Pentecost 11
Farewell Sermon
Revelation 7:9-14
Dear Christian friends, since today is
my final sermon as pastor here at Grace, I wanted to share some
concluding thoughts as my ministry here comes to a close, and I begin
a new phase of service to the Lord.
We've been through a lot together. I
began here as a young pastor 13 years ago. When I came, as you
recall, my wife Brenda was very ill, and Grace was extremely
supportive as she was hospitalized, and as she returned to health.
You rejoiced with us as we welcomed our three daughters into the
world, and into God's kingdom through Holy Baptism.
I've baptized your children, presided
at your weddings and the funerals of your loved ones. I've visited
you in the hospital, and kept you in countless prayers, both in the
struggles and joys of your lives.
As I've been a part of your lives, you
have been a part of mine. You've seen me through some of my best and
worst moments, in the hard times and the good. You've suffered
through my worst sermons, and there have surely been some clunkers.
You've supported me and my ministry in your midst faithfully, and I
thank you.
Special thanks to Pastor Poppe, a
faithful servant of Christ, in whose capable care you will continue
to receive healthy doses of Jesus Christ. It's been a pleasure to
serve alongside you, pastor, and I wish you the best as well.
But now it is time for me to depart
from you, officially. As I serve God in a very different context, I
will draw on the experiences I've gained here, and I am sure I will
continue to grow. I hope above all that you consider my new
calling less a matter of losing a pastor, but more like you are
sending a missionary. As a new congregation is established
in a new country, Grace Lutheran, Racine, will have played a huge
part in it, as I will carry you all in my heart even there.
I thought of using some scriptural
farewell sermon as our text today – Moses' farewell address, St.
Paul's concluding remarks, or even words of Jesus saying his
goodbyes. But I am not Moses or St. Paul, and I am certainly not
Jesus Christ.
Instead I thought I would call your
attention to one of my favorite passages of Scripture, one that has
been a comfort to me as I have served here, and along with you these
13 years. It's a text I've often preached at funerals, but it also
seems fitting for today. From Revelation 7:
After this I looked, and behold,
a great multitude that no one could number, from every nation, from
all tribes and peoples and languages, standing before the throne and
before the Lamb, clothed in white robes, with palm branches in their
hands, and crying out with a loud voice, “Salvation belongs to our
God who sits on the throne, and to the Lamb!” And all the angels
were standing around the throne and around the elders and the four
living creatures, and they fell on their faces before the throne and
worshiped God, saying, “Amen! Blessing and glory and wisdom and
thanksgiving and honor and power and might be to our God forever and
ever! Amen.”
Then one of the elders addressed me, saying, “Who are these, clothed in white robes, and from where have they come?” I said to him, “Sir, you know.” And he said to me, “These are the ones coming out of the great tribulation. They have washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb.
(Revelation 7:9-14 ESV)
Then one of the elders addressed me, saying, “Who are these, clothed in white robes, and from where have they come?” I said to him, “Sir, you know.” And he said to me, “These are the ones coming out of the great tribulation. They have washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb.
(Revelation 7:9-14 ESV)
As I think back on the great multitude
of people I've met and shared life with here at Grace Lutheran
Church, Racine, I will remember you. And there are certain things I
can say about you all.
One, you are sinners. Like me, you
struggle through life with your own self-inflicted guilt and shame,
bearing the burdens of suffering and sorrow that life in this broken
world brings. You're not perfect people, as there is no such thing
this side of heaven. And I don't expect to find perfect people where
I am going.
You are sinners, but you are my kind of
sinners. You are people who live repentant in your baptism,
gathering here each week to receive God's Word of forgiveness, and
the life-giving body and blood of Christ. You are redeemed sinners,
people of the multitude pictured here in Revelation. You are among
those who have washed your robes and made them white in the blood of
the lamb.
We live in the great tribulation,
trying times for God's people. We've been through many struggles
together – personal, and as a congregation. Life in this world is
hard. Tears flow. Even Jesus wept. We grieve over our sins, and
over the effects of sin – diseases, troubles, even death. In so
many ways we are all the same... stumbling through from one crisis to
another, looking for help wherever we can find it. We bear each
others burdens, but that isn't enough.
Thanks be to God through Jesus Christ,
that he gives you all good things. God sends his Son to your rescue.
The Father and the Son send the Spirit to help you, comfort you, and
keep you, even through the valley of the shadow of death. So fear no
evil.
You are baptized. You are washed in
the holy waters of his promise. You live by a daily drowning of the
Old Adam, and a daily arising of the New Man. You are sealed in
those waters for eternity with a promise that keeps you ever fresh
and clean. A multitude of white-robed palm-branch waving, victorious
people, pure and righteous and holy in Christ along.
You are beggars, as am I, who live only
by the generous hand of God. He who fed the 5000 with bread and fish
feeds the multitude clad in white with his own body and blood. As
you gather each week at this rail and receive what is far more
precious than gold or silver, know that we remain in that one holy
communion of all the saints. We are one body, one holy Christian
church, united in Christ alone.
And as I go forth to preach in a new
land, pray with me that many more will hear of Christ crucified for
sinners, and join that great multitude washed in the blood of the
Lamb. For the message will be the same – Law and Gospel, Sin and
Grace. Jesus Christ, who died for you and me. Jesus Christ, who
lives and reigns, for you. Jesus Christ, our righteousness, our sure
defense, our only hope.
And may they, too, hear and believe and
join us at the marriage feast of the Lamb in his kingdom that has no
end. In Jesus' Name. Amen.
This, I stumbled on while searching for the chapter and verse of the
ReplyDeletelast sermon of Moses. You reference to the book of Revelation is interesting. Your message is inspiring. Yes, we shall all meet
someday. How wonderful to see those
patriarchs of old. What a day that
will be when the Savior we shall see.
God bless you in your new endeavor.
Joy T. of Corrales, NM.