Sermon – Easter 5 – Acts 11:1-18
Grace and Trinity Lutheran Churches,
Bear Creek, WI
"The Same Gift - Repentance that
Leads to Life!"
We turn our
attention to the reading from Acts. I don't know about you, but I
haven't heard a lot of sermons on Acts over the years, nor have I
preached on it much. But now, as a missionary, this account of the
early years of the Christian church holds new interest for me. It
was very much a missionary time for the early Christians, as the
apostles shared the Gospel beginning at Jerusalem, but then to Judea,
Samaria, and to the ends of the earth.
And Peter's
struggles in those early days were an important part of the story –
as he, along with the rest of the Jewish disciples, struggled with
the idea that Gospel was for the gentiles, too. How did this message
of Jesus Christ – crucified and risen from the dead – how did it
relate to these outsiders? These people who maybe didn't know of the
Old Testament, who ate unclean foods, and who after all, weren't even
circumcised!?
I suppose some
preachers would start with a harangue about how we Christians need to
be more welcoming to the outsider. That we're like the Judaizers who
think that Jesus is only for us. That we think we're the only ones
who deserve God's grace. And that we better shape up in our
attitudes and actions and get busy reaching out and welcoming the
unbelievers. That maybe we should even drastically change the way we
do business for the sake of the lost – you know, like Peter had to
eat new foods and all – that we Christians should get out of our
comfort zones and our tired old ways of worship and practice...
and... well... I'm not going to do that.
Nor am I here to
pat us all on the back for being so wonderful. To the extent that we
are welcoming and reaching out, thanks be to God. To the extent that
we do support God's work here at home, and in far away lands, thanks
be to God. And even if we have to turn a poor pastor from Minnestoa
into a Packers fan to do it, it's a price we're willing to pay,
thanks be to God. No seriously, thanks be to God for the good work
that he does among us to support his mission. He deserves the thanks
and praise for any good work that we do, any gift we bring he first
gave to us, any love we show is a reflection of his love for us.
Of ourselves, we
are like Peter and the early church – confused, self-concerned,
inwardly focused. But in joyous response to the Gospel of Jesus
Christ – everything changes. For in his death our sins are paid,
and in his resurrection our new life comes to light. Easter changes
everything, and by God's Spirit at work in us, we are new creations,
children of God, heirs of eternal life.
And friends, this
is what the mission of God is all about - that the outsiders, the
unbelievers who come to Christ – that they receive the same gift
that we have. We receive the Gospel of Jesus Christ! We receive the
gift of a rebirth in the washing of renewal that is baptism! We
receive all the benefits won by the precious blood of Christ, shed
for us in his innocent suffering and death. It's all about the
gifts. And the gifts for God's people in Christ are all the same.
God's love, his eternal, everlasting, sin-and-death-destroying love –
shown in the death of his own Son on a cross long ago. Gifts which
come to us, millenia later, through humble means of word and water
and bread and wine.
This is why our
mission work, as Lutherans, centers on these gifts of Christ. This
is why we're going to Singapore to plant a Lutheran church –
meeting weekly around the Word of God and the Sacrament. Yes, we're
just going to do church – but oh what a gift that is! And it's the
same gift, the same gifts, that you treasure here each week in Bear
Creek.
We have no magic
formula for foreign missions. We have only the Gospel of Jesus
Christ – the preaching of him, crucified for sinners. We have only
his washing and his meal, to which he attaches his word. But these
gifts are enough. They are the gifts that bring repentance that
leads to life.
When the other
early Christians heard about God's work through Peter to bring these
gifts to even the gentiles, they rejoiced. They glorified God,
saying, “Then to the gentiles also God has granted repentance that
leads to life.”
Repentance that
leads to life. This is the very Christian faith. This is what it's
all about, repentance that leads to life. That each day we would see
our sins in the mirror of the law, and that each day we would return
to the font of our baptism in repentance, and that each day we grow
in faith – knowing that our sins are covered by the blood of
Christ. And by the Holy Spirit working in us, grow also in love
toward our neighbor, for we have been so loved. Repentance that
leads to life. The same gift God gives to you, he gives to all who
would believe in Christ by his grace.
May God grant
repentance to all who hear his word, and now also to those who hear
it through us, even in Singapore. For the same Jesus who died for
them, died for you, who lives for them, lives for you, who gives his
gifts to them, gives gifts to you, even today, in word and meal.
Receive them, in repentance that brings life, in Jesus Christ, amen.
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