Monday, January 24, 2022

Sermon - Epiphany 3 - Luke 4:16-30


Luke 4:16–30

"Rejecting or Receiving the Words of Life"

Just exactly what did Jesus say to make them try and throw him off a cliff?

In the book of Nehemiah, we see Ezra reading from God’s word and preaching to the people (giving the sense of it).  And they all received it well- showing contrition for their sins, and even great patience at attentiveness to the word.  When Jesus read the Word and preached about it in Nazareth – things didn’t go nearly as well.

Here was the hometown hero – the preacher who was making all the stir – going about Caparnaum and the north, but not just preaching.  He was casting out demons and healing all manner of sick and suffering people.  Signs and wonders.  Miracles.  Now our boy had come home.  Isn’t this Jospeh’s son?  This is going to be great.

At first, they politely listen to him as he reads from Isaiah and preaches about it – but you have to wonder if they were really listening.  Something something about being fulfilled.  Something about good news.  Sounds good, isn’t he a nice speaker?

But you get the sense they’re not really listening.  For Jesus is making a bold claim that he is the fulfillment of Isaiah – that he, Jesus is the Messiah!  Today, here, in the flesh.  But they barely blink about this.

But then he really gets their attention.  He starts to make it personal.  “Doubtless you will say, Physician, heal thyself!”  Do the kinds of miracles here you were doing in Capernaum.  Let’s see the show, Jesus!  We’ve got some sick people here too, I’m sure.  I mean, we’re your people, right?  You’re one of us!  We’re sure you’ve got something special in store.

But no.  The rude awakening from Jesus is that he already knows they will reject him.  And it’s no different than with the prophets of old.  Elijah and Elisha came preaching too – but some of their most notable signs and wonders were for the outsiders from Syria and Zarapeth.

How dare you, Jesus!!  How dare you liken us to the unbelievers!  How dare you show more regard for them than for us!  Who do you think you are, anyway!  And in a show of fury and self-righteous indignation – they become an angry mob and try to push Jesus off the cliff.  The hometown hero becomes the object of their wrath.  Old Joseph the Carpenter’s son is now the enemy, and they must do away with him.

Of course, Jesus’ time had not yet come.  And so they can’t kill him.  He just passes through the crowd. But it is an early indication – a sort of foretelling of the cross.  For a time will come soon when he will lay down his life, willingly.  And his enemies will do away with him in much the same vein.

And just like so many of the prophets before him, Jesus would meet a prophet’s reward.  Death.  When it was the proper time, they arrested him and convicted him and killed him – primarily – because they didn’t like what he was saying.

Dear friends in Christ, the church of Christ can relate.  We are not Jesus, but we are the Body of Christ (as Paul mentions in 1 Corinthians).  And so as it is for Jesus, so also it is for his body, the Church.  As Jesus was rejected by the unbelieving world, yes even his own home-town, so the people of Christ are rejected by the unbelieving world. 

Jesus knows this, he warns us of this, he even tells us “Blessed are you when others revile you and persecute you and utter all kinds of evil against you falsely on my account. Rejoice and be glad, for your reward is great in heaven, for so they persecuted the prophets who were before you.”  And he tells us that the world hates us because it hated him first.

But also like Jesus, the church is mostly despised for what we say.  It should be no surprise, since the faithful church says what Jesus says.  We speak the law of God, and pull no punches in calling a sin a sin.  We preach the word of Christ, the Gospel of Jesus Christ.  And while for us it is the very power of salvation, the Gospel of Christ crucified is a stumbling block to Jews and foolishness to gentiles.

If you are like me, you have perceived the growing intolerance of the unbelieving world around us for the truth of God’s Word.  And perhaps you feel it has become ever more difficult even to say what is true for fear of reprisal. 

But here in this pulpit, and here at this church, let the truth ring out clearly regardless of the world’s squealing.  Sometimes certain things must be said clearly and simply.

Especially on this Life Sunday we consider the church’s prophetic voice of calling for repentance against the sin of abortion.  And yes, let’s call it a sin. 

Not only those who commit the act, but those who condone it and support it as a viable choice, who twist reason and morality into knots to somehow claim that the destruction of the most helpless human lives is somehow justifiable.  This too is sinful, and of the devil.

Whether it’s before our leaders and politicians or with your family and neighbors, in every circle and in whatever ways we can, Christians ought to confess that God’s gift of life is sacred, and that he alone gives life, and we should not usurp his right to end life when he sees fit. 

And if we confess this truth, we better be prepared for the blow-back.  And yes, they may even throw us off a cliff (metaphorically or physically).  If they’d do it to Jesus, even in his hometown, they would do it to you, Christian.

But let this truth also ring out from our midst.  It’s not just those people over there that ought to repent.  Repentance starts at home.  With you and me.  The self-righteous citizens of Nazareth would have been happy with a sermon that condemned other people for other people’s sins.  But they got mad when Jesus shined the light of the law on them.  May it not be so among us!

Our condemnation of abortion, homosexuality, greed, fornication, pornography, gender-bending, adultery, selfishness, slander, hatred and violence – or whatever other sins we can and should identify – it must always come from a place of humble repentance for our own sins, whatever they may be.  And yes, maybe even some on that list. 

In other words, let the law offend you, for that’s what it’s supposed to do.  Let it accuse you and expose you and your unclean heart and hands and mouth.  Don’t shut your ears and harden your heart, and don’t throw the messenger off a cliff.  But instead repent.  Confess your sins and let Jesus, the Lord of Life do what he does best – bring the good news.

The one anointed to bring good news to the poor, healing to the lepers, freedom to the captives, and all other good remedies, is the Great Physician for what is ailing you – sin.  And the physician comes to heal, not himself, but you.

That yes, there is grace and mercy in Christ, even for those who have spilled innocent blood.  There is life in him, and only in him, for those who have embraced death. 

For the one who they tried to murder at Nazareth, they crucified at Jerusalem.  They killed the Author of Life, but God raised him from the dead.  And believing in him, we have life, and abundantly so.  He is the way and the truth and the life, and no one comes to the Father but by him.  But by him we do come to God, and in him we do have life, even though we die.  For whoever lives and believes in him will never die.

Who knows what the future holds for our country and will we ever put aside the state-sanctioned killing of the unborn?  Who knows if God will turn hearts and heal our nation, or will death’s shadow continue to grow?  We pray for our nation, for the unborn, and for repentance to do what is right and protect these little ones. 

But we do know what the future holds for us who are in Christ – life.  Abundant, glorious, eternal life.  Good news for us poor sinners, indeed. Receive his gracious words in repentance and faith.  And your eternal home will be with him.  In Jesus’ Name.

 

 

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