and how we see ourselves as a congregation in five years. That said, I want to spend some time today on what Isaiah, John the Baptist and Paul saw, and then circle back to what we see.

First, Isaiah’s vision. When we read of what God revealed to Isaiah in a vision, he saw the Lord sitting upon a throne, high and lifted up; and the train of his robe filled the temple (6:1). He was so overwhelmed at this sight, and became agonizingly aware of God’s need for a messenger to the people of Israel, and, despite his own sense of inadequacy, he offered himself for God’s service. When Isaiah “heard the voice of the Lord saying, ‘Whom shall I send, and who will go for us?’, he said, “Here I am! Send me” (6:8).

Commissioned to give voice to the divine word was no light undertaking. Isaiah was to condemn his own people and watch the nation crumble and perish. He was aware that, coming with such a message, he would experience bitter opposition, willful disbelief, and ridicule. All this came to him in the form of a vision and ended as a sudden, firm, and lifelong resolve.

In today’s chapter, Isaiah calls the whole world to listen. “Listen” is a summons commonly used by the prophets, but “Listen to me” is used only by Isaiah, and only when he speaks of the Lord (46:3; 48:12; 51:1; 55:2). Isaiah was not a political figure, but spoke of the release of prisoners (42:7; 49:9) and a journey to a new land (42:16; 49:9-12). The release of bondage into freedom is not of the feet, but the mind and heart. Now, we all know people who have been bound to wheelchairs or beds for years or decades, but the Word of God released them, perhaps not from a physical bond, but their minds and hearts.

Isaiah realized that Israel, then exiled to Babylon, was incapable of living up to what it meant to be Israel. In chapter 48, we see the evidence that Israel forfeited all rights to that name as God foretold it (48:1-8). Therefore, God either had to accept the failure of his plans and promises or find a true and worthy Israel, a new Servant. Isaiah’s vision is that this Servant would be a wonderful new beginning of God’s plan.

Isaiah saw that God desired to gather Israel not to be simply a servant, but to be a light for the nations so that His salvation could reach to the end of the earth (49:6). And yet, God’s Holy One would be thoroughly despised, rejected, abhorred and hated by the nation’s rulers. To understand why God’s Holy One would be treated like this, we can turn to The Three Uses of the Law in Luther’s Small Catechism.

The Law serves as a curb, mirror and guide. God’s Law helps to control violent outbursts of sin and keeps order in the world. It accuses us and shows us our sin. Finally, God’s Law teaches us what we should and should not do to live a God-pleasing life; and the power to live according to the Law comes from the Gospel.

So, if the Holy One of God teaches that following God’s Law shows us how to control our behavior, most reasonable people would agree that can be accomplished. On the other hand, if the Holy One holds a mirror which shows us and accuses us of sin, we may not be so agreeable with that. I mean, the mirror does not lie. It shows us something about ourselves that we welcome or reject; in this case, that we are sinning or missing the mark. Now imagine the Servant holding up that mirror to an entire people and showing them their sin and accusing them before God. How would “God’s People” respond to that?!

The Servant struggled as he spent his strength carrying out what God appointed him to do. He had been faithful, spared no expense, and saw nothing coming out of his effort. Nothing has been achieved. All has been a waste of effort. Initially, he became despondent, but it is revealed to him that it is not for him to decide. So, he turns from his own “wisdom” and rests in the God who called and appointed him. Resting in God is the antidote to the Servant’s despondency. It is also revealed to him that it is the power of God that brings forth fruit.

What we see in the life of Isaiah, we see in the life of Jesus. It is why Jesus prayed to His Father in Gethsemane, “Abba, Father, all things are possible for you. Remove this cup from me. Yet not what I will, but what you will” (Mark 14:36). Before I move from Isaiah’s vision to John’s, I leave you with this piece of advice I received many years ago when I was newly ordained. Later today, ponder this: If you ever grew despondent being God’s servant in whatever capacity that has been in your life (spouse, parent, adult, teen), did it dawn on you to rest in Jesus and allow His Father to bring forth the fruit?

John’s Vision. When the Baptist saw Jesus coming toward him, he saw the Lamb of God. Sometimes when we read the Bible we do not hang onto every word and phrase. That said, let’s consider who John was. His parents, Zechariah and Elizabeth, were advanced in age when he was born. His father was a priest, and his mother was a descendant of Aaron. Upon his birth, Zechariah prophesied, “Blessed be the Lord, the God of Israel; he has come to his people and set them free. He has raised up for us a mighty savior, born of the house of his servant David. … You, my child, shall be called the prophet of the Most High; for you will go before the Lord to prepare his way, to give his people knowledge of salvation by the forgiveness of their sins” (Luke 1:68-69, 76-77).[1]

As a child, John grew and became physically and spiritually strong. His parents were not poor, but John embraced poverty. He lived in the wilderness, wore a sackcloth made from camel hair held up by a leather strap, and ate grasshoppers with wild honey.[2] Because he was dedicated as a Nazirite and never drank wine or any strong drink. He was also filled with the Holy Spirit even when he was in his mother’s womb (Luke 1:15). John also was a member of the Essene community, a Jewish mystical sect somewhat resembling the Pharisees who lived lives of ritual purity and separation. In the wilderness he preached a baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins.

It's important to know what kind of Jewish man John was because, like every one of us, John’s vision was formed by all of this. His vision was unlike that of many of the people who surrounded him. Think of John’s vision in this way. As a 65-year-old white male whose descent is 100% Polish, raised Catholic, now serving as a pastor in the Lutheran Church for ten years after twenty-some in the Catholic Church, I see Jesus differently than other people. Since your background is different from mine, you see Jesus differently than I do. Our own particular backgrounds effect our vision of Jesus.

So, what did John see when he said, “Behold, the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world!”? What is the Lamb of God? What is it to any Jew of John’s day? What is it to you?

When a Jew heard “Lamb of God” it brought to mind the Exodus of the Israelites out of Egypt under the mighty hand of God. At that initial Passover, each family was to procure a lamb that qualified for the redemption of the Israelites. It had to be a perfect one-year-old male sheep, which was slaughtered and eaten. The head of every household anointed the lintels of the house with the blood of the lamb (Ex 12). The blood of the lamb was a sign to God that the people of this house belonged to Him so that He would not kill the firstborn male when He passed over the house.

Later, in the Torah when blood sacrifices were introduced, the Lord also explained why these sacrifices were needed for the forgiveness of the sins of the Israelites. We read in Leviticus, “The life of the flesh is in the blood, and I have given it for you on the altar to make atonement for your souls, for it is the blood that makes atonement by the life” (17:11). So, the blood of the Lamb of God took away the sins of the people, but the sacrifices were executed repeatedly. John proclaimed Jesus as Lamb of God because he saw him as the one who would be sacrificed to take away our sins forever, meaning that Jesus was the perfect and final sacrifice.

Now, keep in mind that the blood of the lamb on the original Passover was also a sign that these people belonged to God. Jewish males were signed through circumcision to indicate that they belonged to God (Gen 17). Similarly, Roman soldiers were signed with the tattoo of SPQR and other permanent dots to identify their allegiance to the empire and their membership in a certain unit. And at your baptism, you were anointed and signed with the Cross of Christ to identify you as belonging to Jesus Christ.

Paul’s Vision. In 1st Corinthians today (1:1-9), Paul sees the Church, the people, as sanctified in Christ Jesus, that is they were made holy by God through their baptism. He refers to this repeatedly throughout the Letter. His vision of these Christians was that they were saints joined to all the other baptized Christians throughout the world. Through this Letter, Paul explained the Church’s teaching and corrected the faults of erroneous teaching, but never lost sight of the fact that the members were saints.

As saints today, we all need to be reminded of the true teaching of the Church, which is why we read, alongside the Bible, the catechisms and other writings in the Book of Concord, which keep us from misinterpreting what the Bible says to us today.

Our Vision. That said, what is our vision of the Church? What is your vision not only of this congregation, but also of our Eastern District, Synod and 35 Sister Churches throughout the world? What is my vision?

My vision of all of these Church bodies, and particularly this one is that we are all saints who constantly sin. And as a friend of mine said, “I am the chief sinner among you.” That is why I need God’s mercy and forgiveness that has been and is given to me through Baptism and the Lord’s Supper. That is why I heed the spiritual advice of Martin Luther.

Luther once wrote that each day we should all do these four things. First, recite the Apostle’s Creed because it tells us what we are to believe. Second, meditate on the Ten Commandments because they tell us how to live. Third, recite the Lord’s Prayer because it tells us how to pray. Fourth, ponder our Baptism and the Lord’s Supper, which we should receive often, because they are the means of God’s grace that strengthen us. That is my vision of saints who need and seek God’s mercy and forgiveness.

Here is my hope: that you heed Dr. Luther’s advice and take on this daily practice. I hope that you would do it not because it will separate you from the world but because the world needs you. You carry God’s message and God’s vision into the world because nobody else is. Do this like Isaiah, John the Baptist and Paul did. Spare no expense and embrace the struggle which God appointed you to do, and then rest in God’s arms and you will see what God can do. Do that, and may the peace of God which is beyond all understanding keep your heart and mind in Christ Jesus. Amen.



[1] This is from the version of I pray each morning.

[2] See Numbers 11:22; Deuteronomy 32:13.